summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 19:56:17 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 19:56:17 -0700
commit7fe5d7de5be603193412b95180b510feb3c6e387 (patch)
treeb0b9cad11bf704ca8c9397772c6ac483005da9cc
initial commit of ebook 31710HEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--31710-8.txt8668
-rw-r--r--31710-8.zipbin0 -> 203205 bytes
-rw-r--r--31710-h.zipbin0 -> 233164 bytes
-rw-r--r--31710-h/31710-h.htm11420
-rw-r--r--31710-h/images/logo.pngbin0 -> 18221 bytes
-rw-r--r--31710.txt8668
-rw-r--r--31710.zipbin0 -> 203159 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
10 files changed, 28772 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/31710-8.txt b/31710-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e602d14
--- /dev/null
+++ b/31710-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,8668 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Hills and the Vale, by Richard Jefferies
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Hills and the Vale
+
+Author: Richard Jefferies
+
+Commentator: Edward Thomas
+
+Release Date: March 20, 2010 [EBook #31710]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HILLS AND THE VALE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer 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.)
+
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE: In a few places the book has the letter T
+printed in a sans-serif font to indicate the shape of the letter.
+This has been reproduced as [T] below.
+
+
+
+
+ THE HILLS AND THE VALE
+
+
+
+
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+
+
+
+ THE HILLS AND THE VALE
+
+
+ BY
+ RICHARD JEFFERIES
+
+
+ WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY
+ EDWARD THOMAS
+
+
+ LONDON: DUCKWORTH & CO.
+ 3 HENRIETTA STREET, COVENT GARDEN
+ 1909
+
+
+
+
+ TO
+ JOHN WILLIAMS
+ OF WAUN WEN
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ PAGE
+
+ INTRODUCTION ix
+
+ CHOOSING A GUN 1
+
+ SKATING 22
+
+ MARLBOROUGH FOREST 27
+
+ VILLAGE CHURCHES 35
+
+ BIRDS OF SPRING 43
+
+ THE SPRING OF THE YEAR 54
+
+ VIGNETTES FROM NATURE 70
+
+ A KING OF ACRES 79
+
+ THE STORY OF SWINDON 104
+
+ UNEQUAL AGRICULTURE 134
+
+ VILLAGE ORGANIZATION 151
+
+ THE IDLE EARTH 207
+
+ AFTER THE COUNTY FRANCHISE 224
+
+ THE WILTSHIRE LABOURER 247
+
+ ON THE DOWNS 270
+
+ THE SUN AND THE BROOK 280
+
+ NATURE AND ETERNITY 284
+
+ THE DAWN 306
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+This book consists of three unpublished essays and of fifteen
+reprinted from _Longman's Magazine_, _Fraser's Magazine_, the _New
+Quarterly_, _Knowledge_, _Chambers's Magazine_, the _Graphic_, and
+the _Standard_, where they have probably been little noticed since
+the time of their appearance. Several more volumes of this size
+might have been made by collecting all the articles which were not
+reprinted in Jefferies' lifetime, or in 'Field and Hedgerow' and
+'Toilers of the Field,' shortly after his death. But the work in
+such volumes could only have attracted those very few of the
+omnivorous lovers of Jefferies who have not already found it out.
+After the letters on the Wiltshire labourer, addressed to the
+_Times_ in 1872, he wrote nothing that was not perhaps at the time
+his best, but, being a journalist, he had often to deal immediately,
+and in a transitory manner, with passing events, or to empty a page
+or two of his note-books in response to an impulse assuredly no
+higher than habit or necessity. Many of these he passed over or
+rejected in making up volumes of essays for publication; some he
+certainly included. Of those he passed over, some are equal to the
+best, or all but the best, of those which he admitted, and I think
+these will be found in 'The Hills and the Vale.' There are others
+which need more excuse. The two early papers on 'Marlborough Forest'
+and 'Village Churches,' which were quoted in Besant's 'Eulogy,' are
+interesting on account of their earliness (1875), and charming
+enough to please those who read all Jefferies' books. 'The Story of
+Swindon,' 'Unequal Agriculture,' and 'Village Organization,' will be
+valued for their matter, and because they are examples of his
+writing, and of his interests and opinions, before he was thirty.
+That they are partly out of date is true, but they are worth
+remembering by the student of Jefferies and of his times; they do
+credit to his insight and even to his foresight; and there is still
+upon them, here and there, some ungathered fruit. The later
+agricultural articles, 'The Idle Earth,' 'After the County
+Franchise,' and 'The Wiltshire Labourer,' are the work of his ripe
+years. There were also several papers published not only after his
+death, but after the posthumous collections. I have included all of
+these, for none of them needs defence, while 'Nature and Eternity'
+ranks with his finest work. The three papers now for the first time
+printed might have been, but are not, admitted on that ground alone.
+'On Choosing a Gun' and 'Skating' belong to the period of 'The
+Amateur Poacher,' and are still alive, and too good to destroy. 'The
+Dawn' is beautiful.
+
+Among these eighteen papers are examples from nearly every kind
+and period of Jefferies' work, though his earliest writing is
+still decently interred where it was born, in Wiltshire and
+Gloucestershire papers (chiefly the _North Wilts Herald_), except
+such as was disinterred by the late Miss Toplis for 'Jefferies
+Land,' 'T.T.T.,' and 'The Early Fiction of Richard Jefferies.'
+From his early youth Jefferies was a reporter in the north of
+Wiltshire and south of Gloucestershire, at political and
+agricultural meetings, elections, police-courts, markets, and
+Boards of Guardians. He inquired privately or officially into the
+history of the Great Western Railway works at New Swindon, of the
+local churches and families, of ancient monuments, and he
+announced the facts with such reflections as came to him, or might
+be expected from him, in newspaper articles, papers read before
+the Wiltshire Archæological Society, and in a booklet on 'The
+Goddards of North Wilts.' As reporter, archæologist, and
+sportsman, he was continually walking to and fro across the vale
+and over the downs; or writing down what he saw, for the most part
+in a manner dictated by the writing of other men engaged in the
+same way; or reading everything that came in his way, but
+especially natural history, chronicles, and Greek philosophy in
+English translations. He was bred entirely on English, and in a
+very late paper he could be so hazy about the meaning of
+'illiterate' as to say that the labourers 'never were illiterate
+mentally; they are now no more illiterate in the partial sense of
+book-knowledge.' He tried his hand at topical humour, and again
+and again at short sensational tales. But until he was twenty-four
+he wrote nothing which could have suggested that he was much above
+the cleverer young men of the same calling. There was nothing fine
+or strong in his writing. His researches were industrious, but not
+illuminated. If his range of reading was uncommon, it gave him
+only some quotations of no exceptional felicity. His point of view
+could have given no cause for admiration or alarm. And yet he was
+not considered an ordinary young man, being apparently idle,
+ambitious, discontented, and morose, and certainly unsociable and
+negligently dressed. He walked about night and day, chiefly alone
+and with a noticeable long stride. But if he was ambitious, it was
+only that he desired success--the success of a writer, and
+probably a novelist, in the public eye. His possessions were the
+fruits of his wandering, his self-chosen books and a sensitive,
+solitary temperament. He might have been described as a clever
+young man, well-informed, a little independent, not first-rate at
+shorthand, and yet possibly too good for his place; and the
+description would have been all that was possible to anyone not
+intimate with him, and there was no one intimate with him but
+himself. He had as yet neither a manner nor a matter of his own.
+It is not clear from anything remaining that he had discovered
+that writing could be something more than a means of making party
+views plausible or information picturesque. In 1867, at the age of
+nineteen, he opened a description of Swindon as follows:
+
+ 'Whenever a man imbued with republican politics and
+ progressionist views ascends the platform and delivers an
+ oration, it is a safe wager that he makes some allusion at least
+ to Chicago, the famous mushroom city of the United States, which
+ sprang up in a night, and thirty years ago consisted of a dozen
+ miserable fishermen's huts, and now counts over two hundred
+ thousand inhabitants. Chicago! Chicago! look at Chicago! and see
+ in its development the vigour which invariably follows
+ republican institutions.... Men need not go so far from their
+ own doors to see another instance of rapid expansion and
+ development which has taken place under a monarchical
+ government. The Swindon of to-day is almost ridiculously
+ disproportioned to the Swindon of forty years ago....'
+
+Eight years later Jefferies rewrote 'The Story of Swindon' as it is
+given in this book, and the allusion to Chicago was reduced to this:
+
+ 'The workmen required food; tradesmen came and supplied that
+ food, and Swindon rose as Chicago rose, as if by magic.'
+
+Yet it is certain that in 1867 Jefferies was already carrying about
+with him an experience and a power which were to ripen very slowly
+into something unique. He was observing; he was developing a sense
+of the beauty in Nature, in humanity, in thought, and the arts; and
+he was 'not more than eighteen when an inner and esoteric meaning
+began to come to him from all the visible universe, and undefinable
+aspirations filled him.'
+
+In 1872 he discovered part of his power almost in its perfection. He
+wrote several letters to the _Times_ about the Wiltshire labourer,
+and they were lucid, simple, moderate, founded on his own
+observation, and arranged in a telling, harmonious manner. What he
+said and thought about the labourers then is of no great importance
+now, and even in 1872 it was only a journalist's grain in the scale
+against the labourer's agitation. But it was admirably done. It was
+clear, easy writing, and a clear, easy writer he was thenceforth to
+the end.
+
+These letters procured for him admission to _Fraser's_ and other
+magazines, and he now began for them a long series of articles,
+mainly connected with the land and those who work on the land. He
+had now freedom and space to put on paper something of what he had
+seen and thought. The people, their homes, and their fields, he
+described and criticized with moderation and some spirit. He showed
+that he saw more things than most writing men, but it was in an
+ordinary light, in the same way as most of the readers whom he
+addressed. His gravity, tenderness and courage were discernible, but
+the articles were not more than a clever presentation of a set of
+facts and an intelligent, lucid point of view, which were good grist
+to the mills of that decade. They had neither the sagacity nor the
+passion which could have helped that calm style to make literature.
+
+'The Story of Swindon' (_Fraser's_, May, 1875) is one of three or
+four articles which Jefferies wrote at that time on a subject not
+purely his own. As a journalist he had had to do a hundred things
+for which he had no strong natural taste. This article is a good
+example of his adaptable gifts. He was probably equal to grappling
+with any set of facts and ideas at the word of command. In 'coming
+to this very abode of the Cyclops' the _North Wilts Herald_ reporter
+survives, and nothing could be more like everybody else than the
+phrasing and the atmosphere of the greater part, as in 'the ten
+minutes for refreshment, now in the case of certain trains reduced
+to five, have made thousands of travellers familiar with the name of
+the spot.' This is probably due to lack not so much of skill as of
+developed personality. When he describes and states facts, he is
+lucid and forcible; when he reflects or decorates, he is often showy
+or ill at ease, or both, though the thought on p. 130 is valid
+enough. Through the cold, colourless light between him and the
+object, he saw and remembered clearly; short of creativeness, he was
+a master--or one of those skilled servants who appear masters--of
+words. The power is, at this distance, more worthy of attention than
+the achievement. The power of retaining and handling facts was one
+which he never lost, but it was absorbed and even concealed among
+powers of later development, when reality was a richer thing to him
+than is to be surmised from anything in 'The Story of Swindon.'
+
+'Unequal Agriculture' (_Fraser's_, May, 1877) and 'Village
+Organization' (_New Quarterly_, October, 1875) belong to the same
+period. They describe and debate matters which are now not so new,
+though often as debatable. The description is sometimes felicitous,
+as in the 'steady jerk' of the sower's arm, but is not destined for
+immortality; and the picture of a steam-plough at work he himself
+surpassed in a later paper. But it is sufficiently vivid to survive
+for another generation. Since Cobbett no keener agriculturist's eye
+or better pen had surveyed North Wiltshire. The most advanced and
+the most antiquated style of farming remain the same in our own day.
+Whether these articles were commissioned or not, their form and
+direction was probably dictated as much by the expressed or supposed
+needs of the magazine as by Jefferies himself. His own line was not
+yet clear and strong, and he consciously or unconsciously adopted
+one which was a compromise between his own and that of his
+contemporaries. In fact, it is hard in places to tell whether he is
+expressing his own opinion or those of the farmers whom he has
+consulted; and he still writes as one of an agricultural community
+who is to remain in it. But many of the suggestions in 'Village
+Organization' may still be found stimulating, and the inactivity of
+men in country parishes is not yet in need of further description;
+while the fact that 'the great centres of population have almost
+entirely occupied the attention of our legislators of late years' is
+still only fitfully perceived. It should be noticed, also, that he
+is true to himself and his later self, if not in his valiant
+asseveration of the farmer's sturdy independence, yet in the wish
+that there should be an authority to 'cause a parish to be supplied
+with good drinking water,' or that there should be a tank, 'the
+public property of the village.'
+
+To 'Unequal Agriculture' the editor of _Fraser's Magazine_ appended
+a note, saying that if England were to be brought to such a pitch of
+perfection under scientific cultivation as Jefferies desired, 'a few
+of us would then prefer to go away and live elsewhere.' And there is
+no doubt that he was carried away by his subject into an
+indiscriminate optimism, for he turned upon it sadly and with equal
+firmness in later life. But the writing is beyond that of the
+letters to the _Times_, and in the sentences--
+
+ 'The plough is drawn by dull, patient oxen, plodding onwards now
+ just as they were depicted upon the tombs and temples, the
+ graves and worshipping-places, of races who had their being
+ three thousand years ago. Think of the suns that have shone
+ since then; of the summers and the bronzed grain waving in the
+ wind; of the human teeth that have ground that grain, and are
+ now hidden in the abyss of earth; yet still the oxen plod on,
+ like slow Time itself, here this day in our land of steam and
+ telegraph'
+
+--in these sentences, though they are commonplace enough, there is
+proof that the writer already had that curious consciousness of the
+past which was to give so deep a tone to many of his pages later on.
+But in these papers, again, what is most noticeable is the practical
+knowledge and the power of handling practical things. Though he
+himself, brought up on his father's farm, had no taste for farming,
+and seldom did any practical work except splitting timber, he yet
+confines himself severely to things as they are, or as they may
+quickly be made to become by a patching-up. These are 'practical
+politics for practical men.' Consequently the clear and forcible
+writing is only better in degree than other writing of the moment
+with an element of controversy, and represents not the whole truth,
+but an aspect of selected portions of the truth. When it is turned
+to other purposes it shows a poor grace, as in 'a widespread ocean
+of wheat, an English gold-field, a veritable Yellow Sea, bowing in
+waves before the southern breeze--a sight full of peaceful poetry;'
+and the sluggish, customary euphemism of phrases like 'a few calves
+find their way to the butcher' is tedious enough.
+
+'The Idle Earth' (_Longman's_, December, 1894), 'After the County
+Franchise' (_Longman's_, February, 1884), and 'The Wiltshire
+Labourer' (_Longman's_, 1887), belong to Jefferies' later years.
+'The Idle Earth' was published only after his death, but, like the
+other two, was written, probably, between 1884 and 1887. He was no
+longer writing as a practical man, but as a critical outsider with
+an inside knowledge. 'The Idle Earth' is an astonishing
+curiosity--an extreme example of Jefferies' discontent with things
+as they are. 'Why is it,' he asks, 'that this cry arises that
+agriculture will not pay?... The answer is simple enough. It is
+because the earth is idle one-third of the year.' He looks round a
+January field and sees 'not an animal in sight, not a single
+machine for making money, not a penny being turned.' He wishes to
+know, 'What would a manufacturer think of a business in which he was
+compelled to let his engines rest for a third of the year?' Then he
+falls upon the miserable Down-land because that is still more idle
+and still less productive. 'With all its progress,' he cries, 'how
+little real advance has agriculture made! All because of the
+stubborn, idle earth.' It is a genuine cry, to be paralleled by
+'Life is short, art long,' and by his own wonder that 'in twelve
+thousand written years the world has not yet built itself a House,
+unfilled a Granary, nor organized itself for its own comfort,' by
+his contempt for 'this little petty life of seventy years,' and for
+the short sleep permitted to men.
+
+The editor of _Longman's_ had to explain that, in publishing 'After
+the County Franchise,' he was not really 'overstepping the limit
+which he laid down in undertaking to keep _Longman's Magazine_ free
+from the strife of party politics, because it might be profitable to
+consider what changes this Bill will make, when it becomes law, in
+the lives and the social relations of our rural population.' It was
+true that Jefferies was no longer a party politician. He was by that
+time above and before either party. He is so still, and the
+reappearance of these no longer novel ideas is excusable simply
+because Jefferies' name is likely to gain for them still more of the
+consideration and support which they deserve, for it may be hoped
+that our day is ready to receive the seed of trouble and advance
+contained in the modest suggestion which he believed to be
+compatible with 'the acquisition of public and the preservation of
+private liberty.'
+
+ ['We now govern our village ourselves;] why should we not
+ possess our village? Why should we not live in our own houses?
+ Why should we not have a little share in the land, as much, at
+ least, as we can pay for?... Can an owner of this kind of
+ property be permitted to refuse to sell? Must he be compelled to
+ sell?'
+
+Twenty-five years ago Jefferies, knowing that neither land nor
+cottages were to be had, that there was no security of tenure for
+the labourer, hoped for the day when 'some, at least, of our people
+may be able to set up homes for themselves in their own country.' He
+believed that 'the greater his freedom, the greater his attachment
+to home, the more settled the labourer,' the firmer would become the
+position of labourer, farmer, and landowner. Yet an advanced
+reformer of our own day--Mr. Montague Fordham in 'Mother Earth'--has
+still to cry the same thing in the wilderness; and it is still true
+that 'you cannot have a fixed population unless it has a home, and
+the labouring population is practically homeless.' On the other
+hand, it should be remembered that Jefferies also says: 'Parks and
+woods are becoming of priceless value; we should have to preserve a
+few landowners, if only to have parks and woods.'
+
+These later articles are far more persuasive than their
+predecessors, for here there is no doubt, not merely that they are
+sincere, but that they are the unprejudiced opinion of the man as
+well as of the agriculturist. He has ceased to be concerned only
+with things as they are, or as they may be made to-morrow. He allows
+himself to think as much of justice as of expediency, of what is
+fitting as well as of what is at once possible. The phrases,
+'Sentiment is more stubborn than fact,' 'Service is no inheritance,'
+'I do not want any paupers,' 'I should not like men under my thumb,'
+'Men demanding to be paid in full for full work, but refusing
+favours and petty assistance to be recouped hereafter; ... men with
+the franchise, voting under the protection of the ballot, and voting
+first and foremost for the demolition of the infernal Poor Law and
+workhouse system'--these simple phrases fall with peculiar and even
+pathetic force, in their context, from the mystic optimist whom pain
+was ripening fast in those last years. Even here he uses phrases
+like 'the serious work which brings in money' and commends 'push and
+enterprise' as a substitute for 'the slow plodding manner of the
+labourer.' But these are exceptional. As to the writing itself, of
+which this is an example,
+
+ 'By home life I mean that which gathers about a house, however
+ small, standing in its own grounds. Something comes into
+ existence about such a house, an influence, a pervading feeling,
+ like some warm colour softening the whole, tinting the lichen on
+ the wall, even the very smoke-marks on the chimney. It is home,
+ and the men and women born there will never lose the tone it has
+ given them. Such homes are the strength of a land'
+
+--it remains simple; but by the use of far fewer words, and of fewer
+orator's phrases, its unadorned directness has almost a positive
+spiritual quality.
+
+But these agricultural essays, good as they were, and absorbing as
+they did all of Jefferies' social thoughts to the end of his life,
+became less and less frequent as he grew less inclined and less able
+to adapt his mind and style to the affairs of the moment.
+
+In the same year as 'The Story of Swindon' he published 'Village
+Churches' and 'Marlborough Forest' (_Graphic_, December 4 and
+October 23, 1875). These and his unsuccessful novels remain to show
+the direction of his more intimate thoughts in the third decade of
+his life. They are as imperfect in their class as 'The Story of
+Swindon' is perfect in its own. They are the earliest of their kind
+from Jefferies' pen which have survived. He is dealing already with
+another and a more individual kind of reality, and he is not yet at
+home with it in words. He approaches it with ceremony--with the
+ceremony of phrases like 'the great painter Autumn,' 'a very tiger
+to the rabbit,' 'the titles and pomp of belted earl and knight.' But
+here for the first time he is so bent upon himself and his object
+that he casts only an occasional glance upon his audience, whereas
+in his practical papers he has it continually in view, or even ready
+to jog his elbow if he dreams. The full English hedges, which he
+condemns as an agriculturist, he would now save from the modern
+Goths; he can even be sorry for the death of beautiful jays. Here,
+for the first time, it might occur to a student of the man that he
+is more than his words express. He does not see Nature as he sees
+the factory, and when he and Nature touch there is an emotional
+discharge which blurs the sight, though presently it is to enrich
+it. As yet we cannot be sure whether he is perfectly genuine or is
+striving for an effect based upon a recollection of someone
+else--probably it is both--when he writes:
+
+ 'The heart has a yearning for the unknown, a longing to
+ penetrate the deep shadow and the winding glade, where, as it
+ seems, no human foot has been';
+
+when he speaks of the '_visible_ silence' of the old church, or
+exclaims:
+
+ 'To us, each hour is of consequence, especially in this modern
+ day, which has invented the detestable creed that time is money.
+ But time is not money to Nature. She never hastens....'
+
+But already he is expressing a thought, which he was often to repeat
+in his maturity and in his best work, when he says of the
+church-bell that 'In the day when this bell was made, men put their
+souls into their works. Their one great object was not to turn out
+100,000 all alike.'
+
+It was in the next year, 1876, that he began to think of using his
+observation and feeling in a 'chatty style,' of setting down 'some
+of the glamour--the magic of sunshine, and green things, and clear
+waters.' But it was not until 1878 that he succeeded in doing so.
+In 'The Amateur Poacher' and its companions, there was not between
+Jefferies and Nature the colourless, clear light of the factory or
+the journalist's workshop, but the tender English atmosphere or, if
+you like, that of the happy and thoughtful mind which had grown up
+in that atmosphere.
+
+'Choosing a Gun' and 'Skating' belong to the period, if not the
+year, of 'The Amateur Poacher.' In fact, the passage about the
+pleasure of having the freedom of the woods with a wheel-lock, is
+either a first draft of one of the best in that book, or it is an
+unconscious repetition. Here again is a characteristic complaint
+that 'the leading idea of the gunmaker nowadays is to turn out a
+hundred thousand guns of one particular pattern.' The suggestion
+that some clever workman should go and set himself up in some
+village is one that has been followed in other trades, and is not
+yet exhausted. The writing is now excellent of its kind, but for the
+word 'Metropolis' and the phrase 'no great distance from' Pall Mall.
+The negligent--but slowly acquired--conversational simplicity
+captures the open air as calmly and pleasantly as the humour of the
+city dialogue.
+
+'Skating' is slight enough, but ends with grace and an unsought
+solemnity which comes more and more into his later writing, so that
+in 'The Spring of the Year' (_Longman's_, June, 1894), after many
+notes about wood-pigeons, there comes such a genuine landscape as
+this:
+
+ 'The bare, slender tips of the birches on which they perched
+ exposed them against the sky. Once six alighted on a long
+ birch-branch, bending it down with their weight, not unlike a
+ heavy load of fruit. As the stormy sunset flamed up, tinting the
+ fields with momentary red, their hollow voices sounded among the
+ trees.'
+
+These notes for April and May, 1881, were continued in 'The Coming
+of Summer,' which forms part of 'Toilers of the Field.' This
+informal chitchat, addressed chiefly to the amateur naturalist,
+became an easy habit with Jefferies. The talk is of the plainest and
+pleasantest here, and full of himself. With his 'I like sparrows,'
+he was an older and tenderer man than in 'The Gamekeeper' period.
+The paper gives some idea of his habits and haunts round about
+Surbiton before the fatal chain of illnesses began at the end of
+this year. Personally, I like to know that it was finished on May
+10, 1881, at midnight, with 'Antares visible, the summer star,' very
+low in the south-east above Banstead Downs, and Lyra and Arcturus
+high above in the south, if Jefferies was writing at Tolworth, as
+presumably he was. This paper is to be preferred to 'Birds of
+Spring'--likeable mainly for the pages on the chiff-chaff and
+sedge-warbler--which does much the same thing, in a more formal
+manner, for the instruction of readers of _Chambers's_ (March,
+1884), who wished to know about our 'feathered visitors.'
+
+'Vignettes from Nature' were posthumously published in _Longman's_
+(July, 1895). They abound in touches from the depth and tenderness
+of his nature, and when they were written Jefferies had passed into
+the most distinct period of his life--the period which gave birth to
+his mature ideas, and, in particular, to 'The Story of My Heart.'
+The light which he had carried about with him since his youth--a
+light so faint that we cannot be sure he was aware of it in
+retrospect--now leaped up with a mystic significance. Professor
+William James, in 'Varieties of Religious Experience,' describes
+four marks by which states of mind may be recognized as mystical.
+The subject says that they defy expression. They are 'states of
+insight into depths of truth unplumbed by the discursive intellect
+... and, as a rule, they carry with them a curious sense of
+authority for after-time,' because the mystic believes that 'we both
+become one with the Absolute, and we become aware of our oneness.'
+They 'cannot be sustained for long ... except in rare instances half
+an hour, or at most an hour or two, seems to be the limit beyond
+which they fade into the light of common day.' And when the mystic
+consciousness has set in, 'the mystic feels as if his own will were
+in abeyance, and, indeed, sometimes as if he were grasped and held
+by a superior power.' Most of the striking cases in Professor
+James's collection occurred out of doors. These marks may all be
+recognized in Jefferies' record of his own experience--'The Story
+of My Heart.' Yet it was, in the opinion of a very high
+authority--Dr. Maurice Bucke, in 'Cosmic Consciousness'--an
+imperfect experience, and his state is described as 'the twilight
+of cosmic consciousness.' Dr. Bucke gives as the marks of the
+cosmic sense--a subjective light on its appearance; moral
+elevation; intellectual illumination; the sense of immortality;
+loss of the fear of death and of the sense of sin; the suddenness
+of the awakening which takes place usually at a little past the
+thirtieth year, and comes only to noble characters (_e.g._, Pascal,
+Blake, Balzac, and Whitman); a charm added to the personality; a
+transfiguration of the subject in the eyes of others when the
+cosmic sense is actually present. Jefferies appears to have lacked
+the subjective light and the full sense of immortality. 'If,' says
+Dr. Bucke, 'he had attained to cosmic consciousness, he would have
+entered into eternal life, and there would be no "seems" about it;'
+while he finds positive evidence against Jefferies' possession of
+the perfect cosmic sense in his 'contempt for the assertion that
+all things occur for the best.' The sense varied in intensity with
+Jefferies, and in its everyday force was not much more than
+Kingsley's 'innate feeling that everything I see has a meaning, if
+I could but understand it,' which 'feeling of being surrounded with
+truths which I cannot grasp amounts to indescribable awe
+sometimes.'
+
+Cosmic consciousness, the half-grasped power which gave its
+significance to his autobiography, to 'The Dawn,' 'The Sun and the
+Brook' (_Knowledge_, October 13, 1882), 'On the Downs' (_Standard_,
+March 23, 1883), 'Nature and Eternity' (_Longman's_, May, 1895), and
+many other papers, may have been the faculty for which Jefferies
+prayed in 'The Story of My Heart,' and to which he desired that
+mankind should advance. In Dr. Bucke's view, an imperfectly
+supported one, men with this faculty are becoming more and more
+common, and he thinks that 'our descendants will sooner or later
+reach, as a race, the condition of cosmic consciousness, just as
+long ago our ancestors passed from simple to self consciousness.'
+
+In Jefferies the development of this sense was gradual. Phrases
+suggesting that it is in progress may be found in earlier books--in
+the novels, in 'Wood Magic' and 'Bevis'--but 'The Story of My
+Heart' is the first that is inspired by it; and after that, all his
+best work is affected either by the same fervour and solemnity, or
+by its accompanying ideas, or by both. It is to be detected in many
+sentences in 'Vignettes,' and in the concluding prayer, 'Let the
+heart come out from the shadow of roofs to the open glow of the
+sky...'--even in the plea to the mechanics in 'A King of Acres'
+(_Chambers's_, January, 1884) not to 'pin their faith to any theory
+born and sprung up among the crushed and pale-faced life of modern
+time, but to look for themselves at the sky above the highest
+branches ... that they might gather to themselves some of the
+leaves--mental and spiritual leaves--of the ancient forest, feeling
+nearer to the truth and soul, as it were, that lives on in it.' It
+is in the aspiration and hope--in the sense of 'hovering on the
+verge of a great truth,' of 'a meaning waiting in the grass and
+water,' of a 'wider existence yet to be enjoyed on the earth'--in
+the 'increased consciousness of our own life,' gained from sun and
+sky and sea--it is everywhere in 'Sun and Brook' and 'On the
+Downs.' It suffuses the sensuous delicacy and exuberance and the
+spiritual joy of 'Nature and Eternity.' That paper belongs to, and
+in a measure corrects, 'The Story of My Heart.' There is less
+eloquence than in the autobiography, and a greater proportion of
+that beautiful simplicity that is so spiritual when combined with
+the characteristic cadence of Jefferies at his best. The mystic has
+a view of things by which all knowledge becomes real--or
+disappears--and all things are seen related to the whole in a
+manner which gives a wonderful value to the least of them. The
+combination of sensuousness and spiritual aspiration in this and
+other essays produces a beauty perhaps peculiar to Jefferies--often
+a vague beauty imperfectly adumbrated, as was the meaning of the
+universe itself in his mood of 'thoughts without words, mobile like
+the stream, nothing compact that can be grasped and stayed: dreams
+that slip silently as water slips through the fingers.' In 'Nature
+and Eternity' this is all the more impressive because Coate Farm
+and its fields, Jefferies' birthplace and early home, is the scene
+of it. That beauty haunts the last four essays of this book as it
+haunts 'The Story of My Heart,' like a theme of music, always a
+repetition, and yet never exactly the same. 'The Dawn' is one of
+the most beautiful things which Jefferies wrote after his
+awakening. The cadences are his best--gentle, wistful, not quite
+certain cadences, where the effect of the mere sound cannot be
+detached from the effect of the thought hovering behind the sound.
+How they kindle such a passage as this, where Jefferies again
+brings before us his sense of past time!--
+
+ 'But though so familiar, that spectral light in the silence has
+ never lost its meaning, the violets are sweet year by year
+ though never so many summers pass away; indeed, its meaning
+ grows wider and more difficult as the time goes on. For think,
+ this spectre of light--light's double-ganger--has stood by the
+ couch of every human being for thousands and thousands of years.
+ Sleeping or waking, happily dreaming, or wrenched with pain,
+ whether they have noticed it or not, the finger of this light
+ has pointed towards them. When they were building the pyramids,
+ five thousand years ago, straight the arrow of light shot from
+ the sun, lit their dusky forms, and glowed on the endless
+ sand....'
+
+The whole essay is delicately perfect--as free from the spiritual
+eloquence of the autobiography and from the rhetoric of the
+agricultural papers as from the everyday atmosphere of earlier work
+and the decoration of the first outdoor essays. It is pure spirit.
+Take any passage, and it will be seen that in thought and style
+Jefferies' evolution is now complete. He has mounted from being a
+member of a class, at first undistinguishable from it, then clearly
+more enlightened, but still of it, and seeing things in the same
+way, up to the position of a poet with an outlook that is purely
+individual, and, though deeply human, yet of a spirituality now
+close as the grass, and now as the stars. The date of 'The Dawn' is
+uncertain. It may have been 1883, the year of 'The Story of My
+Heart,' or it may have been as late as 1885. This book, therefore,
+contains, like no other single volume, the record of Jefferies'
+progress during about ten of his most important years. It was not
+for nothing that Jefferies, man and boy, had gone through the phases
+of sportsman, naturalist, and artist, and always worshipper, upon
+the hills, 'that he lived in a perpetual commerce with external
+Nature, and nourished himself upon the spirit of its forms.' Air and
+sun so cleaned and sweetened his work that in the end the cleanness
+and sweetness of Nature herself become inseparable from it in our
+minds.
+
+
+
+
+CHOOSING A GUN
+
+
+The first thought of the amateur sportsman naturally refers to his
+gun, and the questions arise: What sort of a gun do I want? Where
+can I get it? What price shall I pay? In appearance there can be no
+great difficulty in settling these matters, but in practice it is
+really by no means easy. Some time since, being on a visit to the
+Metropolis, I was requested by a friend to get him a gun, and
+accepted the commission, as M. Emile Ollivier went to war, with a
+light heart, little dreaming of the troubles that would start up in
+the attempt to conscientiously carry it out. He wanted a good gun,
+and was not very scrupulous as to maker or price, provided that the
+latter was not absolutely extravagant. With such _carte blanche_ as
+this it seemed plain-sailing, and, indeed, I never gave a second
+thought to the business till I opened the door of the first
+respectable gunmaker's shop I came across, which happened to be no
+great distance from Pall Mall. A very polite gentleman immediately
+came forward, rubbing his hands as if he were washing them (which is
+an odd habit with many), and asked if there was anything he could do
+for me. Well, yes, I wanted a gun. Just so--they had one of the
+largest stocks in London, and would be most happy to show me
+specimens of all kinds. But was there any special sort of gun
+required, as then they could suit me in an instant.
+
+'Hum! Ah! Well, I--I'--feeling rather vague--'perhaps you would let
+me see your catalogue----'
+
+'Certainly.' And a handsomely got-up pamphlet, illustrated with
+woodcuts, was placed in my hands, and I began to study the pages.
+But this did not suit him; doubtless, with the practice of his
+profession, he saw at once the uncertain manner of the customer who
+was feeling his way, and thought to bring it to a point.
+
+'You want a good, useful gun, sir, I presume?'
+
+'That is just it'--shutting the catalogue; quite a relief to have
+the thing put into shape for one!
+
+'Then you can't do better than take our new patent double-action
+so-and-so. Here it is'--handing me a decent-looking weapon in
+thorough polish, which I begin to weigh in my hands, poise it to
+ascertain the balance, and to try how it comes to the present, and
+whether I can catch the rib quick enough, when he goes on: 'We can
+let you have that gun, sir, for ten guineas.'
+
+'Oh, indeed! But that's very cheap, isn't it?' I thoughtlessly
+observe, putting the gun down.
+
+My friend D. had mentioned a much higher amount as his ultimatum.
+The next instant I saw in what light my remark would be taken. It
+would be interpreted in this way: Here we have either a rich
+amateur, who doesn't care what he gives, or else a fool who knows
+nothing about it.
+
+'Well, sir, of course it's our very plainest gun'--the weapon is
+tossed carelessly into the background--'in fact, we sometimes call
+it our gamekeeper gun. Now, here is a really fine thing--neatly
+finished, engraved plates, first choice stock, the very best walnut,
+price----' He names a sum very close to D.'s outside.
+
+I handle the weapon in the same manner, and for the life of me
+cannot meet his eye, for I know that he is reading me, or thinks he
+is, like a book. With the exception that the gun is a trifle more
+elaborately got up, I cannot see or feel the slightest difference,
+and begin secretly to suspect that the price of guns is regulated
+according to the inexperience of the purchaser--a sort of sliding
+scale, gauged to ignorance, and rising or falling with its density!
+He expatiates on the gun and points out all its beauties.
+
+'Shooting carefully registered, sir. Can see it tried, or try it
+yourself, sir. Our range is barely three-quarters of an hour's ride.
+If the stock doesn't quite fit your shoulder, you can have
+another--the same price. You won't find a better gun in all London.'
+
+I can see that it really is a very fair article, but do not detect
+the extraordinary excellencies so glibly described. I recollect an
+old proverb about the fool and the money he is said to part with
+hastily. I resolve to see more variety before making the final
+plunge; and what the eloquent shopkeeper thinks is my growing
+admiration for the gun which I continue to handle is really my
+embarrassment, for as yet I am not hardened, and dislike the idea of
+leaving the shop without making a purchase after actually touching
+the goods. But D.'s money--I must lay it out to the best advantage.
+Desperately I fling the gun into his hands, snatch up the catalogue,
+mutter incoherently, 'Will look it through--like the look of the
+thing--call again,' and find myself walking aimlessly along the
+pavement outside.
+
+An unpleasant sense of having played a rather small part lingered
+for some time, and ultimately resolved itself into a determination
+to make up my mind as to exactly what D. wanted, and on entering the
+next shop, to ask to see that, and that only. So, turning to the
+address of another gunmaker, I walked towards it slowly, revolving
+in my mind the sort of shooting D. usually enjoyed. Visions of green
+fields, woods just beginning to turn colour, puffs of smoke hanging
+over the ground, rose up, and blotted out the bustling London scene.
+The shops glittering with their brightest goods placed in front, the
+throng of vehicles, the crowds of people, faded away, the pace
+increased and the stride lengthened as if stepping over the elastic
+turf, and the roar of the traffic sounded low, like a distant
+waterfall. From this reverie the rude apostrophes of a hansom-cabman
+awoke me--I had walked right into the stream of the street, and
+instead of the awning boughs of the wood found a whip upheld,
+threatening chastisement for getting in the way. This brought me up
+from imagination to logic with a jerk, and I began to check off the
+uses D. could put his gun to on the fingers. (1) I knew he had a
+friend in Yorkshire, and shot over his moor every August. His gun,
+then, must be suited to grouse-shooting, and must be light, because
+of the heat which often prevails at that time, and renders dragging
+a heavy gun many miles over the heather--before they pack--a
+serious drawback to the pleasure of the sport. (2) He had some
+partridge-shooting of his own, and was peculiarly fond of it. (3) He
+was always invited to at least two battues. (4) A part of his own
+shooting was on the hills, where the hares were very wild, where
+there was no cover, and they had to be knocked over at long
+distances, and took a hard blow. That would require (a) a
+choke-bore, which was not suitable either, because in covers the
+pheasants at short ranges would not unlikely get 'blown,' which
+would annoy the host; or (b) a heavy, strong gun, which would take a
+stiff charge without too much recoil. But that, again, clashed with
+the light gun for shooting in August. (5) He had latterly taken a
+fancy to wild-fowl shooting by the coast, for which a very
+hard-hitting, long-range gun was needed. It would never do if D.
+could not bring down a duck. (6) He was notorious as a dead shot on
+snipe--this told rather in favour of a light gun, old system of
+boring; for where would a snipe or a woodcock be if it chanced to
+get 200 pellets into it at twenty yards? You might find the claws
+and fragments of the bill if you looked with a microscope. (7) No
+delicate piece of workmanship would do, because he was careless of
+his gun, knocked it about anyhow, and occasionally dropped it in a
+brook. And here was the shop-door; imagine the state of confusion my
+mind was in when I entered!
+
+This was a very 'big' place: the gentleman who approached had a way
+of waving his hand--very white and jewelled--and a grand, lofty idea
+of what a gun should cost. 'Twenty, thirty, forty pounds--some of
+the £30 were second-hand, of course--we have a few, a very few,
+second-hand guns'--such was the sweeping answer to my first mild
+inquiry about prices. Then, seeing at once my vacillating manner,
+he, too, took me in hand, only in a terribly earnest, ponderous way
+from which there was no escape. 'You wanted a good general gun--yes;
+a thoroughly good, well-finished, _plain_ gun (great emphasis on the
+'plain'). Of course, you can't get anything new for _that_ money,
+finished in style. Still, the plain gun will shoot just as well (as
+if the shooting part was scarcely worth consideration). We make the
+very best plain-finished article for five-and-twenty guineas in
+London. By-the-by, where is your shooting, sir?' Thrust home like
+this, not over-gratified by a manner which seemed to say, 'Listen to
+an authority,' and desiring to keep an incog., I mutter something
+about 'abroad.' 'Ah--well, then, this article is precisely the
+thing, because it will carry ball, an immense advantage in any
+country where you may come across large game.'
+
+'How far will it throw a ball?' I ask, rather curious on that
+subject, for I was under the impression that a smooth-bore of the
+usual build is not much to be relied on in that way--far less,
+indeed, than the matchlocks made by semi-civilized nations. But it
+seems I was mistaken.
+
+'Why--a hundred yards point-blank, and ten times better to shoot
+with than a rifle.'
+
+'Indeed!'
+
+'Of course, I mean in cover, as you're pretty sure to be. Say a wild
+boar is suddenly started: well, you pull out your No. 4
+shot-cartridge, and push in a ball; you shoot as well
+again--snap-shooting with a smooth-bore in jungle or bush. There's
+not a better gun turned out in town than that. It's not the
+slightest use your looking for anything cheaper--rebounding locks,
+best stocks, steel damascene barrels; fit for anything from snipe to
+deer, from dust to buck-shot----'
+
+'But I think----' Another torrent overwhelms me.
+
+'Here's an order for twenty of these guns for Texas, to shoot from
+horseback at buffalo--ride in among them, you know.'
+
+I look at my watch, find it's much later than I imagine, remark that
+it is really a difficult thing to pick out a gun, and seize the
+door-handle.
+
+'When gentlemen don't exactly know what they're looking for it _is_
+a hard job to choose a gun'--he smiles sarcastically, and shuts me
+out politely.
+
+The observation seems hard, after thinking over guns so intently;
+yet it must be aggravating to attempt to serve a man who does not
+know what he wants--yet (one's mood changes quickly) it was his
+own fault for trying to force, to positively force, that
+twenty-five-guinea thing on me instead of giving me a chance to
+choose. I had seen rows on rows of guns stacked round the shop, rank
+upon rank; in the background a door partly open permitted a glimpse
+of a second room, also perfectly coated with guns, if such an
+expression is permissible. Now, I look on ranges of guns like this
+much the same as on a library. Is there anything so delicious as the
+first exploration of a great library--alone--unwatched? You shut the
+heavy door behind you slowly, reverently, lest a noise should jar on
+the sleepers of the shelves. For as the Seven Sleepers of Ephesus
+were dead and yet alive, so are the souls of the authors in the care
+of their ancient leathern binding. You walk gently round the walls,
+pausing here to read a title, there to draw out a tome and support
+it for a passing glance--half in your arms, half against the shelf.
+The passing glance lengthens till the weight becomes too great, and
+with a sigh you replace it, and move again, peering up at those
+titles which are foreshortened from the elevation of the shelf, and
+so roam from folio to octavo, from octavo to quarto, till at last,
+finding a little work whose value, were it in the mart, would be
+more than its weight in gold, you bear it to the low leather-covered
+arm-chair and enjoy it at your ease. But to sip the full pleasure of
+a library you must be alone, and you must take the books yourself
+from the shelves. A man to read must read alone. He may make
+extracts, he may _work_ at books in company; but to read, to absorb,
+he must be solitary. Something in the same way--except in the
+necessity for solitude, which does not exist in this case--I like to
+go through a battery of guns, picking up this one, or that, glancing
+up one, trying the locks of another, examining the thickness of the
+breech. Why did not the fellow say, 'There are our guns; walk round,
+take down what you please, do as you like, and don't hurry. I will
+go on with some work while you examine them. Call me if you want any
+explanation. Spend the day there if you like, and come again
+to-morrow.' It would have been a hundred chances to one that I had
+found a gun to suit D., for the shop was a famous one, the guns
+really good, the workmanship unimpeachable, and the stock to select
+from immense. But let a thing be never so good, one does not care to
+have it positively thrust on one.
+
+By this time my temper was up, and I determined to go through with
+the business, and get the precise article likely to please D., if I
+went to every maker in the Metropolis. I went to very nearly every
+prominent man--I spent several days at it. I called at shops whose
+names are household words wherever an English sportsman can be
+found. Some of them, though bright to look at from the pavement,
+within were mean, and even lacked cleanliness. The attendants were
+often incapable of comprehending that a customer _may_ be as good a
+judge of what he wants as themselves; they have got into a narrow
+routine of offering the same thing to everybody. No two shops were
+of the same opinion: at one you were told that the choke was the
+greatest success in the world; at another, that they only shot well
+for one season, quickly wearing out; at a third, that such and such
+a 'grip' or breech-action was perfect; at a fourth, that there never
+was such a mistake; at a fifth, that hammerless guns were the guns
+of the future, and elsewhere, that people detested hammerless guns
+because it seemed like learning to shoot over again. Finally, I
+visited several of the second-hand shops. They had some remarkably
+good guns--for the leading second-hand shops do not care to buy a
+gun unless by a crack maker--but the cheapness was a delusion. A new
+gun might be got for the same money, or very little more. Their
+system was like this. Suppose they had a really good gun, but, for
+aught you could tell, twenty or thirty years old (the breech-action
+might have been altered), for this they would ask, say £25. The
+original price of the gun may have been £50, and if viewed _only_
+with regard to the original price, of course that would be a great
+reduction. But for the £25 a new gun could be got from a maker whose
+goods, if not so famous, were thoroughly reliable, and who
+guaranteed the shooting. In the one case you bought a gun about
+whose previous history you knew absolutely nothing beyond the mere
+fact of the barrels having come at first-hand from a leading maker.
+But they may have been battered about--rebored; they may be scored
+inside by someone loading with flints; twenty things that are quite
+unascertainable may have combined to injure its original perfection.
+The cheapness will not stand the test of a moment's thought--that
+is, if you are in search of excellence. You buy a name and trust to
+chance. After several days of such work as this, becoming less and
+less satisfied at every fresh attempt, and physically more fatigued
+than if I had walked a hundred miles, I gave it up for awhile, and
+wrote to D. for more precise instructions.
+
+When I came to quietly reflect on these experiences, I found that
+the effect of carefully studying the subject had been to plunge me
+into utter confusion. It seemed as difficult to choose a gun as to
+choose a horse, which is saying a good deal. Most of us take our
+shooting as we take other things--from our fathers--very likely use
+their guns, get into their style of shooting; or if we buy guns, buy
+them because a friend wants to sell, and so get hold of the gun that
+suits us by a kind of happy chance. But to begin _de novo_, to
+select a gun from the thousand and one exhibited in London, to go
+conscientiously into the merits and demerits of the endless
+varieties of locks and breeches, and to come to an impartial
+decision, is a task the magnitude of which is not easily described.
+How many others who have been placed in somewhat similar positions
+must have felt the same ultimate confusion of mind, and perhaps at
+last, in sheer despair, plunged, and bought the first that came to
+hand, regretting for years afterwards that they had not bought this
+or that weapon, which had taken their fancy, but which some
+gunsmith interested in a patent had declared obsolete!
+
+D. settled the question, so far as he was concerned, by ordering two
+guns: one bored in the old style for ordinary shooting, and a choked
+gun of larger bore for the ducks. But all this trouble and
+investigation gave rise to several not altogether satisfactory
+reflections. For one thing, there seems a too great desire on the
+part of gunmakers to achieve a colossal reputation by means of some
+new patent, which is thrust on the notice of the sportsman and of
+the public generally at every step and turn. The patent very likely
+is an admirable thing, and quite fulfils the promise so far as the
+actual object in view is concerned. But it is immediately declared
+to supersede everything--no gun is of any use without it: you are
+compelled to purchase it whether or no, or you are given to
+understand that you are quite behind the age. The leading idea of
+the gunmaker nowadays is to turn out a hundred thousand guns of one
+particular pattern, like so many bales of cloth; everybody is to
+shoot with this, their speciality, and everything that has been
+previously done is totally ignored. The workman in the true sense of
+the word--the artist in guns--is either extinct, or hidden in an
+obscure corner. There is no individuality about modern guns. One is
+exactly like another. That is very well, and necessary for military
+arms, because an army must be supplied with a single pattern
+cartridge in order to simplify the difficulty of providing
+ammunition. They fail even in the matter of ornament. The
+design--if it can be called design--on one lock-plate is repeated on
+a thousand others, so with the hammers. There is no originality
+about a modern gun; as you handle it you are conscious that it is
+well put together, that the mechanism is perfect, the barrels true,
+but somehow it feels _hard_; it conveys the impression of being
+machine-made. You cannot feel the _hand_ of the maker anywhere, and
+the failure, the flatness, the formality of the supposed ornament,
+is depressing. The ancient harquebuss makers far surpassed the very
+best manufacturers of the present day. Their guns are really
+artistic--works of true art. The stocks of some of the German
+wheel-lock guns of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries are
+really beautiful specimens of carving and design. Their powder-horns
+are gems of workmanship--hunting-scenes cut out in ivory, the
+minutest detail rendered with life-like accuracy. They graved their
+stags and boars from Nature, not from conventional designs; the
+result is that we admire them now because Nature is constant, and
+her fashions endure. The conventional 'designs' on our lock-plates,
+etc., will in a few years be despised; they have no intrinsic
+beauty. The Arab of the desert, wild, untrammelled, ornaments his
+matchlock with turquoise. Our machine-made guns, double-barrel,
+breech-loading, double-grip, rebounding locks, first-choice stocks,
+laminated steel, or damascus barrels, choke-bore, and so forth,
+will, it is true, mow down the pheasants at the battue as the scythe
+cuts down the grass. There is slaughter in every line of them. But
+is slaughter everything? In my idea it is not, but very far from it.
+Were I offered the choice of participation in the bloodiest battue
+ever arranged--such as are reserved for princes--the very best
+position, and the best-finished and swiftest breech-loader invented,
+or the freedom of an English forest, to go forth at any time and
+shoot whatever I chose, untrammelled by any attendants, on condition
+that I only carried a wheel-lock, I should unhesitatingly select the
+second alternative. There would be an abiding pleasure in the very
+fact of using so beautiful a weapon--just in the very handling of
+it, to pass the fingers over the intricate and exquisite carving.
+There would be pleasure in winding up the lock with the spanner; in
+adjusting the pyrites to strike fire from the notches of the wheel;
+in priming from a delicate flask graven with stag and hounds. There
+would be delight in stealing from tree to tree, in creeping from
+bush to bush, through the bracken, keeping the wind carefully,
+noiselessly gliding forward--so silently that the woodpecker should
+not cease tapping in the beech, or the pigeon her hoarse call in the
+oak, till at last within range of the buck. And then! First, if the
+ball did not hit the vital spot, if it did not pass through the
+neck, or break the shoulder, inevitably he would be lost, for the
+round bullet would not break up like a shell, and smash the
+creature's flesh and bones into a ghastly jelly, as do the missiles
+from our nineteenth century express rifles. Secondly, if the wheel
+did not knock a spark out quickly, if the priming had not been kept
+dry, and did not ignite instantly, the aim might waver, and all the
+previous labour be lost. Something like skill would be necessary
+here. There would be art in the weapon itself, skill in the very
+loading, skill in the approach, nerve in holding the gun steady
+while the slow powder caught from the priming and expelled the ball.
+That would be sport. An imperfect weapon--well, yes; but the
+imperfect weapon would somehow harmonize with the forest, with the
+huge old hollow oaks, the beeches full of knot-holes, the mysterious
+thickets, the tall fern, the silence and solitude. It would make the
+forest seem a forest--such as existed hundreds of years ago; it
+would make the chase a real chase, not a foregone conclusion. It
+would equalize the chances, and give the buck 'law.' In short, it
+would be real shooting. Or with smaller game--I fancy I could hit a
+pheasant with a wheel-lock if I went alone, and _flushed the bird
+myself_. In that lies all the difference. If your birds are flushed
+by beaters, you may be on the watch, but that very watching unnerves
+by straining the nerves, and then the sudden rush and noise flusters
+you, and even with the best gun of modern construction you often
+miss. If you spring the bird yourself the noise may startle you, and
+yet somehow you settle down to your aim and drop him. With a
+wheel-lock, if I could get a tolerably clear view, I think I could
+bring him down. If only a brace rewarded a day's roaming under oak
+and beech, through fern and past thicket, I should be amply
+satisfied. With the antique weapon the spirit of the wood would
+enter into one. The chances of failure add zest to the pursuit. For
+slaughter, however, our modern guns are unsurpassed.
+
+Another point which occurs to one after such an overhauling of guns
+as I went through is the price charged for them. There does seem
+something very arbitrary in the charges demanded, and one cannot
+help a feeling that they bear no proportion to the real value or
+cost of production. It may, of course, be said that the wages of
+workmen are very high--although workmen as a mass have long been
+complaining that such is not really the case. The rent of premises
+in fashionable localities is also high, no doubt. For my part, I
+would quite as soon buy a gun in a village as in a crowded
+thoroughfare of the Metropolis; indeed rather sooner, since there
+would probably be a range attached where it could be tried. To be
+offered a range, as is often the case in London, half an hour
+out--which, with getting to the station and from the station at the
+other end, to the place and back, may practically mean half a
+day--is of little use. If you could pick up the gun in the shop,
+stroll outside and try it at once, it would be ten times more
+pleasant and satisfactory. A good gun is like the good wine of the
+proverb--if it were made in a village, to that village men would go
+or send for it. The materials for gun making are, surely, not very
+expensive--processes for cheapening steel and metal generally are
+now carried to such an extent, and the market for metals has fallen
+to an extraordinary extent. Machinery and steam-power to drive it
+is, no doubt, a very heavy item; but are we so anxious for machinery
+and machine-made guns? Are you and I anxious that ten thousand other
+persons should shoot with guns exactly, precisely like ours in every
+single particular? That is the meaning of machinery. It destroys the
+individuality of sport. We are all like so many soldiers in an army
+corps firing Government Martini-Henries. In the sporting ranks one
+does not want to be a private. I wonder some clever workman does not
+go and set himself up in some village where rent and premises are
+low, and where a range could be got close to his door, and
+deliberately set down to make a name for really first-rate guns, at
+a moderate price, and with some pretensions to individuality and
+beauty. There is water-power, which is cheaper than steam, running
+to waste all over the country now. The old gristmills, which may be
+found three or four in a single parish sometimes, are half of them
+falling into decay, because we eat American wheat now, which is
+ground in the city steam-mills, and a good deal imported ready
+ground as flour. Here and there one would think sufficient
+water-power might be obtained in this way. But even if we admit that
+great manufactories are extremely expensive to maintain, wages high,
+rent dear, premises in fashionable streets fabulously costly, yet
+even then there is something in the price of guns not quite the
+thing. You buy a gun and pay a long price for it: but if you attempt
+to sell it again you find it is the same as with jewellery, you can
+get hardly a third of its original cost. The intrinsic value of the
+gun then is less than half its advertised first cost-price. The
+second-hand gun offered to you for £20 has probably cost the dealer
+about £6, or £10 at the most. So that, manage it 'how you will,' you
+pay a sum quite out of proportion to the intrinsic value. It is all
+very well to talk about the market, custom of trade, supply and
+demand, and so forth, though some of the cries of the political
+economist (notably the Free Trade cry) are now beginning to be
+questioned. The value of a thing is what it will fetch, no doubt,
+and yet that is a doctrine which metes out half-justice only. It is
+justice to the seller, but, argue as sophistically as you like, it
+is _not_ justice to the purchaser.
+
+I should recommend any gentleman who is going to equip himself as a
+sportsman to ask himself before he starts the question that occurred
+to me too late in D.'s case: What kind of shooting am I likely to
+enjoy? Then, if not wishing to go to more expense than absolutely
+necessary, let him purchase a gun precisely suited to the game he
+will meet. As briefly observed before, if the sportsman takes his
+sport early in the year, and practically in the summer--August is
+certainly a summer month--he will like a light gun; and as the
+grouse at that time have not packed, and are not difficult of
+access, a light gun will answer quite as well as a heavy arm, whose
+powerful charges are not required, and which simply adds to the
+fatigue. Much lighter guns are used now than formerly; they do not
+last so long, but few of us now look forward forty years. A gun of
+6œ pounds' weight will be better than anything else for summer
+work. All sportsmen say it is a toy and so it is, but a very deadly
+one. The same weapon will equally well do for the first of September
+(unless the weather has been very bad), and for a few weeks of
+partridge-shooting. But if the sport comes later in the autumn, a
+heavier gun with a stronger charge (alluding to guns of the old
+style of boring) will be found useful. For shooting when the leaves
+are off a heavier gun has, perhaps, some advantages.
+
+Battue-shooting puts a great strain upon a gun, from the rapid and
+continuous firing, and a pheasant often requires a hard knock to
+grass him successfully. You never know, either, at what range you
+are likely to meet with him. It may be ten yards, it may be sixty;
+so that a strong charge, a long range, and considerable power of
+penetration are desirable, if it is wished to make a good
+performance. I recommend a powerful gun for pheasant-shooting,
+because probably in no other sport is a miss so annoying. The bird
+is large and in popular estimation, therefore ought not to get away.
+There is generally a party at the house at the time, and shots are
+sure to be talked about, good or bad, but especially the latter,
+which some men have a knack of noticing, though they may be
+apparently out of sight, and bring up against you in the pleasantest
+way possible: 'I say, you were rather in a fluster, weren't you,
+this morning? Nerves out of order--eh?' Now, is there anything so
+aggravating as to be asked about your nerves? It is, perhaps, from
+the operation of competition that pheasants, as a rule, get very
+little law allowed them. If you want to shine at this kind of sport,
+knock the bird over, no matter when you see him--if his tail brushes
+the muzzle of your gun: every head counts. The fact is, if a
+pheasant is allowed law, and really treated as game, he is not by
+any means so easy a bird to kill as may be supposed.
+
+If money is no particular object, of course the sportsman can allow
+himself a gun for every different kind of sport, although luxury in
+that respect is apt to bring with it its punishment, by making him
+but an indifferent shot with either of his weapons. But if anyone
+wishes to be a really good shot, to be equipped for almost every
+contingency, and yet not to go to great expense, the very best
+course to follow is to buy two good guns, one of the old style of
+boring, and the other nearly or quite choked. The first should be
+neither heavy nor light--a moderately weighted weapon, upon which
+thorough reliance may be placed up to fifty yards, and that under
+favourable circumstances may kill much farther. Choose it with care,
+pay a fair price for it, and adhere to it. This gun, with a little
+variation in the charge, will suit almost every kind of shooting,
+from snipe to pheasant. The choke-bore is the reserve gun, in case
+of specially long range and great penetration being required. It
+should, perhaps, be a size larger in the bore than the other.
+Twelve-bore for the ordinary gun, and ten for the second, will
+cover most contingencies. With a ten-bore choke, hares running wild
+on hills without cover, partridge coveys getting up at fifty or
+sixty yards in the same kind of country, grouse wild as hawks,
+ducks, plovers, and wild-fowl generally, are pretty well accessible.
+If not likely to meet with duck, a twelve-bore choke will do equally
+well. Thus armed, if opportunity offers, you may shoot anywhere in
+Europe. The cylinder-bore will carry an occasional ball for a boar,
+a wolf, or fallow-deer, though large shot out of the choke will,
+perhaps, be more effective--so far, at least, as small deer are
+concerned. If you can afford it, a spare gun (old-style boring) is a
+great comfort, in case of an accident to the mechanism.
+
+
+
+
+SKATING
+
+
+The rime of the early morning on the rail nearest the bank is easily
+brushed off by sliding the walking-stick along it, and then forms a
+convenient seat while the skates are fastened. An old hand selects
+his gimlet with the greatest care, for if too large the screw
+speedily works loose, if too small the thread, as it is frantically
+forced in or out by main strength, cuts and tears the leather. A bad
+gimlet has spoilt many a day's skating. Nor should the straps be
+drawn too tight at first, for if hauled up to the last hole at
+starting the blood cannot circulate, and the muscles of the foot
+become cramped. What miseries have not ladies heroically endured in
+this way at the hands of incompetent assistants! In half an hour's
+time the straps will have worked to the boot, and will bear pulling
+another hole or even more without pain. On skates thus fastened
+anything may be accomplished.
+
+Always put your own skates on, and put them on deliberately; for if
+you really mean skating in earnest, limbs, and even life, may depend
+on their running true, and not failing at a critical moment. The
+slope of the bank must be descended sideways--avoid the stones
+concealed by snow, for they will destroy the edge of the skate. When
+within a foot or so, leap on, and the impetus will carry you some
+yards out upon the lake, clear of the shadow of the bank and the
+willows above, out to where the ice gleams under the sunshine. A
+glance round shows that it is a solitude; the marks of skates that
+went past yesterday are visible, but no one has yet arrived: it is
+the time for an exploring expedition. Following the shore, note how
+every stone or stick that has been thrown on by thoughtless persons
+has sunk into and become firmly fixed in the ice. The slight heat of
+midday has radiated from the surface of the stone, causing the ice
+to melt around it, when it has sunk a little, and at night been
+frozen hard in that position, forming an immovable obstacle,
+extremely awkward to come into contact with. A few minutes and the
+marks of skates become less frequent, and in a short time almost
+cease, for the gregarious nature of man exhibits itself even on ice.
+One spot is crowded with people, and beyond that extends a broad
+expanse scarcely visited. Here a sand-bank rises almost to the
+surface, and the yellow sand beneath causes the ice to assume a
+lighter tint; beyond it, over the deep water, it is dark.
+
+Then a fir-copse bordering the shore shuts out the faintest breath
+of the north wind, and the surface in the bay thus sheltered is
+sleek to a degree. This is the place for figure-skating; the ice is
+perfect, and the wind cannot interfere with the balance. Here you
+may turn and revolve and twist and go through those endless
+evolutions and endless repetitions of curves which exercise so
+singular a fascination. Look at a common figure of 8 that a man has
+cut out! How many hundreds of times has he gone round and round
+those two narrow crossing loops or circles! No variation, no change;
+the art of it is to keep almost to the same groove, and not to make
+the figure broad and splay. Yet by the wearing away of the ice it is
+evident that a length of time has been spent thus for ever wheeling
+round. And when the skater visits the ice again, back he will come
+and resume the wheeling at intervals. On past a low waterfall where
+a brook runs in--the water has frozen right up to the cascade. A
+long stretch of marshy shore succeeds--now frozen hard enough, at
+other times not to be passed without sinking over the ankles in mud.
+The ice is rough with the aquatic weeds frozen in it, so that it is
+necessary to leave the shore some thirty yards. The lake widens, and
+yonder in the centre--scarcely within range of a deer-rifle--stand
+four or five disconsolate wild-duck watching every motion. They are
+quite unapproachable, but sometimes an unfortunate dabchick that has
+been discovered in a tuft of grass is hunted and struck down by
+sticks. A rabbit on ice can also be easily overtaken by a skater. If
+one should venture out from the furze there, and make for the copse
+opposite, put on the pace, and you will be speedily alongside. As he
+doubles quickly, however, it is not so easy to catch him when
+overtaken: still, it can be done. Rabbits previously netted are
+occasionally turned out on purpose for a course, and afford
+considerable sport, with a very fair chance--if dogs be eschewed--of
+gaining their liberty. But they must have 'law,' and the presence of
+a crowd spoils all; the poor animal is simply surrounded, and knows
+not where to run. Tracks of wild rabbits crossing the ice are
+frequent. Now, having gained the farthest extremity of the lake,
+pause a minute and take breath for a burst down the centre. The
+regular sound of the axe comes from the wood hard by, and every now
+and then the crash as some tall ash-pole falls to the ground, no
+more to bear the wood-pigeon's nest in spring, no more to impede the
+startled pheasant in autumn as he rises like a rocket till clear of
+the boughs.
+
+Now for it: the wind, hardly felt before under shelter of the banks
+and trees, strikes the chest like the blow of a strong man as you
+rush against it. The chest responds with a long-drawn heave, the
+pliable ribs bend outwards, and the cavity within enlarges, filled
+with the elastic air. The stride grows longer and longer--the
+momentum increases--the shadow slips over the surface; the fierce
+joy of reckless speed seizes on the mind. In the glow, and the
+speed, and the savage north wind, the old Norse spirit rises, and
+one feels a giant. Oh that such a sense of vigour--of the fulness of
+life--could but last!
+
+By now others have found their way to the shore; a crowd has already
+assembled at that spot which a gregarious instinct has marked out
+for the ice-fair, and approaching it speed must be slackened.
+Sounds of merry laughter, and the 'knock, knock' of the
+hockey-sticks arise. Ladies are gracefully gliding hither and
+thither. Dancing-parties are formed, and thus among friends the
+short winter's day passes too soon, and sunset is at hand. But how
+beautiful that sunset! Under the level beams of the sun the ice
+assumes a delicate rosy hue; yonder the white snow-covered hills to
+the eastward are rosy too. Above them the misty vapour thickening in
+the sky turns to the dull red the shepherd knows to mean another
+frost and another fine day. Westwards where the disc has just gone
+down, the white ridges of the hills stand out for the moment sharp
+against the sky, as if cut by the graver's tool. Then the vapours
+thicken; then, too, behind them, and slowly, the night falls.
+
+Come back again in a few hours' time. The laugh is still, the noise
+has fled, and the first sound of the skate on the black ice seems
+almost a desecration. Shadows stretch out and cover the once
+gleaming surface. But through the bare boughs of the great oak
+yonder the moon--almost full--looks athwart the lake, and will soon
+be high in the sky.
+
+
+
+
+MARLBOROUGH FOREST
+
+
+The great painter, Autumn, has just touched with the tip of his
+brush a branch of the beech-tree, here and there leaving an orange
+spot, and the green acorns are tinged with a faint yellow. The
+hedges, perfect mines of beauty, look almost red from a distance, so
+innumerable are the peggles.[1] Let not the modern Goths destroy our
+hedges, so typical of an English landscape, so full of all that can
+delight the eye and please the mind. Spare them, if only for the
+sake of the 'days when we went gipsying--a long time ago'; spare
+them for the children to gather the flowers of May and the
+blackberries of September.
+
+ [1] A Wiltshire name for hawthorn-berries.
+
+When the orange spot glows upon the beech, then the nuts are ripe,
+and the hawthorn-bushes are hung with festoons of the buff-coloured,
+heart-shaped leaves of a once-green creeper. That 'deepe and
+enclosed country of Northe Wiltes,' which old Clarendon, in his
+famous 'Civill Warre,' says the troops of King Charles had so much
+difficulty to hurry through, is pleasant to those who can linger by
+the wayside and the copse, and do not fear to hear the ordnance
+make the 'woods ring again,' though to this day a rusty old
+cannon-ball may sometimes be found under the dead brown leaves of
+Aldbourne Chase, where the skirmish took place before 'Newbury
+Battle.'
+
+Perhaps it is because no such outbursts of human passions have
+swept along beneath its trees that the 'Forest' is unsung by
+the poet and unvisited by the artist. Yet its very name is
+poetical--Savernake--_i.e._, savernes-acres--like the God's-acres
+of Longfellow. Saverne--a peculiar species of sweet fern;
+acre--land.' So we may call it 'Fern-land Forest,' and with truth,
+for but one step beneath those beeches away from the path plunges
+us to our shoulders in an ocean of bracken.
+
+The yellow stalks, stout and strong as wood, make walking through
+the brake difficult, and the route pursued devious, till, from the
+constant turning and twisting, the way is lost. For this is no
+narrow copse, but a veritable forest in which it is easy to lose
+oneself; and the stranger who attempts to pass it away from the
+beaten track must possess some of the Indian instinct which sees
+signs and directions in the sun and wind, in the trees and humble
+plants of the ground.
+
+And this is its great charm. The heart has a yearning for the
+unknown, a longing to penetrate the deep shadow and the winding
+glade, where, as it seems, no human foot has been.
+
+High overhead in the beech-tree the squirrel peeps down from behind
+a bough, his long bushy tail curled up over his back, and his bright
+eyes full of mischievous cunning. Listen, and you will hear the
+tap, tap of the woodpecker, and see! away he goes in undulating
+flight with a wild, unearthly chuckle, his green and gold plumage
+glancing in the sun, like the parrots of far-distant lands. He will
+alight in some open space upon an ant-hill, and lick up the red
+insects with his tongue. In the fir-tree there, what a chattering
+and fluttering of gaily-painted wings!--three or four jays are
+quarrelling noisily. These beautiful birds are slain by scores
+because of their hawk-like capacities for destruction of game, and
+because of the delicate colours of their feathers, which are used in
+fly-fishing.
+
+There darts across the glade a scared rabbit, straining each little
+limb for speed, almost rushing against us, a greater terror
+overcoming the less. In a moment there darts forth from the dried
+grass a fierce red-furred hunter, a very tiger to the rabbit tribe,
+with back slightly arched, bounding along, and sniffing the scent;
+another, and another, still a fourth--a whole pack of stoats (elder
+brothers of the smaller weasels). In vain will the rabbit trust to
+his speed, these untiring wolves will overtake him. In vain will he
+turn and double: their unerring noses will find him out. In vain the
+tunnels of the 'bury,' they will as surely come under ground as
+above. At last, wearied, panting, frightened almost to death, the
+timid creature will hide in a cul-de-sac, a hole that has no outlet,
+burying its head in the sand. Then the tiny bloodhounds will steal
+with swift, noiseless rush, and fasten upon the veins of the neck.
+What a rattling the wings of the pigeons make as they rise out of
+the trees in hot haste and alarm! As we pass a fir-copse we stoop
+down and look along the ground under the foliage. The sharp
+'needles' or leaves which fall will not decay, and they kill all
+vegetation, so that there is no underwood or herbage to obstruct the
+view. It is like looking into a vast cellar supported upon
+innumerable slender columns. The pheasants run swiftly away
+underneath.
+
+High up the cones are ripening--those mysterious emblems sculptured
+in the hands of the gods at Nineveh, perhaps typifying the secret of
+life. More bracken. What a strong, tall fern! it is like a miniature
+tree. So thick is the cover, a thousand archers might be hid in it
+easily. In this wild solitude, utterly separated from civilization,
+the whistle of an arrow would not surprise us--the shout of a savage
+before he hurled his spear would seem natural, and in keeping. What
+are those strange, clattering noises, like the sound of men fighting
+with wooden 'backswords'? Now it is near--now afar off--a spreading
+battle seems to be raging all round, but the combatants are out of
+sight. But, gently--step lightly, and avoid placing the foot on dead
+sticks, which break with a loud crack--softly peep round the trunk
+of this noble oak, whose hard furrowed bark defends it like armour.
+
+The red-deer! Two splendid stags are fighting--fighting for their
+lady-love, the timid doe. They rush at each other with head down and
+horns extended; the horns meet and rattle; they fence with them
+skilfully. This was the cause of the noise. It is the tilting
+season--these tournaments between the knights of the forest are
+going on all around. There is just a trifle of danger in approaching
+these combatants, but not much, just enough to make the forest still
+more enticing; none whatever to those who use common caution. At the
+noise of our footsteps away go the stags, their 'branching antlers'
+seen high above the tall fern, bounding over the ground in a series
+of jumps, all four feet leaving the earth at once. There are immense
+oaks that we come to now, each with an open space beneath it, where
+Titania and the fairies may dance their rings at night. These
+enormous trunks--what _time_ they represent! To us, each hour is of
+consequence, especially in this modern day, which has invented the
+detestable creed that time is money. But time is not money to
+Nature. She never hastens. Slowly from the tiny acorn grew up this
+gigantic trunk, and spread abroad those limbs which in themselves
+are trees. And from the trunk itself to the smallest leaf, every
+infinitesimal atom of which it is composed was perfected slowly,
+gradually--there was no hurry, no attempt to discount effect. A
+little farther and the ground declines; through the tall fern we
+come upon a valley. But the soft warm sunshine, the stillness, the
+solitude, have induced an irresistible idleness. Let us lie down
+upon the fern, on the edge of the green vale, and gaze up at the
+slow clouds as they drift across the blue vault.
+
+The subtle influence of Nature penetrates every limb and every vein,
+fills the soul with a perfect contentment, an absence of all wish
+except to lie there, half in sunshine, half in shade, for ever in a
+Nirvana of indifference to all but the exquisite delight of simply
+_living_. The wind in the tree-tops overhead sighs in soft music,
+and ever and anon a leaf falls with a slight rustle to mark time.
+
+The clouds go by in rhythmic motion, the ferns whisper verses in the
+ear, the beams of the wondrous sun in endless song, for he, also,
+
+ In his motion like an angel sings,
+ Still quiring to the young-eyed cherubim,
+ Such harmony is in immortal souls!
+
+Time is to us now no more than it was to the oak; we have no
+consciousness of it. Only we feel the broad earth beneath us, and as
+to the ancient giant, so there passes through us a strength renewing
+itself, of vital energy flowing into the frame. It may be an hour,
+it may be two hours, when, without the aid of sound or sight, we
+become aware by an indescribable, supersensuous perception that
+living creatures are approaching. Sit up without noise and look:
+there is a herd of deer feeding down the narrow valley close at
+hand, within a stone's-throw. And these are deer indeed--no puny
+creatures, but the 'tall deer' that William the Conqueror loved 'as
+if he were their father.' Fawns are darting here and there, frisking
+round the does. How many may there be in this herd? Fifty, perhaps
+more. Nor is this a single isolated instance, but dozens more of
+such herds may be found in this true old English forest, all running
+free and unconstrained.
+
+But the sun gets low. Following this broad green drive, it leads us
+past vistas of endless glades, going no man knows where, into
+shadow and gloom; past grand old oaks; past places where the edge
+of a veritable wilderness comes up to the trees--a wilderness of
+gnarled hawthorn trunks of unknown ages, of holly with shining
+metallic-green leaves, and hazel-bushes. Past tall trees bearing the
+edible chestnut in prickly clusters; past maples which in a little
+while will be painted in crimson and gold, with the deer peeping out
+of the fern everywhere, and once, perhaps, catching a glimpse of a
+shy, beautiful, milk-white doe. Past a huge hollow trunk in the
+midst of a greensward, where merry picnic parties under the 'King
+Oak' tread the social quadrille, or whirl waltzes to the harp and
+flute. For there are certain spots even in this grand solitude
+consecrated to Cytherea and Bacchus, as he is now worshipped in
+champagne. And where can graceful forms look finer, happy eyes more
+bright, than in this natural ballroom, under its incomparable roof
+of blue, supported upon living columns of stately trees? Still
+onward, into a gravel carriage-road now, returning by degrees to
+civilization, and here, with happy judgment, the hand of man has
+aided Nature. Far as the eye can see extends an avenue of beech,
+passing right through the forest. The tall, smooth trunks rise up to
+a great height, and then branch overhead, looking like the roof of a
+Gothic cathedral. The growth is so regular and so perfect that the
+comparison springs unbidden to the lip, and here, if anywhere, that
+order of architecture might have taken its inspiration. There is a
+continuous Gothic arch of green for miles, beneath which one may
+drive or walk, as in the aisles of a forest abbey. But it is
+impossible to even mention all the beauties of this place within so
+short a space. It must suffice to say that the visitor may walk for
+whole days in this great wood, and never pass the same spot twice.
+No gates or jealous walls will bar his progress. As the fancy seizes
+him, so he may wander. If he has a taste for archæological studies,
+especially the prehistoric, the edge of the forest melts away upon
+downs that bear grander specimens than can be seen elsewhere.
+Stonehenge and Avebury are near. The trout-fisher can approach very
+close to it. The rail gives easy communication, but has not spoilt
+the seclusion.
+
+Monsieur Lesseps, of Suez Canal fame, is reported to have said that
+Marlborough Forest was the finest he had seen in Europe. Certainly
+no one who had not seen it would believe that a forest still existed
+in the very heart of Southern England so completely recalling those
+woods and 'chases' upon which the ancient feudal monarchs set such
+store.
+
+
+
+
+VILLAGE CHURCHES
+
+
+The black rooks are busy in the old oak-trees, carrying away the
+brown acorns one by one in their strong beaks to some open place
+where, undisturbed, they can feast upon the fruit. The nuts have
+fallen from the boughs, and the mice garner them out of the ditches;
+but the blue-black sloes cling tight to the thorn-branch still. The
+first frost has withered up the weak sap left in the leaves, and
+they whirl away in yellow clouds before the gusts of wind. It is the
+season, the hour of half-sorrowful, half-mystic thought, when the
+past becomes a reality and the present a dream, and unbidden
+memories of sunny days and sunny faces, seen when life was all
+spring, float around:
+
+ Dim dream-like forms! your shadowy train
+ Around me gathers once again;
+ The same as in life's morning hour,
+ Before my troubled gaze you passed.
+ * * * * *
+ Forms known in happy days you bring,
+ And much-loved shades amid you spring,
+ Like a tradition, half expired,
+ Worn out with many a passing year.
+
+In so busy a land as ours there is no place where the mind can, as
+it were, turn in upon itself so fully as in the silence and solitude
+of a village church.
+
+There is no ponderous vastness, no oppressive weight of gloomy roof,
+no weird cavernous crypts, as in the cathedral; only a _visible_
+silence, which at once isolates the soul, separates it from external
+present influences, and compels it, in falling back upon itself, to
+recognize its own depth and powers. In daily life we sit as in a
+vast library filled with tomes, hurriedly writing frivolous letters
+upon 'vexatious nothings,' snatching our food and slumber, for ever
+rushing forward with beating pulse, never able to turn our gaze away
+from the goal to examine the great storehouse, the library around
+us. Upon the infinitely delicate organization of the brain
+innumerable pictures are hourly painted; these, too, we hurry by,
+ignoring them, pushing them back into oblivion. But here, in
+silence, they pass again before the gaze. Let no man know for what
+real purpose we come here; tell the aged clerk our business is with
+brasses and inscriptions, press half a crown into his hand, and let
+him pass to his potato-digging. There is one advantage at least in
+the closing of the church on week-days, so much complained of--to
+those who do visit it there is a certainty that their thoughts will
+not be disturbed. And the sense of man's presence has departed from
+the walls and oaken seats; the dust here is not the dust of the
+highway, of the quick footstep; it is the dust of the past. The
+ancient heavy key creaks in the cumbrous lock, and the iron
+latch-ring has worn a deep groove in the solid stone. The narrow
+nail-studded door of black oak yields slowly to the push--it is not
+easy to enter, not easy to quit the present--but once close it, and
+the living world is gone. The very style of ornament upon the door,
+the broad-headed nails, has come down from the remotest antiquity.
+After the battle, says the rude bard in the Saxon chronicle,
+
+ The Northmen departed
+ In their nailed barks,
+
+and, earlier still, the treacherous troop that seized the sleeping
+magician in iron, Wayland the Smith, were clad in 'nailed armour,'
+in both instances meaning ornamented with nails. Incidentally, it
+may be noted that, until very recently, at least one village church
+in England had part of the skin of a Dane nailed to the door--a
+stern reminder of the days when 'the Pagans' harried the land. This
+narrow window, deep in the thick wall, has no painted magnificence
+to boast of; but as you sit beside it in the square, high-sided pew,
+it possesses a human interest which even art cannot supply.
+
+The tall grass growing rank on the graves without rustles as it
+waves to and fro in the wind against the small diamond panes, yellow
+and green with age--rustles with a melancholy sound; for we know
+that this window was once far above the ground, but the earth has
+risen till nearly on a level--risen from the accumulation of human
+remains. Yet, but a day or two before, on the Sunday morning, in
+this pew, bright, restless children smiled at each other, exchanged
+guilty pushes, while the sunbeams from the arrow-slit above shone
+upon their golden hair.
+
+Let us not think of this further, but dimly through the window, 'as
+through a glass darkly,' see the green yew with its red berries, and
+afar the elms and beeches, brown and yellow. The steep down rises
+over them, and the moving grey patch upon it is a flock of sheep.
+The white wall is cold and damp, and the beams of the roof overhead,
+though the varnish is gone from them, are dark with slow decay.
+
+In the recess lies the figure of a knight in armour, rudely carved,
+beside his lady, still more rudely rendered in her stiff robes, and
+of him an ill-spelt inscription proudly records that he 'builded ye
+greate howse at'--no matter where; but history records that cruel
+war wrapped it in flames before half a generation was gone, so that
+the boast of his building great houses reads as a bitter mockery.
+There stands opposite a grander monument to a mighty earl, and over
+it hangs a breastplate and gauntlets of steel.
+
+The villagers will tell that in yonder deep shady 'combe' or valley,
+in the thick hazel-bushes, when the 'beetle with his drowsy hum'
+rises through the night air, there comes the wicked old earl,
+wearing this very breastplate, these iron gloves, to expiate one
+evil deed of yore. And if we sit in this pew long enough, till the
+mind is magnetized with the spirit of the past, till the early
+evening sends its shadowy troops to fill the distant corners of the
+silent church, then, perhaps, there may come to us forms gliding
+noiselessly over the stone pavement of the aisles--forms not
+repelling or ghastly, but filling us with an eager curiosity. Then
+through the slit made for that very purpose centuries since, when
+the pew was in a family chapel--through the slit in the pillar, we
+may see cowled monks assemble at the altar, muttering as magicians
+might over vessels of gold. The clank of scabbards upon the stones
+is stilled, the rustle of gowns is silent; if there is a sound, it
+is of subdued sobs, as the aged monk blesses the troop on the eve of
+their march. Not even yet has the stern idol of war ceased to demand
+its victims; even yet brave hearts and noble minds must perish, and
+leave sterile the hopes of the elders and the love of woman. There
+is still light enough left to read the few simple lines on the plain
+marble slab, telling how 'Lieutenant ----,' at Inkerman, at Lucknow,
+or, later still, at Coomassie, fell doing his duty. And these plain
+slabs are dearer to us far than all the sculptured grandeur, and the
+titles and pomp of belted earl and knight; their simple words go
+straighter to our hearts than all the quaint curt Latin of the olden
+time.
+
+The belfry door is ajar--those winding stairs are not easy of
+access. The edges are worn away, and the steps strewn with small
+sticks of wood; sticks once used by the jackdaws in building their
+nests in the tower. It is needful to take much care, lest the foot
+should stumble in the semi-darkness. Listen! there is now a slight
+sound: it is the dull ticking of the old, old clock above. It is the
+only thing with motion here; all else is still, and even its motion
+is not life. A strange old clock, a study in itself; all the works
+open and visible, simple, but ingenious. For a hundred years it has
+carried round the one hour-hand upon the square-faced dial without,
+marking every second of time for a century with its pendulum. Here,
+too, are the bells, and one, the chief bell, is a noble tenor, a
+mighty maker of sound. Its curves are full and beautiful, its colour
+clear; its tone, if you do but tap it, sonorous, yet not harsh. It
+is an artistic bell. Round the rim runs a rhyme in the monkish
+tongue, which has a chime in the words, recording the donor, and
+breathing a prayer for his soul. In the day when this bell was made
+men put their souls into their works. Their one great object was not
+to turn out 100,000 all alike, it was rarely they made two alike.
+Their one great object was to construct a work which should carry
+their very spirit in it, which should excel all similar works, and
+cause men in after-times to inquire with wonder for the maker's
+name, whether it was such a common thing as a knife-handle, or a
+bell, or a ship. Longfellow has caught the spirit well in the saga
+of the 'Long Serpent,' where the builder of the vessel listens to
+axe and hammer:
+
+ All this tumult heard the master,
+ It was music to his ear;
+ Fancy whispered all the faster,
+ 'Men shall hear of Thorberg Skafting
+ For a hundred year!'
+
+Would that there were more of this spirit in the workshops of our
+day! They did not, when such a work was finished, hasten to blaze it
+abroad with trumpet and shouting; it was not carried to the topmost
+pinnacle of the mountain in sight of all the kingdoms of the earth.
+They were contented with the result of their labour, and cared
+little where it was placed or who saw it; and so it is that some of
+the finest-toned bells in the world are at this moment to be found
+in village churches; and for so local a fame the maker worked as
+truly, and in as careful a manner, as if he had known his bell was
+to be hung in St. Peter's, at Rome. This was the true spirit of art.
+Yet it is not altogether pleasant to contemplate this bell; the mind
+cannot but reflect upon the length of time it has survived those to
+whose joys or sorrows it has lent a passing utterance, and who are
+dust in the yard beneath.
+
+ For full five hundred years I've swung
+ In my old grey turret high,
+ And many a changing theme I've sung
+ As the time went stealing by.
+
+Even the 'old grey turret' shows more signs of age and of decay than
+the bell, for it is strengthened with iron clamps and rods to bind
+its feeble walls together. Of the pavements, whose flagstones are
+monuments, the dates and names worn by footsteps; of the vaults
+beneath, with their grim and ghastly traditions of coffins moved out
+of place, as was supposed, by supernatural agency, but, as
+explained, by water; of the thick walls, in which, in at least one
+village church, the trembling victim of priestly cruelty was immured
+alive--of these and a thousand other matters that suggest themselves
+there is no time to speak.
+
+But just a word must be spared to notice one lovely spot where two
+village churches stand not a hundred yards apart, separated by a
+stream, both in the hands of one Vicar, whose 'cure' is,
+nevertheless, so scant of souls that service in the morning in one
+and in the evening in the other church is amply sufficient. And
+where is there a place where springtime possesses such a tender yet
+melancholy interest to the heart as in a village churchyard, where
+the budding leaves and flowers in the grass may naturally be taken
+as symbolical of a still more beautiful springtime yet in store for
+the soul?
+
+
+
+
+BIRDS OF SPRING
+
+
+The birds of spring come as imperceptibly as the leaves. One by one
+the buds open on hawthorn and willow, till all at once the hedges
+appear green, and so the birds steal quietly into the bushes and
+trees, till by-and-by a chorus fills the wood, and each warm shower
+is welcomed with varied song. To many, the majority of spring-birds
+are really unknown; the cuckoo, the nightingale, and the swallow,
+are all with which they are acquainted, and these three make the
+summer. The loud cuckoo cannot be overlooked by anyone passing even
+a short time in the fields; the nightingale is so familiar in verse
+that everyone tries to hear it; and the swallows enter the towns and
+twitter at the chimney-top. But these are really only the principal
+representatives of the crowd of birds that flock to our hedges in
+the early summer; and perhaps it would be accurate to say that no
+other area of equal extent, either in Europe or elsewhere, receives
+so many feathered visitors. The English climate is the established
+subject of abuse, yet it is the climate most preferred and sought by
+the birds, who have the choice of immense continents.
+
+Nothing that I have ever read of, or seen, or that I expect to see,
+equals the beauty and the delight of a summer spent in our woods
+and meadows. Green leaves and grass, and sunshine, blue skies, and
+sweet brooks--there is nothing to approach it; it is no wonder the
+birds are tempted to us. The food they find is so abundant, that
+after all their efforts, little apparent diminution can be noticed;
+to this fertile and lovely country, therefore, they hasten every
+year. It might be said that the spring-birds begin to come to us in
+the autumn, as early as October, when hedge-sparrows and
+golden-crested wrens, larks, blackbirds, and thrushes, and many
+others, float over on the gales from the coasts of Norway. Their
+numbers, especially of the smaller birds, such as larks, are
+immense, and their line of flight so extended that it strikes our
+shores for a distance of two hundred miles. The vastness of these
+numbers, indeed, makes me question whether they all come from
+Scandinavia. That is their route; Norway seems to be the last land
+they see before crossing; but I think it possible that their
+original homes may have been farther still. Though many go back in
+the spring, many individuals remain here, and rejoice in the plenty
+of the hedgerows. As all roads of old time led to Rome, so do
+bird-routes lead to these islands. Some of these birds appear to
+pair in November, and so have settled their courtship long before
+the crocuses of St. Valentine. Much difference is apparent in the
+dates recorded of the arrivals in spring; they vary year by year,
+and now one and now another bird presents itself first, so that I
+shall not in these notes attempt to arrange them in strict order.
+
+One of the first noticeable in southern fields is the common
+wagtail. When his shrill note is heard echoing against the walls of
+the outhouses as he rises from the ground, the carters and ploughmen
+know that there will not be much more frost. If icicles hang from
+the thatched eaves, they will not long hang, but melt before the
+softer wind. The bitter part of winter is over. The wagtail is a
+house-bird, making the houses or cattle-pens its centre, and
+remaining about them for months. There is not a farmhouse in the
+South of England without its summer pair of wagtails--not more than
+one pair, as a rule, for they are not gregarious till winter; but
+considering that every farmhouse has its pair, their numbers must be
+really large.
+
+Where wheatears frequent, their return is very marked; they appear
+suddenly in the gardens and open places, and cannot be overlooked.
+Swallows return one by one at first, and we get used to them by
+degrees. The wheatears seem to drop out of the night, and to be
+showered down on the ground in the morning. A white bar on the tail
+renders them conspicuous, for at that time much of the surface of
+the earth is bare and dark. Naturally birds of the wildest and most
+open country, they yet show no dread, but approach the houses
+closely. They are local in their habits, or perhaps follow a broad
+but well-defined route of migration; so that while common in one
+place, they are rare in others. In two localities with which I am
+familiar, and know every path, I never saw a wheatear. I heard of
+them occasionally as passing over, but they were not birds of the
+district. In Sussex, on the contrary, the wheatear is as regularly
+seen as the blackbird; and in the spring and summer you cannot go
+for a walk without finding them. They change their ground three
+times: first, on arrival, they feed in the gardens and arable
+fields; next, they go up on the hills; lastly, they return to the
+coast, and frequent the extreme edge of the cliffs and the land by
+the shore. Every bird has its different manner; I do not know how
+else to express it. Now, the wheatears move in numbers, and yet not
+in concert; in spring, perhaps twenty may be counted in sight at
+once on the ground, feeding together and yet quite separate; just
+opposite in manner to starlings, who feed side by side and rise and
+fly as one. Every wheatear feeds by himself, a space between him and
+his neighbour, dotted about, and yet they obviously have a certain
+amount of mutual understanding: they recognize that they belong to
+the same family, but maintain their individuality. On the hills in
+their breeding season they act in the same way: each pair has a wide
+piece of turf, sometimes many acres. But if you see one pair, it is
+certain that other pairs are in the neighbourhood. In their
+breeding-grounds they will not permit a man to approach so near as
+when they arrive, or as when the nesting is over. At the time of
+their arrival, anyone can walk up within a short distance; so,
+again, in autumn. During the nesting-time the wheatear perches on a
+molehill, or a large flint, or any slight elevation above the open
+surface of the downs, and allows no one to come closer than fifty
+yards.
+
+The hedge-sparrows, that creep about the bushes of the hedgerow as
+mice creep about the banks, are early in spring joined by the
+whitethroats, almost the first hedge-birds to return. The thicker
+the undergrowth of nettles and wild parsley, rushes and rough
+grasses, the more the whitethroat likes the spot. Amongst this
+tangled mass he lives and feeds, slipping about under the brambles
+and ferns as rapidly as if the way was clear. Loudest of all, the
+chiff-chaff sings in the ash woods, bare and leafless, while yet the
+sharp winds rush between the poles, rattling them together, and
+bringing down the dead twigs to the earth. The violets are difficult
+to find, few, and scattered; but his clear note rings in the hushes
+of the eastern breeze, encouraging the flowers. It is very pleasant
+indeed to hear him. One's hands are dry, and the skin rough with the
+east wind; the trunks of the trees look dry, and the lichens have
+shrivelled on the bark; the brook looks dark; grey dust rises and
+drifts, and the grey clouds hurry over; but the chiff-chaff sings,
+and it is certainly spring. The first green leaves which the elder
+put forth in January have been burned up by frost, and the woodbine,
+which looked as if it would soon be entirely green then, has been
+checked, and remains a promise only. The chiff-chaff tells the buds
+of the coming April rains and the sweet soft intervals of warm sun.
+He is a sure forerunner. He defies the bitter wind; his little heart
+is as true as steel. He is one of the birds in which I feel a
+personal interest, as if I could converse with him. The willow-wren,
+his friend, comes later, and has a gentler, plaintive song.
+
+Meadow-pipits are not migrants in the sense that the swallows are;
+but they move about and so change their localities that when they
+come back they have much of the interest of a spring-bird. They rise
+from the ground and sing in the air like larks, but not at such a
+height, nor is the song so beautiful. These, too, are early birds.
+They often frequent very exposed places, as the side of a hill where
+the air is keen, and where one would not expect to meet with so
+lively a little creature. The pond has not yet any of the growths
+that will presently render its margin green; the willow-herbs are
+still low, the aquatic grasses have not become strong, and the
+osiers are without leaf. If examined closely, evidences of growth
+would be found everywhere around it; but as yet the surface is open,
+and it looks cold. Along the brook the shoals are visible, as the
+flags have not risen from the stems which were cut down in the
+autumn. In the sedges, however, the first young shoots are thrusting
+up, and the reeds have started slender green stalks tipped with the
+first leaves. At the verge of the water, a thick green plant of
+marsh-marigold has one or two great golden flowers open. This is the
+appearance of his home when the sedge-reedling returns to it.
+Sometimes he may be seen flitting across the pond, or perched for a
+moment on an exposed branch; but he quickly returns to the dry
+sedges or the bushes, or climbs in and out the willow-stoles. It is
+too bare and open for him at the pond, or even by the brookside. So
+much does he love concealment, that although to be near the water is
+his habit, for a while he prefers to keep back among the bushes. As
+the reeds and reed canary-grass come up and form a cover--as the
+sedges grow green and advance to the edge of the water--as the
+sword-flags lift up and expand, opening from a centre, the
+sedge-reedling issues from the bushes and enters these vigorous
+growths, on which he perches, and about which he climbs as if they
+were trees. In the pleasant mornings, when the sun grows warm about
+eleven o'clock, he calls and sings with scarcely a cessation, and is
+answered by his companions up and down the stream. He does but just
+interrupt his search for food to sing; he stays a moment, calls, and
+immediately resumes his prying into every crevice of the branches
+and stoles. The thrush often sits on a bough and sings for a length
+of time, apart from his food, and without thinking of it, absorbed
+in his song, and full of the sweetness of the day. These restless
+sedge-reedlings cannot pause; their little feet are for ever at
+work, climbing about the willow-stoles where the wands spring from
+the trunk; they never reflect; they are always engaged. This
+restlessness is to them a great pleasure; they are filled with the
+life which the sun gives, and express it in every motion; they are
+so joyful, they cannot be still. Step into the osier-bed amongst
+them gently; they will chirp--a note like a sparrow's--just in
+front, and only recede a yard at a time as you push through the tall
+grass, flags, and underwood. Stand where you can see the brook, not
+too near, but so as to see it through a fringe of sedges and
+willows. The pink lychnis or ragged robin grows among the grasses;
+the iris flowers higher on the shore. The water-vole comes swimming
+past, on his way to nibble the green weeds in the stream round about
+the great branch which fell two winters since, and remains in the
+water. Aquatic plants take root in its shelter. There, too, a
+moorhen goes, sometimes diving under the bough. A blackbird flies up
+to drink or bathe, never at the grassy edge, but always choosing a
+spot where he can get at the stream free from obstruction. The sound
+of many birds singing comes from the hedge across the meadow; it
+mingles with the rush of the water through a drawn hatch--finches
+and linnets, thrush and chiff-chaff, wren and whitethroat, and
+others farther away, whose louder notes only reach. The singing is
+so mixed and interwoven, and is made of so many notes, it seems as
+if it were the leaves singing--the countless leaves--as if they had
+voices.
+
+A brightly-coloured bird, the redstart, appears suddenly in spring,
+like a flower that has bloomed before the bud was noticed. Red is
+his chief colour, and as he rushes out from his perch to take an
+insect on the wing, he looks like a red streak. These birds
+sometimes nest near farm-houses in the rickyards, sometimes by
+copses, and sometimes in the deepest and most secluded combes or
+glens, the farthest places from habitation; so that they cannot be
+said to have any preference, as so many birds have, for a particular
+kind of locality; but they return year by year to the places they
+have chosen. The return of the corncrake or landrail is quickly
+recognized by the noise he makes in the grass; he is the noisiest of
+all the spring-birds. The return of the goat-sucker is hardly
+noticed at first. This is not at all a rare, but rather a local
+bird, well known in many places, but in others unnoticed, except by
+those who feel a special interest. A bird must be common and
+plentiful before people generally observe it, so that there are many
+of the labouring class who have never seen the goat-sucker, or would
+say so, if you asked them.
+
+Few observe the migration of the turtle-doves, perhaps confusing
+them with the wood-pigeons, which stay in the fields all the winter.
+By the time the sap is well up in the oaks all the birds have
+arrived, and the tremulous cooing of the turtle-dove is heard by
+those engaged in barking the felled trees. The sap rises slowly in
+the oaks, moving gradually through the minute interstices or
+capillary tubes of this close-grained wood; the softer timber-trees
+are full of it long before the oak; and when the oak is putting
+forth its leaves it is high spring. Doves stay so much at this time
+in the great hawthorns of the hedgerows and at the edge of the
+copses that they are seldom noticed, though comparatively large
+birds. They are easily seen by any who wish; the 'coo-coo' tells
+where they are; and in walking gently to find them, many other
+lesser birds will be observed. A wryneck may be caught sight of on a
+bough overhead; a black-headed bunting, in the hedge where there is
+a wet ditch and rushes; a blackcap, in the birches; and the
+'zee-zee-zee' of the tree-pipit by the oaks just through the narrow
+copse.
+
+This is the most pleasant and the best way to observe--to have an
+object, when so many things will be seen that would have been passed
+unnoticed. To steal softly along the hedgerow, keeping out of sight
+as much as possible, pausing now and then to listen as the 'coo-coo'
+is approached; and then, when near enough to see the doves, to
+remain quiet behind a tree, is the surest way to see everything
+else. The thrush will not move from her nest if passed so quietly;
+the chaffinch's lichen-made nest will be caught sight of against the
+elm-trunk--it would escape notice otherwise; the whitethroat may be
+watched in the nettles almost underneath; a rabbit will sit on his
+haunches and look at you from among the bare green stalks of brake
+rising; mice will rustle under the ground-ivy's purple flowers; a
+mole perhaps may be seen, for at this time they often leave their
+burrows and run along the surface; and, indeed, so numerous are the
+sights and sounds and interesting things, that you will soon be
+conscious of the fact that, while you watch one, two or three more
+are escaping you. It would be the same with any other search as well
+as the dove; I choose the dove because by then all the other
+creatures are come and are busy, and because it is a fairly large
+bird with a distinctive note, and consequently a good guide.
+
+But these are not all the spring-birds: there are the whinchats,
+fly-catchers, sandpipers, ring-ousels, and others that are
+occasional or rare. There is not a corner of the fields, woods,
+streams, or hills, which does not receive a new inhabitant: the
+sandpiper comes to the open sandy margins of the pool; the
+fly-catcher, to the old post by the garden; the whinchat, to the
+furze; the tree-pipit, to the oaks, where their boughs overhang
+meadow or cornfield; the sedge-reedling, to the osiers; the dove, to
+the thick hedgerows; the wheatear, to the hills; and I see I have
+overlooked the butcher-bird or shrike, as, indeed, in writing of
+these things one is certain to overlook something, so wide is the
+subject. Many of the spring-birds do not sing on their first
+arrival, but stay a little while; by that time others are here.
+Grass-blade comes up by grass-blade till the meadows are freshly
+green; leaf comes forth by leaf till the trees are covered; and,
+like the leaves, the birds gently take their places, till the hedges
+are imperceptibly filled.
+
+
+
+
+THE SPRING OF THE YEAR
+
+
+'There's the cuckoo!' Everyone looked up and listened as the notes
+came indoors from the copse by the garden. He had returned to the
+same spot for the fourth time. The tallest birch-tree--it is as tall
+as an elm--stands close to the hedge, about three parts of the way
+up it, and it is just round there that the cuckoo generally sings.
+From the garden gate it is only a hundred yards to this tree,
+walking beside the hedge which extends all the way, so that the very
+first time the cuckoo calls upon his arrival he is certain to be
+heard. His voice travels that little distance with ease, and can be
+heard in every room. This year (1881) he came back to the copse on
+April 27, just ten days after I first heard one in the fields by
+Worcester Park. The difference in time is usual; the bird which
+frequents this copse does not arrive there till a week or so after
+others in the neighbourhood may be heard calling. So marked is the
+interval that once or twice I began to think the copse would be
+deserted--there were cuckoos crying all round in the fields, but
+none came near. He has, however, always returned, and this
+difference in time makes his notes all the more remarked. I have,
+therefore, always two dates for the cuckoo: one, when I first hear
+the note, no matter where, and the second, when the copse bird
+sings. When he once comes he continues so long as he stays in this
+country, visiting the spot every day, sometimes singing for a few
+minutes, sometimes for an hour, and one season he seemed to call
+every morning and all the morning long. In the copse the ring of the
+two notes is a little toned down and lost by passing through the
+boughs, which hold and check the vibration of the sound. One year a
+detached ash in Cooper's Field, not fifty yards from the houses, was
+a favourite resort, and while perched there the notes echoed along
+the buildings, one following the other as waves roll on the summer
+sands. Flying from the ash to the copse, or along the copse hedge,
+the cuckoo that year was as often seen as the sparrows, and as
+little notice was taken of him. Several times cuckoos have flown
+over this house, but just clearing the roof, and descending directly
+they were over to the copse. He has not called so much this year
+yet, but on the evening of May 8 he was crying in the copse at
+half-past eight while the moon was shining.
+
+On the morning of May 2, standing in the garden, or at the window of
+any of the rooms facing south, you could hear five birds calling
+together. The cuckoo was calling not far from the tallest birch;
+there was a turtle-dove cooing in the copse much closer; and a
+wood-pigeon overpowered the dove's soft voice every two or three
+minutes--the pigeon was not fifty yards distant; a wryneck was
+perched up in an oak at the end of the garden, and uttered his
+peculiar note from time to time, and a nightingale was singing on
+Tolworth Common, just opposite the house, though on the other side.
+These were all audible, sometimes together, sometimes alternately;
+and if you went to the northern windows or the front door, looking
+towards the common, then you might also hear the chatter of a
+brook-sparrow. The dove has a way of gurgling his coo in the throat.
+The wryneck's 'kie-kie-kie,' the last syllable plaintively
+prolonged, is not like the call or songs of other birds; it reminds
+one of the peacock's strange scream, not in its actual sound, but
+its singularity. When it is suddenly heard from the midst of the
+thick green hedges of a summer's day, the bird itself unseen, it has
+a weird sound, which does not accord, like the blackbird's whistle,
+with our trees; it seems as if some tropical bird had wandered
+hither. I have heard the wryneck calling in the oak at the end of
+the garden every morning this season before rising, and suspect,
+from his constant presence, that a nest will be built close by. Last
+year the wryneck was a scarce bird in this neighbourhood; in all my
+walks I heard but two or three, and at long intervals. This year
+there are plenty; I hear them in almost every walk I take. There is
+one in the orchard beside the Red Lion Inn; another frequents the
+hedges and trees behind St. Matthew's Church; up Claygate Lane there
+is another--the third or fourth gateway on the left side is the
+place to listen. One year a pair built, I am sure, close to the
+cottage which stands by itself near the road on Tolworth Common. I
+saw them daily perched on the trees in front, and heard them every
+time I passed. There were not many, or we did not notice them, at
+home, and therefore I have observed them with interest. Now there is
+one every morning at the end of the garden. This nightingale, too,
+that sings on Tolworth Common just opposite, returns there every
+year, and, like the cuckoo to the copse, he is late in his
+arrival--at least a week later than other nightingales whose haunts
+are not far off. His cover is in some young birch-trees, which form
+a leafy thicket among the furze. On the contrary, the brook-sparrow,
+or sedge-reedling, that sings there is the first, I think, of all
+his species to return in this place. He comes so soon that,
+remembering the usual date in other districts, I have more than once
+tried to persuade myself that I was mistaken, and that it was not
+the sedge-bird, but some other. But he has a note that it is not
+possible to confuse, and as it has happened several seasons running,
+this early appearance, there can be no doubt it is a fixed period
+with him. These two, the sedge-bird and the nightingale, have their
+homes so near together that the one often sings in the branches
+above, while the other chatters in the underwood beneath.
+
+Besides these, before I get up I hear now a wren regularly. Little
+as he is, his notes rise in a crescendo above all; he sings on a
+small twig growing from the trunk of an oak--a bare twig which gives
+him a view all round. There is a bold ring in some of the notes of
+the wren which might give an idea to a composer desirous of
+producing a merry tune. The chirp of sparrows, of course, underlies
+all. I like sparrows. The chirp has a tang in it, a sound within a
+sound, just as a piece of metal rings; there is not only the noise
+of the blow as you strike it, but a sound of the metal itself. Just
+now the cock birds are much together; a month or two since the
+little bevies of sparrows were all hens, six or seven together, as
+if there were a partial separation of the sexes at times. I like
+sparrows, and am always glad to hear their chirp; the house seems
+still and quiet after this nesting-time, when they leave us for the
+wheatfields, where they stay the rest of the summer. What happy days
+they have among the ripening corn!
+
+But this year the thrushes do not sing: I have listened for them
+morning after morning, but have not heard them. They used to sing so
+continuously in the copse that their silence is very marked: I see
+them, but they are silent--they want rain. Nor have our old
+missel-thrushes sung here this spring. One season there seem more of
+one kind of bird, and another of another species. None are more
+constant than the turtle-dove: he always comes to the same place in
+the copse, about forty yards from the garden gate.
+
+The wood-pigeons are the most prominent birds in the copse this
+year. In previous seasons there were hardly any--one or two,
+perhaps; sometimes the note was not heard for weeks. There might
+have been a nest; I do not think so; the pigeons that come seemed
+merely to rest _en route_ elsewhere--occasional visitors only. But
+last autumn (1880) a small flock of seven or eight took up their
+residence here, and returned to roost every evening. They remained
+the winter through, and even in the January frosts, if the sun shone
+a little, called now and then. Their hollow cooing came from the
+copse at midday on January 1, and it was heard again on the 2nd.
+During the deep snows they were silent, but I constantly saw them
+flying to and fro, and immediately it became milder they recommenced
+to call. So that the wood-pigeon's notes have been heard in the
+garden--and the house--with only short intervals ever since last
+October, and it is now May. In the early spring, while walking up
+the Long Ditton road towards sunset, the place from whence you can
+get the most extended view of the copse, they were always flying
+about the tops of the trees preparatory to roosting. The bare
+slender tips of the birches on which they perched exposed them
+against the sky. Once six alighted on a long birch-branch, bending
+it down with their weight, not unlike a heavy load of fruit. As the
+stormy sunset flamed up, tinting the fields with momentary red,
+their hollow voices sounded among the trees.
+
+Now, in May, they are busy; they have paired, and each couple has a
+part of the copse to themselves. Just level with the gardens the
+wood is almost bare of undergrowth; there is little to obstruct the
+sight but the dead hanging branches, and one couple are always up
+and down here. They are near enough for us to see the dark marking
+at the end of the tail as it is spread open to assist the upward
+flight from the ground to the tree. Outside the garden gate, about
+twenty yards distant, there stand three or four young spruce-firs;
+they are in the field, but so close as to touch the copse hedge. To
+the largest of these one of the pigeons comes now and then; he is
+half inclined to choose it for his nest, and yet hesitates. The
+noise of their wings, as they rise and thresh their strong feathers
+together over the tops of the trees, may often be heard in the
+garden; or you may see one come from a distance, swift as the wind,
+suddenly half close two wings, and, shooting forward, alight among
+the branches. They seem with us like the sparrows, as much as if the
+house stood in the midst of the woods at home. The coo itself is not
+tuneful in any sense; it is hoarse and hollow, yet it has a pleasant
+sound to me--a sound of the woods and the forest. I can almost feel
+the gun in my hand again. They are pre-eminently the birds of the
+woods. Other birds frequent them at times, and then quit the trees:
+but the ring-dove is the wood-bird, always there some part of the
+day. So that the sound soothes by its associations.
+
+Coming down the Long Ditton road on May 1, at the corner of the
+copse, where there are some hornbeams, I heard some low sweet notes
+that came from the trees, and, after a little difficulty, discovered
+a blackcap perched on a branch, humped up. Another answered within
+ten yards, and then they sang one against the other. The foliage of
+the hornbeam was still pale, and the blackcaps' colours being so
+pale also (with the exception of the poll), it was not easy to see
+them. The song is sweet and cultured, but does not last many
+seconds. In its beginning it something resembles that of the
+hedge-sparrow--not the pipe, but the song which the hedge-sparrows
+are now delivering from the top sprays of the hawthorn hedges. It is
+sweet indeed and cultured, and it is a pleasure to welcome another
+arrival, but I do not feel enraptured with the blackcap's notes. One
+came into the garden, visiting some ivy on the wall, but they are
+not plentiful just now. By these hornbeam trees a little streamlet
+flows out from the copse and under the road by a culvert. At the
+hedge it is crossed by a pole (to prevent cattle straying in), and
+this pole is the robin's especial perch. He is always there, or
+near; he was there all through the winter, and is there now.
+Beneath, where there are a few inches of sand beside the water, a
+wagtail comes now and then; but the robin does not like the
+intrusion, and drives him away.
+
+The same oak at the end of the garden, where the wryneck calls, is
+also the favourite tree of a cock chaffinch, and every morning he
+sings there for at least two hours at a stretch. I hear him first
+between waking and sleeping, and listen to his song before my eyes
+are open. No starlings whistle on the house-tops this year; I am
+disappointed that they have not returned; last year, and the year
+before that--indeed, since we have been here--a pair built under the
+eaves just above the window of the room I then used. Last spring,
+indeed, they filled the gutter with the materials of their nest, and
+long after they had left a storm descended, and the rain, unable to
+escape, flooded the corner. It cost eight shillings to repair the
+damage; but it did not matter, they had been happy. It is a
+disappointment not to hear their whistle again this spring, and the
+flutter of their wings as they vibrate them superbly while hovering
+a moment before entering their cavern. A pair of house-martins built
+under the eaves near by one season; they, too, have disappointed me
+by not returning, though their nest was not disturbed. Some fate has
+probably overtaken late starlings and house-martins.
+
+Then in the sunny mornings, too, there is the twittering of the
+swallows. They were very late this spring at Surbiton. The first of
+the species was a bank-martin flying over the Wandle by Wimbledon on
+April 25; the first swallow appeared at Surbiton on April 30. As the
+bank-martins skim the surface of the Thames--there are plenty
+everywhere near the osier-beds and eyots, as just below Kingston
+Bridge--their brown colour, and the black mark behind the eye, and
+the thickness of the body near the head, cause them to bear a
+resemblance to moths. A fortnight before the first swallow the large
+bats were hawking up and down the road in the evenings. They seem to
+prefer to follow the course of the road, flying straight up it from
+the copse to the pond, half-way to Red Lion Lane, then back again,
+and so to and fro, sometimes wheeling over the Common, but usually
+resuming their voyaging above the highway. Passing on a level with
+the windows in the dusk, their wings seem to expand nine or ten
+inches. Bats are sensitive to heat and cold. When the north or east
+wind blows they do not come out; they like a warm evening.
+
+A shrike flew down from a hedge on May 9, just in front of me, and
+alighted on a dandelion, bending the flower to the ground and
+clasping the stalk in his claws. There must have been an insect on
+the flower: the bright yellow disk was dashed to the ground in an
+instant by the ferocious bird, who came with such force as almost to
+lose his balance. Though small, the butcher-bird's decision is
+marked in every action, in his very outline. His eagle-like head
+sweeps the grass, and in a second he is on his victim. Perhaps it
+was a humble-bee. The humble-bees are now searching about for the
+crevices in which they make their nests, and go down into every hole
+or opening, exploring the depressions left by the hoofs of horses on
+the sward when it was wet, and peering under stones and flints
+beside the way. Wasps, too, are about with the same purpose, and
+wild bees hover in the sunshine. The shrikes are numerous here, and
+all have their special haunts, to which they annually return. The
+bird that darted on the dandelion flew from the hedge by the
+footpath, through the meadow where the stag is generally uncarted,
+beside the Hogsmill brook. A pair frequent the bushes beside the
+Long Ditton road, not far from the milestone; another pair come to
+the railway arch at the foot of Cockrow Hill. In Claygate Lane
+there are several places, and in June and July, when they are
+feeding their young, the 'chuck-chucking' is incessant.
+
+Beside the copse on the sward by the Long Ditton road is a favourite
+resort of peacock butterflies. On sunny days now one may often be
+seen there floating over the grass. White butterflies go
+flutter-flutter, continually fanning; the peacock spreads his wide
+wings and floats above the bennets. Yellow or sulphur butterflies
+are almost rare--things common enough in other places. I seldom see
+one here, and, unless it is fancy, fewer the last two seasons than
+previously.
+
+In the ploughed field by Southborough Park, towards the Long Ditton
+road, partridges sometimes call now as the sun goes down. The corn
+is yet so short and thin that the necks of partridges stand up above
+it. One stole out the other evening from the hedge of a field beside
+the Ewell road into the corn; his head was high over the green
+blades. The meadow close by, the second past the turn, is a
+favourite with partridges, though so close to the road and to
+Tolworth Farm. Beside Claygate Lane, where the signpost points to
+Hook, there is a withybed which is a favourite cover for hares.
+There is a gateway (on the left of the lane) just past the signpost,
+from which you can see all one side of the osiers; the best time is
+when the clover begins to close its leaves for the evening. On May
+3, looking over the gate there, I watched two hares enjoying
+themselves in the corn; they towered high above it--it was not more
+than four or five inches--and fed with great unconcern, though I was
+not concealed. A nightingale sang in the bushes within a few yards,
+and two cuckoos chased each other, calling as they flew across the
+lane; once one passed just overhead. The cuckoo has a note like
+'chuck, chuck,' besides the well-known cry, which is uttered
+apparently when the bird is much exerted. These two were quite
+restless; they were to and fro from the fields on one side of the
+lane to those on the other, now up the hedge, now in a tree, and
+continually scolding each other with these 'chuck-chucking' sounds.
+Chaffinches were calling from the tops of the trees; the chaffinches
+now have a note much like one used by the yellow-hammer, different
+from their song and from their common 'fink tink.' I was walking by
+the same place, on April 24, when there was suddenly a tremendous
+screaming and threatening, and, glancing over the fields bordering
+on the Waffrons, there were six jays fighting. They screamed at and
+followed each other in a fury, real or apparent, up and down the
+hedge, and then across the fields out of sight. There were three
+jays together in a field by the Ewell road on May 1.
+
+Just past the bridge over the Hogsmill brook at Tolworth Court there
+begins, on the left-hand side of the road, a broad mound, almost a
+cover in itself. At this time, before the underwood is up, much that
+goes on in the mound can be seen. There are several nightingales
+here, and they sometimes run or dart along under the trailing ivy,
+as if a mouse had rushed through it. The rufous colour of the back
+increases the impression; the hedgerows look red in the sunshine.
+Whitethroats are in full song everywhere: they have a twitter
+sometimes like swallows. A magpie flew up from the short green corn
+to a branch low down an elm, his back towards me, and as he rose his
+tail seemed to project from a white circle. The white tips of his
+wings met--or apparently so--as he fluttered, both above and beneath
+his body, so that he appeared encircled with a white ring.
+
+The swifts have not come, up to the 10th, but there are young
+thrushes about able to fly. There was one at the top of the garden
+the other day almost as large as his parent. Nesting is in the
+fullest progress. I chanced on a hedge-sparrow's lately, the whole
+groundwork of which was composed of the dry vines of the wild white
+convolvulus. All the birds are come, I think, except the swift, the
+chat, and the redstart: very likely the last two are in the
+neighbourhood, though I have not seen them. In the furze on Tolworth
+Common--a resort of chats--the land-lizards are busy every sunny
+day. They run over the bunches of dead, dry grass--quite white and
+blanched--grasping it in their claws, like a monkey with hands and
+prehensile feet. They are much swifter than would be supposed. There
+was one on the sward by the Ewell road the other morning, quite
+without a tail; the creature was as quick as possible, but the grass
+too short to hide under till it reached some nettles.
+
+The roan and white cattle happily grazing in the meadows by the
+Hogsmill brook look as if they had never been absent, as if they
+belonged to the place, like the trees, and had never been shut up in
+the yards through so terrible a winter. The water of the Hogsmill
+has a way of escaping like that of larger channels, and has made for
+itself a course for its overflow across a corner of the meadow by
+the road. A thin place in the rather raised bank lets it through in
+flood-time (like a bursting loose of the Mississippi), and down it
+rushes towards the moat. Beside the furrows thus soaked now and
+then, there are bunches of marsh-marigold in flower, and though the
+field is bright with dandelions and buttercups, the marigolds are
+numerous enough to be visible on the other side of it, 300 yards or
+more distant, and are easily distinguished by their different
+yellow. White cuckoo-flowers (_Cardamine_) are so thick in many
+fields that the green tint of the grass is lost under their silvery
+hue. Bluebells are in full bloom. There are some on the mound
+between Claygate and the Ewell road; the footpath to Chessington
+from Roxby Farm passes a copse on the left which shimmers in the
+azure; on the mound on the right of the lane to Horton they are
+plentiful this year--the hedge has been cut, and consequently more
+have shot up. Cowslips innumerable. The pond by the Ewell road,
+between this and Red Lion Lane, is dotted with white water-crowfoot.
+The first that flowered were in the pond in the centre of Tolworth
+Common. The understalks are long and slender, and with a filament
+rather than leaves--like seaweed--but when the flower appears these
+larger leaves float on the surface. Quantities of this ranunculus
+come floating down the Hogsmill brook, at times catching against the
+bridge. A little pond by the lane near Bone's Gate was white with
+this flower lately, quite covered from bank to bank, not a spare
+inch without its silver cup. Vetches are in flower; there are always
+some up the Long Ditton road on the bank by Swaynes-Thorp.
+Shepherd's purse stands up in flower in the waste places, and on the
+side of the ditches thick branches of hedge-mustard lift their white
+petals. The delicate wind anemones flowered thickly in Claygate Lane
+this year. On April 24 the mound on the right-hand side was dotted
+with them. They had pushed up through the dead dry oak-leaves of
+last autumn. The foliage of the wind anemone is finely cut and
+divided, so that it casts a lovely shadow on any chance leaf that
+lies under it: it might suggest a design. The anemones have not
+flowered there like this since I have known the lane before. They
+were thicker than I have ever seen them there. Dog-violets, barren
+strawberry, and the yellowish-green spurge are in flower there now.
+
+The pine in front of my north window began to put forth its catkins
+some time since; those up the Long Ditton road are now covered thick
+with the sulphur farina or dust. I fancy three different sets of
+fruit may sometimes be seen on pines: this year's small and green,
+last year's ripe and mature, and that of the year before dry and
+withered. The trees are all in leaf now, except the Turkey
+oaks--there are some fine young Turkey oaks by Oak Hill Path--and
+the black poplars. Oaks have been in leaf some time, except those
+that flower and are now garlanded with green. Ash, too, is now in
+leaf, and beech. The bees have been humming in the sycamores; the
+limes are in leaf, but their flower does not come yet. There were
+round, rosy oak-apples on the oak by the garden in the copse on the
+9th. This tree is singular for bearing a crop of these apples every
+year. Its top was snapped by the snow that fell last October while
+yet the leaf was on. I think the apples appear on this oak earlier
+than on any about here. As for the orchards, now they are beautiful
+with bloom; walking along the hedges, too, you light once now and
+then on a crab or a wild apple, with its broad rosy petals showing
+behind the hawthorn. On the 7th I heard a corncrake in the meadow
+over Thames, opposite the Promenade, a hundred yards below
+Messenger's Eyot. It is a favourite spot with the corncrake--almost
+the only place where you are nearly sure to hear him. Crake! crake!
+So it is now high May, and now midnight. Antares is visible--the
+summer star.
+
+
+
+
+VIGNETTES FROM NATURE
+
+
+I.--SPRING
+
+The soft sound of water moving among thousands of grass-blades is to
+the hearing as the sweetness of spring air to the scent. It is so
+faint and so diffused that the exact spot whence it issues cannot be
+discerned, yet it is distinct, and my footsteps are slower as I
+listen. Yonder, in the corners of the mead, the atmosphere is full
+of some ethereal vapour. The sunshine stays in the air there as if
+the green hedges held the wind from brushing it away. Low and
+plaintive comes the notes of a lapwing; the same notes, but tender
+with love.
+
+On this side by the hedge the ground is a little higher and dry,
+hung over with the lengthy boughs of an oak which give some shade. I
+always feel a sense of regret when I see a seedling oak in the
+grass. The two green leaves--the little stem so upright and
+confident, and though but a few inches high, already so completely a
+tree--are in themselves beautiful. Power, endurance, grandeur are
+there; you can grasp all with your hand and take a ship between the
+finger and thumb. Time, that sweeps away everything, is for a while
+repelled: the oak will grow when the time we know is forgotten, and
+when felled will be mainstay and safety of a generation in a future
+century. That the plant should start among the grass to be severed
+by the scythe, or crushed by cattle, is very pitiful; I cannot help
+wishing that it could be transplanted and protected. O! the
+countless acorns that drop in autumn not one in a million is
+permitted to become a tree: a vast waste of strength and beauty.
+From the bushes by the stile on the left hand (which I have just
+passed) follows the long whistle of a nightingale. His nest is near;
+he sings night and day. Had I waited on the stile, in a few minutes,
+becoming used to my presence, he would have made the hawthorn
+vibrate, so powerful is his voice when heard close at hand. There is
+not another nightingale along this path for at least a mile, though
+it crosses meadows and runs by hedges to all appearance equally
+suitable. But nightingales will not pass their limits; they seem to
+have a marked-out range as strictly defined as the line of a
+geological map. They will not go over to the next hedge, hardly into
+the field on one side of a favourite spot, nor a yard farther along
+the mound. Opposite the oak is a low fence of serrated green. Just
+projecting above the edges of a brook, fast-growing flags have
+thrust up their bayonet-tips. Beneath, these stalks are so thick in
+the shallow places that a pike can scarcely push a way between them.
+Over the brook stand some high maple-trees: to their thick foliage
+wood-pigeons come. The entrance to a combe--the widening mouth of a
+valley--is beyond, with copses on the slopes.
+
+Again the plover's notes, this time in the field immediately behind;
+repeated, too, in the field on the right hand. One comes over, and
+as he flies he jerks a wing upwards and partly turns on his side in
+the air, rolling like a vessel in a swell. He seems to beat the air
+sideways, as if against a wall, not downwards. This habit makes his
+course appear so uncertain: he may go there, or yonder, or in a
+third direction, more undecided than a startled snipe. Is there a
+little vanity in that wanton flight? Is there a little consciousness
+of the spring-freshened colours of his plumage and pride in the
+dainty touch of his wings on the sweet wind? His love is watching
+his wayward course. He prolongs it. He has but a few yards to fly to
+reach the well-known feeding-ground by the brook where the grass is
+short; perhaps it has been eaten off by sheep. It is a straight and
+easy line--as a starling would fly. The plover thinks nothing of a
+straight line: he winds first with the curve of the hedge, then
+rises, uttering his cry, aslant, wheels, and returns; now this way,
+direct at me, as if his object was to display his snowy breast;
+suddenly rising aslant again, he wheels once more, and goes right
+away from his object over above the field whence he came. Another
+moment and he returns, and so to and fro, and round and round, till,
+with a sidelong, unexpected sweep, he alights by the brook. He
+stands a minute, then utters his cry, and runs a yard or so forward.
+In a little while a second plover arrives from the field behind;
+he, too, dances a maze in the air before he settles. Soon a third
+joins them. They are visible at that spot because the grass is
+short; elsewhere they would be hidden. If one of these rises and
+flies to and fro, almost instantly another follows, and then it is
+indeed a dance before they alight. The wheeling, maze-tracing,
+devious windings continue till the eye wearies and rests with
+pleasure on a passing butterfly. These birds have nests in the
+meadows adjoining; they meet here as a common feeding-ground.
+Presently they will disperse, each returning to his mate at the
+nest. Half an hour afterwards they will meet once more, either here
+or on the wing.
+
+In this manner they spend their time from dawn, through the
+flower-growing day, till dusk. When the sun arises over the hill
+into the sky, already blue, the plovers have been up a long while.
+All the busy morning they go to and fro: the busy morning when the
+wood-pigeons cannot rest in the copses on the combe side, but
+continually fly in and out; when the blackbirds whistle in the oaks;
+when the bluebells gleam with purplish lustre. At noontide in the
+dry heat it is pleasant to listen to the sound of water moving among
+the thousand thousand grass-blades of the mead. The flower-growing
+day lengthens out beyond the sunset, and till the hedges are dim the
+lapwings do not cease.
+
+Leaving now the shade of the oak, I follow the path into the meadow
+on the right, stepping by the way over a streamlet which diffuses
+its rapid current broadcast over the sward till it collects again
+and pours into the brook. This next meadow is somewhat more raised,
+and not watered; the grass is high, and full of buttercups. Before I
+have gone twenty yards a lapwing rises out in the field, rushes
+towards me through the air, and circles round my head, making as if
+to dash at me, and uttering shrill cries. Immediately another comes
+from the mead behind the oak; then a third from over the hedge, and
+all those that have been feeding by the bank, till I am encircled
+with them. They wheel round, dive, rise aslant, cry, and wheel
+again, always close over me, till I have walked some distance, when
+one by one they fall off, and, still uttering threats, retire. There
+is a nest in this meadow, and, although it is, no doubt, a long way
+from the path, my presence even in the field, large as it is, is
+resented. The couple who imagine themselves threatened are quickly
+joined by their friends, and there is no rest till I have left their
+treasures far behind.
+
+
+II.--THE GREEN CORN
+
+Pure colour almost always gives the idea of fire, or, rather, it is
+perhaps as if a light shone through as well as the colour itself.
+The fresh green blade of corn is like this--so pellucid, so clear
+and pure in its green as to seem to shine with colour. It is not
+brilliant--not a surface gleam nor an enamel--it is stained through.
+Beside the moist clods the slender flags arise, filled with the
+sweetness of the earth. Out of the darkness under--that darkness
+which knows no day save when the ploughshare opens its chinks--they
+have come to the light. To the light they have brought a colour
+which will attract the sunbeams from now till harvest. They fall
+more pleasantly on the corn, toned, as if they mingled with it.
+Seldom do we realize that the world is practically no thicker to us
+than the print of our footsteps on the path. Upon that surface we
+walk and act our comedy of life, and what is beneath is nothing to
+us. But it is out from that underworld, from the dead and the
+unknown, from the cold, moist ground, that these green blades have
+sprung. Yonder a steam-plough pants up the hill, groaning with its
+own strength, yet all that strength and might of wheels, and piston,
+and chains cannot drag from the earth one single blade like these.
+Force cannot make it; it must grow--an easy word to speak or write,
+in fact full of potency.
+
+It is this mystery--of growth and life, of beauty and sweetness and
+colour, and sun-loved ways starting forth from the clods--that gives
+the corn its power over me. Somehow I identify myself with it; I
+live again as I see it. Year by year it is the same, and when I see
+it I feel that I have once more entered on a new life. And to my
+fancy, the spring, with its green corn, its violets, and hawthorn
+leaves, and increasing song, grows yearly dearer and more dear to
+this our ancient earth. So many centuries have flown. Now it is the
+manner with all natural things to gather as it were by smallest
+particles. The merest grain of sand drifts unseen into a crevice,
+and by-and-by another; after a while there is a heap; a century and
+it is a mound, and then everyone observes and comments on it. Time
+itself has gone on like this; the years have accumulated, first in
+drifts, then in heaps, and now a vast mound, to which the mountains
+are knolls, rises up and overshadows us. Time lies heavy on the
+world. The old, old earth is glad to turn from the cark and care of
+driftless centuries to the first sweet blades of green.
+
+There is sunshine to-day, after rain, and every lark is singing.
+Across the vale a broad cloud-shadow descends the hillside, is lost
+in the hollow, and presently, without warning, slips over the edge,
+crossing swiftly along the green tips. The sunshine follows--the
+warmer for its momentary absence. Far, far down in a grassy combe
+stands a solitary corn-rick, conical-roofed, casting a lonely
+shadow--marked because so solitary--and beyond it, on the rising
+slope, is a brown copse. The leafless branches take a brown tint in
+the sunlight; on the summit above there is furze; then more
+hill-lines drawn against the sky. In the tops of the dark pines at
+the corner of the copse, could the glance sustain itself to see
+them, there are finches warming themselves in the sunbeams. The
+thick needles shelter them from the current of air, and the sky is
+bluer above the pines. Their hearts are full already of the happy
+days to come, when the moss yonder by the beech, and the lichen on
+the fir-trunk, and the loose fibres caught in the fork of an
+unbending bough, shall furnish forth a sufficient mansion for their
+young. Another broad cloud-shadow, and another warm embrace of
+sunlight. All the serried ranks of the green corn bow at the word of
+command as the wind rushes over them.
+
+There is largeness and freedom here. Broad as the down and free as
+the wind, the thought can roam high over the narrow roofs in the
+vale. Nature has affixed no bounds to thought. All the palings, and
+walls, and crooked fences deep down yonder are artificial. The
+fetters and traditions, the routine, the dull roundabout, which
+deadens the spirit like the cold moist earth, are the merest
+nothing. Here it is easy with the physical eye to look over the
+highest roof, which must also always be the narrowest. The moment
+the eye of the mind is filled with the beauty of things natural an
+equal freedom and width of view comes to it. Step aside from the
+trodden footpath of personal experience, throwing away the petty
+cynicism bred of petty hopes disappointed. Step out upon the broad
+down beside the green corn, and let its freshness become part of
+life.
+
+The wind passes and it bends--let the wind, too, pass over the
+spirit. From the cloud-shadow it emerges to the sunshine--let the
+heart come out from the shadow of roofs to the open glow of the sky.
+High above, the songs of the larks fall as rain--receive it with
+open hands. Pure is the colour of the green flags, the slender,
+pointed blades--let the thought be pure as the light that shines
+through that colour. Broad are the downs and open the aspect--gather
+the breadth and largeness of view. Never can that view be wide
+enough and large enough; there will always be room to aim higher. As
+the air of the hills enriches the blood, so let the presence of
+these beautiful things enrich the inner sense.
+
+
+
+
+A KING OF ACRES
+
+
+I.--JAMES THARDOVER
+
+A weather-beaten man stood by a gateway watching some teams at
+plough. The bleak March wind rushed across the field, reddening his
+face; rougher than a flesh-brush, it rubbed the skin, and gave it a
+glow as if each puff were a blow with the 'gloves.' His short brown
+beard was full of dust blown into it. Between the line of the hat
+and the exposed part of the forehead the skin had peeled slightly,
+literally worn off by the unsparing rudeness of wintry mornings.
+Like the early field veronica, which flowered at his feet in the
+short grass under the hedge, his eyes were blue and grey. The petals
+are partly of either hue, and so his eyes varied according to the
+light--now somewhat more grey, and now more blue. Tall and upright,
+he stood straight as a bolt, though both arms were on the gate, and
+his ashen walking-stick swung over it. He wore a grey overcoat, a
+grey felt hat, grey leggings, and his boots were grey with the dust
+which had settled on them.
+
+He was thinking: 'Farmer Bartholomew is doing the place better this
+year; he scarcely hoed a weed last season; the stubble was a tangle
+of weeds; one could hardly walk across it. That second team stops
+too long at the end of the furrow--idle fellow that. Third team goes
+too fast; horses will be soon tired. Fourth team--he's getting
+beyond his work--too old; the stilts nearly threw him over there.
+This ground has paid for the draining--one, at all events. Never saw
+land look better. Looks brownish and moist--moist brownish red.
+Query, what colour is that? Ask Mary--the artist. Never saw it in a
+picture. Keeps his hedges well; this one is like a board on the top,
+thorn-boughs molten together; a hare could run along it (as they
+will sometimes with harriers behind them, and jump off the other
+side to baffle scent). Now, why is Bartholomew doing his land better
+this year? Keen old fellow! Something behind this. Has he got that
+bit of money that was coming to him? Done something, they said, last
+Doncaster; no one could get anything out of him. Dark as night. Sold
+the trainer some oats--that I know. Wonder how much the trainer
+pocketed over that transaction? Expect he did not charge them all.
+Still, he's a decent fellow. Honesty is uncertain--never met an
+honest man. Doubt if world could hang together. Bartholomew is
+honest enough; but either he has won some money, or he really does
+not want the drawback at audit. Takes care his horses don't look too
+well. Notice myself that farmers do not let their teams look so
+glossy as a few years ago. Like them to seem rough and uncared
+for--can't afford smooth coats these hard times. Don't look very
+glossy myself; don't feel very glossy. Hate this wind--hang kings'
+ransoms! People who like these winds are telling falsehoods. That's
+broken (as one of the teams stopped); have to send to blacksmith.
+Knock off now; no good your pottering there. Next team stops to go
+and help potter. Third team stops to help second. Fourth team comes
+across to help third. All pottering. Wants Bartholomew among them.
+That's the way to do a morning's work. Did anyone ever see such
+idleness! Group about a broken chain--link snapped. Tie it up with
+your leathern garter--not he; no resource. What patience a man needs
+to have anything to do with land! Four teams idle over a snapped
+link! Rent!--of course they can't pay rent. Wonder if a gang of
+American labourers could make anything out of our farms? There they
+work from sunrise to sunset. Suppose import a gang and try. Did
+anyone ever see such a helpless set as that yonder? Depression--of
+course. No go-ahead in them.'
+
+'Mind opening the gate, you?' said a voice behind; and, turning, the
+thinker saw a dealer in a trap, who wanted the gate opened, to save
+him the trouble of getting down to do it himself. The thinker did as
+he was asked, and held the gate open. The trap went slowly through.
+
+'Will you come on and take a glass?' said the dealer, pointing with
+the butt-end of his whip. 'Crown.' This was sententious for the
+Crown in the hamlet. Country-folk speak in pieces, putting the
+principal word in a sentence for the entire paragraph.
+
+The thinker shook his head and shut the gate, carefully hasping it.
+The dealer drove on.
+
+'Who's that?' thought the grey man, watching the trap jolt down the
+rough road. 'Wants veal, I suppose. No veal here--no good. Now,
+look!'
+
+The group by the broken chain beckoned to the trap; a lad went
+across to it with the chain, got up, and was driven off, so saving
+himself half a mile on his road to the forge.
+
+'Anything to save themselves exertion. Nothing will make them move
+faster--like whipping a carthorse into a gallop; it soon dies away
+in the old jog-trot. Why, they have actually started again--actually
+started!'
+
+He watched the teams a little longer, heedless of the wind, which he
+abused, but which really did not affect him, and then walked along
+the hedgerow downhill. Two men were sowing a field on the slope,
+swinging the hand full of grain from the hip regular as time itself,
+a swing calculated to throw the seed so far, but not too far, and
+without jerk. The next field had just been manured, and he stopped
+to glance at the crowds of small birds which were looking over the
+straw--finches and sparrows, and the bluish grey of pied wagtails.
+There were hundreds of small birds. While he stood, a hedge-sparrow
+uttered his thin, pleading song on the hedge-top, and a
+meadow-pipit, which had mounted a little way in the air, came down
+with outspread wings, with a short 'Seep, seep,' to the ground. Lark
+and pipit seem near relations; only the skylark sings rising,
+descending, anywhere, but the pipits chiefly while slowly
+descending. There had been a rough attempt at market-gardening in
+the field after this, and rows of cabbage gone up to seed stood
+forlorn and ragged. On the top of one of these a skylark was
+perched, calling at intervals; for though classed as a non-percher,
+perch he does sometimes. Meadows succeeded on the level ground; one
+had been covered with the scrapings of roads, a whitish, crumbling
+dirt, dry, and falling to pieces in the wind. The grass was pale,
+its wintry hue not yet gone, and the clods seemed to make it appear
+paler. Among these clods four or five thrushes were seeking their
+food; on a bare oak a blackbird was perched, his mate no doubt close
+by in the hedgerow; at the margin of a pond a black-and-white
+wagtail waded in the water; a blue tit flew across to the corner.
+Brown thrushes, dark blackbird, blue tit, and wagtail gave a little
+colour to the angle of the meadow. A gleam of passing sunlight
+brightened it. Two wood-pigeons came to a thick bush growing over a
+grey wall on the other side--for ivy-berries, probably.
+
+A cart passed at a little distance, laden with red mangolds, fresh
+from the pit in which they had been stored; the roots had grown out
+a trifle, and the rootlets were mauve. A goldfinch perched on a dry
+dead stalk of wild carrot, a stalk that looked too slender to bear
+the bird. As the weather-beaten man moved, the goldfinch flew, and
+the golden wings outspread formed a bright contrast with the dull
+white clods. Crossing the meadow, and startling the wood-pigeons,
+our friend scaled the grey walls, putting his foot in a hole left
+for the purpose. Dark moss lined the interstices between the
+irregular and loosely placed stones. Above, on the bank, and
+greener than the grass, grew moss at the roots of ash-stoles and
+wherever there was shelter. Broad, rank, green arum leaves crowded
+each other in places. Red stalks of herb-robert spread open. The
+weather-beaten man gathered a white wild violet from the shelter of
+a dead dry oak-leaf, and as he placed it in his buttonhole, paused
+to listen to the baying of hounds. Yowp! yow! The cries echoed from
+the bank and filled the narrow beechwood within. A shot followed,
+and then another, and a third after an interval. More yowping. The
+grey-brown head of a rabbit suddenly appeared over the top of the
+bank, within three yards of him, and he could see the creature's
+whiskers nervously working, as its mind estimated its chances of
+escape. Instead of turning back, the rabbit made a rush to get
+under an ash-stole, where was a burrow. The yowping went slowly
+away; the beeches rang again as if the beagles were in cry. Two
+assistant-keepers were working the outskirts, and shooting the
+rabbits which sat out in the brushwood, and so were not to be
+captured by nets and ferrets. The ground-game was strictly kept
+down; the noise was made by half a dozen puppies they had with
+them. Passing through the ash-stoles, and next the narrow
+beechwood, the grey man walked across the open park, and after
+awhile came in sight of Thardover House. His steps were directed
+to the great arched porch, beneath which the village folk boasted
+a waggon-load could pass. The inner door swung open as if by
+instinct at his approach. The man who had so neighbourly opened the
+gate to the dealer in the trap was James Thardover, the owner of
+the property. Historic as was his name and residence, he was
+utterly devoid of affectation--a true man of the land.
+
+
+II.--NEW TITLE-DEEDS
+
+Deed, seal, and charter give but a feeble hold compared with that
+which is afforded by labour. James Thardover held his lands again by
+right of labour; he had taken possession of them once more with
+thought, design, and actual work, as his ancestors had with the
+sword. He had laid hands, as it were, on every acre. Those who work,
+own. There are many who receive rent who do not own; they are
+proprietors, not owners; like receiving dividends on stock, which
+stock is never seen or handled. Their rights are legal only; his
+right was the right of labour, and, it might be added, of
+forbearance. It is a condition of ownership in the United States
+that the settler clears so much and brings so many acres into
+cultivation. It was just this condition which he had practically
+carried out upon the Thardover estate. He had done so much, and in
+so varied a manner, that it is difficult to select particular acts
+for enumeration. All the great agricultural movements of the last
+thirty years he had energetically supported. There was the draining
+movement. The undulating contour of the country, deep vales
+alternating with moderate brows, gave a sufficient supply of water
+to every farm, and on the lower lands led to flooding and the
+formation of marshes. Horley Bottom, where the hay used to be
+frequently carried into the river by a June freshet, was now safe
+from flood. Flag Marsh had been completely drained, and made some of
+the best wheat-land in the neighbourhood. Part of a bark canoe was
+found in it; the remnants were preserved at Thardover House, but
+gradually fell to pieces.
+
+Longboro' Farm was as dry now as any such soil could be. More or
+less draining had been carried out on twenty other farms, sometimes
+entirely at his expense. Sometimes the tenant paid a small
+percentage on the sum expended; generally this percentage fell off
+in the course of a year or two. The tenant found he could not pay
+it. Except on Flag Marsh, the drainage did not pay him £50. Perhaps
+it might have done, had the seasons been better; but, as it had
+actually happened, the rents had decreased instead of increasing.
+Tile-pipes had not availed against rain and American wheat. So far
+as income was concerned, he would have been richer had the money so
+expended been allowed to accumulate at the banker's. The land as
+land was certainly improved in places, as on Bartholomew's farm.
+Thardover never cared for the steam-plough; personally, he disliked
+it. Those who represented agricultural opinion at the farmers' clubs
+and in the agricultural papers raised so loud a cry for it that he
+went half-way to meet them. One of the large tenants was encouraged
+to invest in the steam-plough by a drawback on his rent, on
+condition that it should be hired out to others. The steam-plough,
+Thardover soon discovered, was not profitable to the landowner. It
+reduced the fields to a dead level. They had previously been thrown
+into 'lands,' with a drain-trench on each side. On this dead level
+water did not run off quickly, and the growth of weeds increased.
+Tenants got into a habit of shirking the extirpation of the weeds.
+The best farmers on the estate would not use it at all. To very
+large tenants, and to small tenants who could not keep enough
+horses, it was profitable at times. It did not appear that a single
+sack more of wheat was raised, nor a single additional head of stock
+maintained, since the steam-plough arrived.
+
+Paul of Embersbury, who occupied some of the best meadow and upland
+country, a man of some character and standing, had taken to the
+shorthorns before Thardover succeeded to the property. Thardover
+assisted him in every way, and bought some of the best blood. There
+was no home-farm; the house was supplied from Bartholomew's dairy,
+and the Squire did not care to upset the old traditionary
+arrangements by taking a farm in hand. What he bought went to
+Embersbury, and Paul did well. As a consequence, there were good
+cattle all over the estate. The long prices formerly fetched by
+Paul's method had much fallen off, but substantial sums were still
+paid. Paul had faced the depression better than most of them. He
+was bitter, as was only natural, against the reaction in favour of
+black cattle. The upland tenants, though, had a good many of the
+black, in spite of Paul's frowns and thunders after the market
+ordinary at Barnboro' town. He would put down his pipe, bustle upon
+his feet, lean his somewhat protuberant person on the American
+leather of the table, and address the dozen or so who stayed for
+spirits and water after dinner, without the pretence of a formal
+meeting. He spoke in very fair language, short, jerky sentences, but
+well-chosen words. He who had taken the van in improvements thirty
+years ago was the bitterest against any proposed change now. Black
+cattle were thoroughly bad.
+
+Another of his topics was the hiring fair, where servant-girls stood
+waiting for engagements, and which it was proposed to abolish. Paul
+considered it was taking the bread and cheese out of the poor
+wenches' mouths. They could stand there and get hired for nothing,
+instead of having to pay half a crown for advertising, and get
+nothing then. But though the Squire had supported the shorthorns,
+even the shorthorns had not prevented the downward course things
+agricultural were following.
+
+Then there was the scientific movement, the cry for science among
+the farmers. He founded a scholarship, invited the professors to his
+place, lunched them, let them experiment on little pieces of land,
+mournful-looking plots. Nothing came of it. He drew a design for a
+new cottage himself, a practical plain place. The builders told him
+it was far dearer to put up than ornamental but inconvenient
+structures. Thardover sunk his money his own way, and very
+comfortable cottages they were. Ground-game he had kept down for
+years before the Act. Farm-buildings he had improved freely. The
+education movement, however, stirred him most. He went into it
+enthusiastically. Thardover village was one of the first places to
+become efficient under the new legislation. This was a piece of
+practical work after his own heart. Generally, legislative measures
+were so far off from country people. They affected the condition of
+large towns, of the Black Country, of the weavers or miners, distant
+folk. To the villages and hamlets of purely agricultural districts
+these Acts had no existence. The Education Act was just the reverse.
+This was a statute which came right down into the hamlets, which was
+nailed up at the cross-roads, and ruled the barn, the plough, and
+scythe. Something tangible, that could be carried out and made into
+a fact--something he could do. Thardover did it with the
+thoroughness of his nature. He found the ground, lent the money, saw
+to the building, met the Government inspectors, and organized the
+whole. A committee of the tenants were the ostensible authority, the
+motive-power was the Squire. He worked at it till it was completely
+organized, for he felt as if he were helping to mould the future of
+this great country. Broad-minded himself, he understood the immense
+value of education, looked at generally; and he thought, too, that
+by its aid the farmer and the landowner might be enabled to compete
+with the foreigner, who was driving them from the market. No
+speeches and no agitation could equal the power concentrated in that
+plain school-house; there was nothing from which he hoped so much.
+
+Only one held aloof and showed hostility to the movement, or rather
+to the form it took. His youngest and favourite daughter, Mary, the
+artist, rebelled against it. Hitherto she had ruled him as she
+choose. She had led in every kind act--acts too kind to be called
+charity. She had been the life of the place. Perhaps it was the
+strong-minded women whom the cry of education brought to Thardover
+House that set ajar some chord in her sensitive mind. Strident
+voices checked her sympathies, and hard rule-and-line work like this
+repelled her. Till then she had been the constant companion of the
+Squire's walks; but while the school was being organized she would
+not go with him. She walked where she could not see the plain
+angular building; she said it set her teeth on edge.
+
+When the strident voices had departed, when time had made the
+school-house part and parcel of the place, like the cottages, Mary
+changed her ways, and occasionally called there. She took a class
+once a week of the elder girls, and taught them in her own fashion
+at home--most unorthodox teaching it was--in which the works of the
+best poets were the chief subjects, and portfolios of engravings
+were found on the table. Long since father and daughter had resumed
+their walks together.
+
+It was in this way that James Thardover made his estate his own--he
+held possession by right of labour. He was resident ten months out
+of twelve, and after all these public and open works he did far more
+in private. There was not an acre on the property which he had not
+personally visited. The farm-houses and farm-buildings were all
+known to him. He rode from tenancy to tenancy; he visited the men at
+plough, and stood among the reapers. Neither the summer heat nor the
+winds of March prevented him from seeing with his own eyes. The
+latest movement was the silo system, the burying of grass under
+pressure, instead of making it into hay. By these means the clouds
+are to be defied, and a plentiful supply of fodder secured. Time
+alone can show whether this, the latest invention, is any more
+powerful than steam-plough or guano to uphold agriculture against
+the shocks of fortune. But James Thardover would have tried any plan
+that had been suggested to him. It was thus that he laid hold on his
+lands with the strongest of titles--the work of his own hands. Yet
+still the tenants were unable to pay the former rent. Some had
+failed or left, and their farms were vacant; and nothing could be
+more discouraging than the condition of affairs upon the property.
+
+
+III.--A RING-FENCE: CONCLUSION
+
+There were great elms in the Out-park, whose limbs or boughs, as
+large as the trunk itself, came down almost to the ground. They
+touched the tops of the white wild parsley; and when sheep were
+lying beneath, the jackdaws stepped from the sheep's back to the
+bough and returned again. The jackdaws had their nests in the hollow
+places of these elms; for the elm as it ages becomes full of
+cavities. These great trees often divided into two main boughs,
+rising side by side, and afar off visible as two dark streaks among
+the green. For many years no cattle had been permitted in the park,
+and the boughs of the trees had grown in a drooping form, as they
+naturally do unless eaten or broken by animals pushing against them.
+But since the times of agricultural pressure, a large part of the
+domain had been fenced off, and was now partly grazed and partly
+mown, being called the Out-park. There were copses at the farther
+side, where in spring the may flowered; the purple orchis was drawn
+up high by the trees and bushes--twice as high as its fellows in the
+mead, where a stray spindle-tree grew; and from these copses the
+cuckoos flew round the park.
+
+But the thinnest hedge about the wheat-fields was as interesting as
+the park or the covers; and this is the remarkable feature of
+English scenery--that its perfection, its beauty, and its interest
+are not confined to any masterpiece here and there, walled in or
+enclosed, or at least difficult of access and isolated, but it
+extends to the smallest portion of the country. Wheatfield hedges
+are the thinnest of hedges, kept so that the birds may find no
+shelter, and that the numerous caterpillars may not breed in them
+more than can be helped. Such a hedge is so low it can be leaped
+over, and so narrow that it is a mere screen of twisted hawthorn
+branches which can be seen through, like screens of twisted stone in
+ancient chapels. But the sparrows come to it, and the finches, the
+mice, and weasles, and now and then a crow, who searches along, and
+goes in and out and quests like a spaniel. It is so tough, this
+twisted screen of branches, that a charge of shot would be stopped
+by it; if a pellet or two slid through an interstice, the majority
+would be held as if by a shield of wicker-work. Old Bartholomew, the
+farmer, sent his men once or twice along with reaping-hooks to clear
+away the weeds that grew up here under such slight shelter; but
+other farmers were not so careful. Then convolvulus grew over the
+thin screen, a corncockle stood up taller than the hedge itself; in
+time of harvest, yellow St. John's wort flowered beside it, and
+later on, bunches of yellow-weed.
+
+A lark rose on the other side, and so caused the glance to be lifted
+and to look farther, and away yonder was a farm-house at the foot of
+a hill. Pale yellow stubble covered the hill, rising like a
+background to the red-tile roof, and to the elms beside the house,
+among whose branches there were pale yellow spots. Round wheat-ricks
+stood in a double row on the left hand--count them, and you counted
+the coin of the land, bank-notes in straw--and on the right and in
+front were green meads, and horses feeding--horses who had done good
+work in plough-time and harvest-time, and would soon be at plough
+again. There were green meads, because some green meads are a
+necessity of an English farm-house, and there are few without them,
+even when in the midst of corn. Meads in which the horses feed, a
+pony for the children and for the pony-cart, turkeys, two or three
+cows--all the large and small creatures that live about the place.
+When the land was torn up and ploughed for corn of old time, these
+green enclosures were left to stay on, till now it seems as if
+pressure of low prices for wheat would cause the corn-land to again
+become pasture. Of old time, golden wheat conquered and held
+possession, and now the grass threatens to oust the conqueror.
+
+Had anyone studied either of these three--the great elms in the
+Out-park, or the thin twisted screen of hedge, or the red-tile roof,
+and the yellow stubble behind it on the hill--he might have found
+material for a picture in each. There was, in truth, in each far
+more than anyone could put into a picture, or than anyone could put
+into a book; for the painter can but give one aspect of one day, and
+the writer a mere catalogue of things; but Nature refreshes the
+reality every day with different tints, and as it were new ideas, so
+that, although it is always there, it is never twice the same. Over
+that stubble on the hill there were other hills, and among these a
+combe or valley, in which stood just such another farm-house, but
+differently placed, with few trees, and those low, somewhat bare in
+its immediate surroundings, but above, on each side, close at hand,
+sloping ramparts of green turf rising high, till the larks that sang
+above seemed to sing in another land, like that found by Jack when
+he clomb the beanstalk. Along this combe was a cover of gorse, and
+in spring there was a mile of golden bloom, richer than gold in
+colour, leading like a broad highway of gold down to the house. From
+those ramparts in high summer--which is when the corn is ripe and
+the reapers in it--there could be seen a slope divided into squares
+of varied grain. This on the left of the fertile undulation was a
+maize colour, which, when the sunlight touched it, seemed to have a
+fleeting hue of purple somewhere within. There is no purple in ripe
+wheat visible to direct and considering vision; look for it
+specially, and it will not be seen. Purple forms no part of any
+separate wheat-ear or straw; brown and yellow in the ear, yellow in
+the upper part of the straw, and still green towards the earth. But
+when the distant beams of sunlight travelling over the hill swept
+through the rich ripe grain, for a moment there was a sense of
+purple on the retina. Beyond this square was a pale gold piece, and
+then one where the reapers had worked hard, and the shocks stood in
+diagonal rows; this was a bronze, or brown and bronze, and beside it
+was a green of clover.
+
+Farther on, the different green of the hill turf, and white sheep,
+feeding in an extended crescent, the bow of the crescent gradually
+descending the sward. The hills of themselves beautiful, and
+possessing views which are their property and belong to them--a
+twofold value. The woods on the lower slopes full of tall brake
+fern, and holding in their shadowy depths the spirit of old time. In
+the woods it is still the past, and the noisy mechanic present of
+this manufacturing century has no place. Enter in among the
+round-boled beeches which the squirrels rush up, twining round like
+ivy in ascent, where they nibble the beech-nuts forty feet aloft,
+and let the husks drop to your feet; where the wood-pigeon sits and
+does not move, safe in the height and thickness of the spray. There
+are jew-berries or dew-berries on a bramble-bush, which grows where
+the sunlight and rain fall direct to the ground, unchecked by
+boughs. They are full of the juice of autumn, black, rich,
+vine-like, taken fresh from the prickly bough. Low down in the
+hollow is a marshy spot, sedge-grown, and in the sedge lie yellow
+leaves of willow already fallen. Here in the later months will come
+a woodcock or two, with feathers so brown and leaf-like of hue and
+markings that the plumage might have been printed in colours from
+brown leaves of beech. No springes are set for the woodcocks now,
+but the markings are the same on the feathers as centuries since;
+the brown beech-leaves lie in the dry hollows the year through just
+as they did then; the large dew-berries are as rich; and the nuts as
+sweet. It is the past in the wood, and Time here never grows any
+older. Could you bring back the red stag--as you may easily in
+fancy--and place him among the tall brake, and under the beeches, he
+should not know that a day had gone by since the stern Roundheads
+shot down the last of his race hereabouts in Charles I.'s days. For
+the leaves are turning as they turned then to the altered colour of
+the sun's rays as he declines in his noonday arch, lower and lower
+every day; his rays are somewhat yellower than in dry hot June; a
+little of the tint of the ripe wheat floats in the sunshine. To this
+the woods turn. First, the nut-tree leaves drop, and the green brake
+is quickly yellow; the slender birch becomes lemon on its upper
+branches; the beech reddens; by-and-by the first ripe acorn falls,
+and there's as much cawing of the rooks in the oaks at acorn-time as
+at their nests in the elms in March.
+
+All these things happened in the old, old time before the red stags
+were shot down; the leaves changed as the sunbeams became less
+brilliantly white; the woodcocks arrived; the mice had the last of
+the acorns which had fallen, and which the rooks and jays and
+squirrels had spared for them after feasting to the full of their
+greediness. This ancient oak, whose thick bark, like cast-iron for
+ruggedness at the base, has grown on steadily ever since the last
+deer bounded beneath it, utterly heedless of the noisy rattle of
+machinery in the northern cities, unmoved by any shriek of engine,
+or hum, or flapping of loose belting, or any volume of smoke
+drifting into the air--I wish that the men now serving the great
+polished wheels, and works in iron and steel and brass, could
+somehow be spared an hour to sit under this ancient oak in Thardover
+South Wood, and come to know from actual touch of its rugged bark
+that the past is living now, that Time is no older, that Nature
+still exists as full as ever, and to see that all the factories of
+the world have made no difference, and therefore not to pin their
+faith to any theory born and sprung up among the crush and
+pale-faced life of modern time; but to look for themselves at the
+rugged oak-bark, and up to the sky above the highest branches, and
+to take an acorn and consider its story and possibilities, and to
+watch the sly squirrel coming down, as they sit quietly, to play
+almost at their feet. That they might gather to themselves some of
+the leaves--mental and spiritual leaves--of the ancient forest,
+feeling nearer to the truth and soul, as it were, that lives on in
+it. They would feel as if they had got back to their original
+existence, and had become themselves, as they ought to be, could
+they live such life, untouched by artificial care. Then, how hurt
+they would be if any proposed to cut down that oak; if any proposed
+the felling of the forest, and the death of its meaning. It would be
+like a blow aimed at themselves. No picture that could be bought at
+a thousand guineas could come near that ancient oak; but you can
+carry away the memory of it, the picture and thought in your mind
+for nothing. If the oak were cut down, it would be like thrusting a
+stick through some valuable painting on your walls at home.
+
+The common below the South Wood, even James Thardover with all his
+desire for improvement could not do much good with; the soil, and
+the impossibility of getting a fall for draining, all checked effort
+there. A wild, rugged waste, you say, at first, glancing at the
+rushes, and the gaunt signpost standing up among them, the anthills,
+and thistles. Thistles have colour in their bloom, and the prickly
+leaves are finely cut; rushes--green rushes--are notes of the
+season, and with their slender tips point to the days in the book of
+the year; they are brown now at the tip, and some bent downwards in
+an angle. The brown will descend the stalk till the snipes come with
+grey-grass colours in their wings. But all the beatings of the rain
+will not cast the rushes utterly down; they will send up fresh green
+successors for the spring, for the cuckoo to float along over on his
+way to the signpost, where he will perch a few minutes, and call in
+the midst of the wilderness. There, too, the lapwings leave their
+eggs on the ground among the rushes, and rise, and complainingly
+call. The warm showers of June call up the iris in the corner where
+the streamlet widens, and under the willows appear large yellow
+flowers above the flags. Pink and white blossom of the rest-harrow
+comes on bushy plants where the common is dry, and there is heath,
+and heather, and fern. The waste has its treasures too--as the
+song-thrush has his in the hawthorn bush--its treasures of flowers,
+as the wood its beauties of tree and leaf, and the hills their
+wheat.
+
+The ring-fence goes farther than this; it encloses the living
+creatures, yet without confining them. The wing of the wood-pigeon,
+as the bird perches, forms a defined curve against its body. The
+forward edge of the wing--its thickest part--as it is pressed to its
+side, draws a line sweeping round--a painter's line. How many
+wood-pigeons are there in the South Wood alone, besides the copses
+and the fir-plantations? How many turtle-doves in spring in the
+hedges and outlying thickets, in summer among the shocks of corn?
+And all these are his--the Squire's--not in the sense of possession,
+for no true wild creature was ever anyone's yet; it would die first;
+but still, within his ring-fence, and their destinies affected by
+his will, since he can cut down their favourite ash and hawthorn, or
+thin them with shot. Neither of which he does. The robin, methinks,
+sings sweetest of autumn-tide in the deep woods, when no other birds
+speak or trill, unexpectedly giving forth his plaintive note,
+complaining that the summer is going, and the time of love, and the
+sweet cares of the nest; telling you that the berries are brown, the
+dew-berries over-ripe, and dropping of over-ripeness like dew as the
+morning wind shakes the branch; that the wheat is going to the
+stack, and that the rusty plough will soon be bright once more by
+the attrition of the earth.
+
+Many of them sing thus in the South Wood, yet scarce any two within
+sound of each other, for the robin is jealous, and likes to have you
+all to himself as he tells his tale. Song-thrushes--what ranks of
+them in April; larks, what hundreds and hundreds of them on the
+hills above the green wheat; finches of varied species; blackbirds;
+nightingales; crakes in the meadows; partridges; a whole page might
+be filled merely with their names.
+
+These, too, are in the ring-fence with the hills and woods, the
+yellow iris of the common, and the red-roofed farm-houses. Besides
+which, there are beings infinitely higher--namely, men and women in
+village and hamlet, and more precious still, those little children
+with hobnail boots and clean jackets and pinafores, who go
+a-blackberrying on their way to school. All these are in the
+ring-fence. Upon their physical destinies the Squire can exercise a
+powerful influence, and has done so, as the school itself testifies.
+
+Now, is not a large estate a living picture? Or rather, is it not
+formed of a hundred living pictures? So beautiful it looks, its
+hills, its ripe wheat, its red-roofed farm-houses, and acres upon
+acres of oaks; so beautiful, it must be valuable--most valuable; it
+is visible, tangible wealth. It is difficult to disabuse anyone's
+mind of that idea; yet, as we have seen, with all the skill,
+science, and expenditure Thardover could bring to bear upon it, all
+his personal effort was in vain. It was a possession, not a profit.
+Had not James Thardover's ancestors invested their wealth in
+building streets of villas in the outskirts of a great city, he
+could not have done one-fifth what he had. Men who had made their
+fortunes in factories--the noisy factories of the present
+century--paid him high rents for these residences; and thus it was
+that the labour and time of the many-handed operatives in mill,
+factory, and workshop really went to aid in maintaining these living
+pictures. Without that outside income the Squire could not have
+reduced the rents of his tenants, so that they could push through
+the depression; without that outside income he could not have
+drained the lands, put up those good buildings, assisted the
+school, and in a hundred ways helped the people. Those who watched
+the polished machinery under the revolving shaft, and tended the
+loom, really helped to keep the beauties of South Wood, the
+grain-grown hills, the flower-strewn meadows. These were so
+beautiful, it seemed as if they must represent money--riches; but
+they did not. They had a value much higher than that. As the spring
+rises in the valley at the foot of the hills and slowly increases
+till it forms a river, to which ships resort, so these fields and
+woods, meads and brooks, were the source from which the city was
+derived. If the operative in the factory, or tending the loom, had
+traced his descent, he would have found that his grandfather, or
+some scarcely more remote ancestor, was a man of the land. He
+followed the plough, or tended the cattle, and his children went
+forth to earn higher wages in the town. For the hamlet and the
+outlying cottage are the springs whence the sinew and muscle of
+populous cities are derived. The land is the fountain-head from
+which the spring of life flows, widening into a river. The river at
+its broad mouth disdains the spring; the city in its immensity
+disdains the hamlet and the ploughman. Yet if the spring ceased, the
+ships could not frequent the river; if the hamlet and the ploughman
+were wiped out by degrees, the city must run dry of life. Therefore
+the South Wood and the park, the hamlet and the fields, had a value
+no one can tell how many times above the actual money rental, and
+the money earned by the operatives in factory and workshop could
+not have been better expended than in supporting it.
+
+But it had another value still--which they too helped to
+sustain--the value of beauty. Parliament has several times
+intervened to save the Lake District from the desecrating intrusion
+of useless railways. So, too, the beauty of these woods, and
+grain-grown hills, of the very common, is worth preservation at the
+hands and votes of the operatives in factory and mill. If a man
+loves the brick walls of his narrow dwelling in a close-built city,
+and the flowers which he has trained with care in the window, how
+much more would he love the hundred living pictures like those round
+about Thardover House! After any artificer had once seen such an oak
+and rested under it, if any threatened to cut it down, he would feel
+as if a blow had been delivered at his heart. His efforts,
+therefore, should be not to destroy these pictures, but to preserve
+them. All the help that they can give is needed to assist a King of
+Acres in his struggle, and the struggle of the farmers and
+labourers--equally involved--against the adverse influences which
+press so heavily on English agriculture.
+
+
+
+
+THE STORY OF SWINDON
+
+
+We have all of us passed through Swindon Station, whether _en route_
+to Southern Wales, to warm Devon--the fern-land--to the Channel
+Islands, or to Ireland. The ten minutes for refreshment, now in the
+case of certain trains reduced to five, have made thousands of
+travellers familiar with the name of the spot. Those who have not
+actually been there can recall to memory a shadowy tradition which
+has grown up and propagated itself, that here the soup skins the
+tongue, and that generally it is a near relative of the famous
+'Mugby Junction.' Those who have been there retain at least a
+confused recollection of large and lofty saloons, velvet sofas,
+painted walls, and long semicircular bars covered with glittering
+glasses and decanters. Or it may be that the cleverly executed
+silver model of a locomotive under a glass case lingers still in
+their memories. At all events Swindon is a well-known oasis,
+familiar to the travelling public. Here let us do an act of justice.
+Much has been done of late to ameliorate many of the institutions
+which formerly led to bitter things being said against the place.
+The soup is no longer liquid fire, the beer is not lukewarm, the
+charges are more moderate; the lady manager has succeeded in
+substituting order for disorder, comfort and attention in place of
+lofty disdain. Passengers have not got to cross the line for a fresh
+ticket or to telegraph; the whole place is reformed. So much the
+better for the traveller. But how little do these birds of passage
+imagine the varied interest of the strange and even romantic story
+which is hidden in this most unromantic spot, given over, as it
+seems, to bricks and mortar!
+
+Not that it ever had a history in the usual sense. There is but a
+faint, dim legend that the great Sweyn halted with his army on this
+hill--thence called Sweyn's dune, and so Swindon. There is a family
+here whose ancestry goes back to the times of the Vikings; which was
+in honour when Fair Rosamond bloomed at Woodstock; which fought in
+the great Civil War. Nothing further. The real history, written in
+iron and steel, of the place began forty years ago only. Then a
+certain small party of gentlemen sat down to luncheon on the
+greensward which was then where the platform is now. The furze was
+in blossom around them; the rabbits frisked in and out of their
+burrows; two or three distant farm-houses, one or two cottages,
+these were all the signs of human habitation, except a few cart-ruts
+indicating a track used for field purposes. There these gentlemen
+lunched, and one among them, ay, two among them, meditated great
+things, which the first planned, and the second lived to see realize
+the most sanguine anticipations. These two gentlemen were Isambard
+Brunel and Daniel Gooch. Driven away from the original plan, which
+was to follow the old coach-road, they had come here to survey and
+reconnoitre a possible track running in the valley at the northern
+edge of the great range of Wiltshire Downs. They decided that here
+should be their junction and their workshop. Immense sacrifices,
+enormous expenditure, the directors of the new railway incurred in
+their one great idea of getting it finished! They could not stay to
+cart the earth from the cuttings to the places where it was required
+for embanking, so where they excavated thousands of tons of clay
+they purchased land to cast it upon out of their way; and where they
+required an embankment they purchased a hill, and boldly removed it
+to fill up the hollow. They could not stay for the seasons, for
+proper weather to work in, and in consequence of this their clay
+embankment, thrown up wet and saturated, swelled out, bulged at the
+sides, and could not be made stable, till at last they drove rows of
+piles on each side, and chained them together with chain-cables, and
+so confined the slippery soil. They drove these piles, tall
+beech-trees, 20 feet into the earth, and at this day every train
+passes over tons of chain-cables hidden beneath the ballast. The
+world yet remembers the gigantic cost of the Box Tunnel, and how
+heaven and earth were moved to get the line open; and at last it was
+open, but at what a cost!--a cost that hung like a millstone round
+the neck of the company, till a man rose into power who had the
+talent of administration, and that man was the very companion of
+Brunel whom we saw lunching among the furze-bushes. Reckless as the
+expenditure was, one cannot but admire the determination which
+overcame every obstacle. For the great line a workshop was needed,
+and that workshop was built at Swindon. The green fields were
+covered with forges, the hedges disappeared to make way for cottages
+for the workmen. The workmen required food--tradesmen came and
+supplied that food--and Swindon rose as Chicago rose, as if by
+magic. From that day to this additions have been made, and other
+departments concentrated upon this one spot, till at the present
+time the factory covers a space equal to that of a moderate farm,
+and employs nearly four thousand workmen, to whom three hundred
+thousand pounds are yearly paid, whereby to purchase their daily
+bread. But at that early stage the difficulty was to find
+experienced workmen, and still greater to discover men who could
+superintend them. For these it was necessary to go up into the
+shrewd North, which had already foreseen the demand that must arise,
+and had partially educated her children in the new life that was
+about to dawn on the world; and so it is that to this time the names
+of those who are in authority over this army of workers carry with
+them in their sound a strong flavour of the heather and the brae,
+and seem more in accordance with ideas of 'following the wild deer'
+than of a dwelling in the midst of the clangour and smoke.
+
+All these new inhabitants of the hitherto deserted fields had to be
+lodged, and in endeavouring to solve this problem the company were
+induced to try an experiment which savoured not a little of
+communism, though not so intended. A building was erected which was
+locally called the 'barracks,' and it well deserved the name, for at
+one time as many as perhaps five hundred men found shelter in it. It
+was a vast place, with innumerable rooms and corridors. The
+experiment did not altogether answer, and was in time abandoned,
+when the company built whole streets, and even erected a covered
+market-place for their labourers. They went further, and bore the
+chief expense in building a church. A reading-room was started, and
+grew and grew till a substantial place was required for the
+accommodation of the members. Finally, the 'barracks' was converted
+into a place of worship for a Dissenting body, and a grand hall it
+afforded when the interior was removed and only the shell left. But
+by this time vast changes had taken place, and great extensions had
+arisen through private energy. This land was the poorest in the
+neighbourhood; low-lying, shallow soil on top of an endless depth of
+stiff clay, worthless for arable purposes, of small value for
+pasture, covered with furze, rushes, and rowen; so much so that when
+a certain man with a little money purchased a good strip of it, he
+was talked of as a fool, and considered to have committed a most
+egregious error. How vain is human wisdom! In a few years the
+railway came. Land rose in price, and this very strip brought its
+owner thousands; so that the fool became wise, and the wise was
+deemed of no account. Private speculators, seeing the turn things
+were taking, ran up rows of houses; building societies stepped in
+and laid out streets; a whole town seemed to start into being at
+once. Still the company continued to concentrate their works at the
+junction, and at last added the culminating stroke by bringing the
+carriage department here, which was like planting a new colony. A
+fresh impulse was given to building; fresh blocks and streets arose;
+companies were formed to burn bricks--one of these makes bricks by
+steam, and can burn a quarter of a million at once in their kiln.
+This in a place where previously the rate of building was five new
+houses in twenty years! Sanitary districts were mapped out; boards
+of control elected; gas companies; water companies--who brought
+water out of the chalk hills three miles distant: all the
+distinctive characteristics of a city arose into being. Lastly came
+a sewage farm, for so great was the sewage that it became a burning
+question how to dispose of it, and on this sewage farm some most
+extraordinary results have been obtained, such as mangolds with
+leaves four feet in length--a tropical luxuriance of growth. One
+postman had sufficed, then two, then three, till a strong staff had
+to be organized, in regular uniform, provided with bull's-eye
+lanthorns to pick their way in and out of the dark and dirty
+back-streets. One single constable had sufficed, and a dark hole had
+done duty as a prison. Now a superintendent and other officers, a
+full staff, and a complete police-station, with cells, justice-room,
+all the paraphernalia were required; and so preposterous did this
+seem to other towns, formerly leading towns in the country, but
+which had remained stagnant while Swindon went ahead, that they
+bitterly resented the building, and satirized it as a 'Palace of
+Justice,' though, in good truth, sorely needed. A vast corn
+exchange, a vaster drill-hall for the workmen--who had formed a
+volunteer corps--to drill in, chapels of every description, and some
+of really large size--all these arose.
+
+The little old town on the hill a mile from the station felt the
+wave of progress strongly. The streets were paved; sewers driven
+under the town at a depth of 40 feet through solid stone, in order
+to dispose of the sewage on a second sewage farm of over 100 acres.
+Shops, banks, and, above all, public-houses, abounded and increased
+apace, especially in the new town, where every third house seemed to
+be licensed premises. The cart-track seen by the luncheon-party in
+the furze was laid down and macadamized, and a street erected, named
+after the finest street in London, full of shops of all
+descriptions. Every denomination, from the Plymouth Brethren to the
+Roman Catholics, had their place of worship. Most of the tradesmen
+had two branches, one in the upper and one in the lower town, and
+the banks followed their example. Not satisfied with two railways,
+two others are now in embryo--one a link in the long-talked-of
+through communication between North and South, from Manchester to
+Southampton, the other a local line with possible extensions. A
+population of barely 2,000 has risen to 15,000, and this does not
+nearly represent the real number of inhabitants, for there is a
+large floating population, and, in addition, five or six villages
+surrounding the town are in reality merely suburbs, and in great
+part populated by men working in the town. These villages have
+shared in the general movement, and some of them have almost trebled
+in size and importance. This population is made up of the most
+incongruous elements: labouring men of the adjacent counties who
+have left the plough and the sickle for the hammer and the spade;
+Irish in large numbers; Welshmen, Scotch, and North of England men;
+stalwart fellows from York and places in a similar latitude. Yet,
+notwithstanding all the building that has been going on, despite the
+rush of building societies and private speculators, the cry is
+still, 'More bricks and mortar,' for there exists an enormous amount
+of overcrowding. The high rents are almost prohibitory, and those
+who take houses, underlet them and sublet them, till in six rooms
+three families may be living. The wages are good, ranging from 18s.
+for common labourers to 30s., 36s., 40s., and more for skilled
+mechanics, and the mode in which they live affords an illustrative
+contrast to the agricultural population immediately surrounding the
+place. As if to complete the picture, that nothing might be wanting,
+a music-hall has been opened, where for threepence the workman may
+listen to the dulcet strains of 'London artistes' while he smokes
+his pipe.
+
+Can a more striking, a more wonderful and interesting spectacle
+be seen than this busy, Black-Country-looking town, with its
+modern associations, its go-ahead ways, in the midst of a purely
+agricultural country, where there are no coal or iron mines,
+where in the memory of middle-aged men there was nothing but
+pasture-fields, furze, and rabbits? In itself it affords a
+perfect epitome of the spirit of the nineteenth century.
+
+And much, if not all, of this marvellous transformation, of this
+abounding life and vigorous vitality, is due to the energy and the
+forethought, the will of one man. It is notorious that the Swindon
+of to-day is the creation of the companion of Brunel at the lunch in
+the furze-bushes. Sir Daniel Gooch has had a wonderful life.
+Beginning literally at the beginning, he rose from stage to stage,
+till he became the responsible head of the vast company in whose
+service he had commenced life. In that position he did not forget
+the place where his early years were passed, but used his influence
+to enrich it with the real secret of wealth, employment for the
+people. In so doing, time has proved that he acted for the best
+interests of the company, for, apart from monetary matters, the mass
+of workmen assembled at this spot are possessed of overwhelming
+political power, and can return the man they choose to Parliament.
+Thus the company secures a representative in the House of Commons.
+
+Among the institutions which the railway company fostered was the
+primitive reading-room which has been alluded to. Under their care
+this grew and grew, until it became a Mechanics' Institute, or,
+rather, a department of science and art, which at the present day
+has an intimate connection with South Kensington. Some hundred
+prizes are here annually distributed to the numerous students, both
+male and female, who can here obtain the very best instruction, at
+the very smallest cost, in almost every branch of learning, from
+sewing to shorthand, from freehand drawing to algebra and conic
+sections. On one occasion, while distributing the prizes to the
+successful competitors, Sir Daniel Gooch laid bare some of his early
+struggles as an incentive to the youth around him. He admitted that
+there was a time, and a dark hour, when he all but gave up hopes of
+ultimate success, when it seemed that the dearest wish of his heart
+must for ever go without fulfilment. In this desponding mood he was
+slowly crossing a bridge in London, when he observed an inscription
+upon the parapet--_Nil Desperandum_ (Never despair). How he took
+heart at this as an omen, and went forth and persevered till----The
+speaker did not complete the sentence, but all the world knows what
+ultimately happened, and remembers the man who laid the first
+Atlantic cable. The great lesson of perseverance, of patience, was
+never drawn with better effect.
+
+In the Eastern tales of magicians one reads of a town being found
+one day where there was nothing but sand the day before. Here the
+fable is fact, and the potent magician is Steam. Here is, perhaps,
+the greatest temple that has ever been built to that great god of
+our day. Taking little note of its immense extent, of the vast walls
+which enclose it, like some fortress, of the tunnel which gives
+entrance, and through which three thousand workmen pass four times a
+day, let us enter at once and go straight to the manufacture of
+those wheels and tires and axles of which we have heard so much
+since the tragedy at Shipton. To look at a carriage-wheel, the iron
+carriage-wheel, one would imagine that it was all one piece, that it
+was stamped out at a blow, so little sign is there of a junction of
+parts. The very contrary is the fact: the wheel is made of a large
+number of pieces of iron welded together, and again and again welded
+together, till at last it forms one solid homogeneous mass. The
+first of these processes consists in the manufacture of the spokes,
+which are made out of fine iron. The spoke is made in two pieces, at
+two different forges, and by two distinct gangs of men. A third
+forge and a third gang are constantly employed in welding these two
+detached parts in one continuous piece, forming a spoke. One of
+these parts resembles a [T] with the downward stroke very short, and
+the cross stroke at the top slightly bent, so as to form a section
+of a curve. The other piece is about the same length, but rather
+thicker, and at its larger end somewhat wedge-shaped. This last
+piece forms that part of the spoke which goes nearest to the centre
+of the wheel. These two parts, when completed, are again heated to a
+red heat, and in that ductile state hammered with dexterous blows
+into one, which then resembles the same letter [T], only with the
+downward stroke disproportionately long. Eight or more of these
+spokes, according to the size of the wheel, and whether it is
+intended for a carriage, an engine, or tender, are then arranged
+together on the ground, so that the wedge-shaped ends fit close
+together, and in that position are firmly fixed by the imposition
+above them of what is called a 'washer,' a flat circular piece of
+iron, which is laid red-hot on the centre of the embryo wheel, and
+there hammered into cohesion. The wheel is then turned over, and a
+second 'washer' beaten on, so that the partially molten metal runs,
+and joins together with the particles of the spokes, and the whole
+is one mass. In the ordinary cart-wheel or gig-wheel the spokes are
+placed in mortise-holes made in a solid central block; but in this
+wheel before us, the ends of the spokes, well cemented together by
+the two washers, form the central block or boss. The ends of the
+spokes do not quite touch each other, and so a small circular space
+is left which is subsequently bored to fit the axle. The wheel now
+presents a curiously incomplete appearance, for the top strokes of
+the [T]'s do not touch each other. There is a space between each,
+and these spaces have now to be filled with pieces of red-hot iron
+well welded and hammered together. To the uninitiated it would seem
+that all this work is superfluous; that the wheel might be made much
+more quickly in two or three pieces, instead of all these, and that
+it would be stronger. But the practical men engaged in the work say
+differently. It is their maxim that the more iron is hammered, the
+stronger and better it becomes; therefore all this welding adds to
+the strength of the wheel. In practice it is found quicker and more
+convenient to thus divide the labour than to endeavour to form the
+wheel of fewer component parts. The wheel is now taken to the lathe,
+and a portion is cut away from its edge, till a groove is left so as
+to dovetail into the tyre.
+
+The tyres, which are of steel, are not made here; they come ready to
+be placed upon the wheel, and some care has to be taken in moving
+them, for, although several inches in thickness and of enormous
+strength, it has occasionally happened that a sudden jar from other
+solid bodies has fractured them. One outer edge of the tyre is
+prolonged, so to say, and forms the projecting flange which holds
+the rails and prevents the carriage from running off the road. So
+important a part requires the best metal and the most careful
+manufacture, and accordingly no trouble or expense is spared to
+secure suitable tyres. One of the inner edges of the tyre, on the
+opposite side to the flange, is grooved, and this groove is intended
+to receive the edge of the wheel itself; they dovetail together
+here. The tyre is now made hot, and the result of that heating is an
+expansion of the metal, so that the circle of the tyre becomes
+larger. The wheel is then driven into the tyre, which fits round it
+like a band. As it grows cool the steel tyre clasps the iron wheel
+with enormous force, and the softer metal is driven into the groove
+of the steel. But this is not all. The wheel is turned over, and the
+iron wheel is seen to be some little distance sunk, as it were,
+beneath the surface of the tyre. Immediately on a level with the
+iron wheel there runs round the steel tyre another deeper groove.
+The wheel is again heated--not to redness, for the steel will not
+bear blows if too hot--and when the tyre is sufficiently warm, a
+long, thin strip of iron is driven into this groove, and so shuts
+the iron wheel into the tyre as with a continuous wedge. Yet another
+process has to follow--yet another safeguard against accident. The
+tyre, once more heated, is attacked with the blows of three heavy
+sledge-hammers, wielded by as many stalwart smiths, and its inner
+edge, by their well-directed blows, bent down over the narrow band
+of iron, or continuous wedge, so that this wedge is closed in by
+what may be called a continuous rivet. The wheel is now complete, so
+far as its body is concerned, and to look at, it seems very nearly
+impossible that any wear or tear, or jar or accident, could
+disconnect its parts--all welded, overlapped, dovetailed as they
+are. Practically it seems the perfection of safety; nor was it to a
+wheel of this character that _the_ accident happened. The only
+apparent risk is that there may be some slight undiscovered flaw in
+the solid steel which, under the pressure of unforeseen
+circumstances, may give way. But the whole design of the wheel is to
+guard against the ill-effects that would follow the snapping of a
+tyre. Suppose a tyre to 'fly'--the result would be a small crack;
+supposing there were two cracks, or ten cracks, the speciality of
+this wheel is that not one of those pieces could come off--that the
+wheel would run as well and as safely with a tyre cracked through in
+a dozen places as when perfectly sound. The reason of this is that
+every single quarter of an inch of the tyre is fixed irremovably to
+the outer edge of the iron wheel, by the continuous dovetail, by the
+continuous wedge, and by the continuous overlapping. So that under
+no condition could any portion of the tyre fly off from the wheel.
+Close by this wheel thus finished upon this patent process there was
+an old riveted wheel which had been brought in to receive a new tyre
+on the new process. This old wheel aptly illustrates the advantages
+of the new one. Its tyre is fixed to the wheel by rivets or bolts
+placed at regular intervals. Now, the holes made for these bolts to
+some extent weaken both tyre and wheel. The bolt is liable, with
+constant shaking, to wear loose. The bolt only holds a very limited
+area of tyre to the wheel. If the tyre breaks in two places between
+the bolts, it comes off. If a bolt breaks, or the tyre breaks at the
+bolt, it flies. The tyre is, in fact, only fixed on in spots with
+intervals between. The new fastening leaves no intervals, and
+instead of spots is fixed everywhere. This is called the Gibson
+process, and was invented by an employé of the company. Latterly
+another process has partially come into vogue, particularly for
+wooden wheels, which are preferred sometimes on account of their
+noiselessness. By this (the Mansell) process, the tyres, which are
+similar, are fastened to the wheels by two circular bands which
+dovetail into the tyre, and are then bolted to the wood.
+
+To return to the wheel--now really and substantially a wheel, but
+which has still to be turned so as to run perfectly true upon the
+metals--it is conveyed to the wheel lathe, and affixed to what looks
+like another wheel, which is set in motion by steam-power, and
+carries our wheel round with it. A workman sets a tool to plane its
+edge, which shaves off the steel as if it were wood, and reduces it
+to the prescribed scale. Then, when its centre has been bored to
+receive the axle, the genesis of the wheel is complete, and it
+enters upon its life of perpetual revolution. How little do the
+innumerable travellers who are carried to their destination upon it
+imagine the immense expenditure of care, skill, labour, and thought
+that has been expended before a perfect wheel was produced.
+
+Next in natural order come the rails upon which the wheel must run.
+The former type of rail was a solid bar of iron, whose end presented
+a general resemblance to the letter [T], which was thick at the top
+and at the bottom, and smaller in the middle. It was thought that
+this rail was not entirely satisfactory, for reasons that cannot be
+enumerated here, and accordingly a patent was taken out for a rail
+which, it is believed, can be more easily and cheaply manufactured,
+with a less expenditure of metal, and which can be more readily
+attached to the sleepers. In reality it is designed upon the
+principle of the arch, and the end of these rails somewhat
+resembles the Greek letter [Omega], for they are hollow, and formed
+of a thin plate of metal rolled into this shape. Coming to this very
+abode of the Cyclops, the rail-mill, the first machine that appears
+resembles a pair of gigantic scissors, which are employed day and
+night in snipping off old rails and other pieces of iron into
+lengths suitable for the manufacture of new rails.
+
+These scissors, or, perhaps, rather pincers, are driven by
+steam-power, and bite off the solid iron as if it were merely strips
+of ribbon. There is some danger in this process, for occasionally
+the metal breaks and flies, and men's hands are severely injured. At
+a guess, the lengths of iron for manufacture into rails may be about
+four feet long, and are piled up in flat pieces eight or nine inches
+or more in height. These pieces are carried to the furnace, heated
+to an intense heat, and then placed under the resistless blows of a
+steam-hammer, which welds them into one solid bar of iron, longer
+than the separate pieces were. The bar then goes back to the
+furnace, and again comes out white-hot. The swinging-shears seize
+it, and it is swung along to the rollers. These rollers are two
+massive cylindrical iron bars which revolve rapidly one over the
+other. The end of the white-hot metal is placed between these
+rollers, and is at once drawn out into a long strip of iron, much as
+a piece of dough is rolled out under the cook's rolling-pin. It is
+now perfectly flat, and entirely malleable. It is returned to the
+furnace, heated, brought back, and placed in a second pair of
+rollers. This second pair have projections upon them, which so
+impress the flat strip of iron that it is drawn out into the
+required shape. The rail passes twice through these rollers, once
+forwards, then backwards. Terrible is the heat in this fiery spot.
+The experienced workman who guides the long red-hot rails to the
+mouth of the rollers is protected with a mask, with iron-shod shoes,
+iron greaves on his legs, an iron apron, and, even further, with a
+shield of iron. The very floor beneath is formed of slabs of iron
+instead of slabs of stone, and the visitor very soon finds this iron
+floor too hot for his feet. The perfect rail, still red-hot or
+nearly, is run back to the circular saw, which cuts it off in
+regular lengths; for it is not possible to so apportion the iron in
+each bundle as to form absolutely identical strips. They are
+proportioned so as to be a little longer than required, and then
+sawn off to the exact length. While still hot, a workman files the
+sawn ends so that they may fit together closely when laid down on
+the sleepers. The completed rails are then stacked for removal on
+trucks to their destination. The rollers which turn out these rails
+in so regular and beautiful a manner are driven by a pair of engines
+of enormous power. The huge fly-wheel is twenty feet in diameter,
+and weighs, with its axle, thirty-five tons. When these rails were
+first manufactured, the rollers were driven direct from the axle of
+the fly-wheel, and the rails had to be lifted right over the
+roller--a difficult and dangerous process--and again inserted
+between them on the side at which it started. Since then an
+improvement has been effected, by which the rails are sent backwards
+through the rollers, thus avoiding the trouble of lifting them over.
+This is managed by reversing the motion of the rollers, which is
+done in an instant by means of a 'crab.'
+
+Immediately adjacent to these rail-mills are the steam-hammers,
+whose blows shake the solid earth. The largest descends with the
+force of seventy tons, yet so delicate is the machinery that
+visitors are shown how the same ponderous mass of metal and the same
+irresistible might can be so gently administered as to crush the
+shell of a nut without injuring the kernel. These hammers are
+employed in beating huge masses of iron into cranks for engines, and
+other heavy work which is beyond the unaided strength of man. Each
+of the hammers has its own steam-boiler and its furnace close at
+hand, and overhead there are travelling cranes which convey the
+metal to and fro. These boilers may be called vertical, and with the
+structure on which they are supported have a dome-like shape.
+Hissing, with small puffs of white steam curling stealthily upwards,
+they resemble a group of volcanoes on the eve of an eruption. This
+place presents a wonderful and even terrible aspect at night, when
+the rail-mill and steam-hammers are in full swing. The open doors of
+the glaring furnaces shoot forth an insupportable beam of brilliant
+white light, and out from among the glowing fire comes a massive bar
+of iron, hotter, whiter than the fire itself--barely to be looked
+upon. It is dragged and swung along under the great hammer; Thor
+strikes, and the metal doubles up, and bends as if of plastic clay,
+and showers of sparks fly high and far. What looks like a long strip
+of solid flame is guided between the rollers, and flattened and
+shaped, till it comes out a dull-red-hot rail, and the sharp teeth
+of the circular saw cut through it, throwing out a circle of sparks.
+The vast fly-wheel whirls round endless shaftings, and drums are
+revolving overhead, and the ear is full of a ceaseless overpowering
+hum, varied at intervals with the sharp scraping, ringing sound of
+the saw. The great boilers hiss, the furnaces roar, all around there
+is a sense of an irresistible power, but just held in by bars and
+rivets, ready in a moment to rend all asunder. Masses of glowing
+iron are wheeled hither and thither in wheelbarrows; smaller blocks
+are slid along the iron floor. Here is a heap of red-hot scraps
+hissing. A sulphurous hot smell prevails, a burning wind, a fierce
+heat, now from this side, now from that, and ever and anon bright
+streaks of light flow out from the open furnace doors, casting
+grotesque shadows upon the roof and walls. The men have barely a
+human look, with the reflection of the fire upon them; mingling thus
+with flame and heat, toying with danger, handling, as it seems,
+red-hot metal with ease. The whole scene suggests the infernal
+regions. A mingled hiss and roar and thud fill the building with
+reverberation, and the glare of the flames rising above the chimneys
+throws a reflection upon the sky, which is visible miles away, like
+that of a conflagration.
+
+Stepping out of this pandemonium, there are rows upon rows of
+gleaming forges, each with its appointed smiths, whose hammers rise
+and fall in rhythmic strokes, and who manufacture the minor portions
+of the incipient locomotive. Here is a machine the central part of
+which resembles a great corkscrew or spiral constantly revolving. A
+weight is affixed to its inclined plane, and is carried up to the
+required height by the revolution of the screw, to be let fall upon
+a piece of red-hot iron, which in that moment becomes a bolt, with
+its projecting head or cap. Though they do not properly belong to
+our subject, the great marine boilers in course of construction in
+the adjoining department cannot be overlooked, even if only for
+their size--vast cylinders of twelve feet diameter. Next comes the
+erecting shop, where the various parts of the locomotive are fitted
+together, and it is built up much as a ship from the keel. These
+semi-completed engines have a singularly helpless look--out of
+proportion, without limbs, and many mere skeletons. Close by is the
+department where engines out of repair are made good. Some American
+engineer started the idea of a railway thirty feet wide, an idea
+which in this place is partially realized. The engine to be repaired
+is run on to what may be described as a turn-table resting upon
+wheels, and this turn-table is bodily rolled along, like a truck,
+with the engine on it, to the place where tools and cranes and all
+the necessary gear are ready for the work upon it. Now by a yard,
+which seems one vast assemblage of wheels of all kinds--big wheels,
+little wheels, wheels of all sizes, nothing but wheels; past great
+mounds of iron, shapeless heaps of scrap, and then, perhaps, the
+most interesting shop of all, though the least capable of
+description, is entered. It is where the endless pieces of metal of
+which the locomotive is composed are filed and planed and smoothed
+into an accurate fit; an immense building, with shafting overhead
+and shafting below in endless revolution, yielding an incessant hum
+like the sound of armies of bees--a building which may be said to
+have a score of aisles, up which one may walk with machinery upon
+either side. Hundreds of lathes of every conceivable pattern are
+planing the solid steel and the solid iron as if it were wood,
+cutting off with each revolution a more or less thick slice of the
+hard metal, which curls up like a shaving of deal. So delicate is
+the touch of some of these tools, so good the metal they are
+employed to cut, that shavings are taken off three or more feet
+long, curled up like a spiral spring, and which may be wound round
+the hand like string. The interiors of the cylinders, the bearings,
+those portions of the engines which slide one upon the other, and
+require the most accurate fit, are here adjusted by unerring
+machinery, which turns out the work with an ease and exactness which
+the hand of man, delicate and wonderful organ as it is, cannot
+reach. From the smallest fitting up to the great engine cranks, the
+lathes smooth them all--reduce them to the precise size which they
+were intended to be by the draughtsman. These cranks and larger
+pieces of metal are conveyed to their lathes and placed in position
+by a steam crane, which glides along upon a single rail at the will
+of the driver, who rides on it, and which handles the massive metal
+almost with the same facility that an elephant would move a log of
+wood with his trunk. Most of us have an inherent idea that iron is
+exceedingly hard, but the ease with which it is cut and smoothed by
+these machines goes far to remove that impression.
+
+The carriage department does not offer so much that will strike the
+eye, yet it is of the highest importance. To the uninitiated it is
+difficult to trace the connection between the various stages of the
+carriage, as it is progressively built up, and finally painted and
+gilded and fitted with cushions. Generally, the impression left from
+an inspection is that the frames of the carriages are made in a way
+calculated to secure great strength, the material being solid oak.
+The brake-vans especially are made strong. The carriages made here
+are for the narrow gauge, and are immensely superior in every way to
+the old broad-gauge carriage, being much more roomy, although not so
+wide. Over the department there lingers an odour of wood. It is
+common to speak of the scented woods of the East and the South, but
+even our English woods are not devoid of pleasant odour under the
+carpenter's hands. Hidden away amongst the piles of wood there is
+here a triumph of human ingenuity. It is an endless saw which
+revolves around two wheels, much in the same way as a band revolves
+around two drums. The wheels are perhaps three feet in diameter, and
+two inches in thickness at the circumference. They are placed--one
+as low as the workman's feet, another rather above his head--six or
+seven feet apart. Round the wheels there stretches an endless narrow
+band of blue steel, just as a ribbon might. This band of steel is
+very thin, and almost half an inch in width. Its edge towards the
+workman is serrated with sharp deep teeth. The wheels revolve by
+steam rapidly, and carry with them the saw, so that, instead of the
+old up and down motion, the teeth are continually running one way.
+The band of steel is so extremely flexible that it sustains the
+state of perpetual curve. There are stories in ancient chronicles of
+the wonderful swords of famous warriors made of such good steel that
+the blade could be bent till the point touched the hilt, and even
+till the blade was tied in a knot. These stories do not seem like
+fables before this endless saw, which does not bend once or twice,
+but is incessantly curved, and incessantly in the act of curving. A
+more beautiful machine cannot be imagined. Its chief use is to cut
+out the designs for cornices, and similar ornamental work in thin
+wood; but it is sufficiently strong to cut through a two-inch plank
+like paper. Every possible support that can be afforded by runners
+is given to the saw; still, with every aid, it is astonishing to see
+metal, which we have been taught to believe rigid, flexible as
+indiarubber. Adjoining are frame saws, working up and down by
+steam, and cutting half a dozen or more boards at the same time. It
+was in this department that the Queen's carriage was built at a
+great expenditure of skill and money--a carriage which is considered
+one of the masterpieces of this particular craft.
+
+There rises up in the mind, after the contemplation of this vast
+workshop, with its endless examples of human ingenuity, a conviction
+that safety in railway travelling is not only possible, but
+probable, and even now on the way to us. No one can behold the
+degree of excellence to which the art of manufacturing material has
+been brought, no one can inspect the processes by which the wheel,
+for instance, is finally welded into one compact mass, without a
+firm belief that, where so much has been done, in a little time
+still more will be done. That safer plans, that better designs, that
+closer compacted forms will arise seems as certain and assured a
+fact as that those forms now in use arose out of the rude beginnings
+of the past; for this great factory, both in its machine-tools and
+in its products, the wheels and rails and locomotives, is a standing
+proof of the development which goes on in the mind of man when
+brought constantly to bear upon one subject. As with the development
+of species, so it is with that of machinery: rude and more general
+forms first, finer and more specialized forms afterwards. There is
+every reason to hope, for this factory is a proof of the advance
+that has been made. It would seem that the capability of metal is
+practically infinite.
+
+But what an enormous amount of labour, what skill, and what
+complicated machinery must be first employed before what is in
+itself a very small result can be arrived at! In order that an
+individual may travel from London to Oxford, see what innumerable
+conditions have to be fulfilled. Three thousand men have to work
+night and day that we may merely seat ourselves and remain passive
+till our destination is reached.
+
+This small nation of workers, this army of the hammer, lathe, and
+drill, affords matter for deep meditation in its sociological
+aspect. Though so numerous that no one of them can be personally
+acquainted with more than a fractional part, yet there is a strong
+_esprit de corps_, a spirit that ascends to the highest among them;
+for it is well known that the chief manager has a genuine feeling of
+almost fatherly affection for these his men, and will on no account
+let them suffer, and will, if possible, obtain for them every
+advantage. The influence he thereby acquires among them is
+principally used for moral and religious ends. Under these auspices
+have arisen the great chapels and places of worship of which the
+town is full. Of the men themselves, the majority are intelligent,
+contrasting strongly with the agricultural poor around them, and not
+a few are well educated and thoughtful. This gleaning of
+intellectual men are full of social life, or, rather, of an interest
+in the problems of social existence. They eagerly discuss the claims
+of religion _versus_ the allegations of secularism; they are shrewd
+to detect the weak points of an argument; they lean, in fact,
+towards an eclecticism: they select the most rational part of every
+theory. They are full of information on every subject--information
+obtained not only from newspapers, books, conversation, and
+lectures, but from travel, for most have at least been over the
+greater part of England. They are probably higher in their
+intellectual life than a large proportion of the so-called middle
+classes. One is, indeed, tempted to declare, after considering the
+energy with which they enter on all questions, that this class of
+educated mechanics forms in reality the protoplasm, or living
+matter, out of which modern society is evolved. The great and
+well-supplied reading-room of the Mechanics' Institute is always
+full of readers; the library, now an extensive one, is constantly in
+use. Where one book is read in agricultural districts, fifty are
+read in the vicinity of the factory. Social questions of marriage,
+of religion, of politics, sanitary science, are for ever on the
+simmer among these men. It would almost seem as if the hammer, the
+lathe, and the drill would one day bring forth a creed of its own. A
+characteristic of all classes of these workmen is their demand for
+meat, of which great quantities are consumed. Nor do they stay at
+meat alone, but revel in fish and other luxuries at times, though
+the champagne of the miner is not known here. Notwithstanding the
+number of public-houses, it is a remarkable fact that there is very
+little drunkenness in proportion to the population, few crimes of
+violence, and, what is more singular still, and has been often
+remarked, very little immorality. Where there are some hundreds,
+perhaps thousands, of young uneducated girls, without work to occupy
+their time, there must of course exist a certain amount of lax
+conduct; but never, or extremely rarely, does a girl apply to the
+magistrates for an affiliation order, while from agricultural
+parishes such applications are common. The number of absolutely
+immoral women openly practising infamy is also remarkably small.
+There was a time when the workmen at this factory enjoyed an
+unpleasant notoriety for mischief and drunkenness, but that time has
+passed away, a most marked improvement having taken place in the
+last few years.
+
+There appears, however, to be very little prudence amongst them. The
+man who receives some extra money for extra work simply spends it on
+unusual luxuries in food or drink; or, if it be summer, takes his
+wife and children a drive in a hired conveyance. To this latter
+there can be no objection; but still, the fact remains prominent
+that men in the receipt of good wages do not save. They do not put
+by money; this is, of course, speaking of the majority. It would
+almost seem to be a characteristic of human nature that those who
+receive wages for work done, so much per week or fortnight, do not
+contract saving habits. The small struggling tradesman, whose income
+is very little more than that of the mechanic, often makes great
+exertions and practises much economy to put by a sum to assist him
+in difficulty or to extend his business. It may be that the very
+certainty of the wages acts as a deterrent--inasmuch as the mechanic
+feels safe of his weekly money, while the shopkeeper runs much risk.
+It is doubtful whether mechanics with good wages save more than
+agricultural labourers, except in indirect ways--ways which are
+thrust upon them. First of all, there is the yard club, to which all
+are compelled to pay by their employers, the object being to provide
+medical assistance in case of sickness. This is in some sense a
+saving. Then there are the building societies, which offer
+opportunities of possessing a house, and the mechanic who becomes a
+member has to pay for it by instalments. This also may be called an
+indirect saving, since the effect is the same. But of direct
+saving--putting money in a bank, or investing it--there is scarcely
+any. The quarter of a million annually paid in wages mostly finds
+its way into the pockets of the various trades-people, and at the
+end of the year the mechanic is none the better off. This is a grave
+defect in his character. Much of it results from a generous, liberal
+disposition: a readiness to treat a friend with a drink, to drive
+the family out into the country, to treat the daughter with a new
+dress. The mechanic does not set a value upon money in itself.
+
+The effect of the existence of this factory upon the whole
+surrounding district has been marked. A large proportion of the
+lower class of mechanics, especially the factory labourers, are
+drawn from the agricultural poor of the adjacent villages. These
+work all day at the factory, and return at night. They daily walk
+great distances to secure this employment: three miles to and three
+miles back is common, four miles not uncommon, and some have been
+known to walk six or twelve miles per day. These carry back with
+them into the villages the knowledge they insensibly acquire from
+their better-informed comrades, and exhibit an independent spirit.
+For a radius of six miles round the poorer class are better
+informed, quicker in perception, more ready with an answer to a
+question, than those who dwell farther back out of the track of
+modern life. Wages had materially risen long before the movement
+among the agricultural labourers took place.
+
+Where there was lately nothing but furze and rabbits there is now a
+busy human population. Why was it that for so many hundreds of years
+the population of England remained nearly stationary? and why has it
+so marvellously increased in this last forty years? The history of
+this place seems to answer that interesting question. The increase
+is due to the facilities of communication which now exist, and to
+the numberless new employments in which that facility of
+communication took rise, and which it in turn adds to and fosters.
+
+
+
+
+UNEQUAL AGRICULTURE
+
+
+In the way of sheer, downright force few effects of machinery are
+more striking than a steam-ploughing engine dragging the shares
+across a wide expanse of stiff clay. The huge engines used in our
+ironclad vessels work with a graceful ease which deceives the eye;
+the ponderous cranks revolve so smoothly, and shine so brightly with
+oil and polish, that the mind is apt to underrate the work
+performed. But these ploughing engines stand out solitary and apart
+from other machinery, and their shape itself suggests crude force,
+such force as may have existed in the mastodon or other unwieldy
+monster of the prehistoric ages. The broad wheels sink into the
+earth under the pressure; the steam hissing from the escape valves
+is carried by the breeze through the hawthorn hedge, hiding the red
+berries with a strange, unwonted cloud; the thick dark brown smoke,
+rising from the funnel as the stoker casts its food of coal into the
+fiery mouth of the beast, falls again and floats heavily over the
+yellow stubble, smothering and driving away the partridges and
+hares. There is a smell of oil, and cotton-waste, and gas, and
+steam, and smoke, which overcomes the fresh, sweet odour of the
+earth and green things after a shower. Stray lumps of coal crush the
+delicate pimpernel and creeping convolvulus. A shrill, short scream
+rushes forth and echoes back from an adjacent rick--puff! the
+fly-wheel revolves, and the drum underneath tightens its hold upon
+the wire rope. Across yonder a curious, shapeless thing, with a man
+riding upon it, comes jerking forward, tearing its way through
+stubble and clay, dragging its iron teeth with sheer strength deep
+through the solid earth. The thick wire rope stretches and strains
+as if it would snap and curl up like a tortured snake; the engine
+pants loudly and quick; the plough now glides forward, now pauses,
+and, as it were, eats its way through a tougher place, then glides
+again, and presently there is a pause, and behold the long furrow
+with the upturned subsoil is completed. A brief pause, and back it
+travels again, this time drawn from the other side, where a twin
+monster puffs and pants and belches smoke, while the one that has
+done its work uncoils its metal sinews. When the furrows run up and
+down a slope, the savage force, the fierce, remorseless energy of
+the engine pulling the plough upwards, gives an idea of power which
+cannot but impress the mind.
+
+This is what is going on upon one side of the hedge. These engines
+cost as much as the fee-simple of a small farm; they consume
+expensive coal, and water that on the hills has to be brought long
+distances; they require skilled workmen to attend to them, and they
+do the work with a thoroughness which leaves little to be desired.
+Each puff and pant echoing from the ricks, each shrill whistle
+rolling along from hill to hill, proclaims as loudly as iron and
+steel can shout, 'Progress! Onwards!' Now step through this gap in
+the hedge and see what is going on in the next field.
+
+It is a smaller ground, of irregular shape and uneven surface.
+Steam-ploughs mean _plains_ rather than fields--broad, square
+expanses of land without awkward corners--and as level as possible,
+with mounds that may have been tumuli worked down, rising places
+smoothed away, old ditch-like drains filled up, and fairly good
+roads. This field may be triangular or some indescribable figure,
+with narrow corners where the high hedges come close together, with
+deep furrows to carry away the water, rising here and sinking there
+into curious hollows, entered by a narrow gateway leading from a
+muddy lane where the ruts are a foot deep. The plough is at work
+here also, such a plough as was used when the Corn Laws were in
+existence, chiefly made of wood--yes, actually wood, in this age of
+iron--bound and strengthened with metal, but principally made from
+the tree--the tree which furnishes the African savage at this day
+with the crooked branch with which to scratch the earth, which
+furnished the ancient agriculturists of the Nile Valley with their
+primitive implements. It is drawn by dull, patient oxen, plodding
+onwards now just as they were depicted upon the tombs and temples,
+the graves and worshipping places, of races who had their being
+three thousand years ago. Think of the suns that have shone since
+then; of the summers and the bronzed grain waving in the wind, of
+the human teeth that have ground that grain, and are now hidden in
+the abyss of earth; yet still the oxen plod on, like slow Time
+itself, here this day in our land of steam and telegraph. Are not
+these striking pictures, remarkable contrasts? On the one side
+steam, on the other the oxen of the Egyptians, only a few
+thorn-bushes between dividing the nineteenth century B.C. from the
+nineteenth century A.D. After these oxen follows an aged man, slow
+like themselves, sowing the seed. A basket is at his side, from
+which at every stride, regular as machinery, he takes a handful of
+that corn round which so many mysteries have gathered from the time
+of Ceres to the hallowed words of the great Teacher, taking His
+parable from the sower. He throws it with a peculiar _steady_ jerk,
+so to say, and the grains, impelled with the exact force and skill,
+which can only be attained by long practice, scatter in an even
+shower. Listen! On the other side of the hedge the rattle of the
+complicated drill resounds as it drops the seed in regular
+rows--and, perhaps, manures it at the same time--so that the plants
+can be easily thinned out, or the weeds removed, after the magical
+influence of the despised clods has brought on the miracle of
+vegetation.
+
+These are not extreme and isolated instances; no one will need to
+walk far afield to witness similar contrasts. There is a medium
+between the two--a third class--an intermediate agriculture. The
+pride of this farm is in its horses, its teams of magnificent
+animals, sleek and glossy of skin, which the carters spend hours in
+feeding lest they should lose their appetites--more hours than ever
+they spend in feeding their own children. These noble creatures,
+whose walk is power and whose step is strength, work a few hours
+daily, stopping early in the afternoon, taking also an ample margin
+for lunch. They pull the plough also like the oxen, but it is a
+modern implement, of iron, light, and with all the latest
+improvements. It is typical of the system itself--half and
+half--neither the old oxen nor the new steam, but midway, a
+compromise. The fields are small and irregular in shape, but the
+hedges are cut, and the mounds partially grubbed and reduced to the
+thinnest of banks, the trees thrown, and some draining done. Some
+improvements have been adopted, others have been omitted.
+
+Upon those broad acres where the steam-plough was at work, what tons
+of artificial manure, superphosphate, and guano, liquid and solid,
+have been sown by the progressive tenant! Lavishly and yet
+judiciously, not once only, but many times, have the fertilizing
+elements been restored to the soil, and more than restored--added to
+it, till the earth itself has grown richer and stronger. The
+scarifier and the deep plough have turned up the subsoil and exposed
+the hard, stiff under-clods to the crumbling action of the air and
+the mysterious influence of light. Never before since Nature
+deposited those earthy atoms there in the slow process of some
+geological change has the sunshine fallen on them, or their latent
+power been called forth. Well-made and judiciously laid drains carry
+away the flow of water from the winter rains and floods--no longer
+does there remain a species of reservoir at a certain depth,
+chilling the tender roots of the plants as they strike downwards,
+lowering the entire temperature of the field. Mounds have been
+levelled, good roads laid down, nothing left undone that can
+facilitate operations or aid in the production of strong, succulent
+vegetation. Large flocks of well-fed sheep, folded on the
+corn-lands, assist the artificial manure, and perhaps even surpass
+it. When at last the plant comes to maturity and turns colour under
+the scorching sun, behold a widespread ocean of wheat, an English
+gold-field, a veritable Yellow Sea, bowing in waves before the
+southern breeze--a sight full of peaceful poetry. The stalk is tall
+and strong, good in colour, fit for all purposes. The ear is full,
+large; the increase is truly a hundredfold. Or it may be roots. By
+these means the progressive agriculturist has produced a crop of
+swedes or mangolds which in individual size and collective weight
+per acre would seem to an old-fashioned farmer perfectly fabulous.
+Now, here are many great benefits. First, the tenant himself reaps
+his reward, and justly adds to his private store. Next, the property
+of the landlord is improved, and increases in value. The labourer
+gets better house accommodation, gardens, and higher wages. The
+country at large is supplied with finer qualities and greater
+quantities of food, and those who are engaged in trade and
+manufactures, and even in commerce, feel an increased vitality in
+their various occupations.
+
+On the other side of the hedge, where the oxen were at plough, the
+earth is forced to be self-supporting--to restore to itself how it
+can the elements carried away in wheat and straw and root. Except a
+few ill-fed sheep, except some small quantities of manure from the
+cattle-yards, no human aid, so to say, reaches the much-abused soil.
+A crop of green mustard is sometimes ploughed in to decompose and
+fertilize, but as it had to be grown first the advantage is
+doubtful. The one object is to spend as little as possible upon the
+soil, and to get as much out of it as may be. Granted that in
+numbers of cases no trickery be practised, that the old rotation of
+crops is honestly followed, and no evil meant, yet even then, in
+course of time, a soil just scratched on the surface, never fairly
+manured, and always in use, must of necessity deteriorate. Then,
+when such an effect is too patent to be any longer overlooked, when
+the decline of the produce begins to alarm him, the farmer, perhaps,
+buys a few hundredweight of artificial manure, and frugally scatters
+it abroad. This causes 'a flash in the pan'; it acts as a momentary
+stimulus; it is like endeavouring to repair a worn-out constitution
+with doses of strong cordial; there springs up a vigorous vegetation
+one year, and the next the earth is more exhausted than before.
+Soils cannot be made highly fertile all at once even by
+superphosphates; it is the inability to discern this fact which
+leads many to still argue in the face of experience that artificial
+manures are of no avail. The slow oxen, the lumbering wooden plough,
+the equally lumbering heavy waggon, the primitive bush-harrow, made
+simply of a bush cut down and dragged at a horse's tail--these are
+symbols of a standstill policy utterly at variance with the times.
+Then this man loudly complains that things are not as they used to
+be--that wheat is so low in price it will not yield any profit, that
+labour is so high and everything so dear; and, truly, it is easy to
+conceive that the present age, with its competition and eagerness to
+advance, must really press very seriously upon him.
+
+Most persons have been interested enough, however little connected
+with agriculture, to at least once in their lives walk round an
+agricultural show, and to express their astonishment at the size and
+rotundity of the cattle exhibited. How easy, judging from such a
+passing view of the finest products of the country centred in one
+spot, to go away with the idea that under every hawthorn hedge a
+prize bullock of enormous girth is peacefully grazing! Should the
+same person ever go across country, through gaps and over brooks,
+taking an Asmodeus-like glance into every field, how marvellously
+would he find that he had been deceived! He might travel miles, and
+fly over scores of fields, and find no such animals, nor anything
+approaching to them. By making inquiries he would perhaps discover
+in most districts one spot where something of the kind could be
+seen--an oasis in the midst of a desert. On the farm he would see a
+long range of handsome outhouses, tiled or slated, with comfortable
+stalls and every means of removing litter and manure, tanks for
+liquid manure, skilled attendants busy in feeding, in preparing
+food, storehouses full of cake. A steam-engine in one of the
+sheds--perhaps a portable engine, used also for threshing--drives
+the machinery which slices up or pulps roots, cuts up chaff, pumps
+up water, and performs a score of other useful functions. The yards
+are dry, well paved, and clean; everything smells clean; there are
+no foul heaps of decaying matter breeding loathsome things and
+fungi; yet nothing is wasted, not even the rain that falls upon the
+slates and drops from the eaves. The stock within are worthy to
+compare with those magnificent beasts seen at the show. It is from
+these places that the prize animals are drawn; it is here that the
+beef which makes England famous is fattened; it is from here that
+splendid creatures are sent abroad to America or the Colonies, to
+improve the breed in those distant countries. Now step forth again
+over the hedge, down yonder in the meadows.
+
+This is a cow-pen, one of the old-fashioned style; in the dairy and
+pasture counties you may find them by hundreds still. It is pitched
+by the side of a tall hedge, or in an angle of two hedges, which
+themselves form two walls of the enclosure. The third is the
+cow-house and shedding itself; the fourth is made of willow rods.
+These rods are placed upright, confined between horizontal poles,
+and when new this simple contrivance is not wholly to be despised;
+but when the rods decay, as they do quickly, then gaps are formed,
+through which the rain and sleet and bitter wind penetrate with
+ease. Inside this willow paling is a lower hedge, so to say, two
+feet distant from the other, made of willow work twisted--like a
+continuous hurdle. Into this rude manger, when the yard is full of
+cattle, the fodder is thrown. Here and there about the yard, also,
+stand cumbrous cribs for fodder, at which two cows can feed at once.
+In one corner there is a small pond, muddy, stagnant, covered with
+duckweed, perhaps reached by a steep, 'pitched' descent, slippery,
+and difficult for the cattle to get down. They foul the very water
+they drink. The cow-house, as it is called, is really merely adapted
+for one or two cows at a time, at the period of calving--dark,
+narrow, awkward. The skilling, or open house where the cows lie and
+chew the cud in winter, is built of boards or slabs at the back, and
+in front supported upon oaken posts standing on stones. The roof is
+of thatch, green with moss; in wet weather the water drips steadily
+from the eaves, making one long gutter. In the eaves the wrens make
+their nests in the spring, and roost there in winter. The floor here
+is hard, certainly, and dry; the yard itself is a sea of muck. Never
+properly stoned or pitched, and without a drain, the loose stones
+cannot keep the mud down, and it works up under the hoofs of the
+cattle in a filthy mass. Over this there is litter and manure a foot
+deep; or, if the fogger does clean up the manure, he leaves it in
+great heaps scattered about, and on the huge dunghill just outside
+the yard he will show you a fine crop of mushrooms cunningly hidden
+under a light layer of litter. It is his boast that the cow-pen was
+built in the three sevens; on one ancient beam, worm-eaten and
+cracked, there may perhaps be seen the inscription '1777' cut deep
+into the wood. Over all, at the back of the cow-pen, stands a row of
+tall elm-trees, dripping in wet weather upon the thatch, in the
+autumn showering their yellow leaves into the hay, in a gale
+dropping dead branches into the yard. The tenant seems to think even
+this shelter effeminate, and speaks regretfully of the old hardy
+breed which stood all weathers, and wanted no more cover than was
+afforded by a hawthorn bush. From here a few calves find their way
+to the butcher, and towards Christmas one or two moderately fat
+beasts.
+
+Near by lives a dairy farmer, who, without going to the length of
+the famous stock-breeder whose stalls are the pride of the district,
+yet fills his meadows with a handsome herd of productive shorthorns,
+giving splendid results in butter, milk, and cheese, and who sends
+to the market a succession of animals which, if not equal to the
+gigantic prize beasts, are nevertheless valuable to the consumer.
+This tenant does good work, both for himself and for the labourers,
+the landlord, and the country. His meadows are a sight in themselves
+to the experienced eye--well drained, great double mounds thinned
+out, but the supply of wood not quite destroyed--not a rush, a
+'bullpoll,' a thistle, or a 'rattle,' those yellow pests of mowing
+grass, to be seen. They have been weeded out as carefully as the
+arable farmer weeds his plants. Where broad deep furrows used to
+breed those aquatic grasses which the cattle left, drains have been
+put in and soil thrown over till the level was brought up to the
+rest of the field. The manure carts have evidently been at work
+here, perhaps the liquid manure tank also, and some artificial aid
+in places where required, both of seed and manure. The number of
+stock kept is the fullest tale the land will bear, and he does not
+hesitate to help the hay with cake in the fattening stalls. For
+there are stalls, not so elaborately furnished as those of the
+famous stock-breeder, but comfortable, clean, and healthy. Nothing
+is wasted here either. So far as practicable the fields have been
+enlarged by throwing two or three smaller enclosures together. He
+does not require so much machinery as the great arable farmer, but
+here are mowing machines, haymaking machines, horse-rakes, chain
+harrows, chaff-cutters, light carts instead of heavy waggons--every
+labour-saving appliance. Without any noise or puff this man is doing
+good work, and silently reaping his reward. Glance for a moment at
+an adjacent field: it is an old 'leaze' or ground not mown, but used
+for grazing. It has the appearance of a desert, a wilderness. The
+high, thick hedges encroach upon the land; the ditches are quite
+arched over by the brambles and briars which trail out far into the
+grass. Broad deep furrows are full of tough, grey aquatic grass,
+'bullpolls,' and short brown rushes; in winter they are so many
+small brooks. Tall bennets from last year and thistle abound--half
+the growth is useless for cattle; in autumn the air here is white
+with the clouds of thistle-down. It is a tolerably large field, but
+the meadows held by the same tenant are small, with double mounds
+and trees, rows of spreading oaks and tall elms; these meadows run
+up into the strangest nooks and corners. Sometimes, where they
+follow the course of a brook which winds and turns, actually an area
+equal to about half the available field is occupied by the hedges.
+Into this brook the liquid sewage from the cow-pens filtrates, or,
+worse still, accumulates in a hollow, making a pond, disgusting to
+look at, but which liquid, if properly applied, is worth almost its
+weight in gold. The very gateways of the fields in winter are a
+Slough of Despond, where the wheels sink in up to the axles, and in
+summer great ruts jolt the loads almost off the waggons.
+
+Where the steam-plough is kept, where first-class stock are bred,
+there the labourer is well housed, and his complaints are few and
+faint. There cottages with decent and even really capital
+accommodation for the families spring up, and are provided with
+extensive gardens. It is not easy, in the absence of statistics, to
+compare the difference in the amount of money put in circulation by
+these contrasted farms, but it must be something extraordinary.
+First comes the capital expenditure upon machinery--ploughs,
+engines, drills, what not--then the annual expenditure upon labour,
+which, despite the employment of machinery, is as great or greater
+upon a progressive farm as upon one conducted on stagnant
+principle. Add to this the cost of artificial manure, of cake and
+feeding-stuffs, etc., and the total will be something very heavy.
+Now, all this expenditure, this circulation of coin, means not only
+gain to the individual, but gain to the country at large. Whenever
+in a town a great manufactory is opened and gives employment to
+several hundred hands, at the same time increasing the production
+of a valuable material, the profit--the _outside_ profit, so to
+say--is as great to others as to the proprietors. But these
+half-cultivated lands, these tons upon tons of wasted manure, these
+broad hedges and weed-grown fields, represent upon the other hand
+an equal loss. The labouring classes in the rural districts are
+eager for more work. They may popularly be supposed to look with
+suspicion upon change, but such an idea is a mistaken one. They
+anxiously wait the approach of such works as new railways or
+extension of old ones in the hope of additional employment. Work is
+their gold-mine, and the best mine of all. The capitalist,
+therefore, who sets himself to improve his holding is the very man
+they most desire to see. What scope is there for work upon a
+stagnant dairy farm of one hundred and fifty acres? A couple of
+foggers and milkers, a hedger and ditcher, two or three women at
+times, and there is the end. And such work!--mere animal labour,
+leading to so little result. The effect of constant, of lifelong
+application in such labour cannot but be deteriorating to the mind.
+The master himself must feel the dull routine. The steam-plough
+teaches the labourer who works near it something; the sight must
+react upon him, utterly opposed as it is to all the traditions of
+the past. The enterprise of the master must convey some small
+spirit of energy into the mind of the man. Where the cottages are
+built of wattle and daub, low and thatched--mere sheds, in
+fact--where the gardens are small, and the allotments, if any, far
+distant, and where the men wear a sullen, apathetic look, be sure
+the agriculture of the district is at a low ebb.
+
+Are not these few pictures sufficient to show beyond a cavil that
+the agriculture of this country exhibits the strangest inequalities?
+Anyone who chooses can verify the facts stated, and may perhaps
+discover more curious anomalies still. The spirit of science is
+undoubtedly abroad in the homes of the English farmers, and immense
+are the strides that have been taken; but still greater is the work
+that remains to be done. Suppose anyone had a garden, and carefully
+manured, and dug over and over again, and raked, and broke up all
+the larger clods, and well watered one particular section of it,
+leaving all the rest to follow the dictates of wild nature, could he
+possibly expect the same amount of produce from those portions
+which, practically speaking, took care of themselves? Here are men
+of intellect and energy employing every possible means to develop
+the latent powers of the soil, and producing extraordinary results
+in grain and meat. Here also are others who, in so far as
+circumstances permit, follow in their footsteps. But there remains a
+large area in the great garden of England which, practically
+speaking, takes care of itself. The grass grows, the seed sprouts
+and germinates, very much how they may, with little or no aid from
+man. It does not require much penetration to arrive at the obvious
+conclusion that the yield does not nearly approach the possible
+production. Neither in meat nor corn is the tale equal to what it
+well might be. All due allowance must be made for barren soils of
+sand or chalk with thinnest layers of earth; yet then there is an
+enormous area, where the soil is good and fertile, not properly
+productive. It would be extremely unfair to cast the blame wholly
+upon the tenants. They have achieved wonders in the past twenty
+years; they have made gigantic efforts and bestirred themselves
+right manfully. But a man may wander over his farm and note with
+discontented eye the many things he would like to do--the drains he
+would like to lay down, the manure he would like to spread abroad,
+the new stalls he would gladly build, the machine he so much
+wants--and then, shrugging his shoulders, reflect that he has not
+got the capital to do it with. Almost to a man they are sincerely
+desirous of progress; those who cannot follow in great things do in
+little. Science and invention have done almost all that they can be
+expected to do; chemistry and research have supplied powerful
+fertilizers. Machinery has been made to do work which at first sight
+seems incapable of being carried on by wheels and cranks. Science
+and invention may rest awhile: what is wanted is the universal
+application of their improvements by the aid of more capital. We
+want the great garden equally highly cultivated everywhere.
+
+
+
+
+VILLAGE ORGANIZATION
+
+
+The great centres of population have almost entirely occupied the
+attention of our legislators of late years, and even those measures
+which affect the rural districts, or which may be extended to affect
+them at the will of the residents, have had their origin in the wish
+to provide for large towns. The Education Act arose out of a natural
+desire to place the means of learning within the reach of the dense
+population of such centres as London, Birmingham, Manchester, and
+others of that class; and although its operation extends to the
+whole country, yet those who have had any experience of its method
+of working in agricultural parishes will recognize at once that its
+designers did not contemplate the conditions of rural life when they
+were framing their Bill. What is reasonable enough when applied to
+cities is often extremely inconvenient when applied to villages. It
+would almost seem as if the framers of the Bill left out of sight
+the circumstances which obtain in agricultural districts. It was
+obviously drawn up with a view to cities and towns, where an
+organization exists which can be called in to assist the new
+institution. This indifference of the Bill to the conditions of
+country life is one of the reasons why it is so reluctantly complied
+with. The number of School Boards which have been called into
+existence in the country is extremely small, and even where they do
+exist they cannot be taken as representing a real outcome of opinion
+on the part of the inhabitants. They owe their establishment to
+certain causes which, in process of time, bring the parish under the
+operation of the Act, with or without the will of the residents.
+This is particularly the case in parishes where there is no large
+landlord, no one to take the initiative, and no large farmers to
+support the clergyman in his attempt to obtain, or maintain, an
+independent school. The matter is distinct from political feelings.
+It arises in a measure from the desultory village life, which
+possesses no organization, no power of combination. Here is a large
+and fairly populous parish without any great landowners, and, as a
+natural consequence, also without any large farmers. The property of
+the parish is in the hands of some score of persons; it may be split
+up into almost infinitesimal holdings in the village itself. Now,
+everyone knows the thoroughly independent character of an English
+farmer. He will follow what he considers the natural lead of his
+landlord, if he occupy a superior social position. He will follow
+his landlord in a sturdy, independent way, but he will follow no one
+else. Let there be no great landowner in the parish, and any
+combination on the part of the agriculturists becomes impossible.
+One man has one idea, another another, and each and all are
+determined not to yield an inch. Most of them are decidedly against
+the introduction of a School Board, and are quite ready to subscribe
+towards an independent school; but, then, when it comes to the
+administration of the school funds, there must be managers appointed
+to carry the plan into execution, and these managers must confer
+with the clergyman. Now here are endless elements of confusion and
+disagreement. One man thinks he ought to be a manager, and does not
+approve of the conduct of those who are in charge. Another dislikes
+the tone of the clergyman. A third takes a personal dislike to the
+schoolmaster who is employed. One little discord leads to further
+complication; someone loses his temper, and personalities are
+introduced; then it is all over with the subscription, and the
+school ceases, simply because there are no funds. Finally, the
+Imperial authorities step in, and finding education at a dead-lock,
+a School Board is presently established, though in all probability
+nine out of ten are against it, but hold their peace in the hope of
+at last getting some kind of organization. So it will be found that
+the few country School Boards which exist are in parishes where
+there is no large landowner, or where the owner is a non-resident,
+or the property in Chancery. In other words, they exist in places
+where there is no natural chief to give expression to the feelings
+of the parish.
+
+Agriculturists of all shades of political opinions are usually
+averse to a School Board. An ill-defined feeling is very often the
+strongest rule of conduct. Now there is an ill-defined but very
+strong feeling that the introduction of a School Board means the
+placing of the parish more or less under imperial rule, and
+curtailing the freedom that has hitherto existed. This has been much
+strengthened by the experience gained during the last few years of
+the actual working of the Bill with respect to schools which are not
+Board Schools, but which come under the Government inspection. Every
+step of the proceedings shows only too plainly the utter unfitness
+of the clauses of the Bill to rural conditions. One of the most
+important clauses is that which insists upon a given amount of cubic
+space for each individual child. This has often entailed the
+greatest inconveniences, and very unnecessary expense. It was most
+certainly desirable that overcrowding and the consequent evolution
+of foul gases should be guarded against; and in great cities, where
+the air is always more or less impure, and contaminated with the
+effluvia from factories as well as from human breath, a large amount
+of cubic feet of space might properly be insisted upon; but in
+villages where the air is pure and free from the slightest
+contamination, villages situated often on breezy hills, or at worst
+in the midst of sweet meadow land, the hard-and-fast rule of so many
+cubic feet is an intolerable burden upon the supporters of the
+school. Still, that would not be so objectionable were it confined
+to the actual number of attendants at the school; but it would
+appear that the Government grant is not applicable to schools,
+unless they are large enough to allow to all children in the parish
+a certain given cubic space.
+
+Now, as a matter of fact, nothing like all the children of the
+parish attend the school. In rural districts, especially, where the
+distance of cottages from the school is often very great, there will
+always be a heavy percentage of absentees. There will also be a
+percentage who attend schools in connection with a Dissenting
+establishment, and even a certain number who attend private schools,
+to say nothing of the numbers who never attend at all. It is, then,
+extremely hard that the subscribers to a school should be compelled
+to erect a building sufficiently large to allow of the given
+quantity of space to each and every child in the parish. Matters
+like these have convinced the residents in rural districts that the
+Act was framed without any consideration of their peculiar position,
+and they naturally feel repugnant to its introduction amongst them,
+and decline to make it in any way a foundation of village
+organization. The Act regulating the age at which children may be
+employed in agriculture was also an extension of an original Act,
+passed to protect the interest of children in cities and
+manufacturing districts. There is no objection to the Act except
+that it is a dead-letter. How many prosecutions have taken place
+under it? No one ever hears of anything of the kind, and probably no
+one ever will. The fact is, that since the universal use of
+machinery there is not so ready an employment for boys and children
+of that tender age as formerly. They are not by any means so
+greatly in demand, neither do they pay so well, on account of the
+much larger wages they now ask for. In addition, the farmers are
+strongly in favour of the education of their labourers' children,
+and place every facility in the way of those attending school. In
+many parishes a very strong moral pressure is voluntarily put upon
+the labouring poor to induce them to send their children, and the
+labouring poor themselves have awakened in a measure to the
+advantages of education. The Act, therefore, is practically a
+dead-letter, and bears no influence upon village life. These two
+Acts, and the alteration of the law relating to sanitary matters--by
+which the Guardians of the Poor become the rural sanitary
+authority--are the only legislation of modern days that goes direct
+to the heart of rural districts. The rural sanitary authority
+possesses great powers, but rarely exercises them. The constitution
+of that body forbids an active supervision. It is made up of one or
+two gentlemen from each parish, who are generally elected to that
+office without any contest, and simply because their brother farmers
+feel confidence in their judgment. The principal objects to which
+their attention is directed while at the board is to see that no
+unnecessary expenditure is permitted, so as to keep the rates at the
+lowest possible figure, and to state all they know of the conduct
+and position of the poor of their own parishes who apply for relief,
+in which latter matter they afford the most valuable assistance,
+many of the applicants having been known to them for a score of
+years or more. But if there is one thing a farmer dislikes more than
+another it is meddling and interfering with other persons' business.
+He would sooner put up with any amount of inconvenience, and even
+serious annoyance, than take an active step to remove the cause of
+his grumbling, if that step involves the operation of the law
+against his neighbours. The guardian who rides to the board meeting
+week after week may be perfectly well aware that the village which
+he represents is suffering under a common nuisance: that there is a
+pond in the middle of the place which emits an offensive odour; that
+there are three or four cottages in a dilapidated condition and
+unfit for human habitation, or crowded to excess with dirty tenants;
+or that the sewage of the place flows in an open ditch into the
+brook which supplies the inhabitants with water. He has not got
+power to deal with these matters personally, but he can, if he
+chooses, bring them before the notice of the board, which can
+instruct its inspector (probably also its relieving officer) to take
+action at law against the nuisance. But it is not to be expected
+that a single person will do anything of the kind.
+
+There is in all properly-balanced minds an instinctive dislike to
+the office of public prosecutor, and nothing more unpopular could be
+imagined. The agriculturist who holds the office of guardian does
+not feel it his duty to act as common spy and informer, and he may
+certainly be pardoned if he neglects to act contrary to his feelings
+as a gentleman. Therefore he rides by the stinking pond, the
+overcrowded cottages, the polluted water, week by week, and says
+nothing whatever. It is easy to remark that the board has its
+inspector, who is paid to report upon these matters; but the
+inspector has, in the first place, to traverse an enormous extent of
+country, and has no opportunity of becoming acquainted with
+nuisances which are not unbearably offensive. He has usually other
+duties to perform which occupy the greater part of his time, and he
+is certainly not overpaid for the work he does and the distance he
+travels. He also has his natural feelings upon the subject of making
+himself disagreeable, and he shrinks from interference, unless
+instructed by his superiors. His position is not sufficiently
+independent to render him, in all cases, a free agent; so it happens
+that the rural sanitary authority is practically a nullity. It is
+too cumbrous, it meets at too great a distance, and its powers,
+after all, even when at last set in motion, are too limited to have
+any appreciable effect in ameliorating the condition of village
+life. But even if this nominal body were actively engaged in
+prosecuting offenders, the desired result would be far from being
+attained. One of the most serious matters is the supply of water for
+public use in villages. At the present moment there exists no
+authority which can cause a parish to be supplied with good drinking
+water. While the great centres of population have received the most
+minute attention from the Legislature, the large population which
+resides in villages has been left to its own devices, with the
+exception of the three measures, the first of which is unsuitable
+and strenuously opposed, the second a dead-letter, and the third
+cumbrous and practically inoperative.
+
+Let us now examine the authorities which act under ancient
+enactments, or by reason of long standing, immemorial custom. The
+first of these may be taken to be the Vestry. The powers of the
+vestries appear to have formerly been somewhat extended, but in
+these latter times the influence they exercise has been very much
+curtailed. At the time when each parish relieved its own poor, the
+Vestry was practically the governing authority of the village, and
+possessed almost unlimited power, so far as the poor were concerned.
+That power was derived from its control over the supply of bread to
+the destitute. As the greater part of the working population
+received relief, it followed that the Vestry, composed of the
+agriculturists and landowners, was practically autocratic. Still
+longer ago, when the laws of the land contained certain enactments
+as to the attendance of persons at church, the Vestry had still
+greater powers. But at present, in most parishes, the Vestry is a
+nominal assembly, and frequently there is a difficulty in getting
+sufficient numbers of people together to constitute a legal
+authority. The poor rate is no longer made at the Vestry; the church
+rate is a thing of the past; and what is then left? There is the
+appointment of overseers, churchwardens, and similar formal matters;
+but the power has departed. In all probability they will never be
+resuscitated, because in all authorities of the kind there is a
+suspicion of Church influence; and there seems to be almost as much
+dislike to any shadow of that as against the political and temporal
+claims of the Roman Pontiff. The Vestry can never again become a
+popular vehicle of administration. The second is the Board of
+Guardians--though this is not properly a village or local authority
+at all, but merely a representative firm for the supervision of
+certain funds in which a number of villages are partners, and which
+can only be applied to a few stated purposes, under strictly limited
+conditions. There is no popular feeling involved in the expenditure
+of this fund, except that of economy, and almost any ratepayer may
+be trusted to vote for this; so that the office of guardian is a
+most routine one, and offers no opportunity of reform. Often one
+gentleman will represent a village for twenty years, being simply
+nominated, or even not as much as nominated, from year to year. If
+at last he grows tired of the monotony, and mentions it to his
+friends, they nominate another gentleman, always chosen for his
+good-fellowship and known dislike to change or interference--a man,
+in fact, without any violent opinions. He is nominated, and takes
+his seat. There is no emulation, no excitement. The Board of
+Guardians would assume more of the character of a local authority if
+it possessed greater freedom of action. But its course is so rigidly
+bound down by minute regulations and precedents that it really has
+no volition of its own, and can only deal with circumstances as
+they arise, according to a code laid down at a distance. It is not
+permitted to discriminate; it can neither relax nor repress; it is
+absolutely inelastic. In consequence it does not approach to the
+idea of a real local power, but rather resembles an assembly of
+unpaid clerks doling out infinitesimal sums of money to an endless
+stream of creditors, according to written instructions left by the
+absent head of the firm. Next there is the Highway Board; but this
+also possesses but limited authority, and deals only with roads. It
+has merely to see that the roads are kept in good repair, and that
+no encroachments are made upon them. Like the Board of Guardians, it
+is a most useful body; but its influence upon village life is
+indirect and indeterminate. There only remains the Court Leet. This,
+the most ancient and absolute of all, nevertheless approaches in
+principle nearest to the ideal of a local village authority. It is
+supposed to be composed of the lord of the manor, and of his court
+or jury of tenants, and its object is to see that the rights of the
+manor are maintained. The Court Leet was formerly a very important
+assembly, but in our time its offices are minute, and only apply to
+small interests. It is held at long intervals of time--as long, in
+some instances, as seven years--and is summoned by the steward of
+the lord of the manor, and commonly held at an inn, refreshments
+being supplied by the lord. Here come all the poor persons who
+occupy cottages or garden grounds on quit-rent, and pay their rent,
+which may amount in seven years to as much as fourteen shillings. A
+member of the court will, perhaps, draw the attention of the court
+to the fact that a certain ditch or watercourse has become choked
+up, and requires clearing out or diverting; and if this ditch be
+upon the manor, the court can order it to be attended to. On the
+manor they have also jurisdiction over timber, paths, and similar
+matters, and can order that a cottage which is dilapidated shall be
+repaired or removed. In point of fact, however, the Court Leet is
+merely a jovial assembly of the tenants upon the estate of the
+landowner, who drink so many bottles of sherry at his expense, and
+set to right a few minute grievances.
+
+In many places--the vast majority, indeed--there is no longer any
+Court Leet held, because the manorial rights have become faint and
+indistinct with the passage of time; the manor has been sold, split
+up into two or three estates, the entail cut off; or the manor as a
+manor has totally disappeared under the changes of ownership, and
+the various deeds and liabilities which have arisen. But this
+merely general gathering of the farmers of the village--where Court
+Leets are still held, all farmers are invited, irrespective of
+their supposed allegiance to the lord of the manor or not--this
+pleasant dinner and sherry party, which meets to go through
+obsolete customs, and exercise minute and barely legal rights,
+contains nevertheless many of the elements of a desirable local
+authority. It is composed of gentlemen of all shades of opinion; no
+politics are introduced. It meets in the village itself, and under
+the direct sanction of the landowner. Its powers are confined to
+strictly local matters, and its members are thoroughly acquainted
+with those matters. The affairs of the village are discussed
+without acrimony, and a certain amount of understanding arrived at.
+It regulates disputes and grievances arising between the
+inhabitants of cottage property, and can see that that property is
+habitable. It acts more by custom, habit, more by acquiescence of
+the parties than by any imperious, hard-and-fast law laid down at a
+distance from the scene. But any hope of the resuscitation of Court
+Leets must not be entertained, because in so many places the manor
+is now merely 'reputed,' and has no proper existence; because, too,
+the lord of the manor may be living at a distance, and possess
+scarcely any property in the parish, except his 'rights.' The idea,
+however, of the agriculturists and principal residents in a village
+meeting in a friendly manner together, under the direct leadership
+of the largest landowner, to discuss village matters, is one that
+may be revived with some prospect of success. At present, who,
+pray, has the power of so much as convening a meeting of the
+parishioners, or of taking the sense of the village? It may be done
+by the churchwardens convening a Vestry, but a Vestry is extremely
+limited in authority, unpopular, and without any cohesion. Under
+the new Education Acts the signatures of a certain number of
+ratepayers to a requisition compels the officer appointed by law to
+call a meeting, but only for objects connected with the school.
+Upon consideration it appears that there really is no village
+authority at all; no recognized place or time at which the
+principal inhabitants can meet together and discuss the affairs of
+the parish with a prospect of immediate action resulting. The
+meetings of the magistrates at petty sessions, quarter sessions,
+and at various other times are purposely omitted from this
+argument, because there is rarely more than one magistrate resident
+in a village, or at most two, and the assemblies of these gentlemen
+at a distance from their homes cannot be taken to form a village
+council in any sense of the term.
+
+The places where agriculturists and the principal inhabitants of
+the parish do meet together and discuss matters in a friendly
+spirit are the churchyard, before service, the market dinner, the
+hunting-field, and the village inn. The last has fallen into
+disuse. It used to be the custom to meet at the central village inn
+night after night to hear the news, as well as for convivial
+purposes. In those days of slow travelling and few posts, the news
+was communicated from village to village by pedlars, or carriers'
+carts calling, as they went, at each inn. But now it is a rare
+thing to find farmers at the inn in their own village. The old
+drinking habits have died out. It is not that there is any
+prejudice against the inn; but there is a cessation of the
+inducement to sit there night after night. People do not care to
+drink as they used to, and they can get the news just as well at
+home. The parlour at the inn has ceased to be the village
+parliament. The hunting-field is an unfavourable place for
+discussion, since in the midst of a remark the hounds may start,
+and away go speaker and listener, and the subject is forgotten. The
+market dinner is not so general and friendly a meeting as it was.
+There is a large admixture of manure and machinery agents,
+travellers for seed-merchants, corn-dealers, and others who have no
+interest in purely local matters, and the dinner itself is somewhat
+formal, with its regular courses of fish and so forth, till the
+talk is more or less constrained and general. The churchyard is a
+singular place of meeting, but it is still popular. The
+agriculturist walks into the yard about a quarter to eleven, sees a
+friend; a third joins; then the squire strolls round from his
+carriage, and a pleasant chat ensues, till the ceasing bell reminds
+them that service is about to commence. But this is a very narrow
+representation of the village, and is perhaps never made up on two
+occasions of the same persons. The duration of the gathering is
+extremely short, and it has no cohesion or power of action.
+
+It is difficult to convey an adequate idea of the desultory nature
+of village life. There is an utter lack of any kind of cohesion, a
+total absence of any common interest, or social bond of union. There
+is no _esprit de corps_. In old times there was, to a certain
+extent--in the days when each village was divided against its
+neighbour, and fiercely contested with it the honour of sending
+forth the best backsword player. No one wishes those times to
+return. We have still village cricket clubs, who meet each other in
+friendly battle, but there is no enthusiasm over it. The players
+themselves are scarcely excited, and it is often difficult to get
+sufficient together to fulfil an engagement. There is the dinner of
+the village benefit club, year after year. The object of the club is
+of the best, but its appearance upon club-day is a woeful spectacle
+to eyes that naturally look for a little taste upon an occasion of
+supposed festivity. What can be more melancholy than a procession of
+men clad in ill-fitting black clothes, in which they are evidently
+uncomfortable, with blue scarves over the shoulder, headed with a
+blatant brass band, and going first to church, and then all round
+the place for beer? They eat their dinner and disperse, and then
+there is an end of the matter. There is no social bond of union, no
+connection.
+
+It is questionable whether this desultoriness is a matter for
+congratulation. It fosters an idle, slow, clumsy, heedless race of
+men--men who are but great children, who have no public feeling
+whatever--without a leading idea. This fact was most patently
+exhibited at the last General Election, when the agricultural
+labourers for the first time exercised the franchise freely to any
+extent. The great majority of them voted plump for the candidate
+favoured by the squire or by the farmer. There was nothing
+unreasonable in this; it is natural and fit that men should support
+the candidate who comes nearest to their interest; but, then, let
+there be some better reason for it than the simple fact 'that master
+goes that way.' Whether it be for Liberal or Conservative, whatever
+be the party, surely it is desirable that the labourer should
+possess a leading idea, an independent conviction of what is for the
+public good. Let it be a mistaken conviction, it is better than an
+absence of all feeling; but politics are no part of the question.
+Politics apart, the villager might surely have some conception of
+what is best for his own native place, the parish in which he was
+born and bred, and with every field in which he is familiar. But no,
+nothing of the kind. He goes to and fro his work, receives his
+wages, spends them at the ale-house, and wanders listlessly about.
+The very conception of a public feeling never occurs to him; it is
+all desultory. A little desultory work--except in harvest,
+labourer's work cannot be called downright _work_--a little
+desultory talk, a little desultory rambling about, a good deal of
+desultory drinking: these are the sum and total of it; no, add a
+little desultory smoking and purposeless mischief to make it
+complete. Why should not the labourer be made to feel an interest in
+the welfare, the prosperity, and progress of his own village? Why
+should he not be supplied with a motive for united action? All
+experience teaches that united action, even on small matters, has a
+tendency to enlarge the minds and the whole powers of those engaged.
+The labourer feels so little interest in his own progress, because
+the matter is only brought before him in its individual bearing. You
+can rarely interest a single person in the improvement of himself,
+but you can interest a number in the progress of that number as a
+body. The vacancy of mind, the absence of any ennobling aspiration,
+so noticeable in the agricultural labourer, is a painful fact. Does
+it not, in great measure, arise from this very desultory life--from
+this procrastinating dislike to active exertion? Supply a motive--a
+general public motive--and the labourer will wake up. At the present
+moment, what interest has an ordinary agricultural labourer in the
+affairs of his own village? Practically none whatever. He may,
+perhaps, pay rates; but these are administered at a distance, and he
+knows nothing of the system by which they are dispensed. If his
+next-door neighbour's cottage is tumbling down, the thatch in holes,
+the doors off their hinges, it matters nothing to him. Certainly, he
+cannot himself pay for its renovation, and there is no fund to which
+he can subscribe so much as a penny with that object in view. A
+number of cottages may be without a supply of water. Well, he cannot
+help it; probably he never gives a thought to it. There is no
+governing body in the place responsible for such things--no body in
+the election of which he has any hand. He puts his hands in his
+pockets and slouches about, smoking a short pipe, and drinks a quart
+at the nearest ale-house. He is totally indifferent. To go still
+further, there can be no doubt that the absence of any such ruling
+body, even if ruling only on sufferance, has a deteriorating effect
+upon the minds of the best-informed and broadest-minded
+agriculturist. He sees a nuisance or a grievance, possibly something
+that may approach the nature of a calamity. 'Ah, well,' he sighs, 'I
+can't help it; I've no power to interfere.' He walks round his farm,
+examines his sheep, pats his horses, and rides to market, and
+naturally forgets all about it. Were there any ready and available
+means by which the nuisance could be removed, or the calamity in
+some measure averted, the very same man would at once put it in
+motion, and never cease till the desired result was attained; but
+the total absence of any authority, any common centre, tends to
+foster what appears an utter indifference. How can it be otherwise?
+The absence of such a body tends, therefore, in two ways to the
+injury of the labourer: first, because he has no means of helping
+himself; and, secondly, because those above him in social station
+have no means of assisting him. But why cannot the squire step in
+and do all that is wanted? What is there that the landowner is not
+expected to do? He is compelled by the law to contribute to the
+maintenance of roads by heavy subscriptions, while men of much
+larger income, but no real property, ride over them free of cost. He
+is expected by public opinion to rebuild all the cottages on his
+estate, introducing all the modern improvements, to furnish them
+with large plots of garden ground, to supply them with coal during
+the winter at nominal cost, to pay three parts of the expense of
+erecting schools, and what not. He is expected to extend the
+farm-buildings upon the farms, to rebuild the farmsteads, and now to
+compensate the tenants for improvements, though he may not
+particularly care for them, knowing full well by experience that
+improvements are a long time before they pay any interest on the
+principal invested. Now we expect him to remove all nuisances in the
+village, to supply water, to exercise a wise paternal authority, and
+all at his own cost. The whole thing is unreasonable. Many
+landowners have succeeded to heavily-burdened estates. The best
+estates pay, it must be remembered, but a very small comparative
+interest upon their value--in some instances not more than two and a
+half per cent. Moreover, almost all landowners do take an interest
+in improvements, and are ready to forward them; but can a gentleman
+be expected to go round from cottage to cottage performing the
+duties of an inspector of nuisances? and, if he did so, would it be
+tolerated for an instant? The outcry would be raised of
+interference, tyranny, overbearing insolence, intolerable intrusion.
+It is undoubtedly the landowner's duty to forward all reasonable
+schemes of improvement; but if the inhabitants are utterly
+indifferent to progress of any kind, it is not his duty to issue an
+autocratical ukase. Let the inhabitants combine, in however loose
+and informal a manner, and the landowner will always be ready to
+assist them with purse and moral support.
+
+Granting, then, that there is at present no such local authority,
+and that it is desirable--what are the objects which would come
+within its sphere of operation? In an article which had the honour
+of appearing in a former number of this magazine,[2] the writer
+pointed out that the extension of the allotment system was only
+delayed because there was no body or authority which had power to
+increase the area under spade cultivation. Throughout the country
+there is an undoubted conviction that such extension is extremely
+desirable, but who is to take the initiative? There is an increasing
+demand for these gardens--a demand that will probably make itself
+loudly felt as time goes on and the population grows larger. Even
+those villages that possess allotment grounds would be in a better
+position if there were some body who held rule over the gardens, and
+administered them according to varying circumstances. Some of these
+allotments are upon the domain of the landowner, and have been
+broken up for the purpose under his directions; but it is not every
+gentleman who has either the time or the inclination to superintend
+the actual working of the gardens, and they are often left pretty
+much to take care of themselves. Other allotment grounds are simply
+matters of speculation with the owner, and are let out to the
+highest bidder in order to make money, without any species of
+control whatever. This is not desirable for many reasons, and such
+owners deprecate the extension of the system, because if a larger
+area were offered to the labourer, the letting value would diminish,
+since there would be less competition for the lots. There can be
+very little doubt that the allotment garden will form an integral
+part of the social system of the future, and, as such, will require
+proper regulation. If it is to be so, it is obviously desirable that
+it should be in the hands of a body of local gentlemen with a
+perfect knowledge of the position and resource of the numerous small
+tenants, and a thorough comprehension of the practical details which
+are essential to success in such cultivation. It may be predicted
+that the first step which would ensue upon the formation of such a
+body would be an extension of allotments. There would be no
+difficulty in renting a field or fields for that purpose. The
+village council, as we may for convenience term it, would select a
+piece of ground possessing an easily-moved soil, avoiding stiff clay
+on the one hand, and too light, sandy ground on the other. For this
+piece they would give a somewhat higher rent than it would obtain
+for agricultural purposes--say £3 per acre--which they would
+guarantee to the owner after the manner of a syndicate. They would
+cause the hedges to be pared down to the very smallest proportions,
+but the mounds to be somewhat raised, so as to avoid harbouring
+birds, and at the same time safely exclude cattle, which in a short
+time would play havoc with the vegetables. If possible, a road
+should run right across the plot, with a gateway on either side, so
+that a cart might pass straight through, pick up its load, and go on
+and out without turning. Each plot should have a frontage upon this
+road, or to branch roads running at right angles to it, so that each
+tenant could remove his produce without trespassing upon the plot of
+his neighbour. Such trespasses often lead to much ill-will. The
+narrow paths dividing these strips should be sufficiently wide to
+allow of wheeling a barrow down them, and should on no account be
+permitted to be overgrown with grass. Grass-paths are much prettier,
+but are simply reservoirs of couch, weeds, and slugs, and therefore
+to be avoided. The whole field should be accurately mapped, and each
+plot numbered on the map, and a strong plug driven into the plot
+with a similar number upon it--a plan which renders identification
+easy, and prevents disputes. A book should be kept, with the name of
+every tenant entered into it, and indexed, like a ledger, with the
+initial letter. Against the name of the tenant should be placed the
+area of his holdings, and the numbers of his plots upon the map; and
+in this book the date of his tenancy, and any change of holding,
+should be registered. There should be a book of printed forms (not
+to be torn out) of agreement, with blank spaces for name, date, and
+number, which should be signed by the tenant. In a third book all
+payments and receipts should be entered. This sounds commercial, and
+looks like serious business; but as the rent would be payable
+half-yearly only, there would be really very little trouble
+required, and the saving of disputes very great. During the season
+of cropping, the payment of a small gratuity to the village
+policeman would insure the allotment being well watched, and if
+pilferers were detected they should invariably be prosecuted. As
+many of the tenants would come from long distances, and would not
+frequent their plots every evening, there might possibly be a small
+lock-up tool-house in which to deposit their tools, the key being
+left in charge of some old man living in an adjacent cottage. The
+rules of cultivation would depend in some measure upon the nature of
+the soil, but such a village council would be composed of practical
+men, who would have no difficulty whatever in drawing up concise and
+accurate instructions. The council could depute one or more members
+to receive the rent-money and to keep the books, and if any labour
+were required, there are always bailiffs and trustworthy men who
+could be employed to do it. At a small expense the field should be
+properly drained before being opened, and even though let at a very
+low charge per perch, there would still remain an overplus above the
+rent paid by the council for the field, sufficient in a short time
+to clear off the debt incurred in draining.
+
+ [2] See 'Toilers of the Field,' by Richard Jefferies.--ED.
+
+It is very rarely that allotment gardens are sufficiently manured,
+and this is a subject that would come very properly under the
+jurisdiction of the allotment committee of our village council. Some
+labourers keep a pig or two, but all do not; and many living at a
+considerable distance would find, and do find, a difficulty in
+conveying any manure they may possess to the spot. So it often
+happens that gardens are cropped year after year without any
+substances being restored to the soil, which gradually becomes less
+productive. Means should be devised of supplying this deficiency.
+Manure is valuable to the farmer, but still he could spare a
+little--quite sufficient for this purpose. Suppose the allotment
+gardens consisted of twelve acres, then let one-fourth, or three
+acres, be properly manured every year. This would be no strain upon
+the product of manure in the vicinity, and in four years--four
+years' system--the whole of the field would receive a proper
+amount, in addition to the small quantities the labourer's pig
+produced. Every tenant, in his agreement, could be caused to pay, in
+addition to his rent, once every four years, a small sum in
+part-payment for this manuring, and also for the hauling of the
+material to the field. This payment would not represent the actual
+value of the manure, but it would maintain the principle of
+self-help; and, as far as possible, the allotments should be
+self-supporting. In cases of dispute, the committee would simply
+have to refer the matter to the council, and the thing would be
+definitely settled; but under a regular system of this kind, as it
+were mapped down and written out, no obstinate disputes could arise.
+In this one matter of allotment-gardens alone there is plenty of
+scope for the exertions of a village council, and incalculable good
+might be attained. The very order and systematic working of the
+thing would have a salutary effect upon the desultory life of the
+village.
+
+Next comes the water-supply of the village. This is a matter of
+vital importance. There are, of course, villages where water is
+abundant, even too abundant, as in low-lying meadow-land by the side
+of rivers which are liable to overflow. There are villages traversed
+throughout the whole of their length by a brook running parallel
+with the road, so that to gain access to each cottage it is
+necessary to cross a 'drock,' or small bridge, and in summer-time
+such villages are very picturesque. In the colder months, the mist
+on the water and damp air are not so pleasant or healthy. Many
+villages, situated at the edge of a range of hills--a most favourite
+position for villages--are supplied with good springs of the
+clearest water rising in those hills. But there are also large
+numbers of villages placed high up above the water-level on the same
+hills, which are most scantily supplied with water; and there are
+also villages far away down in the valley which are liable to run
+short in the summer or dry time, when the 'bourne,' or winter
+watercourse, fails them. Such places, situated in the midst of rich
+meadows, can sometimes barely find water enough for the cattle, who
+are not so particular as to quality. Even in places where there is a
+good natural spring, or a brook which is rarely dry, the cottagers
+experience no little difficulty in conveying it to their homes,
+which may be situated a mile away. It is not uncommon in country
+places to see the water trickling along in the ditch by the roadside
+bayed up with a miniature dam in front of a cottage, and from the
+turbid pool thus formed the woman fills her kettle. People who live
+in towns, and can turn on the water in any room of their houses
+without the slightest exertion, have no idea of the difficulty the
+poor experience in the country in procuring good water, despite all
+the beautiful rivers and springs and brooks which poetry sings of.
+After a man or woman has worked all day in the field, perhaps at a
+distance of two miles from home, it is weary and discouraging work
+to have to trudge with the pail another weary half-mile or so to the
+pool for water. It is harder still, after trudging that weary
+half-mile, pail in hand, to find the water almost too low to dip,
+muddied by cattle, and diminished in quantity to serve the pressing
+needs of the animals living higher up the stream. Now, in starting,
+it may be assumed that the nearest source of water in a village is
+certain to be found upon the premises of some agriculturist. He
+will, doubtless, be perfectly willing to allow free access to his
+stream or pool; but he cannot be expected to construct conveniences
+for the public use, and he may even feel naturally annoyed if
+continual use by thirty people, twice a day, finally breaks his
+pump. He naturally believes that other gentlemen in the village
+should take an equal interest with himself in the public welfare,
+but they do not appear to do so. It may be that the path to the pump
+leads through the private garden, right before his sitting-room
+window, and the constant passage of women and children for water,
+particularly children, who are apt to lounge and stare about them,
+becomes a downright nuisance. This, surely, ought not to be. A very
+little amount of united action on the part of the principal
+inhabitants of the village would put this straight. The pump could
+be repaired, a new path made, and the water conveyed to a stone
+trough by a hose, or something of the kind, and the owner would be
+quite willing to sanction it, but he does not see why it should all
+be done at his expense. The other inhabitants of the village see the
+difficulty, recognize it, perhaps talk about remedying it, but
+nothing is done, simply because there exists no body, no council to
+undertake it. Spontaneous combination is extremely uncertain in its
+action; the organization should exist before the necessity for
+utilizing it arises. In other places what is wanted is a well, but
+cottagers cannot afford to dig a deep well, and certainly no
+combination can be expected from them alone and unassisted. Village
+wells require also to be under some kind of supervision. At
+intervals they require cleaning out. The machinery for raising water
+must be prepared; the cover to prevent accidents to children
+renewed. A well that has no one to look after it quickly becomes the
+receptacle of all the stones and old boots and dead cats in the
+place. But if there is a terror of prosecution, the well remains
+clear and useful. The digging of a deep well is an event of national
+importance, so to say, to a village. It may happen that a noble
+spring of water bursts out some little distance from the village,
+but is practically useless to the inhabitants because of its
+distance. What more easy than to run a hose from it right to a stone
+trough, or dipping-place, in the centre of the village? In most
+cases, very simple engineering ability would be sufficient to supply
+the hamlet. The hose, or whatever the plan might be, need not take
+half nor a quarter of the water thrown out by the spring. The owner
+might object; certainly he would object to any forcible carrying
+away of his water; but if he were himself a party to the scheme, and
+to receive compensation for any injury, he would not do so.
+
+Water has been the cause of more disputes, probably, than
+anything else between neighbouring agriculturists. One wishes it
+for his water-meadows, another for his cattle, a third for his
+home-consumption; then there is, perhaps, the miller to be
+consulted. After all, there is, in most cases, more than enough
+water for everybody, and a very little mutual yielding would
+accommodate all, and supply the village in the bargain. But each
+party being alone in his view, without any mediator, the result
+may be a lawsuit, or ill-blood, lasting for years; the cutting
+down of bays and dams, the possible collision of the men
+employed.
+
+Between these parties, between agriculturists themselves, the
+establishment of a species of village council would often lead to
+peace and harmony. The advice and expressed wishes of their
+neighbour, the influence of the clergyman and the resident landlord,
+and the existence of a common public want in the village, would have
+an irresistible effect; and what neither would yield to his
+opponent, all would yield to a body of friends. Taken in this way it
+may safely be considered that there would be no difficulty in
+obtaining access to water. In places which are still less fortunate
+and, especially in dry times, are at a greater distance from the
+precious element, there still remains a plan by which sufficient
+could be secured, and that is the portable water-tank. Our
+agricultural machinists now turn out handsome and capacious iron
+tanks which are coming into general use. Now, no one farmer can be
+expected to send water-tank and team three or four times every
+evening to fetch up water for the use of cottagers, not
+one-twentieth of whom work for him. But why should there not be a
+tank, the public property of the village, and why should not teams
+take it in turn? Undoubtedly something of the kind would immediately
+spring into existence were there any village organization whatever.
+In a large number of villages, the natural supply would be
+sufficient during three parts of the year, and it would be only in
+summer that any assistance would be necessary.
+
+While on the subject of water, another matter may as well be dealt
+with, and that is the establishment of bathing-places near villages.
+This is, of course, impossible over considerable areas of country
+where water is scarce, and especially scarce in the bathing season.
+Even in many places, however, where water is comparatively deficient
+in quantity, there are usually some great ponds, which for part of
+the season could be made applicable for bathing purposes. There then
+remain an immense number of villages situated on or near a stream,
+and wherever there is a stream a bathing-place is practicable. At
+the present moment it would be difficult to find one such place,
+unless on the banks of a large river, and rivers are far between.
+The boys and young men who feel a natural desire to bathe in the
+warm weather resort to muddy ponds, with a filthy bottom of black
+slush, or paddle about in shallow brooks no more than knee-deep, or
+in the water-carriers in water meadows. This species of bathing is
+practically useless; it does not answer any purposes of cleanliness,
+and learning to swim is out of the question. The formation of a
+proper bathing-place presents few difficulties. A spot must be
+chosen near to the village, but far enough away for decency. The
+bottom of the stream should be covered with a layer of sand and
+small gravel, carefully avoiding large stones and sharp-edged
+flints. Much of the pleasure of bathing depends upon a good bottom,
+and nothing is more likely to deter a young beginner than the
+feeling that he cannot place his feet on the ground without the
+danger of lacerating them. For this reason, also, care should be
+taken to exclude all boughs and branches, and particularly the
+prickly bushes cut from hedges, which are most annoying to bathers.
+The stream should be bayed up to a depth at the deepest part of
+about five feet, which is quite deep enough for ordinary swimming,
+and reduces the danger to a minimum. If possible, a strong smooth
+rail should run across the pool, or partly across. This is for the
+encouragement of boys and young bathers, who like something to catch
+hold of, and it is also an adjunct in learning to swim, for the boy
+can stand opposite to it, and after two or three strokes place his
+hand on it, and so gradually increasing the distance, he can swim
+without once losing confidence. Those who cannot swim can hold to
+the rail and splash about and enjoy themselves. Such a bathing-place
+will sound childish enough to strong swimmers, who have learnt to go
+long distances with ease in the Thames or in the sea, but it must be
+remembered that we are dealing with an inland population who are
+timid of water. A boy who can cross such a small pool without
+touching the bottom with his feet, would soon feel at home in
+broader waters, if ever circumstances should bring him near them. If
+there is no stream a large pond could be cleaned out, and sand and
+gravel placed upon the bottom--almost anything is better than the
+soft oozy mud, which, once stirred up, will not settle for hours,
+and destroys all pleasure or benefit from bathing. No building is
+necessary to dress in, or anything of that kind. The place selected
+would be, of course, at a distance from any public footpath, and
+even if it were near there are so few passing in rural outlying
+districts that no one need be shocked. But if it was considered
+necessary an older man could be paid a small sum to walk down every
+evening, or at the stated hours for bathing, and see that no
+irregularity occurred. A loose pole or two always kept near the
+stream or pond, and ready to hand, would amply provide against any
+little danger there might be. Bathing is most important to health,
+and if a really good swim is possible there is nothing so conducive
+to an elasticity of frame. Our labourers are notoriously strong and
+muscular, and possess considerable power of endurance (though they
+destroy their 'wind,' in running phraseology, by too much beer), but
+their strength is clumsy, their gait ungainly, their run heavy and
+slow. The freedom of motion in the water, the simultaneous use of
+arms and limbs, the peculiar character of the exercise, renders it
+one, above all others, calculated to give an ease and grace to the
+body. In a good physical education, swimming must form an important
+part; and the labourer requires a physical education quite as much
+as a mental. The bathing-place, as a means of inducing personal
+cleanliness, would have its uses. The cottages of the labouring poor
+are often models of cleanliness, but the persons of the inhabitants
+precisely the reverse. The expense of such a bathing-place need be
+but very small. If it was situated in a cow-leaze, the bathing could
+begin the moment the spring became warm enough; if in a meadow
+usually mown, as soon as the grass has been cut, which would be
+early in June. It would perhaps be necessary to have stated hours of
+bathing; but no other regulation--the less restriction the better
+the privilege would be appreciated. Exercises of this character
+could not be too much encouraged. Every accomplishment of the kind
+adds a new power to the man, and gives him a sense of superiority.
+
+There should be a rough kind of gymnasium for the villagers. Almost
+always a piece of waste ground could be found, and the requisite
+materials are very simple and inexpensive. A few upright poles for
+climbing; horizontal bars; a few ropes, and a ladder would be
+sufficient. In wet weather some large open cow-house could be
+utilized for such purposes. In summer such outbuildings are empty,
+the cattle being in the fields. A few pairs of quoits also could be
+added at a small cost. Wrestling, perhaps, had better be avoided, as
+liable to lead to quarrels; but jumping and running should be
+fostered, and prizes presented for excellence. It is not the value
+of the prize, it is the fact that it is a prize. A good strong
+pocket-knife with four or five blades would be valued by a
+ploughboy, and a labourer would be pleased with an ornamental pipe
+costing five shillings, or a hoe or spade could be substituted as
+more useful.
+
+The institution of such annual village games, the bathing-place, the
+gymnasium in the open air, the running match, the quoits, would have
+a tendency to awaken the emulation of the labouring class; and once
+awaken the emulation, an increase of intelligence follows. A man
+would feel that he was not altogether a mere machine, to do so much
+work and then trudge home and sleep. Lads would have something
+better to do than play pitch-and-toss, and slouch about the place,
+learning nothing but bad language. A life would be imparted to the
+village, there would be a centre of union, a gathering-place, and a
+certain amount of proper pride in the village, and an _esprit de
+corps_ would spring up. In all these things the labourer should be
+encouraged to carry them out as much as possible in his own way, and
+without interference or supervision. Make the bathing-place, erect
+the poles and horizontal bars, establish the pocket-knife and hoe
+prizes, present the quoits, but let him use them in his own way.
+There must be freedom, liberty, or the attempt would certainly fail.
+
+How many villages have so much as a reading-room? Such a local
+council as has been indicated would soon come to discuss the
+propriety of establishing such an institution. If managed strictly
+with a view to the real wants and ideas of the people, and not in
+accordance with any preconceived principles of so-called
+instruction, it would be certain to succeed. The labouring poor
+dislike instruction being forced down their throats quite as much,
+or more, than the upper classes. The very worst way to induce a man
+to learn is to begin by telling him he is ignorant, and thereby
+insulting his self-esteem. A village reading-room should be open to
+all, and not to subscribers only. From six till nine in the evening
+would be long enough for it to be open, and the key could be kept by
+some adjacent cottager. With every respect for the schoolmaster, let
+the schoolmaster be kept away from it. If there is a night-school,
+keep it distinct from the reading-room; let the reading-room be a
+voluntary affair, without the slightest suspicion of _drill_
+attaching to it. It should be a place where a working man could come
+in, and sit down and _spell_ over a book, without the consciousness
+that someone was watching him, ready to snap him up at a mistake.
+Exclude all 'goody' books; there are sects in villages as well as
+towns, and the presence of an obnoxious work may do much harm. To
+the Bible itself, in clear print, no sect will object; but let it be
+the Bible only. A collection of amusing literature can easily be
+made. For £5 enough books could be bought on an old bookstall in
+London to stock a village library; such as travels, tales--not
+despising Robinson Crusoe--and a few popular expositions of science.
+There should be one daily paper. It could be brought by one of the
+milk-carts from the nearest railway-station. This daily paper would
+form a very strong counteraction to the ale-house. Of course, the
+ale-house would start a daily in opposition; but at the reading-room
+the labourer would soon learn that he need not purchase a glass of
+beer in order to pay for his news. The daily paper would be a most
+important feature, for such papers are rare in villages. Very few
+farmers even take them. The rent of a room for this purpose in a
+village would be almost nominal. A small room would be sufficient,
+for only a few would be present at a time. Cricket clubs may be left
+to establish themselves.
+
+The next suggestion the writer is about to make will be thought a
+very bold one; but is it not rational enough when the first novelty
+of the idea has subsided? It is, that an annual excursion should be
+arranged for the villagers. It is common to see in the papers
+appeals made on behalf of the poor children of crowded districts in
+London, for funds to give them a day in the country. It is stated
+that they never see anything but stone pavements; never breathe
+anything but smoky air. The appeal is a proper and good one, and
+should be generously responded to. Now, the position of the villager
+is the exact antithesis. He, or she, sees nothing but green fields
+or bare fields all the year round. They hear nothing but a constant
+iteration of talk about cattle, crops, and weather--important
+matters, but apt to grow monotonous. It may be, that for thirty
+years they never for one day lose sight of the hills overhanging the
+village. Their subjects of conversation are consequently extremely
+narrow. They want a change quite as much as the dwellers in cities;
+but it is a change of another character--a change to bustle and
+excitement. Factories and large tradesmen arrange trips for their
+work-people once or twice a year. Why should not the agricultural
+labourers have a trip? A trip of the simplest kind would satisfy
+them, and afford matter of conversation for months. All railway
+lines now issue tickets at reduced rates for parties above a certain
+number. For instance, to the population of an inland village, what
+would be more delightful than a few hours on the sea-beach? Where
+the sea is not within easy reach, take them to a great town--if
+possible, London--but if not London, any large town will be a
+change. There is no great difficulty in the plan. Perhaps twenty or
+thirty would be the largest number who would wish to go. Let these
+assemble at a stated hour and place, and take them down to the
+railway-station with two or three waggons and teams, which should
+also meet them on their return. The expense would not be great, and
+might be partly borne by the excursionists themselves. All that is
+wanted is some amount of leadership, a little organization. Such
+enterprises as these would go far to create a genuine mutual
+understanding and pleasant feeling between employer and employed.
+There may be outlying places where such an excursion would be very
+difficult. Then harness the horses to the waggons, and take them to
+a picnic ten miles off on a noted hill or heath, or by the side of a
+river--somewhere for a change.
+
+To return to more serious matters. Perhaps it would be as well if
+the first endeavour of such a local authority were addressed to the
+smaller matters that have been just alluded to, so that the public
+mind might become gradually accustomed to change, and prepared for
+greater innovations. Village drainage is notoriously defective.
+Anyone who has walked through a village or hamlet must be perfectly
+well aware that there is no drainage, from the unpleasant odours
+that constantly assail the nostrils. It seems absurd, that with such
+an expanse of open country around, and with such an exposure to the
+fresh air, such foul substances should be permitted to contaminate
+the atmosphere. Each cottager either throws the sewage right into
+the road, and allows it to find its way as it can by the same
+channel as the rain-water; or, at best, flings it into the ditch at
+the back, which parts the garden from the agricultural land. Here it
+accumulates and soaks into the soil till the first storm of rain,
+which sweeps it away, but at the same time causes an abominable
+smell. It is positively unbearable to pass some cottages after a
+fresh shower.
+
+Not unfrequently this ditch at the back of the garden runs down to
+the stream from which the cottagers draw their water, and the
+dipping-place may be close to the junction of the two. In places
+where there is a fall--when the cottages are built upon a
+slope--there can be little difficulty about drainage; but here steps
+in the question of water-supply, for drains of this character
+require flushing. The supply of water must, therefore, in such
+places, precede the attempt at drainage. The disposal of the sewage,
+when collected, offers no difficulty. Its value is well understood,
+and it would be welcomed upon agricultural land. In the case of
+villages where there is no natural fall, and small hamlets and
+outlying cottages, the Moule system should be encouraged, especially
+as it affords a valuable product that can be transported to the
+allotment garden. A certain amount of most unreasonable prejudice
+exists against the introduction of this useful contrivance, which
+every means should be used to overcome. Now, most farm-houses stand
+apart, and in their own grounds, where any system of sewer is almost
+impossible. These are the very places where the Moule plan is
+available; and if agriculturists were to employ it, the poor would
+quickly learn its advantages. It would, perhaps, be even better than
+a public sewer in large villages, for a sewer entails an amount of
+supervision, repairs, and must have an outfall, and other
+difficulties, such as flushing with water, and, if neglected, it
+engenders sewer-gas, which is more dangerous than the sewage itself.
+The plan to be pursued depends entirely upon the circumstances of
+the place and the configuration of the ground. The subject of
+drainage connects itself with that of nuisances. This is, perhaps,
+the most difficult matter with which a local authority would have to
+deal. Nuisances are comparative. One man may not consider that to be
+a nuisance which may be an intolerable annoyance to his neighbour.
+The keeping of pigs, for instance, is a troublesome affair. The
+cottager cannot be requested to give up so reasonable a habit; but
+there can be no doubt that the presence of a number of pigs in a
+village, in their dirty sties, and with their accompanying heaps of
+decaying garbage, is very offensive, and perhaps unhealthy. The pig
+itself, though commonly called a dirty animal, is not anything near
+so bad as has been represented. To convince oneself of that it is
+only necessary to visit farm-buildings which are well looked after.
+The pigsties have no more smell than the stables, because the manure
+is removed, and no garbage is allowed to accumulate. It is the man
+who keeps the pig that makes it filthy and repulsive, and not the
+animal itself. Regular and _clean_ food has also much to do with it,
+such as barley-meal. Cottagers cannot afford barley-meal, but they
+certainly could keep their sties much cleaner. It does not seem
+possible to attack the nuisance with any other means than that of
+persuasion, unless some plan could be devised of keeping pigs in a
+common building outside the village; or at any rate, of having the
+manure taken outside at short intervals. Such nuisances as stagnant
+ponds and mud-filled ditches are more easily dealt with, because
+they are public, and interference with them would not touch upon any
+man's liberty of action. Stagnant ponds are of no use to
+anyone--even horses will not drink at them. The simple plan is to
+remove the mud, and then fill them up level with the ground, laying
+in drain-pipes to carry off the water which accumulated there. But
+some of these ponds could be utilized for the benefit of passing
+horses and cattle. They are fed with a running stream, but, being no
+man's property, the pond becomes choked with mud and manure, and the
+small inflow of pure water is not enough to overcome the noisome
+exhalations. These should be cleaned out now and then, and, if
+possible, the bottom laid down with gravel or small stones, making
+the pond shallow at the edges, and for some distance in. Nothing is
+more valuable upon a country road than ponds of this character, into
+which a jaded horse can walk over his fetlock, and cool his feet at
+the same time that he refreshes his thirst. They are most welcome to
+cattle driven along the road.
+
+The moral nuisances of drunkenness, gambling, and bad language at
+the corners of the streets and cross-roads had best be left to the
+law to deal with, though the influence of a local council in reproof
+and caution would undoubtedly be considerable. But if a
+bathing-place, an out-of-doors gymnasium, and such things, were
+established, these evils would almost disappear, because the younger
+inhabitants would have something to amuse themselves with; at
+present they have nothing whatever.
+
+A local authority of this kind would confer a great boon upon the
+agricultural poor if they could renovate the old idea of a common.
+Allotment grounds are most useful, but they do not meet every want.
+The better class of cottagers, who have contrived to save a little
+money, often try to keep a cow, and before the road surveyors grew
+so strict, they had little difficulty in doing so. But now the roads
+are so jealously and properly preserved purely for traffic, the
+cottager has no opportunity of grazing a cow or a donkey. It would
+not be possible in places where land is chiefly arable, nor in
+others where the meadow-land is let at a high rent, but still there
+are places where a common could be provided. It need not be the best
+land. The poorest would do. Those who graze should pay a small
+fee--so much per head per week. Such a field would be a great
+benefit, and an encouragement to those who were inclined to save.
+
+In almost every parish there are a number of public charities. Many
+of these are unfortunately expressly devised for certain purposes,
+from which they cannot be diverted without much trouble and
+resorting to high authorities. But there are others left in a loose
+manner for the good of the poor, and the very origin of which is
+doubtful. Such are many of the pieces of land scattered about the
+country, the rent of which is paid to the churchwardens for the time
+being, in trust for the poor. At present these charities are
+dissipated in petty almsgiving, such as so much bread and a
+fourpenny-piece on a certain day of the year, a blanket or cloak at
+Christmas, and so on, the utility of which is more than doubtful.
+Stories are currently believed of such four penny-pieces purchasing
+quarts of ale, and of such blankets being immediately sold to raise
+money for the same end. A village council would be able to suggest
+many ways in which the income of these charities could be far better
+employed. The giving of coal has already been substituted in some
+places for the fourpenny-piece and blanket, which is certainly a
+sensible change; but if possible it would be better to avoid
+so-called charity altogether. Why should not the income of half a
+dozen villages lying adjacent to each other be concentrated upon a
+cottage hospital, or upon a hospital for lying-in women, which is
+one of the great desiderata in country places. Such institutions
+afford charity of the highest and best character, without any
+degradation to the recipient. At the present moment the woman who
+has lost her reputation, and is confined with an illegitimate child,
+simply proceeds to the workhouse, where she meets with every
+attention skilled nurses and science can afford. The labourer's wife
+is left to languish in a close overcrowded room, and permitted to
+resume her household labours before she has properly recovered.
+There is nothing more wretched than the confinement of an
+agricultural labourer's wife.
+
+The health of villagers, notwithstanding the pure air, is often
+prejudiced by the overcrowding of cottages. This overcrowding may
+not be sufficiently great to render an appeal to the legal
+authorities desirable, and yet may be productive of very bad
+effects, both moral and physical. It is particularly the case where
+the cottages are the property of the labourer himself, and are held
+at a low quit-rent. The labourer cannot afford to rebuild the
+cottage, which has descended to him from his father, or possibly
+grandfather, and which was originally designed for one small family,
+but, in the course of years, three or four members of that family
+have acquired a right of residence in it. Of this right they are
+extremely tenacious, though it may be positively injurious to them.
+As many as two married men, with wives and children, may crowd
+themselves into this dirty hovel, with a result of quarrelling and
+immorality that cannot be surpassed; in fact, some things that have
+happened in such places are not to be mentioned. Under the best
+circumstances it often happens that there are not sufficient
+cottages in a parish for the accommodation of the necessary workmen.
+Complaints are continually arising, from no one so much as from the
+agriculturists, who can never depend upon their men remaining
+because of the deficiency of lodging. It is not often that the
+entire parish belongs to one landlord; frequently, there are four or
+five landlords, and a large number of freehold properties let to
+tenants. Nor even where parishes are more or less the property of
+one person, is it always practicable for the estate to bear the
+burden of additional cottage building. The cost of a cottage varies
+more, perhaps, than any other estimate, according to the size, the
+materials to be employed, and their abundance in the neighbourhood.
+But it may be safely believed that the estimates given to landowners
+and others desirous of erecting cottages, very much exceed the sum
+at which they can be built. Deduct the hauling of materials--a
+considerable item--which could be done by the farmers themselves at
+odd times.
+
+In some places the materials may be found upon an adjacent farm, and
+for such purposes might be had for a nominal sum. Altogether, a very
+fair cottage might be built for £100 to £150, according to the
+circumstances. These, of course, would not be ornamental houses with
+Gothic porches and elaborate gables; but plain cottages, and quite
+as comfortable. In round figures, four such places might be erected
+for £500.[3] For a large parish will contain as many as twenty
+farmers, and some more than that: £500 distributed between twenty is
+but £25 apiece, and this sum could be still further reduced if the
+landlords, the clergy, and the principal inhabitants are calculated
+to take an interest in the matter. Let it be taken at £20 each, and
+the product four cottages. As there are supposed to be twenty farms,
+it may be reckoned that eight or ten new cottages would be welcome.
+This would vary with circumstances. In some places five would be
+sufficient. Ten would be the very highest number; and may be
+considered quite exceptional. Now for the repayment of the
+investment of £20. Four cottages at 2s. per week equals £20 per
+annum. At this rate in five-and-twenty years, each subscriber would
+be paid back his principal; say, after the manner of bonds, one
+redeemable every year, and drawn for by lot. An agriculturist who
+invests £100 or £150 in a cottage expects some interest upon his
+money; but he can afford to sink £20 for a few years in view of
+future benefit. But there are means by which the repayment could be
+much accelerated; _i.e._, by inducing the tenant of a cottage to pay
+a higher rent, and so become, after a time, the possessor of the
+tenement, in the same way as with building societies.
+
+ [3] This, of course, is upon the supposition that the materials
+ are obtained at a nominal cost, and the hauling not charged for.
+
+It may, however, be considered preferable that the cottages should
+remain the property of the village council--each member receiving
+back his original payment. This is thrown out merely as a
+suggestion; but this much is clear, that were there an organization
+of this kind there would be no material difficulty in the way of
+increasing the cottage accommodation. A number of gentlemen working
+together would overcome the want with ease. At all events, if they
+did not go so far as to erect new cottages, they might effect a
+great deal of improvement in repairing dilapidated places, and
+enlarging existing premises.
+
+In thus rapidly sketching out the various ways in which a local
+village authority might encourage the growth and improvement of the
+place, it has been endeavoured to indicate, in a suggestive manner,
+the way in which such an authority might be established. It is not
+for one moment proposed that an application should be made to the
+Legislature for a special enactment enabling such councils to act
+with legal force. To such a course there would certainly arise the
+most vigorous opposition on the part of all classes of the
+agricultural community, from landlord, tenant, and labourer alike.
+There exists an irresistible dislike to any form of 'imperial'
+interference, as is amply proved by the resistance offered to the
+School Board system, and by the comparative impotence of the rural
+sanitary authorities. People would rather suffer annoyance than call
+in an outside power. The species of local authority here indicated
+must be founded entirely upon the will of the inhabitants
+themselves; and its power be derived rather from acquiescence than
+from inherent force. In fact, the major part of its duties would not
+require any legal power. The allotment-garden, the cottage repair,
+the common, the bathing-place, reading-room, etc., would require no
+legal authority to render them useful and attractive. Neither is it
+probable that any serious opposition would be made to a system of
+drainage, and certainly none whatever to an improved water supply.
+No force would be necessary, and the whole moral influence of
+landlord, and tenant, and clergy, would sway in the proposed
+direction. It has often been remarked that the agricultural
+class--the tenant farmer--is the one least capable of combination,
+and there is a great deal of truth in the assertion of the lack of
+all cohesion, and united action. It must, however, be remembered
+that until very lately no kind of combination has been proposed, no
+attempt made to organize action. That, at least in local matters,
+agriculturists are capable of combination and united action has
+been proved by the strenuous exertions made to retain the voluntary
+school system, and also by the endeavours made for the restoration
+of village churches. If the total of the sums obtained for schools
+and for village church restoration could be ascertained, it would be
+found to amount to something very great; and in the case of the
+schools, at any rate, and to some degree in the case of
+restorations, the administration of the funds has rested upon the
+leading farmers assembled in committees. When once a number of
+agriculturists have formed a combination with an understood object,
+they are less liable to be thrown into disorder by factious
+differences amongst themselves than any other class of men. They are
+willing to agree to anything reasonable, and do not persist in
+amendments just in order that a favourite crotchet may be gratified.
+In other words, they are amenable to common sense and practical
+arguments.
+
+There would be very little doubt of harmonious action if once such a
+combination was formed. It could be started in many ways--by the
+clergyman asking the tenants of the parish to meet him in the
+village school-room, and there giving a rapid sketch of the proposed
+organization; and if any landlord, or magistrate, or leading
+gentleman was present, the thing would be set on its legs on the
+spot. In most parishes there are one or more large tenant farmers
+who naturally take the lead in their own class, and they would
+speedily obtain adherents to the movement. It would be as well,
+perhaps, if the attempt were made, for the promoters to draw up a
+species of circular for distribution in every house and cottage in
+the parish, explaining the objects of the association, and inviting
+co-operation on the part of rich and poor alike. Once a meeting was
+called together, and a committee appointed, the principal difficulty
+would be got over.
+
+The next matter--in fact, the first matter for the consideration of
+such a committee--would be the method of raising funds. All
+legally-established bodies have powers of obtaining money, as by
+rates; but the example of the independent schools and church
+restorations has amply proved that money will be forthcoming for
+proper purposes without resort to compulsion. The abolition of
+Church-rates has not in any way tended to the degradation of the
+Church; perhaps, on the contrary, more has been done towards Church
+extension since that date than before. A voluntary rate is still
+collected in many places, and produces a considerable sum, the
+calculation being made upon the basis of the poor-rate assessment.
+The objects of such a village association being eminently
+practical, devoid of any sectarian bearing and thoroughly local in
+application, there would probably be little difficulty in
+collecting a small voluntary rate for its support, even amongst the
+poorest of the population. The cottager would not grudge a few
+pence for objects in which he has an obvious interest, and which
+are close at home; but in the formation of the association it
+would, perhaps, be practicable to begin with a subscription of one
+guinea each from every member, the subscription of one guinea per
+annum endowing the giver with voting power at the meetings. If
+there were five-and-twenty farmers in a parish, there would be
+five-and-twenty guineas (it is not probable that any farmer would
+stand out from such a society), and five-and-twenty guineas would
+be quite sufficient to start the thing. Suppose the society
+commence with supplying additional allotment-grounds. They rent,
+say, eight acres at £2 10s. per acre, equalling £20 per annum; but
+they only expend £10 on rent for one half-year, because the other
+half will be paid by incoming tenants. The labour to be expended on
+the plot in making it tenable can hardly be reckoned, because, in
+all probability, it would be done by their own men at odd times.
+Many places would not require draining at all, and it need not be
+done at starting, and the generality of fields are already drained.
+So that about £15 would suffice to start the allotment-grounds,
+leaving £10 in hand to make a bathing-place with, or to erect a
+pump, or purchase hose or tank for water-supply. Here we have a
+considerable progress arrived at with one year's subscription only,
+not counting on any subscription from the landlord, or clergy, or
+resident gentlemen. The funds required are, in fact, not nearly so
+large as might be imagined. Most of these improvements, when once
+started, would last for some years without further outlay; the
+allotments would probably return a small income. It is not so
+necessary to do everything in one year. Add the sums collected on
+the low rate to the yearly subscription of the members, and there
+would probably be sufficient for every purpose, except that of
+cottage repairs or the erection of new cottages. Such more
+expensive matters would require shareholders investing larger sums;
+but the income already mentioned would probably enable all ordinary
+improvements to be carried out, even draining; and, after a year or
+two, a small reserve fund would even accumulate. It would, however,
+be important to bring the poorer class to feel that these matters,
+in a manner, depended upon their own exertions. There might be a
+subscription of twopence a month for certain given objects, as the
+bathing-place, the water-tank, or other things in hand at the time;
+and it would probably be well responded to. They should also be
+invited to give their labour free of charge after farm work. In the
+case of important alterations affecting the whole village, such as
+drainage, they might be asked to meet the society in the
+school-room, and then let the matter be put to the vote. After a
+few months, there can be no doubt the labouring population would
+come to take a very animated interest in such proceedings. There is
+a great deal of common sense in the labourer, and once let him see
+the practical as opposed to the theoretical benefit, and his
+co-operation is certain.
+
+The members of the society would have no trouble in electing a
+committee. There might be more than one committee to attend to
+different matters, as the allotment and the water-supply, because
+it would happen that one gentleman would have more practical
+knowledge of gardening, and another would have more acquaintance
+with the means of dealing with water, from the experience gained in
+his own water meadows. There should be a president of the society, a
+treasurer, and secretary; and a general meeting might take place
+once every two months, the committee meeting as circumstances
+dictated. Any member having a scheme to propose could draw up a
+short outline of his plan in writing, and submit it to the general
+meeting, when, if it met with favour, it could be handed over to a
+committee for execution.
+
+Such an association might call itself the village Local Society. It
+would be distinct from all party politics; it would have nothing to
+do with individual disputes or grievances between landlord and
+tenant; it would most carefully disclaim all sectarian objects. It
+would meet in a friendly genial manner, and if a few bottles of
+sherry could be placed on the table the better. A formal, hard,
+entirely business-like meeting is undesirable and to be avoided. The
+affairs in progress should be discussed in a free, open manner, and
+without any attempt at set speeches, though to prevent mistakes
+propositions would have to be moved and seconded, and entered in a
+minute-book. Such a society would be the means of bringing gentlemen
+together from distant parts of the parish, and would lead to a more
+intimate social connection. It would have other uses than those for
+which it was formally instituted. In the event of a serious
+outbreak of fever in the village, or any infectious disease, it
+might be of the very greatest utility in affording assistance to the
+poor, and in making arrangements for preventing the spread of
+infection by the plan of isolation. It might set apart a cottage for
+the reception of patients, and engage additional medical assistance.
+The influence it would exercise in the village and parish would be
+very great, and might produce a decided improvement in the moral
+tone of the place. In the event of disaffection and agitation
+arising among the labouring classes, it might be enabled to
+establish a reasonable compromise, and, in time, a good many little
+petty disputes among the poor would be referred to the society for
+arbitration.
+
+In large villages it might be found advantageous to establish a
+ladies' committee in connection with such a society. There are many
+matters in which the ladies are better agents, and possess a special
+knowledge. It may, perhaps, be thought rather an advanced idea; but
+would not some instruction in cookery be extremely useful to the
+agricultural girl just growing up into womanhood? The cooking she
+learns at home is simply no cooking at all. It is hardly possible to
+induce the elder women to change the habits of a lifetime, but the
+girls, fast growing up, would be eager to learn. With the increase
+of wages, the labourer has obtained a certain addition to his fare,
+and can occasionally afford some of the cheaper pieces of butcher's
+meat. But the women have no idea of utilizing these pieces in the
+most economical and savoury ways. Plentiful as vegetables are at
+times, they are only used in the coarsest manner. The ladies'
+committee would also have important work before them in boarding out
+the orphan children from the Union, and also in endeavouring to find
+employment for the great girls who play about the village, getting
+them into service, and so on. In the distribution of charities (if
+charities there must be), ladies are far more efficient than men,
+and they may exercise an influence in moral matters where no one
+else could interfere. If there is any charity which deserves to be
+assisted by this local society, it is the cheapening of coals in the
+winter. Already in some villages the principal farmers combine to
+purchase a good stock of coal at the beginning of winter, and as
+they buy it in large quantities they get it somewhat cheaper. Their
+teams and waggons haul it to the village, and in the dead of winter
+it is retailed to the cottagers at less than cost price. This is a
+most useful institution, and can hardly be called a charity. The
+fact that this has been done is a proof that organization for
+objects of local benefit is quite possible in rural parishes.
+Landowners and resident gentlemen would naturally take an interest
+in such proceedings, and may very properly be asked to subscribe;
+but the actual execution of the plans decided on should be left in
+the hands of tenant-farmers, who have a direct interest, and who
+come into daily contact with the lower class. As a means of adding
+to their funds, the society could give popular entertainments of
+reading and singing, which have often been found effective in
+raising money for the purchase of a new harmonium, and which, at the
+same time, afford a harmless gratification. It would, perhaps, be
+better if such a society were to keep itself distinct from any
+project of church restoration, or even from the school question,
+because it is most essential that they should be free from the
+slightest suspicion of leaning towards any party. Their authority
+must be based upon universal consent. They might perform a useful
+task if they could induce the cottagers to insure their goods and
+chattels, or in any way assist them to do so. Cottages are
+exceptionably liable to conflagration, and after the place is burnt,
+there is piteous weeping and wailing, and general begging to replace
+the lost furniture and bedding. There is much to be done also in the
+matter of savings. It seems to be pretty well demonstrated by the
+history of benefit clubs and the calculations of actuaries, that the
+agricultural labourer, out of his amount of wages, cannot put by a
+sufficient monthly contribution to enable him to receive a pension
+when he becomes old and infirm. But that is not the slightest reason
+why he should not save small sums year by year, which, in course of
+time, would amount to a nice little thing to fall back upon in case
+of sickness or accident. There are many aged and deserving men who
+have worked all their lives in one place and almost upon one farm,
+and, at last, are reduced to the pitiful allowance of the parish,
+occasionally supplemented by a friendly gift. These cases are very
+painful to witness, and are felt to be wrong by the tenant-farmers.
+But one person cannot entirely support them; and often it happens
+that the man who would have done his best is dead--the old employer
+for whom they worked so many years is gone before them to his rest.
+If there were but a little organization such cases would not pass
+unnoticed.
+
+Certain it is that the tendency of the age, and the progress of
+recent events, indicates the coming of a time when organization of
+some kind in rural districts will be necessary. The labour-agitation
+was a lesson of this kind. There are upheaving forces at work among
+the agricultural lower class as well as in the lower class of towns;
+a flow of fresh knowledge, and larger aspirations, which require
+guidance and supervision, lest they run to riot and excess. An
+organization of the character here indicated would meet the
+difficulties of the future, and meet them in the best of ways; for
+while possessing power to improve and to reform, it would have no
+hated odour of compulsion. The suggestions here put forth are, of
+course, all more or less tentative. They sketch an outline, the
+filling up of which must fall upon practical men, and which must
+depend greatly upon the circumstances of the locality.
+
+
+
+
+THE IDLE EARTH
+
+
+The bare fallows of a factory are of short duration, and occur at
+lengthened intervals. There are the Saturday afternoons--four or
+five hours' shorter time; there are the Sundays--fifty-two in
+number; a day or two at Christmas, at Midsummer, at Easter.
+Fifty-two Sundays, plus fifty-two half-days on Saturdays; eight days
+more for _bonâ-fide_ holidays--in all, eighty-six days on which no
+labour is done. This is as near as may be just one quarter of the
+year spent in idleness. But how fallacious is such a calculation!
+for overtime and night-work make up far more than this deficient
+quarter; and therefore it may safely be said that man works the
+whole year through, and has no bare fallow. But earth--idle
+earth--on which man dwells, has a much easier time of it. It takes
+nearly a third of the year out in downright leisure, doing nothing
+but inchoating; a slow process indeed, and one which all the
+agricultural army have of late tried to hasten, with very
+indifferent success. Winter seed sown in the fall of the year does
+not come to anything till the spring; spring seed is not reaped till
+the autumn is at hand. But it will be argued that this land is not
+idle, for during those months the seed is slowly growing--absorbing
+its constituent parts from the atmosphere, the earth, the water;
+going through astonishing metamorphoses; outdoing the most wonderful
+laboratory experiments with its untaught, instinctive chemistry. All
+true enough; and hitherto it has been assumed that the ultimate
+product of these idle months is sufficient to repay the idleness;
+that in the _coup_ of the week of reaping there is a dividend
+recompensing the long, long days of development. Is it really so?
+This is not altogether a question which a practical man used to City
+formulas of profit and loss might ask. It is a question to which,
+even at this hour, farmers themselves--most unpractical of men--are
+requiring an answer. There is a cry arising throughout the country
+that farms do not pay; that a man with a moderate 400 acres and a
+moderate £1,000 of his own, with borrowed money added, cannot get a
+reasonable remuneration from those acres. These say they would
+sooner be hotel-keepers, tailors, grocers--anything but farmers.
+These are men who have tried the task of subduing the stubborn
+earth, which is no longer bountiful to her children. Much reason
+exists in this cry, which is heard at the market ordinary, in the
+lobby, at the club meetings--wherever agriculturists congregate, and
+which will soon force itself out upon the public. It is like this.
+Rents have risen. Five shillings per acre makes an enormous
+difference, though nominally only an additional £100 on 400 acres.
+But as in agricultural profits one must not reckon more than 8 per
+cent., this 5s. per acre represents nearly another £1,000 which
+must be invested in the business, and which must be made to return
+interest to pay the additional rent. If that cannot be done, then it
+represents a dead £100 per annum taken out of the agriculturist's
+pocket.
+
+Then--labour, the great agricultural _crux_. If the occupier pays
+3s. per week more to seven men, that adds more than another £50 per
+annum to his outgoings, to meet which you must somehow make your
+acres represent another £500. Turnpikes fall in, and the roads are
+repaired at the ratepayers' cost. Compulsory education--for it is
+compulsory in reality, since it compels voluntary schools to be
+built--comes next, and as generally the village committee mull
+matters, and have to add a wing, and rebuild, and so forth, till
+they get in debt, there grows up a rate which is a serious matter,
+not by itself, but added to other things. Just as in great factories
+they keep accounts in decimals because of the vast multitude of
+little expenses which are in the aggregate serious--each decimal is
+equivalent to a rusty nail or so--here on our farm threepence or
+fourpence in the pound added to threepence or sixpence ditto for
+voluntary Church-rate, puts an appreciable burden on the man's back.
+The tightness, however, does not end here; the belt is squeezed
+closer than this. No man had such long credit as the yeoman of yore
+(thirty years ago is 'of yore' in our century). Butcher and baker,
+grocer, tailor, draper, all gave him unlimited credit as to _time_.
+As a rule, they got paid in the end; for a farmer is a fixture, and
+does not have an address for his letters at one place and live in
+another. But modern trade manners are different. The trader is
+himself pressed. Competition galls his heel. He has to press upon
+his customers, and in place of bills sent in for payment once a
+year, and actual cash transfer in three, we have bills punctually
+every quarter, and due notice of county court if cheques are not
+sent at the half-year. So that the agriculturist wants more ready
+cash; and as his returns come but once a year, he does not quite see
+the fairness of having to swell other men's returns four times in
+the same period. Still a step further, and a few words will suffice
+to describe the increased cost of all the materials supplied by
+these tradesmen. Take coals, for instance. This is a fact so patent
+that it stares the world in the face. A farmer, too, nowadays has a
+natural desire to live as other people in his station of life do. He
+cannot reconcile himself to rafty bacon, cheese, radishes,
+turnip-tops, homespun cloth, smock frocks. He cannot see why his
+girls should milk the cows or wheel out manure from the yards any
+more than the daughters of tradesmen; neither that his sons should
+say 'Ay' and 'Noa,' and exhibit a total disregard of grammar and
+ignorance of all social customs. The piano, he thinks, is quite as
+much in its place in his cool parlour as in the stuffy so-called
+drawing-room at his grocer's in the petty town hard by, where they
+are so particular to distinguish the social ranks of 'professional
+tradesmen' from common tradesmen. Here in all this, even supposing
+it kept down to economical limits, there exists a considerable
+margin of expenditure greater than in our forefathers' time. True,
+wool is dearer, meat dearer; but to balance that put the increased
+cost of artificial manure and artificial food--two things no farmer
+formerly bought--and do not forget that the seasons rule all things,
+and are quite as capricious as ever, and when there is a bad season
+the loss is much greater than it used to be, just as the foundering
+of an ironclad costs the nation more than the loss of a frigate.
+
+Experience every day brings home more and more the fatal truth that
+moderate farms do not pay, and there are even ominous whispers about
+the 2,000 acres system. The agriculturist says that, work how he
+may, he only gets 8 per cent. per annum; the tradesman, still more
+the manufacturer, gets only 2 per cent. each time, but he turns his
+money over twenty times a year, and so gets 40 per cent. per annum.
+Eight per cent. is a large dividend on one transaction, but it is
+very small for a whole year--a year, the one-thirtieth of a man's
+whole earning period, if we take him to be in a business at
+twenty-five, and to be in full work till fifty-five, a fair
+allowance. Now, why is it that this cry arises that agriculture will
+not pay? and why is it that the farmer only picks up 8 per cent.?
+The answer is simple enough. It is because the earth is idle a third
+of the year. So far as actual cash return is concerned, one might
+say it was idle eleven out of the twelve months. But that is hardly
+fair. Say a third of the year.
+
+The earth does not continue yielding a crop day by day as the
+machines do in the manufactory. The nearest approach to the
+manufactory is the dairy, whose cows send out so much milk per diem;
+but the cows go dry for their calves. Out of the tall chimney shaft
+there floats a taller column of dark smoke hour after hour; the vast
+engines puff and snort and labour perhaps the whole twenty-four
+hours through; the drums hum round, the shafts revolve perpetually,
+and each revolution is a penny gained. It may be only steel-pen
+making--pens, common pens, which one treats as of no value and
+wastes by dozens; but the iron-man thumps them out hour after hour,
+and the thin stream of daily profit swells into a noble river of
+gold at the end of the year. Even the pill people are fortunate in
+this: it is said that every second a person dies in this huge world
+of ours. Certain it is that every second somebody takes a pill; and
+so the millions of globules disappear, and so the profit is nearer 8
+per cent. per hour than 8 per cent. per annum. But this idle earth
+takes a third of the year to mature its one single crop of pills;
+and so the agriculturist with his slow returns cannot compete with
+the quick returns of the tradesman and manufacturer. If he cannot
+compete, he cannot long exist; such is the modern law of business.
+As an illustration, take one large meadow on a dairy farm; trace its
+history for one year, and see what an idle workshop this meadow is.
+Call it twenty acres of first-class land at £2 15s. per acre, or £55
+per annum. Remember that twenty acres is a large piece on which
+some millions multiplied by millions of cubic feet of air play on a
+month, and on which an incalculable amount of force in the shape of
+sunlight is poured down in the summer. January sees this plot of a
+dull, dirty green, unless hidden by snow; the dirty green is a
+short, juiceless herbage. The ground is as hard as a brick with the
+frost. We will not stay now to criticize the plan of carting out
+manure at this period, or dwell on the great useless furrows. Look
+carefully round the horizon of the twenty acres, and there is not an
+animal in sight, not a single machine for making money, not a penny
+being turned. The cows are all in the stalls. February comes, March
+passes; the herbage grows slowly; but still no machines are
+introduced, no pennies roll out at the gateways. The farmer may lean
+on the gate and gaze over an empty workshop, twenty acres big, with
+his hands in his pockets, except when he pulls out his purse to pay
+the hedge-cutters who are clearing out the ditches, the women who
+have been stone-picking, and the carters who took out the manure,
+half of which stains the drains, while the volatile part mixes with
+the atmosphere. This is highly profitable and gratifying. The man
+walks home, hears his daughter playing the piano, picks up the
+paper, sees himself described as a brutal tyrant to the labourer,
+and ten minutes afterwards in walks the collector of the voluntary
+rate for the village school, which educates the labourers' children.
+April arrives; grass grows rapidly. May comes; grass is now long.
+But still not one farthing has been made out of that twenty acres.
+Five months have passed, and all this time the shafts in the
+manufactories have been turning, and the quick coppers accumulating.
+Now it is June, and the mower goes to work; then the haymakers, and
+in a fortnight if the weather be good, a month if it be bad, the hay
+is ricked. Say it cost £1 per acre to make the hay and rick
+it--_i.e._, £20--and by this time half the rent is due, or £27 10s.
+= total expenditure (without any profit as yet), £47 10s., exclusive
+of stone-picking, ditch-cleaning, value of manure, etc. This by the
+way. The five months' idleness is the point at present. June is now
+gone. If the weather be showery the sharp-edged grass may spring up
+in a fortnight to a respectable height; but if it be a dry
+summer--and if it is not a dry summer the increased cost of
+haymaking runs away with profit--then it may be fully a month before
+there is anything worth biting. Say at the end of July (one more
+idle month) twenty cows are turned in, and three horses. One cannot
+estimate how long they may take to eat up the short grass, but
+certain it is that the beginning of November will see that field
+empty of cattle again; and fortunate indeed the agriculturist who
+long before that has not had to 'fodder' (feed with hay) at least
+once a day. Here, then, are five idle months in spring, one in
+summer, two in winter; total, eight idle months. But, not to stretch
+the case, let us allow that during a part of that time, though the
+meadow is idle, its produce--the hay--is being eaten and converted
+into milk, cheese and butter, or meat, which is quite correct; but,
+even making this allowance, it may safely be said that the meadow is
+absolutely idle for one-third of the year, or four months. That is
+looking at the matter in a mere pounds, shillings, and pence light.
+Now look at it in a broader, more national view. Does it not seem a
+very serious matter that so large a piece of land should remain idle
+for that length of time? It is a reproach to science that no method
+of utilizing the meadow during that eight months has been
+discovered. To go further, it is very hard to require of the
+agriculturist that he should keep pace with a world whose maxims day
+by day tend to centralize and concentrate themselves into the one
+canon, Time is Money, when he cannot by any ingenuity get his
+machinery to revolve more than once a year. In the old days the
+farmer belonged to a distinct class, a very isolated and independent
+class, little affected by the progress or retrogression of any other
+class, and not at all by those waves of social change which sweep
+over Europe. Now the farmer is in the same position as other
+producers: the fall or rise of prices, the competition of foreign
+lands, the waves of panic or monetary tightness, all tell upon him
+quite as much as on the tradesman. So that the cry is gradually
+rising that the idle earth will not pay.
+
+On arable land it is perhaps even more striking. Take a wheat crop,
+for instance. Without going into the cost and delay of the three
+years of preparation under various courses for the crop, take the
+field just before the wheat year begins. There it lies in November,
+a vast brown patch, with a few rooks here and there hopping from one
+great lump to another; but there is nothing on it--no machine
+turning out materials to be again turned into money. On the
+contrary, it is very probable that the agriculturist may be sowing
+money on it, scarifying it with steam ploughing-engines, tearing up
+the earth to a great depth in order that the air may penetrate and
+the frost disintegrate the strong, hard lumps. He may have commenced
+this expensive process as far back as the end of August, for it is
+becoming more and more the custom to plough up directly after the
+crop is removed. All November, December, January, and not a penny
+from this broad patch, which may be of any size from fifteen to
+ninety acres, lying perfectly idle. Sometimes, indeed, persons who
+wish to save manure will grow mustard on it and plough it in, the
+profit of which process is extremely dubious. At the latter end of
+February or beginning of March, just as the season is early or late,
+dry or wet, in goes the seed--another considerable expense. Then
+April, May, June, July are all absorbed in the slow process of
+growth--a necessary process, of course, but still terribly slow, and
+not a penny of ready-money coming in. If the seed was sown in
+October, as is usual on some soils, the effect is the same--the crop
+does not arrive till next year's summer sun shines. In August the
+reaper goes to work, but even then the corn has to be threshed and
+sent to market before there is any return. Here is a whole year
+spent in elaborating one single crop, which may, after all, be very
+unprofitable if it is a good wheat year, and the very wheat over
+which such time and trouble have been expended may be used to fat
+beasts, or even to feed pigs. All this, however, and the great
+expense of preparation, though serious matters enough in themselves,
+are beside our immediate object. The length of time the land is
+useless is the point. Making every possible allowance, it is not
+less than one-third of the year--four months out of the twelve. For
+all practical--_i.e._, monetary--purposes it is longer than that. No
+wonder that agriculturists aware of this fact are so anxious to get
+as much as possible out of their one crop--to make the one
+revolution of their machinery turn them out as much money as
+possible. If their workshop must be enforcedly idle for so long,
+they desire that when in work there shall be full blast and double
+tides. Let the one crop be as heavy as it can. Hence the agitation
+for compensatory clauses, enabling the tenant to safely invest all
+the capital he can procure in the soil. How else is he to meet the
+increased cost of labour, of rent, of education, of domestic
+materials; how else maintain his fair position in society? The
+demand is reasonable enough; the one serious drawback is the
+possibility that, even with this assistance, the idle earth will
+refuse to move any faster.
+
+We have had now the experience of many sewage-farms where the
+culture is extremely 'high.' It has been found that these farms
+answer admirably where the land is poor--say, sandy and porous--but
+on fairly good soil the advantage is dubious, and almost limited to
+growing a succession of rye-grass crops. After a season or two of
+sewage soaking the soil becomes so soft that in the winter months it
+is unapproachable. Neither carts nor any implements can be drawn
+over it; and then in the spring the utmost care has to be exercised
+to keep the liquid from touching the young plants, or they wither up
+and die. Sewage on grass lands produces the most wonderful results
+for two or three years, but after that the herbage comes so thick
+and rank and 'strong' that cattle will not touch it; the landlord
+begins to grumble, and complains that the land, which was to have
+been improved, has been spoilt for a long time to come. Neither is
+it certain that the employment of capital in other ways will lead to
+a continuous increase of profit. There are examples before our eyes
+where capital has been unsparingly employed, and upon very large
+areas of land, with most disappointing results. In one such instance
+five or six farms were thrown into one; straw, and manure, and every
+aid lavishly used, till a fabulous number of sheep and other stock
+was kept; but the experiment failed. Many of the farms were again
+made separate holdings, and grass laid down in the place of glowing
+cornfields. Then there is another instance, where a gentleman of
+large means and a cultivated and business mind, called in the
+assistance of the deep plough, and by dint of sheer subsoil
+ploughing grew corn profitably several years in succession. But
+after a while he began to pause, and to turn his attention to stock
+and other aids. It is not for one moment contended that the use of
+artificial manure, of the deep plough, of artificial food, and other
+improvements will not increase the yield, and so the profit of the
+agriculturist. It is obvious that they do so. The question is, Will
+they do so to an extent sufficient to repay the outlay? And,
+further, will they do so sufficiently to enable the agriculturist to
+meet the ever-increasing weight which presses on him? It would seem
+open to doubt. One thing appears to have been left quite out of
+sight by those gentlemen who are so enthusiastic about compensation
+for unexhausted improvements, and that is, if the landlord is to be
+bound down so rigidly, and if the tenant really is going to make so
+large a profit, most assuredly the rents will rise very
+considerably. How then? Neither the sewage system, nor the deep
+plough, nor the artificial manure has, as yet, succeeded in
+overcoming the _vis inertiæ_ of the idle earth. They cause an
+increase in the yield of the one revolution of the agriculturist
+machine per annum; but they do not cause the machine to revolve
+twice or three times. Without a decrease in the length of this
+enforced idleness any very great increase of profit does not seem
+possible. What would any manufacturer think of a business in which
+he was compelled to let his engines rest for a third of the year?
+Would he be eager to sink his capital in such an enterprise?
+
+The practical man will, of course, exclaim that all this is very
+true, but Nature is Nature, and must have its way, and it is useless
+to expect more than one crop per annum, and any talk of three or
+four crops is perfectly visionary. 'Visionary,' by the way, is a
+very favourite word with so-called practical men. But the stern
+logic of figures, of pounds, shillings, and pence, proves that the
+present condition of affairs cannot last much longer, and they are
+the true 'visionaries' who imagine that it can. This enormous loss
+of time, this idleness, must be obviated somehow. It is a question
+whether the millions of money at present sunk in agriculture are not
+a dead loss to the country; whether they could not be far more
+profitably employed in developing manufacturing industries, or in
+utilizing for home consumption the enormous resources of Southern
+America and Australasia; whether we should not get more to eat, and
+cheaper, if such was the case. Such a low rate of interest as is now
+obtained in agriculture--and an interest by no means secure either,
+for a bad season may at any time reduce it, and even a too good
+season--such a state of things is a loss, if not a curse. It is
+questionable whether the million or so of labourers representing a
+potential amount of force almost incalculable, and the thousands of
+young farmers throbbing with health and vigour, eager _to do_, would
+not return a far larger amount of good to the world and to
+themselves if, instead of waiting for the idle earth at home to
+bring forth, they were transported bodily to the broad savannahs and
+prairies, and were sending to the mother-country innumerable
+shiploads of meat and corn--unless, indeed, we can discover some
+method by which our idle earth shall be made to labour more
+frequently. This million or so of labourers and these thousands of
+young, powerfully made farmers literally do nothing at all for a
+third the year but wait, wait for the idle earth. The of strength,
+the will, the vigour latent in them is wasted. They do not enjoy
+this waiting by any means. The young agriculturist chafes under the
+delay, and is eager _to do_. They can hunt and course hares, 'tis
+true, but that is feeble excitement indeed, and feminine in
+comparison with the serious work which brings in money.
+
+The idleness of arable and pasture land is as nothing compared to
+the idleness of the wide, rolling downs. These downs are of immense
+extent, and stretch through the very heart of the country. They
+maintain sheep, but in how small a proportion to the acreage! In the
+spring and summer the short herbage is cropped by the sheep; but it
+is short, and it requires a large tract to keep a moderate flock. In
+the winter the down is left to the hares and fieldfares. It has just
+as long a period of absolute idleness as the arable and pasture
+land, and when in work the yield is so very, very small.
+
+After all, the very deepest ploughing is but scratching the surface.
+The earth at five feet beneath the level has not been disturbed for
+countless centuries. Nor would it pay to turn up this subsoil over
+large areas, for it is nothing but clay, as many a man has found to
+his cost who, in the hope of a heavier crop, has dug up his garden
+half a spade deeper than usual. But when the soil really is good at
+that depth, we cannot get at it so as to turn it to practical
+account. The thin stratum of artificial manure which is sown is no
+more in comparison than a single shower after a drought of months;
+yet to sow too much would destroy the effect. No blame, then, falls
+upon the agriculturist, who is only too anxious to get a larger
+produce. It is useless charging him with incompetency. What
+countless experiments have been tried to increase the crop: to see
+if some new system cannot be introduced! With all its progress, how
+little real advance has agriculture made! All because of the
+stubborn, idle earth. Will not science some day come to our aid, and
+show how two crops or three may be grown in our short summers; or
+how we may even overcome the chill hand of winter? Science has got
+as far as this: it recognizes the enormous latent forces surrounding
+us--electricity, magnetism; some day, perhaps, it may be able to
+utilize them. It recognizes the truly overwhelming amount of force
+which the sun of summer pours down upon our fields, and of which we
+really make no use. To recognize the existence of a power is the
+first step towards employing it. Till it was granted that there was
+a power in steam the locomotive was impossible.
+
+It would be easy to swell this notice of idle earth by bringing in
+all the waste lands, now doing nothing--the parks, deer forests, and
+so on. But that is not to the purpose. If the wastes were reclaimed
+and the parks ploughed up, that would in nowise solve the problem
+how to make the cultivated earth more busy. It is no use for a man
+who has a garden to lean on his spade, look over his boundary wall,
+and say, 'Ah, if neighbour Brown would but dig up his broad green
+paths how many more potatoes he would grow!' That would not increase
+the produce of the critic's garden by one single cabbage. Certainly
+it is most desirable that all lands capable of yielding crops should
+be reclaimed, but one great subject for the agriculturist to study
+is, how to shorten the period of idleness in his already cultivated
+plots. At present the earth is so very idle.
+
+
+
+
+AFTER THE COUNTY FRANCHISE
+
+
+The money-lender is the man I most fear to see in the villages after
+the extension of the county franchise--the money-lender both in his
+private and public capacity, the man who has already taken a grasp
+of most little towns that have obtained incorporation in some form.
+Like Shylock he demands what is in his bond: he demands his
+interest, and that means a pull at every man's purse--every man,
+rich or poor--who lives within the boundary. Borrowing is almost the
+ruin of many such little towns; rates rise nearly as high as in
+cities, and people strive all they can to live anywhere outside the
+limit. Borrowing is becoming one of the curses of modern life, and a
+sorrowful day it will be when the first village takes to it. The
+name changes--now it is a local board, now it is commissioners,
+sometimes a town council: the practice remains the same. These
+authorities exist but for one purpose--to borrow money, and as any
+stick will do to beat a dog with, so any pretence will do to exact
+the uttermost farthing from the inhabitants. Borrowing boards they
+are, one and all, and nothing else, from whom no one obtains benefit
+except the solicitor, the surveyor, the lucky architect, and those
+who secure a despicable living in the rear of the county court.
+Nothing could better illustrate the strange supineness of the
+majority of people than the way in which they pay, pay, pay, and
+submit to every species of extortion at the hands of these incapable
+blunderers, without so much as a protest. The system has already
+penetrated into the smallest of the county towns which groan under
+the incubus; let us hope, let us labour, that it may not continue
+its course and enter the villages.
+
+It may reasonably be supposed that when once the extension of the
+franchise becomes an established fact, some kind of local
+government will soon follow. At present country districts are
+either without any local government at all--I mean practically,
+not theoretically--or else they are ruled without the least shadow
+of real representation. When men are admitted to vote and come to
+be enlightened as to the full meaning and force of such rights, it
+is probable that they will shortly demand the power to arrange
+their own affairs. They will have something to say as to the
+administration of the poor-law, over which at present they do not
+possess the slightest control, and they are not at all unlikely to
+set up a species of self-government in every separate village. I
+think, in short, that the parish may become the unit in the future
+to the disintegration of the artificial divisions drawn to
+facilitate the poor-law. Such divisions, wherein many parishes of
+the most diverse description and far apart are thrown together
+anyhow as the gardener pitches weeds into his basket, have done
+serious harm in the past. They have injured the sense of personal
+responsibility, they have created a bureaucracy absolutely without
+feeling, and they have tended to shift great questions out of
+sight. The shifting of things out of sight--round the corner--is a
+vile method of dealing with them. Send your wretched poor miles
+away into a sort of alien workhouse, and then congratulate
+yourself that you have tided over the difficulty! But the
+difficulty has not been got over.
+
+A man who can vote, and who is told--as he certainly will be
+told--that he bears a part in directing the great affairs of his
+nation, will ask himself why he should not be capable of managing
+the little affairs of his own neighbourhood. When he has asked
+himself this question, it will be the first step towards the
+downfall of the inhuman poor-law. He will go further and say, 'Why
+should I not settle these things at home? Why should I not walk up
+to the village from my house in the country lane, and there and then
+arrange the business which concerns me? Why should I any longer
+permit it to be done over my head and without my consent by a body
+of persons in whom I have no confidence, for they do not represent
+me--they represent property?'
+
+In his own village the voter will observe the school--his own
+village then is worthy to possess its own school; possibly he may
+even remotely have some trifling share in the control of the school
+if there is a board. If that great interest, the children of the
+parish, can be administered at home, why not the other and much less
+important interests? Here may be traced a series of reflections, and
+a succession of steps by which ultimately the whole system of boards
+of guardians with their attendant powers, as the rural sanitary
+authority and so forth, may ultimately be swept away. Government
+will come again to the village.
+
+Then arises the money-lender, and no time should be lost by those
+who have the good and the genuine liberty of the countryside at
+heart in labouring to prevent his entry into the village. Whatsoever
+constitution the village obtains in future, let us strive to
+strictly limit the borrowing powers of its council. No borrowing
+powers at all would be best--government without loans would be
+almost ideal--if that cannot be accomplished, then at least lay down
+a stringent regulation putting a firm and impassable limit. Were
+every one of my way of thinking, government without loans would be
+imperative. It would be done if it had to be done. Rugged discomfort
+is preferable to borrowing.
+
+I dread, in a word, lest the follies perpetrated in towns should get
+into the villages and hamlets, and want to say a word betimes of
+warning. Imagine a new piece of roadway required, then to get the
+money let a penny be added to the rates, and the amount produced
+laid by at interest year after year, till the sum be made up. Better
+wait a few years and walk half a mile round than borrow the five or
+six hundred pounds, and have to pay that back and all the interest
+on it. Shift somehow, do not borrow.
+
+In the discussions upon the agricultural franchise it has been
+generally assumed that the changes it portends will be shown in
+momentous State affairs and questions of principle. But perhaps it
+will be rather in local and home concerns that the alterations will
+be most apparent. The agricultural labourer voters--and the numerous
+semi-agricultural voters, not labourers--are more than likely to
+look at their own parish as well as at the policy of the Foreign
+Office. Gradually the parish--that is, the village--must become the
+centre to men who feel at last that they are their own masters.
+Under some form or other they will take the parish into their own
+hands, and insist upon their business being managed at home. Some
+shape of village council must come presently into existence.
+
+Shrewd people are certain to appear upon the scene, pointing out to
+the cottager that if he desires to rule himself in his own village,
+he must insist upon one most important point. This is the exclusion
+of property representation. Instead of property having an
+overwhelming share, as now, in the direction of affairs, the owner
+of the largest property must not weigh any heavier in the village
+council than the wayside cottager. If farmer or landowner sit there
+he must have one vote only, the same as any other member. The
+council, if it is to be independent, must represent men and not
+land in the shape of landowners, or money in the shape of
+tenant-farmers. Shrewd people will have no difficulty in
+explaining the meaning of this to the village voters, because they
+can quote so many familiar instances. There is the Education Act in
+part defeated by the combination of property, landowners and
+farmers paying to escape a school-board--a plan temporarily
+advantageous to them, but of doubtful benefit, possibly injurious,
+to the parish at large. Leaving that question alone, the fact is
+patent that the cottager has no share in the government of his
+school, because land and money have combined. It may be governed
+very well; still it is not _his_ government, and will serve to
+illustrate the meaning. There is the board of guardians, nominally
+elected, really selected, and almost self-appointed. The board of
+guardians is land and money simply, and in no way whatever
+represents the people. A favourite principle continually enunciated
+at the present day is that the persons chiefly concerned should
+have the management. But the lower classes who are chiefly
+concerned with poor relief, as a matter of fact, have not the
+slightest control over that management. Besides the guardians,
+there is still an upper row, and here the rulers are not even
+invested with the semblance of representation, for magistrates are
+not elected, and they are guardians by virtue of their being
+magistrates. The machinery is thus complete for the defeat of
+representation and for the despotic control of those who, being
+principally concerned, ought by all rule and analogy to have the
+main share of the management. We have seen working men's
+representatives sit in the House of Commons; did anyone ever see a
+cottage labourer sit as administrator at the board before which the
+wretched poor of his own neighbourhood appear for relief?
+
+But it may be asked, Is the village council, then, composed of small
+proprietors, to sit down and vote away the farmer's or landowner's
+money without farmer or landowner having so much as a voice in the
+matter? Certainly not. The idea of village self-government supposes
+a distinct and separate existence, as it were; the village apart
+from the farmer or landowner, and the latter apart from the village.
+At present the money drawn in rates from farmer or landowner is
+chiefly expended on poor-law purposes. But, as will presently
+appear, village self-government proposes the entire abolition of the
+poor-law system, and with it the rates which support it, or at least
+the heaviest part of them. Therefore, as this money would not be
+concerned, they could receive no injury, even if they did not sit at
+the village council at all.
+
+Imagine the village, figuratively speaking, surrounded by a high
+wall like a girdle, as towns were in ancient times, and so cut off
+altogether from the large properties surrounding it--on the one hand
+the village supporting and governing itself, and on the other the
+large properties equally independent.
+
+The probable result would be a considerable reduction in local
+burdens on land. A self-supporting and self-governing moral
+population is the first step towards this relief to land so very
+desirable in the interest of agriculture.
+
+In practice there must remain certain more or less imperial
+questions, as lines of through road, police, etc., some of which are
+already managed by the county authority. As these matters affect the
+farmer and landowner even more than the cottager, clearly they must
+expect to contribute to the cost, and can rightly claim a share in
+the management.
+
+Having advanced so far as a village council, and arrived at the
+stage of managing their own affairs, having, in fact, emerged from
+pupilage, next comes a question for the council. We now govern our
+village ourselves; why should we not possess our village? Why should
+we not live in our own houses? Why should we not have a little share
+in the land, as much, at least, as we can pay for? At this moment
+the village, let us say, consists of a hundred cottages, and perhaps
+there are another hundred scattered about the parish. Of these
+three-fourths belong to two or three large landowners, and those who
+reside in them, however protected by enactment, can never have a
+sense of complete independence. We should own these cottages, so
+that the inhabitants might practically pay rent to themselves. We
+must purchase them, a few at a time; the residents can repurchase
+from us and so become freeholders. For a purchaser there must be a
+seller, and here one of the questions of the future appears: Can an
+owner of this kind of property be permitted to refuse to sell? Must
+he be compelled to sell?
+
+It is clear that if the village voter thoroughly addresses himself
+to his home affairs there is room for some remarkable incidents.
+There is reason now, is there not, to dread the appearance of the
+money-lender?
+
+About this illustrative parish there lie many hundred acres of good
+land all belonging to one man, while we, the said village council,
+do not possess a rood apiece, and our constituents not a square
+yard. Rightfully we ought to have a share, yet we do not agitate for
+confiscation. Shall we then say that every owner of land should be
+obliged to sell a certain fixed percentage--a very small percentage
+would suffice--upon proffer of a reasonable amount, the proffer
+being made by those who propose to personally settle on it? Of one
+thousand acres suppose ten or twenty liable to forcible purchase at
+a given and moderate price. After all it is not a much more
+overbearing thing than the taking by railways of land in almost any
+direction they please, and not nearly so tyrannous, so stupidly
+tyrannous, as some of the acts of folly committed by local boards in
+towns. Not long since the newspapers reported a case where a local
+authority actually ran a main sewer across a gentleman's park, and
+ventilated it at regular intervals, completely destroying the value
+of an historic mansion, and utterly ruining a beautiful domain. This
+was fouling their own nest with a vengeance. They should have
+cherished that park as one of their chiefest glories, their proudest
+possession. Parks and woods are daily becoming of almost priceless
+value to the nation; nothing could be so mad as to destroy these
+last homes of nature. Just conceive the inordinate folly of marking
+such a property with sewer ventilators. This is a hundred times more
+despotic than a proposal that say two per cent. of land should be
+forcibly purchasable for actual settlement. Even five per cent.
+would not make an appreciable difference to an estate, though every
+fraction of the five per cent. were taken up.
+
+For such proposals to have any effect, the transfer of real property
+must be greatly simplified and cheapened. From time to time,
+whenever a discussion occurs upon this subject, and there are signs
+that the glacier-like movements of government will be hastened by
+public stir, up rises some great lawyer and explains to the world
+that really nothing could be simpler or cheaper than such transfer.
+All that can be wished in that direction has been accomplished
+already; there is not the slightest ground for agitation; every
+obstruction has been removed, and the machinery is now perfect. He
+quotes a long list of Acts to demonstrate the progress that has been
+made, and so winds up a very effective speech. Facts, however, are
+not in accordance with these gracious words. Here is an instance. A
+cottage in a village was recently sold for seventy pounds; the
+costs, legal expenses, parchments, all the antiquated formalities
+absorbed _thirty-two pounds_, only three pounds less than half the
+value of the little property. Could anything be more obviously wrong
+than such a system.
+
+The difficulties in the way of simplification are created
+difficulties, entirely artificial, owing their existence to legal
+ingenuity. How often has the question been asked and never answered:
+Why should there be any more expense in transferring the ownership
+of an acre of land than of £100 stock?
+
+The village council coming into contact with this matter is likely
+to agitate continuously for its rectification, since otherwise its
+movements will be seriously hampered. If they succeed in obtaining
+the abolition of these semi-feudal survivals, they will have
+conferred a substantial benefit upon the community. County franchise
+would be worth the granting merely to secure this.
+
+Let us take the case for a moment of a labourer at this day and
+consider his position. What has he before him? He has a
+hand-to-mouth, nomad existence, ending in the inevitable frozen
+misery of the workhouse. Men with votes and political power are
+hardly likely to endure this for many more years, and it is much to
+be hoped that they will not endure it. A labourer may be never so
+hard-working, so careful, so sober, and yet let his efforts be what
+they may, his old age finds him helpless. I am sure there is no
+class of men among whom may be found so many industrious, plodding,
+sober folk, economical to the verge of starvation. Their
+straightforward lives are thrown away. Their sons and daughters,
+warned by example, go to the cities, and there lose the virtues that
+rendered their forefathers so admirable even in their wretchedness.
+It will indeed be a blessing if, as I hope, the outcome of the
+franchise is the foundation of solid inducements to the countryman
+to stay in the country. I use the phrase countryman purposely,
+intending it to include small farmers and small farmers' sons; the
+latter are likewise driven away from the land year by year as much
+as the young labourers, and are as serious a loss to it. Did the
+possibility exist of purchasing a cottage and a plot of ground of
+moderate size, it is more than probable that the labourer's son
+would remain in the village, or return to it, and his daughter would
+come back to the village to be married. We hear how the poor Italian
+or the poor Swiss leaves his native country for our harder climate,
+how he works and saves, and by-and-by returns to his village and
+purchases some corner of earth. This seems a legitimate and worthy
+object. We do not hear of our own sturdy labourers returning to
+their village with a pocketful of money and purchasing a plot of
+ground or a cottage. They do not attempt it, because they know that
+under present conditions it is nearly impossible. There is no land
+for them to buy. Why not, when the country is nothing but land?
+Because the owner of ten thousand acres is by no means obliged to
+part with the minutest fragment of it. If by chance a stray portion
+be somewhere for sale, the expenses, the costs, the parchments, the
+antiquated formalities, the semi-feudal routine delay and possibly
+prevent transfer altogether. If land were accessible, and the cost
+of transferring cottage property reduced to reasonable proportions,
+the labourer would have the soundest of all inducements to practise
+self-denial in his youth. Cities might attract him temporarily for
+the advantage of higher wages, but he would put the excess by and
+ultimately bring it home. Even the married cottager with a family
+would try his hardest to save a little with such a hope before him.
+
+The existing circumstances deny hope altogether. Neither land nor
+cottages are to be had, there are no sellers, and the cost of
+transfer is prohibitive; men are shifted on, they have no security
+of tenure, they are passed on from farm to farm and can settle
+nowhere. The competition for a house in some districts is keen to
+the last degree; it seems as if there were eager crowds waiting for
+homes. Recently while roaming on the Sussex hills I met an ancient
+shepherd whose hair was white as snow, though he stood upright
+enough. I inquired the names of the hills there, and he replied that
+he did not know; he was a stranger, he had only been moved there
+lately. How strangely changed are things when a grey-headed shepherd
+does not know the names of his hills! At a time of life when he
+ought to have been comfortably settled he had had to shift.
+
+Sentiment is more stubborn than fact. People will face the sternest
+facts, dire facts, stubborn facts, and stay on in spite of all; but
+once let sentiment alter and away they troop. So I think that some
+part of the distaste for farming visible about us is due to change
+of sentiment--to feeling repelled--as well as to unfruitful years.
+Men have stood out against weary weather in all ages of agriculture,
+but lately they have felt hurt and repelled, the sentiment of
+attachment to home has been rudely torn up, and so now the current
+sets against farming, though farms are often offered on advantageous
+terms. In the same way, besides the stubborn facts that drive the
+labourer from the village and prevent his return to settle, there is
+a yet more stubborn sentiment repelling him. Made a man of by
+education--not only of books, but the unconscious education of
+progressive times--the labourer and his son and daughter have
+thoughts of independence. To be humbly subservient to the will of
+those above them, to be docilely obedient, not only to the employer,
+but to all in some sort of authority, is not attractive to them.
+Plainly put, the rule of parson and squire, tenant and guardian, is
+repellent to them in these days. They would rather go away. If they
+do save money in cities, they do not care to return and settle under
+the thumb of these their old masters. Besides more attractive facts,
+the sentiment of independence must be called into existence before
+the labourer, or, for the matter of that, the small farmer's son,
+will willingly settle in the village. That sense of independence can
+only arise when the village governs itself by its own council,
+irrespective of parson, squire, tenant, or guardian. Towards that
+end the power to vote is almost certain to drift slowly.
+
+Nothing can be conceived more harshly antagonistic to the feelings
+of a naturally industrious race of men than the knowledge that as a
+mass they are looked upon as prospective 'paupers.' I detest this
+word so much that it is painful to me to write it; I put it between
+inverted commas as a sort of protest, so that it may appear a hated
+intruder, and not native to the text. The local government existing
+at this day in country districts is practically based upon the
+assumption that every labouring man will one day be a 'pauper,' will
+one day come to the workhouse. By the workhouse and its board the
+cottage is governed; the workhouse is the centre, the bureau, the
+_hôtel de ville_. The venue of local government must be changed
+before the labourer can feel independent, and it will be changed
+doubtless as he becomes conscious of the new power he has acquired.
+Shall the bitterness of the workhouse at last pass away? Let us hope
+so let us be thankful indeed if the franchise leads to the downfall
+of those cruel walls. Yet what is the cruelty of cold walls to the
+cruelty of 'system'? A workhouse in the country is usually situated
+as nearly as possible in the centre of the Union, it may be miles
+from the outlying parishes. Thither the worn-out cottager is borne
+away from the fields, his cronies, his little helps to old age such
+as the corner where the sun shines, the friend who allows little
+amenities, to dwindle and die. The workhouse bureau extends its
+unfeeling hands into every detail of cottage life. No wonder the
+labourer does not deny himself to save money in order to settle
+where these things are done. A happy day it will be when the
+workhouse door is shut and the building sold for materials. A
+gentleman not long since wrote to me a vindication of his
+workhouse--I cannot at the moment place my hand on the figures he
+sent me, but I grant that they were conclusive from his point of
+view; they were not extravagant, the administration appeared
+correct. But this is not my point of view at all. Figures are not
+humanity. The workhouse and the poor-law system are inhuman,
+debasing, and injurious to the whole country, and the better they
+are administered, the worse it really is, since it affords a
+specious pretext for their continuance. What would be the use of a
+captain assuring his passengers that the ship was well found, plenty
+of coal in the bunkers, the engines oiled and working smoothly, when
+they did not want to go to the port for which he was steering? An
+exact dose of poison may be administered, but what comfort is it to
+the victim to assure him that it was accurately measured to a minim?
+What is the value of informing me that the 'paupers' are properly
+looked after when I do not want any 'paupers'?
+
+But how manage without the poor-law system? There are several ways.
+There is the insurance method: space will not permit of discussion
+in this paper, but one fact which speaks volumes may be alluded to.
+Two large societies exist in this country called the 'Oddfellows'
+and the 'Foresters'; they number their members by the million; they
+assist their members not only at home, but all over the world (which
+is what no poor-law has ever done); they govern themselves by their
+own laws, and they prosper exceedingly--an honour to the nation.
+They have solved the difficulty for themselves.
+
+When the village governs itself and takes all matters into its own
+hands, in time the sentiment of independence may grow up and men
+begin to work and strive and save, that they may settle at home. It
+would be a very noble thing indeed if the true English feeling for
+home life should become the dominant passion of the country once
+again. By home life I mean that which gathers about a house,
+however small, standing in its own grounds. Something comes into
+existence about such a house, an influence, a pervading feeling,
+like some warm colour softening the whole, tinting the lichen on
+the wall, even the very smoke-marks on the chimney. It is home, and
+the men and women born there will never lose the tone it has given
+them. Such homes are the strength of a land. The emigrant who
+leaves us for the backwoods hopes to carve out a home for himself
+there, and we consider that an ambition to be admired. I hope the
+day will come when some at least of our people may be able to set
+up homes for themselves in their own country. To-day, if they would
+live, they must crowd into the city, often to dwell in the midst of
+hideous squalor, or they must cross the ocean. They would rather
+endure the squalor, rather say farewell for ever and sail for
+America, than stay in the village where everyone is master, and
+none of their class can be independent. The village must be its own
+master before it becomes popular. County government may be
+reformed with advantage, but that is not enough, because it must
+necessarily be too far off. People in the country are scattered,
+and each little centre is naturally only concerned with itself. A
+government having its centre at the county town is too far away,
+and is likely to bear too much resemblance to the boards of
+guardians and present authorities, to be representative of land and
+money rather than of men. Progress can only be made in each little
+centre separately by means of village councils, genuinely
+representative of the village folk, unswayed by mansion, vicarage,
+or farm. Then by degrees we may hope to see the re-awakening of
+English home-life in contradistinction to that unhappy restlessness
+which drives so many to the cities.
+
+Men will then wake up and work with energy because they will have
+hope. The slow, plodding manner of the labourer--the dull ways even
+of the many industrious cottagers--these will disappear, giving
+place to push and enterprise. Why does a lawyer work as no navvy
+works? Why does a cabinet minister labour the year through as hard
+as a miner? Because they have a mental object. So will the labourer
+work when he has a mental object--to possess a home for himself.
+
+Whenever such homes become numerous and the new life of the country
+begins to flow, pressure will soon be brought to bear for the
+removal of the mediæval law which prevents the use of steam on
+common roads. Modern as the law is, it is mediæval in its tendency
+as much as a law would be for the restriction of steam on the
+ocean. Suppose a statute compelling all ships to sail, or, if they
+steamed, not to exceed four miles an hour! One of the greatest
+drawbacks to agriculture is the cost and difficulty of transit;
+wheat, flour, and other foods come from America at far less expense
+in proportion than it takes to send a waggon-load to London. This
+cost of transit in the United Kingdom will ultimately, one would
+think, become the question of the day, concerning as it does every
+individual. Agriculture on a large scale finds it a heavy drawback;
+to agriculture on a small scale it is often prohibitory. A man may
+cultivate his two-acre plot and produce vegetables and fruit, but if
+he cannot get his produce to London (or some great city), the demand
+for it is small, and the value low in proportion. As settlers
+increase, as the village becomes its own master, and men pass part
+at least of their time labouring on their own land, the difficulty
+will be felt to be a very serious one. Transit they must have, and
+steam alone can supply it. Engines and cars can be built to run on
+common roads almost as easily as on rails, and as for danger it is
+merely the interested outcry of those who deal in horses. There is
+no danger. Fine smooth roads exist all over the country; they have
+been kept up from coaching days as if in a prophetic spirit for
+their future use by steam. Upon these roads engines and cars can
+travel at a good fair pace, collecting produce, and either
+delivering it to the through lines of rail, or passing it on from
+road-train to road-train till it reaches the city. This is a very
+important matter indeed, for in the future easier and quicker
+transit will become imperative for agriculture. The impost of
+extraordinary tithe--the whole system of tithe--again, is doomed
+when once the country begins to live its new life. Freedom of
+cultivation is ten times more needful to the small than to the large
+proprietor.
+
+These changes closely examined lose their threatening aspect, so
+much so that the marvel is they did not commence fifty years ago
+instead of waiting till now, and even now to be only potential. What
+is there in the present condition of agriculture to make farmer or
+landowner anxious that the existing system of things should
+continue? Surely nothing; surely every consideration points in
+favour of moderate change. Those who quote the example of France,
+and would argue that dissatisfaction must, as there, increase with
+efforts to allay it, must know full well in their hearts that there
+is no comparison whatever with France. The two peoples are so
+entirely different. So little contents our race that the danger is
+rather the other way, that they will be too easily satisfied. Such
+changes as I have indicated, when examined closely, are really so
+mild that in full operation they would scarcely make any difference
+in the relation of the classes. Such village councils would be very
+anxious for the existence of the farmer, and for his interests to be
+respected, for the sufficient reason that they know the value of
+wages. Perhaps they might even, under certain conditions, become
+almost too willing partisans of the farmer for their best interests
+to be served. I can imagine such conditions easily enough, and the
+possibility of the three sections, labourer, farmer, and owner,
+becoming more closely welded together than ever. There is far more
+stolidity to be regretted than revolution to be feared. The danger
+is lest the new voters should stolidify--crystallize--in tacit
+league with existing conditions; not lest we should go hop, skip,
+and jump over Niagara.
+
+A probable result of these changes is an increase in the value of
+land: if thousands of people should ever really begin to desire it,
+and to work and save for the object of buying it, analogy would
+suppose a rise in value. Instead of a loss there would be a gain to
+the landowner, and I think to the farmer, who would have a larger
+supply of labour, and possibly a strong posse of supporters at the
+poll in their men. Instead of division coalescence is more probable.
+The greater his freedom, the greater his attachment to home, the
+more settled the labourer, the firmer will become the position of
+all three classes. The landowner has nothing whatever to fear for
+his park, his mansion, his privacy, his shooting, or anything else.
+What is taken will be paid for, and no more will be taken than
+needful. Parks and woods are becoming of priceless value; we should
+have to preserve a few landlords if only to have parks and woods.
+Perfect rights of possession are not at all incompatible with
+enjoyment by the people. There are domains to be found where people
+wander at their will, and enjoy themselves as much as they please,
+and yet the owner retains every right. It is true that there are
+also numerous parks rigidly closed to the public, demonstrating the
+folly of the proprietors--square miles of folly. The use of a little
+compulsion to open them would not be at all deplorable. But it must
+stop there and not encroach farther. Having obtained the use, be
+careful not to destroy.
+
+The one great aim I have in all my thoughts is the acquisition of
+public and the preservation of private liberty. Freedom is the most
+valuable of all things, and is to be sought with all our powers of
+mind and hand. Freedom does not mean injustice, but neither will it
+put up with injustice. A singular misapprehension seems to be widely
+spread in our time; it is that there are two great criminals, the
+poor man or 'pauper' and the landlord. At opposite extremes of the
+scale they are regarded as equally guilty. Every right--the right to
+vote, the right to live in his native village, the right to be
+buried decently--is taken from the unhappy poor man or 'pauper.' He
+is a criminal. To own land is to be guilty of unpardonable sin,
+nothing is so bad; as criminals are ordered to be searched and
+everything taken from them, so everything is to be taken from the
+landowner. The injustice to both is equally evident. Anyone by
+chance of circumstances, uncontrollable, may be reduced to extreme
+poverty; how cruel to punish the unfortunate with the loss of civil
+rights! Anyone by good fortune and labour may acquire wealth, and
+would naturally wish to purchase land: is he then guilty? In equity
+both the poor and the rich should enjoy the same civil rights.
+
+Let the new voter then bear in mind above all things the value of
+individual liberty, and not be too anxious to destroy the liberty of
+others, an action that invariably recoils. Let him, having obtained
+his freedom, beware how he surrenders it again either to local
+influence in the shape of land or money, or to the outside orator
+who may urge him on for his own ends. Efforts will be made no doubt
+to use the new voter for the purposes of cliques and fanatics. He
+can always test the value of their object by the question of wages
+and food--'How will it affect my wages and food?'--and probably that
+is the test he will apply. A little knot of resolute and
+straightforward men should be formed in every village to see that
+the natural outcome of the franchise is obtained. They can begin as
+vigilance committees, and will ultimately reach to legal status as
+councils.
+
+
+
+
+THE WILTSHIRE LABOURER
+
+
+Ten years have passed away,[4] and the Wiltshire labourers have
+only moved in two things--education and discontent. I had the
+pleasure then of pointing out in 'Fraser' that there were causes
+at work promising a considerable advance in the labourers'
+condition. I regret to say now that the advance, which in a
+measure did take place, has been checkmated by other circumstances,
+and there they remain much as I left them, except in book-learning
+and mental restlessness. They possess certain permanent
+improvements--unexhausted improvements in agricultural language--but
+these, in some way or other, do not seem now so valuable as they
+looked. Ten years since important steps were being taken for the
+material benefit of the labouring class. Landowners had awakened to
+the advantage of attaching the peasantry to the soil, and were
+spending large sums of money building cottages. Everywhere cottages
+were put up on sanitary principles, so that to-day few farms on
+great estates are without homes for the men. This substantial
+improvement remains, and cannot fade away. Much building, too, was
+progressing about the farmsteads; the cattle-sheds were undergoing
+renovation, and this to some degree concerned the labourer, who now
+began to do more of his work under cover. The efforts of every
+writer and speaker in the country had not been without effect,
+and allotments, or large gardens, were added to most cottage
+homes. The movement, however, was slow, and promised more than it
+performed, so that there are still cottages which have not shared
+in it. But, on the whole, an advance in this respect did occur,
+and the aggregate acreage of gardens and allotments must be
+very considerably larger now than formerly. These are solid
+considerations to quote on the favourable side. I have been
+thinking to see if I could find anything else. I cannot call to
+mind anything tangible, but there is certainly more liberty, an air
+of freedom and independence--something more of the 'do as I please'
+feeling exhibited. Then the sum ends. At that time experiments were
+being tried on an extended scale in the field: such as draining,
+the enlargement of fields by removing hedges, the formation of
+private roads, the buildings already mentioned, and new systems of
+agriculture, so that there was a general stir and bustle which
+meant not only better wages but wages for more persons. The latter
+is of the utmost importance to the tenant-labourer, by which I mean
+a man who is settled, because it keeps his sons at home. Common
+experience all over the world has always shown that three or four
+or more people can mess together, as in camps, at a cheaper rate
+than they can live separately. If the father of the family can find
+work for his boys within a reasonable distance of home, with their
+united contributions they can furnish a very comfortable table, one
+to which no one could object to sit down, and then still have a sum
+over and above with which to purchase clothes, and even to indulge
+personal fancies. Such a pleasant state of things requires that
+work should be plentiful in the neighbourhood. Work at that time
+was plentiful, and contented and even prosperous homes of this kind
+could be found. Here is just where the difficulty arises. From a
+variety of causes the work has subsided. The father of the
+family--the settled man, the tenant-labourer--keeps on as of yore,
+but the boys cannot get employment near home. They have to seek it
+afar, one here, one yonder--all apart, and the wages each
+separately receives do but just keep them in food among strangers.
+It is this scarcity of work which in part seems to have
+counterbalanced the improvements which promised so well. Instead of
+the progress naturally to be expected you find the same insolvency,
+the same wearisome monotony of existence in debt, the same hopeless
+countenances and conversation.
+
+ [4] Written in 1887.
+
+There has been a contraction of enterprise everywhere, and a
+consequent diminution of employment. When a factory shuts its
+doors, the fact is patent to all who pass. The hum of machinery is
+stopped, and smoke no longer floats from the chimney; the building
+itself, large and regular--a sort of emphasized plainness of
+architecture--cannot be overlooked. It is evident to everyone that
+work has ceased, and the least reflection shows that hundreds of
+men, perhaps hundreds of families, are reduced from former
+comparative prosperity. But when ten thousand acres of land fall
+out of cultivation, the fact is scarcely noticed. There the land is
+just the same, and perhaps some effort is still made to keep it from
+becoming altogether foul, so that a glance detects no difference.
+The village feels it, but the world does not see it. The farmer has
+left, and the money he paid over as wages once a week is no longer
+forthcoming. Each man's separate portion of that sum was not much in
+comparison with the earnings of fortunate artisans, but it was
+money. Ten, twelve, or as much as fifteen shillings a week made a
+home; but just sufficient to purchase food and meet other
+requirements, such as clothes; yet still a home. On the cessation of
+the twelve shillings where is the labourer to find a substitute for
+it? Our country is limited in extent, and it has long been settled
+to its utmost capacity. Under present circumstances there is no room
+anywhere for more than the existing labouring population. It is
+questionable if a district could be found where, under these present
+circumstances, room could be found for ten more farmers' men. Only
+so many men can live as can be employed; in each district there are
+only so many farmers; they cannot enlarge their territories; and
+thus it is that every agricultural parish is full to its utmost.
+Some places among meadows appear almost empty. No one is at work in
+the fields as you pass; there are cattle swishing their tails in the
+shadow of the elms, but not a single visible person; acres upon
+acres of grass, and no human being. Towards the latter part of the
+afternoon, if the visitor has patience to wait, there will be a
+sound of shouting, which the cattle understand, and begin in their
+slow way to obey by moving in its direction. Milking time has come,
+and one or two men come out to fetch in the cows. That over, for the
+rest of the evening and till milking time in the morning the meadows
+will be vacant. Naturally it would be supposed that there is room
+here for a great number of people. Whole crowds might migrate into
+these grassy fields, put up shanties, and set to work. But set to
+work at what? That is just the difficulty. Whole crowds could come
+here and find plenty of room to walk about--and starve! Cattle
+require but few to look after them. Milch cattle need most, but
+grazing beasts practically no one, for one can look after so many.
+Upon inquiry it would be found that this empty parish is really
+quite full. Very likely there are empty cottages, and yet it is
+quite full. A cottage is of no use unless the occupier can obtain
+regular weekly wages. The farmers are already paying as many as they
+can find work for, and not one extra hand is wanted; except, of
+course, in the press of hay-harvest, but no one can settle on one
+month's work out of twelve. When ten or fifteen thousand acres of
+land fall out of cultivation, and farmers leave, what is to become
+of the labouring families they kept? What has become of them?
+
+It is useless blinking the fact that what a man wants in our time is
+good wages, constant wages, and a chance of increasing wages.
+Labouring men more and more think simply of work and wages. They do
+not want kindness--they want coin. In this they are not altogether
+influenced by self-interest; they are driven rather than go of their
+own movement. The world pushes hard on their heels, and they must go
+on like the rest. A man cannot drift up into a corner of some green
+lane, and stay in his cottage out of the tide of life, as was once
+the case. The tide comes to him. He must find money somehow; the
+parish will not keep him on out-relief if he has no work; the
+rate-collector calls at his door; his children must go to school
+decently clad with pennies in each little hand. He must have wages.
+You may give him a better cottage, you may give him a large
+allotment, you may treat him as an equal, and all is of no avail.
+Circumstance--the push of the world--forces him to ask you for
+wages. The farmer replies that he has only work for just so many and
+no more. The land is full of people. Men reply in effect, 'We cannot
+stay if a chance offers us to receive wages from any railway,
+factory, or enterprise; if wages are offered to us in the United
+States, there we must go.' If they heard that in a town fifty miles
+distant twenty shillings could be had for labour, how many of the
+hale men do you suppose would stay in the village? Off they would
+rush to receive the twenty shillings per week, and the farmers might
+have the land to themselves if they liked. Eighteen shillings to a
+pound a week would draw off every man from agriculture, and leave
+every village empty. If a vast industrial combination announced
+regular wages of that amount for all who came, there would not be a
+man left in the fields out of the two millions or more who now till
+them.
+
+A plan to get more wages out of the land would indeed be a wonderful
+success. As previously explained, it is not so much the amount paid
+to one individual as the paying of many individuals that is so much
+to be desired. Depression in agriculture has not materially
+diminished the sum given to a particular labourer, but it has most
+materially diminished the sum distributed among the numbers. One of
+the remarkable features of agricultural difficulties is, indeed,
+that the quotation of wages is nominally the same as in the past
+years of plenty. But then not nearly so many receive them. The
+father of the family gets his weekly money the same now as ten years
+since. At that date his sons found work at home. At the present date
+they have to move on. Some farmer is likely to exclaim, 'How can
+this be, when I cannot get enough men when I want them?' Exactly so,
+but the question is not when you want _them_, but when they want
+you. You cannot employ them, as of old, all the year round,
+therefore they migrate, or move to and fro, and at harvest time may
+be the other side of the county.
+
+The general aspect of country life was changing fast enough before
+the depression came. Since then it has continued to alter at an
+increasing rate--a rate accelerated by education; for I think
+education increases the struggle for more wages. As a man grows in
+social stature so he feels the want of little things which it is
+impossible to enumerate, but which in the aggregate represent a
+considerable sum. Knowledge adds to a man's social stature, and he
+immediately becomes desirous of innumerable trifles which, in
+ancient days, would have been deemed luxuries, but which now seem
+very commonplace. He wants somewhat more fashionable clothes, and I
+use the word fashion in association with the ploughman purposely,
+for he and his children do follow the fashion now in as far as they
+can, once a week at least. He wants a newspaper--only a penny a
+week, but a penny is a penny. He thinks of an excursion like the
+artisan in towns. He wants his boots to shine as workmen's boots
+shine in towns, and must buy blacking. Very likely you laugh at the
+fancy of shoe-blacking having anything to do with the farm labourer
+and agriculture. But I can assure you it means a good deal. He is no
+longer satisfied with the grease his forefathers applied to their
+boots; he wants them to shine and reflect. For that he must, too,
+have lighter boots, not the heavy, old, clod-hopping watertights
+made in the village. If he retains these for week-days, he likes a
+shiny pair for Sundays. Here is the cost, then, of an additional
+pair of shoes; this is one of the many trifles the want of which
+accompanies civilization. Once now and then he writes a letter, and
+must have pen, ink, and paper; only a pennyworth, but then a penny
+is a coin when the income is twelve or fourteen shillings a week.
+He likes a change of hats--a felt at least for Sunday. He is not
+happy till he has a watch. Many more such little wants will occur to
+anyone who will think about them, and they are the necessary
+attendants upon an increase of social stature. To obtain them the
+young man must have money--coins, shillings, and pence. His
+thoughts, therefore, are bent on wages; he must get wages somewhere,
+not merely to live, for bread, but for these social necessaries.
+That he can live at home with his family, that in time he may get a
+cottage of his own, that cottages are better now, large gardens
+given, that the labourer is more independent--all these and twenty
+other considerations--all these are nothing to him, because they are
+not to be depended on. Wages paid weekly are his aim, and thus it is
+that education increases the value of a weekly stipend, and
+increases the struggle for it by sending so many more into the ranks
+of competitors. I cannot see myself why, in the course of a little
+time, we may not see the sons of ploughmen competing for clerkships,
+situations in offices of various kinds, the numerous employments not
+of a manual character. So good is the education they receive, that,
+if only their personal manners happen to be pleasant, they have as
+fair a chance of getting such work as others.
+
+Ceaseless effort to obtain wages causes a drifting about of the
+agricultural population. The hamlets and villages, though they seem
+so thinly inhabited, are really full, and every extra man and youth,
+finding himself unable to get the weekly stipend at home, travels
+away. Some go but a little distance, some across the width of the
+country, a few emigrate, though not so many as would be expected.
+Some float up and down continually, coming home to their native
+parish for a few weeks, and then leaving it again. A restlessness
+permeates the ranks; few but those with families will hire for the
+year. They would rather do anything than that. Family men must do so
+because they require cottages, and four out of six cottages belong
+to the landowners and are part and parcel of the farms. The activity
+in cottage building, to which reference has been made, as prevailing
+ten or twelve years since, was solely on the part of the landowners.
+There were no independent builders; I mean the cottages were not
+built by the labouring class. They are let by farmers to those
+labourers who engage for the year, and if they quit this employment
+they quit their houses. Hence it is that even the labourers who have
+families are not settled men in the full sense, but are liable to be
+ordered on if they do not give satisfaction, or if cause of quarrel
+arises. The only settled men--the only fixed population in villages
+and hamlets at the present day--are that small proportion who
+possess cottages of their own. This proportion varies, of course,
+but it is always small. Of old times, when it was the custom for men
+to stay all their lives in one district, and to work for one farmer
+quite as much for payment in kind as for the actual wages, this made
+little difference. Very few men once settled in regular employment
+moved again; they and their families remained for many years as
+stationary as if the cottage was their property, and frequently
+their sons succeeded to the place and work. Now in these days the
+custom of long service has rapidly disappeared. There are many
+reasons, the most potent, perhaps, the altered tone of the entire
+country. It boots little to inquire into the causes. The fact is,
+then, that no men, not even with families, will endure what once
+they did. If the conditions are arbitrary, or they consider they are
+not well used, or they hear of better terms elsewhere, they will
+risk it and go. So, too, farmers are more given to changing their
+men than was once the case, and no longer retain the hereditary
+faces about them. The result is that the fixed population may be
+said to decline every year. The total population is probably the
+same, but half of it is nomad. It is nomad for two reasons--because
+it has no home, and because it must find wages.
+
+Farmers can only pay so much in wages and no more; they are at the
+present moment really giving higher wages than previously, though
+nominally the same in amount. The wages are higher judged in
+relation to the price of wheat; that is, to their profits. If coal
+falls in price, the wages of coal-miners are reduced. Now, wheat has
+fallen heavily in price, but the wages of the labourer remain the
+same, so that he is, individually, when he has employment, receiving
+a larger sum. Probably, if farming accounts were strictly balanced,
+and farming like any other business, that sum would be found to be
+more than the business would bear. No trace of oppression in wages
+can be found. The farmer gets allowances from his landlord, and he
+allows something to his labourers, and so the whole system is kept
+up by mutual understanding. Except under a very important rise in
+wheat, or a favourable change in the condition of agriculture
+altogether, it is not possible for the farmers to add another
+sixpence either to the sum paid to the individual or to the sum paid
+in the aggregate to the village.
+
+Therefore, as education increases--and it increases rapidly--as the
+push of the world reaches the hamlet; as the labouring class
+increase in social stature, and twenty new wants are found; as they
+come to look forth upon matters in a very different manner to their
+stolid forefathers; it is evident that some important problems will
+arise in the country. The question will have to be asked: Is it
+better for this population to be practically nomad or settled? How
+is livelihood--_i.e._, wages--to be found for it? Can anything be
+substituted for wages? Or must we devise a gigantic system of
+emigration, and in a twelvemonth (if the people took it up) have
+every farmer crying out that he was ruined, he could never get his
+harvest in. I do not think myself that the people could be induced
+to go under any temptation. They like England in despite of their
+troubles. If the farmer could by any happy means find out some new
+plant to cultivate, and so obtain a better profit and be able to
+give wages to more hands, the nomad population would settle itself
+somehow, if in mud huts. No chance of that is in sight at present,
+so we are forced round to the consideration of a substitute for
+wages.
+
+Now, ten or twelve years since, when much activity prevailed in all
+things agricultural, it was proposed to fix the labouring population
+to the soil by building better cottages, giving them large gardens
+and allotments, and various other privileges. This was done; and in
+'Fraser' I did not forget to credit the good intent of those who did
+it. Yet now we see, ten years afterwards, that instead of fixing the
+population, the population becomes more wandering. Why is this? Why
+have not these cottages and allotments produced their expected
+effect? There seems but one answer--that it is the lack of fixity of
+tenure. All these cottages and allotments have only been held on
+sufferance, on good behaviour, and hence they have failed. For even
+for material profit in the independent nineteenth century men do not
+care to be held on their good behaviour. A contract must be free and
+equal on both sides to be respected. To illustrate the case, suppose
+that some large banking institution in London gave out as a law that
+all the employés must live in villas belonging to the bank, say at
+Norwood. There they could have very good villas, and gardens
+attached, and on payment even paddocks, and there they could dwell
+so long as they remained in the office. But the instant any cause of
+disagreement arose they must quit not only the office but their
+homes. What an outcry would be raised against bank managers'
+tyranny were such a custom to be introduced! The extreme hardship of
+having to leave the house on which so much trouble had been
+expended, the garden carefully kept up and planted, the paddock; to
+leave the neighbourhood where friends had been found, and which
+suited the constitution, and where the family were healthy. Fancy
+the stir there would be, and the public meetings to denounce the
+harsh interference with liberty! Yet, with the exception that the
+clerk might have £300 a year, and the labourer 12s. or 14s. a week,
+the cases would be exactly parallel. The labourer has no fixity of
+tenure. He does not particularly care to lay himself out to do his
+best in the field or for his master, because he is aware that
+service is no inheritance, and at any moment circumstances may arise
+which may lead to his eviction. For it is really eviction, though
+unaccompanied by the suffering associated with the word--I was going
+to write 'abroad' for in Ireland. So that all the sanitary cottages
+erected at such expense, and all the large gardens and the
+allotments offered, have failed to produce a contented and settled
+working population. Most people are familiar by this time with the
+demand of the tenant farmers for some exalted kind of compensation,
+which in effect is equivalent to tenant-right, _i.e._, to fixity of
+tenure. Without this, we have all been pretty well informed by now,
+it is impossible for farmers to flourish, since they cannot expend
+capital unless they feel certain of getting it back again. This is
+precisely the case with the labourer. His labour is his capital,
+and he cannot expend it in one district unless he is assured of his
+cottage and garden--that is, of his homestead and farm. You cannot
+have a fixed population unless it has a home, and the labouring
+population is practically homeless. There appears no possibility of
+any real amelioration of their condition until they possess settled
+places of abode. Till then they must move to and fro, and increase
+in restlessness and discontent. Till then they must live in debt,
+from hand to mouth, and without hope of growth in material comfort.
+A race for ever trembling on the verge of the workhouse cannot
+progress and lay up for itself any saving against old age. Such a
+race is feeble and lacks cohesion, and does not afford that backbone
+an agricultural population should afford to the country at large. At
+the last, it is to the countryman, to the ploughman, and 'the
+farmer's boy,' that a land in difficulty looks for help. They are
+the last line of defence--the reserve, the rampart of the nation.
+Our last line at present is all unsettled and broken up, and has
+lost its firm and solid front. Without homes, how can its ranks ever
+become firm and solid again?
+
+An agricultural labourer entering on a cottage and garden with his
+family, we will suppose, is informed that so long as he pays his
+rent he will not be disturbed. He then sets to work in his off hours
+to cultivate his garden and his allotment; he plants fruit-trees; he
+trains a creeper over his porch. His boys and girls have a home
+whenever out of service, and when they are at home they can assist
+in cultivating their father's little property. The family has a home
+and a centre, and there it will remain for generations. Such is
+certainly the case wherever a labourer has a cottage of his own. The
+family inherit it for generations; it would not be difficult to find
+cases in which occupation has endured for a hundred years. There is
+no danger now of the younger members of the family staying too much
+at home. The pressure of circumstances is too strong, as already
+explained; all the tendencies of the time are such as would force
+them from home in search of wages. There is no going back, they must
+push forwards.
+
+The cottage-tenure, like the farm-tenure, must come from the
+landlord, of course. All movements must fall on the landlord unless
+they are made imperial questions. It is always the landowner who has
+to bear the burden in the end. As the cottages belong to the
+landowners, fixity or certainty of tenure is like taking their
+rights from them. But not more so than in the case of the exalted
+compensation called tenant-right. Indeed, I think I shall show that
+the change would be quite trifling beside measures which deal with
+whole properties at once, of five, ten, or twenty thousand acres, as
+the case may be. For, in the first place, let note be taken of a
+most important circumstance, which is that at the present time these
+cottages let on sufferance do not bring in one shilling to the
+landlord. They are not the least profit to him. He does not receive
+the nominal rent, and if he did, of what value would be so
+insignificant a sum, the whole of which for a year would not pay a
+tenth part of the losses sustained by the failure of one tenant
+farmer. As a fact, then, the cottages are of no money value to the
+landowner. A change, therefore, in the mode of tenure could not
+affect the owner like a change in the tenure of a great farm, say at
+a rental of £1,500. Not having received any profit from the previous
+tenure of cottages, he suffers no loss if the tenure be varied. The
+advantage the landowner is supposed to enjoy from the possession of
+cottages scattered about his farms is that the tenants thereby
+secure men to do their work. This advantage would be much better
+secured by a resident and settled population. Take away the
+conventional veil with which the truth is usually flimsily hidden,
+and the fact is that the only objection to a certain degree of
+fixity in cottage tenure is that it would remove from the farmer the
+arbitrary power he now possesses of eviction. What loss there would
+be in this way it is not easy to see, since, as explained, the men
+must have wages, and can only get them from farmers, to whom
+therefore they must resort. But then the man knows the power to give
+such notice is there, and it does not agree with the feelings of the
+nineteenth century. No loss whatever would accrue either to
+landowner or tenant from a fixed population. A farmer may say, 'But
+suppose the man who has my cottage will not work for me?' To this I
+reply, that if the district is so short of cottages that it is
+possible for a farmer to be short of hands, the sooner pressure is
+applied in some way, and others built, the better for landowner,
+tenant, and labourer. If there is sufficient habitation for the
+number of men necessary for cultivating the land, there will be no
+difficulty, because one particular labourer will not work for one
+particular farmer. That labourer must then do one of two things, he
+must starve or work for some other farmer, where his services would
+dispossess another labourer, who would immediately take the vacant
+place. The system of employing men on sufferance, and keeping them,
+however mildly, under the thumb, is a system totally at variance
+with the tenets of our time. It is a most expensive system, and
+ruinous to true self-respect, insomuch as it tends to teach the
+labourer's children that the only way they can show the independence
+of their thought is by impertinent language. How much better for a
+labourer to be perfectly free--how much better for an employer to
+have a man to work for him quite outside any suspicion of
+sufferance, or of being under his thumb! I should not like men under
+my thumb; I should like to pay them for their work, and there let
+the contract end, as it ends in all other businesses. As more wages
+cannot be paid, the next best thing, perhaps the absolutely
+necessary thing, is a fixed home.
+
+I think it would pay any landowner to let all the cottages upon his
+property to the labourers themselves direct, exactly as farms are
+let, giving them security of tenure, so long as rent was
+forthcoming, with each cottage to add a large garden, or allotment,
+up to, say, two acres, at an agricultural, and not an accommodation,
+rent. Most gardens and allotments are let as a favour at a rent
+about three times, and in some cases even six times, the
+agricultural rent of the same soil in the adjoining fields.
+Cottagers do not look upon such tenancies--held, too, on
+sufferance--as a favour or kindness, and feel no gratitude nor any
+attachment to those who permit them to dig and delve at thrice the
+charge the farmer pays. Add to these cottages gardens, not
+necessarily adjoining them, but as near as circumstances allow, up
+to two acres at a purely agricultural rental. If, in addition,
+facilities were to be given for the gradual purchase of the freehold
+by the labourer on the same terms as are now frequently held out by
+building societies, it would be still better. I think it would turn
+out for the advantage of landowner, tenant, and the country at large
+to have a settled agricultural population.
+
+The limit of two acres I mention, not that there is any especial
+virtue in that extent of land, but because I do not think the
+labourer would profit by having more, since he must then spend his
+whole time cultivating his plot. Experience has proved over and over
+again that for a man in England to live by spade-husbandry on four
+or five acres of land is the most miserable existence possible. He
+can but just scrape a living, he is always failing, his children are
+in rags, and debt ultimately consumes him. He is of no good either
+to himself or to others or to the country. For in our country
+agriculture, whether by plough or spade, is confined to three
+things, to grass, corn, or cattle, and there is no plant like the
+vine by which a small proprietor may prosper. Wet seasons come, and
+see--even the broad acres cultivated at such an expense of money
+produce nothing, and the farmer comes to the verge of ruin. But this
+verge of ruin to the small proprietor who sees his four acres of
+crops destroyed means simple extinction. So that the amount of land
+to be of advantage is that amount which the cottager can cultivate
+without giving his entire time to it; so that, in fact, he may also
+earn wages.
+
+To landowner and farmer the value of a fixed population like this,
+fixed and independent, and looking only for payment for what was
+actually done, and not for eleemosynary earnings, would be, I think,
+very great. There would be a constant supply of first-class labour
+available all the year round. A supply of labour on an estate is
+like water-power in America--indispensable. But if you have no
+resident supply you face two evils--you must pay extra to keep men
+there when you have no real work for them to do, or you must offer
+fancy wages in harvest. Now, I think a resident population would do
+the same work if not at less wages at the time of the work, yet for
+less money, taking the year through.
+
+I should be in hopes that such a plan would soon breed a race of men
+of the sturdiest order, the true and natural countrymen; men
+standing upright in the face of all, without one particle of
+servility; paying their rates, and paying their rents; absolutely
+civil and pleasant-mannered, because, being really independent, they
+would need no impudence of tongue to assert what they did not feel;
+men giving a full day's work for a full day's wages (which is now
+seldom seen); men demanding to be paid in full for full work, but
+refusing favours and petty assistance to be recouped hereafter; able
+to give their children a fixed home to come back to; able even to
+push them in life if they wish to leave employment on the land; men
+with the franchise, voting under the protection of the ballot, and
+voting first and foremost for the demolition of the infernal
+poor-law and workhouse system.
+
+The men are there. This is no imaginary class to be created, they
+are there, and they only require homes to become the finest body in
+the world, a rampart to the nation, a support not only to
+agriculture but to every industry that needs the help of labour. For
+physique they have ever been noted, and if it is not valued at home
+it is estimated at its true value in the colonies. From Australia,
+America, all countries desiring sinews and strength, come earnest
+persuasions to these men to emigrate. They are desired above all
+others as the very foundation of stability. It is only at home that
+the agricultural labourer is despised. If ever there were grounds
+for that contempt in his illiterate condition they have disappeared.
+I have always maintained that intelligence exists outside education,
+that men who can neither read nor write often possess good natural
+parts. The labourer at large possesses such parts, but until quite
+lately he has had no opportunity of displaying them. Of recent years
+he or his children have had an opportunity of displaying their
+natural ability, since education was brought within reach of them
+all. Their natural power has at once shown itself, and all the young
+men and young women are now solidly educated. The reproach of being
+illiterate can no longer be hurled at them. They never were
+illiterate mentally; they are now no more illiterate in the partial
+sense of book-knowledge. A young agricultural labourer to-day can
+speak almost as well as the son of a gentleman. There is, of course,
+a little of the country accent remaining, and some few technical
+words are in use. Why should they not be? Do not gentlemen on the
+Exchange use technical terms? I cannot see myself that 'contango' is
+any better English, or 'backwardation' more indicative of
+intelligence, than the terms used in the field. The labourer of
+to-day reads, and thinks about what he reads. The young, being
+educated, have brought education to their parents, the old have
+caught the new tone from the young. It is acknowledged that the farm
+labourer is the most peaceful of all men, the least given to
+agitation for agitation's sake. Permit him to live and he is
+satisfied. He has no class ill-feeling, either against farmer or
+landowner, and he resists all attempts to introduce ill-feeling. He
+maintains a steady and manly attitude, calm, and considering,
+without a trace of hasty revolutionary sentiments. I say that such
+a race of men are not to be despised; I say that they are the very
+foundation of a nation's stability. I say that in common justice
+they deserve settled homes; and further, that as a matter of sound
+policy they should be provided with them.
+
+
+
+
+ON THE DOWNS
+
+
+A trailing beam of light sweeps through the combe, broadening out
+where it touches the ground, and narrowing up to the cloud with
+which it travels. The hollow groove between the hills is lit up
+where it falls as with a ray cast from a mirror. It is an acre wide
+on the sward, and tapers up to the invisible slit in the cloud; a
+mere speck of light from the sky enlightens the earth, and one
+thought opens the hearts of all men. On the slope here the furze is
+flecked with golden spots, and black-headed stonechats perch on
+ant-hills or stray flints, taking no heed of a quiet wanderer. Afar,
+blue line upon blue line of down is drawn along in slow curves, and
+beneath, the distant sea appears a dim plain with five bright
+streaks, where the sunshine pours through as many openings in the
+clouds. The wind smells like an apple fresh plucked; suddenly the
+great beam of light vanishes as the sun comes out, and at once the
+single beam is merged in the many.
+
+Light and colour, freedom and delicious air, give exquisite pleasure
+to the senses; but the heart searches deeper, and draws forth food
+for itself from sunshine, hills and sea. Desiring their beauty so
+deeply, the desire in a measure satisfies itself. It is a thirst
+which slakes itself to grow the stronger. It springs afresh from the
+light, from the blue hill-line yonder, from the gorse-flower at
+hand; to seize upon something that seems in them, which they
+symbolize and speak of; to take it away within oneself; to absorb it
+and feel conscious of it--a something that cannot be defined, but
+which corresponds with all that is highest, truest, and most ideal
+within the mind. It says, Hope and aspire, strive for largeness of
+thought. The wind blows, and declares that the mind has capacity for
+more than has ever yet been brought to it. The wind is wide, and
+blows not only here, but along the whole range of hills--the hills
+are not broad enough for it; nor is the sea--it crosses the ocean
+and spreads itself whither it will. Though invisible, it is
+material, and yet it knows no limit. As the wind to the fixed
+boulder lying deep in the sward, so is the immaterial mind to the
+wind. There is capacity in it for more than has ever yet been placed
+before it. No system, no philosophy yet organized in logical
+sequence satisfies the inmost depth--fills and fully occupies the
+well of thought. Read the system, and with the last word it is
+over--the mind passes on and requires more. It is but a crumb tasted
+and gone: who should remember a crumb? But the wind blows, not one
+puff and then stillness: it continues; if it does cease there
+remains the same air to be breathed. So that the physical part of
+man thus always provided with air for breathing is infinitely better
+cared for than his mind, which gets but little crumbs, as it were,
+coming from old times. These are soon gone, and there remains
+nothing. Somewhere surely there must be more. An ancient thinker
+considered that the atmosphere was full of faint images--spectra,
+reflections, or emanations retaining shape, though without
+substance--that they crowded past in myriads by day and night.
+Perhaps there may be thoughts invisible, but floating round us, if
+we could only render ourselves sensitive to their impact. Such a
+remark must not be taken literally--it is only an effort to convey a
+meaning, just as shadow throws up light. The light is that there are
+further thoughts yet to be found.
+
+The fulness of Nature and the vacancy of mental existence are
+strangely contrasted. Nature is full everywhere; there is no chink,
+no unfurnished space. The mind has only a few thoughts to recall,
+and those old, and that have been repeated these centuries past.
+Unless the inner mind (not that which deals with little matters of
+daily labour) lets itself rest on every blade of grass and leaf, and
+listens to the soothing wind, it must be vacant--vacant for lack of
+something to do, not from limit of capacity. For it is too strong
+and powerful for the things it has to grasp; they are crushed like
+wheat in a mill. It has capacity for so much, and it is supplied
+with so little. All the centuries that have gone have gathered
+hardly a bushel, as it were, and these dry grains are quickly rolled
+under strong thought and reduced to dust. The mill must then cease,
+not that it has no further power, but because the supply stops.
+Bring it another bushel, and it will grind as long as the grain is
+poured in. Let fresh images come in a stream like the apple-scented
+wind; there is room for them, the storehouse of the inner mind
+expands to receive them, wide as the sea which receives the breeze.
+The Downs are now lit with sunlight--the night will cover them
+presently--but the mind will sigh as eagerly for these things as in
+the glory of day. Sooner or later there will surely come an opening
+in the clouds, and a broad beam of light will descend. A new thought
+scarcely arrives in a thousand years, but the sweet wind is always
+here, providing breath for the physical man. Let hope and faith
+remain, like the air, always, so that the soul may live. That such a
+higher thought may come is the desire--the prayer--which springs on
+viewing the blue hill line, the sea, the flower.
+
+Stoop and touch the earth, and receive its influence; touch the
+flower, and feel its life; face the wind, and have its meaning; let
+the sunlight fall on the open hand as if you could hold it.
+Something may be grasped from them all, invisible yet strong. It is
+the sense of a wider existence--wider and higher. Illustrations
+drawn from material things (as they needs must be) are weak to
+convey such an idea. But much may be gathered indirectly by
+examining the powers of the mind--by the light thrown on it from
+physical things. Now, at this moment, the blue dome of the sky,
+immense as it is, is but a span to the soul. The eye-glance travels
+to the horizon in an instant--the soul-glance travels over all
+matter also in a moment. By no possibility could a world, or a
+series of worlds, be conceived which the mind could not traverse
+instantaneously. Outer space itself, therefore, seems limited and
+with bounds, because the mind is so penetrating it can imagine
+nothing to the end of which it cannot get. Space--ethereal space, as
+far beyond the stars as it is to them--think of it how you will,
+ends each side in dimness. The dimness is its boundary. The mind so
+instantly occupies all space that space becomes finite, and with
+limits. It is the things that are brought before it that are
+limited, not the power of the mind.
+
+The sweet wind says, again, that the inner mind has never yet been
+fully employed; that more than half its power still lies dormant.
+Ideas are the tools of the mind. Without tools you cannot build a
+ship. The minds of savages lie almost wholly dormant, not because
+naturally deficient, but because they lack the ideas--the tools--to
+work with. So we have had our ideas so long that we have built all
+we can with them. Nothing further can be constructed with these
+materials. But whenever new and larger materials are discovered we
+shall find the mind able to build much more magnificent structures.
+Let us, then, if we cannot yet discover them, at least wait and
+watch as ceaselessly as the hills, listening as the wind blows over.
+Three-fourths of the mind still sleeps. That little atom of it
+needed to conduct the daily routine of the world is, indeed, often
+strained to the utmost. That small part of it, again, occasionally
+exercised in re-learning ancient thoughts, is scarcely half
+employed--small as it is. There is so much more capacity in the
+inner mind--a capacity of which but few even dream. Until favourable
+times and chances bring fresh materials for it, it is not conscious
+of itself. Light and freedom, colour, and delicious air--sunshine,
+blue hill lines, and flowers--give the heart to feel that there is
+so much more to be enjoyed of which we walk in ignorance.
+
+Touching a flower, it seems as if some of this were absorbed from
+it; it flows from the flower like its perfume. The delicate odour of
+the violet cannot be written; it is material yet it cannot be
+expressed. So there is an immaterial influence flowing from it which
+escapes language. Touching the greensward, there is a feeling as if
+the great earth sent a mystic influence through the frame. From the
+sweet wind, too, it comes. The sunlight falls on the hand; the light
+remains without on the surface, but its influence enters the very
+being. This sense of absorbing something from earth, and flower, and
+sunlight is like hovering on the verge of a great truth. It is the
+consciousness that a great truth is there. Not that the flower and
+the wind know it, but that they stir unexplored depths in the mind.
+They are only material--the sun sinks, darkness covers the hills,
+and where is their beauty then? The feeling or thought which is
+excited by them resides in the mind, and the purport and drift of it
+is a wider existence--yet to be enjoyed on earth. Only to think of
+and imagine it is in itself a pleasure.
+
+The red-tipped hawthorn buds are full of such a thought; the tender
+green of the leaf just born speaks it. The leaf does not come forth
+shapeless. Already, at its emergence, there are fine divisions at
+the edge, markings, and veins. It is wonderful from the
+commencement. A thought may be put in a line, yet require a
+life-time to understand in its completeness. The leaf was folded in
+the tiny red-tipped bud--now it has come forth how long must one
+ponder to fully appreciate it?
+
+Those things which are symbolized by the leaf, the flower, the very
+touch of earth, have not yet been put before the mind in a definite
+form, and shaped so that they can be weighed. The mind is like a
+lens. A lens can examine nothing of itself, but no matter what is
+put before it, it will magnify it so that it can be searched into.
+So whatever is put before the mind in such form that it may be
+perceived, the mind will search into and examine. It is not that the
+mind is limited, and unable to understand; it is that the facts have
+not yet been placed in front of it. But because as yet these things
+are like the leaf folded in the bud, that is no reason why we should
+say they are beyond hope of comprehension.
+
+Such a course inflicts the greatest moral injury on the world.
+Remaining content upon a mental level is fatal, saying to ourselves,
+'There is nothing more, this is our limit; we can go no farther,' is
+the ruin of the mind, as much sleep is the ruin of the body. Looking
+back through history, it is evident that thought has forced itself
+out on the world by its own power and against an immense inertia.
+Thought has worked its way by dint of its own energy, and not
+because it was welcomed. So few care or hope for a higher mental
+level; the old terrace of mind will do; let us rest; be assured no
+higher terrace exists. Experience, however, from time to time has
+proved that higher terraces did exist. Without doubt there are
+others now. Somewhere behind the broad beam of life sweeping so
+beautifully through the combe, somewhere behind the flower, and in
+the wind. Yet to come up over the blue hill line, there are deeper,
+wider thoughts still. Always let us look higher, in spite of the
+narrowness of daily life. The little is so heavy that it needs a
+strong effort to escape it. The littleness of daily routine; the
+care felt and despised, the minutiæ which grow against our will,
+come in time to be heavier than lead. There should be some comfort
+in the thought that, however these may strain the mind, it is
+certain that hardly a fiftieth part of its real capacity is occupied
+with them. There is an immense power in it unused. By stretching one
+muscle too much it becomes overworked; still, there are a hundred
+other muscles in the body. In truth, we do not fully understand our
+own earth, our own life, yet. Never, never let us permit the weight
+of little things to bear us wholly down. If any object that these
+are vague aspirations, so is the wind vague, yet it is real. They
+may direct us as strongly as the wind presses on the sails of a
+ship.
+
+The blue hill line arouses a perception of a current of thought
+which lies for the most part unrecognized within--an unconscious
+thought. By looking at this blue hill line this dormant power within
+the mind becomes partly visible; the heart wakes up to it.
+
+The intense feeling caused by the sunshine, by the sky, by the
+flowers and distant sea is an increased consciousness of our own
+life. The stream of light--the rush of sweet wind--excites a deeper
+knowledge of the soul. An unutterable desire at once arises for more
+of this; let us receive more of the inner soul life which seeks and
+sighs for purest beauty. But the word beauty is poor to convey the
+feelings intended. Give us the thoughts which correspond with the
+feeling called up by the sky, the sea afar, and the flower at hand.
+Let us really be in ourselves the sunbeam which we use as an
+illustration. The recognition of its loveliness, and of the
+delicious air, is really a refined form of prayer--the purer because
+it is not associated with any object, because of its width and
+openness. It is not prayer in the sense of a benefit desired, it is
+a feeling of rising to a nobler existence.
+
+It does not include wishes connected with routine and labour. Nor
+does it depend on the brilliant sun--this mere clod of earth will
+cause it, even a little crumble of mould. The commonest form of
+matter thus regarded excites the highest form of spirit. The
+feelings may be received from the least morsel of brown earth
+adhering to the surface of the skin on the hand that has touched the
+ground. Inhaling this deep feeling, the soul, perforce, must
+pray--a rude imperfect word to express the aspiration--with every
+glimpse of sunlight, whether it come in a room amid routine, or in
+the solitude of the hills; with every flower, and grass-blade, and
+the vast earth underfoot; with the gleam on the distant sea, with
+the song of the lark on high, and the thrush lowly in the hawthorn.
+
+From the blue hill lines, from the dark copses on the ridges, the
+shadows in the combes, from the apple-sweet wind and rising grasses,
+from the leaf issuing out of the bud to question the sun--there
+comes from all of these an influence which forces the heart to lift
+itself in earnest and purest desire.
+
+The soul knows itself, and would live its own life.
+
+
+
+
+THE SUN AND THE BROOK
+
+
+The sun first sees the brook in the meadow where some roach swim
+under a bulging root of ash. Leaning against the tree, and looking
+down into the water, there is a picture of the sky. Its brightness
+hides the sandy floor of the stream as a picture conceals the wall
+where it hangs, but, as if the water cooled the rays, the eye can
+bear to gaze on the image of the sun. Over its circle thin threads
+of summer cloud are drawn; it is only the reflection, yet the sun
+seems closer seen in the brook, more to do with us, like the grass,
+and the tree, and the flowing stream. In the sky it is so far, it
+cannot be approached, nor even gazed at, so that by the very virtue
+and power of its own brilliance it forces us to ignore, and almost
+forget it. The summer days go on, and no one notices the sun. The
+sweet water slipping past the green flags, with every now and then a
+rushing sound of eager haste, receives the sky, and it becomes a
+part of the earth and of life. No one can see his own face without a
+glass; no one can sit down and deliberately think of the soul till
+it appears a visible thing. It eludes--the mind cannot grasp it. But
+hold a flower in the hand--a rose, this later honeysuckle, or this
+the first harebell--and in its beauty you can recognize your own
+soul reflected as the sun in the brook. For the soul finds itself in
+beautiful things.
+
+Between the bulging root and the bank there is a tiny oval pool, on
+the surface of which the light does not fall. There the eye can see
+deep down into the stream, which scarcely moves in the hollow it has
+worn for itself as its weight swings into the concave of the bend.
+The hollow is illumined by the light which sinks through the stream
+outside the root; and beneath, in the green depth, five or six roach
+face the current. Every now and then a tiny curl appears on the
+surface inside the root, and must rise up to come there. Unwinding
+as it goes, its raised edge lowers and becomes lost in the level.
+Dark moss on the base of the ash darkens the water under. The light
+green leaves overhead yield gently to the passing air; there are but
+few leaves on the tree, and these scarcely make a shadow on the
+grass beyond that of the trunk. As the branch swings, the gnats are
+driven farther away to avoid it. Over the verge of the bank, bending
+down almost to the root in the water, droop the heavily seeded heads
+of tall grasses which, growing there, have escaped the scythe.
+
+These are the days of the convolvulus, of ripening berry, and
+dropping nut. In the gateways, ears of wheat hang from the hawthorn
+boughs, which seized them from the passing load. The broad aftermath
+is without flowers; the flowers are gone to the uplands and the
+untilled wastes. Curving opposite the south, the hollow side of the
+brook has received the sunlight like a silvered speculum every day
+that the sun has shone. Since the first violet of the meadow, till
+now that the berries are ripening, through all the long drama of the
+summer, the rays have visited the stream. The long, loving touch of
+the sun has left some of its own mystic attraction in the brook.
+Resting here, and gazing down into it, thoughts and dreams come
+flowing as the water flows. Thoughts without words, mobile like the
+stream, nothing compact that can be grasped and stayed: dreams that
+slip silently as water slips through the fingers. The grass is not
+grass alone; the leaves of the ash above are not leaves only. From
+tree, and earth, and soft air moving, there comes an invisible touch
+which arranges the senses to its waves as the ripples of the lake
+set the sand in parallel lines. The grass sways and fans the
+reposing mind; the leaves sway and stroke it, till it can feel
+beyond itself and with them, using each grass blade, each leaf, to
+abstract life from earth and ether. These then become new organs,
+fresh nerves and veins running afar out into the field, along the
+winding brook, up through the leaves, bringing a larger existence.
+The arms of the mind open wide to the broad sky.
+
+Some sense of the meaning of the grass, and leaves of the tree, and
+sweet waters hovers on the confines of thought, and seems ready to
+be resolved into definite form. There is a meaning in these things,
+a meaning in all that exists, and it comes near to declare itself.
+Not yet, not fully, nor in such shape that it may be formulated--if
+ever it will be--but sufficiently so to leave, as it were, an
+unwritten impression that will remain when the glamour is gone, and
+grass is but grass, and a tree a tree.
+
+
+
+
+NATURE AND ETERNITY
+
+
+The goldfinches sing so sweetly hidden in the topmost boughs of the
+apple-trees that heart of man cannot withstand them. These four
+walls, though never so well decorated with pictures, this flat white
+ceiling, feels all too small, and dull and tame. Down with books and
+pen, and let us away with the goldfinches, the princes of the birds.
+For thirty of their generations they have sung and courted and built
+their nests in those apple-trees, almost under the very windows--a
+time in their chronology equal to a thousand years. For they are so
+very busy, from earliest morn till night--a long summer's day is
+like a year. Now flirting with a gaily-decked and coy lady-love,
+chasing her from tree to tree; now splashing at the edge of a
+shallow stream till the golden feathers glisten and the red topknot
+shines. Then searching in and out the hedgerow for favourite seeds,
+and singing, singing all the while, verily a 'song without an end.'
+The wings never still, the bill never idle, the throat never silent,
+and the tiny heart within the proud breast beating so rapidly that,
+reckoning time by change and variety, an hour must be a day. A life
+all joy and freedom, without thought, and full of love. What a
+great god the sun must be to the finches from whose wings his beams
+are reflected in glittering gold! The abstract idea of a deity
+apart, as they feel their life-blood stirring, their eyelids
+opening, with the rising sun; as they fly to satisfy their hunger
+with those little fruits they use; as they revel in the warm
+sunshine, and utter soft notes of love to their beautiful mates,
+they cannot but feel a sense, unnamed, indefinite, of joyous
+gratitude towards that great orb which is very nearly akin to the
+sensual worship of ancient days. Darkness and cold are Typhon and
+Ahriman, light and warmth, Osiris and Ormuzd, indeed to them; with
+song they welcome the spring and celebrate the awakening of Adonis.
+Lovely little idolaters, my heart goes with them. Deep down in the
+mysteries of organic life there are causes for the marvellously
+extended grasp which the worship of light once held upon the world,
+hardly yet guessed at, and which even now play a part unsuspected in
+the motives of men. Even yet, despite our artificial life, despite
+railroads, telegraphs, printing-press, in the face of firm
+monotheistic convictions, once a year the old, old influence breaks
+forth, driving thousands and thousands from cities and houses out
+into field and forest, to the seashore and mountain-top, to gather
+fresh health and strength from the Sun, from the Air--Jove--and old
+Ocean. So the goldfinches rejoice in the sunshine, and who can sit
+within doors when they sing?
+
+Foolish fashion has banished the orchard from the mansion--the
+orchard which Homer tells us kings once valued as part of their
+demesne--and has substituted curious evergreens to which the birds
+do not take readily. But this orchard is almost under the windows,
+and in summer the finches wake the sleeper with their song, and in
+autumn the eye looks down upon the yellow and rosy fruit. Up the
+scaling bark of the trunks the brown tree-climbers run, peering into
+every cranny, and few are the insects which escape those keen eyes.
+Sitting on a bench under a pear-tree, I saw a spider drop from a
+leaf fully nine feet above the ground, and disappear in the grass,
+leaving a slender rope of web, attached at the upper end to a leaf,
+and at the lower to a fallen pear. In a few minutes a small white
+caterpillar, barely an inch long, began to climb this rope. It
+grasped the thread in the mouth and drew up its body about a
+sixteenth of an inch at a time, then held tight with the two
+fore-feet, and, lifting its head, seized the rope a sixteenth
+higher; repeating this operation incessantly, the rest of the body
+swinging in the air. Never pausing, without haste and without rest,
+this creature patiently worked its way upwards, as a man might up a
+rope. Let anyone seize a beam overhead and attempt to lift the chest
+up to a level with it, the expenditure of strength is very great;
+even with long practice, to 'swarm' up a pole or rope to any
+distance is the hardest labour the human muscles are capable of.
+This despised 'creeping thing,' without the slightest apparent
+effort, without once pausing to take breath, reached the leaf
+overhead in rather under half an hour, having climbed a rope fully
+108 times its own length. To equal this a man must climb 648 feet,
+or more than half as high again as St. Paul's. The insect on
+reaching the top at once commenced feeding, and easily bit through
+the hard pear-leaf: how delicately then it must have grasped the
+slender spider's web, which a touch would destroy! The thoughts
+which this feat call forth do not end here, for there was no
+necessity to go up the thread; the insect could to all appearance
+have travelled up the trunk of the tree with ease, and it is not to
+be supposed that its mouth and feet were specially adapted to climb
+a web, a thing which I have never seen done since, and which was to
+all appearance merely the result of the _accident_ of the insect
+coming along just after the spider had left the thread. Another few
+minutes, and the first puff of wind would have carried the thread
+away--as a puff actually did soon afterwards. I claim a wonderful
+amount of _original_ intelligence--as opposed to the ill-used term
+instinct--of patience and perseverance for this creature. It is so
+easy to imagine that because man is big, brain power cannot exist in
+tiny organizations; but even in man the seat of thought is so minute
+that it escapes discovery, and his very life may be said to lie in
+the point of contact of two bones of the neck. Put the mind of man
+within the body of the caterpillar--what more could it have done?
+Accustomed to bite and eat its way through hard leaves, why did not
+the insect snip off and destroy its rope? These are matters to think
+over dreamily while the finches sing overhead in the apple-tree.
+
+They are not the only regular inhabitants, still less the only
+visitors. As there are wide plains even in thickly populated England
+where man has built no populous city, so in bird-life there are
+fields and woods almost deserted by the songsters, who at the same
+time congregate thickly in a few favourite resorts, where experience
+gathered in slow time has shown them they need fear nothing from
+human beings. Such a place, such a city of the birds and beasts, is
+this old orchard. The bold and handsome bullfinch builds in the low
+hawthorn hedge which bounds it upon one side. In the walls of the
+arbour formed of thick ivy and flowering creepers, the robin and
+thrush hide their nests. On the topmost branches of the tall
+pear-trees the swallows rest and twitter. The noble blackbird, with
+full black eye, pecks at the decaying apples upon the sward, and
+takes no heed of a footstep. Sometimes the loving pair of squirrels
+who dwell in the fir-copse at the end of the meadow find their way
+down the hedges--staying at each tree as an inn by the road--into
+the orchard, and play their fantastic tricks upon the apple-boughs.
+The flycatchers perch on a branch clear from the tree, and dart at
+the passing flies. Merriest of all, the tomtits chatter and scold,
+hanging under the twigs, head downwards, and then away to their nest
+in the crumbling stone wall which encloses one side of the orchard.
+They have worked their way by a cranny deep into the thick wall. On
+the other side runs the king's highway, and ever and anon the teams
+go by, making music with their bells. One day a whole nation of
+martins savagely attacked this wall. Pressure of population probably
+had compelled them to emigrate from the sand quarry, and the chinks
+in the wall pleased their eyes. Five-and-thirty brown little birds
+went to work like miners at twelve or fourteen holes, tapping at the
+mortar with their bills, scratching out small fragments of stone,
+twittering and talking all the time, and there undoubtedly they
+would have founded a colony had not the jingling teams and now and
+then a barking dog disturbed them. Resting on the bench and leaning
+back against an apple-tree, it is easy to watch the eager starlings
+on the chimney-top, and see them tear out the straw of the thatch to
+form their holes. They are all orators born. They live in a
+democracy, and fluency of speech leads the populace. Perched on the
+edge of the chimney, his bronze-tinted wings flapping against his
+side to give greater emphasis--as a preacher moves his hands--the
+starling pours forth a flood of eloquence, now rising to
+screaming-pitch, now modulating his tones to soft persuasion, now
+descending to deep, low, complaining, regretful sounds--a speech
+without words--addressed to a dozen birds gravely listening on the
+ash-tree yonder. He is begging them to come with him to a meadow
+where food is abundant. In the ivy close under the window there,
+within reach of the hand, a water-wagtail built its nest. To this
+nest one lovely afternoon came a great bird like a hawk, to the
+fearful alarm and intense excitement of all the bird population. It
+was a cuckoo, and after three or four visits, despite a curious eye
+at the window, there was a strange egg in that nest. Inside that
+window, huddled fearfully in the darkest corner of the room, there
+was once a tiny heap of blue and yellow feathers. A tomtit straying
+through the casement had been chased by the cat till it dropped
+exhausted, and the cat was fortunately frightened by a footstep. The
+bird was all but dead--the feathers awry and ruffled, the eyelids
+closed, the body limp and helpless--only a faint fluttering of the
+tiny heart. When placed tenderly on the ledge of the casement, where
+the warm sunshine fell and the breeze came softly, it dropped
+listlessly on one side. But in a little while the life-giving rays
+quickened the blood, the eyelids opened, and presently it could
+stand perched upon the finger. Then, lest with returning
+consciousness fear should again arise, the clinging claws were
+transferred from the finger to a twig of wall-pear. A few minutes
+more, and with a chirp the bird was gone into the flood of sunlight.
+What intense joy there must have been in that little creature's
+heart as it drank the sweet air and felt the loving warmth of its
+great god Ra, the Sun!
+
+Throwing open the little wicket-gate, by a step the greensward of
+the meadow is reached. Though the grass has been mown and the ground
+is dry, it is better to carry a thick rug, and cast it down in the
+shadow under the tall horse-chestnut-tree. It is only while in a
+dreamy, slumbrous, half-mesmerized state that nature's ancient
+papyrus roll can be read--only when the mind is at rest, separated
+from care and labour; when the body is at ease, luxuriating in
+warmth and delicious languor; when the soul is in accord and
+sympathy with the sunlight, with the leaf, with the slender blades
+of grass, and can feel with the tiniest insect which climbs up them
+as up a mighty tree. As the genius of the great musicians, without
+an articulated word or printed letter, can carry with it all the
+emotions, so now, lying prone upon the earth in the shadow, with
+quiescent will, listening, thoughts and feelings rise respondent to
+the sunbeams, to the leaf, the very blade of grass. Resting the head
+upon the hand, gazing down upon the ground, the strange and
+marvellous inner sight of the mind penetrates the solid earth,
+grasps in part the mystery of its vast extension upon either side,
+bearing its majestic mountains, its deep forests, its grand oceans,
+and almost feels the life which in ten thousand thousand forms
+revels upon its surface. Returning upon itself, the mind joys in the
+knowledge that it too is a part of this wonder--akin to the ten
+thousand thousand creatures, akin to the very earth itself. How
+grand and holy is this life! how sacred the temple which contains
+it!
+
+Out from the hedge, not five yards distant, pours a rush of deep
+luscious notes, succeeded by the sweetest trills heard by man. It is
+the nightingale, which tradition assigns to the night only, but
+which in fact sings as loudly, and to my ear more joyously, in the
+full sunlight, especially in the morning, and always close to the
+nest. The sun has moved onward upon his journey, and this spot is no
+longer completely shaded, but the foliage of a great oak breaks the
+force of his rays, and the eye can even bear to gaze at his disc for
+a few moments. Living for this brief hour at least in unalloyed
+sympathy with nature, apart from all disturbing influences, the
+sight of that splendid disc carries the soul with it till it feels
+as eternal as the sun. Let the memory call up a picture of the
+desert sands of Egypt--upon the kings with the double crown, upon
+Rameses, upon Sesostris, upon Assurbanipal the burning beams of this
+very sun descended, filling their veins with tumultuous life, three
+thousand years ago. Lifted up in absorbing thought, the mind feels
+that these three thousand years are in truth no longer past than the
+last beat of the pulse. It throbbed--the throb is gone; their pulse
+throbbed, and it seems but a moment since, for to thought, as to the
+sun, there is no time. This little petty life of seventy years, with
+its little petty aims and hopes, its despicable fears and
+contemptible sorrows, is no more the life with which the mind is
+occupied. This golden disc has risen and set, as the graven marks of
+man alone record, full eight thousand years. The hieroglyphs of the
+rocks speak of a fiery sun shining inconceivable ages before that.
+Yet even this almost immortal sun had a beginning--perhaps emerging
+as a ball of incandescent gas from chaos: how long ago was that? And
+onwards, still onwards goes the disc, doubtless for ages and ages to
+come. It is time that our measures should be extended; these paltry
+divisions of hours and days and years--aye, of centuries--should be
+superseded by terms conveying some faint idea at least of the
+vastness of space. For in truth, when thinking thus, there is no
+_time_ at all. The mind loses the sense of time and reposes in
+eternity. This hour, this instant is eternity; it extends backwards,
+it extends forwards, and we are in it. It is a grand and an
+ennobling feeling to know that at this moment illimitable time
+extends on either hand. No conception of a supernatural character
+formed in the brain has ever or will ever surpass the mystery of
+this endless existence as exemplified--as made manifest by the
+physical sun--a visible sign of immortality. This--this hour is part
+of the immortal life. Reclining upon this rug under the
+chestnut-tree, while the graceful shadows dance, a passing bee hums
+and the nightingale sings, while the oak foliage sprinkles the
+sunshine over us, we are really and in truth in the midst of
+eternity. Only by walking hand in hand with nature, only by a
+reverent and loving study of the mysteries for ever around us, is it
+possible to disabuse the mind of the narrow view, the contracted
+belief that time is now and eternity to-morrow. Eternity is to-day.
+The goldfinches and the tiny caterpillars, the brilliant sun, if
+looked at lovingly and thoughtfully, will lift the soul out of the
+smaller life of human care that is of selfish aims, bounded by
+seventy years, into the greater, the limitless life which has been
+going on over universal space from endless ages past, which is going
+on now, and which will for ever and for ever, in one form or
+another, continue to proceed.
+
+Dreamily listening to the nightingale's song, let us look down upon
+the earth as the sun looks down upon it. In this meadow how many
+millions of blades of grass are there, each performing wonderful
+operations which the cleverest chemist can but poorly indicate,
+taking up from the earth its sap, from the air its gases, in a word
+living, living as much as ourselves, though in a lower form? On the
+oak-tree yonder, how many leaves are doing the same? Just now we
+felt the vastness of the earth--its extended majesty, bearing
+mountain, forest, and sea. Not a blade of grass but has its insect,
+not a leaf; the very air as it softly woos the cheek bears with it
+living germs, and upon all those mountains, within those forests,
+and in every drop of those oceans, life in some shape moves and
+stirs. Nay, the very solid earth itself, the very chalk and clay and
+stone and rock has been built up by once living organisms. But at
+this instant, looking down upon the earth as the sun does, how can
+words depict the glowing wonder, the marvellous beauty of all the
+plant, the insect, the animal life, which presses upon the mental
+eye? It is impossible. But with these that are more immediately
+around us--with the goldfinch, the caterpillar, the nightingale, the
+blades of grass, the leaves--with these we may feel, into their life
+we may in part enter, and find our own existence thereby enlarged.
+Would that it were possible for the heart and mind to enter into
+_all_ the life that glows and teems upon the earth--to feel with it,
+hope with it, sorrow with it--and thereby to become a grander,
+nobler being. Such a being, with such a sympathy and larger
+existence, must hold in scorn the feeble, cowardly, selfish desire
+for an immortality of pleasure only, whose one great hope is to
+escape pain! No. Let me joy with all living creatures; let me suffer
+with them all--the reward of feeling a deeper, grander life would be
+amply sufficient.
+
+What wonderful patience the creatures called 'lower' exhibit! Watch
+this small red ant travelling among the grass-blades. To it they are
+as high as the oak-trees to us, and they are entangled and matted
+together as a forest overthrown by a tornado. The insect slowly
+overcomes all the difficulties of its route--now climbing over the
+creeping roots of the buttercups, now struggling under a fallen
+leaf, now getting up a bennet, up and down, making one inch forward
+for three vertically, but never pausing, always onwards at racing
+speed. A shadow sweeps rapidly over the grass--it is that of a rook
+which has flown between us and the sun. Looking upwards into the
+deep azure of the sky, intently gazing into space and forgetting for
+a while the life around and beneath, there comes into the mind an
+intense desire to rise, to penetrate the height, to become part and
+parcel of that wondrous infinity which extends overhead as it
+extends along the surface. The soul full of thought grows
+concentrated in itself, marvels only at its own destiny, labours to
+behold the secret of its own existence, and, above all, utters
+without articulate words a prayer forced from it by the bright sun,
+by the blue sky, by bird and plant:--Let me have wider feelings,
+more extended sympathies, let me feel with all living things,
+rejoice and praise with them. Let me have deeper knowledge, a nearer
+insight, a more reverent conception. Let me see the mystery of
+life--the secret of the sap as it rises in the tree--the secret of
+the blood as it courses through the vein. Reveal the broad earth and
+the ends of it--make the majestic ocean open to the eye down to its
+inmost recesses. Expand the mind till it grasps the idea of the
+unseen forces which hold the globe suspended and draw the vast suns
+and stars through space. Let it see the life, the organisms which
+dwell in those great worlds, and feel with them their hopes and joys
+and sorrows. Ever upwards, onwards, wider, deeper, broader, till
+capable of all--all. Never did vivid imagination stretch out the
+powers of deity with such a fulness, with such intellectual grasp,
+vigour, omniscience as the human mind could reach to, if only its
+organs, its means, were equal to its thought. Give us, then, greater
+strength of body, greater length of days; give us more vital energy,
+let our limbs be mighty as those of the giants of old. Supplement
+such organs with nobler mechanical engines--with extended means of
+locomotion; add novel and more minute methods of analysis and
+discovery. Let us become as demi-gods. And why not? Whoso gave the
+gift of the mind gave also an infinite space, an infinite matter for
+it to work upon, an infinite time in which to work. Let no one
+presume to define the boundaries of that divine gift--that
+mind--for all the experience of eight thousand years proves beyond a
+question that the limits of its powers will never be reached, though
+the human race dwell upon the globe for eternity. Up, then, and
+labour: and let that labour be sound and holy. Not for immediate and
+petty reward, not that the appetite or the vanity may be gratified,
+but that the sum of human perfection may be advanced; labouring as
+consecrated priests, for true science is religion. All is possible.
+A grand future awaits the world. When man has only partially worked
+out his own conceptions--when only a portion of what the mind
+foresees and plans is realized--then already earth will be as a
+paradise.
+
+Full of love and sympathy for this feeble ant climbing over grass
+and leaf, for yonder nightingale pouring forth its song, feeling
+a community with the finches, with bird, with plant, with animal,
+and reverently studying all these and more--how is it possible
+for the heart while thus wrapped up to conceive the desire of
+crime? For ever anxious and labouring for perfection, shall the
+soul, convinced of the divinity of its work, halt and turn aside
+to fall into imperfection? Lying thus upon the rug under the
+shadow of the oak and horse-chestnut-tree, full of the joy of
+life--full of the joy which all organisms feel in living
+alone--lifting the eye far, far above the sphere even of the sun,
+shall we ever conceive the idea of murder, of violence, of aught
+that degrades ourselves? It is impossible while in this frame. So
+thus reclining, and thus occupied, we require no judge, no
+prison, no law, no punishment--and, further, no army, no monarch.
+At this moment, did neither of these institutions exist our
+conduct would be the same. Our whole existence at this moment is
+permeated with a reverent love, an aspiration--a desire of a more
+perfect life; if the very name of religion was extinct, our
+hopes, our wish would be the same. It is but a simple transition
+to conclude that with more extended knowledge, with wider
+sympathies, with greater powers--powers more equal to the vague
+longings of their minds, the human race would be as we are at
+this moment in the shadow of the chestnut-tree. No need of priest
+and lawyer; no need of armies or kings. It is probable that with
+the progress of knowledge it will be possible to satisfy the
+necessary wants of existence much more easily than now, and thus
+to remove one great cause of discord. And all these thoughts
+because the passing shadow of a rook caused the eye to gaze
+upwards into the deep azure of the sky. There is no limit, no
+number to the thoughts which the study of nature may call forth,
+any more than there is a limit to the number of the rays of the
+sun.
+
+This blade of grass grows as high as it can, the nightingale there
+sings as sweetly as it can, the goldfinches feed to their full
+desire and lay down no arbitrary rules of life; the great sun above
+pours out its heat and light in a flood unrestrained. What is the
+meaning of this hieroglyph, which is repeated in a thousand thousand
+other ways and shapes, which meets us at every turn? It is evident
+that all living creatures, from the zoophyte upwards, plant,
+reptile, bird, animal, and in his natural state--in his physical
+frame--man also, strive with all their powers to obtain as perfect
+an existence as possible. It is the one great law of their being,
+followed from birth to death. All the efforts of the plant are put
+forth to obtain more light, more air, more moisture--in a word, more
+food--upon which to grow, expand, and become more beautiful and
+perfect. The aim may be unconscious, but the result is evident. It
+is equally so with the animal; its lowest appetites subserve the one
+grand object of its advance. Whether it be eating, drinking,
+sleeping, procreating, all tends to one end, a fuller development of
+the individual, a higher condition of the species; still further, to
+the production of new races capable of additional progress. Part and
+parcel as we are of the great community of living beings,
+indissolubly connected with them from the lowest to the highest by a
+thousand ties, it is impossible for us to escape from the operation
+of this law; or if, by the exertion of the will, and the resources
+of the intellect, it is partially suspended, then the individual may
+perhaps pass away unharmed, but the race must suffer. It is, rather,
+the province of that inestimable gift, the mind, to aid nature, to
+smooth away the difficulties, to assist both the physical and mental
+man to increase his powers and widen his influence. Such efforts
+have been made from time to time, but unfortunately upon purely
+empirical principles, by arbitrary interference, without a long
+previous study of the delicate organization it was proposed to
+amend. If there is one thing our latter-day students have
+demonstrated beyond all reach of cavil, it is that both the physical
+and the mental man are, as it were, a mass of inherited
+structures--are built up of partially absorbed rudimentary organs
+and primitive conceptions, much as the trunks of certain trees are
+formed by the absorption of the leaves. He is made up of the Past.
+This is a happy and an inspiriting discovery, insomuch as it holds
+out a resplendent promise that there may yet come a man of the
+future made out of our present which will then be the past. It is a
+discovery which calls upon us for new and larger moral and physical
+exertion, which throws upon us wider and nobler duties, for upon us
+depends the future. At one blow this new light casts aside those
+melancholy convictions which, judging from the evil blood which
+seemed to stain each new generation alike, had elevated into a faith
+the depressing idea that man could not advance. It explains the
+causes of that stain, the reason of those imperfections, not
+necessary parts of the ideal man, but inherited from a lower order
+of life, and to be gradually expunged.
+
+But this marvellous mystery of inheritance has brought with it a
+series of mental instincts, so to say; a whole circle of ideas of
+moral conceptions, in a sense belonging to the Past--ideas which
+were high and noble in the rudimentary being, which were beyond the
+capacity of the pure animal, but which are now in great part merely
+obstructions to advancement. Let these perish. We must seek for
+enlightenment and for progress, not in the dim failing traditions
+of a period but just removed from the time of the rudimentary or
+primeval man--we must no longer allow the hoary age of such
+traditions to blind the eye and cause the knee to bend--we must no
+longer stultify the mind by compelling it to receive as infallible
+what in the very nature of things must have been fallible to the
+highest degree. The very plants are wiser far. They seek the light
+of to-day, the heat of the sun which shines at this hour; they make
+no attempt to guide their life by the feeble reflection of rays
+which were extinguished ages ago. This slender blade of grass,
+beside the edge of our rug under the chestnut-tree, shoots upwards
+in the fresh air of to-day; its roots draw nourishment from the
+moisture of the dew which heaven deposited this morning. If it does
+make use of the past--of the soil, the earth that has accumulated in
+centuries--it is to advance its present growth. Root out at once and
+for ever these primeval, narrow, and contracted ideas; fix the mind
+upon the sun of the present, and prepare for the sun that must rise
+to-morrow. It is our duty to develop both mind and body and soul to
+the utmost: as it is the duty of this blade of grass and this
+oak-tree to grow and expand as far as their powers will admit. But
+the blade of grass and the oak have this great disadvantage to work
+against--they can only labour in the lines laid down for them, and
+unconsciously; while man can think, foresee, and plan. The greatest
+obstacle to progress is the lack now beginning to be felt all over
+the world, but more especially in the countries most highly
+civilized, of a true ideal to work up to. It is necessary that some
+far-seeing master-mind, some giant intellect, should arise, and
+sketch out in bold, unmistakable outlines the grand and noble future
+which the human race should labour for. There have been weak
+attempts--there are contemptible makeshifts now on their trial,
+especially in the new world--but the whole of these, without
+exception, are simply diluted reproductions of systems long since
+worn out. These can only last a little while; if anything, they are
+worse than the prejudices and traditions which form the body of
+wider-spread creeds. The world cries out for an intellect which
+shall draw its inspiration from the unvarying and infallible laws
+regulating the universe; which shall found its faith upon the
+teaching of grass, of leaf, of bird, of beast, of hoary rock, great
+ocean, star and sun; which shall afford full room for the
+development of muscle, sense, and above all of the wondrous brain;
+and which without fettering the individual shall secure the ultimate
+apotheosis of the race. No such system can spring at once, complete,
+perfect in detail, from any one mind. But assuredly when once a firm
+basis has been laid down, when an outline has been drawn, the
+converging efforts of a thousand thousand thinkers will be brought
+to bear upon it, and it will be elaborated into something
+approaching a reliable guide. The faiths of the past, of the ancient
+world, now extinct or feebly lingering on, were each inspired by one
+mind only. The faith of the future, in strong contrast, will spring
+from the researches of a thousand thousand thinkers, whose minds,
+once brought into a focus, will speedily burn up all that is
+useless and worn out with a fierce heat, and evoke a new and
+brilliant light. This converging thought is one of the greatest
+blessings of our day, made possible by the vastly extended means of
+communication, and almost seems specially destined for this very
+purpose. Thought increases with the ages. At this moment there are
+probably as many busy brains studying, reflecting, collecting
+scattered truths, as there were thinkers--effectual thinkers--in
+all the recorded eighty centuries gone by. Daily and hourly the
+noble army swells its numbers, and the sound of its mighty march
+grows louder; the inscribed roll of its victories fills the heart
+with exultation.
+
+There is a slight rustle among the bushes and the fern upon the
+mound. It is a rabbit who has peeped forth into the sunshine. His
+eye opens wide with wonder at the sight of us; his nostrils work
+nervously as he watches us narrowly. But in a little while the
+silence and stillness reassure him; he nibbles in a desultory way at
+the stray grasses on the mound, and finally ventures out into the
+meadow almost within reach of the hand. It is so easy to make the
+acquaintance--to make friends with the children of Nature. From the
+tiniest insect upwards they are so ready to dwell in sympathy with
+us--only be tender, quiet, considerate, in a word, _gentlemanly_,
+towards them and they will freely wander around. And they have all
+such marvellous tales to tell--intricate problems to solve for us.
+This common wild rabbit has an ancestry of almost unsearchable
+antiquity. Within that little body there are organs and structures
+which, rightly studied, will throw a light upon the mysteries hidden
+in our own frames. It is a peculiarity of this search that nothing
+is despicable; nothing can be passed over--not so much as a fallen
+leaf, or a grain of sand. Literally everything bears stamped upon it
+characters in the hieratic, the sacred handwriting, not one word of
+which shall fall to the ground.
+
+Sitting indoors, with every modern luxury around, rich carpets,
+artistic furniture, pictures, statuary, food and drink brought from
+the uttermost ends of the earth, with the telegraph, the
+printing-press, the railway at immediate command, it is easy to say,
+'What have _I_ to do with all this? I am neither an animal nor a
+plant, and the sun is nothing to me. This is _my_ life which I have
+created; I am apart from the other inhabitants of the earth.' But go
+to the window. See--there is but a thin, transparent sheet of
+brittle glass between the artificial man and the air, the light, the
+trees, and grass. So between him and the other innumerable organisms
+which live and breathe there is but a thin feeble crust of prejudice
+and social custom. Between him and those irresistible laws which
+keep the sun upon its course there is absolutely no bar whatever.
+Without air he cannot live. Nature cannot be escaped. Then face the
+facts, and having done so, there will speedily arise a calm pleasure
+beckoning onwards.
+
+The shadows of the oak and chestnut-tree no longer shelter our rug;
+the beams of the noonday sun fall vertically on us; we will leave
+the spot for a while. The nightingale and the goldfinches, the
+thrushes and blackbirds, are silent for a time in the sultry heat.
+But they only wait for the evening to burst forth in one exquisite
+chorus, praising this wondrous life and the beauties of the earth.
+
+
+
+
+THE DAWN
+
+
+There came to my bedside this morning a visitant that has been
+present at the bedside of everyone who has lived for ten thousand
+years. In the darkness I was conscious of a faint light not visible
+if I looked deliberately to find it, but seen sideways, and where I
+was not gazing. It slipped from direct glance as a shadow may slip
+from a hand-grasp, but it was there floating in the atmosphere of
+the room. I could not say that it shone on the wall or lit the
+distant corner. Light is seen by reflection, but this light was
+visible of itself like a living thing, a visitant from the unknown.
+The dawn was in the chamber, and by degrees this intangible and
+slender existence would enlarge and deepen into day. Ever since I
+used to rise early to bathe, or shoot, or see the sunrise, the habit
+has remained of waking at the same hour, so that I see the dawn
+morning after morning, though I may sleep again immediately.
+Sometimes the change of the seasons makes it broad sunlight,
+sometimes it is still dark; then again the faint grey light is
+there, and I know that the distant hills are becoming defined along
+the sky. But though so familiar, that spectral light in the silence
+has never lost its meaning, the violets are sweet year by year
+though never so many summers pass away; indeed, its meaning grows
+wider and more difficult as the time goes on. For think, this
+spectre of the light--light's double-ganger--has stood by the couch
+of every human being for thousands and thousands of years. Sleeping
+or waking, happily dreaming, or wrenched with pain, whether they
+have noticed it or not, the finger of this light has pointed towards
+them. When they were building the pyramids, five thousand years ago,
+straight the arrow of light shot from the sun, lit their dusky
+forms, and glowed on the endless sand. Endless as that desert sand
+may be, innumerable in multitude its grains, there was and is a ray
+of light for each. A ray for every invisible atom that dances in
+the air--for the million million changing facets of the million
+ocean waves. Immense as these numbers may be, they are not
+incomprehensible. The priestess at Delphi in her moment of
+inspiration declared that she knew the number of the sands. Such
+number falls into insignificance before the mere thought of light,
+its speed, its quantity, its existence over space, and yet the idea
+of light is easy to the mind. The mind is the priestess of the
+Delphic temple of our bodies, and sees and understands things for
+which language is imperfect, and notation deficient. There is a
+secret alphabet in it to every letter of which we unconsciously
+assign a value, just as the mathematician may represent a thousand
+by the letter A. In my own mind the idea of light is associated with
+the colour yellow, not the yellow of the painters, or of flowers,
+but a quick flash. This quick bright flash of palest yellow in the
+thousandth of an instant reminds me, or rather conveys in itself,
+the whole idea of light--the accumulated idea of study and thought.
+I suppose it to be a memory of looking at the sun--a quick glance at
+the sun leaves something such an impression on the retina. With that
+physical impression all the calculations that I have read, and all
+the ideas that have occurred to me, are bound up. It is the
+sign--the letter--the expression of light. To the builders of the
+pyramids came the arrow from the sun, tinting their dusky forms, and
+glowing in the sand. To me it comes white and spectral in the
+silence, a finger pointed, a voice saying, 'Even now you know
+nothing.' Five thousand years since they were fully persuaded that
+they understood the universe, the course of the stars, and the
+secrets of life and death. What did they know of the beam of light
+that shone on the sonorous lap of their statue Memnon? The
+telescope, the microscope, and the prism have parted light and
+divided it, till it seems as if further discovery were impossible.
+This beam of light brings an account of the sun, clear as if written
+in actual letters, for example stating that certain minerals are as
+certainly there as they are here. But when in the silence I see the
+pale visitant at my bedside, and the mind rushes in one spring back
+to the builders of the pyramids who were equally sure with us, the
+thought will come to me that even now there may be messages in that
+beam undeciphered. With a turn of the heliograph, a mere turn of
+the wrist, a message is easily flashed twenty miles to the observer.
+You cannot tell what knowledge may not be pouring down in every ray;
+messages that are constant and perpetual, the same from age to age.
+These are physical messages. There is beyond this just a possibility
+that beings in distant earths possessed of greater knowledge than
+ourselves may be able to transmit their thoughts along, or by the
+ray, as we do along wires. In the days to come, when a deeper
+insight shall have been gained into the motions and properties of
+those unseen agents we call forces, such as magnetism, electricity,
+gravitation, perhaps a method will be devised to use them for
+communication. If so, communication with distant earths is quite
+within reasonable hypothesis. At this hour it is not more impossible
+than the transmission of a message to the antipodes in a few minutes
+would have been to those who lived a century since. The inhabitants
+of distant earths may have endeavoured to communicate with us in
+this way for ought we know time after time. Such a message is
+possibly contained sometimes in the pale beam which comes to my
+bedside. That beam always impresses me with a profound, an intense
+and distressful sense of ignorance, of being outside the
+intelligence of the universe, as if there were a vast civilization
+in view and yet not entered. Mere villagers and rustics creeping
+about a sullen earth, we know nothing of the grandeur and
+intellectual brilliance of that civilization. This beam fills me
+with unutterable dissatisfaction. Discontent, restless longing,
+anger at the denseness of the perception, the stupidity with which
+we go round and round in the old groove till accident shows us a
+fresh field. Consider, all that has been wrested from light has been
+gained by mere bits of glass. Mere bits of glass in curious
+shapes--poor feeble glass, quickly broken, made of flint, of the
+flint that mends the road. To this almost our highest conceptions
+are due. Could we employ the ocean as a lens we might tear truth
+from the sky. Could the greater intelligences that dwell on the
+planets and stars communicate with us, they might enable us to
+conquer the disease and misery which bear down the masses of the
+world. Perhaps they do not die. The pale visitor hints that the
+stars are not the outside and rim of the universe, any more than the
+edge of horizon is the circumference of our globe. Beyond the
+star-stratum, what? Mere boundless space. Mind says certainly not.
+What then? At present we cannot conceive a universe without a
+central solar orb for it to gather about and swing around. But that
+is only because hitherto our positive, physical knowledge has gone
+no farther. It can as yet only travel as far as this, as analogous
+beams of light. Light comes from the uttermost bounds of our star
+system--to that rim we can extend a positive thought. Beyond, and
+around it, whether it is solid, or fluid, or ether, or whether, as
+is most probable, there exist things absolutely different to any
+that have come under eyesight yet is not known. May there not be
+light we cannot see? Gravitation is an unseen light; so too
+magnetism; electricity or its effect is sometimes visible, sometimes
+not. Besides these there may be more delicate forces not
+instrumentally demonstrable. A force, or a wave, or a motion--an
+unseen light--may at this moment be flowing in upon us from that
+unknown space without and beyond the stellar system. It may contain
+messages from thence as this pale visitant does from the sun. It may
+outstrip light in speed as light outstrips an arrow. The more
+delicate, the more ethereal, then the fuller and more varied the
+knowledge it holds. There may be other things beside matter and
+motion, or force. All natural things known to us as yet may be
+referred to those two conditions: One, Force; Two, Matter. A third,
+a fourth, a fifth--no one can say how many conditions--may exist in
+the ultra-stellar space, beyond the most distant stars. Such a
+condition may even be about us now unsuspected. Something which is
+neither force nor matter is difficult to conceive; the mind cannot
+give it tangible shape even as a thought. Yet I think it more than
+doubtful if the entire universe, visible and invisible, is composed
+of these two. To me it seems almost demonstrable by rational
+induction that the entire universe must consist of more than two
+conditions. The grey dawn every morning warns me not to be certain
+that all is known. Analysis by the prism alone has quite doubled the
+knowledge that was previously available. In the light itself there
+may still exist as much more to be learnt, and then there may be
+other forces and other conditions to be first found out and next to
+tell their story. As at present known the whole system is so easy
+and simple, one body revolving round another, and so on; it is as
+easy to understand as the motion of a stone that has been thrown.
+This simplicity makes me misdoubt. Is it all? Space--immeasurable
+space--offers such possibilities that the mind is forced to the
+conclusion that it is not, that there must be more. I cannot think
+that the universe can be so very very easy as this.
+
+
+BILLING AND SONS, LTD., PRINTERS, GUILDFORD
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Hills and the Vale, by Richard Jefferies
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HILLS AND THE VALE ***
+
+***** This file should be named 31710-8.txt or 31710-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/1/7/1/31710/
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer 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.)
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/31710-8.zip b/31710-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b29581d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/31710-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/31710-h.zip b/31710-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7008a36
--- /dev/null
+++ b/31710-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/31710-h/31710-h.htm b/31710-h/31710-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8c4d4af
--- /dev/null
+++ b/31710-h/31710-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,11420 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
+ <title>The Hills and the Vale, by Richard Jefferies; an eBook from Project Gutenberg</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+ /* <![CDATA[ */
+body {
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+}
+
+h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 {
+ text-align: center;
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+p {
+ margin-top: .75em;
+ text-align: justify;
+ margin-bottom: .75em;
+}
+
+hr {
+ width: 33%;
+ margin-top: 2em;
+ margin-bottom: 2em;
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+.pagenum {
+ /*visibility: hidden;*/
+ color: #999;
+ position: absolute;
+ left: 92%;
+ font-size: smaller;
+ text-align: right;
+} /* page numbers */
+
+.blockquot {
+ margin-left: 8%;
+ margin-right: 8%;
+}
+
+.center { text-align: center; }
+.smcap { font-variant: small-caps; }
+.smcaplc { font-variant: small-caps; text-transform: lowercase; }
+.caps { text-transform: uppercase; }
+.smaller { font-size: smaller; }
+.larger { font-size: larger; }
+
+/* Images */
+img { border: 1px solid black; }
+.nobord { border: none; }
+.figcenter {
+ margin: auto;
+ text-align: center;
+}
+
+/* Footnotes */
+.footnotes { border: dashed 1px; }
+.footnote { margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 0.9em; }
+.footnote .label { position: absolute; right: 84%; text-align: right; }
+
+.fnanchor {
+ font-size: 80%;
+ text-decoration: none;
+}
+h2 .fnanchor { font-size: 60%; font-weight: normal; }
+
+/* Poetry */
+.poem { margin-left:10%; margin-right:10%; text-align: left; }
+.poem br { display: none; }
+.poem .stanza { margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em; }
+.poem span { display: block; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em; }
+.poem span.i0 { margin-left: 0em; }
+.poem span.i1 { margin-left: 1em; }
+.poem span.i2 { margin-left: 2em; }
+.poem span.i4 { margin-left: 4em; }
+
+/***/
+
+.trnote {
+ font-family: sans-serif;
+ background-color: #ccc;
+ color: #000;
+ border: black 1px dotted;
+ margin: 2em 10% 2em 10%;
+ padding: .6em;
+}
+.trnote ul li { list-style-type: none; }
+
+.toc { margin: 0 24% auto 24%; padding: 0 2em 0 0; }
+p.toc { font-size: 60%; margin-bottom: 0; padding-bottom: 0; }
+.toc li { list-style-type: none; }
+.toc li p { margin-top: 0; padding-top: 0; margin-bottom: .4em; text-align: left; }
+.toc .num { position: absolute; right: 29%; top: auto; }
+.topmarg { margin-top: 2.6em; }
+
+p.theend { text-align: center; margin-top: 4em; margin-bottom: 4em; }
+p.theend span { border-top: solid 1px black; padding-top: 3px; }
+.sansserif { font-family: sans-serif; }
+.snip { font-size: 90%; padding: 0; margin: -.5em 0 -.7em 1em; text-align: left; letter-spacing: 1.4em; }
+.deco { letter-spacing: .1em; }
+
+hr.chapbreak { width: 25%; }
+hr.tb, .w65 { width: 65%; }
+.w45 { width: 45%; }
+.w25 { width: 25%; }
+
+a.corr { /*border-bottom: 1px dotted #333;*/ }
+
+ /* ]]> */
+ </style>
+ </head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Hills and the Vale, by Richard Jefferies
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Hills and the Vale
+
+Author: Richard Jefferies
+
+Commentator: Edward Thomas
+
+Release Date: March 20, 2010 [EBook #31710]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HILLS AND THE VALE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer 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.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<div class="trnote">
+<h2>Transcriber's note</h2>
+<ol>
+<li>Obvious punctuation errors have been repaired silently.</li>
+<li>Word errors have been corrected and a <a href="#trcorrections">list
+ of corrections</a> can be found after the book.</li>
+</ol>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h1 class="caps">The Hills and the Vale</h1>
+
+
+
+<hr class="w25" />
+<p class="center"><i>All rights reserved</i></p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="w25" />
+<h1 class="caps">The Hills and the Vale</h1>
+
+<h2 class="caps"><span class="smaller">By</span><br />
+<span class="deco">Richard Jefferies</span></h2>
+
+<p class="topmarg center caps"><span class="smaller">With an introduction by</span><br />
+<span class="deco">Edward Thomas</span></p>
+
+<div class="topmarg figcenter"><img class="nobord" alt="Publisher logo" src="images/logo.png" width="137" height="148" /></div>
+
+<p class="topmarg center caps"><span class="deco">London: Duckworth &amp; Co.</span><br />
+3 Henrietta Street, Covent Garden<br />
+1909</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="w25" />
+<p class="center caps">To<br />
+<span class="deco">John Williams</span><br />
+of Waun Wen</p>
+
+
+<hr class="w45" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</a></span></div>
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<p class="toc">&nbsp;<span class="num caps">Page</span></p>
+<ul class="toc">
+
+<li><p><a href="#INTRODUCTION">INTRODUCTION</a>
+<span class="num">ix</span></p></li>
+
+<li><p><a href="#CHOOSING_A_GUN">CHOOSING A GUN</a>
+<span class="num">1</span></p></li>
+
+<li><p><a href="#SKATING">SKATING</a>
+<span class="num">22</span></p></li>
+
+<li><p><a href="#MARLBOROUGH_FOREST">MARLBOROUGH FOREST</a>
+<span class="num">27</span></p></li>
+
+<li><p><a href="#VILLAGE_CHURCHES">VILLAGE CHURCHES</a>
+<span class="num">35</span></p></li>
+
+<li><p><a href="#BIRDS_OF_SPRING">BIRDS OF SPRING</a>
+<span class="num">43</span></p></li>
+
+<li><p><a href="#THE_SPRING_OF_THE_YEAR">THE SPRING OF THE YEAR</a>
+<span class="num">54</span></p></li>
+
+<li><p><a href="#VIGNETTES_FROM_NATURE">VIGNETTES FROM NATURE</a>
+<span class="num">70</span></p></li>
+
+<li><p><a href="#A_KING_OF_ACRES">A KING OF ACRES</a>
+<span class="num">79</span></p></li>
+
+<li><p><a href="#THE_STORY_OF_SWINDON">THE STORY OF SWINDON</a>
+<span class="num">104</span></p></li>
+
+<li><p><a href="#UNEQUAL_AGRICULTURE">UNEQUAL AGRICULTURE</a>
+<span class="num">134</span></p></li>
+
+<li><p><a href="#VILLAGE_ORGANIZATION">VILLAGE ORGANIZATION</a>
+<span class="num">151</span></p></li>
+
+<li><p><a href="#THE_IDLE_EARTH">THE IDLE EARTH</a>
+<span class="num">207</span></p></li>
+
+<li><p><a href="#AFTER_THE_COUNTY_FRANCHISE">AFTER THE COUNTY FRANCHISE</a>
+<span class="num">224</span></p></li>
+
+<li><p><a href="#THE_WILTSHIRE_LABOURER">THE WILTSHIRE LABOURER</a>
+<span class="num">247</span></p></li>
+
+<li><p><a href="#ON_THE_DOWNS">ON THE DOWNS</a>
+<span class="num">270</span></p></li>
+
+<li><p><a href="#THE_SUN_AND_THE_BROOK">THE SUN AND THE BROOK</a>
+<span class="num">280</span></p></li>
+
+<li><p><a href="#NATURE_AND_ETERNITY">NATURE AND ETERNITY</a>
+<span class="num">284</span></p></li>
+
+<li><p><a href="#THE_DAWN">THE DAWN</a>
+<span class="num">306</span></p></li>
+</ul>
+
+
+
+<hr class="w45" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="INTRODUCTION" id="INTRODUCTION"></a>INTRODUCTION</h2>
+
+
+<p>This book consists of three unpublished essays and
+of fifteen reprinted from <i>Longman's Magazine</i>,
+<i>Fraser's Magazine</i>, the <i>New Quarterly</i>, <i>Knowledge</i>,
+<i>Chambers's Magazine</i>, the <i>Graphic</i>, and the <i>Standard</i>,
+where they have probably been little noticed since
+the time of their appearance. Several more volumes
+of this size might have been made by collecting all
+the articles which were not reprinted in Jefferies'
+lifetime, or in 'Field and Hedgerow' and 'Toilers
+of the Field,' shortly after his death. But the
+work in such volumes could only have attracted
+those very few of the omnivorous lovers of
+Jefferies who have not already found it out. After
+the letters on the Wiltshire labourer, addressed to
+the <i>Times</i> in 1872, he wrote nothing that was not
+perhaps at the time his best, but, being a journalist,
+he had often to deal immediately, and in a transitory
+manner, with passing events, or to empty a page or
+two of his note-books in response to an impulse
+assuredly no higher than habit or necessity. Many
+of these he passed over or rejected in making up
+volumes of essays for publication; some he certainly
+included. Of those he passed over, some are equal
+to the best, or all but the best, of those which he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</a></span>
+admitted, and I think these will be found in 'The
+Hills and the Vale.' There are others which need
+more excuse. The two early papers on 'Marlborough
+Forest' and 'Village Churches,' which were
+quoted in Besant's 'Eulogy,' are interesting on
+account of their earliness (1875), and charming
+enough to please those who read all Jefferies' books.
+'The Story of Swindon,' 'Unequal Agriculture,' and
+'Village Organization,' will be valued for their
+matter, and because they are examples of his writing,
+and of his interests and opinions, before he was
+thirty. That they are partly out of date is true, but
+they are worth remembering by the student of
+Jefferies and of his times; they do credit to his
+insight and even to his foresight; and there is still
+upon them, here and there, some ungathered fruit.
+The later agricultural articles, 'The Idle Earth,'
+'After the County Franchise,' and 'The Wiltshire
+Labourer,' are the work of his ripe years. There
+were also several papers published not only after
+his death, but after the posthumous collections. I
+have included all of these, for none of them needs
+defence, while 'Nature and Eternity' ranks with his
+finest work. The three papers now for the first
+time printed might have been, but are not, admitted
+on that ground alone. 'On Choosing a Gun' and
+'Skating' belong to the period of 'The Amateur
+Poacher,' and are still alive, and too good to destroy.
+'The Dawn' is beautiful.</p>
+
+<p>Among these eighteen papers are examples from
+nearly every kind and period of Jefferies' work,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[Pg xi]</a></span>
+though his earliest writing is still decently interred
+where it was born, in Wiltshire and Gloucestershire
+papers (chiefly the <i>North Wilts Herald</i>), except such
+as was disinterred by the late Miss Toplis for
+'Jefferies Land,' 'T.T.T.,' and 'The Early Fiction
+of Richard Jefferies.' From his early youth Jefferies
+was a reporter in the north of Wiltshire and south of
+Gloucestershire, at political and agricultural meetings,
+elections, police-courts, markets, and Boards of Guardians.
+He inquired privately or officially into the
+history of the Great Western Railway works at New
+Swindon, of the local churches and families, of ancient
+monuments, and he announced the facts with such
+reflections as came to him, or might be expected from
+him, in newspaper articles, papers read before the Wiltshire
+Arch&aelig;ological Society, and in a booklet on 'The
+Goddards of North Wilts.' As reporter, arch&aelig;ologist,
+and sportsman, he was continually walking to and
+fro across the vale and over the downs; or writing
+down what he saw, for the most part in a manner
+dictated by the writing of other men engaged in the
+same way; or reading everything that came in his
+way, but especially natural history, chronicles, and
+Greek philosophy in English translations. He was
+bred entirely on English, and in a very late paper he
+could be so hazy about the meaning of 'illiterate' as to
+say that the labourers 'never were illiterate mentally;
+they are now no more illiterate in the partial sense of
+book-knowledge.' He tried his hand at topical
+humour, and again and again at short sensational
+tales. But until he was twenty-four he wrote nothing
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[Pg xii]</a></span>
+which could have suggested that he was much above
+the cleverer young men of the same calling. There
+was nothing fine or strong in his writing. His
+researches were industrious, but not illuminated. If
+his range of reading was uncommon, it gave him
+only some quotations of no exceptional felicity. His
+point of view could have given no cause for admiration
+or alarm. And yet he was not considered an
+ordinary young man, being apparently idle, ambitious,
+discontented, and morose, and certainly unsociable
+and negligently dressed. He walked about night
+and day, chiefly alone and with a noticeable long
+stride. But if he was ambitious, it was only that he
+desired success&mdash;the success of a writer, and probably
+a novelist, in the public eye. His possessions were
+the fruits of his wandering, his self-chosen books
+and a sensitive, solitary temperament. He might
+have been described as a clever young man, well-informed,
+a little independent, not first-rate at shorthand,
+and yet possibly too good for his place; and
+the description would have been all that was possible
+to anyone not intimate with him, and there was no
+one intimate with him but himself. He had as yet
+neither a manner nor a matter of his own. It is not
+clear from anything remaining that he had discovered
+that writing could be something more than a means
+of making party views plausible or information
+picturesque. In 1867, at the age of nineteen, he
+opened a description of Swindon as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>'Whenever a man imbued with republican politics
+and progressionist views ascends the platform and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[Pg xiii]</a></span>
+delivers an oration, it is a safe wager that he makes
+some allusion at least to Chicago, the famous mushroom
+city of the United States, which sprang up in
+a night, and thirty years ago consisted of a dozen
+miserable fishermen's huts, and now counts over two
+hundred thousand inhabitants. Chicago! Chicago!
+look at Chicago! and see in its development the
+vigour which invariably follows republican institutions....
+Men need not go so far from their
+own doors to see another instance of rapid expansion
+and development which has taken place under a
+monarchical government. The Swindon of to-day is
+almost ridiculously disproportioned to the Swindon
+of forty years ago....'</p></div>
+
+<p>Eight years later Jefferies rewrote 'The Story of
+Swindon' as it is given in this book, and the allusion
+to Chicago was reduced to this:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>'The workmen required food; tradesmen came
+and supplied that food, and Swindon rose as Chicago
+rose, as if by magic.'</p></div>
+
+<p>Yet it is certain that in 1867 Jefferies was already
+carrying about with him an experience and a power
+which were to ripen very slowly into something
+unique. He was observing; he was developing
+a sense of the beauty in Nature, in humanity, in
+thought, and the arts; and he was 'not more than
+eighteen when an inner and esoteric meaning began
+to come to him from all the visible universe, and
+undefinable aspirations filled him.'</p>
+
+<p>In 1872 he discovered part of his power almost in
+its perfection. He wrote several letters to the <i>Times</i>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">[Pg xiv]</a></span>
+about the Wiltshire labourer, and they were lucid,
+simple, moderate, founded on his own observation,
+and arranged in a telling, harmonious manner. What
+he said and thought about the labourers then is of
+no great importance now, and even in 1872 it was
+only a journalist's grain in the scale against the
+labourer's agitation. But it was admirably done.
+It was clear, easy writing, and a clear, easy writer he
+was thenceforth to the end.</p>
+
+<p>These letters procured for him admission to
+<i>Fraser's</i> and other magazines, and he now began for
+them a long series of articles, mainly connected with
+the land and those who work on the land. He had
+now freedom and space to put on paper something
+of what he had seen and thought. The people,
+their homes, and their fields, he described and
+criticized with moderation and some spirit. He
+showed that he saw more things than most writing
+men, but it was in an ordinary light, in the same
+way as most of the readers whom he addressed. His
+gravity, tenderness and courage were discernible, but
+the articles were not more than a clever presentation
+of a set of facts and an intelligent, lucid point
+of view, which were good grist to the mills of that
+decade. They had neither the sagacity nor the
+passion which could have helped that calm style to
+make literature.</p>
+
+<p>'The Story of Swindon' (<i>Fraser's</i>, May, 1875)
+is one of three or four articles which Jefferies wrote
+at that time on a subject not purely his own. As a
+journalist he had had to do a hundred things for which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[Pg xv]</a></span>
+he had no strong natural taste. This article is a
+good example of his adaptable gifts. He was probably
+equal to grappling with any set of facts and
+ideas at the word of command. In 'coming to this
+very abode of the Cyclops' the <i>North Wilts Herald</i>
+reporter survives, and nothing could be more like
+everybody else than the phrasing and the atmosphere
+of the greater part, as in 'the ten minutes for
+refreshment, now in the case of certain trains reduced
+to five, have made thousands of travellers familiar
+with the name of the spot.' This is probably due
+to lack not so much of skill as of developed personality.
+When he describes and states facts, he is lucid
+and forcible; when he reflects or decorates, he is
+often showy or ill at ease, or both, though the
+thought on p.&nbsp;130 is valid enough. Through the
+cold, colourless light between him and the object, he
+saw and remembered clearly; short of creativeness,
+he was a master&mdash;or one of those skilled servants
+who appear masters&mdash;of words. The power is, at
+this distance, more worthy of attention than the
+achievement. The power of retaining and handling
+facts was one which he never lost, but it was absorbed
+and even concealed among powers of later development,
+when reality was a richer thing to him than is
+to be surmised from anything in 'The Story of
+Swindon.'</p>
+
+<p>'Unequal Agriculture' (<i>Fraser's</i>, May, 1877)
+and 'Village Organization' (<i>New Quarterly</i>, October,
+1875) belong to the same period. They
+describe and debate matters which are now not so
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">[Pg xvi]</a></span>
+new, though often as debatable. The description
+is sometimes felicitous, as in the 'steady jerk' of the
+sower's arm, but is not destined for immortality;
+and the picture of a steam-plough at work he himself
+surpassed in a later paper. But it is sufficiently
+vivid to survive for another generation. Since
+Cobbett no keener agriculturist's eye or better pen
+had surveyed North Wiltshire. The most advanced
+and the most antiquated style of farming remain the
+same in our own day. Whether these articles were
+commissioned or not, their form and direction was
+probably dictated as much by the expressed or
+supposed needs of the magazine as by Jefferies himself.
+His own line was not yet clear and strong,
+and he consciously or unconsciously adopted one
+which was a compromise between his own and that
+of his contemporaries. In fact, it is hard in places
+to tell whether he is expressing his own opinion or
+those of the farmers whom he has consulted; and he
+still writes as one of an agricultural community who
+is to remain in it. But many of the suggestions in
+'Village Organization' may still be found stimulating,
+and the inactivity of men in country parishes is not yet
+in need of further description; while the fact that 'the
+great centres of population have almost entirely occupied
+the attention of our legislators of late years' is
+still only fitfully perceived. It should be noticed, also,
+that he is true to himself and his later self, if not in
+his valiant asseveration of the farmer's sturdy independence,
+yet in the wish that there should be an
+authority to 'cause a parish to be supplied with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvii" id="Page_xvii">[Pg xvii]</a></span>
+good drinking water,' or that there should be a
+tank, 'the public property of the village.'</p>
+
+<p>To 'Unequal Agriculture' the editor of <i>Fraser's
+Magazine</i> appended a note, saying that if England
+were to be brought to such a pitch of perfection under
+scientific cultivation as Jefferies desired, 'a few of
+us would then prefer to go away and live elsewhere.'
+And there is no doubt that he was carried away by
+his subject into an indiscriminate optimism, for he
+turned upon it sadly and with equal firmness in later
+life. But the writing is beyond that of the letters
+to the <i>Times</i>, and in the sentences&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>'The plough is drawn by dull, patient oxen,
+plodding onwards now just as they were depicted
+upon the tombs and temples, the graves and
+worshipping-places, of races who had their being
+three thousand years ago. Think of the suns that
+have shone since then; of the summers and the
+bronzed grain waving in the wind; of the human
+teeth that have ground that grain, and are now
+hidden in the abyss of earth; yet still the oxen plod
+on, like slow Time itself, here this day in our land
+of steam and telegraph'</p></div>
+
+<p>&mdash;in these sentences, though they are commonplace
+enough, there is proof that the writer already had
+that curious consciousness of the past which was to
+give so deep a tone to many of his pages later on.
+But in these papers, again, what is most noticeable
+is the practical knowledge and the power of
+handling practical things. Though he himself,
+brought up on his father's farm, had no taste for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xviii" id="Page_xviii">[Pg xviii]</a></span>
+farming, and seldom did any practical work except
+splitting timber, he yet confines himself severely to
+things as they are, or as they may quickly be made to
+become by a patching-up. These are 'practical
+politics for practical men.' Consequently the clear
+and forcible writing is only better in degree than
+other writing of the moment with an element of
+controversy, and represents not the whole truth, but
+an aspect of selected portions of the truth. When
+it is turned to other purposes it shows a poor grace,
+as in 'a widespread ocean of wheat, an English gold-field,
+a veritable Yellow Sea, bowing in waves before
+the southern breeze&mdash;a sight full of peaceful poetry;'
+and the sluggish, customary euphemism of phrases
+like 'a few calves find their way to the butcher' is
+tedious enough.</p>
+
+<p>'The Idle Earth' (<i>Longman's</i>, December, 1894),
+'After the County Franchise' (<i>Longman's</i>, February,
+1884), and 'The Wiltshire Labourer' (<i>Longman's</i>,
+1887), belong to Jefferies' later years. 'The Idle
+Earth' was published only after his death, but, like
+the other two, was written, probably, between 1884
+and 1887. He was no longer writing as a practical
+man, but as a critical outsider with an inside knowledge.
+'The Idle Earth' is an astonishing curiosity&mdash;an
+extreme example of Jefferies' discontent with
+things as they are. 'Why is it,' he asks, 'that this
+cry arises that agriculture will not pay?... The
+answer is simple enough. It is because the earth
+is idle one-third of the year.' He looks round a
+January field and sees 'not an animal in sight, not a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xix" id="Page_xix">[Pg xix]</a></span>
+single machine for making money, not a penny being
+turned.' He wishes to know, 'What would a manufacturer
+think of a business in which he was compelled
+to let his engines rest for a third of the year?' Then
+he falls upon the miserable Down-land because that is
+still more idle and still less productive. 'With all its
+progress,' he cries, 'how little real advance has
+agriculture made! All because of the stubborn, idle
+earth.' It is a genuine cry, to be paralleled by
+'Life is short, art long,' and by his own wonder
+that 'in twelve thousand written years the world
+has not yet built itself a House, unfilled a Granary,
+nor organized itself for its own comfort,' by his
+contempt for 'this little petty life of seventy years,'
+and for the short sleep permitted to men.</p>
+
+<p>The editor of <i>Longman's</i> had to explain that, in
+publishing 'After the County Franchise,' he was not
+really 'overstepping the limit which he laid down in
+undertaking to keep <i>Longman's Magazine</i> free from
+the strife of party politics, because it might be profitable
+to consider what changes this Bill will make,
+when it becomes law, in the lives and the social
+relations of our rural population.' It was true that
+Jefferies was no longer a party politician. He was
+by that time above and before either party. He is
+so still, and the reappearance of these no longer
+novel ideas is excusable simply because Jefferies'
+name is likely to gain for them still more of the consideration
+and support which they deserve, for it
+may be hoped that our day is ready to receive the
+seed of trouble and advance contained in the modest
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xx" id="Page_xx">[Pg xx]</a></span>
+suggestion which he believed to be compatible with
+'the acquisition of public and the preservation of
+private liberty.'</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>['We now govern our village ourselves;] why
+should we not possess our village? Why should
+we not live in our own houses? Why should we
+not have a little share in the land, as much, at least,
+as we can pay for?... Can an owner of this kind
+of property be permitted to refuse to sell? Must
+he be compelled to sell?'</p></div>
+
+<p>Twenty-five years ago Jefferies, knowing that
+neither land nor cottages were to be had, that there
+was no security of tenure for the labourer, hoped for
+the day when 'some, at least, of our people may be
+able to set up homes for themselves in their own
+country.' He believed that 'the greater his freedom,
+the greater his attachment to home, the more settled
+the labourer,' the firmer would become the position
+of labourer, farmer, and landowner. Yet an advanced
+reformer of our own day&mdash;Mr. Montague Fordham
+in 'Mother Earth'&mdash;has still to cry the same thing
+in the wilderness; and it is still true that 'you
+cannot have a fixed population unless it has a home,
+and the labouring population is practically homeless.'
+On the other hand, it should be remembered that
+Jefferies also says: 'Parks and woods are becoming
+of priceless value; we should have to preserve a few
+landowners, if only to have parks and woods.'</p>
+
+<p>These later articles are far more persuasive than
+their predecessors, for here there is no doubt, not
+merely that they are sincere, but that they are the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxi" id="Page_xxi">[Pg xxi]</a></span>
+unprejudiced opinion of the man as well as of the
+agriculturist. He has ceased to be concerned only
+with things as they are, or as they may be made to-morrow.
+He allows himself to think as much of justice
+as of expediency, of what is fitting as well as of what is
+at once possible. The phrases, 'Sentiment is more
+stubborn than fact,' 'Service is no inheritance,' 'I do
+not want any paupers,' 'I should not like men under
+my thumb,' 'Men demanding to be paid in full for
+full work, but refusing favours and petty assistance
+to be recouped hereafter; ... men with the
+franchise, voting under the protection of the ballot,
+and voting first and foremost for the demolition of
+the infernal Poor Law and workhouse system'&mdash;these
+simple phrases fall with peculiar and even pathetic
+force, in their context, from the mystic optimist whom
+pain was ripening fast in those last years. Even
+here he uses phrases like 'the serious work which
+brings in money' and commends 'push and enterprise'
+as a substitute for 'the slow plodding manner
+of the labourer.' But these are exceptional. As to
+the writing itself, of which this is an example,</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>'By home life I mean that which gathers about a
+house, however small, standing in its own grounds.
+Something comes into existence about such a house,
+an influence, a pervading feeling, like some warm
+colour softening the whole, tinting the lichen on the
+wall, even the very smoke-marks on the chimney.
+It is home, and the men and women born there will
+never lose the tone it has given them. Such homes
+are the strength of a land'</p></div><p>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxii" id="Page_xxii">[Pg xxii]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>&mdash;it remains simple; but by the use of far fewer
+words, and of fewer orator's phrases, its unadorned
+directness has almost a positive spiritual quality.</p>
+
+<p>But these agricultural essays, good as they were,
+and absorbing as they did all of Jefferies' social
+thoughts to the end of his life, became less and less
+frequent as he grew less inclined and less able to
+adapt his mind and style to the affairs of the
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>In the same year as 'The Story of Swindon' he
+published 'Village Churches' and 'Marlborough
+Forest' (<i>Graphic</i>, December 4 and October 23,
+1875). These and his unsuccessful novels remain
+to show the direction of his more intimate thoughts
+in the third decade of his life. They are as imperfect
+in their class as 'The Story of Swindon' is perfect
+in its own. They are the earliest of their kind
+from Jefferies' pen which have survived. He is dealing
+already with another and a more individual kind of
+reality, and he is not yet at home with it in words.
+He approaches it with ceremony&mdash;with the ceremony
+of phrases like 'the great painter Autumn,' 'a very
+tiger to the rabbit,' 'the titles and pomp of belted
+earl and knight.' But here for the first time he is
+so bent upon himself and his object that he casts
+only an occasional glance upon his audience, whereas
+in his practical papers he has it continually in view,
+or even ready to jog his elbow if he dreams. The
+full English hedges, which he condemns as an
+agriculturist, he would now save from the modern
+Goths; he can even be sorry for the death of beautiful
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxiii" id="Page_xxiii">[Pg xxiii]</a></span>
+jays. Here, for the first time, it might occur to
+a student of the man that he is more than his words
+express. He does not see Nature as he sees the
+factory, and when he and Nature touch there is an
+emotional discharge which blurs the sight, though
+presently it is to enrich it. As yet we cannot be
+sure whether he is perfectly genuine or is striving
+for an effect based upon a recollection of someone
+else&mdash;probably it is both&mdash;when he writes:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>'The heart has a yearning for the unknown, a
+longing to penetrate the deep shadow and the winding
+glade, where, as it seems, no human foot has
+been';</p></div>
+
+<p>when he speaks of the '<i>visible</i> silence' of the old
+church, or exclaims:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>'To us, each hour is of consequence, especially in
+this modern day, which has invented the detestable
+creed that time is money. But time is not money
+to Nature. She never hastens....'</p></div>
+
+<p>But already he is expressing a thought, which he
+was often to repeat in his maturity and in his best
+work, when he says of the church-bell that 'In the
+day when this bell was made, men put their souls
+into their works. Their one great object was not
+to turn out 100,000 all alike.'</p>
+
+<p>It was in the next year, 1876, that he began to
+think of using his observation and feeling in a
+'chatty style,' of setting down 'some of the
+glamour&mdash;the magic of sunshine, and green things,
+and clear waters.' But it was not until 1878 that he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxiv" id="Page_xxiv">[Pg xxiv]</a></span>
+succeeded in doing so. In 'The Amateur Poacher'
+and its companions, there was not between Jefferies
+and Nature the colourless, clear light of the factory
+or the journalist's workshop, but the tender English
+atmosphere or, if you like, that of the happy and
+thoughtful mind which had grown up in that
+atmosphere.</p>
+
+<p>'Choosing a Gun' and 'Skating' belong to the
+period, if not the year, of 'The Amateur Poacher.'
+In fact, the passage about the pleasure of having the
+freedom of the woods with a wheel-lock, is either a
+first draft of one of the best in that book, or it is an
+unconscious repetition. Here again is a characteristic
+complaint that 'the leading idea of the gunmaker
+nowadays is to turn out a hundred thousand
+guns of one particular pattern.' The suggestion
+that some clever workman should go and set himself
+up in some village is one that has been followed in
+other trades, and is not yet exhausted. The writing
+is now excellent of its kind, but for the word
+'Metropolis' and the phrase 'no great distance from'
+Pall Mall. The negligent&mdash;but slowly acquired&mdash;conversational
+simplicity captures the open air as
+calmly and pleasantly as the humour of the city
+dialogue.</p>
+
+<p>'Skating' is slight enough, but ends with grace
+and an unsought solemnity which comes more and
+more into his later writing, so that in 'The Spring
+of the Year' (<i>Longman's</i>, June, 1894), after many
+notes about wood-pigeons, there comes such a genuine
+landscape as this:
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxv" id="Page_xxv">[Pg xxv]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>'The bare, slender tips of the birches on which
+they perched exposed them against the sky. Once
+six alighted on a long birch-branch, bending it down
+with their weight, not unlike a heavy load of fruit.
+As the stormy sunset flamed up, tinting the fields
+with momentary red, their hollow voices sounded
+among the trees.'</p></div>
+
+<p>These notes for April and May, 1881, were continued
+in 'The Coming of Summer,' which forms
+part of 'Toilers of the Field.' This informal chitchat,
+addressed chiefly to the amateur naturalist,
+became an easy habit with Jefferies. The talk is of
+the plainest and pleasantest here, and full of himself.
+With his 'I like sparrows,' he was an older and
+tenderer man than in 'The Gamekeeper' period.
+The paper gives some idea of his habits and haunts
+round about Surbiton before the fatal chain of illnesses
+began at the end of this year. Personally, I
+like to know that it was finished on May 10, 1881,
+at midnight, with 'Antares visible, the summer star,'
+very low in the south-east above Banstead Downs,
+and Lyra and Arcturus high above in the south, if
+Jefferies was writing at Tolworth, as presumably he
+was. This paper is to be preferred to 'Birds of
+Spring'&mdash;likeable mainly for the pages on the chiff-chaff
+and sedge-warbler&mdash;which does much the same
+thing, in a more formal manner, for the instruction
+of readers of <i>Chambers's</i> (March, 1884), who wished
+to know about our 'feathered visitors.'</p>
+
+<p>'Vignettes from Nature' were posthumously
+published in <i>Longman's</i> (July, 1895). They abound
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxvi" id="Page_xxvi">[Pg xxvi]</a></span>
+in touches from the depth and tenderness of his
+nature, and when they were written Jefferies had
+passed into the most distinct period of his life&mdash;the
+period which gave birth to his mature ideas, and, in
+particular, to 'The Story of My Heart.' The light
+which he had carried about with him since his youth&mdash;a
+light so faint that we cannot be sure he was
+aware of it in retrospect&mdash;now leaped up with a mystic
+significance. Professor William James, in 'Varieties
+of Religious Experience,' describes four marks by
+which states of mind may be recognized as mystical.
+The subject says that they defy expression. They
+are 'states of insight into depths of truth unplumbed
+by the discursive intellect ... and, as a rule, they
+carry with them a curious sense of authority for after-time,'
+because the mystic believes that 'we both
+become one with the Absolute, and we become
+aware of our oneness.' They 'cannot be sustained
+for long ... except in rare instances half an hour,
+or at most an hour or two, seems to be the limit
+beyond which they fade into the light of common
+day.' And when the mystic consciousness has set
+in, 'the mystic feels as if his own will were in
+abeyance, and, indeed, sometimes as if he were
+grasped and held by a superior power.' Most of the
+striking cases in Professor James's collection occurred
+out of doors. These marks may all be recognized
+in Jefferies' record of his own experience&mdash;'The
+Story of My Heart.' Yet it was, in the opinion of a
+very high authority&mdash;Dr. Maurice Bucke, in 'Cosmic
+Consciousness'&mdash;an imperfect experience, and his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxvii" id="Page_xxvii">[Pg xxvii]</a></span>
+state is described as 'the twilight of cosmic consciousness.'
+Dr. Bucke gives as the marks of the cosmic
+sense&mdash;a subjective light on its appearance; moral
+elevation; intellectual illumination; the sense of immortality;
+loss of the fear of death and of the sense
+of sin; the suddenness of the awakening which
+takes place usually at a little past the thirtieth year,
+and comes only to noble characters (<i>e.g.</i>, Pascal,
+Blake, Balzac, and Whitman); a charm added to
+the personality; a transfiguration of the subject in
+the eyes of others when the cosmic sense is actually
+present. Jefferies appears to have lacked the subjective
+light and the full sense of immortality. 'If,'
+says Dr.&nbsp;Bucke, 'he had attained to cosmic consciousness,
+he would have entered into eternal life, and
+there would be no "seems" about it;' while he finds
+positive evidence against Jefferies' possession of the
+perfect cosmic sense in his 'contempt for the assertion
+that all things occur for the best.' The sense varied
+in intensity with Jefferies, and in its everyday force
+was not much more than Kingsley's 'innate feeling
+that everything I see has a meaning, if I could but
+understand it,' which 'feeling of being surrounded
+with truths which I cannot grasp amounts to indescribable
+awe sometimes.'</p>
+
+<p>Cosmic consciousness, the half-grasped power
+which gave its significance to his autobiography, to
+'The Dawn,' 'The Sun and the Brook' (<i>Knowledge</i>,
+October 13, 1882), 'On the Downs' (<i>Standard</i>,
+March 23, 1883), 'Nature and Eternity' (<i>Longman's</i>,
+May, 1895), and many other papers, may have been
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxviii" id="Page_xxviii">[Pg xxviii]</a></span>
+the faculty for which Jefferies prayed in 'The Story
+of My Heart,' and to which he desired that mankind
+should advance. In Dr.&nbsp;Bucke's view, an imperfectly
+supported one, men with this faculty are becoming
+more and more common, and he thinks that 'our
+descendants will sooner or later reach, as a race, the
+condition of cosmic consciousness, just as long ago our
+ancestors passed from simple to self consciousness.'</p>
+
+<p>In Jefferies the development of this sense was
+gradual. Phrases suggesting that it is in progress
+may be found in earlier books&mdash;in the novels, in
+'Wood Magic' and 'Bevis'&mdash;but 'The Story of My
+Heart' is the first that is inspired by it; and after
+that, all his best work is affected either by the same
+fervour and solemnity, or by its accompanying ideas,
+or by both. It is to be detected in many sentences
+in 'Vignettes,' and in the concluding prayer, 'Let
+the heart come out from the shadow of roofs to the
+open glow of the sky...'&mdash;even in the plea to the
+mechanics in 'A King of Acres' (<i>Chambers's</i>,
+January, 1884) not to 'pin their faith to any theory
+born and sprung up among the crushed and pale-faced
+life of modern time, but to look for themselves
+at the sky above the highest branches ... that they
+might gather to themselves some of the leaves&mdash;mental
+and spiritual leaves&mdash;of the ancient forest,
+feeling nearer to the truth and soul, as it were, that
+lives on in it.' It is in the aspiration and hope&mdash;in the
+sense of 'hovering on the verge of a great truth,' of
+'a meaning waiting in the grass and water,' of a
+'wider existence yet to be enjoyed on the earth'&mdash;in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxix" id="Page_xxix">[Pg xxix]</a></span>
+the 'increased consciousness of our own life,' gained
+from sun and sky and sea&mdash;it is everywhere in 'Sun
+and Brook' and 'On the Downs.' It suffuses the
+sensuous delicacy and exuberance and the spiritual
+joy of 'Nature and Eternity.' That paper belongs
+to, and in a measure corrects, 'The Story of My
+Heart.' There is less eloquence than in the autobiography,
+and a greater proportion of that beautiful
+simplicity that is so spiritual when combined with
+the characteristic cadence of Jefferies at his best.
+The mystic has a view of things by which all knowledge
+becomes real&mdash;or disappears&mdash;and all things
+are seen related to the whole in a manner which
+gives a wonderful value to the least of them. The
+combination of sensuousness and spiritual aspiration
+in this and other essays produces a beauty perhaps
+peculiar to Jefferies&mdash;often a vague beauty imperfectly
+adumbrated, as was the meaning of the
+universe itself in his mood of 'thoughts without
+words, mobile like the stream, nothing compact that
+can be grasped and stayed: dreams that slip silently
+as water slips through the fingers.' In 'Nature and
+Eternity' this is all the more impressive because
+Coate Farm and its fields, Jefferies' birthplace and
+early home, is the scene of it. That beauty haunts
+the last four essays of this book as it haunts 'The
+Story of My Heart,' like a theme of music, always
+a repetition, and yet never exactly the same. 'The
+Dawn' is one of the most beautiful things which
+Jefferies wrote after his awakening. The cadences
+are his best&mdash;gentle, wistful, not quite certain
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxx" id="Page_xxx">[Pg xxx]</a></span>
+cadences, where the effect of the mere sound cannot
+be detached from the effect of the thought hovering
+behind the sound. How they kindle such a passage
+as this, where Jefferies again brings before us his
+sense of past time!&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>'But though so familiar, that spectral light in the
+silence has never lost its meaning, the violets are
+sweet year by year though never so many summers
+pass away; indeed, its meaning grows wider and
+more difficult as the time goes on. For think, this
+spectre of light&mdash;light's double-ganger&mdash;has stood by
+the couch of every human being for thousands and
+thousands of years. Sleeping or waking, happily
+dreaming, or wrenched with pain, whether they have
+noticed it or not, the finger of this light has pointed
+towards them. When they were building the
+pyramids, five thousand years ago, straight the arrow
+of light shot from the sun, lit their dusky forms, and
+glowed on the endless sand....'</p></div>
+
+<p>The whole essay is delicately perfect&mdash;as free
+from the spiritual eloquence of the autobiography
+and from the rhetoric of the agricultural papers as
+from the everyday atmosphere of earlier work and
+the decoration of the first outdoor essays. It is pure
+spirit. Take any passage, and it will be seen that in
+thought and style Jefferies' evolution is now complete.
+He has mounted from being a member of a
+class, at first undistinguishable from it, then clearly
+more enlightened, but still of it, and seeing things in
+the same way, up to the position of a poet with an
+outlook that is purely individual, and, though deeply
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxxi" id="Page_xxxi">[Pg xxxi]</a></span>
+human, yet of a spirituality now close as the grass,
+and now as the stars. The date of 'The Dawn' is
+uncertain. It may have been 1883, the year of 'The
+Story of My Heart,' or it may have been as late as
+1885. This book, therefore, contains, like no other
+single volume, the record of Jefferies' progress during
+about ten of his most important years. It was not
+for nothing that Jefferies, man and boy, had gone
+through the phases of sportsman, naturalist, and
+artist, and always worshipper, upon the hills, 'that
+he lived in a perpetual commerce with external
+Nature, and nourished himself upon the spirit of its
+forms.' Air and sun so cleaned and sweetened his
+work that in the end the cleanness and sweetness of
+Nature herself become inseparable from it in our
+minds.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chapbreak" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHOOSING_A_GUN" id="CHOOSING_A_GUN"></a>CHOOSING A GUN</h2>
+
+
+<p>The first thought of the amateur sportsman naturally
+refers to his gun, and the questions arise: What sort
+of a gun do I want? Where can I get it? What
+price shall I pay? In appearance there can be no
+great difficulty in settling these matters, but in
+practice it is really by no means easy. Some time
+since, being on a visit to the Metropolis, I was
+requested by a friend to get him a gun, and accepted
+the commission, as M.&nbsp;Emile Ollivier went to war,
+with a light heart, little dreaming of the troubles that
+would start up in the attempt to conscientiously carry
+it out. He wanted a good gun, and was not very
+scrupulous as to maker or price, provided that the
+latter was not absolutely extravagant. With such <i>carte
+blanche</i> as this it seemed plain-sailing, and, indeed,
+I never gave a second thought to the business till I
+opened the door of the first respectable gunmaker's
+shop I came across, which happened to be no great
+distance from Pall Mall. A very polite gentleman
+immediately came forward, rubbing his hands as if he
+were washing them (which is an odd habit with
+many), and asked if there was anything he could do
+for me. Well, yes, I wanted a gun. Just so&mdash;they
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>
+had one of the largest stocks in London, and would
+be most happy to show me specimens of all kinds.
+But was there any special sort of gun required, as
+then they could suit me in an instant.</p>
+
+<p>'Hum! Ah! Well, I&mdash;I'&mdash;feeling rather
+vague&mdash;'perhaps you would let me see your catalogue&mdash;&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>'Certainly.' And a handsomely got-up pamphlet,
+illustrated with woodcuts, was placed in my hands,
+and I began to study the pages. But this did not
+suit him; doubtless, with the practice of his profession,
+he saw at once the uncertain manner of the customer
+who was feeling his way, and thought to bring it to
+a point.</p>
+
+<p>'You want a good, useful gun, sir, I presume?'</p>
+
+<p>'That is just it'&mdash;shutting the catalogue; quite a
+relief to have the thing put into shape for one!</p>
+
+<p>'Then you can't do better than take our new
+patent double-action so-and-so. Here it is'&mdash;handing
+me a decent-looking weapon in thorough polish,
+which I begin to weigh in my hands, poise it to
+ascertain the balance, and to try how it comes to the
+present, and whether I can catch the rib quick enough,
+when he goes on: 'We can let you have that gun,
+sir, for ten guineas.'</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, indeed! But that's very cheap, isn't it?'
+I thoughtlessly observe, putting the gun down.</p>
+
+<p>My friend D. had mentioned a much higher
+amount as his ultimatum. The next instant I saw
+in what light my remark would be taken. It would
+be interpreted in this way: Here we have either a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
+rich amateur, who doesn't care what he gives, or else
+a fool who knows nothing about it.</p>
+
+<p>'Well, sir, of course it's our very plainest gun'&mdash;the
+weapon is tossed carelessly into the background&mdash;'in
+fact, we sometimes call it our gamekeeper
+gun. Now, here is a really fine thing&mdash;neatly
+finished, engraved plates, first choice stock, the very
+best walnut, price&mdash;&mdash;' He names a sum very
+close to D.'s outside.</p>
+
+<p>I handle the weapon in the same manner, and for
+the life of me cannot meet his eye, for I know that
+he is reading me, or thinks he is, like a book.
+With the exception that the gun is a trifle more
+elaborately got up, I cannot see or feel the slightest
+difference, and begin secretly to suspect that the
+price of guns is regulated according to the inexperience
+of the purchaser&mdash;a sort of sliding scale,
+gauged to ignorance, and rising or falling with its
+density! He expatiates on the gun and points out
+all its beauties.</p>
+
+<p>'Shooting carefully registered, sir. Can see it
+tried, or try it yourself, sir. Our range is barely
+three-quarters of an hour's ride. If the stock doesn't
+quite fit your shoulder, you can have another&mdash;the
+same price. You won't find a better gun in all
+London.'</p>
+
+<p>I can see that it really is a very fair article, but do
+not detect the extraordinary excellencies so glibly
+described. I recollect an old proverb about the fool
+and the money he is said to part with hastily. I
+resolve to see more variety before making the final
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
+plunge; and what the eloquent shopkeeper thinks is
+my growing admiration for the gun which I continue
+to handle is really my embarrassment, for as yet I
+am not hardened, and dislike the idea of leaving the
+shop without making a purchase after actually touching
+the goods. But D.'s money&mdash;I must lay it out
+to the best advantage. Desperately I fling the gun
+into his hands, snatch up the catalogue, mutter incoherently,
+'Will look it through&mdash;like the look of
+the thing&mdash;call again,' and find myself walking aimlessly
+along the pavement outside.</p>
+
+<p>An unpleasant sense of having played a rather
+small part lingered for some time, and ultimately
+resolved itself into a determination to make up my
+mind as to exactly what D. wanted, and on entering
+the next shop, to ask to see that, and that only. So,
+turning to the address of another gunmaker, I
+walked towards it slowly, revolving in my mind the
+sort of shooting D. usually enjoyed. Visions of
+green fields, woods just beginning to turn colour,
+puffs of smoke hanging over the ground, rose up,
+and blotted out the bustling London scene. The
+shops glittering with their brightest goods placed in
+front, the throng of vehicles, the crowds of people,
+faded away, the pace increased and the stride
+lengthened as if stepping over the elastic turf, and
+the roar of the traffic sounded low, like a distant
+waterfall. From this reverie the rude apostrophes
+of a hansom-cabman awoke me&mdash;I had walked right
+into the stream of the street, and instead of the
+awning boughs of the wood found a whip upheld,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+threatening chastisement for getting in the way. This
+brought me up from imagination to logic with a
+jerk, and I began to check off the uses D. could put
+his gun to on the fingers. (1) I knew he had a
+friend in Yorkshire, and shot over his moor every
+August. His gun, then, must be suited to grouse-shooting,
+and must be light, because of the heat which
+often prevails at that time, and renders dragging a
+heavy gun many miles over the heather&mdash;before they
+pack&mdash;a serious drawback to the pleasure of the
+sport. (2) He had some partridge-shooting of his
+own, and was peculiarly fond of it. (3) He was
+always invited to at least two battues. (4) A part
+of his own shooting was on the hills, where the hares
+were very wild, where there was no cover, and they
+had to be knocked over at long distances, and took a
+hard blow. That would require (<i>a</i>) a choke-bore,
+which was not suitable either, because in covers the
+pheasants at short ranges would not unlikely get
+'blown,' which would annoy the host; or (<i>b</i>) a heavy,
+strong gun, which would take a stiff charge without
+too much recoil. But that, again, clashed with the
+light gun for shooting in August. (5) He had
+latterly taken a fancy to wild-fowl shooting by the
+coast, for which a very hard-hitting, long-range gun
+was needed. It would never do if D. could not
+bring down a duck. (6) He was notorious as a
+dead shot on snipe&mdash;this told rather in favour of a
+light gun, old system of boring; for where would a
+snipe or a woodcock be if it chanced to get 200
+pellets into it at twenty yards? You might find the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
+claws and fragments of the bill if you looked with a
+microscope. (7) No delicate piece of workmanship
+would do, because he was careless of his gun, knocked
+it about anyhow, and occasionally dropped it in a
+brook. And here was the shop-door; imagine the
+state of confusion my mind was in when I entered!</p>
+
+<p>This was a very 'big' place: the gentleman who
+approached had a way of waving his hand&mdash;very
+white and jewelled&mdash;and a grand, lofty idea of what
+a gun should cost. 'Twenty, thirty, forty pounds&mdash;some
+of the &pound;30 were second-hand, of course&mdash;we
+have a few, a very few, second-hand guns'&mdash;such
+was the sweeping answer to my first mild inquiry
+about prices. Then, seeing at once my vacillating
+manner, he, too, took me in hand, only in a terribly
+earnest, ponderous way from which there was no
+escape. 'You wanted a good general gun&mdash;yes; a
+thoroughly good, well-finished, <i>plain</i> gun (great
+emphasis on the 'plain'). Of course, you can't get
+anything new for <i>that</i> money, finished in style. Still,
+the plain gun will shoot just as well (as if the
+shooting part was scarcely worth consideration).
+We make the very best plain-finished article for five-and-twenty
+guineas in London. By-the-by, where
+is your shooting, sir?' Thrust home like this, not
+over-gratified by a manner which seemed to say,
+'Listen to an authority,' and desiring to keep an
+incog., I mutter something about 'abroad.' 'Ah&mdash;well,
+then, this article is precisely the thing, because
+it will carry ball, an immense advantage in any
+country where you may come across large game.'
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'How far will it throw a ball?' I ask, rather
+curious on that subject, for I was under the impression
+that a smooth-bore of the usual build is not
+much to be relied on in that way&mdash;far less, indeed, than
+the matchlocks made by semi-civilized nations. But
+it seems I was mistaken.</p>
+
+<p>'Why&mdash;a hundred yards point-blank, and ten
+times better to shoot with than a rifle.'</p>
+
+<p>'Indeed!'</p>
+
+<p>'Of course, I mean in cover, as you're pretty sure
+to be. Say a wild boar is suddenly started: well, you
+pull out your No.&nbsp;4 shot-cartridge, and push in a ball;
+you shoot as well again&mdash;snap-shooting with a
+smooth-bore in jungle or bush. There's not a better
+gun turned out in town than that. It's not the
+slightest use your looking for anything cheaper&mdash;rebounding
+locks, best stocks, steel damascene barrels;
+fit for anything from snipe to deer, from dust to
+buck-shot&mdash;&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>'But I think&mdash;&mdash;' Another torrent overwhelms me.</p>
+
+<p>'Here's an order for twenty of these guns for
+Texas, to shoot from horseback at buffalo&mdash;ride in
+among them, you know.'</p>
+
+<p>I look at my watch, find it's much later than I
+imagine, remark that it is really a difficult thing to
+pick out a gun, and seize the door-handle.</p>
+
+<p>'When gentlemen don't exactly know what they're
+looking for it <i>is</i> a hard job to choose a gun'&mdash;he
+smiles sarcastically, and shuts me out politely.</p>
+
+<p>The observation seems hard, after thinking over
+guns so intently; yet it must be aggravating to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+attempt to serve a man who does not know what he
+wants&mdash;yet (one's mood changes quickly) it was his
+own fault for trying to force, to positively force, that
+twenty-five-guinea thing on me instead of giving me
+a chance to choose. I had seen rows on rows of
+guns stacked round the shop, rank upon rank; in
+the background a door partly open permitted a
+glimpse of a second room, also perfectly coated with
+guns, if such an expression is permissible. Now, I
+look on ranges of guns like this much the same as on
+a library. Is there anything so delicious as the first
+exploration of a great library&mdash;alone&mdash;unwatched?
+You shut the heavy door behind you slowly,
+reverently, lest a noise should jar on the sleepers of
+the shelves. For as the Seven Sleepers of Ephesus
+were dead and yet alive, so are the souls of the
+authors in the care of their ancient leathern binding.
+You walk gently round the walls, pausing here to
+read a title, there to draw out a tome and support it
+for a passing glance&mdash;half in your arms, half against
+the shelf. The passing glance lengthens till the
+weight becomes too great, and with a sigh you replace
+it, and move again, peering up at those titles which
+are foreshortened from the elevation of the shelf, and
+so roam from folio to octavo, from octavo to quarto,
+till at last, finding a little work whose value, were it
+in the mart, would be more than its weight in gold, you
+bear it to the low leather-covered arm-chair and enjoy
+it at your ease. But to sip the full pleasure of a
+library you must be alone, and you must take the books
+yourself from the shelves. A man to read must read
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+alone. He may make extracts, he may <i>work</i> at books
+in company; but to read, to absorb, he must be
+solitary. Something in the same way&mdash;except in the
+necessity for solitude, which does not exist in this
+case&mdash;I like to go through a battery of guns, picking
+up this one, or that, glancing up one, trying the locks
+of another, examining the thickness of the breech.
+Why did not the fellow say, 'There are our guns;
+walk round, take down what you please, do as you
+like, and don't hurry. I will go on with some work
+while you examine them. Call me if you want any
+explanation. Spend the day there if you like, and
+come again to-morrow.' It would have been a hundred
+chances to one that I had found a gun to suit D.,
+for the shop was a famous one, the guns really good,
+the workmanship unimpeachable, and the stock to
+select from immense. But let a thing be never so
+good, one does not care to have it positively thrust
+on one.</p>
+
+<p>By this time my temper was up, and I determined
+to go through with the business, and get the precise
+article likely to please D., if I went to every maker
+in the Metropolis. I went to very nearly every
+prominent man&mdash;I spent several days at it. I called
+at shops whose names are household words wherever
+an English sportsman can be found. Some of them,
+though bright to look at from the pavement, within
+were mean, and even lacked cleanliness. The attendants
+were often incapable of comprehending that
+a customer <i>may</i> be as good a judge of what he wants
+as themselves; they have got into a narrow routine
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
+of offering the same thing to everybody. No two
+shops were of the same opinion: at one you were
+told that the choke was the greatest success in the
+world; at another, that they only shot well for one
+season, quickly wearing out; at a third, that such and
+such a 'grip' or breech-action was perfect; at a
+fourth, that there never was such a mistake; at a
+fifth, that hammerless guns were the guns of the
+future, and elsewhere, that people detested hammerless
+guns because it seemed like learning to shoot
+over again. Finally, I visited several of the second-hand
+shops. They had some remarkably good
+guns&mdash;for the leading second-hand shops do not
+care to buy a gun unless by a crack maker&mdash;but the
+cheapness was a delusion. A new gun might be got
+for the same money, or very little more. Their
+system was like this. Suppose they had a really good
+gun, but, for aught you could tell, twenty or thirty
+years old (the breech-action might have been altered),
+for this they would ask, say &pound;25. The original
+price of the gun may have been &pound;50, and if viewed
+<i>only</i> with regard to the original price, of course that
+would be a great reduction. But for the &pound;25 a new
+gun could be got from a maker whose goods, if not so
+famous, were thoroughly reliable, and who guaranteed
+the shooting. In the one case you bought a gun
+about whose previous history you knew absolutely
+nothing beyond the mere fact of the barrels having
+come at first-hand from a leading maker. But they
+may have been battered about&mdash;rebored; they may
+be scored inside by someone loading with flints;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+twenty things that are quite unascertainable may have
+combined to injure its original perfection. The
+cheapness will not stand the test of a moment's
+thought&mdash;that is, if you are in search of excellence.
+You buy a name and trust to chance. After several
+days of such work as this, becoming less and less
+satisfied at every fresh attempt, and physically more
+fatigued than if I had walked a hundred miles, I gave
+it up for awhile, and wrote to D. for more precise
+instructions.</p>
+
+<p>When I came to quietly reflect on these experiences,
+I found that the effect of carefully studying
+the subject had been to plunge me into utter confusion.
+It seemed as difficult to choose a gun as to
+choose a horse, which is saying a good deal. Most
+of us take our shooting as we take other things&mdash;from
+our fathers&mdash;very likely use their guns, get into
+their style of shooting; or if we buy guns, buy them
+because a friend wants to sell, and so get hold of the
+gun that suits us by a kind of happy chance. But
+to begin <i>de novo</i>, to select a gun from the thousand
+and one exhibited in London, to go conscientiously
+into the merits and demerits of the endless varieties
+of locks and breeches, and to come to an impartial
+decision, is a task the magnitude of which is not
+easily described. How many others who have been
+placed in somewhat similar positions must have felt
+the same ultimate confusion of mind, and perhaps at
+last, in sheer despair, plunged, and bought the first
+that came to hand, regretting for years afterwards
+that they had not bought this or that weapon, which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+had taken their fancy, but which some gunsmith interested
+in a patent had declared obsolete!</p>
+
+<p>D. settled the question, so far as he was concerned,
+by ordering two guns: one bored in the old style
+for ordinary shooting, and a choked gun of larger
+bore for the ducks. But all this trouble and investigation
+gave rise to several not altogether satisfactory
+reflections. For one thing, there seems a too great
+desire on the part of gunmakers to achieve a colossal
+reputation by means of some new patent, which is
+thrust on the notice of the sportsman and of the
+public generally at every step and turn. The patent
+very likely is an admirable thing, and quite fulfils
+the promise so far as the actual object in view is
+concerned. But it is immediately declared to supersede
+everything&mdash;no gun is of any use without it:
+you are compelled to purchase it whether or no, or
+you are given to understand that you are quite
+behind the age. The leading idea of the gunmaker
+nowadays is to turn out a hundred thousand guns of
+one particular pattern, like so many bales of cloth;
+everybody is to shoot with this, their speciality, and
+everything that has been previously done is totally
+ignored. The workman in the true sense of the
+word&mdash;the artist in guns&mdash;is either extinct, or hidden
+in an obscure corner. There is no individuality
+about modern guns. One is exactly like another.
+That is very well, and necessary for military arms,
+because an army must be supplied with a single
+pattern cartridge in order to simplify the difficulty of
+providing ammunition. They fail even in the matter
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+of ornament. The design&mdash;if it can be called design&mdash;on
+one lock-plate is repeated on a thousand others,
+so with the hammers. There is no originality about
+a modern gun; as you handle it you are conscious
+that it is well put together, that the mechanism is
+perfect, the barrels true, but somehow it feels <i>hard</i>;
+it conveys the impression of being machine-made.
+You cannot feel the <i>hand</i> of the maker anywhere,
+and the failure, the flatness, the formality of the
+supposed ornament, is depressing. The ancient
+harquebuss makers far surpassed the very best manufacturers
+of the present day. Their guns are really
+artistic&mdash;works of true art. The stocks of some of
+the German wheel-lock guns of the sixteenth and
+<a class="corr" name="TC_1" id="TC_1" title="seventeeth">seventeenth</a> centuries are really beautiful specimens of
+carving and design. Their powder-horns are gems
+of workmanship&mdash;hunting-scenes cut out in ivory,
+the minutest detail rendered with life-like accuracy.
+They graved their stags and boars from Nature,
+not from conventional designs; the result is that we
+admire them now because Nature is constant, and
+her fashions endure. The conventional 'designs'
+on our lock-plates, etc., will in a few years be
+despised; they have no intrinsic beauty. The Arab
+of the desert, wild, untrammelled, ornaments his
+matchlock with turquoise. Our machine-made
+guns, double-barrel, breech-loading, double-grip, rebounding
+locks, first-choice stocks, laminated steel,
+or damascus barrels, choke-bore, and so forth, will,
+it is true, mow down the pheasants at the battue as
+the scythe cuts down the grass. There is slaughter
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+in every line of them. But is slaughter everything?
+In my idea it is not, but very far from it. Were I
+offered the choice of participation in the bloodiest
+battue ever arranged&mdash;such as are reserved for
+princes&mdash;the very best position, and the best-finished
+and swiftest breech-loader invented, or the freedom
+of an English forest, to go forth at any time and
+shoot whatever I chose, untrammelled by any attendants,
+on condition that I only carried a wheel-lock,
+I should unhesitatingly select the second alternative.
+There would be an abiding pleasure in the very fact
+of using so beautiful a weapon&mdash;just in the very
+handling of it, to pass the fingers over the intricate
+and exquisite carving. There would be pleasure in
+winding up the lock with the spanner; in adjusting
+the pyrites to strike fire from the notches of the
+wheel; in priming from a delicate flask graven with
+stag and hounds. There would be delight in stealing
+from tree to tree, in creeping from bush to
+bush, through the bracken, keeping the wind carefully,
+noiselessly gliding forward&mdash;so silently that
+the woodpecker should not cease tapping in the
+beech, or the pigeon her hoarse call in the oak,
+till at last within range of the buck. And then!
+First, if the ball did not hit the vital spot, if
+it did not pass through the neck, or break the
+shoulder, inevitably he would be lost, for the round
+bullet would not break up like a shell, and smash
+the creature's flesh and bones into a ghastly jelly, as
+do the missiles from our nineteenth century express
+rifles. Secondly, if the wheel did not knock a spark
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+out quickly, if the priming had not been kept dry,
+and did not ignite instantly, the aim might waver,
+and all the previous labour be lost. Something like
+skill would be necessary here. There would be art
+in the weapon itself, skill in the very loading, skill
+in the approach, nerve in holding the gun steady
+while the slow powder caught from the priming and
+expelled the ball. That would be sport. An imperfect
+weapon&mdash;well, yes; but the imperfect weapon
+would somehow harmonize with the forest, with the
+huge old hollow oaks, the beeches full of knot-holes,
+the mysterious thickets, the tall fern, the silence and
+solitude. It would make the forest seem a forest&mdash;such
+as existed hundreds of years ago; it would
+make the chase a real chase, not a foregone conclusion.
+It would equalize the chances, and give
+the buck 'law.' In short, it would be real shooting.
+Or with smaller game&mdash;I fancy I could hit a pheasant
+with a wheel-lock if I went alone, and <i>flushed the bird
+myself</i>. In that lies all the difference. If your
+birds are flushed by beaters, you may be on the
+watch, but that very watching unnerves by straining
+the nerves, and then the sudden rush and noise
+flusters you, and even with the best gun of modern
+construction you often miss. If you spring the
+bird yourself the noise may startle you, and yet
+somehow you settle down to your aim and drop
+him. With a wheel-lock, if I could get a tolerably
+clear view, I think I could bring him down. If
+only a brace rewarded a day's roaming under oak
+and beech, through fern and past thicket, I should
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+be amply satisfied. With the antique weapon the
+spirit of the wood would enter into one. The chances
+of failure add zest to the pursuit. For slaughter,
+however, our modern guns are unsurpassed.</p>
+
+<p>Another point which occurs to one after such an
+overhauling of guns as I went through is the price
+charged for them. There does seem something very
+arbitrary in the charges demanded, and one cannot
+help a feeling that they bear no proportion to the
+real value or cost of production. It may, of course,
+be said that the wages of workmen are very high&mdash;although
+workmen as a mass have long been complaining
+that such is not really the case. The rent
+of premises in fashionable localities is also high, no
+doubt. For my part, I would quite as soon buy a
+gun in a village as in a crowded thoroughfare of the
+Metropolis; indeed rather sooner, since there would
+probably be a range attached where it could be tried.
+To be offered a range, as is often the case in London,
+half an hour out&mdash;which, with getting to the station
+and from the station at the other end, to the place
+and back, may practically mean half a day&mdash;is of little
+use. If you could pick up the gun in the shop,
+stroll outside and try it at once, it would be ten
+times more pleasant and satisfactory. A good gun
+is like the good wine of the proverb&mdash;if it were made
+in a village, to that village men would go or send
+for it. The materials for gun making are, surely,
+not very expensive&mdash;processes for cheapening steel
+and metal generally are now carried to such an
+extent, and the market for metals has fallen to an
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+extraordinary extent. Machinery and steam-power
+to drive it is, no doubt, a very heavy item; but are
+we so anxious for machinery and machine-made
+guns? Are you and I anxious that ten thousand
+other persons should shoot with guns exactly, precisely
+like ours in every single particular? That is the
+meaning of machinery. It destroys the individuality
+of sport. We are all like so many soldiers in an
+army corps firing Government Martini-Henries. In
+the sporting ranks one does not want to be a private.
+I wonder some clever workman does not go and set
+himself up in some village where rent and premises
+are low, and where a range could be got close to his
+door, and deliberately set down to make a name for
+really first-rate guns, at a moderate price, and with
+some pretensions to individuality and beauty. There
+is water-power, which is cheaper than steam, running
+to waste all over the country now. The old gristmills,
+which may be found three or four in a single
+parish sometimes, are half of them falling into decay,
+because we eat American wheat now, which is ground
+in the city steam-mills, and a good deal imported
+ready ground as flour. Here and there one would
+think sufficient water-power might be obtained in
+this way. But even if we admit that great manufactories
+are extremely expensive to maintain, wages
+high, rent dear, premises in fashionable streets
+fabulously costly, yet even then there is something
+in the price of guns not quite the thing. You buy
+a gun and pay a long price for it: but if you
+attempt to sell it again you find it is the same as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+with jewellery, you can get hardly a third of its
+original cost. The intrinsic value of the gun then
+is less than half its advertised first cost-price. The
+second-hand gun offered to you for &pound;20 has probably
+cost the dealer about &pound;6, or &pound;10 at the most. So
+that, manage it 'how you will,' you pay a sum quite
+out of proportion to the intrinsic value. It is all
+very well to talk about the market, custom of trade,
+supply and demand, and so forth, though some of
+the cries of the political economist (notably the
+Free Trade cry) are now beginning to be questioned.
+The value of a thing is what it will fetch, no doubt,
+and yet that is a doctrine which metes out half-justice
+only. It is justice to the seller, but, argue as
+sophistically as you like, it is <i>not</i> justice to the
+purchaser.</p>
+
+<p>I should recommend any gentleman who is going
+to equip himself as a sportsman to ask himself before
+he starts the question that occurred to me too late in
+D.'s case: What kind of shooting am I likely to
+enjoy? Then, if not wishing to go to more expense
+than absolutely necessary, let him purchase a gun
+precisely suited to the game he will meet. As briefly
+observed before, if the sportsman takes his sport
+early in the year, and practically in the summer&mdash;August
+is certainly a summer month&mdash;he will like a
+light gun; and as the grouse at that time have not
+packed, and are not difficult of access, a light gun
+will answer quite as well as a heavy arm, whose
+powerful charges are not required, and which simply
+adds to the fatigue. Much lighter guns are used
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
+now than formerly; they do not last so long, but
+few of us now look forward forty years. A gun of
+6&frac12; pounds' weight will be better than anything else
+for summer work. All sportsmen say it is a toy
+and so it is, but a very deadly one. The same
+weapon will equally well do for the first of September
+(unless the weather has been very bad), and for a
+few weeks of partridge-shooting. But if the sport
+comes later in the autumn, a heavier gun with a
+stronger charge (alluding to guns of the old style of
+boring) will be found useful. For shooting when
+the leaves are off a heavier gun has, perhaps, some
+advantages.</p>
+
+<p>Battue-shooting puts a great strain upon a gun,
+from the rapid and continuous firing, and a pheasant
+often requires a hard knock to grass him successfully.
+You never know, either, at what range you are likely
+to meet with him. It may be ten yards, it may be
+sixty; so that a strong charge, a long range, and
+considerable power of penetration are desirable, if it
+is wished to make a good performance. I recommend
+a powerful gun for pheasant-shooting, because
+probably in no other sport is a miss so annoying.
+The bird is large and in popular estimation, therefore
+ought not to get away. There is generally a party
+at the house at the time, and shots are sure to be
+talked about, good or bad, but especially the latter,
+which some men have a knack of noticing, though
+they may be apparently out of sight, and bring up
+against you in the pleasantest way possible: 'I
+say, you were rather in a fluster, weren't you, this
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+morning? Nerves out of order&mdash;eh?' Now, is
+there anything so aggravating as to be asked about
+your nerves? It is, perhaps, from the operation of
+competition that pheasants, as a rule, get very little
+law allowed them. If you want to shine at this kind
+of sport, knock the bird over, no matter when you
+see him&mdash;if his tail brushes the muzzle of your gun:
+every head counts. The fact is, if a pheasant is
+allowed law, and really treated as game, he is not by
+any means so easy a bird to kill as may be supposed.</p>
+
+<p>If money is no particular object, of course the
+sportsman can allow himself a gun for every different
+kind of sport, although luxury in that respect is apt
+to bring with it its punishment, by making him but
+an indifferent shot with either of his weapons. But
+if anyone wishes to be a really good shot, to be
+equipped for almost every contingency, and yet not
+to go to great expense, the very best course to follow
+is to buy two good guns, one of the old style of
+boring, and the other nearly or quite choked. The
+first should be neither heavy nor light&mdash;a moderately
+weighted weapon, upon which thorough reliance may
+be placed up to fifty yards, and that under favourable
+circumstances may kill much farther. Choose
+it with care, pay a fair price for it, and adhere to it.
+This gun, with a little variation in the charge, will
+suit almost every kind of shooting, from snipe to
+pheasant. The choke-bore is the reserve gun, in
+case of specially long range and great penetration
+being required. It should, perhaps, be a size larger
+in the bore than the other. Twelve-bore for the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+ordinary gun, and ten for the second, will cover most
+contingencies. With a ten-bore choke, hares running
+wild on hills without cover, partridge coveys getting
+up at fifty or sixty yards in the same kind of country,
+grouse wild as hawks, ducks, plovers, and wild-fowl
+generally, are pretty well accessible. If not likely to
+meet with duck, a twelve-bore choke will do equally
+well. Thus armed, if opportunity offers, you may
+shoot anywhere in Europe. The cylinder-bore will
+carry an occasional ball for a boar, a wolf, or fallow-deer,
+though large shot out of the choke will, perhaps,
+be more effective&mdash;so far, at least, as small deer
+are concerned. If you can afford it, a spare gun (old-style
+boring) is a great comfort, in case of an accident
+to the mechanism.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chapbreak" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="SKATING" id="SKATING"></a>SKATING</h2>
+
+
+<p>The rime of the early morning on the rail nearest
+the bank is easily brushed off by sliding the walking-stick
+along it, and then forms a convenient seat while
+the skates are fastened. An old hand selects his
+gimlet with the greatest care, for if too large the
+screw speedily works loose, if too small the thread,
+as it is frantically forced in or out by main strength,
+cuts and tears the leather. A bad gimlet has spoilt
+many a day's skating. Nor should the straps be
+drawn too tight at first, for if hauled up to the last
+hole at starting the blood cannot circulate, and the
+muscles of the foot become cramped. What miseries
+have not ladies heroically endured in this way at the
+hands of incompetent assistants! In half an hour's
+time the straps will have worked to the boot, and
+will bear pulling another hole or even more without
+pain. On skates thus fastened anything may be
+accomplished.</p>
+
+<p>Always put your own skates on, and put them on
+deliberately; for if you really mean skating in earnest,
+limbs, and even life, may depend on their running
+true, and not failing at a critical moment. The
+slope of the bank must be descended sideways&mdash;avoid
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+the stones concealed by snow, for they will
+destroy the edge of the skate. When within a foot
+or so, leap on, and the impetus will carry you some
+yards out upon the lake, clear of the shadow of the
+bank and the willows above, out to where the ice
+gleams under the sunshine. A glance round shows
+that it is a solitude; the marks of skates that went
+past yesterday are visible, but no one has yet arrived:
+it is the time for an exploring expedition. Following
+the shore, note how every stone or stick that has been
+thrown on by thoughtless persons has sunk into and
+become firmly fixed in the ice. The slight heat of
+midday has radiated from the surface of the stone,
+causing the ice to melt around it, when it has sunk
+a little, and at night been frozen hard in that position,
+forming an immovable obstacle, extremely awkward
+to come into contact with. A few minutes and the
+marks of skates become less frequent, and in a short
+time almost cease, for the gregarious nature of man
+exhibits itself even on ice. One spot is crowded
+with people, and beyond that extends a broad expanse
+scarcely visited. Here a sand-bank rises almost to
+the surface, and the yellow sand beneath causes the
+ice to assume a lighter tint; beyond it, over the deep
+water, it is dark.</p>
+
+<p>Then a fir-copse bordering the shore shuts out the
+faintest breath of the north wind, and the surface in
+the bay thus sheltered is sleek to a degree. This is
+the place for <a class="corr" name="TC_2" id="TC_2" title="figure-shating">figure-skating</a>; the ice is perfect, and
+the wind cannot interfere with the balance. Here
+you may turn and revolve and twist and go through
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+those endless evolutions and endless repetitions of
+curves which exercise so singular a fascination. Look
+at a common figure of 8 that a man has cut out!
+How many hundreds of times has he gone round
+and round those two narrow crossing loops or circles!
+No variation, no change; the art of it is to keep
+almost to the same groove, and not to make the
+figure broad and splay. Yet by the wearing away
+of the ice it is evident that a length of time has been
+spent thus for ever wheeling round. And when the
+skater visits the ice again, back he will come and resume
+the wheeling at intervals. On past a low waterfall
+where a brook runs in&mdash;the water has frozen right up
+to the cascade. A long stretch of marshy shore
+succeeds&mdash;now frozen hard enough, at other times
+not to be passed without sinking over the ankles
+in mud. The ice is rough with the aquatic weeds
+frozen in it, so that it is necessary to leave the shore
+some thirty yards. The lake widens, and yonder in
+the centre&mdash;scarcely within range of a deer-rifle&mdash;stand
+four or five disconsolate wild-duck watching
+every motion. They are quite unapproachable, but
+sometimes an unfortunate dabchick that has been
+discovered in a tuft of grass is hunted and struck
+down by sticks. A rabbit on ice can also be easily
+overtaken by a skater. If one should venture out
+from the furze there, and make for the copse opposite,
+put on the pace, and you will be speedily alongside.
+As he doubles quickly, however, it is not so easy to catch
+him when overtaken: still, it can be done. Rabbits
+previously netted are occasionally turned out on
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+purpose for a course, and afford considerable sport,
+with a very fair chance&mdash;if dogs be eschewed&mdash;of
+gaining their liberty. But they must have 'law,'
+and the presence of a crowd spoils all; the poor
+animal is simply surrounded, and knows not where
+to run. Tracks of wild rabbits crossing the ice are
+frequent. Now, having gained the farthest extremity
+of the lake, pause a minute and take breath for a burst
+down the centre. The regular sound of the axe comes
+from the wood hard by, and every now and then the
+crash as some tall ash-pole falls to the ground, no
+more to bear the wood-pigeon's nest in spring, no
+more to impede the startled pheasant in autumn as
+he rises like a rocket till clear of the boughs.</p>
+
+<p>Now for it: the wind, hardly felt before under
+shelter of the banks and trees, strikes the chest like
+the blow of a strong man as you rush against it.
+The chest responds with a long-drawn heave, the
+pliable ribs bend outwards, and the cavity within
+enlarges, filled with the elastic air. The stride grows
+longer and longer&mdash;the momentum increases&mdash;the
+shadow slips over the surface; the fierce joy of
+reckless speed seizes on the mind. In the glow,
+and the speed, and the savage north wind, the old
+Norse spirit rises, and one feels a giant. Oh that
+such a sense of vigour&mdash;of the fulness of life&mdash;could
+but last!</p>
+
+<p>By now others have found their way to the shore;
+a crowd has already assembled at that spot which
+a gregarious instinct has marked out for the ice-fair,
+and approaching it speed must be slackened. Sounds
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+of merry laughter, and the 'knock, knock' of the
+hockey-sticks arise. Ladies are gracefully gliding
+hither and thither. Dancing-parties are formed, and
+thus among friends the short winter's day passes too
+soon, and sunset is at hand. But how beautiful that
+sunset! Under the level beams of the sun the ice
+assumes a delicate rosy hue; yonder the white snow-covered
+hills to the eastward are rosy too. Above
+them the misty vapour thickening in the sky turns
+to the dull red the shepherd knows to mean another
+frost and another fine day. Westwards where the
+disc has just gone down, the white ridges of the hills
+stand out for the moment sharp against the sky, as
+if cut by the graver's tool. Then the vapours thicken;
+then, too, behind them, and slowly, the night falls.</p>
+
+<p>Come back again in a few hours' time. The laugh
+is still, the noise has fled, and the first sound of the
+skate on the black ice seems almost a desecration.
+Shadows stretch out and cover the once gleaming
+surface. But through the bare boughs of the great
+oak yonder the moon&mdash;almost full&mdash;looks athwart
+the lake, and will soon be high in the sky.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chapbreak" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="MARLBOROUGH_FOREST" id="MARLBOROUGH_FOREST"></a>MARLBOROUGH FOREST</h2>
+
+
+<p>The great painter, Autumn, has just touched with
+the tip of his brush a branch of the beech-tree, here
+and there leaving an orange spot, and the green
+acorns are tinged with a faint yellow. The hedges,
+perfect mines of beauty, look almost red from a
+distance, so innumerable are the peggles.<a name="FNanchor_1" id="FNanchor_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> Let not
+the modern Goths destroy our hedges, so typical of
+an English landscape, so full of all that can delight
+the eye and please the mind. Spare them, if only
+for the sake of the 'days when we went gipsying&mdash;a
+long time ago'; spare them for the children to
+gather the flowers of May and the blackberries of
+September.</p>
+
+<p>When the orange spot glows upon the beech, then
+the nuts are ripe, and the hawthorn-bushes are hung
+with festoons of the buff-coloured, heart-shaped leaves
+of a once-green creeper. That 'deepe and enclosed
+country of Northe Wiltes,' which old Clarendon, in
+his famous 'Civill Warre,' says the troops of King
+Charles had so much difficulty to hurry through, is
+pleasant to those who can linger by the wayside and
+the copse, and do not fear to hear the ordnance make
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+the 'woods ring again,' though to this day a rusty
+old cannon-ball may sometimes be found under the
+dead brown leaves of Aldbourne Chase, where the
+skirmish took place before 'Newbury Battle.'</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps it is because no such outbursts of human
+passions have swept along beneath its trees that the
+'Forest' is unsung by the poet and unvisited by the
+artist. Yet its very name is poetical&mdash;Savernake&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>,
+savernes-acres&mdash;like the God's-acres of Longfellow.
+Saverne&mdash;a peculiar species of sweet fern;
+acre&mdash;land.' So we may call it 'Fern-land Forest,' and
+with truth, for but one step beneath those beeches
+away from the path plunges us to our shoulders in
+an ocean of bracken.</p>
+
+<p>The yellow stalks, stout and strong as wood, make
+walking through the brake difficult, and the route
+pursued devious, till, from the constant turning and
+twisting, the way is lost. For this is no narrow copse,
+but a veritable forest in which it is easy to lose oneself;
+and the stranger who attempts to pass it away
+from the beaten track must possess some of the Indian
+instinct which sees signs and directions in the sun and
+wind, in the trees and humble plants of the ground.</p>
+
+<p>And this is its great charm. The heart has a
+yearning for the unknown, a longing to penetrate
+the deep shadow and the winding glade, where, as it
+seems, no human foot has been.</p>
+
+<p>High overhead in the beech-tree the squirrel
+peeps down from behind a bough, his long bushy
+tail curled up over his back, and his bright eyes full
+of mischievous cunning. Listen, and you will hear
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+the tap, tap of the woodpecker, and see! away he
+goes in undulating flight with a wild, unearthly
+chuckle, his green and gold plumage glancing in the
+sun, like the parrots of far-distant lands. He will
+alight in some open space upon an ant-hill, and lick
+up the red insects with his tongue. In the fir-tree
+there, what a chattering and fluttering of gaily-painted
+wings!&mdash;three or four jays are quarrelling
+noisily. These beautiful birds are slain by scores
+because of their hawk-like capacities for destruction
+of game, and because of the delicate colours of their
+feathers, which are used in fly-fishing.</p>
+
+<p>There darts across the glade a scared rabbit, straining
+each little limb for speed, almost rushing against
+us, a greater terror overcoming the less. In a moment
+there darts forth from the dried grass a fierce red-furred
+hunter, a very tiger to the rabbit tribe, with
+back slightly arched, bounding along, and sniffing
+the scent; another, and another, still a fourth&mdash;a
+whole pack of stoats (elder brothers of the smaller
+weasels). In vain will the rabbit trust to his speed,
+these untiring wolves will overtake him. In vain
+will he turn and double: their unerring noses will
+find him out. In vain the tunnels of the 'bury,'
+they will as surely come under ground as above.
+At last, wearied, panting, frightened almost to death,
+the timid creature will hide in a cul-de-sac, a hole that
+has no outlet, burying its head in the sand. Then
+the tiny bloodhounds will steal with swift, noiseless
+rush, and fasten upon the veins of the neck. What
+a rattling the wings of the pigeons make as they rise
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+out of the trees in hot haste and alarm! As we
+pass a fir-copse we stoop down and look along the
+ground under the foliage. The sharp 'needles' or
+leaves which fall will not decay, and they kill all
+vegetation, so that there is no underwood or herbage
+to obstruct the view. It is like looking into a vast
+cellar supported upon innumerable slender columns.
+The pheasants run swiftly away underneath.</p>
+
+<p>High up the cones are ripening&mdash;those mysterious
+emblems sculptured in the hands of the gods at
+Nineveh, perhaps typifying the secret of life. More
+bracken. What a strong, tall fern! it is like a miniature
+tree. So thick is the cover, a thousand archers
+might be hid in it easily. In this wild solitude,
+utterly separated from civilization, the whistle of an
+arrow would not surprise us&mdash;the shout of a savage
+before he hurled his spear would seem natural, and
+in keeping. What are those strange, clattering
+noises, like the sound of men fighting with wooden
+'backswords'? Now it is near&mdash;now afar off&mdash;a
+spreading battle seems to be raging all round, but
+the combatants are out of sight. But, gently&mdash;step
+lightly, and avoid placing the foot on dead sticks,
+which break with a loud crack&mdash;softly peep round
+the trunk of this noble oak, whose hard furrowed
+bark defends it like armour.</p>
+
+<p>The red-deer! Two splendid stags are fighting&mdash;fighting
+for their lady-love, the timid doe. They
+rush at each other with head down and horns extended;
+the horns meet and rattle; they fence with
+them skilfully. This was the cause of the noise. It
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+is the tilting season&mdash;these tournaments between the
+knights of the forest are going on all around. There
+is just a trifle of danger in approaching these combatants,
+but not much, just enough to make the
+forest still more enticing; none whatever to those
+who use common caution. At the noise of our footsteps
+away go the stags, their 'branching antlers'
+seen high above the tall fern, bounding over the
+ground in a series of jumps, all four feet leaving the
+earth at once. There are immense oaks that we
+come to now, each with an open space beneath it,
+where Titania and the fairies may dance their rings
+at night. These enormous trunks&mdash;what <i>time</i> they
+represent! To us, each hour is of consequence,
+especially in this modern day, which has invented the
+detestable creed that time is money. But time is not
+money to Nature. She never hastens. Slowly from
+the tiny acorn grew up this gigantic trunk, and
+spread abroad those limbs which in themselves are
+trees. And from the trunk itself to the smallest
+leaf, every infinitesimal atom of which it is composed
+was perfected slowly, gradually&mdash;there was no hurry,
+no attempt to discount effect. A little farther and
+the ground declines; through the tall fern we come
+upon a valley. But the soft warm sunshine, the
+stillness, the solitude, have induced an irresistible
+idleness. Let us lie down upon the fern, on the
+edge of the green vale, and gaze up at the slow
+clouds as they drift across the blue vault.</p>
+
+<p>The subtle influence of Nature penetrates every
+limb and every vein, fills the soul with a perfect
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+contentment, an absence of all wish except to lie there,
+half in sunshine, half in shade, for ever in a Nirvana
+of indifference to all but the exquisite delight of
+simply <i>living</i>. The wind in the tree-tops overhead
+sighs in soft music, and ever and anon a leaf falls
+with a slight rustle to mark time.</p>
+
+<p>The clouds go by in rhythmic motion, the ferns
+whisper verses in the ear, the beams of the wondrous
+sun in endless song, for he, also,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">In his motion like an angel sings,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Still quiring to the young-eyed cherubim,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Such harmony is in immortal souls!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Time is to us now no more than it was to the oak;
+we have no consciousness of it. Only we feel the
+broad earth beneath us, and as to the ancient giant,
+so there passes through us a strength renewing itself,
+of vital energy flowing into the frame. It may be
+an hour, it may be two hours, when, without the aid
+of sound or sight, we become aware by an indescribable,
+supersensuous perception that living creatures
+are approaching. Sit up without noise and look:
+there is a herd of deer feeding down the narrow
+valley close at hand, within a stone's-throw. And
+these are deer indeed&mdash;no puny creatures, but the
+'tall deer' that William the Conqueror loved 'as if
+he were their father.' Fawns are darting here and
+there, frisking round the does. How many may
+there be in this herd? Fifty, perhaps more. Nor
+is this a single isolated instance, but dozens more of
+such herds may be found in this true old English
+forest, all running free and unconstrained.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But the sun gets low. Following this broad green
+drive, it leads us past vistas of endless glades, going
+no man knows where, into shadow and gloom; past
+grand old oaks; past places where the edge of a
+veritable wilderness comes up to the trees&mdash;a wilderness
+of gnarled hawthorn trunks of unknown ages,
+of holly with shining metallic-green leaves, and hazel-bushes.
+Past tall trees bearing the edible chestnut in
+prickly clusters; past maples which in a little while will
+be painted in crimson and gold, with the deer peeping
+out of the fern everywhere, and once, perhaps, catching
+a glimpse of a shy, beautiful, milk-white doe.
+Past a huge hollow trunk in the midst of a greensward,
+where merry picnic parties under the 'King
+Oak' tread the social quadrille, or whirl waltzes to the
+harp and flute. For there are certain spots even in
+this grand solitude consecrated to Cytherea and
+Bacchus, as he is now worshipped in champagne.
+And where can graceful forms look finer, happy eyes
+more bright, than in this natural ballroom, under its
+incomparable roof of blue, supported upon living
+columns of stately trees? Still onward, into a gravel
+carriage-road now, returning by degrees to civilization,
+and here, with happy judgment, the hand of
+man has aided Nature. Far as the eye can see
+extends an avenue of beech, passing right through
+the forest. The tall, smooth trunks rise up to a
+great height, and then branch overhead, looking like
+the roof of a Gothic cathedral. The growth is so
+regular and so perfect that the comparison springs
+unbidden to the lip, and here, if anywhere, that order
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+of architecture might have taken its inspiration.
+There is a continuous Gothic arch of green for miles,
+beneath which one may drive or walk, as in the aisles
+of a forest abbey. But it is impossible to even mention
+all the beauties of this place within so short a
+space. It must suffice to say that the visitor may
+walk for whole days in this great wood, and never
+pass the same spot twice. No gates or jealous walls
+will bar his progress. As the fancy seizes him, so
+he may wander. If he has a taste for arch&aelig;ological
+studies, especially the prehistoric, the edge of the
+forest melts away upon downs that bear grander
+specimens than can be seen elsewhere. Stonehenge
+and Avebury are near. The trout-fisher can approach
+very close to it. The rail gives easy communication,
+but has not spoilt the seclusion.</p>
+
+<p>Monsieur Lesseps, of Suez Canal fame, is reported
+to have said that Marlborough Forest was the finest
+he had seen in Europe. Certainly no one who had
+not seen it would believe that a forest still existed in
+the very heart of Southern England so completely
+recalling those woods and 'chases' upon which the
+ancient feudal monarchs set such store.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chapbreak" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="VILLAGE_CHURCHES" id="VILLAGE_CHURCHES"></a>VILLAGE CHURCHES</h2>
+
+
+<p>The black rooks are busy in the old oak-trees, carrying
+away the brown acorns one by one in their strong
+beaks to some open place where, undisturbed, they
+can feast upon the fruit. The nuts have fallen from
+the boughs, and the mice garner them out of the
+ditches; but the blue-black sloes cling tight to the
+thorn-branch still. The first frost has withered up
+the weak sap left in the leaves, and they whirl away
+in yellow clouds before the gusts of wind. It is
+the season, the hour of half-sorrowful, half-mystic
+thought, when the past becomes a reality and the
+present a dream, and unbidden memories of sunny
+days and sunny faces, seen when life was all spring,
+float around:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Dim dream-like forms! your shadowy train<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Around me gathers once again;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The same as in life's morning hour,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Before my troubled gaze you passed.<br /></span>
+</div>
+<div class="snip">* * * * *</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Forms known in happy days you bring,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And much-loved shades amid you spring,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Like a tradition, half expired,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Worn out with many a passing year.<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span></div>
+
+<p>In so busy a land as ours there is no place where
+the mind can, as it were, turn in upon itself so fully
+as in the silence and solitude of a village church.</p>
+
+<p>There is no ponderous vastness, no oppressive
+weight of gloomy roof, no weird cavernous crypts,
+as in the cathedral; only a <i>visible</i> silence, which at
+once isolates the soul, separates it from external
+present influences, and compels it, in falling back
+upon itself, to recognize its own depth and powers.
+In daily life we sit as in a vast library filled with
+tomes, hurriedly writing frivolous letters upon
+'vexatious nothings,' snatching our food and slumber,
+for ever rushing forward with beating pulse, never
+able to turn our gaze away from the goal to examine
+the great storehouse, the library around us. Upon the
+infinitely delicate organization of the brain innumerable
+pictures are hourly painted; these, too, we
+hurry by, ignoring them, pushing them back into
+oblivion. But here, in silence, they pass again
+before the gaze. Let no man know for what real
+purpose we come here; tell the aged clerk our
+business is with brasses and inscriptions, press half
+a crown into his hand, and let him pass to his
+potato-digging. There is one advantage at least in
+the closing of the church on week-days, so much
+complained of&mdash;to those who do visit it there is a
+certainty that their thoughts will not be disturbed.
+And the sense of man's presence has departed from
+the walls and oaken seats; the dust here is not the
+dust of the highway, of the quick footstep; it is
+the dust of the past. The ancient heavy key creaks
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+in the cumbrous lock, and the iron latch-ring has
+worn a deep groove in the solid stone. The narrow
+nail-studded door of black oak yields slowly to the
+push&mdash;it is not easy to enter, not easy to quit the
+present&mdash;but once close it, and the living world is
+gone. The very style of ornament upon the door,
+the broad-headed nails, has come down from the
+remotest antiquity. After the battle, says the rude
+bard in the Saxon chronicle,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The Northmen departed<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In their nailed barks,<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>and, earlier still, the treacherous troop that seized the
+sleeping magician in iron, Wayland the Smith, were
+clad in 'nailed armour,' in both instances meaning
+ornamented with nails. Incidentally, it may be noted
+that, until very recently, at least one village church
+in England had part of the skin of a Dane nailed to
+the door&mdash;a stern reminder of the days when 'the
+Pagans' harried the land. This narrow window,
+deep in the thick wall, has no painted magnificence
+to boast of; but as you sit beside it in the square,
+high-sided pew, it possesses a human interest which
+even art cannot supply.</p>
+
+<p>The tall grass growing rank on the graves without
+rustles as it waves to and fro in the wind against the
+small diamond panes, yellow and green with age&mdash;rustles
+with a melancholy sound; for we know that
+this window was once far above the ground, but the
+earth has risen till nearly on a level&mdash;risen from the
+accumulation of human remains. Yet, but a day or
+two before, on the Sunday morning, in this pew,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+bright, restless children smiled at each other, exchanged
+guilty pushes, while the sunbeams from the
+arrow-slit above shone upon their golden hair.</p>
+
+<p>Let us not think of this further, but dimly through
+the window, 'as through a glass darkly,' see the
+green yew with its red berries, and afar the elms
+and beeches, brown and yellow. The steep down
+rises over them, and the moving grey patch upon
+it is a flock of <a class="corr" name="TC_3" id="TC_3" title="sleep">sheep</a>. The white wall is cold and
+damp, and the beams of the roof overhead, though
+the varnish is gone from them, are dark with slow
+decay.</p>
+
+<p>In the recess lies the figure of a knight in armour,
+rudely carved, beside his lady, still more rudely
+rendered in her stiff robes, and of him an ill-spelt
+inscription proudly records that he 'builded ye
+greate howse at'&mdash;no matter where; but history
+records that cruel war wrapped it in flames before
+half a generation was gone, so that the boast of his
+building great houses reads as a bitter mockery.
+There stands opposite a grander monument to a
+mighty earl, and over it hangs a breastplate and
+gauntlets of steel.</p>
+
+<p>The villagers will tell that in yonder deep shady
+'combe' or valley, in the thick hazel-bushes, when
+the 'beetle with his drowsy hum' rises through the
+night air, there comes the wicked old earl, wearing
+this very breastplate, these iron gloves, to expiate
+one evil deed of yore. And if we sit in this pew
+long enough, till the mind is magnetized with the
+spirit of the past, till the early evening sends its
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+shadowy troops to fill the distant corners of the
+silent church, then, perhaps, there may come to us
+forms gliding noiselessly over the stone pavement of
+the aisles&mdash;forms not repelling or ghastly, but filling
+us with an eager curiosity. Then through the slit
+made for that very purpose centuries since, when the
+pew was in a family chapel&mdash;through the slit in the
+pillar, we may see cowled monks assemble at the
+altar, muttering as magicians might over vessels of
+gold. The clank of scabbards upon the stones is
+stilled, the rustle of gowns is silent; if there is a
+sound, it is of subdued sobs, as the aged monk
+blesses the troop on the eve of their march. Not
+even yet has the stern idol of war ceased to demand
+its victims; even yet brave hearts and noble minds
+must perish, and leave sterile the hopes of the elders
+and the love of woman. There is still light enough
+left to read the few simple lines on the plain marble
+slab, telling how 'Lieutenant &mdash;&mdash;,' at Inkerman,
+at Lucknow, or, later still, at Coomassie, fell doing
+his duty. And these plain slabs are dearer to us
+far than all the sculptured grandeur, and the titles
+and pomp of belted earl and knight; their simple
+words go straighter to our hearts than all the quaint
+curt Latin of the olden time.</p>
+
+<p>The belfry door is ajar&mdash;those winding stairs are
+not easy of access. The edges are worn away, and
+the steps strewn with small sticks of wood; sticks
+once used by the jackdaws in building their nests in
+the tower. It is needful to take much care, lest the
+foot should stumble in the semi-darkness. Listen!
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+there is now a slight sound: it is the dull ticking of
+the old, old clock above. It is the only thing with
+motion here; all else is still, and even its motion is
+not life. A strange old clock, a study in itself;
+all the works open and visible, simple, but ingenious.
+For a hundred years it has carried round the one
+hour-hand upon the square-faced dial without, marking
+every second of time for a century with its pendulum.
+Here, too, are the bells, and one, the chief
+bell, is a noble tenor, a mighty maker of sound. Its
+curves are full and beautiful, its colour clear; its
+tone, if you do but tap it, sonorous, yet not harsh.
+It is an artistic bell. Round the rim runs a rhyme
+in the monkish tongue, which has a chime in the
+words, recording the donor, and breathing a prayer
+for his soul. In the day when this bell was made
+men put their souls into their works. Their one
+great object was not to turn out 100,000 all alike,
+it was rarely they made two alike. Their one
+great object was to construct a work which should
+carry their very spirit in it, which should excel all
+similar works, and cause men in after-times to inquire
+with wonder for the maker's name, whether it was
+such a common thing as a knife-handle, or a bell, or
+a ship. Longfellow has caught the spirit well in the
+saga of the 'Long Serpent,' where the builder of the
+vessel listens to axe and hammer:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">All this tumult heard the master,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">It was music to his ear;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Fancy whispered all the faster,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">'Men shall hear of Thorberg Skafting<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">For a hundred year!'<br /></span>
+</div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span></div>
+
+<p>Would that there were more of this spirit in the
+workshops of our day! They did not, when such a
+work was finished, hasten to blaze it abroad with
+trumpet and shouting; it was not carried to the
+topmost pinnacle of the mountain in sight of all
+the kingdoms of the earth. They were contented
+with the result of their labour, and cared little where
+it was placed or who saw it; and so it is that some
+of the finest-toned bells in the world are at this
+moment to be found in village churches; and for so
+local a fame the maker worked as truly, and in as
+careful a manner, as if he had known his bell was to
+be hung in St.&nbsp;Peter's, at Rome. This was the true
+spirit of art. Yet it is not altogether pleasant to
+contemplate this bell; the mind cannot but reflect
+upon the length of time it has survived those to
+whose joys or sorrows it has lent a passing utterance,
+and who are dust in the yard beneath.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">For full five hundred years I've swung<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">In my old grey turret high,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And many a changing theme I've sung<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">As the time went stealing by.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Even the 'old grey turret' shows more signs of
+age and of decay than the bell, for it is strengthened
+with iron clamps and rods to bind its feeble walls
+together. Of the pavements, whose flagstones are
+monuments, the dates and names worn by footsteps;
+of the vaults beneath, with their grim and ghastly
+traditions of coffins moved out of place, as was supposed,
+by supernatural agency, but, as explained, by
+water; of the thick walls, in which, in at least one
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+village church, the trembling victim of priestly cruelty
+was immured alive&mdash;of these and a thousand other
+matters that suggest themselves there is no time to
+speak.</p>
+
+<p>But just a word must be spared to notice one
+lovely spot where two village churches stand not a
+hundred yards apart, separated by a stream, both in
+the hands of one Vicar, whose 'cure' is, nevertheless,
+so scant of souls that service in the morning in
+one and in the evening in the other church is amply
+sufficient. And where is there a place where springtime
+possesses such a tender yet melancholy interest
+to the heart as in a village churchyard, where the
+budding leaves and flowers in the grass may naturally
+be taken as symbolical of a still more beautiful springtime
+yet in store for the soul?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chapbreak" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="BIRDS_OF_SPRING" id="BIRDS_OF_SPRING"></a>BIRDS OF SPRING</h2>
+
+
+<p>The birds of spring come as imperceptibly as the
+leaves. One by one the buds open on hawthorn and
+willow, till all at once the hedges appear green, and
+so the birds steal quietly into the bushes and trees,
+till by-and-by a chorus fills the wood, and each warm
+shower is welcomed with varied song. To many, the
+majority of spring-birds are really unknown; the
+cuckoo, the nightingale, and the swallow, are all with
+which they are acquainted, and these three make the
+summer. The loud cuckoo cannot be overlooked by
+anyone passing even a short time in the fields; the
+nightingale is so familiar in verse that everyone tries
+to hear it; and the swallows enter the towns and
+twitter at the chimney-top. But these are really only
+the principal representatives of the crowd of birds
+that flock to our hedges in the early summer; and
+perhaps it would be accurate to say that no other
+area of equal extent, either in Europe or elsewhere,
+receives so many feathered visitors. The English
+climate is the established subject of abuse, yet it is
+the climate most preferred and sought by the birds,
+who have the choice of immense continents.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing that I have ever read of, or seen, or that
+I expect to see, equals the beauty and the delight of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+a summer spent in our woods and meadows. Green
+leaves and grass, and sunshine, blue skies, and sweet
+brooks&mdash;there is nothing to approach it; it is no
+wonder the birds are tempted to us. The food they
+find is so abundant, that after all their efforts, little
+apparent diminution can be noticed; to this fertile
+and lovely country, therefore, they hasten every year.
+It might be said that the spring-birds begin to come
+to us in the autumn, as early as October, when
+hedge-sparrows and golden-crested wrens, larks,
+blackbirds, and thrushes, and many others, float over
+on the gales from the coasts of Norway. Their
+numbers, especially of the smaller birds, such as larks,
+are immense, and their line of flight so extended that
+it strikes our shores for a distance of two hundred
+miles. The vastness of these numbers, indeed, makes
+me question whether they all come from Scandinavia.
+That is their route; Norway seems to be the last
+land they see before crossing; but I think it possible
+that their original homes may have been farther still.
+Though many go back in the spring, many individuals
+remain here, and rejoice in the plenty of the
+hedgerows. As all roads of old time led to Rome,
+so do bird-routes lead to these islands. Some of
+these birds appear to pair in November, and so have
+settled their courtship long before the crocuses of
+St. Valentine. Much difference is apparent in the
+dates recorded of the arrivals in spring; they vary
+year by year, and now one and now another bird
+presents itself first, so that I shall not in these notes
+attempt to arrange them in strict order.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>One of the first noticeable in southern fields is the
+common wagtail. When his shrill note is heard
+echoing against the walls of the outhouses as he rises
+from the ground, the carters and ploughmen know
+that there will not be much more frost. If icicles
+hang from the thatched eaves, they will not long
+hang, but melt before the softer wind. The bitter
+part of winter is over. The wagtail is a house-bird,
+making the houses or cattle-pens its centre, and
+remaining about them for months. There is not
+a farmhouse in the South of England without its
+summer pair of wagtails&mdash;not more than one pair, as
+a rule, for they are not gregarious till winter; but
+considering that every farmhouse has its pair, their
+numbers must be really large.</p>
+
+<p>Where wheatears frequent, their return is very
+marked; they appear suddenly in the gardens and
+open places, and cannot be overlooked. Swallows
+return one by one at first, and we get used to them
+by degrees. The wheatears seem to drop out of the
+night, and to be showered down on the ground in the
+morning. A white bar on the tail renders them
+conspicuous, for at that time much of the surface of
+the earth is bare and dark. Naturally birds of the
+wildest and most open country, they yet show no
+dread, but approach the houses closely. They are
+local in their habits, or perhaps follow a broad but
+well-defined route of migration; so that while
+common in one place, they are rare in others. In
+two localities with which I am familiar, and know
+every path, I never saw a wheatear. I heard of them
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+occasionally as passing over, but they were not birds
+of the district. In Sussex, on the contrary, the
+wheatear is as regularly seen as the blackbird; and in
+the spring and summer you cannot go for a walk without
+finding them. They change their ground three
+times: first, on arrival, they feed in the gardens and
+arable fields; next, they go up on the hills; lastly,
+they return to the coast, and frequent the extreme
+edge of the cliffs and the land by the shore. Every
+bird has its different manner; I do not know how
+else to express it. Now, the wheatears move in
+numbers, and yet not in concert; in spring, perhaps
+twenty may be counted in sight at once on the
+ground, feeding together and yet quite separate; just
+opposite in manner to starlings, who feed side by
+side and rise and fly as one. Every wheatear feeds
+by himself, a space between him and his neighbour,
+dotted about, and yet they obviously have a certain
+amount of mutual understanding: they recognize
+that they belong to the same family, but maintain
+their individuality. On the hills in their breeding
+season they act in the same way: each pair has a
+wide piece of turf, sometimes many acres. But if
+you see one pair, it is certain that other pairs are in
+the neighbourhood. In their breeding-grounds they
+will not permit a man to approach so near as when
+they arrive, or as when the nesting is over. At the
+time of their arrival, anyone can walk up within
+a short distance; so, again, in autumn. During the
+nesting-time the wheatear perches on a molehill, or a
+large flint, or any slight elevation above the open
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+surface of the downs, and allows no one to come
+closer than fifty yards.</p>
+
+<p>The hedge-sparrows, that creep about the bushes
+of the hedgerow as mice creep about the banks, are
+early in spring joined by the whitethroats, almost the
+first hedge-birds to return. The thicker the undergrowth
+of nettles and wild parsley, rushes and rough
+grasses, the more the whitethroat likes the spot.
+Amongst this tangled mass he lives and feeds, slipping
+about under the brambles and ferns as rapidly as if
+the way was clear. Loudest of all, the chiff-chaff
+sings in the ash woods, bare and leafless, while yet
+the sharp winds rush between the poles, rattling
+them together, and bringing down the dead twigs to
+the earth. The violets are difficult to find, few, and
+scattered; but his clear note rings in the hushes
+of the eastern breeze, encouraging the flowers. It is
+very pleasant indeed to hear him. One's hands are
+dry, and the skin rough with the east wind; the
+trunks of the trees look dry, and the lichens have
+shrivelled on the bark; the brook looks dark; grey
+dust rises and drifts, and the grey clouds hurry over;
+but the chiff-chaff sings, and it is certainly spring.
+The first green leaves which the elder put forth in
+January have been burned up by frost, and the
+woodbine, which looked as if it would soon be
+entirely green then, has been checked, and remains a
+promise only. The chiff-chaff tells the buds of the
+coming April rains and the sweet soft intervals of
+warm sun. He is a sure forerunner. He defies the
+bitter wind; his little heart is as true as steel. He
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+is one of the birds in which I feel a personal interest,
+as if I could converse with him. The willow-wren,
+his friend, comes later, and has a gentler, plaintive
+song.</p>
+
+<p>Meadow-pipits are not migrants in the sense that
+the swallows are; but they move about and so
+change their localities that when they come back
+they have much of the interest of a spring-bird.
+They rise from the ground and sing in the air like
+larks, but not at such a height, nor is the song
+so beautiful. These, too, are early birds. They
+often frequent very exposed places, as the side of
+a hill where the air is keen, and where one would not
+expect to meet with so lively a little creature. The
+pond has not yet any of the growths that will
+presently render its margin green; the willow-herbs
+are still low, the aquatic grasses have not become
+strong, and the osiers are without leaf. If examined
+closely, evidences of growth would be found everywhere
+around it; but as yet the surface is open, and
+it looks cold. Along the brook the shoals are visible,
+as the flags have not risen from the stems which were
+cut down in the autumn. In the sedges, however,
+the first young shoots are thrusting up, and the
+reeds have started slender green stalks tipped with
+the first leaves. At the verge of the water, a thick
+green plant of marsh-marigold has one or two great
+golden flowers open. This is the appearance of his
+home when the sedge-reedling returns to it. Sometimes
+he may be seen flitting across the pond, or
+perched for a moment on an exposed branch; but he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+quickly returns to the dry sedges or the bushes, or
+climbs in and out the willow-stoles. It is too bare
+and open for him at the pond, or even by the brookside.
+So much does he love concealment, that
+although to be near the water is his habit, for a while
+he prefers to keep back among the bushes. As the
+reeds and reed canary-grass come up and form a
+cover&mdash;as the sedges grow green and advance to the
+edge of the water&mdash;as the sword-flags lift up and
+expand, opening from a centre, the sedge-reedling
+issues from the bushes and enters these vigorous
+growths, on which he perches, and about which he
+climbs as if they were trees. In the pleasant mornings,
+when the sun grows warm about eleven o'clock,
+he calls and sings with scarcely a cessation, and
+is answered by his companions up and down the
+stream. He does but just interrupt his search for
+food to sing; he stays a moment, calls, and immediately
+resumes his prying into every crevice of
+the branches and stoles. The thrush often sits on a
+bough and sings for a length of time, apart from his
+food, and without thinking of it, absorbed in his
+song, and full of the sweetness of the day. These
+restless sedge-reedlings cannot pause; their little feet
+are for ever at work, climbing about the willow-stoles
+where the wands spring from the trunk; they never
+reflect; they are always engaged. This restlessness is
+to them a great pleasure; they are filled with the
+life which the sun gives, and express it in every
+motion; they are so joyful, they cannot be still.
+Step into the osier-bed amongst them gently; they
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+will chirp&mdash;a note like a sparrow's&mdash;just in front,
+and only recede a yard at a time as you push through
+the tall grass, flags, and underwood. Stand where
+you can see the brook, not too near, but so as to see
+it through a fringe of sedges and willows. The pink
+lychnis or ragged robin grows among the grasses;
+the iris flowers higher on the shore. The water-vole
+comes swimming past, on his way to nibble the green
+weeds in the stream round about the great branch
+which fell two winters since, and remains in the
+water. Aquatic plants take root in its shelter.
+There, too, a moorhen goes, sometimes diving under
+the bough. A blackbird flies up to drink or bathe,
+never at the grassy edge, but always choosing a spot
+where he can get at the stream free from obstruction.
+The sound of many birds singing comes from the
+hedge across the meadow; it mingles with the rush
+of the water through a drawn hatch&mdash;finches and
+linnets, thrush and chiff-chaff, wren and whitethroat,
+and others farther away, whose louder notes only
+reach. The singing is so mixed and interwoven, and
+is made of so many notes, it seems as if it were the
+leaves singing&mdash;the countless leaves&mdash;as if they had
+voices.</p>
+
+<p>A brightly-coloured bird, the redstart, appears
+suddenly in spring, like a flower that has bloomed
+before the bud was noticed. Red is his chief colour,
+and as he rushes out from his perch to take an insect
+on the wing, he looks like a red streak. These birds
+sometimes nest near farm-houses in the rickyards,
+sometimes by copses, and sometimes in the deepest
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+and most secluded combes or glens, the farthest
+places from habitation; so that they cannot be said
+to have any preference, as so many birds have, for
+a particular kind of locality; but they return year
+by year to the places they have chosen. The return
+of the corncrake or landrail is quickly recognized by
+the noise he makes in the grass; he is the noisiest of
+all the spring-birds. The return of the goat-sucker
+is hardly noticed at first. This is not at all a rare,
+but rather a local bird, well known in many places,
+but in others unnoticed, except by those who feel
+a special interest. A bird must be common and
+plentiful before people generally observe it, so that
+there are many of the labouring class who have never
+seen the goat-sucker, or would say so, if you asked
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Few observe the migration of the turtle-doves,
+perhaps confusing them with the wood-pigeons,
+which stay in the fields all the winter. By the time
+the sap is well up in the oaks all the birds have
+arrived, and the tremulous cooing of the turtle-dove
+is heard by those engaged in barking the felled trees.
+The sap rises slowly in the oaks, moving gradually
+through the minute interstices or capillary tubes of
+this close-grained wood; the softer timber-trees are
+full of it long before the oak; and when the oak is
+putting forth its leaves it is high spring. Doves
+stay so much at this time in the great hawthorns of
+the hedgerows and at the edge of the copses that
+they are seldom noticed, though comparatively large
+birds. They are easily seen by any who wish; the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+'coo-coo' tells where they are; and in walking gently
+to find them, many other lesser birds will be observed.
+A wryneck may be caught sight of on a bough overhead;
+a black-headed bunting, in the hedge where
+there is a wet ditch and rushes; a blackcap, in the
+birches; and the 'zee-zee-zee' of the tree-pipit by
+the oaks just through the narrow copse.</p>
+
+<p>This is the most pleasant and the best way to
+observe&mdash;to have an object, when so many things
+will be seen that would have been passed unnoticed.
+To steal softly along the hedgerow, keeping out of
+sight as much as possible, pausing now and then to
+listen as the 'coo-coo' is approached; and then, when
+near enough to see the doves, to remain quiet behind
+a tree, is the surest way to see everything else. The
+thrush will not move from her nest if passed so
+quietly; the chaffinch's lichen-made nest will be
+caught sight of against the elm-trunk&mdash;it would
+escape notice otherwise; the whitethroat may be
+watched in the nettles almost underneath; a rabbit
+will sit on his haunches and look at you from among
+the bare green stalks of brake rising; mice will rustle
+under the ground-ivy's purple flowers; a mole perhaps
+may be seen, for at this time they often leave their
+burrows and run along the surface; and, indeed, so
+numerous are the sights and sounds and interesting
+things, that you will soon be conscious of the fact
+that, while you watch one, two or three more are
+escaping you. It would be the same with any other
+search as well as the dove; I choose the dove because
+by then all the other creatures are come and are busy,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+and because it is a fairly large bird with a distinctive
+note, and consequently a good guide.</p>
+
+<p>But these are not all the spring-birds: there are
+the whinchats, fly-catchers, sandpipers, ring-ousels,
+and others that are occasional or rare. There is not
+a corner of the fields, woods, streams, or hills, which
+does not receive a new inhabitant: the sandpiper
+comes to the open sandy margins of the pool; the
+fly-catcher, to the old post by the garden; the whinchat,
+to the furze; the tree-pipit, to the oaks, where
+their boughs overhang meadow or cornfield; the
+sedge-reedling, to the osiers; the dove, to the thick
+hedgerows; the wheatear, to the hills; and I see
+I have overlooked the butcher-bird or shrike, as,
+indeed, in writing of these things one is certain to
+overlook something, so wide is the subject. Many
+of the spring-birds do not sing on their first arrival,
+but stay a little while; by that time others are here.
+Grass-blade comes up by grass-blade till the meadows
+are freshly green; leaf comes forth by leaf till the
+trees are covered; and, like the leaves, the birds
+gently take their places, till the hedges are imperceptibly
+filled.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chapbreak" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="THE_SPRING_OF_THE_YEAR" id="THE_SPRING_OF_THE_YEAR"></a>THE SPRING OF THE YEAR</h2>
+
+
+<p>'There's the cuckoo!' Everyone looked up and
+listened as the notes came indoors from the copse by
+the garden. He had returned to the same spot for
+the fourth time. The tallest birch-tree&mdash;it is as tall
+as an elm&mdash;stands close to the hedge, about three
+parts of the way up it, and it is just round there
+that the cuckoo generally sings. From the garden
+gate it is only a hundred yards to this tree, walking
+beside the hedge which extends all the way, so that
+the very first time the cuckoo calls upon his arrival
+he is certain to be heard. His voice travels that
+little distance with ease, and can be heard in every
+room. This year (1881) he came back to the copse
+on April 27, just ten days after I first heard one in
+the fields by Worcester Park. The difference in
+time is usual; the bird which frequents this copse
+does not arrive there till a week or so after others in
+the neighbourhood may be heard calling. So marked
+is the interval that once or twice I began to think
+the copse would be deserted&mdash;there were cuckoos
+crying all round in the fields, but none came near.
+He has, however, always returned, and this difference
+in time makes his notes all the more remarked. I
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+have, therefore, always two dates for the cuckoo:
+one, when I first hear the note, no matter where,
+and the second, when the copse bird sings. When
+he once comes he continues so long as he stays in
+this country, visiting the spot every day, sometimes
+singing for a few minutes, sometimes for an hour,
+and one season he seemed to call every morning and
+all the morning long. In the copse the ring of the
+two notes is a little toned down and lost by passing
+through the boughs, which hold and check the vibration
+of the sound. One year a detached ash in
+Cooper's Field, not fifty yards from the houses, was
+a favourite resort, and while perched there the notes
+echoed along the buildings, one following the other
+as waves roll on the summer sands. Flying from
+the ash to the copse, or along the copse hedge, the
+cuckoo that year was as often seen as the sparrows,
+and as little notice was taken of him. Several times
+cuckoos have flown over this house, but just clearing
+the roof, and descending directly they were over to
+the copse. He has not called so much this year yet,
+but on the evening of May 8 he was crying in the
+copse at half-past eight while the moon was shining.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning of May 2, standing in the garden,
+or at the window of any of the rooms facing south,
+you could hear five birds calling together. The
+cuckoo was calling not far from the tallest birch;
+there was a turtle-dove cooing in the copse much
+closer; and a wood-pigeon overpowered the dove's
+soft voice every two or three minutes&mdash;the pigeon
+was not fifty yards distant; a wryneck was perched
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
+up in an oak at the end of the garden, and uttered
+his peculiar note from time to time, and a nightingale
+was singing on Tolworth Common, just opposite the
+house, though on the other side. These were all
+audible, sometimes together, sometimes alternately;
+and if you went to the northern windows or the front
+door, looking towards the common, then you might
+also hear the chatter of a brook-sparrow. The dove
+has a way of gurgling his coo in the throat. The
+wryneck's 'kie-kie-kie,' the last syllable plaintively
+prolonged, is not like the call or songs of other
+birds; it reminds one of the peacock's strange scream,
+not in its actual sound, but its singularity. When
+it is suddenly heard from the midst of the thick
+green hedges of a summer's day, the bird itself unseen,
+it has a weird sound, which does not accord,
+like the blackbird's whistle, with our trees; it seems
+as if some tropical bird had wandered hither. I have
+heard the wryneck calling in the oak at the end of
+the garden every morning this season before rising,
+and suspect, from his constant presence, that a nest
+will be built close by. Last year the wryneck was
+a scarce bird in this neighbourhood; in all my walks
+I heard but two or three, and at long intervals.
+This year there are plenty; I hear them in almost
+every walk I take. There is one in the orchard
+beside the Red Lion Inn; another frequents the
+hedges and trees behind St.&nbsp;Matthew's Church; up
+Claygate Lane there is another&mdash;the third or fourth
+gateway on the left side is the place to listen. One
+year a pair built, I am sure, close to the cottage which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+stands by itself near the road on Tolworth Common.
+I saw them daily perched on the trees in
+front, and heard them every time I passed. There
+were not many, or we did not notice them, at home,
+and therefore I have observed them with interest.
+Now there is one every morning at the end of the
+garden. This nightingale, too, that sings on Tolworth
+Common just opposite, returns there every
+year, and, like the cuckoo to the copse, he is late in
+his arrival&mdash;at least a week later than other nightingales
+whose haunts are not far off. His cover is in
+some young birch-trees, which form a leafy thicket
+among the furze. On the contrary, the brook-sparrow,
+or sedge-reedling, that sings there is the
+first, I think, of all his species to return in this place.
+He comes so soon that, remembering the usual date
+in other districts, I have more than once tried to
+persuade myself that I was mistaken, and that it was
+not the sedge-bird, but some other. But he has a
+note that it is not possible to confuse, and as it has
+happened several seasons running, this early appearance,
+there can be no doubt it is a fixed period with
+him. These two, the sedge-bird and the nightingale,
+have their homes so near together that the one often
+sings in the branches above, while the other chatters
+in the underwood beneath.</p>
+
+<p>Besides these, before I get up I hear now a wren
+regularly. Little as he is, his notes rise in a crescendo
+above all; he sings on a small twig growing
+from the trunk of an oak&mdash;a bare twig which gives
+him a view all round. There is a bold ring in some
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+of the notes of the wren which might give an idea to
+a composer desirous of producing a merry tune.
+The chirp of sparrows, of course, underlies all. I
+like sparrows. The chirp has a tang in it, a sound
+within a sound, just as a piece of metal rings; there
+is not only the noise of the blow as you strike it, but
+a sound of the metal itself. Just now the cock birds
+are much together; a month or two since the little
+bevies of sparrows were all hens, six or seven together,
+as if there were a partial separation of the
+sexes at times. I like sparrows, and am always glad
+to hear their chirp; the house seems still and quiet
+after this nesting-time, when they leave us for the
+wheatfields, where they stay the rest of the summer.
+What happy days they have among the ripening corn!</p>
+
+<p>But this year the thrushes do not sing: I have
+listened for them morning after morning, but have
+not heard them. They used to sing so continuously
+in the copse that their silence is very marked: I see
+them, but they are silent&mdash;they want rain. Nor
+have our old missel-thrushes sung here this spring.
+One season there seem more of one kind of bird, and
+another of another species. None are more constant
+than the turtle-dove: he always comes to the same
+place in the copse, about forty yards from the garden
+gate.</p>
+
+<p>The wood-pigeons are the most prominent birds
+in the copse this year. In previous seasons there
+were hardly any&mdash;one or two, perhaps; sometimes
+the note was not heard for weeks. There might
+have been a nest; I do not think so; the pigeons
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+that come seemed merely to rest <i>en route</i> elsewhere&mdash;occasional
+visitors only. But last autumn (1880) a
+small flock of seven or eight took up their residence
+here, and returned to roost every evening. They
+remained the winter through, and even in the January
+frosts, if the sun shone a little, called now and then.
+Their hollow cooing came from the copse at midday
+on January 1, and it was heard again on the 2nd.
+During the deep snows they were silent, but I constantly
+saw them flying to and fro, and immediately
+it became milder they recommenced to call. So that
+the wood-pigeon's notes have been heard in the
+garden&mdash;and the house&mdash;with only short intervals
+ever since last October, and it is now May. In the
+early spring, while walking up the Long Ditton
+road towards sunset, the place from whence you can
+get the most extended view of the copse, they were
+always flying about the tops of the trees preparatory
+to roosting. The bare slender tips of the birches on
+which they perched exposed them against the sky.
+Once six alighted on a long birch-branch, bending it
+down with their weight, not unlike a heavy load of
+fruit. As the stormy sunset flamed up, tinting the
+fields with momentary red, their hollow voices
+sounded among the trees.</p>
+
+<p>Now, in May, they are busy; they have paired, and
+each couple has a part of the copse to themselves.
+Just level with the gardens the wood is almost bare
+of undergrowth; there is little to obstruct the sight
+but the dead hanging branches, and one couple are
+always up and down here. They are near enough
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+for us to see the dark marking at the end of the tail
+as it is spread open to assist the upward flight from
+the ground to the tree. Outside the garden gate,
+about twenty yards distant, there stand three or four
+young spruce-firs; they are in the field, but so close
+as to touch the copse hedge. To the largest of these
+one of the pigeons comes now and then; he is half
+inclined to choose it for his nest, and yet hesitates.
+The noise of their wings, as they rise and thresh their
+strong feathers together over the tops of the trees,
+may often be heard in the garden; or you may see
+one come from a distance, swift as the wind, suddenly
+half close two wings, and, shooting forward,
+alight among the branches. They seem with us like
+the sparrows, as much as if the house stood in the
+midst of the woods at home. The coo itself is not
+tuneful in any sense; it is hoarse and hollow, yet it
+has a pleasant sound to me&mdash;a sound of the woods
+and the forest. I can almost feel the gun in my
+hand again. They are pre-eminently the birds of
+the woods. Other birds frequent them at times, and
+then quit the trees: but the ring-dove is the wood-bird,
+always there some part of the day. So that the
+sound soothes by its associations.</p>
+
+<p>Coming down the Long Ditton road on May 1,
+at the corner of the copse, where there are some
+hornbeams, I heard some low sweet notes that came
+from the trees, and, after a little difficulty, discovered
+a blackcap perched on a branch, humped up. Another
+answered within ten yards, and then they sang one
+against the other. The foliage of the hornbeam was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+still pale, and the blackcaps' colours being so pale
+also (with the exception of the poll), it was not easy
+to see them. The song is sweet and cultured, but
+does not last many seconds. In its beginning it
+something resembles that of the hedge-sparrow&mdash;not
+the pipe, but the song which the hedge-sparrows are
+now delivering from the top sprays of the hawthorn
+hedges. It is sweet indeed and cultured, and it is a
+pleasure to welcome another arrival, but I do not feel
+enraptured with the blackcap's notes. One came
+into the garden, visiting some ivy on the wall, but
+they are not plentiful just now. By these hornbeam
+trees a little streamlet flows out from the copse and
+under the road by a culvert. At the hedge it is
+crossed by a pole (to prevent cattle straying in), and
+this pole is the robin's especial perch. He is always
+there, or near; he was there all through the winter,
+and is there now. Beneath, where there are a few
+inches of sand beside the water, a wagtail comes now
+and then; but the robin does not like the intrusion,
+and drives him away.</p>
+
+<p>The same oak at the end of the garden, where the
+wryneck calls, is also the favourite tree of a cock
+chaffinch, and every morning he sings there for at
+least two hours at a stretch. I hear him first between
+waking and sleeping, and listen to his song
+before my eyes are open. No starlings whistle on
+the house-tops this year; I am disappointed that
+they have not returned; last year, and the year
+before that&mdash;indeed, since we have been here&mdash;a pair
+built under the eaves just above the window of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+room I then used. Last spring, indeed, they filled
+the gutter with the materials of their nest, and long
+after they had left a storm descended, and the rain,
+unable to escape, flooded the corner. It cost eight
+shillings to repair the damage; but it did not matter,
+they had been happy. It is a disappointment not to
+hear their whistle again this spring, and the flutter
+of their wings as they vibrate them superbly while
+hovering a moment before entering their cavern.
+A pair of house-martins built under the eaves near
+by one season; they, too, have disappointed me by
+not returning, though their nest was not disturbed.
+Some fate has probably overtaken late starlings and
+house-martins.</p>
+
+<p>Then in the sunny mornings, too, there is the
+twittering of the swallows. They were very late
+this spring at Surbiton. The first of the species was
+a bank-martin flying over the Wandle by Wimbledon
+on April 25; the first swallow appeared at Surbiton
+on April 30. As the bank-martins skim the surface
+of the Thames&mdash;there are plenty everywhere near
+the osier-beds and eyots, as just below Kingston
+Bridge&mdash;their brown colour, and the black mark
+behind the eye, and the thickness of the body near
+the head, cause them to bear a resemblance to moths.
+A fortnight before the first swallow the large bats
+were hawking up and down the road in the evenings.
+They seem to prefer to follow the course of the
+road, flying straight up it from the copse to the
+pond, half-way to Red Lion Lane, then back again,
+and so to and fro, sometimes wheeling over the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
+Common, but usually resuming their voyaging above
+the highway. Passing on a level with the windows
+in the dusk, their wings seem to expand nine or ten
+inches. Bats are sensitive to heat and cold. When
+the north or east wind blows they do not come out;
+they like a warm evening.</p>
+
+<p>A shrike flew down from a hedge on May 9, just
+in front of me, and alighted on a dandelion, bending
+the flower to the ground and clasping the stalk in
+his claws. There must have been an insect on the
+flower: the bright yellow disk was dashed to the
+ground in an instant by the ferocious bird, who came
+with such force as almost to lose his balance. Though
+small, the butcher-bird's decision is marked in every
+action, in his very outline. His eagle-like head
+sweeps the grass, and in a second he is on his victim.
+Perhaps it was a humble-bee. The humble-bees are
+now searching about for the crevices in which they
+make their nests, and go down into every hole or
+opening, exploring the depressions left by the hoofs
+of horses on the sward when it was wet, and peering
+under stones and flints beside the way. Wasps, too, are
+about with the same purpose, and wild bees hover in
+the sunshine. The shrikes are numerous here, and
+all have their special haunts, to which they annually
+return. The bird that darted on the dandelion flew
+from the hedge by the footpath, through the meadow
+where the stag is generally uncarted, beside the
+Hogsmill brook. A pair frequent the bushes beside
+the Long Ditton road, not far from the milestone;
+another pair come to the railway arch at the foot of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+Cockrow Hill. In Claygate Lane there are several
+places, and in June and July, when they are feeding
+their young, the 'chuck-chucking' is incessant.</p>
+
+<p>Beside the copse on the sward by the Long
+Ditton road is a favourite resort of peacock butterflies.
+On sunny days now one may often be seen
+there floating over the grass. White butterflies go
+flutter-flutter, continually fanning; the peacock
+spreads his wide wings and floats above the bennets.
+Yellow or sulphur butterflies are almost rare&mdash;things
+common enough in other places. I seldom see one
+here, and, unless it is fancy, fewer the last two
+seasons than previously.</p>
+
+<p>In the ploughed field by Southborough Park,
+towards the Long Ditton road, partridges sometimes
+call now as the sun goes down. The corn is yet so
+short and thin that the necks of partridges stand up
+above it. One stole out the other evening from the
+hedge of a field beside the Ewell road into the
+corn; his head was high over the green blades.
+The meadow close by, the second past the turn, is a
+favourite with partridges, though so close to the
+road and to Tolworth Farm. Beside Claygate Lane,
+where the signpost points to Hook, there is a withybed
+which is a favourite cover for hares. There is
+a gateway (on the left of the lane) just past the signpost,
+from which you can see all one side of the
+osiers; the best time is when the clover begins to
+close its leaves for the evening. On May 3, looking
+over the gate there, I watched two hares enjoying
+themselves in the corn; they towered high above it&mdash;it
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
+was not more than four or five inches&mdash;and fed
+with great unconcern, though I was not concealed.
+A nightingale sang in the bushes within a few yards,
+and two cuckoos chased each other, calling as they
+flew across the lane; once one passed just overhead.
+The cuckoo has a note like 'chuck, chuck,' besides
+the well-known cry, which is uttered apparently
+when the bird is much exerted. These two were
+quite restless; they were to and fro from the fields
+on one side of the lane to those on the other, now
+up the hedge, now in a tree, and continually scolding
+each other with these 'chuck-chucking' sounds.
+Chaffinches were calling from the tops of the trees;
+the chaffinches now have a note much like one used
+by the yellow-hammer, different from their song and
+from their common 'fink tink.' I was walking by
+the same place, on April 24, when there was suddenly
+a tremendous screaming and threatening, and,
+glancing over the fields bordering on the Waffrons,
+there were six jays fighting. They screamed at and
+followed each other in a fury, real or apparent, up
+and down the hedge, and then across the fields out
+of sight. There were three jays together in a field
+by the Ewell road on May 1.</p>
+
+<p>Just past the bridge over the Hogsmill brook at
+Tolworth Court there begins, on the left-hand side
+of the road, a broad mound, almost a cover in itself.
+At this time, before the underwood is up, much
+that goes on in the mound can be seen. There are
+several nightingales here, and they sometimes run or
+dart along under the trailing ivy, as if a mouse had
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+rushed through it. The rufous colour of the back
+increases the impression; the hedgerows look red in
+the sunshine. Whitethroats are in full song everywhere:
+they have a twitter sometimes like swallows.
+A magpie flew up from the short green corn to a
+branch low down an elm, his back towards me, and
+as he rose his tail seemed to project from a white
+circle. The white tips of his wings met&mdash;or apparently
+so&mdash;as he fluttered, both above and beneath
+his body, so that he appeared encircled with a white
+ring.</p>
+
+<p>The swifts have not come, up to the 10th, but
+there are young thrushes about able to fly. There
+was one at the top of the garden the other day almost
+as large as his parent. Nesting is in the fullest
+progress. I chanced on a hedge-sparrow's lately, the
+whole groundwork of which was composed of the
+dry vines of the wild white convolvulus. All
+the birds are come, I think, except the swift, the
+chat, and the redstart: very likely the last two are in
+the neighbourhood, though I have not seen them.
+In the furze on Tolworth Common&mdash;a resort of
+chats&mdash;the land-lizards are busy every sunny day.
+They run over the bunches of dead, dry grass&mdash;quite
+white and blanched&mdash;grasping it in their claws,
+like a monkey with hands and prehensile feet. They
+are much swifter than would be supposed. There
+was one on the sward by the Ewell road the other
+morning, quite without a tail; the creature was as
+quick as possible, but the grass too short to hide
+under till it reached some nettles.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The roan and white cattle happily grazing in the
+meadows by the Hogsmill brook look as if they had
+never been absent, as if they belonged to the place, like
+the trees, and had never been shut up in the yards
+through so terrible a winter. The water of the
+Hogsmill has a way of escaping like that of larger
+channels, and has made for itself a course for its
+overflow across a corner of the meadow by the road.
+A thin place in the rather raised bank lets it through
+in flood-time (like a bursting loose of the Mississippi),
+and down it rushes towards the moat. Beside
+the furrows thus soaked now and then, there are
+bunches of marsh-marigold in flower, and though
+the field is bright with dandelions and buttercups,
+the marigolds are numerous enough to be visible on
+the other side of it, 300 yards or more distant, and
+are easily distinguished by their different yellow.
+White cuckoo-flowers (<i>Cardamine</i>) are so thick in
+many fields that the green tint of the grass is lost
+under their silvery hue. Bluebells are in full bloom.
+There are some on the mound between Claygate and
+the Ewell road; the footpath to Chessington from
+Roxby Farm passes a copse on the left which shimmers
+in the azure; on the mound on the right of
+the lane to Horton they are plentiful this year&mdash;the
+hedge has been cut, and consequently more have
+shot up. Cowslips innumerable. The pond by
+the Ewell road, between this and Red Lion Lane,
+is dotted with white water-crowfoot. The first that
+flowered were in the pond in the centre of Tolworth
+Common. The understalks are long and slender,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+and with a filament rather than leaves&mdash;like seaweed&mdash;but
+when the flower appears these larger leaves
+float on the surface. Quantities of this ranunculus
+come floating down the Hogsmill brook, at times
+catching against the bridge. A little pond by the
+lane near Bone's Gate was white with this flower
+lately, quite covered from bank to bank, not a
+spare inch without its silver cup. Vetches are in
+flower; there are always some up the Long
+Ditton road on the bank by Swaynes-Thorp. Shepherd's
+purse stands up in flower in the waste places,
+and on the side of the ditches thick branches of
+hedge-mustard lift their white petals. The delicate
+wind anemones flowered thickly in Claygate Lane
+this year. On April 24 the mound on the right-hand
+side was dotted with them. They had pushed
+up through the dead dry oak-leaves of last autumn.
+The foliage of the wind anemone is finely cut and
+divided, so that it casts a lovely shadow on any
+chance leaf that lies under it: it might suggest a
+design. The anemones have not flowered there like
+this since I have known the lane before. They were
+thicker than I have ever seen them there. Dog-violets,
+barren strawberry, and the yellowish-green
+spurge are in flower there now.</p>
+
+<p>The pine in front of my north window began to
+put forth its catkins some time since; those up the
+Long Ditton road are now covered thick with the
+sulphur farina or dust. I fancy three different sets of
+fruit may sometimes be seen on pines: this year's
+small and green, last year's ripe and mature, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+that of the year before dry and withered. The trees
+are all in leaf now, except the Turkey oaks&mdash;there
+are some fine young Turkey oaks by Oak Hill Path&mdash;and
+the black poplars. Oaks have been in leaf
+some time, except those that flower and are now
+garlanded with green. Ash, too, is now in leaf, and
+beech. The bees have been humming in the sycamores;
+the limes are in leaf, but their flower does
+not come yet. There were round, rosy oak-apples
+on the oak by the garden in the copse on the 9th.
+This tree is singular for bearing a crop of these
+apples every year. Its top was snapped by the snow
+that fell last October while yet the leaf was on. I
+think the apples appear on this oak earlier than on
+any about here. As for the orchards, now they are
+beautiful with bloom; walking along the hedges,
+too, you light once now and then on a crab or a
+wild apple, with its broad rosy petals showing
+behind the hawthorn. On the 7th I heard a corncrake
+in the meadow over Thames, opposite the
+Promenade, a hundred yards below Messenger's
+Eyot. It is a favourite spot with the corncrake&mdash;almost
+the only place where you are nearly sure
+to hear him. Crake! crake! So it is now high
+May, and now midnight. Antares is visible&mdash;the
+summer star.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chapbreak" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="VIGNETTES_FROM_NATURE" id="VIGNETTES_FROM_NATURE"></a>VIGNETTES FROM NATURE</h2>
+
+
+<p>I.&mdash;SPRING</p>
+
+<p>The soft sound of water moving among thousands
+of grass-blades is to the hearing as the sweetness
+of spring air to the scent. It is so faint and so
+diffused that the exact spot whence it issues cannot
+be discerned, yet it is distinct, and my footsteps are
+slower as I listen. Yonder, in the corners of the
+mead, the atmosphere is full of some ethereal vapour.
+The sunshine stays in the air there as if the green
+hedges held the wind from brushing it away. Low
+and plaintive comes the notes of a lapwing; the
+same notes, but tender with love.</p>
+
+<p>On this side by the hedge the ground is a little
+higher and dry, hung over with the lengthy boughs
+of an oak which give some shade. I always feel
+a sense of regret when I see a seedling oak in the
+grass. The two green leaves&mdash;the little stem so
+upright and confident, and though but a few inches
+high, already so completely a tree&mdash;are in themselves
+beautiful. Power, endurance, grandeur are there;
+you can grasp all with your hand and take a ship
+between the finger and thumb. Time, that sweeps
+away everything, is for a while repelled: the oak
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
+will grow when the time we know is forgotten, and
+when felled will be mainstay and safety of a generation
+in a future century. That the plant should
+start among the grass to be severed by the scythe, or
+crushed by cattle, is very pitiful; I cannot help wishing
+that it could be transplanted and protected. O!
+the countless acorns that drop in autumn not one in
+a million is permitted to become a tree: a vast waste
+of strength and beauty. From the bushes by the
+stile on the left hand (which I have just passed)
+follows the long whistle of a nightingale. His nest
+is near; he sings night and day. Had I waited on the
+stile, in a few minutes, becoming used to my presence,
+he would have made the hawthorn vibrate, so powerful
+is his voice when heard close at hand. There
+is not another nightingale along this path for at least
+a mile, though it crosses meadows and runs by hedges
+to all appearance equally suitable. But nightingales
+will not pass their limits; they seem to have a
+marked-out range as strictly defined as the line of
+a geological map. They will not go over to the
+next hedge, hardly into the field on one side of a
+favourite spot, nor a yard farther along the mound.
+Opposite the oak is a low fence of serrated green.
+Just projecting above the edges of a brook, fast-growing
+flags have thrust up their bayonet-tips.
+Beneath, these stalks are so thick in the shallow
+places that a pike can scarcely push a way
+between them. Over the brook stand some high
+maple-trees: to their thick foliage wood-pigeons
+come. The entrance to a combe&mdash;the widening
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+mouth of a valley&mdash;is beyond, with copses on the
+slopes.</p>
+
+<p>Again the plover's notes, this time in the field
+immediately behind; repeated, too, in the field on
+the right hand. One comes over, and as he flies
+he jerks a wing upwards and partly turns on his side
+in the air, rolling like a vessel in a swell. He seems
+to beat the air sideways, as if against a wall, not
+downwards. This habit makes his course appear so
+uncertain: he may go there, or yonder, or in a third
+direction, more undecided than a startled snipe. Is
+there a little vanity in that wanton flight? Is there
+a little consciousness of the spring-freshened colours
+of his plumage and pride in the dainty touch of his
+wings on the sweet wind? His love is watching his
+wayward course. He prolongs it. He has but a
+few yards to fly to reach the well-known feeding-ground
+by the brook where the grass is short;
+perhaps it has been eaten off by sheep. It is a
+straight and easy line&mdash;as a starling would fly. The
+plover thinks nothing of a straight line: he winds
+first with the curve of the hedge, then rises, uttering
+his cry, aslant, wheels, and returns; now this way,
+direct at me, as if his object was to display his snowy
+breast; suddenly rising aslant again, he wheels once
+more, and goes right away from his object over above
+the field whence he came. Another moment and he
+returns, and so to and fro, and round and round,
+till, with a sidelong, unexpected sweep, he alights by
+the brook. He stands a minute, then utters his cry,
+and runs a yard or so forward. In a little while a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+second plover arrives from the field behind; he, too,
+dances a maze in the air before he settles. Soon a third
+joins them. They are visible at that spot because
+the grass is short; elsewhere they would be hidden.
+If one of these rises and flies to and fro, almost instantly
+another follows, and then it is indeed a dance
+before they alight. The wheeling, maze-tracing,
+devious windings continue till the eye wearies and
+rests with pleasure on a passing butterfly. These
+birds have nests in the meadows adjoining; they
+meet here as a common feeding-ground. Presently
+they will disperse, each returning to his mate at the
+nest. Half an hour afterwards they will meet once
+more, either here or on the wing.</p>
+
+<p>In this manner they spend their time from dawn,
+through the flower-growing day, till dusk. When
+the sun arises over the hill into the sky, already
+blue, the plovers have been up a long while. All
+the busy morning they go to and fro: the busy
+morning when the wood-pigeons cannot rest in the
+copses on the combe side, but continually fly in and
+out; when the blackbirds whistle in the oaks; when
+the bluebells gleam with purplish lustre. At noontide
+in the dry heat it is pleasant to listen to the
+sound of water moving among the thousand thousand
+grass-blades of the mead. The flower-growing day
+lengthens out beyond the sunset, and till the hedges
+are dim the lapwings do not cease.</p>
+
+<p>Leaving now the shade of the oak, I follow the
+path into the meadow on the right, stepping by the
+way over a streamlet which diffuses its rapid current
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+broadcast over the sward till it collects again and
+pours into the brook. This next meadow is somewhat
+more raised, and not watered; the grass is high,
+and full of buttercups. Before I have gone twenty
+yards a lapwing rises out in the field, rushes towards
+me through the air, and circles round my head, making
+as if to dash at me, and uttering shrill cries. Immediately
+another comes from the mead behind the
+oak; then a third from over the hedge, and all those
+that have been feeding by the bank, till I am encircled
+with them. They wheel round, dive, rise aslant, cry,
+and wheel again, always close over me, till I have
+walked some distance, when one by one they fall off,
+and, still uttering threats, retire. There is a nest in
+this meadow, and, although it is, no doubt, a long way
+from the path, my presence even in the field, large
+as it is, is resented. The couple who imagine themselves
+threatened are quickly joined by their friends,
+and there is no rest till I have left their treasures far
+behind.</p>
+
+
+<p>II.&mdash;THE GREEN CORN</p>
+
+<p>Pure colour almost always gives the idea of fire,
+or, rather, it is perhaps as if a light shone through as
+well as the colour itself. The fresh green blade of
+corn is like this&mdash;so pellucid, so clear and pure in
+its green as to seem to shine with colour. It is not
+brilliant&mdash;not a surface gleam nor an enamel&mdash;it is
+stained through. Beside the moist clods the slender
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
+flags arise, filled with the sweetness of the earth.
+Out of the darkness under&mdash;that darkness which
+knows no day save when the ploughshare opens its
+chinks&mdash;they have come to the light. To the light
+they have brought a colour which will attract the
+sunbeams from now till harvest. They fall more
+pleasantly on the corn, toned, as if they mingled
+with it. Seldom do we realize that the world is
+practically no thicker to us than the print of our
+footsteps on the path. Upon that surface we walk
+and act our comedy of life, and what is beneath is
+nothing to us. But it is out from that underworld,
+from the dead and the unknown, from the cold,
+moist ground, that these green blades have sprung.
+Yonder a steam-plough pants up the hill, groaning
+with its own strength, yet all that strength and might
+of wheels, and piston, and chains cannot drag from
+the earth one single blade like these. Force cannot
+make it; it must grow&mdash;an easy word to speak or
+write, in fact full of potency.</p>
+
+<p>It is this mystery&mdash;of growth and life, of beauty
+and sweetness and colour, and sun-loved ways starting
+forth from the clods&mdash;that gives the corn its
+power over me. Somehow I identify myself with
+it; I live again as I see it. Year by year it is the
+same, and when I see it I feel that I have once more
+entered on a new life. And to my fancy, the spring,
+with its green corn, its violets, and hawthorn leaves,
+and increasing song, grows yearly dearer and more
+dear to this our ancient earth. So many centuries
+have flown. Now it is the manner with all natural
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
+things to gather as it were by smallest particles.
+The merest grain of sand drifts unseen into a crevice,
+and by-and-by another; after a while there is a heap;
+a century and it is a mound, and then everyone
+observes and comments on it. Time itself has gone
+on like this; the years have accumulated, first in
+drifts, then in heaps, and now a vast mound, to
+which the mountains are knolls, rises up and overshadows
+us. Time lies heavy on the world. The
+old, old earth is glad to turn from the cark and care
+of driftless centuries to the first sweet blades of
+green.</p>
+
+<p>There is sunshine to-day, after rain, and every lark
+is singing. Across the vale a broad cloud-shadow
+descends the hillside, is lost in the hollow, and presently,
+without warning, slips over the edge, crossing
+swiftly along the green tips. The sunshine follows&mdash;the
+warmer for its momentary absence. Far, far
+down in a grassy combe stands a solitary corn-rick,
+conical-roofed, casting a lonely shadow&mdash;marked
+because so solitary&mdash;and beyond it, on the rising
+slope, is a brown copse. The leafless branches take
+a brown tint in the sunlight; on the summit above
+there is furze; then more hill-lines drawn against
+the sky. In the tops of the dark pines at the corner
+of the copse, could the glance sustain itself to see
+them, there are finches warming themselves in the
+sunbeams. The thick needles shelter them from the
+current of air, and the sky is bluer above the pines.
+Their hearts are full already of the happy days to
+come, when the moss yonder by the beech, and the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+lichen on the fir-trunk, and the loose fibres caught
+in the fork of an unbending bough, shall furnish forth
+a sufficient mansion for their young. Another broad
+cloud-shadow, and another warm embrace of sunlight.
+All the serried ranks of the green corn
+bow at the word of command as the wind rushes
+over them.</p>
+
+<p>There is largeness and freedom here. Broad as
+the down and free as the wind, the thought can
+roam high over the narrow roofs in the vale. Nature
+has affixed no bounds to thought. All the palings,
+and walls, and crooked fences deep down yonder are
+artificial. The fetters and traditions, the routine, the
+dull roundabout, which deadens the spirit like the cold
+moist earth, are the merest nothing. Here it is easy
+with the physical eye to look over the highest roof,
+which must also always be the narrowest. The
+moment the eye of the mind is filled with the beauty
+of things natural an equal freedom and width of view
+comes to it. Step aside from the trodden footpath
+of personal experience, throwing away the petty
+cynicism bred of petty hopes disappointed. Step
+out upon the broad down beside the green corn, and
+let its freshness become part of life.</p>
+
+<p>The wind passes and it bends&mdash;let the wind,
+too, pass over the spirit. From the cloud-shadow
+it emerges to the sunshine&mdash;let the heart come out
+from the shadow of roofs to the open glow of the
+sky. High above, the songs of the larks fall as rain&mdash;receive
+it with open hands. Pure is the colour of
+the green flags, the slender, pointed blades&mdash;let the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+thought be pure as the light that shines through that
+colour. Broad are the downs and open the aspect&mdash;gather
+the breadth and largeness of view. Never
+can that view be wide enough and large enough;
+there will always be room to aim higher. As the
+air of the hills enriches the blood, so let the presence
+of these beautiful things enrich the inner sense.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chapbreak" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="A_KING_OF_ACRES" id="A_KING_OF_ACRES"></a>A KING OF ACRES</h2>
+
+
+<p>I.&mdash;JAMES THARDOVER</p>
+
+<p>A weather-beaten man stood by a gateway watching
+some teams at plough. The bleak March wind
+rushed across the field, reddening his face; rougher
+than a flesh-brush, it rubbed the skin, and gave it a
+glow as if each puff were a blow with the 'gloves.'
+His short brown beard was full of dust blown into
+it. Between the line of the hat and the exposed part
+of the forehead the skin had peeled slightly, literally
+worn off by the unsparing rudeness of wintry mornings.
+Like the early field veronica, which flowered
+at his feet in the short grass under the hedge, his
+eyes were blue and grey. The petals are partly of
+either hue, and so his eyes varied according to the
+light&mdash;now somewhat more grey, and now more
+blue. Tall and upright, he stood straight as a bolt,
+though both arms were on the gate, and his ashen
+walking-stick swung over it. He wore a grey overcoat,
+a grey felt hat, grey leggings, and his boots
+were grey with the dust which had settled on them.</p>
+
+<p>He was thinking: 'Farmer Bartholomew is doing
+the place better this year; he scarcely hoed a weed
+last season; the stubble was a tangle of weeds; one
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+could hardly walk across it. That second team
+stops too long at the end of the furrow&mdash;idle fellow
+that. Third team goes too fast; horses will be soon
+tired. Fourth team&mdash;he's getting beyond his work&mdash;too
+old; the stilts nearly threw him over there.
+This ground has paid for the draining&mdash;one, at all
+events. Never saw land look better. Looks
+brownish and moist&mdash;moist brownish red. Query,
+what colour is that? Ask Mary&mdash;the artist. Never
+saw it in a picture. Keeps his hedges well; this one
+is like a board on the top, thorn-boughs molten
+together; a hare could run along it (as they will
+sometimes with harriers behind them, and jump off
+the other side to baffle scent). Now, why is Bartholomew
+doing his land better this year? Keen old
+fellow! Something behind this. Has he got that
+bit of money that was coming to him? Done something,
+they said, last Doncaster; no one could get
+anything out of him. Dark as night. Sold the
+trainer some oats&mdash;that I know. Wonder how much
+the trainer pocketed over that transaction? Expect
+he did not charge them all. Still, he's a decent
+fellow. Honesty is uncertain&mdash;never met an honest
+man. Doubt if world could hang together. Bartholomew
+is honest enough; but either he has won
+some money, or he really does not want the drawback
+at audit. Takes care his horses don't look too
+well. Notice myself that farmers do not let their
+teams look so glossy as a few years ago. Like them
+to seem rough and uncared for&mdash;can't afford smooth
+coats these hard times. Don't look very glossy
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+myself; don't feel very glossy. Hate this wind&mdash;hang
+kings' ransoms! People who like these winds
+are telling falsehoods. That's broken (as one of the
+teams stopped); have to send to blacksmith. Knock
+off now; no good your pottering there. Next team
+stops to go and help potter. Third team stops to
+help second. Fourth team comes across to help
+third. All pottering. Wants Bartholomew among
+them. That's the way to do a morning's work.
+Did anyone ever see such idleness! Group about a
+broken chain&mdash;link snapped. Tie it up with your
+leathern garter&mdash;not he; no resource. What
+patience a man needs to have anything to do with
+land! Four teams idle over a snapped link! Rent!&mdash;of
+course they can't pay rent. Wonder if a gang
+of American labourers could make anything out of
+our farms? There they work from sunrise to
+sunset. Suppose import a gang and try. Did anyone
+ever see such a helpless set as that yonder?
+Depression&mdash;of course. No go-ahead in them.'</p>
+
+<p>'Mind opening the gate, you?' said a voice behind;
+and, turning, the thinker saw a dealer in a
+trap, who wanted the gate opened, to save him the
+trouble of getting down to do it himself. The
+thinker did as he was asked, and held the gate open.
+The trap went slowly through.</p>
+
+<p>'Will you come on and take a glass?' said the
+dealer, pointing with the butt-end of his whip.
+'Crown.' This was sententious for the Crown in the
+hamlet. Country-folk speak in pieces, putting the
+principal word in a sentence for the entire paragraph.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The thinker shook his head and shut the gate,
+carefully hasping it. The dealer drove on.</p>
+
+<p>'Who's that?' thought the grey man, watching
+the trap jolt down the rough road. 'Wants veal, I
+suppose. No veal here&mdash;no good. Now, look!'</p>
+
+<p>The group by the broken chain beckoned to the
+trap; a lad went across to it with the chain, got up,
+and was driven off, so saving himself half a mile on
+his road to the forge.</p>
+
+<p>'Anything to save themselves exertion. Nothing
+will make them move faster&mdash;like whipping a carthorse
+into a gallop; it soon dies away in the old
+jog-trot. Why, they have actually started again&mdash;actually
+started!'</p>
+
+<p>He watched the teams a little longer, heedless of
+the wind, which he abused, but which really did not
+affect him, and then walked along the hedgerow
+downhill. Two men were sowing a field on the
+slope, swinging the hand full of grain from the hip
+regular as time itself, a swing calculated to throw the
+seed so far, but not too far, and without jerk. The
+next field had just been manured, and he stopped to
+glance at the crowds of small birds which were looking
+over the straw&mdash;finches and sparrows, and the
+bluish grey of pied wagtails. There were hundreds
+of small birds. While he stood, a hedge-sparrow
+uttered his thin, pleading song on the hedge-top, and
+a meadow-pipit, which had mounted a little way in
+the air, came down with outspread wings, with a
+short 'Seep, seep,' to the ground. Lark and pipit
+seem near relations; only the skylark sings rising,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+descending, anywhere, but the pipits chiefly while
+slowly descending. There had been a rough attempt
+at market-gardening in the field after this, and rows
+of cabbage gone up to seed stood forlorn and ragged.
+On the top of one of these a skylark was perched,
+calling at intervals; for though classed as a non-percher,
+perch he does sometimes. Meadows succeeded
+on the level ground; one had been covered
+with the scrapings of roads, a whitish, crumbling
+dirt, dry, and falling to pieces in the wind. The
+grass was pale, its wintry hue not yet gone, and the
+clods seemed to make it appear paler. Among these
+clods four or five thrushes were seeking their food;
+on a bare oak a blackbird was perched, his mate no
+doubt close by in the hedgerow; at the margin of a
+pond a black-and-white wagtail waded in the water;
+a blue tit flew across to the corner. Brown thrushes,
+dark blackbird, blue tit, and wagtail gave a little
+colour to the angle of the meadow. A gleam of
+passing sunlight brightened it. Two wood-pigeons
+came to a thick bush growing over a grey wall on
+the other side&mdash;for ivy-berries, probably.</p>
+
+<p>A cart passed at a little distance, laden with red
+mangolds, fresh from the pit in which they had been
+stored; the roots had grown out a trifle, and the rootlets
+were mauve. A goldfinch perched on a dry dead
+stalk of wild carrot, a stalk that looked too slender
+to bear the bird. As the weather-beaten man moved,
+the goldfinch flew, and the golden wings outspread
+formed a bright contrast with the dull white clods.
+Crossing the meadow, and startling the wood-pigeons,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+our friend scaled the grey walls, putting his
+foot in a hole left for the purpose. Dark moss lined
+the interstices between the irregular and loosely
+placed stones. Above, on the bank, and greener
+than the grass, grew moss at the roots of ash-stoles
+and wherever there was shelter. Broad, rank, green
+arum leaves crowded each other in places. Red
+stalks of herb-robert spread open. The weather-beaten
+man gathered a white wild violet from the
+shelter of a dead dry oak-leaf, and as he placed it in
+his buttonhole, paused to listen to the baying of
+hounds. Yowp! yow! The cries echoed from the
+bank and filled the narrow beechwood within. A
+shot followed, and then another, and a third after an
+interval. More yowping. The grey-brown head of
+a rabbit suddenly appeared over the top of the bank,
+within three yards of him, and he could see the
+creature's whiskers nervously working, as its mind
+estimated its chances of escape. Instead of turning
+back, the rabbit made a rush to get under an ash-stole,
+where was a burrow. The yowping went
+slowly away; the beeches rang again as if the beagles
+were in cry. Two assistant-keepers were working
+the outskirts, and shooting the rabbits which sat out
+in the brushwood, and so were not to be captured by
+nets and ferrets. The ground-game was strictly kept
+down; the noise was made by half a dozen puppies
+they had with them. Passing through the ash-stoles,
+and next the narrow beechwood, the grey man walked
+across the open park, and after awhile came in sight
+of Thardover House. His steps were directed to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
+the great arched porch, beneath which the village
+folk boasted a waggon-load could pass. The inner
+door swung open as if by instinct at his approach.
+The man who had so neighbourly opened the gate
+to the dealer in the trap was James Thardover, the
+owner of the property. Historic as was his name
+and residence, he was utterly devoid of affectation&mdash;a
+true man of the land.</p>
+
+
+<p>II.&mdash;NEW TITLE-DEEDS</p>
+
+<p>Deed, seal, and charter give but a feeble hold compared
+with that which is afforded by labour. James
+Thardover held his lands again by right of labour;
+he had taken possession of them once more with
+thought, design, and actual work, as his ancestors
+had with the sword. He had laid hands, as it were,
+on every acre. Those who work, own. There are
+many who receive rent who do not own; they are
+proprietors, not owners; like receiving dividends on
+stock, which stock is never seen or handled. Their
+rights are legal only; his right was the right of
+labour, and, it might be added, of forbearance. It is
+a condition of ownership in the United States that
+the settler clears so much and brings so many acres
+into cultivation. It was just this condition which he
+had practically carried out upon the Thardover estate.
+He had done so much, and in so varied a manner,
+that it is difficult to select particular acts for enumeration.
+All the great agricultural movements of the
+last thirty years he had energetically supported.
+There was the draining movement. The undulating
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+contour of the country, deep vales alternating with
+moderate brows, gave a sufficient supply of water to
+every farm, and on the lower lands led to flooding
+and the formation of marshes. Horley Bottom,
+where the hay used to be frequently carried into the
+river by a June freshet, was now safe from flood.
+Flag Marsh had been completely drained, and made
+some of the best wheat-land in the neighbourhood.
+Part of a bark canoe was found in it; the remnants
+were preserved at Thardover House, but gradually
+fell to pieces.</p>
+
+<p>Longboro' Farm was as dry now as any such soil
+could be. More or less draining had been carried
+out on twenty other farms, sometimes entirely at his
+expense. Sometimes the tenant paid a small percentage
+on the sum expended; generally this percentage
+fell off in the course of a year or two. The
+tenant found he could not pay it. Except on Flag
+Marsh, the drainage did not pay him &pound;50. Perhaps
+it might have done, had the seasons been
+better; but, as it had actually happened, the rents
+had decreased instead of increasing. Tile-pipes had
+not availed against rain and American wheat. So far
+as income was concerned, he would have been richer
+had the money so expended been allowed to accumulate
+at the banker's. The land as land was certainly
+improved in places, as on Bartholomew's farm.
+Thardover never cared for the steam-plough; personally,
+he disliked it. Those who represented agricultural
+opinion at the farmers' clubs and in the
+agricultural papers raised so loud a cry for it that he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+went half-way to meet them. One of the large
+tenants was encouraged to invest in the steam-plough
+by a drawback on his rent, on condition that it
+should be hired out to others. The steam-plough,
+Thardover soon discovered, was not profitable to the
+landowner. It reduced the fields to a dead level.
+They had previously been thrown into 'lands,' with
+a drain-trench on each side. On this dead level
+water did not run off quickly, and the growth of
+weeds increased. Tenants got into a habit of shirking
+the extirpation of the weeds. The best farmers
+on the estate would not use it at all. To very large
+tenants, and to small tenants who could not keep
+enough horses, it was profitable at times. It did
+not appear that a single sack more of wheat was
+raised, nor a single additional head of stock maintained,
+since the steam-plough arrived.</p>
+
+<p>Paul of Embersbury, who occupied some of the
+best meadow and upland country, a man of some
+character and standing, had taken to the shorthorns
+before Thardover succeeded to the property. Thardover
+assisted him in every way, and bought some
+of the best blood. There was no home-farm; the
+house was supplied from Bartholomew's dairy, and
+the Squire did not care to upset the old traditionary
+arrangements by taking a farm in hand. What he
+bought went to Embersbury, and Paul did well. As
+a consequence, there were good cattle all over the
+estate. The long prices formerly fetched by Paul's
+method had much fallen off, but substantial sums
+were still paid. Paul had faced the depression better
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+than most of them. He was bitter, as was only
+natural, against the reaction in favour of black cattle.
+The upland tenants, though, had a good many of
+the black, in spite of Paul's frowns and thunders
+after the market ordinary at Barnboro' town. He
+would put down his pipe, bustle upon his feet, lean
+his somewhat protuberant person on the American
+leather of the table, and address the dozen or so who
+stayed for spirits and water after dinner, without the
+pretence of a formal meeting. He spoke in very
+fair language, short, jerky sentences, but well-chosen
+words. He who had taken the van in improvements
+thirty years ago was the bitterest against any proposed
+change now. Black cattle were thoroughly bad.</p>
+
+<p>Another of his topics was the hiring fair, where
+servant-girls stood waiting for engagements, and
+which it was proposed to abolish. Paul considered
+it was taking the bread and cheese out of the poor
+wenches' mouths. They could stand there and get
+hired for nothing, instead of having to pay half a
+crown for advertising, and get nothing then. But
+though the Squire had supported the shorthorns,
+even the shorthorns had not prevented the downward
+course things agricultural were following.</p>
+
+<p>Then there was the scientific movement, the cry
+for science among the farmers. He founded a
+scholarship, invited the professors to his place,
+lunched them, let them experiment on little pieces of
+land, mournful-looking plots. Nothing came of it.
+He drew a design for a new cottage himself, a
+practical plain place. The builders told him it was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
+far dearer to put up than ornamental but inconvenient
+structures. Thardover sunk his money his
+own way, and very comfortable cottages they were.
+Ground-game he had kept down for years before the
+Act. Farm-buildings he had improved freely. The
+education movement, however, stirred him most.
+He went into it enthusiastically. Thardover village
+was one of the first places to become efficient under
+the new legislation. This was a piece of practical
+work after his own heart. Generally, legislative
+measures were so far off from country people. They
+affected the condition of large towns, of the Black
+Country, of the weavers or miners, distant folk. To
+the villages and hamlets of purely agricultural districts
+these Acts had no existence. The Education
+Act was just the reverse. This was a statute which
+came right down into the hamlets, which was nailed
+up at the cross-roads, and ruled the barn, the plough,
+and scythe. Something tangible, that could be
+carried out and made into a fact&mdash;something he
+could do. Thardover did it with the thoroughness
+of his nature. He found the ground, lent the money,
+saw to the building, met the Government inspectors,
+and organized the whole. A committee of the
+tenants were the ostensible authority, the motive-power
+was the Squire. He worked at it till it was
+completely organized, for he felt as if he were helping
+to mould the future of this great country. Broad-minded
+himself, he understood the immense value of
+education, looked at generally; and he thought, too,
+that by its aid the farmer and the landowner might
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
+be enabled to compete with the foreigner, who was
+driving them from the market. No speeches and no
+agitation could equal the power concentrated in that
+plain school-house; there was nothing from which
+he hoped so much.</p>
+
+<p>Only one held aloof and showed hostility to the
+movement, or rather to the form it took. His
+youngest and favourite daughter, Mary, the artist,
+rebelled against it. Hitherto she had ruled him as
+she choose. She had led in every kind act&mdash;acts too
+kind to be called charity. She had been the life of
+the place. Perhaps it was the strong-minded women
+whom the cry of education brought to Thardover
+House that set ajar some chord in her sensitive
+mind. Strident voices checked her sympathies, and
+hard rule-and-line work like this repelled her. Till
+then she had been the constant companion of the
+Squire's walks; but while the school was being
+organized she would not go with him. She walked
+where she could not see the plain angular building;
+she said it set her teeth on edge.</p>
+
+<p>When the strident voices had departed, when time
+had made the school-house part and parcel of the
+place, like the cottages, Mary changed her ways, and
+occasionally called there. She took a class once a
+week of the elder girls, and taught them in her own
+fashion at home&mdash;most unorthodox teaching it was&mdash;in
+which the works of the best poets were the chief
+subjects, and portfolios of engravings were found on
+the table. Long since father and daughter had
+resumed their walks together.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It was in this way that James Thardover made his
+estate his own&mdash;he held possession by right of labour.
+He was resident ten months out of twelve, and after
+all these public and open works he did far more in
+private. There was not an acre on the property
+which he had not personally visited. The farm-houses
+and farm-buildings were all known to him.
+He rode from tenancy to tenancy; he visited the
+men at plough, and stood among the reapers.
+Neither the summer heat nor the winds of March
+prevented him from seeing with his own eyes. The
+latest movement was the silo system, the burying of
+grass under pressure, instead of making it into hay.
+By these means the clouds are to be defied, and a
+plentiful supply of fodder secured. Time alone can
+show whether this, the latest invention, is any more
+powerful than steam-plough or guano to uphold agriculture
+against the shocks of fortune. But James
+Thardover would have tried any plan that had been
+suggested to him. It was thus that he laid hold on
+his lands with the strongest of titles&mdash;the work of
+his own hands. Yet still the tenants were unable to
+pay the former rent. Some had failed or left, and
+their farms were vacant; and nothing could be more
+discouraging than the condition of affairs upon the
+property.</p>
+
+
+<p>III.&mdash;A RING-FENCE: CONCLUSION</p>
+
+<p>There were great elms in the Out-park, whose limbs
+or boughs, as large as the trunk itself, came down
+almost to the ground. They touched the tops of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+the white wild parsley; and when sheep were lying
+beneath, the jackdaws stepped from the sheep's back
+to the bough and returned again. The jackdaws
+had their nests in the hollow places of these elms;
+for the elm as it ages becomes full of cavities. These
+great trees often divided into two main boughs, rising
+side by side, and afar off visible as two dark streaks
+among the green. For many years no cattle had
+been permitted in the park, and the boughs of the
+trees had grown in a drooping form, as they naturally
+do unless eaten or broken by animals pushing against
+them. But since the times of agricultural pressure,
+a large part of the domain had been fenced off, and
+was now partly grazed and partly mown, being called
+the Out-park. There were copses at the farther side,
+where in spring the may flowered; the purple orchis
+was drawn up high by the trees and bushes&mdash;twice
+as high as its fellows in the mead, where a stray
+spindle-tree grew; and from these copses the cuckoos
+flew round the park.</p>
+
+<p>But the thinnest hedge about the wheat-fields was
+as interesting as the park or the covers; and this is
+the remarkable feature of English scenery&mdash;that its
+perfection, its beauty, and its interest are not confined
+to any masterpiece here and there, walled in or
+enclosed, or at least difficult of access and isolated,
+but it extends to the smallest portion of the country.
+Wheatfield hedges are the thinnest of hedges, kept
+so that the birds may find no shelter, and that the
+numerous caterpillars may not breed in them more
+than can be helped. Such a hedge is so low it can
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+be leaped over, and so narrow that it is a mere
+screen of twisted hawthorn branches which can be
+seen through, like screens of twisted stone in ancient
+chapels. But the sparrows come to it, and the finches,
+the mice, and weasles, and now and then a crow, who
+searches along, and goes in and out and quests like
+a spaniel. It is so tough, this twisted screen of branches,
+that a charge of shot would be stopped by it; if a pellet
+or two slid through an interstice, the majority would
+be held as if by a shield of wicker-work. Old Bartholomew,
+the farmer, sent his men once or twice
+along with reaping-hooks to clear away the weeds
+that grew up here under such slight shelter; but other
+farmers were not so careful. Then convolvulus
+grew over the thin screen, a corncockle stood up
+taller than the hedge itself; in time of harvest, yellow
+St. John's wort flowered beside it, and later on, bunches
+of yellow-weed.</p>
+
+<p>A lark rose on the other side, and so caused the
+glance to be lifted and to look farther, and away
+yonder was a farm-house at the foot of a hill. Pale
+yellow stubble covered the hill, rising like a background
+to the red-tile roof, and to the elms beside
+the house, among whose branches there were pale
+yellow spots. Round wheat-ricks stood in a double
+row on the left hand&mdash;count them, and you counted
+the coin of the land, bank-notes in straw&mdash;and on
+the right and in front were green meads, and horses
+feeding&mdash;horses who had done good work in plough-time
+and harvest-time, and would soon be at plough
+again. There were green meads, because some green
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+meads are a necessity of an English farm-house, and
+there are few without them, even when in the midst
+of corn. Meads in which the horses feed, a pony
+for the children and for the pony-cart, turkeys, two
+or three cows&mdash;all the large and small creatures that
+live about the place. When the land was torn up
+and ploughed for corn of old time, these green
+enclosures were left to stay on, till now it seems as
+if pressure of low prices for wheat would cause the
+corn-land to again become pasture. Of old time,
+golden wheat conquered and held possession, and
+now the grass threatens to oust the conqueror.</p>
+
+<p>Had anyone studied either of these three&mdash;the great
+elms in the Out-park, or the thin twisted screen of
+hedge, or the red-tile roof, and the yellow stubble
+behind it on the hill&mdash;he might have found material
+for a picture in each. There was, in truth, in each
+far more than anyone could put into a picture, or
+than anyone could put into a book; for the painter
+can but give one aspect of one day, and the writer
+a mere catalogue of things; but Nature refreshes the
+reality every day with different tints, and as it were
+new ideas, so that, although it is always there, it is
+never twice the same. Over that stubble on the hill
+there were other hills, and among these a combe or
+valley, in which stood just such another farm-house,
+but differently placed, with few trees, and those
+low, somewhat bare in its immediate surroundings,
+but above, on each side, close at hand, sloping ramparts
+of green turf rising high, till the larks that sang
+above seemed to sing in another land, like that found
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+by Jack when he clomb the beanstalk. Along this
+combe was a cover of gorse, and in spring there was
+a mile of golden bloom, richer than gold in colour,
+leading like a broad highway of gold down to the
+house. From those ramparts in high summer&mdash;which
+is when the corn is ripe and the reapers in
+it&mdash;there could be seen a slope divided into squares
+of varied grain. This on the left of the fertile undulation
+was a maize colour, which, when the sunlight
+touched it, seemed to have a fleeting hue of purple
+somewhere within. There is no purple in ripe wheat
+visible to direct and considering vision; look for it
+specially, and it will not be seen. Purple forms no
+part of any separate wheat-ear or straw; brown and
+yellow in the ear, yellow in the upper part of the
+straw, and still green towards the earth. But when
+the distant beams of sunlight travelling over the hill
+swept through the rich ripe grain, for a moment there
+was a sense of purple on the retina. Beyond this
+square was a pale gold piece, and then one where
+the reapers had worked hard, and the shocks stood
+in diagonal rows; this was a bronze, or brown and
+bronze, and beside it was a green of clover.</p>
+
+<p>Farther on, the different green of the hill turf, and
+white sheep, feeding in an extended crescent, the bow
+of the crescent gradually descending the sward. The
+hills of themselves beautiful, and possessing views
+which are their property and belong to them&mdash;a twofold
+value. The woods on the lower slopes full of
+tall brake fern, and holding in their shadowy depths
+the spirit of old time. In the woods it is still the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+past, and the noisy mechanic present of this manufacturing
+century has no place. Enter in among the
+round-boled beeches which the squirrels rush up,
+twining round like ivy in ascent, where they nibble
+the beech-nuts forty feet aloft, and let the husks drop
+to your feet; where the wood-pigeon sits and does not
+move, safe in the height and thickness of the spray.
+There are jew-berries or dew-berries on a bramble-bush,
+which grows where the sunlight and rain fall
+direct to the ground, unchecked by boughs. They
+are full of the juice of autumn, black, rich, vine-like,
+taken fresh from the prickly bough. Low
+down in the hollow is a marshy spot, sedge-grown,
+and in the sedge lie yellow leaves of willow already
+fallen. Here in the later months will come a woodcock
+or two, with feathers so brown and leaf-like of
+hue and markings that the plumage might have been
+printed in colours from brown leaves of beech. No
+springes are set for the woodcocks now, but the
+markings are the same on the feathers as centuries
+since; the brown beech-leaves lie in the dry hollows
+the year through just as they did then; the large
+dew-berries are as rich; and the nuts as sweet. It
+is the past in the wood, and Time here never grows
+any older. Could you bring back the red stag&mdash;as
+you may easily in fancy&mdash;and place him among the
+tall brake, and under the beeches, he should not
+know that a day had gone by since the stern Roundheads
+shot down the last of his race hereabouts in
+Charles I.'s days. For the leaves are turning as they
+turned then to the altered colour of the sun's rays as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+he declines in his noonday arch, lower and lower every
+day; his rays are somewhat yellower than in dry hot
+June; a little of the tint of the ripe wheat floats in
+the sunshine. To this the woods turn. First, the
+nut-tree leaves drop, and the green brake is quickly
+yellow; the slender birch becomes lemon on its upper
+branches; the beech reddens; by-and-by the first ripe
+acorn falls, and there's as much cawing of the rooks
+in the oaks at acorn-time as at their nests in the elms
+in March.</p>
+
+<p>All these things happened in the old, old time
+before the red stags were shot down; the leaves
+changed as the sunbeams became less brilliantly
+white; the woodcocks arrived; the mice had the last
+of the acorns which had fallen, and which the rooks
+and jays and squirrels had spared for them after
+feasting to the full of their greediness. This ancient
+oak, whose thick bark, like cast-iron for ruggedness
+at the base, has grown on steadily ever since the last
+deer bounded beneath it, utterly heedless of the noisy
+rattle of machinery in the northern cities, unmoved
+by any shriek of engine, or hum, or flapping of loose
+belting, or any volume of smoke drifting into the air&mdash;I
+wish that the men now serving the great polished
+wheels, and works in iron and steel and brass, could
+somehow be spared an hour to sit under this ancient
+oak in Thardover South Wood, and come to know
+from actual touch of its rugged bark that the past is
+living now, that Time is no older, that Nature still
+exists as full as ever, and to see that all the factories
+of the world have made no difference, and therefore
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
+not to pin their faith to any theory born and sprung
+up among the crush and pale-faced life of modern
+time; but to look for themselves at the rugged oak-bark,
+and up to the sky above the highest branches,
+and to take an acorn and consider its story and possibilities,
+and to watch the sly squirrel coming down,
+as they sit quietly, to play almost at their feet. That
+they might gather to themselves some of the leaves&mdash;mental
+and spiritual leaves&mdash;of the ancient forest,
+feeling nearer to the truth and soul, as it were, that
+lives on in it. They would feel as if they had got
+back to their original existence, and had become
+themselves, as they ought to be, could they live
+such life, untouched by artificial care. Then, how
+hurt they would be if any proposed to cut down that
+oak; if any proposed the felling of the forest, and
+the death of its meaning. It would be like a blow
+aimed at themselves. No picture that could be
+bought at a thousand guineas could come near that
+ancient oak; but you can carry away the memory of
+it, the picture and thought in your mind for nothing.
+If the oak were cut down, it would be like thrusting
+a stick through some valuable painting on your walls
+at home.</p>
+
+<p>The common below the South Wood, even James
+Thardover with all his desire for improvement could
+not do much good with; the soil, and the impossibility
+of getting a fall for draining, all checked effort there.
+A wild, rugged waste, you say, at first, glancing at the
+rushes, and the gaunt signpost standing up among
+them, the anthills, and thistles. Thistles have colour
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+in their bloom, and the prickly leaves are finely cut;
+rushes&mdash;green rushes&mdash;are notes of the season, and
+with their slender tips point to the days in the book
+of the year; they are brown now at the tip, and some
+bent downwards in an angle. The brown will descend
+the stalk till the snipes come with grey-grass colours
+in their wings. But all the beatings of the rain will
+not cast the rushes utterly down; they will send up
+fresh green successors for the spring, for the cuckoo
+to float along over on his way to the signpost, where
+he will perch a few minutes, and call in the midst of
+the wilderness. There, too, the lapwings leave their
+eggs on the ground among the rushes, and rise, and
+complainingly call. The warm showers of June call
+up the iris in the corner where the streamlet widens,
+and under the willows appear large yellow flowers
+above the flags. Pink and white blossom of the
+rest-harrow comes on bushy plants where the common
+is dry, and there is heath, and heather, and fern.
+The waste has its treasures too&mdash;as the song-thrush
+has his in the hawthorn bush&mdash;its treasures of flowers,
+as the wood its beauties of tree and leaf, and the hills
+their wheat.</p>
+
+<p>The ring-fence goes farther than this; it encloses
+the living creatures, yet without confining them. The
+wing of the wood-pigeon, as the bird perches, forms
+a defined curve against its body. The forward edge
+of the wing&mdash;its thickest part&mdash;as it is pressed to its
+side, draws a line sweeping round&mdash;a painter's line.
+How many wood-pigeons are there in the South
+Wood alone, besides the copses and the fir-plantations?
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+How many turtle-doves in spring in the
+hedges and outlying thickets, in summer among the
+shocks of corn? And all these are his&mdash;the Squire's&mdash;not
+in the sense of possession, for no true wild
+creature was ever anyone's yet; it would die first;
+but still, within his ring-fence, and their destinies
+affected by his will, since he can cut down their
+favourite ash and hawthorn, or thin them with shot.
+Neither of which he does. The robin, methinks,
+sings sweetest of autumn-tide in the deep woods,
+when no other birds speak or trill, unexpectedly
+giving forth his plaintive note, complaining that the
+summer is going, and the time of love, and the sweet
+cares of the nest; telling you that the berries are
+brown, the dew-berries over-ripe, and dropping of
+over-ripeness like dew as the morning wind shakes
+the branch; that the wheat is going to the stack, and
+that the rusty plough will soon be bright once more
+by the attrition of the earth.</p>
+
+<p>Many of them sing thus in the South Wood, yet
+scarce any two within sound of each other, for the
+robin is jealous, and likes to have you all to himself
+as he tells his tale. Song-thrushes&mdash;what ranks of
+them in April; larks, what hundreds and hundreds
+of them on the hills above the green wheat; finches
+of varied species; blackbirds; nightingales; crakes
+in the meadows; partridges; a whole page might be
+filled merely with their names.</p>
+
+<p>These, too, are in the ring-fence with the hills
+and woods, the yellow iris of the common, and the
+red-roofed farm-houses. Besides which, there are
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
+beings infinitely higher&mdash;namely, men and women in
+village and hamlet, and more precious still, those
+little children with hobnail boots and clean jackets
+and pinafores, who go a-blackberrying on their way
+to school. All these are in the ring-fence. Upon
+their physical destinies the Squire can exercise a
+powerful influence, and has done so, as the school
+itself testifies.</p>
+
+<p>Now, is not a large estate a living picture? Or
+rather, is it not formed of a hundred living pictures?
+So beautiful it looks, its hills, its ripe wheat, its red-roofed
+farm-houses, and acres upon acres of oaks; so
+beautiful, it must be valuable&mdash;most valuable; it is
+visible, tangible wealth. It is difficult to disabuse
+anyone's mind of that idea; yet, as we have seen,
+with all the skill, science, and expenditure Thardover
+could bring to bear upon it, all his personal
+effort was in vain. It was a possession, not a profit.
+Had not James Thardover's ancestors invested their
+wealth in building streets of villas in the outskirts of
+a great city, he could not have done one-fifth what
+he had. Men who had made their fortunes in
+factories&mdash;the noisy factories of the present century&mdash;paid
+him high rents for these residences; and thus
+it was that the labour and time of the many-handed
+operatives in mill, factory, and workshop really went
+to aid in maintaining these living pictures. Without
+that outside income the Squire could not have reduced
+the rents of his tenants, so that they could push through
+the depression; without that outside income he could
+not have drained the lands, put up those good
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+buildings, assisted the school, and in a hundred ways
+helped the people. Those who watched the polished
+machinery under the revolving shaft, and tended the
+loom, really helped to keep the beauties of South
+Wood, the grain-grown hills, the flower-strewn
+meadows. These were so beautiful, it seemed as
+if they must represent money&mdash;riches; but they did
+not. They had a value much higher than that. As
+the spring rises in the valley at the foot of the hills
+and slowly increases till it forms a river, to which
+ships resort, so these fields and woods, meads and
+brooks, were the source from which the city was
+derived. If the operative in the factory, or tending
+the loom, had traced his descent, he would have
+found that his grandfather, or some scarcely more
+remote ancestor, was a man of the land. He followed
+the plough, or tended the cattle, and his
+children went forth to earn higher wages in the
+town. For the hamlet and the outlying cottage are
+the springs whence the sinew and muscle of populous
+cities are derived. The land is the fountain-head
+from which the spring of life flows, widening into
+a river. The river at its broad mouth disdains the
+spring; the city in its immensity disdains the hamlet
+and the ploughman. Yet if the spring ceased, the
+ships could not frequent the river; if the hamlet and
+the ploughman were wiped out by degrees, the city
+must run dry of life. Therefore the South Wood
+and the park, the hamlet and the fields, had a value
+no one can tell how many times above the actual
+money rental, and the money earned by the operatives
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+in factory and workshop could not have been better
+expended than in supporting it.</p>
+
+<p>But it had another value still&mdash;which they too
+helped to sustain&mdash;the value of beauty. Parliament
+has several times intervened to save the Lake District
+from the desecrating intrusion of useless railways.
+So, too, the beauty of these woods, and grain-grown
+hills, of the very common, is worth preservation at
+the hands and votes of the operatives in factory and
+mill. If a man loves the brick walls of his narrow
+dwelling in a close-built city, and the flowers which
+he has trained with care in the window, how much
+more would he love the hundred living pictures like
+those round about Thardover House! After any
+artificer had once seen such an oak and rested under
+it, if any threatened to cut it down, he would feel as
+if a blow had been delivered at his heart. His efforts,
+therefore, should be not to destroy these pictures, but
+to preserve them. All the help that they can give is
+needed to assist a King of Acres in his struggle, and
+the struggle of the farmers and labourers&mdash;equally
+involved&mdash;against the adverse influences which press
+so heavily on English agriculture.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chapbreak" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="THE_STORY_OF_SWINDON" id="THE_STORY_OF_SWINDON"></a>THE STORY OF SWINDON</h2>
+
+
+<p>We have all of us passed through Swindon Station,
+whether <i>en route</i> to Southern Wales, to warm Devon&mdash;the
+fern-land&mdash;to the Channel Islands, or to
+Ireland. The ten minutes for refreshment, now in
+the case of certain trains reduced to five, have made
+thousands of travellers familiar with the name of the
+spot. Those who have not actually been there can
+recall to memory a shadowy tradition which has
+grown up and propagated itself, that here the soup
+skins the tongue, and that generally it is a near
+relative of the famous 'Mugby Junction.' Those
+who have been there retain at least a confused recollection
+of large and lofty saloons, velvet sofas, painted
+walls, and long semicircular bars covered with glittering
+glasses and decanters. Or it may be that the
+cleverly executed silver model of a locomotive under
+a glass case lingers still in their memories. At all
+events Swindon is a well-known oasis, familiar to the
+travelling public. Here let us do an act of justice.
+Much has been done of late to ameliorate many of
+the institutions which formerly led to bitter things
+being said against the place. The soup is no longer
+liquid fire, the beer is not lukewarm, the charges are
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+more moderate; the lady manager has succeeded in
+substituting order for disorder, comfort and attention
+in place of lofty disdain. Passengers have not got
+to cross the line for a fresh ticket or to telegraph;
+the whole place is reformed. So much the better
+for the traveller. But how little do these birds of
+passage imagine the varied interest of the strange
+and even romantic story which is hidden in this
+most unromantic spot, given over, as it seems, to
+bricks and mortar!</p>
+
+<p>Not that it ever had a history in the usual sense.
+There is but a faint, dim legend that the great
+Sweyn halted with his army on this hill&mdash;thence
+called Sweyn's dune, and so Swindon. There is a
+family here whose ancestry goes back to the times
+of the Vikings; which was in honour when Fair
+Rosamond bloomed at Woodstock; which fought in
+the great Civil War. Nothing further. The real
+history, written in iron and steel, of the place began
+forty years ago only. Then a certain small party of
+gentlemen sat down to luncheon on the greensward
+which was then where the platform is now. The
+furze was in blossom around them; the rabbits
+frisked in and out of their burrows; two or three
+distant farm-houses, one or two cottages, these were
+all the signs of human habitation, except a few cart-ruts
+indicating a track used for field purposes. There
+these gentlemen lunched, and one among them,
+ay, two among them, meditated great things, which
+the first planned, and the second lived to see realize
+the most sanguine anticipations. These two gentlemen
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+were Isambard Brunel and Daniel Gooch.
+Driven away from the original plan, which was to
+follow the old coach-road, they had come here to
+survey and reconnoitre a possible track running in
+the valley at the northern edge of the great range of
+Wiltshire Downs. They decided that here should
+be their junction and their workshop. Immense
+sacrifices, enormous expenditure, the directors of the
+new railway incurred in their one great idea of getting
+it finished! They could not stay to cart the
+earth from the cuttings to the places where it was
+required for embanking, so where they excavated
+thousands of tons of clay they purchased land to
+cast it upon out of their way; and where they
+required an embankment they purchased a hill, and
+boldly removed it to fill up the hollow. They
+could not stay for the seasons, for proper weather
+to work in, and in consequence of this their clay
+embankment, thrown up wet and saturated, swelled
+out, bulged at the sides, and could not be made
+stable, till at last they drove rows of piles on each
+side, and chained them together with chain-cables,
+and so confined the slippery soil. They drove these
+piles, tall beech-trees, 20 feet into the earth, and at
+this day every train passes over tons of chain-cables
+hidden beneath the ballast. The world yet remembers
+the gigantic cost of the Box Tunnel, and how
+heaven and earth were moved to get the line open;
+and at last it was open, but at what a cost!&mdash;a cost
+that hung like a millstone round the neck of the
+company, till a man rose into power who had the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
+talent of administration, and that man was the very
+companion of Brunel whom we saw lunching among
+the furze-bushes. Reckless as the expenditure was,
+one cannot but admire the determination which
+overcame every obstacle. For the great line a
+workshop was needed, and that workshop was built
+at Swindon. The green fields were covered with
+forges, the hedges disappeared to make way for
+cottages for the workmen. The workmen required
+food&mdash;tradesmen came and supplied that food&mdash;and
+Swindon rose as Chicago rose, as if by magic. From
+that day to this additions have been made, and other
+departments concentrated upon this one spot, till at
+the present time the factory covers a space equal
+to that of a moderate farm, and employs nearly
+four thousand workmen, to whom three hundred
+thousand pounds are yearly paid, whereby to purchase
+their daily bread. But at that early stage
+the difficulty was to find experienced workmen,
+and still greater to discover men who could superintend
+them. For these it was necessary to go up
+into the shrewd North, which had already foreseen
+the demand that must arise, and had partially educated
+her children in the new life that was about to
+dawn on the world; and so it is that to this time the
+names of those who are in authority over this army
+of workers carry with them in their sound a strong
+flavour of the heather and the brae, and seem more
+in accordance with ideas of 'following the wild deer'
+than of a dwelling in the midst of the clangour and
+smoke.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>All these new inhabitants of the hitherto deserted
+fields had to be lodged, and in endeavouring to solve
+this problem the company were induced to try an
+experiment which savoured not a little of communism,
+though not so intended. A building was
+erected which was locally called the 'barracks,' and
+it well deserved the name, for at one time as many as
+perhaps five hundred men found shelter in it. It was
+a vast place, with innumerable rooms and corridors.
+The experiment did not altogether answer, and was
+in time abandoned, when the company built whole
+streets, and even erected a covered market-place for
+their labourers. They went further, and bore the
+chief expense in building a church. A reading-room
+was started, and grew and grew till a substantial
+place was required for the accommodation of the
+members. Finally, the 'barracks' was converted
+into a place of worship for a Dissenting body, and a
+grand hall it afforded when the interior was removed
+and only the shell left. But by this time vast changes
+had taken place, and great extensions had arisen
+through private energy. This land was the poorest
+in the neighbourhood; low-lying, shallow soil on
+top of an endless depth of stiff clay, worthless for
+arable purposes, of small value for pasture, covered
+with furze, rushes, and rowen; so much so that
+when a certain man with a little money purchased a
+good strip of it, he was talked of as a fool, and considered
+to have committed a most egregious error.
+How vain is human wisdom! In a few years the
+railway came. Land rose in price, and this very
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+strip brought its owner thousands; so that the fool
+became wise, and the wise was deemed of no account.
+Private speculators, seeing the turn things were
+taking, ran up rows of houses; building societies
+stepped in and laid out streets; a whole town
+seemed to start into being at once. Still the company
+continued to concentrate their works at the
+junction, and at last added the culminating stroke
+by bringing the carriage department here, which was
+like planting a new colony. A fresh impulse was
+given to building; fresh blocks and streets arose;
+companies were formed to burn bricks&mdash;one of these
+makes bricks by steam, and can burn a quarter of
+a million at once in their kiln. This in a place
+where previously the rate of building was five new
+houses in twenty years! Sanitary districts were
+mapped out; boards of control elected; gas companies;
+water companies&mdash;who brought water out of
+the chalk hills three miles distant: all the distinctive
+characteristics of a city arose into being. Lastly
+came a sewage farm, for so great was the sewage
+that it became a burning question how to dispose of
+it, and on this sewage farm some most extraordinary
+results have been obtained, such as mangolds with
+leaves four feet in length&mdash;a tropical luxuriance of
+growth. One postman had sufficed, then two, then
+three, till a strong staff had to be organized, in
+regular uniform, provided with bull's-eye lanthorns
+to pick their way in and out of the dark and dirty
+back-streets. One single constable had sufficed,
+and a dark hole had done duty as a prison. Now
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+a superintendent and other officers, a full staff, and
+a complete police-station, with cells, justice-room, all
+the paraphernalia were required; and so preposterous
+did this seem to other towns, formerly leading towns
+in the country, but which had remained stagnant
+while Swindon went ahead, that they bitterly resented
+the building, and satirized it as a 'Palace of Justice,'
+though, in good truth, sorely needed. A vast corn
+exchange, a vaster drill-hall for the workmen&mdash;who
+had formed a volunteer corps&mdash;to drill in, chapels of
+every description, and some of really large size&mdash;all
+these arose.</p>
+
+<p>The little old town on the hill a mile from the
+station felt the wave of progress strongly. The
+streets were paved; sewers driven under the town
+at a depth of 40 feet through solid stone, in
+order to dispose of the sewage on a second sewage
+farm of over 100 acres. Shops, banks, and, above
+all, public-houses, abounded and increased apace,
+especially in the new town, where every third house
+seemed to be licensed premises. The cart-track seen
+by the luncheon-party in the furze was laid down
+and macadamized, and a street erected, named after
+the finest street in London, full of shops of all descriptions.
+Every denomination, from the Plymouth
+Brethren to the Roman Catholics, had their place
+of worship. Most of the tradesmen had two
+branches, one in the upper and one in the lower
+town, and the banks followed their example. Not
+satisfied with two railways, two others are now in
+embryo&mdash;one a link in the long-talked-of through
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+communication between North and South, from Manchester
+to Southampton, the other a local line with
+possible extensions. A population of barely 2,000
+has risen to 15,000, and this does not nearly represent
+the real number of inhabitants, for there is a
+large floating population, and, in addition, five or six
+villages surrounding the town are in reality merely
+suburbs, and in great part populated by men working
+in the town. These villages have shared in the
+general movement, and some of them have almost
+trebled in size and importance. This population is
+made up of the most incongruous elements: labouring
+men of the adjacent counties who have left the
+plough and the sickle for the hammer and the spade;
+Irish in large numbers; Welshmen, Scotch, and
+North of England men; stalwart fellows from York
+and places in a similar latitude. Yet, notwithstanding
+all the building that has been going on, despite
+the rush of building societies and private speculators,
+the cry is still, 'More bricks and mortar,' for there
+exists an enormous amount of overcrowding. The
+high rents are almost prohibitory, and those who
+take houses, underlet them and sublet them, till in six
+rooms three families may be living. The wages are
+good, ranging from 18s. for common labourers to
+30s., 36s., 40s., and more for skilled mechanics, and
+the mode in which they live affords an illustrative
+contrast to the agricultural population immediately
+surrounding the place. As if to complete the
+picture, that nothing might be wanting, a music-hall
+has been opened, where for threepence the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+workman may listen to the dulcet strains of 'London
+artistes' while he smokes his pipe.</p>
+
+<p>Can a more striking, a more wonderful and interesting
+spectacle be seen than this busy, Black-Country-looking
+town, with its modern associations, its
+go-ahead ways, in the midst of a purely agricultural
+country, where there are no coal or iron mines, where
+in the memory of middle-aged men there was nothing
+but pasture-fields, furze, and rabbits? In itself it
+affords a perfect epitome of the spirit of the nineteenth
+century.</p>
+
+<p>And much, if not all, of this marvellous transformation,
+of this abounding life and vigorous
+vitality, is due to the energy and the forethought, the
+will of one man. It is notorious that the Swindon
+of to-day is the creation of the companion of Brunel
+at the lunch in the furze-bushes. Sir Daniel Gooch
+has had a wonderful life. Beginning literally at the
+beginning, he rose from stage to stage, till he became
+the responsible head of the vast company in whose
+service he had commenced life. In that position he
+did not forget the place where his early years were
+passed, but used his influence to enrich it with the
+real secret of wealth, employment for the people.
+In so doing, time has proved that he acted for the
+best interests of the company, for, apart from monetary
+matters, the mass of workmen assembled at this spot
+are possessed of overwhelming political power, and
+can return the man they choose to Parliament. Thus
+the company secures a representative in the House
+of Commons.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Among the institutions which the railway company
+fostered was the primitive reading-room which has
+been alluded to. Under their care this grew and
+grew, until it became a Mechanics' Institute, or, rather,
+a department of science and art, which at the present
+day has an intimate connection with South Kensington.
+Some hundred prizes are here annually distributed
+to the numerous students, both male and
+female, who can here obtain the very best instruction,
+at the very smallest cost, in almost every branch of
+learning, from sewing to shorthand, from freehand
+drawing to algebra and conic sections. On one
+occasion, while distributing the prizes to the successful
+competitors, Sir Daniel Gooch laid bare some of his
+early struggles as an incentive to the youth around
+him. He admitted that there was a time, and a dark
+hour, when he all but gave up hopes of ultimate
+success, when it seemed that the dearest wish of his
+heart must for ever go without fulfilment. In this
+desponding mood he was slowly crossing a bridge in
+London, when he observed an inscription upon the
+parapet&mdash;<i>Nil Desperandum</i> (Never despair). How
+he took heart at this as an omen, and went forth and
+persevered till&mdash;&mdash;The speaker did not complete the
+sentence, but all the world knows what ultimately
+happened, and remembers the man who laid the first
+Atlantic cable. The great lesson of perseverance, of
+patience, was never drawn with better effect.</p>
+
+<p>In the Eastern tales of magicians one reads of a
+town being found one day where there was nothing
+but sand the day before. Here the fable is fact, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+the potent magician is Steam. Here is, perhaps, the
+greatest temple that has ever been built to that great
+god of our day. Taking little note of its immense
+extent, of the vast walls which enclose it, like some
+fortress, of the tunnel which gives entrance, and
+through which three thousand workmen pass four
+times a day, let us enter at once and go straight to
+the manufacture of those wheels and tires and axles
+of which we have heard so much since the tragedy at
+Shipton. To look at a carriage-wheel, the iron
+carriage-wheel, one would imagine that it was all one
+piece, that it was stamped out at a blow, so little sign
+is there of a junction of parts. The very contrary is
+the fact: the wheel is made of a large number of
+pieces of iron welded together, and again and again
+welded together, till at last it forms one solid homogeneous
+mass. The first of these processes consists
+in the manufacture of the spokes, which are made
+out of fine iron. The spoke is made in two pieces,
+at two different forges, and by two distinct gangs of
+men. A third forge and a third gang are constantly
+employed in welding these two detached parts in one
+continuous piece, forming a spoke. One of these
+parts resembles a <span class="sansserif">T</span> with the downward stroke very
+short, and the cross stroke at the top slightly bent,
+so as to form a section of a curve. The other piece
+is about the same length, but rather thicker, and at its
+larger end somewhat wedge-shaped. This last piece
+forms that part of the spoke which goes nearest to
+the centre of the wheel. These two parts, when
+completed, are again heated to a red heat, and in that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+ductile state hammered with dexterous blows into
+one, which then resembles the same letter <span class="sansserif">T</span>, only
+with the downward stroke disproportionately long.
+Eight or more of these spokes, according to the size
+of the wheel, and whether it is intended for a carriage,
+an engine, or tender, are then arranged together on
+the ground, so that the wedge-shaped ends fit close
+together, and in that position are firmly fixed by the
+imposition above them of what is called a 'washer,' a
+flat circular piece of iron, which is laid red-hot on the
+centre of the embryo wheel, and there hammered into
+cohesion. The wheel is then turned over, and a
+second 'washer' beaten on, so that the partially
+molten metal runs, and joins together with the
+particles of the spokes, and the whole is one mass.
+In the ordinary cart-wheel or gig-wheel the spokes
+are placed in mortise-holes made in a solid central
+block; but in this wheel before us, the ends of the
+spokes, well cemented together by the two washers,
+form the central block or boss. The ends of the
+spokes do not quite touch each other, and so a small
+circular space is left which is subsequently bored to
+fit the axle. The wheel now presents a curiously
+incomplete appearance, for the top strokes of the <span class="sansserif">T</span>'s
+do not touch each other. There is a space between
+each, and these spaces have now to be filled with
+pieces of red-hot iron well welded and hammered
+together. To the uninitiated it would seem that all
+this work is superfluous; that the wheel might be
+made much more quickly in two or three pieces,
+instead of all these, and that it would be stronger.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+But the practical men engaged in the work say
+differently. It is their maxim that the more iron is
+hammered, the stronger and better it becomes; therefore
+all this welding adds to the strength of the
+wheel. In practice it is found quicker and more
+convenient to thus divide the labour than to endeavour
+to form the wheel of fewer component parts.
+The wheel is now taken to the lathe, and a portion is
+cut away from its edge, till a groove is left so as to
+dovetail into the tyre.</p>
+
+<p>The tyres, which are of steel, are not made here;
+they come ready to be placed upon the wheel, and
+some care has to be taken in moving them, for,
+although several inches in thickness and of enormous
+strength, it has occasionally happened that a sudden
+jar from other solid bodies has fractured them. One
+outer edge of the tyre is prolonged, so to say, and
+forms the projecting flange which holds the rails and
+prevents the carriage from running off the road.
+So important a part requires the best metal and the
+most careful manufacture, and accordingly no trouble
+or expense is spared to secure suitable tyres. One of
+the inner edges of the tyre, on the opposite side
+to the flange, is grooved, and this groove is intended
+to receive the edge of the wheel itself; they dovetail
+together here. The tyre is now made hot, and the
+result of that heating is an expansion of the metal, so
+that the circle of the tyre becomes larger. The
+wheel is then driven into the tyre, which fits round
+it like a band. As it grows cool the steel tyre clasps
+the iron wheel with enormous force, and the softer
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+metal is driven into the groove of the steel. But
+this is not all. The wheel is turned over, and the
+iron wheel is seen to be some little distance sunk, as
+it were, beneath the surface of the tyre. Immediately
+on a level with the iron wheel there runs round the
+steel tyre another deeper groove. The wheel is again
+heated&mdash;not to redness, for the steel will not bear
+blows if too hot&mdash;and when the tyre is sufficiently
+warm, a long, thin strip of iron is driven into this
+groove, and so shuts the iron wheel into the tyre as
+with a continuous wedge. Yet another process has
+to follow&mdash;yet another safeguard against accident.
+The tyre, once more heated, is attacked with the
+blows of three heavy sledge-hammers, wielded by as
+many stalwart smiths, and its inner edge, by their
+well-directed blows, bent down over the narrow band
+of iron, or continuous wedge, so that this wedge is
+closed in by what may be called a continuous rivet.
+The wheel is now complete, so far as its body is
+concerned, and to look at, it seems very nearly
+impossible that any wear or tear, or jar or accident,
+could disconnect its parts&mdash;all welded, overlapped,
+dovetailed as they are. Practically it seems the perfection
+of safety; nor was it to a wheel of this
+character that <i>the</i> accident happened. The only
+apparent risk is that there may be some slight undiscovered
+flaw in the solid steel which, under the
+pressure of unforeseen circumstances, may give way.
+But the whole design of the wheel is to guard against
+the ill-effects that would follow the snapping of a
+tyre. Suppose a tyre to 'fly'&mdash;the result would be
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+a small crack; supposing there were two cracks, or
+ten cracks, the speciality of this wheel is that not one
+of those pieces could come off&mdash;that the wheel would
+run as well and as safely with a tyre cracked through
+in a dozen places as when perfectly sound. The
+reason of this is that every single quarter of an inch
+of the tyre is fixed irremovably to the outer edge of
+the iron wheel, by the continuous dovetail, by the
+continuous wedge, and by the continuous overlapping.
+So that under no condition could any
+portion of the tyre fly off from the wheel. Close by
+this wheel thus finished upon this patent process
+there was an old riveted wheel which had been
+brought in to receive a new tyre on the new process.
+This old wheel aptly illustrates the advantages of
+the new one. Its tyre is fixed to the wheel by rivets
+or bolts placed at regular intervals. Now, the holes
+made for these bolts to some extent weaken both
+tyre and wheel. The bolt is liable, with constant
+shaking, to wear loose. The bolt only holds a very
+limited area of tyre to the wheel. If the tyre breaks
+in two places between the bolts, it comes off. If a
+bolt breaks, or the tyre breaks at the bolt, it flies.
+The tyre is, in fact, only fixed on in spots with
+intervals between. The new fastening leaves no
+intervals, and instead of spots is fixed everywhere.
+This is called the Gibson process, and was invented
+by an employ&eacute; of the company. Latterly another
+process has partially come into vogue, particularly
+for wooden wheels, which are preferred sometimes on
+account of their noiselessness. By this (the Mansell)
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+process, the tyres, which are similar, are fastened to
+the wheels by two circular bands which dovetail into
+the tyre, and are then bolted to the wood.</p>
+
+<p>To return to the wheel&mdash;now really and substantially
+a wheel, but which has still to be turned
+so as to run perfectly true upon the metals&mdash;it is
+conveyed to the wheel lathe, and affixed to what
+looks like another wheel, which is set in motion by
+steam-power, and carries our wheel round with it.
+A workman sets a tool to plane its edge, which shaves
+off the steel as if it were wood, and reduces it to the
+prescribed scale. Then, when its centre has been
+bored to receive the axle, the genesis of the wheel is
+complete, and it enters upon its life of perpetual
+revolution. How little do the innumerable travellers
+who are carried to their destination upon it imagine
+the immense expenditure of care, skill, labour, and
+thought that has been expended before a perfect
+wheel was produced.</p>
+
+<p>Next in natural order come the rails upon which
+the wheel must run. The former type of rail was a
+solid bar of iron, whose end presented a general
+resemblance to the letter <span class="sansserif">T</span>, which was thick at the
+top and at the bottom, and smaller in the middle.
+It was thought that this rail was not entirely satisfactory,
+for reasons that cannot be enumerated here,
+and accordingly a patent was taken out for a rail
+which, it is believed, can be more easily and cheaply
+manufactured, with a less expenditure of metal, and
+which can be more readily attached to the sleepers.
+In reality it is designed upon the principle of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+arch, and the end of these rails somewhat resembles
+the Greek letter &Omega;, for they are hollow, and formed
+of a thin plate of metal rolled into this shape.
+Coming to this very abode of the Cyclops, the rail-mill,
+the first machine that appears resembles a pair
+of gigantic scissors, which are employed day and
+night in snipping off old rails and other pieces of iron
+into lengths suitable for the manufacture of new
+rails.</p>
+
+<p>These scissors, or, perhaps, rather pincers, are
+driven by steam-power, and bite off the solid iron as
+if it were merely strips of ribbon. There is some
+danger in this process, for occasionally the metal
+breaks and flies, and men's hands are severely injured.
+At a guess, the lengths of iron for manufacture into
+rails may be about four feet long, and are piled up in
+flat pieces eight or nine inches or more in height.
+These pieces are carried to the furnace, heated to an
+intense heat, and then placed under the resistless
+blows of a steam-hammer, which welds them into one
+solid bar of iron, longer than the separate pieces
+were. The bar then goes back to the furnace, and
+again comes out white-hot. The swinging-shears
+seize it, and it is swung along to the rollers. These
+rollers are two massive cylindrical iron bars which
+revolve rapidly one over the other. The end of the
+white-hot metal is placed between these rollers, and
+is at once drawn out into a long strip of iron, much
+as a piece of dough is rolled out under the cook's
+rolling-pin. It is now perfectly flat, and entirely
+malleable. It is returned to the furnace, heated,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
+brought back, and placed in a second pair of rollers.
+This second pair have projections upon them, which
+so impress the flat strip of iron that it is drawn out
+into the required shape. The rail passes twice
+through these rollers, once forwards, then backwards.
+Terrible is the heat in this fiery spot. The experienced
+workman who guides the long red-hot
+rails to the mouth of the rollers is protected with
+a mask, with iron-shod shoes, iron greaves on his
+legs, an iron apron, and, even further, with a shield of
+iron. The very floor beneath is formed of slabs
+of iron instead of slabs of stone, and the visitor very
+soon finds this iron floor too hot for his feet. The
+perfect rail, still red-hot or nearly, is run back to the
+circular saw, which cuts it off in regular lengths; for
+it is not possible to so apportion the iron in each
+bundle as to form absolutely identical strips. They
+are proportioned so as to be a little longer than
+required, and then sawn off to the exact length.
+While still hot, a workman files the sawn ends so
+that they may fit together closely when laid down on
+the sleepers. The completed rails are then stacked
+for removal on trucks to their destination. The
+rollers which turn out these rails in so regular and
+beautiful a manner are driven by a pair of engines of
+enormous power. The huge fly-wheel is twenty feet
+in diameter, and weighs, with its axle, thirty-five tons.
+When these rails were first manufactured, the rollers
+were driven direct from the axle of the fly-wheel, and
+the rails had to be lifted right over the roller&mdash;a
+difficult and dangerous process&mdash;and again inserted
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+between them on the side at which it started. Since
+then an improvement has been effected, by which
+the rails are sent backwards through the rollers,
+thus avoiding the trouble of lifting them over.
+This is managed by reversing the motion of the
+rollers, which is done in an instant by means of a
+'crab.'</p>
+
+<p>Immediately adjacent to these rail-mills are the
+steam-hammers, whose blows shake the solid earth.
+The largest descends with the force of seventy tons,
+yet so delicate is the machinery that visitors are
+shown how the same ponderous mass of metal and
+the same irresistible might can be so gently administered
+as to crush the shell of a nut without injuring
+the kernel. These hammers are employed in beating
+huge masses of iron into cranks for engines, and
+other heavy work which is beyond the unaided
+strength of man. Each of the hammers has its own
+steam-boiler and its furnace close at hand, and overhead
+there are travelling cranes which convey the
+metal to and fro. These boilers may be called
+vertical, and with the structure on which they are
+supported have a dome-like shape. Hissing, with
+small puffs of white steam curling stealthily upwards,
+they resemble a group of volcanoes on the eve of an
+eruption. This place presents a wonderful and even
+terrible aspect at night, when the rail-mill and steam-hammers
+are in full swing. The open doors of the
+glaring furnaces shoot forth an insupportable beam
+of brilliant white light, and out from among the
+glowing fire comes a massive bar of iron, hotter,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+whiter than the fire itself&mdash;barely to be looked upon.
+It is dragged and swung along under the great
+hammer; Thor strikes, and the metal doubles up,
+and bends as if of plastic clay, and showers of sparks
+fly high and far. What looks like a long strip of
+solid flame is guided between the rollers, and flattened
+and shaped, till it comes out a dull-red-hot rail, and
+the sharp teeth of the circular saw cut through it,
+throwing out a circle of sparks. The vast fly-wheel
+whirls round endless shaftings, and drums are revolving
+overhead, and the ear is full of a ceaseless
+overpowering hum, varied at intervals with the
+sharp scraping, ringing sound of the saw. The
+great boilers hiss, the furnaces roar, all around there
+is a sense of an irresistible power, but just held in
+by bars and rivets, ready in a moment to rend all
+asunder. Masses of glowing iron are wheeled hither
+and thither in wheelbarrows; smaller blocks are slid
+along the iron floor. Here is a heap of red-hot
+scraps hissing. A sulphurous hot smell prevails, a
+burning wind, a fierce heat, now from this side, now
+from that, and ever and anon bright streaks of light
+flow out from the open furnace doors, casting
+grotesque shadows upon the roof and walls. The
+men have barely a human look, with the reflection
+of the fire upon them; mingling thus with flame and
+heat, toying with danger, handling, <a class="corr" name="TC_4" id="TC_4" title="at">as</a> it seems, red-hot
+metal with ease. The whole scene suggests the
+infernal regions. A mingled hiss and roar and thud
+fill the building with reverberation, and the glare of
+the flames rising above the chimneys throws a reflection
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+upon the sky, which is visible miles away,
+like that of a conflagration.</p>
+
+<p>Stepping out of this pandemonium, there are rows
+upon rows of gleaming forges, each with its appointed
+smiths, whose hammers rise and fall in rhythmic
+strokes, and who manufacture the minor portions of
+the incipient locomotive. Here is a machine the
+central part of which resembles a great corkscrew or
+spiral constantly revolving. A weight is affixed to
+its inclined plane, and is carried up to the required
+height by the revolution of the screw, to be let fall
+upon a piece of red-hot iron, which in that moment becomes
+a bolt, with its projecting head or cap. Though
+they do not properly belong to our subject, the
+great marine boilers in course of construction in the
+adjoining department cannot be overlooked, even if
+only for their size&mdash;vast cylinders of twelve feet
+diameter. Next comes the erecting shop, where the
+various parts of the locomotive are fitted together,
+and it is built up much as a ship from the keel.
+These semi-completed engines have a singularly helpless
+look&mdash;out of proportion, without limbs, and
+many mere skeletons. Close by is the department
+where engines out of repair are made good. Some
+American engineer started the idea of a railway thirty
+feet wide, an idea which in this place is partially
+realized. The engine to be repaired is run on to
+what may be described as a turn-table resting upon
+wheels, and this turn-table is bodily rolled along, like
+a truck, with the engine on it, to the place where tools
+and cranes and all the necessary gear are ready for the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+work upon it. Now by a yard, which seems one vast
+assemblage of wheels of all kinds&mdash;big wheels, little
+wheels, wheels of all sizes, nothing but wheels; past
+great mounds of iron, shapeless heaps of scrap, and
+then, perhaps, the most interesting shop of all,
+though the least capable of description, is entered.
+It is where the endless pieces of metal of which the
+locomotive is composed are filed and planed and
+smoothed into an accurate fit; an immense building,
+with shafting overhead and shafting below in endless
+revolution, yielding an incessant hum like the sound
+of armies of bees&mdash;a building which may be said to
+have a score of aisles, up which one may walk with
+machinery upon either side. Hundreds of lathes of
+every conceivable pattern are planing the solid steel
+and the solid iron as if it were wood, cutting off
+with each revolution a more or less thick slice of the
+hard metal, which curls up like a shaving of deal.
+So delicate is the touch of some of these tools, so
+good the metal they are employed to cut, that shavings
+are taken off three or more feet long, curled
+up like a spiral spring, and which may be wound
+round the hand like string. The interiors of the
+cylinders, the bearings, those portions of the engines
+which slide one upon the other, and require the most
+accurate fit, are here adjusted by unerring machinery,
+which turns out the work with an ease and exactness
+which the hand of man, delicate and wonderful organ
+as it is, cannot reach. From the smallest fitting up
+to the great engine cranks, the lathes smooth them
+all&mdash;reduce them to the precise size which they were
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+intended to be by the draughtsman. These cranks
+and larger pieces of metal are conveyed to their
+lathes and placed in position by a steam crane, which
+glides along upon a single rail at the will of the
+driver, who rides on it, and which handles the
+massive metal almost with the same facility that an
+elephant would move a log of wood with his trunk.
+Most of us have an inherent idea that iron is exceedingly
+hard, but the ease with which it is cut and
+smoothed by these machines goes far to remove that
+impression.</p>
+
+<p>The carriage department does not offer so much
+that will strike the eye, yet it is of the highest importance.
+To the uninitiated it is difficult to trace
+the connection between the various stages of the
+carriage, as it is progressively built up, and finally
+painted and gilded and fitted with cushions. Generally,
+the impression left from an inspection is that
+the frames of the carriages are made in a way calculated
+to secure great strength, the material being
+solid oak. The brake-vans especially are made
+strong. The carriages made here are for the narrow
+gauge, and are immensely superior in every way to
+the old broad-gauge carriage, being much more
+roomy, although not so wide. Over the department
+there lingers an odour of wood. It is common to
+speak of the scented woods of the East and the
+South, but even our English woods are not devoid
+of pleasant odour under the carpenter's hands.
+Hidden away amongst the piles of wood there is
+here a triumph of human ingenuity. It is an endless
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+saw which revolves around two wheels, much in the
+same way as a band revolves around two drums.
+The wheels are perhaps three feet in diameter, and
+two inches in thickness at the circumference. They
+are placed&mdash;one as low as the workman's feet,
+another rather above his head&mdash;six or seven feet
+apart. Round the wheels there stretches an endless
+narrow band of blue steel, just as a ribbon might.
+This band of steel is very thin, and almost half an
+inch in width. Its edge towards the workman is
+serrated with sharp deep teeth. The wheels revolve
+by steam rapidly, and carry with them the saw, so
+that, instead of the old up and down motion, the
+teeth are continually running one way. The band
+of steel is so extremely flexible that it sustains the
+state of perpetual curve. There are stories in ancient
+chronicles of the wonderful swords of famous warriors
+made of such good steel that the blade could be bent
+till the point touched the hilt, and even till the blade
+was tied in a knot. These stories do not seem like
+fables before this endless saw, which does not bend
+once or twice, but is incessantly curved, and incessantly
+in the act of curving. A more beautiful
+machine cannot be imagined. Its chief use is to cut
+out the designs for cornices, and similar ornamental
+work in thin wood; but it is sufficiently strong to
+cut through a two-inch plank like paper. Every
+possible support that can be afforded by runners is
+given to the saw; still, with every aid, it is astonishing
+to see metal, which we have been taught to
+believe rigid, flexible as indiarubber. Adjoining are
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+frame saws, working up and down by steam, and
+cutting half a dozen or more boards at the same
+time. It was in this department that the Queen's
+carriage was built at a great expenditure of skill and
+money&mdash;a carriage which is considered one of the
+masterpieces of this particular craft.</p>
+
+<p>There rises up in the mind, after the contemplation
+of this vast workshop, with its endless examples
+of human ingenuity, a conviction that safety in railway
+travelling is not only possible, but probable, and
+even now on the way to us. No one can behold the
+degree of excellence to which the art of manufacturing
+material has been brought, no one can inspect the
+processes by which the wheel, for instance, is finally
+welded into one compact mass, without a firm belief
+that, where so much has been done, in a little time
+still more will be done. That safer plans, that
+better designs, that closer compacted forms will arise
+seems as certain and assured a fact as that those forms
+now in use arose out of the rude beginnings of the
+past; for this great factory, both in its machine-tools
+and in its products, the wheels and rails and
+locomotives, is a standing proof of the development
+which goes on in the mind of man when brought
+constantly to bear upon one subject. As with the
+development of species, so it is with that of
+machinery: rude and more general forms first, finer
+and more specialized forms afterwards. There is
+every reason to hope, for this factory is a proof of
+the advance that has been made. It would seem
+that the capability of metal is practically infinite.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But what an enormous amount of labour, what
+skill, and what complicated machinery must be first
+employed before what is in itself a very small result
+can be arrived at! In order that an individual may
+travel from London to Oxford, see what innumerable
+conditions have to be fulfilled. Three thousand men
+have to work night and day that we may merely
+seat ourselves and remain passive till our destination
+is reached.</p>
+
+<p>This small nation of workers, this army of the
+hammer, lathe, and drill, affords matter for deep
+meditation in its sociological aspect. Though so
+numerous that no one of them can be personally
+acquainted with more than a fractional part, yet there
+is a strong <i>esprit de corps</i>, a spirit that ascends to the
+highest among them; for it is well known that the
+chief manager has a genuine feeling of almost fatherly
+affection for these his men, and will on no account let
+them suffer, and will, if possible, obtain for them
+every advantage. The influence he thereby acquires
+among them is principally used for moral and religious
+ends. Under these auspices have arisen the
+great chapels and places of worship of which the
+town is full. Of the men themselves, the majority
+are intelligent, contrasting strongly with the agricultural
+poor around them, and not a few are well
+educated and thoughtful. This gleaning of intellectual
+men are full of social life, or, rather, of an
+interest in the problems of social existence. They
+eagerly discuss the claims of religion <i>versus</i> the
+allegations of secularism; they are shrewd to detect
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+the weak points of an argument; they lean, in fact,
+towards an eclecticism: they select the most rational
+part of every theory. They are full of information
+on every subject&mdash;information obtained not only
+from newspapers, books, conversation, and lectures,
+but from travel, for most have at least been over the
+greater part of England. They are probably higher
+in their intellectual life than a large proportion of
+the so-called middle classes. One is, indeed, tempted
+to declare, after considering the energy with which
+they enter on all questions, that this class of educated
+mechanics forms in reality the protoplasm, or living
+matter, out of which modern society is evolved.
+The great and well-supplied reading-room of the
+Mechanics' Institute is always full of readers; the
+library, now an extensive one, is constantly in use.
+Where one book is read in agricultural districts,
+fifty are read in the vicinity of the factory. Social
+questions of marriage, of religion, of politics, sanitary
+science, are for ever on the simmer among these men.
+It would almost seem as if the hammer, the lathe,
+and the drill would one day bring forth a creed of its
+own. A characteristic of all classes of these workmen
+is their demand for meat, of which great quantities
+are consumed. Nor do they stay at meat alone, but
+revel in fish and other luxuries at times, though the
+champagne of the miner is not known here. Notwithstanding
+the number of public-houses, it is a
+remarkable fact that there is very little drunkenness
+in proportion to the population, few crimes of
+violence, and, what is more singular still, and has
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+been often remarked, very little immorality. Where
+there are some hundreds, perhaps thousands, of
+young uneducated girls, without work to occupy
+their time, there must of course exist a certain
+amount of lax conduct; but never, or extremely
+rarely, does a girl apply to the magistrates for an
+affiliation order, while from agricultural parishes such
+applications are common. The number of absolutely
+immoral women openly practising infamy is also
+remarkably small. There was a time when the workmen
+at this factory enjoyed an unpleasant notoriety
+for mischief and drunkenness, but that time has
+passed away, a most marked improvement having
+taken place in the last few years.</p>
+
+<p>There appears, however, to be very little prudence
+amongst them. The man who receives some extra
+money for extra work simply spends it on unusual
+luxuries in food or drink; or, if it be summer, takes
+his wife and children a drive in a hired conveyance.
+To this latter there can be no objection; but still, the
+fact remains prominent that men in the receipt of
+good wages do not save. They do not put by
+money; this is, of course, speaking of the majority.
+It would almost seem to be a characteristic of human
+nature that those who receive wages for work done,
+so much per week or fortnight, do not contract
+saving habits. The small struggling tradesman,
+whose income is very little more than that of the
+mechanic, often makes great exertions and practises
+much economy to put by a sum to assist him in
+difficulty or to extend his business. It may be that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
+the very certainty of the wages acts as a deterrent&mdash;inasmuch
+as the mechanic feels safe of his weekly
+money, while the shopkeeper runs much risk. It is
+doubtful whether mechanics with good wages save
+more than agricultural labourers, except in indirect
+ways&mdash;ways which are thrust upon them. First of
+all, there is the yard club, to which all are compelled
+to pay by their employers, the object being to provide
+medical assistance in case of sickness. This is
+in some sense a saving. Then there are the building
+societies, which offer opportunities of possessing a
+house, and the mechanic who becomes a member has
+to pay for it by instalments. This also may be called
+an indirect saving, since the effect is the same. But
+of direct saving&mdash;putting money in a bank, or investing
+it&mdash;there is scarcely any. The quarter of a
+million annually paid in wages mostly finds its way
+into the pockets of the various trades-people, and at
+the end of the year the mechanic is none the better
+off. This is a grave defect in his character. Much
+of it results from a generous, liberal disposition: a
+readiness to treat a friend with a drink, to drive the
+family out into the country, to treat the daughter
+with a new dress. The mechanic does not set a
+value upon money in itself.</p>
+
+<p>The effect of the existence of this factory upon
+the whole surrounding district has been marked. A
+large proportion of the lower class of mechanics,
+especially the factory labourers, are drawn from the
+agricultural poor of the adjacent villages. These
+work all day at the factory, and return at night.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+They daily walk great distances to secure this employment:
+three miles to and three miles back is
+common, four miles not uncommon, and some have
+been known to walk six or twelve miles per day.
+These carry back with them into the villages the
+knowledge they insensibly acquire from their better-informed
+comrades, and exhibit an independent spirit.
+For a radius of six miles round the poorer class are
+better informed, quicker in perception, more ready
+with an answer to a question, than those who dwell
+farther back out of the track of modern life. Wages
+had materially risen long before the movement among
+the agricultural labourers took place.</p>
+
+<p>Where there was lately nothing but furze and
+rabbits there is now a busy human population. Why
+was it that for so many hundreds of years the population
+of England remained nearly stationary? and
+why has it so marvellously increased in this last forty
+years? The history of this place seems to answer
+that interesting question. The increase is due to the
+facilities of communication which now exist, and to
+the numberless new employments in which that
+facility of communication took rise, and which it in
+turn adds to and fosters.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chapbreak" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="UNEQUAL_AGRICULTURE" id="UNEQUAL_AGRICULTURE"></a>UNEQUAL AGRICULTURE</h2>
+
+
+<p>In the way of sheer, downright force few effects
+of machinery are more striking than a steam-ploughing
+engine dragging the shares across a wide expanse
+of stiff clay. The huge engines used in our ironclad
+vessels work with a graceful ease which deceives the
+eye; the ponderous cranks revolve so smoothly, and
+shine so brightly with oil and polish, that the mind
+is apt to underrate the work performed. But these
+ploughing engines stand out solitary and apart from
+other machinery, and their shape itself suggests crude
+force, such force as may have existed in the mastodon
+or other unwieldy monster of the prehistoric ages.
+The broad wheels sink into the earth under the
+pressure; the steam hissing from the escape valves
+is carried by the breeze through the hawthorn hedge,
+hiding the red berries with a strange, unwonted
+cloud; the thick dark brown smoke, rising from
+the funnel as the stoker casts its food of coal into
+the fiery mouth of the beast, falls again and floats
+heavily over the yellow stubble, smothering and
+driving away the partridges and hares. There is
+a smell of oil, and cotton-waste, and gas, and steam,
+and smoke, which overcomes the fresh, sweet odour
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+of the earth and green things after a shower. Stray
+lumps of coal crush the delicate pimpernel and
+creeping convolvulus. A shrill, short scream rushes
+forth and echoes back from an adjacent rick&mdash;puff!
+the fly-wheel revolves, and the drum underneath
+tightens its hold upon the wire rope. Across yonder
+a curious, shapeless thing, with a man riding upon
+it, comes jerking forward, tearing its way through
+stubble and clay, dragging its iron teeth with sheer
+strength deep through the solid earth. The thick
+wire rope stretches and strains as if it would snap
+and curl up like a tortured snake; the engine pants
+loudly and quick; the plough now glides forward,
+now pauses, and, as it were, eats its way through
+a tougher place, then glides again, and presently
+there is a pause, and behold the long furrow with
+the upturned subsoil is completed. A brief pause,
+and back it travels again, this time drawn from the
+other side, where a twin monster puffs and pants
+and belches smoke, while the one that has done its
+work uncoils its metal sinews. When the furrows
+run up and down a slope, the savage force, the
+fierce, remorseless energy of the engine pulling the
+plough upwards, gives an idea of power which cannot
+but impress the mind.</p>
+
+<p>This is what is going on upon one side of the
+hedge. These engines cost as much as the fee-simple
+of a small farm; they consume expensive
+coal, and water that on the hills has to be brought
+long distances; they require skilled workmen to
+attend to them, and they do the work with a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+thoroughness which leaves little to be desired.
+Each puff and pant echoing from the ricks, each
+shrill whistle rolling along from hill to hill, proclaims
+as loudly as iron and steel can shout, 'Progress!
+Onwards!' Now step through this gap in
+the hedge and see what is going on in the next field.</p>
+
+<p>It is a smaller ground, of irregular shape and
+uneven surface. Steam-ploughs mean <i>plains</i> rather
+than fields&mdash;broad, square expanses of land without
+awkward corners&mdash;and as level as possible, with
+mounds that may have been tumuli worked down,
+rising places smoothed away, old ditch-like drains
+filled up, and fairly good roads. This field may be
+triangular or some indescribable figure, with narrow
+corners where the high hedges come close together,
+with deep furrows to carry away the water, rising
+here and sinking there into curious hollows, entered
+by a narrow gateway leading from a muddy lane
+where the ruts are a foot deep. The plough is
+at work here also, such a plough as was used when
+the Corn Laws were in existence, chiefly made of
+wood&mdash;yes, actually wood, in this age of iron&mdash;bound
+and strengthened with metal, but principally
+made from the tree&mdash;the tree which furnishes the
+African savage at this day with the crooked branch
+with which to scratch the earth, which furnished the
+ancient agriculturists of the Nile Valley with their
+primitive implements. It is drawn by dull, patient
+oxen, plodding onwards now just as they were
+depicted upon the tombs and temples, the graves
+and worshipping places, of races who had their being
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>
+three thousand years ago. Think of the suns that
+have shone since then; of the summers and the
+bronzed grain waving in the wind, of the human
+teeth that have ground that grain, and are now
+hidden in the abyss of earth; yet still the oxen plod
+on, like slow Time itself, here this day in our land
+of steam and telegraph. Are not these striking
+pictures, remarkable contrasts? On the one side
+steam, on the other the oxen of the Egyptians, only
+a few thorn-bushes between dividing the nineteenth
+century <span class="smcaplc">B.C.</span> from the nineteenth century <span class="smcaplc">A.D.</span> After
+these oxen follows an aged man, slow like themselves,
+sowing the seed. A basket is at his side, from
+which at every stride, regular as machinery, he
+takes a handful of that corn round which so many
+mysteries have gathered from the time of Ceres to
+the hallowed words of the great Teacher, taking His
+parable from the sower. He throws it with a peculiar
+<i>steady</i> jerk, so to say, and the grains, impelled
+with the exact force and skill, which can only be
+attained by long practice, scatter in an even shower.
+Listen! On the other side of the hedge the rattle of
+the complicated drill resounds as it drops the seed
+in regular rows&mdash;and, perhaps, manures it at the
+same time&mdash;so that the plants can be easily thinned
+out, or the weeds removed, after the magical influence
+of the despised clods has brought on the
+miracle of vegetation.</p>
+
+<p>These are not extreme and isolated instances; no
+one will need to walk far afield to witness similar
+contrasts. There is a medium between the two&mdash;a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
+third class&mdash;an intermediate agriculture. The
+pride of this farm is in its horses, its teams of magnificent
+animals, sleek and glossy of skin, which the
+carters spend hours in feeding lest they should lose
+their appetites&mdash;more hours than ever they spend in
+feeding their own children. These noble creatures,
+whose walk is power and whose step is strength,
+work a few hours daily, stopping early in the afternoon,
+taking also an ample margin for lunch. They
+pull the plough also like the oxen, but it is a modern
+implement, of iron, light, and with all the latest
+improvements. It is typical of the system itself&mdash;half
+and half&mdash;neither the old oxen nor the new
+steam, but midway, a compromise. The fields are
+small and irregular in shape, but the hedges are cut,
+and the mounds partially grubbed and reduced to
+the thinnest of banks, the trees thrown, and some
+draining done. Some improvements have been
+adopted, others have been omitted.</p>
+
+<p>Upon those broad acres where the steam-plough
+was at work, what tons of artificial manure, superphosphate,
+and guano, liquid and solid, have been
+sown by the progressive tenant! Lavishly and yet
+judiciously, not once only, but many times, have the
+fertilizing elements been restored to the soil, and more
+than restored&mdash;added to it, till the earth itself has
+grown richer and stronger. The scarifier and the
+deep plough have turned up the subsoil and exposed
+the hard, stiff under-clods to the crumbling action of
+the air and the mysterious influence of light. Never
+before since Nature deposited those earthy atoms there
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
+in the slow process of some geological change has the
+sunshine fallen on them, or their latent power been
+called forth. Well-made and judiciously laid drains
+carry away the flow of water from the winter rains
+and floods&mdash;no longer does there remain a species of
+reservoir at a certain depth, chilling the tender roots
+of the plants as they strike downwards, lowering the
+entire temperature of the field. Mounds have been
+levelled, good roads laid down, nothing left undone
+that can facilitate operations or aid in the production
+of strong, succulent vegetation. Large flocks of well-fed
+sheep, folded on the corn-lands, assist the artificial
+manure, and perhaps even surpass it. When at last
+the plant comes to maturity and turns colour under
+the scorching sun, behold a widespread ocean of
+wheat, an English gold-field, a veritable Yellow Sea,
+bowing in waves before the southern breeze&mdash;a sight
+full of peaceful poetry. The stalk is tall and strong,
+good in colour, fit for all purposes. The ear is full,
+large; the increase is truly a hundredfold. Or it
+may be roots. By these means the progressive agriculturist
+has produced a crop of swedes or mangolds
+which in individual size and collective weight per
+acre would seem to an old-fashioned farmer perfectly
+fabulous. Now, here are many great benefits. First,
+the tenant himself reaps his reward, and justly adds
+to his private store. Next, the property of the
+landlord is improved, and increases in value. The
+labourer gets better house accommodation, gardens,
+and higher wages. The country at large is supplied
+with finer qualities and greater quantities of food,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
+and those who are engaged in trade and manufactures,
+and even in commerce, feel an increased
+vitality in their various occupations.</p>
+
+<p>On the other side of the hedge, where the oxen
+were at plough, the earth is forced to be self-supporting&mdash;to
+restore to itself how it can the
+elements carried away in wheat and straw and root.
+Except a few ill-fed sheep, except some small quantities
+of manure from the cattle-yards, no human
+aid, so to say, reaches the much-abused soil. A
+crop of green mustard is sometimes ploughed in
+to decompose and fertilize, but as it had to be grown
+first the advantage is doubtful. The one object is to
+spend as little as possible upon the soil, and to get as
+much out of it as may be. Granted that in numbers
+of cases no trickery be practised, that the old rotation
+of crops is honestly followed, and no evil meant,
+yet even then, in course of time, a soil just scratched
+on the surface, never fairly manured, and always in
+use, must of necessity deteriorate. Then, when such
+an effect is too patent to be any longer overlooked,
+when the decline of the produce begins to alarm
+him, the farmer, perhaps, buys a few hundredweight
+of artificial manure, and frugally scatters it abroad.
+This causes 'a flash in the pan'; it acts as a
+momentary stimulus; it is like endeavouring to
+repair a worn-out constitution with doses of strong
+cordial; there springs up a vigorous vegetation one
+year, and the next the earth is more exhausted than
+before. Soils cannot be made highly fertile all at
+once even by superphosphates; it is the inability to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
+discern this fact which leads many to still argue in the
+face of experience that artificial manures are of no
+avail. The slow oxen, the lumbering wooden plough,
+the equally lumbering heavy waggon, the primitive
+bush-harrow, made simply of a bush cut down and
+dragged at a horse's tail&mdash;these are symbols of a
+standstill policy utterly at variance with the times.
+Then this man loudly complains that things are not
+as they used to be&mdash;that wheat is so low in price
+it will not yield any profit, that labour is so high
+and everything so dear; and, truly, it is easy to conceive
+that the present age, with its competition and
+eagerness to advance, must really press very seriously
+upon him.</p>
+
+<p>Most persons have been interested enough, however
+little connected with agriculture, to at least once
+in their lives walk round an agricultural show, and
+to express their astonishment at the size and rotundity
+of the cattle exhibited. How easy, judging
+from such a passing view of the finest products of
+the country centred in one spot, to go away with the
+idea that under every hawthorn hedge a prize bullock
+of enormous girth is peacefully grazing! Should the
+same person ever go across country, through gaps
+and over brooks, taking an Asmodeus-like glance
+into every field, how marvellously would he find
+that he had been deceived! He might travel miles,
+and fly over scores of fields, and find no such animals,
+nor anything approaching to them. By making inquiries
+he would perhaps discover in most districts
+one spot where something of the kind could be seen&mdash;an
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
+oasis in the midst of a desert. On the farm he
+would see a long range of handsome outhouses, tiled
+or slated, with comfortable stalls and every means of
+removing litter and manure, tanks for liquid manure,
+skilled attendants busy in feeding, in preparing food,
+storehouses full of cake. A steam-engine in one of
+the sheds&mdash;perhaps a portable engine, used also for
+threshing&mdash;drives the machinery which slices up or
+pulps roots, cuts up chaff, pumps up water, and performs
+a score of other useful functions. The yards
+are dry, well paved, and clean; everything smells
+clean; there are no foul heaps of decaying matter
+breeding loathsome things and fungi; yet nothing is
+wasted, not even the rain that falls upon the slates
+and drops from the eaves. The stock within are
+worthy to compare with those magnificent beasts
+seen at the show. It is from these places that the
+prize animals are drawn; it is here that the beef
+which makes England famous is fattened; it is from
+here that splendid creatures are sent abroad to
+America or the Colonies, to improve the breed in
+those distant countries. Now step forth again over
+the hedge, down yonder in the meadows.</p>
+
+<p>This is a cow-pen, one of the old-fashioned style;
+in the dairy and pasture counties you may find
+them by hundreds still. It is pitched by the side of
+a tall hedge, or in an angle of two hedges, which
+themselves form two walls of the enclosure. The
+third is the cow-house and shedding itself; the
+fourth is made of willow rods. These rods are
+placed upright, confined between horizontal poles,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+and when new this simple contrivance is not
+wholly to be despised; but when the rods decay,
+as they do quickly, then gaps are formed, through
+which the rain and sleet and bitter wind penetrate
+with ease. Inside this willow paling is a lower
+hedge, so to say, two feet distant from the other,
+made of willow work twisted&mdash;like a continuous
+hurdle. Into this rude manger, when the yard is
+full of cattle, the fodder is thrown. Here and there
+about the yard, also, stand cumbrous cribs for fodder,
+at which two cows can feed at once. In one corner
+there is a small pond, muddy, stagnant, covered with
+duckweed, perhaps reached by a steep, 'pitched'
+descent, slippery, and difficult for the cattle to get
+down. They foul the very water they drink. The
+cow-house, as it is called, is really merely adapted
+for one or two cows at a time, at the period of
+calving&mdash;dark, narrow, awkward. The skilling, or
+open house where the cows lie and chew the cud in
+winter, is built of boards or slabs at the back, and in
+front supported upon oaken posts standing on stones.
+The roof is of thatch, green with moss; in wet
+weather the water drips steadily from the eaves,
+making one long gutter. In the eaves the wrens
+make their nests in the spring, and roost there in
+winter. The floor here is hard, certainly, and dry;
+the yard itself is a sea of muck. Never properly
+stoned or pitched, and without a drain, the loose
+stones cannot keep the mud down, and it works up
+under the hoofs of the cattle in a filthy mass. Over
+this there is litter and manure a foot deep; or, if the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+fogger does clean up the manure, he leaves it in great
+heaps scattered about, and on the huge dunghill just
+outside the yard he will show you a fine crop of
+mushrooms cunningly hidden under a light layer of
+litter. It is his boast that the cow-pen was built
+in the three sevens; on one ancient beam, worm-eaten
+and cracked, there may perhaps be seen the
+inscription '1777' cut deep into the wood. Over
+all, at the back of the cow-pen, stands a row of tall
+elm-trees, dripping in wet weather upon the thatch,
+in the autumn showering their yellow leaves into the
+hay, in a gale dropping dead branches into the yard.
+The tenant seems to think even this shelter effeminate,
+and speaks regretfully of the old hardy breed
+which stood all weathers, and wanted no more cover
+than was afforded by a hawthorn bush. From here
+a few calves find their way to the butcher, and
+towards Christmas one or two moderately fat beasts.</p>
+
+<p>Near by lives a dairy farmer, who, without going
+to the length of the famous stock-breeder whose
+stalls are the pride of the district, yet fills his
+meadows with a handsome herd of productive shorthorns,
+giving splendid results in butter, milk, and
+cheese, and who sends to the market a succession
+of animals which, if not equal to the gigantic prize
+beasts, are nevertheless valuable to the consumer.
+This tenant does good work, both for himself and
+for the labourers, the landlord, and the country.
+His meadows are a sight in themselves to the experienced
+eye&mdash;well drained, great double mounds
+thinned out, but the supply of wood not quite
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>
+destroyed&mdash;not a rush, a 'bullpoll,' a thistle, or a
+'rattle,' those yellow pests of mowing grass, to be
+seen. They have been weeded out as carefully as
+the arable farmer weeds his plants. Where broad
+deep furrows used to breed those aquatic grasses
+which the cattle left, drains have been put in and
+soil thrown over till the level was brought up to the
+rest of the field. The manure carts have evidently
+been at work here, perhaps the liquid manure tank
+also, and some artificial aid in places where required,
+both of seed and manure. The number of stock kept
+is the fullest tale the land will bear, and he does <a class="corr" name="TC_5" id="TC_5" title="no">not</a>
+hesitate to help the hay with cake in the fattening
+stalls. For there are stalls, not so elaborately furnished
+as those of the famous stock-breeder, but
+comfortable, clean, and healthy. Nothing is wasted
+here either. So far as practicable the fields have
+been enlarged by throwing two or three smaller
+enclosures together. He does not require so much
+machinery as the great arable farmer, but here are
+mowing machines, haymaking machines, horse-rakes,
+chain harrows, chaff-cutters, light carts
+instead of heavy waggons&mdash;every labour-saving
+appliance. Without any noise or puff this man is
+doing good work, and silently reaping his reward.
+Glance for a moment at an adjacent field: it is an
+old 'leaze' or ground not mown, but used for
+grazing. It has the appearance of a desert, a
+wilderness. The high, thick hedges encroach upon
+the land; the ditches are quite arched over by the
+brambles and briars which trail out far into the grass.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
+Broad deep furrows are full of tough, grey aquatic
+grass, 'bullpolls,' and short brown rushes; in winter
+they are so many small brooks. Tall bennets from
+last year and thistle abound&mdash;half the growth is useless
+for cattle; in autumn the air here is white with
+the clouds of thistle-down. It is a tolerably large
+field, but the meadows held by the same tenant are
+small, with double mounds and trees, rows of spreading
+oaks and tall elms; these meadows run up into
+the strangest nooks and corners. Sometimes, where
+they follow the course of a brook which winds and
+turns, actually an area equal to about half the available
+field is occupied by the hedges. Into this
+brook the liquid sewage from the cow-pens filtrates,
+or, worse still, accumulates in a hollow, making a
+pond, disgusting to look at, but which liquid, if
+properly applied, is worth almost its weight in gold.
+The very gateways of the fields in winter are a Slough
+of Despond, where the wheels sink in up to the
+axles, and in summer great ruts jolt the loads almost
+off the waggons.</p>
+
+<p>Where the steam-plough is kept, where first-class
+stock are bred, there the labourer is well housed,
+and his complaints are few and faint. There
+cottages with decent and even really capital accommodation
+for the families spring up, and are provided
+with extensive gardens. It is not easy, in the absence
+of statistics, to compare the difference in the
+amount of money put in circulation by these contrasted
+farms, but it must be something extraordinary.
+First comes the capital expenditure upon
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+machinery&mdash;ploughs, engines, drills, what not&mdash;then
+the annual expenditure upon labour, which, despite
+the employment of machinery, is as great or greater
+upon a progressive farm as upon one conducted on
+stagnant principle. Add to this the cost of artificial
+manure, of cake and feeding-stuffs, etc., and the
+total will be something very heavy. Now, all this
+expenditure, this circulation of coin, means not only
+gain to the individual, but gain to the country at
+large. Whenever in a town a great manufactory is
+opened and gives employment to several hundred
+hands, at the same time increasing the production of
+a valuable material, the profit&mdash;the <i>outside</i> profit, so
+to say&mdash;is as great to others as to the proprietors.
+But these half-cultivated lands, these tons upon tons
+of wasted manure, these broad hedges and weed-grown
+fields, represent upon the other hand an
+equal loss. The labouring classes in the rural districts
+are eager for more work. They may popularly
+be supposed to look with suspicion upon
+change, but such an idea is a mistaken one. They
+anxiously wait the approach of such works as new
+railways or extension of old ones in the hope of
+additional employment. Work is their gold-mine,
+and the best mine of all. The capitalist, therefore,
+who sets himself to improve his holding is the very
+man they most desire to see. What scope is there
+for work upon a stagnant dairy farm of one hundred
+and fifty acres? A couple of foggers and milkers, a
+hedger and ditcher, two or three women at times,
+and there is the end. And such work!&mdash;mere
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
+animal labour, leading to so little result. The effect
+of constant, of lifelong application in such labour
+cannot but be deteriorating to the mind. The
+master himself must feel the dull routine. The
+steam-plough teaches the labourer who works near it
+something; the sight must react upon him, utterly opposed
+as it is to all the traditions of the past. The
+enterprise of the master must convey some small
+spirit of energy into the mind of the man. Where
+the cottages are built of wattle and daub, low and
+thatched&mdash;mere sheds, in fact&mdash;where the gardens
+are small, and the allotments, if any, far distant, and
+where the men wear a sullen, apathetic look, be sure
+the agriculture of the district is at a low ebb.</p>
+
+<p>Are not these few pictures sufficient to show
+beyond a cavil that the agriculture of this country
+exhibits the strangest inequalities? Anyone who
+chooses can verify the facts stated, and may perhaps
+discover more curious anomalies still. The spirit of
+science is undoubtedly abroad in the homes of the
+English farmers, and immense are the strides that
+have been taken; but still greater is the work that
+remains to be done. Suppose anyone had a garden,
+and carefully manured, and dug over and over again,
+and raked, and broke up all the larger clods, and
+well watered one particular section of it, leaving all
+the rest to follow the dictates of wild nature, could
+he possibly expect the same amount of produce from
+those portions which, practically speaking, took care
+of themselves? Here are men of intellect and
+energy employing every possible means to develop
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
+the latent powers of the soil, and producing extraordinary
+results in grain and meat. Here also are
+others who, in so far as circumstances permit, follow
+in their footsteps. But there remains a large area in
+the great garden of England which, practically speaking,
+takes care of itself. The grass grows, the seed
+sprouts and germinates, very much how they may,
+with little or no aid from man. It does not require
+much penetration to arrive at the obvious conclusion
+that the yield does not nearly approach the possible
+production. Neither in meat nor corn is the tale
+equal to what it well might be. All due allowance
+must be made for barren soils of sand or chalk with
+thinnest layers of earth; yet then there is an enormous
+area, where the soil is good and fertile, not
+properly productive. It would be extremely unfair
+to cast the blame wholly upon the tenants. They
+have achieved wonders in the past twenty years;
+they have made gigantic efforts and bestirred themselves
+right manfully. But a man may wander over
+his farm and note with discontented eye the many
+things he would like to do&mdash;the drains he would
+like to lay down, the manure he would like to
+spread abroad, the new stalls he would gladly build,
+the machine he so much wants&mdash;and then, shrugging
+his shoulders, reflect that he has not got the capital
+to do it with. Almost to a man they are sincerely
+desirous of progress; those who cannot follow in
+great things do in little. Science and invention
+have done almost all that they can be expected to
+do; chemistry and research have supplied powerful
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
+fertilizers. Machinery has been made to do work
+which at first sight seems incapable of being carried
+on by wheels and cranks. Science and invention
+may rest awhile: what is wanted is the universal
+application of their improvements by the aid of more
+capital. We want the great garden equally highly
+cultivated everywhere.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chapbreak" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="VILLAGE_ORGANIZATION" id="VILLAGE_ORGANIZATION"></a>VILLAGE ORGANIZATION</h2>
+
+
+<p>The great centres of population have almost entirely
+occupied the attention of our legislators of late
+years, and even those measures which affect the rural
+districts, or which may be extended to affect them at
+the will of the residents, have had their origin in the
+wish to provide for large towns. The Education
+Act arose out of a natural desire to place the means
+of learning within the reach of the dense population
+of such centres as London, Birmingham, Manchester,
+and others of that class; and although its operation
+extends to the whole country, yet those who have
+had any experience of its method of working in
+agricultural parishes will recognize at once that its
+designers did not contemplate the conditions of <a class="corr" name="TC_6" id="TC_6" title="rurul">rural</a>
+life when they were framing their Bill. What is
+reasonable enough when applied to cities is often
+extremely inconvenient when applied to villages. It
+would almost seem as if the framers of the Bill left
+out of sight the circumstances which obtain in agricultural
+districts. It was obviously drawn up with a
+view to cities and towns, where an organization exists
+which can be called in to assist the new institution.
+This indifference of the Bill to the conditions of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+country life is one of the reasons why it is so reluctantly
+complied with. The number of School
+Boards which have been called into existence in the
+country is extremely small, and even where they do
+exist they cannot be taken as representing a real
+outcome of opinion on the part of the inhabitants.
+They owe their establishment to certain causes which,
+in process of time, bring the parish under the operation
+of the Act, with or without the will of the residents.
+This is particularly the case in parishes where
+there is no large landlord, no one to take the initiative,
+and no large farmers to support the clergyman
+in his attempt to obtain, or maintain, an independent
+school. The matter is distinct from political feelings.
+It arises in a measure from the desultory village life,
+which possesses no organization, no power of combination.
+Here is a large and fairly populous parish
+without any great landowners, and, as a natural consequence,
+also without any large farmers. The
+property of the parish is in the hands of some score
+of persons; it may be split up into almost infinitesimal
+holdings in the village itself. Now, everyone
+knows the thoroughly independent character of
+an English farmer. He will follow what he considers
+the natural lead of his landlord, if he occupy a
+superior social position. He will follow his landlord
+in a sturdy, independent way, but he will follow no
+one else. Let there be no great landowner in the
+parish, and any combination on the part of the agriculturists
+becomes impossible. One man has one
+idea, another another, and each and all are determined
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
+not to yield an inch. Most of them are decidedly
+against the introduction of a School Board, and are
+quite ready to subscribe towards an independent
+school; but, then, when it comes to the administration
+of the school funds, there must be managers
+appointed to carry the plan into execution, and these
+managers must confer with the clergyman. Now here
+are endless elements of confusion and disagreement.
+One man thinks he ought to be a manager, and does
+not approve of the conduct of those who are in
+charge. Another dislikes the tone of the clergyman.
+A third takes a personal dislike to the schoolmaster
+who is employed. One little discord leads to further
+complication; someone loses his temper, and personalities
+are introduced; then it is all over with the
+subscription, and the school ceases, simply because
+there are no funds. Finally, the Imperial authorities
+step in, and finding education at a dead-lock, a
+School Board is presently established, though in all
+probability nine out of ten are against it, but hold
+their peace in the hope of at last getting some kind
+of organization. So it will be found that the few
+country School Boards which exist are in parishes
+where there is no large landowner, or where the
+owner is a non-resident, or the property in Chancery.
+In other words, they exist in places where there is no
+natural chief to give expression to the feelings of the
+parish.</p>
+
+<p>Agriculturists of all shades of political opinions
+are usually averse to a School Board. An ill-defined
+feeling is very often the strongest rule of conduct.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
+Now there is an ill-defined but very strong feeling
+that the introduction of a School Board means the
+placing of the parish more or less under imperial
+rule, and curtailing the freedom that has hitherto
+existed. This has been much strengthened by the
+experience gained during the last few years of the
+actual working of the Bill with respect to schools
+which are not Board Schools, but which come under
+the Government inspection. Every step of the proceedings
+shows only too plainly the utter unfitness of
+the clauses of the Bill to rural conditions. One of
+the most important clauses is that which insists
+upon a given amount of cubic space for each individual
+child. This has often entailed the greatest
+inconveniences, and very unnecessary expense. It
+was most certainly desirable that overcrowding and
+the consequent evolution of foul gases should be
+guarded against; and in great cities, where the air
+is always more or less impure, and contaminated
+with the effluvia from factories as well as from human
+breath, a large amount of cubic feet of space might
+properly be insisted upon; but in villages where the
+air is pure and free from the slightest contamination,
+villages situated often on breezy hills, or at worst in
+the midst of sweet meadow land, the hard-and-fast
+rule of so many cubic feet is an intolerable burden
+upon the supporters of the school. Still, that would
+not be so objectionable were it confined to the actual
+number of attendants at the school; but it would
+appear that the Government grant is not applicable
+to schools, unless they are large enough to allow
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
+to all children in the parish a certain given cubic
+space.</p>
+
+<p>Now, as a matter of fact, nothing like all the
+children of the parish attend the school. In rural
+districts, especially, where the distance of cottages
+from the school is often very great, there will always
+be a heavy percentage of absentees. There will
+also be a percentage who attend schools in connection
+with a Dissenting establishment, and even a
+certain number who attend private schools, to say
+nothing of the numbers who never attend at all. It
+is, then, extremely hard that the subscribers to a
+school should be compelled to erect a building
+sufficiently large to allow of the given quantity
+of space to each and every child in the parish.
+Matters like these have convinced the residents in
+rural districts that the Act was framed without any
+consideration of their peculiar position, and they
+naturally feel repugnant to its introduction amongst
+them, and decline to make it in any way a foundation
+of village organization. The Act regulating the
+age at which children may be employed in agriculture
+was also an extension of an original Act,
+passed to protect the interest of children in cities and
+manufacturing districts. There is no objection to
+the Act except that it is a dead-letter. How many
+prosecutions have taken place under it? No one
+ever hears of anything of the kind, and probably no
+one ever will. The fact is, that since the universal
+use of machinery there is not so ready an employment
+for boys and children of that tender age as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+formerly. They are not by any means so greatly in
+demand, neither do they pay so well, on account of
+the much larger wages they now ask for. In addition,
+the farmers are strongly in favour of the education
+of their labourers' children, and place every
+facility in the way of those attending school. In
+many parishes a very strong moral pressure is
+voluntarily put upon the labouring poor to induce
+them to send their children, and the labouring poor
+themselves have awakened in a measure to the
+advantages of education. The Act, therefore, is
+practically a dead-letter, and bears no influence upon
+village life. These two Acts, and the alteration of
+the law relating to sanitary matters&mdash;by which the
+Guardians of the Poor become the rural sanitary
+authority&mdash;are the only legislation of modern days
+that goes direct to the heart of rural districts. The
+rural sanitary authority possesses great powers, but
+rarely exercises them. The constitution of that body
+forbids an active supervision. It is made up of one
+or two gentlemen from each parish, who are generally
+elected to that office without any contest, and simply
+because their brother farmers feel confidence in their
+judgment. The principal objects to which their
+attention is directed while at the board is to see that
+no unnecessary expenditure is permitted, so as to
+keep the rates at the lowest possible figure, and to
+state all they know of the conduct and position of
+the poor of their own parishes who apply for relief,
+in which latter matter they afford the most valuable
+assistance, many of the applicants having been known
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+to them for a score of years or more. But if there is
+one thing a farmer dislikes more than another it is
+meddling and interfering with other persons' business.
+He would sooner put up with any amount of
+inconvenience, and even serious annoyance, than take
+an active step to remove the cause of his grumbling,
+if that step involves the operation of the law against
+his neighbours. The guardian who rides to the
+board meeting week after week may be perfectly
+well aware that the village which he represents is
+suffering under a common nuisance: that there is a
+pond in the middle of the place which emits an
+offensive odour; that there are three or four cottages
+in a dilapidated condition and unfit for human habitation,
+or crowded to excess with dirty tenants; or
+that the sewage of the place flows in an open ditch
+into the brook which supplies the inhabitants with
+water. He has not got power to deal with these
+matters personally, but he can, if he chooses, bring
+them before the notice of the board, which can
+instruct its inspector (probably also its relieving
+officer) to take action at law against the nuisance.
+But it is not to be expected that a single person will
+do anything of the kind.</p>
+
+<p>There is in all properly-balanced minds an instinctive
+dislike to the office of public prosecutor,
+and nothing more unpopular could be imagined.
+The agriculturist who holds the office of guardian
+does not feel it his duty to act as common spy and
+informer, and he may certainly be pardoned if he
+neglects to act contrary to his feelings as a gentleman.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+Therefore he rides by the stinking pond, the overcrowded
+cottages, the polluted water, week by week,
+and says nothing whatever. It is easy to remark
+that the board has its inspector, who is paid to report
+upon these matters; but the inspector has, in the
+first place, to traverse an enormous extent of country,
+and has no opportunity of becoming acquainted with
+nuisances which are not unbearably offensive. He
+has usually other duties to perform which occupy
+the greater part of his time, and he is certainly not
+overpaid for the work he does and the distance he
+travels. He also has his natural feelings upon the
+subject of making himself disagreeable, and he
+shrinks from interference, unless instructed by his
+superiors. His position is not sufficiently independent
+to render him, in all cases, a free agent; so
+it happens that the rural sanitary authority is practically
+a nullity. It is too cumbrous, it meets at too
+great a distance, and its powers, after all, even when
+at last set in motion, are too limited to have any
+appreciable effect in ameliorating the condition of
+village life. But even if this nominal body were
+actively engaged in prosecuting offenders, the desired
+result would be far from being attained. One of
+the most serious matters is the supply of water for
+public use in villages. At the present moment there
+exists no authority which can cause a parish to be
+supplied with good drinking water. While the
+great centres of population have received the most
+minute attention from the Legislature, the large
+population which resides in villages has been left to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>
+its own devices, with the exception of the three
+measures, the first of which is unsuitable and strenuously
+opposed, the second a dead-letter, and the third
+cumbrous and practically inoperative.</p>
+
+<p>Let us now examine the authorities which act
+under ancient enactments, or by reason of long standing,
+immemorial custom. The first of these may be
+taken to be the Vestry. The powers of the vestries
+appear to have formerly been somewhat extended,
+but in these latter times the influence they exercise
+has been very much curtailed. At the time when
+each parish relieved its own poor, the Vestry was
+practically the governing authority of the village,
+and possessed almost unlimited power, so far as the
+poor were concerned. That power was derived from
+its control over the supply of bread to the destitute.
+As the greater part of the working population received
+relief, it followed that the Vestry, composed
+of the agriculturists and landowners, was practically
+autocratic. Still longer ago, when the laws of the
+land contained certain enactments as to the attendance
+of persons at church, the Vestry had still greater
+powers. But at present, in most parishes, the Vestry
+is a nominal assembly, and frequently there is a
+difficulty in getting sufficient numbers of people
+together to constitute a legal authority. The poor
+rate is no longer made at the Vestry; the church
+rate is a thing of the past; and what is then left?
+There is the appointment of overseers, churchwardens,
+and similar formal matters; but the power
+has departed. In all probability they will never be
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
+resuscitated, because in all authorities of the kind
+there is a suspicion of Church influence; and there
+seems to be almost as much dislike to any shadow of
+that as against the political and temporal claims of
+the Roman Pontiff. The Vestry can never again
+become a popular vehicle of administration. The
+second is the Board of Guardians&mdash;though this is
+not properly a village or local authority at all, but
+merely a representative firm for the supervision of
+certain funds in which a number of villages are
+partners, and which can only be applied to a few
+stated purposes, under strictly limited conditions.
+There is no popular feeling involved in the expenditure
+of this fund, except that of economy, and
+almost any ratepayer may be trusted to vote for this;
+so that the office of guardian is a most routine one,
+and offers no opportunity of reform. Often one
+gentleman will represent a village for twenty years,
+being simply nominated, or even not as much as
+nominated, from year to year. If at last he grows
+tired of the monotony, and mentions it to his friends,
+they nominate another gentleman, always chosen for
+his good-fellowship and known dislike to change or
+interference&mdash;a man, in fact, without any violent
+opinions. He is nominated, and takes his seat.
+There is no emulation, no excitement. The Board
+of Guardians would assume more of the character
+of a local authority if it possessed greater freedom of
+action. But its course is so rigidly bound down by
+minute regulations and precedents that it really has
+no volition of its own, and can only deal with circumstances
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
+as they arise, according to a code laid down
+at a distance. It is not permitted to discriminate; it
+can neither relax nor repress; it is absolutely inelastic.
+In consequence it does not approach to the
+idea of a real local power, but rather resembles an
+assembly of unpaid clerks doling out infinitesimal
+sums of money to an endless stream of creditors,
+according to written instructions left by the absent
+head of the firm. Next there is the Highway
+Board; but this also possesses but limited authority,
+and deals only with roads. It has merely to see that
+the roads are kept in good repair, and that no encroachments
+are made upon them. Like the Board
+of Guardians, it is a most useful body; but its
+influence upon village life is indirect and indeterminate.
+There only remains the Court Leet.
+This, the most ancient and absolute of all, nevertheless
+approaches in principle nearest to the ideal of a
+local village authority. It is supposed to be composed
+of the lord of the manor, and of his court or
+jury of tenants, and its object is to see that the rights
+of the manor are maintained. The Court Leet was
+formerly a very important assembly, but in our time
+its offices are minute, and only apply to small
+interests. It is held at long intervals of time&mdash;as
+long, in some instances, as seven years&mdash;and is summoned
+by the steward of the lord of the manor, and
+commonly held at an inn, refreshments being supplied
+by the lord. Here come all the poor persons
+who occupy cottages or garden grounds on quit-rent,
+and pay their rent, which may amount in seven years
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>
+to as much as fourteen shillings. A member of the
+court will, perhaps, draw the attention of the court
+to the fact that a certain ditch or watercourse has
+become choked up, and requires clearing out or
+diverting; and if this ditch be upon the manor, the
+court can order it to be attended to. On the manor
+they have also jurisdiction over timber, paths, and
+similar matters, and can order that a cottage which
+is dilapidated shall be repaired or removed. In point
+of fact, however, the Court Leet is merely a jovial
+assembly of the tenants upon the estate of the landowner,
+who drink so many bottles of sherry at his
+expense, and set to right a few minute grievances.</p>
+
+<p>In many places&mdash;the vast majority, indeed&mdash;there
+is no longer any Court Leet held, because the
+manorial rights have become faint and indistinct
+with the passage of time; the manor has been sold,
+split up into two or three estates, the entail cut off;
+or the manor as a manor has totally disappeared
+under the changes of ownership, and the various
+deeds and liabilities which have arisen. But this
+merely general gathering of the farmers of the village&mdash;where
+Court Leets are still held, all farmers are
+invited, irrespective of their supposed allegiance to
+the lord of the manor or not&mdash;this pleasant dinner
+and sherry party, which meets to go through obsolete
+customs, and exercise minute and barely legal rights,
+contains nevertheless many of the elements of a
+desirable local authority. It is composed of gentlemen
+of all shades of opinion; no politics are introduced.
+It meets in the village itself, and under the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+direct sanction of the landowner. Its powers are
+confined to strictly local matters, and its members
+are thoroughly acquainted with those matters. The
+affairs of the village are discussed without acrimony,
+and a certain amount of understanding arrived at.
+It regulates disputes and grievances arising between
+the inhabitants of cottage property, and can see that
+that property is habitable. It acts more by custom,
+habit, more by acquiescence of the parties than by
+any imperious, hard-and-fast law laid down at a
+distance from the scene. But any hope of the
+resuscitation of Court Leets must not be entertained,
+because in so many places the manor is now merely
+'reputed,' and has no proper existence; because, too,
+the lord of the manor may be living at a distance, and
+possess scarcely any property in the parish, except his
+'rights.' The idea, however, of the agriculturists and
+principal residents in a village meeting in a friendly
+manner together, under the direct leadership of the
+largest landowner, to discuss village matters, is one
+that may be revived with some prospect of success.
+At present, who, pray, has the power of so much as
+convening a meeting of the parishioners, or of taking
+the sense of the village? It may be done by the
+churchwardens convening a Vestry, but a Vestry is
+extremely limited in authority, unpopular, and without
+any cohesion. Under the new Education Acts
+the signatures of a certain number of ratepayers to
+a requisition compels the officer appointed by law to
+call a meeting, but only for objects connected with
+the school. Upon consideration it appears that there
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+really is no village authority at all; no recognized
+place or time at which the principal inhabitants can
+meet together and discuss the affairs of the parish
+with a prospect of immediate action resulting. The
+meetings of the magistrates at petty sessions, quarter
+sessions, and at various other times are purposely
+omitted from this argument, because there is rarely
+more than one magistrate resident in a village, or at
+most two, and the assemblies of these gentlemen at
+a distance from their homes cannot be taken to form
+a village council in any sense of the term.</p>
+
+<p>The places where agriculturists and the principal
+inhabitants of the parish do meet together and discuss
+matters in a friendly spirit are the churchyard, before
+service, the market dinner, the hunting-field, and the
+village inn. The last has fallen into disuse. It used
+to be the custom to meet at the central village inn
+night after night to hear the news, as well as for convivial
+purposes. In those days of slow travelling and
+few posts, the news was communicated from village
+to village by pedlars, or carriers' carts calling, as they
+went, at each inn. But now it is a rare thing to find
+farmers at the inn in their own village. The old
+drinking habits have died out. It is not that there
+is any prejudice against the inn; but there is a cessation
+of the inducement to sit there night after night.
+People do not care to drink as they used to, and they
+can get the news just as well at home. The parlour
+at the inn has ceased to be the village parliament.
+The hunting-field is an unfavourable place for discussion,
+since in the midst of a remark the hounds may
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+start, and away go speaker and listener, and the subject
+is forgotten. The market dinner is not so general
+and friendly a meeting as it was. There is a large
+admixture of manure and machinery agents, travellers
+for seed-merchants, corn-dealers, and others who have
+no interest in purely local matters, and the dinner
+itself is somewhat formal, with its regular courses of
+fish and so forth, till the talk is more or less constrained
+and general. The churchyard is a singular place of
+meeting, but it is still popular. The agriculturist
+walks into the yard about a quarter to eleven, sees a
+friend; a third joins; then the squire strolls round from
+his carriage, and a pleasant chat ensues, till the ceasing
+bell reminds them that service is about to commence.
+But this is a very narrow representation of the village,
+and is perhaps never made up on two occasions of the
+same persons. The duration of the gathering is extremely
+short, and it has no cohesion or power of action.</p>
+
+<p>It is difficult to convey an adequate idea of the
+desultory nature of village life. There is an utter
+lack of any kind of cohesion, a total absence of any
+common interest, or social bond of union. There is
+no <i>esprit de corps</i>. In old times there was, to a certain
+extent&mdash;in the days when each village was divided
+against its neighbour, and fiercely contested with it
+the honour of sending forth the best backsword
+player. No one wishes those times to return. We
+have still village cricket clubs, who meet each other
+in friendly battle, but there is no enthusiasm over it.
+The players themselves are scarcely excited, and it is
+often difficult to get sufficient together to fulfil an
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
+engagement. There is the dinner of the village
+benefit club, year after year. The object of the club
+is of the best, but its appearance upon club-day is
+a woeful spectacle to eyes that naturally look for
+a little taste upon an occasion of supposed festivity.
+What can be more melancholy than a procession of
+men clad in ill-fitting black clothes, in which they
+are evidently uncomfortable, with blue scarves over
+the shoulder, headed with a blatant brass band, and
+going first to church, and then all round the place
+for beer? They eat their dinner and disperse, and
+then there is an end of the matter. There is no
+social bond of union, no connection.</p>
+
+<p>It is questionable whether this desultoriness is
+a matter for congratulation. It fosters an idle, slow,
+clumsy, heedless race of men&mdash;men who are but
+great children, who have no public feeling whatever&mdash;without
+a leading idea. This fact was most patently
+exhibited at the last General Election, when the agricultural
+labourers for the first time exercised the franchise
+freely to any extent. The great majority of them
+voted plump for the candidate favoured by the squire
+or by the farmer. There was nothing unreasonable
+in this; it is natural and fit that men should support
+the candidate who comes nearest to their interest;
+but, then, let there be some better reason for it than
+the simple fact 'that master goes that way.' Whether
+it be for Liberal or Conservative, whatever be the
+party, surely it is desirable that the labourer should
+possess a leading idea, an independent conviction of
+what is for the public good. Let it be a mistaken
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+conviction, it is better than an absence of all feeling;
+but politics are no part of the question. Politics
+apart, the villager might surely have some conception
+of what is best for his own native place, the parish
+in which he was born and bred, and with every field
+in which he is familiar. But no, nothing of the kind.
+He goes to and fro his work, receives his wages, spends
+them at the ale-house, and wanders listlessly about.
+The very conception of a public feeling never occurs
+to him; it is all desultory. A little desultory work&mdash;except
+in harvest, labourer's work cannot be called
+downright <i>work</i>&mdash;a little desultory talk, a little
+desultory rambling about, a good deal of desultory
+drinking: these are the sum and total of it; no, add
+a little desultory smoking and purposeless mischief
+to make it complete. Why should not the labourer
+be made to feel an interest in the welfare, the prosperity,
+and progress of his own village? Why should
+he not be supplied with a motive for united action?
+All experience teaches that united action, even on
+small matters, has a tendency to enlarge the minds
+and the whole powers of those engaged. The labourer
+feels so little interest in his own progress, because the
+matter is only brought before him in its individual
+bearing. You can rarely interest a single person in
+the improvement of himself, but you can interest
+a number in the progress of that number as a body.
+The vacancy of mind, the absence of any ennobling
+aspiration, so noticeable in the agricultural labourer,
+is a painful fact. Does it not, in great measure, arise
+from this very desultory life&mdash;from this procrastinating
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
+dislike to active exertion? Supply a motive&mdash;a general
+public motive&mdash;and the labourer will wake up. At
+the present moment, what interest has an ordinary
+agricultural labourer in the affairs of his own village?
+Practically none whatever. He may, perhaps, pay
+rates; but these are administered at a distance, and
+he knows nothing of the system by which they are
+dispensed. If his next-door neighbour's cottage is
+tumbling down, the thatch in holes, the doors off
+their hinges, it matters nothing to him. Certainly,
+he cannot himself pay for its renovation, and there is
+no fund to which he can subscribe so much as a penny
+with that object in view. A number of cottages may
+be without a supply of water. Well, he cannot help
+it; probably he never gives a thought to it. There
+is no governing body in the place responsible for such
+things&mdash;no body in the election of which he has any
+hand. He puts his hands in his pockets and slouches
+about, smoking a short pipe, and drinks a quart at
+the nearest ale-house. He is totally indifferent.
+To go still further, there can be no doubt that the
+absence of any such ruling body, even if ruling only
+on sufferance, has a deteriorating effect upon the
+minds of the best-informed and broadest-minded
+agriculturist. He sees a nuisance or a grievance,
+possibly something that may approach the nature of
+a calamity. 'Ah, well,' he sighs, 'I can't help it;
+I've no power to interfere.' He walks round his
+farm, examines his sheep, pats his horses, and rides
+to market, and naturally forgets all about it. Were
+there any ready and available means by which the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+nuisance could be removed, or the calamity in some
+measure averted, the very same man would at once
+put it in motion, and never cease till the desired
+result was attained; but the total absence of any
+authority, any common centre, tends to foster what
+appears an utter indifference. How can it be otherwise?
+The absence of such a body tends, therefore,
+in two ways to the injury of the labourer: first,
+because he has no means of helping himself; and,
+secondly, because those above him in social station
+have no means of assisting him. But why cannot
+the squire step in and do all that is wanted? What
+is there that the landowner is not expected to do?
+He is compelled by the law to contribute to the
+maintenance of roads by heavy subscriptions, while
+men of much larger income, but no real property,
+ride over them free of cost. He is expected by
+public opinion to rebuild all the cottages on his
+estate, introducing all the modern improvements, to
+furnish them with large plots of garden ground, to
+supply them with coal during the winter at nominal
+cost, to pay three parts of the expense of erecting
+schools, and what not. He is expected to extend
+the farm-buildings upon the farms, to rebuild the
+farmsteads, and now to compensate the tenants for
+improvements, though he may not particularly care
+for them, knowing full well by experience that improvements
+are a long time before they pay any
+interest on the principal invested. Now we expect
+him to remove all nuisances in the village, to supply
+water, to exercise a wise paternal authority, and all
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
+at his own cost. The whole thing is unreasonable.
+Many landowners have succeeded to heavily-burdened
+estates. The best estates pay, it must be remembered,
+but a very small comparative interest upon their value&mdash;in
+some instances not more than two and a half per
+cent. Moreover, almost all landowners do take an
+interest in improvements, and are ready to forward
+them; but can a gentleman be expected to go round
+from cottage to cottage performing the duties of an
+inspector of nuisances? and, if he did so, would it be
+tolerated for an instant? The outcry would be raised
+of interference, tyranny, overbearing insolence, intolerable
+intrusion. It is undoubtedly the landowner's
+duty to forward all reasonable schemes of
+improvement; but if the inhabitants are utterly
+indifferent to progress of any kind, it is not his duty
+to issue an autocratical ukase. Let the inhabitants
+combine, in however loose and informal a manner,
+and the landowner will always be ready to assist
+them with purse and moral support.</p>
+
+<p>Granting, then, that there is at present no such
+local authority, and that it is desirable&mdash;what are the
+objects which would come within its sphere of operation?
+In an article which had the honour of appearing
+in a former number of this magazine,<a name="FNanchor_2" id="FNanchor_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> the
+writer pointed out that the extension of the allotment
+system was only delayed because there was no
+body or authority which had power to increase the
+area under spade cultivation. Throughout the
+country there is an undoubted conviction that such
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
+extension is extremely desirable, but who is to take
+the initiative? There is an increasing demand for
+these gardens&mdash;a demand that will probably make
+itself loudly felt as time goes on and the population
+grows larger. Even those villages that possess allotment
+grounds would be in a better position if there
+were some body who held rule over the gardens,
+and administered them according to varying circumstances.
+Some of these allotments are upon the
+domain of the landowner, and have been broken
+up for the purpose under his directions; but it is
+not every gentleman who has either the time or the
+inclination to superintend the actual working of the
+gardens, and they are often left pretty much to take
+care of themselves. Other allotment grounds are
+simply matters of speculation with the owner, and
+are let out to the highest bidder in order to make
+money, without any species of control whatever.
+This is not desirable for many reasons, and such
+owners deprecate the extension of the system, because
+if a larger area were offered to the labourer, the
+letting value would diminish, since there would be
+less competition for the lots. There can be very
+little doubt that the allotment garden will form an
+integral part of the social system of the future, and,
+as such, will require proper regulation. If it is to be
+so, it is obviously desirable that it should be in the
+hands of a body of local gentlemen with a perfect
+knowledge of the position and resource of the
+numerous small tenants, and a thorough comprehension
+of the practical details which are essential to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>
+success in such cultivation. It may be predicted
+that the first step which would ensue upon the
+formation of such a body would be an extension
+of allotments. There would be no difficulty in
+renting a field or fields for that purpose. The village
+council, as we may for convenience term it, would
+select a piece of ground possessing an easily-moved
+soil, avoiding stiff clay on the one hand, and too
+light, sandy ground on the other. For this piece
+they would give a somewhat higher rent than it
+would obtain for agricultural purposes&mdash;say &pound;3 per
+acre&mdash;which they would guarantee to the owner after
+the manner of a syndicate. They would cause the
+hedges to be pared down to the very smallest proportions,
+but the mounds to be somewhat raised,
+so as to avoid harbouring birds, and at the same
+time safely exclude cattle, which in a short time
+would play havoc with the vegetables. If possible, a
+road should run right across the plot, with a gateway
+on either side, so that a cart might pass straight
+through, pick up its load, and go on and out without
+turning. Each plot should have a frontage upon
+this road, or to branch roads running at right angles
+to it, so that each tenant could remove his produce
+without trespassing upon the plot of his neighbour.
+Such trespasses often lead to much ill-will. The
+narrow paths dividing these strips should be sufficiently
+wide to allow of wheeling a barrow down
+them, and should on no account be permitted to be
+overgrown with grass. Grass-paths are much prettier,
+but are simply reservoirs of couch, weeds, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
+slugs, and therefore to be avoided. The whole field
+should be accurately mapped, and each plot numbered
+on the map, and a strong plug driven into the
+plot with a similar number upon it&mdash;a plan which
+renders identification easy, and prevents disputes.
+A book should be kept, with the name of every
+tenant entered into it, and indexed, like a ledger,
+with the initial letter. Against the name of the
+tenant should be placed the area of his holdings, and
+the numbers of his plots upon the map; and in this
+book the date of his tenancy, and any change of
+holding, should be registered. There should be a
+book of printed forms (not to be torn out) of agreement,
+with blank spaces for name, date, and number,
+which should be signed by the tenant. In a third
+book all payments and receipts should be entered.
+This sounds commercial, and looks like serious business;
+but as the rent would be payable half-yearly
+only, there would be really very little trouble required,
+and the saving of disputes very great.
+During the season of cropping, the payment of a
+small gratuity to the village policeman would insure
+the allotment being well watched, and if pilferers
+were detected they should invariably be prosecuted.
+As many of the tenants would come from long distances,
+and would not frequent their plots every
+evening, there might possibly be a small lock-up
+tool-house in which to deposit their tools, the key
+being left in charge of some old man living in an
+adjacent cottage. The rules of cultivation would
+depend in some measure upon the nature of the soil,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+but such a village council would be composed of
+practical men, who would have no difficulty whatever
+in drawing up concise and accurate instructions.
+The council could depute one or more members to
+receive the rent-money and to keep the books, and if
+any labour were required, there are always bailiffs
+and trustworthy men who could be employed to do
+it. At a small expense the field should be properly
+drained before being opened, and even though let at
+a very low charge per perch, there would still remain
+an overplus above the rent paid by the council for
+the field, sufficient in a short time to clear off the
+debt incurred in draining.</p>
+
+<p>It is very rarely that allotment gardens are sufficiently
+manured, and this is a subject that would
+come very properly under the jurisdiction of the
+allotment committee of our village council. Some
+labourers keep a pig or two, but all do not; and
+many living at a considerable distance would find,
+and do find, a difficulty in conveying any manure
+they may possess to the spot. So it often happens
+that gardens are cropped year after year without any
+substances being restored to the soil, which gradually
+becomes less productive. Means should be devised
+of supplying this deficiency. Manure is valuable to
+the farmer, but still he could spare a little&mdash;quite
+sufficient for this purpose. Suppose the allotment
+gardens consisted of twelve acres, then let one-fourth,
+or three acres, be properly manured every year. This
+would be no strain upon the product of manure in
+the vicinity, and in four years&mdash;four years' system&mdash;the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
+whole of the field would receive a proper amount,
+in addition to the small quantities the labourer's pig
+produced. Every tenant, in his agreement, could be
+caused to pay, in addition to his rent, once every
+four years, a small sum in part-payment for this
+manuring, and also for the hauling of the material
+to the field. This payment would not represent the
+actual value of the manure, but it would maintain
+the principle of self-help; and, as far as possible, the
+allotments should be self-supporting. In cases of
+dispute, the committee would simply have to refer
+the matter to the council, and the thing would be
+definitely settled; but under a regular system of
+this kind, as it were mapped down and written out,
+no obstinate disputes could arise. In this one matter
+of allotment-gardens alone there is plenty of scope
+for the exertions of a village council, and incalculable
+good might be attained. The very order and systematic
+working of the thing would have a salutary
+effect upon the desultory life of the village.</p>
+
+<p>Next comes the water-supply of the village. This
+is a matter of vital importance. There are, of course,
+villages where water is abundant, even too abundant,
+as in low-lying meadow-land by the side of rivers
+which are liable to overflow. There are villages
+traversed throughout the whole of their length by
+a brook running parallel with the road, so that to
+gain access to each cottage it is necessary to cross
+a 'drock,' or small bridge, and in summer-time such
+villages are very picturesque. In the colder months,
+the mist on the water and damp air are not so
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
+pleasant or healthy. Many villages, situated at the
+edge of a range of hills&mdash;a most favourite position
+for villages&mdash;are supplied with good springs of the
+clearest water rising in those hills. But there are
+also large numbers of villages placed high up above
+the water-level on the same hills, which are most
+scantily supplied with water; and there are also
+villages far away down in the valley which are liable
+to run short in the summer or dry time, when the
+'bourne,' or winter watercourse, fails them. Such
+places, situated in the midst of rich meadows, can
+sometimes barely find water enough for the cattle,
+who are not so particular as to quality. Even in
+places where there is a good natural spring, or a
+brook which is rarely dry, the cottagers experience
+no little difficulty in conveying it to their homes,
+which may be situated a mile away. It is not
+uncommon in country places to see the water trickling
+along in the ditch by the roadside bayed up
+with a miniature dam in front of a cottage, and from
+the turbid pool thus formed the woman fills her
+kettle. People who live in towns, and can turn on
+the water in any room of their houses without the
+slightest exertion, have no idea of the difficulty the
+poor experience in the country in procuring good
+water, despite all the beautiful rivers and springs
+and brooks which poetry sings of. After a man or
+woman has worked all day in the field, perhaps at
+a distance of two miles from home, it is weary and
+discouraging work to have to trudge with the pail
+another weary half-mile or so to the pool for water.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>
+It is harder still, after trudging that weary half-mile,
+pail in hand, to find the water almost too low to dip,
+muddied by cattle, and diminished in quantity to
+serve the pressing needs of the animals living higher
+up the stream. Now, in starting, it may be assumed
+that the nearest source of water in a village is certain
+to be found upon the premises of some agriculturist.
+He will, doubtless, be perfectly willing to allow free
+access to his stream or pool; but he cannot be expected
+to construct conveniences for the public use,
+and he may even feel naturally annoyed if continual
+use by thirty people, twice a day, finally breaks his
+pump. He naturally believes that other gentlemen
+in the village should take an equal interest with
+himself in the public welfare, but they do not appear
+to do so. It may be that the path to the pump
+leads through the private garden, right before his
+sitting-room window, and the constant passage of
+women and children for water, particularly children,
+who are apt to lounge and stare about them, becomes
+a downright nuisance. This, surely, ought not to
+be. A very little amount of united action on the
+part of the principal inhabitants of the village would
+put this straight. The pump could be repaired, a
+new path made, and the water conveyed to a stone
+trough by a hose, or something of the kind, and the
+owner would be quite willing to sanction it, but
+he does not see why it should all be done at his
+expense. The other inhabitants of the village see
+the difficulty, recognize it, perhaps talk about remedying
+it, but nothing is done, simply because there
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
+exists no body, no council to undertake it. Spontaneous
+combination is extremely uncertain in its
+action; the organization should exist before the
+necessity for utilizing it arises. In other places what
+is wanted is a well, but cottagers cannot afford to dig
+a deep well, and certainly no combination can be
+expected from them alone and unassisted. Village
+wells require also to be under some kind of supervision.
+At intervals they require cleaning out. The
+machinery for raising water must be prepared; the
+cover to prevent accidents to children renewed. A
+well that has no one to look after it quickly becomes
+the receptacle of all the stones and old boots and
+dead cats in the place. But if there is a terror of
+prosecution, the well remains clear and useful. The
+digging of a deep well is an event of national importance,
+so to say, to a village. It may happen
+that a noble spring of water bursts out some little
+distance from the village, but is practically useless to
+the inhabitants because of its distance. What more
+easy than to run a hose from it right to a stone
+trough, or dipping-place, in the centre of the village?
+In most cases, very simple engineering ability would
+be sufficient to supply the hamlet. The hose, or
+whatever the plan might be, need not take half nor
+a quarter of the water thrown out by the spring.
+The owner might object; certainly he would object
+to any forcible carrying away of his water; but if he
+were himself a party to the scheme, and to receive
+compensation for any injury, he would not do so.</p>
+
+<p>Water has been the cause of more disputes,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
+probably, than anything else between neighbouring
+agriculturists. One wishes it for his water-meadows,
+another for his cattle, a third for his home-consumption;
+then there is, perhaps, the miller to be consulted.
+After all, there is, in most cases, more than
+enough water for everybody, and a very little mutual
+yielding would accommodate all, and supply the
+village in the bargain. But each party being alone
+in his view, without any mediator, the result may be
+a lawsuit, or ill-blood, lasting for years; the cutting
+down of bays and dams, the possible collision of the
+men employed.</p>
+
+<p>Between these parties, between agriculturists themselves,
+the establishment of a species of village council
+would often lead to peace and harmony. The advice
+and expressed wishes of their neighbour, the influence
+of the clergyman and the resident landlord, and the
+existence of a common public want in the village,
+would have an irresistible effect; and what neither
+would yield to his opponent, all would yield to a
+body of friends. Taken in this way it may safely be
+considered that there would be no difficulty in obtaining
+access to water. In places which are still less
+fortunate and, especially in dry times, are at a greater
+distance from the precious element, there still remains
+a plan by which sufficient could be secured, and
+that is the portable water-tank. Our agricultural
+machinists now turn out handsome and capacious
+iron tanks which are coming into general use. Now,
+no one farmer can be expected to send water-tank
+and team three or four times every evening to fetch
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+up water for the use of cottagers, not one-twentieth
+of whom work for him. But why should there not
+be a tank, the public property of the village, and why
+should not teams take it in turn? Undoubtedly
+something of the kind would immediately spring into
+existence were there any village organization whatever.
+In a large number of villages, the natural
+supply would be sufficient during three parts of the
+year, and it would be only in summer that any
+assistance would be necessary.</p>
+
+<p>While on the subject of water, another matter may
+as well be dealt with, and that is the establishment of
+bathing-places near villages. This is, of course, impossible
+over considerable areas of country where
+water is scarce, and especially scarce in the bathing
+season. Even in many places, however, where water
+is comparatively deficient in quantity, there are
+usually some great ponds, which for part of the
+season could be made applicable for bathing purposes.
+There then remain an immense number of villages
+situated on or near a stream, and wherever there is a
+stream a bathing-place is practicable. At the present
+moment it would be difficult to find one such place,
+unless on the banks of a large river, and rivers are far
+between. The boys and young men who feel a
+natural desire to bathe in the warm weather resort to
+muddy ponds, with a filthy bottom of black slush, or
+paddle about in shallow brooks no more than knee-deep,
+or in the water-carriers in water meadows.
+This species of bathing is practically useless; it does
+not answer any purposes of cleanliness, and learning
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
+to swim is out of the question. The formation of a
+proper bathing-place presents few difficulties. A spot
+must be chosen near to the village, but far enough
+away for decency. The bottom of the stream should
+be covered with a layer of sand and small gravel,
+carefully avoiding large stones and sharp-edged flints.
+Much of the pleasure of bathing depends upon a good
+bottom, and nothing is more likely to deter a young
+beginner than the feeling that he cannot place his
+feet on the ground without the danger of lacerating
+them. For this reason, also, care should be taken
+to exclude all boughs and branches, and particularly
+the prickly bushes cut from hedges, which are most
+annoying to bathers. The stream should be bayed
+up to a depth at the deepest part of about five feet,
+which is quite deep enough for ordinary swimming,
+and reduces the danger to a minimum. If possible,
+a strong smooth rail should run across the pool, or
+partly across. This is for the encouragement of
+boys and young bathers, who like something to catch
+hold of, and it is also an adjunct in learning to swim,
+for the boy can stand opposite to it, and after two or
+three strokes place his hand on it, and so gradually
+increasing the distance, he can swim without once
+losing confidence. Those who cannot swim can hold
+to the rail and splash about and enjoy themselves.
+Such a bathing-place will sound childish enough to
+strong swimmers, who have learnt to go long
+distances with ease in the Thames or in the sea, but
+it must be remembered that we are dealing with an
+inland population who are timid of water. A boy
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>
+who can cross such a small pool without touching the
+bottom with his feet, would soon feel at home in
+broader waters, if ever circumstances should bring
+him near them. If there is no stream a large pond
+could be cleaned out, and sand and gravel placed
+upon the bottom&mdash;almost anything is better than the
+soft oozy mud, which, once stirred up, will not settle
+for hours, and destroys all pleasure or benefit from
+bathing. No building is necessary to dress in, or
+anything of that kind. The place selected would be,
+of course, at a distance from any public footpath, and
+even if it were near there are so few passing in rural
+outlying districts that no one need be shocked.
+But if it was considered necessary an older man
+could be paid a small sum to walk down every
+evening, or at the stated hours for bathing, and see
+that no irregularity occurred. A loose pole or two
+always kept near the stream or pond, and ready to
+hand, would amply provide against any little danger
+there might be. Bathing is most important to health,
+and if a really good swim is possible there is nothing
+so conducive to an elasticity of frame. Our labourers
+are notoriously strong and muscular, and possess
+considerable power of endurance (though they destroy
+their 'wind,' in running phraseology, by too much
+beer), but their strength is clumsy, their gait ungainly,
+their run heavy and slow. The freedom of motion
+in the water, the simultaneous use of arms and limbs,
+the peculiar character of the exercise, renders it one,
+above all others, calculated to give an ease and grace
+to the body. In a good physical education, swimming
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
+must form an important part; and the labourer
+requires a physical education quite as much as a
+mental. The bathing-place, as a means of inducing
+personal cleanliness, would have its uses. The
+cottages of the labouring poor are often models
+of cleanliness, but the persons of the inhabitants
+precisely the reverse. The expense of such a bathing-place
+need be but very small. If it was situated in a
+cow-leaze, the bathing could begin the moment the
+spring became warm enough; if in a meadow usually
+mown, as soon as the grass has been cut, which
+would be early in June. It would perhaps be necessary
+to have stated hours of bathing; but no other
+regulation&mdash;the less restriction the better the privilege
+would be appreciated. Exercises of this character
+could not be too much encouraged. Every accomplishment
+of the kind adds a new power to the man,
+and gives him a sense of superiority.</p>
+
+<p>There should be a rough kind of gymnasium for
+the villagers. Almost always a piece of waste ground
+could be found, and the requisite materials are very
+simple and inexpensive. A few upright poles for
+climbing; horizontal bars; a few ropes, and a ladder
+would be sufficient. In wet weather some large
+open cow-house could be utilized for such purposes.
+In summer such outbuildings are empty, the cattle
+being in the fields. A few pairs of quoits also could
+be added at a small cost. Wrestling, perhaps, had
+better be avoided, as liable to lead to quarrels; but
+jumping and running should be fostered, and prizes
+presented for excellence. It is not the value of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
+prize, it is the fact that it is a prize. A good strong
+pocket-knife with four or five blades would be valued
+by a ploughboy, and a labourer would be pleased
+with an ornamental pipe costing five shillings, or
+a hoe or spade could be substituted as more useful.</p>
+
+<p>The institution of such annual village games, the
+bathing-place, the gymnasium in the open air, the
+running match, the quoits, would have a tendency to
+awaken the emulation of the labouring class; and
+once awaken the emulation, an increase of intelligence
+follows. A man would feel that he was not altogether
+a mere machine, to do so much work and then trudge
+home and sleep. Lads would have something better
+to do than play pitch-and-toss, and slouch about the
+place, learning nothing but bad language. A life
+would be imparted to the village, there would be a
+centre of union, a gathering-place, and a certain
+amount of proper pride in the village, and an <i>esprit
+de corps</i> would spring up. In all these things the
+labourer should be encouraged to carry them out as
+much as possible in his own way, and without interference
+or supervision. Make the bathing-place,
+erect the poles and horizontal bars, establish the
+pocket-knife and hoe prizes, present the quoits, but
+let him use them in his own way. There must be
+freedom, liberty, or the attempt would certainly fail.</p>
+
+<p>How many villages have so much as a reading-room?
+Such a local council as has been indicated
+would soon come to discuss the propriety of establishing
+such an institution. If managed strictly with a
+view to the real wants and ideas of the people, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>
+not in accordance with any preconceived principles of
+so-called instruction, it would be certain to succeed.
+The labouring poor dislike instruction being forced
+down their throats quite as much, or more, than the
+upper classes. The very worst way to induce a man
+to learn is to begin by telling him he is ignorant, and
+thereby insulting his self-esteem. A village reading-room
+should be open to all, and not to subscribers
+only. From six till nine in the evening would
+be long enough for it to be open, and the key could
+be kept by some adjacent cottager. With every
+respect for the schoolmaster, let the schoolmaster be
+kept away from it. If there is a night-school, keep
+it distinct from the reading-room; let the reading-room
+be a voluntary affair, without the slightest
+suspicion of <i>drill</i> attaching to it. It should be a
+place where a working man could come in, and sit
+down and <i>spell</i> over a book, without the consciousness
+that someone was watching him, ready to snap
+him up at a mistake. Exclude all 'goody' books;
+there are sects in villages as well as towns, and the
+presence of an obnoxious work may do much harm.
+To the Bible itself, in clear print, no sect will object;
+but let it be the Bible only. A collection of amusing
+literature can easily be made. For &pound;5 enough
+books could be bought on an old bookstall in London
+to stock a village library; such as travels, tales&mdash;not
+despising Robinson Crusoe&mdash;and a few popular
+expositions of science. There should be one daily
+paper. It could be brought by one of the milk-carts
+from the nearest railway-station. This daily paper
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
+would form a very strong counteraction to the ale-house.
+Of course, the ale-house would start a daily
+in opposition; but at the reading-room the labourer
+would soon learn that he need not purchase a glass of
+beer in order to pay for his news. The daily paper
+would be a most important feature, for such papers
+are rare in villages. Very few farmers even take
+them. The rent of a room for this purpose in a village
+would be almost nominal. A small room would be
+sufficient, for only a few would be present at a time.
+Cricket clubs may be left to establish themselves.</p>
+
+<p>The next suggestion the writer is about to make
+will be thought a very bold one; but is it not rational
+enough when the first novelty of the idea has subsided?
+It is, that an annual excursion should be
+arranged for the villagers. It is common to see in
+the papers appeals made on behalf of the poor
+children of crowded districts in London, for funds to
+give them a day in the country. It is stated that
+they never see anything but stone pavements; never
+breathe anything but smoky air. The appeal is a
+proper and good one, and should be generously
+responded to. Now, the position of the villager is
+the exact antithesis. He, or she, sees nothing but
+green fields or bare fields all the year round. They
+hear nothing but a constant iteration of talk about
+cattle, crops, and weather&mdash;important matters, but
+apt to grow monotonous. It may be, that for thirty
+years they never for one day lose sight of the hills
+overhanging the village. Their subjects of conversation
+are consequently extremely narrow. They want
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
+a change quite as much as the dwellers in cities; but
+it is a change of another character&mdash;a change to
+bustle and excitement. Factories and large tradesmen
+arrange trips for their work-people once or
+twice a year. Why should not the agricultural
+labourers have a trip? A trip of the simplest kind
+would satisfy them, and afford matter of conversation
+for months. All railway lines now issue tickets at
+reduced rates for parties above a certain number.
+For instance, to the population of an inland village,
+what would be more delightful than a few hours on
+the sea-beach? Where the sea is not within easy
+reach, take them to a great town&mdash;if possible,
+London&mdash;but if not London, any large town will be
+a change. There is no great difficulty in the plan.
+Perhaps twenty or thirty would be the largest
+number who would wish to go. Let these assemble
+at a stated hour and place, and take them down to the
+railway-station with two or three waggons and teams,
+which should also meet them on their return. The
+expense would not be great, and might be partly borne
+by the excursionists themselves. All that is wanted
+is some amount of leadership, a little organization.
+Such enterprises as these would go far to create a
+genuine mutual understanding and pleasant feeling
+between employer and employed. There may be
+outlying places where such an excursion would be
+very difficult. Then harness the horses to the
+waggons, and take them to a picnic ten miles off on
+a noted hill or heath, or by the side of a river&mdash;somewhere
+for a change.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>To return to more serious matters. Perhaps it
+would be as well if the first endeavour of such a local
+authority were addressed to the smaller matters that
+have been just alluded to, so that the public mind
+might become gradually accustomed to change, and
+prepared for greater innovations. Village drainage
+is notoriously defective. Anyone who has walked
+through a village or hamlet must be perfectly well
+aware that there is no drainage, from the unpleasant
+odours that constantly assail the nostrils. It seems
+absurd, that with such an expanse of open country
+around, and with such an exposure to the fresh air,
+such foul substances should be permitted to contaminate
+the atmosphere. Each cottager either
+throws the sewage right into the road, and allows it
+to find its way as it can by the same channel as the
+rain-water; or, at best, flings it into the ditch at the
+back, which parts the garden from the agricultural
+land. Here it accumulates and soaks into the soil
+till the first storm of rain, which sweeps it away, but
+at the same time causes an abominable smell. It is
+positively unbearable to pass some cottages after a
+fresh shower.</p>
+
+<p>Not unfrequently this ditch at the back of the
+garden runs down to the stream from which the
+cottagers draw their water, and the dipping-place
+may be close to the junction of the two. In places
+where there is a fall&mdash;when the cottages are built
+upon a slope&mdash;there can be little difficulty about
+drainage; but here steps in the question of water-supply,
+for drains of this character require flushing.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
+The supply of water must, therefore, in such places,
+precede the attempt at drainage. The disposal of
+the sewage, when collected, offers no difficulty. Its
+value is well understood, and it would be welcomed
+upon agricultural land. In the case of villages where
+there is no natural fall, and small hamlets and outlying
+cottages, the Moule system should be encouraged,
+especially as it affords a valuable product
+that can be transported to the allotment garden. A
+certain amount of most unreasonable prejudice exists
+against the introduction of this useful contrivance,
+which every means should be used to overcome.
+Now, most farm-houses stand apart, and in their own
+grounds, where any system of sewer is almost impossible.
+These are the very places where the Moule
+plan is available; and if agriculturists were to employ
+it, the poor would quickly learn its advantages. It
+would, perhaps, be even better than a public sewer in
+large villages, for a sewer entails an amount of supervision,
+repairs, and must have an outfall, and other
+difficulties, such as flushing with water, and, if
+neglected, it engenders sewer-gas, which is more
+dangerous than the sewage itself. The plan to be
+pursued depends entirely upon the circumstances of
+the place and the configuration of the ground. The
+subject of drainage connects itself with that of
+nuisances. This is, perhaps, the most difficult
+matter with which a local authority would have to
+deal. Nuisances are comparative. One man may
+not consider that to be a nuisance which may be an
+intolerable annoyance to his neighbour. The keeping
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
+of pigs, for instance, is a troublesome affair.
+The cottager cannot be requested to give up so
+reasonable a habit; but there can be no doubt that
+the presence of a number of pigs in a village, in
+their dirty sties, and with their accompanying heaps
+of decaying garbage, is very offensive, and perhaps
+unhealthy. The pig itself, though commonly called
+a dirty animal, is not anything near so bad as has
+been represented. To convince oneself of that it is
+only necessary to visit farm-buildings which are well
+looked after. The pigsties have no more smell than
+the stables, because the manure is removed, and no
+garbage is allowed to accumulate. It is the man
+who keeps the pig that makes it filthy and repulsive,
+and not the animal itself. Regular and <i>clean</i> food
+has also much to do with it, such as barley-meal.
+Cottagers cannot afford barley-meal, but they certainly
+could keep their sties much cleaner. It does
+not seem possible to attack the nuisance with any
+other means than that of persuasion, unless some
+plan could be devised of keeping pigs in a common
+building outside the village; or at any rate, of having
+the manure taken outside at short intervals. Such
+nuisances as stagnant ponds and mud-filled ditches
+are more easily dealt with, because they are public,
+and interference with them would not touch upon
+any man's liberty of action. Stagnant ponds are of
+no use to anyone&mdash;even horses will not drink at
+them. The simple plan is to remove the mud, and
+then fill them up level with the ground, laying in
+drain-pipes to carry off the water which accumulated
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>
+there. But some of these ponds could be utilized
+for the benefit of passing horses and cattle. They
+are fed with a running stream, but, being no man's
+property, the pond becomes choked with mud and
+manure, and the small inflow of pure water is not
+enough to overcome the noisome exhalations. These
+should be cleaned out now and then, and, if possible,
+the bottom laid down with gravel or small stones,
+making the pond shallow at the edges, and for some
+distance in. Nothing is more valuable upon a
+country road than ponds of this character, into
+which a jaded horse can walk over his fetlock, and
+cool his feet at the same time that he refreshes his
+thirst. They are most welcome to cattle driven
+along the road.</p>
+
+<p>The moral nuisances of drunkenness, gambling,
+and bad language at the corners of the streets and
+cross-roads had best be left to the law to deal with,
+though the influence of a local council in reproof and
+caution would undoubtedly be considerable. But if
+a bathing-place, an out-of-doors gymnasium, and
+such things, were established, these evils would
+almost disappear, because the younger inhabitants
+would have something to amuse themselves with; at
+present they have nothing whatever.</p>
+
+<p>A local authority of this kind would confer a great
+boon upon the agricultural poor if they could renovate
+the old idea of a common. Allotment grounds
+are most useful, but they do not meet every want.
+The better class of cottagers, who have contrived to
+save a little money, often try to keep a cow, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>
+before the road surveyors grew so strict, they had
+little difficulty in doing so. But now the roads are
+so jealously and properly preserved purely for traffic,
+the cottager has no opportunity of grazing a cow or
+a donkey. It would not be possible in places where
+land is chiefly arable, nor in others where the
+meadow-land is let at a high rent, but still there
+are places where a common could be provided. It
+need not be the best land. The poorest would do.
+Those who graze should pay a small fee&mdash;so much
+per head per week. Such a field would be a great
+benefit, and an encouragement to those who were
+inclined to save.</p>
+
+<p>In almost every parish there are a number of
+public charities. Many of these are unfortunately
+expressly devised for certain purposes, from which
+they cannot be diverted without much trouble and
+resorting to high authorities. But there are others
+left in a loose manner for the good of the poor, and
+the very origin of which is doubtful. Such are
+many of the pieces of land scattered about the
+country, the rent of which is paid to the churchwardens
+for the time being, in trust for the poor. At
+present these charities are dissipated in petty almsgiving,
+such as so much bread and a fourpenny-piece
+on a certain day of the year, a blanket or cloak at
+Christmas, and so on, the utility of which is more
+than doubtful. Stories are currently believed of
+such four penny-pieces purchasing quarts of ale, and
+of such blankets being immediately sold to raise
+money for the same end. A village council would
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>
+be able to suggest many ways in which the income
+of these charities could be far better employed. The
+giving of coal has already been substituted in some
+places for the fourpenny-piece and blanket, which is
+certainly a sensible change; but if possible it would
+be better to avoid so-called charity altogether. Why
+should not the income of half a dozen villages lying
+adjacent to each other be concentrated upon a cottage
+hospital, or upon a hospital for lying-in women,
+which is one of the great desiderata in country places.
+Such institutions afford charity of the highest and
+best character, without any degradation to the recipient.
+At the present moment the woman who
+has lost her reputation, and is confined with an
+illegitimate child, simply proceeds to the workhouse,
+where she meets with every attention skilled nurses
+and science can afford. The labourer's wife is left
+to languish in a close overcrowded room, and permitted
+to resume her household labours before she
+has properly recovered. There is nothing more
+wretched than the confinement of an agricultural
+labourer's wife.</p>
+
+<p>The health of villagers, notwithstanding the pure
+air, is often prejudiced by the overcrowding of
+cottages. This overcrowding may not be sufficiently
+great to render an appeal to the legal
+authorities desirable, and yet may be productive of
+very bad effects, both moral and physical. It is particularly
+the case where the cottages are the property
+of the labourer himself, and are held at a low quit-rent.
+The labourer cannot afford to rebuild the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
+cottage, which has descended to him from his father,
+or possibly grandfather, and which was originally
+designed for one small family, but, in the course of
+years, three or four members of that family have
+acquired a right of residence in it. Of this right they
+are extremely tenacious, though it may be positively
+injurious to them. As many as two married men,
+with wives and children, may crowd themselves into
+this dirty hovel, with a result of quarrelling and
+immorality that cannot be surpassed; in fact, some
+things that have happened in such places are not to
+be mentioned. Under the best circumstances it often
+happens that there are not sufficient cottages in a
+parish for the accommodation of the necessary workmen.
+Complaints are continually arising, from no
+one so much as from the agriculturists, who can
+never depend upon their men remaining because of
+the deficiency of lodging. It is not often that the
+entire parish belongs to one landlord; frequently,
+there are four or five landlords, and a large number
+of freehold properties let to tenants. Nor even
+where parishes are more or less the property of one
+person, is it always practicable for the estate to bear
+the burden of additional cottage building. The cost
+of a cottage varies more, perhaps, than any other
+estimate, according to the size, the materials to be
+employed, and their abundance in the neighbourhood.
+But it may be safely believed that the estimates given
+to landowners and others desirous of erecting cottages,
+very much exceed the sum at which they can be
+built. Deduct the hauling of materials&mdash;a considerable
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
+item&mdash;which could be done by the farmers themselves
+at odd times.</p>
+
+<p>In some places the materials may be found upon
+an adjacent farm, and for such purposes might be
+had for a nominal sum. Altogether, a very fair
+cottage might be built for &pound;100 to &pound;150, according
+to the circumstances. These, of course, would not
+be ornamental houses with Gothic porches and
+elaborate gables; but plain cottages, and quite as
+comfortable. In round figures, four such places
+might be erected for &pound;500.<a name="FNanchor_3" id="FNanchor_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> For a large parish
+will contain as many as twenty farmers, and some
+more than that: &pound;500 distributed between twenty
+is but &pound;25 apiece, and this sum could be still further
+reduced if the landlords, the clergy, and the principal
+inhabitants are calculated to take an interest in the
+matter. Let it be taken at &pound;20 each, and the
+product four cottages. As there are supposed to
+be twenty farms, it may be reckoned that eight or
+ten new cottages would be welcome. This would
+vary with circumstances. In some places five would
+be sufficient. Ten would be the very highest
+number; and may be considered quite exceptional.
+Now for the repayment of the investment of &pound;20.
+Four cottages at 2s. per week equals &pound;20 per annum.
+At this rate in five-and-twenty years, each subscriber
+would be paid back his principal; say, after the
+manner of bonds, one redeemable every year, and
+drawn for by lot. An agriculturist who invests
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
+&pound;100 or &pound;150 in a cottage expects some interest
+upon his money; but he can afford to sink &pound;20 for
+a few years in view of future benefit. But there
+are means by which the repayment could be much
+accelerated; <i>i.e.</i>, by inducing the tenant of a cottage
+to pay a higher rent, and so become, after a time,
+the possessor of the tenement, in the same way as
+with building societies.</p>
+
+<p>It may, however, be considered preferable that the
+cottages should remain the property of the village
+council&mdash;each member receiving back his original
+payment. This is thrown out merely as a suggestion;
+but this much is clear, that were there an
+organization of this kind there would be no material
+difficulty in the way of increasing the cottage accommodation.
+A number of gentlemen working together
+would overcome the want with ease. At all events,
+if they did not go so far as to erect new cottages,
+they might effect a great deal of improvement in
+repairing dilapidated places, and enlarging existing
+premises.</p>
+
+<p>In thus rapidly sketching out the various ways
+in which a local village authority might encourage
+the growth and improvement of the place, it has
+been endeavoured to indicate, in a suggestive
+manner, the way in which such an authority might
+be established. It is not for one moment proposed
+that an application should be made to the Legislature
+for a special enactment enabling such councils
+to act with legal force. To such a course there
+would certainly arise the most vigorous opposition
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
+on the part of all classes of the agricultural community,
+from landlord, tenant, and labourer alike.
+There exists an irresistible dislike to any form of
+'imperial' interference, as is amply proved by the
+resistance offered to the School Board system, and by
+the comparative impotence of the rural sanitary
+authorities. People would rather suffer annoyance
+than call in an outside power. The species of local
+authority here indicated must be founded entirely
+upon the will of the inhabitants themselves; and its
+power be derived rather from acquiescence than
+from inherent force. In fact, the major part of its
+duties would not require any legal power. The
+allotment-garden, the cottage repair, the common,
+the bathing-place, reading-room, etc., would require
+no legal authority to render them useful and attractive.
+Neither is it probable that any serious opposition
+would be made to a system of drainage, and
+certainly none whatever to an improved water
+supply. No force would be necessary, and the
+whole moral influence of landlord, and tenant, and
+clergy, would sway in the proposed direction. It
+has often been remarked that the agricultural class&mdash;the
+tenant farmer&mdash;is the one least capable of combination,
+and there is a great deal of truth in the
+assertion of the lack of all cohesion, and united
+action. It must, however, be remembered that
+until very lately no kind of combination has been
+proposed, no attempt made to organize action.
+That, at least in local matters, agriculturists are
+capable of combination and united action has been
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>
+proved by the strenuous exertions made to retain
+the voluntary school system, and also by the endeavours
+made for the restoration of village churches.
+If the total of the sums obtained for schools and for
+village church restoration could be ascertained, it
+would be found to amount to something very great;
+and in the case of the schools, at any rate, and to
+some degree in the case of restorations, the administration
+of the funds has rested upon the leading
+farmers assembled in committees. When once a
+number of agriculturists have formed a combination
+with an understood object, they are less liable to be
+thrown into disorder by factious differences amongst
+themselves than any other class of men. They are
+willing to agree to anything reasonable, and do not
+persist in amendments just in order that a favourite
+crotchet may be gratified. In other words, they
+are amenable to common sense and practical arguments.</p>
+
+<p>There would be very little doubt of harmonious
+action if once such a combination was formed. It
+could be started in many ways&mdash;by the clergyman
+asking the tenants of the parish to meet him in the
+village school-room, and there giving a rapid sketch
+of the proposed organization; and if any landlord,
+or magistrate, or leading gentleman was present, the
+thing would be set on its legs on the spot. In most
+parishes there are one or more large tenant farmers
+who naturally take the lead in their own class, and
+they would speedily obtain adherents to the movement.
+It would be as well, perhaps, if the attempt
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>
+were made, for the promoters to draw up a species of
+circular for distribution in every house and cottage
+in the parish, explaining the objects of the association,
+and inviting co-operation on the part of rich and
+poor alike. Once a meeting was called together,
+and a committee appointed, the principal difficulty
+would be got over.</p>
+
+<p>The next matter&mdash;in fact, the first matter for the
+consideration of such a committee&mdash;would be the
+method of raising funds. All legally-established
+bodies have powers of obtaining money, as by rates;
+but the example of the independent schools and
+church restorations has amply proved that money
+will be forthcoming for proper purposes without
+resort to compulsion. The abolition of Church-rates
+has not in any way tended to the degradation of the
+Church; perhaps, on the contrary, more has been
+done towards Church extension since that date than
+before. A voluntary rate is still collected in many
+places, and produces a considerable sum, the calculation
+being made upon the basis of the poor-rate
+assessment. The objects of such a village association
+being eminently practical, devoid of any sectarian
+bearing and thoroughly local in application,
+there would probably be little difficulty in collecting
+a small voluntary rate for its support, even amongst
+the poorest of the population. The cottager would
+not grudge a few pence for objects in which he has
+an obvious interest, and which are close at home;
+but in the formation of the association it would,
+perhaps, be practicable to begin with a subscription of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
+one guinea each from every member, the subscription
+of one guinea per annum endowing the giver with
+voting power at the meetings. If there were five-and-twenty
+farmers in a parish, there would be five-and-twenty
+guineas (it is not probable that any
+farmer would stand out from such a society), and
+five-and-twenty guineas would be quite sufficient to
+start the thing. Suppose the society commence with
+supplying additional allotment-grounds. They rent,
+say, eight acres at &pound;2 10s. per acre, equalling
+&pound;20 per annum; but they only expend &pound;10 on rent
+for one half-year, because the other half will be paid
+by incoming tenants. The labour to be expended
+on the plot in making it tenable can hardly be
+reckoned, because, in all probability, it would be
+done by their own men at odd times. Many places
+would not require draining at all, and it need not be
+done at starting, and the generality of fields are
+already drained. So that about &pound;15 would suffice to
+start the allotment-grounds, leaving &pound;10 in hand to
+make a bathing-place with, or to erect a pump, or
+purchase hose or tank for water-supply. Here we
+have a considerable progress arrived at with one
+year's subscription only, not counting on any subscription
+from the landlord, or clergy, or resident
+gentlemen. The funds required are, in fact, not
+nearly so large as might be imagined. Most of these
+improvements, when once started, would last for
+some years without further outlay; the allotments
+would probably return a small income. It is not so
+necessary to do everything in one year. Add the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
+sums collected on the low rate to the yearly subscription
+of the members, and there would probably be
+sufficient for every purpose, except that of cottage
+repairs or the erection of new cottages. Such more
+expensive matters would require shareholders investing
+larger sums; but the income already mentioned
+would probably enable all ordinary improvements to
+be carried out, even draining; and, after a year or
+two, a small reserve fund would even accumulate.
+It would, however, be important to bring the poorer
+class to feel that these matters, in a manner, depended
+upon their own exertions. There might be a subscription
+of twopence a month for certain given
+objects, as the bathing-place, the water-tank, or
+other things in hand at the time; and it would probably
+be well responded to. They should also be
+invited to give their labour free of charge after farm
+work. In the case of important alterations affecting
+the whole village, such as drainage, they might be
+asked to meet the society in the school-room, and
+then let the matter be put to the vote. After a few
+months, there can be no doubt the labouring population
+would come to take a very animated interest in
+such proceedings. There is a great deal of common
+sense in the labourer, and once let him see the practical
+as opposed to the theoretical benefit, and his
+co-operation is certain.</p>
+
+<p>The members of the society would have no
+trouble in electing a committee. There might be
+more than one committee to attend to different
+matters, as the allotment and the water-supply, because
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>
+it would happen that one gentleman would
+have more practical knowledge of gardening, and
+another would have more acquaintance with the
+means of dealing with water, from the experience
+gained in his own water meadows. There should be
+a president of the society, a treasurer, and secretary;
+and a general meeting might take place once every
+two months, the committee meeting as circumstances
+dictated. Any member having a scheme to propose
+could draw up a short outline of his plan in writing,
+and submit it to the general meeting, when, if it met
+with favour, it could be handed over to a committee
+for execution.</p>
+
+<p>Such an association might call itself the village
+Local Society. It would be distinct from all party
+politics; it would have nothing to do with individual
+disputes or grievances between landlord and
+tenant; it would most carefully disclaim all sectarian
+objects. It would meet in a friendly genial
+manner, and if a few bottles of sherry could be
+placed on the table the better. A formal, hard,
+entirely business-like meeting is undesirable and to
+be avoided. The affairs in progress should be discussed
+in a free, open manner, and without any
+attempt at set speeches, though to prevent mistakes
+propositions would have to be moved and seconded,
+and entered in a minute-book. Such a society would
+be the means of bringing gentlemen together from
+distant parts of the parish, and would lead to a more
+intimate social connection. It would have other
+uses than those for which it was formally instituted.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+In the event of a serious outbreak of fever in the
+village, or any infectious disease, it might be of
+the very greatest utility in affording assistance to
+the poor, and in making arrangements for preventing
+the spread of infection by the plan of isolation.
+It might set apart a cottage for the reception of
+patients, and engage additional medical assistance.
+The influence it would exercise in the village and
+parish would be very great, and might produce a
+decided improvement in the moral tone of the place.
+In the event of disaffection and agitation arising
+among the labouring classes, it might be enabled to
+establish a reasonable compromise, and, in time, a
+good many little petty disputes among the poor
+would be referred to the society for arbitration.</p>
+
+<p>In large villages it might be found advantageous
+to establish a ladies' committee in connection with
+such a society. There are many matters in which
+the ladies are better agents, and possess a special
+knowledge. It may, perhaps, be thought rather an
+advanced idea; but would not some instruction in
+cookery be extremely useful to the agricultural girl
+just growing up into womanhood? The cooking
+she learns at home is simply no cooking at all. It
+is hardly possible to induce the elder women to
+change the habits of a lifetime, but the girls, fast
+growing up, would be eager to learn. With the
+increase of wages, the labourer has obtained a certain
+addition to his fare, and can occasionally afford some
+of the cheaper pieces of butcher's meat. But the
+women have no idea of utilizing these pieces in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
+most economical and savoury ways. Plentiful as
+vegetables are at times, they are only used in the
+coarsest manner. The ladies' committee would also
+have important work before them in boarding out
+the orphan children from the Union, and also in
+endeavouring to find employment for the great girls
+who play about the village, getting them into service,
+and so on. In the distribution of charities (if charities
+there must be), ladies are far more efficient than
+men, and they may exercise an influence in moral
+matters where no one else could interfere. If there
+is any charity which deserves to be assisted by this
+local society, it is the cheapening of coals in the
+winter. Already in some villages the principal
+farmers combine to purchase a good stock of coal at
+the beginning of winter, and as they buy it in large
+quantities they get it somewhat cheaper. Their
+teams and waggons haul it to the village, and in the
+dead of winter it is retailed to the cottagers at less
+than cost price. This is a most useful institution,
+and can hardly be called a charity. The fact that
+this has been done is a proof that organization for
+objects of local benefit is quite possible in rural
+parishes. Landowners and resident gentlemen would
+naturally take an interest in such proceedings, and
+may very properly be asked to subscribe; but the
+actual execution of the plans decided on should be
+left in the hands of tenant-farmers, who have a
+direct interest, and who come into daily contact with
+the lower class. As a means of adding to their
+funds, the society could give popular entertainments
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
+of reading and singing, which have often been found
+effective in raising money for the purchase of a new
+harmonium, and which, at the same time, afford a
+harmless gratification. It would, perhaps, be better
+if such a society were to keep itself distinct from
+any project of church restoration, or even from the
+school question, because it is most essential that they
+should be free from the slightest suspicion of leaning
+towards any party. Their authority must be based
+upon universal consent. They might perform a
+useful task if they could induce the cottagers to
+insure their goods and chattels, or in any way assist
+them to do so. Cottages are exceptionably liable to
+conflagration, and after the place is burnt, there is
+piteous weeping and wailing, and general begging to
+replace the lost furniture and bedding. There is
+much to be done also in the matter of savings. It
+seems to be pretty well demonstrated by the history
+of benefit clubs and the calculations of actuaries, that
+the agricultural labourer, out of his amount of wages,
+cannot put by a sufficient monthly contribution to
+enable him to receive a pension when he becomes
+old and infirm. But that is not the slightest reason
+why he should not save small sums year by year,
+which, in course of time, would amount to a nice
+little thing to fall back upon in case of sickness or
+accident. There are many aged and deserving men
+who have worked all their lives in one place and
+almost upon one farm, and, at last, are reduced to the
+pitiful allowance of the parish, occasionally supplemented
+by a friendly gift. These cases are very
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
+painful to witness, and are felt to be wrong by the
+tenant-farmers. But one person cannot entirely support
+them; and often it happens that the man who
+would have done his best is dead&mdash;the old employer
+for whom they worked so many years is gone before
+them to his rest. If there were but a little organization
+such cases would not pass unnoticed.</p>
+
+<p>Certain it is that the tendency of the age, and the
+progress of recent events, indicates the coming of a
+time when organization of some kind in rural districts
+will be necessary. The labour-agitation was
+a lesson of this kind. There are upheaving forces
+at work among the agricultural lower class as well as
+in the lower class of towns; a flow of fresh knowledge,
+and larger aspirations, which require guidance
+and supervision, lest they run to riot and excess.
+An organization of the character here indicated
+would meet the difficulties of the future, and meet
+them in the best of ways; for while possessing power
+to improve and to reform, it would have no hated
+odour of compulsion. The suggestions here put
+forth are, of course, all more or less tentative.
+They sketch an outline, the filling up of which must
+fall upon practical men, and which must depend
+greatly upon the circumstances of the locality.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chapbreak" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="THE_IDLE_EARTH" id="THE_IDLE_EARTH"></a>THE IDLE EARTH</h2>
+
+
+<p>The bare fallows of a factory are of short duration,
+and occur at lengthened intervals. There are the
+Saturday afternoons&mdash;four or five hours' shorter time;
+there are the Sundays&mdash;fifty-two in number; a day
+or two at Christmas, at Midsummer, at Easter. Fifty-two
+Sundays, plus fifty-two half-days on Saturdays;
+eight days more for <i>bon&acirc;-fide</i> holidays&mdash;in all, eighty-six
+days on which no labour is done. This is as near
+as may be just one quarter of the year spent in idleness.
+But how fallacious is such a calculation! for
+overtime and night-work make up far more than this
+deficient quarter; and therefore it may safely be said
+that man works the whole year through, and has no
+bare fallow. But earth&mdash;idle earth&mdash;on which man
+dwells, has a much easier time of it. It takes nearly
+a third of the year out in downright leisure, doing
+nothing but inchoating; a slow process indeed, and
+one which all the agricultural army have of late tried
+to hasten, with very indifferent success. Winter seed
+sown in the fall of the year does not come to anything
+till the spring; spring seed is not reaped till
+the autumn is at hand. But it will be argued that
+this land is not idle, for during those months the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>
+seed is slowly growing&mdash;absorbing its constituent
+parts from the atmosphere, the earth, the water;
+going through astonishing metamorphoses; outdoing
+the most wonderful laboratory experiments with its
+untaught, instinctive chemistry. All true enough;
+and hitherto it has been assumed that the ultimate
+product of these idle months is sufficient to repay
+the idleness; that in the <i>coup</i> of the week of reaping
+there is a dividend recompensing the long, long days
+of development. Is it really so? This is not altogether
+a question which a practical man used to City
+formulas of profit and loss might ask. It is a question
+to which, even at this hour, farmers themselves&mdash;most
+unpractical of men&mdash;are requiring an answer.
+There is a cry arising throughout the country that
+farms do not pay; that a man with a moderate
+400 acres and a moderate &pound;1,000 of his own, with
+borrowed money added, cannot get a reasonable
+remuneration from those acres. These say they
+would sooner be hotel-keepers, tailors, grocers&mdash;anything
+but farmers. These are men who have
+tried the task of subduing the stubborn earth, which
+is no longer bountiful to her children. Much reason
+exists in this cry, which is heard at the market ordinary,
+in the lobby, at the club meetings&mdash;wherever agriculturists
+congregate, and which will soon force itself out
+upon the public. It is like this. Rents have risen.
+Five shillings per acre makes an enormous difference,
+though nominally only an additional &pound;100 on 400 acres.
+But as in agricultural profits one must not reckon more
+than 8 per cent., this 5s. per acre represents nearly
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
+another &pound;1,000 which must be invested in the business,
+and which must be made to return interest to
+pay the additional rent. If that cannot be done,
+then it represents a dead &pound;100 per annum taken out
+of the agriculturist's pocket.</p>
+
+<p>Then&mdash;labour, the great agricultural <i>crux</i>. If the
+occupier pays 3s. per week more to seven men, that
+adds more than another &pound;50 per annum to his outgoings,
+to meet which you must somehow make your
+acres represent another &pound;500. Turnpikes fall in, and
+the roads are repaired at the ratepayers' cost. Compulsory
+education&mdash;for it is compulsory in reality,
+since it compels voluntary schools to be built&mdash;comes
+next, and as generally the village committee mull
+matters, and have to add a wing, and rebuild, and
+so forth, till they get in debt, there grows up a rate
+which is a serious matter, not by itself, but added to
+other things. Just as in great factories they keep
+accounts in decimals because of the vast multitude
+of little expenses which are in the aggregate serious&mdash;each
+decimal is equivalent to a rusty nail or so&mdash;here
+on our farm threepence or fourpence in the
+pound added to threepence or sixpence ditto for
+voluntary Church-rate, puts an appreciable burden
+on the man's back. The tightness, however, does
+not end here; the belt is squeezed closer than this.
+No man had such long credit as the yeoman of
+yore (thirty years ago is 'of yore' in our century).
+Butcher and baker, grocer, tailor, draper, all gave
+him unlimited credit as to <i>time</i>. As a rule, they got
+paid in the end; for a farmer is a fixture, and does
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
+not have an address for his letters at one place and
+live in another. But modern trade manners are
+different. The trader is himself pressed. Competition
+galls his heel. He has to press upon his
+customers, and in place of bills sent in for payment
+once a year, and actual cash transfer in three, we
+have bills punctually every quarter, and due notice
+of county court if cheques are not sent at the half-year.
+So that the agriculturist wants more ready
+cash; and as his returns come but once a year, he
+does not quite see the fairness of having to swell
+other men's returns four times in the same period.
+Still a step further, and a few words will suffice to
+describe the increased cost of all the materials supplied
+by these tradesmen. Take coals, for instance. This
+is a fact so patent that it stares the world in the face.
+A farmer, too, nowadays has a natural desire to live
+as other people in his station of life do. He cannot
+reconcile himself to rafty bacon, cheese, radishes,
+turnip-tops, homespun cloth, smock frocks. He
+cannot see why his girls should milk the cows or
+wheel out manure from the yards any more than the
+daughters of tradesmen; neither that his sons should
+say 'Ay' and 'Noa,' and exhibit a total disregard of
+grammar and ignorance of all social customs. The
+piano, he thinks, is quite as much in its place in his
+cool parlour as in the stuffy so-called drawing-room
+at his grocer's in the petty town hard by, where they
+are so particular to distinguish the social ranks of
+'professional tradesmen' from common tradesmen.
+Here in all this, even supposing it kept down to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
+economical limits, there exists a considerable margin
+of expenditure greater than in our forefathers' time.
+True, wool is dearer, meat dearer; but to balance
+that put the increased cost of artificial manure and
+artificial food&mdash;two things no farmer formerly bought&mdash;and
+do not forget that the seasons rule all things,
+and are quite as capricious as ever, and when there is
+a bad season the loss is much greater than it used to
+be, just as the foundering of an ironclad costs the
+nation more than the loss of a frigate.</p>
+
+<p>Experience every day brings home more and more
+the fatal truth that moderate farms do not pay, and
+there are even ominous whispers about the 2,000
+acres system. The agriculturist says that, work how
+he may, he only gets 8 per cent. per annum; the
+tradesman, still more the manufacturer, gets only
+2 per cent. each time, but he turns his money over
+twenty times a year, and so gets 40 per cent. per
+annum. Eight per cent. is a large dividend on one
+transaction, but it is very small for a whole year&mdash;a
+year, the one-thirtieth of a man's whole earning
+period, if we take him to be in a business at twenty-five,
+and to be in full work till fifty-five, a fair
+allowance. Now, why is it that this cry arises that
+agriculture will not pay? and why is it that the
+farmer only picks up 8 per cent.? The answer is
+simple enough. It is because the earth is idle a third
+of the year. So far as actual cash return is concerned,
+one might say it was idle eleven out of the twelve
+months. But that is hardly fair. Say a third of the
+year.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The earth does not continue yielding a crop day
+by day as the machines do in the manufactory. The
+nearest approach to the manufactory is the dairy,
+whose cows send out so much milk per diem; but
+the cows go dry for their calves. Out of the tall
+chimney shaft there floats a taller column of dark
+smoke hour after hour; the vast engines puff and
+snort and labour perhaps the whole twenty-four hours
+through; the drums hum round, the shafts revolve
+perpetually, and each revolution is a penny gained.
+It may be only steel-pen making&mdash;pens, common
+pens, which one treats as of no value and wastes by
+dozens; but the iron-man thumps them out hour
+after hour, and the thin stream of daily profit swells
+into a noble river of gold at the end of the year.
+Even the pill people are fortunate in this: it is said
+that every second a person dies in this huge world
+of ours. Certain it is that every second somebody
+takes a pill; and so the millions of globules disappear,
+and so the profit is nearer 8 per cent. per hour than
+8 per cent. per annum. But this idle earth takes a
+third of the year to mature its one single crop of
+pills; and so the agriculturist with his slow returns
+cannot compete with the quick returns of the tradesman
+and manufacturer. If he cannot compete, he
+cannot long exist; such is the modern law of business.
+As an illustration, take one large meadow on a dairy
+farm; trace its history for one year, and see what an
+idle workshop this meadow is. Call it twenty acres
+of first-class land at &pound;2 15s. per acre, or &pound;55 per
+annum. Remember that twenty acres is a large
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>
+piece on which some millions multiplied by millions
+of cubic feet of air play on a month, and on which an
+incalculable amount of force in the shape of sunlight
+is poured down in the summer. January sees this
+plot of a dull, dirty green, unless hidden by snow;
+the dirty green is a short, juiceless herbage. The
+ground is as hard as a brick with the frost. We
+will not stay now to criticize the plan of carting out
+manure at this period, or dwell on the great useless
+furrows. Look carefully round the horizon of the
+twenty acres, and there is not an animal in sight, not
+a single machine for making money, not a penny
+being turned. The cows are all in the stalls.
+February comes, March passes; the herbage grows
+slowly; but still no machines are introduced, no
+pennies roll out at the gateways. The farmer may
+lean on the gate and gaze over an empty workshop,
+twenty acres big, with his hands in his pockets,
+except when he pulls out his purse to pay the hedge-cutters
+who are clearing out the ditches, the women
+who have been stone-picking, and the carters who
+took out the manure, half of which stains the drains,
+while the volatile part mixes with the atmosphere.
+This is highly profitable and gratifying. The man
+walks home, hears his daughter playing the piano,
+picks up the paper, sees himself described as a brutal
+tyrant to the labourer, and ten minutes afterwards
+in walks the collector of the voluntary rate for the
+village school, which educates the labourers' children.
+April arrives; grass grows rapidly. May comes;
+grass is now long. But still not one farthing has
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
+been made out of that twenty acres. Five months
+have passed, and all this time the shafts in the
+manufactories have been turning, and the quick
+coppers accumulating. Now it is June, and the
+mower goes to work; then the haymakers, and in a
+fortnight if the weather be good, a month if it be
+bad, the hay is ricked. Say it cost &pound;1 per acre to
+make the hay and rick it&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, &pound;20&mdash;and by this
+time half the rent is due, or &pound;27 10s. = total
+expenditure (without any profit as yet), &pound;47 10s.,
+exclusive of stone-picking, ditch-cleaning, value of
+manure, etc. This by the way. The five months'
+idleness is the point at present. June is now gone.
+If the weather be showery the sharp-edged grass may
+spring up in a fortnight to a respectable height; but
+if it be a dry summer&mdash;and if it is not a dry summer
+the increased cost of haymaking runs away with
+profit&mdash;then it may be fully a month before there is
+anything worth biting. Say at the end of July (one
+more idle month) twenty cows are turned in, and
+three horses. One cannot estimate how long they
+may take to eat up the short grass, but certain it is
+that the beginning of November will see that field
+empty of cattle again; and fortunate indeed the
+agriculturist who long before that has not had to
+'fodder' (feed with hay) at least once a day. Here,
+then, are five idle months in spring, one in summer,
+two in winter; total, eight idle months. But, not
+to stretch the case, let us allow that during a part
+of that time, though the meadow is idle, its produce&mdash;the
+hay&mdash;is being eaten and converted into milk,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>
+cheese and butter, or meat, which is quite correct;
+but, even making this allowance, it may safely be
+said that the meadow is absolutely idle for one-third
+of the year, or four months. That is looking at the
+matter in a mere pounds, shillings, and pence light.
+Now look at it in a broader, more national view.
+Does it not seem a very serious matter that so large
+a piece of land should remain idle for that length of
+time? It is a reproach to science that no method of
+utilizing the meadow during that eight months has
+been discovered. To go further, it is very hard to
+require of the agriculturist that he should keep pace
+with a world whose maxims day by day tend to
+centralize and concentrate themselves into the one
+canon, Time is Money, when he cannot by any
+ingenuity get his machinery to revolve more than once
+a year. In the old days the farmer belonged to a
+distinct class, a very isolated and independent class,
+little affected by the progress or retrogression of any
+other class, and not at all by those waves of social
+change which sweep over Europe. Now the farmer
+is in the same position as other producers: the fall
+or rise of prices, the competition of foreign lands,
+the waves of panic or monetary tightness, all tell
+upon him quite as much as on the tradesman. So
+that the cry is gradually rising that the idle earth
+will not pay.</p>
+
+<p>On arable land it is perhaps even more striking.
+Take a wheat crop, for instance. Without going
+into the cost and delay of the three years of preparation
+under various courses for the crop, take the field
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
+just before the wheat year begins. There it lies in
+November, a vast brown patch, with a few rooks here
+and there hopping from one great lump to another;
+but there is nothing on it&mdash;no machine turning out
+materials to be again turned into money. On the
+contrary, it is very probable that the agriculturist
+may be sowing money on it, scarifying it with steam
+ploughing-engines, tearing up the earth to a great
+depth in order that the air may penetrate and the
+frost disintegrate the strong, hard lumps. He may
+have commenced this expensive process as far back as
+the end of August, for it is becoming more and more
+the custom to plough up directly after the crop is
+removed. All November, December, January, and
+not a penny from this broad patch, which may be of
+any size from fifteen to ninety acres, lying perfectly
+idle. Sometimes, indeed, persons who wish to save
+manure will grow mustard on it and plough it in,
+the profit of which process is extremely dubious. At
+the latter end of February or beginning of March,
+just as the season is early or late, dry or wet, in goes
+the seed&mdash;another considerable expense. Then April,
+May, June, July are all absorbed in the slow process
+of growth&mdash;a necessary process, of course, but still
+terribly slow, and not a penny of ready-money
+coming in. If the seed was sown in October, as is
+usual on some soils, the effect is the same&mdash;the crop
+does not arrive till next year's summer sun shines.
+In August the reaper goes to work, but even then
+the corn has to be threshed and sent to market before
+there is any return. Here is a whole year spent in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
+elaborating one single crop, which may, after all, be
+very unprofitable if it is a good wheat year, and the
+very wheat over which such time and trouble have
+been expended may be used to fat beasts, or even to
+feed pigs. All this, however, and the great expense
+of preparation, though serious matters enough in
+themselves, are beside our immediate object. The
+length of time the land is useless is the point.
+Making every possible allowance, it is not less than
+one-third of the year&mdash;four months out of the twelve.
+For all practical&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, monetary&mdash;purposes it is
+longer than that. No wonder that agriculturists
+aware of this fact are so anxious to get as much as
+possible out of their one crop&mdash;to make the one
+revolution of their machinery turn them out as much
+money as possible. If their workshop must be
+enforcedly idle for so long, they desire that when in
+work there shall be full blast and double tides. Let
+the one crop be as heavy as it can. Hence the
+agitation for compensatory clauses, enabling the
+tenant to safely invest all the capital he can procure
+in the soil. How else is he to meet the increased
+cost of labour, of rent, of education, of domestic
+materials; how else maintain his fair position in
+society? The demand is reasonable enough; the
+one serious drawback is the possibility that, even
+with this assistance, the idle earth will refuse to
+move any faster.</p>
+
+<p>We have had now the experience of many sewage-farms
+where the culture is extremely 'high.' It has
+been found that these farms answer admirably where
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
+the land is poor&mdash;say, sandy and porous&mdash;but on
+fairly good soil the advantage is dubious, and almost
+limited to growing a succession of rye-grass crops.
+After a season or two of sewage soaking the soil
+becomes so soft that in the winter months it is
+unapproachable. Neither carts nor any implements
+can be drawn over it; and then in the spring the
+utmost care has to be exercised to keep the liquid
+from touching the young plants, or they wither up
+and die. Sewage on grass lands produces the most
+wonderful results for two or three years, but after
+that the herbage comes so thick and rank and 'strong'
+that cattle will not touch it; the landlord begins to
+grumble, and complains that the land, which was to
+have been improved, has been spoilt for a long time
+to come. Neither is it certain that the employment
+of capital in other ways will lead to a continuous
+increase of profit. There are examples before our
+eyes where capital has been unsparingly employed,
+and upon very large areas of land, with most disappointing
+results. In one such instance five or six
+farms were thrown into one; straw, and manure, and
+every aid lavishly used, till a fabulous number of
+sheep and other stock was kept; but the experiment
+failed. Many of the farms were again made separate
+holdings, and grass laid down in the place of glowing
+cornfields. Then there is another instance, where a
+gentleman of large means and a cultivated and business
+mind, called in the assistance of the deep plough,
+and by dint of sheer subsoil ploughing grew corn
+profitably several years in succession. But after a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>
+while he began to pause, and to turn his attention to
+stock and other aids. It is not for one moment contended
+that the use of artificial manure, of the deep
+plough, of artificial food, and other improvements
+will not increase the yield, and so the profit of the
+agriculturist. It is obvious that they do so. The
+question is, Will they do so to an extent sufficient to
+repay the outlay? And, further, will they do so
+sufficiently to enable the agriculturist to meet the
+ever-increasing weight which presses on him? It
+would seem open to doubt. One thing appears to
+have been left quite out of sight by those gentlemen
+who are so enthusiastic about compensation for unexhausted
+improvements, and that is, if the landlord
+is to be bound down so rigidly, and if the tenant
+really is going to make so large a profit, most
+assuredly the rents will rise very considerably. How
+then? Neither the sewage system, nor the deep
+plough, nor the artificial manure has, as yet, succeeded
+in overcoming the <i>vis inerti&aelig;</i> of the idle earth.
+They cause an increase in the yield of the one revolution
+of the agriculturist machine per annum; but
+they do not cause the machine to revolve twice or
+three times. Without a decrease in the length of
+this enforced idleness any very great increase of
+profit does not seem possible. What would any
+manufacturer think of a business in which he was
+compelled to let his engines rest for a third of the
+year? Would he be eager to sink his capital in such
+an enterprise?</p>
+
+<p>The practical man will, of course, exclaim that all
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
+this is very true, but Nature is Nature, and must have
+its way, and it is useless to expect more than one crop
+per annum, and any talk of three or four crops is
+perfectly visionary. 'Visionary,' by the way, is a very
+favourite word with so-called practical men. But the
+stern logic of figures, of pounds, shillings, and pence,
+proves that the present condition of affairs cannot
+last much longer, and they are the true 'visionaries'
+who imagine that it can. This enormous loss of time,
+this idleness, must be obviated somehow. It is a
+question whether the millions of money at present
+sunk in agriculture are not a dead loss to the country;
+whether they could not be far more profitably
+employed in developing manufacturing industries, or
+in utilizing for home consumption the enormous
+resources of Southern America and Australasia;
+whether we should not get more to eat, and cheaper,
+if such was the case. Such a low rate of interest as
+is now obtained in agriculture&mdash;and an interest by no
+means secure either, for a bad season may at any
+time reduce it, and even a too good season&mdash;such a
+state of things is a loss, if not a curse. It is questionable
+whether the million or so of labourers
+representing a potential amount of force almost
+incalculable, and the thousands of young farmers
+throbbing with health and vigour, eager <i>to do</i>, would
+not return a far larger amount of good to the world
+and to themselves if, instead of waiting for the idle
+earth at home to bring forth, they were transported
+bodily to the broad savannahs and prairies, and were
+sending to the mother-country innumerable shiploads
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
+of meat and corn&mdash;unless, indeed, we can discover
+some method by which our idle earth shall be made
+to labour more frequently. This million or so of
+labourers and these thousands of young, powerfully
+made farmers literally do nothing at all for a third
+the year but wait, wait for the idle earth. The of
+strength, the will, the vigour latent in them is wasted.
+They do not enjoy this waiting by any means. The
+young agriculturist chafes under the delay, and is
+eager <i>to do</i>. They can hunt and course hares, 'tis
+true, but that is feeble excitement indeed, and
+feminine in comparison with the serious work which
+brings in money.</p>
+
+<p>The idleness of arable and pasture land is as
+nothing compared to the idleness of the wide, rolling
+downs. These downs are of immense extent, and
+stretch through the very heart of the country. They
+maintain sheep, but in how small a proportion to the
+acreage! In the spring and summer the short
+herbage is cropped by the sheep; but it is short, and
+it requires a large tract to keep a moderate flock.
+In the winter the down is left to the hares and fieldfares.
+It has just as long a period of absolute idleness
+as the arable and pasture land, and when in work
+the yield is so very, very small.</p>
+
+<p>After all, the very deepest ploughing is but scratching
+the surface. The earth at five feet beneath the
+level has not been disturbed for countless centuries.
+Nor would it pay to turn up this subsoil over large
+areas, for it is nothing but clay, as many a man has
+found to his cost who, in the hope of a heavier crop,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
+has dug up his garden half a spade deeper than
+usual. But when the soil really is good at that
+depth, we cannot get at it so as to turn it to practical
+account. The thin stratum of artificial manure which
+is sown is no more in comparison than a single
+shower after a drought of months; yet to sow too
+much would destroy the effect. No blame, then,
+falls upon the agriculturist, who is only too anxious
+to get a larger produce. It is useless charging him
+with incompetency. What countless experiments
+have been tried to increase the crop: to see if some
+new system cannot be introduced! With all its
+progress, how little real advance has agriculture
+made! All because of the stubborn, idle earth.
+Will not science some day come to our aid, and show
+how two crops or three may be grown in our short
+summers; or how we may even overcome the chill
+hand of winter? Science has got as far as this: it
+recognizes the enormous latent forces surrounding
+us&mdash;electricity, magnetism; some day, perhaps, it
+may be able to utilize them. It recognizes the truly
+overwhelming amount of force which the sun of
+summer pours down upon our fields, and of which
+we really make no use. To recognize the existence
+of a power is the first step towards employing it.
+Till it was granted that there was a power in steam
+the locomotive was impossible.</p>
+
+<p>It would be easy to swell this notice of idle earth
+by bringing in all the waste lands, now doing
+nothing&mdash;the parks, deer forests, and so on. But
+that is not to the purpose. If the wastes were
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
+reclaimed and the parks ploughed up, that would in
+nowise solve the problem how to make the cultivated
+earth more busy. It is no use for a man who has a
+garden to lean on his spade, look over his boundary
+wall, and say, 'Ah, if neighbour Brown would but
+dig up his broad green paths how many more potatoes
+he would grow!' That would not increase the
+produce of the critic's garden by one single cabbage.
+Certainly it is most desirable that all lands capable of
+yielding crops should be reclaimed, but one great
+subject for the agriculturist to study is, how to
+shorten the period of idleness in his already cultivated
+plots. At present the earth is so very idle.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chapbreak" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="AFTER_THE_COUNTY_FRANCHISE" id="AFTER_THE_COUNTY_FRANCHISE"></a>AFTER THE COUNTY FRANCHISE</h2>
+
+
+<p>The money-lender is the man I most fear to see
+in the villages after the extension of the county
+franchise&mdash;the money-lender both in his private and
+public capacity, the man who has already taken a
+grasp of most little towns that have obtained incorporation
+in some form. Like Shylock he demands
+what is in his bond: he demands his interest, and that
+means a pull at every man's purse&mdash;every man, rich
+or poor&mdash;who lives within the boundary. Borrowing
+is almost the ruin of many such little towns; rates
+rise nearly as high as in cities, and people strive all
+they can to live anywhere outside the limit. Borrowing
+is becoming one of the curses of modern life, and a
+sorrowful day it will be when the first village takes to
+it. The name changes&mdash;now it is a local board, now
+it is commissioners, sometimes a town council: the
+practice remains the same. These authorities exist
+but for one purpose&mdash;to borrow money, and as any
+stick will do to beat a dog with, so any pretence will
+do to exact the uttermost farthing from the inhabitants.
+Borrowing boards they are, one and all, and
+nothing else, from whom no one obtains benefit
+except the solicitor, the surveyor, the lucky architect,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>
+and those who secure a despicable living in the rear
+of the county court. Nothing could better illustrate
+the strange supineness of the majority of people than
+the way in which they pay, pay, pay, and submit to
+every species of extortion at the hands of these incapable
+blunderers, without so much as a protest.
+The system has already penetrated into the smallest
+of the county towns which groan under the incubus;
+let us hope, let us labour, that it may not continue its
+course and enter the villages.</p>
+
+<p>It may reasonably be supposed that when once the
+extension of the franchise becomes an established
+fact, some kind of local government will soon follow.
+At present country districts are either without any
+local government at all&mdash;I mean practically, not
+theoretically&mdash;or else they are ruled without the
+least shadow of real representation. When men are
+admitted to vote and come to be enlightened as
+to the full meaning and force of such rights,
+it is probable that they will shortly demand the
+power to arrange their own affairs. They will have
+something to say as to the administration of the
+poor-law, over which at present they do not possess
+the slightest control, and they are not at all unlikely
+to set up a species of self-government in every
+separate village. I think, in short, that the parish
+may become the unit in the future to the disintegration
+of the artificial divisions drawn to facilitate the
+poor-law. Such divisions, wherein many parishes
+of the most diverse description and far apart are
+thrown together anyhow as the gardener pitches
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>
+weeds into his basket, have done serious harm in
+the past. They have injured the sense of personal
+responsibility, they have created a bureaucracy absolutely
+without feeling, and they have tended to shift
+great questions out of sight. The shifting of things
+out of sight&mdash;round the corner&mdash;is a vile method of
+dealing with them. Send your wretched poor miles
+away into a sort of alien workhouse, and then congratulate
+yourself that you have tided over the difficulty!
+But the difficulty has not been got over.</p>
+
+<p>A man who can vote, and who is told&mdash;as he
+certainly will be told&mdash;that he bears a part in directing
+the great affairs of his nation, will ask himself
+why he should not be capable of managing the little
+affairs of his own neighbourhood. When he has
+asked himself this question, it will be the first step
+towards the downfall of the inhuman poor-law.
+He will go further and say, 'Why should I not
+settle these things at home? Why should I not
+walk up to the village from my house in the country
+lane, and there and then arrange the business which
+concerns me? Why should I any longer permit
+it to be done over my head and without my consent
+by a body of persons in whom I have no confidence,
+for they do not represent me&mdash;they represent
+property?'</p>
+
+<p>In his own village the voter will observe the
+school&mdash;his own village then is worthy to possess
+its own school; possibly he may even remotely
+have some trifling share in the control of the school
+if there is a board. If that great interest, the children
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
+of the parish, can be administered at home, why
+not the other and much less important interests?
+Here may be traced a series of reflections, and a
+succession of steps by which ultimately the whole
+system of boards of guardians with their attendant
+powers, as the rural sanitary authority and so forth,
+may ultimately be swept away. Government will
+come again to the village.</p>
+
+<p>Then arises the money-lender, and no time should
+be lost by those who have the good and the genuine
+liberty of the countryside at heart in labouring to
+prevent his entry into the village. Whatsoever
+constitution the village obtains in future, let us
+strive to strictly limit the borrowing powers of its
+council. No borrowing powers at all would be best&mdash;government
+without loans would be almost ideal&mdash;if
+that cannot be accomplished, then at least lay
+down a stringent regulation putting a firm and
+impassable limit. Were every one of my way of
+thinking, government without loans would be imperative.
+It would be done if it had to be done.
+Rugged discomfort is preferable to borrowing.</p>
+
+<p>I dread, in a word, lest the follies perpetrated in
+towns should get into the villages and hamlets, and
+want to say a word betimes of warning. Imagine
+a new piece of roadway required, then to get the
+money let a penny be added to the rates, and the
+amount produced laid by at interest year after year,
+till the sum be made up. Better wait a few years
+and walk half a mile round than borrow the five
+or six hundred pounds, and have to pay that back
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>
+and all the interest on it. Shift somehow, do not
+borrow.</p>
+
+<p>In the discussions upon the agricultural franchise
+it has been generally assumed that the changes it
+portends will be shown in momentous State affairs
+and questions of principle. But perhaps it will be
+rather in local and home concerns that the alterations
+will be most apparent. The agricultural labourer
+voters&mdash;and the numerous semi-agricultural voters,
+not labourers&mdash;are more than likely to look at their
+own parish as well as at the policy of the Foreign
+Office. Gradually the parish&mdash;that is, the village&mdash;must
+become the centre to men who feel at last that
+they are their own masters. Under some form or
+other they will take the parish into their own hands,
+and insist upon their business being managed at
+home. Some shape of village council must come
+presently into existence.</p>
+
+<p>Shrewd people are certain to appear upon the scene,
+pointing out to the cottager that if he desires to rule
+himself in his own village, he must insist upon one
+most important point. This is the exclusion of
+property representation. Instead of property having
+an overwhelming share, as now, in the direction of
+affairs, the owner of the largest property must not
+weigh any heavier in the village council than the
+wayside cottager. If farmer or landowner sit there
+he must have one vote only, the same as any other
+member. The council, if it is to be independent,
+must represent men and not land in the shape of
+landowners, or money in the shape of tenant-farmers.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
+Shrewd people will have no difficulty in explaining
+the meaning of this to the village voters, because
+they can quote so many familiar instances. There is
+the Education Act in part defeated by the combination
+of property, landowners and farmers paying to
+escape a school-board&mdash;a plan temporarily advantageous
+to them, but of doubtful benefit, possibly
+injurious, to the parish at large. Leaving that
+question alone, the fact is patent that the cottager
+has no share in the government of his school, because
+land and money have combined. It may be governed
+very well; still it is not <i>his</i> government, and will
+serve to illustrate the meaning. There is the board
+of guardians, nominally elected, really selected, and
+almost self-appointed. The board of guardians is
+land and money simply, and in no way whatever
+represents the people. A favourite principle continually
+enunciated at the present day is that the
+persons chiefly concerned should have the management.
+But the lower classes who are chiefly concerned
+with poor relief, as a matter of fact, have not
+the slightest control over that management. Besides
+the guardians, there is still an upper row, and here
+the rulers are not even invested with the semblance
+of representation, for magistrates are not elected, and
+they are guardians by virtue of their being magistrates.
+The machinery is thus complete for the defeat of representation
+and for the despotic control of those who,
+being principally concerned, ought by all rule and
+analogy to have the main share of the management.
+We have seen working men's representatives sit in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
+the House of Commons; did anyone ever see a
+cottage labourer sit as administrator at the board
+before which the wretched poor of his own neighbourhood
+appear for relief?</p>
+
+<p>But it may be asked, Is the village council, then,
+composed of small proprietors, to sit down and vote
+away the farmer's or landowner's money without
+farmer or landowner having so much as a voice in
+the matter? Certainly not. The idea of village
+self-government supposes a distinct and separate
+existence, as it were; the village apart from the
+farmer or landowner, and the latter apart from the
+village. At present the money drawn in rates from
+farmer or landowner is chiefly expended on poor-law
+purposes. But, as will presently appear, village self-government
+proposes the entire abolition of the poor-law
+system, and with it the rates which support it, or
+at least the heaviest part of them. Therefore, as this
+money would not be concerned, they could receive no
+injury, even if they did not sit at the village council
+at all.</p>
+
+<p>Imagine the village, figuratively speaking, surrounded
+by a high wall like a girdle, as towns
+were in ancient times, and so cut off altogether
+from the large properties surrounding it&mdash;on the
+one hand the village supporting and governing
+itself, and on the other the large properties equally
+independent.</p>
+
+<p>The probable result would be a considerable reduction
+in local burdens on land. A self-supporting
+and self-governing moral population is the first step
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>
+towards this relief to land so very desirable in the
+interest of agriculture.</p>
+
+<p>In practice there must remain certain more or less
+imperial questions, as lines of through road, police,
+etc., some of which are already managed by the
+county authority. As these matters affect the farmer
+and landowner even more than the cottager, clearly they
+must expect to contribute to the cost, and can rightly
+claim a share in the management.</p>
+
+<p>Having advanced so far as a village council, and
+arrived at the stage of managing their own affairs,
+having, in fact, emerged from pupilage, next comes
+a question for the council. We now govern our
+village ourselves; why should we not possess our
+village? Why should we not live in our own houses?
+Why should we not have a little share in the land, as
+much, at least, as we can pay for? At this moment
+the village, let us say, consists of a hundred cottages,
+and perhaps there are another hundred scattered
+about the parish. Of these three-fourths belong to
+two or three large landowners, and those who reside
+in them, however protected by enactment, can never
+have a sense of complete independence. We should
+own these cottages, so that the inhabitants might
+practically pay rent to themselves. We must purchase
+them, a few at a time; the residents can
+repurchase from us and so become freeholders. For
+a purchaser there must be a seller, and here one
+of the questions of the future appears: Can an owner
+of this kind of property be permitted to refuse to sell?
+Must he be compelled to sell?
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It is clear that if the village voter thoroughly
+addresses himself to his home affairs there is room
+for some remarkable incidents. There is reason now,
+is there not, to dread the appearance of the money-lender?</p>
+
+<p>About this illustrative parish there lie many
+hundred acres of good land all belonging to one
+man, while we, the said village council, do not possess
+a rood apiece, and our constituents not a square
+yard. Rightfully we ought to have a share, yet we
+do not agitate for confiscation. Shall we then say
+that every owner of land should be obliged to sell
+a certain fixed percentage&mdash;a very small percentage
+would suffice&mdash;upon proffer of a reasonable amount,
+the proffer being made by those who propose to
+personally settle on it? Of one thousand acres
+suppose ten or twenty liable to forcible purchase at a
+given and moderate price. After all it is not a much
+more overbearing thing than the taking by railways
+of land in almost any direction they please, and not
+nearly so tyrannous, so stupidly tyrannous, as some
+of the acts of folly committed by local boards in
+towns. Not long since the newspapers reported a
+case where a local authority actually ran a main
+sewer across a gentleman's park, and ventilated it at
+regular intervals, completely destroying the value of
+an historic mansion, and utterly ruining a beautiful
+domain. This was fouling their own nest with a
+vengeance. They should have cherished that park
+as one of their chiefest glories, their proudest
+possession. Parks and woods are daily becoming of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>
+almost priceless value to the nation; nothing could
+be so mad as to destroy these last homes of nature.
+Just conceive the inordinate folly of marking such a
+property with sewer ventilators. This is a hundred
+times more despotic than a proposal that say two per
+cent. of land should be forcibly purchasable for
+actual settlement. Even five per cent. would not
+make an appreciable difference to an estate, though
+every fraction of the five per cent. were taken up.</p>
+
+<p>For such proposals to have any effect, the transfer
+of real property must be greatly simplified and
+cheapened. From time to time, whenever a discussion
+occurs upon this subject, and there are signs
+that the glacier-like movements of government will
+be hastened by public stir, up rises some great lawyer
+and explains to the world that really nothing could
+be simpler or cheaper than such transfer. All that
+can be wished in that direction has been accomplished
+already; there is not the slightest ground for
+agitation; every obstruction has been removed, and
+the machinery is now perfect. He quotes a long
+list of Acts to demonstrate the progress that has been
+made, and so winds up a very effective speech.
+Facts, however, are not in accordance with these
+gracious words. Here is an instance. A cottage in
+a village was recently sold for seventy pounds; the
+costs, legal expenses, parchments, all the antiquated
+formalities absorbed <i>thirty-two pounds</i>, only three
+pounds less than half the value of the little property.
+Could anything be more obviously wrong than such
+a system.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The difficulties in the way of simplification are
+created difficulties, entirely artificial, owing their
+existence to legal ingenuity. How often has the
+question been asked and never answered: Why
+should there be any more expense in transferring
+the ownership of an acre of land than of &pound;100
+stock?</p>
+
+<p>The village council coming into contact with this
+matter is likely to agitate continuously for its rectification,
+since otherwise its movements will be seriously
+hampered. If they succeed in obtaining the abolition
+of these semi-feudal survivals, they will have conferred
+a substantial benefit upon the community.
+County franchise would be worth the granting
+merely to secure this.</p>
+
+<p>Let us take the case for a moment of a labourer
+at this day and consider his position. What has he
+before him? He has a hand-to-mouth, nomad existence,
+ending in the inevitable frozen misery of the
+workhouse. Men with votes and political power
+are hardly likely to endure this for many more years,
+and it is much to be hoped that they will not endure
+it. A labourer may be never so hard-working, so
+careful, so sober, and yet let his efforts be what they
+may, his old age finds him helpless. I am sure there
+is no class of men among whom may be found so
+many industrious, plodding, sober folk, economical
+to the verge of starvation. Their straightforward
+lives are thrown away. Their sons and daughters,
+warned by example, go to the cities, and there lose
+the virtues that rendered their forefathers so admirable
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>
+even in their wretchedness. It will indeed
+be a blessing if, as I hope, the outcome of the
+franchise is the foundation of solid inducements to
+the countryman to stay in the country. I use the
+phrase countryman purposely, intending it to include
+small farmers and small farmers' sons; the latter are
+likewise driven away from the land year by year as
+much as the young labourers, and are as serious a
+loss to it. Did the possibility exist of purchasing a
+cottage and a plot of ground of moderate size, it is
+more than probable that the labourer's son would
+remain in the village, or return to it, and his
+daughter would come back to the village to be
+married. We hear how the poor Italian or the poor
+Swiss leaves his native country for our harder climate,
+how he works and saves, and by-and-by returns to
+his village and purchases some corner of earth. This
+seems a legitimate and worthy object. We do not
+hear of our own sturdy labourers returning to their
+village with a pocketful of money and purchasing a
+plot of ground or a cottage. They do not attempt
+it, because they know that under present conditions
+it is nearly impossible. There is no land for them
+to buy. Why not, when the country is nothing but
+land? Because the owner of ten thousand acres is
+by no means obliged to part with the minutest fragment
+of it. If by chance a stray portion be somewhere
+for sale, the expenses, the costs, the parchments,
+the antiquated formalities, the semi-feudal routine
+delay and possibly prevent transfer altogether. If
+land were accessible, and the cost of transferring
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>
+cottage property reduced to reasonable proportions,
+the labourer would have the soundest of all inducements
+to practise self-denial in his youth. Cities
+might attract him temporarily for the advantage of
+higher wages, but he would put the excess by and
+ultimately bring it home. Even the married cottager
+with a family would try his hardest to save a little
+with such a hope before him.</p>
+
+<p>The existing circumstances deny hope altogether.
+Neither land nor cottages are to be had, there are
+no sellers, and the cost of transfer is prohibitive;
+men are shifted on, they have no security of tenure,
+they are passed on from farm to farm and can settle
+nowhere. The competition for a house in some
+districts is keen to the last degree; it seems as if
+there were eager crowds waiting for homes. Recently
+while roaming on the Sussex hills I met an ancient
+shepherd whose hair was white as snow, though he
+stood upright enough. I inquired the names of the
+hills there, and he replied that he did not know; he
+was a stranger, he had only been moved there lately.
+How strangely changed are things when a grey-headed
+shepherd does not know the names of his
+hills! At a time of life when he ought to have been
+comfortably settled he had had to shift.</p>
+
+<p>Sentiment is more stubborn than fact. People
+will face the sternest facts, dire facts, stubborn facts,
+and stay on in spite of all; but once let sentiment
+alter and away they troop. So I think that some
+part of the distaste for farming visible about us is
+due to change of sentiment&mdash;to feeling repelled&mdash;as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>
+well as to unfruitful years. Men have stood out
+against weary weather in all ages of agriculture, but
+lately they have felt hurt and repelled, the sentiment
+of attachment to home has been rudely torn up, and
+so now the current sets against farming, though
+farms are often offered on advantageous terms. In
+the same way, besides the stubborn facts that drive
+the labourer from the village and prevent his return
+to settle, there is a yet more stubborn sentiment
+repelling him. Made a man of by education&mdash;not
+only of books, but the unconscious education of progressive
+times&mdash;the labourer and his son and daughter
+have thoughts of independence. To be humbly
+subservient to the will of those above them, to be
+docilely obedient, not only to the employer, but to
+all in some sort of authority, is not attractive to
+them. Plainly put, the rule of parson and squire,
+tenant and guardian, is repellent to them in these
+days. They would rather go away. If they do save
+money in cities, they do not care to return and settle
+under the thumb of these their old masters. Besides
+more attractive facts, the sentiment of independence
+must be called into existence before the labourer, or,
+for the matter of that, the small farmer's son, will
+willingly settle in the village. That sense of independence
+can only arise when the village governs
+itself by its own council, irrespective of parson, squire,
+tenant, or guardian. Towards that end the power
+to vote is almost certain to drift slowly.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing can be conceived more harshly antagonistic
+to the feelings of a naturally industrious race
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>
+of men than the knowledge that as a mass they are
+looked upon as prospective 'paupers.' I detest this
+word so much that it is painful to me to write it; I
+put it between inverted commas as a sort of protest,
+so that it may appear a hated intruder, and not native
+to the text. The local government existing at this
+day in country districts is practically based upon the
+assumption that every labouring man will one day
+be a 'pauper,' will one day come to the workhouse.
+By the workhouse and its board the cottage is
+governed; the workhouse is the centre, the bureau,
+the <i>h&ocirc;tel de ville</i>. The venue of local government
+must be changed before the labourer can feel independent,
+and it will be changed doubtless as he
+becomes conscious of the new power he has acquired.
+Shall the bitterness of the workhouse at last pass
+away? Let us hope so let us be thankful indeed
+if the franchise leads to the downfall of those cruel
+walls. Yet what is the cruelty of cold walls to the
+cruelty of 'system'? A workhouse in the country
+is usually situated as nearly as possible in the centre
+of the Union, it may be miles from the outlying
+parishes. Thither the worn-out cottager is borne away
+from the fields, his cronies, his little helps to old age
+such as the corner where the sun shines, the friend
+who allows little amenities, to dwindle and die. The
+workhouse bureau extends its unfeeling hands into
+every detail of cottage life. No wonder the labourer
+does not deny himself to save money in order to
+settle where these things are done. A happy day it
+will be when the workhouse door is shut and the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>
+building sold for materials. A gentleman not long
+since wrote to me a vindication of his workhouse&mdash;I
+cannot at the moment place my hand on the figures
+he sent me, but I grant that they were conclusive
+from his point of view; they were not extravagant,
+the administration appeared correct. But this is not
+my point of view at all. Figures are not humanity.
+The workhouse and the poor-law system are inhuman,
+debasing, and injurious to the whole country,
+and the better they are administered, the worse it
+really is, since it affords a specious pretext for their
+continuance. What would be the use of a captain
+assuring his passengers that the ship was well found,
+plenty of coal in the bunkers, the engines oiled and
+working smoothly, when they did not want to go to
+the port for which he was steering? An exact dose
+of poison may be administered, but what comfort is
+it to the victim to assure him that it was accurately
+measured to a minim? What is the value of informing
+me that the 'paupers' are properly looked after
+when I do not want any 'paupers'?</p>
+
+<p>But how manage without the poor-law system?
+There are several ways. There is the insurance
+method: space will not permit of discussion in this
+paper, but one fact which speaks volumes may be
+alluded to. Two large societies exist in this country
+called the 'Oddfellows' and the 'Foresters'; they
+number their members by the million; they assist
+their members not only at home, but all over the
+world (which is what no poor-law has ever done);
+they govern themselves by their own laws, and they
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>
+prosper exceedingly&mdash;an honour to the nation. They
+have solved the difficulty for themselves.</p>
+
+<p>When the village governs itself and takes all
+matters into its own hands, in time the sentiment of
+independence may grow up and men begin to work
+and strive and save, that they may settle at home.
+It would be a very noble thing indeed if the true
+English feeling for home life should become the
+dominant passion of the country once again. By
+home life I mean that which gathers about a house,
+however small, standing in its own grounds. Something
+comes into existence about such a house, an
+influence, a pervading feeling, like some warm colour
+softening the whole, tinting the lichen on the wall,
+even the very smoke-marks on the chimney. It is
+home, and the men and women born there will never
+lose the tone it has given them. Such homes are <a class="corr" name="TC_7" id="TC_7" title="the the">the</a>
+strength of a land. The emigrant who leaves us
+for the backwoods hopes to carve out a home for
+himself there, and we consider that an ambition to
+be admired. I hope the day will come when some
+at least of our people may be able to set up homes
+for themselves in their own country. To-day, if
+they would live, they must crowd into the city,
+often to dwell in the midst of hideous squalor, or
+they must cross the ocean. They would rather
+endure the squalor, rather say farewell for ever and
+sail for America, than stay in the village where
+everyone is master, and none of their class can be
+independent. The village must be its own master
+before it becomes popular. County government may
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
+be reformed with advantage, but that is not enough,
+because it must necessarily be too far off. People in
+the country are scattered, and each little centre is
+naturally only concerned with itself. A government
+having its centre at the county town is too far away,
+and is likely to bear too much resemblance to the
+boards of guardians and present authorities, to be
+representative of land and money rather than of men.
+Progress can only be made in each little centre
+separately by means of village councils, genuinely
+representative of the village folk, unswayed by
+mansion, vicarage, or farm. Then by degrees we
+may hope to see the re-awakening of English home-life
+in contradistinction to that unhappy restlessness
+which drives so many to the cities.</p>
+
+<p>Men will then wake up and work with energy
+because they will have hope. The slow, plodding
+manner of the labourer&mdash;the dull ways even of the
+many industrious cottagers&mdash;these will disappear,
+giving place to push and enterprise. Why does a
+lawyer work as no navvy works? Why does a
+cabinet minister labour the year through as hard as
+a miner? Because they have a mental object. So
+will the labourer work when he has a mental object&mdash;to
+possess a home for himself.</p>
+
+<p>Whenever such homes become numerous and the
+new life of the country begins to flow, pressure will
+soon be brought to bear for the removal of the
+medi&aelig;val law which prevents the use of steam on
+common roads. Modern as the law is, it is medi&aelig;val
+in its tendency as much as a law would be for the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>
+restriction of steam on the ocean. Suppose a statute
+compelling all ships to sail, or, if they steamed, not
+to exceed four miles an hour! One of the greatest
+drawbacks to agriculture is the cost and difficulty of
+transit; wheat, flour, and other foods come from
+America at far less expense in proportion than it
+takes to send a waggon-load to London. This cost
+of transit in the United Kingdom will ultimately,
+one would think, become the question of the day,
+concerning as it does every individual. Agriculture
+on a large scale finds it a heavy drawback; to agriculture
+on a small scale it is often prohibitory. A
+man may cultivate his two-acre plot and produce
+vegetables and fruit, but if he cannot get his produce
+to London (or some great city), the demand for it
+is small, and the value low in proportion. As
+settlers increase, as the village becomes its own
+master, and men pass part at least of their time
+labouring on their own land, the difficulty will be
+felt to be a very serious one. Transit they must
+have, and steam alone can supply it. Engines and
+cars can be built to run on common roads almost as
+easily as on rails, and as for danger it is merely the
+interested outcry of those who deal in horses. There
+is no danger. Fine smooth roads exist all over the
+country; they have been kept up from coaching
+days as if in a prophetic spirit for their future use
+by steam. Upon these roads engines and cars can
+travel at a good fair pace, collecting produce, and either
+delivering it to the through lines of rail, or passing
+it on from road-train to road-train till it reaches the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
+city. This is a very important matter indeed, for in
+the future easier and quicker transit will become
+imperative for agriculture. The impost of extraordinary
+tithe&mdash;the whole system of tithe&mdash;again, is
+doomed when once the country begins to live its
+new life. Freedom of cultivation is ten times more
+needful to the small than to the large proprietor.</p>
+
+<p>These changes closely examined lose their threatening
+aspect, so much so that the marvel is they did
+not commence fifty years ago instead of waiting till
+now, and even now to be only potential. What is
+there in the present condition of agriculture to make
+farmer or landowner anxious that the existing system
+of things should continue? Surely nothing; surely
+every consideration points in favour of moderate
+change. Those who quote the example of France,
+and would argue that dissatisfaction must, as there,
+increase with efforts to allay it, must know full well
+in their hearts that there is no comparison whatever
+with France. The two peoples are so entirely
+different. So little contents our race that the danger
+is rather the other way, that they will be too easily
+satisfied. Such changes as I have indicated, when
+examined closely, are really so mild that in full
+operation they would scarcely make any difference
+in the relation of the classes. Such village councils
+would be very anxious for the existence of the
+farmer, and for his interests to be respected, for the
+sufficient reason that they know the value of wages.
+Perhaps they might even, under certain conditions,
+become almost too willing partisans of the farmer
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>
+for their best interests to be served. I can imagine
+such conditions easily enough, and the possibility of
+the three sections, labourer, farmer, and owner,
+becoming more closely welded together than ever.
+There is far more stolidity to be regretted than
+revolution to be feared. The danger is lest the
+new voters should stolidify&mdash;crystallize&mdash;in tacit
+league with existing conditions; not lest we should
+go hop, skip, and jump over Niagara.</p>
+
+<p>A probable result of these changes is an increase
+in the value of land: if thousands of people should
+ever really begin to desire it, and to work and save
+for the object of buying it, analogy would suppose
+a rise in value. Instead of a loss there would be a
+gain to the landowner, and I think to the farmer,
+who would have a larger supply of labour, and
+possibly a strong posse of supporters at the poll in
+their men. Instead of division coalescence is more
+probable. The greater his freedom, the greater his
+attachment to home, the more settled the labourer,
+the firmer will become the position of all three
+classes. The landowner has nothing whatever to fear
+for his park, his mansion, his privacy, his shooting,
+or anything else. What is taken will be paid for,
+and no more will be taken than needful. Parks and
+woods are becoming of priceless value; we should
+have to preserve a few landlords if only to have
+parks and woods. Perfect rights of possession
+are not at all incompatible with enjoyment by the
+people. There are domains to be found where
+people wander at their will, and enjoy themselves as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
+much as they please, and yet the owner retains
+every right. It is true that there are also numerous
+parks rigidly closed to the public, demonstrating the
+folly of the proprietors&mdash;square miles of folly. The
+use of a little compulsion to open them would not
+be at all deplorable. But it must stop there and
+not encroach farther. Having obtained the use, be
+careful not to destroy.</p>
+
+<p>The one great aim I have in all my thoughts is
+the acquisition of public and the preservation of
+private liberty. Freedom is the most valuable of
+all things, and is to be sought with all our powers
+of mind and hand. Freedom does not mean injustice,
+but neither will it put up with injustice. A
+singular misapprehension seems to be widely spread
+in our time; it is that there are two great criminals,
+the poor man or 'pauper' and the landlord. At
+opposite extremes of the scale they are regarded as
+equally guilty. Every right&mdash;the right to vote, the
+right to live in his native village, the right to be
+buried decently&mdash;is taken from the unhappy poor
+man or 'pauper.' He is a criminal. To own land
+is to be guilty of unpardonable sin, nothing is so
+bad; as criminals are ordered to be searched and
+everything taken from them, so everything is to be
+taken from the landowner. The injustice to both
+is equally evident. Anyone by chance of circumstances,
+uncontrollable, may be reduced to extreme
+poverty; how cruel to punish the unfortunate
+with the loss of civil rights! Anyone by good
+fortune and labour may acquire wealth, and would
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>
+naturally wish to purchase land: is he then guilty?
+In equity both the poor and the rich should enjoy
+the same civil rights.</p>
+
+<p>Let the new voter then bear in mind above all
+things the value of individual liberty, and not be
+too anxious to destroy the liberty of others, an action
+that invariably recoils. Let him, having obtained
+his freedom, beware how he surrenders it again
+either to local influence in the shape of land or
+money, or to the outside orator who may urge him
+on for his own ends. Efforts will be made no doubt
+to use the new voter for the purposes of cliques and
+fanatics. He can always test the value of their
+object by the question of wages and food&mdash;'How
+will it affect my wages and food?'&mdash;and probably
+that is the test he will apply. A little knot of
+resolute and straightforward men should be formed
+in every village to see that the natural outcome of
+the franchise is obtained. They can begin as
+vigilance committees, and will ultimately reach to
+legal status as councils.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chapbreak" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="THE_WILTSHIRE_LABOURER" id="THE_WILTSHIRE_LABOURER"></a>THE WILTSHIRE LABOURER</h2>
+
+
+<p>Ten years have passed away,<a name="FNanchor_4" id="FNanchor_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> and the Wiltshire
+labourers have only moved in two things&mdash;education
+and discontent. I had the pleasure then of pointing
+out in 'Fraser' that there were causes at work
+promising a considerable advance in the labourers'
+condition. I regret to say now that the advance,
+which in a measure did take place, has been checkmated
+by other circumstances, and there they remain
+much as I left them, except in book-learning and
+mental restlessness. They possess certain permanent
+improvements&mdash;unexhausted improvements in agricultural
+language&mdash;but these, in some way or other,
+do not seem now so valuable as they looked. Ten
+years since important steps were being taken for the
+material benefit of the labouring class. Landowners
+had awakened to the advantage of attaching the
+peasantry to the soil, and were spending large sums
+of money building cottages. Everywhere cottages
+were put up on sanitary principles, so that to-day
+few farms on great estates are without homes for the
+men. This substantial improvement remains, and
+cannot fade away. Much building, too, was progressing
+about the farmsteads; the cattle-sheds were
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span>
+undergoing renovation, and this to some degree
+concerned the labourer, who now began to do more
+of his work under cover. The efforts of every writer
+and speaker in the country had not been without
+effect, and allotments, or large gardens, were added
+to most cottage homes. The movement, however,
+was slow, and promised more than it performed, so
+that there are still cottages which have not shared in
+it. But, on the whole, an advance in this respect did
+occur, and the aggregate acreage of gardens and
+allotments must be very considerably larger now than
+formerly. These are solid considerations to quote on
+the favourable side. I have been thinking to see if I
+could find anything else. I cannot call to mind anything
+tangible, but there is certainly more liberty, an
+air of freedom and independence&mdash;something more
+of the 'do as I please' feeling exhibited. Then the
+sum ends. At that time experiments were being
+tried on an extended scale in the field: such as
+draining, the enlargement of fields by removing
+hedges, the formation of private roads, the buildings
+already mentioned, and new systems of agriculture,
+so that there was a general stir and bustle which
+meant not only better wages but wages for more
+persons. The latter is of the utmost importance to
+the tenant-labourer, by which I mean a man who is
+settled, because it keeps his sons at home. Common
+experience all over the world has always shown that
+three or four or more people can mess together, as in
+camps, at a cheaper rate than they can live separately.
+If the father of the family can find work for his boys
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>
+within a reasonable distance of home, with their
+united contributions they can furnish a very comfortable
+table, one to which no one could object to
+sit down, and then still have a sum over and above
+with which to purchase clothes, and even to indulge
+personal fancies. Such a pleasant state of things
+requires that work should be plentiful in the neighbourhood.
+Work at that time was plentiful, and
+contented and even prosperous homes of this kind
+could be found. Here is just where the difficulty
+arises. From a variety of causes the work has
+subsided. The father of the family&mdash;the settled
+man, the tenant-labourer&mdash;keeps on as of yore, but
+the boys cannot get employment near home. They
+have to seek it afar, one here, one yonder&mdash;all apart,
+and the wages each separately receives do but just
+keep them in food among strangers. It is this scarcity
+of work which in part seems to have counterbalanced
+the improvements which promised so well. Instead
+of the progress naturally to be expected you find the
+same insolvency, the same wearisome monotony of
+existence in debt, the same hopeless countenances and
+conversation.</p>
+
+<p>There has been a contraction of enterprise everywhere,
+and a consequent diminution of employment.
+When a factory shuts its doors, the fact is patent to
+all who pass. The hum of machinery is stopped,
+and smoke no longer floats from the chimney; the
+building itself, large and regular&mdash;a sort of emphasized
+plainness of architecture&mdash;cannot be overlooked. It
+is evident to everyone that work has ceased, and the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>
+least reflection shows that hundreds of men, perhaps
+hundreds of families, are reduced from former comparative
+prosperity. But when ten thousand acres of
+land fall out of cultivation, the fact is scarcely noticed.
+There the land is just the same, and perhaps some
+effort is still made to keep it from becoming altogether
+foul, so that a glance detects no difference.
+The village feels it, but the world does not see it.
+The farmer has left, and the money he paid over as
+wages once a week is no longer forthcoming. Each
+man's separate portion of that sum was not much in
+comparison with the earnings of fortunate artisans,
+but it was money. Ten, twelve, or as much as fifteen
+shillings a week made a home; but just sufficient to
+purchase food and meet other requirements, such as
+clothes; yet still a home. On the cessation of the
+twelve shillings where is the labourer to find a
+substitute for it? Our country is limited in extent,
+and it has long been settled to its utmost capacity.
+Under present circumstances there is no room anywhere
+for more than the existing labouring population.
+It is questionable if a district could be found where,
+under these present circumstances, room could be
+found for ten more farmers' men. Only so many
+men can live as can be employed; in each district
+there are only so many farmers; they cannot enlarge
+their territories; and thus it is that every agricultural
+parish is full to its utmost. Some places among
+meadows appear almost empty. No one is at work
+in the fields as you pass; there are cattle swishing
+their tails in the shadow of the elms, but not a single
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>
+visible person; acres upon acres of grass, and no
+human being. Towards the latter part of the afternoon,
+if the visitor has patience to wait, there will be
+a sound of shouting, which the cattle understand, and
+begin in their slow way to obey by moving in its
+direction. Milking time has come, and one or two
+men come out to fetch in the cows. That over, for
+the rest of the evening and till milking time in the
+morning the meadows will be vacant. Naturally it
+would be supposed that there is room here for a great
+number of people. Whole crowds might migrate
+into these grassy fields, put up shanties, and set to
+work. But set to work at what? That is just the
+difficulty. Whole crowds could come here and find
+plenty of room to walk about&mdash;and starve! Cattle
+require but few to look after them. Milch cattle
+need most, but grazing beasts practically no one, for
+one can look after so many. Upon inquiry it would
+be found that this empty parish is really quite full.
+Very likely there are empty cottages, and yet it is
+quite full. A cottage is of no use unless the occupier
+can obtain regular weekly wages. The farmers are
+already paying as many as they can find work for,
+and not one extra hand is wanted; except, of course,
+in the press of hay-harvest, but no one can settle on
+one month's work out of twelve. When ten or
+fifteen thousand acres of land fall out of cultivation,
+and farmers leave, what is to become of the labouring
+families they kept? What has become of them?</p>
+
+<p>It is useless blinking the fact that what a man
+wants in our time is good wages, constant wages,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
+and a chance of increasing wages. Labouring men
+more and more think simply of work and wages.
+They do not want kindness&mdash;they want coin. In
+this they are not altogether influenced by self-interest;
+they are driven rather than go of their
+own movement. The world pushes hard on their
+heels, and they must go on like the rest. A man
+cannot drift up into a corner of some green lane,
+and stay in his cottage out of the tide of life, as was
+once the case. The tide comes to him. He must
+find money somehow; the parish will not keep him
+on out-relief if he has no work; the rate-collector
+calls at his door; his children must go to school
+decently clad with pennies in each little hand. He
+must have wages. You may give him a better
+cottage, you may give him a large allotment, you
+may treat him as an equal, and all is of no avail.
+Circumstance&mdash;the push of the world&mdash;forces him to
+ask you for wages. The farmer replies that he has
+only work for just so many and no more. The
+land is full of people. Men reply in effect, 'We
+cannot stay if a chance offers us to receive wages
+from any railway, factory, or enterprise; if wages
+are offered to us in the United States, there we must
+go.' If they heard that in a town fifty miles distant
+twenty shillings could be had for labour, how many
+of the hale men do you suppose would stay in the
+village? Off they would rush to receive the twenty
+shillings per week, and the farmers might have the
+land to themselves if they liked. Eighteen shillings
+to a pound a week would draw off every man from
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>
+agriculture, and leave every village empty. If a vast
+industrial combination announced regular wages of
+that amount for all who came, there would not be a
+man left in the fields out of the two millions or more
+who now till them.</p>
+
+<p>A plan to get more wages out of the land would
+indeed be a wonderful success. As previously explained,
+it is not so much the amount paid to one
+individual as the paying of many individuals that
+is so much to be desired. Depression in agriculture
+has not materially diminished the sum given to a
+particular labourer, but it has most materially
+diminished the sum distributed among the numbers.
+One of the remarkable features of agricultural difficulties
+is, indeed, that the quotation of wages is
+nominally the same as in the past years of plenty.
+But then not nearly so many receive them. The
+father of the family gets his weekly money the same
+now as ten years since. At that date his sons found
+work at home. At the present date they have to
+move on. Some farmer is likely to exclaim, 'How
+can this be, when I cannot get enough men when
+I want them?' Exactly so, but the question is not
+when you want <i>them</i>, but when they want you. You
+cannot employ them, as of old, all the year round,
+therefore they migrate, or move to and fro, and at
+harvest time may be the other side of the county.</p>
+
+<p>The general aspect of country life was changing
+fast enough before the depression came. Since then
+it has continued to alter at an increasing rate&mdash;a rate
+accelerated by education; for I think education increases
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>
+the struggle for more wages. As a man
+grows in social stature so he feels the want of little
+things which it is impossible to enumerate, but which
+in the aggregate represent a considerable sum.
+Knowledge adds to a man's social stature, and he
+immediately becomes desirous of innumerable trifles
+which, in ancient days, would have been deemed
+luxuries, but which now seem very commonplace.
+He wants somewhat more fashionable clothes, and I
+use the word fashion in association with the ploughman
+purposely, for he and his children do follow the
+fashion now in as far as they can, once a week at
+least. He wants a newspaper&mdash;only a penny a week,
+but a penny is a penny. He thinks of an excursion
+like the artisan in towns. He wants his boots to
+shine as workmen's boots shine in towns, and must
+buy blacking. Very likely you laugh at the fancy of
+shoe-blacking having anything to do with the farm
+labourer and agriculture. But I can assure you it
+means a good deal. He is no longer satisfied with
+the grease his forefathers applied to their boots; he
+wants them to shine and reflect. For that he must,
+too, have lighter boots, not the heavy, old, clod-hopping
+watertights made in the village. If he
+retains these for week-days, he likes a shiny pair
+for Sundays. Here is the cost, then, of an additional
+pair of shoes; this is one of the many trifles
+the want of which accompanies civilization. Once
+now and then he writes a letter, and must have pen,
+ink, and paper; only a pennyworth, but then a
+penny is a coin when the income is twelve or fourteen
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span>
+shillings a week. He likes a change of hats&mdash;a
+felt at least for Sunday. He is not happy till he has
+a watch. Many more such little wants will occur to
+anyone who will think about them, and they are the
+necessary attendants upon an increase of social stature.
+To obtain them the young man must have money&mdash;coins,
+shillings, and pence. His thoughts, therefore,
+are bent on wages; he must get wages somewhere,
+not merely to live, for bread, but for these social
+necessaries. That he can live at home with his
+family, that in time he may get a cottage of his
+own, that cottages are better now, large gardens
+given, that the labourer is more independent&mdash;all
+these and twenty other considerations&mdash;all these are
+nothing to him, because they are not to be depended
+on. Wages paid weekly are his aim, and thus it is
+that education increases the value of a weekly stipend,
+and increases the struggle for it by sending so many
+more into the ranks of competitors. I cannot see
+myself why, in the course of a little time, we may
+not see the sons of ploughmen competing for clerkships,
+situations in offices of various kinds, the
+numerous employments not of a manual character.
+So good is the education they receive, that, if only
+their personal manners happen to be pleasant, they
+have as fair a chance of getting such work as others.</p>
+
+<p>Ceaseless effort to obtain wages causes a drifting
+about of the agricultural population. The hamlets
+and villages, though they seem so thinly inhabited,
+are really full, and every extra man and youth, finding
+himself unable to get the weekly stipend at
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>
+home, travels away. Some go but a little distance,
+some across the width of the country, a few emigrate,
+though not so many as would be expected. Some
+float up and down continually, coming home to their
+native parish for a few weeks, and then leaving it
+again. A restlessness permeates the ranks; few but
+those with families will hire for the year. They
+would rather do anything than that. Family men
+must do so because they require cottages, and four
+out of six cottages belong to the landowners and are
+part and parcel of the farms. The activity in cottage
+building, to which reference has been made, as prevailing
+ten or twelve years since, was solely on the
+part of the landowners. There were no independent
+builders; I mean the cottages were not built by the
+labouring class. They are let by farmers to those
+labourers who engage for the year, and if they quit
+this employment they quit their houses. Hence it
+is that even the labourers who have families are not
+settled men in the full sense, but are liable to be
+ordered on if they do not give satisfaction, or if
+cause of quarrel arises. The only settled men&mdash;the
+only fixed population in villages and hamlets at the
+present day&mdash;are that small proportion who possess
+cottages of their own. This proportion varies, of
+course, but it is always small. Of old times, when
+it was the custom for men to stay all their lives in
+one district, and to work for one farmer quite as
+much for payment in kind as for the actual wages,
+this made little difference. Very few men once
+settled in regular employment moved again; they
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>
+and their families remained for many years as
+stationary as if the cottage was their property, and
+frequently their sons succeeded to the place and
+work. Now in these days the custom of long
+service has rapidly disappeared. There are many
+reasons, the most potent, perhaps, the altered tone of
+the entire country. It boots little to inquire into
+the causes. The fact is, then, that no men, not even
+with families, will endure what once they did. If
+the conditions are arbitrary, or they consider they
+are not well used, or they hear of better terms elsewhere,
+they will risk it and go. So, too, farmers are
+more given to changing their men than was once the
+case, and no longer retain the hereditary faces about
+them. The result is that the fixed population may
+be said to decline every year. The total population
+is probably the same, but half of it is nomad. It is
+nomad for two reasons&mdash;because it has no home, and
+because it must find wages.</p>
+
+<p>Farmers can only pay so much in wages and no
+more; they are at the present moment really giving
+higher wages than previously, though nominally the
+same in amount. The wages are higher judged in
+relation to the price of wheat; that is, to their
+profits. If coal falls in price, the wages of coal-miners
+are reduced. Now, wheat has fallen heavily
+in price, but the wages of the labourer remain
+the same, so that he is, individually, when he has
+employment, receiving a larger sum. Probably, if
+farming accounts were strictly balanced, and farming
+like any other business, that sum would be found to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>
+be more than the business would bear. No trace of
+oppression in wages can be found. The farmer gets
+allowances from his landlord, and he allows something
+to his labourers, and so the whole system is
+kept up by mutual understanding. Except under a
+very important rise in wheat, or a favourable change
+in the condition of agriculture altogether, it is not
+possible for the farmers to add another sixpence
+either to the sum paid to the individual or to the
+sum paid in the aggregate to the village.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore, as education increases&mdash;and it increases
+rapidly&mdash;as the push of the world reaches the
+hamlet; as the labouring class increase in social
+stature, and twenty new wants are found; as they
+come to look forth upon matters in a very different
+manner to their stolid forefathers; it is evident that
+some important problems will arise in the country.
+The question will have to be asked: Is it better for
+this population to be practically nomad or settled?
+How is livelihood&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, wages&mdash;to be found for it?
+Can anything be substituted for wages? Or must
+we devise a gigantic system of emigration, and in
+a twelvemonth (if the people took it up) have every
+farmer crying out that he was ruined, he could never
+get his harvest in. I do not think myself that the
+people could be induced to go under any temptation.
+They like England in despite of their troubles. If
+the farmer could by any happy means find out some
+new plant to cultivate, and so obtain a better profit
+and be able to give wages to more hands, the nomad
+population would settle itself somehow, if in mud
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
+huts. No chance of that is in sight at present, so
+we are forced round to the consideration of a substitute
+for wages.</p>
+
+<p>Now, ten or twelve years since, when much
+activity prevailed in all things agricultural, it was
+proposed to fix the labouring population to the soil
+by building better cottages, giving them large gardens
+and allotments, and various other privileges. This
+was done; and in 'Fraser' I did not forget to credit
+the good intent of those who did it. Yet now we
+see, ten years afterwards, that instead of fixing the
+population, the population becomes more wandering.
+Why is this? Why have not these cottages and
+allotments produced their expected effect? There
+seems but one answer&mdash;that it is the lack of fixity
+of tenure. All these cottages and allotments have
+only been held on sufferance, on good behaviour,
+and hence they have failed. For even for material
+profit in the independent nineteenth century men do
+not care to be held on their good behaviour. A
+contract must be free and equal on both sides to be
+respected. To illustrate the case, suppose that some
+large banking institution in London gave out as a
+law that all the employ&eacute;s must live in villas belonging
+to the bank, say at Norwood. There they could
+have very good villas, and gardens attached, and on
+payment even paddocks, and there they could dwell
+so long as they remained in the office. But the
+instant any cause of disagreement arose they must
+quit not only the office but their homes. What an
+outcry would be raised against bank managers'
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
+tyranny were such a custom to be introduced! The
+extreme hardship of having to leave the house on
+which so much trouble had been expended, the
+garden carefully kept up and planted, the paddock;
+to leave the neighbourhood where friends had been
+found, and which suited the constitution, and where
+the family were healthy. Fancy the stir there would
+be, and the public meetings to denounce the harsh
+interference with liberty! Yet, with the exception
+that the clerk might have &pound;300 a year, and the
+labourer 12s. or 14s. a week, the cases would be
+exactly parallel. The labourer has no fixity of
+tenure. He does not particularly care to lay himself
+out to do his best in the field or for his master,
+because he is aware that service is no inheritance,
+and at any moment circumstances may arise which
+may lead to his eviction. For it is really eviction,
+though unaccompanied by the suffering associated
+with the word&mdash;I was going to write 'abroad' for in
+Ireland. So that all the sanitary cottages erected at
+such expense, and all the large gardens and the
+allotments offered, have failed to produce a contented
+and settled working population. Most people are
+familiar by this time with the demand of the tenant
+farmers for some exalted kind of compensation,
+which in effect is equivalent to tenant-right, <i>i.e.</i>, to
+fixity of tenure. Without this, we have all been
+pretty well informed by now, it is impossible for
+farmers to flourish, since they cannot expend capital
+unless they feel certain of getting it back again.
+This is precisely the case with the labourer. His
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>
+labour is his capital, and he cannot expend it in one
+district unless he is assured of his cottage and garden&mdash;that
+is, of his homestead and farm. You cannot
+have a fixed population unless it has a home, and the
+labouring population is practically homeless. There
+appears no possibility of any real amelioration of
+their condition until they possess settled places of
+abode. Till then they must move to and fro, and
+increase in restlessness and discontent. Till then
+they must live in debt, from hand to mouth, and
+without hope of growth in material comfort. A
+race for ever trembling on the verge of the workhouse
+cannot progress and lay up for itself any
+saving against old age. Such a race is feeble and
+lacks cohesion, and does not afford that backbone an
+agricultural population should afford to the country
+at large. At the last, it is to the countryman, to
+the ploughman, and 'the farmer's boy,' that a land
+in difficulty looks for help. They are the last line
+of defence&mdash;the reserve, the rampart of the nation.
+Our last line at present is all unsettled and broken
+up, and has lost its firm and solid front. Without
+homes, how can its ranks ever become firm and solid
+again?</p>
+
+<p>An agricultural labourer entering on a cottage and
+garden with his family, we will suppose, is informed
+that so long as he pays his rent he will not be
+disturbed. He then sets to work in his off hours to
+cultivate his garden and his allotment; he plants
+fruit-trees; he trains a creeper over his porch. His
+boys and girls have a home whenever out of service,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>
+and when they are at home they can assist in cultivating
+their father's little property. The family has
+a home and a centre, and there it will remain for
+generations. Such is certainly the case wherever a
+labourer has a cottage of his own. The family
+inherit it for generations; it would not be difficult
+to find cases in which occupation has endured for a
+hundred years. There is no danger now of the
+younger members of the family staying too much at
+home. The pressure of circumstances is too strong,
+as already explained; all the tendencies of the time
+are such as would force them from home in search
+of wages. There is no going back, they must push
+forwards.</p>
+
+<p>The cottage-tenure, like the farm-tenure, must
+come from the landlord, of course. All movements
+must fall on the landlord unless they are made
+imperial questions. It is always the landowner who
+has to bear the burden in the end. As the cottages
+belong to the landowners, fixity or certainty of tenure
+is like taking their rights from them. But not more
+so than in the case of the exalted compensation
+called tenant-right. Indeed, I think I shall show
+that the change would be quite trifling beside
+measures which deal with whole properties at once,
+of five, ten, or twenty thousand acres, as the case
+may be. For, in the first place, let note be taken of
+a most important circumstance, which is that at the
+present time these cottages let on sufferance do not
+bring in one shilling to the landlord. They are not
+the least profit to him. He does not receive the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>
+nominal rent, and if he did, of what value would be
+so insignificant a sum, the whole of which for a year
+would not pay a tenth part of the losses sustained by
+the failure of one tenant farmer. As a fact, then,
+the cottages are of no money value to the landowner.
+A change, therefore, in the mode of tenure could not
+affect the owner like a change in the tenure of a great
+farm, say at a rental of &pound;1,500. Not having received
+any profit from the previous tenure of cottages, he
+suffers no loss if the tenure be varied. The advantage
+the landowner is supposed to enjoy from the
+possession of cottages scattered about his farms is
+that the tenants thereby secure men to do their
+work. This advantage would be much better secured
+by a resident and settled population. Take away the
+conventional veil with which the truth is usually
+flimsily hidden, and the fact is that the only objection
+to a certain degree of fixity in cottage tenure is that
+it would remove from the farmer the arbitrary power
+he now possesses of eviction. What loss there would
+be in this way it is not easy to see, since, as explained,
+the men must have wages, and can only get them
+from farmers, to whom therefore they must resort.
+But then the man knows the power to give such
+notice is there, and it does not agree with the feelings
+of the nineteenth century. No loss whatever would
+accrue either to landowner or tenant from a fixed
+population. A farmer may say, 'But suppose the
+man who has my cottage will not work for me?'
+To this I reply, that if the district is so short of
+cottages that it is possible for a farmer to be short of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>
+hands, the sooner pressure is applied in some way,
+and others built, the better for landowner, tenant,
+and labourer. If there is sufficient habitation for
+the number of men necessary for cultivating the
+land, there will be no difficulty, because one particular
+labourer will not work for one particular farmer.
+That labourer must then do one of two things, he
+must starve or work for some other farmer, where
+his services would dispossess another labourer, who
+would immediately take the vacant place. The
+system of employing men on sufferance, and keeping
+them, however mildly, under the thumb, is a system
+totally at variance with the tenets of our time. It is
+a most expensive system, and ruinous to true self-respect,
+insomuch as it tends to teach the labourer's
+children that the only way they can show the independence
+of their thought is by impertinent language.
+How much better for a labourer to be perfectly free&mdash;how
+much better for an employer to have a man
+to work for him quite outside any suspicion of
+sufferance, or of being under his thumb! I should
+not like men under my thumb; I should like to
+pay them for their work, and there let the contract
+end, as it ends in all other businesses. As
+more wages cannot be paid, the next best thing,
+perhaps the absolutely necessary thing, is a fixed
+home.</p>
+
+<p>I think it would pay any landowner to let all the
+cottages upon his property to the labourers themselves
+direct, exactly as farms are let, giving them
+security of tenure, so long as rent was forthcoming,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>
+with each cottage to add a large garden, or allotment,
+up to, say, two acres, at an agricultural, and not an
+accommodation, rent. Most gardens and allotments
+are let as a favour at a rent about three times, and
+in some cases even six times, the agricultural rent of
+the same soil in the adjoining fields. Cottagers do
+not look upon such tenancies&mdash;held, too, on sufferance&mdash;as
+a favour or kindness, and feel no gratitude
+nor any attachment to those who permit them to dig
+and delve at thrice the charge the farmer pays. Add
+to these cottages gardens, not necessarily adjoining
+them, but as near as circumstances allow, up to two
+acres at a purely agricultural rental. If, in addition,
+facilities were to be given for the gradual purchase of
+the freehold by the labourer on the same terms as
+are now frequently held out by building societies,
+it would be still better. I think it would turn
+out for the advantage of landowner, tenant, and
+the country at large to have a settled agricultural
+population.</p>
+
+<p>The limit of two acres I mention, not that there is
+any especial virtue in that extent of land, but because
+I do not think the labourer would profit by having
+more, since he must then spend his whole time cultivating
+his plot. Experience has proved over and
+over again that for a man in England to live by
+spade-husbandry on four or five acres of land is the
+most miserable existence possible. He can but just
+scrape a living, he is always failing, his children are
+in rags, and debt ultimately consumes him. He is
+of no good either to himself or to others or to the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>
+country. For in our country agriculture, whether
+by plough or spade, is confined to three things, to
+grass, corn, or cattle, and there is no plant like the
+vine by which a small proprietor may prosper. Wet
+seasons come, and see&mdash;even the broad acres cultivated
+at such an expense of money produce nothing, and the
+farmer comes to the verge of ruin. But this verge
+of ruin to the small proprietor who sees his four
+acres of crops destroyed means simple extinction.
+So that the amount of land to be of advantage is
+that amount which the cottager can cultivate without
+giving his entire time to it; so that, in fact, he
+may also earn wages.</p>
+
+<p>To landowner and farmer the value of a fixed
+population like this, fixed and independent, and
+looking only for payment for what was actually
+done, and not for eleemosynary earnings, would
+be, I think, very great. There would be a constant
+supply of first-class labour available all the year round.
+A supply of labour on an estate is like water-power
+in America&mdash;indispensable. But if you have no
+resident supply you face two evils&mdash;you must pay
+extra to keep men there when you have no real
+work for them to do, or you must offer fancy wages
+in harvest. Now, I think a resident population
+would do the same work if not at less wages at the
+time of the work, yet for less money, taking the
+year through.</p>
+
+<p>I should be in hopes that such a plan would soon
+breed a race of men of the sturdiest order, the true
+and natural countrymen; men standing upright in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>
+the face of all, without one particle of servility;
+paying their rates, and paying their rents; absolutely
+civil and pleasant-mannered, because, being really
+independent, they would need no impudence of
+tongue to assert what they did not feel; men giving
+a full day's work for a full day's wages (which is
+now seldom seen); men demanding to be paid in
+full for full work, but refusing favours and petty
+assistance to be recouped hereafter; able to give
+their children a fixed home to come back to; able
+even to push them in life if they wish to leave
+employment on the land; men with the franchise,
+voting under the protection of the ballot, and voting
+first and foremost for the demolition of the infernal
+poor-law and workhouse system.</p>
+
+<p>The men are there. This is no imaginary class
+to be created, they are there, and they only require
+homes to become the finest body in the world, a
+rampart to the nation, a support not only to agriculture
+but to every industry that needs the help of labour.
+For physique they have ever been noted, and if it is
+not valued at home it is estimated at its true value
+in the colonies. From Australia, America, all countries
+desiring sinews and strength, come earnest persuasions
+to these men to emigrate. They are desired above
+all others as the very foundation of stability. It is
+only at home that the agricultural labourer is despised.
+If ever there were grounds for that contempt in his
+illiterate condition they have disappeared. I have
+always maintained that intelligence exists outside
+education, that men who can neither read nor write
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>
+often possess good natural parts. The labourer at
+large possesses such parts, but until quite lately he
+has had no opportunity of displaying them. Of
+recent years he or his children have had an opportunity
+of displaying their natural ability, since education
+was brought within reach of them all. Their
+natural power has at once shown itself, and all the
+young men and young women are now solidly educated.
+The reproach of being illiterate can no longer be hurled
+at them. They never were illiterate mentally; they
+are now no more illiterate in the partial sense of book-knowledge.
+A young agricultural labourer to-day
+can speak almost as well as the son of a gentleman.
+There is, of course, a little of the country accent
+remaining, and some few technical words are in use.
+Why should they not be? Do not gentlemen on
+the Exchange use technical terms? I cannot see
+myself that 'contango' is any better English, or
+'backwardation' more indicative of intelligence, than
+the terms used in the field. The labourer of to-day
+reads, and thinks about what he reads. The young,
+being educated, have brought education to their
+parents, the old have caught the new tone from the
+young. It is acknowledged that the farm labourer
+is the most peaceful of all men, the least given to
+agitation for agitation's sake. Permit him to live
+and he is satisfied. He has no class ill-feeling,
+either against farmer or landowner, and he resists
+all attempts to introduce ill-feeling. He maintains
+a steady and manly attitude, calm, and considering,
+without a trace of hasty revolutionary sentiments.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>
+I say that such a race of men are not to be despised;
+I say that they are the very foundation of
+a nation's stability. I say that in common justice
+they deserve settled homes; and further, that as a
+matter of sound policy they should be provided with
+them.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chapbreak" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="ON_THE_DOWNS" id="ON_THE_DOWNS"></a>ON THE DOWNS</h2>
+
+
+<p>A trailing beam of light sweeps through the
+combe, broadening out where it touches the ground,
+and narrowing up to the cloud with which it travels.
+The hollow groove between the hills is lit up where
+it falls as with a ray cast from a mirror. It is an
+acre wide on the sward, and tapers up to the invisible
+slit in the cloud; a mere speck of light from the sky
+enlightens the earth, and one thought opens the
+hearts of all men. On the slope here the furze
+is flecked with golden spots, and black-headed
+stonechats perch on ant-hills or stray flints, taking
+no heed of a quiet wanderer. Afar, blue line upon
+blue line of down is drawn along in slow curves, and
+beneath, the distant sea appears a dim plain with five
+bright streaks, where the sunshine pours through as
+many openings in the clouds. The wind smells like
+an apple fresh plucked; suddenly the great beam of
+light vanishes as the sun comes out, and at once the
+single beam is merged in the many.</p>
+
+<p>Light and colour, freedom and delicious air, give
+exquisite pleasure to the senses; but the heart
+searches deeper, and draws forth food for itself from
+sunshine, hills and sea. Desiring their beauty so
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>
+deeply, the desire in a measure satisfies itself. It is
+a thirst which slakes itself to grow the stronger. It
+springs afresh from the light, from the blue hill-line
+yonder, from the gorse-flower at hand; to seize upon
+something that seems in them, which they symbolize
+and speak of; to take it away within oneself; to
+absorb it and feel conscious of it&mdash;a something that
+cannot be defined, but which corresponds with all
+that is highest, truest, and most ideal within the mind.
+It says, Hope and aspire, strive for largeness of
+thought. The wind blows, and declares that the
+mind has capacity for more than has ever yet been
+brought to it. The wind is wide, and blows not
+only here, but along the whole range of hills&mdash;the
+hills are not broad enough for it; nor is the sea&mdash;it
+crosses the ocean and spreads itself whither it will.
+Though invisible, it is material, and yet it knows no
+limit. As the wind to the fixed boulder lying deep
+in the sward, so is the immaterial mind to the wind.
+There is capacity in it for more than has ever yet
+been placed before it. No system, no philosophy
+yet organized in logical sequence satisfies the inmost
+depth&mdash;fills and fully occupies the well of thought.
+Read the system, and with the last word it is over&mdash;the
+mind passes on and requires more. It is but
+a crumb tasted and gone: who should remember a
+crumb? But the wind blows, not one puff and then
+stillness: it continues; if it does cease there remains
+the same air to be breathed. So that the physical
+part of man thus always provided with air for breathing
+is infinitely better cared for than his mind, which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
+gets but little crumbs, as it were, coming from old
+times. These are soon gone, and there remains
+nothing. Somewhere surely there must be more.
+An ancient thinker considered that the atmosphere
+was full of faint images&mdash;spectra, reflections, or
+emanations retaining shape, though without substance&mdash;that
+they crowded past in myriads by day
+and night. Perhaps there may be thoughts invisible,
+but floating round us, if we could only render
+ourselves sensitive to their impact. Such a remark
+must not be taken literally&mdash;it is only an effort to
+convey a meaning, just as shadow throws up light.
+The light is that there are further thoughts yet to be
+found.</p>
+
+<p>The fulness of Nature and the vacancy of mental
+existence are strangely contrasted. Nature is full
+everywhere; there is no chink, no unfurnished
+space. The mind has only a few thoughts to recall,
+and those old, and that have been repeated these
+centuries past. Unless the inner mind (not that
+which deals with little matters of daily labour) lets
+itself rest on every blade of grass and leaf, and listens
+to the soothing wind, it must be vacant&mdash;vacant
+for lack of something to do, not from limit of
+capacity. For it is too strong and powerful for the
+things it has to grasp; they are crushed like wheat in
+a mill. It has capacity for so much, and it is supplied
+with so little. All the centuries that have gone have
+gathered hardly a bushel, as it were, and these dry
+grains are quickly rolled under strong thought and
+reduced to dust. The mill must then cease, not
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span>
+that it has no further power, but because the supply
+stops. Bring it another bushel, and it will grind as
+long as the grain is poured in. Let fresh images
+come in a stream like the apple-scented wind; there
+is room for them, the storehouse of the inner mind
+expands to receive them, wide as the sea which
+receives the breeze. The Downs are now lit with
+sunlight&mdash;the night will cover them presently&mdash;but
+the mind will sigh as eagerly for these things as in
+the glory of day. Sooner or later there will surely
+come an opening in the clouds, and a broad beam of
+light will descend. A new thought scarcely arrives
+in a thousand years, but the sweet wind is always
+here, providing breath for the physical man. Let
+hope and faith remain, like the air, always, so that
+the soul may live. That such a higher thought may
+come is the desire&mdash;the prayer&mdash;which springs on
+viewing the blue hill line, the sea, the flower.</p>
+
+<p>Stoop and touch the earth, and receive its influence;
+touch the flower, and feel its life; face the wind, and
+have its meaning; let the sunlight fall on the open
+hand as if you could hold it. Something may be
+grasped from them all, invisible yet strong. It is the
+sense of a wider existence&mdash;wider and higher. Illustrations
+drawn from material things (as they needs must
+be) are weak to convey such an idea. But much
+may be gathered indirectly by examining the powers
+of the mind&mdash;by the light thrown on it from physical
+things. Now, at this moment, the blue dome of the
+sky, immense as it is, is but a span to the soul.
+The eye-glance travels to the horizon in an instant&mdash;the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>
+soul-glance travels over all matter also in a
+moment. By no possibility could a world, or a series
+of worlds, be conceived which the mind could not
+traverse instantaneously. Outer space itself, therefore,
+seems limited and with bounds, because the
+mind is so penetrating it can imagine nothing to the
+end of which it cannot get. Space&mdash;ethereal space,
+as far beyond the stars as it is to them&mdash;think of it
+how you will, ends each side in dimness. The
+dimness is its boundary. The mind so instantly
+occupies all space that space becomes finite, and with
+limits. It is the things that are brought before it
+that are limited, not the power of the mind.</p>
+
+<p>The sweet wind says, again, that the inner mind
+has never yet been fully employed; that more than
+half its power still lies dormant. Ideas are the tools
+of the mind. Without tools you cannot build a ship.
+The minds of savages lie almost wholly dormant,
+not because naturally deficient, but because they lack
+the ideas&mdash;the tools&mdash;to work with. So we have
+had our ideas so long that we have built all we can
+with them. Nothing further can be constructed
+with these materials. But whenever new and larger
+materials are discovered we shall find the mind able
+to build much more magnificent structures. Let us,
+then, if we cannot yet discover them, at least wait
+and watch as ceaselessly as the hills, listening as the
+wind blows over. Three-fourths of the mind still
+sleeps. That little atom of it needed to conduct the
+daily routine of the world is, indeed, often strained
+to the utmost. That small part of it, again, occasionally
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>
+exercised in re-learning ancient thoughts, is
+scarcely half employed&mdash;small as it is. There is so
+much more capacity in the inner mind&mdash;a capacity of
+which but few even dream. Until favourable times
+and chances bring fresh materials for it, it is not
+conscious of itself. Light and freedom, colour, and
+delicious air&mdash;sunshine, blue hill lines, and flowers&mdash;give
+the heart to feel that there is so much more to
+be enjoyed of which we walk in ignorance.</p>
+
+<p>Touching a flower, it seems as if some of this were
+absorbed from it; it flows from the flower like its
+perfume. The delicate odour of the violet cannot
+be written; it is material yet it cannot be expressed.
+So there is an immaterial influence flowing from it
+which escapes language. Touching the greensward,
+there is a feeling as if the great earth sent a mystic
+influence through the frame. From the sweet wind,
+too, it comes. The sunlight falls on the hand; the
+light remains without on the surface, but its influence
+enters the very being. This sense of absorbing
+something from earth, and flower, and sunlight is like
+hovering on the verge of a great truth. It is the
+consciousness that a great truth is there. Not that
+the flower and the wind know it, but that they stir
+unexplored depths in the mind. They are only
+material&mdash;the sun sinks, darkness covers the hills,
+and where is their beauty then? The feeling or
+thought which is excited by them resides in the mind,
+and the purport and drift of it is a wider existence&mdash;yet
+to be enjoyed on earth. Only to think of and
+imagine it is in itself a pleasure.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The red-tipped hawthorn buds are full of such a
+thought; the tender green of the leaf just born
+speaks it. The leaf does not come forth shapeless.
+Already, at its emergence, there are fine divisions at
+the edge, markings, and veins. It is wonderful from
+the commencement. A thought may be put in a
+line, yet require a life-time to understand in its completeness.
+The leaf was folded in the tiny red-tipped
+bud&mdash;now it has come forth how long must
+one ponder to fully appreciate it?</p>
+
+<p>Those things which are symbolized by the leaf, the
+flower, the very touch of earth, have not yet been
+put before the mind in a definite form, and shaped
+so that they can be weighed. The mind is like a
+lens. A lens can examine nothing of itself, but no
+matter what is put before it, it will magnify it so
+that it can be searched into. So whatever is put
+before the mind in such form that it may be perceived,
+the mind will search into and examine. It is
+not that the mind is limited, and unable to understand;
+it is that the facts have not yet been placed
+in front of it. But because as yet these things are
+like the leaf folded in the bud, that is no reason why
+we should say they are beyond hope of comprehension.</p>
+
+<p>Such a course inflicts the greatest moral injury on
+the world. Remaining content upon a mental level
+is fatal, saying to ourselves, 'There is nothing more,
+this is our limit; we can go no farther,' is the ruin
+of the mind, as much sleep is the ruin of the body.
+Looking back through history, it is evident that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span>
+thought has forced itself out on the world by its own
+power and against an immense inertia. Thought
+has worked its way by dint of its own energy, and
+not because it was welcomed. So few care or hope
+for a higher mental level; the old terrace of mind
+will do; let us rest; be assured no higher terrace
+exists. Experience, however, from time to time has
+proved that higher terraces did exist. Without
+doubt there are others now. Somewhere behind the
+broad beam of life sweeping so beautifully through
+the combe, somewhere behind the flower, and in
+the wind. Yet to come up over the blue hill line,
+there are deeper, wider thoughts still. Always let
+us look higher, in spite of the narrowness of daily
+life. The little is so heavy that it needs a strong
+effort to escape it. The littleness of daily routine; the
+care felt and despised, the minuti&aelig; which grow against
+our will, come in time to be heavier than lead.
+There should be some comfort in the thought that,
+however these may strain the mind, it is certain that
+hardly a fiftieth part of its real capacity is occupied
+with them. There is an immense power in it unused.
+By stretching one muscle too much it becomes
+overworked; still, there are a hundred other
+muscles in the body. In truth, we do not fully
+understand our own earth, our own life, yet. Never,
+never let us permit the weight of little things to
+bear us wholly down. If any object that these are
+vague aspirations, so is the wind vague, yet it is
+real. They may direct us as strongly as the wind
+presses on the sails of a ship.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The blue hill line arouses a perception of a current
+of thought which lies for the most part unrecognized
+within&mdash;an unconscious thought. By looking at this
+blue hill line this dormant power within the mind
+becomes partly visible; the heart wakes up to it.</p>
+
+<p>The intense feeling caused by the sunshine, by
+the sky, by the flowers and distant sea is an increased
+consciousness of our own life. The stream
+of light&mdash;the rush of sweet wind&mdash;excites a deeper
+knowledge of the soul. An unutterable desire at
+once arises for more of this; let us receive more of
+the inner soul life which seeks and sighs for purest
+beauty. But the word beauty is poor to convey the
+feelings intended. Give us the thoughts which
+correspond with the feeling called up by the sky, the
+sea afar, and the flower at hand. Let us really be in
+ourselves the sunbeam which we use as an illustration.
+The recognition of its loveliness, and of the
+delicious air, is really a refined form of prayer&mdash;the
+purer because it is not associated with any object,
+because of its width and openness. It is not prayer
+in the sense of a benefit desired, it is a feeling of
+rising to a nobler existence.</p>
+
+<p>It does not include wishes connected with routine
+and labour. Nor does it depend on the brilliant sun&mdash;this
+mere clod of earth will cause it, even a little
+crumble of mould. The commonest form of matter
+thus regarded excites the highest form of spirit. The
+feelings may be received from the least morsel of
+brown earth adhering to the surface of the skin on
+the hand that has touched the ground. Inhaling
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>
+this deep feeling, the soul, perforce, must pray&mdash;a
+rude imperfect word to express the aspiration&mdash;with
+every glimpse of sunlight, whether it come in a room
+amid routine, or in the solitude of the hills; with
+every flower, and grass-blade, and the vast earth
+underfoot; with the gleam on the distant sea, with
+the song of the lark on high, and the thrush lowly
+in the hawthorn.</p>
+
+<p>From the blue hill lines, from the dark copses on
+the ridges, the shadows in the combes, from the
+apple-sweet wind and rising grasses, from the leaf
+issuing out of the bud to question the sun&mdash;there
+comes from all of these an influence which forces the
+heart to lift itself in earnest and purest desire.</p>
+
+<p>The soul knows itself, and would live its own life.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chapbreak" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="THE_SUN_AND_THE_BROOK" id="THE_SUN_AND_THE_BROOK"></a>THE SUN AND THE BROOK</h2>
+
+
+<p>The sun first sees the brook in the meadow where
+some roach swim under a bulging root of ash.
+Leaning against the tree, and looking down into the
+water, there is a picture of the sky. Its brightness
+hides the sandy floor of the stream as a picture conceals
+the wall where it hangs, but, as if the water
+cooled the rays, the eye can bear to gaze on the
+image of the sun. Over its circle thin threads of
+summer cloud are drawn; it is only the reflection,
+yet the sun seems closer seen in the brook, more to
+do with us, like the grass, and the tree, and the
+flowing stream. In the sky it is so far, it cannot be
+approached, nor even gazed at, so that by the very
+virtue and power of its own brilliance it forces us to
+ignore, and almost forget it. The summer days go
+on, and no one notices the sun. The sweet water
+slipping past the green flags, with every now and
+then a rushing sound of eager haste, receives the
+sky, and it becomes a part of the earth and of life.
+No one can see his own face without a glass; no
+one can sit down and deliberately think of the soul
+till it appears a visible thing. It eludes&mdash;the mind
+cannot grasp it. But hold a flower in the hand&mdash;a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>
+rose, this later honeysuckle, or this the first harebell&mdash;and
+in its beauty you can recognize your own
+soul reflected as the sun in the brook. For the soul
+finds itself in beautiful things.</p>
+
+<p>Between the bulging root and the bank there is a
+tiny oval pool, on the surface of which the light does
+not fall. There the eye can see deep down into the
+stream, which scarcely moves in the hollow it has
+worn for itself as its weight swings into the concave
+of the bend. The hollow is illumined by the light
+which sinks through the stream outside the root;
+and beneath, in the green depth, five or six roach
+face the current. Every now and then a tiny curl
+appears on the surface inside the root, and must rise
+up to come there. Unwinding as it goes, its raised
+edge lowers and becomes lost in the level. Dark
+moss on the base of the ash darkens the water under.
+The light green leaves overhead yield gently to the
+passing air; there are but few leaves on the tree, and
+these scarcely make a shadow on the grass beyond
+that of the trunk. As the branch swings, the gnats
+are driven farther away to avoid it. Over the
+verge of the bank, bending down almost to the root
+in the water, droop the heavily seeded heads of tall
+grasses which, growing there, have escaped the
+scythe.</p>
+
+<p>These are the days of the convolvulus, of ripening
+berry, and dropping nut. In the gateways, ears of
+wheat hang from the hawthorn boughs, which seized
+them from the passing load. The broad aftermath
+is without flowers; the flowers are gone to the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>
+uplands and the untilled wastes. Curving opposite
+the south, the hollow side of the brook has received
+the sunlight like a silvered speculum every day that
+the sun has shone. Since the first violet of the
+meadow, till now that the berries are ripening,
+through all the long drama of the summer, the rays
+have visited the stream. The long, loving touch of
+the sun has left some of its own mystic attraction in
+the brook. Resting here, and gazing down into it,
+thoughts and dreams come flowing as the water
+flows. Thoughts without words, mobile like the
+stream, nothing compact that can be grasped and
+stayed: dreams that slip silently as water slips
+through the fingers. The grass is not grass alone;
+the leaves of the ash above are not leaves only.
+From tree, and earth, and soft air moving, there
+comes an invisible touch which arranges the senses
+to its waves as the ripples of the lake set the sand in
+parallel lines. The grass sways and fans the reposing
+mind; the leaves sway and stroke it, till it
+can feel beyond itself and with them, using each
+grass blade, each leaf, to abstract life from earth and
+ether. These then become new organs, fresh nerves
+and veins running afar out into the field, along the
+winding brook, up through the leaves, bringing a
+larger existence. The arms of the mind open wide
+to the broad sky.</p>
+
+<p>Some sense of the meaning of the grass, and
+leaves of the tree, and sweet waters hovers on the
+confines of thought, and seems ready to be resolved
+into definite form. There is a meaning in these
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>
+things, a meaning in all that exists, and it comes
+near to declare itself. Not yet, not fully, nor in
+such shape that it may be formulated&mdash;if ever it will
+be&mdash;but sufficiently so to leave, as it were, an unwritten
+impression that will remain when the glamour
+is gone, and grass is but grass, and a tree a tree.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chapbreak" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="NATURE_AND_ETERNITY" id="NATURE_AND_ETERNITY"></a>NATURE AND ETERNITY</h2>
+
+
+<p>The goldfinches sing so sweetly hidden in the topmost
+boughs of the apple-trees that heart of man
+cannot withstand them. These four walls, though
+never so well decorated with pictures, this flat white
+ceiling, feels all too small, and dull and tame. Down
+with books and pen, and let us away with the goldfinches,
+the princes of the birds. For thirty of their
+generations they have sung and courted and built
+their nests in those apple-trees, almost under the
+very windows&mdash;a time in their chronology equal to
+a thousand years. For they are so very busy, from
+earliest morn till night&mdash;a long summer's day is like
+a year. Now flirting with a gaily-decked and coy
+lady-love, chasing her from tree to tree; now splashing
+at the edge of a shallow stream till the golden
+feathers glisten and the red topknot shines. Then
+searching in and out the hedgerow for favourite
+seeds, and singing, singing all the while, verily a
+'song without an end.' The wings never still, the
+bill never idle, the throat never silent, and the tiny
+heart within the proud breast beating so rapidly that,
+reckoning time by change and variety, an hour must
+be a day. A life all joy and freedom, without thought,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>
+and full of love. What a great god the sun must be
+to the finches from whose wings his beams are reflected
+in glittering gold! The abstract idea of a deity apart,
+as they feel their life-blood stirring, their eyelids
+opening, with the rising sun; as they fly to satisfy
+their hunger with those little fruits they use; as they
+revel in the warm sunshine, and utter soft notes of
+love to their beautiful mates, they cannot but feel
+a sense, unnamed, indefinite, of joyous gratitude
+towards that great orb which is very nearly akin to
+the sensual worship of ancient days. Darkness and
+cold are Typhon and Ahriman, light and warmth,
+Osiris and Ormuzd, indeed to them; with song they
+welcome the spring and celebrate the awakening of
+Adonis. Lovely little idolaters, my heart goes with
+them. Deep down in the mysteries of organic life
+there are causes for the marvellously extended grasp
+which the worship of light once held upon the world,
+hardly yet guessed at, and which even now play a
+part unsuspected in the motives of men. Even yet,
+despite our artificial life, despite railroads, telegraphs,
+printing-press, in the face of firm monotheistic convictions,
+once a year the old, old influence breaks
+forth, driving thousands and thousands from cities
+and houses out into field and forest, to the seashore
+and mountain-top, to gather fresh health and strength
+from the Sun, from the Air&mdash;Jove&mdash;and old Ocean.
+So the goldfinches rejoice in the sunshine, and who
+can sit within doors when they sing?</p>
+
+<p>Foolish fashion has banished the orchard from the
+mansion&mdash;the orchard which Homer tells us kings
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>
+once valued as part of their demesne&mdash;and has substituted
+curious evergreens to which the birds do not
+take readily. But this orchard is almost under the
+windows, and in summer the finches wake the sleeper
+with their song, and in autumn the eye looks down
+upon the yellow and rosy fruit. Up the scaling bark
+of the trunks the brown tree-climbers run, peering
+into every cranny, and few are the insects which
+escape those keen eyes. Sitting on a bench under
+a pear-tree, I saw a spider drop from a leaf fully
+nine feet above the ground, and disappear in the
+grass, leaving a slender rope of web, attached at the
+upper end to a leaf, and at the lower to a fallen pear.
+In a few minutes a small white caterpillar, barely an
+inch long, began to climb this rope. It grasped the
+thread in the mouth and drew up its body about
+a sixteenth of an inch at a time, then held tight with
+the two fore-feet, and, lifting its head, seized the
+rope a sixteenth higher; repeating this operation
+incessantly, the rest of the body swinging in the air.
+Never pausing, without haste and without rest, this
+creature patiently worked its way upwards, as a man
+might up a rope. Let anyone seize a beam overhead
+and attempt to lift the chest up to a level with it, the
+expenditure of strength is very great; even with long
+practice, to 'swarm' up a pole or rope to any distance
+is the hardest labour the human muscles are capable
+of. This despised 'creeping thing,' without the
+slightest apparent effort, without once pausing to
+take breath, reached the leaf overhead in rather under
+half an hour, having climbed a rope fully 108 times
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span>
+its own length. To equal this a man must climb
+648 feet, or more than half as high again as St.&nbsp;Paul's.
+The insect on reaching the top at once commenced
+feeding, and easily bit through the hard pear-leaf:
+how delicately then it must have grasped the slender
+spider's web, which a touch would destroy! The
+thoughts which this feat call forth do not end here,
+for there was no necessity to go up the thread; the
+insect could to all appearance have travelled up the
+trunk of the tree with ease, and it is not to be supposed
+that its mouth and feet were specially adapted
+to climb a web, a thing which I have never seen done
+since, and which was to all appearance merely the
+result of the <i>accident</i> of the insect coming along just
+after the spider had left the thread. Another few
+minutes, and the first puff of wind would have carried
+the thread away&mdash;as a puff actually did soon afterwards.
+I claim a wonderful amount of <i>original</i> intelligence&mdash;as
+opposed to the ill-used term instinct&mdash;of
+patience and perseverance for this creature. It is so
+easy to imagine that because man is big, brain power
+cannot exist in tiny organizations; but even in man
+the seat of thought is so minute that it escapes discovery,
+and his very life may be said to lie in the
+point of contact of two bones of the neck. Put the
+mind of man within the body of the caterpillar&mdash;what
+more could it have done? Accustomed to bite
+and eat its way through hard leaves, why did not
+the insect snip off and destroy its rope? These are
+matters to think over dreamily while the finches sing
+overhead in the apple-tree.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>They are not the only regular inhabitants, still less
+the only visitors. As there are wide plains even in
+thickly populated England where man has built no
+populous city, so in bird-life there are fields and
+woods almost deserted by the songsters, who at the
+same time congregate thickly in a few favourite
+resorts, where experience gathered in slow time has
+shown them they need fear nothing from human
+beings. Such a place, such a city of the birds and
+beasts, is this old orchard. The bold and handsome
+bullfinch builds in the low hawthorn hedge which
+bounds it upon one side. In the walls of the arbour
+formed of thick ivy and flowering creepers, the robin
+and thrush hide their nests. On the topmost branches
+of the tall pear-trees the swallows rest and twitter.
+The noble blackbird, with full black eye, pecks at
+the decaying apples upon the sward, and takes no
+heed of a footstep. Sometimes the loving pair of
+squirrels who dwell in the fir-copse at the end of the
+meadow find their way down the hedges&mdash;staying at
+each tree as an inn by the road&mdash;into the orchard,
+and play their fantastic tricks upon the apple-boughs.
+The flycatchers perch on a branch clear from the
+tree, and dart at the passing flies. Merriest of all,
+the tomtits chatter and scold, hanging under the
+twigs, head downwards, and then away to their nest
+in the crumbling stone wall which encloses one side
+of the orchard. They have worked their way by
+a cranny deep into the thick wall. On the other side
+runs the king's highway, and ever and anon the teams
+go by, making music with their bells. One day a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span>
+whole nation of martins savagely attacked this wall.
+Pressure of population probably had compelled them
+to emigrate from the sand quarry, and the chinks in
+the wall pleased their eyes. Five-and-thirty brown
+little birds went to work like miners at twelve or
+fourteen holes, tapping at the mortar with their bills,
+scratching out small fragments of stone, twittering
+and talking all the time, and there undoubtedly they
+would have founded a colony had not the jingling
+teams and now and then a barking dog disturbed
+them. Resting on the bench and leaning back against
+an apple-tree, it is easy to watch the eager starlings
+on the chimney-top, and see them tear out the straw
+of the thatch to form their holes. They are all
+orators born. They live in a democracy, and fluency
+of speech leads the populace. Perched on the edge
+of the chimney, his bronze-tinted wings flapping
+against his side to give greater emphasis&mdash;as a
+preacher moves his hands&mdash;the starling pours forth
+a flood of eloquence, now rising to screaming-pitch,
+now modulating his tones to soft persuasion, now
+descending to deep, low, complaining, regretful sounds&mdash;a
+speech without words&mdash;addressed to a dozen
+birds gravely listening on the ash-tree yonder. He
+is begging them to come with him to a meadow
+where food is abundant. In the ivy close under the
+window there, within reach of the hand, a water-wagtail
+built its nest. To this nest one lovely afternoon
+came a great bird like a hawk, to the fearful
+alarm and intense excitement of all the bird population.
+It was a cuckoo, and after three or four visits,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span>
+despite a curious eye at the window, there was a
+strange egg in that nest. Inside that window, huddled
+fearfully in the darkest corner of the room, there was
+once a tiny heap of blue and yellow feathers. A
+tomtit straying through the casement had been chased
+by the cat till it dropped exhausted, and the cat was
+fortunately frightened by a footstep. The bird was
+all but dead&mdash;the feathers awry and ruffled, the eyelids
+closed, the body limp and helpless&mdash;only a faint
+fluttering of the tiny heart. When placed tenderly
+on the ledge of the casement, where the warm
+sunshine fell and the breeze came softly, it dropped
+listlessly on one side. But in a little while the life-giving
+rays quickened the blood, the eyelids opened,
+and presently it could stand perched upon the finger.
+Then, lest with returning consciousness fear should
+again arise, the clinging claws were transferred from
+the finger to a twig of wall-pear. A few minutes
+more, and with a chirp the bird was gone into the
+flood of sunlight. What intense joy there must have
+been in that little creature's heart as it drank the
+sweet air and felt the loving warmth of its great god
+Ra, the Sun!</p>
+
+<p>Throwing open the little wicket-gate, by a step
+the greensward of the meadow is reached. Though
+the grass has been mown and the ground is dry, it is
+better to carry a thick rug, and cast it down in the
+shadow under the tall horse-chestnut-tree. It is only
+while in a dreamy, slumbrous, half-mesmerized state
+that nature's ancient papyrus roll can be read&mdash;only
+when the mind is at rest, separated from care and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span>
+labour; when the body is at ease, luxuriating in
+warmth and delicious languor; when the soul is
+in accord and sympathy with the sunlight, with the
+leaf, with the slender blades of grass, and can feel
+with the tiniest insect which climbs up them as up a
+mighty tree. As the genius of the great musicians,
+without an articulated word or printed letter, can
+carry with it all the emotions, so now, lying prone
+upon the earth in the shadow, with quiescent will,
+listening, thoughts and feelings rise respondent to
+the sunbeams, to the leaf, the very blade of grass.
+Resting the head upon the hand, gazing down upon
+the ground, the strange and marvellous inner sight
+of the mind penetrates the solid earth, grasps in part
+the mystery of its vast extension upon either side,
+bearing its majestic mountains, its deep forests, its
+grand oceans, and almost feels the life which in ten
+thousand thousand forms revels upon its surface.
+Returning upon itself, the mind joys in the knowledge
+that it too is a part of this wonder&mdash;akin to
+the ten thousand thousand creatures, akin to the
+very earth itself. How grand and holy is this life!
+how sacred the temple which contains it!</p>
+
+<p>Out from the hedge, not five yards distant, pours a
+rush of deep luscious notes, succeeded by the sweetest
+trills heard by man. It is the nightingale, which
+tradition assigns to the night only, but which in fact
+sings as loudly, and to my ear more joyously, in the
+full sunlight, especially in the morning, and always
+close to the nest. The sun has moved onward upon
+his journey, and this spot is no longer completely
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span>
+shaded, but the foliage of a great oak breaks the force
+of his rays, and the eye can even bear to gaze at his
+disc for a few moments. Living for this brief hour
+at least in unalloyed sympathy with nature, apart from
+all disturbing influences, the sight of that splendid
+disc carries the soul with it till it feels as eternal as
+the sun. Let the memory call up a picture of the
+desert sands of Egypt&mdash;upon the kings with the
+double crown, upon Rameses, upon Sesostris, upon
+Assurbanipal the burning beams of this very sun
+descended, filling their veins with tumultuous life,
+three thousand years ago. Lifted up in absorbing
+thought, the mind feels that these three thousand
+years are in truth no longer past than the last beat
+of the pulse. It throbbed&mdash;the throb is gone; their
+pulse throbbed, and it seems but a moment since, for
+to thought, as to the sun, there is no time. This
+little petty life of seventy years, with its little petty
+aims and hopes, its despicable fears and contemptible
+sorrows, is no more the life with which the mind is
+occupied. This golden disc has risen and set, as the
+graven marks of man alone record, full eight thousand
+years. The hieroglyphs of the rocks speak of a fiery
+sun shining inconceivable ages before that. Yet even
+this almost immortal sun had a beginning&mdash;perhaps
+emerging as a ball of incandescent gas from chaos:
+how long ago was that? And onwards, still onwards
+goes the disc, doubtless for ages and ages to come.
+It is time that our measures should be extended;
+these paltry divisions of hours and days and years&mdash;aye,
+of centuries&mdash;should be superseded by terms
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span>
+conveying some faint idea at least of the vastness
+of space. For in truth, when thinking thus, there is
+no <i>time</i> at all. The mind loses the sense of time and
+reposes in eternity. This hour, this instant is eternity;
+it extends backwards, it extends forwards, and we are
+in it. It is a grand and an ennobling feeling to know
+that at this moment illimitable time extends on either
+hand. No conception of a supernatural character
+formed in the brain has ever or will ever surpass the
+mystery of this endless existence as exemplified&mdash;as
+made manifest by the physical sun&mdash;a visible sign
+of immortality. This&mdash;this hour is part of the
+immortal life. Reclining upon this rug under the
+chestnut-tree, while the graceful shadows dance, a
+passing bee hums and the nightingale sings, while
+the oak foliage sprinkles the sunshine over us, we are
+really and in truth in the midst of eternity. Only by
+walking hand in hand with nature, only by a reverent
+and loving study of the mysteries for ever around us,
+is it possible to disabuse the mind of the narrow view,
+the contracted belief that time is now and eternity to-morrow.
+Eternity is to-day. The goldfinches and
+the tiny caterpillars, the brilliant sun, if looked at
+lovingly and thoughtfully, will lift the soul out of the
+smaller life of human care that is of selfish aims,
+bounded by seventy years, into the greater, the
+limitless life which has been going on over universal
+space from endless ages past, which is going on now,
+and which will for ever and for ever, in one form or
+another, continue to proceed.</p>
+
+<p>Dreamily listening to the nightingale's song, let
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>
+us look down upon the earth as the sun looks down
+upon it. In this meadow how many millions of
+blades of grass are there, each performing wonderful
+operations which the cleverest chemist can but poorly
+indicate, taking up from the earth its sap, from the
+air its gases, in a word living, living as much as ourselves,
+though in a lower form? On the oak-tree
+yonder, how many leaves are doing the same? Just
+now we felt the vastness of the earth&mdash;its extended
+majesty, bearing mountain, forest, and sea. Not a
+blade of grass but has its insect, not a leaf; the very
+air as it softly woos the cheek bears with it living
+germs, and upon all those mountains, within those
+forests, and in every drop of those oceans, life in
+some shape moves and stirs. Nay, the very solid
+earth itself, the very chalk and clay and stone and
+rock has been built up by once living organisms.
+But at this instant, looking down upon the earth
+as the sun does, how can words depict the glowing
+wonder, the marvellous beauty of all the plant, the
+insect, the animal life, which presses upon the
+mental eye? It is impossible. But with these that
+are more immediately around us&mdash;with the goldfinch,
+the caterpillar, the nightingale, the blades of
+grass, the leaves&mdash;with these we may feel, into their
+life we may in part enter, and find our own existence
+thereby enlarged. Would that it were possible for
+the heart and mind to enter into <i>all</i> the life that
+glows and teems upon the earth&mdash;to feel with it,
+hope with it, sorrow with it&mdash;and thereby to become
+a grander, nobler being. Such a being, with such a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span>
+sympathy and larger existence, must hold in scorn
+the feeble, cowardly, selfish desire for an immortality
+of pleasure only, whose one great hope is to
+escape pain! No. Let me joy with all living
+creatures; let me suffer with them all&mdash;the reward
+of feeling a deeper, grander life would be amply
+sufficient.</p>
+
+<p>What wonderful patience the creatures called
+'lower' exhibit! Watch this small red ant travelling
+among the grass-blades. To it they are as high as
+the oak-trees to us, and they are entangled and
+matted together as a forest overthrown by a tornado.
+The insect slowly overcomes all the difficulties of its
+route&mdash;now climbing over the creeping roots of the
+buttercups, now struggling under a fallen leaf, now
+getting up a bennet, up and down, making one inch
+forward for three vertically, but never pausing,
+always onwards at racing speed. A shadow sweeps
+rapidly over the grass&mdash;it is that of a rook which
+has flown between us and the sun. Looking upwards
+into the deep azure of the sky, intently
+gazing into space and forgetting for a while the
+life around and beneath, there comes into the mind
+an intense desire to rise, to penetrate the height, to
+become part and parcel of that wondrous infinity
+which extends overhead as it extends along the
+surface. The soul full of thought grows concentrated
+in itself, marvels only at its own destiny,
+labours to behold the secret of its own existence,
+and, above all, utters without articulate words a
+prayer forced from it by the bright sun, by the blue
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>
+sky, by bird and plant:&mdash;Let me have wider feelings,
+more extended sympathies, let me feel with all living
+things, rejoice and praise with them. Let me have
+deeper knowledge, a nearer insight, a more reverent
+conception. Let me see the mystery of life&mdash;the
+secret of the sap as it rises in the tree&mdash;the secret of
+the blood as it courses through the vein. Reveal
+the broad earth and the ends of it&mdash;make the
+majestic ocean open to the eye down to its inmost
+recesses. Expand the mind till it grasps the idea of
+the unseen forces which hold the globe suspended and
+draw the vast suns and stars through space. Let it
+see the life, the organisms which dwell in those great
+worlds, and feel with them their hopes and joys and
+sorrows. Ever upwards, onwards, wider, deeper,
+broader, till capable of all&mdash;all. Never did vivid
+imagination stretch out the powers of deity with
+such a fulness, with such intellectual grasp, vigour,
+omniscience as the human mind could reach to, if
+only its organs, its means, were equal to its thought.
+Give us, then, greater strength of body, greater
+length of days; give us more vital energy, let our
+limbs be mighty as those of the giants of old.
+Supplement such organs with nobler mechanical
+engines&mdash;with extended means of locomotion; add
+novel and more minute methods of analysis and
+discovery. Let us become as demi-gods. And why
+not? Whoso gave the gift of the mind gave also
+an infinite space, an infinite matter for it to work
+upon, an infinite time in which to work. Let no
+one presume to define the boundaries of that divine
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span>
+gift&mdash;that mind&mdash;for all the experience of eight
+thousand years proves beyond a question that the
+limits of its powers will never be reached, though
+the human race dwell upon the globe for eternity.
+Up, then, and labour: and let that labour be sound
+and holy. Not for immediate and petty reward,
+not that the appetite or the vanity may be gratified,
+but that the sum of human perfection may be advanced;
+labouring as consecrated priests, for true
+science is religion. All is possible. A grand future
+awaits the world. When man has only partially
+worked out his own conceptions&mdash;when only a
+portion of what the mind foresees and plans is
+realized&mdash;then already earth will be as a paradise.</p>
+
+<p>Full of love and sympathy for this feeble ant
+climbing over grass and leaf, for yonder nightingale
+pouring forth its song, feeling a community with
+the finches, with bird, with plant, with animal, and
+reverently studying all these and more&mdash;how is it
+possible for the heart while thus wrapped up to
+conceive the desire of crime? For ever anxious
+and labouring for perfection, shall the soul, convinced
+of the divinity of its work, halt and turn
+aside to fall into imperfection? Lying thus upon
+the rug under the shadow of the oak and horse-chestnut-tree,
+full of the joy of life&mdash;full of the joy
+which all organisms feel in living alone&mdash;lifting the
+eye far, far above the sphere even of the sun, shall
+we ever conceive the idea of murder, of violence,
+of aught that degrades ourselves? It is impossible
+while in this frame. So thus reclining, and thus
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>
+occupied, we require no judge, no prison, no law,
+no punishment&mdash;and, further, no army, no monarch.
+At this moment, did neither of these institutions
+exist our conduct would be the same. Our whole
+existence at this moment is permeated with a reverent
+love, an aspiration&mdash;a desire of a more perfect life; if
+the very name of religion was extinct, our hopes, our
+wish would be the same. It is but a simple transition
+to conclude that with more extended knowledge,
+with wider sympathies, with greater powers&mdash;powers
+more equal to the vague longings of their minds, the
+human race would be as we are at this moment in
+the shadow of the chestnut-tree. No need of priest
+and lawyer; no need of armies or kings. It is probable
+that with the progress of knowledge it will be
+possible to satisfy the necessary wants of existence
+much more easily than now, and thus to remove one
+great cause of discord. And all these thoughts
+because the passing shadow of a rook caused the
+eye to gaze upwards into the deep azure of the sky.
+There is no limit, no number to the thoughts which
+the study of nature may call forth, any more than
+there is a limit to the number of the rays of the sun.</p>
+
+<p>This blade of grass grows as high as it can, the
+nightingale there sings as sweetly as it can, the goldfinches
+feed to their full desire and lay down no
+arbitrary rules of life; the great sun above pours out
+its heat and light in a flood unrestrained. What is
+the meaning of this hieroglyph, which is repeated in
+a thousand thousand other ways and shapes, which
+meets us at every turn? It is evident that all living
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span>
+creatures, from the zoophyte upwards, plant, reptile,
+bird, animal, and in his natural state&mdash;in his physical
+frame&mdash;man also, strive with all their powers to
+obtain as perfect an existence as possible. It is the
+one great law of their being, followed from birth to
+death. All the efforts of the plant are put forth to
+obtain more light, more air, more moisture&mdash;in a
+word, more food&mdash;upon which to grow, expand, and
+become more beautiful and perfect. The aim may
+be unconscious, but the result is evident. It is
+equally so with the animal; its lowest appetites
+subserve the one grand object of its advance.
+Whether it be eating, drinking, sleeping, procreating,
+all tends to one end, a fuller development of the
+individual, a higher condition of the species; still
+further, to the production of new races capable of
+additional progress. Part and parcel as we are of
+the great community of living beings, indissolubly
+connected with them from the lowest to the highest
+by a thousand ties, it is impossible for us to escape
+from the operation of this law; or if, by the exertion
+of the will, and the resources of the intellect, it is
+partially suspended, then the individual may perhaps
+pass away unharmed, but the race must suffer. It is,
+rather, the province of that inestimable gift, the mind,
+to aid nature, to smooth away the difficulties, to
+assist both the physical and mental man to increase
+his powers and widen his influence. Such efforts
+have been made from time to time, but unfortunately
+upon purely empirical principles, by arbitrary interference,
+without a long previous study of the delicate
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span>
+organization it was proposed to amend. If there is
+one thing our latter-day students have demonstrated
+beyond all reach of cavil, it is that both the physical
+and the mental man are, as it were, a mass of inherited
+structures&mdash;are built up of partially absorbed rudimentary
+organs and primitive conceptions, much as
+the trunks of certain trees are formed by the absorption
+of the leaves. He is made up of the Past.
+This is a happy and an inspiriting discovery, insomuch
+as it holds out a resplendent promise that
+there may yet come a man of the future made out of
+our present which will then be the past. It is a
+discovery which calls upon us for new and larger
+moral and physical exertion, which throws upon us
+wider and nobler duties, for upon us depends the
+future. At one blow this new light casts aside those
+melancholy convictions which, judging from the evil
+blood which seemed to stain each new generation
+alike, had elevated into a faith the depressing idea
+that man could not advance. It explains the causes
+of that stain, the reason of those imperfections, not
+necessary parts of the ideal man, but inherited from
+a lower order of life, and to be gradually expunged.</p>
+
+<p>But this marvellous mystery of inheritance has
+brought with it a series of mental instincts, so to say;
+a whole circle of ideas of moral conceptions, in a sense
+belonging to the Past&mdash;ideas which were high and
+noble in the rudimentary being, which were beyond
+the capacity of the pure animal, but which are now
+in great part merely obstructions to advancement.
+Let these perish. We must seek for enlightenment
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span>
+and for progress, not in the dim failing traditions of
+a period but just removed from the time of the
+rudimentary or primeval man&mdash;we must no longer
+allow the hoary age of such traditions to blind the
+eye and cause the knee to bend&mdash;we must no longer
+stultify the mind by compelling it to receive as
+infallible what in the very nature of things must
+have been fallible to the highest degree. The very
+plants are wiser far. They seek the light of to-day,
+the heat of the sun which shines at this hour; they
+make no attempt to guide their life by the feeble
+reflection of rays which were extinguished ages ago.
+This slender blade of grass, beside the edge of our
+rug under the chestnut-tree, shoots upwards in the
+fresh air of to-day; its roots draw nourishment from
+the moisture of the dew which heaven deposited this
+morning. If it does make use of the past&mdash;of the
+soil, the earth that has accumulated in centuries&mdash;it
+is to advance its present growth. Root out at once
+and for ever these primeval, narrow, and contracted
+ideas; fix the mind upon the sun of the present, and
+prepare for the sun that must rise to-morrow. It is
+our duty to develop both mind and body and soul
+to the utmost: as it is the duty of this blade of grass
+and this oak-tree to grow and expand as far as their
+powers will admit. But the blade of grass and the
+oak have this great disadvantage to work against&mdash;they
+can only labour in the lines laid down for them,
+and unconsciously; while man can think, foresee,
+and plan. The greatest obstacle to progress is the
+lack now beginning to be felt all over the world, but
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span>
+more especially in the countries most highly civilized,
+of a true ideal to work up to. It is necessary that
+some far-seeing master-mind, some giant intellect,
+should arise, and sketch out in bold, unmistakable
+outlines the grand and noble future which the human
+race should labour for. There have been weak
+attempts&mdash;there are contemptible makeshifts now on
+their trial, especially in the new world&mdash;but the whole
+of these, without exception, are simply diluted reproductions
+of systems long since worn out. These
+can only last a little while; if anything, they are
+worse than the prejudices and traditions which form
+the body of wider-spread creeds. The world cries
+out for an intellect which shall draw its inspiration
+from the unvarying and infallible laws regulating the
+universe; which shall found its faith upon the
+teaching of grass, of leaf, of bird, of beast, of hoary
+rock, great ocean, star and sun; which shall afford
+full room for the development of muscle, sense, and
+above all of the wondrous brain; and which without
+fettering the individual shall secure the ultimate
+apotheosis of the race. No such system can spring
+at once, complete, perfect in detail, from any one
+mind. But assuredly when once a firm basis has
+been laid down, when an outline has been drawn,
+the converging efforts of a thousand thousand
+thinkers will be brought to bear upon it, and it will
+be elaborated into something approaching a reliable
+guide. The faiths of the past, of the ancient world,
+now extinct or feebly lingering on, were each inspired
+by one mind only. The faith of the future, in strong
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span>
+contrast, will spring from the researches of a thousand
+thousand thinkers, whose minds, once brought into
+a focus, will speedily burn up all that is useless and
+worn out with a fierce heat, and evoke a new and
+brilliant light. This converging thought is one of
+the greatest blessings of our day, made possible by
+the vastly extended means of communication, and
+almost seems specially destined for this very purpose.
+Thought increases with the ages. At this moment
+there are probably as many busy brains studying,
+reflecting, collecting scattered truths, as there were
+thinkers&mdash;effectual thinkers&mdash;in all the recorded
+eighty centuries gone by. Daily and hourly the
+noble army swells its numbers, and the sound of
+its mighty march grows louder; the inscribed roll
+of its victories fills the heart with exultation.</p>
+
+<p>There is a slight rustle among the bushes and the
+fern upon the mound. It is a rabbit who has peeped
+forth into the sunshine. His eye opens wide with
+wonder at the sight of us; his nostrils work nervously
+as he watches us narrowly. But in a little while the
+silence and stillness reassure him; he nibbles in a
+desultory way at the stray grasses on the mound, and
+finally ventures out into the meadow almost within
+reach of the hand. It is so easy to make the
+acquaintance&mdash;to make friends with the children of
+Nature. From the tiniest insect upwards they are
+so ready to dwell in sympathy with us&mdash;only be
+tender, quiet, considerate, in a word, <i>gentlemanly</i>,
+towards them and they will freely wander around.
+And they have all such marvellous tales to tell&mdash;intricate
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span>
+problems to solve for us. This common
+wild rabbit has an ancestry of almost unsearchable
+antiquity. Within that little body there are organs
+and structures which, rightly studied, will throw a
+light upon the mysteries hidden in our own frames.
+It is a peculiarity of this search that nothing is
+despicable; nothing can be passed over&mdash;not so much
+as a fallen leaf, or a grain of sand. Literally everything
+bears stamped upon it characters in the hieratic,
+the sacred handwriting, not one word of which shall
+fall to the ground.</p>
+
+<p>Sitting indoors, with every modern luxury around,
+rich carpets, artistic furniture, pictures, statuary,
+food and drink brought from the uttermost ends of
+the earth, with the telegraph, the printing-press, the
+railway at immediate command, it is easy to say,
+'What have <i>I</i> to do with all this? I am neither an
+animal nor a plant, and the sun is nothing to me.
+This is <i>my</i> life which I have created; I am apart
+from the other inhabitants of the earth.' But go to
+the window. See&mdash;there is but a thin, transparent
+sheet of brittle glass between the artificial man and
+the air, the light, the trees, and grass. So between
+him and the other innumerable organisms which live
+and breathe there is but a thin feeble crust of prejudice
+and social custom. Between him and those
+irresistible laws which keep the sun upon its course
+there is absolutely no bar whatever. Without air he
+cannot live. Nature cannot be escaped. Then face
+the facts, and having done so, there will speedily
+arise a calm pleasure beckoning onwards.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The shadows of the oak and chestnut-tree no
+longer shelter our rug; the beams of the noonday
+sun fall vertically on us; we will leave the spot for
+a while. The nightingale and the goldfinches, the
+thrushes and blackbirds, are silent for a time in the
+sultry heat. But they only wait for the evening to
+burst forth in one exquisite chorus, praising this
+wondrous life and the beauties of the earth.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chapbreak" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="THE_DAWN" id="THE_DAWN"></a>THE DAWN</h2>
+
+
+<p>There came to my bedside this morning a visitant
+that has been present at the bedside of everyone who
+has lived for ten thousand years. In the darkness I
+was conscious of a faint light not visible if I looked
+deliberately to find it, but seen sideways, and where
+I was not gazing. It slipped from direct glance as a
+shadow may slip from a hand-grasp, but it was there
+floating in the atmosphere of the room. I could not
+say that it shone on the wall or lit the distant corner.
+Light is seen by reflection, but this light was visible
+of itself like a living thing, a visitant from the
+unknown. The dawn was in the chamber, and by
+degrees this intangible and slender existence would
+enlarge and deepen into day. Ever since I used to
+rise early to bathe, or shoot, or see the sunrise, the
+habit has remained of waking at the same hour, so
+that I see the dawn morning after morning, though I
+may sleep again immediately. Sometimes the change
+of the seasons makes it broad sunlight, sometimes it
+is still dark; then again the faint grey light is there,
+and I know that the distant hills are becoming defined
+along the sky. But though so familiar, that spectral
+light in the silence has never lost its meaning, the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span>
+violets are sweet year by year though never so many
+summers pass away; indeed, its meaning grows wider
+and more difficult as the time goes on. For think,
+this spectre of the light&mdash;light's double-ganger&mdash;has
+stood by the couch of every human being for
+thousands and thousands of years. Sleeping or
+waking, happily dreaming, or wrenched with pain,
+whether they have noticed it or not, the finger of this
+light has pointed towards them. When they were
+building the pyramids, five thousand years ago,
+straight the arrow of light shot from the sun, lit
+their dusky forms, and glowed on the endless sand.
+Endless as that desert sand may be, innumerable in
+multitude its grains, there was and is a ray of light
+for each. A ray for every invisible atom that dances
+in the air&mdash;for the million million changing facets of
+the million ocean waves. Immense as these numbers
+may be, they are not incomprehensible. The priestess
+at Delphi in her moment of inspiration declared
+that she knew the number of the sands. Such
+number falls into insignificance before the mere
+thought of light, its speed, its quantity, its existence
+over space, and yet the idea of light is easy to the
+mind. The mind is the priestess of the Delphic
+temple of our bodies, and sees and understands
+things for which language is imperfect, and notation
+deficient. There is a secret alphabet in it to every
+letter of which we unconsciously assign a value, just
+as the mathematician may represent a thousand by
+the letter A. In my own mind the idea of light is
+associated with the colour yellow, not the yellow
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span>
+of the painters, or of flowers, but a quick flash.
+This quick bright flash of palest yellow in the
+thousandth of an instant reminds me, or rather conveys
+in itself, the whole idea of light&mdash;the accumulated
+idea of study and thought. I suppose it to be
+a memory of looking at the sun&mdash;a quick glance at
+the sun leaves something such an impression on the
+retina. With that physical impression all the calculations
+that I have read, and all the ideas that have
+occurred to me, are bound up. It is the sign&mdash;the
+letter&mdash;the expression of light. To the builders of
+the pyramids came the arrow from the sun, tinting
+their dusky forms, and glowing in the sand. To me
+it comes white and spectral in the silence, a finger
+pointed, a voice saying, 'Even now you know
+nothing.' Five thousand years since they were fully
+persuaded that they understood the universe, the
+course of the stars, and the secrets of life and death.
+What did they know of the beam of light that shone
+on the sonorous lap of their statue Memnon? The
+telescope, the microscope, and the prism have parted
+light and divided it, till it seems as if further discovery
+were impossible. This beam of light brings
+an account of the sun, clear as if written in actual
+letters, for example stating that certain minerals are
+as certainly there as they are here. But when in the
+silence I see the pale visitant at my bedside, and the
+mind rushes in one spring back to the builders of the
+pyramids who were equally sure with us, the thought
+will come to me that even now there may be messages
+in that beam undeciphered. With a turn of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span>
+heliograph, a mere turn of the wrist, a message is
+easily flashed twenty miles to the observer. You
+cannot tell what knowledge may not be pouring
+down in every ray; messages that are constant and
+perpetual, the same from age to age. These are
+physical messages. There is beyond this just a
+possibility that beings in distant earths possessed of
+greater knowledge than ourselves may be able to
+transmit their thoughts along, or by the ray, as we
+do along wires. In the days to come, when a
+deeper insight shall have been gained into the
+motions and properties of those unseen agents we
+call forces, such as magnetism, electricity, gravitation,
+perhaps a method will be devised to use them
+for communication. If so, communication with
+distant earths is quite within reasonable hypothesis.
+At this hour it is not more impossible than the
+transmission of a message to the antipodes in a few
+minutes would have been to those who lived a
+century since. The inhabitants of distant earths
+may have endeavoured to communicate with us in
+this way for ought we know time after time. Such
+a message is possibly contained sometimes in the
+pale beam which comes to my bedside. That beam
+always impresses me with a profound, an intense
+and distressful sense of ignorance, of being outside
+the intelligence of the universe, as if there were
+a vast civilization in view and yet not entered.
+Mere villagers and rustics creeping about a sullen
+earth, we know nothing of the grandeur and intellectual
+brilliance of that civilization. This beam
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span>
+fills me with unutterable dissatisfaction. Discontent,
+restless longing, anger at the denseness of the perception,
+the stupidity with which we go round and
+round in the old groove till accident shows us a fresh
+field. Consider, all that has been wrested from
+light has been gained by mere bits of glass. Mere
+bits of glass in curious shapes&mdash;poor feeble glass,
+quickly broken, made of flint, of the flint that mends
+the road. To this almost our highest conceptions
+are due. Could we employ the ocean as a lens we
+might tear truth from the sky. Could the greater
+intelligences that dwell on the planets and stars communicate
+with us, they might enable us to conquer
+the disease and misery which bear down the masses
+of the world. Perhaps they do not die. The pale
+visitor hints that the stars are not the outside and
+rim of the universe, any more than the edge of
+horizon is the circumference of our globe. Beyond
+the star-stratum, what? Mere boundless space.
+Mind says certainly not. What then? At present
+we cannot conceive a universe without a central
+solar orb for it to gather about and swing around.
+But that is only because hitherto our positive,
+physical knowledge has gone no farther. It can as
+yet only travel as far as this, as analogous beams of
+light. Light comes from the uttermost bounds of
+our star system&mdash;to that rim we can extend a positive
+thought. Beyond, and around it, whether it is
+solid, or fluid, or ether, or whether, as is most
+probable, there exist things absolutely different to
+any that have come under eyesight yet is not known.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span>
+May there not be light we cannot see? Gravitation
+is an unseen light; so too magnetism; electricity
+or its effect is sometimes visible, sometimes not.
+Besides these there may be more delicate forces not
+instrumentally demonstrable. A force, or a wave,
+or a motion&mdash;an unseen light&mdash;may at this moment
+be flowing in upon us from that unknown space
+without and beyond the stellar system. It may
+contain messages from thence as this pale visitant
+does from the sun. It may outstrip light in speed
+as light outstrips an arrow. The more delicate, the
+more ethereal, then the fuller and more varied the
+knowledge it holds. There may be other things
+beside matter and motion, or force. All natural
+things known to us as yet may be referred to those
+two conditions: One, Force; Two, Matter. A third,
+a fourth, a fifth&mdash;no one can say how many conditions&mdash;may
+exist in the ultra-stellar space, beyond
+the most distant stars. Such a condition may even
+be about us now unsuspected. Something which is
+neither force nor matter is difficult to conceive;
+the mind cannot give it tangible shape even as a
+thought. Yet I think it more than doubtful if the
+entire universe, visible and invisible, is composed of
+these two. To me it seems almost demonstrable
+by rational induction that the entire universe must
+consist of more than two conditions. The grey
+dawn every morning warns me not to be certain
+that all is known. Analysis by the prism alone has
+quite doubled the knowledge that was previously
+available. In the light itself there may still exist as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span>
+much more to be learnt, and then there may be
+other forces and other conditions to be first found out
+and next to tell their story. As at present known
+the whole system is so easy and simple, one body
+revolving round another, and so on; it is as easy to
+understand as the motion of a stone that has been
+thrown. This simplicity makes me misdoubt. Is it
+all? Space&mdash;immeasurable space&mdash;offers such possibilities
+that the mind is forced to the conclusion that
+it is not, that there must be more. I cannot think
+that the universe can be so very very easy as this.</p>
+
+
+<p class="theend"><span>BILLING AND SONS, LTD., PRINTERS, GUILDFORD</span></p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1" id="Footnote_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> A Wiltshire name for hawthorn-berries.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2" id="Footnote_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> See 'Toilers of the Field,' by Richard Jefferies.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3" id="Footnote_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> This, of course, is upon the supposition that the materials
+are obtained at a nominal cost, and the hauling not charged for.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4" id="Footnote_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Written in 1887.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="trnote">
+<h2><a name="trcorrections" id="trcorrections"></a>Transcriber's corrections</h2>
+<ul>
+<li><a href="#TC_1">p. 13</a>: seventeenth[seventeeth] centuries are really beautiful specimens of</li>
+<li><a href="#TC_2">p. 23</a>: the place for figure-skating[figure-shating]; the ice is perfect, and</li>
+<li><a href="#TC_3">p. 38</a>: it is a flock of sheep[sleep]. The white wall is cold and</li>
+<li><a href="#TC_4">p. 123</a>: heat, toying with danger, handling, as[at] it seems, red-hot</li>
+<li><a href="#TC_5">p. 145</a>: is the fullest tale the land will bear, and he does not[no]</li>
+<li><a href="#TC_6">p. 151</a>: designers did not contemplate the conditions of rural[rurul]</li>
+<li><a href="#TC_7">p. 240</a>: lose the tone it has given them. Such homes are the[the the]</li>
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Hills and the Vale, by Richard Jefferies
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HILLS AND THE VALE ***
+
+***** This file should be named 31710-h.htm or 31710-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/1/7/1/31710/
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer 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.)
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/31710-h/images/logo.png b/31710-h/images/logo.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..642d885
--- /dev/null
+++ b/31710-h/images/logo.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/31710.txt b/31710.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..50aaae8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/31710.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,8668 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Hills and the Vale, by Richard Jefferies
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Hills and the Vale
+
+Author: Richard Jefferies
+
+Commentator: Edward Thomas
+
+Release Date: March 20, 2010 [EBook #31710]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HILLS AND THE VALE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer 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.)
+
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE: In a few places the book has the letter T
+printed in a sans-serif font to indicate the shape of the letter.
+This has been reproduced as [T] below.
+
+
+
+
+ THE HILLS AND THE VALE
+
+
+
+
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+
+
+
+ THE HILLS AND THE VALE
+
+
+ BY
+ RICHARD JEFFERIES
+
+
+ WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY
+ EDWARD THOMAS
+
+
+ LONDON: DUCKWORTH & CO.
+ 3 HENRIETTA STREET, COVENT GARDEN
+ 1909
+
+
+
+
+ TO
+ JOHN WILLIAMS
+ OF WAUN WEN
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ PAGE
+
+ INTRODUCTION ix
+
+ CHOOSING A GUN 1
+
+ SKATING 22
+
+ MARLBOROUGH FOREST 27
+
+ VILLAGE CHURCHES 35
+
+ BIRDS OF SPRING 43
+
+ THE SPRING OF THE YEAR 54
+
+ VIGNETTES FROM NATURE 70
+
+ A KING OF ACRES 79
+
+ THE STORY OF SWINDON 104
+
+ UNEQUAL AGRICULTURE 134
+
+ VILLAGE ORGANIZATION 151
+
+ THE IDLE EARTH 207
+
+ AFTER THE COUNTY FRANCHISE 224
+
+ THE WILTSHIRE LABOURER 247
+
+ ON THE DOWNS 270
+
+ THE SUN AND THE BROOK 280
+
+ NATURE AND ETERNITY 284
+
+ THE DAWN 306
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+This book consists of three unpublished essays and of fifteen
+reprinted from _Longman's Magazine_, _Fraser's Magazine_, the _New
+Quarterly_, _Knowledge_, _Chambers's Magazine_, the _Graphic_, and
+the _Standard_, where they have probably been little noticed since
+the time of their appearance. Several more volumes of this size
+might have been made by collecting all the articles which were not
+reprinted in Jefferies' lifetime, or in 'Field and Hedgerow' and
+'Toilers of the Field,' shortly after his death. But the work in
+such volumes could only have attracted those very few of the
+omnivorous lovers of Jefferies who have not already found it out.
+After the letters on the Wiltshire labourer, addressed to the
+_Times_ in 1872, he wrote nothing that was not perhaps at the time
+his best, but, being a journalist, he had often to deal immediately,
+and in a transitory manner, with passing events, or to empty a page
+or two of his note-books in response to an impulse assuredly no
+higher than habit or necessity. Many of these he passed over or
+rejected in making up volumes of essays for publication; some he
+certainly included. Of those he passed over, some are equal to the
+best, or all but the best, of those which he admitted, and I think
+these will be found in 'The Hills and the Vale.' There are others
+which need more excuse. The two early papers on 'Marlborough Forest'
+and 'Village Churches,' which were quoted in Besant's 'Eulogy,' are
+interesting on account of their earliness (1875), and charming
+enough to please those who read all Jefferies' books. 'The Story of
+Swindon,' 'Unequal Agriculture,' and 'Village Organization,' will be
+valued for their matter, and because they are examples of his
+writing, and of his interests and opinions, before he was thirty.
+That they are partly out of date is true, but they are worth
+remembering by the student of Jefferies and of his times; they do
+credit to his insight and even to his foresight; and there is still
+upon them, here and there, some ungathered fruit. The later
+agricultural articles, 'The Idle Earth,' 'After the County
+Franchise,' and 'The Wiltshire Labourer,' are the work of his ripe
+years. There were also several papers published not only after his
+death, but after the posthumous collections. I have included all of
+these, for none of them needs defence, while 'Nature and Eternity'
+ranks with his finest work. The three papers now for the first time
+printed might have been, but are not, admitted on that ground alone.
+'On Choosing a Gun' and 'Skating' belong to the period of 'The
+Amateur Poacher,' and are still alive, and too good to destroy. 'The
+Dawn' is beautiful.
+
+Among these eighteen papers are examples from nearly every kind
+and period of Jefferies' work, though his earliest writing is
+still decently interred where it was born, in Wiltshire and
+Gloucestershire papers (chiefly the _North Wilts Herald_), except
+such as was disinterred by the late Miss Toplis for 'Jefferies
+Land,' 'T.T.T.,' and 'The Early Fiction of Richard Jefferies.'
+From his early youth Jefferies was a reporter in the north of
+Wiltshire and south of Gloucestershire, at political and
+agricultural meetings, elections, police-courts, markets, and
+Boards of Guardians. He inquired privately or officially into the
+history of the Great Western Railway works at New Swindon, of the
+local churches and families, of ancient monuments, and he
+announced the facts with such reflections as came to him, or might
+be expected from him, in newspaper articles, papers read before
+the Wiltshire Archaeological Society, and in a booklet on 'The
+Goddards of North Wilts.' As reporter, archaeologist, and
+sportsman, he was continually walking to and fro across the vale
+and over the downs; or writing down what he saw, for the most part
+in a manner dictated by the writing of other men engaged in the
+same way; or reading everything that came in his way, but
+especially natural history, chronicles, and Greek philosophy in
+English translations. He was bred entirely on English, and in a
+very late paper he could be so hazy about the meaning of
+'illiterate' as to say that the labourers 'never were illiterate
+mentally; they are now no more illiterate in the partial sense of
+book-knowledge.' He tried his hand at topical humour, and again
+and again at short sensational tales. But until he was twenty-four
+he wrote nothing which could have suggested that he was much above
+the cleverer young men of the same calling. There was nothing fine
+or strong in his writing. His researches were industrious, but not
+illuminated. If his range of reading was uncommon, it gave him
+only some quotations of no exceptional felicity. His point of view
+could have given no cause for admiration or alarm. And yet he was
+not considered an ordinary young man, being apparently idle,
+ambitious, discontented, and morose, and certainly unsociable and
+negligently dressed. He walked about night and day, chiefly alone
+and with a noticeable long stride. But if he was ambitious, it was
+only that he desired success--the success of a writer, and
+probably a novelist, in the public eye. His possessions were the
+fruits of his wandering, his self-chosen books and a sensitive,
+solitary temperament. He might have been described as a clever
+young man, well-informed, a little independent, not first-rate at
+shorthand, and yet possibly too good for his place; and the
+description would have been all that was possible to anyone not
+intimate with him, and there was no one intimate with him but
+himself. He had as yet neither a manner nor a matter of his own.
+It is not clear from anything remaining that he had discovered
+that writing could be something more than a means of making party
+views plausible or information picturesque. In 1867, at the age of
+nineteen, he opened a description of Swindon as follows:
+
+ 'Whenever a man imbued with republican politics and
+ progressionist views ascends the platform and delivers an
+ oration, it is a safe wager that he makes some allusion at least
+ to Chicago, the famous mushroom city of the United States, which
+ sprang up in a night, and thirty years ago consisted of a dozen
+ miserable fishermen's huts, and now counts over two hundred
+ thousand inhabitants. Chicago! Chicago! look at Chicago! and see
+ in its development the vigour which invariably follows
+ republican institutions.... Men need not go so far from their
+ own doors to see another instance of rapid expansion and
+ development which has taken place under a monarchical
+ government. The Swindon of to-day is almost ridiculously
+ disproportioned to the Swindon of forty years ago....'
+
+Eight years later Jefferies rewrote 'The Story of Swindon' as it is
+given in this book, and the allusion to Chicago was reduced to this:
+
+ 'The workmen required food; tradesmen came and supplied that
+ food, and Swindon rose as Chicago rose, as if by magic.'
+
+Yet it is certain that in 1867 Jefferies was already carrying about
+with him an experience and a power which were to ripen very slowly
+into something unique. He was observing; he was developing a sense
+of the beauty in Nature, in humanity, in thought, and the arts; and
+he was 'not more than eighteen when an inner and esoteric meaning
+began to come to him from all the visible universe, and undefinable
+aspirations filled him.'
+
+In 1872 he discovered part of his power almost in its perfection. He
+wrote several letters to the _Times_ about the Wiltshire labourer,
+and they were lucid, simple, moderate, founded on his own
+observation, and arranged in a telling, harmonious manner. What he
+said and thought about the labourers then is of no great importance
+now, and even in 1872 it was only a journalist's grain in the scale
+against the labourer's agitation. But it was admirably done. It was
+clear, easy writing, and a clear, easy writer he was thenceforth to
+the end.
+
+These letters procured for him admission to _Fraser's_ and other
+magazines, and he now began for them a long series of articles,
+mainly connected with the land and those who work on the land. He
+had now freedom and space to put on paper something of what he had
+seen and thought. The people, their homes, and their fields, he
+described and criticized with moderation and some spirit. He showed
+that he saw more things than most writing men, but it was in an
+ordinary light, in the same way as most of the readers whom he
+addressed. His gravity, tenderness and courage were discernible, but
+the articles were not more than a clever presentation of a set of
+facts and an intelligent, lucid point of view, which were good grist
+to the mills of that decade. They had neither the sagacity nor the
+passion which could have helped that calm style to make literature.
+
+'The Story of Swindon' (_Fraser's_, May, 1875) is one of three or
+four articles which Jefferies wrote at that time on a subject not
+purely his own. As a journalist he had had to do a hundred things
+for which he had no strong natural taste. This article is a good
+example of his adaptable gifts. He was probably equal to grappling
+with any set of facts and ideas at the word of command. In 'coming
+to this very abode of the Cyclops' the _North Wilts Herald_ reporter
+survives, and nothing could be more like everybody else than the
+phrasing and the atmosphere of the greater part, as in 'the ten
+minutes for refreshment, now in the case of certain trains reduced
+to five, have made thousands of travellers familiar with the name of
+the spot.' This is probably due to lack not so much of skill as of
+developed personality. When he describes and states facts, he is
+lucid and forcible; when he reflects or decorates, he is often showy
+or ill at ease, or both, though the thought on p. 130 is valid
+enough. Through the cold, colourless light between him and the
+object, he saw and remembered clearly; short of creativeness, he was
+a master--or one of those skilled servants who appear masters--of
+words. The power is, at this distance, more worthy of attention than
+the achievement. The power of retaining and handling facts was one
+which he never lost, but it was absorbed and even concealed among
+powers of later development, when reality was a richer thing to him
+than is to be surmised from anything in 'The Story of Swindon.'
+
+'Unequal Agriculture' (_Fraser's_, May, 1877) and 'Village
+Organization' (_New Quarterly_, October, 1875) belong to the same
+period. They describe and debate matters which are now not so new,
+though often as debatable. The description is sometimes felicitous,
+as in the 'steady jerk' of the sower's arm, but is not destined for
+immortality; and the picture of a steam-plough at work he himself
+surpassed in a later paper. But it is sufficiently vivid to survive
+for another generation. Since Cobbett no keener agriculturist's eye
+or better pen had surveyed North Wiltshire. The most advanced and
+the most antiquated style of farming remain the same in our own day.
+Whether these articles were commissioned or not, their form and
+direction was probably dictated as much by the expressed or supposed
+needs of the magazine as by Jefferies himself. His own line was not
+yet clear and strong, and he consciously or unconsciously adopted
+one which was a compromise between his own and that of his
+contemporaries. In fact, it is hard in places to tell whether he is
+expressing his own opinion or those of the farmers whom he has
+consulted; and he still writes as one of an agricultural community
+who is to remain in it. But many of the suggestions in 'Village
+Organization' may still be found stimulating, and the inactivity of
+men in country parishes is not yet in need of further description;
+while the fact that 'the great centres of population have almost
+entirely occupied the attention of our legislators of late years' is
+still only fitfully perceived. It should be noticed, also, that he
+is true to himself and his later self, if not in his valiant
+asseveration of the farmer's sturdy independence, yet in the wish
+that there should be an authority to 'cause a parish to be supplied
+with good drinking water,' or that there should be a tank, 'the
+public property of the village.'
+
+To 'Unequal Agriculture' the editor of _Fraser's Magazine_ appended
+a note, saying that if England were to be brought to such a pitch of
+perfection under scientific cultivation as Jefferies desired, 'a few
+of us would then prefer to go away and live elsewhere.' And there is
+no doubt that he was carried away by his subject into an
+indiscriminate optimism, for he turned upon it sadly and with equal
+firmness in later life. But the writing is beyond that of the
+letters to the _Times_, and in the sentences--
+
+ 'The plough is drawn by dull, patient oxen, plodding onwards now
+ just as they were depicted upon the tombs and temples, the
+ graves and worshipping-places, of races who had their being
+ three thousand years ago. Think of the suns that have shone
+ since then; of the summers and the bronzed grain waving in the
+ wind; of the human teeth that have ground that grain, and are
+ now hidden in the abyss of earth; yet still the oxen plod on,
+ like slow Time itself, here this day in our land of steam and
+ telegraph'
+
+--in these sentences, though they are commonplace enough, there is
+proof that the writer already had that curious consciousness of the
+past which was to give so deep a tone to many of his pages later on.
+But in these papers, again, what is most noticeable is the practical
+knowledge and the power of handling practical things. Though he
+himself, brought up on his father's farm, had no taste for farming,
+and seldom did any practical work except splitting timber, he yet
+confines himself severely to things as they are, or as they may
+quickly be made to become by a patching-up. These are 'practical
+politics for practical men.' Consequently the clear and forcible
+writing is only better in degree than other writing of the moment
+with an element of controversy, and represents not the whole truth,
+but an aspect of selected portions of the truth. When it is turned
+to other purposes it shows a poor grace, as in 'a widespread ocean
+of wheat, an English gold-field, a veritable Yellow Sea, bowing in
+waves before the southern breeze--a sight full of peaceful poetry;'
+and the sluggish, customary euphemism of phrases like 'a few calves
+find their way to the butcher' is tedious enough.
+
+'The Idle Earth' (_Longman's_, December, 1894), 'After the County
+Franchise' (_Longman's_, February, 1884), and 'The Wiltshire
+Labourer' (_Longman's_, 1887), belong to Jefferies' later years.
+'The Idle Earth' was published only after his death, but, like the
+other two, was written, probably, between 1884 and 1887. He was no
+longer writing as a practical man, but as a critical outsider with
+an inside knowledge. 'The Idle Earth' is an astonishing
+curiosity--an extreme example of Jefferies' discontent with things
+as they are. 'Why is it,' he asks, 'that this cry arises that
+agriculture will not pay?... The answer is simple enough. It is
+because the earth is idle one-third of the year.' He looks round a
+January field and sees 'not an animal in sight, not a single
+machine for making money, not a penny being turned.' He wishes to
+know, 'What would a manufacturer think of a business in which he was
+compelled to let his engines rest for a third of the year?' Then he
+falls upon the miserable Down-land because that is still more idle
+and still less productive. 'With all its progress,' he cries, 'how
+little real advance has agriculture made! All because of the
+stubborn, idle earth.' It is a genuine cry, to be paralleled by
+'Life is short, art long,' and by his own wonder that 'in twelve
+thousand written years the world has not yet built itself a House,
+unfilled a Granary, nor organized itself for its own comfort,' by
+his contempt for 'this little petty life of seventy years,' and for
+the short sleep permitted to men.
+
+The editor of _Longman's_ had to explain that, in publishing 'After
+the County Franchise,' he was not really 'overstepping the limit
+which he laid down in undertaking to keep _Longman's Magazine_ free
+from the strife of party politics, because it might be profitable to
+consider what changes this Bill will make, when it becomes law, in
+the lives and the social relations of our rural population.' It was
+true that Jefferies was no longer a party politician. He was by that
+time above and before either party. He is so still, and the
+reappearance of these no longer novel ideas is excusable simply
+because Jefferies' name is likely to gain for them still more of the
+consideration and support which they deserve, for it may be hoped
+that our day is ready to receive the seed of trouble and advance
+contained in the modest suggestion which he believed to be
+compatible with 'the acquisition of public and the preservation of
+private liberty.'
+
+ ['We now govern our village ourselves;] why should we not
+ possess our village? Why should we not live in our own houses?
+ Why should we not have a little share in the land, as much, at
+ least, as we can pay for?... Can an owner of this kind of
+ property be permitted to refuse to sell? Must he be compelled to
+ sell?'
+
+Twenty-five years ago Jefferies, knowing that neither land nor
+cottages were to be had, that there was no security of tenure for
+the labourer, hoped for the day when 'some, at least, of our people
+may be able to set up homes for themselves in their own country.' He
+believed that 'the greater his freedom, the greater his attachment
+to home, the more settled the labourer,' the firmer would become the
+position of labourer, farmer, and landowner. Yet an advanced
+reformer of our own day--Mr. Montague Fordham in 'Mother Earth'--has
+still to cry the same thing in the wilderness; and it is still true
+that 'you cannot have a fixed population unless it has a home, and
+the labouring population is practically homeless.' On the other
+hand, it should be remembered that Jefferies also says: 'Parks and
+woods are becoming of priceless value; we should have to preserve a
+few landowners, if only to have parks and woods.'
+
+These later articles are far more persuasive than their
+predecessors, for here there is no doubt, not merely that they are
+sincere, but that they are the unprejudiced opinion of the man as
+well as of the agriculturist. He has ceased to be concerned only
+with things as they are, or as they may be made to-morrow. He allows
+himself to think as much of justice as of expediency, of what is
+fitting as well as of what is at once possible. The phrases,
+'Sentiment is more stubborn than fact,' 'Service is no inheritance,'
+'I do not want any paupers,' 'I should not like men under my thumb,'
+'Men demanding to be paid in full for full work, but refusing
+favours and petty assistance to be recouped hereafter; ... men with
+the franchise, voting under the protection of the ballot, and voting
+first and foremost for the demolition of the infernal Poor Law and
+workhouse system'--these simple phrases fall with peculiar and even
+pathetic force, in their context, from the mystic optimist whom pain
+was ripening fast in those last years. Even here he uses phrases
+like 'the serious work which brings in money' and commends 'push and
+enterprise' as a substitute for 'the slow plodding manner of the
+labourer.' But these are exceptional. As to the writing itself, of
+which this is an example,
+
+ 'By home life I mean that which gathers about a house, however
+ small, standing in its own grounds. Something comes into
+ existence about such a house, an influence, a pervading feeling,
+ like some warm colour softening the whole, tinting the lichen on
+ the wall, even the very smoke-marks on the chimney. It is home,
+ and the men and women born there will never lose the tone it has
+ given them. Such homes are the strength of a land'
+
+--it remains simple; but by the use of far fewer words, and of fewer
+orator's phrases, its unadorned directness has almost a positive
+spiritual quality.
+
+But these agricultural essays, good as they were, and absorbing as
+they did all of Jefferies' social thoughts to the end of his life,
+became less and less frequent as he grew less inclined and less able
+to adapt his mind and style to the affairs of the moment.
+
+In the same year as 'The Story of Swindon' he published 'Village
+Churches' and 'Marlborough Forest' (_Graphic_, December 4 and
+October 23, 1875). These and his unsuccessful novels remain to show
+the direction of his more intimate thoughts in the third decade of
+his life. They are as imperfect in their class as 'The Story of
+Swindon' is perfect in its own. They are the earliest of their kind
+from Jefferies' pen which have survived. He is dealing already with
+another and a more individual kind of reality, and he is not yet at
+home with it in words. He approaches it with ceremony--with the
+ceremony of phrases like 'the great painter Autumn,' 'a very tiger
+to the rabbit,' 'the titles and pomp of belted earl and knight.' But
+here for the first time he is so bent upon himself and his object
+that he casts only an occasional glance upon his audience, whereas
+in his practical papers he has it continually in view, or even ready
+to jog his elbow if he dreams. The full English hedges, which he
+condemns as an agriculturist, he would now save from the modern
+Goths; he can even be sorry for the death of beautiful jays. Here,
+for the first time, it might occur to a student of the man that he
+is more than his words express. He does not see Nature as he sees
+the factory, and when he and Nature touch there is an emotional
+discharge which blurs the sight, though presently it is to enrich
+it. As yet we cannot be sure whether he is perfectly genuine or is
+striving for an effect based upon a recollection of someone
+else--probably it is both--when he writes:
+
+ 'The heart has a yearning for the unknown, a longing to
+ penetrate the deep shadow and the winding glade, where, as it
+ seems, no human foot has been';
+
+when he speaks of the '_visible_ silence' of the old church, or
+exclaims:
+
+ 'To us, each hour is of consequence, especially in this modern
+ day, which has invented the detestable creed that time is money.
+ But time is not money to Nature. She never hastens....'
+
+But already he is expressing a thought, which he was often to repeat
+in his maturity and in his best work, when he says of the
+church-bell that 'In the day when this bell was made, men put their
+souls into their works. Their one great object was not to turn out
+100,000 all alike.'
+
+It was in the next year, 1876, that he began to think of using his
+observation and feeling in a 'chatty style,' of setting down 'some
+of the glamour--the magic of sunshine, and green things, and clear
+waters.' But it was not until 1878 that he succeeded in doing so.
+In 'The Amateur Poacher' and its companions, there was not between
+Jefferies and Nature the colourless, clear light of the factory or
+the journalist's workshop, but the tender English atmosphere or, if
+you like, that of the happy and thoughtful mind which had grown up
+in that atmosphere.
+
+'Choosing a Gun' and 'Skating' belong to the period, if not the
+year, of 'The Amateur Poacher.' In fact, the passage about the
+pleasure of having the freedom of the woods with a wheel-lock, is
+either a first draft of one of the best in that book, or it is an
+unconscious repetition. Here again is a characteristic complaint
+that 'the leading idea of the gunmaker nowadays is to turn out a
+hundred thousand guns of one particular pattern.' The suggestion
+that some clever workman should go and set himself up in some
+village is one that has been followed in other trades, and is not
+yet exhausted. The writing is now excellent of its kind, but for the
+word 'Metropolis' and the phrase 'no great distance from' Pall Mall.
+The negligent--but slowly acquired--conversational simplicity
+captures the open air as calmly and pleasantly as the humour of the
+city dialogue.
+
+'Skating' is slight enough, but ends with grace and an unsought
+solemnity which comes more and more into his later writing, so that
+in 'The Spring of the Year' (_Longman's_, June, 1894), after many
+notes about wood-pigeons, there comes such a genuine landscape as
+this:
+
+ 'The bare, slender tips of the birches on which they perched
+ exposed them against the sky. Once six alighted on a long
+ birch-branch, bending it down with their weight, not unlike a
+ heavy load of fruit. As the stormy sunset flamed up, tinting the
+ fields with momentary red, their hollow voices sounded among the
+ trees.'
+
+These notes for April and May, 1881, were continued in 'The Coming
+of Summer,' which forms part of 'Toilers of the Field.' This
+informal chitchat, addressed chiefly to the amateur naturalist,
+became an easy habit with Jefferies. The talk is of the plainest and
+pleasantest here, and full of himself. With his 'I like sparrows,'
+he was an older and tenderer man than in 'The Gamekeeper' period.
+The paper gives some idea of his habits and haunts round about
+Surbiton before the fatal chain of illnesses began at the end of
+this year. Personally, I like to know that it was finished on May
+10, 1881, at midnight, with 'Antares visible, the summer star,' very
+low in the south-east above Banstead Downs, and Lyra and Arcturus
+high above in the south, if Jefferies was writing at Tolworth, as
+presumably he was. This paper is to be preferred to 'Birds of
+Spring'--likeable mainly for the pages on the chiff-chaff and
+sedge-warbler--which does much the same thing, in a more formal
+manner, for the instruction of readers of _Chambers's_ (March,
+1884), who wished to know about our 'feathered visitors.'
+
+'Vignettes from Nature' were posthumously published in _Longman's_
+(July, 1895). They abound in touches from the depth and tenderness
+of his nature, and when they were written Jefferies had passed into
+the most distinct period of his life--the period which gave birth to
+his mature ideas, and, in particular, to 'The Story of My Heart.'
+The light which he had carried about with him since his youth--a
+light so faint that we cannot be sure he was aware of it in
+retrospect--now leaped up with a mystic significance. Professor
+William James, in 'Varieties of Religious Experience,' describes
+four marks by which states of mind may be recognized as mystical.
+The subject says that they defy expression. They are 'states of
+insight into depths of truth unplumbed by the discursive intellect
+... and, as a rule, they carry with them a curious sense of
+authority for after-time,' because the mystic believes that 'we both
+become one with the Absolute, and we become aware of our oneness.'
+They 'cannot be sustained for long ... except in rare instances half
+an hour, or at most an hour or two, seems to be the limit beyond
+which they fade into the light of common day.' And when the mystic
+consciousness has set in, 'the mystic feels as if his own will were
+in abeyance, and, indeed, sometimes as if he were grasped and held
+by a superior power.' Most of the striking cases in Professor
+James's collection occurred out of doors. These marks may all be
+recognized in Jefferies' record of his own experience--'The Story
+of My Heart.' Yet it was, in the opinion of a very high
+authority--Dr. Maurice Bucke, in 'Cosmic Consciousness'--an
+imperfect experience, and his state is described as 'the twilight
+of cosmic consciousness.' Dr. Bucke gives as the marks of the
+cosmic sense--a subjective light on its appearance; moral
+elevation; intellectual illumination; the sense of immortality;
+loss of the fear of death and of the sense of sin; the suddenness
+of the awakening which takes place usually at a little past the
+thirtieth year, and comes only to noble characters (_e.g._, Pascal,
+Blake, Balzac, and Whitman); a charm added to the personality; a
+transfiguration of the subject in the eyes of others when the
+cosmic sense is actually present. Jefferies appears to have lacked
+the subjective light and the full sense of immortality. 'If,' says
+Dr. Bucke, 'he had attained to cosmic consciousness, he would have
+entered into eternal life, and there would be no "seems" about it;'
+while he finds positive evidence against Jefferies' possession of
+the perfect cosmic sense in his 'contempt for the assertion that
+all things occur for the best.' The sense varied in intensity with
+Jefferies, and in its everyday force was not much more than
+Kingsley's 'innate feeling that everything I see has a meaning, if
+I could but understand it,' which 'feeling of being surrounded with
+truths which I cannot grasp amounts to indescribable awe
+sometimes.'
+
+Cosmic consciousness, the half-grasped power which gave its
+significance to his autobiography, to 'The Dawn,' 'The Sun and the
+Brook' (_Knowledge_, October 13, 1882), 'On the Downs' (_Standard_,
+March 23, 1883), 'Nature and Eternity' (_Longman's_, May, 1895), and
+many other papers, may have been the faculty for which Jefferies
+prayed in 'The Story of My Heart,' and to which he desired that
+mankind should advance. In Dr. Bucke's view, an imperfectly
+supported one, men with this faculty are becoming more and more
+common, and he thinks that 'our descendants will sooner or later
+reach, as a race, the condition of cosmic consciousness, just as
+long ago our ancestors passed from simple to self consciousness.'
+
+In Jefferies the development of this sense was gradual. Phrases
+suggesting that it is in progress may be found in earlier books--in
+the novels, in 'Wood Magic' and 'Bevis'--but 'The Story of My
+Heart' is the first that is inspired by it; and after that, all his
+best work is affected either by the same fervour and solemnity, or
+by its accompanying ideas, or by both. It is to be detected in many
+sentences in 'Vignettes,' and in the concluding prayer, 'Let the
+heart come out from the shadow of roofs to the open glow of the
+sky...'--even in the plea to the mechanics in 'A King of Acres'
+(_Chambers's_, January, 1884) not to 'pin their faith to any theory
+born and sprung up among the crushed and pale-faced life of modern
+time, but to look for themselves at the sky above the highest
+branches ... that they might gather to themselves some of the
+leaves--mental and spiritual leaves--of the ancient forest, feeling
+nearer to the truth and soul, as it were, that lives on in it.' It
+is in the aspiration and hope--in the sense of 'hovering on the
+verge of a great truth,' of 'a meaning waiting in the grass and
+water,' of a 'wider existence yet to be enjoyed on the earth'--in
+the 'increased consciousness of our own life,' gained from sun and
+sky and sea--it is everywhere in 'Sun and Brook' and 'On the
+Downs.' It suffuses the sensuous delicacy and exuberance and the
+spiritual joy of 'Nature and Eternity.' That paper belongs to, and
+in a measure corrects, 'The Story of My Heart.' There is less
+eloquence than in the autobiography, and a greater proportion of
+that beautiful simplicity that is so spiritual when combined with
+the characteristic cadence of Jefferies at his best. The mystic has
+a view of things by which all knowledge becomes real--or
+disappears--and all things are seen related to the whole in a
+manner which gives a wonderful value to the least of them. The
+combination of sensuousness and spiritual aspiration in this and
+other essays produces a beauty perhaps peculiar to Jefferies--often
+a vague beauty imperfectly adumbrated, as was the meaning of the
+universe itself in his mood of 'thoughts without words, mobile like
+the stream, nothing compact that can be grasped and stayed: dreams
+that slip silently as water slips through the fingers.' In 'Nature
+and Eternity' this is all the more impressive because Coate Farm
+and its fields, Jefferies' birthplace and early home, is the scene
+of it. That beauty haunts the last four essays of this book as it
+haunts 'The Story of My Heart,' like a theme of music, always a
+repetition, and yet never exactly the same. 'The Dawn' is one of
+the most beautiful things which Jefferies wrote after his
+awakening. The cadences are his best--gentle, wistful, not quite
+certain cadences, where the effect of the mere sound cannot be
+detached from the effect of the thought hovering behind the sound.
+How they kindle such a passage as this, where Jefferies again
+brings before us his sense of past time!--
+
+ 'But though so familiar, that spectral light in the silence has
+ never lost its meaning, the violets are sweet year by year
+ though never so many summers pass away; indeed, its meaning
+ grows wider and more difficult as the time goes on. For think,
+ this spectre of light--light's double-ganger--has stood by the
+ couch of every human being for thousands and thousands of years.
+ Sleeping or waking, happily dreaming, or wrenched with pain,
+ whether they have noticed it or not, the finger of this light
+ has pointed towards them. When they were building the pyramids,
+ five thousand years ago, straight the arrow of light shot from
+ the sun, lit their dusky forms, and glowed on the endless
+ sand....'
+
+The whole essay is delicately perfect--as free from the spiritual
+eloquence of the autobiography and from the rhetoric of the
+agricultural papers as from the everyday atmosphere of earlier work
+and the decoration of the first outdoor essays. It is pure spirit.
+Take any passage, and it will be seen that in thought and style
+Jefferies' evolution is now complete. He has mounted from being a
+member of a class, at first undistinguishable from it, then clearly
+more enlightened, but still of it, and seeing things in the same
+way, up to the position of a poet with an outlook that is purely
+individual, and, though deeply human, yet of a spirituality now
+close as the grass, and now as the stars. The date of 'The Dawn' is
+uncertain. It may have been 1883, the year of 'The Story of My
+Heart,' or it may have been as late as 1885. This book, therefore,
+contains, like no other single volume, the record of Jefferies'
+progress during about ten of his most important years. It was not
+for nothing that Jefferies, man and boy, had gone through the phases
+of sportsman, naturalist, and artist, and always worshipper, upon
+the hills, 'that he lived in a perpetual commerce with external
+Nature, and nourished himself upon the spirit of its forms.' Air and
+sun so cleaned and sweetened his work that in the end the cleanness
+and sweetness of Nature herself become inseparable from it in our
+minds.
+
+
+
+
+CHOOSING A GUN
+
+
+The first thought of the amateur sportsman naturally refers to his
+gun, and the questions arise: What sort of a gun do I want? Where
+can I get it? What price shall I pay? In appearance there can be no
+great difficulty in settling these matters, but in practice it is
+really by no means easy. Some time since, being on a visit to the
+Metropolis, I was requested by a friend to get him a gun, and
+accepted the commission, as M. Emile Ollivier went to war, with a
+light heart, little dreaming of the troubles that would start up in
+the attempt to conscientiously carry it out. He wanted a good gun,
+and was not very scrupulous as to maker or price, provided that the
+latter was not absolutely extravagant. With such _carte blanche_ as
+this it seemed plain-sailing, and, indeed, I never gave a second
+thought to the business till I opened the door of the first
+respectable gunmaker's shop I came across, which happened to be no
+great distance from Pall Mall. A very polite gentleman immediately
+came forward, rubbing his hands as if he were washing them (which is
+an odd habit with many), and asked if there was anything he could do
+for me. Well, yes, I wanted a gun. Just so--they had one of the
+largest stocks in London, and would be most happy to show me
+specimens of all kinds. But was there any special sort of gun
+required, as then they could suit me in an instant.
+
+'Hum! Ah! Well, I--I'--feeling rather vague--'perhaps you would let
+me see your catalogue----'
+
+'Certainly.' And a handsomely got-up pamphlet, illustrated with
+woodcuts, was placed in my hands, and I began to study the pages.
+But this did not suit him; doubtless, with the practice of his
+profession, he saw at once the uncertain manner of the customer who
+was feeling his way, and thought to bring it to a point.
+
+'You want a good, useful gun, sir, I presume?'
+
+'That is just it'--shutting the catalogue; quite a relief to have
+the thing put into shape for one!
+
+'Then you can't do better than take our new patent double-action
+so-and-so. Here it is'--handing me a decent-looking weapon in
+thorough polish, which I begin to weigh in my hands, poise it to
+ascertain the balance, and to try how it comes to the present, and
+whether I can catch the rib quick enough, when he goes on: 'We can
+let you have that gun, sir, for ten guineas.'
+
+'Oh, indeed! But that's very cheap, isn't it?' I thoughtlessly
+observe, putting the gun down.
+
+My friend D. had mentioned a much higher amount as his ultimatum.
+The next instant I saw in what light my remark would be taken. It
+would be interpreted in this way: Here we have either a rich
+amateur, who doesn't care what he gives, or else a fool who knows
+nothing about it.
+
+'Well, sir, of course it's our very plainest gun'--the weapon is
+tossed carelessly into the background--'in fact, we sometimes call
+it our gamekeeper gun. Now, here is a really fine thing--neatly
+finished, engraved plates, first choice stock, the very best walnut,
+price----' He names a sum very close to D.'s outside.
+
+I handle the weapon in the same manner, and for the life of me
+cannot meet his eye, for I know that he is reading me, or thinks he
+is, like a book. With the exception that the gun is a trifle more
+elaborately got up, I cannot see or feel the slightest difference,
+and begin secretly to suspect that the price of guns is regulated
+according to the inexperience of the purchaser--a sort of sliding
+scale, gauged to ignorance, and rising or falling with its density!
+He expatiates on the gun and points out all its beauties.
+
+'Shooting carefully registered, sir. Can see it tried, or try it
+yourself, sir. Our range is barely three-quarters of an hour's ride.
+If the stock doesn't quite fit your shoulder, you can have
+another--the same price. You won't find a better gun in all London.'
+
+I can see that it really is a very fair article, but do not detect
+the extraordinary excellencies so glibly described. I recollect an
+old proverb about the fool and the money he is said to part with
+hastily. I resolve to see more variety before making the final
+plunge; and what the eloquent shopkeeper thinks is my growing
+admiration for the gun which I continue to handle is really my
+embarrassment, for as yet I am not hardened, and dislike the idea of
+leaving the shop without making a purchase after actually touching
+the goods. But D.'s money--I must lay it out to the best advantage.
+Desperately I fling the gun into his hands, snatch up the catalogue,
+mutter incoherently, 'Will look it through--like the look of the
+thing--call again,' and find myself walking aimlessly along the
+pavement outside.
+
+An unpleasant sense of having played a rather small part lingered
+for some time, and ultimately resolved itself into a determination
+to make up my mind as to exactly what D. wanted, and on entering the
+next shop, to ask to see that, and that only. So, turning to the
+address of another gunmaker, I walked towards it slowly, revolving
+in my mind the sort of shooting D. usually enjoyed. Visions of green
+fields, woods just beginning to turn colour, puffs of smoke hanging
+over the ground, rose up, and blotted out the bustling London scene.
+The shops glittering with their brightest goods placed in front, the
+throng of vehicles, the crowds of people, faded away, the pace
+increased and the stride lengthened as if stepping over the elastic
+turf, and the roar of the traffic sounded low, like a distant
+waterfall. From this reverie the rude apostrophes of a hansom-cabman
+awoke me--I had walked right into the stream of the street, and
+instead of the awning boughs of the wood found a whip upheld,
+threatening chastisement for getting in the way. This brought me up
+from imagination to logic with a jerk, and I began to check off the
+uses D. could put his gun to on the fingers. (1) I knew he had a
+friend in Yorkshire, and shot over his moor every August. His gun,
+then, must be suited to grouse-shooting, and must be light, because
+of the heat which often prevails at that time, and renders dragging
+a heavy gun many miles over the heather--before they pack--a
+serious drawback to the pleasure of the sport. (2) He had some
+partridge-shooting of his own, and was peculiarly fond of it. (3) He
+was always invited to at least two battues. (4) A part of his own
+shooting was on the hills, where the hares were very wild, where
+there was no cover, and they had to be knocked over at long
+distances, and took a hard blow. That would require (a) a
+choke-bore, which was not suitable either, because in covers the
+pheasants at short ranges would not unlikely get 'blown,' which
+would annoy the host; or (b) a heavy, strong gun, which would take a
+stiff charge without too much recoil. But that, again, clashed with
+the light gun for shooting in August. (5) He had latterly taken a
+fancy to wild-fowl shooting by the coast, for which a very
+hard-hitting, long-range gun was needed. It would never do if D.
+could not bring down a duck. (6) He was notorious as a dead shot on
+snipe--this told rather in favour of a light gun, old system of
+boring; for where would a snipe or a woodcock be if it chanced to
+get 200 pellets into it at twenty yards? You might find the claws
+and fragments of the bill if you looked with a microscope. (7) No
+delicate piece of workmanship would do, because he was careless of
+his gun, knocked it about anyhow, and occasionally dropped it in a
+brook. And here was the shop-door; imagine the state of confusion my
+mind was in when I entered!
+
+This was a very 'big' place: the gentleman who approached had a way
+of waving his hand--very white and jewelled--and a grand, lofty idea
+of what a gun should cost. 'Twenty, thirty, forty pounds--some of
+the L30 were second-hand, of course--we have a few, a very few,
+second-hand guns'--such was the sweeping answer to my first mild
+inquiry about prices. Then, seeing at once my vacillating manner,
+he, too, took me in hand, only in a terribly earnest, ponderous way
+from which there was no escape. 'You wanted a good general gun--yes;
+a thoroughly good, well-finished, _plain_ gun (great emphasis on the
+'plain'). Of course, you can't get anything new for _that_ money,
+finished in style. Still, the plain gun will shoot just as well (as
+if the shooting part was scarcely worth consideration). We make the
+very best plain-finished article for five-and-twenty guineas in
+London. By-the-by, where is your shooting, sir?' Thrust home like
+this, not over-gratified by a manner which seemed to say, 'Listen to
+an authority,' and desiring to keep an incog., I mutter something
+about 'abroad.' 'Ah--well, then, this article is precisely the
+thing, because it will carry ball, an immense advantage in any
+country where you may come across large game.'
+
+'How far will it throw a ball?' I ask, rather curious on that
+subject, for I was under the impression that a smooth-bore of the
+usual build is not much to be relied on in that way--far less,
+indeed, than the matchlocks made by semi-civilized nations. But it
+seems I was mistaken.
+
+'Why--a hundred yards point-blank, and ten times better to shoot
+with than a rifle.'
+
+'Indeed!'
+
+'Of course, I mean in cover, as you're pretty sure to be. Say a wild
+boar is suddenly started: well, you pull out your No. 4
+shot-cartridge, and push in a ball; you shoot as well
+again--snap-shooting with a smooth-bore in jungle or bush. There's
+not a better gun turned out in town than that. It's not the
+slightest use your looking for anything cheaper--rebounding locks,
+best stocks, steel damascene barrels; fit for anything from snipe to
+deer, from dust to buck-shot----'
+
+'But I think----' Another torrent overwhelms me.
+
+'Here's an order for twenty of these guns for Texas, to shoot from
+horseback at buffalo--ride in among them, you know.'
+
+I look at my watch, find it's much later than I imagine, remark that
+it is really a difficult thing to pick out a gun, and seize the
+door-handle.
+
+'When gentlemen don't exactly know what they're looking for it _is_
+a hard job to choose a gun'--he smiles sarcastically, and shuts me
+out politely.
+
+The observation seems hard, after thinking over guns so intently;
+yet it must be aggravating to attempt to serve a man who does not
+know what he wants--yet (one's mood changes quickly) it was his
+own fault for trying to force, to positively force, that
+twenty-five-guinea thing on me instead of giving me a chance to
+choose. I had seen rows on rows of guns stacked round the shop, rank
+upon rank; in the background a door partly open permitted a glimpse
+of a second room, also perfectly coated with guns, if such an
+expression is permissible. Now, I look on ranges of guns like this
+much the same as on a library. Is there anything so delicious as the
+first exploration of a great library--alone--unwatched? You shut the
+heavy door behind you slowly, reverently, lest a noise should jar on
+the sleepers of the shelves. For as the Seven Sleepers of Ephesus
+were dead and yet alive, so are the souls of the authors in the care
+of their ancient leathern binding. You walk gently round the walls,
+pausing here to read a title, there to draw out a tome and support
+it for a passing glance--half in your arms, half against the shelf.
+The passing glance lengthens till the weight becomes too great, and
+with a sigh you replace it, and move again, peering up at those
+titles which are foreshortened from the elevation of the shelf, and
+so roam from folio to octavo, from octavo to quarto, till at last,
+finding a little work whose value, were it in the mart, would be
+more than its weight in gold, you bear it to the low leather-covered
+arm-chair and enjoy it at your ease. But to sip the full pleasure of
+a library you must be alone, and you must take the books yourself
+from the shelves. A man to read must read alone. He may make
+extracts, he may _work_ at books in company; but to read, to absorb,
+he must be solitary. Something in the same way--except in the
+necessity for solitude, which does not exist in this case--I like to
+go through a battery of guns, picking up this one, or that, glancing
+up one, trying the locks of another, examining the thickness of the
+breech. Why did not the fellow say, 'There are our guns; walk round,
+take down what you please, do as you like, and don't hurry. I will
+go on with some work while you examine them. Call me if you want any
+explanation. Spend the day there if you like, and come again
+to-morrow.' It would have been a hundred chances to one that I had
+found a gun to suit D., for the shop was a famous one, the guns
+really good, the workmanship unimpeachable, and the stock to select
+from immense. But let a thing be never so good, one does not care to
+have it positively thrust on one.
+
+By this time my temper was up, and I determined to go through with
+the business, and get the precise article likely to please D., if I
+went to every maker in the Metropolis. I went to very nearly every
+prominent man--I spent several days at it. I called at shops whose
+names are household words wherever an English sportsman can be
+found. Some of them, though bright to look at from the pavement,
+within were mean, and even lacked cleanliness. The attendants were
+often incapable of comprehending that a customer _may_ be as good a
+judge of what he wants as themselves; they have got into a narrow
+routine of offering the same thing to everybody. No two shops were
+of the same opinion: at one you were told that the choke was the
+greatest success in the world; at another, that they only shot well
+for one season, quickly wearing out; at a third, that such and such
+a 'grip' or breech-action was perfect; at a fourth, that there never
+was such a mistake; at a fifth, that hammerless guns were the guns
+of the future, and elsewhere, that people detested hammerless guns
+because it seemed like learning to shoot over again. Finally, I
+visited several of the second-hand shops. They had some remarkably
+good guns--for the leading second-hand shops do not care to buy a
+gun unless by a crack maker--but the cheapness was a delusion. A new
+gun might be got for the same money, or very little more. Their
+system was like this. Suppose they had a really good gun, but, for
+aught you could tell, twenty or thirty years old (the breech-action
+might have been altered), for this they would ask, say L25. The
+original price of the gun may have been L50, and if viewed _only_
+with regard to the original price, of course that would be a great
+reduction. But for the L25 a new gun could be got from a maker whose
+goods, if not so famous, were thoroughly reliable, and who
+guaranteed the shooting. In the one case you bought a gun about
+whose previous history you knew absolutely nothing beyond the mere
+fact of the barrels having come at first-hand from a leading maker.
+But they may have been battered about--rebored; they may be scored
+inside by someone loading with flints; twenty things that are quite
+unascertainable may have combined to injure its original perfection.
+The cheapness will not stand the test of a moment's thought--that
+is, if you are in search of excellence. You buy a name and trust to
+chance. After several days of such work as this, becoming less and
+less satisfied at every fresh attempt, and physically more fatigued
+than if I had walked a hundred miles, I gave it up for awhile, and
+wrote to D. for more precise instructions.
+
+When I came to quietly reflect on these experiences, I found that
+the effect of carefully studying the subject had been to plunge me
+into utter confusion. It seemed as difficult to choose a gun as to
+choose a horse, which is saying a good deal. Most of us take our
+shooting as we take other things--from our fathers--very likely use
+their guns, get into their style of shooting; or if we buy guns, buy
+them because a friend wants to sell, and so get hold of the gun that
+suits us by a kind of happy chance. But to begin _de novo_, to
+select a gun from the thousand and one exhibited in London, to go
+conscientiously into the merits and demerits of the endless
+varieties of locks and breeches, and to come to an impartial
+decision, is a task the magnitude of which is not easily described.
+How many others who have been placed in somewhat similar positions
+must have felt the same ultimate confusion of mind, and perhaps at
+last, in sheer despair, plunged, and bought the first that came to
+hand, regretting for years afterwards that they had not bought this
+or that weapon, which had taken their fancy, but which some
+gunsmith interested in a patent had declared obsolete!
+
+D. settled the question, so far as he was concerned, by ordering two
+guns: one bored in the old style for ordinary shooting, and a choked
+gun of larger bore for the ducks. But all this trouble and
+investigation gave rise to several not altogether satisfactory
+reflections. For one thing, there seems a too great desire on the
+part of gunmakers to achieve a colossal reputation by means of some
+new patent, which is thrust on the notice of the sportsman and of
+the public generally at every step and turn. The patent very likely
+is an admirable thing, and quite fulfils the promise so far as the
+actual object in view is concerned. But it is immediately declared
+to supersede everything--no gun is of any use without it: you are
+compelled to purchase it whether or no, or you are given to
+understand that you are quite behind the age. The leading idea of
+the gunmaker nowadays is to turn out a hundred thousand guns of one
+particular pattern, like so many bales of cloth; everybody is to
+shoot with this, their speciality, and everything that has been
+previously done is totally ignored. The workman in the true sense of
+the word--the artist in guns--is either extinct, or hidden in an
+obscure corner. There is no individuality about modern guns. One is
+exactly like another. That is very well, and necessary for military
+arms, because an army must be supplied with a single pattern
+cartridge in order to simplify the difficulty of providing
+ammunition. They fail even in the matter of ornament. The
+design--if it can be called design--on one lock-plate is repeated on
+a thousand others, so with the hammers. There is no originality
+about a modern gun; as you handle it you are conscious that it is
+well put together, that the mechanism is perfect, the barrels true,
+but somehow it feels _hard_; it conveys the impression of being
+machine-made. You cannot feel the _hand_ of the maker anywhere, and
+the failure, the flatness, the formality of the supposed ornament,
+is depressing. The ancient harquebuss makers far surpassed the very
+best manufacturers of the present day. Their guns are really
+artistic--works of true art. The stocks of some of the German
+wheel-lock guns of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries are
+really beautiful specimens of carving and design. Their powder-horns
+are gems of workmanship--hunting-scenes cut out in ivory, the
+minutest detail rendered with life-like accuracy. They graved their
+stags and boars from Nature, not from conventional designs; the
+result is that we admire them now because Nature is constant, and
+her fashions endure. The conventional 'designs' on our lock-plates,
+etc., will in a few years be despised; they have no intrinsic
+beauty. The Arab of the desert, wild, untrammelled, ornaments his
+matchlock with turquoise. Our machine-made guns, double-barrel,
+breech-loading, double-grip, rebounding locks, first-choice stocks,
+laminated steel, or damascus barrels, choke-bore, and so forth,
+will, it is true, mow down the pheasants at the battue as the scythe
+cuts down the grass. There is slaughter in every line of them. But
+is slaughter everything? In my idea it is not, but very far from it.
+Were I offered the choice of participation in the bloodiest battue
+ever arranged--such as are reserved for princes--the very best
+position, and the best-finished and swiftest breech-loader invented,
+or the freedom of an English forest, to go forth at any time and
+shoot whatever I chose, untrammelled by any attendants, on condition
+that I only carried a wheel-lock, I should unhesitatingly select the
+second alternative. There would be an abiding pleasure in the very
+fact of using so beautiful a weapon--just in the very handling of
+it, to pass the fingers over the intricate and exquisite carving.
+There would be pleasure in winding up the lock with the spanner; in
+adjusting the pyrites to strike fire from the notches of the wheel;
+in priming from a delicate flask graven with stag and hounds. There
+would be delight in stealing from tree to tree, in creeping from
+bush to bush, through the bracken, keeping the wind carefully,
+noiselessly gliding forward--so silently that the woodpecker should
+not cease tapping in the beech, or the pigeon her hoarse call in the
+oak, till at last within range of the buck. And then! First, if the
+ball did not hit the vital spot, if it did not pass through the
+neck, or break the shoulder, inevitably he would be lost, for the
+round bullet would not break up like a shell, and smash the
+creature's flesh and bones into a ghastly jelly, as do the missiles
+from our nineteenth century express rifles. Secondly, if the wheel
+did not knock a spark out quickly, if the priming had not been kept
+dry, and did not ignite instantly, the aim might waver, and all the
+previous labour be lost. Something like skill would be necessary
+here. There would be art in the weapon itself, skill in the very
+loading, skill in the approach, nerve in holding the gun steady
+while the slow powder caught from the priming and expelled the ball.
+That would be sport. An imperfect weapon--well, yes; but the
+imperfect weapon would somehow harmonize with the forest, with the
+huge old hollow oaks, the beeches full of knot-holes, the mysterious
+thickets, the tall fern, the silence and solitude. It would make the
+forest seem a forest--such as existed hundreds of years ago; it
+would make the chase a real chase, not a foregone conclusion. It
+would equalize the chances, and give the buck 'law.' In short, it
+would be real shooting. Or with smaller game--I fancy I could hit a
+pheasant with a wheel-lock if I went alone, and _flushed the bird
+myself_. In that lies all the difference. If your birds are flushed
+by beaters, you may be on the watch, but that very watching unnerves
+by straining the nerves, and then the sudden rush and noise flusters
+you, and even with the best gun of modern construction you often
+miss. If you spring the bird yourself the noise may startle you, and
+yet somehow you settle down to your aim and drop him. With a
+wheel-lock, if I could get a tolerably clear view, I think I could
+bring him down. If only a brace rewarded a day's roaming under oak
+and beech, through fern and past thicket, I should be amply
+satisfied. With the antique weapon the spirit of the wood would
+enter into one. The chances of failure add zest to the pursuit. For
+slaughter, however, our modern guns are unsurpassed.
+
+Another point which occurs to one after such an overhauling of guns
+as I went through is the price charged for them. There does seem
+something very arbitrary in the charges demanded, and one cannot
+help a feeling that they bear no proportion to the real value or
+cost of production. It may, of course, be said that the wages of
+workmen are very high--although workmen as a mass have long been
+complaining that such is not really the case. The rent of premises
+in fashionable localities is also high, no doubt. For my part, I
+would quite as soon buy a gun in a village as in a crowded
+thoroughfare of the Metropolis; indeed rather sooner, since there
+would probably be a range attached where it could be tried. To be
+offered a range, as is often the case in London, half an hour
+out--which, with getting to the station and from the station at the
+other end, to the place and back, may practically mean half a
+day--is of little use. If you could pick up the gun in the shop,
+stroll outside and try it at once, it would be ten times more
+pleasant and satisfactory. A good gun is like the good wine of the
+proverb--if it were made in a village, to that village men would go
+or send for it. The materials for gun making are, surely, not very
+expensive--processes for cheapening steel and metal generally are
+now carried to such an extent, and the market for metals has fallen
+to an extraordinary extent. Machinery and steam-power to drive it
+is, no doubt, a very heavy item; but are we so anxious for machinery
+and machine-made guns? Are you and I anxious that ten thousand other
+persons should shoot with guns exactly, precisely like ours in every
+single particular? That is the meaning of machinery. It destroys the
+individuality of sport. We are all like so many soldiers in an army
+corps firing Government Martini-Henries. In the sporting ranks one
+does not want to be a private. I wonder some clever workman does not
+go and set himself up in some village where rent and premises are
+low, and where a range could be got close to his door, and
+deliberately set down to make a name for really first-rate guns, at
+a moderate price, and with some pretensions to individuality and
+beauty. There is water-power, which is cheaper than steam, running
+to waste all over the country now. The old gristmills, which may be
+found three or four in a single parish sometimes, are half of them
+falling into decay, because we eat American wheat now, which is
+ground in the city steam-mills, and a good deal imported ready
+ground as flour. Here and there one would think sufficient
+water-power might be obtained in this way. But even if we admit that
+great manufactories are extremely expensive to maintain, wages high,
+rent dear, premises in fashionable streets fabulously costly, yet
+even then there is something in the price of guns not quite the
+thing. You buy a gun and pay a long price for it: but if you attempt
+to sell it again you find it is the same as with jewellery, you can
+get hardly a third of its original cost. The intrinsic value of the
+gun then is less than half its advertised first cost-price. The
+second-hand gun offered to you for L20 has probably cost the dealer
+about L6, or L10 at the most. So that, manage it 'how you will,' you
+pay a sum quite out of proportion to the intrinsic value. It is all
+very well to talk about the market, custom of trade, supply and
+demand, and so forth, though some of the cries of the political
+economist (notably the Free Trade cry) are now beginning to be
+questioned. The value of a thing is what it will fetch, no doubt,
+and yet that is a doctrine which metes out half-justice only. It is
+justice to the seller, but, argue as sophistically as you like, it
+is _not_ justice to the purchaser.
+
+I should recommend any gentleman who is going to equip himself as a
+sportsman to ask himself before he starts the question that occurred
+to me too late in D.'s case: What kind of shooting am I likely to
+enjoy? Then, if not wishing to go to more expense than absolutely
+necessary, let him purchase a gun precisely suited to the game he
+will meet. As briefly observed before, if the sportsman takes his
+sport early in the year, and practically in the summer--August is
+certainly a summer month--he will like a light gun; and as the
+grouse at that time have not packed, and are not difficult of
+access, a light gun will answer quite as well as a heavy arm, whose
+powerful charges are not required, and which simply adds to the
+fatigue. Much lighter guns are used now than formerly; they do not
+last so long, but few of us now look forward forty years. A gun of
+6 1/2 pounds' weight will be better than anything else for summer
+work. All sportsmen say it is a toy and so it is, but a very deadly
+one. The same weapon will equally well do for the first of September
+(unless the weather has been very bad), and for a few weeks of
+partridge-shooting. But if the sport comes later in the autumn, a
+heavier gun with a stronger charge (alluding to guns of the old
+style of boring) will be found useful. For shooting when the leaves
+are off a heavier gun has, perhaps, some advantages.
+
+Battue-shooting puts a great strain upon a gun, from the rapid and
+continuous firing, and a pheasant often requires a hard knock to
+grass him successfully. You never know, either, at what range you
+are likely to meet with him. It may be ten yards, it may be sixty;
+so that a strong charge, a long range, and considerable power of
+penetration are desirable, if it is wished to make a good
+performance. I recommend a powerful gun for pheasant-shooting,
+because probably in no other sport is a miss so annoying. The bird
+is large and in popular estimation, therefore ought not to get away.
+There is generally a party at the house at the time, and shots are
+sure to be talked about, good or bad, but especially the latter,
+which some men have a knack of noticing, though they may be
+apparently out of sight, and bring up against you in the pleasantest
+way possible: 'I say, you were rather in a fluster, weren't you,
+this morning? Nerves out of order--eh?' Now, is there anything so
+aggravating as to be asked about your nerves? It is, perhaps, from
+the operation of competition that pheasants, as a rule, get very
+little law allowed them. If you want to shine at this kind of sport,
+knock the bird over, no matter when you see him--if his tail brushes
+the muzzle of your gun: every head counts. The fact is, if a
+pheasant is allowed law, and really treated as game, he is not by
+any means so easy a bird to kill as may be supposed.
+
+If money is no particular object, of course the sportsman can allow
+himself a gun for every different kind of sport, although luxury in
+that respect is apt to bring with it its punishment, by making him
+but an indifferent shot with either of his weapons. But if anyone
+wishes to be a really good shot, to be equipped for almost every
+contingency, and yet not to go to great expense, the very best
+course to follow is to buy two good guns, one of the old style of
+boring, and the other nearly or quite choked. The first should be
+neither heavy nor light--a moderately weighted weapon, upon which
+thorough reliance may be placed up to fifty yards, and that under
+favourable circumstances may kill much farther. Choose it with care,
+pay a fair price for it, and adhere to it. This gun, with a little
+variation in the charge, will suit almost every kind of shooting,
+from snipe to pheasant. The choke-bore is the reserve gun, in case
+of specially long range and great penetration being required. It
+should, perhaps, be a size larger in the bore than the other.
+Twelve-bore for the ordinary gun, and ten for the second, will
+cover most contingencies. With a ten-bore choke, hares running wild
+on hills without cover, partridge coveys getting up at fifty or
+sixty yards in the same kind of country, grouse wild as hawks,
+ducks, plovers, and wild-fowl generally, are pretty well accessible.
+If not likely to meet with duck, a twelve-bore choke will do equally
+well. Thus armed, if opportunity offers, you may shoot anywhere in
+Europe. The cylinder-bore will carry an occasional ball for a boar,
+a wolf, or fallow-deer, though large shot out of the choke will,
+perhaps, be more effective--so far, at least, as small deer are
+concerned. If you can afford it, a spare gun (old-style boring) is a
+great comfort, in case of an accident to the mechanism.
+
+
+
+
+SKATING
+
+
+The rime of the early morning on the rail nearest the bank is easily
+brushed off by sliding the walking-stick along it, and then forms a
+convenient seat while the skates are fastened. An old hand selects
+his gimlet with the greatest care, for if too large the screw
+speedily works loose, if too small the thread, as it is frantically
+forced in or out by main strength, cuts and tears the leather. A bad
+gimlet has spoilt many a day's skating. Nor should the straps be
+drawn too tight at first, for if hauled up to the last hole at
+starting the blood cannot circulate, and the muscles of the foot
+become cramped. What miseries have not ladies heroically endured in
+this way at the hands of incompetent assistants! In half an hour's
+time the straps will have worked to the boot, and will bear pulling
+another hole or even more without pain. On skates thus fastened
+anything may be accomplished.
+
+Always put your own skates on, and put them on deliberately; for if
+you really mean skating in earnest, limbs, and even life, may depend
+on their running true, and not failing at a critical moment. The
+slope of the bank must be descended sideways--avoid the stones
+concealed by snow, for they will destroy the edge of the skate. When
+within a foot or so, leap on, and the impetus will carry you some
+yards out upon the lake, clear of the shadow of the bank and the
+willows above, out to where the ice gleams under the sunshine. A
+glance round shows that it is a solitude; the marks of skates that
+went past yesterday are visible, but no one has yet arrived: it is
+the time for an exploring expedition. Following the shore, note how
+every stone or stick that has been thrown on by thoughtless persons
+has sunk into and become firmly fixed in the ice. The slight heat of
+midday has radiated from the surface of the stone, causing the ice
+to melt around it, when it has sunk a little, and at night been
+frozen hard in that position, forming an immovable obstacle,
+extremely awkward to come into contact with. A few minutes and the
+marks of skates become less frequent, and in a short time almost
+cease, for the gregarious nature of man exhibits itself even on ice.
+One spot is crowded with people, and beyond that extends a broad
+expanse scarcely visited. Here a sand-bank rises almost to the
+surface, and the yellow sand beneath causes the ice to assume a
+lighter tint; beyond it, over the deep water, it is dark.
+
+Then a fir-copse bordering the shore shuts out the faintest breath
+of the north wind, and the surface in the bay thus sheltered is
+sleek to a degree. This is the place for figure-skating; the ice is
+perfect, and the wind cannot interfere with the balance. Here you
+may turn and revolve and twist and go through those endless
+evolutions and endless repetitions of curves which exercise so
+singular a fascination. Look at a common figure of 8 that a man has
+cut out! How many hundreds of times has he gone round and round
+those two narrow crossing loops or circles! No variation, no change;
+the art of it is to keep almost to the same groove, and not to make
+the figure broad and splay. Yet by the wearing away of the ice it is
+evident that a length of time has been spent thus for ever wheeling
+round. And when the skater visits the ice again, back he will come
+and resume the wheeling at intervals. On past a low waterfall where
+a brook runs in--the water has frozen right up to the cascade. A
+long stretch of marshy shore succeeds--now frozen hard enough, at
+other times not to be passed without sinking over the ankles in mud.
+The ice is rough with the aquatic weeds frozen in it, so that it is
+necessary to leave the shore some thirty yards. The lake widens, and
+yonder in the centre--scarcely within range of a deer-rifle--stand
+four or five disconsolate wild-duck watching every motion. They are
+quite unapproachable, but sometimes an unfortunate dabchick that has
+been discovered in a tuft of grass is hunted and struck down by
+sticks. A rabbit on ice can also be easily overtaken by a skater. If
+one should venture out from the furze there, and make for the copse
+opposite, put on the pace, and you will be speedily alongside. As he
+doubles quickly, however, it is not so easy to catch him when
+overtaken: still, it can be done. Rabbits previously netted are
+occasionally turned out on purpose for a course, and afford
+considerable sport, with a very fair chance--if dogs be eschewed--of
+gaining their liberty. But they must have 'law,' and the presence of
+a crowd spoils all; the poor animal is simply surrounded, and knows
+not where to run. Tracks of wild rabbits crossing the ice are
+frequent. Now, having gained the farthest extremity of the lake,
+pause a minute and take breath for a burst down the centre. The
+regular sound of the axe comes from the wood hard by, and every now
+and then the crash as some tall ash-pole falls to the ground, no
+more to bear the wood-pigeon's nest in spring, no more to impede the
+startled pheasant in autumn as he rises like a rocket till clear of
+the boughs.
+
+Now for it: the wind, hardly felt before under shelter of the banks
+and trees, strikes the chest like the blow of a strong man as you
+rush against it. The chest responds with a long-drawn heave, the
+pliable ribs bend outwards, and the cavity within enlarges, filled
+with the elastic air. The stride grows longer and longer--the
+momentum increases--the shadow slips over the surface; the fierce
+joy of reckless speed seizes on the mind. In the glow, and the
+speed, and the savage north wind, the old Norse spirit rises, and
+one feels a giant. Oh that such a sense of vigour--of the fulness of
+life--could but last!
+
+By now others have found their way to the shore; a crowd has already
+assembled at that spot which a gregarious instinct has marked out
+for the ice-fair, and approaching it speed must be slackened.
+Sounds of merry laughter, and the 'knock, knock' of the
+hockey-sticks arise. Ladies are gracefully gliding hither and
+thither. Dancing-parties are formed, and thus among friends the
+short winter's day passes too soon, and sunset is at hand. But how
+beautiful that sunset! Under the level beams of the sun the ice
+assumes a delicate rosy hue; yonder the white snow-covered hills to
+the eastward are rosy too. Above them the misty vapour thickening in
+the sky turns to the dull red the shepherd knows to mean another
+frost and another fine day. Westwards where the disc has just gone
+down, the white ridges of the hills stand out for the moment sharp
+against the sky, as if cut by the graver's tool. Then the vapours
+thicken; then, too, behind them, and slowly, the night falls.
+
+Come back again in a few hours' time. The laugh is still, the noise
+has fled, and the first sound of the skate on the black ice seems
+almost a desecration. Shadows stretch out and cover the once
+gleaming surface. But through the bare boughs of the great oak
+yonder the moon--almost full--looks athwart the lake, and will soon
+be high in the sky.
+
+
+
+
+MARLBOROUGH FOREST
+
+
+The great painter, Autumn, has just touched with the tip of his
+brush a branch of the beech-tree, here and there leaving an orange
+spot, and the green acorns are tinged with a faint yellow. The
+hedges, perfect mines of beauty, look almost red from a distance, so
+innumerable are the peggles.[1] Let not the modern Goths destroy our
+hedges, so typical of an English landscape, so full of all that can
+delight the eye and please the mind. Spare them, if only for the
+sake of the 'days when we went gipsying--a long time ago'; spare
+them for the children to gather the flowers of May and the
+blackberries of September.
+
+ [1] A Wiltshire name for hawthorn-berries.
+
+When the orange spot glows upon the beech, then the nuts are ripe,
+and the hawthorn-bushes are hung with festoons of the buff-coloured,
+heart-shaped leaves of a once-green creeper. That 'deepe and
+enclosed country of Northe Wiltes,' which old Clarendon, in his
+famous 'Civill Warre,' says the troops of King Charles had so much
+difficulty to hurry through, is pleasant to those who can linger by
+the wayside and the copse, and do not fear to hear the ordnance
+make the 'woods ring again,' though to this day a rusty old
+cannon-ball may sometimes be found under the dead brown leaves of
+Aldbourne Chase, where the skirmish took place before 'Newbury
+Battle.'
+
+Perhaps it is because no such outbursts of human passions have
+swept along beneath its trees that the 'Forest' is unsung by
+the poet and unvisited by the artist. Yet its very name is
+poetical--Savernake--_i.e._, savernes-acres--like the God's-acres
+of Longfellow. Saverne--a peculiar species of sweet fern;
+acre--land.' So we may call it 'Fern-land Forest,' and with truth,
+for but one step beneath those beeches away from the path plunges
+us to our shoulders in an ocean of bracken.
+
+The yellow stalks, stout and strong as wood, make walking through
+the brake difficult, and the route pursued devious, till, from the
+constant turning and twisting, the way is lost. For this is no
+narrow copse, but a veritable forest in which it is easy to lose
+oneself; and the stranger who attempts to pass it away from the
+beaten track must possess some of the Indian instinct which sees
+signs and directions in the sun and wind, in the trees and humble
+plants of the ground.
+
+And this is its great charm. The heart has a yearning for the
+unknown, a longing to penetrate the deep shadow and the winding
+glade, where, as it seems, no human foot has been.
+
+High overhead in the beech-tree the squirrel peeps down from behind
+a bough, his long bushy tail curled up over his back, and his bright
+eyes full of mischievous cunning. Listen, and you will hear the
+tap, tap of the woodpecker, and see! away he goes in undulating
+flight with a wild, unearthly chuckle, his green and gold plumage
+glancing in the sun, like the parrots of far-distant lands. He will
+alight in some open space upon an ant-hill, and lick up the red
+insects with his tongue. In the fir-tree there, what a chattering
+and fluttering of gaily-painted wings!--three or four jays are
+quarrelling noisily. These beautiful birds are slain by scores
+because of their hawk-like capacities for destruction of game, and
+because of the delicate colours of their feathers, which are used in
+fly-fishing.
+
+There darts across the glade a scared rabbit, straining each little
+limb for speed, almost rushing against us, a greater terror
+overcoming the less. In a moment there darts forth from the dried
+grass a fierce red-furred hunter, a very tiger to the rabbit tribe,
+with back slightly arched, bounding along, and sniffing the scent;
+another, and another, still a fourth--a whole pack of stoats (elder
+brothers of the smaller weasels). In vain will the rabbit trust to
+his speed, these untiring wolves will overtake him. In vain will he
+turn and double: their unerring noses will find him out. In vain the
+tunnels of the 'bury,' they will as surely come under ground as
+above. At last, wearied, panting, frightened almost to death, the
+timid creature will hide in a cul-de-sac, a hole that has no outlet,
+burying its head in the sand. Then the tiny bloodhounds will steal
+with swift, noiseless rush, and fasten upon the veins of the neck.
+What a rattling the wings of the pigeons make as they rise out of
+the trees in hot haste and alarm! As we pass a fir-copse we stoop
+down and look along the ground under the foliage. The sharp
+'needles' or leaves which fall will not decay, and they kill all
+vegetation, so that there is no underwood or herbage to obstruct the
+view. It is like looking into a vast cellar supported upon
+innumerable slender columns. The pheasants run swiftly away
+underneath.
+
+High up the cones are ripening--those mysterious emblems sculptured
+in the hands of the gods at Nineveh, perhaps typifying the secret of
+life. More bracken. What a strong, tall fern! it is like a miniature
+tree. So thick is the cover, a thousand archers might be hid in it
+easily. In this wild solitude, utterly separated from civilization,
+the whistle of an arrow would not surprise us--the shout of a savage
+before he hurled his spear would seem natural, and in keeping. What
+are those strange, clattering noises, like the sound of men fighting
+with wooden 'backswords'? Now it is near--now afar off--a spreading
+battle seems to be raging all round, but the combatants are out of
+sight. But, gently--step lightly, and avoid placing the foot on dead
+sticks, which break with a loud crack--softly peep round the trunk
+of this noble oak, whose hard furrowed bark defends it like armour.
+
+The red-deer! Two splendid stags are fighting--fighting for their
+lady-love, the timid doe. They rush at each other with head down and
+horns extended; the horns meet and rattle; they fence with them
+skilfully. This was the cause of the noise. It is the tilting
+season--these tournaments between the knights of the forest are
+going on all around. There is just a trifle of danger in approaching
+these combatants, but not much, just enough to make the forest still
+more enticing; none whatever to those who use common caution. At the
+noise of our footsteps away go the stags, their 'branching antlers'
+seen high above the tall fern, bounding over the ground in a series
+of jumps, all four feet leaving the earth at once. There are immense
+oaks that we come to now, each with an open space beneath it, where
+Titania and the fairies may dance their rings at night. These
+enormous trunks--what _time_ they represent! To us, each hour is of
+consequence, especially in this modern day, which has invented the
+detestable creed that time is money. But time is not money to
+Nature. She never hastens. Slowly from the tiny acorn grew up this
+gigantic trunk, and spread abroad those limbs which in themselves
+are trees. And from the trunk itself to the smallest leaf, every
+infinitesimal atom of which it is composed was perfected slowly,
+gradually--there was no hurry, no attempt to discount effect. A
+little farther and the ground declines; through the tall fern we
+come upon a valley. But the soft warm sunshine, the stillness, the
+solitude, have induced an irresistible idleness. Let us lie down
+upon the fern, on the edge of the green vale, and gaze up at the
+slow clouds as they drift across the blue vault.
+
+The subtle influence of Nature penetrates every limb and every vein,
+fills the soul with a perfect contentment, an absence of all wish
+except to lie there, half in sunshine, half in shade, for ever in a
+Nirvana of indifference to all but the exquisite delight of simply
+_living_. The wind in the tree-tops overhead sighs in soft music,
+and ever and anon a leaf falls with a slight rustle to mark time.
+
+The clouds go by in rhythmic motion, the ferns whisper verses in the
+ear, the beams of the wondrous sun in endless song, for he, also,
+
+ In his motion like an angel sings,
+ Still quiring to the young-eyed cherubim,
+ Such harmony is in immortal souls!
+
+Time is to us now no more than it was to the oak; we have no
+consciousness of it. Only we feel the broad earth beneath us, and as
+to the ancient giant, so there passes through us a strength renewing
+itself, of vital energy flowing into the frame. It may be an hour,
+it may be two hours, when, without the aid of sound or sight, we
+become aware by an indescribable, supersensuous perception that
+living creatures are approaching. Sit up without noise and look:
+there is a herd of deer feeding down the narrow valley close at
+hand, within a stone's-throw. And these are deer indeed--no puny
+creatures, but the 'tall deer' that William the Conqueror loved 'as
+if he were their father.' Fawns are darting here and there, frisking
+round the does. How many may there be in this herd? Fifty, perhaps
+more. Nor is this a single isolated instance, but dozens more of
+such herds may be found in this true old English forest, all running
+free and unconstrained.
+
+But the sun gets low. Following this broad green drive, it leads us
+past vistas of endless glades, going no man knows where, into
+shadow and gloom; past grand old oaks; past places where the edge
+of a veritable wilderness comes up to the trees--a wilderness of
+gnarled hawthorn trunks of unknown ages, of holly with shining
+metallic-green leaves, and hazel-bushes. Past tall trees bearing the
+edible chestnut in prickly clusters; past maples which in a little
+while will be painted in crimson and gold, with the deer peeping out
+of the fern everywhere, and once, perhaps, catching a glimpse of a
+shy, beautiful, milk-white doe. Past a huge hollow trunk in the
+midst of a greensward, where merry picnic parties under the 'King
+Oak' tread the social quadrille, or whirl waltzes to the harp and
+flute. For there are certain spots even in this grand solitude
+consecrated to Cytherea and Bacchus, as he is now worshipped in
+champagne. And where can graceful forms look finer, happy eyes more
+bright, than in this natural ballroom, under its incomparable roof
+of blue, supported upon living columns of stately trees? Still
+onward, into a gravel carriage-road now, returning by degrees to
+civilization, and here, with happy judgment, the hand of man has
+aided Nature. Far as the eye can see extends an avenue of beech,
+passing right through the forest. The tall, smooth trunks rise up to
+a great height, and then branch overhead, looking like the roof of a
+Gothic cathedral. The growth is so regular and so perfect that the
+comparison springs unbidden to the lip, and here, if anywhere, that
+order of architecture might have taken its inspiration. There is a
+continuous Gothic arch of green for miles, beneath which one may
+drive or walk, as in the aisles of a forest abbey. But it is
+impossible to even mention all the beauties of this place within so
+short a space. It must suffice to say that the visitor may walk for
+whole days in this great wood, and never pass the same spot twice.
+No gates or jealous walls will bar his progress. As the fancy seizes
+him, so he may wander. If he has a taste for archaeological studies,
+especially the prehistoric, the edge of the forest melts away upon
+downs that bear grander specimens than can be seen elsewhere.
+Stonehenge and Avebury are near. The trout-fisher can approach very
+close to it. The rail gives easy communication, but has not spoilt
+the seclusion.
+
+Monsieur Lesseps, of Suez Canal fame, is reported to have said that
+Marlborough Forest was the finest he had seen in Europe. Certainly
+no one who had not seen it would believe that a forest still existed
+in the very heart of Southern England so completely recalling those
+woods and 'chases' upon which the ancient feudal monarchs set such
+store.
+
+
+
+
+VILLAGE CHURCHES
+
+
+The black rooks are busy in the old oak-trees, carrying away the
+brown acorns one by one in their strong beaks to some open place
+where, undisturbed, they can feast upon the fruit. The nuts have
+fallen from the boughs, and the mice garner them out of the ditches;
+but the blue-black sloes cling tight to the thorn-branch still. The
+first frost has withered up the weak sap left in the leaves, and
+they whirl away in yellow clouds before the gusts of wind. It is the
+season, the hour of half-sorrowful, half-mystic thought, when the
+past becomes a reality and the present a dream, and unbidden
+memories of sunny days and sunny faces, seen when life was all
+spring, float around:
+
+ Dim dream-like forms! your shadowy train
+ Around me gathers once again;
+ The same as in life's morning hour,
+ Before my troubled gaze you passed.
+ * * * * *
+ Forms known in happy days you bring,
+ And much-loved shades amid you spring,
+ Like a tradition, half expired,
+ Worn out with many a passing year.
+
+In so busy a land as ours there is no place where the mind can, as
+it were, turn in upon itself so fully as in the silence and solitude
+of a village church.
+
+There is no ponderous vastness, no oppressive weight of gloomy roof,
+no weird cavernous crypts, as in the cathedral; only a _visible_
+silence, which at once isolates the soul, separates it from external
+present influences, and compels it, in falling back upon itself, to
+recognize its own depth and powers. In daily life we sit as in a
+vast library filled with tomes, hurriedly writing frivolous letters
+upon 'vexatious nothings,' snatching our food and slumber, for ever
+rushing forward with beating pulse, never able to turn our gaze away
+from the goal to examine the great storehouse, the library around
+us. Upon the infinitely delicate organization of the brain
+innumerable pictures are hourly painted; these, too, we hurry by,
+ignoring them, pushing them back into oblivion. But here, in
+silence, they pass again before the gaze. Let no man know for what
+real purpose we come here; tell the aged clerk our business is with
+brasses and inscriptions, press half a crown into his hand, and let
+him pass to his potato-digging. There is one advantage at least in
+the closing of the church on week-days, so much complained of--to
+those who do visit it there is a certainty that their thoughts will
+not be disturbed. And the sense of man's presence has departed from
+the walls and oaken seats; the dust here is not the dust of the
+highway, of the quick footstep; it is the dust of the past. The
+ancient heavy key creaks in the cumbrous lock, and the iron
+latch-ring has worn a deep groove in the solid stone. The narrow
+nail-studded door of black oak yields slowly to the push--it is not
+easy to enter, not easy to quit the present--but once close it, and
+the living world is gone. The very style of ornament upon the door,
+the broad-headed nails, has come down from the remotest antiquity.
+After the battle, says the rude bard in the Saxon chronicle,
+
+ The Northmen departed
+ In their nailed barks,
+
+and, earlier still, the treacherous troop that seized the sleeping
+magician in iron, Wayland the Smith, were clad in 'nailed armour,'
+in both instances meaning ornamented with nails. Incidentally, it
+may be noted that, until very recently, at least one village church
+in England had part of the skin of a Dane nailed to the door--a
+stern reminder of the days when 'the Pagans' harried the land. This
+narrow window, deep in the thick wall, has no painted magnificence
+to boast of; but as you sit beside it in the square, high-sided pew,
+it possesses a human interest which even art cannot supply.
+
+The tall grass growing rank on the graves without rustles as it
+waves to and fro in the wind against the small diamond panes, yellow
+and green with age--rustles with a melancholy sound; for we know
+that this window was once far above the ground, but the earth has
+risen till nearly on a level--risen from the accumulation of human
+remains. Yet, but a day or two before, on the Sunday morning, in
+this pew, bright, restless children smiled at each other, exchanged
+guilty pushes, while the sunbeams from the arrow-slit above shone
+upon their golden hair.
+
+Let us not think of this further, but dimly through the window, 'as
+through a glass darkly,' see the green yew with its red berries, and
+afar the elms and beeches, brown and yellow. The steep down rises
+over them, and the moving grey patch upon it is a flock of sheep.
+The white wall is cold and damp, and the beams of the roof overhead,
+though the varnish is gone from them, are dark with slow decay.
+
+In the recess lies the figure of a knight in armour, rudely carved,
+beside his lady, still more rudely rendered in her stiff robes, and
+of him an ill-spelt inscription proudly records that he 'builded ye
+greate howse at'--no matter where; but history records that cruel
+war wrapped it in flames before half a generation was gone, so that
+the boast of his building great houses reads as a bitter mockery.
+There stands opposite a grander monument to a mighty earl, and over
+it hangs a breastplate and gauntlets of steel.
+
+The villagers will tell that in yonder deep shady 'combe' or valley,
+in the thick hazel-bushes, when the 'beetle with his drowsy hum'
+rises through the night air, there comes the wicked old earl,
+wearing this very breastplate, these iron gloves, to expiate one
+evil deed of yore. And if we sit in this pew long enough, till the
+mind is magnetized with the spirit of the past, till the early
+evening sends its shadowy troops to fill the distant corners of the
+silent church, then, perhaps, there may come to us forms gliding
+noiselessly over the stone pavement of the aisles--forms not
+repelling or ghastly, but filling us with an eager curiosity. Then
+through the slit made for that very purpose centuries since, when
+the pew was in a family chapel--through the slit in the pillar, we
+may see cowled monks assemble at the altar, muttering as magicians
+might over vessels of gold. The clank of scabbards upon the stones
+is stilled, the rustle of gowns is silent; if there is a sound, it
+is of subdued sobs, as the aged monk blesses the troop on the eve of
+their march. Not even yet has the stern idol of war ceased to demand
+its victims; even yet brave hearts and noble minds must perish, and
+leave sterile the hopes of the elders and the love of woman. There
+is still light enough left to read the few simple lines on the plain
+marble slab, telling how 'Lieutenant ----,' at Inkerman, at Lucknow,
+or, later still, at Coomassie, fell doing his duty. And these plain
+slabs are dearer to us far than all the sculptured grandeur, and the
+titles and pomp of belted earl and knight; their simple words go
+straighter to our hearts than all the quaint curt Latin of the olden
+time.
+
+The belfry door is ajar--those winding stairs are not easy of
+access. The edges are worn away, and the steps strewn with small
+sticks of wood; sticks once used by the jackdaws in building their
+nests in the tower. It is needful to take much care, lest the foot
+should stumble in the semi-darkness. Listen! there is now a slight
+sound: it is the dull ticking of the old, old clock above. It is the
+only thing with motion here; all else is still, and even its motion
+is not life. A strange old clock, a study in itself; all the works
+open and visible, simple, but ingenious. For a hundred years it has
+carried round the one hour-hand upon the square-faced dial without,
+marking every second of time for a century with its pendulum. Here,
+too, are the bells, and one, the chief bell, is a noble tenor, a
+mighty maker of sound. Its curves are full and beautiful, its colour
+clear; its tone, if you do but tap it, sonorous, yet not harsh. It
+is an artistic bell. Round the rim runs a rhyme in the monkish
+tongue, which has a chime in the words, recording the donor, and
+breathing a prayer for his soul. In the day when this bell was made
+men put their souls into their works. Their one great object was not
+to turn out 100,000 all alike, it was rarely they made two alike.
+Their one great object was to construct a work which should carry
+their very spirit in it, which should excel all similar works, and
+cause men in after-times to inquire with wonder for the maker's
+name, whether it was such a common thing as a knife-handle, or a
+bell, or a ship. Longfellow has caught the spirit well in the saga
+of the 'Long Serpent,' where the builder of the vessel listens to
+axe and hammer:
+
+ All this tumult heard the master,
+ It was music to his ear;
+ Fancy whispered all the faster,
+ 'Men shall hear of Thorberg Skafting
+ For a hundred year!'
+
+Would that there were more of this spirit in the workshops of our
+day! They did not, when such a work was finished, hasten to blaze it
+abroad with trumpet and shouting; it was not carried to the topmost
+pinnacle of the mountain in sight of all the kingdoms of the earth.
+They were contented with the result of their labour, and cared
+little where it was placed or who saw it; and so it is that some of
+the finest-toned bells in the world are at this moment to be found
+in village churches; and for so local a fame the maker worked as
+truly, and in as careful a manner, as if he had known his bell was
+to be hung in St. Peter's, at Rome. This was the true spirit of art.
+Yet it is not altogether pleasant to contemplate this bell; the mind
+cannot but reflect upon the length of time it has survived those to
+whose joys or sorrows it has lent a passing utterance, and who are
+dust in the yard beneath.
+
+ For full five hundred years I've swung
+ In my old grey turret high,
+ And many a changing theme I've sung
+ As the time went stealing by.
+
+Even the 'old grey turret' shows more signs of age and of decay than
+the bell, for it is strengthened with iron clamps and rods to bind
+its feeble walls together. Of the pavements, whose flagstones are
+monuments, the dates and names worn by footsteps; of the vaults
+beneath, with their grim and ghastly traditions of coffins moved out
+of place, as was supposed, by supernatural agency, but, as
+explained, by water; of the thick walls, in which, in at least one
+village church, the trembling victim of priestly cruelty was immured
+alive--of these and a thousand other matters that suggest themselves
+there is no time to speak.
+
+But just a word must be spared to notice one lovely spot where two
+village churches stand not a hundred yards apart, separated by a
+stream, both in the hands of one Vicar, whose 'cure' is,
+nevertheless, so scant of souls that service in the morning in one
+and in the evening in the other church is amply sufficient. And
+where is there a place where springtime possesses such a tender yet
+melancholy interest to the heart as in a village churchyard, where
+the budding leaves and flowers in the grass may naturally be taken
+as symbolical of a still more beautiful springtime yet in store for
+the soul?
+
+
+
+
+BIRDS OF SPRING
+
+
+The birds of spring come as imperceptibly as the leaves. One by one
+the buds open on hawthorn and willow, till all at once the hedges
+appear green, and so the birds steal quietly into the bushes and
+trees, till by-and-by a chorus fills the wood, and each warm shower
+is welcomed with varied song. To many, the majority of spring-birds
+are really unknown; the cuckoo, the nightingale, and the swallow,
+are all with which they are acquainted, and these three make the
+summer. The loud cuckoo cannot be overlooked by anyone passing even
+a short time in the fields; the nightingale is so familiar in verse
+that everyone tries to hear it; and the swallows enter the towns and
+twitter at the chimney-top. But these are really only the principal
+representatives of the crowd of birds that flock to our hedges in
+the early summer; and perhaps it would be accurate to say that no
+other area of equal extent, either in Europe or elsewhere, receives
+so many feathered visitors. The English climate is the established
+subject of abuse, yet it is the climate most preferred and sought by
+the birds, who have the choice of immense continents.
+
+Nothing that I have ever read of, or seen, or that I expect to see,
+equals the beauty and the delight of a summer spent in our woods
+and meadows. Green leaves and grass, and sunshine, blue skies, and
+sweet brooks--there is nothing to approach it; it is no wonder the
+birds are tempted to us. The food they find is so abundant, that
+after all their efforts, little apparent diminution can be noticed;
+to this fertile and lovely country, therefore, they hasten every
+year. It might be said that the spring-birds begin to come to us in
+the autumn, as early as October, when hedge-sparrows and
+golden-crested wrens, larks, blackbirds, and thrushes, and many
+others, float over on the gales from the coasts of Norway. Their
+numbers, especially of the smaller birds, such as larks, are
+immense, and their line of flight so extended that it strikes our
+shores for a distance of two hundred miles. The vastness of these
+numbers, indeed, makes me question whether they all come from
+Scandinavia. That is their route; Norway seems to be the last land
+they see before crossing; but I think it possible that their
+original homes may have been farther still. Though many go back in
+the spring, many individuals remain here, and rejoice in the plenty
+of the hedgerows. As all roads of old time led to Rome, so do
+bird-routes lead to these islands. Some of these birds appear to
+pair in November, and so have settled their courtship long before
+the crocuses of St. Valentine. Much difference is apparent in the
+dates recorded of the arrivals in spring; they vary year by year,
+and now one and now another bird presents itself first, so that I
+shall not in these notes attempt to arrange them in strict order.
+
+One of the first noticeable in southern fields is the common
+wagtail. When his shrill note is heard echoing against the walls of
+the outhouses as he rises from the ground, the carters and ploughmen
+know that there will not be much more frost. If icicles hang from
+the thatched eaves, they will not long hang, but melt before the
+softer wind. The bitter part of winter is over. The wagtail is a
+house-bird, making the houses or cattle-pens its centre, and
+remaining about them for months. There is not a farmhouse in the
+South of England without its summer pair of wagtails--not more than
+one pair, as a rule, for they are not gregarious till winter; but
+considering that every farmhouse has its pair, their numbers must be
+really large.
+
+Where wheatears frequent, their return is very marked; they appear
+suddenly in the gardens and open places, and cannot be overlooked.
+Swallows return one by one at first, and we get used to them by
+degrees. The wheatears seem to drop out of the night, and to be
+showered down on the ground in the morning. A white bar on the tail
+renders them conspicuous, for at that time much of the surface of
+the earth is bare and dark. Naturally birds of the wildest and most
+open country, they yet show no dread, but approach the houses
+closely. They are local in their habits, or perhaps follow a broad
+but well-defined route of migration; so that while common in one
+place, they are rare in others. In two localities with which I am
+familiar, and know every path, I never saw a wheatear. I heard of
+them occasionally as passing over, but they were not birds of the
+district. In Sussex, on the contrary, the wheatear is as regularly
+seen as the blackbird; and in the spring and summer you cannot go
+for a walk without finding them. They change their ground three
+times: first, on arrival, they feed in the gardens and arable
+fields; next, they go up on the hills; lastly, they return to the
+coast, and frequent the extreme edge of the cliffs and the land by
+the shore. Every bird has its different manner; I do not know how
+else to express it. Now, the wheatears move in numbers, and yet not
+in concert; in spring, perhaps twenty may be counted in sight at
+once on the ground, feeding together and yet quite separate; just
+opposite in manner to starlings, who feed side by side and rise and
+fly as one. Every wheatear feeds by himself, a space between him and
+his neighbour, dotted about, and yet they obviously have a certain
+amount of mutual understanding: they recognize that they belong to
+the same family, but maintain their individuality. On the hills in
+their breeding season they act in the same way: each pair has a wide
+piece of turf, sometimes many acres. But if you see one pair, it is
+certain that other pairs are in the neighbourhood. In their
+breeding-grounds they will not permit a man to approach so near as
+when they arrive, or as when the nesting is over. At the time of
+their arrival, anyone can walk up within a short distance; so,
+again, in autumn. During the nesting-time the wheatear perches on a
+molehill, or a large flint, or any slight elevation above the open
+surface of the downs, and allows no one to come closer than fifty
+yards.
+
+The hedge-sparrows, that creep about the bushes of the hedgerow as
+mice creep about the banks, are early in spring joined by the
+whitethroats, almost the first hedge-birds to return. The thicker
+the undergrowth of nettles and wild parsley, rushes and rough
+grasses, the more the whitethroat likes the spot. Amongst this
+tangled mass he lives and feeds, slipping about under the brambles
+and ferns as rapidly as if the way was clear. Loudest of all, the
+chiff-chaff sings in the ash woods, bare and leafless, while yet the
+sharp winds rush between the poles, rattling them together, and
+bringing down the dead twigs to the earth. The violets are difficult
+to find, few, and scattered; but his clear note rings in the hushes
+of the eastern breeze, encouraging the flowers. It is very pleasant
+indeed to hear him. One's hands are dry, and the skin rough with the
+east wind; the trunks of the trees look dry, and the lichens have
+shrivelled on the bark; the brook looks dark; grey dust rises and
+drifts, and the grey clouds hurry over; but the chiff-chaff sings,
+and it is certainly spring. The first green leaves which the elder
+put forth in January have been burned up by frost, and the woodbine,
+which looked as if it would soon be entirely green then, has been
+checked, and remains a promise only. The chiff-chaff tells the buds
+of the coming April rains and the sweet soft intervals of warm sun.
+He is a sure forerunner. He defies the bitter wind; his little heart
+is as true as steel. He is one of the birds in which I feel a
+personal interest, as if I could converse with him. The willow-wren,
+his friend, comes later, and has a gentler, plaintive song.
+
+Meadow-pipits are not migrants in the sense that the swallows are;
+but they move about and so change their localities that when they
+come back they have much of the interest of a spring-bird. They rise
+from the ground and sing in the air like larks, but not at such a
+height, nor is the song so beautiful. These, too, are early birds.
+They often frequent very exposed places, as the side of a hill where
+the air is keen, and where one would not expect to meet with so
+lively a little creature. The pond has not yet any of the growths
+that will presently render its margin green; the willow-herbs are
+still low, the aquatic grasses have not become strong, and the
+osiers are without leaf. If examined closely, evidences of growth
+would be found everywhere around it; but as yet the surface is open,
+and it looks cold. Along the brook the shoals are visible, as the
+flags have not risen from the stems which were cut down in the
+autumn. In the sedges, however, the first young shoots are thrusting
+up, and the reeds have started slender green stalks tipped with the
+first leaves. At the verge of the water, a thick green plant of
+marsh-marigold has one or two great golden flowers open. This is the
+appearance of his home when the sedge-reedling returns to it.
+Sometimes he may be seen flitting across the pond, or perched for a
+moment on an exposed branch; but he quickly returns to the dry
+sedges or the bushes, or climbs in and out the willow-stoles. It is
+too bare and open for him at the pond, or even by the brookside. So
+much does he love concealment, that although to be near the water is
+his habit, for a while he prefers to keep back among the bushes. As
+the reeds and reed canary-grass come up and form a cover--as the
+sedges grow green and advance to the edge of the water--as the
+sword-flags lift up and expand, opening from a centre, the
+sedge-reedling issues from the bushes and enters these vigorous
+growths, on which he perches, and about which he climbs as if they
+were trees. In the pleasant mornings, when the sun grows warm about
+eleven o'clock, he calls and sings with scarcely a cessation, and is
+answered by his companions up and down the stream. He does but just
+interrupt his search for food to sing; he stays a moment, calls, and
+immediately resumes his prying into every crevice of the branches
+and stoles. The thrush often sits on a bough and sings for a length
+of time, apart from his food, and without thinking of it, absorbed
+in his song, and full of the sweetness of the day. These restless
+sedge-reedlings cannot pause; their little feet are for ever at
+work, climbing about the willow-stoles where the wands spring from
+the trunk; they never reflect; they are always engaged. This
+restlessness is to them a great pleasure; they are filled with the
+life which the sun gives, and express it in every motion; they are
+so joyful, they cannot be still. Step into the osier-bed amongst
+them gently; they will chirp--a note like a sparrow's--just in
+front, and only recede a yard at a time as you push through the tall
+grass, flags, and underwood. Stand where you can see the brook, not
+too near, but so as to see it through a fringe of sedges and
+willows. The pink lychnis or ragged robin grows among the grasses;
+the iris flowers higher on the shore. The water-vole comes swimming
+past, on his way to nibble the green weeds in the stream round about
+the great branch which fell two winters since, and remains in the
+water. Aquatic plants take root in its shelter. There, too, a
+moorhen goes, sometimes diving under the bough. A blackbird flies up
+to drink or bathe, never at the grassy edge, but always choosing a
+spot where he can get at the stream free from obstruction. The sound
+of many birds singing comes from the hedge across the meadow; it
+mingles with the rush of the water through a drawn hatch--finches
+and linnets, thrush and chiff-chaff, wren and whitethroat, and
+others farther away, whose louder notes only reach. The singing is
+so mixed and interwoven, and is made of so many notes, it seems as
+if it were the leaves singing--the countless leaves--as if they had
+voices.
+
+A brightly-coloured bird, the redstart, appears suddenly in spring,
+like a flower that has bloomed before the bud was noticed. Red is
+his chief colour, and as he rushes out from his perch to take an
+insect on the wing, he looks like a red streak. These birds
+sometimes nest near farm-houses in the rickyards, sometimes by
+copses, and sometimes in the deepest and most secluded combes or
+glens, the farthest places from habitation; so that they cannot be
+said to have any preference, as so many birds have, for a particular
+kind of locality; but they return year by year to the places they
+have chosen. The return of the corncrake or landrail is quickly
+recognized by the noise he makes in the grass; he is the noisiest of
+all the spring-birds. The return of the goat-sucker is hardly
+noticed at first. This is not at all a rare, but rather a local
+bird, well known in many places, but in others unnoticed, except by
+those who feel a special interest. A bird must be common and
+plentiful before people generally observe it, so that there are many
+of the labouring class who have never seen the goat-sucker, or would
+say so, if you asked them.
+
+Few observe the migration of the turtle-doves, perhaps confusing
+them with the wood-pigeons, which stay in the fields all the winter.
+By the time the sap is well up in the oaks all the birds have
+arrived, and the tremulous cooing of the turtle-dove is heard by
+those engaged in barking the felled trees. The sap rises slowly in
+the oaks, moving gradually through the minute interstices or
+capillary tubes of this close-grained wood; the softer timber-trees
+are full of it long before the oak; and when the oak is putting
+forth its leaves it is high spring. Doves stay so much at this time
+in the great hawthorns of the hedgerows and at the edge of the
+copses that they are seldom noticed, though comparatively large
+birds. They are easily seen by any who wish; the 'coo-coo' tells
+where they are; and in walking gently to find them, many other
+lesser birds will be observed. A wryneck may be caught sight of on a
+bough overhead; a black-headed bunting, in the hedge where there is
+a wet ditch and rushes; a blackcap, in the birches; and the
+'zee-zee-zee' of the tree-pipit by the oaks just through the narrow
+copse.
+
+This is the most pleasant and the best way to observe--to have an
+object, when so many things will be seen that would have been passed
+unnoticed. To steal softly along the hedgerow, keeping out of sight
+as much as possible, pausing now and then to listen as the 'coo-coo'
+is approached; and then, when near enough to see the doves, to
+remain quiet behind a tree, is the surest way to see everything
+else. The thrush will not move from her nest if passed so quietly;
+the chaffinch's lichen-made nest will be caught sight of against the
+elm-trunk--it would escape notice otherwise; the whitethroat may be
+watched in the nettles almost underneath; a rabbit will sit on his
+haunches and look at you from among the bare green stalks of brake
+rising; mice will rustle under the ground-ivy's purple flowers; a
+mole perhaps may be seen, for at this time they often leave their
+burrows and run along the surface; and, indeed, so numerous are the
+sights and sounds and interesting things, that you will soon be
+conscious of the fact that, while you watch one, two or three more
+are escaping you. It would be the same with any other search as well
+as the dove; I choose the dove because by then all the other
+creatures are come and are busy, and because it is a fairly large
+bird with a distinctive note, and consequently a good guide.
+
+But these are not all the spring-birds: there are the whinchats,
+fly-catchers, sandpipers, ring-ousels, and others that are
+occasional or rare. There is not a corner of the fields, woods,
+streams, or hills, which does not receive a new inhabitant: the
+sandpiper comes to the open sandy margins of the pool; the
+fly-catcher, to the old post by the garden; the whinchat, to the
+furze; the tree-pipit, to the oaks, where their boughs overhang
+meadow or cornfield; the sedge-reedling, to the osiers; the dove, to
+the thick hedgerows; the wheatear, to the hills; and I see I have
+overlooked the butcher-bird or shrike, as, indeed, in writing of
+these things one is certain to overlook something, so wide is the
+subject. Many of the spring-birds do not sing on their first
+arrival, but stay a little while; by that time others are here.
+Grass-blade comes up by grass-blade till the meadows are freshly
+green; leaf comes forth by leaf till the trees are covered; and,
+like the leaves, the birds gently take their places, till the hedges
+are imperceptibly filled.
+
+
+
+
+THE SPRING OF THE YEAR
+
+
+'There's the cuckoo!' Everyone looked up and listened as the notes
+came indoors from the copse by the garden. He had returned to the
+same spot for the fourth time. The tallest birch-tree--it is as tall
+as an elm--stands close to the hedge, about three parts of the way
+up it, and it is just round there that the cuckoo generally sings.
+From the garden gate it is only a hundred yards to this tree,
+walking beside the hedge which extends all the way, so that the very
+first time the cuckoo calls upon his arrival he is certain to be
+heard. His voice travels that little distance with ease, and can be
+heard in every room. This year (1881) he came back to the copse on
+April 27, just ten days after I first heard one in the fields by
+Worcester Park. The difference in time is usual; the bird which
+frequents this copse does not arrive there till a week or so after
+others in the neighbourhood may be heard calling. So marked is the
+interval that once or twice I began to think the copse would be
+deserted--there were cuckoos crying all round in the fields, but
+none came near. He has, however, always returned, and this
+difference in time makes his notes all the more remarked. I have,
+therefore, always two dates for the cuckoo: one, when I first hear
+the note, no matter where, and the second, when the copse bird
+sings. When he once comes he continues so long as he stays in this
+country, visiting the spot every day, sometimes singing for a few
+minutes, sometimes for an hour, and one season he seemed to call
+every morning and all the morning long. In the copse the ring of the
+two notes is a little toned down and lost by passing through the
+boughs, which hold and check the vibration of the sound. One year a
+detached ash in Cooper's Field, not fifty yards from the houses, was
+a favourite resort, and while perched there the notes echoed along
+the buildings, one following the other as waves roll on the summer
+sands. Flying from the ash to the copse, or along the copse hedge,
+the cuckoo that year was as often seen as the sparrows, and as
+little notice was taken of him. Several times cuckoos have flown
+over this house, but just clearing the roof, and descending directly
+they were over to the copse. He has not called so much this year
+yet, but on the evening of May 8 he was crying in the copse at
+half-past eight while the moon was shining.
+
+On the morning of May 2, standing in the garden, or at the window of
+any of the rooms facing south, you could hear five birds calling
+together. The cuckoo was calling not far from the tallest birch;
+there was a turtle-dove cooing in the copse much closer; and a
+wood-pigeon overpowered the dove's soft voice every two or three
+minutes--the pigeon was not fifty yards distant; a wryneck was
+perched up in an oak at the end of the garden, and uttered his
+peculiar note from time to time, and a nightingale was singing on
+Tolworth Common, just opposite the house, though on the other side.
+These were all audible, sometimes together, sometimes alternately;
+and if you went to the northern windows or the front door, looking
+towards the common, then you might also hear the chatter of a
+brook-sparrow. The dove has a way of gurgling his coo in the throat.
+The wryneck's 'kie-kie-kie,' the last syllable plaintively
+prolonged, is not like the call or songs of other birds; it reminds
+one of the peacock's strange scream, not in its actual sound, but
+its singularity. When it is suddenly heard from the midst of the
+thick green hedges of a summer's day, the bird itself unseen, it has
+a weird sound, which does not accord, like the blackbird's whistle,
+with our trees; it seems as if some tropical bird had wandered
+hither. I have heard the wryneck calling in the oak at the end of
+the garden every morning this season before rising, and suspect,
+from his constant presence, that a nest will be built close by. Last
+year the wryneck was a scarce bird in this neighbourhood; in all my
+walks I heard but two or three, and at long intervals. This year
+there are plenty; I hear them in almost every walk I take. There is
+one in the orchard beside the Red Lion Inn; another frequents the
+hedges and trees behind St. Matthew's Church; up Claygate Lane there
+is another--the third or fourth gateway on the left side is the
+place to listen. One year a pair built, I am sure, close to the
+cottage which stands by itself near the road on Tolworth Common. I
+saw them daily perched on the trees in front, and heard them every
+time I passed. There were not many, or we did not notice them, at
+home, and therefore I have observed them with interest. Now there is
+one every morning at the end of the garden. This nightingale, too,
+that sings on Tolworth Common just opposite, returns there every
+year, and, like the cuckoo to the copse, he is late in his
+arrival--at least a week later than other nightingales whose haunts
+are not far off. His cover is in some young birch-trees, which form
+a leafy thicket among the furze. On the contrary, the brook-sparrow,
+or sedge-reedling, that sings there is the first, I think, of all
+his species to return in this place. He comes so soon that,
+remembering the usual date in other districts, I have more than once
+tried to persuade myself that I was mistaken, and that it was not
+the sedge-bird, but some other. But he has a note that it is not
+possible to confuse, and as it has happened several seasons running,
+this early appearance, there can be no doubt it is a fixed period
+with him. These two, the sedge-bird and the nightingale, have their
+homes so near together that the one often sings in the branches
+above, while the other chatters in the underwood beneath.
+
+Besides these, before I get up I hear now a wren regularly. Little
+as he is, his notes rise in a crescendo above all; he sings on a
+small twig growing from the trunk of an oak--a bare twig which gives
+him a view all round. There is a bold ring in some of the notes of
+the wren which might give an idea to a composer desirous of
+producing a merry tune. The chirp of sparrows, of course, underlies
+all. I like sparrows. The chirp has a tang in it, a sound within a
+sound, just as a piece of metal rings; there is not only the noise
+of the blow as you strike it, but a sound of the metal itself. Just
+now the cock birds are much together; a month or two since the
+little bevies of sparrows were all hens, six or seven together, as
+if there were a partial separation of the sexes at times. I like
+sparrows, and am always glad to hear their chirp; the house seems
+still and quiet after this nesting-time, when they leave us for the
+wheatfields, where they stay the rest of the summer. What happy days
+they have among the ripening corn!
+
+But this year the thrushes do not sing: I have listened for them
+morning after morning, but have not heard them. They used to sing so
+continuously in the copse that their silence is very marked: I see
+them, but they are silent--they want rain. Nor have our old
+missel-thrushes sung here this spring. One season there seem more of
+one kind of bird, and another of another species. None are more
+constant than the turtle-dove: he always comes to the same place in
+the copse, about forty yards from the garden gate.
+
+The wood-pigeons are the most prominent birds in the copse this
+year. In previous seasons there were hardly any--one or two,
+perhaps; sometimes the note was not heard for weeks. There might
+have been a nest; I do not think so; the pigeons that come seemed
+merely to rest _en route_ elsewhere--occasional visitors only. But
+last autumn (1880) a small flock of seven or eight took up their
+residence here, and returned to roost every evening. They remained
+the winter through, and even in the January frosts, if the sun shone
+a little, called now and then. Their hollow cooing came from the
+copse at midday on January 1, and it was heard again on the 2nd.
+During the deep snows they were silent, but I constantly saw them
+flying to and fro, and immediately it became milder they recommenced
+to call. So that the wood-pigeon's notes have been heard in the
+garden--and the house--with only short intervals ever since last
+October, and it is now May. In the early spring, while walking up
+the Long Ditton road towards sunset, the place from whence you can
+get the most extended view of the copse, they were always flying
+about the tops of the trees preparatory to roosting. The bare
+slender tips of the birches on which they perched exposed them
+against the sky. Once six alighted on a long birch-branch, bending
+it down with their weight, not unlike a heavy load of fruit. As the
+stormy sunset flamed up, tinting the fields with momentary red,
+their hollow voices sounded among the trees.
+
+Now, in May, they are busy; they have paired, and each couple has a
+part of the copse to themselves. Just level with the gardens the
+wood is almost bare of undergrowth; there is little to obstruct the
+sight but the dead hanging branches, and one couple are always up
+and down here. They are near enough for us to see the dark marking
+at the end of the tail as it is spread open to assist the upward
+flight from the ground to the tree. Outside the garden gate, about
+twenty yards distant, there stand three or four young spruce-firs;
+they are in the field, but so close as to touch the copse hedge. To
+the largest of these one of the pigeons comes now and then; he is
+half inclined to choose it for his nest, and yet hesitates. The
+noise of their wings, as they rise and thresh their strong feathers
+together over the tops of the trees, may often be heard in the
+garden; or you may see one come from a distance, swift as the wind,
+suddenly half close two wings, and, shooting forward, alight among
+the branches. They seem with us like the sparrows, as much as if the
+house stood in the midst of the woods at home. The coo itself is not
+tuneful in any sense; it is hoarse and hollow, yet it has a pleasant
+sound to me--a sound of the woods and the forest. I can almost feel
+the gun in my hand again. They are pre-eminently the birds of the
+woods. Other birds frequent them at times, and then quit the trees:
+but the ring-dove is the wood-bird, always there some part of the
+day. So that the sound soothes by its associations.
+
+Coming down the Long Ditton road on May 1, at the corner of the
+copse, where there are some hornbeams, I heard some low sweet notes
+that came from the trees, and, after a little difficulty, discovered
+a blackcap perched on a branch, humped up. Another answered within
+ten yards, and then they sang one against the other. The foliage of
+the hornbeam was still pale, and the blackcaps' colours being so
+pale also (with the exception of the poll), it was not easy to see
+them. The song is sweet and cultured, but does not last many
+seconds. In its beginning it something resembles that of the
+hedge-sparrow--not the pipe, but the song which the hedge-sparrows
+are now delivering from the top sprays of the hawthorn hedges. It is
+sweet indeed and cultured, and it is a pleasure to welcome another
+arrival, but I do not feel enraptured with the blackcap's notes. One
+came into the garden, visiting some ivy on the wall, but they are
+not plentiful just now. By these hornbeam trees a little streamlet
+flows out from the copse and under the road by a culvert. At the
+hedge it is crossed by a pole (to prevent cattle straying in), and
+this pole is the robin's especial perch. He is always there, or
+near; he was there all through the winter, and is there now.
+Beneath, where there are a few inches of sand beside the water, a
+wagtail comes now and then; but the robin does not like the
+intrusion, and drives him away.
+
+The same oak at the end of the garden, where the wryneck calls, is
+also the favourite tree of a cock chaffinch, and every morning he
+sings there for at least two hours at a stretch. I hear him first
+between waking and sleeping, and listen to his song before my eyes
+are open. No starlings whistle on the house-tops this year; I am
+disappointed that they have not returned; last year, and the year
+before that--indeed, since we have been here--a pair built under the
+eaves just above the window of the room I then used. Last spring,
+indeed, they filled the gutter with the materials of their nest, and
+long after they had left a storm descended, and the rain, unable to
+escape, flooded the corner. It cost eight shillings to repair the
+damage; but it did not matter, they had been happy. It is a
+disappointment not to hear their whistle again this spring, and the
+flutter of their wings as they vibrate them superbly while hovering
+a moment before entering their cavern. A pair of house-martins built
+under the eaves near by one season; they, too, have disappointed me
+by not returning, though their nest was not disturbed. Some fate has
+probably overtaken late starlings and house-martins.
+
+Then in the sunny mornings, too, there is the twittering of the
+swallows. They were very late this spring at Surbiton. The first of
+the species was a bank-martin flying over the Wandle by Wimbledon on
+April 25; the first swallow appeared at Surbiton on April 30. As the
+bank-martins skim the surface of the Thames--there are plenty
+everywhere near the osier-beds and eyots, as just below Kingston
+Bridge--their brown colour, and the black mark behind the eye, and
+the thickness of the body near the head, cause them to bear a
+resemblance to moths. A fortnight before the first swallow the large
+bats were hawking up and down the road in the evenings. They seem to
+prefer to follow the course of the road, flying straight up it from
+the copse to the pond, half-way to Red Lion Lane, then back again,
+and so to and fro, sometimes wheeling over the Common, but usually
+resuming their voyaging above the highway. Passing on a level with
+the windows in the dusk, their wings seem to expand nine or ten
+inches. Bats are sensitive to heat and cold. When the north or east
+wind blows they do not come out; they like a warm evening.
+
+A shrike flew down from a hedge on May 9, just in front of me, and
+alighted on a dandelion, bending the flower to the ground and
+clasping the stalk in his claws. There must have been an insect on
+the flower: the bright yellow disk was dashed to the ground in an
+instant by the ferocious bird, who came with such force as almost to
+lose his balance. Though small, the butcher-bird's decision is
+marked in every action, in his very outline. His eagle-like head
+sweeps the grass, and in a second he is on his victim. Perhaps it
+was a humble-bee. The humble-bees are now searching about for the
+crevices in which they make their nests, and go down into every hole
+or opening, exploring the depressions left by the hoofs of horses on
+the sward when it was wet, and peering under stones and flints
+beside the way. Wasps, too, are about with the same purpose, and
+wild bees hover in the sunshine. The shrikes are numerous here, and
+all have their special haunts, to which they annually return. The
+bird that darted on the dandelion flew from the hedge by the
+footpath, through the meadow where the stag is generally uncarted,
+beside the Hogsmill brook. A pair frequent the bushes beside the
+Long Ditton road, not far from the milestone; another pair come to
+the railway arch at the foot of Cockrow Hill. In Claygate Lane
+there are several places, and in June and July, when they are
+feeding their young, the 'chuck-chucking' is incessant.
+
+Beside the copse on the sward by the Long Ditton road is a favourite
+resort of peacock butterflies. On sunny days now one may often be
+seen there floating over the grass. White butterflies go
+flutter-flutter, continually fanning; the peacock spreads his wide
+wings and floats above the bennets. Yellow or sulphur butterflies
+are almost rare--things common enough in other places. I seldom see
+one here, and, unless it is fancy, fewer the last two seasons than
+previously.
+
+In the ploughed field by Southborough Park, towards the Long Ditton
+road, partridges sometimes call now as the sun goes down. The corn
+is yet so short and thin that the necks of partridges stand up above
+it. One stole out the other evening from the hedge of a field beside
+the Ewell road into the corn; his head was high over the green
+blades. The meadow close by, the second past the turn, is a
+favourite with partridges, though so close to the road and to
+Tolworth Farm. Beside Claygate Lane, where the signpost points to
+Hook, there is a withybed which is a favourite cover for hares.
+There is a gateway (on the left of the lane) just past the signpost,
+from which you can see all one side of the osiers; the best time is
+when the clover begins to close its leaves for the evening. On May
+3, looking over the gate there, I watched two hares enjoying
+themselves in the corn; they towered high above it--it was not more
+than four or five inches--and fed with great unconcern, though I was
+not concealed. A nightingale sang in the bushes within a few yards,
+and two cuckoos chased each other, calling as they flew across the
+lane; once one passed just overhead. The cuckoo has a note like
+'chuck, chuck,' besides the well-known cry, which is uttered
+apparently when the bird is much exerted. These two were quite
+restless; they were to and fro from the fields on one side of the
+lane to those on the other, now up the hedge, now in a tree, and
+continually scolding each other with these 'chuck-chucking' sounds.
+Chaffinches were calling from the tops of the trees; the chaffinches
+now have a note much like one used by the yellow-hammer, different
+from their song and from their common 'fink tink.' I was walking by
+the same place, on April 24, when there was suddenly a tremendous
+screaming and threatening, and, glancing over the fields bordering
+on the Waffrons, there were six jays fighting. They screamed at and
+followed each other in a fury, real or apparent, up and down the
+hedge, and then across the fields out of sight. There were three
+jays together in a field by the Ewell road on May 1.
+
+Just past the bridge over the Hogsmill brook at Tolworth Court there
+begins, on the left-hand side of the road, a broad mound, almost a
+cover in itself. At this time, before the underwood is up, much that
+goes on in the mound can be seen. There are several nightingales
+here, and they sometimes run or dart along under the trailing ivy,
+as if a mouse had rushed through it. The rufous colour of the back
+increases the impression; the hedgerows look red in the sunshine.
+Whitethroats are in full song everywhere: they have a twitter
+sometimes like swallows. A magpie flew up from the short green corn
+to a branch low down an elm, his back towards me, and as he rose his
+tail seemed to project from a white circle. The white tips of his
+wings met--or apparently so--as he fluttered, both above and beneath
+his body, so that he appeared encircled with a white ring.
+
+The swifts have not come, up to the 10th, but there are young
+thrushes about able to fly. There was one at the top of the garden
+the other day almost as large as his parent. Nesting is in the
+fullest progress. I chanced on a hedge-sparrow's lately, the whole
+groundwork of which was composed of the dry vines of the wild white
+convolvulus. All the birds are come, I think, except the swift, the
+chat, and the redstart: very likely the last two are in the
+neighbourhood, though I have not seen them. In the furze on Tolworth
+Common--a resort of chats--the land-lizards are busy every sunny
+day. They run over the bunches of dead, dry grass--quite white and
+blanched--grasping it in their claws, like a monkey with hands and
+prehensile feet. They are much swifter than would be supposed. There
+was one on the sward by the Ewell road the other morning, quite
+without a tail; the creature was as quick as possible, but the grass
+too short to hide under till it reached some nettles.
+
+The roan and white cattle happily grazing in the meadows by the
+Hogsmill brook look as if they had never been absent, as if they
+belonged to the place, like the trees, and had never been shut up in
+the yards through so terrible a winter. The water of the Hogsmill
+has a way of escaping like that of larger channels, and has made for
+itself a course for its overflow across a corner of the meadow by
+the road. A thin place in the rather raised bank lets it through in
+flood-time (like a bursting loose of the Mississippi), and down it
+rushes towards the moat. Beside the furrows thus soaked now and
+then, there are bunches of marsh-marigold in flower, and though the
+field is bright with dandelions and buttercups, the marigolds are
+numerous enough to be visible on the other side of it, 300 yards or
+more distant, and are easily distinguished by their different
+yellow. White cuckoo-flowers (_Cardamine_) are so thick in many
+fields that the green tint of the grass is lost under their silvery
+hue. Bluebells are in full bloom. There are some on the mound
+between Claygate and the Ewell road; the footpath to Chessington
+from Roxby Farm passes a copse on the left which shimmers in the
+azure; on the mound on the right of the lane to Horton they are
+plentiful this year--the hedge has been cut, and consequently more
+have shot up. Cowslips innumerable. The pond by the Ewell road,
+between this and Red Lion Lane, is dotted with white water-crowfoot.
+The first that flowered were in the pond in the centre of Tolworth
+Common. The understalks are long and slender, and with a filament
+rather than leaves--like seaweed--but when the flower appears these
+larger leaves float on the surface. Quantities of this ranunculus
+come floating down the Hogsmill brook, at times catching against the
+bridge. A little pond by the lane near Bone's Gate was white with
+this flower lately, quite covered from bank to bank, not a spare
+inch without its silver cup. Vetches are in flower; there are always
+some up the Long Ditton road on the bank by Swaynes-Thorp.
+Shepherd's purse stands up in flower in the waste places, and on the
+side of the ditches thick branches of hedge-mustard lift their white
+petals. The delicate wind anemones flowered thickly in Claygate Lane
+this year. On April 24 the mound on the right-hand side was dotted
+with them. They had pushed up through the dead dry oak-leaves of
+last autumn. The foliage of the wind anemone is finely cut and
+divided, so that it casts a lovely shadow on any chance leaf that
+lies under it: it might suggest a design. The anemones have not
+flowered there like this since I have known the lane before. They
+were thicker than I have ever seen them there. Dog-violets, barren
+strawberry, and the yellowish-green spurge are in flower there now.
+
+The pine in front of my north window began to put forth its catkins
+some time since; those up the Long Ditton road are now covered thick
+with the sulphur farina or dust. I fancy three different sets of
+fruit may sometimes be seen on pines: this year's small and green,
+last year's ripe and mature, and that of the year before dry and
+withered. The trees are all in leaf now, except the Turkey
+oaks--there are some fine young Turkey oaks by Oak Hill Path--and
+the black poplars. Oaks have been in leaf some time, except those
+that flower and are now garlanded with green. Ash, too, is now in
+leaf, and beech. The bees have been humming in the sycamores; the
+limes are in leaf, but their flower does not come yet. There were
+round, rosy oak-apples on the oak by the garden in the copse on the
+9th. This tree is singular for bearing a crop of these apples every
+year. Its top was snapped by the snow that fell last October while
+yet the leaf was on. I think the apples appear on this oak earlier
+than on any about here. As for the orchards, now they are beautiful
+with bloom; walking along the hedges, too, you light once now and
+then on a crab or a wild apple, with its broad rosy petals showing
+behind the hawthorn. On the 7th I heard a corncrake in the meadow
+over Thames, opposite the Promenade, a hundred yards below
+Messenger's Eyot. It is a favourite spot with the corncrake--almost
+the only place where you are nearly sure to hear him. Crake! crake!
+So it is now high May, and now midnight. Antares is visible--the
+summer star.
+
+
+
+
+VIGNETTES FROM NATURE
+
+
+I.--SPRING
+
+The soft sound of water moving among thousands of grass-blades is to
+the hearing as the sweetness of spring air to the scent. It is so
+faint and so diffused that the exact spot whence it issues cannot be
+discerned, yet it is distinct, and my footsteps are slower as I
+listen. Yonder, in the corners of the mead, the atmosphere is full
+of some ethereal vapour. The sunshine stays in the air there as if
+the green hedges held the wind from brushing it away. Low and
+plaintive comes the notes of a lapwing; the same notes, but tender
+with love.
+
+On this side by the hedge the ground is a little higher and dry,
+hung over with the lengthy boughs of an oak which give some shade. I
+always feel a sense of regret when I see a seedling oak in the
+grass. The two green leaves--the little stem so upright and
+confident, and though but a few inches high, already so completely a
+tree--are in themselves beautiful. Power, endurance, grandeur are
+there; you can grasp all with your hand and take a ship between the
+finger and thumb. Time, that sweeps away everything, is for a while
+repelled: the oak will grow when the time we know is forgotten, and
+when felled will be mainstay and safety of a generation in a future
+century. That the plant should start among the grass to be severed
+by the scythe, or crushed by cattle, is very pitiful; I cannot help
+wishing that it could be transplanted and protected. O! the
+countless acorns that drop in autumn not one in a million is
+permitted to become a tree: a vast waste of strength and beauty.
+From the bushes by the stile on the left hand (which I have just
+passed) follows the long whistle of a nightingale. His nest is near;
+he sings night and day. Had I waited on the stile, in a few minutes,
+becoming used to my presence, he would have made the hawthorn
+vibrate, so powerful is his voice when heard close at hand. There is
+not another nightingale along this path for at least a mile, though
+it crosses meadows and runs by hedges to all appearance equally
+suitable. But nightingales will not pass their limits; they seem to
+have a marked-out range as strictly defined as the line of a
+geological map. They will not go over to the next hedge, hardly into
+the field on one side of a favourite spot, nor a yard farther along
+the mound. Opposite the oak is a low fence of serrated green. Just
+projecting above the edges of a brook, fast-growing flags have
+thrust up their bayonet-tips. Beneath, these stalks are so thick in
+the shallow places that a pike can scarcely push a way between them.
+Over the brook stand some high maple-trees: to their thick foliage
+wood-pigeons come. The entrance to a combe--the widening mouth of a
+valley--is beyond, with copses on the slopes.
+
+Again the plover's notes, this time in the field immediately behind;
+repeated, too, in the field on the right hand. One comes over, and
+as he flies he jerks a wing upwards and partly turns on his side in
+the air, rolling like a vessel in a swell. He seems to beat the air
+sideways, as if against a wall, not downwards. This habit makes his
+course appear so uncertain: he may go there, or yonder, or in a
+third direction, more undecided than a startled snipe. Is there a
+little vanity in that wanton flight? Is there a little consciousness
+of the spring-freshened colours of his plumage and pride in the
+dainty touch of his wings on the sweet wind? His love is watching
+his wayward course. He prolongs it. He has but a few yards to fly to
+reach the well-known feeding-ground by the brook where the grass is
+short; perhaps it has been eaten off by sheep. It is a straight and
+easy line--as a starling would fly. The plover thinks nothing of a
+straight line: he winds first with the curve of the hedge, then
+rises, uttering his cry, aslant, wheels, and returns; now this way,
+direct at me, as if his object was to display his snowy breast;
+suddenly rising aslant again, he wheels once more, and goes right
+away from his object over above the field whence he came. Another
+moment and he returns, and so to and fro, and round and round, till,
+with a sidelong, unexpected sweep, he alights by the brook. He
+stands a minute, then utters his cry, and runs a yard or so forward.
+In a little while a second plover arrives from the field behind;
+he, too, dances a maze in the air before he settles. Soon a third
+joins them. They are visible at that spot because the grass is
+short; elsewhere they would be hidden. If one of these rises and
+flies to and fro, almost instantly another follows, and then it is
+indeed a dance before they alight. The wheeling, maze-tracing,
+devious windings continue till the eye wearies and rests with
+pleasure on a passing butterfly. These birds have nests in the
+meadows adjoining; they meet here as a common feeding-ground.
+Presently they will disperse, each returning to his mate at the
+nest. Half an hour afterwards they will meet once more, either here
+or on the wing.
+
+In this manner they spend their time from dawn, through the
+flower-growing day, till dusk. When the sun arises over the hill
+into the sky, already blue, the plovers have been up a long while.
+All the busy morning they go to and fro: the busy morning when the
+wood-pigeons cannot rest in the copses on the combe side, but
+continually fly in and out; when the blackbirds whistle in the oaks;
+when the bluebells gleam with purplish lustre. At noontide in the
+dry heat it is pleasant to listen to the sound of water moving among
+the thousand thousand grass-blades of the mead. The flower-growing
+day lengthens out beyond the sunset, and till the hedges are dim the
+lapwings do not cease.
+
+Leaving now the shade of the oak, I follow the path into the meadow
+on the right, stepping by the way over a streamlet which diffuses
+its rapid current broadcast over the sward till it collects again
+and pours into the brook. This next meadow is somewhat more raised,
+and not watered; the grass is high, and full of buttercups. Before I
+have gone twenty yards a lapwing rises out in the field, rushes
+towards me through the air, and circles round my head, making as if
+to dash at me, and uttering shrill cries. Immediately another comes
+from the mead behind the oak; then a third from over the hedge, and
+all those that have been feeding by the bank, till I am encircled
+with them. They wheel round, dive, rise aslant, cry, and wheel
+again, always close over me, till I have walked some distance, when
+one by one they fall off, and, still uttering threats, retire. There
+is a nest in this meadow, and, although it is, no doubt, a long way
+from the path, my presence even in the field, large as it is, is
+resented. The couple who imagine themselves threatened are quickly
+joined by their friends, and there is no rest till I have left their
+treasures far behind.
+
+
+II.--THE GREEN CORN
+
+Pure colour almost always gives the idea of fire, or, rather, it is
+perhaps as if a light shone through as well as the colour itself.
+The fresh green blade of corn is like this--so pellucid, so clear
+and pure in its green as to seem to shine with colour. It is not
+brilliant--not a surface gleam nor an enamel--it is stained through.
+Beside the moist clods the slender flags arise, filled with the
+sweetness of the earth. Out of the darkness under--that darkness
+which knows no day save when the ploughshare opens its chinks--they
+have come to the light. To the light they have brought a colour
+which will attract the sunbeams from now till harvest. They fall
+more pleasantly on the corn, toned, as if they mingled with it.
+Seldom do we realize that the world is practically no thicker to us
+than the print of our footsteps on the path. Upon that surface we
+walk and act our comedy of life, and what is beneath is nothing to
+us. But it is out from that underworld, from the dead and the
+unknown, from the cold, moist ground, that these green blades have
+sprung. Yonder a steam-plough pants up the hill, groaning with its
+own strength, yet all that strength and might of wheels, and piston,
+and chains cannot drag from the earth one single blade like these.
+Force cannot make it; it must grow--an easy word to speak or write,
+in fact full of potency.
+
+It is this mystery--of growth and life, of beauty and sweetness and
+colour, and sun-loved ways starting forth from the clods--that gives
+the corn its power over me. Somehow I identify myself with it; I
+live again as I see it. Year by year it is the same, and when I see
+it I feel that I have once more entered on a new life. And to my
+fancy, the spring, with its green corn, its violets, and hawthorn
+leaves, and increasing song, grows yearly dearer and more dear to
+this our ancient earth. So many centuries have flown. Now it is the
+manner with all natural things to gather as it were by smallest
+particles. The merest grain of sand drifts unseen into a crevice,
+and by-and-by another; after a while there is a heap; a century and
+it is a mound, and then everyone observes and comments on it. Time
+itself has gone on like this; the years have accumulated, first in
+drifts, then in heaps, and now a vast mound, to which the mountains
+are knolls, rises up and overshadows us. Time lies heavy on the
+world. The old, old earth is glad to turn from the cark and care of
+driftless centuries to the first sweet blades of green.
+
+There is sunshine to-day, after rain, and every lark is singing.
+Across the vale a broad cloud-shadow descends the hillside, is lost
+in the hollow, and presently, without warning, slips over the edge,
+crossing swiftly along the green tips. The sunshine follows--the
+warmer for its momentary absence. Far, far down in a grassy combe
+stands a solitary corn-rick, conical-roofed, casting a lonely
+shadow--marked because so solitary--and beyond it, on the rising
+slope, is a brown copse. The leafless branches take a brown tint in
+the sunlight; on the summit above there is furze; then more
+hill-lines drawn against the sky. In the tops of the dark pines at
+the corner of the copse, could the glance sustain itself to see
+them, there are finches warming themselves in the sunbeams. The
+thick needles shelter them from the current of air, and the sky is
+bluer above the pines. Their hearts are full already of the happy
+days to come, when the moss yonder by the beech, and the lichen on
+the fir-trunk, and the loose fibres caught in the fork of an
+unbending bough, shall furnish forth a sufficient mansion for their
+young. Another broad cloud-shadow, and another warm embrace of
+sunlight. All the serried ranks of the green corn bow at the word of
+command as the wind rushes over them.
+
+There is largeness and freedom here. Broad as the down and free as
+the wind, the thought can roam high over the narrow roofs in the
+vale. Nature has affixed no bounds to thought. All the palings, and
+walls, and crooked fences deep down yonder are artificial. The
+fetters and traditions, the routine, the dull roundabout, which
+deadens the spirit like the cold moist earth, are the merest
+nothing. Here it is easy with the physical eye to look over the
+highest roof, which must also always be the narrowest. The moment
+the eye of the mind is filled with the beauty of things natural an
+equal freedom and width of view comes to it. Step aside from the
+trodden footpath of personal experience, throwing away the petty
+cynicism bred of petty hopes disappointed. Step out upon the broad
+down beside the green corn, and let its freshness become part of
+life.
+
+The wind passes and it bends--let the wind, too, pass over the
+spirit. From the cloud-shadow it emerges to the sunshine--let the
+heart come out from the shadow of roofs to the open glow of the sky.
+High above, the songs of the larks fall as rain--receive it with
+open hands. Pure is the colour of the green flags, the slender,
+pointed blades--let the thought be pure as the light that shines
+through that colour. Broad are the downs and open the aspect--gather
+the breadth and largeness of view. Never can that view be wide
+enough and large enough; there will always be room to aim higher. As
+the air of the hills enriches the blood, so let the presence of
+these beautiful things enrich the inner sense.
+
+
+
+
+A KING OF ACRES
+
+
+I.--JAMES THARDOVER
+
+A weather-beaten man stood by a gateway watching some teams at
+plough. The bleak March wind rushed across the field, reddening his
+face; rougher than a flesh-brush, it rubbed the skin, and gave it a
+glow as if each puff were a blow with the 'gloves.' His short brown
+beard was full of dust blown into it. Between the line of the hat
+and the exposed part of the forehead the skin had peeled slightly,
+literally worn off by the unsparing rudeness of wintry mornings.
+Like the early field veronica, which flowered at his feet in the
+short grass under the hedge, his eyes were blue and grey. The petals
+are partly of either hue, and so his eyes varied according to the
+light--now somewhat more grey, and now more blue. Tall and upright,
+he stood straight as a bolt, though both arms were on the gate, and
+his ashen walking-stick swung over it. He wore a grey overcoat, a
+grey felt hat, grey leggings, and his boots were grey with the dust
+which had settled on them.
+
+He was thinking: 'Farmer Bartholomew is doing the place better this
+year; he scarcely hoed a weed last season; the stubble was a tangle
+of weeds; one could hardly walk across it. That second team stops
+too long at the end of the furrow--idle fellow that. Third team goes
+too fast; horses will be soon tired. Fourth team--he's getting
+beyond his work--too old; the stilts nearly threw him over there.
+This ground has paid for the draining--one, at all events. Never saw
+land look better. Looks brownish and moist--moist brownish red.
+Query, what colour is that? Ask Mary--the artist. Never saw it in a
+picture. Keeps his hedges well; this one is like a board on the top,
+thorn-boughs molten together; a hare could run along it (as they
+will sometimes with harriers behind them, and jump off the other
+side to baffle scent). Now, why is Bartholomew doing his land better
+this year? Keen old fellow! Something behind this. Has he got that
+bit of money that was coming to him? Done something, they said, last
+Doncaster; no one could get anything out of him. Dark as night. Sold
+the trainer some oats--that I know. Wonder how much the trainer
+pocketed over that transaction? Expect he did not charge them all.
+Still, he's a decent fellow. Honesty is uncertain--never met an
+honest man. Doubt if world could hang together. Bartholomew is
+honest enough; but either he has won some money, or he really does
+not want the drawback at audit. Takes care his horses don't look too
+well. Notice myself that farmers do not let their teams look so
+glossy as a few years ago. Like them to seem rough and uncared
+for--can't afford smooth coats these hard times. Don't look very
+glossy myself; don't feel very glossy. Hate this wind--hang kings'
+ransoms! People who like these winds are telling falsehoods. That's
+broken (as one of the teams stopped); have to send to blacksmith.
+Knock off now; no good your pottering there. Next team stops to go
+and help potter. Third team stops to help second. Fourth team comes
+across to help third. All pottering. Wants Bartholomew among them.
+That's the way to do a morning's work. Did anyone ever see such
+idleness! Group about a broken chain--link snapped. Tie it up with
+your leathern garter--not he; no resource. What patience a man needs
+to have anything to do with land! Four teams idle over a snapped
+link! Rent!--of course they can't pay rent. Wonder if a gang of
+American labourers could make anything out of our farms? There they
+work from sunrise to sunset. Suppose import a gang and try. Did
+anyone ever see such a helpless set as that yonder? Depression--of
+course. No go-ahead in them.'
+
+'Mind opening the gate, you?' said a voice behind; and, turning, the
+thinker saw a dealer in a trap, who wanted the gate opened, to save
+him the trouble of getting down to do it himself. The thinker did as
+he was asked, and held the gate open. The trap went slowly through.
+
+'Will you come on and take a glass?' said the dealer, pointing with
+the butt-end of his whip. 'Crown.' This was sententious for the
+Crown in the hamlet. Country-folk speak in pieces, putting the
+principal word in a sentence for the entire paragraph.
+
+The thinker shook his head and shut the gate, carefully hasping it.
+The dealer drove on.
+
+'Who's that?' thought the grey man, watching the trap jolt down the
+rough road. 'Wants veal, I suppose. No veal here--no good. Now,
+look!'
+
+The group by the broken chain beckoned to the trap; a lad went
+across to it with the chain, got up, and was driven off, so saving
+himself half a mile on his road to the forge.
+
+'Anything to save themselves exertion. Nothing will make them move
+faster--like whipping a carthorse into a gallop; it soon dies away
+in the old jog-trot. Why, they have actually started again--actually
+started!'
+
+He watched the teams a little longer, heedless of the wind, which he
+abused, but which really did not affect him, and then walked along
+the hedgerow downhill. Two men were sowing a field on the slope,
+swinging the hand full of grain from the hip regular as time itself,
+a swing calculated to throw the seed so far, but not too far, and
+without jerk. The next field had just been manured, and he stopped
+to glance at the crowds of small birds which were looking over the
+straw--finches and sparrows, and the bluish grey of pied wagtails.
+There were hundreds of small birds. While he stood, a hedge-sparrow
+uttered his thin, pleading song on the hedge-top, and a
+meadow-pipit, which had mounted a little way in the air, came down
+with outspread wings, with a short 'Seep, seep,' to the ground. Lark
+and pipit seem near relations; only the skylark sings rising,
+descending, anywhere, but the pipits chiefly while slowly
+descending. There had been a rough attempt at market-gardening in
+the field after this, and rows of cabbage gone up to seed stood
+forlorn and ragged. On the top of one of these a skylark was
+perched, calling at intervals; for though classed as a non-percher,
+perch he does sometimes. Meadows succeeded on the level ground; one
+had been covered with the scrapings of roads, a whitish, crumbling
+dirt, dry, and falling to pieces in the wind. The grass was pale,
+its wintry hue not yet gone, and the clods seemed to make it appear
+paler. Among these clods four or five thrushes were seeking their
+food; on a bare oak a blackbird was perched, his mate no doubt close
+by in the hedgerow; at the margin of a pond a black-and-white
+wagtail waded in the water; a blue tit flew across to the corner.
+Brown thrushes, dark blackbird, blue tit, and wagtail gave a little
+colour to the angle of the meadow. A gleam of passing sunlight
+brightened it. Two wood-pigeons came to a thick bush growing over a
+grey wall on the other side--for ivy-berries, probably.
+
+A cart passed at a little distance, laden with red mangolds, fresh
+from the pit in which they had been stored; the roots had grown out
+a trifle, and the rootlets were mauve. A goldfinch perched on a dry
+dead stalk of wild carrot, a stalk that looked too slender to bear
+the bird. As the weather-beaten man moved, the goldfinch flew, and
+the golden wings outspread formed a bright contrast with the dull
+white clods. Crossing the meadow, and startling the wood-pigeons,
+our friend scaled the grey walls, putting his foot in a hole left
+for the purpose. Dark moss lined the interstices between the
+irregular and loosely placed stones. Above, on the bank, and
+greener than the grass, grew moss at the roots of ash-stoles and
+wherever there was shelter. Broad, rank, green arum leaves crowded
+each other in places. Red stalks of herb-robert spread open. The
+weather-beaten man gathered a white wild violet from the shelter of
+a dead dry oak-leaf, and as he placed it in his buttonhole, paused
+to listen to the baying of hounds. Yowp! yow! The cries echoed from
+the bank and filled the narrow beechwood within. A shot followed,
+and then another, and a third after an interval. More yowping. The
+grey-brown head of a rabbit suddenly appeared over the top of the
+bank, within three yards of him, and he could see the creature's
+whiskers nervously working, as its mind estimated its chances of
+escape. Instead of turning back, the rabbit made a rush to get
+under an ash-stole, where was a burrow. The yowping went slowly
+away; the beeches rang again as if the beagles were in cry. Two
+assistant-keepers were working the outskirts, and shooting the
+rabbits which sat out in the brushwood, and so were not to be
+captured by nets and ferrets. The ground-game was strictly kept
+down; the noise was made by half a dozen puppies they had with
+them. Passing through the ash-stoles, and next the narrow
+beechwood, the grey man walked across the open park, and after
+awhile came in sight of Thardover House. His steps were directed
+to the great arched porch, beneath which the village folk boasted
+a waggon-load could pass. The inner door swung open as if by
+instinct at his approach. The man who had so neighbourly opened the
+gate to the dealer in the trap was James Thardover, the owner of
+the property. Historic as was his name and residence, he was
+utterly devoid of affectation--a true man of the land.
+
+
+II.--NEW TITLE-DEEDS
+
+Deed, seal, and charter give but a feeble hold compared with that
+which is afforded by labour. James Thardover held his lands again by
+right of labour; he had taken possession of them once more with
+thought, design, and actual work, as his ancestors had with the
+sword. He had laid hands, as it were, on every acre. Those who work,
+own. There are many who receive rent who do not own; they are
+proprietors, not owners; like receiving dividends on stock, which
+stock is never seen or handled. Their rights are legal only; his
+right was the right of labour, and, it might be added, of
+forbearance. It is a condition of ownership in the United States
+that the settler clears so much and brings so many acres into
+cultivation. It was just this condition which he had practically
+carried out upon the Thardover estate. He had done so much, and in
+so varied a manner, that it is difficult to select particular acts
+for enumeration. All the great agricultural movements of the last
+thirty years he had energetically supported. There was the draining
+movement. The undulating contour of the country, deep vales
+alternating with moderate brows, gave a sufficient supply of water
+to every farm, and on the lower lands led to flooding and the
+formation of marshes. Horley Bottom, where the hay used to be
+frequently carried into the river by a June freshet, was now safe
+from flood. Flag Marsh had been completely drained, and made some of
+the best wheat-land in the neighbourhood. Part of a bark canoe was
+found in it; the remnants were preserved at Thardover House, but
+gradually fell to pieces.
+
+Longboro' Farm was as dry now as any such soil could be. More or
+less draining had been carried out on twenty other farms, sometimes
+entirely at his expense. Sometimes the tenant paid a small
+percentage on the sum expended; generally this percentage fell off
+in the course of a year or two. The tenant found he could not pay
+it. Except on Flag Marsh, the drainage did not pay him L50. Perhaps
+it might have done, had the seasons been better; but, as it had
+actually happened, the rents had decreased instead of increasing.
+Tile-pipes had not availed against rain and American wheat. So far
+as income was concerned, he would have been richer had the money so
+expended been allowed to accumulate at the banker's. The land as
+land was certainly improved in places, as on Bartholomew's farm.
+Thardover never cared for the steam-plough; personally, he disliked
+it. Those who represented agricultural opinion at the farmers' clubs
+and in the agricultural papers raised so loud a cry for it that he
+went half-way to meet them. One of the large tenants was encouraged
+to invest in the steam-plough by a drawback on his rent, on
+condition that it should be hired out to others. The steam-plough,
+Thardover soon discovered, was not profitable to the landowner. It
+reduced the fields to a dead level. They had previously been thrown
+into 'lands,' with a drain-trench on each side. On this dead level
+water did not run off quickly, and the growth of weeds increased.
+Tenants got into a habit of shirking the extirpation of the weeds.
+The best farmers on the estate would not use it at all. To very
+large tenants, and to small tenants who could not keep enough
+horses, it was profitable at times. It did not appear that a single
+sack more of wheat was raised, nor a single additional head of stock
+maintained, since the steam-plough arrived.
+
+Paul of Embersbury, who occupied some of the best meadow and upland
+country, a man of some character and standing, had taken to the
+shorthorns before Thardover succeeded to the property. Thardover
+assisted him in every way, and bought some of the best blood. There
+was no home-farm; the house was supplied from Bartholomew's dairy,
+and the Squire did not care to upset the old traditionary
+arrangements by taking a farm in hand. What he bought went to
+Embersbury, and Paul did well. As a consequence, there were good
+cattle all over the estate. The long prices formerly fetched by
+Paul's method had much fallen off, but substantial sums were still
+paid. Paul had faced the depression better than most of them. He
+was bitter, as was only natural, against the reaction in favour of
+black cattle. The upland tenants, though, had a good many of the
+black, in spite of Paul's frowns and thunders after the market
+ordinary at Barnboro' town. He would put down his pipe, bustle upon
+his feet, lean his somewhat protuberant person on the American
+leather of the table, and address the dozen or so who stayed for
+spirits and water after dinner, without the pretence of a formal
+meeting. He spoke in very fair language, short, jerky sentences, but
+well-chosen words. He who had taken the van in improvements thirty
+years ago was the bitterest against any proposed change now. Black
+cattle were thoroughly bad.
+
+Another of his topics was the hiring fair, where servant-girls stood
+waiting for engagements, and which it was proposed to abolish. Paul
+considered it was taking the bread and cheese out of the poor
+wenches' mouths. They could stand there and get hired for nothing,
+instead of having to pay half a crown for advertising, and get
+nothing then. But though the Squire had supported the shorthorns,
+even the shorthorns had not prevented the downward course things
+agricultural were following.
+
+Then there was the scientific movement, the cry for science among
+the farmers. He founded a scholarship, invited the professors to his
+place, lunched them, let them experiment on little pieces of land,
+mournful-looking plots. Nothing came of it. He drew a design for a
+new cottage himself, a practical plain place. The builders told him
+it was far dearer to put up than ornamental but inconvenient
+structures. Thardover sunk his money his own way, and very
+comfortable cottages they were. Ground-game he had kept down for
+years before the Act. Farm-buildings he had improved freely. The
+education movement, however, stirred him most. He went into it
+enthusiastically. Thardover village was one of the first places to
+become efficient under the new legislation. This was a piece of
+practical work after his own heart. Generally, legislative measures
+were so far off from country people. They affected the condition of
+large towns, of the Black Country, of the weavers or miners, distant
+folk. To the villages and hamlets of purely agricultural districts
+these Acts had no existence. The Education Act was just the reverse.
+This was a statute which came right down into the hamlets, which was
+nailed up at the cross-roads, and ruled the barn, the plough, and
+scythe. Something tangible, that could be carried out and made into
+a fact--something he could do. Thardover did it with the
+thoroughness of his nature. He found the ground, lent the money, saw
+to the building, met the Government inspectors, and organized the
+whole. A committee of the tenants were the ostensible authority, the
+motive-power was the Squire. He worked at it till it was completely
+organized, for he felt as if he were helping to mould the future of
+this great country. Broad-minded himself, he understood the immense
+value of education, looked at generally; and he thought, too, that
+by its aid the farmer and the landowner might be enabled to compete
+with the foreigner, who was driving them from the market. No
+speeches and no agitation could equal the power concentrated in that
+plain school-house; there was nothing from which he hoped so much.
+
+Only one held aloof and showed hostility to the movement, or rather
+to the form it took. His youngest and favourite daughter, Mary, the
+artist, rebelled against it. Hitherto she had ruled him as she
+choose. She had led in every kind act--acts too kind to be called
+charity. She had been the life of the place. Perhaps it was the
+strong-minded women whom the cry of education brought to Thardover
+House that set ajar some chord in her sensitive mind. Strident
+voices checked her sympathies, and hard rule-and-line work like this
+repelled her. Till then she had been the constant companion of the
+Squire's walks; but while the school was being organized she would
+not go with him. She walked where she could not see the plain
+angular building; she said it set her teeth on edge.
+
+When the strident voices had departed, when time had made the
+school-house part and parcel of the place, like the cottages, Mary
+changed her ways, and occasionally called there. She took a class
+once a week of the elder girls, and taught them in her own fashion
+at home--most unorthodox teaching it was--in which the works of the
+best poets were the chief subjects, and portfolios of engravings
+were found on the table. Long since father and daughter had resumed
+their walks together.
+
+It was in this way that James Thardover made his estate his own--he
+held possession by right of labour. He was resident ten months out
+of twelve, and after all these public and open works he did far more
+in private. There was not an acre on the property which he had not
+personally visited. The farm-houses and farm-buildings were all
+known to him. He rode from tenancy to tenancy; he visited the men at
+plough, and stood among the reapers. Neither the summer heat nor the
+winds of March prevented him from seeing with his own eyes. The
+latest movement was the silo system, the burying of grass under
+pressure, instead of making it into hay. By these means the clouds
+are to be defied, and a plentiful supply of fodder secured. Time
+alone can show whether this, the latest invention, is any more
+powerful than steam-plough or guano to uphold agriculture against
+the shocks of fortune. But James Thardover would have tried any plan
+that had been suggested to him. It was thus that he laid hold on his
+lands with the strongest of titles--the work of his own hands. Yet
+still the tenants were unable to pay the former rent. Some had
+failed or left, and their farms were vacant; and nothing could be
+more discouraging than the condition of affairs upon the property.
+
+
+III.--A RING-FENCE: CONCLUSION
+
+There were great elms in the Out-park, whose limbs or boughs, as
+large as the trunk itself, came down almost to the ground. They
+touched the tops of the white wild parsley; and when sheep were
+lying beneath, the jackdaws stepped from the sheep's back to the
+bough and returned again. The jackdaws had their nests in the hollow
+places of these elms; for the elm as it ages becomes full of
+cavities. These great trees often divided into two main boughs,
+rising side by side, and afar off visible as two dark streaks among
+the green. For many years no cattle had been permitted in the park,
+and the boughs of the trees had grown in a drooping form, as they
+naturally do unless eaten or broken by animals pushing against them.
+But since the times of agricultural pressure, a large part of the
+domain had been fenced off, and was now partly grazed and partly
+mown, being called the Out-park. There were copses at the farther
+side, where in spring the may flowered; the purple orchis was drawn
+up high by the trees and bushes--twice as high as its fellows in the
+mead, where a stray spindle-tree grew; and from these copses the
+cuckoos flew round the park.
+
+But the thinnest hedge about the wheat-fields was as interesting as
+the park or the covers; and this is the remarkable feature of
+English scenery--that its perfection, its beauty, and its interest
+are not confined to any masterpiece here and there, walled in or
+enclosed, or at least difficult of access and isolated, but it
+extends to the smallest portion of the country. Wheatfield hedges
+are the thinnest of hedges, kept so that the birds may find no
+shelter, and that the numerous caterpillars may not breed in them
+more than can be helped. Such a hedge is so low it can be leaped
+over, and so narrow that it is a mere screen of twisted hawthorn
+branches which can be seen through, like screens of twisted stone in
+ancient chapels. But the sparrows come to it, and the finches, the
+mice, and weasles, and now and then a crow, who searches along, and
+goes in and out and quests like a spaniel. It is so tough, this
+twisted screen of branches, that a charge of shot would be stopped
+by it; if a pellet or two slid through an interstice, the majority
+would be held as if by a shield of wicker-work. Old Bartholomew, the
+farmer, sent his men once or twice along with reaping-hooks to clear
+away the weeds that grew up here under such slight shelter; but
+other farmers were not so careful. Then convolvulus grew over the
+thin screen, a corncockle stood up taller than the hedge itself; in
+time of harvest, yellow St. John's wort flowered beside it, and
+later on, bunches of yellow-weed.
+
+A lark rose on the other side, and so caused the glance to be lifted
+and to look farther, and away yonder was a farm-house at the foot of
+a hill. Pale yellow stubble covered the hill, rising like a
+background to the red-tile roof, and to the elms beside the house,
+among whose branches there were pale yellow spots. Round wheat-ricks
+stood in a double row on the left hand--count them, and you counted
+the coin of the land, bank-notes in straw--and on the right and in
+front were green meads, and horses feeding--horses who had done good
+work in plough-time and harvest-time, and would soon be at plough
+again. There were green meads, because some green meads are a
+necessity of an English farm-house, and there are few without them,
+even when in the midst of corn. Meads in which the horses feed, a
+pony for the children and for the pony-cart, turkeys, two or three
+cows--all the large and small creatures that live about the place.
+When the land was torn up and ploughed for corn of old time, these
+green enclosures were left to stay on, till now it seems as if
+pressure of low prices for wheat would cause the corn-land to again
+become pasture. Of old time, golden wheat conquered and held
+possession, and now the grass threatens to oust the conqueror.
+
+Had anyone studied either of these three--the great elms in the
+Out-park, or the thin twisted screen of hedge, or the red-tile roof,
+and the yellow stubble behind it on the hill--he might have found
+material for a picture in each. There was, in truth, in each far
+more than anyone could put into a picture, or than anyone could put
+into a book; for the painter can but give one aspect of one day, and
+the writer a mere catalogue of things; but Nature refreshes the
+reality every day with different tints, and as it were new ideas, so
+that, although it is always there, it is never twice the same. Over
+that stubble on the hill there were other hills, and among these a
+combe or valley, in which stood just such another farm-house, but
+differently placed, with few trees, and those low, somewhat bare in
+its immediate surroundings, but above, on each side, close at hand,
+sloping ramparts of green turf rising high, till the larks that sang
+above seemed to sing in another land, like that found by Jack when
+he clomb the beanstalk. Along this combe was a cover of gorse, and
+in spring there was a mile of golden bloom, richer than gold in
+colour, leading like a broad highway of gold down to the house. From
+those ramparts in high summer--which is when the corn is ripe and
+the reapers in it--there could be seen a slope divided into squares
+of varied grain. This on the left of the fertile undulation was a
+maize colour, which, when the sunlight touched it, seemed to have a
+fleeting hue of purple somewhere within. There is no purple in ripe
+wheat visible to direct and considering vision; look for it
+specially, and it will not be seen. Purple forms no part of any
+separate wheat-ear or straw; brown and yellow in the ear, yellow in
+the upper part of the straw, and still green towards the earth. But
+when the distant beams of sunlight travelling over the hill swept
+through the rich ripe grain, for a moment there was a sense of
+purple on the retina. Beyond this square was a pale gold piece, and
+then one where the reapers had worked hard, and the shocks stood in
+diagonal rows; this was a bronze, or brown and bronze, and beside it
+was a green of clover.
+
+Farther on, the different green of the hill turf, and white sheep,
+feeding in an extended crescent, the bow of the crescent gradually
+descending the sward. The hills of themselves beautiful, and
+possessing views which are their property and belong to them--a
+twofold value. The woods on the lower slopes full of tall brake
+fern, and holding in their shadowy depths the spirit of old time. In
+the woods it is still the past, and the noisy mechanic present of
+this manufacturing century has no place. Enter in among the
+round-boled beeches which the squirrels rush up, twining round like
+ivy in ascent, where they nibble the beech-nuts forty feet aloft,
+and let the husks drop to your feet; where the wood-pigeon sits and
+does not move, safe in the height and thickness of the spray. There
+are jew-berries or dew-berries on a bramble-bush, which grows where
+the sunlight and rain fall direct to the ground, unchecked by
+boughs. They are full of the juice of autumn, black, rich,
+vine-like, taken fresh from the prickly bough. Low down in the
+hollow is a marshy spot, sedge-grown, and in the sedge lie yellow
+leaves of willow already fallen. Here in the later months will come
+a woodcock or two, with feathers so brown and leaf-like of hue and
+markings that the plumage might have been printed in colours from
+brown leaves of beech. No springes are set for the woodcocks now,
+but the markings are the same on the feathers as centuries since;
+the brown beech-leaves lie in the dry hollows the year through just
+as they did then; the large dew-berries are as rich; and the nuts as
+sweet. It is the past in the wood, and Time here never grows any
+older. Could you bring back the red stag--as you may easily in
+fancy--and place him among the tall brake, and under the beeches, he
+should not know that a day had gone by since the stern Roundheads
+shot down the last of his race hereabouts in Charles I.'s days. For
+the leaves are turning as they turned then to the altered colour of
+the sun's rays as he declines in his noonday arch, lower and lower
+every day; his rays are somewhat yellower than in dry hot June; a
+little of the tint of the ripe wheat floats in the sunshine. To this
+the woods turn. First, the nut-tree leaves drop, and the green brake
+is quickly yellow; the slender birch becomes lemon on its upper
+branches; the beech reddens; by-and-by the first ripe acorn falls,
+and there's as much cawing of the rooks in the oaks at acorn-time as
+at their nests in the elms in March.
+
+All these things happened in the old, old time before the red stags
+were shot down; the leaves changed as the sunbeams became less
+brilliantly white; the woodcocks arrived; the mice had the last of
+the acorns which had fallen, and which the rooks and jays and
+squirrels had spared for them after feasting to the full of their
+greediness. This ancient oak, whose thick bark, like cast-iron for
+ruggedness at the base, has grown on steadily ever since the last
+deer bounded beneath it, utterly heedless of the noisy rattle of
+machinery in the northern cities, unmoved by any shriek of engine,
+or hum, or flapping of loose belting, or any volume of smoke
+drifting into the air--I wish that the men now serving the great
+polished wheels, and works in iron and steel and brass, could
+somehow be spared an hour to sit under this ancient oak in Thardover
+South Wood, and come to know from actual touch of its rugged bark
+that the past is living now, that Time is no older, that Nature
+still exists as full as ever, and to see that all the factories of
+the world have made no difference, and therefore not to pin their
+faith to any theory born and sprung up among the crush and
+pale-faced life of modern time; but to look for themselves at the
+rugged oak-bark, and up to the sky above the highest branches, and
+to take an acorn and consider its story and possibilities, and to
+watch the sly squirrel coming down, as they sit quietly, to play
+almost at their feet. That they might gather to themselves some of
+the leaves--mental and spiritual leaves--of the ancient forest,
+feeling nearer to the truth and soul, as it were, that lives on in
+it. They would feel as if they had got back to their original
+existence, and had become themselves, as they ought to be, could
+they live such life, untouched by artificial care. Then, how hurt
+they would be if any proposed to cut down that oak; if any proposed
+the felling of the forest, and the death of its meaning. It would be
+like a blow aimed at themselves. No picture that could be bought at
+a thousand guineas could come near that ancient oak; but you can
+carry away the memory of it, the picture and thought in your mind
+for nothing. If the oak were cut down, it would be like thrusting a
+stick through some valuable painting on your walls at home.
+
+The common below the South Wood, even James Thardover with all his
+desire for improvement could not do much good with; the soil, and
+the impossibility of getting a fall for draining, all checked effort
+there. A wild, rugged waste, you say, at first, glancing at the
+rushes, and the gaunt signpost standing up among them, the anthills,
+and thistles. Thistles have colour in their bloom, and the prickly
+leaves are finely cut; rushes--green rushes--are notes of the
+season, and with their slender tips point to the days in the book of
+the year; they are brown now at the tip, and some bent downwards in
+an angle. The brown will descend the stalk till the snipes come with
+grey-grass colours in their wings. But all the beatings of the rain
+will not cast the rushes utterly down; they will send up fresh green
+successors for the spring, for the cuckoo to float along over on his
+way to the signpost, where he will perch a few minutes, and call in
+the midst of the wilderness. There, too, the lapwings leave their
+eggs on the ground among the rushes, and rise, and complainingly
+call. The warm showers of June call up the iris in the corner where
+the streamlet widens, and under the willows appear large yellow
+flowers above the flags. Pink and white blossom of the rest-harrow
+comes on bushy plants where the common is dry, and there is heath,
+and heather, and fern. The waste has its treasures too--as the
+song-thrush has his in the hawthorn bush--its treasures of flowers,
+as the wood its beauties of tree and leaf, and the hills their
+wheat.
+
+The ring-fence goes farther than this; it encloses the living
+creatures, yet without confining them. The wing of the wood-pigeon,
+as the bird perches, forms a defined curve against its body. The
+forward edge of the wing--its thickest part--as it is pressed to its
+side, draws a line sweeping round--a painter's line. How many
+wood-pigeons are there in the South Wood alone, besides the copses
+and the fir-plantations? How many turtle-doves in spring in the
+hedges and outlying thickets, in summer among the shocks of corn?
+And all these are his--the Squire's--not in the sense of possession,
+for no true wild creature was ever anyone's yet; it would die first;
+but still, within his ring-fence, and their destinies affected by
+his will, since he can cut down their favourite ash and hawthorn, or
+thin them with shot. Neither of which he does. The robin, methinks,
+sings sweetest of autumn-tide in the deep woods, when no other birds
+speak or trill, unexpectedly giving forth his plaintive note,
+complaining that the summer is going, and the time of love, and the
+sweet cares of the nest; telling you that the berries are brown, the
+dew-berries over-ripe, and dropping of over-ripeness like dew as the
+morning wind shakes the branch; that the wheat is going to the
+stack, and that the rusty plough will soon be bright once more by
+the attrition of the earth.
+
+Many of them sing thus in the South Wood, yet scarce any two within
+sound of each other, for the robin is jealous, and likes to have you
+all to himself as he tells his tale. Song-thrushes--what ranks of
+them in April; larks, what hundreds and hundreds of them on the
+hills above the green wheat; finches of varied species; blackbirds;
+nightingales; crakes in the meadows; partridges; a whole page might
+be filled merely with their names.
+
+These, too, are in the ring-fence with the hills and woods, the
+yellow iris of the common, and the red-roofed farm-houses. Besides
+which, there are beings infinitely higher--namely, men and women in
+village and hamlet, and more precious still, those little children
+with hobnail boots and clean jackets and pinafores, who go
+a-blackberrying on their way to school. All these are in the
+ring-fence. Upon their physical destinies the Squire can exercise a
+powerful influence, and has done so, as the school itself testifies.
+
+Now, is not a large estate a living picture? Or rather, is it not
+formed of a hundred living pictures? So beautiful it looks, its
+hills, its ripe wheat, its red-roofed farm-houses, and acres upon
+acres of oaks; so beautiful, it must be valuable--most valuable; it
+is visible, tangible wealth. It is difficult to disabuse anyone's
+mind of that idea; yet, as we have seen, with all the skill,
+science, and expenditure Thardover could bring to bear upon it, all
+his personal effort was in vain. It was a possession, not a profit.
+Had not James Thardover's ancestors invested their wealth in
+building streets of villas in the outskirts of a great city, he
+could not have done one-fifth what he had. Men who had made their
+fortunes in factories--the noisy factories of the present
+century--paid him high rents for these residences; and thus it was
+that the labour and time of the many-handed operatives in mill,
+factory, and workshop really went to aid in maintaining these living
+pictures. Without that outside income the Squire could not have
+reduced the rents of his tenants, so that they could push through
+the depression; without that outside income he could not have
+drained the lands, put up those good buildings, assisted the
+school, and in a hundred ways helped the people. Those who watched
+the polished machinery under the revolving shaft, and tended the
+loom, really helped to keep the beauties of South Wood, the
+grain-grown hills, the flower-strewn meadows. These were so
+beautiful, it seemed as if they must represent money--riches; but
+they did not. They had a value much higher than that. As the spring
+rises in the valley at the foot of the hills and slowly increases
+till it forms a river, to which ships resort, so these fields and
+woods, meads and brooks, were the source from which the city was
+derived. If the operative in the factory, or tending the loom, had
+traced his descent, he would have found that his grandfather, or
+some scarcely more remote ancestor, was a man of the land. He
+followed the plough, or tended the cattle, and his children went
+forth to earn higher wages in the town. For the hamlet and the
+outlying cottage are the springs whence the sinew and muscle of
+populous cities are derived. The land is the fountain-head from
+which the spring of life flows, widening into a river. The river at
+its broad mouth disdains the spring; the city in its immensity
+disdains the hamlet and the ploughman. Yet if the spring ceased, the
+ships could not frequent the river; if the hamlet and the ploughman
+were wiped out by degrees, the city must run dry of life. Therefore
+the South Wood and the park, the hamlet and the fields, had a value
+no one can tell how many times above the actual money rental, and
+the money earned by the operatives in factory and workshop could
+not have been better expended than in supporting it.
+
+But it had another value still--which they too helped to
+sustain--the value of beauty. Parliament has several times
+intervened to save the Lake District from the desecrating intrusion
+of useless railways. So, too, the beauty of these woods, and
+grain-grown hills, of the very common, is worth preservation at the
+hands and votes of the operatives in factory and mill. If a man
+loves the brick walls of his narrow dwelling in a close-built city,
+and the flowers which he has trained with care in the window, how
+much more would he love the hundred living pictures like those round
+about Thardover House! After any artificer had once seen such an oak
+and rested under it, if any threatened to cut it down, he would feel
+as if a blow had been delivered at his heart. His efforts,
+therefore, should be not to destroy these pictures, but to preserve
+them. All the help that they can give is needed to assist a King of
+Acres in his struggle, and the struggle of the farmers and
+labourers--equally involved--against the adverse influences which
+press so heavily on English agriculture.
+
+
+
+
+THE STORY OF SWINDON
+
+
+We have all of us passed through Swindon Station, whether _en route_
+to Southern Wales, to warm Devon--the fern-land--to the Channel
+Islands, or to Ireland. The ten minutes for refreshment, now in the
+case of certain trains reduced to five, have made thousands of
+travellers familiar with the name of the spot. Those who have not
+actually been there can recall to memory a shadowy tradition which
+has grown up and propagated itself, that here the soup skins the
+tongue, and that generally it is a near relative of the famous
+'Mugby Junction.' Those who have been there retain at least a
+confused recollection of large and lofty saloons, velvet sofas,
+painted walls, and long semicircular bars covered with glittering
+glasses and decanters. Or it may be that the cleverly executed
+silver model of a locomotive under a glass case lingers still in
+their memories. At all events Swindon is a well-known oasis,
+familiar to the travelling public. Here let us do an act of justice.
+Much has been done of late to ameliorate many of the institutions
+which formerly led to bitter things being said against the place.
+The soup is no longer liquid fire, the beer is not lukewarm, the
+charges are more moderate; the lady manager has succeeded in
+substituting order for disorder, comfort and attention in place of
+lofty disdain. Passengers have not got to cross the line for a fresh
+ticket or to telegraph; the whole place is reformed. So much the
+better for the traveller. But how little do these birds of passage
+imagine the varied interest of the strange and even romantic story
+which is hidden in this most unromantic spot, given over, as it
+seems, to bricks and mortar!
+
+Not that it ever had a history in the usual sense. There is but a
+faint, dim legend that the great Sweyn halted with his army on this
+hill--thence called Sweyn's dune, and so Swindon. There is a family
+here whose ancestry goes back to the times of the Vikings; which was
+in honour when Fair Rosamond bloomed at Woodstock; which fought in
+the great Civil War. Nothing further. The real history, written in
+iron and steel, of the place began forty years ago only. Then a
+certain small party of gentlemen sat down to luncheon on the
+greensward which was then where the platform is now. The furze was
+in blossom around them; the rabbits frisked in and out of their
+burrows; two or three distant farm-houses, one or two cottages,
+these were all the signs of human habitation, except a few cart-ruts
+indicating a track used for field purposes. There these gentlemen
+lunched, and one among them, ay, two among them, meditated great
+things, which the first planned, and the second lived to see realize
+the most sanguine anticipations. These two gentlemen were Isambard
+Brunel and Daniel Gooch. Driven away from the original plan, which
+was to follow the old coach-road, they had come here to survey and
+reconnoitre a possible track running in the valley at the northern
+edge of the great range of Wiltshire Downs. They decided that here
+should be their junction and their workshop. Immense sacrifices,
+enormous expenditure, the directors of the new railway incurred in
+their one great idea of getting it finished! They could not stay to
+cart the earth from the cuttings to the places where it was required
+for embanking, so where they excavated thousands of tons of clay
+they purchased land to cast it upon out of their way; and where they
+required an embankment they purchased a hill, and boldly removed it
+to fill up the hollow. They could not stay for the seasons, for
+proper weather to work in, and in consequence of this their clay
+embankment, thrown up wet and saturated, swelled out, bulged at the
+sides, and could not be made stable, till at last they drove rows of
+piles on each side, and chained them together with chain-cables, and
+so confined the slippery soil. They drove these piles, tall
+beech-trees, 20 feet into the earth, and at this day every train
+passes over tons of chain-cables hidden beneath the ballast. The
+world yet remembers the gigantic cost of the Box Tunnel, and how
+heaven and earth were moved to get the line open; and at last it was
+open, but at what a cost!--a cost that hung like a millstone round
+the neck of the company, till a man rose into power who had the
+talent of administration, and that man was the very companion of
+Brunel whom we saw lunching among the furze-bushes. Reckless as the
+expenditure was, one cannot but admire the determination which
+overcame every obstacle. For the great line a workshop was needed,
+and that workshop was built at Swindon. The green fields were
+covered with forges, the hedges disappeared to make way for cottages
+for the workmen. The workmen required food--tradesmen came and
+supplied that food--and Swindon rose as Chicago rose, as if by
+magic. From that day to this additions have been made, and other
+departments concentrated upon this one spot, till at the present
+time the factory covers a space equal to that of a moderate farm,
+and employs nearly four thousand workmen, to whom three hundred
+thousand pounds are yearly paid, whereby to purchase their daily
+bread. But at that early stage the difficulty was to find
+experienced workmen, and still greater to discover men who could
+superintend them. For these it was necessary to go up into the
+shrewd North, which had already foreseen the demand that must arise,
+and had partially educated her children in the new life that was
+about to dawn on the world; and so it is that to this time the names
+of those who are in authority over this army of workers carry with
+them in their sound a strong flavour of the heather and the brae,
+and seem more in accordance with ideas of 'following the wild deer'
+than of a dwelling in the midst of the clangour and smoke.
+
+All these new inhabitants of the hitherto deserted fields had to be
+lodged, and in endeavouring to solve this problem the company were
+induced to try an experiment which savoured not a little of
+communism, though not so intended. A building was erected which was
+locally called the 'barracks,' and it well deserved the name, for at
+one time as many as perhaps five hundred men found shelter in it. It
+was a vast place, with innumerable rooms and corridors. The
+experiment did not altogether answer, and was in time abandoned,
+when the company built whole streets, and even erected a covered
+market-place for their labourers. They went further, and bore the
+chief expense in building a church. A reading-room was started, and
+grew and grew till a substantial place was required for the
+accommodation of the members. Finally, the 'barracks' was converted
+into a place of worship for a Dissenting body, and a grand hall it
+afforded when the interior was removed and only the shell left. But
+by this time vast changes had taken place, and great extensions had
+arisen through private energy. This land was the poorest in the
+neighbourhood; low-lying, shallow soil on top of an endless depth of
+stiff clay, worthless for arable purposes, of small value for
+pasture, covered with furze, rushes, and rowen; so much so that when
+a certain man with a little money purchased a good strip of it, he
+was talked of as a fool, and considered to have committed a most
+egregious error. How vain is human wisdom! In a few years the
+railway came. Land rose in price, and this very strip brought its
+owner thousands; so that the fool became wise, and the wise was
+deemed of no account. Private speculators, seeing the turn things
+were taking, ran up rows of houses; building societies stepped in
+and laid out streets; a whole town seemed to start into being at
+once. Still the company continued to concentrate their works at the
+junction, and at last added the culminating stroke by bringing the
+carriage department here, which was like planting a new colony. A
+fresh impulse was given to building; fresh blocks and streets arose;
+companies were formed to burn bricks--one of these makes bricks by
+steam, and can burn a quarter of a million at once in their kiln.
+This in a place where previously the rate of building was five new
+houses in twenty years! Sanitary districts were mapped out; boards
+of control elected; gas companies; water companies--who brought
+water out of the chalk hills three miles distant: all the
+distinctive characteristics of a city arose into being. Lastly came
+a sewage farm, for so great was the sewage that it became a burning
+question how to dispose of it, and on this sewage farm some most
+extraordinary results have been obtained, such as mangolds with
+leaves four feet in length--a tropical luxuriance of growth. One
+postman had sufficed, then two, then three, till a strong staff had
+to be organized, in regular uniform, provided with bull's-eye
+lanthorns to pick their way in and out of the dark and dirty
+back-streets. One single constable had sufficed, and a dark hole had
+done duty as a prison. Now a superintendent and other officers, a
+full staff, and a complete police-station, with cells, justice-room,
+all the paraphernalia were required; and so preposterous did this
+seem to other towns, formerly leading towns in the country, but
+which had remained stagnant while Swindon went ahead, that they
+bitterly resented the building, and satirized it as a 'Palace of
+Justice,' though, in good truth, sorely needed. A vast corn
+exchange, a vaster drill-hall for the workmen--who had formed a
+volunteer corps--to drill in, chapels of every description, and some
+of really large size--all these arose.
+
+The little old town on the hill a mile from the station felt the
+wave of progress strongly. The streets were paved; sewers driven
+under the town at a depth of 40 feet through solid stone, in order
+to dispose of the sewage on a second sewage farm of over 100 acres.
+Shops, banks, and, above all, public-houses, abounded and increased
+apace, especially in the new town, where every third house seemed to
+be licensed premises. The cart-track seen by the luncheon-party in
+the furze was laid down and macadamized, and a street erected, named
+after the finest street in London, full of shops of all
+descriptions. Every denomination, from the Plymouth Brethren to the
+Roman Catholics, had their place of worship. Most of the tradesmen
+had two branches, one in the upper and one in the lower town, and
+the banks followed their example. Not satisfied with two railways,
+two others are now in embryo--one a link in the long-talked-of
+through communication between North and South, from Manchester to
+Southampton, the other a local line with possible extensions. A
+population of barely 2,000 has risen to 15,000, and this does not
+nearly represent the real number of inhabitants, for there is a
+large floating population, and, in addition, five or six villages
+surrounding the town are in reality merely suburbs, and in great
+part populated by men working in the town. These villages have
+shared in the general movement, and some of them have almost trebled
+in size and importance. This population is made up of the most
+incongruous elements: labouring men of the adjacent counties who
+have left the plough and the sickle for the hammer and the spade;
+Irish in large numbers; Welshmen, Scotch, and North of England men;
+stalwart fellows from York and places in a similar latitude. Yet,
+notwithstanding all the building that has been going on, despite the
+rush of building societies and private speculators, the cry is
+still, 'More bricks and mortar,' for there exists an enormous amount
+of overcrowding. The high rents are almost prohibitory, and those
+who take houses, underlet them and sublet them, till in six rooms
+three families may be living. The wages are good, ranging from 18s.
+for common labourers to 30s., 36s., 40s., and more for skilled
+mechanics, and the mode in which they live affords an illustrative
+contrast to the agricultural population immediately surrounding the
+place. As if to complete the picture, that nothing might be wanting,
+a music-hall has been opened, where for threepence the workman may
+listen to the dulcet strains of 'London artistes' while he smokes
+his pipe.
+
+Can a more striking, a more wonderful and interesting spectacle
+be seen than this busy, Black-Country-looking town, with its
+modern associations, its go-ahead ways, in the midst of a purely
+agricultural country, where there are no coal or iron mines,
+where in the memory of middle-aged men there was nothing but
+pasture-fields, furze, and rabbits? In itself it affords a
+perfect epitome of the spirit of the nineteenth century.
+
+And much, if not all, of this marvellous transformation, of this
+abounding life and vigorous vitality, is due to the energy and the
+forethought, the will of one man. It is notorious that the Swindon
+of to-day is the creation of the companion of Brunel at the lunch in
+the furze-bushes. Sir Daniel Gooch has had a wonderful life.
+Beginning literally at the beginning, he rose from stage to stage,
+till he became the responsible head of the vast company in whose
+service he had commenced life. In that position he did not forget
+the place where his early years were passed, but used his influence
+to enrich it with the real secret of wealth, employment for the
+people. In so doing, time has proved that he acted for the best
+interests of the company, for, apart from monetary matters, the mass
+of workmen assembled at this spot are possessed of overwhelming
+political power, and can return the man they choose to Parliament.
+Thus the company secures a representative in the House of Commons.
+
+Among the institutions which the railway company fostered was the
+primitive reading-room which has been alluded to. Under their care
+this grew and grew, until it became a Mechanics' Institute, or,
+rather, a department of science and art, which at the present day
+has an intimate connection with South Kensington. Some hundred
+prizes are here annually distributed to the numerous students, both
+male and female, who can here obtain the very best instruction, at
+the very smallest cost, in almost every branch of learning, from
+sewing to shorthand, from freehand drawing to algebra and conic
+sections. On one occasion, while distributing the prizes to the
+successful competitors, Sir Daniel Gooch laid bare some of his early
+struggles as an incentive to the youth around him. He admitted that
+there was a time, and a dark hour, when he all but gave up hopes of
+ultimate success, when it seemed that the dearest wish of his heart
+must for ever go without fulfilment. In this desponding mood he was
+slowly crossing a bridge in London, when he observed an inscription
+upon the parapet--_Nil Desperandum_ (Never despair). How he took
+heart at this as an omen, and went forth and persevered till----The
+speaker did not complete the sentence, but all the world knows what
+ultimately happened, and remembers the man who laid the first
+Atlantic cable. The great lesson of perseverance, of patience, was
+never drawn with better effect.
+
+In the Eastern tales of magicians one reads of a town being found
+one day where there was nothing but sand the day before. Here the
+fable is fact, and the potent magician is Steam. Here is, perhaps,
+the greatest temple that has ever been built to that great god of
+our day. Taking little note of its immense extent, of the vast walls
+which enclose it, like some fortress, of the tunnel which gives
+entrance, and through which three thousand workmen pass four times a
+day, let us enter at once and go straight to the manufacture of
+those wheels and tires and axles of which we have heard so much
+since the tragedy at Shipton. To look at a carriage-wheel, the iron
+carriage-wheel, one would imagine that it was all one piece, that it
+was stamped out at a blow, so little sign is there of a junction of
+parts. The very contrary is the fact: the wheel is made of a large
+number of pieces of iron welded together, and again and again welded
+together, till at last it forms one solid homogeneous mass. The
+first of these processes consists in the manufacture of the spokes,
+which are made out of fine iron. The spoke is made in two pieces, at
+two different forges, and by two distinct gangs of men. A third
+forge and a third gang are constantly employed in welding these two
+detached parts in one continuous piece, forming a spoke. One of
+these parts resembles a [T] with the downward stroke very short, and
+the cross stroke at the top slightly bent, so as to form a section
+of a curve. The other piece is about the same length, but rather
+thicker, and at its larger end somewhat wedge-shaped. This last
+piece forms that part of the spoke which goes nearest to the centre
+of the wheel. These two parts, when completed, are again heated to a
+red heat, and in that ductile state hammered with dexterous blows
+into one, which then resembles the same letter [T], only with the
+downward stroke disproportionately long. Eight or more of these
+spokes, according to the size of the wheel, and whether it is
+intended for a carriage, an engine, or tender, are then arranged
+together on the ground, so that the wedge-shaped ends fit close
+together, and in that position are firmly fixed by the imposition
+above them of what is called a 'washer,' a flat circular piece of
+iron, which is laid red-hot on the centre of the embryo wheel, and
+there hammered into cohesion. The wheel is then turned over, and a
+second 'washer' beaten on, so that the partially molten metal runs,
+and joins together with the particles of the spokes, and the whole
+is one mass. In the ordinary cart-wheel or gig-wheel the spokes are
+placed in mortise-holes made in a solid central block; but in this
+wheel before us, the ends of the spokes, well cemented together by
+the two washers, form the central block or boss. The ends of the
+spokes do not quite touch each other, and so a small circular space
+is left which is subsequently bored to fit the axle. The wheel now
+presents a curiously incomplete appearance, for the top strokes of
+the [T]'s do not touch each other. There is a space between each,
+and these spaces have now to be filled with pieces of red-hot iron
+well welded and hammered together. To the uninitiated it would seem
+that all this work is superfluous; that the wheel might be made much
+more quickly in two or three pieces, instead of all these, and that
+it would be stronger. But the practical men engaged in the work say
+differently. It is their maxim that the more iron is hammered, the
+stronger and better it becomes; therefore all this welding adds to
+the strength of the wheel. In practice it is found quicker and more
+convenient to thus divide the labour than to endeavour to form the
+wheel of fewer component parts. The wheel is now taken to the lathe,
+and a portion is cut away from its edge, till a groove is left so as
+to dovetail into the tyre.
+
+The tyres, which are of steel, are not made here; they come ready to
+be placed upon the wheel, and some care has to be taken in moving
+them, for, although several inches in thickness and of enormous
+strength, it has occasionally happened that a sudden jar from other
+solid bodies has fractured them. One outer edge of the tyre is
+prolonged, so to say, and forms the projecting flange which holds
+the rails and prevents the carriage from running off the road. So
+important a part requires the best metal and the most careful
+manufacture, and accordingly no trouble or expense is spared to
+secure suitable tyres. One of the inner edges of the tyre, on the
+opposite side to the flange, is grooved, and this groove is intended
+to receive the edge of the wheel itself; they dovetail together
+here. The tyre is now made hot, and the result of that heating is an
+expansion of the metal, so that the circle of the tyre becomes
+larger. The wheel is then driven into the tyre, which fits round it
+like a band. As it grows cool the steel tyre clasps the iron wheel
+with enormous force, and the softer metal is driven into the groove
+of the steel. But this is not all. The wheel is turned over, and the
+iron wheel is seen to be some little distance sunk, as it were,
+beneath the surface of the tyre. Immediately on a level with the
+iron wheel there runs round the steel tyre another deeper groove.
+The wheel is again heated--not to redness, for the steel will not
+bear blows if too hot--and when the tyre is sufficiently warm, a
+long, thin strip of iron is driven into this groove, and so shuts
+the iron wheel into the tyre as with a continuous wedge. Yet another
+process has to follow--yet another safeguard against accident. The
+tyre, once more heated, is attacked with the blows of three heavy
+sledge-hammers, wielded by as many stalwart smiths, and its inner
+edge, by their well-directed blows, bent down over the narrow band
+of iron, or continuous wedge, so that this wedge is closed in by
+what may be called a continuous rivet. The wheel is now complete, so
+far as its body is concerned, and to look at, it seems very nearly
+impossible that any wear or tear, or jar or accident, could
+disconnect its parts--all welded, overlapped, dovetailed as they
+are. Practically it seems the perfection of safety; nor was it to a
+wheel of this character that _the_ accident happened. The only
+apparent risk is that there may be some slight undiscovered flaw in
+the solid steel which, under the pressure of unforeseen
+circumstances, may give way. But the whole design of the wheel is to
+guard against the ill-effects that would follow the snapping of a
+tyre. Suppose a tyre to 'fly'--the result would be a small crack;
+supposing there were two cracks, or ten cracks, the speciality of
+this wheel is that not one of those pieces could come off--that the
+wheel would run as well and as safely with a tyre cracked through in
+a dozen places as when perfectly sound. The reason of this is that
+every single quarter of an inch of the tyre is fixed irremovably to
+the outer edge of the iron wheel, by the continuous dovetail, by the
+continuous wedge, and by the continuous overlapping. So that under
+no condition could any portion of the tyre fly off from the wheel.
+Close by this wheel thus finished upon this patent process there was
+an old riveted wheel which had been brought in to receive a new tyre
+on the new process. This old wheel aptly illustrates the advantages
+of the new one. Its tyre is fixed to the wheel by rivets or bolts
+placed at regular intervals. Now, the holes made for these bolts to
+some extent weaken both tyre and wheel. The bolt is liable, with
+constant shaking, to wear loose. The bolt only holds a very limited
+area of tyre to the wheel. If the tyre breaks in two places between
+the bolts, it comes off. If a bolt breaks, or the tyre breaks at the
+bolt, it flies. The tyre is, in fact, only fixed on in spots with
+intervals between. The new fastening leaves no intervals, and
+instead of spots is fixed everywhere. This is called the Gibson
+process, and was invented by an employe of the company. Latterly
+another process has partially come into vogue, particularly for
+wooden wheels, which are preferred sometimes on account of their
+noiselessness. By this (the Mansell) process, the tyres, which are
+similar, are fastened to the wheels by two circular bands which
+dovetail into the tyre, and are then bolted to the wood.
+
+To return to the wheel--now really and substantially a wheel, but
+which has still to be turned so as to run perfectly true upon the
+metals--it is conveyed to the wheel lathe, and affixed to what looks
+like another wheel, which is set in motion by steam-power, and
+carries our wheel round with it. A workman sets a tool to plane its
+edge, which shaves off the steel as if it were wood, and reduces it
+to the prescribed scale. Then, when its centre has been bored to
+receive the axle, the genesis of the wheel is complete, and it
+enters upon its life of perpetual revolution. How little do the
+innumerable travellers who are carried to their destination upon it
+imagine the immense expenditure of care, skill, labour, and thought
+that has been expended before a perfect wheel was produced.
+
+Next in natural order come the rails upon which the wheel must run.
+The former type of rail was a solid bar of iron, whose end presented
+a general resemblance to the letter [T], which was thick at the top
+and at the bottom, and smaller in the middle. It was thought that
+this rail was not entirely satisfactory, for reasons that cannot be
+enumerated here, and accordingly a patent was taken out for a rail
+which, it is believed, can be more easily and cheaply manufactured,
+with a less expenditure of metal, and which can be more readily
+attached to the sleepers. In reality it is designed upon the
+principle of the arch, and the end of these rails somewhat
+resembles the Greek letter [Omega], for they are hollow, and formed
+of a thin plate of metal rolled into this shape. Coming to this very
+abode of the Cyclops, the rail-mill, the first machine that appears
+resembles a pair of gigantic scissors, which are employed day and
+night in snipping off old rails and other pieces of iron into
+lengths suitable for the manufacture of new rails.
+
+These scissors, or, perhaps, rather pincers, are driven by
+steam-power, and bite off the solid iron as if it were merely strips
+of ribbon. There is some danger in this process, for occasionally
+the metal breaks and flies, and men's hands are severely injured. At
+a guess, the lengths of iron for manufacture into rails may be about
+four feet long, and are piled up in flat pieces eight or nine inches
+or more in height. These pieces are carried to the furnace, heated
+to an intense heat, and then placed under the resistless blows of a
+steam-hammer, which welds them into one solid bar of iron, longer
+than the separate pieces were. The bar then goes back to the
+furnace, and again comes out white-hot. The swinging-shears seize
+it, and it is swung along to the rollers. These rollers are two
+massive cylindrical iron bars which revolve rapidly one over the
+other. The end of the white-hot metal is placed between these
+rollers, and is at once drawn out into a long strip of iron, much as
+a piece of dough is rolled out under the cook's rolling-pin. It is
+now perfectly flat, and entirely malleable. It is returned to the
+furnace, heated, brought back, and placed in a second pair of
+rollers. This second pair have projections upon them, which so
+impress the flat strip of iron that it is drawn out into the
+required shape. The rail passes twice through these rollers, once
+forwards, then backwards. Terrible is the heat in this fiery spot.
+The experienced workman who guides the long red-hot rails to the
+mouth of the rollers is protected with a mask, with iron-shod shoes,
+iron greaves on his legs, an iron apron, and, even further, with a
+shield of iron. The very floor beneath is formed of slabs of iron
+instead of slabs of stone, and the visitor very soon finds this iron
+floor too hot for his feet. The perfect rail, still red-hot or
+nearly, is run back to the circular saw, which cuts it off in
+regular lengths; for it is not possible to so apportion the iron in
+each bundle as to form absolutely identical strips. They are
+proportioned so as to be a little longer than required, and then
+sawn off to the exact length. While still hot, a workman files the
+sawn ends so that they may fit together closely when laid down on
+the sleepers. The completed rails are then stacked for removal on
+trucks to their destination. The rollers which turn out these rails
+in so regular and beautiful a manner are driven by a pair of engines
+of enormous power. The huge fly-wheel is twenty feet in diameter,
+and weighs, with its axle, thirty-five tons. When these rails were
+first manufactured, the rollers were driven direct from the axle of
+the fly-wheel, and the rails had to be lifted right over the
+roller--a difficult and dangerous process--and again inserted
+between them on the side at which it started. Since then an
+improvement has been effected, by which the rails are sent backwards
+through the rollers, thus avoiding the trouble of lifting them over.
+This is managed by reversing the motion of the rollers, which is
+done in an instant by means of a 'crab.'
+
+Immediately adjacent to these rail-mills are the steam-hammers,
+whose blows shake the solid earth. The largest descends with the
+force of seventy tons, yet so delicate is the machinery that
+visitors are shown how the same ponderous mass of metal and the same
+irresistible might can be so gently administered as to crush the
+shell of a nut without injuring the kernel. These hammers are
+employed in beating huge masses of iron into cranks for engines, and
+other heavy work which is beyond the unaided strength of man. Each
+of the hammers has its own steam-boiler and its furnace close at
+hand, and overhead there are travelling cranes which convey the
+metal to and fro. These boilers may be called vertical, and with the
+structure on which they are supported have a dome-like shape.
+Hissing, with small puffs of white steam curling stealthily upwards,
+they resemble a group of volcanoes on the eve of an eruption. This
+place presents a wonderful and even terrible aspect at night, when
+the rail-mill and steam-hammers are in full swing. The open doors of
+the glaring furnaces shoot forth an insupportable beam of brilliant
+white light, and out from among the glowing fire comes a massive bar
+of iron, hotter, whiter than the fire itself--barely to be looked
+upon. It is dragged and swung along under the great hammer; Thor
+strikes, and the metal doubles up, and bends as if of plastic clay,
+and showers of sparks fly high and far. What looks like a long strip
+of solid flame is guided between the rollers, and flattened and
+shaped, till it comes out a dull-red-hot rail, and the sharp teeth
+of the circular saw cut through it, throwing out a circle of sparks.
+The vast fly-wheel whirls round endless shaftings, and drums are
+revolving overhead, and the ear is full of a ceaseless overpowering
+hum, varied at intervals with the sharp scraping, ringing sound of
+the saw. The great boilers hiss, the furnaces roar, all around there
+is a sense of an irresistible power, but just held in by bars and
+rivets, ready in a moment to rend all asunder. Masses of glowing
+iron are wheeled hither and thither in wheelbarrows; smaller blocks
+are slid along the iron floor. Here is a heap of red-hot scraps
+hissing. A sulphurous hot smell prevails, a burning wind, a fierce
+heat, now from this side, now from that, and ever and anon bright
+streaks of light flow out from the open furnace doors, casting
+grotesque shadows upon the roof and walls. The men have barely a
+human look, with the reflection of the fire upon them; mingling thus
+with flame and heat, toying with danger, handling, as it seems,
+red-hot metal with ease. The whole scene suggests the infernal
+regions. A mingled hiss and roar and thud fill the building with
+reverberation, and the glare of the flames rising above the chimneys
+throws a reflection upon the sky, which is visible miles away, like
+that of a conflagration.
+
+Stepping out of this pandemonium, there are rows upon rows of
+gleaming forges, each with its appointed smiths, whose hammers rise
+and fall in rhythmic strokes, and who manufacture the minor portions
+of the incipient locomotive. Here is a machine the central part of
+which resembles a great corkscrew or spiral constantly revolving. A
+weight is affixed to its inclined plane, and is carried up to the
+required height by the revolution of the screw, to be let fall upon
+a piece of red-hot iron, which in that moment becomes a bolt, with
+its projecting head or cap. Though they do not properly belong to
+our subject, the great marine boilers in course of construction in
+the adjoining department cannot be overlooked, even if only for
+their size--vast cylinders of twelve feet diameter. Next comes the
+erecting shop, where the various parts of the locomotive are fitted
+together, and it is built up much as a ship from the keel. These
+semi-completed engines have a singularly helpless look--out of
+proportion, without limbs, and many mere skeletons. Close by is the
+department where engines out of repair are made good. Some American
+engineer started the idea of a railway thirty feet wide, an idea
+which in this place is partially realized. The engine to be repaired
+is run on to what may be described as a turn-table resting upon
+wheels, and this turn-table is bodily rolled along, like a truck,
+with the engine on it, to the place where tools and cranes and all
+the necessary gear are ready for the work upon it. Now by a yard,
+which seems one vast assemblage of wheels of all kinds--big wheels,
+little wheels, wheels of all sizes, nothing but wheels; past great
+mounds of iron, shapeless heaps of scrap, and then, perhaps, the
+most interesting shop of all, though the least capable of
+description, is entered. It is where the endless pieces of metal of
+which the locomotive is composed are filed and planed and smoothed
+into an accurate fit; an immense building, with shafting overhead
+and shafting below in endless revolution, yielding an incessant hum
+like the sound of armies of bees--a building which may be said to
+have a score of aisles, up which one may walk with machinery upon
+either side. Hundreds of lathes of every conceivable pattern are
+planing the solid steel and the solid iron as if it were wood,
+cutting off with each revolution a more or less thick slice of the
+hard metal, which curls up like a shaving of deal. So delicate is
+the touch of some of these tools, so good the metal they are
+employed to cut, that shavings are taken off three or more feet
+long, curled up like a spiral spring, and which may be wound round
+the hand like string. The interiors of the cylinders, the bearings,
+those portions of the engines which slide one upon the other, and
+require the most accurate fit, are here adjusted by unerring
+machinery, which turns out the work with an ease and exactness which
+the hand of man, delicate and wonderful organ as it is, cannot
+reach. From the smallest fitting up to the great engine cranks, the
+lathes smooth them all--reduce them to the precise size which they
+were intended to be by the draughtsman. These cranks and larger
+pieces of metal are conveyed to their lathes and placed in position
+by a steam crane, which glides along upon a single rail at the will
+of the driver, who rides on it, and which handles the massive metal
+almost with the same facility that an elephant would move a log of
+wood with his trunk. Most of us have an inherent idea that iron is
+exceedingly hard, but the ease with which it is cut and smoothed by
+these machines goes far to remove that impression.
+
+The carriage department does not offer so much that will strike the
+eye, yet it is of the highest importance. To the uninitiated it is
+difficult to trace the connection between the various stages of the
+carriage, as it is progressively built up, and finally painted and
+gilded and fitted with cushions. Generally, the impression left from
+an inspection is that the frames of the carriages are made in a way
+calculated to secure great strength, the material being solid oak.
+The brake-vans especially are made strong. The carriages made here
+are for the narrow gauge, and are immensely superior in every way to
+the old broad-gauge carriage, being much more roomy, although not so
+wide. Over the department there lingers an odour of wood. It is
+common to speak of the scented woods of the East and the South, but
+even our English woods are not devoid of pleasant odour under the
+carpenter's hands. Hidden away amongst the piles of wood there is
+here a triumph of human ingenuity. It is an endless saw which
+revolves around two wheels, much in the same way as a band revolves
+around two drums. The wheels are perhaps three feet in diameter, and
+two inches in thickness at the circumference. They are placed--one
+as low as the workman's feet, another rather above his head--six or
+seven feet apart. Round the wheels there stretches an endless narrow
+band of blue steel, just as a ribbon might. This band of steel is
+very thin, and almost half an inch in width. Its edge towards the
+workman is serrated with sharp deep teeth. The wheels revolve by
+steam rapidly, and carry with them the saw, so that, instead of the
+old up and down motion, the teeth are continually running one way.
+The band of steel is so extremely flexible that it sustains the
+state of perpetual curve. There are stories in ancient chronicles of
+the wonderful swords of famous warriors made of such good steel that
+the blade could be bent till the point touched the hilt, and even
+till the blade was tied in a knot. These stories do not seem like
+fables before this endless saw, which does not bend once or twice,
+but is incessantly curved, and incessantly in the act of curving. A
+more beautiful machine cannot be imagined. Its chief use is to cut
+out the designs for cornices, and similar ornamental work in thin
+wood; but it is sufficiently strong to cut through a two-inch plank
+like paper. Every possible support that can be afforded by runners
+is given to the saw; still, with every aid, it is astonishing to see
+metal, which we have been taught to believe rigid, flexible as
+indiarubber. Adjoining are frame saws, working up and down by
+steam, and cutting half a dozen or more boards at the same time. It
+was in this department that the Queen's carriage was built at a
+great expenditure of skill and money--a carriage which is considered
+one of the masterpieces of this particular craft.
+
+There rises up in the mind, after the contemplation of this vast
+workshop, with its endless examples of human ingenuity, a conviction
+that safety in railway travelling is not only possible, but
+probable, and even now on the way to us. No one can behold the
+degree of excellence to which the art of manufacturing material has
+been brought, no one can inspect the processes by which the wheel,
+for instance, is finally welded into one compact mass, without a
+firm belief that, where so much has been done, in a little time
+still more will be done. That safer plans, that better designs, that
+closer compacted forms will arise seems as certain and assured a
+fact as that those forms now in use arose out of the rude beginnings
+of the past; for this great factory, both in its machine-tools and
+in its products, the wheels and rails and locomotives, is a standing
+proof of the development which goes on in the mind of man when
+brought constantly to bear upon one subject. As with the development
+of species, so it is with that of machinery: rude and more general
+forms first, finer and more specialized forms afterwards. There is
+every reason to hope, for this factory is a proof of the advance
+that has been made. It would seem that the capability of metal is
+practically infinite.
+
+But what an enormous amount of labour, what skill, and what
+complicated machinery must be first employed before what is in
+itself a very small result can be arrived at! In order that an
+individual may travel from London to Oxford, see what innumerable
+conditions have to be fulfilled. Three thousand men have to work
+night and day that we may merely seat ourselves and remain passive
+till our destination is reached.
+
+This small nation of workers, this army of the hammer, lathe, and
+drill, affords matter for deep meditation in its sociological
+aspect. Though so numerous that no one of them can be personally
+acquainted with more than a fractional part, yet there is a strong
+_esprit de corps_, a spirit that ascends to the highest among them;
+for it is well known that the chief manager has a genuine feeling of
+almost fatherly affection for these his men, and will on no account
+let them suffer, and will, if possible, obtain for them every
+advantage. The influence he thereby acquires among them is
+principally used for moral and religious ends. Under these auspices
+have arisen the great chapels and places of worship of which the
+town is full. Of the men themselves, the majority are intelligent,
+contrasting strongly with the agricultural poor around them, and not
+a few are well educated and thoughtful. This gleaning of
+intellectual men are full of social life, or, rather, of an interest
+in the problems of social existence. They eagerly discuss the claims
+of religion _versus_ the allegations of secularism; they are shrewd
+to detect the weak points of an argument; they lean, in fact,
+towards an eclecticism: they select the most rational part of every
+theory. They are full of information on every subject--information
+obtained not only from newspapers, books, conversation, and
+lectures, but from travel, for most have at least been over the
+greater part of England. They are probably higher in their
+intellectual life than a large proportion of the so-called middle
+classes. One is, indeed, tempted to declare, after considering the
+energy with which they enter on all questions, that this class of
+educated mechanics forms in reality the protoplasm, or living
+matter, out of which modern society is evolved. The great and
+well-supplied reading-room of the Mechanics' Institute is always
+full of readers; the library, now an extensive one, is constantly in
+use. Where one book is read in agricultural districts, fifty are
+read in the vicinity of the factory. Social questions of marriage,
+of religion, of politics, sanitary science, are for ever on the
+simmer among these men. It would almost seem as if the hammer, the
+lathe, and the drill would one day bring forth a creed of its own. A
+characteristic of all classes of these workmen is their demand for
+meat, of which great quantities are consumed. Nor do they stay at
+meat alone, but revel in fish and other luxuries at times, though
+the champagne of the miner is not known here. Notwithstanding the
+number of public-houses, it is a remarkable fact that there is very
+little drunkenness in proportion to the population, few crimes of
+violence, and, what is more singular still, and has been often
+remarked, very little immorality. Where there are some hundreds,
+perhaps thousands, of young uneducated girls, without work to occupy
+their time, there must of course exist a certain amount of lax
+conduct; but never, or extremely rarely, does a girl apply to the
+magistrates for an affiliation order, while from agricultural
+parishes such applications are common. The number of absolutely
+immoral women openly practising infamy is also remarkably small.
+There was a time when the workmen at this factory enjoyed an
+unpleasant notoriety for mischief and drunkenness, but that time has
+passed away, a most marked improvement having taken place in the
+last few years.
+
+There appears, however, to be very little prudence amongst them. The
+man who receives some extra money for extra work simply spends it on
+unusual luxuries in food or drink; or, if it be summer, takes his
+wife and children a drive in a hired conveyance. To this latter
+there can be no objection; but still, the fact remains prominent
+that men in the receipt of good wages do not save. They do not put
+by money; this is, of course, speaking of the majority. It would
+almost seem to be a characteristic of human nature that those who
+receive wages for work done, so much per week or fortnight, do not
+contract saving habits. The small struggling tradesman, whose income
+is very little more than that of the mechanic, often makes great
+exertions and practises much economy to put by a sum to assist him
+in difficulty or to extend his business. It may be that the very
+certainty of the wages acts as a deterrent--inasmuch as the mechanic
+feels safe of his weekly money, while the shopkeeper runs much risk.
+It is doubtful whether mechanics with good wages save more than
+agricultural labourers, except in indirect ways--ways which are
+thrust upon them. First of all, there is the yard club, to which all
+are compelled to pay by their employers, the object being to provide
+medical assistance in case of sickness. This is in some sense a
+saving. Then there are the building societies, which offer
+opportunities of possessing a house, and the mechanic who becomes a
+member has to pay for it by instalments. This also may be called an
+indirect saving, since the effect is the same. But of direct
+saving--putting money in a bank, or investing it--there is scarcely
+any. The quarter of a million annually paid in wages mostly finds
+its way into the pockets of the various trades-people, and at the
+end of the year the mechanic is none the better off. This is a grave
+defect in his character. Much of it results from a generous, liberal
+disposition: a readiness to treat a friend with a drink, to drive
+the family out into the country, to treat the daughter with a new
+dress. The mechanic does not set a value upon money in itself.
+
+The effect of the existence of this factory upon the whole
+surrounding district has been marked. A large proportion of the
+lower class of mechanics, especially the factory labourers, are
+drawn from the agricultural poor of the adjacent villages. These
+work all day at the factory, and return at night. They daily walk
+great distances to secure this employment: three miles to and three
+miles back is common, four miles not uncommon, and some have been
+known to walk six or twelve miles per day. These carry back with
+them into the villages the knowledge they insensibly acquire from
+their better-informed comrades, and exhibit an independent spirit.
+For a radius of six miles round the poorer class are better
+informed, quicker in perception, more ready with an answer to a
+question, than those who dwell farther back out of the track of
+modern life. Wages had materially risen long before the movement
+among the agricultural labourers took place.
+
+Where there was lately nothing but furze and rabbits there is now a
+busy human population. Why was it that for so many hundreds of years
+the population of England remained nearly stationary? and why has it
+so marvellously increased in this last forty years? The history of
+this place seems to answer that interesting question. The increase
+is due to the facilities of communication which now exist, and to
+the numberless new employments in which that facility of
+communication took rise, and which it in turn adds to and fosters.
+
+
+
+
+UNEQUAL AGRICULTURE
+
+
+In the way of sheer, downright force few effects of machinery are
+more striking than a steam-ploughing engine dragging the shares
+across a wide expanse of stiff clay. The huge engines used in our
+ironclad vessels work with a graceful ease which deceives the eye;
+the ponderous cranks revolve so smoothly, and shine so brightly with
+oil and polish, that the mind is apt to underrate the work
+performed. But these ploughing engines stand out solitary and apart
+from other machinery, and their shape itself suggests crude force,
+such force as may have existed in the mastodon or other unwieldy
+monster of the prehistoric ages. The broad wheels sink into the
+earth under the pressure; the steam hissing from the escape valves
+is carried by the breeze through the hawthorn hedge, hiding the red
+berries with a strange, unwonted cloud; the thick dark brown smoke,
+rising from the funnel as the stoker casts its food of coal into the
+fiery mouth of the beast, falls again and floats heavily over the
+yellow stubble, smothering and driving away the partridges and
+hares. There is a smell of oil, and cotton-waste, and gas, and
+steam, and smoke, which overcomes the fresh, sweet odour of the
+earth and green things after a shower. Stray lumps of coal crush the
+delicate pimpernel and creeping convolvulus. A shrill, short scream
+rushes forth and echoes back from an adjacent rick--puff! the
+fly-wheel revolves, and the drum underneath tightens its hold upon
+the wire rope. Across yonder a curious, shapeless thing, with a man
+riding upon it, comes jerking forward, tearing its way through
+stubble and clay, dragging its iron teeth with sheer strength deep
+through the solid earth. The thick wire rope stretches and strains
+as if it would snap and curl up like a tortured snake; the engine
+pants loudly and quick; the plough now glides forward, now pauses,
+and, as it were, eats its way through a tougher place, then glides
+again, and presently there is a pause, and behold the long furrow
+with the upturned subsoil is completed. A brief pause, and back it
+travels again, this time drawn from the other side, where a twin
+monster puffs and pants and belches smoke, while the one that has
+done its work uncoils its metal sinews. When the furrows run up and
+down a slope, the savage force, the fierce, remorseless energy of
+the engine pulling the plough upwards, gives an idea of power which
+cannot but impress the mind.
+
+This is what is going on upon one side of the hedge. These engines
+cost as much as the fee-simple of a small farm; they consume
+expensive coal, and water that on the hills has to be brought long
+distances; they require skilled workmen to attend to them, and they
+do the work with a thoroughness which leaves little to be desired.
+Each puff and pant echoing from the ricks, each shrill whistle
+rolling along from hill to hill, proclaims as loudly as iron and
+steel can shout, 'Progress! Onwards!' Now step through this gap in
+the hedge and see what is going on in the next field.
+
+It is a smaller ground, of irregular shape and uneven surface.
+Steam-ploughs mean _plains_ rather than fields--broad, square
+expanses of land without awkward corners--and as level as possible,
+with mounds that may have been tumuli worked down, rising places
+smoothed away, old ditch-like drains filled up, and fairly good
+roads. This field may be triangular or some indescribable figure,
+with narrow corners where the high hedges come close together, with
+deep furrows to carry away the water, rising here and sinking there
+into curious hollows, entered by a narrow gateway leading from a
+muddy lane where the ruts are a foot deep. The plough is at work
+here also, such a plough as was used when the Corn Laws were in
+existence, chiefly made of wood--yes, actually wood, in this age of
+iron--bound and strengthened with metal, but principally made from
+the tree--the tree which furnishes the African savage at this day
+with the crooked branch with which to scratch the earth, which
+furnished the ancient agriculturists of the Nile Valley with their
+primitive implements. It is drawn by dull, patient oxen, plodding
+onwards now just as they were depicted upon the tombs and temples,
+the graves and worshipping places, of races who had their being
+three thousand years ago. Think of the suns that have shone since
+then; of the summers and the bronzed grain waving in the wind, of
+the human teeth that have ground that grain, and are now hidden in
+the abyss of earth; yet still the oxen plod on, like slow Time
+itself, here this day in our land of steam and telegraph. Are not
+these striking pictures, remarkable contrasts? On the one side
+steam, on the other the oxen of the Egyptians, only a few
+thorn-bushes between dividing the nineteenth century B.C. from the
+nineteenth century A.D. After these oxen follows an aged man, slow
+like themselves, sowing the seed. A basket is at his side, from
+which at every stride, regular as machinery, he takes a handful of
+that corn round which so many mysteries have gathered from the time
+of Ceres to the hallowed words of the great Teacher, taking His
+parable from the sower. He throws it with a peculiar _steady_ jerk,
+so to say, and the grains, impelled with the exact force and skill,
+which can only be attained by long practice, scatter in an even
+shower. Listen! On the other side of the hedge the rattle of the
+complicated drill resounds as it drops the seed in regular
+rows--and, perhaps, manures it at the same time--so that the plants
+can be easily thinned out, or the weeds removed, after the magical
+influence of the despised clods has brought on the miracle of
+vegetation.
+
+These are not extreme and isolated instances; no one will need to
+walk far afield to witness similar contrasts. There is a medium
+between the two--a third class--an intermediate agriculture. The
+pride of this farm is in its horses, its teams of magnificent
+animals, sleek and glossy of skin, which the carters spend hours in
+feeding lest they should lose their appetites--more hours than ever
+they spend in feeding their own children. These noble creatures,
+whose walk is power and whose step is strength, work a few hours
+daily, stopping early in the afternoon, taking also an ample margin
+for lunch. They pull the plough also like the oxen, but it is a
+modern implement, of iron, light, and with all the latest
+improvements. It is typical of the system itself--half and
+half--neither the old oxen nor the new steam, but midway, a
+compromise. The fields are small and irregular in shape, but the
+hedges are cut, and the mounds partially grubbed and reduced to the
+thinnest of banks, the trees thrown, and some draining done. Some
+improvements have been adopted, others have been omitted.
+
+Upon those broad acres where the steam-plough was at work, what tons
+of artificial manure, superphosphate, and guano, liquid and solid,
+have been sown by the progressive tenant! Lavishly and yet
+judiciously, not once only, but many times, have the fertilizing
+elements been restored to the soil, and more than restored--added to
+it, till the earth itself has grown richer and stronger. The
+scarifier and the deep plough have turned up the subsoil and exposed
+the hard, stiff under-clods to the crumbling action of the air and
+the mysterious influence of light. Never before since Nature
+deposited those earthy atoms there in the slow process of some
+geological change has the sunshine fallen on them, or their latent
+power been called forth. Well-made and judiciously laid drains carry
+away the flow of water from the winter rains and floods--no longer
+does there remain a species of reservoir at a certain depth,
+chilling the tender roots of the plants as they strike downwards,
+lowering the entire temperature of the field. Mounds have been
+levelled, good roads laid down, nothing left undone that can
+facilitate operations or aid in the production of strong, succulent
+vegetation. Large flocks of well-fed sheep, folded on the
+corn-lands, assist the artificial manure, and perhaps even surpass
+it. When at last the plant comes to maturity and turns colour under
+the scorching sun, behold a widespread ocean of wheat, an English
+gold-field, a veritable Yellow Sea, bowing in waves before the
+southern breeze--a sight full of peaceful poetry. The stalk is tall
+and strong, good in colour, fit for all purposes. The ear is full,
+large; the increase is truly a hundredfold. Or it may be roots. By
+these means the progressive agriculturist has produced a crop of
+swedes or mangolds which in individual size and collective weight
+per acre would seem to an old-fashioned farmer perfectly fabulous.
+Now, here are many great benefits. First, the tenant himself reaps
+his reward, and justly adds to his private store. Next, the property
+of the landlord is improved, and increases in value. The labourer
+gets better house accommodation, gardens, and higher wages. The
+country at large is supplied with finer qualities and greater
+quantities of food, and those who are engaged in trade and
+manufactures, and even in commerce, feel an increased vitality in
+their various occupations.
+
+On the other side of the hedge, where the oxen were at plough, the
+earth is forced to be self-supporting--to restore to itself how it
+can the elements carried away in wheat and straw and root. Except a
+few ill-fed sheep, except some small quantities of manure from the
+cattle-yards, no human aid, so to say, reaches the much-abused soil.
+A crop of green mustard is sometimes ploughed in to decompose and
+fertilize, but as it had to be grown first the advantage is
+doubtful. The one object is to spend as little as possible upon the
+soil, and to get as much out of it as may be. Granted that in
+numbers of cases no trickery be practised, that the old rotation of
+crops is honestly followed, and no evil meant, yet even then, in
+course of time, a soil just scratched on the surface, never fairly
+manured, and always in use, must of necessity deteriorate. Then,
+when such an effect is too patent to be any longer overlooked, when
+the decline of the produce begins to alarm him, the farmer, perhaps,
+buys a few hundredweight of artificial manure, and frugally scatters
+it abroad. This causes 'a flash in the pan'; it acts as a momentary
+stimulus; it is like endeavouring to repair a worn-out constitution
+with doses of strong cordial; there springs up a vigorous vegetation
+one year, and the next the earth is more exhausted than before.
+Soils cannot be made highly fertile all at once even by
+superphosphates; it is the inability to discern this fact which
+leads many to still argue in the face of experience that artificial
+manures are of no avail. The slow oxen, the lumbering wooden plough,
+the equally lumbering heavy waggon, the primitive bush-harrow, made
+simply of a bush cut down and dragged at a horse's tail--these are
+symbols of a standstill policy utterly at variance with the times.
+Then this man loudly complains that things are not as they used to
+be--that wheat is so low in price it will not yield any profit, that
+labour is so high and everything so dear; and, truly, it is easy to
+conceive that the present age, with its competition and eagerness to
+advance, must really press very seriously upon him.
+
+Most persons have been interested enough, however little connected
+with agriculture, to at least once in their lives walk round an
+agricultural show, and to express their astonishment at the size and
+rotundity of the cattle exhibited. How easy, judging from such a
+passing view of the finest products of the country centred in one
+spot, to go away with the idea that under every hawthorn hedge a
+prize bullock of enormous girth is peacefully grazing! Should the
+same person ever go across country, through gaps and over brooks,
+taking an Asmodeus-like glance into every field, how marvellously
+would he find that he had been deceived! He might travel miles, and
+fly over scores of fields, and find no such animals, nor anything
+approaching to them. By making inquiries he would perhaps discover
+in most districts one spot where something of the kind could be
+seen--an oasis in the midst of a desert. On the farm he would see a
+long range of handsome outhouses, tiled or slated, with comfortable
+stalls and every means of removing litter and manure, tanks for
+liquid manure, skilled attendants busy in feeding, in preparing
+food, storehouses full of cake. A steam-engine in one of the
+sheds--perhaps a portable engine, used also for threshing--drives
+the machinery which slices up or pulps roots, cuts up chaff, pumps
+up water, and performs a score of other useful functions. The yards
+are dry, well paved, and clean; everything smells clean; there are
+no foul heaps of decaying matter breeding loathsome things and
+fungi; yet nothing is wasted, not even the rain that falls upon the
+slates and drops from the eaves. The stock within are worthy to
+compare with those magnificent beasts seen at the show. It is from
+these places that the prize animals are drawn; it is here that the
+beef which makes England famous is fattened; it is from here that
+splendid creatures are sent abroad to America or the Colonies, to
+improve the breed in those distant countries. Now step forth again
+over the hedge, down yonder in the meadows.
+
+This is a cow-pen, one of the old-fashioned style; in the dairy and
+pasture counties you may find them by hundreds still. It is pitched
+by the side of a tall hedge, or in an angle of two hedges, which
+themselves form two walls of the enclosure. The third is the
+cow-house and shedding itself; the fourth is made of willow rods.
+These rods are placed upright, confined between horizontal poles,
+and when new this simple contrivance is not wholly to be despised;
+but when the rods decay, as they do quickly, then gaps are formed,
+through which the rain and sleet and bitter wind penetrate with
+ease. Inside this willow paling is a lower hedge, so to say, two
+feet distant from the other, made of willow work twisted--like a
+continuous hurdle. Into this rude manger, when the yard is full of
+cattle, the fodder is thrown. Here and there about the yard, also,
+stand cumbrous cribs for fodder, at which two cows can feed at once.
+In one corner there is a small pond, muddy, stagnant, covered with
+duckweed, perhaps reached by a steep, 'pitched' descent, slippery,
+and difficult for the cattle to get down. They foul the very water
+they drink. The cow-house, as it is called, is really merely adapted
+for one or two cows at a time, at the period of calving--dark,
+narrow, awkward. The skilling, or open house where the cows lie and
+chew the cud in winter, is built of boards or slabs at the back, and
+in front supported upon oaken posts standing on stones. The roof is
+of thatch, green with moss; in wet weather the water drips steadily
+from the eaves, making one long gutter. In the eaves the wrens make
+their nests in the spring, and roost there in winter. The floor here
+is hard, certainly, and dry; the yard itself is a sea of muck. Never
+properly stoned or pitched, and without a drain, the loose stones
+cannot keep the mud down, and it works up under the hoofs of the
+cattle in a filthy mass. Over this there is litter and manure a foot
+deep; or, if the fogger does clean up the manure, he leaves it in
+great heaps scattered about, and on the huge dunghill just outside
+the yard he will show you a fine crop of mushrooms cunningly hidden
+under a light layer of litter. It is his boast that the cow-pen was
+built in the three sevens; on one ancient beam, worm-eaten and
+cracked, there may perhaps be seen the inscription '1777' cut deep
+into the wood. Over all, at the back of the cow-pen, stands a row of
+tall elm-trees, dripping in wet weather upon the thatch, in the
+autumn showering their yellow leaves into the hay, in a gale
+dropping dead branches into the yard. The tenant seems to think even
+this shelter effeminate, and speaks regretfully of the old hardy
+breed which stood all weathers, and wanted no more cover than was
+afforded by a hawthorn bush. From here a few calves find their way
+to the butcher, and towards Christmas one or two moderately fat
+beasts.
+
+Near by lives a dairy farmer, who, without going to the length of
+the famous stock-breeder whose stalls are the pride of the district,
+yet fills his meadows with a handsome herd of productive shorthorns,
+giving splendid results in butter, milk, and cheese, and who sends
+to the market a succession of animals which, if not equal to the
+gigantic prize beasts, are nevertheless valuable to the consumer.
+This tenant does good work, both for himself and for the labourers,
+the landlord, and the country. His meadows are a sight in themselves
+to the experienced eye--well drained, great double mounds thinned
+out, but the supply of wood not quite destroyed--not a rush, a
+'bullpoll,' a thistle, or a 'rattle,' those yellow pests of mowing
+grass, to be seen. They have been weeded out as carefully as the
+arable farmer weeds his plants. Where broad deep furrows used to
+breed those aquatic grasses which the cattle left, drains have been
+put in and soil thrown over till the level was brought up to the
+rest of the field. The manure carts have evidently been at work
+here, perhaps the liquid manure tank also, and some artificial aid
+in places where required, both of seed and manure. The number of
+stock kept is the fullest tale the land will bear, and he does not
+hesitate to help the hay with cake in the fattening stalls. For
+there are stalls, not so elaborately furnished as those of the
+famous stock-breeder, but comfortable, clean, and healthy. Nothing
+is wasted here either. So far as practicable the fields have been
+enlarged by throwing two or three smaller enclosures together. He
+does not require so much machinery as the great arable farmer, but
+here are mowing machines, haymaking machines, horse-rakes, chain
+harrows, chaff-cutters, light carts instead of heavy waggons--every
+labour-saving appliance. Without any noise or puff this man is doing
+good work, and silently reaping his reward. Glance for a moment at
+an adjacent field: it is an old 'leaze' or ground not mown, but used
+for grazing. It has the appearance of a desert, a wilderness. The
+high, thick hedges encroach upon the land; the ditches are quite
+arched over by the brambles and briars which trail out far into the
+grass. Broad deep furrows are full of tough, grey aquatic grass,
+'bullpolls,' and short brown rushes; in winter they are so many
+small brooks. Tall bennets from last year and thistle abound--half
+the growth is useless for cattle; in autumn the air here is white
+with the clouds of thistle-down. It is a tolerably large field, but
+the meadows held by the same tenant are small, with double mounds
+and trees, rows of spreading oaks and tall elms; these meadows run
+up into the strangest nooks and corners. Sometimes, where they
+follow the course of a brook which winds and turns, actually an area
+equal to about half the available field is occupied by the hedges.
+Into this brook the liquid sewage from the cow-pens filtrates, or,
+worse still, accumulates in a hollow, making a pond, disgusting to
+look at, but which liquid, if properly applied, is worth almost its
+weight in gold. The very gateways of the fields in winter are a
+Slough of Despond, where the wheels sink in up to the axles, and in
+summer great ruts jolt the loads almost off the waggons.
+
+Where the steam-plough is kept, where first-class stock are bred,
+there the labourer is well housed, and his complaints are few and
+faint. There cottages with decent and even really capital
+accommodation for the families spring up, and are provided with
+extensive gardens. It is not easy, in the absence of statistics, to
+compare the difference in the amount of money put in circulation by
+these contrasted farms, but it must be something extraordinary.
+First comes the capital expenditure upon machinery--ploughs,
+engines, drills, what not--then the annual expenditure upon labour,
+which, despite the employment of machinery, is as great or greater
+upon a progressive farm as upon one conducted on stagnant
+principle. Add to this the cost of artificial manure, of cake and
+feeding-stuffs, etc., and the total will be something very heavy.
+Now, all this expenditure, this circulation of coin, means not only
+gain to the individual, but gain to the country at large. Whenever
+in a town a great manufactory is opened and gives employment to
+several hundred hands, at the same time increasing the production
+of a valuable material, the profit--the _outside_ profit, so to
+say--is as great to others as to the proprietors. But these
+half-cultivated lands, these tons upon tons of wasted manure, these
+broad hedges and weed-grown fields, represent upon the other hand
+an equal loss. The labouring classes in the rural districts are
+eager for more work. They may popularly be supposed to look with
+suspicion upon change, but such an idea is a mistaken one. They
+anxiously wait the approach of such works as new railways or
+extension of old ones in the hope of additional employment. Work is
+their gold-mine, and the best mine of all. The capitalist,
+therefore, who sets himself to improve his holding is the very man
+they most desire to see. What scope is there for work upon a
+stagnant dairy farm of one hundred and fifty acres? A couple of
+foggers and milkers, a hedger and ditcher, two or three women at
+times, and there is the end. And such work!--mere animal labour,
+leading to so little result. The effect of constant, of lifelong
+application in such labour cannot but be deteriorating to the mind.
+The master himself must feel the dull routine. The steam-plough
+teaches the labourer who works near it something; the sight must
+react upon him, utterly opposed as it is to all the traditions of
+the past. The enterprise of the master must convey some small
+spirit of energy into the mind of the man. Where the cottages are
+built of wattle and daub, low and thatched--mere sheds, in
+fact--where the gardens are small, and the allotments, if any, far
+distant, and where the men wear a sullen, apathetic look, be sure
+the agriculture of the district is at a low ebb.
+
+Are not these few pictures sufficient to show beyond a cavil that
+the agriculture of this country exhibits the strangest inequalities?
+Anyone who chooses can verify the facts stated, and may perhaps
+discover more curious anomalies still. The spirit of science is
+undoubtedly abroad in the homes of the English farmers, and immense
+are the strides that have been taken; but still greater is the work
+that remains to be done. Suppose anyone had a garden, and carefully
+manured, and dug over and over again, and raked, and broke up all
+the larger clods, and well watered one particular section of it,
+leaving all the rest to follow the dictates of wild nature, could he
+possibly expect the same amount of produce from those portions
+which, practically speaking, took care of themselves? Here are men
+of intellect and energy employing every possible means to develop
+the latent powers of the soil, and producing extraordinary results
+in grain and meat. Here also are others who, in so far as
+circumstances permit, follow in their footsteps. But there remains a
+large area in the great garden of England which, practically
+speaking, takes care of itself. The grass grows, the seed sprouts
+and germinates, very much how they may, with little or no aid from
+man. It does not require much penetration to arrive at the obvious
+conclusion that the yield does not nearly approach the possible
+production. Neither in meat nor corn is the tale equal to what it
+well might be. All due allowance must be made for barren soils of
+sand or chalk with thinnest layers of earth; yet then there is an
+enormous area, where the soil is good and fertile, not properly
+productive. It would be extremely unfair to cast the blame wholly
+upon the tenants. They have achieved wonders in the past twenty
+years; they have made gigantic efforts and bestirred themselves
+right manfully. But a man may wander over his farm and note with
+discontented eye the many things he would like to do--the drains he
+would like to lay down, the manure he would like to spread abroad,
+the new stalls he would gladly build, the machine he so much
+wants--and then, shrugging his shoulders, reflect that he has not
+got the capital to do it with. Almost to a man they are sincerely
+desirous of progress; those who cannot follow in great things do in
+little. Science and invention have done almost all that they can be
+expected to do; chemistry and research have supplied powerful
+fertilizers. Machinery has been made to do work which at first sight
+seems incapable of being carried on by wheels and cranks. Science
+and invention may rest awhile: what is wanted is the universal
+application of their improvements by the aid of more capital. We
+want the great garden equally highly cultivated everywhere.
+
+
+
+
+VILLAGE ORGANIZATION
+
+
+The great centres of population have almost entirely occupied the
+attention of our legislators of late years, and even those measures
+which affect the rural districts, or which may be extended to affect
+them at the will of the residents, have had their origin in the wish
+to provide for large towns. The Education Act arose out of a natural
+desire to place the means of learning within the reach of the dense
+population of such centres as London, Birmingham, Manchester, and
+others of that class; and although its operation extends to the
+whole country, yet those who have had any experience of its method
+of working in agricultural parishes will recognize at once that its
+designers did not contemplate the conditions of rural life when they
+were framing their Bill. What is reasonable enough when applied to
+cities is often extremely inconvenient when applied to villages. It
+would almost seem as if the framers of the Bill left out of sight
+the circumstances which obtain in agricultural districts. It was
+obviously drawn up with a view to cities and towns, where an
+organization exists which can be called in to assist the new
+institution. This indifference of the Bill to the conditions of
+country life is one of the reasons why it is so reluctantly complied
+with. The number of School Boards which have been called into
+existence in the country is extremely small, and even where they do
+exist they cannot be taken as representing a real outcome of opinion
+on the part of the inhabitants. They owe their establishment to
+certain causes which, in process of time, bring the parish under the
+operation of the Act, with or without the will of the residents.
+This is particularly the case in parishes where there is no large
+landlord, no one to take the initiative, and no large farmers to
+support the clergyman in his attempt to obtain, or maintain, an
+independent school. The matter is distinct from political feelings.
+It arises in a measure from the desultory village life, which
+possesses no organization, no power of combination. Here is a large
+and fairly populous parish without any great landowners, and, as a
+natural consequence, also without any large farmers. The property of
+the parish is in the hands of some score of persons; it may be split
+up into almost infinitesimal holdings in the village itself. Now,
+everyone knows the thoroughly independent character of an English
+farmer. He will follow what he considers the natural lead of his
+landlord, if he occupy a superior social position. He will follow
+his landlord in a sturdy, independent way, but he will follow no one
+else. Let there be no great landowner in the parish, and any
+combination on the part of the agriculturists becomes impossible.
+One man has one idea, another another, and each and all are
+determined not to yield an inch. Most of them are decidedly against
+the introduction of a School Board, and are quite ready to subscribe
+towards an independent school; but, then, when it comes to the
+administration of the school funds, there must be managers appointed
+to carry the plan into execution, and these managers must confer
+with the clergyman. Now here are endless elements of confusion and
+disagreement. One man thinks he ought to be a manager, and does not
+approve of the conduct of those who are in charge. Another dislikes
+the tone of the clergyman. A third takes a personal dislike to the
+schoolmaster who is employed. One little discord leads to further
+complication; someone loses his temper, and personalities are
+introduced; then it is all over with the subscription, and the
+school ceases, simply because there are no funds. Finally, the
+Imperial authorities step in, and finding education at a dead-lock,
+a School Board is presently established, though in all probability
+nine out of ten are against it, but hold their peace in the hope of
+at last getting some kind of organization. So it will be found that
+the few country School Boards which exist are in parishes where
+there is no large landowner, or where the owner is a non-resident,
+or the property in Chancery. In other words, they exist in places
+where there is no natural chief to give expression to the feelings
+of the parish.
+
+Agriculturists of all shades of political opinions are usually
+averse to a School Board. An ill-defined feeling is very often the
+strongest rule of conduct. Now there is an ill-defined but very
+strong feeling that the introduction of a School Board means the
+placing of the parish more or less under imperial rule, and
+curtailing the freedom that has hitherto existed. This has been much
+strengthened by the experience gained during the last few years of
+the actual working of the Bill with respect to schools which are not
+Board Schools, but which come under the Government inspection. Every
+step of the proceedings shows only too plainly the utter unfitness
+of the clauses of the Bill to rural conditions. One of the most
+important clauses is that which insists upon a given amount of cubic
+space for each individual child. This has often entailed the
+greatest inconveniences, and very unnecessary expense. It was most
+certainly desirable that overcrowding and the consequent evolution
+of foul gases should be guarded against; and in great cities, where
+the air is always more or less impure, and contaminated with the
+effluvia from factories as well as from human breath, a large amount
+of cubic feet of space might properly be insisted upon; but in
+villages where the air is pure and free from the slightest
+contamination, villages situated often on breezy hills, or at worst
+in the midst of sweet meadow land, the hard-and-fast rule of so many
+cubic feet is an intolerable burden upon the supporters of the
+school. Still, that would not be so objectionable were it confined
+to the actual number of attendants at the school; but it would
+appear that the Government grant is not applicable to schools,
+unless they are large enough to allow to all children in the parish
+a certain given cubic space.
+
+Now, as a matter of fact, nothing like all the children of the
+parish attend the school. In rural districts, especially, where the
+distance of cottages from the school is often very great, there will
+always be a heavy percentage of absentees. There will also be a
+percentage who attend schools in connection with a Dissenting
+establishment, and even a certain number who attend private schools,
+to say nothing of the numbers who never attend at all. It is, then,
+extremely hard that the subscribers to a school should be compelled
+to erect a building sufficiently large to allow of the given
+quantity of space to each and every child in the parish. Matters
+like these have convinced the residents in rural districts that the
+Act was framed without any consideration of their peculiar position,
+and they naturally feel repugnant to its introduction amongst them,
+and decline to make it in any way a foundation of village
+organization. The Act regulating the age at which children may be
+employed in agriculture was also an extension of an original Act,
+passed to protect the interest of children in cities and
+manufacturing districts. There is no objection to the Act except
+that it is a dead-letter. How many prosecutions have taken place
+under it? No one ever hears of anything of the kind, and probably no
+one ever will. The fact is, that since the universal use of
+machinery there is not so ready an employment for boys and children
+of that tender age as formerly. They are not by any means so
+greatly in demand, neither do they pay so well, on account of the
+much larger wages they now ask for. In addition, the farmers are
+strongly in favour of the education of their labourers' children,
+and place every facility in the way of those attending school. In
+many parishes a very strong moral pressure is voluntarily put upon
+the labouring poor to induce them to send their children, and the
+labouring poor themselves have awakened in a measure to the
+advantages of education. The Act, therefore, is practically a
+dead-letter, and bears no influence upon village life. These two
+Acts, and the alteration of the law relating to sanitary matters--by
+which the Guardians of the Poor become the rural sanitary
+authority--are the only legislation of modern days that goes direct
+to the heart of rural districts. The rural sanitary authority
+possesses great powers, but rarely exercises them. The constitution
+of that body forbids an active supervision. It is made up of one or
+two gentlemen from each parish, who are generally elected to that
+office without any contest, and simply because their brother farmers
+feel confidence in their judgment. The principal objects to which
+their attention is directed while at the board is to see that no
+unnecessary expenditure is permitted, so as to keep the rates at the
+lowest possible figure, and to state all they know of the conduct
+and position of the poor of their own parishes who apply for relief,
+in which latter matter they afford the most valuable assistance,
+many of the applicants having been known to them for a score of
+years or more. But if there is one thing a farmer dislikes more than
+another it is meddling and interfering with other persons' business.
+He would sooner put up with any amount of inconvenience, and even
+serious annoyance, than take an active step to remove the cause of
+his grumbling, if that step involves the operation of the law
+against his neighbours. The guardian who rides to the board meeting
+week after week may be perfectly well aware that the village which
+he represents is suffering under a common nuisance: that there is a
+pond in the middle of the place which emits an offensive odour; that
+there are three or four cottages in a dilapidated condition and
+unfit for human habitation, or crowded to excess with dirty tenants;
+or that the sewage of the place flows in an open ditch into the
+brook which supplies the inhabitants with water. He has not got
+power to deal with these matters personally, but he can, if he
+chooses, bring them before the notice of the board, which can
+instruct its inspector (probably also its relieving officer) to take
+action at law against the nuisance. But it is not to be expected
+that a single person will do anything of the kind.
+
+There is in all properly-balanced minds an instinctive dislike to
+the office of public prosecutor, and nothing more unpopular could be
+imagined. The agriculturist who holds the office of guardian does
+not feel it his duty to act as common spy and informer, and he may
+certainly be pardoned if he neglects to act contrary to his feelings
+as a gentleman. Therefore he rides by the stinking pond, the
+overcrowded cottages, the polluted water, week by week, and says
+nothing whatever. It is easy to remark that the board has its
+inspector, who is paid to report upon these matters; but the
+inspector has, in the first place, to traverse an enormous extent of
+country, and has no opportunity of becoming acquainted with
+nuisances which are not unbearably offensive. He has usually other
+duties to perform which occupy the greater part of his time, and he
+is certainly not overpaid for the work he does and the distance he
+travels. He also has his natural feelings upon the subject of making
+himself disagreeable, and he shrinks from interference, unless
+instructed by his superiors. His position is not sufficiently
+independent to render him, in all cases, a free agent; so it happens
+that the rural sanitary authority is practically a nullity. It is
+too cumbrous, it meets at too great a distance, and its powers,
+after all, even when at last set in motion, are too limited to have
+any appreciable effect in ameliorating the condition of village
+life. But even if this nominal body were actively engaged in
+prosecuting offenders, the desired result would be far from being
+attained. One of the most serious matters is the supply of water for
+public use in villages. At the present moment there exists no
+authority which can cause a parish to be supplied with good drinking
+water. While the great centres of population have received the most
+minute attention from the Legislature, the large population which
+resides in villages has been left to its own devices, with the
+exception of the three measures, the first of which is unsuitable
+and strenuously opposed, the second a dead-letter, and the third
+cumbrous and practically inoperative.
+
+Let us now examine the authorities which act under ancient
+enactments, or by reason of long standing, immemorial custom. The
+first of these may be taken to be the Vestry. The powers of the
+vestries appear to have formerly been somewhat extended, but in
+these latter times the influence they exercise has been very much
+curtailed. At the time when each parish relieved its own poor, the
+Vestry was practically the governing authority of the village, and
+possessed almost unlimited power, so far as the poor were concerned.
+That power was derived from its control over the supply of bread to
+the destitute. As the greater part of the working population
+received relief, it followed that the Vestry, composed of the
+agriculturists and landowners, was practically autocratic. Still
+longer ago, when the laws of the land contained certain enactments
+as to the attendance of persons at church, the Vestry had still
+greater powers. But at present, in most parishes, the Vestry is a
+nominal assembly, and frequently there is a difficulty in getting
+sufficient numbers of people together to constitute a legal
+authority. The poor rate is no longer made at the Vestry; the church
+rate is a thing of the past; and what is then left? There is the
+appointment of overseers, churchwardens, and similar formal matters;
+but the power has departed. In all probability they will never be
+resuscitated, because in all authorities of the kind there is a
+suspicion of Church influence; and there seems to be almost as much
+dislike to any shadow of that as against the political and temporal
+claims of the Roman Pontiff. The Vestry can never again become a
+popular vehicle of administration. The second is the Board of
+Guardians--though this is not properly a village or local authority
+at all, but merely a representative firm for the supervision of
+certain funds in which a number of villages are partners, and which
+can only be applied to a few stated purposes, under strictly limited
+conditions. There is no popular feeling involved in the expenditure
+of this fund, except that of economy, and almost any ratepayer may
+be trusted to vote for this; so that the office of guardian is a
+most routine one, and offers no opportunity of reform. Often one
+gentleman will represent a village for twenty years, being simply
+nominated, or even not as much as nominated, from year to year. If
+at last he grows tired of the monotony, and mentions it to his
+friends, they nominate another gentleman, always chosen for his
+good-fellowship and known dislike to change or interference--a man,
+in fact, without any violent opinions. He is nominated, and takes
+his seat. There is no emulation, no excitement. The Board of
+Guardians would assume more of the character of a local authority if
+it possessed greater freedom of action. But its course is so rigidly
+bound down by minute regulations and precedents that it really has
+no volition of its own, and can only deal with circumstances as
+they arise, according to a code laid down at a distance. It is not
+permitted to discriminate; it can neither relax nor repress; it is
+absolutely inelastic. In consequence it does not approach to the
+idea of a real local power, but rather resembles an assembly of
+unpaid clerks doling out infinitesimal sums of money to an endless
+stream of creditors, according to written instructions left by the
+absent head of the firm. Next there is the Highway Board; but this
+also possesses but limited authority, and deals only with roads. It
+has merely to see that the roads are kept in good repair, and that
+no encroachments are made upon them. Like the Board of Guardians, it
+is a most useful body; but its influence upon village life is
+indirect and indeterminate. There only remains the Court Leet. This,
+the most ancient and absolute of all, nevertheless approaches in
+principle nearest to the ideal of a local village authority. It is
+supposed to be composed of the lord of the manor, and of his court
+or jury of tenants, and its object is to see that the rights of the
+manor are maintained. The Court Leet was formerly a very important
+assembly, but in our time its offices are minute, and only apply to
+small interests. It is held at long intervals of time--as long, in
+some instances, as seven years--and is summoned by the steward of
+the lord of the manor, and commonly held at an inn, refreshments
+being supplied by the lord. Here come all the poor persons who
+occupy cottages or garden grounds on quit-rent, and pay their rent,
+which may amount in seven years to as much as fourteen shillings. A
+member of the court will, perhaps, draw the attention of the court
+to the fact that a certain ditch or watercourse has become choked
+up, and requires clearing out or diverting; and if this ditch be
+upon the manor, the court can order it to be attended to. On the
+manor they have also jurisdiction over timber, paths, and similar
+matters, and can order that a cottage which is dilapidated shall be
+repaired or removed. In point of fact, however, the Court Leet is
+merely a jovial assembly of the tenants upon the estate of the
+landowner, who drink so many bottles of sherry at his expense, and
+set to right a few minute grievances.
+
+In many places--the vast majority, indeed--there is no longer any
+Court Leet held, because the manorial rights have become faint and
+indistinct with the passage of time; the manor has been sold, split
+up into two or three estates, the entail cut off; or the manor as a
+manor has totally disappeared under the changes of ownership, and
+the various deeds and liabilities which have arisen. But this
+merely general gathering of the farmers of the village--where Court
+Leets are still held, all farmers are invited, irrespective of
+their supposed allegiance to the lord of the manor or not--this
+pleasant dinner and sherry party, which meets to go through
+obsolete customs, and exercise minute and barely legal rights,
+contains nevertheless many of the elements of a desirable local
+authority. It is composed of gentlemen of all shades of opinion; no
+politics are introduced. It meets in the village itself, and under
+the direct sanction of the landowner. Its powers are confined to
+strictly local matters, and its members are thoroughly acquainted
+with those matters. The affairs of the village are discussed
+without acrimony, and a certain amount of understanding arrived at.
+It regulates disputes and grievances arising between the
+inhabitants of cottage property, and can see that that property is
+habitable. It acts more by custom, habit, more by acquiescence of
+the parties than by any imperious, hard-and-fast law laid down at a
+distance from the scene. But any hope of the resuscitation of Court
+Leets must not be entertained, because in so many places the manor
+is now merely 'reputed,' and has no proper existence; because, too,
+the lord of the manor may be living at a distance, and possess
+scarcely any property in the parish, except his 'rights.' The idea,
+however, of the agriculturists and principal residents in a village
+meeting in a friendly manner together, under the direct leadership
+of the largest landowner, to discuss village matters, is one that
+may be revived with some prospect of success. At present, who,
+pray, has the power of so much as convening a meeting of the
+parishioners, or of taking the sense of the village? It may be done
+by the churchwardens convening a Vestry, but a Vestry is extremely
+limited in authority, unpopular, and without any cohesion. Under
+the new Education Acts the signatures of a certain number of
+ratepayers to a requisition compels the officer appointed by law to
+call a meeting, but only for objects connected with the school.
+Upon consideration it appears that there really is no village
+authority at all; no recognized place or time at which the
+principal inhabitants can meet together and discuss the affairs of
+the parish with a prospect of immediate action resulting. The
+meetings of the magistrates at petty sessions, quarter sessions,
+and at various other times are purposely omitted from this
+argument, because there is rarely more than one magistrate resident
+in a village, or at most two, and the assemblies of these gentlemen
+at a distance from their homes cannot be taken to form a village
+council in any sense of the term.
+
+The places where agriculturists and the principal inhabitants of
+the parish do meet together and discuss matters in a friendly
+spirit are the churchyard, before service, the market dinner, the
+hunting-field, and the village inn. The last has fallen into
+disuse. It used to be the custom to meet at the central village inn
+night after night to hear the news, as well as for convivial
+purposes. In those days of slow travelling and few posts, the news
+was communicated from village to village by pedlars, or carriers'
+carts calling, as they went, at each inn. But now it is a rare
+thing to find farmers at the inn in their own village. The old
+drinking habits have died out. It is not that there is any
+prejudice against the inn; but there is a cessation of the
+inducement to sit there night after night. People do not care to
+drink as they used to, and they can get the news just as well at
+home. The parlour at the inn has ceased to be the village
+parliament. The hunting-field is an unfavourable place for
+discussion, since in the midst of a remark the hounds may start,
+and away go speaker and listener, and the subject is forgotten. The
+market dinner is not so general and friendly a meeting as it was.
+There is a large admixture of manure and machinery agents,
+travellers for seed-merchants, corn-dealers, and others who have no
+interest in purely local matters, and the dinner itself is somewhat
+formal, with its regular courses of fish and so forth, till the
+talk is more or less constrained and general. The churchyard is a
+singular place of meeting, but it is still popular. The
+agriculturist walks into the yard about a quarter to eleven, sees a
+friend; a third joins; then the squire strolls round from his
+carriage, and a pleasant chat ensues, till the ceasing bell reminds
+them that service is about to commence. But this is a very narrow
+representation of the village, and is perhaps never made up on two
+occasions of the same persons. The duration of the gathering is
+extremely short, and it has no cohesion or power of action.
+
+It is difficult to convey an adequate idea of the desultory nature
+of village life. There is an utter lack of any kind of cohesion, a
+total absence of any common interest, or social bond of union. There
+is no _esprit de corps_. In old times there was, to a certain
+extent--in the days when each village was divided against its
+neighbour, and fiercely contested with it the honour of sending
+forth the best backsword player. No one wishes those times to
+return. We have still village cricket clubs, who meet each other in
+friendly battle, but there is no enthusiasm over it. The players
+themselves are scarcely excited, and it is often difficult to get
+sufficient together to fulfil an engagement. There is the dinner of
+the village benefit club, year after year. The object of the club is
+of the best, but its appearance upon club-day is a woeful spectacle
+to eyes that naturally look for a little taste upon an occasion of
+supposed festivity. What can be more melancholy than a procession of
+men clad in ill-fitting black clothes, in which they are evidently
+uncomfortable, with blue scarves over the shoulder, headed with a
+blatant brass band, and going first to church, and then all round
+the place for beer? They eat their dinner and disperse, and then
+there is an end of the matter. There is no social bond of union, no
+connection.
+
+It is questionable whether this desultoriness is a matter for
+congratulation. It fosters an idle, slow, clumsy, heedless race of
+men--men who are but great children, who have no public feeling
+whatever--without a leading idea. This fact was most patently
+exhibited at the last General Election, when the agricultural
+labourers for the first time exercised the franchise freely to any
+extent. The great majority of them voted plump for the candidate
+favoured by the squire or by the farmer. There was nothing
+unreasonable in this; it is natural and fit that men should support
+the candidate who comes nearest to their interest; but, then, let
+there be some better reason for it than the simple fact 'that master
+goes that way.' Whether it be for Liberal or Conservative, whatever
+be the party, surely it is desirable that the labourer should
+possess a leading idea, an independent conviction of what is for the
+public good. Let it be a mistaken conviction, it is better than an
+absence of all feeling; but politics are no part of the question.
+Politics apart, the villager might surely have some conception of
+what is best for his own native place, the parish in which he was
+born and bred, and with every field in which he is familiar. But no,
+nothing of the kind. He goes to and fro his work, receives his
+wages, spends them at the ale-house, and wanders listlessly about.
+The very conception of a public feeling never occurs to him; it is
+all desultory. A little desultory work--except in harvest,
+labourer's work cannot be called downright _work_--a little
+desultory talk, a little desultory rambling about, a good deal of
+desultory drinking: these are the sum and total of it; no, add a
+little desultory smoking and purposeless mischief to make it
+complete. Why should not the labourer be made to feel an interest in
+the welfare, the prosperity, and progress of his own village? Why
+should he not be supplied with a motive for united action? All
+experience teaches that united action, even on small matters, has a
+tendency to enlarge the minds and the whole powers of those engaged.
+The labourer feels so little interest in his own progress, because
+the matter is only brought before him in its individual bearing. You
+can rarely interest a single person in the improvement of himself,
+but you can interest a number in the progress of that number as a
+body. The vacancy of mind, the absence of any ennobling aspiration,
+so noticeable in the agricultural labourer, is a painful fact. Does
+it not, in great measure, arise from this very desultory life--from
+this procrastinating dislike to active exertion? Supply a motive--a
+general public motive--and the labourer will wake up. At the present
+moment, what interest has an ordinary agricultural labourer in the
+affairs of his own village? Practically none whatever. He may,
+perhaps, pay rates; but these are administered at a distance, and he
+knows nothing of the system by which they are dispensed. If his
+next-door neighbour's cottage is tumbling down, the thatch in holes,
+the doors off their hinges, it matters nothing to him. Certainly, he
+cannot himself pay for its renovation, and there is no fund to which
+he can subscribe so much as a penny with that object in view. A
+number of cottages may be without a supply of water. Well, he cannot
+help it; probably he never gives a thought to it. There is no
+governing body in the place responsible for such things--no body in
+the election of which he has any hand. He puts his hands in his
+pockets and slouches about, smoking a short pipe, and drinks a quart
+at the nearest ale-house. He is totally indifferent. To go still
+further, there can be no doubt that the absence of any such ruling
+body, even if ruling only on sufferance, has a deteriorating effect
+upon the minds of the best-informed and broadest-minded
+agriculturist. He sees a nuisance or a grievance, possibly something
+that may approach the nature of a calamity. 'Ah, well,' he sighs, 'I
+can't help it; I've no power to interfere.' He walks round his farm,
+examines his sheep, pats his horses, and rides to market, and
+naturally forgets all about it. Were there any ready and available
+means by which the nuisance could be removed, or the calamity in
+some measure averted, the very same man would at once put it in
+motion, and never cease till the desired result was attained; but
+the total absence of any authority, any common centre, tends to
+foster what appears an utter indifference. How can it be otherwise?
+The absence of such a body tends, therefore, in two ways to the
+injury of the labourer: first, because he has no means of helping
+himself; and, secondly, because those above him in social station
+have no means of assisting him. But why cannot the squire step in
+and do all that is wanted? What is there that the landowner is not
+expected to do? He is compelled by the law to contribute to the
+maintenance of roads by heavy subscriptions, while men of much
+larger income, but no real property, ride over them free of cost. He
+is expected by public opinion to rebuild all the cottages on his
+estate, introducing all the modern improvements, to furnish them
+with large plots of garden ground, to supply them with coal during
+the winter at nominal cost, to pay three parts of the expense of
+erecting schools, and what not. He is expected to extend the
+farm-buildings upon the farms, to rebuild the farmsteads, and now to
+compensate the tenants for improvements, though he may not
+particularly care for them, knowing full well by experience that
+improvements are a long time before they pay any interest on the
+principal invested. Now we expect him to remove all nuisances in the
+village, to supply water, to exercise a wise paternal authority, and
+all at his own cost. The whole thing is unreasonable. Many
+landowners have succeeded to heavily-burdened estates. The best
+estates pay, it must be remembered, but a very small comparative
+interest upon their value--in some instances not more than two and a
+half per cent. Moreover, almost all landowners do take an interest
+in improvements, and are ready to forward them; but can a gentleman
+be expected to go round from cottage to cottage performing the
+duties of an inspector of nuisances? and, if he did so, would it be
+tolerated for an instant? The outcry would be raised of
+interference, tyranny, overbearing insolence, intolerable intrusion.
+It is undoubtedly the landowner's duty to forward all reasonable
+schemes of improvement; but if the inhabitants are utterly
+indifferent to progress of any kind, it is not his duty to issue an
+autocratical ukase. Let the inhabitants combine, in however loose
+and informal a manner, and the landowner will always be ready to
+assist them with purse and moral support.
+
+Granting, then, that there is at present no such local authority,
+and that it is desirable--what are the objects which would come
+within its sphere of operation? In an article which had the honour
+of appearing in a former number of this magazine,[2] the writer
+pointed out that the extension of the allotment system was only
+delayed because there was no body or authority which had power to
+increase the area under spade cultivation. Throughout the country
+there is an undoubted conviction that such extension is extremely
+desirable, but who is to take the initiative? There is an increasing
+demand for these gardens--a demand that will probably make itself
+loudly felt as time goes on and the population grows larger. Even
+those villages that possess allotment grounds would be in a better
+position if there were some body who held rule over the gardens, and
+administered them according to varying circumstances. Some of these
+allotments are upon the domain of the landowner, and have been
+broken up for the purpose under his directions; but it is not every
+gentleman who has either the time or the inclination to superintend
+the actual working of the gardens, and they are often left pretty
+much to take care of themselves. Other allotment grounds are simply
+matters of speculation with the owner, and are let out to the
+highest bidder in order to make money, without any species of
+control whatever. This is not desirable for many reasons, and such
+owners deprecate the extension of the system, because if a larger
+area were offered to the labourer, the letting value would diminish,
+since there would be less competition for the lots. There can be
+very little doubt that the allotment garden will form an integral
+part of the social system of the future, and, as such, will require
+proper regulation. If it is to be so, it is obviously desirable that
+it should be in the hands of a body of local gentlemen with a
+perfect knowledge of the position and resource of the numerous small
+tenants, and a thorough comprehension of the practical details which
+are essential to success in such cultivation. It may be predicted
+that the first step which would ensue upon the formation of such a
+body would be an extension of allotments. There would be no
+difficulty in renting a field or fields for that purpose. The
+village council, as we may for convenience term it, would select a
+piece of ground possessing an easily-moved soil, avoiding stiff clay
+on the one hand, and too light, sandy ground on the other. For this
+piece they would give a somewhat higher rent than it would obtain
+for agricultural purposes--say L3 per acre--which they would
+guarantee to the owner after the manner of a syndicate. They would
+cause the hedges to be pared down to the very smallest proportions,
+but the mounds to be somewhat raised, so as to avoid harbouring
+birds, and at the same time safely exclude cattle, which in a short
+time would play havoc with the vegetables. If possible, a road
+should run right across the plot, with a gateway on either side, so
+that a cart might pass straight through, pick up its load, and go on
+and out without turning. Each plot should have a frontage upon this
+road, or to branch roads running at right angles to it, so that each
+tenant could remove his produce without trespassing upon the plot of
+his neighbour. Such trespasses often lead to much ill-will. The
+narrow paths dividing these strips should be sufficiently wide to
+allow of wheeling a barrow down them, and should on no account be
+permitted to be overgrown with grass. Grass-paths are much prettier,
+but are simply reservoirs of couch, weeds, and slugs, and therefore
+to be avoided. The whole field should be accurately mapped, and each
+plot numbered on the map, and a strong plug driven into the plot
+with a similar number upon it--a plan which renders identification
+easy, and prevents disputes. A book should be kept, with the name of
+every tenant entered into it, and indexed, like a ledger, with the
+initial letter. Against the name of the tenant should be placed the
+area of his holdings, and the numbers of his plots upon the map; and
+in this book the date of his tenancy, and any change of holding,
+should be registered. There should be a book of printed forms (not
+to be torn out) of agreement, with blank spaces for name, date, and
+number, which should be signed by the tenant. In a third book all
+payments and receipts should be entered. This sounds commercial, and
+looks like serious business; but as the rent would be payable
+half-yearly only, there would be really very little trouble
+required, and the saving of disputes very great. During the season
+of cropping, the payment of a small gratuity to the village
+policeman would insure the allotment being well watched, and if
+pilferers were detected they should invariably be prosecuted. As
+many of the tenants would come from long distances, and would not
+frequent their plots every evening, there might possibly be a small
+lock-up tool-house in which to deposit their tools, the key being
+left in charge of some old man living in an adjacent cottage. The
+rules of cultivation would depend in some measure upon the nature of
+the soil, but such a village council would be composed of practical
+men, who would have no difficulty whatever in drawing up concise and
+accurate instructions. The council could depute one or more members
+to receive the rent-money and to keep the books, and if any labour
+were required, there are always bailiffs and trustworthy men who
+could be employed to do it. At a small expense the field should be
+properly drained before being opened, and even though let at a very
+low charge per perch, there would still remain an overplus above the
+rent paid by the council for the field, sufficient in a short time
+to clear off the debt incurred in draining.
+
+ [2] See 'Toilers of the Field,' by Richard Jefferies.--ED.
+
+It is very rarely that allotment gardens are sufficiently manured,
+and this is a subject that would come very properly under the
+jurisdiction of the allotment committee of our village council. Some
+labourers keep a pig or two, but all do not; and many living at a
+considerable distance would find, and do find, a difficulty in
+conveying any manure they may possess to the spot. So it often
+happens that gardens are cropped year after year without any
+substances being restored to the soil, which gradually becomes less
+productive. Means should be devised of supplying this deficiency.
+Manure is valuable to the farmer, but still he could spare a
+little--quite sufficient for this purpose. Suppose the allotment
+gardens consisted of twelve acres, then let one-fourth, or three
+acres, be properly manured every year. This would be no strain upon
+the product of manure in the vicinity, and in four years--four
+years' system--the whole of the field would receive a proper
+amount, in addition to the small quantities the labourer's pig
+produced. Every tenant, in his agreement, could be caused to pay, in
+addition to his rent, once every four years, a small sum in
+part-payment for this manuring, and also for the hauling of the
+material to the field. This payment would not represent the actual
+value of the manure, but it would maintain the principle of
+self-help; and, as far as possible, the allotments should be
+self-supporting. In cases of dispute, the committee would simply
+have to refer the matter to the council, and the thing would be
+definitely settled; but under a regular system of this kind, as it
+were mapped down and written out, no obstinate disputes could arise.
+In this one matter of allotment-gardens alone there is plenty of
+scope for the exertions of a village council, and incalculable good
+might be attained. The very order and systematic working of the
+thing would have a salutary effect upon the desultory life of the
+village.
+
+Next comes the water-supply of the village. This is a matter of
+vital importance. There are, of course, villages where water is
+abundant, even too abundant, as in low-lying meadow-land by the side
+of rivers which are liable to overflow. There are villages traversed
+throughout the whole of their length by a brook running parallel
+with the road, so that to gain access to each cottage it is
+necessary to cross a 'drock,' or small bridge, and in summer-time
+such villages are very picturesque. In the colder months, the mist
+on the water and damp air are not so pleasant or healthy. Many
+villages, situated at the edge of a range of hills--a most favourite
+position for villages--are supplied with good springs of the
+clearest water rising in those hills. But there are also large
+numbers of villages placed high up above the water-level on the same
+hills, which are most scantily supplied with water; and there are
+also villages far away down in the valley which are liable to run
+short in the summer or dry time, when the 'bourne,' or winter
+watercourse, fails them. Such places, situated in the midst of rich
+meadows, can sometimes barely find water enough for the cattle, who
+are not so particular as to quality. Even in places where there is a
+good natural spring, or a brook which is rarely dry, the cottagers
+experience no little difficulty in conveying it to their homes,
+which may be situated a mile away. It is not uncommon in country
+places to see the water trickling along in the ditch by the roadside
+bayed up with a miniature dam in front of a cottage, and from the
+turbid pool thus formed the woman fills her kettle. People who live
+in towns, and can turn on the water in any room of their houses
+without the slightest exertion, have no idea of the difficulty the
+poor experience in the country in procuring good water, despite all
+the beautiful rivers and springs and brooks which poetry sings of.
+After a man or woman has worked all day in the field, perhaps at a
+distance of two miles from home, it is weary and discouraging work
+to have to trudge with the pail another weary half-mile or so to the
+pool for water. It is harder still, after trudging that weary
+half-mile, pail in hand, to find the water almost too low to dip,
+muddied by cattle, and diminished in quantity to serve the pressing
+needs of the animals living higher up the stream. Now, in starting,
+it may be assumed that the nearest source of water in a village is
+certain to be found upon the premises of some agriculturist. He
+will, doubtless, be perfectly willing to allow free access to his
+stream or pool; but he cannot be expected to construct conveniences
+for the public use, and he may even feel naturally annoyed if
+continual use by thirty people, twice a day, finally breaks his
+pump. He naturally believes that other gentlemen in the village
+should take an equal interest with himself in the public welfare,
+but they do not appear to do so. It may be that the path to the pump
+leads through the private garden, right before his sitting-room
+window, and the constant passage of women and children for water,
+particularly children, who are apt to lounge and stare about them,
+becomes a downright nuisance. This, surely, ought not to be. A very
+little amount of united action on the part of the principal
+inhabitants of the village would put this straight. The pump could
+be repaired, a new path made, and the water conveyed to a stone
+trough by a hose, or something of the kind, and the owner would be
+quite willing to sanction it, but he does not see why it should all
+be done at his expense. The other inhabitants of the village see the
+difficulty, recognize it, perhaps talk about remedying it, but
+nothing is done, simply because there exists no body, no council to
+undertake it. Spontaneous combination is extremely uncertain in its
+action; the organization should exist before the necessity for
+utilizing it arises. In other places what is wanted is a well, but
+cottagers cannot afford to dig a deep well, and certainly no
+combination can be expected from them alone and unassisted. Village
+wells require also to be under some kind of supervision. At
+intervals they require cleaning out. The machinery for raising water
+must be prepared; the cover to prevent accidents to children
+renewed. A well that has no one to look after it quickly becomes the
+receptacle of all the stones and old boots and dead cats in the
+place. But if there is a terror of prosecution, the well remains
+clear and useful. The digging of a deep well is an event of national
+importance, so to say, to a village. It may happen that a noble
+spring of water bursts out some little distance from the village,
+but is practically useless to the inhabitants because of its
+distance. What more easy than to run a hose from it right to a stone
+trough, or dipping-place, in the centre of the village? In most
+cases, very simple engineering ability would be sufficient to supply
+the hamlet. The hose, or whatever the plan might be, need not take
+half nor a quarter of the water thrown out by the spring. The owner
+might object; certainly he would object to any forcible carrying
+away of his water; but if he were himself a party to the scheme, and
+to receive compensation for any injury, he would not do so.
+
+Water has been the cause of more disputes, probably, than
+anything else between neighbouring agriculturists. One wishes it
+for his water-meadows, another for his cattle, a third for his
+home-consumption; then there is, perhaps, the miller to be
+consulted. After all, there is, in most cases, more than enough
+water for everybody, and a very little mutual yielding would
+accommodate all, and supply the village in the bargain. But each
+party being alone in his view, without any mediator, the result
+may be a lawsuit, or ill-blood, lasting for years; the cutting
+down of bays and dams, the possible collision of the men
+employed.
+
+Between these parties, between agriculturists themselves, the
+establishment of a species of village council would often lead to
+peace and harmony. The advice and expressed wishes of their
+neighbour, the influence of the clergyman and the resident landlord,
+and the existence of a common public want in the village, would have
+an irresistible effect; and what neither would yield to his
+opponent, all would yield to a body of friends. Taken in this way it
+may safely be considered that there would be no difficulty in
+obtaining access to water. In places which are still less fortunate
+and, especially in dry times, are at a greater distance from the
+precious element, there still remains a plan by which sufficient
+could be secured, and that is the portable water-tank. Our
+agricultural machinists now turn out handsome and capacious iron
+tanks which are coming into general use. Now, no one farmer can be
+expected to send water-tank and team three or four times every
+evening to fetch up water for the use of cottagers, not
+one-twentieth of whom work for him. But why should there not be a
+tank, the public property of the village, and why should not teams
+take it in turn? Undoubtedly something of the kind would immediately
+spring into existence were there any village organization whatever.
+In a large number of villages, the natural supply would be
+sufficient during three parts of the year, and it would be only in
+summer that any assistance would be necessary.
+
+While on the subject of water, another matter may as well be dealt
+with, and that is the establishment of bathing-places near villages.
+This is, of course, impossible over considerable areas of country
+where water is scarce, and especially scarce in the bathing season.
+Even in many places, however, where water is comparatively deficient
+in quantity, there are usually some great ponds, which for part of
+the season could be made applicable for bathing purposes. There then
+remain an immense number of villages situated on or near a stream,
+and wherever there is a stream a bathing-place is practicable. At
+the present moment it would be difficult to find one such place,
+unless on the banks of a large river, and rivers are far between.
+The boys and young men who feel a natural desire to bathe in the
+warm weather resort to muddy ponds, with a filthy bottom of black
+slush, or paddle about in shallow brooks no more than knee-deep, or
+in the water-carriers in water meadows. This species of bathing is
+practically useless; it does not answer any purposes of cleanliness,
+and learning to swim is out of the question. The formation of a
+proper bathing-place presents few difficulties. A spot must be
+chosen near to the village, but far enough away for decency. The
+bottom of the stream should be covered with a layer of sand and
+small gravel, carefully avoiding large stones and sharp-edged
+flints. Much of the pleasure of bathing depends upon a good bottom,
+and nothing is more likely to deter a young beginner than the
+feeling that he cannot place his feet on the ground without the
+danger of lacerating them. For this reason, also, care should be
+taken to exclude all boughs and branches, and particularly the
+prickly bushes cut from hedges, which are most annoying to bathers.
+The stream should be bayed up to a depth at the deepest part of
+about five feet, which is quite deep enough for ordinary swimming,
+and reduces the danger to a minimum. If possible, a strong smooth
+rail should run across the pool, or partly across. This is for the
+encouragement of boys and young bathers, who like something to catch
+hold of, and it is also an adjunct in learning to swim, for the boy
+can stand opposite to it, and after two or three strokes place his
+hand on it, and so gradually increasing the distance, he can swim
+without once losing confidence. Those who cannot swim can hold to
+the rail and splash about and enjoy themselves. Such a bathing-place
+will sound childish enough to strong swimmers, who have learnt to go
+long distances with ease in the Thames or in the sea, but it must be
+remembered that we are dealing with an inland population who are
+timid of water. A boy who can cross such a small pool without
+touching the bottom with his feet, would soon feel at home in
+broader waters, if ever circumstances should bring him near them. If
+there is no stream a large pond could be cleaned out, and sand and
+gravel placed upon the bottom--almost anything is better than the
+soft oozy mud, which, once stirred up, will not settle for hours,
+and destroys all pleasure or benefit from bathing. No building is
+necessary to dress in, or anything of that kind. The place selected
+would be, of course, at a distance from any public footpath, and
+even if it were near there are so few passing in rural outlying
+districts that no one need be shocked. But if it was considered
+necessary an older man could be paid a small sum to walk down every
+evening, or at the stated hours for bathing, and see that no
+irregularity occurred. A loose pole or two always kept near the
+stream or pond, and ready to hand, would amply provide against any
+little danger there might be. Bathing is most important to health,
+and if a really good swim is possible there is nothing so conducive
+to an elasticity of frame. Our labourers are notoriously strong and
+muscular, and possess considerable power of endurance (though they
+destroy their 'wind,' in running phraseology, by too much beer), but
+their strength is clumsy, their gait ungainly, their run heavy and
+slow. The freedom of motion in the water, the simultaneous use of
+arms and limbs, the peculiar character of the exercise, renders it
+one, above all others, calculated to give an ease and grace to the
+body. In a good physical education, swimming must form an important
+part; and the labourer requires a physical education quite as much
+as a mental. The bathing-place, as a means of inducing personal
+cleanliness, would have its uses. The cottages of the labouring poor
+are often models of cleanliness, but the persons of the inhabitants
+precisely the reverse. The expense of such a bathing-place need be
+but very small. If it was situated in a cow-leaze, the bathing could
+begin the moment the spring became warm enough; if in a meadow
+usually mown, as soon as the grass has been cut, which would be
+early in June. It would perhaps be necessary to have stated hours of
+bathing; but no other regulation--the less restriction the better
+the privilege would be appreciated. Exercises of this character
+could not be too much encouraged. Every accomplishment of the kind
+adds a new power to the man, and gives him a sense of superiority.
+
+There should be a rough kind of gymnasium for the villagers. Almost
+always a piece of waste ground could be found, and the requisite
+materials are very simple and inexpensive. A few upright poles for
+climbing; horizontal bars; a few ropes, and a ladder would be
+sufficient. In wet weather some large open cow-house could be
+utilized for such purposes. In summer such outbuildings are empty,
+the cattle being in the fields. A few pairs of quoits also could be
+added at a small cost. Wrestling, perhaps, had better be avoided, as
+liable to lead to quarrels; but jumping and running should be
+fostered, and prizes presented for excellence. It is not the value
+of the prize, it is the fact that it is a prize. A good strong
+pocket-knife with four or five blades would be valued by a
+ploughboy, and a labourer would be pleased with an ornamental pipe
+costing five shillings, or a hoe or spade could be substituted as
+more useful.
+
+The institution of such annual village games, the bathing-place, the
+gymnasium in the open air, the running match, the quoits, would have
+a tendency to awaken the emulation of the labouring class; and once
+awaken the emulation, an increase of intelligence follows. A man
+would feel that he was not altogether a mere machine, to do so much
+work and then trudge home and sleep. Lads would have something
+better to do than play pitch-and-toss, and slouch about the place,
+learning nothing but bad language. A life would be imparted to the
+village, there would be a centre of union, a gathering-place, and a
+certain amount of proper pride in the village, and an _esprit de
+corps_ would spring up. In all these things the labourer should be
+encouraged to carry them out as much as possible in his own way, and
+without interference or supervision. Make the bathing-place, erect
+the poles and horizontal bars, establish the pocket-knife and hoe
+prizes, present the quoits, but let him use them in his own way.
+There must be freedom, liberty, or the attempt would certainly fail.
+
+How many villages have so much as a reading-room? Such a local
+council as has been indicated would soon come to discuss the
+propriety of establishing such an institution. If managed strictly
+with a view to the real wants and ideas of the people, and not in
+accordance with any preconceived principles of so-called
+instruction, it would be certain to succeed. The labouring poor
+dislike instruction being forced down their throats quite as much,
+or more, than the upper classes. The very worst way to induce a man
+to learn is to begin by telling him he is ignorant, and thereby
+insulting his self-esteem. A village reading-room should be open to
+all, and not to subscribers only. From six till nine in the evening
+would be long enough for it to be open, and the key could be kept by
+some adjacent cottager. With every respect for the schoolmaster, let
+the schoolmaster be kept away from it. If there is a night-school,
+keep it distinct from the reading-room; let the reading-room be a
+voluntary affair, without the slightest suspicion of _drill_
+attaching to it. It should be a place where a working man could come
+in, and sit down and _spell_ over a book, without the consciousness
+that someone was watching him, ready to snap him up at a mistake.
+Exclude all 'goody' books; there are sects in villages as well as
+towns, and the presence of an obnoxious work may do much harm. To
+the Bible itself, in clear print, no sect will object; but let it be
+the Bible only. A collection of amusing literature can easily be
+made. For L5 enough books could be bought on an old bookstall in
+London to stock a village library; such as travels, tales--not
+despising Robinson Crusoe--and a few popular expositions of science.
+There should be one daily paper. It could be brought by one of the
+milk-carts from the nearest railway-station. This daily paper would
+form a very strong counteraction to the ale-house. Of course, the
+ale-house would start a daily in opposition; but at the reading-room
+the labourer would soon learn that he need not purchase a glass of
+beer in order to pay for his news. The daily paper would be a most
+important feature, for such papers are rare in villages. Very few
+farmers even take them. The rent of a room for this purpose in a
+village would be almost nominal. A small room would be sufficient,
+for only a few would be present at a time. Cricket clubs may be left
+to establish themselves.
+
+The next suggestion the writer is about to make will be thought a
+very bold one; but is it not rational enough when the first novelty
+of the idea has subsided? It is, that an annual excursion should be
+arranged for the villagers. It is common to see in the papers
+appeals made on behalf of the poor children of crowded districts in
+London, for funds to give them a day in the country. It is stated
+that they never see anything but stone pavements; never breathe
+anything but smoky air. The appeal is a proper and good one, and
+should be generously responded to. Now, the position of the villager
+is the exact antithesis. He, or she, sees nothing but green fields
+or bare fields all the year round. They hear nothing but a constant
+iteration of talk about cattle, crops, and weather--important
+matters, but apt to grow monotonous. It may be, that for thirty
+years they never for one day lose sight of the hills overhanging the
+village. Their subjects of conversation are consequently extremely
+narrow. They want a change quite as much as the dwellers in cities;
+but it is a change of another character--a change to bustle and
+excitement. Factories and large tradesmen arrange trips for their
+work-people once or twice a year. Why should not the agricultural
+labourers have a trip? A trip of the simplest kind would satisfy
+them, and afford matter of conversation for months. All railway
+lines now issue tickets at reduced rates for parties above a certain
+number. For instance, to the population of an inland village, what
+would be more delightful than a few hours on the sea-beach? Where
+the sea is not within easy reach, take them to a great town--if
+possible, London--but if not London, any large town will be a
+change. There is no great difficulty in the plan. Perhaps twenty or
+thirty would be the largest number who would wish to go. Let these
+assemble at a stated hour and place, and take them down to the
+railway-station with two or three waggons and teams, which should
+also meet them on their return. The expense would not be great, and
+might be partly borne by the excursionists themselves. All that is
+wanted is some amount of leadership, a little organization. Such
+enterprises as these would go far to create a genuine mutual
+understanding and pleasant feeling between employer and employed.
+There may be outlying places where such an excursion would be very
+difficult. Then harness the horses to the waggons, and take them to
+a picnic ten miles off on a noted hill or heath, or by the side of a
+river--somewhere for a change.
+
+To return to more serious matters. Perhaps it would be as well if
+the first endeavour of such a local authority were addressed to the
+smaller matters that have been just alluded to, so that the public
+mind might become gradually accustomed to change, and prepared for
+greater innovations. Village drainage is notoriously defective.
+Anyone who has walked through a village or hamlet must be perfectly
+well aware that there is no drainage, from the unpleasant odours
+that constantly assail the nostrils. It seems absurd, that with such
+an expanse of open country around, and with such an exposure to the
+fresh air, such foul substances should be permitted to contaminate
+the atmosphere. Each cottager either throws the sewage right into
+the road, and allows it to find its way as it can by the same
+channel as the rain-water; or, at best, flings it into the ditch at
+the back, which parts the garden from the agricultural land. Here it
+accumulates and soaks into the soil till the first storm of rain,
+which sweeps it away, but at the same time causes an abominable
+smell. It is positively unbearable to pass some cottages after a
+fresh shower.
+
+Not unfrequently this ditch at the back of the garden runs down to
+the stream from which the cottagers draw their water, and the
+dipping-place may be close to the junction of the two. In places
+where there is a fall--when the cottages are built upon a
+slope--there can be little difficulty about drainage; but here steps
+in the question of water-supply, for drains of this character
+require flushing. The supply of water must, therefore, in such
+places, precede the attempt at drainage. The disposal of the sewage,
+when collected, offers no difficulty. Its value is well understood,
+and it would be welcomed upon agricultural land. In the case of
+villages where there is no natural fall, and small hamlets and
+outlying cottages, the Moule system should be encouraged, especially
+as it affords a valuable product that can be transported to the
+allotment garden. A certain amount of most unreasonable prejudice
+exists against the introduction of this useful contrivance, which
+every means should be used to overcome. Now, most farm-houses stand
+apart, and in their own grounds, where any system of sewer is almost
+impossible. These are the very places where the Moule plan is
+available; and if agriculturists were to employ it, the poor would
+quickly learn its advantages. It would, perhaps, be even better than
+a public sewer in large villages, for a sewer entails an amount of
+supervision, repairs, and must have an outfall, and other
+difficulties, such as flushing with water, and, if neglected, it
+engenders sewer-gas, which is more dangerous than the sewage itself.
+The plan to be pursued depends entirely upon the circumstances of
+the place and the configuration of the ground. The subject of
+drainage connects itself with that of nuisances. This is, perhaps,
+the most difficult matter with which a local authority would have to
+deal. Nuisances are comparative. One man may not consider that to be
+a nuisance which may be an intolerable annoyance to his neighbour.
+The keeping of pigs, for instance, is a troublesome affair. The
+cottager cannot be requested to give up so reasonable a habit; but
+there can be no doubt that the presence of a number of pigs in a
+village, in their dirty sties, and with their accompanying heaps of
+decaying garbage, is very offensive, and perhaps unhealthy. The pig
+itself, though commonly called a dirty animal, is not anything near
+so bad as has been represented. To convince oneself of that it is
+only necessary to visit farm-buildings which are well looked after.
+The pigsties have no more smell than the stables, because the manure
+is removed, and no garbage is allowed to accumulate. It is the man
+who keeps the pig that makes it filthy and repulsive, and not the
+animal itself. Regular and _clean_ food has also much to do with it,
+such as barley-meal. Cottagers cannot afford barley-meal, but they
+certainly could keep their sties much cleaner. It does not seem
+possible to attack the nuisance with any other means than that of
+persuasion, unless some plan could be devised of keeping pigs in a
+common building outside the village; or at any rate, of having the
+manure taken outside at short intervals. Such nuisances as stagnant
+ponds and mud-filled ditches are more easily dealt with, because
+they are public, and interference with them would not touch upon any
+man's liberty of action. Stagnant ponds are of no use to
+anyone--even horses will not drink at them. The simple plan is to
+remove the mud, and then fill them up level with the ground, laying
+in drain-pipes to carry off the water which accumulated there. But
+some of these ponds could be utilized for the benefit of passing
+horses and cattle. They are fed with a running stream, but, being no
+man's property, the pond becomes choked with mud and manure, and the
+small inflow of pure water is not enough to overcome the noisome
+exhalations. These should be cleaned out now and then, and, if
+possible, the bottom laid down with gravel or small stones, making
+the pond shallow at the edges, and for some distance in. Nothing is
+more valuable upon a country road than ponds of this character, into
+which a jaded horse can walk over his fetlock, and cool his feet at
+the same time that he refreshes his thirst. They are most welcome to
+cattle driven along the road.
+
+The moral nuisances of drunkenness, gambling, and bad language at
+the corners of the streets and cross-roads had best be left to the
+law to deal with, though the influence of a local council in reproof
+and caution would undoubtedly be considerable. But if a
+bathing-place, an out-of-doors gymnasium, and such things, were
+established, these evils would almost disappear, because the younger
+inhabitants would have something to amuse themselves with; at
+present they have nothing whatever.
+
+A local authority of this kind would confer a great boon upon the
+agricultural poor if they could renovate the old idea of a common.
+Allotment grounds are most useful, but they do not meet every want.
+The better class of cottagers, who have contrived to save a little
+money, often try to keep a cow, and before the road surveyors grew
+so strict, they had little difficulty in doing so. But now the roads
+are so jealously and properly preserved purely for traffic, the
+cottager has no opportunity of grazing a cow or a donkey. It would
+not be possible in places where land is chiefly arable, nor in
+others where the meadow-land is let at a high rent, but still there
+are places where a common could be provided. It need not be the best
+land. The poorest would do. Those who graze should pay a small
+fee--so much per head per week. Such a field would be a great
+benefit, and an encouragement to those who were inclined to save.
+
+In almost every parish there are a number of public charities. Many
+of these are unfortunately expressly devised for certain purposes,
+from which they cannot be diverted without much trouble and
+resorting to high authorities. But there are others left in a loose
+manner for the good of the poor, and the very origin of which is
+doubtful. Such are many of the pieces of land scattered about the
+country, the rent of which is paid to the churchwardens for the time
+being, in trust for the poor. At present these charities are
+dissipated in petty almsgiving, such as so much bread and a
+fourpenny-piece on a certain day of the year, a blanket or cloak at
+Christmas, and so on, the utility of which is more than doubtful.
+Stories are currently believed of such four penny-pieces purchasing
+quarts of ale, and of such blankets being immediately sold to raise
+money for the same end. A village council would be able to suggest
+many ways in which the income of these charities could be far better
+employed. The giving of coal has already been substituted in some
+places for the fourpenny-piece and blanket, which is certainly a
+sensible change; but if possible it would be better to avoid
+so-called charity altogether. Why should not the income of half a
+dozen villages lying adjacent to each other be concentrated upon a
+cottage hospital, or upon a hospital for lying-in women, which is
+one of the great desiderata in country places. Such institutions
+afford charity of the highest and best character, without any
+degradation to the recipient. At the present moment the woman who
+has lost her reputation, and is confined with an illegitimate child,
+simply proceeds to the workhouse, where she meets with every
+attention skilled nurses and science can afford. The labourer's wife
+is left to languish in a close overcrowded room, and permitted to
+resume her household labours before she has properly recovered.
+There is nothing more wretched than the confinement of an
+agricultural labourer's wife.
+
+The health of villagers, notwithstanding the pure air, is often
+prejudiced by the overcrowding of cottages. This overcrowding may
+not be sufficiently great to render an appeal to the legal
+authorities desirable, and yet may be productive of very bad
+effects, both moral and physical. It is particularly the case where
+the cottages are the property of the labourer himself, and are held
+at a low quit-rent. The labourer cannot afford to rebuild the
+cottage, which has descended to him from his father, or possibly
+grandfather, and which was originally designed for one small family,
+but, in the course of years, three or four members of that family
+have acquired a right of residence in it. Of this right they are
+extremely tenacious, though it may be positively injurious to them.
+As many as two married men, with wives and children, may crowd
+themselves into this dirty hovel, with a result of quarrelling and
+immorality that cannot be surpassed; in fact, some things that have
+happened in such places are not to be mentioned. Under the best
+circumstances it often happens that there are not sufficient
+cottages in a parish for the accommodation of the necessary workmen.
+Complaints are continually arising, from no one so much as from the
+agriculturists, who can never depend upon their men remaining
+because of the deficiency of lodging. It is not often that the
+entire parish belongs to one landlord; frequently, there are four or
+five landlords, and a large number of freehold properties let to
+tenants. Nor even where parishes are more or less the property of
+one person, is it always practicable for the estate to bear the
+burden of additional cottage building. The cost of a cottage varies
+more, perhaps, than any other estimate, according to the size, the
+materials to be employed, and their abundance in the neighbourhood.
+But it may be safely believed that the estimates given to landowners
+and others desirous of erecting cottages, very much exceed the sum
+at which they can be built. Deduct the hauling of materials--a
+considerable item--which could be done by the farmers themselves at
+odd times.
+
+In some places the materials may be found upon an adjacent farm, and
+for such purposes might be had for a nominal sum. Altogether, a very
+fair cottage might be built for L100 to L150, according to the
+circumstances. These, of course, would not be ornamental houses with
+Gothic porches and elaborate gables; but plain cottages, and quite
+as comfortable. In round figures, four such places might be erected
+for L500.[3] For a large parish will contain as many as twenty
+farmers, and some more than that: L500 distributed between twenty is
+but L25 apiece, and this sum could be still further reduced if the
+landlords, the clergy, and the principal inhabitants are calculated
+to take an interest in the matter. Let it be taken at L20 each, and
+the product four cottages. As there are supposed to be twenty farms,
+it may be reckoned that eight or ten new cottages would be welcome.
+This would vary with circumstances. In some places five would be
+sufficient. Ten would be the very highest number; and may be
+considered quite exceptional. Now for the repayment of the
+investment of L20. Four cottages at 2s. per week equals L20 per
+annum. At this rate in five-and-twenty years, each subscriber would
+be paid back his principal; say, after the manner of bonds, one
+redeemable every year, and drawn for by lot. An agriculturist who
+invests L100 or L150 in a cottage expects some interest upon his
+money; but he can afford to sink L20 for a few years in view of
+future benefit. But there are means by which the repayment could be
+much accelerated; _i.e._, by inducing the tenant of a cottage to pay
+a higher rent, and so become, after a time, the possessor of the
+tenement, in the same way as with building societies.
+
+ [3] This, of course, is upon the supposition that the materials
+ are obtained at a nominal cost, and the hauling not charged for.
+
+It may, however, be considered preferable that the cottages should
+remain the property of the village council--each member receiving
+back his original payment. This is thrown out merely as a
+suggestion; but this much is clear, that were there an organization
+of this kind there would be no material difficulty in the way of
+increasing the cottage accommodation. A number of gentlemen working
+together would overcome the want with ease. At all events, if they
+did not go so far as to erect new cottages, they might effect a
+great deal of improvement in repairing dilapidated places, and
+enlarging existing premises.
+
+In thus rapidly sketching out the various ways in which a local
+village authority might encourage the growth and improvement of the
+place, it has been endeavoured to indicate, in a suggestive manner,
+the way in which such an authority might be established. It is not
+for one moment proposed that an application should be made to the
+Legislature for a special enactment enabling such councils to act
+with legal force. To such a course there would certainly arise the
+most vigorous opposition on the part of all classes of the
+agricultural community, from landlord, tenant, and labourer alike.
+There exists an irresistible dislike to any form of 'imperial'
+interference, as is amply proved by the resistance offered to the
+School Board system, and by the comparative impotence of the rural
+sanitary authorities. People would rather suffer annoyance than call
+in an outside power. The species of local authority here indicated
+must be founded entirely upon the will of the inhabitants
+themselves; and its power be derived rather from acquiescence than
+from inherent force. In fact, the major part of its duties would not
+require any legal power. The allotment-garden, the cottage repair,
+the common, the bathing-place, reading-room, etc., would require no
+legal authority to render them useful and attractive. Neither is it
+probable that any serious opposition would be made to a system of
+drainage, and certainly none whatever to an improved water supply.
+No force would be necessary, and the whole moral influence of
+landlord, and tenant, and clergy, would sway in the proposed
+direction. It has often been remarked that the agricultural
+class--the tenant farmer--is the one least capable of combination,
+and there is a great deal of truth in the assertion of the lack of
+all cohesion, and united action. It must, however, be remembered
+that until very lately no kind of combination has been proposed, no
+attempt made to organize action. That, at least in local matters,
+agriculturists are capable of combination and united action has
+been proved by the strenuous exertions made to retain the voluntary
+school system, and also by the endeavours made for the restoration
+of village churches. If the total of the sums obtained for schools
+and for village church restoration could be ascertained, it would be
+found to amount to something very great; and in the case of the
+schools, at any rate, and to some degree in the case of
+restorations, the administration of the funds has rested upon the
+leading farmers assembled in committees. When once a number of
+agriculturists have formed a combination with an understood object,
+they are less liable to be thrown into disorder by factious
+differences amongst themselves than any other class of men. They are
+willing to agree to anything reasonable, and do not persist in
+amendments just in order that a favourite crotchet may be gratified.
+In other words, they are amenable to common sense and practical
+arguments.
+
+There would be very little doubt of harmonious action if once such a
+combination was formed. It could be started in many ways--by the
+clergyman asking the tenants of the parish to meet him in the
+village school-room, and there giving a rapid sketch of the proposed
+organization; and if any landlord, or magistrate, or leading
+gentleman was present, the thing would be set on its legs on the
+spot. In most parishes there are one or more large tenant farmers
+who naturally take the lead in their own class, and they would
+speedily obtain adherents to the movement. It would be as well,
+perhaps, if the attempt were made, for the promoters to draw up a
+species of circular for distribution in every house and cottage in
+the parish, explaining the objects of the association, and inviting
+co-operation on the part of rich and poor alike. Once a meeting was
+called together, and a committee appointed, the principal difficulty
+would be got over.
+
+The next matter--in fact, the first matter for the consideration of
+such a committee--would be the method of raising funds. All
+legally-established bodies have powers of obtaining money, as by
+rates; but the example of the independent schools and church
+restorations has amply proved that money will be forthcoming for
+proper purposes without resort to compulsion. The abolition of
+Church-rates has not in any way tended to the degradation of the
+Church; perhaps, on the contrary, more has been done towards Church
+extension since that date than before. A voluntary rate is still
+collected in many places, and produces a considerable sum, the
+calculation being made upon the basis of the poor-rate assessment.
+The objects of such a village association being eminently
+practical, devoid of any sectarian bearing and thoroughly local in
+application, there would probably be little difficulty in
+collecting a small voluntary rate for its support, even amongst the
+poorest of the population. The cottager would not grudge a few
+pence for objects in which he has an obvious interest, and which
+are close at home; but in the formation of the association it
+would, perhaps, be practicable to begin with a subscription of one
+guinea each from every member, the subscription of one guinea per
+annum endowing the giver with voting power at the meetings. If
+there were five-and-twenty farmers in a parish, there would be
+five-and-twenty guineas (it is not probable that any farmer would
+stand out from such a society), and five-and-twenty guineas would
+be quite sufficient to start the thing. Suppose the society
+commence with supplying additional allotment-grounds. They rent,
+say, eight acres at L2 10s. per acre, equalling L20 per annum; but
+they only expend L10 on rent for one half-year, because the other
+half will be paid by incoming tenants. The labour to be expended on
+the plot in making it tenable can hardly be reckoned, because, in
+all probability, it would be done by their own men at odd times.
+Many places would not require draining at all, and it need not be
+done at starting, and the generality of fields are already drained.
+So that about L15 would suffice to start the allotment-grounds,
+leaving L10 in hand to make a bathing-place with, or to erect a
+pump, or purchase hose or tank for water-supply. Here we have a
+considerable progress arrived at with one year's subscription only,
+not counting on any subscription from the landlord, or clergy, or
+resident gentlemen. The funds required are, in fact, not nearly so
+large as might be imagined. Most of these improvements, when once
+started, would last for some years without further outlay; the
+allotments would probably return a small income. It is not so
+necessary to do everything in one year. Add the sums collected on
+the low rate to the yearly subscription of the members, and there
+would probably be sufficient for every purpose, except that of
+cottage repairs or the erection of new cottages. Such more
+expensive matters would require shareholders investing larger sums;
+but the income already mentioned would probably enable all ordinary
+improvements to be carried out, even draining; and, after a year or
+two, a small reserve fund would even accumulate. It would, however,
+be important to bring the poorer class to feel that these matters,
+in a manner, depended upon their own exertions. There might be a
+subscription of twopence a month for certain given objects, as the
+bathing-place, the water-tank, or other things in hand at the time;
+and it would probably be well responded to. They should also be
+invited to give their labour free of charge after farm work. In the
+case of important alterations affecting the whole village, such as
+drainage, they might be asked to meet the society in the
+school-room, and then let the matter be put to the vote. After a
+few months, there can be no doubt the labouring population would
+come to take a very animated interest in such proceedings. There is
+a great deal of common sense in the labourer, and once let him see
+the practical as opposed to the theoretical benefit, and his
+co-operation is certain.
+
+The members of the society would have no trouble in electing a
+committee. There might be more than one committee to attend to
+different matters, as the allotment and the water-supply, because
+it would happen that one gentleman would have more practical
+knowledge of gardening, and another would have more acquaintance
+with the means of dealing with water, from the experience gained in
+his own water meadows. There should be a president of the society, a
+treasurer, and secretary; and a general meeting might take place
+once every two months, the committee meeting as circumstances
+dictated. Any member having a scheme to propose could draw up a
+short outline of his plan in writing, and submit it to the general
+meeting, when, if it met with favour, it could be handed over to a
+committee for execution.
+
+Such an association might call itself the village Local Society. It
+would be distinct from all party politics; it would have nothing to
+do with individual disputes or grievances between landlord and
+tenant; it would most carefully disclaim all sectarian objects. It
+would meet in a friendly genial manner, and if a few bottles of
+sherry could be placed on the table the better. A formal, hard,
+entirely business-like meeting is undesirable and to be avoided. The
+affairs in progress should be discussed in a free, open manner, and
+without any attempt at set speeches, though to prevent mistakes
+propositions would have to be moved and seconded, and entered in a
+minute-book. Such a society would be the means of bringing gentlemen
+together from distant parts of the parish, and would lead to a more
+intimate social connection. It would have other uses than those for
+which it was formally instituted. In the event of a serious
+outbreak of fever in the village, or any infectious disease, it
+might be of the very greatest utility in affording assistance to the
+poor, and in making arrangements for preventing the spread of
+infection by the plan of isolation. It might set apart a cottage for
+the reception of patients, and engage additional medical assistance.
+The influence it would exercise in the village and parish would be
+very great, and might produce a decided improvement in the moral
+tone of the place. In the event of disaffection and agitation
+arising among the labouring classes, it might be enabled to
+establish a reasonable compromise, and, in time, a good many little
+petty disputes among the poor would be referred to the society for
+arbitration.
+
+In large villages it might be found advantageous to establish a
+ladies' committee in connection with such a society. There are many
+matters in which the ladies are better agents, and possess a special
+knowledge. It may, perhaps, be thought rather an advanced idea; but
+would not some instruction in cookery be extremely useful to the
+agricultural girl just growing up into womanhood? The cooking she
+learns at home is simply no cooking at all. It is hardly possible to
+induce the elder women to change the habits of a lifetime, but the
+girls, fast growing up, would be eager to learn. With the increase
+of wages, the labourer has obtained a certain addition to his fare,
+and can occasionally afford some of the cheaper pieces of butcher's
+meat. But the women have no idea of utilizing these pieces in the
+most economical and savoury ways. Plentiful as vegetables are at
+times, they are only used in the coarsest manner. The ladies'
+committee would also have important work before them in boarding out
+the orphan children from the Union, and also in endeavouring to find
+employment for the great girls who play about the village, getting
+them into service, and so on. In the distribution of charities (if
+charities there must be), ladies are far more efficient than men,
+and they may exercise an influence in moral matters where no one
+else could interfere. If there is any charity which deserves to be
+assisted by this local society, it is the cheapening of coals in the
+winter. Already in some villages the principal farmers combine to
+purchase a good stock of coal at the beginning of winter, and as
+they buy it in large quantities they get it somewhat cheaper. Their
+teams and waggons haul it to the village, and in the dead of winter
+it is retailed to the cottagers at less than cost price. This is a
+most useful institution, and can hardly be called a charity. The
+fact that this has been done is a proof that organization for
+objects of local benefit is quite possible in rural parishes.
+Landowners and resident gentlemen would naturally take an interest
+in such proceedings, and may very properly be asked to subscribe;
+but the actual execution of the plans decided on should be left in
+the hands of tenant-farmers, who have a direct interest, and who
+come into daily contact with the lower class. As a means of adding
+to their funds, the society could give popular entertainments of
+reading and singing, which have often been found effective in
+raising money for the purchase of a new harmonium, and which, at the
+same time, afford a harmless gratification. It would, perhaps, be
+better if such a society were to keep itself distinct from any
+project of church restoration, or even from the school question,
+because it is most essential that they should be free from the
+slightest suspicion of leaning towards any party. Their authority
+must be based upon universal consent. They might perform a useful
+task if they could induce the cottagers to insure their goods and
+chattels, or in any way assist them to do so. Cottages are
+exceptionably liable to conflagration, and after the place is burnt,
+there is piteous weeping and wailing, and general begging to replace
+the lost furniture and bedding. There is much to be done also in the
+matter of savings. It seems to be pretty well demonstrated by the
+history of benefit clubs and the calculations of actuaries, that the
+agricultural labourer, out of his amount of wages, cannot put by a
+sufficient monthly contribution to enable him to receive a pension
+when he becomes old and infirm. But that is not the slightest reason
+why he should not save small sums year by year, which, in course of
+time, would amount to a nice little thing to fall back upon in case
+of sickness or accident. There are many aged and deserving men who
+have worked all their lives in one place and almost upon one farm,
+and, at last, are reduced to the pitiful allowance of the parish,
+occasionally supplemented by a friendly gift. These cases are very
+painful to witness, and are felt to be wrong by the tenant-farmers.
+But one person cannot entirely support them; and often it happens
+that the man who would have done his best is dead--the old employer
+for whom they worked so many years is gone before them to his rest.
+If there were but a little organization such cases would not pass
+unnoticed.
+
+Certain it is that the tendency of the age, and the progress of
+recent events, indicates the coming of a time when organization of
+some kind in rural districts will be necessary. The labour-agitation
+was a lesson of this kind. There are upheaving forces at work among
+the agricultural lower class as well as in the lower class of towns;
+a flow of fresh knowledge, and larger aspirations, which require
+guidance and supervision, lest they run to riot and excess. An
+organization of the character here indicated would meet the
+difficulties of the future, and meet them in the best of ways; for
+while possessing power to improve and to reform, it would have no
+hated odour of compulsion. The suggestions here put forth are, of
+course, all more or less tentative. They sketch an outline, the
+filling up of which must fall upon practical men, and which must
+depend greatly upon the circumstances of the locality.
+
+
+
+
+THE IDLE EARTH
+
+
+The bare fallows of a factory are of short duration, and occur at
+lengthened intervals. There are the Saturday afternoons--four or
+five hours' shorter time; there are the Sundays--fifty-two in
+number; a day or two at Christmas, at Midsummer, at Easter.
+Fifty-two Sundays, plus fifty-two half-days on Saturdays; eight days
+more for _bona-fide_ holidays--in all, eighty-six days on which no
+labour is done. This is as near as may be just one quarter of the
+year spent in idleness. But how fallacious is such a calculation!
+for overtime and night-work make up far more than this deficient
+quarter; and therefore it may safely be said that man works the
+whole year through, and has no bare fallow. But earth--idle
+earth--on which man dwells, has a much easier time of it. It takes
+nearly a third of the year out in downright leisure, doing nothing
+but inchoating; a slow process indeed, and one which all the
+agricultural army have of late tried to hasten, with very
+indifferent success. Winter seed sown in the fall of the year does
+not come to anything till the spring; spring seed is not reaped till
+the autumn is at hand. But it will be argued that this land is not
+idle, for during those months the seed is slowly growing--absorbing
+its constituent parts from the atmosphere, the earth, the water;
+going through astonishing metamorphoses; outdoing the most wonderful
+laboratory experiments with its untaught, instinctive chemistry. All
+true enough; and hitherto it has been assumed that the ultimate
+product of these idle months is sufficient to repay the idleness;
+that in the _coup_ of the week of reaping there is a dividend
+recompensing the long, long days of development. Is it really so?
+This is not altogether a question which a practical man used to City
+formulas of profit and loss might ask. It is a question to which,
+even at this hour, farmers themselves--most unpractical of men--are
+requiring an answer. There is a cry arising throughout the country
+that farms do not pay; that a man with a moderate 400 acres and a
+moderate L1,000 of his own, with borrowed money added, cannot get a
+reasonable remuneration from those acres. These say they would
+sooner be hotel-keepers, tailors, grocers--anything but farmers.
+These are men who have tried the task of subduing the stubborn
+earth, which is no longer bountiful to her children. Much reason
+exists in this cry, which is heard at the market ordinary, in the
+lobby, at the club meetings--wherever agriculturists congregate, and
+which will soon force itself out upon the public. It is like this.
+Rents have risen. Five shillings per acre makes an enormous
+difference, though nominally only an additional L100 on 400 acres.
+But as in agricultural profits one must not reckon more than 8 per
+cent., this 5s. per acre represents nearly another L1,000 which
+must be invested in the business, and which must be made to return
+interest to pay the additional rent. If that cannot be done, then it
+represents a dead L100 per annum taken out of the agriculturist's
+pocket.
+
+Then--labour, the great agricultural _crux_. If the occupier pays
+3s. per week more to seven men, that adds more than another L50 per
+annum to his outgoings, to meet which you must somehow make your
+acres represent another L500. Turnpikes fall in, and the roads are
+repaired at the ratepayers' cost. Compulsory education--for it is
+compulsory in reality, since it compels voluntary schools to be
+built--comes next, and as generally the village committee mull
+matters, and have to add a wing, and rebuild, and so forth, till
+they get in debt, there grows up a rate which is a serious matter,
+not by itself, but added to other things. Just as in great factories
+they keep accounts in decimals because of the vast multitude of
+little expenses which are in the aggregate serious--each decimal is
+equivalent to a rusty nail or so--here on our farm threepence or
+fourpence in the pound added to threepence or sixpence ditto for
+voluntary Church-rate, puts an appreciable burden on the man's back.
+The tightness, however, does not end here; the belt is squeezed
+closer than this. No man had such long credit as the yeoman of yore
+(thirty years ago is 'of yore' in our century). Butcher and baker,
+grocer, tailor, draper, all gave him unlimited credit as to _time_.
+As a rule, they got paid in the end; for a farmer is a fixture, and
+does not have an address for his letters at one place and live in
+another. But modern trade manners are different. The trader is
+himself pressed. Competition galls his heel. He has to press upon
+his customers, and in place of bills sent in for payment once a
+year, and actual cash transfer in three, we have bills punctually
+every quarter, and due notice of county court if cheques are not
+sent at the half-year. So that the agriculturist wants more ready
+cash; and as his returns come but once a year, he does not quite see
+the fairness of having to swell other men's returns four times in
+the same period. Still a step further, and a few words will suffice
+to describe the increased cost of all the materials supplied by
+these tradesmen. Take coals, for instance. This is a fact so patent
+that it stares the world in the face. A farmer, too, nowadays has a
+natural desire to live as other people in his station of life do. He
+cannot reconcile himself to rafty bacon, cheese, radishes,
+turnip-tops, homespun cloth, smock frocks. He cannot see why his
+girls should milk the cows or wheel out manure from the yards any
+more than the daughters of tradesmen; neither that his sons should
+say 'Ay' and 'Noa,' and exhibit a total disregard of grammar and
+ignorance of all social customs. The piano, he thinks, is quite as
+much in its place in his cool parlour as in the stuffy so-called
+drawing-room at his grocer's in the petty town hard by, where they
+are so particular to distinguish the social ranks of 'professional
+tradesmen' from common tradesmen. Here in all this, even supposing
+it kept down to economical limits, there exists a considerable
+margin of expenditure greater than in our forefathers' time. True,
+wool is dearer, meat dearer; but to balance that put the increased
+cost of artificial manure and artificial food--two things no farmer
+formerly bought--and do not forget that the seasons rule all things,
+and are quite as capricious as ever, and when there is a bad season
+the loss is much greater than it used to be, just as the foundering
+of an ironclad costs the nation more than the loss of a frigate.
+
+Experience every day brings home more and more the fatal truth that
+moderate farms do not pay, and there are even ominous whispers about
+the 2,000 acres system. The agriculturist says that, work how he
+may, he only gets 8 per cent. per annum; the tradesman, still more
+the manufacturer, gets only 2 per cent. each time, but he turns his
+money over twenty times a year, and so gets 40 per cent. per annum.
+Eight per cent. is a large dividend on one transaction, but it is
+very small for a whole year--a year, the one-thirtieth of a man's
+whole earning period, if we take him to be in a business at
+twenty-five, and to be in full work till fifty-five, a fair
+allowance. Now, why is it that this cry arises that agriculture will
+not pay? and why is it that the farmer only picks up 8 per cent.?
+The answer is simple enough. It is because the earth is idle a third
+of the year. So far as actual cash return is concerned, one might
+say it was idle eleven out of the twelve months. But that is hardly
+fair. Say a third of the year.
+
+The earth does not continue yielding a crop day by day as the
+machines do in the manufactory. The nearest approach to the
+manufactory is the dairy, whose cows send out so much milk per diem;
+but the cows go dry for their calves. Out of the tall chimney shaft
+there floats a taller column of dark smoke hour after hour; the vast
+engines puff and snort and labour perhaps the whole twenty-four
+hours through; the drums hum round, the shafts revolve perpetually,
+and each revolution is a penny gained. It may be only steel-pen
+making--pens, common pens, which one treats as of no value and
+wastes by dozens; but the iron-man thumps them out hour after hour,
+and the thin stream of daily profit swells into a noble river of
+gold at the end of the year. Even the pill people are fortunate in
+this: it is said that every second a person dies in this huge world
+of ours. Certain it is that every second somebody takes a pill; and
+so the millions of globules disappear, and so the profit is nearer 8
+per cent. per hour than 8 per cent. per annum. But this idle earth
+takes a third of the year to mature its one single crop of pills;
+and so the agriculturist with his slow returns cannot compete with
+the quick returns of the tradesman and manufacturer. If he cannot
+compete, he cannot long exist; such is the modern law of business.
+As an illustration, take one large meadow on a dairy farm; trace its
+history for one year, and see what an idle workshop this meadow is.
+Call it twenty acres of first-class land at L2 15s. per acre, or L55
+per annum. Remember that twenty acres is a large piece on which
+some millions multiplied by millions of cubic feet of air play on a
+month, and on which an incalculable amount of force in the shape of
+sunlight is poured down in the summer. January sees this plot of a
+dull, dirty green, unless hidden by snow; the dirty green is a
+short, juiceless herbage. The ground is as hard as a brick with the
+frost. We will not stay now to criticize the plan of carting out
+manure at this period, or dwell on the great useless furrows. Look
+carefully round the horizon of the twenty acres, and there is not an
+animal in sight, not a single machine for making money, not a penny
+being turned. The cows are all in the stalls. February comes, March
+passes; the herbage grows slowly; but still no machines are
+introduced, no pennies roll out at the gateways. The farmer may lean
+on the gate and gaze over an empty workshop, twenty acres big, with
+his hands in his pockets, except when he pulls out his purse to pay
+the hedge-cutters who are clearing out the ditches, the women who
+have been stone-picking, and the carters who took out the manure,
+half of which stains the drains, while the volatile part mixes with
+the atmosphere. This is highly profitable and gratifying. The man
+walks home, hears his daughter playing the piano, picks up the
+paper, sees himself described as a brutal tyrant to the labourer,
+and ten minutes afterwards in walks the collector of the voluntary
+rate for the village school, which educates the labourers' children.
+April arrives; grass grows rapidly. May comes; grass is now long.
+But still not one farthing has been made out of that twenty acres.
+Five months have passed, and all this time the shafts in the
+manufactories have been turning, and the quick coppers accumulating.
+Now it is June, and the mower goes to work; then the haymakers, and
+in a fortnight if the weather be good, a month if it be bad, the hay
+is ricked. Say it cost L1 per acre to make the hay and rick
+it--_i.e._, L20--and by this time half the rent is due, or L27 10s.
+= total expenditure (without any profit as yet), L47 10s., exclusive
+of stone-picking, ditch-cleaning, value of manure, etc. This by the
+way. The five months' idleness is the point at present. June is now
+gone. If the weather be showery the sharp-edged grass may spring up
+in a fortnight to a respectable height; but if it be a dry
+summer--and if it is not a dry summer the increased cost of
+haymaking runs away with profit--then it may be fully a month before
+there is anything worth biting. Say at the end of July (one more
+idle month) twenty cows are turned in, and three horses. One cannot
+estimate how long they may take to eat up the short grass, but
+certain it is that the beginning of November will see that field
+empty of cattle again; and fortunate indeed the agriculturist who
+long before that has not had to 'fodder' (feed with hay) at least
+once a day. Here, then, are five idle months in spring, one in
+summer, two in winter; total, eight idle months. But, not to stretch
+the case, let us allow that during a part of that time, though the
+meadow is idle, its produce--the hay--is being eaten and converted
+into milk, cheese and butter, or meat, which is quite correct; but,
+even making this allowance, it may safely be said that the meadow is
+absolutely idle for one-third of the year, or four months. That is
+looking at the matter in a mere pounds, shillings, and pence light.
+Now look at it in a broader, more national view. Does it not seem a
+very serious matter that so large a piece of land should remain idle
+for that length of time? It is a reproach to science that no method
+of utilizing the meadow during that eight months has been
+discovered. To go further, it is very hard to require of the
+agriculturist that he should keep pace with a world whose maxims day
+by day tend to centralize and concentrate themselves into the one
+canon, Time is Money, when he cannot by any ingenuity get his
+machinery to revolve more than once a year. In the old days the
+farmer belonged to a distinct class, a very isolated and independent
+class, little affected by the progress or retrogression of any other
+class, and not at all by those waves of social change which sweep
+over Europe. Now the farmer is in the same position as other
+producers: the fall or rise of prices, the competition of foreign
+lands, the waves of panic or monetary tightness, all tell upon him
+quite as much as on the tradesman. So that the cry is gradually
+rising that the idle earth will not pay.
+
+On arable land it is perhaps even more striking. Take a wheat crop,
+for instance. Without going into the cost and delay of the three
+years of preparation under various courses for the crop, take the
+field just before the wheat year begins. There it lies in November,
+a vast brown patch, with a few rooks here and there hopping from one
+great lump to another; but there is nothing on it--no machine
+turning out materials to be again turned into money. On the
+contrary, it is very probable that the agriculturist may be sowing
+money on it, scarifying it with steam ploughing-engines, tearing up
+the earth to a great depth in order that the air may penetrate and
+the frost disintegrate the strong, hard lumps. He may have commenced
+this expensive process as far back as the end of August, for it is
+becoming more and more the custom to plough up directly after the
+crop is removed. All November, December, January, and not a penny
+from this broad patch, which may be of any size from fifteen to
+ninety acres, lying perfectly idle. Sometimes, indeed, persons who
+wish to save manure will grow mustard on it and plough it in, the
+profit of which process is extremely dubious. At the latter end of
+February or beginning of March, just as the season is early or late,
+dry or wet, in goes the seed--another considerable expense. Then
+April, May, June, July are all absorbed in the slow process of
+growth--a necessary process, of course, but still terribly slow, and
+not a penny of ready-money coming in. If the seed was sown in
+October, as is usual on some soils, the effect is the same--the crop
+does not arrive till next year's summer sun shines. In August the
+reaper goes to work, but even then the corn has to be threshed and
+sent to market before there is any return. Here is a whole year
+spent in elaborating one single crop, which may, after all, be very
+unprofitable if it is a good wheat year, and the very wheat over
+which such time and trouble have been expended may be used to fat
+beasts, or even to feed pigs. All this, however, and the great
+expense of preparation, though serious matters enough in themselves,
+are beside our immediate object. The length of time the land is
+useless is the point. Making every possible allowance, it is not
+less than one-third of the year--four months out of the twelve. For
+all practical--_i.e._, monetary--purposes it is longer than that. No
+wonder that agriculturists aware of this fact are so anxious to get
+as much as possible out of their one crop--to make the one
+revolution of their machinery turn them out as much money as
+possible. If their workshop must be enforcedly idle for so long,
+they desire that when in work there shall be full blast and double
+tides. Let the one crop be as heavy as it can. Hence the agitation
+for compensatory clauses, enabling the tenant to safely invest all
+the capital he can procure in the soil. How else is he to meet the
+increased cost of labour, of rent, of education, of domestic
+materials; how else maintain his fair position in society? The
+demand is reasonable enough; the one serious drawback is the
+possibility that, even with this assistance, the idle earth will
+refuse to move any faster.
+
+We have had now the experience of many sewage-farms where the
+culture is extremely 'high.' It has been found that these farms
+answer admirably where the land is poor--say, sandy and porous--but
+on fairly good soil the advantage is dubious, and almost limited to
+growing a succession of rye-grass crops. After a season or two of
+sewage soaking the soil becomes so soft that in the winter months it
+is unapproachable. Neither carts nor any implements can be drawn
+over it; and then in the spring the utmost care has to be exercised
+to keep the liquid from touching the young plants, or they wither up
+and die. Sewage on grass lands produces the most wonderful results
+for two or three years, but after that the herbage comes so thick
+and rank and 'strong' that cattle will not touch it; the landlord
+begins to grumble, and complains that the land, which was to have
+been improved, has been spoilt for a long time to come. Neither is
+it certain that the employment of capital in other ways will lead to
+a continuous increase of profit. There are examples before our eyes
+where capital has been unsparingly employed, and upon very large
+areas of land, with most disappointing results. In one such instance
+five or six farms were thrown into one; straw, and manure, and every
+aid lavishly used, till a fabulous number of sheep and other stock
+was kept; but the experiment failed. Many of the farms were again
+made separate holdings, and grass laid down in the place of glowing
+cornfields. Then there is another instance, where a gentleman of
+large means and a cultivated and business mind, called in the
+assistance of the deep plough, and by dint of sheer subsoil
+ploughing grew corn profitably several years in succession. But
+after a while he began to pause, and to turn his attention to stock
+and other aids. It is not for one moment contended that the use of
+artificial manure, of the deep plough, of artificial food, and other
+improvements will not increase the yield, and so the profit of the
+agriculturist. It is obvious that they do so. The question is, Will
+they do so to an extent sufficient to repay the outlay? And,
+further, will they do so sufficiently to enable the agriculturist to
+meet the ever-increasing weight which presses on him? It would seem
+open to doubt. One thing appears to have been left quite out of
+sight by those gentlemen who are so enthusiastic about compensation
+for unexhausted improvements, and that is, if the landlord is to be
+bound down so rigidly, and if the tenant really is going to make so
+large a profit, most assuredly the rents will rise very
+considerably. How then? Neither the sewage system, nor the deep
+plough, nor the artificial manure has, as yet, succeeded in
+overcoming the _vis inertiae_ of the idle earth. They cause an
+increase in the yield of the one revolution of the agriculturist
+machine per annum; but they do not cause the machine to revolve
+twice or three times. Without a decrease in the length of this
+enforced idleness any very great increase of profit does not seem
+possible. What would any manufacturer think of a business in which
+he was compelled to let his engines rest for a third of the year?
+Would he be eager to sink his capital in such an enterprise?
+
+The practical man will, of course, exclaim that all this is very
+true, but Nature is Nature, and must have its way, and it is useless
+to expect more than one crop per annum, and any talk of three or
+four crops is perfectly visionary. 'Visionary,' by the way, is a
+very favourite word with so-called practical men. But the stern
+logic of figures, of pounds, shillings, and pence, proves that the
+present condition of affairs cannot last much longer, and they are
+the true 'visionaries' who imagine that it can. This enormous loss
+of time, this idleness, must be obviated somehow. It is a question
+whether the millions of money at present sunk in agriculture are not
+a dead loss to the country; whether they could not be far more
+profitably employed in developing manufacturing industries, or in
+utilizing for home consumption the enormous resources of Southern
+America and Australasia; whether we should not get more to eat, and
+cheaper, if such was the case. Such a low rate of interest as is now
+obtained in agriculture--and an interest by no means secure either,
+for a bad season may at any time reduce it, and even a too good
+season--such a state of things is a loss, if not a curse. It is
+questionable whether the million or so of labourers representing a
+potential amount of force almost incalculable, and the thousands of
+young farmers throbbing with health and vigour, eager _to do_, would
+not return a far larger amount of good to the world and to
+themselves if, instead of waiting for the idle earth at home to
+bring forth, they were transported bodily to the broad savannahs and
+prairies, and were sending to the mother-country innumerable
+shiploads of meat and corn--unless, indeed, we can discover some
+method by which our idle earth shall be made to labour more
+frequently. This million or so of labourers and these thousands of
+young, powerfully made farmers literally do nothing at all for a
+third the year but wait, wait for the idle earth. The of strength,
+the will, the vigour latent in them is wasted. They do not enjoy
+this waiting by any means. The young agriculturist chafes under the
+delay, and is eager _to do_. They can hunt and course hares, 'tis
+true, but that is feeble excitement indeed, and feminine in
+comparison with the serious work which brings in money.
+
+The idleness of arable and pasture land is as nothing compared to
+the idleness of the wide, rolling downs. These downs are of immense
+extent, and stretch through the very heart of the country. They
+maintain sheep, but in how small a proportion to the acreage! In the
+spring and summer the short herbage is cropped by the sheep; but it
+is short, and it requires a large tract to keep a moderate flock. In
+the winter the down is left to the hares and fieldfares. It has just
+as long a period of absolute idleness as the arable and pasture
+land, and when in work the yield is so very, very small.
+
+After all, the very deepest ploughing is but scratching the surface.
+The earth at five feet beneath the level has not been disturbed for
+countless centuries. Nor would it pay to turn up this subsoil over
+large areas, for it is nothing but clay, as many a man has found to
+his cost who, in the hope of a heavier crop, has dug up his garden
+half a spade deeper than usual. But when the soil really is good at
+that depth, we cannot get at it so as to turn it to practical
+account. The thin stratum of artificial manure which is sown is no
+more in comparison than a single shower after a drought of months;
+yet to sow too much would destroy the effect. No blame, then, falls
+upon the agriculturist, who is only too anxious to get a larger
+produce. It is useless charging him with incompetency. What
+countless experiments have been tried to increase the crop: to see
+if some new system cannot be introduced! With all its progress, how
+little real advance has agriculture made! All because of the
+stubborn, idle earth. Will not science some day come to our aid, and
+show how two crops or three may be grown in our short summers; or
+how we may even overcome the chill hand of winter? Science has got
+as far as this: it recognizes the enormous latent forces surrounding
+us--electricity, magnetism; some day, perhaps, it may be able to
+utilize them. It recognizes the truly overwhelming amount of force
+which the sun of summer pours down upon our fields, and of which we
+really make no use. To recognize the existence of a power is the
+first step towards employing it. Till it was granted that there was
+a power in steam the locomotive was impossible.
+
+It would be easy to swell this notice of idle earth by bringing in
+all the waste lands, now doing nothing--the parks, deer forests, and
+so on. But that is not to the purpose. If the wastes were reclaimed
+and the parks ploughed up, that would in nowise solve the problem
+how to make the cultivated earth more busy. It is no use for a man
+who has a garden to lean on his spade, look over his boundary wall,
+and say, 'Ah, if neighbour Brown would but dig up his broad green
+paths how many more potatoes he would grow!' That would not increase
+the produce of the critic's garden by one single cabbage. Certainly
+it is most desirable that all lands capable of yielding crops should
+be reclaimed, but one great subject for the agriculturist to study
+is, how to shorten the period of idleness in his already cultivated
+plots. At present the earth is so very idle.
+
+
+
+
+AFTER THE COUNTY FRANCHISE
+
+
+The money-lender is the man I most fear to see in the villages after
+the extension of the county franchise--the money-lender both in his
+private and public capacity, the man who has already taken a grasp
+of most little towns that have obtained incorporation in some form.
+Like Shylock he demands what is in his bond: he demands his
+interest, and that means a pull at every man's purse--every man,
+rich or poor--who lives within the boundary. Borrowing is almost the
+ruin of many such little towns; rates rise nearly as high as in
+cities, and people strive all they can to live anywhere outside the
+limit. Borrowing is becoming one of the curses of modern life, and a
+sorrowful day it will be when the first village takes to it. The
+name changes--now it is a local board, now it is commissioners,
+sometimes a town council: the practice remains the same. These
+authorities exist but for one purpose--to borrow money, and as any
+stick will do to beat a dog with, so any pretence will do to exact
+the uttermost farthing from the inhabitants. Borrowing boards they
+are, one and all, and nothing else, from whom no one obtains benefit
+except the solicitor, the surveyor, the lucky architect, and those
+who secure a despicable living in the rear of the county court.
+Nothing could better illustrate the strange supineness of the
+majority of people than the way in which they pay, pay, pay, and
+submit to every species of extortion at the hands of these incapable
+blunderers, without so much as a protest. The system has already
+penetrated into the smallest of the county towns which groan under
+the incubus; let us hope, let us labour, that it may not continue
+its course and enter the villages.
+
+It may reasonably be supposed that when once the extension of the
+franchise becomes an established fact, some kind of local
+government will soon follow. At present country districts are
+either without any local government at all--I mean practically,
+not theoretically--or else they are ruled without the least shadow
+of real representation. When men are admitted to vote and come to
+be enlightened as to the full meaning and force of such rights, it
+is probable that they will shortly demand the power to arrange
+their own affairs. They will have something to say as to the
+administration of the poor-law, over which at present they do not
+possess the slightest control, and they are not at all unlikely to
+set up a species of self-government in every separate village. I
+think, in short, that the parish may become the unit in the future
+to the disintegration of the artificial divisions drawn to
+facilitate the poor-law. Such divisions, wherein many parishes of
+the most diverse description and far apart are thrown together
+anyhow as the gardener pitches weeds into his basket, have done
+serious harm in the past. They have injured the sense of personal
+responsibility, they have created a bureaucracy absolutely without
+feeling, and they have tended to shift great questions out of
+sight. The shifting of things out of sight--round the corner--is a
+vile method of dealing with them. Send your wretched poor miles
+away into a sort of alien workhouse, and then congratulate
+yourself that you have tided over the difficulty! But the
+difficulty has not been got over.
+
+A man who can vote, and who is told--as he certainly will be
+told--that he bears a part in directing the great affairs of his
+nation, will ask himself why he should not be capable of managing
+the little affairs of his own neighbourhood. When he has asked
+himself this question, it will be the first step towards the
+downfall of the inhuman poor-law. He will go further and say, 'Why
+should I not settle these things at home? Why should I not walk up
+to the village from my house in the country lane, and there and then
+arrange the business which concerns me? Why should I any longer
+permit it to be done over my head and without my consent by a body
+of persons in whom I have no confidence, for they do not represent
+me--they represent property?'
+
+In his own village the voter will observe the school--his own
+village then is worthy to possess its own school; possibly he may
+even remotely have some trifling share in the control of the school
+if there is a board. If that great interest, the children of the
+parish, can be administered at home, why not the other and much less
+important interests? Here may be traced a series of reflections, and
+a succession of steps by which ultimately the whole system of boards
+of guardians with their attendant powers, as the rural sanitary
+authority and so forth, may ultimately be swept away. Government
+will come again to the village.
+
+Then arises the money-lender, and no time should be lost by those
+who have the good and the genuine liberty of the countryside at
+heart in labouring to prevent his entry into the village. Whatsoever
+constitution the village obtains in future, let us strive to
+strictly limit the borrowing powers of its council. No borrowing
+powers at all would be best--government without loans would be
+almost ideal--if that cannot be accomplished, then at least lay down
+a stringent regulation putting a firm and impassable limit. Were
+every one of my way of thinking, government without loans would be
+imperative. It would be done if it had to be done. Rugged discomfort
+is preferable to borrowing.
+
+I dread, in a word, lest the follies perpetrated in towns should get
+into the villages and hamlets, and want to say a word betimes of
+warning. Imagine a new piece of roadway required, then to get the
+money let a penny be added to the rates, and the amount produced
+laid by at interest year after year, till the sum be made up. Better
+wait a few years and walk half a mile round than borrow the five or
+six hundred pounds, and have to pay that back and all the interest
+on it. Shift somehow, do not borrow.
+
+In the discussions upon the agricultural franchise it has been
+generally assumed that the changes it portends will be shown in
+momentous State affairs and questions of principle. But perhaps it
+will be rather in local and home concerns that the alterations will
+be most apparent. The agricultural labourer voters--and the numerous
+semi-agricultural voters, not labourers--are more than likely to
+look at their own parish as well as at the policy of the Foreign
+Office. Gradually the parish--that is, the village--must become the
+centre to men who feel at last that they are their own masters.
+Under some form or other they will take the parish into their own
+hands, and insist upon their business being managed at home. Some
+shape of village council must come presently into existence.
+
+Shrewd people are certain to appear upon the scene, pointing out to
+the cottager that if he desires to rule himself in his own village,
+he must insist upon one most important point. This is the exclusion
+of property representation. Instead of property having an
+overwhelming share, as now, in the direction of affairs, the owner
+of the largest property must not weigh any heavier in the village
+council than the wayside cottager. If farmer or landowner sit there
+he must have one vote only, the same as any other member. The
+council, if it is to be independent, must represent men and not
+land in the shape of landowners, or money in the shape of
+tenant-farmers. Shrewd people will have no difficulty in
+explaining the meaning of this to the village voters, because they
+can quote so many familiar instances. There is the Education Act in
+part defeated by the combination of property, landowners and
+farmers paying to escape a school-board--a plan temporarily
+advantageous to them, but of doubtful benefit, possibly injurious,
+to the parish at large. Leaving that question alone, the fact is
+patent that the cottager has no share in the government of his
+school, because land and money have combined. It may be governed
+very well; still it is not _his_ government, and will serve to
+illustrate the meaning. There is the board of guardians, nominally
+elected, really selected, and almost self-appointed. The board of
+guardians is land and money simply, and in no way whatever
+represents the people. A favourite principle continually enunciated
+at the present day is that the persons chiefly concerned should
+have the management. But the lower classes who are chiefly
+concerned with poor relief, as a matter of fact, have not the
+slightest control over that management. Besides the guardians,
+there is still an upper row, and here the rulers are not even
+invested with the semblance of representation, for magistrates are
+not elected, and they are guardians by virtue of their being
+magistrates. The machinery is thus complete for the defeat of
+representation and for the despotic control of those who, being
+principally concerned, ought by all rule and analogy to have the
+main share of the management. We have seen working men's
+representatives sit in the House of Commons; did anyone ever see a
+cottage labourer sit as administrator at the board before which the
+wretched poor of his own neighbourhood appear for relief?
+
+But it may be asked, Is the village council, then, composed of small
+proprietors, to sit down and vote away the farmer's or landowner's
+money without farmer or landowner having so much as a voice in the
+matter? Certainly not. The idea of village self-government supposes
+a distinct and separate existence, as it were; the village apart
+from the farmer or landowner, and the latter apart from the village.
+At present the money drawn in rates from farmer or landowner is
+chiefly expended on poor-law purposes. But, as will presently
+appear, village self-government proposes the entire abolition of the
+poor-law system, and with it the rates which support it, or at least
+the heaviest part of them. Therefore, as this money would not be
+concerned, they could receive no injury, even if they did not sit at
+the village council at all.
+
+Imagine the village, figuratively speaking, surrounded by a high
+wall like a girdle, as towns were in ancient times, and so cut off
+altogether from the large properties surrounding it--on the one hand
+the village supporting and governing itself, and on the other the
+large properties equally independent.
+
+The probable result would be a considerable reduction in local
+burdens on land. A self-supporting and self-governing moral
+population is the first step towards this relief to land so very
+desirable in the interest of agriculture.
+
+In practice there must remain certain more or less imperial
+questions, as lines of through road, police, etc., some of which are
+already managed by the county authority. As these matters affect the
+farmer and landowner even more than the cottager, clearly they must
+expect to contribute to the cost, and can rightly claim a share in
+the management.
+
+Having advanced so far as a village council, and arrived at the
+stage of managing their own affairs, having, in fact, emerged from
+pupilage, next comes a question for the council. We now govern our
+village ourselves; why should we not possess our village? Why should
+we not live in our own houses? Why should we not have a little share
+in the land, as much, at least, as we can pay for? At this moment
+the village, let us say, consists of a hundred cottages, and perhaps
+there are another hundred scattered about the parish. Of these
+three-fourths belong to two or three large landowners, and those who
+reside in them, however protected by enactment, can never have a
+sense of complete independence. We should own these cottages, so
+that the inhabitants might practically pay rent to themselves. We
+must purchase them, a few at a time; the residents can repurchase
+from us and so become freeholders. For a purchaser there must be a
+seller, and here one of the questions of the future appears: Can an
+owner of this kind of property be permitted to refuse to sell? Must
+he be compelled to sell?
+
+It is clear that if the village voter thoroughly addresses himself
+to his home affairs there is room for some remarkable incidents.
+There is reason now, is there not, to dread the appearance of the
+money-lender?
+
+About this illustrative parish there lie many hundred acres of good
+land all belonging to one man, while we, the said village council,
+do not possess a rood apiece, and our constituents not a square
+yard. Rightfully we ought to have a share, yet we do not agitate for
+confiscation. Shall we then say that every owner of land should be
+obliged to sell a certain fixed percentage--a very small percentage
+would suffice--upon proffer of a reasonable amount, the proffer
+being made by those who propose to personally settle on it? Of one
+thousand acres suppose ten or twenty liable to forcible purchase at
+a given and moderate price. After all it is not a much more
+overbearing thing than the taking by railways of land in almost any
+direction they please, and not nearly so tyrannous, so stupidly
+tyrannous, as some of the acts of folly committed by local boards in
+towns. Not long since the newspapers reported a case where a local
+authority actually ran a main sewer across a gentleman's park, and
+ventilated it at regular intervals, completely destroying the value
+of an historic mansion, and utterly ruining a beautiful domain. This
+was fouling their own nest with a vengeance. They should have
+cherished that park as one of their chiefest glories, their proudest
+possession. Parks and woods are daily becoming of almost priceless
+value to the nation; nothing could be so mad as to destroy these
+last homes of nature. Just conceive the inordinate folly of marking
+such a property with sewer ventilators. This is a hundred times more
+despotic than a proposal that say two per cent. of land should be
+forcibly purchasable for actual settlement. Even five per cent.
+would not make an appreciable difference to an estate, though every
+fraction of the five per cent. were taken up.
+
+For such proposals to have any effect, the transfer of real property
+must be greatly simplified and cheapened. From time to time,
+whenever a discussion occurs upon this subject, and there are signs
+that the glacier-like movements of government will be hastened by
+public stir, up rises some great lawyer and explains to the world
+that really nothing could be simpler or cheaper than such transfer.
+All that can be wished in that direction has been accomplished
+already; there is not the slightest ground for agitation; every
+obstruction has been removed, and the machinery is now perfect. He
+quotes a long list of Acts to demonstrate the progress that has been
+made, and so winds up a very effective speech. Facts, however, are
+not in accordance with these gracious words. Here is an instance. A
+cottage in a village was recently sold for seventy pounds; the
+costs, legal expenses, parchments, all the antiquated formalities
+absorbed _thirty-two pounds_, only three pounds less than half the
+value of the little property. Could anything be more obviously wrong
+than such a system.
+
+The difficulties in the way of simplification are created
+difficulties, entirely artificial, owing their existence to legal
+ingenuity. How often has the question been asked and never answered:
+Why should there be any more expense in transferring the ownership
+of an acre of land than of L100 stock?
+
+The village council coming into contact with this matter is likely
+to agitate continuously for its rectification, since otherwise its
+movements will be seriously hampered. If they succeed in obtaining
+the abolition of these semi-feudal survivals, they will have
+conferred a substantial benefit upon the community. County franchise
+would be worth the granting merely to secure this.
+
+Let us take the case for a moment of a labourer at this day and
+consider his position. What has he before him? He has a
+hand-to-mouth, nomad existence, ending in the inevitable frozen
+misery of the workhouse. Men with votes and political power are
+hardly likely to endure this for many more years, and it is much to
+be hoped that they will not endure it. A labourer may be never so
+hard-working, so careful, so sober, and yet let his efforts be what
+they may, his old age finds him helpless. I am sure there is no
+class of men among whom may be found so many industrious, plodding,
+sober folk, economical to the verge of starvation. Their
+straightforward lives are thrown away. Their sons and daughters,
+warned by example, go to the cities, and there lose the virtues that
+rendered their forefathers so admirable even in their wretchedness.
+It will indeed be a blessing if, as I hope, the outcome of the
+franchise is the foundation of solid inducements to the countryman
+to stay in the country. I use the phrase countryman purposely,
+intending it to include small farmers and small farmers' sons; the
+latter are likewise driven away from the land year by year as much
+as the young labourers, and are as serious a loss to it. Did the
+possibility exist of purchasing a cottage and a plot of ground of
+moderate size, it is more than probable that the labourer's son
+would remain in the village, or return to it, and his daughter would
+come back to the village to be married. We hear how the poor Italian
+or the poor Swiss leaves his native country for our harder climate,
+how he works and saves, and by-and-by returns to his village and
+purchases some corner of earth. This seems a legitimate and worthy
+object. We do not hear of our own sturdy labourers returning to
+their village with a pocketful of money and purchasing a plot of
+ground or a cottage. They do not attempt it, because they know that
+under present conditions it is nearly impossible. There is no land
+for them to buy. Why not, when the country is nothing but land?
+Because the owner of ten thousand acres is by no means obliged to
+part with the minutest fragment of it. If by chance a stray portion
+be somewhere for sale, the expenses, the costs, the parchments, the
+antiquated formalities, the semi-feudal routine delay and possibly
+prevent transfer altogether. If land were accessible, and the cost
+of transferring cottage property reduced to reasonable proportions,
+the labourer would have the soundest of all inducements to practise
+self-denial in his youth. Cities might attract him temporarily for
+the advantage of higher wages, but he would put the excess by and
+ultimately bring it home. Even the married cottager with a family
+would try his hardest to save a little with such a hope before him.
+
+The existing circumstances deny hope altogether. Neither land nor
+cottages are to be had, there are no sellers, and the cost of
+transfer is prohibitive; men are shifted on, they have no security
+of tenure, they are passed on from farm to farm and can settle
+nowhere. The competition for a house in some districts is keen to
+the last degree; it seems as if there were eager crowds waiting for
+homes. Recently while roaming on the Sussex hills I met an ancient
+shepherd whose hair was white as snow, though he stood upright
+enough. I inquired the names of the hills there, and he replied that
+he did not know; he was a stranger, he had only been moved there
+lately. How strangely changed are things when a grey-headed shepherd
+does not know the names of his hills! At a time of life when he
+ought to have been comfortably settled he had had to shift.
+
+Sentiment is more stubborn than fact. People will face the sternest
+facts, dire facts, stubborn facts, and stay on in spite of all; but
+once let sentiment alter and away they troop. So I think that some
+part of the distaste for farming visible about us is due to change
+of sentiment--to feeling repelled--as well as to unfruitful years.
+Men have stood out against weary weather in all ages of agriculture,
+but lately they have felt hurt and repelled, the sentiment of
+attachment to home has been rudely torn up, and so now the current
+sets against farming, though farms are often offered on advantageous
+terms. In the same way, besides the stubborn facts that drive the
+labourer from the village and prevent his return to settle, there is
+a yet more stubborn sentiment repelling him. Made a man of by
+education--not only of books, but the unconscious education of
+progressive times--the labourer and his son and daughter have
+thoughts of independence. To be humbly subservient to the will of
+those above them, to be docilely obedient, not only to the employer,
+but to all in some sort of authority, is not attractive to them.
+Plainly put, the rule of parson and squire, tenant and guardian, is
+repellent to them in these days. They would rather go away. If they
+do save money in cities, they do not care to return and settle under
+the thumb of these their old masters. Besides more attractive facts,
+the sentiment of independence must be called into existence before
+the labourer, or, for the matter of that, the small farmer's son,
+will willingly settle in the village. That sense of independence can
+only arise when the village governs itself by its own council,
+irrespective of parson, squire, tenant, or guardian. Towards that
+end the power to vote is almost certain to drift slowly.
+
+Nothing can be conceived more harshly antagonistic to the feelings
+of a naturally industrious race of men than the knowledge that as a
+mass they are looked upon as prospective 'paupers.' I detest this
+word so much that it is painful to me to write it; I put it between
+inverted commas as a sort of protest, so that it may appear a hated
+intruder, and not native to the text. The local government existing
+at this day in country districts is practically based upon the
+assumption that every labouring man will one day be a 'pauper,' will
+one day come to the workhouse. By the workhouse and its board the
+cottage is governed; the workhouse is the centre, the bureau, the
+_hotel de ville_. The venue of local government must be changed
+before the labourer can feel independent, and it will be changed
+doubtless as he becomes conscious of the new power he has acquired.
+Shall the bitterness of the workhouse at last pass away? Let us hope
+so let us be thankful indeed if the franchise leads to the downfall
+of those cruel walls. Yet what is the cruelty of cold walls to the
+cruelty of 'system'? A workhouse in the country is usually situated
+as nearly as possible in the centre of the Union, it may be miles
+from the outlying parishes. Thither the worn-out cottager is borne
+away from the fields, his cronies, his little helps to old age such
+as the corner where the sun shines, the friend who allows little
+amenities, to dwindle and die. The workhouse bureau extends its
+unfeeling hands into every detail of cottage life. No wonder the
+labourer does not deny himself to save money in order to settle
+where these things are done. A happy day it will be when the
+workhouse door is shut and the building sold for materials. A
+gentleman not long since wrote to me a vindication of his
+workhouse--I cannot at the moment place my hand on the figures he
+sent me, but I grant that they were conclusive from his point of
+view; they were not extravagant, the administration appeared
+correct. But this is not my point of view at all. Figures are not
+humanity. The workhouse and the poor-law system are inhuman,
+debasing, and injurious to the whole country, and the better they
+are administered, the worse it really is, since it affords a
+specious pretext for their continuance. What would be the use of a
+captain assuring his passengers that the ship was well found, plenty
+of coal in the bunkers, the engines oiled and working smoothly, when
+they did not want to go to the port for which he was steering? An
+exact dose of poison may be administered, but what comfort is it to
+the victim to assure him that it was accurately measured to a minim?
+What is the value of informing me that the 'paupers' are properly
+looked after when I do not want any 'paupers'?
+
+But how manage without the poor-law system? There are several ways.
+There is the insurance method: space will not permit of discussion
+in this paper, but one fact which speaks volumes may be alluded to.
+Two large societies exist in this country called the 'Oddfellows'
+and the 'Foresters'; they number their members by the million; they
+assist their members not only at home, but all over the world (which
+is what no poor-law has ever done); they govern themselves by their
+own laws, and they prosper exceedingly--an honour to the nation.
+They have solved the difficulty for themselves.
+
+When the village governs itself and takes all matters into its own
+hands, in time the sentiment of independence may grow up and men
+begin to work and strive and save, that they may settle at home. It
+would be a very noble thing indeed if the true English feeling for
+home life should become the dominant passion of the country once
+again. By home life I mean that which gathers about a house,
+however small, standing in its own grounds. Something comes into
+existence about such a house, an influence, a pervading feeling,
+like some warm colour softening the whole, tinting the lichen on
+the wall, even the very smoke-marks on the chimney. It is home, and
+the men and women born there will never lose the tone it has given
+them. Such homes are the strength of a land. The emigrant who
+leaves us for the backwoods hopes to carve out a home for himself
+there, and we consider that an ambition to be admired. I hope the
+day will come when some at least of our people may be able to set
+up homes for themselves in their own country. To-day, if they would
+live, they must crowd into the city, often to dwell in the midst of
+hideous squalor, or they must cross the ocean. They would rather
+endure the squalor, rather say farewell for ever and sail for
+America, than stay in the village where everyone is master, and
+none of their class can be independent. The village must be its own
+master before it becomes popular. County government may be
+reformed with advantage, but that is not enough, because it must
+necessarily be too far off. People in the country are scattered,
+and each little centre is naturally only concerned with itself. A
+government having its centre at the county town is too far away,
+and is likely to bear too much resemblance to the boards of
+guardians and present authorities, to be representative of land and
+money rather than of men. Progress can only be made in each little
+centre separately by means of village councils, genuinely
+representative of the village folk, unswayed by mansion, vicarage,
+or farm. Then by degrees we may hope to see the re-awakening of
+English home-life in contradistinction to that unhappy restlessness
+which drives so many to the cities.
+
+Men will then wake up and work with energy because they will have
+hope. The slow, plodding manner of the labourer--the dull ways even
+of the many industrious cottagers--these will disappear, giving
+place to push and enterprise. Why does a lawyer work as no navvy
+works? Why does a cabinet minister labour the year through as hard
+as a miner? Because they have a mental object. So will the labourer
+work when he has a mental object--to possess a home for himself.
+
+Whenever such homes become numerous and the new life of the country
+begins to flow, pressure will soon be brought to bear for the
+removal of the mediaeval law which prevents the use of steam on
+common roads. Modern as the law is, it is mediaeval in its tendency
+as much as a law would be for the restriction of steam on the
+ocean. Suppose a statute compelling all ships to sail, or, if they
+steamed, not to exceed four miles an hour! One of the greatest
+drawbacks to agriculture is the cost and difficulty of transit;
+wheat, flour, and other foods come from America at far less expense
+in proportion than it takes to send a waggon-load to London. This
+cost of transit in the United Kingdom will ultimately, one would
+think, become the question of the day, concerning as it does every
+individual. Agriculture on a large scale finds it a heavy drawback;
+to agriculture on a small scale it is often prohibitory. A man may
+cultivate his two-acre plot and produce vegetables and fruit, but if
+he cannot get his produce to London (or some great city), the demand
+for it is small, and the value low in proportion. As settlers
+increase, as the village becomes its own master, and men pass part
+at least of their time labouring on their own land, the difficulty
+will be felt to be a very serious one. Transit they must have, and
+steam alone can supply it. Engines and cars can be built to run on
+common roads almost as easily as on rails, and as for danger it is
+merely the interested outcry of those who deal in horses. There is
+no danger. Fine smooth roads exist all over the country; they have
+been kept up from coaching days as if in a prophetic spirit for
+their future use by steam. Upon these roads engines and cars can
+travel at a good fair pace, collecting produce, and either
+delivering it to the through lines of rail, or passing it on from
+road-train to road-train till it reaches the city. This is a very
+important matter indeed, for in the future easier and quicker
+transit will become imperative for agriculture. The impost of
+extraordinary tithe--the whole system of tithe--again, is doomed
+when once the country begins to live its new life. Freedom of
+cultivation is ten times more needful to the small than to the large
+proprietor.
+
+These changes closely examined lose their threatening aspect, so
+much so that the marvel is they did not commence fifty years ago
+instead of waiting till now, and even now to be only potential. What
+is there in the present condition of agriculture to make farmer or
+landowner anxious that the existing system of things should
+continue? Surely nothing; surely every consideration points in
+favour of moderate change. Those who quote the example of France,
+and would argue that dissatisfaction must, as there, increase with
+efforts to allay it, must know full well in their hearts that there
+is no comparison whatever with France. The two peoples are so
+entirely different. So little contents our race that the danger is
+rather the other way, that they will be too easily satisfied. Such
+changes as I have indicated, when examined closely, are really so
+mild that in full operation they would scarcely make any difference
+in the relation of the classes. Such village councils would be very
+anxious for the existence of the farmer, and for his interests to be
+respected, for the sufficient reason that they know the value of
+wages. Perhaps they might even, under certain conditions, become
+almost too willing partisans of the farmer for their best interests
+to be served. I can imagine such conditions easily enough, and the
+possibility of the three sections, labourer, farmer, and owner,
+becoming more closely welded together than ever. There is far more
+stolidity to be regretted than revolution to be feared. The danger
+is lest the new voters should stolidify--crystallize--in tacit
+league with existing conditions; not lest we should go hop, skip,
+and jump over Niagara.
+
+A probable result of these changes is an increase in the value of
+land: if thousands of people should ever really begin to desire it,
+and to work and save for the object of buying it, analogy would
+suppose a rise in value. Instead of a loss there would be a gain to
+the landowner, and I think to the farmer, who would have a larger
+supply of labour, and possibly a strong posse of supporters at the
+poll in their men. Instead of division coalescence is more probable.
+The greater his freedom, the greater his attachment to home, the
+more settled the labourer, the firmer will become the position of
+all three classes. The landowner has nothing whatever to fear for
+his park, his mansion, his privacy, his shooting, or anything else.
+What is taken will be paid for, and no more will be taken than
+needful. Parks and woods are becoming of priceless value; we should
+have to preserve a few landlords if only to have parks and woods.
+Perfect rights of possession are not at all incompatible with
+enjoyment by the people. There are domains to be found where people
+wander at their will, and enjoy themselves as much as they please,
+and yet the owner retains every right. It is true that there are
+also numerous parks rigidly closed to the public, demonstrating the
+folly of the proprietors--square miles of folly. The use of a little
+compulsion to open them would not be at all deplorable. But it must
+stop there and not encroach farther. Having obtained the use, be
+careful not to destroy.
+
+The one great aim I have in all my thoughts is the acquisition of
+public and the preservation of private liberty. Freedom is the most
+valuable of all things, and is to be sought with all our powers of
+mind and hand. Freedom does not mean injustice, but neither will it
+put up with injustice. A singular misapprehension seems to be widely
+spread in our time; it is that there are two great criminals, the
+poor man or 'pauper' and the landlord. At opposite extremes of the
+scale they are regarded as equally guilty. Every right--the right to
+vote, the right to live in his native village, the right to be
+buried decently--is taken from the unhappy poor man or 'pauper.' He
+is a criminal. To own land is to be guilty of unpardonable sin,
+nothing is so bad; as criminals are ordered to be searched and
+everything taken from them, so everything is to be taken from the
+landowner. The injustice to both is equally evident. Anyone by
+chance of circumstances, uncontrollable, may be reduced to extreme
+poverty; how cruel to punish the unfortunate with the loss of civil
+rights! Anyone by good fortune and labour may acquire wealth, and
+would naturally wish to purchase land: is he then guilty? In equity
+both the poor and the rich should enjoy the same civil rights.
+
+Let the new voter then bear in mind above all things the value of
+individual liberty, and not be too anxious to destroy the liberty of
+others, an action that invariably recoils. Let him, having obtained
+his freedom, beware how he surrenders it again either to local
+influence in the shape of land or money, or to the outside orator
+who may urge him on for his own ends. Efforts will be made no doubt
+to use the new voter for the purposes of cliques and fanatics. He
+can always test the value of their object by the question of wages
+and food--'How will it affect my wages and food?'--and probably that
+is the test he will apply. A little knot of resolute and
+straightforward men should be formed in every village to see that
+the natural outcome of the franchise is obtained. They can begin as
+vigilance committees, and will ultimately reach to legal status as
+councils.
+
+
+
+
+THE WILTSHIRE LABOURER
+
+
+Ten years have passed away,[4] and the Wiltshire labourers have
+only moved in two things--education and discontent. I had the
+pleasure then of pointing out in 'Fraser' that there were causes
+at work promising a considerable advance in the labourers'
+condition. I regret to say now that the advance, which in a
+measure did take place, has been checkmated by other circumstances,
+and there they remain much as I left them, except in book-learning
+and mental restlessness. They possess certain permanent
+improvements--unexhausted improvements in agricultural language--but
+these, in some way or other, do not seem now so valuable as they
+looked. Ten years since important steps were being taken for the
+material benefit of the labouring class. Landowners had awakened to
+the advantage of attaching the peasantry to the soil, and were
+spending large sums of money building cottages. Everywhere cottages
+were put up on sanitary principles, so that to-day few farms on
+great estates are without homes for the men. This substantial
+improvement remains, and cannot fade away. Much building, too, was
+progressing about the farmsteads; the cattle-sheds were undergoing
+renovation, and this to some degree concerned the labourer, who now
+began to do more of his work under cover. The efforts of every
+writer and speaker in the country had not been without effect,
+and allotments, or large gardens, were added to most cottage
+homes. The movement, however, was slow, and promised more than it
+performed, so that there are still cottages which have not shared
+in it. But, on the whole, an advance in this respect did occur,
+and the aggregate acreage of gardens and allotments must be
+very considerably larger now than formerly. These are solid
+considerations to quote on the favourable side. I have been
+thinking to see if I could find anything else. I cannot call to
+mind anything tangible, but there is certainly more liberty, an air
+of freedom and independence--something more of the 'do as I please'
+feeling exhibited. Then the sum ends. At that time experiments were
+being tried on an extended scale in the field: such as draining,
+the enlargement of fields by removing hedges, the formation of
+private roads, the buildings already mentioned, and new systems of
+agriculture, so that there was a general stir and bustle which
+meant not only better wages but wages for more persons. The latter
+is of the utmost importance to the tenant-labourer, by which I mean
+a man who is settled, because it keeps his sons at home. Common
+experience all over the world has always shown that three or four
+or more people can mess together, as in camps, at a cheaper rate
+than they can live separately. If the father of the family can find
+work for his boys within a reasonable distance of home, with their
+united contributions they can furnish a very comfortable table, one
+to which no one could object to sit down, and then still have a sum
+over and above with which to purchase clothes, and even to indulge
+personal fancies. Such a pleasant state of things requires that
+work should be plentiful in the neighbourhood. Work at that time
+was plentiful, and contented and even prosperous homes of this kind
+could be found. Here is just where the difficulty arises. From a
+variety of causes the work has subsided. The father of the
+family--the settled man, the tenant-labourer--keeps on as of yore,
+but the boys cannot get employment near home. They have to seek it
+afar, one here, one yonder--all apart, and the wages each
+separately receives do but just keep them in food among strangers.
+It is this scarcity of work which in part seems to have
+counterbalanced the improvements which promised so well. Instead of
+the progress naturally to be expected you find the same insolvency,
+the same wearisome monotony of existence in debt, the same hopeless
+countenances and conversation.
+
+ [4] Written in 1887.
+
+There has been a contraction of enterprise everywhere, and a
+consequent diminution of employment. When a factory shuts its
+doors, the fact is patent to all who pass. The hum of machinery is
+stopped, and smoke no longer floats from the chimney; the building
+itself, large and regular--a sort of emphasized plainness of
+architecture--cannot be overlooked. It is evident to everyone that
+work has ceased, and the least reflection shows that hundreds of
+men, perhaps hundreds of families, are reduced from former
+comparative prosperity. But when ten thousand acres of land fall
+out of cultivation, the fact is scarcely noticed. There the land is
+just the same, and perhaps some effort is still made to keep it from
+becoming altogether foul, so that a glance detects no difference.
+The village feels it, but the world does not see it. The farmer has
+left, and the money he paid over as wages once a week is no longer
+forthcoming. Each man's separate portion of that sum was not much in
+comparison with the earnings of fortunate artisans, but it was
+money. Ten, twelve, or as much as fifteen shillings a week made a
+home; but just sufficient to purchase food and meet other
+requirements, such as clothes; yet still a home. On the cessation of
+the twelve shillings where is the labourer to find a substitute for
+it? Our country is limited in extent, and it has long been settled
+to its utmost capacity. Under present circumstances there is no room
+anywhere for more than the existing labouring population. It is
+questionable if a district could be found where, under these present
+circumstances, room could be found for ten more farmers' men. Only
+so many men can live as can be employed; in each district there are
+only so many farmers; they cannot enlarge their territories; and
+thus it is that every agricultural parish is full to its utmost.
+Some places among meadows appear almost empty. No one is at work in
+the fields as you pass; there are cattle swishing their tails in the
+shadow of the elms, but not a single visible person; acres upon
+acres of grass, and no human being. Towards the latter part of the
+afternoon, if the visitor has patience to wait, there will be a
+sound of shouting, which the cattle understand, and begin in their
+slow way to obey by moving in its direction. Milking time has come,
+and one or two men come out to fetch in the cows. That over, for the
+rest of the evening and till milking time in the morning the meadows
+will be vacant. Naturally it would be supposed that there is room
+here for a great number of people. Whole crowds might migrate into
+these grassy fields, put up shanties, and set to work. But set to
+work at what? That is just the difficulty. Whole crowds could come
+here and find plenty of room to walk about--and starve! Cattle
+require but few to look after them. Milch cattle need most, but
+grazing beasts practically no one, for one can look after so many.
+Upon inquiry it would be found that this empty parish is really
+quite full. Very likely there are empty cottages, and yet it is
+quite full. A cottage is of no use unless the occupier can obtain
+regular weekly wages. The farmers are already paying as many as they
+can find work for, and not one extra hand is wanted; except, of
+course, in the press of hay-harvest, but no one can settle on one
+month's work out of twelve. When ten or fifteen thousand acres of
+land fall out of cultivation, and farmers leave, what is to become
+of the labouring families they kept? What has become of them?
+
+It is useless blinking the fact that what a man wants in our time is
+good wages, constant wages, and a chance of increasing wages.
+Labouring men more and more think simply of work and wages. They do
+not want kindness--they want coin. In this they are not altogether
+influenced by self-interest; they are driven rather than go of their
+own movement. The world pushes hard on their heels, and they must go
+on like the rest. A man cannot drift up into a corner of some green
+lane, and stay in his cottage out of the tide of life, as was once
+the case. The tide comes to him. He must find money somehow; the
+parish will not keep him on out-relief if he has no work; the
+rate-collector calls at his door; his children must go to school
+decently clad with pennies in each little hand. He must have wages.
+You may give him a better cottage, you may give him a large
+allotment, you may treat him as an equal, and all is of no avail.
+Circumstance--the push of the world--forces him to ask you for
+wages. The farmer replies that he has only work for just so many and
+no more. The land is full of people. Men reply in effect, 'We cannot
+stay if a chance offers us to receive wages from any railway,
+factory, or enterprise; if wages are offered to us in the United
+States, there we must go.' If they heard that in a town fifty miles
+distant twenty shillings could be had for labour, how many of the
+hale men do you suppose would stay in the village? Off they would
+rush to receive the twenty shillings per week, and the farmers might
+have the land to themselves if they liked. Eighteen shillings to a
+pound a week would draw off every man from agriculture, and leave
+every village empty. If a vast industrial combination announced
+regular wages of that amount for all who came, there would not be a
+man left in the fields out of the two millions or more who now till
+them.
+
+A plan to get more wages out of the land would indeed be a wonderful
+success. As previously explained, it is not so much the amount paid
+to one individual as the paying of many individuals that is so much
+to be desired. Depression in agriculture has not materially
+diminished the sum given to a particular labourer, but it has most
+materially diminished the sum distributed among the numbers. One of
+the remarkable features of agricultural difficulties is, indeed,
+that the quotation of wages is nominally the same as in the past
+years of plenty. But then not nearly so many receive them. The
+father of the family gets his weekly money the same now as ten years
+since. At that date his sons found work at home. At the present date
+they have to move on. Some farmer is likely to exclaim, 'How can
+this be, when I cannot get enough men when I want them?' Exactly so,
+but the question is not when you want _them_, but when they want
+you. You cannot employ them, as of old, all the year round,
+therefore they migrate, or move to and fro, and at harvest time may
+be the other side of the county.
+
+The general aspect of country life was changing fast enough before
+the depression came. Since then it has continued to alter at an
+increasing rate--a rate accelerated by education; for I think
+education increases the struggle for more wages. As a man grows in
+social stature so he feels the want of little things which it is
+impossible to enumerate, but which in the aggregate represent a
+considerable sum. Knowledge adds to a man's social stature, and he
+immediately becomes desirous of innumerable trifles which, in
+ancient days, would have been deemed luxuries, but which now seem
+very commonplace. He wants somewhat more fashionable clothes, and I
+use the word fashion in association with the ploughman purposely,
+for he and his children do follow the fashion now in as far as they
+can, once a week at least. He wants a newspaper--only a penny a
+week, but a penny is a penny. He thinks of an excursion like the
+artisan in towns. He wants his boots to shine as workmen's boots
+shine in towns, and must buy blacking. Very likely you laugh at the
+fancy of shoe-blacking having anything to do with the farm labourer
+and agriculture. But I can assure you it means a good deal. He is no
+longer satisfied with the grease his forefathers applied to their
+boots; he wants them to shine and reflect. For that he must, too,
+have lighter boots, not the heavy, old, clod-hopping watertights
+made in the village. If he retains these for week-days, he likes a
+shiny pair for Sundays. Here is the cost, then, of an additional
+pair of shoes; this is one of the many trifles the want of which
+accompanies civilization. Once now and then he writes a letter, and
+must have pen, ink, and paper; only a pennyworth, but then a penny
+is a coin when the income is twelve or fourteen shillings a week.
+He likes a change of hats--a felt at least for Sunday. He is not
+happy till he has a watch. Many more such little wants will occur to
+anyone who will think about them, and they are the necessary
+attendants upon an increase of social stature. To obtain them the
+young man must have money--coins, shillings, and pence. His
+thoughts, therefore, are bent on wages; he must get wages somewhere,
+not merely to live, for bread, but for these social necessaries.
+That he can live at home with his family, that in time he may get a
+cottage of his own, that cottages are better now, large gardens
+given, that the labourer is more independent--all these and twenty
+other considerations--all these are nothing to him, because they are
+not to be depended on. Wages paid weekly are his aim, and thus it is
+that education increases the value of a weekly stipend, and
+increases the struggle for it by sending so many more into the ranks
+of competitors. I cannot see myself why, in the course of a little
+time, we may not see the sons of ploughmen competing for clerkships,
+situations in offices of various kinds, the numerous employments not
+of a manual character. So good is the education they receive, that,
+if only their personal manners happen to be pleasant, they have as
+fair a chance of getting such work as others.
+
+Ceaseless effort to obtain wages causes a drifting about of the
+agricultural population. The hamlets and villages, though they seem
+so thinly inhabited, are really full, and every extra man and youth,
+finding himself unable to get the weekly stipend at home, travels
+away. Some go but a little distance, some across the width of the
+country, a few emigrate, though not so many as would be expected.
+Some float up and down continually, coming home to their native
+parish for a few weeks, and then leaving it again. A restlessness
+permeates the ranks; few but those with families will hire for the
+year. They would rather do anything than that. Family men must do so
+because they require cottages, and four out of six cottages belong
+to the landowners and are part and parcel of the farms. The activity
+in cottage building, to which reference has been made, as prevailing
+ten or twelve years since, was solely on the part of the landowners.
+There were no independent builders; I mean the cottages were not
+built by the labouring class. They are let by farmers to those
+labourers who engage for the year, and if they quit this employment
+they quit their houses. Hence it is that even the labourers who have
+families are not settled men in the full sense, but are liable to be
+ordered on if they do not give satisfaction, or if cause of quarrel
+arises. The only settled men--the only fixed population in villages
+and hamlets at the present day--are that small proportion who
+possess cottages of their own. This proportion varies, of course,
+but it is always small. Of old times, when it was the custom for men
+to stay all their lives in one district, and to work for one farmer
+quite as much for payment in kind as for the actual wages, this made
+little difference. Very few men once settled in regular employment
+moved again; they and their families remained for many years as
+stationary as if the cottage was their property, and frequently
+their sons succeeded to the place and work. Now in these days the
+custom of long service has rapidly disappeared. There are many
+reasons, the most potent, perhaps, the altered tone of the entire
+country. It boots little to inquire into the causes. The fact is,
+then, that no men, not even with families, will endure what once
+they did. If the conditions are arbitrary, or they consider they are
+not well used, or they hear of better terms elsewhere, they will
+risk it and go. So, too, farmers are more given to changing their
+men than was once the case, and no longer retain the hereditary
+faces about them. The result is that the fixed population may be
+said to decline every year. The total population is probably the
+same, but half of it is nomad. It is nomad for two reasons--because
+it has no home, and because it must find wages.
+
+Farmers can only pay so much in wages and no more; they are at the
+present moment really giving higher wages than previously, though
+nominally the same in amount. The wages are higher judged in
+relation to the price of wheat; that is, to their profits. If coal
+falls in price, the wages of coal-miners are reduced. Now, wheat has
+fallen heavily in price, but the wages of the labourer remain the
+same, so that he is, individually, when he has employment, receiving
+a larger sum. Probably, if farming accounts were strictly balanced,
+and farming like any other business, that sum would be found to be
+more than the business would bear. No trace of oppression in wages
+can be found. The farmer gets allowances from his landlord, and he
+allows something to his labourers, and so the whole system is kept
+up by mutual understanding. Except under a very important rise in
+wheat, or a favourable change in the condition of agriculture
+altogether, it is not possible for the farmers to add another
+sixpence either to the sum paid to the individual or to the sum paid
+in the aggregate to the village.
+
+Therefore, as education increases--and it increases rapidly--as the
+push of the world reaches the hamlet; as the labouring class
+increase in social stature, and twenty new wants are found; as they
+come to look forth upon matters in a very different manner to their
+stolid forefathers; it is evident that some important problems will
+arise in the country. The question will have to be asked: Is it
+better for this population to be practically nomad or settled? How
+is livelihood--_i.e._, wages--to be found for it? Can anything be
+substituted for wages? Or must we devise a gigantic system of
+emigration, and in a twelvemonth (if the people took it up) have
+every farmer crying out that he was ruined, he could never get his
+harvest in. I do not think myself that the people could be induced
+to go under any temptation. They like England in despite of their
+troubles. If the farmer could by any happy means find out some new
+plant to cultivate, and so obtain a better profit and be able to
+give wages to more hands, the nomad population would settle itself
+somehow, if in mud huts. No chance of that is in sight at present,
+so we are forced round to the consideration of a substitute for
+wages.
+
+Now, ten or twelve years since, when much activity prevailed in all
+things agricultural, it was proposed to fix the labouring population
+to the soil by building better cottages, giving them large gardens
+and allotments, and various other privileges. This was done; and in
+'Fraser' I did not forget to credit the good intent of those who did
+it. Yet now we see, ten years afterwards, that instead of fixing the
+population, the population becomes more wandering. Why is this? Why
+have not these cottages and allotments produced their expected
+effect? There seems but one answer--that it is the lack of fixity of
+tenure. All these cottages and allotments have only been held on
+sufferance, on good behaviour, and hence they have failed. For even
+for material profit in the independent nineteenth century men do not
+care to be held on their good behaviour. A contract must be free and
+equal on both sides to be respected. To illustrate the case, suppose
+that some large banking institution in London gave out as a law that
+all the employes must live in villas belonging to the bank, say at
+Norwood. There they could have very good villas, and gardens
+attached, and on payment even paddocks, and there they could dwell
+so long as they remained in the office. But the instant any cause of
+disagreement arose they must quit not only the office but their
+homes. What an outcry would be raised against bank managers'
+tyranny were such a custom to be introduced! The extreme hardship of
+having to leave the house on which so much trouble had been
+expended, the garden carefully kept up and planted, the paddock; to
+leave the neighbourhood where friends had been found, and which
+suited the constitution, and where the family were healthy. Fancy
+the stir there would be, and the public meetings to denounce the
+harsh interference with liberty! Yet, with the exception that the
+clerk might have L300 a year, and the labourer 12s. or 14s. a week,
+the cases would be exactly parallel. The labourer has no fixity of
+tenure. He does not particularly care to lay himself out to do his
+best in the field or for his master, because he is aware that
+service is no inheritance, and at any moment circumstances may arise
+which may lead to his eviction. For it is really eviction, though
+unaccompanied by the suffering associated with the word--I was going
+to write 'abroad' for in Ireland. So that all the sanitary cottages
+erected at such expense, and all the large gardens and the
+allotments offered, have failed to produce a contented and settled
+working population. Most people are familiar by this time with the
+demand of the tenant farmers for some exalted kind of compensation,
+which in effect is equivalent to tenant-right, _i.e._, to fixity of
+tenure. Without this, we have all been pretty well informed by now,
+it is impossible for farmers to flourish, since they cannot expend
+capital unless they feel certain of getting it back again. This is
+precisely the case with the labourer. His labour is his capital,
+and he cannot expend it in one district unless he is assured of his
+cottage and garden--that is, of his homestead and farm. You cannot
+have a fixed population unless it has a home, and the labouring
+population is practically homeless. There appears no possibility of
+any real amelioration of their condition until they possess settled
+places of abode. Till then they must move to and fro, and increase
+in restlessness and discontent. Till then they must live in debt,
+from hand to mouth, and without hope of growth in material comfort.
+A race for ever trembling on the verge of the workhouse cannot
+progress and lay up for itself any saving against old age. Such a
+race is feeble and lacks cohesion, and does not afford that backbone
+an agricultural population should afford to the country at large. At
+the last, it is to the countryman, to the ploughman, and 'the
+farmer's boy,' that a land in difficulty looks for help. They are
+the last line of defence--the reserve, the rampart of the nation.
+Our last line at present is all unsettled and broken up, and has
+lost its firm and solid front. Without homes, how can its ranks ever
+become firm and solid again?
+
+An agricultural labourer entering on a cottage and garden with his
+family, we will suppose, is informed that so long as he pays his
+rent he will not be disturbed. He then sets to work in his off hours
+to cultivate his garden and his allotment; he plants fruit-trees; he
+trains a creeper over his porch. His boys and girls have a home
+whenever out of service, and when they are at home they can assist
+in cultivating their father's little property. The family has a home
+and a centre, and there it will remain for generations. Such is
+certainly the case wherever a labourer has a cottage of his own. The
+family inherit it for generations; it would not be difficult to find
+cases in which occupation has endured for a hundred years. There is
+no danger now of the younger members of the family staying too much
+at home. The pressure of circumstances is too strong, as already
+explained; all the tendencies of the time are such as would force
+them from home in search of wages. There is no going back, they must
+push forwards.
+
+The cottage-tenure, like the farm-tenure, must come from the
+landlord, of course. All movements must fall on the landlord unless
+they are made imperial questions. It is always the landowner who has
+to bear the burden in the end. As the cottages belong to the
+landowners, fixity or certainty of tenure is like taking their
+rights from them. But not more so than in the case of the exalted
+compensation called tenant-right. Indeed, I think I shall show that
+the change would be quite trifling beside measures which deal with
+whole properties at once, of five, ten, or twenty thousand acres, as
+the case may be. For, in the first place, let note be taken of a
+most important circumstance, which is that at the present time these
+cottages let on sufferance do not bring in one shilling to the
+landlord. They are not the least profit to him. He does not receive
+the nominal rent, and if he did, of what value would be so
+insignificant a sum, the whole of which for a year would not pay a
+tenth part of the losses sustained by the failure of one tenant
+farmer. As a fact, then, the cottages are of no money value to the
+landowner. A change, therefore, in the mode of tenure could not
+affect the owner like a change in the tenure of a great farm, say at
+a rental of L1,500. Not having received any profit from the previous
+tenure of cottages, he suffers no loss if the tenure be varied. The
+advantage the landowner is supposed to enjoy from the possession of
+cottages scattered about his farms is that the tenants thereby
+secure men to do their work. This advantage would be much better
+secured by a resident and settled population. Take away the
+conventional veil with which the truth is usually flimsily hidden,
+and the fact is that the only objection to a certain degree of
+fixity in cottage tenure is that it would remove from the farmer the
+arbitrary power he now possesses of eviction. What loss there would
+be in this way it is not easy to see, since, as explained, the men
+must have wages, and can only get them from farmers, to whom
+therefore they must resort. But then the man knows the power to give
+such notice is there, and it does not agree with the feelings of the
+nineteenth century. No loss whatever would accrue either to
+landowner or tenant from a fixed population. A farmer may say, 'But
+suppose the man who has my cottage will not work for me?' To this I
+reply, that if the district is so short of cottages that it is
+possible for a farmer to be short of hands, the sooner pressure is
+applied in some way, and others built, the better for landowner,
+tenant, and labourer. If there is sufficient habitation for the
+number of men necessary for cultivating the land, there will be no
+difficulty, because one particular labourer will not work for one
+particular farmer. That labourer must then do one of two things, he
+must starve or work for some other farmer, where his services would
+dispossess another labourer, who would immediately take the vacant
+place. The system of employing men on sufferance, and keeping them,
+however mildly, under the thumb, is a system totally at variance
+with the tenets of our time. It is a most expensive system, and
+ruinous to true self-respect, insomuch as it tends to teach the
+labourer's children that the only way they can show the independence
+of their thought is by impertinent language. How much better for a
+labourer to be perfectly free--how much better for an employer to
+have a man to work for him quite outside any suspicion of
+sufferance, or of being under his thumb! I should not like men under
+my thumb; I should like to pay them for their work, and there let
+the contract end, as it ends in all other businesses. As more wages
+cannot be paid, the next best thing, perhaps the absolutely
+necessary thing, is a fixed home.
+
+I think it would pay any landowner to let all the cottages upon his
+property to the labourers themselves direct, exactly as farms are
+let, giving them security of tenure, so long as rent was
+forthcoming, with each cottage to add a large garden, or allotment,
+up to, say, two acres, at an agricultural, and not an accommodation,
+rent. Most gardens and allotments are let as a favour at a rent
+about three times, and in some cases even six times, the
+agricultural rent of the same soil in the adjoining fields.
+Cottagers do not look upon such tenancies--held, too, on
+sufferance--as a favour or kindness, and feel no gratitude nor any
+attachment to those who permit them to dig and delve at thrice the
+charge the farmer pays. Add to these cottages gardens, not
+necessarily adjoining them, but as near as circumstances allow, up
+to two acres at a purely agricultural rental. If, in addition,
+facilities were to be given for the gradual purchase of the freehold
+by the labourer on the same terms as are now frequently held out by
+building societies, it would be still better. I think it would turn
+out for the advantage of landowner, tenant, and the country at large
+to have a settled agricultural population.
+
+The limit of two acres I mention, not that there is any especial
+virtue in that extent of land, but because I do not think the
+labourer would profit by having more, since he must then spend his
+whole time cultivating his plot. Experience has proved over and over
+again that for a man in England to live by spade-husbandry on four
+or five acres of land is the most miserable existence possible. He
+can but just scrape a living, he is always failing, his children are
+in rags, and debt ultimately consumes him. He is of no good either
+to himself or to others or to the country. For in our country
+agriculture, whether by plough or spade, is confined to three
+things, to grass, corn, or cattle, and there is no plant like the
+vine by which a small proprietor may prosper. Wet seasons come, and
+see--even the broad acres cultivated at such an expense of money
+produce nothing, and the farmer comes to the verge of ruin. But this
+verge of ruin to the small proprietor who sees his four acres of
+crops destroyed means simple extinction. So that the amount of land
+to be of advantage is that amount which the cottager can cultivate
+without giving his entire time to it; so that, in fact, he may also
+earn wages.
+
+To landowner and farmer the value of a fixed population like this,
+fixed and independent, and looking only for payment for what was
+actually done, and not for eleemosynary earnings, would be, I think,
+very great. There would be a constant supply of first-class labour
+available all the year round. A supply of labour on an estate is
+like water-power in America--indispensable. But if you have no
+resident supply you face two evils--you must pay extra to keep men
+there when you have no real work for them to do, or you must offer
+fancy wages in harvest. Now, I think a resident population would do
+the same work if not at less wages at the time of the work, yet for
+less money, taking the year through.
+
+I should be in hopes that such a plan would soon breed a race of men
+of the sturdiest order, the true and natural countrymen; men
+standing upright in the face of all, without one particle of
+servility; paying their rates, and paying their rents; absolutely
+civil and pleasant-mannered, because, being really independent, they
+would need no impudence of tongue to assert what they did not feel;
+men giving a full day's work for a full day's wages (which is now
+seldom seen); men demanding to be paid in full for full work, but
+refusing favours and petty assistance to be recouped hereafter; able
+to give their children a fixed home to come back to; able even to
+push them in life if they wish to leave employment on the land; men
+with the franchise, voting under the protection of the ballot, and
+voting first and foremost for the demolition of the infernal
+poor-law and workhouse system.
+
+The men are there. This is no imaginary class to be created, they
+are there, and they only require homes to become the finest body in
+the world, a rampart to the nation, a support not only to
+agriculture but to every industry that needs the help of labour. For
+physique they have ever been noted, and if it is not valued at home
+it is estimated at its true value in the colonies. From Australia,
+America, all countries desiring sinews and strength, come earnest
+persuasions to these men to emigrate. They are desired above all
+others as the very foundation of stability. It is only at home that
+the agricultural labourer is despised. If ever there were grounds
+for that contempt in his illiterate condition they have disappeared.
+I have always maintained that intelligence exists outside education,
+that men who can neither read nor write often possess good natural
+parts. The labourer at large possesses such parts, but until quite
+lately he has had no opportunity of displaying them. Of recent years
+he or his children have had an opportunity of displaying their
+natural ability, since education was brought within reach of them
+all. Their natural power has at once shown itself, and all the young
+men and young women are now solidly educated. The reproach of being
+illiterate can no longer be hurled at them. They never were
+illiterate mentally; they are now no more illiterate in the partial
+sense of book-knowledge. A young agricultural labourer to-day can
+speak almost as well as the son of a gentleman. There is, of course,
+a little of the country accent remaining, and some few technical
+words are in use. Why should they not be? Do not gentlemen on the
+Exchange use technical terms? I cannot see myself that 'contango' is
+any better English, or 'backwardation' more indicative of
+intelligence, than the terms used in the field. The labourer of
+to-day reads, and thinks about what he reads. The young, being
+educated, have brought education to their parents, the old have
+caught the new tone from the young. It is acknowledged that the farm
+labourer is the most peaceful of all men, the least given to
+agitation for agitation's sake. Permit him to live and he is
+satisfied. He has no class ill-feeling, either against farmer or
+landowner, and he resists all attempts to introduce ill-feeling. He
+maintains a steady and manly attitude, calm, and considering,
+without a trace of hasty revolutionary sentiments. I say that such
+a race of men are not to be despised; I say that they are the very
+foundation of a nation's stability. I say that in common justice
+they deserve settled homes; and further, that as a matter of sound
+policy they should be provided with them.
+
+
+
+
+ON THE DOWNS
+
+
+A trailing beam of light sweeps through the combe, broadening out
+where it touches the ground, and narrowing up to the cloud with
+which it travels. The hollow groove between the hills is lit up
+where it falls as with a ray cast from a mirror. It is an acre wide
+on the sward, and tapers up to the invisible slit in the cloud; a
+mere speck of light from the sky enlightens the earth, and one
+thought opens the hearts of all men. On the slope here the furze is
+flecked with golden spots, and black-headed stonechats perch on
+ant-hills or stray flints, taking no heed of a quiet wanderer. Afar,
+blue line upon blue line of down is drawn along in slow curves, and
+beneath, the distant sea appears a dim plain with five bright
+streaks, where the sunshine pours through as many openings in the
+clouds. The wind smells like an apple fresh plucked; suddenly the
+great beam of light vanishes as the sun comes out, and at once the
+single beam is merged in the many.
+
+Light and colour, freedom and delicious air, give exquisite pleasure
+to the senses; but the heart searches deeper, and draws forth food
+for itself from sunshine, hills and sea. Desiring their beauty so
+deeply, the desire in a measure satisfies itself. It is a thirst
+which slakes itself to grow the stronger. It springs afresh from the
+light, from the blue hill-line yonder, from the gorse-flower at
+hand; to seize upon something that seems in them, which they
+symbolize and speak of; to take it away within oneself; to absorb it
+and feel conscious of it--a something that cannot be defined, but
+which corresponds with all that is highest, truest, and most ideal
+within the mind. It says, Hope and aspire, strive for largeness of
+thought. The wind blows, and declares that the mind has capacity for
+more than has ever yet been brought to it. The wind is wide, and
+blows not only here, but along the whole range of hills--the hills
+are not broad enough for it; nor is the sea--it crosses the ocean
+and spreads itself whither it will. Though invisible, it is
+material, and yet it knows no limit. As the wind to the fixed
+boulder lying deep in the sward, so is the immaterial mind to the
+wind. There is capacity in it for more than has ever yet been placed
+before it. No system, no philosophy yet organized in logical
+sequence satisfies the inmost depth--fills and fully occupies the
+well of thought. Read the system, and with the last word it is
+over--the mind passes on and requires more. It is but a crumb tasted
+and gone: who should remember a crumb? But the wind blows, not one
+puff and then stillness: it continues; if it does cease there
+remains the same air to be breathed. So that the physical part of
+man thus always provided with air for breathing is infinitely better
+cared for than his mind, which gets but little crumbs, as it were,
+coming from old times. These are soon gone, and there remains
+nothing. Somewhere surely there must be more. An ancient thinker
+considered that the atmosphere was full of faint images--spectra,
+reflections, or emanations retaining shape, though without
+substance--that they crowded past in myriads by day and night.
+Perhaps there may be thoughts invisible, but floating round us, if
+we could only render ourselves sensitive to their impact. Such a
+remark must not be taken literally--it is only an effort to convey a
+meaning, just as shadow throws up light. The light is that there are
+further thoughts yet to be found.
+
+The fulness of Nature and the vacancy of mental existence are
+strangely contrasted. Nature is full everywhere; there is no chink,
+no unfurnished space. The mind has only a few thoughts to recall,
+and those old, and that have been repeated these centuries past.
+Unless the inner mind (not that which deals with little matters of
+daily labour) lets itself rest on every blade of grass and leaf, and
+listens to the soothing wind, it must be vacant--vacant for lack of
+something to do, not from limit of capacity. For it is too strong
+and powerful for the things it has to grasp; they are crushed like
+wheat in a mill. It has capacity for so much, and it is supplied
+with so little. All the centuries that have gone have gathered
+hardly a bushel, as it were, and these dry grains are quickly rolled
+under strong thought and reduced to dust. The mill must then cease,
+not that it has no further power, but because the supply stops.
+Bring it another bushel, and it will grind as long as the grain is
+poured in. Let fresh images come in a stream like the apple-scented
+wind; there is room for them, the storehouse of the inner mind
+expands to receive them, wide as the sea which receives the breeze.
+The Downs are now lit with sunlight--the night will cover them
+presently--but the mind will sigh as eagerly for these things as in
+the glory of day. Sooner or later there will surely come an opening
+in the clouds, and a broad beam of light will descend. A new thought
+scarcely arrives in a thousand years, but the sweet wind is always
+here, providing breath for the physical man. Let hope and faith
+remain, like the air, always, so that the soul may live. That such a
+higher thought may come is the desire--the prayer--which springs on
+viewing the blue hill line, the sea, the flower.
+
+Stoop and touch the earth, and receive its influence; touch the
+flower, and feel its life; face the wind, and have its meaning; let
+the sunlight fall on the open hand as if you could hold it.
+Something may be grasped from them all, invisible yet strong. It is
+the sense of a wider existence--wider and higher. Illustrations
+drawn from material things (as they needs must be) are weak to
+convey such an idea. But much may be gathered indirectly by
+examining the powers of the mind--by the light thrown on it from
+physical things. Now, at this moment, the blue dome of the sky,
+immense as it is, is but a span to the soul. The eye-glance travels
+to the horizon in an instant--the soul-glance travels over all
+matter also in a moment. By no possibility could a world, or a
+series of worlds, be conceived which the mind could not traverse
+instantaneously. Outer space itself, therefore, seems limited and
+with bounds, because the mind is so penetrating it can imagine
+nothing to the end of which it cannot get. Space--ethereal space, as
+far beyond the stars as it is to them--think of it how you will,
+ends each side in dimness. The dimness is its boundary. The mind so
+instantly occupies all space that space becomes finite, and with
+limits. It is the things that are brought before it that are
+limited, not the power of the mind.
+
+The sweet wind says, again, that the inner mind has never yet been
+fully employed; that more than half its power still lies dormant.
+Ideas are the tools of the mind. Without tools you cannot build a
+ship. The minds of savages lie almost wholly dormant, not because
+naturally deficient, but because they lack the ideas--the tools--to
+work with. So we have had our ideas so long that we have built all
+we can with them. Nothing further can be constructed with these
+materials. But whenever new and larger materials are discovered we
+shall find the mind able to build much more magnificent structures.
+Let us, then, if we cannot yet discover them, at least wait and
+watch as ceaselessly as the hills, listening as the wind blows over.
+Three-fourths of the mind still sleeps. That little atom of it
+needed to conduct the daily routine of the world is, indeed, often
+strained to the utmost. That small part of it, again, occasionally
+exercised in re-learning ancient thoughts, is scarcely half
+employed--small as it is. There is so much more capacity in the
+inner mind--a capacity of which but few even dream. Until favourable
+times and chances bring fresh materials for it, it is not conscious
+of itself. Light and freedom, colour, and delicious air--sunshine,
+blue hill lines, and flowers--give the heart to feel that there is
+so much more to be enjoyed of which we walk in ignorance.
+
+Touching a flower, it seems as if some of this were absorbed from
+it; it flows from the flower like its perfume. The delicate odour of
+the violet cannot be written; it is material yet it cannot be
+expressed. So there is an immaterial influence flowing from it which
+escapes language. Touching the greensward, there is a feeling as if
+the great earth sent a mystic influence through the frame. From the
+sweet wind, too, it comes. The sunlight falls on the hand; the light
+remains without on the surface, but its influence enters the very
+being. This sense of absorbing something from earth, and flower, and
+sunlight is like hovering on the verge of a great truth. It is the
+consciousness that a great truth is there. Not that the flower and
+the wind know it, but that they stir unexplored depths in the mind.
+They are only material--the sun sinks, darkness covers the hills,
+and where is their beauty then? The feeling or thought which is
+excited by them resides in the mind, and the purport and drift of it
+is a wider existence--yet to be enjoyed on earth. Only to think of
+and imagine it is in itself a pleasure.
+
+The red-tipped hawthorn buds are full of such a thought; the tender
+green of the leaf just born speaks it. The leaf does not come forth
+shapeless. Already, at its emergence, there are fine divisions at
+the edge, markings, and veins. It is wonderful from the
+commencement. A thought may be put in a line, yet require a
+life-time to understand in its completeness. The leaf was folded in
+the tiny red-tipped bud--now it has come forth how long must one
+ponder to fully appreciate it?
+
+Those things which are symbolized by the leaf, the flower, the very
+touch of earth, have not yet been put before the mind in a definite
+form, and shaped so that they can be weighed. The mind is like a
+lens. A lens can examine nothing of itself, but no matter what is
+put before it, it will magnify it so that it can be searched into.
+So whatever is put before the mind in such form that it may be
+perceived, the mind will search into and examine. It is not that the
+mind is limited, and unable to understand; it is that the facts have
+not yet been placed in front of it. But because as yet these things
+are like the leaf folded in the bud, that is no reason why we should
+say they are beyond hope of comprehension.
+
+Such a course inflicts the greatest moral injury on the world.
+Remaining content upon a mental level is fatal, saying to ourselves,
+'There is nothing more, this is our limit; we can go no farther,' is
+the ruin of the mind, as much sleep is the ruin of the body. Looking
+back through history, it is evident that thought has forced itself
+out on the world by its own power and against an immense inertia.
+Thought has worked its way by dint of its own energy, and not
+because it was welcomed. So few care or hope for a higher mental
+level; the old terrace of mind will do; let us rest; be assured no
+higher terrace exists. Experience, however, from time to time has
+proved that higher terraces did exist. Without doubt there are
+others now. Somewhere behind the broad beam of life sweeping so
+beautifully through the combe, somewhere behind the flower, and in
+the wind. Yet to come up over the blue hill line, there are deeper,
+wider thoughts still. Always let us look higher, in spite of the
+narrowness of daily life. The little is so heavy that it needs a
+strong effort to escape it. The littleness of daily routine; the
+care felt and despised, the minutiae which grow against our will,
+come in time to be heavier than lead. There should be some comfort
+in the thought that, however these may strain the mind, it is
+certain that hardly a fiftieth part of its real capacity is occupied
+with them. There is an immense power in it unused. By stretching one
+muscle too much it becomes overworked; still, there are a hundred
+other muscles in the body. In truth, we do not fully understand our
+own earth, our own life, yet. Never, never let us permit the weight
+of little things to bear us wholly down. If any object that these
+are vague aspirations, so is the wind vague, yet it is real. They
+may direct us as strongly as the wind presses on the sails of a
+ship.
+
+The blue hill line arouses a perception of a current of thought
+which lies for the most part unrecognized within--an unconscious
+thought. By looking at this blue hill line this dormant power within
+the mind becomes partly visible; the heart wakes up to it.
+
+The intense feeling caused by the sunshine, by the sky, by the
+flowers and distant sea is an increased consciousness of our own
+life. The stream of light--the rush of sweet wind--excites a deeper
+knowledge of the soul. An unutterable desire at once arises for more
+of this; let us receive more of the inner soul life which seeks and
+sighs for purest beauty. But the word beauty is poor to convey the
+feelings intended. Give us the thoughts which correspond with the
+feeling called up by the sky, the sea afar, and the flower at hand.
+Let us really be in ourselves the sunbeam which we use as an
+illustration. The recognition of its loveliness, and of the
+delicious air, is really a refined form of prayer--the purer because
+it is not associated with any object, because of its width and
+openness. It is not prayer in the sense of a benefit desired, it is
+a feeling of rising to a nobler existence.
+
+It does not include wishes connected with routine and labour. Nor
+does it depend on the brilliant sun--this mere clod of earth will
+cause it, even a little crumble of mould. The commonest form of
+matter thus regarded excites the highest form of spirit. The
+feelings may be received from the least morsel of brown earth
+adhering to the surface of the skin on the hand that has touched the
+ground. Inhaling this deep feeling, the soul, perforce, must
+pray--a rude imperfect word to express the aspiration--with every
+glimpse of sunlight, whether it come in a room amid routine, or in
+the solitude of the hills; with every flower, and grass-blade, and
+the vast earth underfoot; with the gleam on the distant sea, with
+the song of the lark on high, and the thrush lowly in the hawthorn.
+
+From the blue hill lines, from the dark copses on the ridges, the
+shadows in the combes, from the apple-sweet wind and rising grasses,
+from the leaf issuing out of the bud to question the sun--there
+comes from all of these an influence which forces the heart to lift
+itself in earnest and purest desire.
+
+The soul knows itself, and would live its own life.
+
+
+
+
+THE SUN AND THE BROOK
+
+
+The sun first sees the brook in the meadow where some roach swim
+under a bulging root of ash. Leaning against the tree, and looking
+down into the water, there is a picture of the sky. Its brightness
+hides the sandy floor of the stream as a picture conceals the wall
+where it hangs, but, as if the water cooled the rays, the eye can
+bear to gaze on the image of the sun. Over its circle thin threads
+of summer cloud are drawn; it is only the reflection, yet the sun
+seems closer seen in the brook, more to do with us, like the grass,
+and the tree, and the flowing stream. In the sky it is so far, it
+cannot be approached, nor even gazed at, so that by the very virtue
+and power of its own brilliance it forces us to ignore, and almost
+forget it. The summer days go on, and no one notices the sun. The
+sweet water slipping past the green flags, with every now and then a
+rushing sound of eager haste, receives the sky, and it becomes a
+part of the earth and of life. No one can see his own face without a
+glass; no one can sit down and deliberately think of the soul till
+it appears a visible thing. It eludes--the mind cannot grasp it. But
+hold a flower in the hand--a rose, this later honeysuckle, or this
+the first harebell--and in its beauty you can recognize your own
+soul reflected as the sun in the brook. For the soul finds itself in
+beautiful things.
+
+Between the bulging root and the bank there is a tiny oval pool, on
+the surface of which the light does not fall. There the eye can see
+deep down into the stream, which scarcely moves in the hollow it has
+worn for itself as its weight swings into the concave of the bend.
+The hollow is illumined by the light which sinks through the stream
+outside the root; and beneath, in the green depth, five or six roach
+face the current. Every now and then a tiny curl appears on the
+surface inside the root, and must rise up to come there. Unwinding
+as it goes, its raised edge lowers and becomes lost in the level.
+Dark moss on the base of the ash darkens the water under. The light
+green leaves overhead yield gently to the passing air; there are but
+few leaves on the tree, and these scarcely make a shadow on the
+grass beyond that of the trunk. As the branch swings, the gnats are
+driven farther away to avoid it. Over the verge of the bank, bending
+down almost to the root in the water, droop the heavily seeded heads
+of tall grasses which, growing there, have escaped the scythe.
+
+These are the days of the convolvulus, of ripening berry, and
+dropping nut. In the gateways, ears of wheat hang from the hawthorn
+boughs, which seized them from the passing load. The broad aftermath
+is without flowers; the flowers are gone to the uplands and the
+untilled wastes. Curving opposite the south, the hollow side of the
+brook has received the sunlight like a silvered speculum every day
+that the sun has shone. Since the first violet of the meadow, till
+now that the berries are ripening, through all the long drama of the
+summer, the rays have visited the stream. The long, loving touch of
+the sun has left some of its own mystic attraction in the brook.
+Resting here, and gazing down into it, thoughts and dreams come
+flowing as the water flows. Thoughts without words, mobile like the
+stream, nothing compact that can be grasped and stayed: dreams that
+slip silently as water slips through the fingers. The grass is not
+grass alone; the leaves of the ash above are not leaves only. From
+tree, and earth, and soft air moving, there comes an invisible touch
+which arranges the senses to its waves as the ripples of the lake
+set the sand in parallel lines. The grass sways and fans the
+reposing mind; the leaves sway and stroke it, till it can feel
+beyond itself and with them, using each grass blade, each leaf, to
+abstract life from earth and ether. These then become new organs,
+fresh nerves and veins running afar out into the field, along the
+winding brook, up through the leaves, bringing a larger existence.
+The arms of the mind open wide to the broad sky.
+
+Some sense of the meaning of the grass, and leaves of the tree, and
+sweet waters hovers on the confines of thought, and seems ready to
+be resolved into definite form. There is a meaning in these things,
+a meaning in all that exists, and it comes near to declare itself.
+Not yet, not fully, nor in such shape that it may be formulated--if
+ever it will be--but sufficiently so to leave, as it were, an
+unwritten impression that will remain when the glamour is gone, and
+grass is but grass, and a tree a tree.
+
+
+
+
+NATURE AND ETERNITY
+
+
+The goldfinches sing so sweetly hidden in the topmost boughs of the
+apple-trees that heart of man cannot withstand them. These four
+walls, though never so well decorated with pictures, this flat white
+ceiling, feels all too small, and dull and tame. Down with books and
+pen, and let us away with the goldfinches, the princes of the birds.
+For thirty of their generations they have sung and courted and built
+their nests in those apple-trees, almost under the very windows--a
+time in their chronology equal to a thousand years. For they are so
+very busy, from earliest morn till night--a long summer's day is
+like a year. Now flirting with a gaily-decked and coy lady-love,
+chasing her from tree to tree; now splashing at the edge of a
+shallow stream till the golden feathers glisten and the red topknot
+shines. Then searching in and out the hedgerow for favourite seeds,
+and singing, singing all the while, verily a 'song without an end.'
+The wings never still, the bill never idle, the throat never silent,
+and the tiny heart within the proud breast beating so rapidly that,
+reckoning time by change and variety, an hour must be a day. A life
+all joy and freedom, without thought, and full of love. What a
+great god the sun must be to the finches from whose wings his beams
+are reflected in glittering gold! The abstract idea of a deity
+apart, as they feel their life-blood stirring, their eyelids
+opening, with the rising sun; as they fly to satisfy their hunger
+with those little fruits they use; as they revel in the warm
+sunshine, and utter soft notes of love to their beautiful mates,
+they cannot but feel a sense, unnamed, indefinite, of joyous
+gratitude towards that great orb which is very nearly akin to the
+sensual worship of ancient days. Darkness and cold are Typhon and
+Ahriman, light and warmth, Osiris and Ormuzd, indeed to them; with
+song they welcome the spring and celebrate the awakening of Adonis.
+Lovely little idolaters, my heart goes with them. Deep down in the
+mysteries of organic life there are causes for the marvellously
+extended grasp which the worship of light once held upon the world,
+hardly yet guessed at, and which even now play a part unsuspected in
+the motives of men. Even yet, despite our artificial life, despite
+railroads, telegraphs, printing-press, in the face of firm
+monotheistic convictions, once a year the old, old influence breaks
+forth, driving thousands and thousands from cities and houses out
+into field and forest, to the seashore and mountain-top, to gather
+fresh health and strength from the Sun, from the Air--Jove--and old
+Ocean. So the goldfinches rejoice in the sunshine, and who can sit
+within doors when they sing?
+
+Foolish fashion has banished the orchard from the mansion--the
+orchard which Homer tells us kings once valued as part of their
+demesne--and has substituted curious evergreens to which the birds
+do not take readily. But this orchard is almost under the windows,
+and in summer the finches wake the sleeper with their song, and in
+autumn the eye looks down upon the yellow and rosy fruit. Up the
+scaling bark of the trunks the brown tree-climbers run, peering into
+every cranny, and few are the insects which escape those keen eyes.
+Sitting on a bench under a pear-tree, I saw a spider drop from a
+leaf fully nine feet above the ground, and disappear in the grass,
+leaving a slender rope of web, attached at the upper end to a leaf,
+and at the lower to a fallen pear. In a few minutes a small white
+caterpillar, barely an inch long, began to climb this rope. It
+grasped the thread in the mouth and drew up its body about a
+sixteenth of an inch at a time, then held tight with the two
+fore-feet, and, lifting its head, seized the rope a sixteenth
+higher; repeating this operation incessantly, the rest of the body
+swinging in the air. Never pausing, without haste and without rest,
+this creature patiently worked its way upwards, as a man might up a
+rope. Let anyone seize a beam overhead and attempt to lift the chest
+up to a level with it, the expenditure of strength is very great;
+even with long practice, to 'swarm' up a pole or rope to any
+distance is the hardest labour the human muscles are capable of.
+This despised 'creeping thing,' without the slightest apparent
+effort, without once pausing to take breath, reached the leaf
+overhead in rather under half an hour, having climbed a rope fully
+108 times its own length. To equal this a man must climb 648 feet,
+or more than half as high again as St. Paul's. The insect on
+reaching the top at once commenced feeding, and easily bit through
+the hard pear-leaf: how delicately then it must have grasped the
+slender spider's web, which a touch would destroy! The thoughts
+which this feat call forth do not end here, for there was no
+necessity to go up the thread; the insect could to all appearance
+have travelled up the trunk of the tree with ease, and it is not to
+be supposed that its mouth and feet were specially adapted to climb
+a web, a thing which I have never seen done since, and which was to
+all appearance merely the result of the _accident_ of the insect
+coming along just after the spider had left the thread. Another few
+minutes, and the first puff of wind would have carried the thread
+away--as a puff actually did soon afterwards. I claim a wonderful
+amount of _original_ intelligence--as opposed to the ill-used term
+instinct--of patience and perseverance for this creature. It is so
+easy to imagine that because man is big, brain power cannot exist in
+tiny organizations; but even in man the seat of thought is so minute
+that it escapes discovery, and his very life may be said to lie in
+the point of contact of two bones of the neck. Put the mind of man
+within the body of the caterpillar--what more could it have done?
+Accustomed to bite and eat its way through hard leaves, why did not
+the insect snip off and destroy its rope? These are matters to think
+over dreamily while the finches sing overhead in the apple-tree.
+
+They are not the only regular inhabitants, still less the only
+visitors. As there are wide plains even in thickly populated England
+where man has built no populous city, so in bird-life there are
+fields and woods almost deserted by the songsters, who at the same
+time congregate thickly in a few favourite resorts, where experience
+gathered in slow time has shown them they need fear nothing from
+human beings. Such a place, such a city of the birds and beasts, is
+this old orchard. The bold and handsome bullfinch builds in the low
+hawthorn hedge which bounds it upon one side. In the walls of the
+arbour formed of thick ivy and flowering creepers, the robin and
+thrush hide their nests. On the topmost branches of the tall
+pear-trees the swallows rest and twitter. The noble blackbird, with
+full black eye, pecks at the decaying apples upon the sward, and
+takes no heed of a footstep. Sometimes the loving pair of squirrels
+who dwell in the fir-copse at the end of the meadow find their way
+down the hedges--staying at each tree as an inn by the road--into
+the orchard, and play their fantastic tricks upon the apple-boughs.
+The flycatchers perch on a branch clear from the tree, and dart at
+the passing flies. Merriest of all, the tomtits chatter and scold,
+hanging under the twigs, head downwards, and then away to their nest
+in the crumbling stone wall which encloses one side of the orchard.
+They have worked their way by a cranny deep into the thick wall. On
+the other side runs the king's highway, and ever and anon the teams
+go by, making music with their bells. One day a whole nation of
+martins savagely attacked this wall. Pressure of population probably
+had compelled them to emigrate from the sand quarry, and the chinks
+in the wall pleased their eyes. Five-and-thirty brown little birds
+went to work like miners at twelve or fourteen holes, tapping at the
+mortar with their bills, scratching out small fragments of stone,
+twittering and talking all the time, and there undoubtedly they
+would have founded a colony had not the jingling teams and now and
+then a barking dog disturbed them. Resting on the bench and leaning
+back against an apple-tree, it is easy to watch the eager starlings
+on the chimney-top, and see them tear out the straw of the thatch to
+form their holes. They are all orators born. They live in a
+democracy, and fluency of speech leads the populace. Perched on the
+edge of the chimney, his bronze-tinted wings flapping against his
+side to give greater emphasis--as a preacher moves his hands--the
+starling pours forth a flood of eloquence, now rising to
+screaming-pitch, now modulating his tones to soft persuasion, now
+descending to deep, low, complaining, regretful sounds--a speech
+without words--addressed to a dozen birds gravely listening on the
+ash-tree yonder. He is begging them to come with him to a meadow
+where food is abundant. In the ivy close under the window there,
+within reach of the hand, a water-wagtail built its nest. To this
+nest one lovely afternoon came a great bird like a hawk, to the
+fearful alarm and intense excitement of all the bird population. It
+was a cuckoo, and after three or four visits, despite a curious eye
+at the window, there was a strange egg in that nest. Inside that
+window, huddled fearfully in the darkest corner of the room, there
+was once a tiny heap of blue and yellow feathers. A tomtit straying
+through the casement had been chased by the cat till it dropped
+exhausted, and the cat was fortunately frightened by a footstep. The
+bird was all but dead--the feathers awry and ruffled, the eyelids
+closed, the body limp and helpless--only a faint fluttering of the
+tiny heart. When placed tenderly on the ledge of the casement, where
+the warm sunshine fell and the breeze came softly, it dropped
+listlessly on one side. But in a little while the life-giving rays
+quickened the blood, the eyelids opened, and presently it could
+stand perched upon the finger. Then, lest with returning
+consciousness fear should again arise, the clinging claws were
+transferred from the finger to a twig of wall-pear. A few minutes
+more, and with a chirp the bird was gone into the flood of sunlight.
+What intense joy there must have been in that little creature's
+heart as it drank the sweet air and felt the loving warmth of its
+great god Ra, the Sun!
+
+Throwing open the little wicket-gate, by a step the greensward of
+the meadow is reached. Though the grass has been mown and the ground
+is dry, it is better to carry a thick rug, and cast it down in the
+shadow under the tall horse-chestnut-tree. It is only while in a
+dreamy, slumbrous, half-mesmerized state that nature's ancient
+papyrus roll can be read--only when the mind is at rest, separated
+from care and labour; when the body is at ease, luxuriating in
+warmth and delicious languor; when the soul is in accord and
+sympathy with the sunlight, with the leaf, with the slender blades
+of grass, and can feel with the tiniest insect which climbs up them
+as up a mighty tree. As the genius of the great musicians, without
+an articulated word or printed letter, can carry with it all the
+emotions, so now, lying prone upon the earth in the shadow, with
+quiescent will, listening, thoughts and feelings rise respondent to
+the sunbeams, to the leaf, the very blade of grass. Resting the head
+upon the hand, gazing down upon the ground, the strange and
+marvellous inner sight of the mind penetrates the solid earth,
+grasps in part the mystery of its vast extension upon either side,
+bearing its majestic mountains, its deep forests, its grand oceans,
+and almost feels the life which in ten thousand thousand forms
+revels upon its surface. Returning upon itself, the mind joys in the
+knowledge that it too is a part of this wonder--akin to the ten
+thousand thousand creatures, akin to the very earth itself. How
+grand and holy is this life! how sacred the temple which contains
+it!
+
+Out from the hedge, not five yards distant, pours a rush of deep
+luscious notes, succeeded by the sweetest trills heard by man. It is
+the nightingale, which tradition assigns to the night only, but
+which in fact sings as loudly, and to my ear more joyously, in the
+full sunlight, especially in the morning, and always close to the
+nest. The sun has moved onward upon his journey, and this spot is no
+longer completely shaded, but the foliage of a great oak breaks the
+force of his rays, and the eye can even bear to gaze at his disc for
+a few moments. Living for this brief hour at least in unalloyed
+sympathy with nature, apart from all disturbing influences, the
+sight of that splendid disc carries the soul with it till it feels
+as eternal as the sun. Let the memory call up a picture of the
+desert sands of Egypt--upon the kings with the double crown, upon
+Rameses, upon Sesostris, upon Assurbanipal the burning beams of this
+very sun descended, filling their veins with tumultuous life, three
+thousand years ago. Lifted up in absorbing thought, the mind feels
+that these three thousand years are in truth no longer past than the
+last beat of the pulse. It throbbed--the throb is gone; their pulse
+throbbed, and it seems but a moment since, for to thought, as to the
+sun, there is no time. This little petty life of seventy years, with
+its little petty aims and hopes, its despicable fears and
+contemptible sorrows, is no more the life with which the mind is
+occupied. This golden disc has risen and set, as the graven marks of
+man alone record, full eight thousand years. The hieroglyphs of the
+rocks speak of a fiery sun shining inconceivable ages before that.
+Yet even this almost immortal sun had a beginning--perhaps emerging
+as a ball of incandescent gas from chaos: how long ago was that? And
+onwards, still onwards goes the disc, doubtless for ages and ages to
+come. It is time that our measures should be extended; these paltry
+divisions of hours and days and years--aye, of centuries--should be
+superseded by terms conveying some faint idea at least of the
+vastness of space. For in truth, when thinking thus, there is no
+_time_ at all. The mind loses the sense of time and reposes in
+eternity. This hour, this instant is eternity; it extends backwards,
+it extends forwards, and we are in it. It is a grand and an
+ennobling feeling to know that at this moment illimitable time
+extends on either hand. No conception of a supernatural character
+formed in the brain has ever or will ever surpass the mystery of
+this endless existence as exemplified--as made manifest by the
+physical sun--a visible sign of immortality. This--this hour is part
+of the immortal life. Reclining upon this rug under the
+chestnut-tree, while the graceful shadows dance, a passing bee hums
+and the nightingale sings, while the oak foliage sprinkles the
+sunshine over us, we are really and in truth in the midst of
+eternity. Only by walking hand in hand with nature, only by a
+reverent and loving study of the mysteries for ever around us, is it
+possible to disabuse the mind of the narrow view, the contracted
+belief that time is now and eternity to-morrow. Eternity is to-day.
+The goldfinches and the tiny caterpillars, the brilliant sun, if
+looked at lovingly and thoughtfully, will lift the soul out of the
+smaller life of human care that is of selfish aims, bounded by
+seventy years, into the greater, the limitless life which has been
+going on over universal space from endless ages past, which is going
+on now, and which will for ever and for ever, in one form or
+another, continue to proceed.
+
+Dreamily listening to the nightingale's song, let us look down upon
+the earth as the sun looks down upon it. In this meadow how many
+millions of blades of grass are there, each performing wonderful
+operations which the cleverest chemist can but poorly indicate,
+taking up from the earth its sap, from the air its gases, in a word
+living, living as much as ourselves, though in a lower form? On the
+oak-tree yonder, how many leaves are doing the same? Just now we
+felt the vastness of the earth--its extended majesty, bearing
+mountain, forest, and sea. Not a blade of grass but has its insect,
+not a leaf; the very air as it softly woos the cheek bears with it
+living germs, and upon all those mountains, within those forests,
+and in every drop of those oceans, life in some shape moves and
+stirs. Nay, the very solid earth itself, the very chalk and clay and
+stone and rock has been built up by once living organisms. But at
+this instant, looking down upon the earth as the sun does, how can
+words depict the glowing wonder, the marvellous beauty of all the
+plant, the insect, the animal life, which presses upon the mental
+eye? It is impossible. But with these that are more immediately
+around us--with the goldfinch, the caterpillar, the nightingale, the
+blades of grass, the leaves--with these we may feel, into their life
+we may in part enter, and find our own existence thereby enlarged.
+Would that it were possible for the heart and mind to enter into
+_all_ the life that glows and teems upon the earth--to feel with it,
+hope with it, sorrow with it--and thereby to become a grander,
+nobler being. Such a being, with such a sympathy and larger
+existence, must hold in scorn the feeble, cowardly, selfish desire
+for an immortality of pleasure only, whose one great hope is to
+escape pain! No. Let me joy with all living creatures; let me suffer
+with them all--the reward of feeling a deeper, grander life would be
+amply sufficient.
+
+What wonderful patience the creatures called 'lower' exhibit! Watch
+this small red ant travelling among the grass-blades. To it they are
+as high as the oak-trees to us, and they are entangled and matted
+together as a forest overthrown by a tornado. The insect slowly
+overcomes all the difficulties of its route--now climbing over the
+creeping roots of the buttercups, now struggling under a fallen
+leaf, now getting up a bennet, up and down, making one inch forward
+for three vertically, but never pausing, always onwards at racing
+speed. A shadow sweeps rapidly over the grass--it is that of a rook
+which has flown between us and the sun. Looking upwards into the
+deep azure of the sky, intently gazing into space and forgetting for
+a while the life around and beneath, there comes into the mind an
+intense desire to rise, to penetrate the height, to become part and
+parcel of that wondrous infinity which extends overhead as it
+extends along the surface. The soul full of thought grows
+concentrated in itself, marvels only at its own destiny, labours to
+behold the secret of its own existence, and, above all, utters
+without articulate words a prayer forced from it by the bright sun,
+by the blue sky, by bird and plant:--Let me have wider feelings,
+more extended sympathies, let me feel with all living things,
+rejoice and praise with them. Let me have deeper knowledge, a nearer
+insight, a more reverent conception. Let me see the mystery of
+life--the secret of the sap as it rises in the tree--the secret of
+the blood as it courses through the vein. Reveal the broad earth and
+the ends of it--make the majestic ocean open to the eye down to its
+inmost recesses. Expand the mind till it grasps the idea of the
+unseen forces which hold the globe suspended and draw the vast suns
+and stars through space. Let it see the life, the organisms which
+dwell in those great worlds, and feel with them their hopes and joys
+and sorrows. Ever upwards, onwards, wider, deeper, broader, till
+capable of all--all. Never did vivid imagination stretch out the
+powers of deity with such a fulness, with such intellectual grasp,
+vigour, omniscience as the human mind could reach to, if only its
+organs, its means, were equal to its thought. Give us, then, greater
+strength of body, greater length of days; give us more vital energy,
+let our limbs be mighty as those of the giants of old. Supplement
+such organs with nobler mechanical engines--with extended means of
+locomotion; add novel and more minute methods of analysis and
+discovery. Let us become as demi-gods. And why not? Whoso gave the
+gift of the mind gave also an infinite space, an infinite matter for
+it to work upon, an infinite time in which to work. Let no one
+presume to define the boundaries of that divine gift--that
+mind--for all the experience of eight thousand years proves beyond a
+question that the limits of its powers will never be reached, though
+the human race dwell upon the globe for eternity. Up, then, and
+labour: and let that labour be sound and holy. Not for immediate and
+petty reward, not that the appetite or the vanity may be gratified,
+but that the sum of human perfection may be advanced; labouring as
+consecrated priests, for true science is religion. All is possible.
+A grand future awaits the world. When man has only partially worked
+out his own conceptions--when only a portion of what the mind
+foresees and plans is realized--then already earth will be as a
+paradise.
+
+Full of love and sympathy for this feeble ant climbing over grass
+and leaf, for yonder nightingale pouring forth its song, feeling
+a community with the finches, with bird, with plant, with animal,
+and reverently studying all these and more--how is it possible
+for the heart while thus wrapped up to conceive the desire of
+crime? For ever anxious and labouring for perfection, shall the
+soul, convinced of the divinity of its work, halt and turn aside
+to fall into imperfection? Lying thus upon the rug under the
+shadow of the oak and horse-chestnut-tree, full of the joy of
+life--full of the joy which all organisms feel in living
+alone--lifting the eye far, far above the sphere even of the sun,
+shall we ever conceive the idea of murder, of violence, of aught
+that degrades ourselves? It is impossible while in this frame. So
+thus reclining, and thus occupied, we require no judge, no
+prison, no law, no punishment--and, further, no army, no monarch.
+At this moment, did neither of these institutions exist our
+conduct would be the same. Our whole existence at this moment is
+permeated with a reverent love, an aspiration--a desire of a more
+perfect life; if the very name of religion was extinct, our
+hopes, our wish would be the same. It is but a simple transition
+to conclude that with more extended knowledge, with wider
+sympathies, with greater powers--powers more equal to the vague
+longings of their minds, the human race would be as we are at
+this moment in the shadow of the chestnut-tree. No need of priest
+and lawyer; no need of armies or kings. It is probable that with
+the progress of knowledge it will be possible to satisfy the
+necessary wants of existence much more easily than now, and thus
+to remove one great cause of discord. And all these thoughts
+because the passing shadow of a rook caused the eye to gaze
+upwards into the deep azure of the sky. There is no limit, no
+number to the thoughts which the study of nature may call forth,
+any more than there is a limit to the number of the rays of the
+sun.
+
+This blade of grass grows as high as it can, the nightingale there
+sings as sweetly as it can, the goldfinches feed to their full
+desire and lay down no arbitrary rules of life; the great sun above
+pours out its heat and light in a flood unrestrained. What is the
+meaning of this hieroglyph, which is repeated in a thousand thousand
+other ways and shapes, which meets us at every turn? It is evident
+that all living creatures, from the zoophyte upwards, plant,
+reptile, bird, animal, and in his natural state--in his physical
+frame--man also, strive with all their powers to obtain as perfect
+an existence as possible. It is the one great law of their being,
+followed from birth to death. All the efforts of the plant are put
+forth to obtain more light, more air, more moisture--in a word, more
+food--upon which to grow, expand, and become more beautiful and
+perfect. The aim may be unconscious, but the result is evident. It
+is equally so with the animal; its lowest appetites subserve the one
+grand object of its advance. Whether it be eating, drinking,
+sleeping, procreating, all tends to one end, a fuller development of
+the individual, a higher condition of the species; still further, to
+the production of new races capable of additional progress. Part and
+parcel as we are of the great community of living beings,
+indissolubly connected with them from the lowest to the highest by a
+thousand ties, it is impossible for us to escape from the operation
+of this law; or if, by the exertion of the will, and the resources
+of the intellect, it is partially suspended, then the individual may
+perhaps pass away unharmed, but the race must suffer. It is, rather,
+the province of that inestimable gift, the mind, to aid nature, to
+smooth away the difficulties, to assist both the physical and mental
+man to increase his powers and widen his influence. Such efforts
+have been made from time to time, but unfortunately upon purely
+empirical principles, by arbitrary interference, without a long
+previous study of the delicate organization it was proposed to
+amend. If there is one thing our latter-day students have
+demonstrated beyond all reach of cavil, it is that both the physical
+and the mental man are, as it were, a mass of inherited
+structures--are built up of partially absorbed rudimentary organs
+and primitive conceptions, much as the trunks of certain trees are
+formed by the absorption of the leaves. He is made up of the Past.
+This is a happy and an inspiriting discovery, insomuch as it holds
+out a resplendent promise that there may yet come a man of the
+future made out of our present which will then be the past. It is a
+discovery which calls upon us for new and larger moral and physical
+exertion, which throws upon us wider and nobler duties, for upon us
+depends the future. At one blow this new light casts aside those
+melancholy convictions which, judging from the evil blood which
+seemed to stain each new generation alike, had elevated into a faith
+the depressing idea that man could not advance. It explains the
+causes of that stain, the reason of those imperfections, not
+necessary parts of the ideal man, but inherited from a lower order
+of life, and to be gradually expunged.
+
+But this marvellous mystery of inheritance has brought with it a
+series of mental instincts, so to say; a whole circle of ideas of
+moral conceptions, in a sense belonging to the Past--ideas which
+were high and noble in the rudimentary being, which were beyond the
+capacity of the pure animal, but which are now in great part merely
+obstructions to advancement. Let these perish. We must seek for
+enlightenment and for progress, not in the dim failing traditions
+of a period but just removed from the time of the rudimentary or
+primeval man--we must no longer allow the hoary age of such
+traditions to blind the eye and cause the knee to bend--we must no
+longer stultify the mind by compelling it to receive as infallible
+what in the very nature of things must have been fallible to the
+highest degree. The very plants are wiser far. They seek the light
+of to-day, the heat of the sun which shines at this hour; they make
+no attempt to guide their life by the feeble reflection of rays
+which were extinguished ages ago. This slender blade of grass,
+beside the edge of our rug under the chestnut-tree, shoots upwards
+in the fresh air of to-day; its roots draw nourishment from the
+moisture of the dew which heaven deposited this morning. If it does
+make use of the past--of the soil, the earth that has accumulated in
+centuries--it is to advance its present growth. Root out at once and
+for ever these primeval, narrow, and contracted ideas; fix the mind
+upon the sun of the present, and prepare for the sun that must rise
+to-morrow. It is our duty to develop both mind and body and soul to
+the utmost: as it is the duty of this blade of grass and this
+oak-tree to grow and expand as far as their powers will admit. But
+the blade of grass and the oak have this great disadvantage to work
+against--they can only labour in the lines laid down for them, and
+unconsciously; while man can think, foresee, and plan. The greatest
+obstacle to progress is the lack now beginning to be felt all over
+the world, but more especially in the countries most highly
+civilized, of a true ideal to work up to. It is necessary that some
+far-seeing master-mind, some giant intellect, should arise, and
+sketch out in bold, unmistakable outlines the grand and noble future
+which the human race should labour for. There have been weak
+attempts--there are contemptible makeshifts now on their trial,
+especially in the new world--but the whole of these, without
+exception, are simply diluted reproductions of systems long since
+worn out. These can only last a little while; if anything, they are
+worse than the prejudices and traditions which form the body of
+wider-spread creeds. The world cries out for an intellect which
+shall draw its inspiration from the unvarying and infallible laws
+regulating the universe; which shall found its faith upon the
+teaching of grass, of leaf, of bird, of beast, of hoary rock, great
+ocean, star and sun; which shall afford full room for the
+development of muscle, sense, and above all of the wondrous brain;
+and which without fettering the individual shall secure the ultimate
+apotheosis of the race. No such system can spring at once, complete,
+perfect in detail, from any one mind. But assuredly when once a firm
+basis has been laid down, when an outline has been drawn, the
+converging efforts of a thousand thousand thinkers will be brought
+to bear upon it, and it will be elaborated into something
+approaching a reliable guide. The faiths of the past, of the ancient
+world, now extinct or feebly lingering on, were each inspired by one
+mind only. The faith of the future, in strong contrast, will spring
+from the researches of a thousand thousand thinkers, whose minds,
+once brought into a focus, will speedily burn up all that is
+useless and worn out with a fierce heat, and evoke a new and
+brilliant light. This converging thought is one of the greatest
+blessings of our day, made possible by the vastly extended means of
+communication, and almost seems specially destined for this very
+purpose. Thought increases with the ages. At this moment there are
+probably as many busy brains studying, reflecting, collecting
+scattered truths, as there were thinkers--effectual thinkers--in
+all the recorded eighty centuries gone by. Daily and hourly the
+noble army swells its numbers, and the sound of its mighty march
+grows louder; the inscribed roll of its victories fills the heart
+with exultation.
+
+There is a slight rustle among the bushes and the fern upon the
+mound. It is a rabbit who has peeped forth into the sunshine. His
+eye opens wide with wonder at the sight of us; his nostrils work
+nervously as he watches us narrowly. But in a little while the
+silence and stillness reassure him; he nibbles in a desultory way at
+the stray grasses on the mound, and finally ventures out into the
+meadow almost within reach of the hand. It is so easy to make the
+acquaintance--to make friends with the children of Nature. From the
+tiniest insect upwards they are so ready to dwell in sympathy with
+us--only be tender, quiet, considerate, in a word, _gentlemanly_,
+towards them and they will freely wander around. And they have all
+such marvellous tales to tell--intricate problems to solve for us.
+This common wild rabbit has an ancestry of almost unsearchable
+antiquity. Within that little body there are organs and structures
+which, rightly studied, will throw a light upon the mysteries hidden
+in our own frames. It is a peculiarity of this search that nothing
+is despicable; nothing can be passed over--not so much as a fallen
+leaf, or a grain of sand. Literally everything bears stamped upon it
+characters in the hieratic, the sacred handwriting, not one word of
+which shall fall to the ground.
+
+Sitting indoors, with every modern luxury around, rich carpets,
+artistic furniture, pictures, statuary, food and drink brought from
+the uttermost ends of the earth, with the telegraph, the
+printing-press, the railway at immediate command, it is easy to say,
+'What have _I_ to do with all this? I am neither an animal nor a
+plant, and the sun is nothing to me. This is _my_ life which I have
+created; I am apart from the other inhabitants of the earth.' But go
+to the window. See--there is but a thin, transparent sheet of
+brittle glass between the artificial man and the air, the light, the
+trees, and grass. So between him and the other innumerable organisms
+which live and breathe there is but a thin feeble crust of prejudice
+and social custom. Between him and those irresistible laws which
+keep the sun upon its course there is absolutely no bar whatever.
+Without air he cannot live. Nature cannot be escaped. Then face the
+facts, and having done so, there will speedily arise a calm pleasure
+beckoning onwards.
+
+The shadows of the oak and chestnut-tree no longer shelter our rug;
+the beams of the noonday sun fall vertically on us; we will leave
+the spot for a while. The nightingale and the goldfinches, the
+thrushes and blackbirds, are silent for a time in the sultry heat.
+But they only wait for the evening to burst forth in one exquisite
+chorus, praising this wondrous life and the beauties of the earth.
+
+
+
+
+THE DAWN
+
+
+There came to my bedside this morning a visitant that has been
+present at the bedside of everyone who has lived for ten thousand
+years. In the darkness I was conscious of a faint light not visible
+if I looked deliberately to find it, but seen sideways, and where I
+was not gazing. It slipped from direct glance as a shadow may slip
+from a hand-grasp, but it was there floating in the atmosphere of
+the room. I could not say that it shone on the wall or lit the
+distant corner. Light is seen by reflection, but this light was
+visible of itself like a living thing, a visitant from the unknown.
+The dawn was in the chamber, and by degrees this intangible and
+slender existence would enlarge and deepen into day. Ever since I
+used to rise early to bathe, or shoot, or see the sunrise, the habit
+has remained of waking at the same hour, so that I see the dawn
+morning after morning, though I may sleep again immediately.
+Sometimes the change of the seasons makes it broad sunlight,
+sometimes it is still dark; then again the faint grey light is
+there, and I know that the distant hills are becoming defined along
+the sky. But though so familiar, that spectral light in the silence
+has never lost its meaning, the violets are sweet year by year
+though never so many summers pass away; indeed, its meaning grows
+wider and more difficult as the time goes on. For think, this
+spectre of the light--light's double-ganger--has stood by the couch
+of every human being for thousands and thousands of years. Sleeping
+or waking, happily dreaming, or wrenched with pain, whether they
+have noticed it or not, the finger of this light has pointed towards
+them. When they were building the pyramids, five thousand years ago,
+straight the arrow of light shot from the sun, lit their dusky
+forms, and glowed on the endless sand. Endless as that desert sand
+may be, innumerable in multitude its grains, there was and is a ray
+of light for each. A ray for every invisible atom that dances in
+the air--for the million million changing facets of the million
+ocean waves. Immense as these numbers may be, they are not
+incomprehensible. The priestess at Delphi in her moment of
+inspiration declared that she knew the number of the sands. Such
+number falls into insignificance before the mere thought of light,
+its speed, its quantity, its existence over space, and yet the idea
+of light is easy to the mind. The mind is the priestess of the
+Delphic temple of our bodies, and sees and understands things for
+which language is imperfect, and notation deficient. There is a
+secret alphabet in it to every letter of which we unconsciously
+assign a value, just as the mathematician may represent a thousand
+by the letter A. In my own mind the idea of light is associated with
+the colour yellow, not the yellow of the painters, or of flowers,
+but a quick flash. This quick bright flash of palest yellow in the
+thousandth of an instant reminds me, or rather conveys in itself,
+the whole idea of light--the accumulated idea of study and thought.
+I suppose it to be a memory of looking at the sun--a quick glance at
+the sun leaves something such an impression on the retina. With that
+physical impression all the calculations that I have read, and all
+the ideas that have occurred to me, are bound up. It is the
+sign--the letter--the expression of light. To the builders of the
+pyramids came the arrow from the sun, tinting their dusky forms, and
+glowing in the sand. To me it comes white and spectral in the
+silence, a finger pointed, a voice saying, 'Even now you know
+nothing.' Five thousand years since they were fully persuaded that
+they understood the universe, the course of the stars, and the
+secrets of life and death. What did they know of the beam of light
+that shone on the sonorous lap of their statue Memnon? The
+telescope, the microscope, and the prism have parted light and
+divided it, till it seems as if further discovery were impossible.
+This beam of light brings an account of the sun, clear as if written
+in actual letters, for example stating that certain minerals are as
+certainly there as they are here. But when in the silence I see the
+pale visitant at my bedside, and the mind rushes in one spring back
+to the builders of the pyramids who were equally sure with us, the
+thought will come to me that even now there may be messages in that
+beam undeciphered. With a turn of the heliograph, a mere turn of
+the wrist, a message is easily flashed twenty miles to the observer.
+You cannot tell what knowledge may not be pouring down in every ray;
+messages that are constant and perpetual, the same from age to age.
+These are physical messages. There is beyond this just a possibility
+that beings in distant earths possessed of greater knowledge than
+ourselves may be able to transmit their thoughts along, or by the
+ray, as we do along wires. In the days to come, when a deeper
+insight shall have been gained into the motions and properties of
+those unseen agents we call forces, such as magnetism, electricity,
+gravitation, perhaps a method will be devised to use them for
+communication. If so, communication with distant earths is quite
+within reasonable hypothesis. At this hour it is not more impossible
+than the transmission of a message to the antipodes in a few minutes
+would have been to those who lived a century since. The inhabitants
+of distant earths may have endeavoured to communicate with us in
+this way for ought we know time after time. Such a message is
+possibly contained sometimes in the pale beam which comes to my
+bedside. That beam always impresses me with a profound, an intense
+and distressful sense of ignorance, of being outside the
+intelligence of the universe, as if there were a vast civilization
+in view and yet not entered. Mere villagers and rustics creeping
+about a sullen earth, we know nothing of the grandeur and
+intellectual brilliance of that civilization. This beam fills me
+with unutterable dissatisfaction. Discontent, restless longing,
+anger at the denseness of the perception, the stupidity with which
+we go round and round in the old groove till accident shows us a
+fresh field. Consider, all that has been wrested from light has been
+gained by mere bits of glass. Mere bits of glass in curious
+shapes--poor feeble glass, quickly broken, made of flint, of the
+flint that mends the road. To this almost our highest conceptions
+are due. Could we employ the ocean as a lens we might tear truth
+from the sky. Could the greater intelligences that dwell on the
+planets and stars communicate with us, they might enable us to
+conquer the disease and misery which bear down the masses of the
+world. Perhaps they do not die. The pale visitor hints that the
+stars are not the outside and rim of the universe, any more than the
+edge of horizon is the circumference of our globe. Beyond the
+star-stratum, what? Mere boundless space. Mind says certainly not.
+What then? At present we cannot conceive a universe without a
+central solar orb for it to gather about and swing around. But that
+is only because hitherto our positive, physical knowledge has gone
+no farther. It can as yet only travel as far as this, as analogous
+beams of light. Light comes from the uttermost bounds of our star
+system--to that rim we can extend a positive thought. Beyond, and
+around it, whether it is solid, or fluid, or ether, or whether, as
+is most probable, there exist things absolutely different to any
+that have come under eyesight yet is not known. May there not be
+light we cannot see? Gravitation is an unseen light; so too
+magnetism; electricity or its effect is sometimes visible, sometimes
+not. Besides these there may be more delicate forces not
+instrumentally demonstrable. A force, or a wave, or a motion--an
+unseen light--may at this moment be flowing in upon us from that
+unknown space without and beyond the stellar system. It may contain
+messages from thence as this pale visitant does from the sun. It may
+outstrip light in speed as light outstrips an arrow. The more
+delicate, the more ethereal, then the fuller and more varied the
+knowledge it holds. There may be other things beside matter and
+motion, or force. All natural things known to us as yet may be
+referred to those two conditions: One, Force; Two, Matter. A third,
+a fourth, a fifth--no one can say how many conditions--may exist in
+the ultra-stellar space, beyond the most distant stars. Such a
+condition may even be about us now unsuspected. Something which is
+neither force nor matter is difficult to conceive; the mind cannot
+give it tangible shape even as a thought. Yet I think it more than
+doubtful if the entire universe, visible and invisible, is composed
+of these two. To me it seems almost demonstrable by rational
+induction that the entire universe must consist of more than two
+conditions. The grey dawn every morning warns me not to be certain
+that all is known. Analysis by the prism alone has quite doubled the
+knowledge that was previously available. In the light itself there
+may still exist as much more to be learnt, and then there may be
+other forces and other conditions to be first found out and next to
+tell their story. As at present known the whole system is so easy
+and simple, one body revolving round another, and so on; it is as
+easy to understand as the motion of a stone that has been thrown.
+This simplicity makes me misdoubt. Is it all? Space--immeasurable
+space--offers such possibilities that the mind is forced to the
+conclusion that it is not, that there must be more. I cannot think
+that the universe can be so very very easy as this.
+
+
+BILLING AND SONS, LTD., PRINTERS, GUILDFORD
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Hills and the Vale, by Richard Jefferies
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HILLS AND THE VALE ***
+
+***** This file should be named 31710.txt or 31710.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/1/7/1/31710/
+
+Produced by Malcolm Farmer 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.)
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/31710.zip b/31710.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6edbefb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/31710.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..41f3183
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #31710 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/31710)