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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The White Slaves of England, by John C. Cobden
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The White Slaves of England
-
-Author: John C. Cobden
-
-Release Date: June 28, 2016 [EBook #52423]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WHITE SLAVES OF ENGLAND ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Brian Coe, Christian Boissonnas and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: THE WHITE SLAVES OF ENGLAND.]
-
-
-
-
- FIFTH THOUSAND.
-
-
- THE WHITE SLAVES
-
- OF
-
- ENGLAND.
-
-
- COMPILED FROM OFFICIAL DOCUMENTS.
-
- WITH TWELVE SPIRITED ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-
- BY JOHN C. COBDEN.
-
-
- AUBURN AND BUFFALO:
- MILLER ORTON & MULLIGAN.
- 1854.
-
-
-
-
- Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year one thousand eight
- hundred and fifty-three, by
-
- DERBY AND MILLER,
-
- In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Northern District
- of New-York.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-The following pages exhibit a system of wrong and outrage equally
-abhorrent to justice, civilization and humanity. The frightful abuses
-which are here set forth, are, from their enormity, difficult of
-belief; yet they are supported by testimony the most impartial, clear
-and irrefutable. These abuses are time-honored, and have the sanction
-of a nation which prides itself upon the _freedom of its Constitution_;
-and which holds up its government to the nations of the earth as a
-model of _regulated liberty_. Vain, audacious, _false_ assumption! Let
-the refutation be found in the details which this volume furnishes,
-of the want, misery and starvation—the slavish toil—the menial
-degradation of nineteen-twentieths of her people. Let her _miners_, her
-_operatives_, _the tenants of her workhouses_, her _naval service_, and
-the millions upon millions in the _Emerald Isle_ and in farther India
-attest its fallacy.
-
-These are the legitimate results of the laws and institutions of Great
-Britain; and they reach and affect, in a greater or less degree, all
-her dependencies. Her _church and state_, and her _laws of entail
-and primogeniture_, are the principal sources of the evils under
-which her people groan; and until these are changed there is no just
-ground of hope for an improvement in their condition. The tendency of
-things is, indeed, to make matters still worse. The poor are every
-year becoming poorer, and more dependent upon those who feast upon
-their sufferings; while the wealth and power of the realm are annually
-concentrating in fewer hands, and becoming more and more instruments
-of oppression. The picture is already sufficiently revolting. "Nine
-hundred and ninety-nine children of the same common Father, suffer from
-destitution, that the thousandth may revel in superfluities. A thousand
-cottages shrink into meanness and want, to swell the dimensions of a
-single palace. The tables of a thousand families of the industrious
-poor waste away into drought and barrenness, that one board may be
-laden with surfeits."
-
-From these monstrous evils there seems to be little chance of escape,
-except by flight; and happy is it for the victims of oppression, that
-an asylum is open to them, in which they can fully enjoy the rights
-and privileges, from which, for ages, they have been debarred. Let
-them come. The feudal chains which so long have bound them can here be
-shaken off. Here they can freely indulge the pure impulses of the mind
-and the soul, untrammeled by political or religious tyranny. Here they
-can enjoy the beneficent influences of humane institutions and laws,
-and find a vast and ample field in which to develop and properly employ
-all their faculties.
-
-The United States appear before the eyes of the down-trodden whites of
-Europe as a land of promise. Thousands of ignorant, degraded wretches,
-who have fled from their homes to escape exhausting systems of
-slavery, annually land upon our shores, and in their hearts thank God
-that he has created such a refuge. This is the answer—the overwhelming
-answer—to the decriers of our country and its institutions. These
-emigrants are more keenly alive to the superiority of our institutions
-than most persons who have been bred under them, and to their care we
-might confidently intrust our defence.
-
-We design to prove in this work that the oligarchy which owns Great
-Britain at the present day is the best friend of human slavery, and
-that its system is most barbarous and destructive. Those feudal
-institutions which reduced to slavery the strong-minded race of
-whites, are perpetuated in Great Britain, to the detriment of freedom
-wherever the British sway extends. Institutions which nearly every
-other civilized country has abolished, and which are at least a century
-behind the age, still curse the British islands and their dependencies.
-This system of slavery, with all its destructive effects, will be found
-fully illustrated in this volume.
-
-Our plan has been to quote English authorities wherever possible. Out
-of their own mouths shall they be condemned. We have been much indebted
-to the publications of distinguished democrats of England, who have
-keenly felt the evils under which their country groans, and striven,
-with a hearty will, to remove them. They have the sympathies of
-civilized mankind with their cause. May their efforts soon be crowned
-with success, for the British masses and oppressed nations far away in
-the East will shout loud and long when the aristocracy is brought to
-the dust!
-
-
-
-
-" • • • • • AS WE HAVE BEEN GREAT IN CRIME, LET US BE EARLY IN
-REPENTANCE. THERE WILL BE A DAY OF RETRIBUTION, WHEREIN WE SHALL HAVE
-TO GIVE ACCOUNT OF ALL THE TALENTS, FACULTIES, AND OPPORTUNITIES WHICH
-HAVE BEEN INTRUSTED TO US. LET IT NOT THEN APPEAR THAT OUR SUPERIOR
-POWER HAS BEEN EMPLOYED TO OPPRESS OUR FELLOW CREATURES, AND OUR
-SUPERIOR LIGHT TO DARKEN THE CREATION OF OUR GOD."—_Wilberforce._
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
- General Slavery proceeding from the existence of the British
- Aristocracy _Page_ 13
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
- Slavery in the British Mines 28
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
- Slavery in the British Factories 104
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
- Slavery in the British Workshops 168
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
- The Workhouse System of Britain 206
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
- Impressment, or Kidnapping White Men for Slaves in the
- Naval Service 257
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
- Irish Slavery 284
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
- The Menial Slaves of Great Britain 370
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- Mental and Moral Condition of the White Slaves in Great Britain 379
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
- Coolie Slavery in the British Colonies 433
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
- Slavery in British India 441
-
-
- CHAPTER XII.
- The Crime and the Duty of the English Government 489
-
-
-
-
-THE
-
-WHITE SLAVES OF ENGLAND.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-GENERAL SLAVERY PROCEEDING FROM THE EXISTENCE OF THE BRITISH
-ARISTOCRACY.
-
-
-What is slavery? A system under which the time and toil of one person
-are compulsorily the property of another. The power of life and death,
-and the privilege of using the lash in the master, are not essential,
-but casual attendants of slavery, which comprehends all involuntary
-servitude without adequate recompense or the means of escape. He
-who can obtain no property in the soil, and is not represented in
-legislation, is a slave; for he is completely at the mercy of the
-lord of the soil and the holder of the reins of government. Sometimes
-slavery is founded upon the inferiority of one race to another; and
-then it appears in its most agreeable garb, for the system may be
-necessary to tame and civilize a race of savages. But the subjection
-of the majority of a nation to an involuntary, hopeless, exhausting,
-and demoralizing servitude, for the benefit of an idle and luxurious
-few of the same nation, is slavery in its most appalling form. Such a
-system of slavery, we assert, exists in Great Britain.
-
-In the United Kingdom, the land is divided into immense estates,
-constantly retained in a few hands; and the tendency of the existing
-laws of entail and primogeniture is to reduce even the number of these
-proprietors. According to McCulloch, there are 77,007,048 acres of
-land in the United Kingdom, including the small islands adjacent. Of
-this quantity, 28,227,435 acres are uncultivated; while, according to
-Mr. Porter, another English writer, about 11,300,000 acres, now lying
-waste, are fit for cultivation. The number of proprietors of all this
-land is about 50,000. Perhaps, this is a rather high estimate for the
-present period. Now the people of the United Kingdom number at least
-28,000,000. What a tremendous majority, then, own not a foot of soil!
-But this is not the worst. Such is the state of the laws, that the
-majority never can acquire an interest in the land. Said the London
-_Times_, in 1844, "_Once a peasant in England, and the man must remain
-a peasant for ever_;" and, says Mr. Kay, of Trinity College, Cambridge—
-
- "Unless the English peasant will consent to tear himself from his
- relations, friends, and early associations, and either transplant
- himself into a town or into a distant colony, he has no chance of
- improving his condition in the world."
-
-Admit this—admit that the peasant must remain through life at the
-mercy of his lord, and of legislation in which his interests are not
-represented—and tell us if he is a freeman?
-
-To begin with England, to show the progress and effects of the land
-monopoly:—The Rev. Henry Worsley states that in the year 1770, there
-were in England 250,000 freehold estates, in the hands of 250,000
-different families; and that, in 1815, the whole of the lands of
-England were concentrated in the hands of only 32,000 proprietors!
-So that, as the population increases, the number of proprietors
-diminishes. A distinguished lawyer, who was engaged in the management
-of estates in Westmoreland and Cumberland counties in 1849, says—
-
- "The greater proprietors in this part of the country are
- buying up all the land, and including it in their settlements.
- Whenever one of the small estates is put up for sale, the great
- proprietors outbid the peasants and purchase it at all costs. The
- consequence is, that for some time past, the number of the small
- estates has been rapidly diminishing in all parts of the country.
- In a short time none of them will remain, but all be merged in
- the great estates. * * * The consequence is, that the peasant's
- position, instead of being what it once was—one of hope—is
- gradually becoming one of despair. Unless a peasant emigrates,
- there is now no chance for him. It is impossible for him to rise
- above the peasant class."
-
-The direct results of this system are obvious. Unable to buy land, the
-tillers of the soil live merely by the sufferance of the proprietors.
-If one of the great landholders takes the notion that grazing will
-be more profitable than farming, he may sweep away the homes of his
-labourers, turning the poor wretches upon the country as wandering
-paupers, or driving them into the cities to overstock the workshops and
-reduce the wages of the poor workman. And what is the condition of the
-peasants who are allowed to remain and labour upon the vast estates?
-Let Englishmen speak for Englishmen.
-
-Devon, Somerset, Dorset, and Wiltshire are generally regarded
-as presenting the agricultural labourer in his most deplorable
-circumstances, while Lincolnshire exhibits the other extreme. We
-have good authority for the condition of the peasantry in all these
-counties. Mr. John Fox, medical officer of the Cerne Union, in
-Dorsetshire, says—
-
- "Most of the cottages are of the worst description; some mere
- mud-hovels, and situated in low and damp places, with cesspools
- or accumulations of filth close to the doors. The mud floors of
- many are much below the level of the road, and, in wet seasons,
- are little better than so much clay. In many of the cottages, the
- beds stood on the ground floor, which was damp three parts of
- the year; scarcely one had a fireplace in the bedroom; and one
- had a single small pane of glass stuck in the mud wall as its
- only window. Persons living in such cottages are generally very
- poor, very dirty, and usually in rags, living almost wholly on
- bread and potatoes, scarcely ever tasting any animal food, and,
- consequently, highly susceptible of disease, and very unable to
- contend with it."
-
-Very often, according to other equally good authority, there is not
-more than one room for the whole family, and the demoralization of
-that family is the natural consequence. The _Morning Chronicle_ of
-November, 1849, said of the cottages at Southleigh, in Devon—
-
- "One house, which our correspondent visited, was almost a ruin.
- It had continued in that state for ten years. The floor was of
- mud, dipping near the fireplace into a deep hollow, which was
- constantly filled with water. There were five in the family—a
- young man of twenty-one, a girl of eighteen, and another girl of
- about thirteen, with the father and mother, all sleeping together
- up-stairs. And what a sleeping-room! 'In places it seemed falling
- in. To ventilation it was an utter stranger. The crazy floor
- shook and creaked under me as I paced it.' Yet the rent was 1_s._
- a week—the same sum for which apartments that may be called
- luxurious in comparison may be had in the model lodging-houses.
- And here sat a girl weaving that beautiful Honiton lace which our
- peeresses wear on court-days. Cottage after cottage at Southleigh
- presented the same characteristics. Clay floors, low ceilings
- letting in the rain, no ventilation; two rooms, one above and
- one below; gutters running through the lower room to let off the
- water; unglazed window-frames, now boarded up, and now uncovered
- to the elements, the boarding going for firewood; the inmates
- disabled by rheumatism, ague, and typhus; broad, stagnant, open
- ditches close to the doors; heaps of abominations piled round
- the dwellings; such are the main features of Southleigh; and it
- is in these worse than pig-styes that one of the most beautiful
- fabrics that luxury demands or art supplies is fashioned. The
- parish houses are still worse. 'One of these, on the borders of
- Devonshire and Cornwall, and not far from Launceston, consisted
- of two houses, containing between them four rooms. In each room
- lived a family night and day, the space being about twelve feet
- square. In one were a man and his wife and eight children; the
- father, mother, and two children lay in one bed, the remaining
- six were huddled 'head and foot' (three at the top and three at
- the foot) in the other bed. The eldest girl was between fifteen
- and sixteen, the eldest boy between fourteen and fifteen.' Is it
- not horrible to think of men and women being brought up in this
- foul and brutish manner in civilized and Christian England! The
- lowest of savages are not worse cared for than these children of
- a luxurious and refined country."
-
-Yet other authorities describe cases much worse than this which so
-stirs the heart of the editor of the _Morning Chronicle_. The frightful
-immorality consequent upon such a mode of living will be illustrated
-fully in another portion of this work.
-
-In Lincolnshire, the cottages of the peasantry are in a better
-condition than in any other part of England; but in consequence of the
-lowness of wages and the comparative enormity of rents, the tillers of
-the soil are in not much better circumstances than their rural brethren
-in other counties. Upon an average, a hard-working peasant can earn
-five shillings a week; two shillings of which go for rent. If he can
-barely live when employed, what is to become of him when thrown out of
-employment? Thus the English peasant is driven to the most constant and
-yet hopeless labour, with whips more terrible than those used by the
-master of the negro slave.
-
-In Wales, the condition of the peasant, thanks to the general system of
-lord and serf, is neither milder nor more hopeful than in England. Mr.
-Symonds, a commissioner who was sent by government to examine the state
-of education in some of the Welsh counties, says of the peasantry of
-Brecknockshire, Cardiganshire, and Radnorshire—
-
- "The people of my district are almost universally poor. In some
- parts of it, wages are probably lower than in any part of Great
- Britain. The evidence of the witnesses, fully confirmed by other
- statements, exhibits much poverty, but little amended in other
- parts of the counties on which I report. _The farmers themselves
- are very much impoverished, and live no better than English
- cottagers in prosperous agricultural counties._
-
- "The cottages in which the people dwell are miserable in the
- extreme in nearly every part of the country in Cardiganshire, and
- every part of Brecknockshire and Radnorshire, except the east.
- I have myself visited many of the dwellings of the poor, and my
- assistants have done so likewise. _I believe the Welsh cottages
- to be very little, if at all, superior to the Irish huts in the
- country districts._
-
- "Brick chimneys are very unusual in these cottages; those which
- exist are usually in the shape of large cones, the top being of
- basket-work. _In very few cottages is there more than one room_,
- which serves the purposes of living and sleeping. A large dresser
- and shelves usually form the partition between the two; and where
- there are separate beds for the family, a curtain or low board is
- (if it exists) the only division with no regular partition. And
- this state of things very generally prevails, even where there
- is some little attention paid to cleanliness; but the cottages
- and beds are frequently filthy. The people are always very dirty.
- In all the counties, the cottages are generally destitute of
- necessary outbuildings, including even those belonging to the
- farmers; and both in Cardiganshire and Radnorshire, except near
- the border of England, the pigs and poultry have free run of the
- joint dwelling and sleeping rooms."
-
-In Scotland, the estates of the nobility are even larger than in
-England. Small farms are difficult to find. McCulloch states that there
-are not more than 8000 proprietors of land in the whole of Scotland;
-and, as in England, this number is decreasing. In some districts,
-the cottages of the peasantry are as wretched as any in England or
-Wales. For some years past, the great landholders, such as the Duke
-of Buccleuch and the Duchess of Sutherland, have been illustrating
-the glorious beneficence of British institutions by removing the
-poor peasantry from the homes of their fathers, for the purpose of
-turning the vacated districts into deer-parks, sheep-walks, and large
-farms. Many a Highland family has vented a curse upon the head of the
-remorseless Duchess of Sutherland. Most slaveholders in other countries
-feed, shelter, and protect their slaves, in compensation for work;
-but the Duchess and her barbarous class take work, shelter, food, and
-protection from their serfs all at one fell swoop, turning them upon
-the world to beg or starve. Scotland has reason—strong reason—to
-bewail the existence of the British aristocracy.
-
-Next let us invoke the testimony of Ireland—the beautiful and the
-wretched—Ireland, whose people have been the object of pity to the
-nations for centuries—whose miseries have been the burden of song and
-the theme of eloquence till they have penetrated all hearts save those
-of the oppressors—whose very life-blood has been trampled out by the
-aristocracy. Let us hear her testimony in regard to the British slave
-system.
-
-Ireland is splendidly situated, in a commercial point of view,
-commanding the direct route between Northern Europe and America,
-with some of the finest harbours in the world. Its soil is rich
-and fruitful. Its rivers are large, numerous, and well adapted
-for internal commerce. The people are active, physically and
-intellectually, and, everywhere beyond Ireland, are distinguished
-for their energy, perseverance, and success. Yet, in consequence of
-its organized oppression, called government, Ireland is the home of
-miseries which have scarcely a parallel upon the face of the earth.
-The great landlords spend most of their time in England or upon the
-continent, and leave their lands to the management of agents, who
-have sub-agents for parts of the estates, and these latter often have
-still inferior agents. Many of the great landlords care nothing for
-their estates beyond the receipt of the rents, and leave their agents
-to enrich themselves at the expense of the tenantry. Everywhere in
-Ireland, a traveller, as he passes along the roads, will see on the
-roadsides and in the fields, places which look like mounds of earth and
-sods, with a higher heap of sods upon the top, out of which smoke is
-curling upward; and with two holes in the sides of the heap next the
-road, one of which is used as the door, and the other as the window of
-the hovel. These are the homes of the peasantry! Entering a hovel, you
-will find it to contain but one room, formed by the four mud walls;
-and in these places, upon the mud floor, the families of the peasant
-live. Men, women, boys, and girls live and sleep together, and herd
-with the wallowing pig. Gaunt, ragged figures crawl out of these hovels
-and plant the ground around them with potatoes, which constitute the
-only food of the inmates throughout the year, or swarm the roads and
-thoroughfares as wretched beggars. The deplorable condition of these
-peasants was graphically described by no less a person than Sir Robert
-Peel, in his great speech on Ireland, in 1849; and the evidence quoted
-by him was unimpeachable. But not only are the majority of the Irish
-condemned to exist in such hovels as we have sketched above—their
-tenure of these disgusting cabins is insecure. If they do not pay the
-rent for them at the proper time, they are liable to be turned adrift
-even in the middle of the night. No notice is necessary. The tenants
-are subject to the tender mercies of a bailiff, without any remedy
-or appeal, except to the court of Heaven. Kay states that in 1849,
-more than 50,000 families were evicted and turned as beggars upon the
-country. An Englishman who travelled through Ireland in the fall of
-1849, says—
-
- "In passing through some half dozen counties, Cork, (especially
- in the western portions of it,) Limerick, Clare, Galway, and
- Mayo, you see thousands of ruined cottages and dwellings of the
- labourers, the peasants, and the small holders of Ireland. You
- see from the roadside twenty houses at once with not a roof upon
- them. I came to a village not far from Castlebar, where the
- system of eviction had been carried out only a few days before.
- Five women came about us as the car stopped, and on making
- inquiry, they told us their sorrowful story. They were not badly
- clad; they were cleanly in appearance; they were intelligent;
- they used no violent language, but in the most moderate terms
- told us that on the Monday week previously those five houses
- had been levelled. They told us how many children there were
- in their families: I recollect one had eight, another had six;
- that the husbands of three of them were in this country for the
- harvest; that they had written to their husbands to tell them
- of the desolation of their homes. And, I asked them, 'What did
- the husbands say in reply?' They said 'they had not been able
- to eat any breakfast!' It is but a simple observation, but it
- marks the sickness and the sorrow which came over the hearts of
- those men, who here were toiling for their three or four pounds,
- denying themselves almost rest at night that they might make a
- good reaping at the harvest, and go back that they might enjoy it
- in the home which they had left. All this is but a faint outline
- of what has taken place in that unhappy country. Thousands of
- individuals have died within the last two or three years in
- consequence of the evictions which have taken place."
-
-The great loss of life in the famine of 1847 showed that the peasantry
-had a miserable dependence upon the chances of a good potato crop for
-the means of keeping life in their bodies. Crowds of poor wretches,
-after wandering about for a time like the ghosts of human beings,
-starved to death by the roadside, victims of the murderous policy
-of the landed aristocracy. Since that period of horror, the great
-proprietors, envious of the lurid fame achieved by the Duchess of
-Sutherland in Scotland, have been evicting their tenants on the most
-extensive scale, and establishing large farms and pasturages, which
-they deem more profitable than former arrangements. In despair at
-home, the wretched Irish are casting their eyes to distant lands for a
-refuge from slavery and starvation. But hundreds of thousands groan
-in their hereditary serfdom, without the means of reaching other and
-happier countries. The dearest ties of family are sundered by the force
-of want. The necessity of seeking a subsistence drives the father to
-a distant land, while the child is compelled to remain in Ireland a
-pauper. The husband can pay his own passage to America, perchance, but
-the wife must stay in the land of misery. Ask Ireland if a slave can
-breathe in Great Britain! The long lamentation of ages, uniting with
-the heart-broken utterances of her present wretched bondsmen, might
-touch even the British aristocracy in its reply.
-
-So much for the general condition of the peasantry in the United
-Kingdom. The miserable consequences of the system of lord and serf do
-not end here. No! There are London, Manchester, Birmingham, Glasgow,
-Dublin, and many other cities and towns, with their crowds of slaves
-either in the factories and workshops, or in the streets as paupers and
-criminals. There are said to be upward of four millions of paupers in
-the United Kingdom! Can such an amount of wretchedness be found in any
-country upon the face of the globe? To what causes are we to attribute
-this amount of pauperism, save to the monopolies and oppressions of the
-aristocracy? Think of there being in the United Kingdom over eleven
-million acres of good land uncultivated, and four millions of paupers!
-According to Kay, more than two millions of people were kept from
-starving in England and Wales, in 1848, by relief doled out to them
-from public and private sources. So scant are the earnings of those
-who labour day and night in the cities and towns, that they may become
-paupers if thrown out of work for a single week. Many from town and
-country are driven by the fear of starvation to labour in the mines,
-the horrors of which species of slavery shall be duly illustrated
-farther on in this work.
-
-Truly did Southey write—
-
- "To talk of English happiness, is like talking of Spartan
- freedom; the _helots_ are overlooked. In no country can such
- riches be acquired by commerce, but it is the one who grows
- rich by the labour of the hundred. The hundred human beings
- like himself, as wonderfully fashioned by nature, gifted with
- the like capacities, and equally made for immortality, are
- sacrificed _body and soul_. Horrible as it must needs appear,
- the assertion is true to the very letter. They are deprived in
- childhood of all instruction and all enjoyment—of the sports
- in which childhood instinctively indulges—of fresh air by day
- and of natural sleep by night. Their health, physical and moral,
- is alike destroyed; they die of diseases induced by unremitting
- task-work, by confinement in the impure atmosphere of crowded
- rooms, by the particles of metallic or vegetable dust which
- they are continually inhaling; or they live to grow up without
- decency, without comfort, and without hope—without morals,
- without religion, and without shame; and bring forth _slaves_
- like themselves to tread in the same path of misery."
-
-Again, the same distinguished Englishman says, in number twenty-six of
-Espriella's Letters—
-
- "The English boast of their liberty, but there is _no liberty in
- England for the poor_. They are no longer sold with the soil,
- it is true; but they cannot quit the soil if there be any
- probability or suspicion that age or infirmity may disable them.
- If, in such a case, they endeavour to remove to some situation
- where they hope more easily to maintain themselves, where work is
- more plentiful or provisions cheaper, the overseers are alarmed,
- the intruder is apprehended, as if he were a criminal, and sent
- back to his own parish. Wherever a pauper dies, that parish must
- bear the cost of his funeral. Instances, therefore, have not
- been wanting of wretches, in the last stage of disease, having
- been hurried away in an open cart, upon straw, and dying upon
- the road. Nay, even women, in the very pains of labour, have
- been driven out, and have perished by the wayside, because the
- birthplace of the child would be its parish!"
-
-The sufferings of the rural labourers—the peasantry of Great Britain
-and Ireland—are to be attributed to the fact that they have no
-property in the land, and cannot acquire any. The law of primogeniture,
-on which the existence of the British aristocracy depends, has, as we
-have already shown, placed the land and those who labour on it—the
-soil and the serfs—at the disposal of a few landed proprietors. The
-labourers are not attached to the soil, and bought and sold with it,
-as in Russia. The English aristocrat is too cunning to adopt such a
-regulation, because it would involve the necessity of supporting his
-slaves. They are _called_ freemen, in order to enable their masters
-to detach them from the soil, and drive them forth to starve, when it
-suits their convenience, without incurring any legal penalty for their
-cruelty, such as the slaveholders of other countries would suffer. The
-Russian, the Spanish, the North American slaveholder must support his
-slaves in sickness and helpless old age, or suffer the penalties of the
-law for his neglect. The British slaveholder alone may drive his slaves
-forth to starve in the highway by hundreds and thousands; and no law
-of Great Britain affords the means of punishing him for his murderous
-cruelty. His Irish slaves may be saved from starvation by American
-bounty, but he cannot be punished until he shall meet his Judge at the
-day of final account.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-SLAVERY IN THE BRITISH MINES.
-
-
-In proceeding to speak more particularly of the various forms of
-British slavery, we will begin with labour in the mines—the horrors
-of which became known to the world through reports made to Parliament
-in the summer of 1840. Pressed by the fear of general execration,
-Parliament appointed a commission of inquiry, which, after a thorough
-examination of all the mines in the United Kingdom, made a voluminous
-report. So shocking were the accounts of labour in the mines given
-by this commission, that the delicate nerves of several perfumed
-lords were grievously pained, and they denounced the commissioners as
-being guilty of exaggeration. Nevertheless, the evidence adduced by
-the officers was unimpeachable, and their statements were generally
-received as plain truth.
-
-[Illustration: COAL GETTER AT WORK.]
-
-The mining industry of the kingdom is divided into two distinct
-branches—that of the coal and iron mines, and that of the mines of
-tin, copper, lead, and zinc. The "coal measures," as the geological
-formations comprising the strata of coal are designated, are variously
-dispersed in the middle, northern, and western portions of South
-Britain, and in a broad belt of country which traverses the centre
-of Scotland, from the shores of Ayrshire to those of the Firth of
-Forth. There are, also, some coal-tracts in Ireland, but they are
-of comparatively small importance. In all these districts, the coal
-is found in beds, interstratified for the most part with various
-qualities of gritstone and shale, in which, in some of the districts,
-occur layers of ironstone, generally thin, but sometimes forming large
-masses, as in the Forest of Dean. When the surface of the coal country
-is mountainous and intersected by deep ravines, as in South Wales,
-the mineral deposites are approached by holes driven into the sides
-of the hills; but the common access to them is by vertical shafts, or
-well-holes, from the bottoms of which horizontal roadways are extended
-in long and confined passages through the coal strata, to bring all
-that is hewn to the "pit's eye," or bottom of the shaft, for winding
-up. It is requisite to have more than one shaft in the same workings;
-but where the coal lies so deep that the sinking of a distinct shaft
-requires an enormous outlay of capital, only one large shaft is sunk;
-and this is divided by wooden partitions, or brattices, into several
-distinct channels. There must always be one shaft or channel, called
-the "downcast pit," for the air to descend; and another, called the
-"upcast pit," for the return draught to ascend. The apparatus for
-lowering and drawing up is generally in the upcast shaft. This is
-either a steam-engine, a horse-gin, or a hand-crank. The thickness
-of the seams that are wrought varies from the eighteen-inch seams of
-the Lancashire and Yorkshire hills, to the ten-yard coal of South
-Staffordshire. But two, three, and four feet are the more common
-thicknesses of the beds that are wrought. When there is a good roof,
-or hard rock immediately over the coal, with a tolerably solid floor
-beneath it, thin coal-seams can be worked with advantage, because the
-outlay of capital for propping is then very limited; but the very
-hardness of the contiguous strata would require an outlay almost as
-great to make the roadways of a proper height for human beings of any
-age to work in.
-
-By the evidence collected under the commission, it is proved that there
-are coal-mines at present at work in which some passages are so small,
-that even the youngest children cannot move along them without crawling
-on their hands and feet, in which constrained position they drag the
-loaded carriages after them; and yet, as it is impossible by any outlay
-compatible with a profitable return, to render such coal-mines fit for
-human beings to work in, they never will be placed in such a condition,
-and, consequently, they never can be worked without this child slavery!
-When the roads are six feet high and upward, there is not only ample
-space for carrying on the general operations of the mine, but the coals
-can be drawn direct from the workings to the foot of the shaft by
-the largest horses; and when the main roads are four feet and a half
-high, the coals may be conveyed to the foot of the shaft by ponies or
-asses. But when the main ways are under four feet, the coals can only
-be conveyed by children. Yet, in many mines, the main gates are only
-from twenty-four to thirty inches high. In this case, even the youngest
-children must work in a bent position of the body. When the inclination
-of the strata causes all the workings out of the main ways to be on
-inclined plains, the young labourers are not only almost worked to
-death, but exposed to severe accidents in descending the plains with
-their loads, out of one level into another. In many of the mines, there
-is such a want of drainage and ventilation, that fatal diseases are
-contracted by the miners.
-
-According to the report of the Parliamentary commission, about
-one-third of the persons employed in the coal-mines were under eighteen
-years of age, and much more than one-third of this number were under
-thirteen years of age. When the proprietor employs the whole of the
-hands, not only will his general overseer be a respectable person,
-but his underlookers will be taken from the more honest, intelligent,
-and industrious of the labouring colliers. Elsewhere, the rulers in
-pits are such as the rudest class is likely to produce. The great
-body of the children and young persons are, however, of the families
-of the adult work-people employed in the pits, or belong to the poor
-population of the neighbourhood. But, in some districts, there are
-numerous defenceless creatures who pass the whole of their youth in
-the most abject slavery, into which they are thrown chiefly by parish
-authorities, under the name of apprenticeship. Said the Parliamentary
-commissioners in their report—
-
- "There is one mode of engaging the labour of children and young
- persons in coal-mines, peculiar to a few districts, which
- deserves particular notice, viz. that by apprenticeship. The
- district in which the practice of employing apprentices is
- most in use, is South Staffordshire; it was formerly common
- in Shropshire, but is now discontinued; it is still common in
- Yorkshire, Lancashire, and the West of Scotland; in all the
- other districts, it appears to be unknown. In Staffordshire,
- the sub-commissioner states that the number of children and
- young persons working in the mines as apprentices is exceedingly
- numerous; that these apprentices are paupers or orphans, and
- are wholly in the power of the butties;[1] that such is the
- demand for this class of children by the butties, that there
- are scarcely any boys in the union workhouses of Walsall,
- Wolverhampton, Dudley, and Stourbridge; that these boys are sent
- on trial to the butties between the ages of eight and nine, and
- at nine are bound as apprentices for twelve years, that is, to
- the age of twenty-one years complete; that, notwithstanding
- this long apprenticeship, there is nothing whatever in the
- coal-mines to learn beyond a little dexterity, readily acquired
- by short practice; and that even in the mines of Cornwall, where
- much skill and judgment is required, there are no apprentices,
- while, in the coal-mines of South Staffordshire, the orphan whom
- necessity has driven into a workhouse, is made to labour in the
- mines until the age of twenty-one, solely for the benefit of
- another."
-
-Thomas Moorhouse, a collier boy, who was brought to the notice of the
-Parliamentary commissioners, said—
-
- "I don't know how old I am; father is dead; I am a chance child;
- mother is dead also; I don't know how long she has been dead;
- 'tis better na three years; I began to hurry[2] when I was nine
- years old for William Greenwood; I was apprenticed to him till
- I should be twenty-one; my mother apprenticed me; I lived with
- Greenwood; I don't know how long it was, but it was a goodish
- while; he was bound to find me in victuals and drink and clothes;
- I never had enough; he gave me some old clothes to wear, which
- he bought at the rag-shop; the overseers gave him a sovereign to
- buy clothes with, but he never laid it out; the overseers bound
- me out with mother's consent from the township of Southowram; I
- ran away from him because he lost my indentures, for he served me
- very bad; he stuck a pick into me twice."
-
-Here the boy was made to strip, and the commissioner, Mr. Symonds,
-found a large cicatrix likely to have been occasioned by such an
-instrument, which must have passed through the glutei muscles, and have
-stopped only short of the hip-joint. There were twenty other wounds,
-occasioned by hurrying in low workings, upon and around the spinous
-processes of the vertebræ, from the sacrum upward. The boy continued—
-
- "He used to hit me with the belt, and mawl or sledge, and fling
- coals at me. He served me so bad that I left him, and went about
- to see if I could get a job. I used to sleep in the cabins upon
- the pit's bank, and in the old pits that had done working. I
- laid upon the shale all night. I used to get what I could to
- eat. I ate for a long time the candles that I found in the pits
- that the colliers left over night. I had nothing else to eat. I
- looked about for work, and begged of the people a bit. I got to
- Bradford after a while, and had a job there for a month while a
- collier's lad was poorly. When he came back, I was obliged to
- leave."
-
-Another case was related by Mr. Kennedy, one of the commissioners.
-A boy, named Edward Kershaw, had been apprenticed by the overseers
-of Castleton to a collier of the name of Robert Brierly, residing at
-Balsgate, who worked in a pit in the vicinity of Rooley Moor. The boy
-was examined, and from twenty-four to twenty-six wounds were found upon
-his body. His posteriors and loins were beaten to a jelly; his head,
-which was almost cleared of hair on the scalp, had the marks of many
-old wounds upon it which had healed up. One of the bones in one arm
-was broken below the elbow, and, from appearances, seemed to have been
-so for some time. The boy, on being brought before the magistrates,
-was unable either to sit or stand, and was placed on the floor of the
-office, laid on his side on a small cradle-bed. It appears from the
-evidence, that the boy's arm had been broken by a blow with an iron
-rail, and the fracture had never been set, and that he had been kept at
-work for several weeks with his arm in the condition above described.
-It further appeared in evidence, and was admitted by Brierly, that he
-had been in the habit of beating the boy with a flat piece of wood, in
-which a nail was driven and projected about half an inch. The blows had
-been inflicted with such violence that they penetrated the skin, and
-caused the wounds above mentioned. The body of the boy presented all
-the marks of emaciation. This brutal master had kept the boy at work as
-a wagoner until he was no longer of any use, and then sent him home in
-a cart to his mother, who was a poor widow, residing in Church lane,
-Rochdale. And yet it is said that a slave cannot breathe the air of
-England!
-
-The want of instruction, and the seclusion from the rest of the world,
-which is common to the colliers, give them a sad pre-eminence over
-every other class of labourers, in ignorance and callousness; and
-when they are made masters, what can be expected? In all cases of
-apprenticeship, the children are bound till they attain the age of
-twenty-one years. If the master dies before the apprentice attains the
-age of twenty-one years, the apprentice is equally bound as the servant
-of his deceased master's heirs, executors, administrators, and assigns.
-In fact, the apprentice is part of the deceased master's goods and
-chattels!
-
-But, to speak more particularly of the labour of the children:—The
-employment of the adult collier is almost exclusively in the "getting"
-of the coal from its natural resting-place, of which there are various
-methods, according to the nature of the seams and the habits of the
-several districts. That of the children and young persons consists
-principally either in tending the air-doors where the coal-carriages
-must pass through openings, the immediately subsequent stoppage of
-which is necessary to preserve the ventilation in its proper channels,
-or in the conveyance of the coal from the bays or recesses in which
-it is hewn, along the subterranean roadways, to the bottom of the
-pit-shaft; a distance varying from absolute contiguity even to miles,
-in the great coal-fields of the North of England, where the depth
-requires that the same expensive shaft shall serve for the excavation
-of a large tract of coal. The earliest employment of children in the
-pits is generally to open and shut the doors, upon the proper custody
-of which the ventilation and safety of the whole mine depends. These
-little workmen are called "trappers." Of the manner in which they pass
-their earlier days, Dr. Mitchell, a distinguished Englishman, has given
-a very interesting sketch, which deserves to be quoted here entire:—
-
- "The little trapper, of eight years of age, lies quiet in bed.
- It is now between two and three in the morning, and his mother
- shakes him and desires him to rise, and tells him that his father
- has an hour ago gone off to the pit. He turns on his side, rubs
- his eyes, and gets up, and comes to the blazing fire and puts on
- his clothes. His coffee, such as it is, stands by the side of
- the fire, and bread is laid down for him. The fortnight is now
- well advanced, the money all spent, and butter, bacon, and other
- luxurious accompaniments of bread, are not to be had at breakfast
- till next pay-day supply the means. He then fills his tin bottle
- with coffee and takes a lump of bread, sets out for the pit, into
- which he goes down in the cage, and walking along the horse-way
- for upward of a mile, he reaches the barrow-way, over which the
- young men and boys push the trams with the tubs on rails to the
- flats, where the barrow-way and horse-way meet, and where the
- tubs are transferred to rolleys or carriages drawn by horses.
-
- [Illustration: THRUSTERS AND TRAPPER.]
-
- "He knows his place of work. It is inside one of the doors called
- trap-doors, which is in the barrow-way, for the purpose of
- forcing the stream of air which passes in its long, many-miled
- course from the down-shaft to the up-shaft of the pit; but
- which door must be opened whenever men or boys, with or without
- carriages, may wish to pass through. He seats himself in a little
- hole, about the size of a common fireplace, and with the string
- in his hand; and all his work is to pull that string when he has
- to open the door, and when man or boy has passed through, then to
- allow the door to shut of itself. Here it is his duty to sit, and
- be attentive, and pull his string promptly as any one approaches.
- He may not stir above a dozen steps with safety from his charge,
- lest he should be found neglecting his duty, and suffer for the
- same.
-
- "He sits solitary by himself, and has no one to talk to him; for
- in the pit the whole of the people, men and boys, are as busy
- as if they were in a sea-fight. He, however, sees now and then
- the putters urging forward their trams through his gate, and
- derives some consolation from the glimmer of the little candle
- of about 40 to the pound, which is fixed on their trams. For he
- himself has no light. His hours, except at such times, are passed
- in total darkness. For the first week of his service in the pit
- his father had allowed him candles to light one after another,
- but the expense of three halfpence a day was so extravagant
- expenditure out of tenpence, the boy's daily wages, that his
- father, of course, withdrew the allowance the second week, all
- except one or two candles in the morning, and the week after the
- allowance was altogether taken away; and now, except a neighbour
- kinder than his father now and then drop him a candle as he
- passes, the boy has no light of his own.
-
- "Thus hour after hour passes away; but what are hours to him,
- seated in darkness, in the bowels of the earth? He knows nothing
- of the ascending or descending sun. Hunger, however, though
- silent and unseen, acts upon him, and he betakes to his bottle
- of coffee and slice of bread; and, if desirous, he may have the
- luxury of softening it in a portion of water in the pit, which is
- brought down for man and beast.
-
- "In this state of sepulchral existence, an insidious enemy gains
- upon him. His eyes are shut, and his ears fail to announce the
- approach of a tram. A deputy overman comes along, and a smart cut
- of his yardwand at once punishes the culprit and recalls him to
- his duty; and happy was it for him that he fell into the hands of
- the deputy overman, rather than one of the putters; for his fist
- would have inflicted a severer pain. The deputy overman moreover
- consoles him by telling him that it was for his good that he
- punished him; and reminds him of boys, well known to both, who,
- when asleep, had fallen down, and some had been severely wounded,
- and others killed. The little trapper believes that he is to
- blame, and makes no complaint, for he dreads being discharged;
- and he knows that his discharge would be attended with the loss
- of wages, and bring upon him the indignation of his father, more
- terrible to endure than the momentary vengeance of the deputy and
- the putters all taken together.
-
- "Such is the day-work of the little trapper in the barrow-way.
-
- "At last, the joyful sound of 'Loose, loose,' reaches his ears.
- The news of its being four o'clock, and of the order, 'Loose,
- loose,' having been shouted down the shaft, is by systematic
- arrangement sent for many miles in all directions round the
- farthest extremities of the pit. The trapper waits until the last
- putter passes with his tram, and then he follows and pursues his
- journey to the foot of the shaft, and takes an opportunity of
- getting into the cage and going up when he can. By five o'clock
- he may probably get home. Here he finds a warm dinner, baked
- potatoes, and broiled bacon lying above them. He eats heartily
- at the warm fire, and sits a little after. He dare not go out to
- play with other boys, for the more he plays the more he is sure
- to sleep the next day in the pit. He, therefore, remains at home,
- until, feeling drowsy, he then repeats the prayer taught by our
- blessed Lord, takes off his clothes, is thoroughly washed in hot
- water by his mother, and is laid in his bed."
-
-[Illustration: HURRIER AND THRUSTER.]
-
-The evidence of the Parliamentary commissioners proves that Dr.
-Mitchell has given the life of the young trapper a somewhat softened
-colouring. Mr. Scriven states that the children employed in this way
-become almost idiotic from the long, dark, solitary confinement. Many
-of them never see the light of day during the winter season, except on
-Sundays.
-
-The loaded corves drawn by the hurriers weigh from two to five
-hundred-weight. These carriages are mounted upon four cast-iron wheels
-of five inches in diameter, there being, in general, no rails from the
-headings to the main gates. The children have to drag these carriages
-through passages in some cases not more than from sixteen to twenty
-inches in height. Of course, to accomplish this, the young children
-must crawl on their hands and feet. To render their labour the more
-easy, the sub-commissioner states that they buckle round their naked
-person a broad leather strap, to which is attached in front a ring and
-about four feet of chain, terminating in a hook. As soon as they enter
-the main gates, they detach the harness from the corve, change their
-position by getting behind it, and become "thrusters." The carriage is
-then placed upon the rail, a candle is stuck fast by a piece of wet
-clay, and away they run with amazing swiftness to the shaft, pushing
-the loads with their heads and hands. The younger children thrust in
-pairs.
-
- "After trapping," says the report of the commissioners, "the
- next labour in the ascending scale to which the children are
- put, is 'thrutching,' or thrusting, which consists in being
- helper to a 'drawer,' or 'wagoner,' who is master, or 'butty,'
- over the 'thrutcher,' In some pits, the thrutcher has his head
- protected by a thick cap, and he will keep on his trousers and
- clogs; but in others, he works nearly naked. The size of the
- loads which he has to thrutch varies with the thickness of the
- seam; and with the size, varies his butty's method of proceeding,
- which is either as a drawer or a wagoner. The drawers are those
- who use the belt and chain. Their labour consists in loading,
- with the coals hewn down by the 'getter,' an oblong tub without
- wheels, and dragging this tub on its sledge bottom by means of a
- girdle of rough leather passing round the body, and a chain of
- iron attached to that girdle in front, and hooked to the sledge.
- The drawer has, with the aid of his thrutcher, to sledge the
- tub in this manner from the place of getting to the mainway,
- generally down, though sometimes up, a brow or incline of the
- same steepness as the inclination of the strata; in descending
- which he goes to the front of his tub, where his light is fixed,
- and, turning his face to it, regulates its motion down the hill,
- as, proceeding back foremost, he pulls it along by his belt. When
- he gets to the mainway, which will be at various distances not
- exceeding forty or fifty yards from his loading-place, he has to
- leave this tub upon a low truck running on small iron wheels, and
- then to go and fetch a second, which will complete its load, and
- with these two to join with his thrutcher in pushing it along
- the iron railway to the pit bottom to have the tubs successively
- hooked on to the drawing-rope. Returning with his tubs empty, he
- leaves the mainway, first with one, and then with the other tub,
- to get them loaded, dragging them up the 'brow' by his belt and
- chain, the latter of which he now passes between his legs, so as
- to pull, face foremost, on all fours. In the thin seams, this
- labour has to be performed in bays, leading from the place of
- getting to the mainways, of scarcely more than twenty inches in
- height, and in mainways of only two feet six inches, and three
- feet high, for the seam itself will only be eighteen inches thick.
-
- "Wagoning is a form of drawing which comes into use with the
- more extensive employment of railways in the thicker seams.
- The tubs here used are large, and all mounted on wheels. From
- the place of getting, the loads are pushed by the wagoners with
- hands and heads to the bottom of the pit along the levels; and
- where they have to descend from one level into another, this is
- generally done by a cut at right angles directly with the dip,
- down the 'brow' which it makes. Here there is a winch or pinion
- for jigging the wagons down the incline, with a jigger at the top
- and a hooker-on at the bottom of the plane, where it is such as
- to require these. The jiggers and the hookers-on are children of
- twelve or thirteen. Sometimes the descent from one line of level
- into another is by a diagonal cutting at a small angle from the
- levels, called a slant, down which the wagoners can, and do,
- in some instances, take their wagons without jigging, by their
- own manual labour; and a very rough process it is, owing to the
- impetus which so great a weight acquires, notwithstanding the
- scotching of the wheels."
-
-Mr. Kennedy thus describes the position of the children, in the
-combined drawing and thrutching:—
-
- "The child in front is harnessed by his belt or chain to the
- wagon; the two boys behind are assisting in pushing it forward.
- Their heads, it will be observed, are brought down to a level
- with the wagon, and the body almost in the horizontal position.
- This is done partly to avoid striking the roof, and partly to
- gain the advantage of the muscular action, which is greatest in
- that position. It will be observed, the boy in front goes on his
- hands and feet: in that manner, the whole weight of his body is,
- in fact, supported by the chain attached to the wagon and his
- feet, and, consequently, his power of drawing is greater than it
- would be if he crawled on his knees. These boys, by constantly
- pushing against the wagons, occasionally rub off the hair from
- the crowns of their heads so much as to make them almost bald."
-
-In Derbyshire, some of the pits are altogether worked by boys. The
-seams are so thin, that several have only a two-feet headway to all
-the workings. The boy who gets the coal, lies on his side while at
-work. The coal is then loaded in a barrow, or tub, and drawn along the
-bank to the pit mouth by boys from eight to twelve years of age, on
-all fours, with a dog-belt and chain, the passages being very often
-an inch or two thick in black mud, and neither ironed nor wooded.
-In Mr. Barnes's pit, these boys have to drag the barrows with one
-hundred-weight of coal or slack, sixty times a day, sixty yards, and
-the empty barrows back, without once straightening their backs, unless
-they choose to stand under the shaft and run the risk of having their
-heads broken by coal falling.
-
-In some of the mines, the space of the workings is so small that the
-adult colliers are compelled to carry on their operations in a stooping
-posture; and, in others, they are obliged to work lying their whole
-length along the uneven floor, and supporting their heads upon a board
-or short crutch. In these low, dark, heated, and dismal chambers, they
-work perfectly naked. In many of the thin-seam mines, the labour of
-"getting" coal, so severe for adults, was found by the commissioners to
-be put upon children from nine to twelve years of age.
-
-If the employment of boys in such a way be, as a miner said to the
-commissioners, "barbarity, barbarity," what are we to think of the
-slavery of female children in the same abyss of darkness? How shall
-we express our feelings upon learning that females, in the years
-of opening womanhood, are engaged in the same occupations as their
-male companions, in circumstances repugnant to the crudest sense of
-decency? Yet we have unimpeachable evidence that, at the time of the
-investigations of the commissioners, females were thus employed; and
-there is reason to believe that this is still the case.
-
-[Illustration: COAL GETTER.]
-
-The commissioners found females employed like the males in the labours
-of the mines in districts of Yorkshire and Lancashire, in the East
-of Scotland, and in Wales. In great numbers of the pits visited, the
-men were working in a state of entire nakedness, and were assisted
-by females of all ages, from girls of six years old to women of
-twenty-one—these females being themselves quite naked down to the
-waist. Mr. Thomas Pearce says that in the West Riding of Yorkshire—
-
- "The girls hurry with a belt and chain, as well as thrust. There
- are as many girls as boys employed about here. One of the most
- disgusting sights I have ever seen, was that of young females,
- dressed like boys in trousers, crawling on all fours, with belts
- around their waists and chains passing between their legs, at
- day-pits at Thurshelf Bank, and in many small pits near Holmfirth
- and New Mills. It exists also in several other places."
-
-In the neighbourhood of Halifax, it is stated that there is no
-distinction whatever between the boys and girls in their coming up the
-shaft and going down; in their mode of hurrying or thrusting; in the
-weight of corves; in the distance they are hurried; in wages or dress;
-that the girls associate and labour with men who are in a state of
-nakedness, and that they have themselves no other garment than a ragged
-shift, or, in the absence of that, a pair of broken trousers, to cover
-their persons.
-
-Here are specimens of the evidence taken by the commissioners:—
-
- "Susan Pitchforth, aged eleven, Elland: 'I have worked in this
- pit going two years. I have one sister going of fourteen, and she
- works with me in the pit. I am a thruster.'
-
- "'This child,' said the sub-commissioner, 'stood shivering before
- me from cold. The rags that hung about her waist were once
- called a shift, which was as black as the coal she thrust, and
- saturated with water—the drippings of the roof and shaft. During
- my examination of her, the banksman, whom I had left in the pit,
- came to the public-house and wanted to take her away, because,
- as he expressed himself, it was not decent that she should be
- exposed to us.'
-
- "Patience Kershaw, aged seventeen: 'I hurry in the clothes I have
- now got on, (trousers and ragged jacket;) the bald place upon my
- head is made by thrusting the corves; the getters I work for are
- naked except their caps; they pull off their clothes; all the men
- are naked.'
-
- "Mary Barrett, aged fourteen: 'I work always without stockings,
- or shoes, or trousers; I wear nothing but my shift; I have to go
- up to the headings with the men; they are all naked there; I am
- got well used to that, and don't care much about it; I was afraid
- at first, and did not like it.'"
-
- In the Lancashire coal-fields lying to the north and west of
- Manchester, females are regularly employed in underground labour;
- and the brutal policy of the men, and the abasement of the women,
- is well described by some of the witnesses examined by Mr.
- Kennedy.
-
- "Peter Gaskill, collier, at Mr. Lancaster's, near Worsley:
- 'Prefers women to boys as drawers; they are better to manage,
- and keep the time better; they will fight and shriek and do
- every thing but let anybody pass them; and they never get to be
- coal-getters—that is another good thing.'
-
- [Illustration: GIRL WITH COAL CART IN THIN SEAM.]
-
- "Betty Harris, aged thirty-seven, drawer in a coal-pit, Little
- Bolton: 'I have a belt round my waist and a chain passing between
- my legs, and I go on my hands and feet. The road is very steep,
- and we have to hold by a rope, and when there is no rope, by any
- thing we can catch hold of. There are six women and about six
- boys and girls in the pit I work in; it is very hard work for
- a woman. The pit is very wet where I work, and the water comes
- over our clog-tops always, and I have seen it up to my thighs; it
- rains in at the roof terribly; my clothes are wet through almost
- all day long. I never was ill in my life but when I was lying-in.
- My cousin looks after my children in the daytime. I am very tired
- when I get home at night; I fall asleep sometimes before I get
- washed. I am not so strong as I was, and cannot stand my work so
- well as I used to do. I have drawn till I have had the skin off
- me. The belt and chain is worse when we are in the family-way. My
- feller (husband) has beaten me many a time for not being ready. I
- were not used to it at first, and he had little patience; I have
- known many a man beat his drawer.'
-
- "Mary Glover, aged thirty-eight, at Messrs. Foster's, Ringley
- Bridge: 'I went into a coal-pit when I was seven years old, and
- began by being a drawer. I never worked much in the pit when I
- was in the family-way, but since I have gave up having children,
- I have begun again a bit. I wear a shift and a pair of trousers
- when at work. I always will have a good pair of trousers. I have
- had many a twopence given me by the boatmen on the canal to show
- my breeches. I never saw women work naked, but I have seen men
- work without breeches in the neighbourhood of Bolton. I remember
- seeing a man who worked stark naked.'"
-
-In the East of Scotland, the business of the females is to remove
-the coals from the hewer who has picked them from the wall-face, and
-placing them either on their backs, which they invariably do when
-working in edge-seams, or in _little carts_ when on levels, to carry
-them to the main road, where they are conveyed to the pit bottom,
-where, being emptied into the ascending basket of the shaft, they
-are wound by machinery to the pit's mouth, where they lie heaped for
-further distribution. Mr. Franks, an Englishman, says of this barbarous
-toil—
-
- "Now when the nature of this horrible labour is taken into
- consideration; its extreme severity; its regular duration of from
- twelve to fourteen hours daily; the damp, heated, and unwholesome
- atmosphere of a coal-mine, and the tender age and sex of the
- workers, a picture is presented of deadly physical oppression and
- systematic slavery, of which I conscientiously believe no one
- unacquainted with such facts would credit the existence in the
- British dominions."
-
-The loads of coal carried on the backs of females vary in weight from
-three-quarters of a hundred-weight to three hundred-weight. In working
-edge-seams, or highly inclined beds, the load must be borne to the
-surface, or to the pit-bottom, up winding stairs, or a succession of
-steep ladders. The disgrace of this peculiar form of oppression is said
-to be confined to Scotland, "where, until nearly the close of the last
-century, the colliers remained in a state of legal bondage, and formed
-a degraded caste, apart from all humanizing influences and sympathy."
-From all accounts, they are not much improved in condition at the
-present time.
-
-A sub-commissioner thus describes a female child's labour in a Scottish
-mine, and gives some of the evidence he obtained:—
-
- "She has first to descend a nine-ladder pit to the first rest,
- even to which a shaft is sunk, to draw up the baskets or tubs of
- coals filled by the bearers; she then takes her creel (a basket
- formed to the back, not unlike a cockle-shell, flattened toward
- the back of the neck, so as to allow lumps of coal to rest on
- the back of the neck and shoulders,) and pursues her journey to
- the wall-face, or, as it is called here, the room of work. She
- then lays down her basket, into which the coal is rolled, and
- it is frequently more than one man can do to lift the burden on
- her back. The tugs or straps are placed over the forehead, and
- the body bent in a semicircular form, in order to stiffen the
- arch. Large lumps of coal are then placed on the neck, and she
- then commences her journey with her burden to the bottom, first
- hanging her lamp to the cloth crossing her head. In this girl's
- case, she has first to travel about fourteen fathoms (eighty-four
- feet) from wall-face to the first ladder, which is eighteen feet
- high; leaving the first ladder, she proceeds along the main road,
- probably three feet six inches to four feet six inches high, to
- the second ladder, eighteen feet high; so on to the third and
- fourth ladders, till she reaches the pit-bottom, where she casts
- her load, varying from one hundred-weight to one hundred-weight
- and a half, in the tub. This one journey is designated a rake;
- the height ascended, and the distance along the roads added
- together, exceed the height of St. Paul's Cathedral; and it not
- unfrequently happens that the tugs break, and the load falls
- upon those females who are following. However incredible it may
- be, yet I have taken the evidence of fathers who have ruptured
- themselves from straining to lift coal on their children's backs.
-
- "Janet Cumming, eleven years old, bears coals: 'I gang with
- the women at five, and come up with the women at five at
- night; work _all night_ on Fridays, and come away at twelve
- in the day. I carry the large bits of coal from the wall-face
- to the pit-bottom, and the small pieces called chows in a
- creel. The weight is usually a hundred-weight, does not know
- how many pounds there are in a hundred-weight, but it is some
- weight to carry; it takes three journeys to fill a tub of four
- hundred-weight. The distance varies, as the work is not always on
- the same wall; sometimes one hundred and fifty fathoms, whiles
- two hundred and fifty fathoms. The roof is very low; I have to
- bend my back and legs, and the water comes frequently up to the
- calves of my legs. Has no liking for the work; father makes me
- like it. Never got hurt, but often obliged to scramble out of the
- pit when bad air was in.'
-
- "William Hunter, mining oversman, Arniston Colliery: 'I have been
- twenty years in the works of Robert Dundas, Esq., and had much
- experience in the manner of drawing coal, as well as the habits
- and practices of the collier people. Until the last eight months,
- women and lasses were wrought below in these works, when Mr.
- Alexander Maxton, our manager, issued an order to exclude them
- from going below, having some months prior given intimation of
- the same. Women always did the lifting or heavy part of the work,
- and neither they nor the children were treated like human beings,
- nor are they where they are employed. Females submit to work
- in places where no man or even lad could be got to labour in;
- they work in bad roads, up to their knees in water, in a posture
- nearly double; they are below till the last hour of pregnancy;
- they have swelled haunches and ankles, and are prematurely
- brought to the grave, or, what is worse, lingering existence.
- Many of the daughters of the miners are now at respectable
- service. I have two who are in families at Leith, and who are
- much delighted with the change.'
-
- "Robert Bald, Esq., the eminent coal-viewer, states that, 'In
- surveying the workings of an extensive colliery under ground, a
- married woman came forward, groaning under an excessive weight
- of coals, trembling in every nerve, and almost unable to keep
- her knees from sinking under her. On coming up, she said, in a
- plaintive and melancholy voice, "Oh, sir, this is sore, sore,
- sore work. I wish to God that the first woman who tried to bear
- coals had broke her back, and none would have tried it again."
-
-The boxes or carriages employed in putting are of two kinds—the
-hutchie and the slype; the hutchie being an oblong, square-sided
-box with four wheels, which usually runs on a rail; and the slype a
-wood-framed box, curved and shod with iron at the bottom, holding
-from two and a quarter to five hundred-weight of coal, adapted to the
-seams through which it is dragged. The lad or lass is harnessed over
-the shoulders and back with a strong leathern girth, which, behind, is
-furnished with an iron-hook, which is attached to a chain fastened to
-the coal-cart or slype. The dresses of these girls are made of coarse
-hempen stuff, fitting close to the figures; the coverings to their
-heads are made of the same material. Little or no flannel is used,
-and their clothing, being of an absorbent nature, frequently gets
-completely saturated shortly after descending the pit. We quote more
-of the evidence obtained by the commissioners. It scarcely needs any
-comment:—
-
- "Margaret Hipps, seventeen years old, putter, Stoney Rigg
- Colliery, Stirlingshire: 'My employment, after reaching the
- wall-face, is to fill my bagie, or slype, with two and a half to
- three hundred-weight of coal. I then hook it on to my chain and
- drag it through the seam, which is twenty-six to twenty-eight
- inches high, till I get to the main road—a good distance,
- probably two hundred to four hundred yards. The pavement I drag
- over is wet, and I am obliged at all times to crawl on hands
- and feet with my bagie hung to the chain and ropes. It is sad
- sweating and sore fatiguing work, and frequently maims the women.'
-
- "Sub-commissioner: 'It is almost incredible that human beings
- can submit to such employment, crawling on hands and knees,
- harnessed like horses, over soft, slushy floors, more difficult
- than dragging the same weights through our lowest common sewers,
- and more difficult in consequence of the inclination, which is
- frequently one in three to one in six.'
-
- "Agnes Moffatt, seventeen years old, coal-bearer: 'Began working
- at ten years of age; father took sister and I down; he gets our
- wages. I fill five baskets; the weight is more than twenty-two
- hundred-weight; it takes me twenty journeys. The work is o'er
- sair for females. It is no uncommon for women to lose their
- burden, and drop off the ladder down the dyke below; Margaret
- McNeil did a few weeks since, and injured both legs. When the
- tugs which pass over the forehead break, which they frequently
- do, it is very dangerous to be under with a load.'
-
- "Margaret Jacques, seventeen years of age, coal-bearer: 'I have
- been seven years at coal-bearing; it is horrible sore work; it
- was not my choice, but we do our parents' will. I make thirty
- rakes a day, with two hundred-weight of coal on my creel. It is a
- guid distance I journey, and very dangerous on parts of the road.
- The distance fast increases as the coals are cut down.'
-
- "Helen Reid, sixteen years old, coal-bearer: 'I have wrought five
- years in the mines in this part; my employment is carrying coal.
- Am frequently worked from four in the morning until six at night.
- I work night-work week about, (alternate weeks.) I then go down
- at two in the day, and come up at four and six in the morning.
- I can carry near two hundred-weight _on_ my back. I do not like
- the work. Two years since the pit closed upon thirteen of us,
- and we were two days without food or light; nearly one day we
- were up to our chins in water. At last we got to an old shaft,
- to which we picked our way, and were heard by people watching
- above. Two months ago, I was filling the tubs at the pit bottom,
- when the gig clicked too early, and the hook caught me by my
- pit-clothes—the people did not hear my shrieks—my hand had fast
- grappled the chain, and the great height of the shaft caused me
- to lose my courage, and I swooned. The banksman could scarcely
- remove my hand—the deadly grasp saved my life.'
-
- "Margaret Drysdale, fifteen years old, coal-putter: 'I don't like
- the work, but mother is dead, and father brought me down; I had
- no choice. The lasses will tell you that they all like the work
- fine, as they think you are going to take them out of the pits.
- My employment is to draw the carts. I have harness, or draw-ropes
- on, like the horses, and pull the carts. Large carts hold seven
- hundred-weight and a half, the smaller five hundred-weight and a
- half. The roads are wet, and I have to draw the work about one
- hundred fathoms.'
-
- "Katherine Logan, sixteen years old, coal-putter: 'Began to work
- at coal-carrying more than five years since; works in harness
- now; draw backward with face to tubs; the ropes and chains go
- under my pit-clothes; it is o'er sair work, especially where we
- crawl.'
-
- "Janet Duncan, seventeen years old, coal-putter: 'Works
- at putting, and was a coal-bearer at Hen-Muir Pit and New
- Pencaitland. The carts I push contain three hundred-weight of
- coal, being a load and a half; it is very severe work, especially
- when we have to stay before the tubs, on the braes, to prevent
- them coming down too fast; they frequently run too quick, and
- knock us down; when they run over fast, we fly off the roads and
- let them go, or we should be crushed. Mary Peacock was severely
- crushed a fortnight since; is gradually recovering. I have
- wrought above in harvest time; it is the only other work that
- ever I tried my hand at, and having harvested for three seasons,
- am able to say that the hardest daylight work is infinitely
- superior to the best of coal-work.'
-
- "Jane Wood, wife of James Wood, formerly a coal-drawer and
- bearer: 'Worked below more than thirty years. I have two
- daughters below, who really hate the employment, and often prayed
- to leave, but we canna do well without them just now. The severe
- work causes women much trouble; they frequently have premature
- births. Jenny McDonald, a neighbour, was laid idle six months;
- and William King's wife lately died from miscarriage, and a vast
- of women suffer from similar causes.'
-
- "Margaret Boxter, fifty years old, coal-hewer: 'I hew the coal;
- have done so since my husband failed in his breath; he has been
- off work twelve years. I have a son, daughter, and niece working
- with me below, and we have sore work to get maintenance. I go
- down early to hew the coal for my girls to draw; my son hews
- also. The work is not fit for women, and men could prevent it
- were they to labour more regular; indeed, men about this place
- don't wish wives to work in mines, but the masters seem to
- encourage it—at any rate, the masters never interfere to prevent
- it.'"
-
- "The different kinds of work to which females are put in South
- Wales, are described in the following evidence:—
-
- "Henrietta Frankland, eleven years old, drammer: 'When
- well, I draw the drams, (carts,) which contain four to five
- hundred-weight of coal, from the heads to the main road; I make
- forty-eight to fifty journeys; sister, who is two years older,
- works also at dramming; the work is very hard, and the long hours
- before the pay-day fatigue us much. The mine is wet where we
- work, as the water passes through the roof, and the workings are
- only thirty to thirty-three inches high.'
-
- "Mary Reed, twelve years old, air-door keeper: 'Been five years
- in the Plymouth mine. Never leaves till the last dram (cart) is
- drawn past by the horse. Works from six till four or five at
- night. Has run home very hungry; runs along the level or hangs on
- a cart as it passes. Does not like the work in the dark; would
- not mind the daylight work.'
-
- "Hannah Bowen, sixteen years old, windlass-woman: 'Been down two
- years; it is good hard work; work from seven in the morning till
- three or four in the afternoon at hauling the windlass. Can draw
- up four hundred loads of one hundred-weight and a half to four
- hundred-weight each.'
-
- "Ann Thomas, sixteen years old, windlass-woman: 'Finds the work
- very hard; two women always work the windlass below ground. We
- wind up eight hundred loads. Men do not like the winding, _it is
- too hard work for them_.'"
-
-The commissioners ascertained that when the work-people were in
-full employment, the regular hours for children and young persons
-were rarely less than eleven; more often they were twelve; in some
-districts, they are thirteen; and, in one district, they are
-generally fourteen and upward. In Derbyshire, south of Chesterfield,
-from thirteen to sixteen hours are considered a day's work. Of the
-exhausting effects of such labour for so long a time, we shall scarcely
-need any particular evidence. But one boy, named John Bostock, told the
-commissioners that he had often been made to work until he was so tired
-as to lie down on his road home until twelve o'clock, when his mother
-had come and led him home; and that he had sometimes been so tired that
-he could not eat his dinner, but had been beaten and made to work until
-night. Many other cases are recorded:—
-
- "John Rawson, collier, aged forty: 'I work at Mr. Sorby's
- pit, Handsworth. I think the children are worked overmuch
- sometimes.'—_Report_, No. 81, p. 243, 1. 25.
-
- "Peter Waring, collier, Billingby: 'I never should like my
- children to go in. They are not beaten; it is the work that hurts
- them; it is mere slavery, and nothing but it.'—Ibid. No. 125, p.
- 256, 1. 6.
-
- "John Hargreave, collier, Thorpe's Colliery: 'Hurrying is heavy
- work for children. They ought not to work till they are twelve
- years old, and then put two together for heavy corves.'—Ibid.
- No. 130, p. 256, 1. 44.
-
- "Mr. Timothy Marshall, collier, aged thirty-five, Darton: 'I
- think the hurrying is what hurts girls, and it is too hard work
- for their strength; I think that children cannot be educated
- after they once get to work in pits; they are both tired and even
- disinclined to learn when they have done work.'—Ibid. No. 141,
- p. 262, 1. 39.
-
- "A collier at Mr. Travis's pit: 'The children get but little
- schooling; six or seven out of nine or ten know nothing. They
- never go to night-schools, except some odd ones. When the
- children get home, they cannot go to school, for they have to be
- up so early in the morning—soon after four—and they cannot do
- without rest.'—Ibid. No. 94, p. 246, 1. 33.
-
- "Mr. George Armitage, aged thirty-six, formerly collier at
- Silkstone, now teacher at Hayland School: 'Little can be learnt
- merely on Sundays, and they are too tired as well as indisposed
- to go to night-schools. I am decidedly of opinion that when trade
- is good, the work of hurriers is generally continuous; but when
- there are two together, perhaps the little one will have a rest
- while the big one is filling or riddling.'—Ibid., No. 138, p.
- 261, 1. 24.
-
- "William Firth, between six and seven years old, Deal Wood
- Pit, Flockton: 'I hurry with my sister. I don't like to be in
- pit. I was crying to go out this morning. It tires me a good
- deal.'—Ibid. No. 218, p. 282, 1. 11.
-
- "John Wright, hurrier in Thorpe's colliery: 'I shall be nine
- years old next Whitsuntide. It tires me much. It tires my arms.
- I have been two years in the pit, and have been hurrying all the
- time. It tries the small of my arms.'—Ibid. No. 129, p. 256, 1.
- 31.
-
- "Daniel Dunchfield: 'I am going in ten; I am more tired in the
- forenoon than at night; it makes my back ache; I work all day
- the same as the other boys; I rest me when I go home at night; I
- never go to play at night; I get my supper and go to bed.'—Ibid.
- No. 63, p. 238, 1. 32.
-
- "George Glossop, aged twelve: 'I help to fill and hurry, and am
- always tired at night when I've done.'—Ibid. No. 50, p. 236, 1.
- 21.
-
- "Martin Stanley: 'I tram by myself, and find it very hard work.
- It tires me in my legs and shoulders every day.'—Ibid. No. 69,
- p. 240, 1. 27.
-
- "Charles Hoyle: 'I was thirteen last January. I work in the thin
- coal-pit. I find it very hard work. We work at night one week,
- and in the day the other. It tires me very much sometimes. It
- tires us most in the legs, especially when we have to go on our
- hands and feet. I fill as well as hurry.'—Ibid. No. 78, p. 242,
- 1. 41.
-
- "Jonathan Clayton, thirteen and a half years old, Soap Work
- Colliery, Sheffield: 'Hurrying is very hard work; when I got home
- at night, I was knocked up.'—Ibid. No. 6, p. 227, 1. 48.
-
- "Andrew Roger, aged seventeen years: 'I work for my father, who
- is an undertaker. I get, and have been getting two years. I find
- it very hard work indeed; it tires me very much; I can hardly get
- washed of a night till nine o'clock, I am so tired.'—Ibid. No.
- 60, p. 237, 1. 49.
-
- ["'This witness,' says the sub-commissioner, 'when examined in
- the evening after his work was over, ached so much that he could
- not stand upright.']—Ibid. s. 109; App. pt. i. p. 181.
-
- "Joseph Reynard, aged nineteen, Mr. Stancliffe's pit, Mirfield:
- 'I began hurrying when I was nine; I get now; I cannot hurry,
- because one leg is shorter than the other. I have had my hip bad
- since I was fifteen. I am very tired at nights. I worked in a wet
- place to-day. I have worked in places as wet as I have been in
- to-day.'
-
- ["'I examined Joseph Reynard; he has several large abscesses in
- his thigh, from hip-joint disease. The thigh-bone is dislocated
- from the same cause; the leg is about three inches shorter; two
- or three of the abscesses are now discharging. No appearance of
- puberty from all the examinations I made. I should not think him
- more than eleven or twelve years of age, except from his teeth. I
- think him quite unfit to follow any occupation, much less the one
- he now occupies.
-
- Signed, "'U. BRADBURY, Surgeon.']
-
- "'This case,' says the sub-commissioner, 'is one reflecting the
- deepest discredit on his employers.'—_Symons, Evidence_, No.
- 272; App. pt. i. p. 298, 1. 29.
-
- "Elizabeth Eggley, sixteen years old: 'I find my work very much
- too hard for me. I hurry alone. It tires me in my arms and back
- most. I am sure it is very hard work, and tires us very much; it
- is too hard work for girls to do. We sometimes go to sleep before
- we get to bed.'—Ibid. No. 114, p. 252, 1. 44.
-
- "Ann Wilson, aged ten and a half years, Messrs. Smith's colliery:
- 'Sometimes the work tires us when we have a good bit to do;
- it tires we in my back. I hurry by myself. I push with my
- head.'—Ibid. No. 229, p. 224, 1. 12.
-
- "Elizabeth Day, hurrier, Messrs. Hopwood's pit, Barnsley: 'It
- is very hard work for us all. It is harder work than we ought
- to do, a deal. I have been lamed in my back, and strained in my
- back.'—Ibid. No. 80, p. 244, 1. 33.
-
- "Mary Shaw: 'I am nineteen years old. I hurry in the pit you were
- in to-day. I have ever been much tired with my work.'—Ibid. No.
- 123, p. 249, 1. 38.
-
- "Ann Eggley, hurrier in Messrs. Thorpe's colliery: 'The work is
- far too hard for me; the sweat runs off me all over sometimes. I
- am very tired at night. Sometimes when we get home at night, we
- have not power to wash us, and then we go to bed. Sometimes we
- fall asleep in the chair. Father said last night it was both a
- shame and a disgrace for girls to work as we do, but there was
- nought else for us to do. The girls are always tired.'—Ibid. No.
- 113, p. 252, 1. 17.
-
- "Elizabeth Coats: 'I hurry with my brother. It tires me a great
- deal, and tires my back and arms.'—Ibid. No. 115, p. 252, 1. 59.
-
- "Elizabeth Ibbitson, at Mr. Harrison's pit, Gomersel: 'I don't
- like being at pit; I push the corf with my head, and it hurts me,
- and is sore.'—Ibid. No. 266, p. 292, 1. 17.
-
- "Margaret Gomley, Lindley Moor, aged nine: 'Am very
- tired.'—_Scriven, Evidence_, No. 9; App. pt. ii. p. 103, 1. 34.
-
- "James Mitchell, aged twelve, Messrs. Holt and Hebblewaite's: 'I
- am very tired when I get home; it is enough to tire a horse; and
- stooping so much makes it bad.'—Ibid. No. 2, p. 101, 1. 32.
-
- "William Whittaker, aged sixteen, Mr. Rawson's colliery: 'I am
- always very tired when I go home.'—Ibid. No. 13, p. 104, 1. 55.
-
- "George Wilkinson, aged thirteen, Low Moor: 'Are you tired now?
- Nay. Were you tired then? Yea. What makes the difference? I can
- hurry a deal better now.'—_W. R. Wood, Esq., Evidence_, No. 18,
- App. pt. ii. p. _h_ 11, 1. 30.
-
- "John Stevenson, aged fourteen, Low Moor: 'Has worked in a
- coal-pit eight years; went in at six years old; used to rue to go
- in; does not rue now; it was very hard when he went in, and "I
- were nobbud a right little one." Was not strong enough when he
- first went; had better have been a little bigger; used to be very
- tired; did not when he first went. I waur ill tired.'—Ibid. No.
- 15, p. _h_ 10, 1. 39.
-
- "Jabez Scott, aged fifteen, Bowling Iron Works: 'Work is very
- hard; sleeps well sometimes; sometimes is very ill tired and
- cannot sleep so well.'—Ibid. No. 38, p. _h_ 10, 1. 29.
-
- "William Sharpe, Esq., F. R. S., surgeon, Bradford, states: 'That
- he has for twenty years professionally attended at the Low Moor
- Iron Works; that there are occasionally cases of deformity, and
- also bad cases of scrofula, apparently induced by the boys being
- too early sent into the pits, by their working beyond their
- strength, by their constant stooping, and by occasionally working
- in water.'"—Ibid. No. 60, p. _h_ 27, 1. 45.
-
-The statements of the children, as will be seen, are confirmed by the
-evidence of the adult work-people, in which we also find some further
-developments:—
-
- "William Fletcher, aged thirty-three, collier, West Hallam:
- 'Considers the collier's life a very hard one both for man and
- boy, the latter full as hard as the former.'—_Report_, No. 37,
- p. 279, 1. 17.
-
- "John Beasley, collier, aged forty-nine, Shipley: 'He has known
- instances where the children have been so overcome with the
- work, as to cause them to go off in a decline; he has seen those
- who could not get home without their father's assistance, and
- have fallen asleep before they could be got to bed; has known
- children of six years old sent to the pit, but thinks there are
- none at Shipley under seven or eight; it is his opinion a boy is
- too weak to stand the hours, even to drive between, until he is
- eight or nine years old; the boys go down at six in the morning,
- and has known them kept down until nine or ten, until they are
- almost ready to exhaust; the children and young persons work the
- same hours as the men; the children are obliged to work in the
- night if the wagon-road is out of repair, or the water coming on
- them; it happens sometimes two or three times in the week; they
- then go down at six P.M. to six A.M., and have from ten minutes
- to half an hour allowed for supper, according to the work they
- have to do; they mostly ask the children who have been at work
- the previous day to go down with them, but seldom have to oblige
- them; when he was a boy, he has worked for thirty-six hours
- running many a time, and many more besides himself have done
- so.'—Ibid. No. 40, p. 274, 1. 23.
-
- "William Wardle, aged forty, Eastwood: 'There is no doubt
- colliers are much harder worked than labourers; indeed, it is the
- hardest work under heaven.'—Ibid. No. 84, p. 287, 1. 51.
-
- "Samuel Richards, aged forty, Awsworth: 'There are Sunday-schools
- when they will go; but when boys have been beaten, knocked about,
- and covered with sludge all the week, they want to be in bed to
- rest all day on Sunday.'—Ibid. No. 166, p. 307, 1. 58.
-
- "William Sellers, operative, aged twenty-two, Butterley Company:
- 'When he first worked in the pit, he has been so tired that he
- slept as he walked.'—Ibid. No. 222, p. 319, 1. 35.
-
- "William Knighton, aged twenty-four, Denby: 'He remembers "mony"
- a time he has dropped asleep with the meat in his mouth through
- fatigue; it is those butties—they are the very devil; they
- impose upon them in one way, then in another.'—Ibid. No. 314, p.
- 334, 1. 42.
-
- "— —, engine-man, Babbington: 'Has, when working whole
- days, often seen the children lie down on the pit-bank and go to
- sleep, they were so tired.'—Ibid. No. 137, p. 300, 1. 10.
-
- "John Attenborough, schoolmaster, Greasley: 'Has observed that
- the collier children are more tired and dull than the others, but
- equally anxious to learn.'—Ibid. No. 153, p. 304, 1. 122.
-
- "Ann Birkin: 'Is mother to Thomas and Jacob, who work in Messrs.
- Fenton's pits; they have been so tired after a whole day's
- work, that she has at times had to wash them and lift them into
- bed.'—Ibid. No. 81, p. 285, 1. 59.
-
- "Hannah Neale, Butterley Park: 'They come home so tired that they
- become stiff, and can hardly get to bed; Constantine, the one
- ten years old, formerly worked in the same pit as his brothers,
- but about a half a year since his toe was cut off by the bind
- falling; notwithstanding this, the loader made him work until the
- end of the day, although in the greatest pain. He was out of work
- more than four months owing to this accident.'—Ibid. No. 237, p.
- 320, 1. 51.
-
- "Ellen Wagstaff, Watnall: 'Has five children, three at Trough
- lane and two at Willow lane, Greasley; one at Trough lane is
- eighteen, one fourteen, one thirteen years of age; and those
- at Willow lane are sixteen and nineteen; they are variously
- employed; the youngest was not seven years old when he first went
- to the pits. The whole have worked since they were seven or seven
- and a half; they have worked from six to eight; from six to two
- for half days, no meal-time in half days; she has known them when
- at full work so tired when they first worked, that you could not
- hear them speak, and they fell asleep before they could eat their
- suppers; it has grieved her to the heart to see them.'—Ibid. No.
- 104, p. 292, 1. 18.
-
- "Ann Wilson, Underwood: 'Is stepmother to Matthew Wilson and
- mother to Richard Clarke. Has heard what they have said, and
- believes it to be true; has known them when they work whole days
- they have come home so tired and dirty, that they could scarcely
- be prevented lying down on the ashes by the fireside, and could
- not take their clothes off; has had to do it for them, and take
- them to the brook and wash them, and has sat up most of the night
- to get their clothes dry. The next morning they have gone to work
- like bears to the stake.'—Ibid. No. 112, p. 294, 1. 5.
-
- "Hannah Brixton, Babbington: 'The butties slave them past any
- thing. Has frequently had them drop asleep as soon as they have
- got in the house, and complain of their legs and arms aching very
- bad.'—Ibid. No. 149, p. 302, 1. 44.
-
- "Michael Wilkins: 'Never has a mind for his victuals; never feels
- himself hungry.'
-
- "John Charlton: 'Thinks the stythe makes him bad so that he
- cannot eat his bait, and often brings it all home with him again,
- or eats very little of it.'
-
- "Michael Richardson: 'He never has much appetite; and the dust
- often blacks his victuals. Is always dry and thirsty.'
-
-
- "William Beaney: 'Has thrown up his victuals often when he came
- home; thinks the bad air made him do this.'
-
- "John Thompson: 'Often throws up his food.'
-
- "Thomas Newton: 'Threw up his victuals last night when he came
- home. Never does so down in the pit, but often does when he comes
- home.'
-
- "Moses Clerk: 'Throws up his victuals nearly every day at home
- and down in the pit.'
-
- "Thomas Martin: 'Many times feels sick, and feels headache, and
- throws up his food. Was well before he went down in the pit.'
-
- "Thomas Fawcett: 'Many a night falls sick; and he many times
- throws up his meat when he is in bed. Sometimes feels bad and
- sick in the morning.'
-
- "George Alder: 'Has been unwell of late with the hard work. Has
- felt very sick and weak all this last week.' (Looks very pale and
- unwell.)
-
- "John Charlton: 'Often obliged to give over. Has been off five
- days in the last month. Each of these days was down in the pit
- and obliged to come up again.'
-
- "John Laverick and others: 'Many times they fell sick down in the
- pit. Sometimes they have the heart-burn; sometimes they force
- up their meat again. Some boys are off a week from being sick;
- occasionally they feel pains.'
-
- "Six trappers: 'Sometimes they feel sick upon going to work in
- the morning. Sometimes bring up their breakfasts from their
- stomachs again. Different boys at different times do this.'
-
- "George Short: 'It is bad air where he is, and makes him bad;
- makes small spots come out upon him, (small pimples,) which he
- thinks is from the air, and he takes physic to stop them. His
- head works very often, and he feels sickish sometimes.'
-
- "Nichol Hudderson: 'The pit makes him sick. Has been very bad in
- his health ever since he went down in the pit. Was very healthy
- before. The heat makes him sick. The sulphur rising up the shaft
- as he goes down makes his head work. Often so sick that he cannot
- eat when he gets up, at least he cannot eat very much. About a
- half a year since, a boy named John Huggins was very sick down in
- the pit, and wanted to come up, but the keeper would not let him
- ride, (come up,) and he died of fever one week afterward.'
-
- ["The father of this lad and his brother fully corroborate this
- statement, and the father says the doctor told him that if he
- (the boy) had not been kept in the pit, he might have been,
- perhaps, saved. This boy never had any thing the matter with him
- before he went down into the pit."—_Leifchild, Evidences_, Nos.
- 156, 169, 270, 83, 110, 142, 143, 374, 194, 364, 135, 100, 101;
- App. pt. i. p. 582 _et seq._ See also the statement of witnesses,
- Nos. 315, 327, 351, 359, 360, 361, 362, 363, 365, 377, 381, 382,
- 384, 403, 434, 454, 455, 457, 464, 465, 466.]
-
-Similar statements are made by all classes of witnesses in some other
-districts. Thus, in Shropshire:—
-
- "A surgeon who did not wish his name to be published: 'They
- are subject to hypertrophy of the heart, no doubt laying the
- foundation of such disease at the early age of from eight to
- thirteen years.'—_Mitchell, Evidence_, No. 45; App. pt. i. p.
- 81, 1. 16.
-
- "Mr. Michael Thomas Sadler, surgeon, Barnsley: 'I have found
- diseases of the heart in adult colliers, which it struck me arose
- from violent exertion. I know of no trade about here where the
- work is harder.'—_Symons, Evidence_, No. 139; App. pt. i. p.
- 261, 1. 36.
-
- "Mr. Pearson, surgeon to the dispensary, Wigan: 'They are very
- subject to diseases of the heart.'—_Kennedy, Report_, 1. 304;
- App. pt. ii. p. 189.
-
- "Dr. William Thompson, Edinburgh: 'Workers in coal-mines
- are exceedingly liable to suffer from irregular action, and
- ultimately organic diseases of the heart.'—_Franks, Evidence_,
- App. pt. i. p. 409.
-
- "Scott Alison, M. D., East Lothian: 'I found diseases of the
- heart very common among colliers at all ages, from boyhood up
- to old age. The most common of them were inflammation of that
- organ, and of its covering, the pericardium, simple enlargement
- or hypertrophy, contraction of the auriculo-ventricular
- communications, and of the commencement of the aorta. These
- symptoms were well marked, attended for the most part with
- increase of the heart's action, the force of its contraction
- being sensibly augmented, and, in many cases, especially those
- of hypertrophy, much and preternaturally extended over the
- chest.'—Ibid. p. 417.
-
- "Mr. Thomas Batten, surgeon, Coleford: 'A boy about thirteen
- years of age, in the Parkend Pits, died of _hæmorrhagia
- purpurea_, (a suffusion of blood under the cuticle,) brought on
- by too much exertion of the muscles and whole frame.'—_Waring,
- Evidence_, No. 36; App. pt. ii. p. 24, 1. 21.
-
-To this list of diseases arising from great muscular exertion, must be
-added rupture:—
-
- "Dr. Farell, Sheffield: 'Many of them are ruptured; nor is this
- by any means uncommon among lads—arising, in all probability,
- from over-exertion.'—_Symons, Evidence_, No. 47, App. pt. i. p.
- 286, 1. 2.
-
- "Mr. Pearson, surgeon to the dispensary, Wigan: 'Colliers are
- often ruptured, and they often come to me for advice.'—_Kennedy,
- Report_, 1. 304; App. pt. ii. p. 189.
-
- "Andrew Grey: 'Severe ruptures occasioned by lifting coal. Many
- are ruptured on both sides. I am, and suffer severely, and a vast
- number of men here are also.'—_Franks, Evidence_, No. 147; App.
- pt. i. p. 463, 1. 61.
-
-But employment in the coal-mines produces another series of diseases
-incomparably more painful and fatal, partly referable to excessive
-muscular exertion, and partly to the state of the place of work—that
-is, to the foul air from imperfect ventilation, and the wetness
-from inefficient drainage. Of the diseases of the lungs produced by
-employment in the mines, asthma is the most frequent.
-
- "Mr. William Hartell Baylis: 'The working of the mines brings on
- asthma.'—_Mitchell, Evidence_, No. 7; App. pt. i. p. 65, 1. 31.
-
- "A surgeon who does not wish his name to be published: 'Most
- colliers, at the age of thirty, become asthmatic. There are
- few attain that age without having the respiratory apparatus
- disordered.'—Ibid. No. 45, p. 81, 1. 15.
-
- "Mr. George Marcy, clerk of the Wellington Union: 'Many
- applications are made from miners for relief on account of
- sickness, and chiefly from asthmatic complaints, when arrived
- at an advanced age. At forty, perhaps, the generality suffer
- much from asthma. Those who have applied have been first to the
- medical officer, who has confirmed what they said.'—Ibid. No.
- 46, p. 81, 1. 44.
-
- "'I met with very few colliers above forty years of age, who, if
- they had not a confirmed asthmatic disease, were not suffering
- from difficult breathing.'—_Fellows, Report_, s. 57; App. pt.
- ii. p. 256.
-
- "Phœbe Gilbert, Watnall, Messrs. Barber and Walker: 'She
- thinks they are much subject to asthma. Her first husband,
- who died aged 57, was unable to work for seven years on that
- account.'—_Fellows, Evidence_, No. 105; App. pt. ii. p. 256.
-
- "William Wardle, collier, forty years of age, Eastwood: 'There
- are some who are asthmatical, and many go double.'—Ibid. No. 84,
- p. 287, 1. 40.
-
- "Mr. Henry Hemmingway, surgeon, Dewsbury: 'When children are
- working where carbonic acid gas prevails, they are rendered more
- liable to affections of the brain and lungs. This acid prevents
- the blood from its proper decarbonization as it passes from
- the heart to the lungs. It does not get properly quit of the
- carbon.'—_Symons, Evidence_, No. 221; App. pt. i. p. 282, 1. 38.
-
- "Mr. Uriah Bradbury, surgeon, Mirfield: 'They suffer from
- asthma.'—Ibid. No. 199, p. 278, 1. 58.
-
- "Mr. J. B. Greenwood, surgeon, Cleckheaton: 'The cases which have
- come before me professionally have been chiefly affections of the
- chest and asthma, owing to the damp underfoot, and also to the
- dust which arises from the working of the coal.'—Ibid. No. 200,
- p. 279, 1. 8.
-
- "J. Ibetson, collier, aged fifty-three, Birkenshaw: 'I have
- suffered from asthma, and am regularly knocked up. A collier
- cannot stand the work regularly. He must stop now and then, or he
- will be mashed up before any time.'—Ibid. No. 267, p. 292, 1. 42.
-
- "Joseph Barker, collier, aged forty-three, Windybank Pit: 'I have
- a wife and two children; one of them is twenty-two years old; he
- is mashed up, (that is, he is asthmatical,) he has been as good a
- worker as ever worked in a skin.'—_Scriven, Evidence_, No. 14;
- App. pt. ii. p. 104, 1. 60.
-
- "Mr. George Canney, surgeon, Bishop Aukland: 'Do the children
- suffer from early employment in the pits?' Yes, seven and
- eight is a very early age, and the constitution must suffer in
- consequence. It is injurious to be kept in one position so long,
- and in the dark. They go to bed when they come home, and enjoy
- very little air. I think there is more than the usual proportion
- of pulmonary complaints.'—_Mitchell, Evidence_, No. 97; App. pt.
- i. p. 154, 1. 2.
-
- "Mr. Headlam, physician, Newcastle: 'Diseases of respiration
- are more common among pit-men than among others, distinctly
- referable to the air in which they work. The air contains a great
- proportion of carbonic gas, and carburetted hydrogen. These
- diseases of the respiratory organs arise from the breathing of
- these gases, principally of the carbonic acid gas.—_Leifchild,
- Evidence_, No. 499; App. pt. i. p. 67, 1. 11.
-
- "Mr. Heath, of Newcastle, surgeon: 'More than usually liable to
- asthma; mostly between thirty and forty years of age. A person
- always working in the broken would be more liable to asthma.
- Asthma is of very slow growth, and it is difficult to say when it
- begins. Custom and habit will not diminish the evil effects, but
- will diminish the sensibility to these evils.'—Ibid. No. 497, p.
- 665, 1. 10-14.
-
- "Matthew Blackburn, driver, fifteen years of age, Heaton
- Colliery: 'Has felt shortness of breath. Helps up sometimes,
- but is bound to drive. Cannot help up sometimes for shortness
- of breath. His legs often work, (ache;) his shoulders work
- sometimes. Working in a wet place.'—Ibid. No. 27, p. 573, 1. 34.
-
- "Dr. S. Scott Alison, East Lothian: 'Between the twentieth and
- thirtieth year the colliers decline in bodily vigour, and become
- more and more spare; the difficulty of breathing progresses,
- and they find themselves very desirous of some remission from
- their labour. This period is fruitful in acute diseases, such
- as fever, inflammation of the lungs, pleura, and many other
- ailments, the product of over-exertion, exposure to cold and wet,
- violence, insufficient clothing, intemperance, and foul air. For
- the first few years chronic bronchitis is usually found alone,
- and unaccompanied by disease of the body or lungs. The patient
- suffers more or less difficulty of breathing, which is affected
- by changes of the weather, and by variations in the weight of
- the atmosphere. He coughs frequently, and the expectoration
- is composed, for the most part, of white frothy and yellowish
- mucous fluid, occasionally containing blackish particles of
- carbon, the result of the combustion of the lamp, and also of
- minute coal-dust. At first, and indeed for several years, the
- patient, for the most part, does not suffer much in his general
- health, eating heartily, and retaining his muscular strength in
- consequence. The disease is rarely, if ever, entirely cured; and
- if the collier be not carried off by some other lesion in the
- mean time, this disease ultimately deprives him of life by a
- slow and lingering process. The difficulty of breathing becomes
- more or less permanent, the expectoration becomes very abundant,
- effusions of water take place in the chest, the feet swell, and
- the urine is secreted in small quantity; the general health
- gradually breaks up, and the patient, after reaching premature
- old age, slips into the grave at a comparatively early period,
- with perfect willingness on his part, and no surprise on that of
- his family and friends.'—_Franks, Evidence_, App. pt. i. p. 412,
- 415, Appendix A.
-
- "John Duncan, aged fifty-nine, hewer, Pencaitland: 'Mining has
- caused my breath to be affected, and I am, like many other
- colliers, obliged to hang upon my children for existence. The
- want of proper ventilation in the pits is the chief cause. No
- part requires more looking to than East Lothian; the men die off
- like rotten sheep.'—Ibid. No. 150, p. 464, 1. 28.
-
- "George Hogg, thirty-two years of age, coal-hewer, Pencaitland:
- 'Unable to labour much now, as am fashed with bad breath; the air
- below is very bad; until lately no ventilation existed.'—Ibid.
- No. 153, p. 406, 1. 46. See also Witnesses, Nos. 4, 36, 53, 131,
- 152, 155, 175, 275, 277, &c.: 'The confined air and dust in which
- they work is apt to render them asthmatic, as well as to unfit
- them for labour at an earlier period of life than is the case in
- other employments.'—_Tancred, Report_, s. 99, App. pt. i. p. 345.
-
- "Dr. Adams, Glasgow: 'Amongst colliers, bronchitis or asthma is
- very prevalent among the older hands.'—_Tancred, Evidence_, No.
- 9; App. pt. i. p. 361, 1. 44.
-
- "Mr. Peter Williams, surgeon, Holiwell, North Wales: 'The chief
- diseases to which they are liable are those of the bronchiæ.
- Miners and colliers, by the age of forty, generally become
- affected by chronic bronchitis, and commonly before the age of
- sixty fall martyrs to the disease. The workmen are, for the most
- part, very healthy and hardy, until the symptoms of affections of
- the bronchial tubes show themselves.'—_H. H. Jones, Evidence_,
- No. 95; App. pt. ii. p. 407, 1. 8.
-
- "Jeremiah Bradley, underground agent, Plaskynaston: 'The men are
- apt to get a tightness of breath, and become unfit for the pits,
- even before sixty.'—Ibid. No. 30, p. 383, 1. 8.
-
- "Amongst colliers in South Wales the diseases most prevalent are
- the chronic diseases of the respiratory organs, especially asthma
- and bronchitis.'—_Franks, Report_, s. 64; App. pt. ii. p. 484.
-
- "David Davis, contractor, Gilvachvargoed colliery,
- Glamorganshire: 'I am of opinion that miners are sooner disabled
- and off work than other mechanics, for they suffer from shortness
- of breath long before they are off work. Shortness of breath may
- be said to commence from forty to fifty years of age.'—_Franks,
- Evidence_, No. 178; App. pt. ii. p. 533, 1. 32.
-
- "Richard Andrews, overseer, Llancyach, Glamorganshire:
- 'The miners about here are very subject to asthmatic
- complaints.'—Ibid. No. 152; p. 529, 1. 7.
-
- "Mr. Frederick Evans, clerk and accountant for the Dowlais
- Collieries, Monmouthshire: 'Asthma is a prevalent disease among
- colliers.'—_R. W. Jones, Evidence_, No. 121; App. pt. ii. p.
- 646, 1. 48.
-
- "Mr. David Mushet, Forest of Dean: 'The men generally become
- asthmatic from fifty to fifty-five years of age.'—_Waring,
- Evidence_, No. 37; App. pt. ii. p. 25, 1. 3.
-
- "'Asthmatic and other bronchial affections are common among the
- older colliers and miners.'—_Waring, Report_, s. 72; App. pt.
- ii. p. 6.
-
- "Mr. W. Brice, clerk, Coal Barton and Vobster Collieries, North
- Somersetshire: 'The work requires the full vigour of a man, and
- they are apt, at this place, to get asthmatical from the gas and
- foul air.'—_Stewart, Evidence_, No. 7; App. pt. ii. p. 50, 1. 49.
-
- "James Beacham, coal-breaker, Writhlington, near Radstock: 'Many
- of the miners suffer from "tight breath."'—Ibid. No. 32; p. 56,
- 1. 31."
-
-Of that disease which is peculiar to colliers, called "black spittle,"
-much evidence is given by many medical witnesses and others:—
-
- "Mr. Cooper, surgeon, of Bilston, gives the following account
- of this malady when it appears in its mildest form: 'Frequently
- it occurs that colliers appear at the offices of medical men,
- complaining of symptoms of general debility, which appear to
- arise from inhalation of certain gases in the mines, (probably an
- excess of carbonic.) These patients present a pallid appearance,
- are affected with headache, (without febrile symptoms,) and
- constriction of the chest; to which may be added dark bronchial
- expectoration and deficient appetite. Gentle aperients, mild
- stomachics, and rest from labour above ground, restore them in
- a week or so, and they are perhaps visited at intervals with a
- relapse, if the state of the atmosphere or the ill ventilation of
- the mine favour the development of deleterious gas.'—_Mitchell,
- Evidence_, No. 3; App. pt. i. p. 62, 1. 48."
-
-In other districts this disease assumes a much more formidable
-character:—
-
- "Dr. Thompson, of Edinburgh, states that, 'The workmen in coal
- mines occasionally die of an affection of the lungs, accompanied
- with the expectoration of a large quantity of matter of a deep
- black colour, this kind of expectoration continuing long after
- they have, from choice or illness, abandoned their subterranean
- employment; and the lungs of such persons are found, on
- examination after death, to be most deeply impregnated with black
- matter. This black deposition may occur to a very considerable
- extent in the lungs of workers in coal-mines, without being
- accompanied with any black expectoration, or any other phenomena
- of active disease, and may come to light only after death has
- been occasioned by causes of a different nature, as by external
- injuries.'—_Franks_, Appendix A, No. 1; App. pt. i. p. 409.
-
- "Dr. S. Scott Alison: 'Spurious melanosis, or "black spit" of
- colliers, is a disease of pretty frequent occurrence among the
- older colliers, and among those men who have been employed
- in cutting and blasting stone dykes in the collieries. The
- symptoms are emaciation of the whole body, constant shortness
- and quickness of breath, occasional stitches in the sides, quick
- pulse, usually upward of one hundred in the minute, hacking cough
- day and night, attended by a copious expectoration, for the most
- part perfectly black, and very much the same as thick blacking in
- colour and consistence, but occasionally yellowish and mucous,
- or white and frothy; respiration is cavernous in some parts,
- and dull in others; a wheezing noise is heard in the bronchial
- passages, from the presence of an inordinate quantity of fluid;
- the muscles of respiration become very prominent, the neck is
- shortened, the chest being drawn up, the nostrils are dilated,
- and the countenance is of an anxious aspect. The strength
- gradually wasting, the collier, who has hitherto continued at his
- employment, finds that he is unable to work six days in the week,
- and goes under ground perhaps only two or three days in that
- time; in the course of time, he finds an occasional half-day's
- employment as much as he can manage, and when only a few weeks'
- or months' journey from the grave, ultimately takes a final leave
- of his labour. This disease is never cured, and if the unhappy
- victim of an unwholesome occupation is not hurried off by some
- more acute disease, or by violence, it invariably ends in the
- death of the sufferer. Several colliers have died of this disease
- under my care.'—Ibid. Appendix A, No. 2; App. pt. i. p. 415, 416.
-
- "Dr. Makellar, Pencaitland, East Lothian: 'The most serious and
- fatal disease which I have been called to treat, connected with
- colliers, is a carbonaceous infiltration into the substance of
- the lungs. It is a disease which has long been overlooked, on
- account of the unwillingness which formerly existed among that
- class of people to allow examination of the body after death; but
- of late such a prejudice has in a great measure been removed.
- From the nature of Pencaitland coal-works, the seams of coal
- being thin when compared with other coal-pits, mining operations
- are carried on with difficulty, and, in such a situation, there
- is a deficiency in the supply of atmospheric gas, thereby causing
- difficulty in breathing, and, consequently, the inhalation of
- the carbon which the lungs in exhalation throw off, and also
- any carbonaceous substance floating in this impure atmosphere.
- I consider the pulmonary diseases of coal-miners to be excited
- chiefly by two causes, viz. first, by running stone-mines with
- the use of gunpowder; and, secondly, coal-mining in an atmosphere
- charged with lamp-smoke and the carbon exhaled from the lungs.
- All who are engaged at coal-pits here, are either employed
- as coal or stone miners; and the peculiar disease to which
- both parties are liable varies considerably according to the
- employment.'—Ibid. Appendix A, No. 3, p. 422. See also witnesses
- Nos. 7, 44, 112, 144, 146. For a full account of this disease,
- see reports of Drs. Alison, Makellar, and Reid, in the Appendix
- to the sub-commissioner's report for the East of Scotland."
-
-Dr. Makellar gives the following remarkable evidence as to the efficacy
-of ventilation in obviating the production of this disease:—
-
- "The only effectual remedy for this disease is a free admission
- of pure air, and to be so applied as to remove the confined
- smoke, both as to stone-mining and coal-mining, and also the
- introduction of some other mode of lighting such pits than by
- oil. I know many coal-pits where there is no _black-spit_, nor
- was it ever known, and, on examination, I find that there is and
- ever has been in them a free circulation of air. For example, the
- Penstone coal-works, which join Pencaitland, has ever been free
- of this disease; but many of the Penstone colliers, on coming
- to work at Pencaitland pit, have been seized with, and died of,
- this disease. Penstone has always good air, while it is quite the
- contrary at Pencaitland.'—Ibid. Appendix A, No. 3; App. pt. i.
- p. 422."
-
-Other diseases, produced by employment in coal-mines, less fatal, but
-scarcely less painful, are rheumatism and inflammation of the joints.
-
-Mr. William Hartell Baylis states that working in the cold and wet
-often brings on rheumatism. "More suffer from this than from any other
-complaint."[3] Asthma and rheumatism, which are so prevalent in other
-districts, are very rare in Warwickshire and Leicestershire.[4] But, in
-Derbyshire, "rheumatism is very general. I believe you will scarcely
-meet a collier, and ask him what he thinks of the weather, but he will
-in reply say, 'Why, his back or shoulders have or have not pained him
-as much as usual.'"[5]
-
-George Tweddell, surgeon, Houghton-le-Spring, South Durham, says, in
-answer to the question—Are miners much subject to rheumatism?—"Not
-particularly so. Our mines are dry; but there is one mine which is wet,
-where the men often complain of rheumatism."[6]
-
-Similar evidence is given by the medical and other witnesses in all
-other districts. Wherever the mines are not properly drained, and are,
-therefore, wet and cold, the work-people are invariably afflicted with
-rheumatism, and with painful diseases of the glands.
-
-The sub-commissioner for the Forest of Dean gives the following account
-of a painful disease of the joints common in that district:—
-
- "'The men employed in cutting down the coal are subject to
- inflammation of the _bursæ_, both in the knees and elbows, from
- the constant pressure and friction on these joints in their
- working postures. When the seams are several feet thick, they
- begin by kneeling and cutting away the exterior portion of the
- base. They proceed undermining till they are obliged to lie down
- on their sides, in order to work beneath the mass as far as the
- arm can urge the pick, for the purpose of bringing down a good
- head of coal. In this last posture the elbow forms a pivot,
- resting on the ground, on which the arm of the workman oscillates
- as he plies his sharp pick. It is easy to comprehend how this
- action, combined with the pressure, should affect the delicate
- cellular membrane of this joint, and bring on the disease
- indicated. The thin seams of coal are necessarily altogether
- worked in a horizontal posture.'—_Waring, Report_, s. 63-66;
- App. pt. ii. p. 5, 6.
-
- "Twenty boys at the Walker Colliery: 'The twenty witnesses,
- when examined collectively, say, that the way is so very
- dirty, and the pit so warm, that the lads often get tired very
- soon.'—_Leifchild, Evidence_, No. 291; App. pt. i. p. 627, 1.
- 661.
-
- "Nineteen boys examined together, of various ages, of whom the
- spokesman was William Holt, seventeen years old, putter: 'The
- bad air when they were whiles working in the broken, makes them
- sick. Has felt weak like in his legs at those times. Was weary
- like. Has gone on working, but very slowly. Many a one has had to
- come home before having a fair start, from bad air and hard work.
- Hours are too long. Would sooner work less hours and get less
- money.'—Ibid. No. 300; p. 629, 1. 1.
-
- "Twenty-three witnesses assembled state: 'That their work is
- too hard for them, and they feel sore tired; that some of them
- constantly throw up their meat from their stomachs; that their
- heads often work, (ache;) the back sometimes; and the legs feel
- weak.'—Ibid. No. 354; p. 639, 1. 18.
-
- "John Wilkinson, aged thirteen, Piercy Main Colliery: 'Was in for
- a double shift about five weeks ago, and fell asleep about one
- o'clock P.M., as he was going to lift the limmers off to join
- the rolleys together, and got himself lamed by the horse turning
- about and jamming one of his fingers. Split his finger. Was off
- a week from this accident. Sometimes feels sick down in the pit;
- felt so once or twice last fortnight. Whiles his head works,
- (aches,) and he has pains in his legs, as if they were weak.
- Feels pains in his knees. Thinks the work is hard for foals, more
- so than for others.'—Ibid. No. 60; p. 579, 1. 22.
-
- "John Middlemas: 'Sometimes, but very rarely, they work double
- shift; that is, they go down at four o'clock A.M. and do not
- come up until four o'clock P.M. in the day after that, thus
- stopping down thirty-six hours, without coming up, sometimes; and
- sometimes they come up for half an hour, and then go down again.
- Another worked for twenty-four hours last week, and never came up
- at all. Another has stopped down thirty-six hours, without coming
- up at all, twice during the last year. When working this double
- shift they go to bed directly they come home.'—Ibid. No. 98; p.
- 588, 1. 42.
-
- "Michael Turner, helper-up, aged fourteen and a half, Gosforth
- Colliery: 'Mostly he puts up hill the full corves. Many times
- the skin is rubbed off his back and off his feet. His head works
- (aches) very often, almost every week. His legs work so sometimes
- that he can hardly trail them. Is at hard work now, shoving
- rolleys and hoisting the crane; the former is the hardest work.
- His back works very often, so that he has sometimes to sit down
- for half a minute or so.'—Ibid. No. 145; p. 598, 1. 58.
-
- "George Short, aged nearly sixteen: 'Hoists a crane. His head
- works very often, and he feels sickish sometimes, and drowsy
- sometimes, especially if he sits down. Has always been drowsy
- since he went there. Twice he has worked three shifts following,
- of twelve hours each shift; never came up at all during the
- thirty-six hours; was sleepy, but had no time to sleep. Has many
- times worked double shift of nineteen hours, and he does this now
- nearly every pay Friday night. A vast of boys work in this shift,
- ten or eleven, or sometimes more. The boys are very tired and
- sleepy.'—Ibid. No. 191; p. 606, 1. 41.
-
- "John Maffin, sixteen years old, putter, Gosforth Colliery: 'Was
- strong before he went down pits, but is not so now, from being
- overhard wrought, and among bad air.'—Ibid. No. 141; p. 598, 1.
- 2.
-
- "Robert Hall, seventeen years old, half marrow, Felling Colliery:
- 'The work of putting makes his arms weak, and his legs work
- all the day; makes his back work. Is putting to the dip now
- in a heavy place. Each one takes his turn to use the "soams,"
- (the drawing-straps;) one pulls with them, and the other shoves
- behind. Both are equally hard. If it is a very heavy place there
- are helpers-up, but not so many as they want. Has known one sore
- strained by putting.'
-
- "John Peel, aged thirteen: 'Is now off from this. Is healthy in
- general, but is now and then off from this work.'—Ibid. No. 325;
- p. 634, 1. 11.
-
- "Michael Richardson, fifteen years old, putter, St. Lawrence Main
- Colliery: 'About three quarters of a year since he wrought double
- shift every other night; or, rather, he worked three times in
- eleven days for thirty-six hours at a time, without coming up the
- pit. About six months ago he worked three shifts following, of
- twelve hours each shift, and never stopped work more than a few
- minutes now and then, or came up the pit till he was done. There
- was now and then some night-work to do, and the overman asked
- him to stop, and he could not say no, or else he (the overman)
- would have frowned on him, and stopped him, perhaps, of some
- helpers-up. Thinks the hours for lads ought to be shortened, and
- does not know whether it would not be better even if their wages
- were less.'—Ibid. No. 270; p. 623, 1. 32.
-
- "James Glass, eighteen years old, putter, Walbottle: 'Puts a tram
- by himself. Has no helper-up, and no assistance. Mostly puts a
- full tram up. Is putting from a distance now. Mostly the trams
- are put up by one person. Was off work the week before last three
- days, by being sick. Was then putting in the night shift, and had
- to go home and give over. Could not work. His head works nearly
- every day. He is always hitting his head against stone roofs. His
- arms work very often. Has to stoop a good deal. The weight of his
- body lies upon his arms when he is putting. The skin is rubbed
- off his back very often.'—Ibid. No. 244; p. 619, 1. 27.
-
- "Mr. James Anderson, a Home Missionary, residing in Easington
- Lane, Hetton-le-Hole, in reply to queries proposed, handed in the
- following written evidence: 'The boys go too soon to work: I have
- seen boys at work not six years of age, and though their work
- is not hard, still they have long hours, so that when they come
- home they are quite spent. I have often seen them lying on the
- floor, fast asleep. Then they often fall asleep in the pit, and
- have been killed. Not long ago a boy fell asleep, lay down on the
- way, and the wagons killed him. Another boy was killed; it was
- supposed he had fallen asleep when driving his wagon, and fallen
- off, and was killed.'—Ibid. No. 446; p. 655, 1. 62."
-
-The children employed in the mines and collieries are distinguished by
-a remarkable muscular development, which, however, is unhealthy, as it
-is premature, obtained at the expense of other parts of the body, and
-of but short duration. The muscles of the arms and the back become very
-large and full.
-
-With the great muscular development, there is commonly a proportionate
-diminution of stature. All classes of witnesses state that colliers,
-as a body—children, young persons, and adults—are stunted in growth.
-There are only two exceptions to this in Great Britain, namely,
-Warwickshire and Leicestershire. It is to be inferred from the
-statements of the sub-commissioner for Ireland, that that country
-forms a third exception for the United Kingdom. Of the uniformity of
-the statements as to the small stature and the stunted growth of the
-colliers in all other districts, the following may be regarded as
-examples:—
-
-In Shropshire, the miners, as a body, are of small stature; this is
-abundantly obvious even to a casual observer, and there are many
-instances of men never exceeding the size of boys.[7] Andrew Blake, M.
-D., states of the colliers in Derbyshire, that he has observed that
-many of them are not so tall as their neighbours in other employments;
-this, in a degree, he considers is owing to their being worked so
-young.[8] In the West Riding of Yorkshire, also, there is in stature
-an "appreciable difference in colliers' children, manifest at all ages
-after they have been three years constantly in the pits; there is
-little malformation, but, as Mr. Eliss, a surgeon constantly attending
-them, admits, they are somewhat stunted in growth and expanded in
-width."[9]
-
- "Mr. Henry Hemmingway, surgeon, Dewsbury: 'I am quite sure that
- the rule is that the children in coal-pits are of a lower stature
- than others.'—_Symons, Evidence_, No. 221; App. pt. i. p. 282,
- 1. 47.
-
- "Mr. Thomas Rayner, surgeon, Bristall: 'I account for the
- stunted growth from the stooping position, which makes them
- grow laterally, and prevents the cartilaginous substances from
- expanding.'—Ibid. No. 268, p. 292, 1. 52.
-
-
- "Henry Moorhouse, surgeon, Huddersfield: 'I may state, from my
- own personal examination of many of them, that they are much less
- in stature, in proportion to their ages, than those working in
- mills.'—Ibid. No. 273, p. 293, 1. 49.
-
- "Mr. Jos. Ellison, Bristall: 'The employment of children
- decidedly stunts their growth.'—Ibid. No. 249, p. 288, 1. 8."
-
-Mr. Symons, in Appendix to p. 212 of his Report, has given in detail
-the names, ages, and measurement, both in stature and in girth of
-breast, of a great number of farm and of colliery children of both ages
-respectively. By taking the first ten collier boys, and the first ten
-farm boys, of ages between twelve and fourteen, we find that the former
-measured in the aggregate forty-four feet six inches in height, and two
-hundred and seventy-four and a half inches around the breast; while
-the farm boys measured forty-seven feet in height, and two hundred and
-seventy-two inches round the breast. By taking the ten first collier
-girls and farm girls, respectively between the ages of fourteen and
-seventeen, we find that the ten collier girls measured forty-six feet
-four inches in height, and two hundred and ninety-three and a half
-inches round the breast; while the ten farm girls measured fifty feet
-five inches in height, and two hundred and ninety-seven inches round
-the breast; so that in the girls there is a difference in the height of
-those employed on farms, compared with those employed in collieries, of
-eight and a half per cent. in favour of the former; while between the
-colliery and farm boys of a somewhat younger age, and before any long
-period had been spent in the collieries, the difference appears to be
-five and a half per cent. in favour of the farm children.
-
-In like manner, of sixty children employed as hurriers in the
-neighbourhood of Halifax, at the average ages of ten years and nine
-months, Mr. Scriven states that the average measurement in height was
-three feet eleven inches and three-tenths, and, in circumference, three
-feet two inches; while of fifty-one children of the same age employed
-on farms, the measurement in height was four feet three inches, the
-circumference being the same in both, namely, two feet three inches.
-In like manner, of fifty young persons of the average of fourteen
-years and eleven months, the measurement in height was four feet five
-inches, and in circumference two feet three inches; while of forty-nine
-young persons employed on farms, of the average of fifteen years and
-six months, the measurement in height was four feet ten inches and
-eight-elevenths, and, in circumference, two feet three inches, being a
-difference of nearly six inches in height in favour of the agricultural
-labourers.
-
-In the district of Bradford and Leeds, there is "in stature an
-appreciable difference, from about the age at which children begin to
-work, between children employed in mines and children of the same age
-and station in the neighbourhood not so employed; and this shortness
-of stature is generally, though to a less degree, visible in the
-adult."[10]
-
-In Lancashire, the sub-commissioner reports that—"It appeared to him
-that the average of the colliers are considerably shorter in stature
-than the agricultural labourers."[11] The evidence collected by the
-other gentlemen in this district is to the same effect. Mr. Pearson,
-surgeon to the dispensary, Wigan, states, with regard to the physical
-condition of the children and young persons employed in coal-mining,
-as compared with that of children in other employments, that they
-are smaller and have a stunted appearance, which he attributes to
-their being employed too early in life.[12] And Mr. Richard Ashton,
-relieving-officer of the Blackburn district, describes the colliers
-as "a low race, and their appearance is rather decrepit."[13] Though
-some remarkable exceptions have been seen in the counties of Warwick
-and Leicester, the colliers, as a race of men, in some districts, and
-in Durham among the rest, are not of large stature.[14] George Canney,
-medical practitioner, Bishop Aukland, states, "that they are less in
-weight and bulk than the generality of men."[15]
-
-Of the collier boys of Durham and Northumberland, the sub-commissioner
-reports that an inspection of more than a thousand of these boys
-convinced him that "as a class, (with many individual exceptions,)
-their stature must be considered as diminutive."[16] Mr. Nicholas Wood,
-viewer of Killingworth, &c., states "that there is a very general
-diminution of stature among pit-men."[17] Mr. Heath, of Newcastle,
-surgeon to Killingworth, Gosforth, and Coxlodge collieries, "thinks the
-confinement of children for twelve hours in a pit is not consistent
-with ordinary health; the stature is rather diminished, and there is an
-absence of colour; they are shortened in stature."[18] And J. Brown,
-M. D., Sunderland, states "that they are generally stunted in stature,
-thin and swarthy."[19]
-
-Of the collier population in Cumberland, it is stated that "they are
-in appearance quite as stunted in growth, and present much the same
-physical phenomena as those of Yorkshire, comparing, of course, those
-following similar branches of the work."[20] Thomas Mitchell, surgeon,
-Whitehaven, says, "their stature is partly decreased."[21]
-
-Of the deteriorated physical condition of the collier population in
-the East of Scotland, as shown, among other indications, by diminished
-stature, Dr. S. Scott Alison states that "many of the infants in a
-collier community are thin, skinny, and wasted, and indicate, by their
-contracted features and sickly, dirty-white or faint-yellowish aspect,
-their early participation in a deteriorated physical condition. From
-the age of infancy up to the seventh or eighth year, much sickliness
-and general imperfection of physical development is observable. The
-physical condition of the boys and girls engaged in the collieries is
-much inferior to that of children of the same age engaged in farming
-operations, in most other trades, or who remain at home unemployed.
-The children are, upon the whole, prejudicially affected to a material
-extent in their growth and development. Many of them are short for
-their years."[22]
-
-In South Wales, "the testimony of medical gentlemen, and of managers
-and overseers of various works, in which large numbers of children
-as well as adults are employed, proves that the physical health and
-strength of children and young persons is deteriorated by their
-employment at the early ages and in the works before enumerated."[23]
-Mr. Jonathan Isaacs, agent of the Top Hill colliery:—"I have noticed
-that the children of miners, who are sent to work, do not grow as they
-ought to do; they get pale in their looks, are weak in their limbs,
-and any one can distinguish a collier's child from the children of
-other working people."[24] Mr. P. Kirkhouse, oversman to the Cyfarthfa
-collieries and ironstone mines, on this point observes—"The infantine
-ages at which children are employed cranks (stunts) their growth, and
-injures their constitution."[25] John Russell, surgeon to the Dowlais
-Iron Works:—"In stature, I believe a difference to exist in the male
-youth from twelve to sixteen, employed in the mines and collieries,
-compared with those engaged in other works, the former being somewhat
-stunted; and this difference (under some form or other) seems still
-perceptible in the adult miners and colliers."[26]
-
-A crippled gait, often connected with positive deformity, is one of the
-frequent results of slaving in the mines.
-
-In Derbyshire, the children who have worked in the collieries from a
-very early age are stated to be bow-legged.[27]
-
-In the West Riding of Yorkshire, "after they are turned forty-five or
-fifty, they walk home from their work almost like cripples; stiffly
-stalking along, often leaning on sticks, bearing the visible evidences
-in their frame and gait of overstrained muscles and over-taxed
-strength. Where the lowness of the gates induces a very bent posture,
-I have observed an inward curvature of the spine; and chicken-breasted
-children are very common among those who work in low, thin
-coal-mines."[28] Mr. Uriah Bradbury, surgeon, Mirfield:—"Their knees
-never stand straight, like other people's."[29] Mr. Henry Hemmingway,
-surgeon, Dewsbury:—"May be distinguished among crowds of people, by
-the bending of the spinal column."[30] Mr. William Sharp, surgeon,
-Bradford:—"There are occasionally cases of deformity."[31]
-
-In Lancashire district, John Bagley, about thirty-nine years of age,
-collier, Mrs. Lancaster's, Patricroft, states, that "the women drawing
-in the pits are generally crooked. Can tell any woman who has been
-in the pits. They are rarely, if ever, so straight as other women
-who stop above ground."[32] Mr. William Gaulter, surgeon, of Over
-Darwen, says—"Has practised as a surgeon twenty-four years in this
-neighbourhood. Those who work in collieries at an early age, when
-they arrive at maturity are not generally so robust as those who work
-elsewhere. They are frequently crooked, (not distorted,) bow-legged,
-and stooping."[33] Betty Duxberry, whose children work in the pits,
-asserts that "colliers are all crooked and short-legged, not like other
-men who work above ground; but they were always colliers, and always
-will be. This young boy turns his feet out and his knees together;
-drawing puts them out of shape."[34]
-
-Evidence collected in Durham and Northumberland, shows that the
-underground labour produces similar effects in that district.
-
-Mr. Nicholas Wood, viewer of Killingworth, Hetton, and other
-collieries:—"The children are perhaps a little ill-formed, and the
-majority of them pale, and not robust. Men working in low seams are
-bent double and bow-legged very often."[35] J. Brown, M. D. and J. P.,
-Sunderland:—"They labour more frequently than other classes of the
-community under deformity of the lower limbs, especially that variety
-of it described as being 'in-kneed.' This I should ascribe to yielding
-of the ligaments, owing to long standing in the mines in a constrained
-and awkward position."[36] Mr. Thomas Greenshaw, surgeon, Walker
-colliery:—"Their persons are apt to be somewhat curved and cramped. As
-they advance in life, their knees and back frequently exhibit a curved
-appearance, from constant bending at their work."[37] Mr. W. Morrison,
-surgeon of Pelaw House, Chester le street, Countess of Durham's
-collieries:—"The 'outward man' distinguishes a pit-man from any other
-operative. His stature is diminished, his figure disproportionate
-and misshapen; his legs being much bowed; his chest protruding, (the
-thoracic region being unequally developed.) His countenance is not less
-striking than his figure—his cheeks being generally hollow, his brow
-over-hanging, his cheek-bones high, his forehead low and retreating.
-Nor is his appearance healthful—his habit is tainted with scrofula.
-I have seen agricultural labourers, blacksmiths, carpenters, and even
-those among the wan and distressed-looking weavers of Nottinghamshire,
-to whom the term 'jolly' might not be inaptly applied; but I never saw
-a 'jolly-looking' pit-man. As the germ of this physical degeneration
-may be formed in the youthful days of the pit-man, it is desirable to
-look for its cause."[38]
-
-Ruptures, rheumatism, diseases of the heart and of other organs, the
-results of over-exertion in unhealthy places, are common among the
-persons employed in the mines, as many intelligent persons testified
-before the commissioners.
-
-An employment often pursued under circumstances which bring with
-them so many and such formidable diseases, must prematurely exhaust
-the strength of ordinary constitutions; and the evidence collected
-in almost all the districts proves that too often the collier is a
-disabled man, with the marks of old age upon him, while other men have
-scarcely passed beyond their prime.
-
-The evidence shows that in South Staffordshire and Shropshire, many
-colliers are incapable of following their occupation after they are
-forty years of age; others continue their work up to fifty, which is
-stated by several witnesses to be about the general average. Mr. Marcy,
-clerk to the Wellington Union, Salop, states, that "at about forty the
-greater part of the colliers may be considered as disabled, and regular
-old men—as much as some are at eighty."[39]
-
-Even in Warwickshire and Leicestershire, in which their physical
-condition is better than in any other districts, Mr. Michael Parker,
-ground bailiff of the Smithson collieries, states that "some of the
-men are knocked up at forty-five and fifty, and that fifty may be the
-average; which early exhaustion of the physical strength he attributes
-to the severe labour and bad air."[40] Mr. Dalby, surgeon of the Union
-of Ashby-de-la-Zouch, says—"The work in the pit is very laborious,
-and some are unable for it as early as fifty, others at forty-five,
-and some at sixty; I should say the greater part at forty-five."[41]
-And Mr. Davenport, clerk of the Union of Ashby-de-la-Zouch, gives a
-higher average, and says that "a collier may wear from sixty-five
-to seventy, while an agricultural labourer may wear from seventy to
-seventy-five."[42]
-
-Of Derbyshire the sub-commissioner reports—"I have not perceived that
-look of premature old age so general amongst colliers, _until they are
-forty years of age_, excepting in the loaders, who evidently appear
-so at _twenty-eight or thirty_, and this I think must arise from the
-hardness of their labour, in having such great weights to lift, and
-breathing a worse atmosphere than any other in the pit."[43] Phoebe
-Gilbert states—"The loaders are, as the saying is, 'old men before
-they are young ones.'"[44] Dr. Blake says—"He has also noticed that
-when a collier has worked from a child, and becomes forty, he looks
-much older than those of the same age above ground."[45]
-
-In Yorkshire "the collier of fifty is usually an aged man; he looks
-overstrained and stiffened by labour."[46] "But whilst both the
-child and the adult miner appear to enjoy excellent health, and to
-be remarkably free from disease, it nevertheless appears that their
-labour, at least that of the adult miner, is, in its general result,
-and in the extent to which it is pursued, of a character more severe
-than the constitution is properly able to bear. It is rare that a
-collier is able to follow his calling beyond the age of from forty to
-fifty, and then, unless he be fortunate enough to obtain some easier
-occupation, he sinks into a state of helpless dependence. Better
-habits with regard to temperance might diminish, but would not remove,
-this evil; and the existence of this fact, in despite of the general
-healthiness of the collier population, gives rise to the question
-whether, apart from all considerations of mental and moral improvement,
-a fatal mistake is not committed in employing children of tender
-years to the extent that their strength will bear, instead of giving
-opportunity, by short hours of labour, for the fuller and more perfect
-physical development which would better fit them to go through the
-severe labour of their after-life."[47]
-
-In the coal-fields of North Durham and Northumberland, Dr. Elliott
-states "that premature old age in appearance is common; men of
-thirty-five or forty years may often be taken for ten years older than
-they really are."[48] Mr. Thomas Greenhow, surgeon, Walker Colliery,
-North Durham, says "they have an aged aspect somewhat early in
-life."[49] Of the effect of employment in the coal-mines of the East
-of Scotland, in producing an early and irreparable deterioration of
-the physical condition, the sub-commissioner thus reports: "In a state
-of society such as has been described, the condition of the children
-may be easily imagined, and its baneful influence on the health cannot
-well be exaggerated; and I am informed by very competent authorities,
-that six months labour in the mines is sufficient to effect a very
-visible change in the physical condition of the children; and indeed
-it is scarcely possible to conceive of circumstances more calculated
-to sow the seeds of future disease, and, to borrow the language of
-the Instructions, to prevent the organs from being fully developed,
-to enfeeble and disorder their functions, and to subject the whole
-system to injury which cannot be repaired at any subsequent stage of
-life."[50] In the West of Scotland, Dr. Thompson, Ayr, says—"A collier
-at fifty generally has the appearance of a man ten years older than he
-is."[51]
-
-The sub-committee for North Wales reports—"They fail in health and
-strength early in life. At thirty a miner begins to look wan and
-emaciated, and so does a collier at forty; while the farming labourer
-continues robust and hearty."[52] John Jones, relieving officer for
-the Holywell district, states—"Though the children and young persons
-employed in these works are healthy, still it is observable that they
-soon get to look old, and they often become asthmatic before they are
-forty."[53]
-
-In the Forest of Dean, Mr. Thomas Marsh, surgeon, states that "colliers
-usually become old men at fifty to fifty-five years of age."[54] In
-North Somersetshire, William Brice, clerk and manager, says "there are
-very few at work who are above fifty years of age."[55]
-
-Early death is the natural consequence of the premature decrepitude
-thus described to those whom ever-imminent casualities have not
-brought to the grave during the years of their vigour. The medical
-evidence shows that even in South Staffordshire and Shropshire,
-comparatively few miners attain their fifty-first year. In Warwickshire
-and Leicestershire it is not uncommon for the men to follow their
-occupation ten years longer; but all classes of witnesses in the other
-districts uniformly state that it is rare to see an old collier.
-
-In Derbyshire, William Wardle "does not think colliers live as long as
-those above ground; very few live to be sixty."[56]
-
-In Yorkshire, "colliers have harder work than any other class of
-workmen, and the length of time they work, as well as the intense
-exertion they undergo, added to the frequent unhealthiness of
-the atmosphere, decidedly tend to shorten their lives."[57] Mr.
-Henry Hemmingway, surgeon, Dewsbury, states—"I only knew one old
-collier."[58] Mr. Thomas Rayner, surgeon, Bristall, says—"I have had
-twenty-seven years' practice, and I know of no old colliers—their
-extreme term of life is from fifty-six to sixty years of age."[59] In
-Lancashire, states Mr. Kennedy, "it appeared to me that the number of
-aged men was much smaller than in other occupations."[60]
-
-After stating that the colliers of South Durham are a strong and
-healthy race, Dr. Mitchell adds—"The work, however, is laborious and
-exhausting; and the colliers, though healthy, are not long-lived."[61]
-John Wetherell Hays, clerk of the Union, Durham, states, "that the
-colliers are not long-lived; that they live well, and live fast."[62]
-And George Canney, medical practitioner, Bishop Auckland, says "they
-are generally short-lived."[63]
-
-The sub-commissioner for the East of Scotland reports, that after a
-careful consideration of all the sources of information which could
-assist him in the object of his inquiry, he arrives at the following
-conclusion:—"That the labour in the coal-mines in the Lothian and
-River Forth districts of Scotland is most severe, and that its severity
-is in many cases increased by the want of proper attention to the
-economy of mining operations; whence those operations, as at present
-carried on, are extremely unwholesome, and productive of diseases which
-have a manifest tendency to shorten life."[64] Mr. Walter Jarvie,
-manager to Mr. Cadell, of Banton, states that "in the small village
-of Banton there are nearly forty widows; and as the children work
-always on parents' behalf, it prevents them having recourse to the
-kirk-session for relief."[65] Elsper Thompson says, "Most of the men
-begin to complain at thirty to thirty-five years of age, and drop off
-before they get the length of forty."[66] Henry Naysmith, sixty-five
-years of age, collier, who says he has wrought upward of fifty years,
-adds that "he has been off work nearly ten years, and is much afflicted
-with shortness of breath: it is the bane of the colliers, and few men
-live to my age."[67]
-
-In North Wales, it is said that "few colliers come to the age of sixty,
-and but still fewer miners. This I believe to be the fact, though I met
-with many, both miners and colliers, who had attained the age of sixty;
-yet they were few compared with the number _employed_ in these branches
-of industry."[68] Mr. John Jones, relieving-officer for the Holywell
-district, "thinks they are not as long-lived as agriculturists."[69]
-James Jones, overman, Cyfarthfa Works, states "that the colliers are
-generally very healthy and strong up to the age of forty or fifty; they
-then often have a difficulty of breathing, and they die at younger ages
-than agricultural labourers or handicraftsmen."[70] Mr. John Hughes,
-assistant underground agent, says "they do not appear to live long
-after fifty or sixty years old."[71]
-
-In South Wales, the sub-commissioner reports that he "has not been able
-to ascertain, for want of sufficient data, the average duration of a
-collier's life in the counties either of Glamorgan or Monmouth, but it
-is admitted that such average duration is less than that of a common
-labourer. In the county of Pembroke, however, Mr. James Bowen, surgeon,
-Narbeth, in that county, informs me—"The average life of a collier is
-about forty; they rarely attain forty-five years of age; and in the
-entire population of Begelly and East Williamson, being 1163, forming,
-strictly speaking, a mining population, there are not six colliers of
-sixty years of age."
-
-The Rev. Richard Buckby, rector of Begelly, in answer to one of the
-queries in the Educational Paper of the Central Board, writes—"The
-foul air of the mines seriously affects the lungs of the children and
-young persons employed therein, and shortens the term of life. In a
-population of one thousand, there are not six colliers sixty years of
-age."
-
-There are certain minor evils connected with employment in the worst
-class of coal-mines, which, though not perhaps very serious, are
-nevertheless sources of much suffering, such as irritation of the
-head, feet, back, and skin, together with occasional strains. "The
-upper parts of their head are always denuded of hair; their scalps are
-also thickened and inflamed, sometimes taking on the appearance _tinea
-capitis_, from the pressure and friction which they undergo in the act
-of pushing the corves forward, although they are mostly defended by a
-padded cap."[72] "It is no uncommon thing to see the hurriers bald,
-owing to pushing the corves up steep board gates, with their heads."[73]
-
-Mr. Alexander Muir, surgeon: "Are there any peculiar diseases to which
-colliers are subject? No, excepting that the hurriers are occasionally
-affected by a formation of matter upon the forehead, in consequence of
-pushing the wagons with their head. To what extent is such formation of
-matter injurious to the general health? It produces considerable local
-irritation. When the matter is allowed to escape, it heals as perfectly
-as before. Do you conceive this use of the head to be a necessary or
-unnecessary part of their occupation? I should think it not necessary.
-Does it arise from any deficiency of strength, the head being used
-to supply the place of the arms? I should think it does."[74] David
-Swallow, collier, East Moor: "The hair is very often worn off bald,
-and the part is swollen so that sometimes it is like a bulb filled
-with spongy matter; so very bad after they have done their day's work
-that they cannot bear it touching."[75] William Holt: "Some thrutched
-with their heads, because they cannot thrutch enough with their hands
-alone. Thrutching with their heads makes a gathering in the head, and
-makes them very ill."[76]
-
-In running continually over uneven ground, without shoes or stockings,
-particles of dirt, coal, and stone get between the toes, and are
-prolific sources of irritation and lameness, of which they often
-complain; the skin covering the balls of the toes and heels becomes
-thickened and horny, occasioning a good deal of pain and pustular
-gathering."[77] James Mitchell: "I have hurt my feet often; sometimes
-the coals cut them, and they run matter, and the corves run over them
-when I stand agate; I an't not always aware of their coming."[78]
-Selina Ambler: "I many times hurt my feet and legs with the coals and
-scale in gate; sometimes we run corve over them; my feet have many a
-time been blooded."[79] Mrs. Carr: "Has known many foals laid off with
-sore backs, especially last year and the year before, when the putting
-was said to be very heavy in the Flatworth pit. Some foals had to lay
-off a day or two, to get their backs healed, before they could go to
-work again."[80] William Jakes: "His back is often skinned; is now sore
-and all red, from holding on or back against the corf."[81] George
-Faction: "In some places he bends quite double, and rubs his back so as
-to bring the skin off, and whiles to make it bleed, and whiles he is
-off work from these things."[82] Mr. James Probert, surgeon: "Chronic
-pain in the back is a very common complaint among colliers, arising
-from overstrained tendonous muscles, and it is the source of much
-discomfort to the colliers."[83] Mr. William Dodd, surgeon: "As to the
-'boils,' when a fresh man comes to the colliery he generally becomes
-affected by these 'boils,' most probably from the heat in the first
-instance, and subsequently they are aggravated by the salt water."[84]
-James Johnson: "Sometimes when among the salt water, the heat, etc.,
-brings out boils about the size of a hen's egg upon him, about his legs
-and thighs, and under his arms sometimes. A vast of boys, men, and all,
-have these boils at times. These boils perhaps last a fortnight before
-they get ripe, and then they burst. A great white thing follows, and is
-called a 'tanner'."[85] Dr. Adams, Glasgow: "An eruption on the skin
-is very prevalent among colliers."[86] William Mackenzie: "Had about
-twenty boils on his back at one time, about two years since. These
-lasted about three months. He was kept off work about a week. If he
-touched them against any thing they were like death to him. But few of
-the boys have so many at a time; many of the boys get two or three at a
-time. The boys take physic to bring them all out; then they get rid of
-them for some time. If the salt water falls on any part of them that is
-scotched, it burns into the flesh like; it is like red rust. It almost
-blinds the boys if it gets into their eyes."[87]
-
-Accidents of a fatal nature are of frightful frequency in the mines.
-In one year there were three hundred and forty-nine deaths by violence
-in the coal-mines of England alone. Of the persons thus killed,
-fifty-eight were under thirteen years of age; sixty-two under eighteen,
-and the remainder over eighteen. One of the most frequent causes of
-accidents is the want of superintendence to see the security of the
-machinery for letting down and bringing up the work-people, and the
-restriction of the number of persons who ascend or descend at the same
-time. The commissioners observed at Elland two hurriers, named Ann
-Ambler and William Dyson, cross-lapped upon a clutch-iron, drawn up by
-a woman. As soon as they arrived at the top the handle was made fast by
-a bolt. The woman then grasped a hand of both at the same time, and by
-main force brought them to land.
-
-From all the evidence adduced, the commissioners came to the following
-conclusions:—
-
- "In regard to coal-mines—
-
- "That instances occur in which children are taken into these
- mines to work as early as four years of age, sometimes at five,
- and between five and six; not unfrequently between six and seven,
- and often from seven to eight; while from eight to nine is the
- ordinary age at which employment in these mines commences.
-
- "That a very large proportion of the persons employed in carrying
- on the work of these mines is under thirteen years of age; and a
- still larger proportion between thirteen and eighteen.
-
- "That in several districts female children begin to work in these
- mines at the same early ages as the males.
-
- "That the great body of the children and young persons employed
- in these mines are of the families of the adult work-people
- engaged in the pits, or belong to the poorest population in the
- neighbourhood, and are hired and paid in some districts by the
- work-people, but in others by the proprietors or contractors.
-
- "That there are in some districts, also, a small number of
- parish apprentices, who are bound to serve their masters until
- twenty-one years of age, in an employment in which there is
- nothing deserving the name of skill to be acquired, under
- circumstances of frequent ill-treatment, and under the oppressive
- condition that they shall receive only food and clothing, while
- their free companions may be obtaining a man's wages.
-
- "That, in many instances, much that skill and capital can effect
- to render the place of work unoppressive and healthy and safe,
- is done, often with complete success, as far as regards the
- healthfulness and comfort of the mines; but that to render them
- perfectly safe does not appear to be practicable by any means yet
- known; while, in great numbers of instances, their condition in
- regard both to ventilation and drainage is lamentably defective.
-
- "That the nature of the employment which is assigned to the
- youngest children—generally that of 'trapping'—requires
- that they should be in the pit as soon as the work of the day
- commences, and, according to the present system, that they should
- not leave the pit before the work of the day is at an end.
-
- "That although this employment scarcely deserves the name of
- labour, yet, as the children engaged in it are commonly excluded
- from light, and are always without companions, it would, were it
- not for the passing and repassing of the coal-carriages, amount
- to solitary confinement of the worst sort.
-
- "That in those districts where the seams of coal are so thick
- that horses go direct to the workings, or in which the side
- passages from the workings to the horseways are not of any great
- length, the lights in the main way render the situation of the
- children comparatively less cheerless, dull, and stupefying; but
- that in some districts they are in solitude and darkness during
- the whole time they are in the pit; and, according to their
- own account, many of them never see the light of day for weeks
- together during the greater part of the winter season, except
- on those days in the week when work is not going on, and on the
- Sundays.
-
- "That, at different ages from six years old and upward, the hard
- work of pushing and dragging the carriages of coal from the
- workings to the main ways, or to the foot of the shaft, begins; a
- labour which all classes of witnesses concur in stating requires
- the unremitting exertion of all the physical power which the
- young workers possess.
-
- "That, in the districts in which females are taken down into the
- coal-mines, both sexes are employed together in precisely the
- same kind of labour, and work for the same number of hours; that
- the girls and boys, and the young men and young women, and even
- married women and women with child, commonly work almost naked,
- and the men, in many mines, quite naked; and that all classes of
- witnesses bear testimony to the demoralizing influence of the
- employment of females under ground.
-
- "That, in the East of Scotland, a much larger proportion of
- children and young persons are employed in these mines than in
- any other districts, many of whom are girls; and that the chief
- part of their labour consists in carrying the coal on their backs
- up steep ladders.
-
- "That, when the work-people are in full employment, the regular
- hours of work for children and young persons are rarely less than
- eleven, more often they are twelve; in some districts they are
- thirteen, and in one district they are generally fourteen and
- upward.
-
- "That, in the great majority of these mines, night-work is a
- part of the ordinary system of labour, more or less regularly
- carried on according to the demand for coals, and one which the
- whole body of evidence shows to act most injuriously both on
- the physical and moral condition of the work-people, and more
- especially on that of the children and young persons.
-
- "That the labour performed daily for this number of hours, though
- it cannot strictly be said to be continuous, because, from the
- nature of the employment, intervals of a few minutes necessarily
- occur during which the muscles are not in active exertion, is,
- nevertheless, generally uninterrupted by any regular time set
- apart for rest or refreshment; what food is taken in the pit
- being eaten as best it may while the labour continues.
-
- "That in all well-regulated mines, in which in general the hours
- of work are the shortest, and in some few of which from half an
- hour to an hour is regularly set apart for meals, little or no
- fatigue is complained of after an ordinary day's work, when the
- children are ten years old and upward; but in other instances
- great complaint is made of the feeling of fatigue, and the
- work-people are never without this feeling, often in an extremely
- painful degree.
-
- "That in many cases the children and young persons have little
- cause of complaint in regard to the treatment they receive from
- the persons of authority in the mine, or from the colliers; but
- that in general the younger children are roughly used by their
- older companions, while in many mines the conduct of the adult
- colliers to the children and adult persons who assist them
- is harsh and cruel; the persons in authority in these mines,
- who must be cognizant of this ill-usage, never interfering to
- prevent it, and some of them distinctly stating that they do not
- conceive that they have any right to do so.
-
- "That, with some exceptions, little interest is taken by the
- coal-owners in the children or young persons employed in their
- works after the daily labour is over; at least, little is done
- to afford them the means of enjoying innocent amusement and
- healthful recreation.
-
- "That in all the coal fields accidents of a fearful nature are
- extremely frequent; and that the returns made to our own queries,
- as well as the registry tables, prove that, of the work-people
- who perish by such accidents, the proportion of children and
- young persons sometimes equals and rarely falls much below that
- of adults.
-
- "That one of the most frequent causes of accidents in these mines
- is the want of superintendence by overlookers or otherwise,
- to see to the security of the machinery for letting down and
- bringing up the work-people, the restriction of the number of
- persons that ascend and descend at a time, the state of the
- mine as to the quantity of noxious gas in it, the efficiency of
- the ventilation, the exactness with which the air-door keepers
- perform their duty, the places into which it is safe or unsafe to
- go with a naked lighted candle, the security of the proppings to
- uphold the roof, &c.
-
- "That another frequent cause of fatal accidents is the almost
- universal practice of intrusting the closing of the air-doors to
- very young children.
-
- "That there are many mines in which the most ordinary precautions
- to guard against accidents are neglected, and in which no money
- appears to be expended with a view to secure the safety, much
- less the comfort, of the work-people.
-
- "There are, moreover, two practices, peculiar to a few districts,
- which deserve the highest reprobation, namely,—first, the
- practice, not unknown in some of the smaller mines in Yorkshire,
- and common in Lancashire, in employing ropes that are unsafe
- for letting down and drawing up the work-people; and second,
- the practice occasionally met with in Yorkshire, and common in
- Derbyshire and Lancashire, of employing boys at the steam-engines
- for letting down and drawing up the work-people."—_First Report,
- Conclusions_, p. 255-257.
-
-Well, what did the British Government do when the heart-rending report
-of the commissioners was received? It felt the necessity of a show of
-legislative interference. Lord Ashley introduced a bill into the House
-of Commons, having for its object the amelioration of the condition
-of the mining women and children. Much discussion occurred. The bill
-passed the House of Commons, and was taken to the House of Lords, the
-high court of British oppression. Some lords advocated the measure,
-whereupon Lord Londonderry and some others spoke of them as "bitten
-with a humanity mania." Modifications were made in the bill to suit
-the pockets of the luxurious proprietors, and then it was grumblingly
-adopted. What did the bill provide? That no child under _ten_ years of
-age, and no woman or girl, of any age, should be allowed to work in a
-mine. Now, children may be ten years of age, and above that, and yet
-they are still tender little creatures. The majority of the sufferers
-who came to the notice of the commissioners were above ten years of
-age! In that point, at least, the bill was worse than a nullity—it was
-a base deceit, pouring balm, but not upon the wound!
-
-The same bill provided that no females should be allowed to work in
-the mines. But then the females were driven to the mines by the dread
-of starvation. Soon after the passage of the bill, petitions from the
-mining districts were sent to Parliament, praying that females might be
-allowed to work in the mines. The petitioners had no means of getting
-bread. If they had, they would never have been in the mines at all.
-The horrors of labour in the mines were consequences of the general
-slavery. Well, there were many proprietors of mines in Parliament, and
-their influence was sufficient to nullify the law in practice. There is
-good authority for believing that the disgusting slavery of the British
-mines has been ameliorated only to a very limited extent.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-SLAVERY IN THE BRITISH FACTORIES.
-
-
-Great Britain has long gloried in the variety and importance of her
-manufactures. Burke spoke of Birmingham as the toyshop of Europe; and,
-at this day, the looms of Manchester and the other factory towns of
-England furnish the dry-goods of a large portion of the world. Viewed
-at a distance, this wonder-working industry excites astonishment and
-admiration; but a closer inspection will show us such corrupt and
-gloomy features in this vast manufacturing system as will turn a
-portion of admiration into shrinking disgust. Giving the meed of praise
-to the perfection of machinery and the excellence of the fabrics, what
-shall we say of the human operatives? For glory purchased at the price
-of blood and souls is a vanity indeed. Let us see!
-
-The number of persons employed in the cotton, wool, silk, and flax
-manufactures of Great Britain is estimated at about two millions. Mr.
-Baines states that about one and a half million are employed in the
-cotton manufactures alone. The whole number employed in the production
-of all sorts of iron, hardware, and cutlery articles is estimated
-at 350,000. In the manufacture of jewelry, earthen and glass ware,
-paper, woollen stuffs, distilled and fermented liquors, and in the
-common trades of tailoring, shoemaking, carpentering, &c., the numbers
-employed are very great, though not accurately known. We think the
-facts will bear us out in stating that this vast body of operatives
-suffer more of the real miseries of slavery than any similar class upon
-the face of the earth.
-
-In the first place, admitting that wages are as high in Great Britain
-as in any continental country, the enormous expenses of the church and
-aristocracy produce a taxation which eats up so large a portion of
-these wages, that there is not enough left to enable the workman to
-live decently and comfortably. But the wages are, in general, brought
-very low by excessive competition; and, in consequence, the operative
-must stretch his hours of toil far beyond all healthy limits to earn
-enough to pay taxes and support himself. It is the struggle of drowning
-men, and what wonder if many sink beneath the gloomy waves?
-
-When C. Edwards Lester, an author of reputation, was in England, he
-visited Manchester, and, making inquiries of an operative, obtained the
-following reply:—
-
- "I have a wife and nine children, and a pretty hard time we have
- too, we are so many; and most of the children are so small, they
- can do little for the support of the family. I generally get from
- two shillings to a crown a day for carrying luggage; and some of
- my children are in the mills; and the rest are too young to work
- yet. My wife is never well, and it comes pretty hard on her to do
- the work of the whole family. We often talk these things over,
- and feel pretty sad. We live in a poor house; we can't clothe
- our children comfortably; not one of them ever went to school:
- they could go to the Sunday-school, but we can't make them look
- decent enough to go to such a place. As for meat, we never taste
- it; potatoes and coarse bread are our principal food. We can't
- save any thing for a day of want; almost every thing we get for
- our work seems to go for taxes. We are taxed for something almost
- every week in the year. We have no time to ourselves when we are
- free from work. It seems that our life is all toil; I sometimes
- almost give up. Life isn't worth much to a poor man in England;
- and sometimes Mary and I, when we talk about it, pretty much
- conclude that we all should be better off if we were dead. I have
- gone home at night a great many times, and told my wife when she
- said supper was ready, that I had taken a bite at a chophouse
- on the way, and was not hungry—she and the children could eat
- my share. Yes, I have said this a great many times when I felt
- pretty hungry myself. I sometimes wonder that God suffers so many
- poor people to come into the world."
-
-And this is, comparatively, a mild case. Instances of hard-working
-families living in dark, damp cellars, and having the coarsest food,
-are common in Manchester, Birmingham, and other manufacturing towns.
-
-Mrs. Gaskell, in her thrilling novel, "Mary Barton, a Tale of
-Manchester Life," depicts without exaggeration the sufferings of the
-operatives and their families when work is a little slack, or when,
-by accident, they are thrown out of employment for a short period.
-A large factory, belonging to a Mr. Carson, had been destroyed by
-fire, and about the same time, as trade was had, some mills shortened
-hours, turned off hands, and finally stopped work altogether. Almost
-inconceivable misery followed among the unemployed workmen. In the
-best of times they fared hardly; now they were forced to live in damp
-and filthy cellars, and many perished, either from starvation or from
-fevers bred in their horrible residences. One cold evening John Barton
-received a hurried visit from a fellow-operative, named George Wilson.
-
- "'You've not got a bit o' money by you, Barton?' asked he.
-
- "'Not I; who has now, I'd like to know? Whatten you want it for?'
-
- "'I donnot want it for mysel, tho' we've none to spare. But don
- ye know Ben Davenport as worked at Carson's? He's down wi' the
- fever, and ne'er a stick o' fire, nor a cowd potato in the house.'
-
- "'I han got no money, I tell ye,' said Barton. Wilson looked
- disappointed. Barton tried not to be interested, but he could
- not help it in spite of his gruffness. He rose, and went to the
- cupboard, (his wife's pride long ago.) There lay the remains
- of his dinner, hastily put there ready for supper. Bread, and
- a slice of cold, fat, boiled bacon. He wrapped them in his
- handkerchief, put them in the crown of his hat, and said—'Come,
- let's be going.'
-
- "'Going—art thou going to work this time o' day?'
-
- "'No, stupid, to be sure not. Going to see the fellow thou
- spoke on.' So they put on their hats and set out. On the way
- Wilson said Davenport was a good fellow, though too much of
- the Methodee; that his children were too young to work, but
- not too young to be cold and hungry; that they had sunk lower
- and lower, and pawned thing after thing, and that now they
- lived in in a cellar in Berry-street, off Store-street. Barton
- growled inarticulate words of no benevolent import to a large
- class of mankind, and so they went along till they arrived in
- Berry-street. It was unpaved; and down the middle a gutter
- forced its way, every now and then forming pools in the holes
- with which the street abounded. Never was the Old Edinburgh
- cry of 'Gardez l'eau,' more necessary than in this street. As
- they passed, women from their doors tossed household slops of
- _every_ description into the gutter; they ran into the next
- pool, which overflowed and stagnated. Heaps of ashes were the
- stepping-stones, on which the passer-by, who cared in the least
- for cleanliness, took care not to put his foot. Our friends were
- not dainty, but even they picked their way till they got to some
- steps leading down into a small area, where a person standing
- would have his head about one foot below the level of the street,
- and might, at the same time, without the least motion of his
- body, touch the window of the cellar and the damp, muddy wall
- right opposite. You went down one step even from the foul area
- into the cellar, in which a family of human beings lived. It was
- very dark inside. The window panes were many of them broken and
- stuffed with rags, which was reason enough for the dusky light
- that pervaded the place even at mid-day. After the account I have
- given of the state of the street, no one can be surprised that,
- on going into the cellar inhabited by Davenport, the smell was
- so fetid as almost to knock the two men down. Quickly recovering
- themselves, as those inured to such things do, they began to
- penetrate the thick darkness of the place, and to see three or
- four little children rolling on the damp, nay, wet, brick floor,
- through which the stagnant, filthy moisture of the street oozed
- up; the fireplace was empty and black; the wife sat on her
- husband's lair, and cried in the dank loneliness.
-
- "'See, missis, I'm back again. Hold your noise, children, and
- don't mither (trouble) your mammy for bread, here's a chap as has
- got some for you.'
-
- "In that dim light, which was darkness to strangers, they
- clustered round Barton, and tore from him the food he had brought
- with him. It was a large hunch of bread, but it had vanished in
- an instant.
-
- "'We maun do summut for 'em,' said he to Wilson. 'Yo stop here,
- and I'll be back in half an hour.'
-
- "So he strode, and ran, and hurried home. He emptied into the
- ever-useful pocket-handkerchief the little meal remaining in the
- mug. Mary would have her tea at Miss Simmonds'; her food for
- the day was safe. Then he went up-stairs for his better coat,
- and his one, gay, red and yellow silk pocket-handkerchief—his
- jewels, his plate, his valuables these were. He went to the
- pawn-shop; he pawned them for five shillings; he stopped not,
- nor stayed, till he was once more in London Road, within five
- minutes' walk of Berry-street—then he loitered in his gait, in
- order to discover the shops he wanted. He bought meat, and a
- loaf of bread, candles, chips, and from a little retail yard he
- purchased a couple of hundredweights of coals. Some money yet
- remained—all destined for them, but he did not yet know how best
- to spend it. Food, light, and warmth, he had instantly seen, were
- necessary; for luxuries he would wait. Wilson's eyes filled with
- tears when he saw Barton enter with his purchases. He understood
- it all, and longed to be once more in work, that he might help in
- some of these material ways, without feeling that he was using
- his son's money. But though 'silver and gold he had none,' he
- gave heart-service and love-works of far more value. Nor was
- John Barton behind in these. 'The fever' was (as it usually is
- in Manchester) of a low, putrid, typhoid kind; brought on by
- miserable living, filthy neighbourhood, and great depression of
- mind and body. It is virulent, malignant, and highly infectious.
- But the poor are fatalists with regard to infection; and well for
- them it is so, for in their crowded dwellings no invalid can be
- isolated. Wilson asked Barton if he thought he should catch it,
- and was laughed at for his idea.
-
- "The two men, rough, tender nurses as they were, lighted the
- fire, which smoked and puffed into the room as if it did not
- know the way up the damp, unused chimney. The very smoke seemed
- purifying and healthy in the thick clammy air. The children
- clamoured again for bread; but this time Barton took a piece
- first to the poor, helpless, hopeless woman, who still sat by
- the side of her husband, listening to his anxious, miserable
- mutterings. She took the bread, when it was put into her hand,
- and broke a bit, but could not eat. She was past hunger. She fell
- down on the floor with a heavy, unresisting bang. The men looked
- puzzled. 'She's wellnigh clemmed, (_starved_,)' said Barton.
- 'Folk do say one musn't give clemmed people much to eat; but,
- bless us, she'll eat naught.'
-
- 'I'll tell you what I'll do,' said Wilson, I'll take these two
- big lads, as does naught but fight, home to my missis's for
- to-night, and I will get a jug o' tea. Them women always does
- best with tea and such slop.'
-
- "So Barton was now left alone with a little child, crying,
- when it had done eating, for mammy, with a fainting, dead-like
- woman, and with the sick man, whose mutterings were rising up to
- screams and shrieks of agonized anxiety. He carried the woman to
- the fire, and chafed her hands. He looked around for something
- to raise her head. There was literally nothing but some loose
- bricks: however, those he got, and taking off his coat, he
- covered them with it as well as he could. He pulled her feet to
- the fire, which now began to emit some faint heat. He looked
- round for water, but the poor woman had been too weak to drag
- herself out to the distant pump, and water there was none. He
- snatched the child, and ran up the area steps to the room above,
- and borrowed their only saucepan with some water in it. Then
- he began, with the useful skill of a working man, to make some
- gruel; and, when it was hastily made, he seized a battered iron
- table-spoon, kept when many other little things had been sold in
- a lot, in order to feed baby, and with it he forced one or two
- drops between her clenched teeth. The mouth opened mechanically
- to receive more, and gradually she revived. She sat up and looked
- round; and, recollecting all, fell down again in weak and passive
- despair. Her little child crawled to her, and wiped with its
- fingers the thick-coming tears which she now had strength to
- weep. It was now high time to attend to the man. He lay on straw,
- so damp and mouldy no dog would have chosen it in preference to
- flags; over it was a piece of sacking, coming next to his worn
- skeleton of a body; above him was mustered every article of
- clothing that could be spared by mother or children this bitter
- weather; and, in addition to his own, these might have given as
- much warmth as one blanket, could they have been kept on him; but
- as he restlessly tossed to and fro, they fell off, and left him
- shivering in spite of the burning heat of his skin. Every now and
- then he started up in his naked madness, looking like the prophet
- of wo in the fearful plague-picture; but he soon fell again in
- exhaustion, and Barton found he must be closely watched, lest
- in these falls he should injure himself against the hard brick
- floor. He was thankful when Wilson reappeared, carrying in both
- hands a jug of steaming tea, intended for the poor wife; but when
- the delirious husband saw drink, he snatched at it with animal
- instinct, with a selfishness he had never shown in health.
-
- "Then the two men consulted together. It seemed decided without
- a word being spoken on the subject, that both should spend the
- night with the forlorn couple; that was settled. But could no
- doctor be had? In all probability, no. The next day an infirmary
- order might be begged; but meanwhile the only medical advice
- they could have must be from a druggist's. So Barton, being the
- moneyed man, set out to find a shop in London Road.
-
- "He reached a druggist's shop, and entered. The druggist,
- whose smooth manners seemed to have been salved over with his
- own spermaceti, listened attentively to Barton's description
- of Davenport's illness, concluded it was typhus fever, very
- prevalent in that neighbourhood, and proceeded to make up a
- bottle of medicine—sweet spirits of nitre, or some such innocent
- potion—very good for slight colds, but utterly powerless to stop
- for an instant the raging fever of the poor man it was intended
- to relieve. He recommended the same course they had previously
- determined to adopt, applying the next morning for an infirmary
- order; and Barton left the shop with comfortable faith in the
- physic given him; for men of his class, if they believe in physic
- at all, believe that every description is equally efficacious.
-
- "Meanwhile Wilson had done what he could at Davenport's home.
- He had soothed and covered the man many a time; he had fed and
- hushed the little child, and spoken tenderly to the woman, who
- lay still in her weakness and her weariness. He had opened a
- door, but only for an instant; it led into a back cellar, with a
- grating instead of a window, down which dropped the moisture from
- pig-styes, and worse abominations. It was not paved; the floor
- was one mass of bad-smelling mud. It had never been used, for
- there was not an article of furniture in it; nor could a human
- being, much less a pig, have lived there many days. Yet the 'back
- apartment' made a difference in the rent. The Davenports paid
- threepence more for having two rooms. When he turned round again,
- he saw the woman suckling the child from her dry, withered breast.
-
- "'Surely the lad is weaned!' exclaimed he, in surprise. 'Why, how
- old is he?'
-
- "'Going on two year,' she faintly answered. 'But, oh! it keeps
- him quiet when I've naught else to gi' him, and he'll get a bit
- of sleep lying there, if he's getten naught beside. We han done
- our best to gi' the childer food, howe'er we pinched ourselves.'
-
- "'Han ye had no money fra th' town?'
-
- "'No; my master is Buckinghamshire born, and he's feared the
- town would send him back to his parish, if he went to the board;
- so we've just borne on in hope o' better times. But I think
- they'll never come in my day;' and the poor woman began her weak,
- high-pitched cry again.
-
- "'Here, sup this drop o' gruel, and then try and get a bit o'
- sleep. John and I'll watch by your master to-night.'
-
- "'God's blessing be on you!'
-
- "She finished the gruel, and fell into a dead sleep. Wilson
- covered her with his coat as well as he could, and tried to move
- lightly for fear of disturbing her; but there need have been no
- such dread, for her sleep was profound and heavy with exhaustion.
- Once only she roused to pull the coat round her little child.
-
- "And now, all Wilson's care, and Barton's to boot, was wanted
- to restrain the wild, mad agony of the fevered man. He started
- up, he yelled, he seemed infuriated by overwhelming anxiety. He
- cursed and swore, which surprised Wilson, who knew his piety in
- health, and who did not know the unbridled tongue of delirium.
- At length he seemed exhausted, and fell asleep; and Barton and
- Wilson drew near the fire, and talked together in whispers. They
- sat on the floor, for chairs there were none; the sole table
- was an old tub turned upside down. They put out the candle and
- conversed by the flickering fire-light.
-
- "'Han yo known this chap long?' asked Barton.
-
- "'Better nor three year. He's worked wi' Carsons that long, and
- were always a steady, civil-spoken fellow, though, as I said
- afore, somewhat of a Methodee. I wish I'd gotten a letter he
- sent to his missis, a week or two agone, when he were on tramp
- for work. It did my heart good to read it; for yo see, I were a
- bit grumbling mysel; it seemed hard to be sponging on Jem, and
- taking a' his flesh-meat money to buy bread for me and them as
- I ought to be keeping. But, yo know, though I can earn naught,
- I mun eat summut. Well, as I telled ye, I were grumbling, when
- she,' indicating the sleeping woman by a nod, 'brought me
- Ben's letter, for she could na read hersel. It were as good as
- Bible-words; ne'er a word o' repining; a' about God being our
- father, and that we mun bear patiently whate'er he sends.'
-
- "'Don ye think he's th' masters' father, too? I'd be loth to have
- 'em for brothers.'
-
- "'Eh, John! donna talk so; sure there's many and many a master as
- good nor better than us.'
-
- "'If you think so, tell me this. How comes it they're rich, and
- we're poor? I'd like to know that. Han they done as they'd be
- done by for us?'
-
- "But Wilson was no arguer—no speechifier, as he would have
- called it. So Barton, seeing he was likely to have his own way,
- went on—
-
- "'You'll say, at least many a one does, they'n getten capital,
- an' we'n getten none. I say, our labour's our capital, and we
- ought to draw interest on that. They get interest on their
- capital somehow a' this time, while ourn is lying idle, else how
- could they all live as they do? Besides, there's many on 'em as
- had naught to begin wi'; there's Carsons, and Duncombes, and
- Mengies, and many another as comed into Manchester with clothes
- to their backs, and that were all, and now they're worth their
- tens of thousands, a' gotten out of our labour; why the very
- land as fetched but sixty pound twenty years agone is now worth
- six hundred, and that, too, is owing to our labour; but look at
- yo, and see me, and poor Davenport yonder. Whatten better are
- we? They'n screwed us down to th' lowest peg, in order to make
- their great big fortunes, and build their great big houses, and
- we—why, we're just clemming, many and many of us. Can you say
- there's naught wrong in this?'"
-
-These poor fellows, according to the story, took care of Davenport till
-he died in that loathsome cellar, and then had him decently buried.
-They knew not how soon his fate would overtake them, and they would
-then want friends. In the mean time, while disease and starvation were
-doing their work among the poor operatives, their masters were lolling
-on sofas, and, in the recreations of an evening, spending enough to
-relieve a hundred families. Perhaps, also, the masters' wives were
-concocting petitions on the subject of negro-slavery—that kind of
-philanthropy costing very little money or self-sacrifice.
-
-It may be said that the story of "Mary Barton" is a fiction; but it
-must not be forgotten that it is the work of an English writer, and
-that its scenes are professedly drawn from the existing realities of
-life in Manchester, where the author resided. In the same work, we
-find an account of an historical affair, which is important in this
-connection, as showing how the wail of the oppressed is treated by the
-British aristocracy:—
-
- "For three years past, trade had been getting worse and worse,
- and the price of provisions higher and higher. This disparity
- between the amount of the earnings of the working classes,
- and the price of their food, occasioned, in more cases than
- could well be imagined, disease and death. Whole families went
- through a gradual starvation. They only wanted a Dante to record
- their sufferings. And yet even his words would fall short of
- the awful truth; they could only present an outline of the
- tremendous facts of the destitution that surrounded thousands
- upon thousands in the terrible years 1839, 1840, and 1841. Even
- philanthropists, who had studied the subject, were forced to
- own themselves perplexed in the endeavour to ascertain the real
- causes of the misery; the whole matter was of so complicated
- a nature, that it became next to impossible to understand it
- thoroughly. It need excite no surprise, then, to learn that a bad
- feeling between working men and the upper classes became very
- strong in this season of privation. The indigence and sufferings
- of the operatives induced a suspicion in the minds of many of
- them, that their legislators, their managers, their employers,
- and even their ministers of religion, were, in general, their
- oppressors and enemies; and were in league for their prostration
- and enthralment. The most deplorable and enduring evil that arose
- out of the period of commercial depression to which I refer,
- was this feeling of alienation between the different classes of
- society. It is so impossible to describe, or even faintly to
- picture, the state of distress which prevailed in the town at
- that time, that I will not attempt it; and yet I think again that
- surely, in a Christian land, it was not known even so feebly as
- words could tell it, or the more happy and fortunate would have
- thronged with their sympathy and their aid. In many instances
- the sufferers wept first, and then they cursed. Their vindictive
- feelings exhibited themselves in rabid politics. And when I hear,
- as I have heard, of the sufferings and privations of the poor, of
- provision-shops where ha'porths of tea, sugar, butter, and even
- flour, were sold to accommodate the indigent—of parents sitting
- in their clothes by the fireside during the whole night, for
- seven weeks together, in order that their only bed and bedding
- might be reserved for the use of their large family—of others
- sleeping upon the cold hearth-stone for weeks in succession,
- without adequate means of providing themselves with food or fuel
- (and this in the depth of winter)—of others being compelled to
- fast for days together, uncheered by any hope of better fortune,
- living, moreover, or rather starving, in a crowded garret or damp
- cellar, and gradually sinking under the pressure of want and
- despair into a premature grave; and when this has been confirmed
- by the evidence of their care-worn looks, their excited feelings,
- and their desolate homes—can I wonder that many of them, in such
- times of misery and destitution, spoke and acted with ferocious
- precipitation!
-
- "An idea was now springing up among the operatives, that
- originated with the Chartists, but which came at last to be
- cherished as a darling child by many and many a one. They could
- not believe that government knew of their misery; they rather
- chose to think it possible that men could voluntarily assume the
- office of legislators for a nation, ignorant of its real state;
- as who should make domestic rules for the pretty behaviour of
- children, without caring to know that these children had been
- kept for days without food. Besides, the starving multitudes
- had heard that the very existence of their distress had been
- denied in Parliament; and though they felt this strange and
- inexplicable, yet the idea that their misery had still to be
- revealed in all its depths, and that then some remedy would be
- found, soothed their aching hearts, and kept down their rising
- fury.
-
- "So a petition was framed, and signed by thousands in the
- bright spring days of 1839, imploring Parliament to hear
- witnesses who could testify to the unparalleled destitution of
- the manufacturing districts. Nottingham, Sheffield, Glasgow,
- Manchester, and many other towns, were busy appointing delegates
- to convey this petition, who might speak, not merely of what
- they had seen and had heard, but from what they had borne and
- suffered. Life-worn, gaunt, anxious, hunger-stamped men were
- those delegates."
-
-The delegates went in a body to London, and applied at the Parliament
-House for permission to present their petition upon the subject nearest
-their hearts—the question of life and death. They were haughtily
-denied a hearing. The assemblage of the "best gentlemen in Europe,"
-were, perhaps, discussing the best means of beautifying their parks
-and extending their estates. What had these rose-pink legislators to
-do with the miseries of the base-born rabble—the soil-serfs of their
-chivalric Norman ancestors? The delegates returned in despair to their
-homes, to meet their starving relatives and friends, and tell them
-there was not a ray of hope. In France such a rejection of a humble
-petition from breadless working-men would have been followed by a
-revolution. In Great Britain the labourers seem to have the inborn
-submission of hereditary slaves. Though they feel the iron heel of
-the aristocracy upon their necks, and see their families starving
-around them, they delay, and still delay, taking that highway to
-freedom—manly and united rebellion.
-
-The workmen employed in the factories are subjected to the cruel
-treatment of overlookers, who have the power of masters, and use it
-as tyrants. If an operative does not obey an order, he is not merely
-reproved, but kicked and beaten as a slave. He dare not resent, for
-if he did he would be turned forth to starve. Such being the system
-under which he works, the operative has the look and air of a degraded
-Helot. Most of them are unhealthy, destitute of spirit, and enfeebled
-by toil and privation. The hand-loom weavers, who are numerous in some
-districts, are the most miserable of the labourers, being hardly able
-to earn scant food and filthy shelter.
-
-The hundreds of thousands of tender age employed in all the various
-branches of manufacture are in all cases the children of the poor.
-When the father goes to the workhouse he has no longer any control
-over his children. They are at the mercy of the parish, and may be
-separated, apprenticed to all sorts of masters, and treated, to all
-intents and purposes, as slaves. The invention of labour-saving
-machinery has brought the services of children into great demand in the
-manufacturing towns. They may be _bought_ at the workhouse at a cheap
-rate, and then they must trust to God alone for their future welfare.
-There is scarcely an instance in which the law ever interferes for
-their protection. The masters and overlookers are allowed to beat their
-younger operatives with impunity.
-
-The following evidence contains instances of a treatment totally
-barbarous, and such are very frequent, according to the report of the
-commissioners:—
-
- "When she was a child, too little to put on her ain claithes,
- the overlooker used to beat her till she screamed again. Gets
- many a good beating and swearing. They are all very ill-used. The
- overseer carries a strap. Has been licked four or five times.
- The boys are often severely strapped; the girls sometimes get
- a clout. The mothers often complain of this. Has seen the boys
- have black and blue marks after strapping. Three weeks ago the
- overseer struck him in the eye with his clenched fist, so as to
- force him to be absent two days. Another overseer used to beat
- him with his fist, striking him so that his arm was black and
- blue. Has often seen the workers beat cruelly. Has seen the girls
- strapped; but the boys were beat so that they fell to the floor
- in the course of the beating with a rope with four tails, called
- a cat. Has seen the boys black and blue, crying for mercy.
-
- "The other night a little girl came home cruelly beaten; wished
- to go before a magistrate, but was advised not. That man is
- always strapping the children. The boys are badly used. They
- are whipped with a strap till they cry out and shed tears; has
- seen the managers kick and strike them. Has suffered much from
- the slubbers' ill treatment. It is the practice of the slubbers
- to go out and amuse themselves for an hour or so, and then make
- up their work in the same time, which is a great fatigue to
- the piecers, keeping them 'on the run' for an hour and a half
- together, besides kicking and beating them for doing it badly,
- when they were so much tired. The slubbers are all brutes to the
- children; they get intoxicated, and then kick them about; they
- are all alike. Never complained to the master; did once to his
- mother, and she gave him a halfpenny not to mind it, to go back
- to work like a good boy. Sometimes he used to be surly, and would
- not go, and then she always had that tale about the halfpenny;
- sometimes he got the halfpenny, and sometimes not.
-
- "He has seen the other children beaten. The little girls standing
- at the drawing-head. They would run home and fetch their mothers
- sometimes.
-
- "Hears the spinners swear very bad at their piecers, and sees
- 'em lick 'em sometimes; some licks 'em with a strap, some licks
- 'em with hand; some straps is as long as your arm, some is very
- thick, and some thin; don't know where they get the straps. There
- is an overlooker in the room; he very seldom comes in; they
- won't allow 'em if they knows of it. (Child volunteered the last
- observation. Asked how she knew that the overlookers would not
- allow the spinners to lick the little hands; answers, 'Because
- I've heard 'em say so.') Girls cry when struck with straps; only
- one girl struck yesterday; they very seldom strike 'em.
-
- "There is an overlooker in the room, who is a man. The doffer
- always scolds her when she is idle, not the overlooker; the
- doffer is a girl. Sometimes sees her hit the little hands; always
- hits them with her hands. Sometimes the overlooker hits the
- little hands; always with her hand when she does. Her mother is
- a throstle-spinner, in her room. The overseer scolds the little
- hands; says he'll bag 'em; sometimes swears at 'em. Sometimes
- overseer beats a 'little hand;' when he does it, it is always
- with his open hand; it is not so very hard; sometimes on the
- face, sometimes on the back. He never beats her. Some on 'em
- cries when they are beat, some doesn't. He beats very seldom;
- didn't beat any yesterday, nor last week, nor week before;
- doesn't know how long it is ago since she has seen him strike a
- girl. If our little helper gets careless we may have occasion to
- correct her a bit. Some uses 'em very bad; beats 'em; but only
- with the hand; and pulls their ears. Some cry, but not often.
- Ours is a good overlooker, but has heard overlookers curse
- very bad. The women weavers themselves curse. Has never cursed
- herself. Can say so honestly from her heart.
-
- "Drawers are entirely under the control of the weavers, said
- a master; they must obey their employer; if they do not they
- are sometimes beat and sometimes discharged. _I chastise them
- occasionally with alight whip_; do not allow it by my workmen;
- sometimes they are punished with a fool's-cap, sometimes with a
- _cane_, but not severely."
-
- "William M. Beath, of Mr. Owen's New Lanark Mills, deposed:
- 'Thinks things improved under Mr. Owen's management. Recollects
- seeing children beaten very severe at times. He himself has
- been beaten very sore, so bad that his head was not in its
- useful state for several days. Recollects, in particular, one
- boy—James Barry—who was very unfond of working in the mill,
- who was always beaten to his work by his father, with his hands
- and feet; the boy was then beaten with a strap by the overseers,
- for being too late, and not being willing to come. Has seen him
- so beaten by Robert Shirley, William Watson, and Robert Sim. The
- boy, James Barry, never came properly to manhood. It was always
- conjectured that he had too many beatings. He was the cruellest
- beat boy ever I saw there. There was a boy, whose name he does
- not recollect, and while he (W. M. B.) was working as a weaver
- at Lanark, having left the mill, and his death was attributed by
- many to a kick in the groin from Peter Gall, an overseer. Does
- not recollect whether the ill usage of the children above alluded
- to took place in Mr. Owen's time, or before he came; but there
- was certainly a great improvement, in many respects, under his
- management, particularly in cleanliness, shorter hours, and the
- establishment of schools. Has been three years employed in his
- present situation. Has two children of his own in the mill. Does
- not believe (and he has every opportunity of knowing) that the
- children of this mill have been tampered with by anybody, with a
- view to their testimony before the commissioners, and that they
- are not afraid to tell the truth. He himself would, on account
- of his children, like a little shorter hours and a little less
- wages; they would then have a better opportunity of attending a
- night-school.'
-
- "Henry Dunn, aged twenty-seven, a spinner: 'Has been five years
- on this work. Went at eight years of age to Mr. Dunn's mill at
- Duntochar; that was a country situation, and much healthier
- than factories situated in town. They worked then from six to
- eight; twelve hours and a half for work, and one hour and a
- half for meals. Liked that mill as well as any he ever was in.
- Great attention was paid to the cleanliness and comfort of the
- people. The wages were lower there at that time than they were
- at Glasgow. After leaving Duntochar, he came into town to see
- Mr. Humphrey's, (now Messrs. Robert Thompson,) which was at that
- time one continued scene of oppression. A system of cruelty
- prevailed there at that time, which was confined almost entirely
- to that work. The wheels were very small, and young men and women
- of the ages of seventeen and eighteen were the spinners. There
- was a tenter to every flat, and he was considered as a sort of
- whipper-in, to force the children to extra exertion. Has seen
- wounds inflicted upon children by tenters, by Alexander Drysdale,
- among others, with a belt or stick, or the first thing that came
- uppermost. Saw a kick given by the above-mentioned Alexander
- Drysdale, which broke two ribs of a little boy. Helped to carry
- the boy down to a surgeon. The boy had been guilty of some very
- trifling offence, such as calling names to the next boy. But the
- whole was the same; all the tenters were alike. Never saw any
- ill-treatment of the children at this mill. Mr. Stevenson is a
- very fine man. The machinery in the spinning department is quite
- well boxed in—it could not be better; but the cards might be
- more protected with great advantage. It is very hot in winter,
- but he can't tell how hot. There is no thermometer.'
-
- "Ellen Ferrier, aged thirteen; carries bobbins: 'Has been three
- years in this mill. Was one year before in another mill in this
- town; doesn't like neither of them very well, because she was
- always very tired from working from half-past five o'clock in
- the morning until half-past seven, with only two intervals of
- half an hour each. She sometimes falls asleep now. She worked
- formerly in the lower flat. When Charles Kennedy was the overseer
- he licked us very bad, beat our heads with his hand, and kicked
- us very bad when the ends were down. He was aye licking them, and
- my gademother (stepmother) has two or three times complained to
- Mr. Shanks, (senior,) and Mr. S. always told him about it, but
- he never minded. Does not know what he left the mill for. A good
- many folks went away from this mill just for Kennedy. Can read;
- cannot write.'
-
- "Mary Scott, aged fourteen: 'Has been here two years. Was here
- with Charles Kennedy. When he has seen us just speaking to one
- another, he struck us with his hands and with his feet. He beat
- us when he saw any of the ends down. Has seen him strike Ellen
- Ferrier (the last witness) very often, just with his hands; and
- has seen him strike Betty Sutherland; can't tell how often, but
- it was terrible often.'
-
- "Euphemia Anderson, aged twenty: 'Has been three years at this
- mill; has been in different mills since she was seven years old.
- About six years ago she was taken ill with pains in the legs,
- and remained ill for three years. I wasn't able to stand. Thinks
- it was the standing so long that made her ill. She is now again
- quite in good health, except that she is sair-footed sometimes.
- They have seats to sit down upon. When the work is bad, we cannot
- get time to sit down. When the flax is good we have a good deal
- of time. Has never seen children beat by Charles Kennedy, but has
- heard talk of it; has often heard them complain of him, never of
- anybody else. Can read; cannot write. Never went to a school;
- never had muckle time. She would give up some of her wages to
- have shorter hours. Her usual dinner is broth and potatoes.'"
-
-The next evidence is particularly valuable, as it came from a person
-who had left the factory work; and having an independent business, he
-may be presumed to have spoken without fear or favour:—
-
- "William Campbell, aged thirty-seven: 'Is a grocer, carrying on
- business in Belfast. Was bred up a cotton-spinner. Went first
- as a piecer to his father, who was a spinner at Mr. Hussy's
- mill, Graham Square, Glasgow, and afterward to several mills
- in this place, among which was Mr. John McCrackan's, where
- he was, altogether, piecer and spinner between four and five
- years, (1811-1818.) There was a regulation at that time there,
- that every hand should be fined if five minutes too late at any
- working hour in the morning and after meals—the younger 5_d._,
- which amounted to the whole wages of some of the lesser ones; the
- older hands were fined as high as 10_d._ The treatment of the
- children at that time was very cruel. Has seen Robert Martin,
- the manager, continually beating the children—with his hands
- generally, sometimes with his clenched fist. Has often seen his
- sister Jane, then about fourteen, struck by him; and he used to
- pinch her ears till the blood came, and pull her hair. The faults
- were usually very trifling. If on coming in he should find any
- girl combing her hair, that was an offence for which he would
- beat her severely, and he would do so if he heard them talking to
- one another. He never complained of the ill-usage of his sister,
- because he believed if he did, his father and two sisters, who
- were both employed in the mill, would have been immediately
- dismissed. A complaint was made by the father of a little girl,
- against Martin, for beating a child. Mr. Ferrer, the police
- magistrate, admonished him. He was a hot-headed, fiery man, and
- when he saw the least fault, or what he conceived to be a fault,
- he just struck them at once. Does not recollect any child getting
- a lasting injury from any beating here. The treatment of the
- children at the mill was the only thing which could be called
- cruelty which he had witnessed. One great hardship to people
- employed in the factories is the want of good water, which
- exists in most of them. At only one of the mills which he worked
- at was there water such as could be drunk brought into the flats,
- and that was Mr. Holdsworth's mill, Anderson, Glasgow. From what
- he recollects of his own and his sister's feelings, he considers
- the hours which were then and are still commonly occupied in
- actual labour—viz. twelve hours and a half per day—longer
- than the health of children can sustain, and also longer than
- will admit of any time being reserved in the evening for their
- instruction.'"
-
-These instances of steady, systematic cruelty, in the treatment of
-children, go far beyond any thing recorded of slave-drivers in other
-countries. If an American overseer was to whip a slave to death, an
-awful groan would express the horror of English lords and ladies. But
-in the factories of Great Britain we have helpless children not only
-kicked and beaten, but liable at any moment to receive a mortal wound
-from the billy-roller of an exasperated slubber. Here is more evidence,
-which we cannot think will flag in interest:—
-
- "John Gibb, eleven years old, solemnly sworn, deposes, 'that he
- has been about three years a piecer in one of the spinning-rooms;
- that the heat and confinement makes his feet sair, and makes him
- sick and have headaches, and he often has a stitch in his side;
- that he is now much paler than he used to be; that he receives
- 4_s._ 6_d._ a week, which he gives to his mother; that he is very
- desirous of short hours, that he might go to school more than he
- can do at present; that the spinners often lick him, when he is
- in fault, with taws of leather.'
-
- "Alexander Wylie, twenty-six years old, solemnly sworn, deposes,
- 'that he is a spinner in one of the spinning departments; that
- most of the spinners keep taws to preserve their authority, but
- he does not; that he has seen them pretty severely whipped,
- when they were in fault; that he has seen piecers beat by the
- overseers, even with their clenched fists; that he has seen both
- boys and girls so treated; that he has seen John Ewan beating his
- little piecers severely, even within these few weeks; that when
- he had a boy as a piecer, he beat him even more severely than the
- girls; that he never saw a thermometer in his flat, till to-day,
- when, in consequence of a bet, the heat was tried, and it was
- found to be 72°, but that they are spinning coarser cotton in
- his flat than in some of the other flats, where greater heat is
- requisite.'
-
- "Bell Sinclair, thirteen years old, solemnly sworn, deposes,
- 'that she has been about four years in the same flat with John
- Gibb, a preceding witness; that all the spinners in the apartment
- keep a leather strap, or taws, with which to punish the piecers,
- both boys and girls—the young ones chiefly when they are
- negligent; that she has been often punished by Francis Gibb and
- by Robert Clarke, both with taws and with their hands, and with
- his open cuff; that he has licked her on the side of the head and
- on her back with his hands, and with the strap on her back and
- arms; that she was never much the worse of the beating, although
- she has sometimes cried and shed tears when Gibb or Clarke was
- hitting her sair.' Deposes that she cannot write.
-
- "Mary Ann Collins, ten years old, solemnly sworn, deposes,
- 'that she has been a year in one of the spinning-rooms in which
- John Ewan is a spinner; that yesterday he gave her a licking
- with the taws; that all the spinners keep taws except Alexander
- Wylie; that he beat her once before till she grat; that she has
- sometimes a pain in her breast, and was absent yesterday on that
- account.' Deposes that she cannot write.
-
- "Daniel McGinty, twenty-two years old, solemnly sworn, deposes,
- 'that he has been nearly two years a spinner here; that he
- notices the piecers frequently complain of bad health; that he
- was a petitioner for short hours, so that the people might have
- more time for their education as well as for health; that he had
- a strap to punish the children when they were in fault, but he
- has not had one for some time, and the straps are not so common
- now as they were formerly; that he and the other spinners prefer
- giving the piecers a lick on the side of the head with their
- hands, than to use a strap at all; that he has seen instances of
- piecers being knocked down again and again, by a blow from the
- hand, in other mills, but not since he came to this one; that he
- has been knocked down himself in Barrowfield mill, by Lauchlin
- McWharry, the spinner to whom he was a piecer.'
-
- "Isabella Stewart, twenty-two years old, solemnly sworn, deposes,
- 'that she has been four years at this mill, and several years
- at other mills; that she is very hoarse, and subject to cough,
- and her feet and ankles swell in the evening; that she is very
- anxious for short hours—thirteen hours are real lang hours—but
- she has nothing else to find fault with; that Alexander Simpson
- straps the young workers, and even gives her, or any of the
- workers, if they are too late, a lick with the strap across the
- shoulders; that he has done this within a week or two; that he
- sometimes gives such a strap as to hurt her, but it is only when
- he is in a passion.' Deposes that 'she cannot write. In the long
- hours they canna get time to write nor to do nae thing.'
-
- "James Patterson, aged sixty years, solemnly sworn, deposes,
- 'that he is an overseer in Messrs. James and William Brown's
- flax-spinning mill, at Dundee, and has been in their employment
- for about seven years; that he was previously at the spinning
- mill at Glamis for twelve years, and there lost his right hand
- and arm, caught by the belt of the wheels, in the preparing
- floor; that he is in the reeling flat, with the women, who are
- tired and sleepy; one of them—Margaret Porter—at present in
- bed, merely from standing so long for a fortnight past; that it
- would be God's blessing for every one to have shorter hours;
- that he has been about forty years in spinning-mills, and has
- seen the young people so lashed with a leather belt that they
- could hardly stand: that at Trollick, a mill now given up, he
- has seen them lashed, skin naked, by the manager, James Brown;
- that at Moniferth he has seen them taken out of bed, when they
- did not get up in time, and lashed with horsewhips to their work,
- carrying their clothes, while yet naked, to the work, in their
- arms with them.'
-
- "William Roe, (examined at his own request:) 'I am constable
- of Radford. I was in the army. I went to work with Mr. Wilson
- in 1825. I had been with Strutts, at Belper, before that. The
- reason I left was this: I was told the overlooker was leathering
- one of my boys. I had two sons there. The overlooker was Crooks.
- I found him strapping the boy, and I struck him. I did not stop
- to ask whether the boy had done any thing. I had heard of his
- beating him before. Smith came up, and said I should work there
- no more till I had seen Mr. Wilson. My answer was, that neither
- I nor mine should ever work more for such a mill as that was. It
- was but the day before I took the boy to Smith, to show him that
- he had no time to take his victuals till he came out at twelve.
- There was no satisfaction, but he laughed at it. That was the
- reason I took the means into my own hands. Crooks threatened
- to fetch a warrant for me, but did not. I told him the master
- durst not let him. The boy had been doing nothing, only could
- not keep up his work enough to please them. I left the mill, and
- took away my sons. One was ten, the other was between eight and
- nine. They went there with me. The youngest was not much past
- eight when he went. I heard no more of it. I put all my reasons
- down in a letter to Mr. Wilson, but I heard no more of it. Smith
- was sent away afterward, but I don't know why. I have heard it
- was for different ill-usages. Crooks is there now. Hogg was the
- overlooker in my room. I have often seen him beat a particular
- boy who was feeding cards. One day he pulled his ear till he
- pulled it out of the socket, and it bled very much. I mean he
- tore the bottom of the ear from the head. I went to him and said,
- if that boy was mine I'd give him a better threshing than ever
- he had in his life. It was reported to Mr. S. Wilson, and he
- told me I had better mind my own business, and not meddle with
- the overlookers. I never heard that the parents complained. Mr.
- S. Wilson is dead now. Mr. W. Wilson said to me afterward, I
- had made myself very forward in meddling with the overlookers'
- business. I was to have come into the warehouse at Nottingham,
- but in consequence of my speaking my mind I lost the situation.
- I never had any complaint about my work while I was there, nor
- at Mr. Strutt's. I left Mr. Strutt's in hopes to better myself.
- I came as a machine smith. I went back to Mr. Strutt's, at
- Milford, after I left Wilson, for two years. The men never had
- more than twenty-five minutes for their dinner, and no extra pay
- for stopping there. I dressed the top cards, and ground them. I
- never heard that Mr. Wilson proposed to stop the breakfast hour,
- and that the hands wished to go on. I don't think such a thing
- could be. Whilst I worked there we always went in at half-past
- five, and worked till nigh half-past seven. We were never paid
- a farthing overtime. At Strutt's, if ever we worked an hour
- overtime, we were paid an hour and a half. I have seen Smith
- take the girls by the hair with one hand, and slap them in the
- face with the other; big and little, it made no difference. He
- worked there many years before he was turned away. He works in
- the mill again now, but not as an overlooker. I never knew of any
- complaint to the magistrate against Smith. I had 12_s._ when I
- was there for standing wages. It was about nine in the morning my
- boy was beat. I think it was in the middle of the day the boy's
- ear was pulled. The work was very severe there while it lasted. A
- boy generally had four breakers and finisher-cards to mind. Such
- a boy might mind six when he had come on to eleven or twelve; I
- mean finishers. A boy can mind from three to four breakers. Any
- way they had not time to get their victuals. I don't know what
- the present state of the mill is as to beating. Men will not
- complain to the magistrates while work is so scarce, and they are
- liable to be turned out; and if they go to the parish, why there
- it is, 'Why, you had work, why did you not stay at it?'"
-
-Robert Blincoe, a small manufacturer, once an apprentice to a cotton
-mill, and one who had seen and suffered much in factories, was sworn
-and examined by Dr. Hawkins, on the 18th of May, 1833. In the evidence,
-which follows, it will be noted that most of the sufferers mentioned
-were parish children, without protectors of any kind:—
-
- "'Do you know where you were born?' 'No; I only know that I came
- out of St. Pancras parish, London.'
-
- "'Do you know the name of your parents?' 'No. I used to be
- called, when young, Robert Saint; but when I received my
- indentures I was called Robert Blincoe; and I have gone by that
- name ever since.'
-
- "'What age are you?' 'Near upon forty, according to my
- indentures."
-
- "'Have you no other means of knowing your age but what you find
- in your indentures?' 'No, I go by that.'
-
- "'Do you work at a cotton mill?' 'Not now. I was bound apprentice
- to a cotton mill for fourteen years, from St. Pancras parish;
- then I got my indentures. I worked five or six years after, at
- different mills, but now I have got work of my own. I rent power
- from a mill in Stockport, and have a room to myself. My business
- is a sheet wadding manufacturer.'
-
- "'Why did you leave off working at the cotton mills?' 'I got
- tired of it, the system is so bad; and I had saved a few pounds.
- I got deformed there; my knees began to bend in when I was
- fifteen; you see how they are, (showing them.) There are many,
- many far worse than me at Manchester.'
-
- "'Can you take exercise with ease?' 'A very little makes me sweat
- in walking. I have not the strength of those who are straight.'
-
- "'Have you ever been in a hospital, or under doctors, for your
- knees or legs?' 'Never in a hospital, or under doctors for that,
- but from illness from over-work I have been. When I was near
- Nottingham there were about eighty of us together, boys and
- girls, all 'prenticed out from St. Pancras parish, London, to
- cotton mills; many of us used to be ill, but the doctors said it
- was only for want of kitchen physic, and want of more rest.'
-
- "'Had you any accidents from machinery?' 'No, nothing to signify
- much; I have not myself, but I saw, on the 6th of March last,
- a man killed by machinery at Stockport; he was smashed, and he
- died in four or five hours; I saw him while the accident took
- place; he was joking with me just before; it was in my own room.
- I employ a poor sore cripple under me, who could not easily get
- work anywhere else. A young man came good-naturedly from another
- room to help my cripple, and he was accidentally drawn up by the
- strap, and was killed. I have known many such accidents take
- place in the course of my life.'
-
- "'Recollect a few.' 'I cannot recollect the exact number, but
- I have known several: one was at Lytton Mill, at Derbyshire;
- another was the master of a factory at Staley Bridge, of the name
- of Bailey. Many more I have known to receive injuries, such as
- the loss of a limb. There is plenty about Stockport that is going
- about now with one arm; they cannot work in the mills, but they
- go about with jackasses and such like. One girl, Mary Richards,
- was made a cripple, and remains so now, when I was in Lowdham
- mill, near Nottingham. She was lapped up by a shaft underneath
- the drawing-frame. That is now an old-fashioned machinery.'
-
- "'Have you any children?' 'Three.'
-
- "'Do you send them to factories?' 'No. I would rather have them
- transported. In the first place, they are standing upon one leg,
- lifting up one knee a greater part of the day, keeping the ends
- up from the spindle. I consider that that employment makes many
- cripples; then there is the heat and dust; then there are so
- many different forms of cruelty used upon them; then they are
- so liable to have their fingers catched, and to suffer other
- accidents from the machinery; then the hours is so long that I
- have seen them tumble down asleep among the straps and machinery,
- and so get cruelly hurt; then I would not have a child of mine
- there, because there is not good morals; there is such a lot of
- them together that they learn mischief.'
-
- "'What do you do with your children?' 'My eldest of thirteen has
- been to school, and can teach me. She now stays at home, and
- helps her mother in the shop. She is as tall as me, and is very
- heavy. Very different from what she would have been if she had
- worked in a factory. My two youngest go to school, and are both
- healthy. I send them every day two miles to school. I know from
- experience the ills of confinement.'
-
- "'What are the forms of cruelty that you spoke of just now as
- being practised upon children in factories?' 'I have seen the
- time when two hand-vices, of a pound weight each, more or less,
- have been screwed to my ears at Lytton mill, in Derbyshire. Here
- are the scars still remaining behind my ears. Then three or four
- of us have been hung at once to a cross-beam above the machinery,
- hanging by our hands, without shirts or stockings. Mind, we were
- apprentices, without father or mother, to take care of us; I
- don't say they often do that now. Then, we used to stand up, in a
- skip, without our shirts, and be beat with straps or sticks; the
- skip was to prevent us from running away from the strap.'
-
- "'Do you think such things are done now in Manchester?' 'No,
- not just the same things; but I think the children are still
- beaten by overlookers; not so much, however, in Manchester,
- where justice is always at hand, as in country places. Then they
- used to tie on a twenty-eight pounds weight, (one or two at
- once,) according to our size, to hang down on our backs, with
- no shirts on. I have had them myself. Then they used to tie one
- leg up to the faller, while the hands were tied behind. I have
- a book written about these things, describing my own life and
- sufferings. I will send it to you.'[88]
-
- "'Do the masters know of these things, or were they done only by
- the overlookers?' 'The masters have often seen them, and have
- been assistants in them.'
-
-The work is so protracted that the children are exhausted, and many
-become crippled from standing too long in unhealthy positions:—
-
- "John Wright, steward in the silk factory of Messrs. Brinsley and
- Shatwell, examined by Mr. Tufnell.
-
- "'What are the effects of the present system of labour?' 'From my
- earliest recollections, I have found the effects to be awfully
- detrimental to the well-being of the operative; I have observed,
- frequently, children carried to factories, unable to walk,
- and that entirely owing to excessive labour and confinement.
- The degradation of the work-people baffles all description;
- frequently have two of my sisters been obliged to be assisted
- to the factory and home again, until by and by they could go no
- longer, being totally crippled in their legs. And in the next
- place, I remember some ten or twelve years ago working in one of
- the largest firms in Macclesfield, (Messrs. Baker and Pearson,)
- with about twenty-five men, where they were scarce one-half fit
- for his majesty's service. Those that are straight in their limbs
- are stunted in their growth, much inferior to their fathers in
- point of strength. 3dly. Through excessive labour and confinement
- there is often a total loss of appetite; a kind of languor
- steals over the whole frame, enters to the very core, saps the
- foundation of the best constitution, and lays our strength
- prostrate in the dust. In the fourth place, by protracted
- labour there is an alarming increase of cripples in various
- parts of this town, which has come under my own observation and
- knowledge.'"
-
-Young sufferers gave the following evidence to the commissioners:—
-
- "'Many a time has been so fatigued that she could hardly take
- off her clothes at night, or put them on in the morning; her
- mother would be raging at her, because when she sat down she
- could not get up again through the house.' 'Looks on the long
- hours as a great bondage.' 'Thinks they are not much better than
- the Israelites in Egypt, and their life is no pleasure to them.'
- 'When a child, was so tired that she could seldom eat her supper,
- and never awoke of herself.'—'Are the hours to be shortened?'
- earnestly demanded one of these girls of the commissioner who was
- examining her, 'for they are too long.'"
-
-The truth of the account given by the children of the fatigue they
-experience by the ordinary labour of the factory is confirmed by the
-testimony of their parents. In general, the representation made by
-parents is like the following:—
-
- "'Her children come home so tired and worn out they can hardly
- eat their supper.' 'Has often seen his daughter come home in the
- evening so fatigued that she would go to bed supper-less,' 'Has
- seen the young workers absolutely oppressed, and unable to sit
- down or rise up; this has happened to his own children.'
-
-These statements are confirmed by the evidence of the adult operatives.
-The depositions of the witnesses of this class are to the effect, that
-"the younger workers are greatly fatigued;" that "children are often
-very severe (unwilling) in the mornings;" that "children are quite
-tired out;" that "the long hours exhaust the workers, especially the
-young ones, to such a degree that they can hardly walk home;" that "the
-young workers are absolutely oppressed, and so tired as to be unable
-to sit down or rise up;" that "younger workers are so tired they often
-cannot raise their hands to their head;" that "all the children are
-very keen for short hours, thinking them now such bondage that they
-might as well be in a prison;" that "the children, when engaged in
-their regular work, are often exhausted beyond what can be expressed;"
-that "the sufferings of the children absolutely require that the hours
-should be shortened."
-
-The depositions of the overlookers are to the same effect, namely,
-that "though the children may not complain, yet that they seem tired
-and sleepy, and happy to get out of doors to play themselves. That,
-"the work over-tires the workers in general." "Often sees the children
-very tired and stiff-like." "Is entirely of opinion, after real
-experience, that the hours of labour are far too long for the children,
-for their health and education; has from twenty-two to twenty-four boys
-under his charge, from nine to about fourteen years old, and they are
-generally much tired at night, always anxious, asking if it be near the
-mill-stopping." "Never knew a single worker among the children that
-did not complain of the long hours, which prevent them from getting
-education, and from getting health in the open air."
-
-The managers in like manner state, that "the labour exhausts the
-children;" that "the workers are tired in the evening;" that "children
-inquire anxiously for the hour of stopping." And admissions to the same
-effect, on the part of managers and proprietors, will be found in every
-part of the Scotch depositions.
-
-In the north-eastern district the evidence is equally complete that the
-fatigue of the young workers is great.
-
- "'I have known the children,' says one witness, 'to hide
- themselves in the store among the wool, so that they should not
- go home when the work was over, when we have worked till ten or
- eleven. I have seen six or eight fetched out of the store and
- beat home; beat out of the mill however; I do not know why they
- should hide themselves, unless it was that they were too tired to
- go home.'
-
- "'Many a one I have had to rouse in the last hour, when the
- work is very slack, from fatigue.' 'The children were very much
- jaded, especially when we worked late at night.' 'The children
- bore the long hours very ill indeed.' 'Exhausted in body and
- depressed in mind by the length of the hours and the height of
- the temperature.' 'I found, when I was an overlooker, that,
- after the children from eight to twelve years had worked eight,
- nine, or ten hours, they were nearly ready to faint; some were
- asleep; some were only kept to work by being spoken to, or by
- a little chastisement, to make them jump up. I was sometimes
- obliged to chastise them when they were almost fainting, and it
- hurt my feelings; then they would spring up and work pretty well
- for another hour; but the last two or three hours were my hardest
- work, for they then got so exhausted,' 'I have never seen fathers
- carrying their children backward nor forward to the factories;
- but I have seen children, apparently under nine, and from nine
- to twelve years of age, going to the factories at five in the
- morning almost asleep in the streets.'"
-
- "Ellen Cook, card-filler: 'I was fifteen last winter. I worked
- on then sometimes day and night;—may be twice a week; I used to
- earn 4_s._ a week; I used to go home to dinner; I was a feeder
- then; I am a feeder still. We used to come at half-past eight at
- night, and work all night till the rest of the girls came in the
- morning; they would come at seven, I think. Sometimes we worked
- on till half-past eight the next night, after we had been working
- all the night before. We worked on meal-hours, except at dinner.
- I have done that sometimes three nights a week, and sometimes
- four nights. It was just as the overlooker chose. John Singleton;
- he is overlooker now. Sometimes the slubbers would work on all
- night too; not always. The pieceners would have to stay all night
- then too. It was not often though that the slubbers worked all
- night. We worked by ourselves. It was when one of the boilers
- was spoiled; that was the reason we had to work all night. The
- engine would not carry all the machines. I was paid for the
- over-hours when we worked day and night; not for meal-hours. We
- worked meal-hours, but were not paid for them. George Lee is
- the slubber in this room. He has worked all night; not often, I
- think; not above twice all the time we worked so; sometimes he
- would not work at all. The pieceners would work too when he did.
- They used to go to sleep, poor things! when they had over-hours
- in the night. I think they were ready enough to sleep sometimes,
- when they only worked in the daytime. I never was a piecener;
- sometimes I go to help them when there are a good many cardings.
- We have to get there by half-past five, in the morning, now. The
- engine begins then. We don't go home to breakfast. Sometimes we
- have a quarter of an hour; sometimes twenty minutes; sometimes
- none. Them in the top-room have a full half hour. We can't take
- half an hour if we like it; we should get jawed; we should have
- such a noise, we should not hear the last of it. The pieceners in
- this room (there were four) have the same time as we do. In some
- of the rooms they forfeit them if they are five minutes too late;
- they don't in this room. The slubber often beats the pieceners.
- He has a strap, and wets it, and gives them a strap over the
- hands, poor things! They cry out ever so loud sometimes; I don't
- know how old they are.'"
-
- "James Simpson, aged twenty-four, solemnly sworn, deposes: 'That
- he has been about fifteen years in spinning mills; that he has
- been nearly a year as an overseer in Mr. Kinmond's mill here,
- and was dismissed on the 2d of May, for supporting, at a meeting
- of the operatives, the Ten Hours Bill; that he was one of the
- persons to receive subscriptions, in money, to forward the
- business, and was dismissed, not on a regular pay-day, but on a
- Thursday evening, by James Malcolm, manager, who told him that
- he was dismissed for being a robber to his master in supporting
- the Ten Hours Bill; that by the regulations of the mill he was
- entitled to a week's notice, and that a week's wages were due to
- him at the time, but neither sum has been paid; that he was two
- or three times desired by the overseer to strike the boys if he
- saw them at any time sitting, and has accordingly struck them
- with a strap, but never so severely as to hurt them; that he
- is not yet employed.' And the preceding deposition having been
- read over to him, he was cautioned to be perfectly sure that it
- was true in all particulars, as it would be communicated to the
- overseer named by him, and might still be altered if, in any
- particular, he wished the change of a word; but he repeated his
- assertion, on oath, that it was.
-
- "Ann Kennedy, sixteen years old, solemnly sworn, deposes: 'That
- she has been nearly a year a piecer to James McNish, a preceding
- witness; that she has had swelled feet for about a year, but she
- thinks them rather better; that she has a great deal of pain,
- both in her feet and legs, so that she was afraid she would not
- be able to go on with the work; that she thought it was owing to
- the heat and the long standing on her feet; that it is a very
- warm room she is in; that she sometimes looks at the thermometer
- and sees it at 82°, or 84, or 86°; that all the people in the
- room are very pale, and a good deal of them complaining.'
- Deposes, that she cannot write.
-
- "Joseph Hurtley, aged forty-four: 'Is an overlooker of the
- flax-dressing department. Has been there since the commencement.
- Thinks, from what he observes, that the hours are too long for
- children. Is led to think so from seeing the children much
- exhausted toward the conclusion of the work. When he came here
- first, and the children were all new to the work, he found that
- by six o'clock they began to be drowsy and sleepy. He took
- different devices to keep them awake, such as giving them snuff,
- &c.; but this drowsiness partly wore off in time, from habit, but
- he still observes the same with all the boys, (they are all boys
- in his department,) and it continues with them for some time.
- Does not know whether the children go to school in the evening,
- but he thinks, from their appearance, that they would be able to
- receive very little benefit from tuition.
-
- "'The occupation of draw-boys and girls to harness hand-loom
- weavers, in their own shops, is by far the lowest and least
- sought after of any connected with the manufacture of cotton.
- They are poor, neglected, ragged, dirty children. They seldom
- are taught any thing, and they work as long as the weaver, that
- is, as long as they can see, standing on the same spot, always
- barefooted, on an earthen, cold, damp floor, in a close, damp
- cellar, for thirteen or fourteen hours a day.
-
- "'The power-loom dressers have all been hand-loom weavers, but
- now prevent any more of their former companions from being
- employed in their present business.
-
- "'They earn 2_s._ per week, and eat porridge, if their parents
- can afford it; if not, potatoes and salt. They are, almost
- always, between nine and thirteen years of age, and look healthy,
- though some have been two or three years at the business; while
- the weaver, for whom they draw, is looking pale, squalid, and
- underfed.
-
- "'There are some hundreds of children thus employed in the
- immediate neighbourhood of Glasgow.'"
-
-In Leicester, Mr. Drinkwater, of the Factory Commission, found that
-great cruelty was practised upon the children employed in some of
-the factories, by the workmen called "slubbers," for whom the young
-creatures act as piecers. Thomas Hough, a trimmer and dyer, who had
-worked at Robinson's factory, deposed—
-
- "'The children were beaten at the factory; I complained, and they
- were turned away. If I could have found the man at the time there
- would have something happened, I am sure. I knew the man; it was
- the slubber with whom they worked. His name was Smith. Robinson
- had the factory then. I had my second son in to Mr. Robinson,
- and stripped him, and showed him how cruelly he had been beaten.
- There were nineteen bruises on his back and posteriors. It was
- not with the billy-roller. It was with the strap. He has often
- been struck with the billy-roller at other times, over the head.
- Robinson rebuked the man, and said he should not beat them any
- more. The children were beat several times after that; and on
- account of my making frequent complaints they turned the children
- away. They worked with Smith till they left. Smith was of a nasty
- disposition, rather. I would say of the slubbers generally, that
- they are a morose, ill-tempered set. Their pay depends on the
- children's work. The slubbers are often off drinking, and then
- they must work harder to get the cardings up. I have seen that
- often. That is in the lamb's-wool trade. Mr. Gamble is one of the
- most humane men that ever lived, by all that I hear, and he will
- not allow the slubbers to touch the children, on any pretence;
- if they will not work, he turns them away. There gets what they
- call flies on the cardings, that is, when the cardings are not
- properly pieced; and it is a general rule to strike the children
- when that happens too often. They allow so many ratched cardings,
- as they call them, in a certain time; and if there are more, they
- call the children round to the billy-gate and strap them. I have
- seen the straps which some of them use; they are as big as the
- strap on my son's lathe yonder, about an inch broad, (looking
- at it.) Oh, it is bigger than this, (it measured 7-8ths.) It is
- about an inch. I have seen the children lie down on the floor,
- and the slubber strike on them as they lay. It depends entirely
- on the temper of the man; sometimes they will only swear at them,
- sometimes they will beat them. They will be severe with them
- at one time, and very familiar at another, and run on with all
- sorts of debauched language, and take indecent liberties with the
- feeders and other big girls, before the children. That is the
- reason why they call the factories hell-holes. There are some
- a good deal different. The overlookers do not take much notice
- generally. They pick out bullies, generally, for overlookers. It
- is very necessary to have men of a determined temper to keep the
- hands in order.
-
- "'I have known my children get strapped two or three times
- between a meal. At all times of the day. Sometimes they would
- escape for a day or two together, just as it might happen. Then
- they get strapped for being too late. They make the children
- sum up, that is, pick up the waste, and clean up the billies
- during the meal-time, so that the children don't get their time.
- The cruelty complained of in the factories is chiefly from the
- slubbers. There is nobody so closely connected with the children
- as the slubbers. There is no other part of the machinery with
- which I am acquainted where the pay of the man depends on the
- work of the children so much.'"
-
- "Joseph Badder, a slubber, deposed: 'Slubbing and spinning is
- very heavy. Those machines are thrown aside now. The spinners did
- not like them, nor the masters neither. They did not turn off
- such stuff as they expected. I always found it more difficult
- to keep my piecers awake the last hours of a winter's evening.
- I have told the master, and I have been told by him that I did
- not half hide them. This was when they were working from six to
- eight. I have known the children hide themselves in the store
- among the wool, so that they should not go home when the work was
- over, when we have worked till ten or eleven. I have seen six or
- eight fetched out of the store and beat home; beat out of the
- mill. However, I do not know why they should hide themselves,
- unless it was they were too tired to go home. My piecers had
- two hours for meals. Other parts of the work I have known them
- work children, from seven to twelve in age, from six in the
- morning till ten or eleven at night, and give no time for meals;
- eat their victuals as they worked; the engines running all the
- time. The engine never stopped at meal-times; it was just as the
- spinner chose whether the children worked on or not. They made
- more work if they went on. I never would allow any one to touch
- my piecers. The foreman would come at times, and has strapped
- them, and I told him I would serve him the same if he touched
- them. I have seen the man who worked the other billy beat his
- piecers. I have seen children knocked down by the billy-rollers.
- It is a weapon that a man will easily take up in a passion. I
- do not know any instance of a man being prosecuted for it. The
- parents are unwilling, for fear the children should lose their
- work. I know Thorpe has been up before the magistrate half a
- dozen times or more, on the complaint of the parents. He has been
- before the bench, at the Exchange, as we call it, and I have seen
- him when he came back, when the magistrates have reprimanded
- Thorpe, and told the parents they had better take the children
- away. After that he has been sometimes half drunk, perhaps, and
- in a passion, and would strap them for the least thing, more
- than he did before. I remember once that he was fined; it was
- about two years and a half ago; it was for beating a little
- girl; he was fined 10_s._ I have seen him strap the women when
- they took the part of the children. The master complained he was
- not strict enough. I know from Thorpe that the master always
- paid his expenses when he was before the magistrate. I believe
- they generally do in all the factories. I have frequently had
- complaints against myself by the parents of the children, for
- beating them. I used to beat them. I am sure no man can do
- without it who works long hours; I am sure he cannot. I told them
- I was very sorry after I had done it, but I was forced to do it.
- The master expected me to do my work, and I could not do mine
- unless they did theirs. One lad used to say to me frequently,
- (he was a jocular kind of lad,) that he liked a good beating at
- times, it helped him to do his work. I used to joke with them to
- keep up their spirits. _I have seen them fall asleep, and they
- have been performing their work with their hands while they were
- asleep, after the billy had stopped, when their work was done. I
- have stopped and looked at them for two minutes, going through
- the motions of piecening, fast asleep, when there was really
- no work to do, and they were really doing nothing._ I believe,
- when we have been working long hours, that they have never been
- washed, but on a Saturday night, for weeks together.
-
- "Thomas Clarke, (examined at request of Joseph Badder:) 'I am
- aged eleven, I work at Cooper's factory; the rope-walk. I spin
- there. I earn 4_s._ a week there. I have been there about one
- year and a half. I was in Ross's factory before that. I was
- piecener there. I piecened for Joseph Badder one while, then
- for George Castle. I piecened for Badder when he left. Badder
- told me I was wanted here. We have not been talking about it. I
- remember that Jesse came to the machine, and Badder would not let
- him go nigh, and so they got a scuffling about it. I was very
- nigh nine years of age when I first went to piecen. I got 2_s._
- 6_d._ a week, at first. I think I was a good hand at it. When I
- had been there half a year I got 3_s._ Badder used to strap me
- some odd times. Some odd times he'd catch me over the head, but
- it was mostly on the back. He made me sing out. He has taken
- the billy-roller to me sometimes; about four times, I think. He
- used to take us over the shoulders with that; he would have done
- us an injury if he had struck us over the head. I never saw any
- one struck over the head with a billy-roller. He would strap us
- about twelve times at once. He used to strap us sometimes over
- the head. He used to strap us for letting his cards run through.
- I believe it was my fault. If we had had cardings to go on with
- we would have kept it from running through. It was nobody's fault
- that there were no cardings, only the slubber's fault that worked
- so hard. I have had, maybe, six stacks of cardings put up while
- he was out. When he came in, he would work harder to work down
- the stacks. Sometimes he would stop the card. He used to strap
- us most when he was working hardest. He did not strap us more at
- night than he did in the daytime. He would sometimes stay half a
- day. When he was away, as soon as we had six stacks of cardings
- up, the rule was to stop, and then we'd pick up the waste about
- the room, and take a play sometimes, but very seldom. Mr. Ross
- paid me. Badder never paid me when he was out. I never got any
- money from Badder. I used sometimes to fall asleep. The boy next
- to me used often to fall asleep: John Breedon; he got many a
- stroke. That was when we were working for Castle; that would be
- about six o'clock. He was about the size of me; he was older than
- I was. They always strapped us if we fell asleep. Badder was a
- better master than Castle. Castle used to get a rope, about as
- thick as my thumb, and double it, and put knots in it, and lick
- us with that. That was a good bit worse than the strap. I was to
- no regular master afterward; I used to do bits about the room.
- I ran away because Thorpe used to come and strap me. He did not
- know what he was strapping me for; it was just as he was in his
- humours. I never saw such a man; he would strap any one as did
- not please him. I only worked for him a week or two. I didn't
- like it, and I ran away. He would strap me if even there was a
- bit of waste lying about the room. I have had marks on my back
- from Castle's strapping me.'"
-
-In Nottingham, also, there is much cruelty shown in the treatment of
-the children, as will appear from the following evidence taken by Mr.
-Power:—
-
- "Williamson, the father: 'My two sons, one ten, the other
- thirteen, work at Milnes's factory, at Lenton. They go at
- half-past five in the morning; don't stop at breakfast or
- tea-time. They stop at dinner half an hour. Come home at a
- quarter before ten. They used to work till ten, sometimes
- eleven, sometimes twelve. They earn between them 6_s._ 2_d._ per
- week. One of them, the eldest, worked at Wilson's for 2 years
- at 2_s._ 3_d._ a week. He left because the overlooker beat him
- and loosened a tooth for him. I complained, and they turned him
- away for it. They have been gone to work sixteen hours now;
- they will be very tired when they come home at half-past nine.
- I have a deal of trouble to get 'em up in the morning. I have
- been obliged to beat 'em with a strap in their shirts, and to
- pinch 'em, in order to get them well awake. It made me cry to be
- obliged to do it.'
-
- "'Did you make them cry?' 'Yes, sometimes. They will be home
- soon, very tired, and you will see them.' I preferred walking
- toward the factory to meet them. I saw the youngest only, and
- asked him a few questions. He said, 'I'm sure I shan't stop to
- talk to you; I want to go home and get to bed; I must be up at
- half-past five again to-morrow morning.'
-
- "G— — and A— —, examined. The boy: 'I am going fourteen: my
- sister is eleven. I have worked in Milnes's factory two years.
- She goes there also. We are both in the clearing-room. I think we
- work too long hours; I've been badly with it. We go at half-past
- five, give over at half-past nine. I'm now just come home. We
- sometimes stay till twelve. We are obliged to work over-hours. I
- have 4_s._ a week; that is, for staying from six till seven. They
- pay for over-hours besides. I asked to come away one night,
- lately, at eight o'clock, being ill; I was told if I went I must
- not come again. I am not well now. I can seldom eat any breakfast;
- my appetite is very bad. I have had a bad cold for a week.'
-
- "Father: 'I believe him to be ill from being over-worked. My
- little girl came home the other day, cruelly beaten. I took her
- to Mr. Milnes; did not see him, but showed Mrs. Milnes the marks.
- I thought of taking it before a magistrate, but was advised
- to let it drop. They might have turned both my children away.
- That man's name is Blagg; he is always strapping the children.
- I shan't let the boy go to them much longer; I shall try to
- apprentice him; it's killing him by inches; he falls asleep
- over his food at night. I saw an account of such things in the
- newspaper, and thought how true it was of my own children.'
-
- "Mother: 'I have worked in the same mills myself. The same man
- was there then. I have seen him behave shocking to the children.
- He would take 'em by the hair of the head and drag 'em about the
- room. He has been there twelve years. There's a many young ones
- in that hot room. There's six of them badly now, with bad eyes
- and sick-headache. This boy of ours has always been delicate
- from a child. His appetite is very bad now; he does not eat his
- breakfast sometimes for two or three days together. The little
- girl bears it well; she is healthy. I should prefer their coming
- home at seven, without additional wages. The practice of working
- over-hours has been constantly pursued at Milnes's factory.'
-
- "John Fortesque, at his own house, nine P.M. 'I am an overlooker
- in this factory. We have about one hundred hands. Forty quite
- children; most of the remainder are young women. Our regular
- day is from six to seven. It should be an hour for dinner, but
- it is only half an hour. I don't know how it comes so. We have
- had some bad men in authority who made themselves big; it is
- partly the master. No time is allowed for tea or breakfast;
- there used to be a quarter of an hour for each; it's altered
- now. We call it twelve hours a day. Over-time is paid for extra.
- When we are busy we work over-hours. Our present time is till
- half-past nine. It has been so all winter, and since to this
- time. We have some very young ones; as young as eight. I don't
- like to take them younger; they're not able to do our work. We
- have three doubling-rooms, a clearing-room, and a gassing-room.
- We have about forty in the clearing-room. We occasionally find
- it necessary to make a difference as to the time of keeping
- some of the children. We have done so several times. Master has
- said: Pick out the youngest, and let them go, and get some of
- the young women to take their places. I am not the overlooker
- to the clearing-room. Blagg is overlooker there; there has been
- many complaints against him. He's forced to be roughish in order
- to keep his place. If he did not keep the work going on properly
- there would be some one to take his place who would. There are
- some children so obstinate and bad they must be punished. A strap
- is used. Beating is necessary, on account of their being idle.
- We find it out often in this way: we give them the same number
- of bobbins each; when the number they ought to finish falls off,
- then they're corrected. They would try the patience of any man.
- It is not from being tired, I think. It happens as often in the
- middle of the day as at other times. I don't like the beating
- myself; I would rather there were little deductions in their
- earnings for these offences. I am sure the children would not
- like to have any of their earnings stopped; I am sure they would
- mind it. From what I have heard parents say about their children
- when at work, I am sure they (the parents) would prefer this
- mode of correction; and, I think, it would have an effect on the
- children. At the factory of Messrs. Mills and Elliot they go on
- working all the night as well as day. I believe them to have done
- so for the last year and a half; they have left it off about a
- week. (_A respectable female here entered with a petition against
- negro-slavery; after she was gone, Mr. Fortesque continued._) I
- think home slavery as bad as it can be abroad; worst of anywhere
- in the factories. The hours we work are much too long for young
- people. Twelve hours' work is enough for young or old, confined
- in a close place. The work is light, but it's standing so long
- that tires them. I have been here about two years; I have seen
- bad effects produced on people's health by it, but not to any
- great degree. It must be much worse at Mills and Elliot's;
- working night as well as day, the rooms are never clear of
- people's breaths. We set our windows open when we turn the hands
- out. The gas, too, which they use at night, makes it worse.'"
-
-The italicised parenthesis is, _bonâ fide_, a part of the Report,
-as may be proved by consulting the parliamentary document. The
-_respectable female_ was probably the original of Dickens's Mrs.
-Jellaby.
-
-Read these references to a case of barbarity in a factory at Wigan:—
-
- _Extract from a speech made by Mr. Grant, a Manchester spinner,
- at a meeting held at Chorlton-upon-Medlock; reported in the
- Manchester Courier of 20th April, 1833._
-
- "Much was said of the black slaves and their chains. No doubt
- they were entitled to freedom, but were there no slaves except
- those of sable hue? Has slavery no sort of existence among
- children of the factories? Yes, and chains were sometimes
- introduced, though those chains might not be forged of iron. He
- would name an instance of this kind of slavery, which took place
- at Wigan. A child, not ten years of age, having been late at
- the factory one morning, had, as a punishment, a rope put round
- its neck, to which a weight of twenty pounds was attached; and,
- thus burdened like a galley-slave, it was compelled to labour
- for a length of time in the midst of an impure atmosphere and a
- heated room. [Loud cries of, Shame!] The truth of this has been
- denied by Mr. Richard Potter, the member for Wigan; but he (the
- speaker) reiterated its correctness. He has seen the child; and
- its mother's eyes were filled with tears while she told him this
- shocking tale of infant suffering."
-
- _Extract from a speech made by Mr. Oastler, on the occasion of a
- meeting at the City of London Tavern; reported in the Times, of
- the 25th of February, 1833._
-
- "In a mill at Wigan, the children, for any slight neglect, were
- loaded with weights of twenty pounds, passed over their shoulders
- and hanging behind their backs. Then there was a murderous
- instrument called a billy-roller, about eight feet long and one
- inch and a half in diameter, with which many children had been
- knocked down, and in some instances murdered by it."
-
- _Extract from a speech made by Mr. Oastler, at a meeting held in
- the theatre at Bolton, and reported in the Bolton Chronicle, of
- the 30th of March, 1833._
-
- "In one factory they have a door which covers a quantity of cold
- water, in which they plunge the sleepy victim to awake it. In
- Wigan they tie a great weight to their backs. I knew the Russians
- made the Poles carry iron weights in their exile to Siberia, but
- it was reserved for Christian England thus to use an infant."
-
-Rowland Detroiser deposed before the Central Board of Commissioners,
-concerning the treatment of children in the cotton factories:—
-
- "'The children employed in a cotton-factory labour, are not
- all under the control or employed by the proprietor. A very
- considerable number is employed and paid by the spinners and
- stretchers, when there are stretchers. These are what are called
- piecers and scavengers; the youngest children being employed
- in the latter capacity, and as they grow up, for a time in the
- scavengers and piecers. In coarse mills, that is, mills in which
- low numbers of yarn are spun, the wages of the scavengers is
- commonly from 1_s._ 6_d._ to 2_s._ 6_d._, according to size and
- ability. The men do not practise the system of fining, generally
- speaking, and especially toward these children. The sum which
- they earn is so small it would be considered by many a shame to
- make it less. They do not, however, scruple to give them a good
- bobbying, as it is called; that is, beating them with a rope
- thickened at one end, or, in some few brutal instances, with the
- combined weapons of fist and foot.'
-
- "'But this severity, you say, is practised toward the children
- who are employed by the men, and not employed by the masters?'
- 'Yes.'
-
- "'And the men inflict the punishment?' 'Yes.'
-
- "'Not the overlookers?' 'Not in these instances.'
-
- "'But how do you reconcile your statement with the fact that
- the men have been the principal complainers of the cruelties
- practised toward the children, and also the parties who are most
- active in endeavouring to obtain for the children legislative
- protection?' 'My statement is only fact. I do not profess to
- reconcile the apparent inconsistency. The men are in some measure
- forced by circumstances into the practice of that severity of
- which I have spoken.'
-
- "'Will you explain these circumstances?' 'The great object in a
- cotton mill is to turn as much work off as possible, in order
- to compensate by quantity for the smallness of the profit. To
- that end every thing is made subservient. There are two classes
- of superintendents in those establishments. The first class are
- what are called managers, from their great power and authority.
- Their especial business is to watch over the whole concern, and
- constantly to attend to the quantity and quality of the yarn,
- &c. turned off. To these individuals the second class, called
- overlookers, are immediately responsible for whatever is amiss.
- The business of overlookers is to attend to particular rooms and
- classes of hands, for the individual conduct of which they are
- held responsible. These individuals, in some mills, are paid in
- proportion to the quantity of work turned off; in all, they are
- made responsible for that quantity, as well as for the quality;
- and as the speed of each particular machine is known, nothing
- is more easy than to calculate the quantity which it ought to
- produce. This quantity is the maximum; the minimum allowed is
- the least possible deficiency, certain contingencies being
- taken into account. In those mills in which the overlookers are
- paid in proportion to the quantity of work turned off, interest
- secures the closest attention to the conduct of every individual
- under them; and in other mills, fear of losing their places
- operates to produce the same effect. It is one continual system
- of driving; and, in order to turn off as great a quantity of
- work as is possible, the manager drives the overlookers, and
- the overlookers drive the men. Every spinner knows that he must
- turn off the average quantity of work which his wheels are
- capable of producing, or lose his place if deficiencies are
- often repeated; and consequently, the piecers and scavengers are
- drilled, in their turns, to the severest attention. On their
- constant attention, as well as his own, depends the quantity of
- work done. So that it is not an exaggeration to say, that their
- powers of labour are subjected to the severity of an undeviating
- exaction. A working man is estimated in these establishments
- in proportion to his physical capacity rather than his moral
- character, and therefore it is not difficult to infer what must
- be the consequences. It begets a system of debasing tyranny in
- almost every department, the most demoralizing in its effects.
- Kind words are godsends in many cotton factories, and oaths
- and blows the usual order of the day. The carder must produce
- the required quantity of drawing and roving; the spinner, the
- required quantity of yarn; a system of overbearing tyranny is
- adopted toward everybody under them; they are cursed into the
- required degree of attention, and blows are resorted to with the
- children when oaths fail, and sometimes even before an oath
- has been tried. In short, the men must do work enough, or lose
- their places. It is a question between losing their places and
- the exercise of severity of discipline in all cases; between
- starvation and positive cruelty, in many. There are exceptions,
- but my conviction is that they are comparatively few indeed. To
- me the whole system has always appeared one of tyranny."
-
-Mr. Abraham Whitehead, clothier, of Scholes, near Holmfirth, examined
-by Parliamentary Committee:—
-
- "'What has been the treatment which you have observed that these
- children have received at the mills, to keep them attentive for
- so many hours, at so early ages?' 'They are generally cruelly
- treated; so cruelly treated that they dare not, hardly for their
- lives, be too late at their work in the morning. When I have
- been at the mills in the winter season, when the children are at
- work in the evening, the very first thing they inquire is, "What
- o'clock is it?" If we should answer, "Seven," they say, "Only
- seven! it is a great while to ten, but we must not give up till
- ten o'clock, or past." They look so anxious to know what o'clock
- it is that I am convinced the children are fatigued, and think
- that, even at seven, they have worked too long. My heart has
- been ready to bleed for them when I have seen them so fatigued,
- for they appear in such a state of apathy and insensibility as
- really not to know whether they are doing their work or not. They
- usually throw a bunch of ten or twelve cordings across the hand,
- and take one off at a time; but I have seen the bunch entirely
- finished, and they have attempted to take off another, when they
- have not had a cording at all; they have been so fatigued as not
- to know whether they were at work or not.'
-
- "'Do they frequently fall into errors and mistakes in piecing
- when thus fatigued?' 'Yes; the errors they make when thus
- fatigued are, that instead of placing the cording in this way,
- (describing it,) they are apt to place them obliquely, and that
- causes a flying, which makes bad yarn; and when the billy-spinner
- sees that, he takes his strap, or the billy-roller, and says,
- "Damn thee, close it; little devil, close it;" and they strike
- the child with the strap or billy roller.'
-
- "'You have noticed this in the after part of the day more
- particularly?' 'It is a very difficult thing to go into a mill in
- the latter part of the day, particularly in winter, and not to
- hear some of the children crying for being beaten for this very
- fault.'
-
- "'How are they beaten?' 'That depends on the humanity of the
- slubber or billy-spinner. Some have been beaten so violently that
- they have lost their lives in consequence of being so beaten;
- and even a young girl has had the end of a billy-roller jammed
- through her cheek.'
-
- "'What is the billy-roller?' 'A heavy rod of from two to three
- yards long, and of two inches in diameter, and with an iron
- pivot at each end. It runs on the top of the cording, over the
- feeding-cloth. I have seen them take the billy-roller and rap
- them on the head, making their heads crack so that you might have
- heard the blow at a distance of six or eight yards, in spite of
- the din and rolling of the machinery. Many have been knocked down
- by the instrument. I knew a boy very well, of the name of Senior,
- with whom I went to school; he was struck with a billy-roller
- on the elbow; it occasioned a swelling; he was not able to work
- more than three or four weeks after the blow; and he died in
- consequence. There was a woman in Holmfirth who was beaten very
- much: I am not quite certain whether on the head; and she lost
- her life in consequence of being beaten with a billy-roller.
- That which was produced (showing one) is not the largest size;
- there are some a foot longer than that; it is the most common
- instrument with which these poor little pieceners are beaten,
- more commonly than with either stick or strap.'
-
- "'How is it detached from the machinery?' 'Supposing this to be
- the billy-frame, (describing it,) at each end there is a socket
- open; the cording runs underneath here, just in this way, and
- when the billy-spinner is angry, and sees the little piecener has
- done wrong, he takes off this and says, "Damn thee, close it."'
-
- "'You have seen the poor children in this situation?' 'I have
- seen them frequently struck with the billy-roller; I have seen
- one so struck as to occasion its death; but I once saw a piecener
- struck in the face by a billy-spinner with his hand, until its
- nose bled very much; and when I said, "Oh dear, I would not
- suffer a child of mine to be treated thus," the man has said "How
- the devil do you know but what he deserved it? What have you to
- do with it?"'"
-
-But the most complete evidence in regard to the slavery in the
-factories was that given to the Parliamentary Committee, by a man
-named Peter Smart, whose experience and observation as a slave and a
-slave-driver in the factories of Scotland, enabled him to substantiate
-all the charges made against the system. His history possesses the
-deepest interest, and should be attentively perused:—
-
- "'Where do you reside?' 'At Dundee.'
-
- "'What age are you?' 'Twenty-seven.'
-
- "'What is your business?' 'An overseer of a flax-mill.'
-
- "'Have you worked in a mill from your youth?' 'Yes, since I was
- five years of age.'
-
- "'Had you a father and mother in the country at that time?' 'My
- mother stopped in Perth, about eleven miles from the mill, and my
- father was in the army.'
-
- "'Were you hired for any length of time when you went?' 'Yes, my
- mother got 15_s._ for six years, I having my meat and clothes.'
-
- "'At whose mill?' 'Mr. Andrew Smith's, at Gateside.'
-
- "'Is that in Fifeshire?' 'Yes.'
-
- "'What were your hours of labour, do you recollect, in that
- mill?' 'In the summer season we were very scarce of water.'
-
- "'But when you had sufficient water, how long did you work?' 'We
- began at four o'clock in the morning, and worked till ten or
- eleven at night; as long as we could stand upon our feet.'
-
- "'You hardly could keep up for that length of time?' 'No, we
- often fell asleep.'
-
- "'How were you kept to your work for that length of time; were
- you chastised?' 'Yes, very often, and very severely.'
-
- "'How long was this ago?' 'It is between twenty-one and
- twenty-two years since I first went.'
-
- "'Were you kept in the premises constantly?' 'Constantly.'
-
- "'Locked up?' 'Yes, locked up.'
-
- "'Night and day?' 'Night and day; I never went home while I was
- at the mill.'
-
- "'Was it possible to keep up your activity for such a length of
- time as that?' 'No, it was impossible to do it; we often fell
- asleep.'
-
- "'Were not accidents then frequently occurring at that mill
- from over-fatigue?' 'Yes, I got my hands injured there by the
- machinery.'
-
- "'Have you lost any of your fingers?' 'Yes, I have lost one, and
- the other hand is very much injured.'
-
- "'At what time of the night was that when your hands became thus
- injured?' 'Twilight, between seven and eight o'clock.'
-
- "'Do you attribute that accident to over-fatigue and drowsiness?'
- 'Yes, and to a want of knowledge of the machinery. I was only
- five years old when I went to the mills, and I did not know the
- use of the different parts of the machinery.'
-
- "'Did you ever know any other accident happen in that mill?'
- 'Yes, there was a girl that fell off her stool when she was
- piecing; she fell down and was killed on the spot.'
-
- "'Was that considered by the hands in the mill to have been
- occasioned by drowsiness and excessive fatigue?' 'Yes.'
-
- "'How old were you at the time this took place?' 'I don't
- know, for I have been so long in the mills that I have got no
- education, and I have forgot the like of those things.'
-
- "'Have you any recollection of what the opinions of the people in
- the mill were at that time as to the cause of the accident?' 'I
- heard the rest of them talking about it, and they said that it
- was so. We had long stools that we sat upon then, old-fashioned;
- we have no such things as those now.'
-
- "'Is that the only accident that you have known to happen in that
- mill?' 'There was a boy, shortly before I got my fingers hurt,
- that had his fingers hurt in the same way that I had.'
-
- "'Was there any other killed?' 'There was one killed, but I could
- not say how it was; but she was killed in the machinery.'
-
- "'Has any accident happened in that mill during the last twelve
- years?' 'I could not say; it is twelve years since I left it.'
-
- "'Is that mill going on still?' 'Yes.'
-
- "'Speaking of the hours that you had to labour there, will you
- state to this committee the effect it had upon you?' 'It had a
- very great effect upon me; I was bad in my health.'
-
- "'Were you frequently much beaten, in order to keep you up to
- your labour?' 'Yes; very often beat till I was bloody at the
- mouth and at the nose, by the overseer and master too.'
-
- "'How did they beat you?' 'With their hands and with a leather
- thong.'
-
- "'Were the children, generally speaking, treated as you have
- stated you were?' 'Yes; generally; there are generally fifteen
- boys in one, and a number of girls in the other; they were kept
- separately.'
-
- "'You say you were locked up night and day?' 'Yes.'
-
- "'Do the children ever attempt to run away?' 'Very often.'
-
- "'Were they pursued and brought back again?' 'Yes, the overseer
- pursued them, and brought them back.'
-
- "'Did you ever attempt to run away?' 'Yes, I ran away twice.'
-
- "'And you were brought back?' 'Yes; and I was sent up to the
- master's loft, and thrashed with a whip for running away.'
-
- "'Were you bound to this man?' 'Yes, for six years.'
-
- "'By whom were you bound?' 'My mother got 15_s._ for the six
- years.'
-
- "'Do you know whether the children were, in point of fact,
- compelled to stop during the whole time for which they were
- engaged?' 'Yes, they were.'
-
- "'By law?' 'I cannot say by law; but they were compelled by the
- master; I never saw any law used there but the law of their own
- hands.'
-
- "'Does that practice of binding continue in Scotland now?' 'Not
- in the place I am in.'
-
- "'How long since it has ceased?' 'For the last two years there
- has been no engagement in Dundee.'
-
- "'Are they generally engagements from week to week, or from month
- to month?' 'From month to month.'
-
- "'Do you know whether a practice has prevailed of sending poor
- children, who are orphans, from workhouses and hospitals to that
- work?' 'There were fifteen, at the time I was there, came from
- Edinburgh Poorhouse.'
-
- "'Do you know what the Poorhouse in Edinburgh is?' 'It is just a
- house for putting poor orphans in.'
-
- "'Do you know the name of that establishment?' 'No.'
-
- "'Do you happen to know that these fifteen came to the mill from
- an establishment for the reception of poor orphans?' 'Yes.'
-
- "'How many had you at the mill?' 'Fifteen.'
-
- "'At what ages?' 'From 12 to 15.'
-
- "'Were they treated in a similar manner to yourself?' 'Yes, we
- were all treated alike; there was one treatment for all, from the
- oldest to the youngest.'
-
- "'Did not some of you attempt, not merely to get out of the
- mill, but out of the country?' 'Yes; I have known some go down
- to the boat at Dundee, in order to escape by that means, and the
- overseer has caught them there, and brought them back again.'
-
- "'Is there not a ferry there?' 'Yes.'
-
- "'When persons disembark there, they may embark on the ferry?'
- 'Yes.'
-
- "'Did your parents live in Dundee at this time?' 'No.'
-
- "'Had you any friends at Dundee?' 'No.'
-
- "'The fact is, that you had nobody that could protect you?' 'No,
- I had no protection; the first three years I was at the mill I
- never saw my mother at all; and when I got this accident with my
- hand she never knew of it.'
-
- "'Where did she reside at that time?' 'At Perth.'
-
- "'You say that your master himself was in the habit of treating
- you in the way you have mentioned?' 'Yes.'
-
- "'Describe what the treatment was?' 'The treatment was very bad;
- perhaps a box on the ear, or very frequently a kick with his
- foot.'
-
- "'Were you punished for falling asleep in that mill?' 'Yes, I
- have got my licks for it, and been punished very severely for it.'
-
- "'Where did you go to then?' 'I went to a mill in Argyleshire.'
-
- "'How many years were you in this mill of Mr. Andrew Smith's, of
- Gateside?' 'Eleven years.'
-
- "'What age were you, when you went to this mill in Argyleshire?'
- 'About 16.'
-
- "'You stated that you were bound to stay with Mr. Smith for six
- years; how came you then to continue with him the remaining five
- years?' 'At the end of those six years I got 3_l._ a year from my
- master, and found my own clothes out of that.'
-
- "'Were you then contented with your situation?' 'No, I cannot say
- that I was; but I did not know any thing of any other business.'
-
- "'You had not been instructed in any other business, and you did
- not know where you could apply for a maintenance?' 'No.'
-
- "'To whose mill did you then remove?' 'To Messrs. Duff, Taylor &
- Co., at Ruthven, Forfarshire.'
-
- "'What were your hours of labour there?' 'Fourteen hours.'
-
- "'Exclusive of the time for meals and refreshment?' 'Yes.'
-
- "'Was that a flax mill?' 'Yes.'
-
- "'Did you work for that number of hours both winter and summer?'
- 'Yes, both winter and summer.'
-
- "'How old were you at this time?' 'Sixteen.'
-
- "'Are you aware whether any increase was made in the number of
- hours of work, in the year 1819, by an agreement between the
- masters and the workmen?' 'No, I cannot say as to that.'
-
- "'You think there could not be much increase of your previous
- labour, whatever agreement might have been made upon the
- subject?' 'No, there could have been no increase made to that; it
- was too long for that.'
-
- "'Were the hands chastised up to their labour in that mill?'
- 'Yes.'
-
- "'That was the practice there also?' 'Yes.'
-
- "'Do you mean to state that you were treated with great cruelty
- at the age of 16, and that you still remain in the mill?' 'I was
- not beaten so severely as I was in Fifeshire.'
-
- "'You were not so beaten as to induce you to leave that mill?'
- 'If I had left it, I did not know where to go.'
-
- "'Did you try to get into any other occupation?' 'Yes, I went
- apprentice to a flax-dresser at that time.'
-
- "'What was the reason that you did not keep at it?' 'My hand was
- so disabled, that it was found I was not able to follow that
- business.'
-
- "'You found you could not get your bread at that business?' 'Yes.'
-
- "'Consequently, you were obliged to go back to the mills?' 'Yes.'
-
- "'Was it the custom, when you were 16 years of age, for the
- overseer to beat you?' 'Yes, the boys were often beaten very
- severely in the mill.'
-
- "'At this time you were hired for wages; how much had you?'
- 'Half-a-crown a week.'
-
- "'And your maintenance?' 'No, I maintained myself.'
-
- "'Is not that much lower than the wages now given to people of
- sixteen years of age?' 'I have a boy about sixteen that has 4_s._
- 6_d._ a week, but he is in a high situation; he is oiler of the
- machinery.'
-
- "'Besides, you have been injured in your hand by the accident to
- which you have alluded, and that probably might have interfered
- with the amount of your wages?' 'Yes.'
-
- "'What duty had you in the mill at this time, for the performance
- of which you received 2_s._ 6_d._ a week, when you were at Duff,
- Taylor & Co.'s?' 'I was a card-feeder.'
-
- "'Did your hand prevent you working at that time as well as other
- boys of the same age, in feeding the cards?' 'Yes, on the old
- system; I was not able to feed with a stick at that time; it is
- done away with now.'
-
- "'How long did you stay there?' 'About fifteen months.'
-
- "'How many hours did you work there?' 'Fourteen.'
-
- "'Do you mean that you worked fourteen hours actual labour?'
- 'Yes.'
-
- "'Was it a water-mill?' 'Yes.'
-
- "'Were you ever short of water?' 'We had plenty of water.'
-
- "'How long did you stop for dinner?' 'Half an hour.'
-
- "'What time had you for breakfast, or for refreshment in the
- afternoon?' 'We had no time for that.'
-
- "'Did you eat your breakfast and dinner in the mill then?' 'No,
- we went to the victualling house.'
-
- "'Was that some building attached to the mill?' 'Yes, at a a
- small distance from the mill.'
-
- "'Was it provided for the purpose of the mill?' 'Yes, we got our
- bread and water there.'
-
- "'Did you sleep in a bothy at Duff & Taylor's?' 'Yes.'
-
- "'Were you locked up in a bothy?' 'No.'
-
- "'What is a bothy?' 'It is a house with beds all round.'
-
- "'Is it not the practice for farm-servants, and others, who are
- unmarried, to sleep in such places?' 'I could not say as to that;
- I am not acquainted with the farm system.'
-
- "'To what mill did you next go?' 'To Mr. Webster's, at Battus
- Den, within eleven miles of Dundee.'
-
- "'In what situation did you act there?' 'I acted as an overseer.'
-
- "'At 17 years of age?' 'Yes.'
-
- "'Did you inflict the same punishment that you yourself had
- experienced?' 'I went as an overseer; not as a slave, but as a
- slave-driver.'
-
- "'What were the hours of labour in that mill?' 'My master told
- me that I had to produce a certain quantity of yarn; the hours
- were at that time fourteen; I said that I was not able to produce
- the quantity of yarn that was required; I told him if he took
- the timepiece out of the mill I would produce that quantity, and
- after that time I found no difficulty in producing the quantity.'
-
- "'How long have you worked per day in order to produce the
- quantity your master required?' 'I have wrought nineteen hours.'
-
- "'Was this a water-mill?' 'Yes, water and steam both.'
-
- "'To what time have you worked?' 'I have seen the mill going till
- it was past 12 o'clock on the Saturday night.'
-
- "'So that the mill was still working on the Sabbath morning.'
- 'Yes.'
-
- "'Were the workmen paid by the piece, or by the day?' 'No, all
- had stated wages.'
-
- "'Did not that almost compel you to use great severity to the
- hands then under you?' 'Yes; I was compelled often to beat them,
- in order to get them to attend to their work, from their being
- overwrought.'
-
- "'Were not the children exceedingly fatigued at that time?' 'Yes,
- exceedingly fatigued.'
-
- "'Were the children bound in the same way in that mill?' 'No;
- they were bound from one year's end to another, for twelve
- months.'
-
- "'Did you keep the hands locked up in the same way in that mill?'
- 'Yes, we locked up the mill; but we did not lock the bothy.'
-
- "'Did you find that the children were unable to pursue their
- labour properly to that extent?' 'Yes; they have been brought to
- that condition, that I have gone and fetched up the doctor to
- them, to see what was the matter with them, and to know whether
- they were able to rise, or not able to rise; they were not at all
- able to rise; we have had great difficulty in getting them up.'
-
- "'When that was the case, how long have they been in bed,
- generally speaking?' 'Perhaps not above four or five hours in
- their beds. Sometimes we were very ill-plagued by men coming
- about the females' bothy.'
-
- "'Were your hands principally girls?' 'Girls and boys all
- together; we had only a very few boys.'
-
- "'Did the boys sleep in the girls' bothy?' 'Yes, all together.'
-
- "'Do you mean to say that there was only one bothy for the girls
- and for the boys who worked there?' 'Yes.'
-
- "'What age were those girls and boys?' 'We had them from 8 to 20
- years of age; and the boys were from 10 to 14, or thereabouts.'
-
- "'You spoke of men who came about the bothy; did the girls expect
- them?' 'Yes; of course they had their sweethearts.'
-
- "'Did they go into the bothy?' 'Yes; and once I got a sore
- beating from one of them, for ordering him out of the bothy.'
-
- "'How long were you in that mill?' 'Three years and nine months.'
-
- "'And where did you go to next?' 'To Messrs. Anderson & Company,
- at Moneyfieth, about six miles from Dundee.'
-
- "'What were your hours of labour there?' 'Fifteen hours.'
-
- "'Exclusive of the hour for refreshment?' 'Yes; we seldom stopped
- for refreshment there.'
-
- "'You worked without any intermission at all, frequently?' 'Yes;
- we made a turn-about.'
-
- "'Explain what you mean by a turn-about?' 'We let them out by
- turns in the days.'
-
- "'How long did you let one go out?' 'Just as short a time as they
- could have to take their victuals in.'
-
- "'What were the ages of the children principally employed in that
- place?' 'From about 12 to 20; they were all girls that I had
- there, except one boy, and I think he was 8 years of age.'
-
- "'Was this a flax-mill?' 'Yes, all flax.'
-
- "'Did you find that the children there were exceedingly
- distressed with their work?' 'Yes; for the mill being in the
- country, we were very scarce of workers, and the master often
- came out and compelled them by flattery to go and work half the
- night after their day's labour, and then they had only the other
- half to sleep.'
-
- "'You mean that the master induced them by offering them extra
- wages to go to work half the night?' 'Yes.'
-
- "'Was that very prejudicial to the girls so employed?' 'Yes; I
- have seen some girls that were working half the night, that have
- fainted and fallen down at their work, and have had to be carried
- out.'
-
- "'Did you use severity in that mill?' 'No, I was not very severe
- there.'
-
- "'You find, perhaps, that the girls do not require that severity
- that the boys do?' 'Yes.'
-
- "'How large was that mill?' 'There were only eighteen of us
- altogether.'
-
- "'From what you have seen, should you say that the treatment of
- the children and the hours of labour are worse in the small or in
- the large mills?' 'I could not answer that question.'
-
- "'Have you ever been in any large mill?' 'Yes, I am in one just
- now, Mr. Baxter's.'
-
- "'Is the treatment of the children better in that large mill than
- in the smaller mills in which you have been usually?' 'There is
- little difference; the treatment is all one.'
-
- "'To whose mill did you next go?' 'To Messrs. Baxter & Brothers,
- at Dundee.'
-
- "'State the hours of labour which you worked when you were there,
- when trade was brisk?' 'Thirteen hours and twenty minutes.'
-
- "'What time was allowed for meals?' 'Fifty minutes each day.'
-
- "'Have you found that the system is getting any better now?' 'No,
- the system is getting no better with us.'
-
- "'Is there as much beating as there was?' 'There is not so much
- in the licking way.'
-
- "'But it is not entirely abolished, the system of chastisement?'
- 'No, it is far from that.'
-
- "'Do you think that, where young children are employed, that
- system ought, or can be, entirely dispensed with, of giving
- some chastisement to the children of that age?' 'They would not
- require chastisement if they had shorter daily work.'
-
- "'Do you mean to state that they are only chastised because
- through weariness they are unable to attend to their work, and
- that they are not chastised for other faults and carelessness as
- well?' 'There may be other causes besides, but weariness is the
- principal fault.'
-
- "'Does not that over-labour induce that weariness and incapacity
- to do the work, which brings upon them chastisement at other
- parts of the day as well as in the evening?' 'Yes; young girls,
- if their work go wrong, if they see me going round, and my
- countenance with the least frown upon it, they will begin crying
- when I go by.'
-
- "'Then they live in a state of perpetual alarm and suffering?'
- 'Yes.'
-
- "'Do you think that those children are healthy?' 'No, they are
- far from that; I have two girls that have been under me these
- two years; the one is 13 years, the other 15, and they are both
- orphans and sisters, and both one size, and they very seldom are
- working together, because the one or the other is generally ill;
- and they are working for 3_s._ 6_d._ a week.'
-
- "'Have you the same system of locking up now?' 'Yes, locking up
- all day.'
-
- "'Are they locked up at night?' 'No; after they have left their
- work we have nothing more to do with them.'
-
- "'What time do they leave their work in the evening now?' 'About
- 20 minutes past 7.'
-
- "'What time do they go to it in the morning?' 'Five minutes
- before 5.'
-
- "'Do you conceive that that is at all consistent with the health
- of those children?' 'It is certainly very greatly against their
- health.'
-
- "'Is not the flax-spinning business in itself very unwholesome?'
- 'Very unwholesome.'
-
-So much for the slavery of the factories—a slavery which destroys
-human beings, body and soul. The fate of the helpless children
-condemned to such protracted, exhausting toil, under such demoralizing
-influences, with the lash constantly impending over them, and no
-alternative but starvation, is enough to excite the tears of all
-humane persons. That such a system should be tolerated in a land
-where a Christian church is a part of the government, is indeed
-remarkable—proving how greatly men are disinclined to practise what
-they profess.
-
-We cannot close this chapter upon the British factories without making
-a quotation from a work which, we fear, has been too little read in
-the United Kingdom—a fiction merely in construction, a truthful
-narrative in fact. We allude to "The Life and Adventures of Michael
-Armstrong, the Factory Boy," by Frances Trollope. Copious editions of
-this heart-rending story should be immediately issued by the British
-publishers. This passage, describing the visit of Michael Armstrong
-to the cotton factory, in company with Sir Matthew Dowling and Dr.
-Crockley, is drawn to the life:—
-
- "The party entered the building, whence—as all know who have
- done the like—every sight, every sound, every scent that kind
- nature has fitted to the organs of her children, so as to render
- the mere unfettered use of them a delight, are banished for ever
- and for ever. The ceaseless whirring of a million hissing wheels
- seizes on the tortured ear; and while threatening to destroy
- the delicate sense, seems bent on proving first, with a sort
- of mocking mercy, of how much suffering it can be the cause.
- The scents that reek around, from oil, tainted water, and human
- filth, with that last worst nausea arising from the hot refuse of
- atmospheric air, left by some hundred pairs of labouring lungs,
- render the act of breathing a process of difficulty, disgust, and
- pain. All this is terrible. But what the eye brings home to the
- heart of those who look round upon the horrid earthly hell, is
- enough to make it all forgotten; for who can think of villanous
- smells, or heed the suffering of the ear-racking sounds, while
- they look upon hundreds of helpless children, divested of every
- trace of health, of joyousness, and even of youth! Assuredly
- there is no exaggeration in this; for except only in their
- diminutive size, these suffering infants have no trace of it.
- Lean and distorted limbs, sallow and sunken cheeks, dim hollow
- eyes, that speak unrest and most unnatural carefulness, give to
- each tiny, trembling, unelastic form, a look of hideous premature
- old age.
-
- "But in the room they entered, the dirty, ragged, miserable
- crew were all in active performance of their various tasks; the
- overlookers, strap in hand, on the alert; the whirling spindles
- urging the little slaves who waited on them to movements as
- unceasing as their own; and the whole monstrous chamber redolent
- of all the various impurities that 'by the perfection of our
- manufacturing system' are converted into 'gales of Araby' for
- the rich, after passing, in the shape of certain poison, through
- the lungs of the poor. So Sir Matthew proudly looked about him
- and approved; and though it was athwart that species of haughty
- frown in which such dignity as his is apt to clothe itself, Dr.
- Crockley failed not to perceive that his friend and patron was
- in good humour, and likely to be pleased by any light and lively
- jestings in which he might indulge. Perceiving, therefore, that
- little Michael passed on with downcast eyes, unrecognised by any,
- he wrote upon a slip of paper, for he knew his voice could not be
- heard—'Make the boy take that bare-legged scavenger wench round
- the neck, and give her a kiss while she is next lying down, and
- let us see them sprawling together.'
-
- "Sir Matthew read the scroll, and grinned applause.
-
- "The miserable creature to whom the facetious doctor pointed, was
- a little girl about seven years old, whose office as 'scavenger'
- was to collect incessantly, from the machinery and from the
- floor, the flying fragments of cotton that might impede the work.
- In the performance of this duty, the child was obliged, from time
- to time, to stretch itself with sudden quickness on the ground,
- while the hissing machinery passed over her; and when this is
- skilfully done, and the head, body, and outstretched limbs
- carefully glued to the floor, the steady-moving but threatening
- mass may pass and repass over the dizzy head and trembling body
- without touching it. But accidents frequently occur; and many are
- the flaxen locks rudely torn from infant heads, in the process.
-
- "It was a sort of vague hope that something comical of this kind
- might occur, which induced Dr. Crockley to propose this frolic to
- his friend, and probably the same idea suggested itself to Sir
- Matthew likewise.
-
- "'I say, Master Michael!' vociferated the knight, in a scream
- which successfully struggled with the din, 'show your old
- acquaintance that pride has not got the upper hand of you in
- your fine clothes. Take scavenger No. 3, there, round the neck;
- now—now—now, as she lies sprawling, and let us see you give her
- a hearty kiss.'
-
- "The stern and steady machinery moved onward, passing over the
- body of the little girl, who owed her safety to the miserable
- leanness of her shrunken frame; but Michael moved not.
-
- "'Are you deaf, you little vermin?' roared Sir Matthew. 'Now
- she's down again. Do what I bid you, or, by the living God, you
- shall smart for it!'
-
- "Still Michael did not stir, neither did he speak; or if he
- did, his young voice was wholly inaudible, and the anger of Sir
- Matthew was demonstrated by a clenched fist and threatening brow.
- 'Where the devil is Parsons?' he demanded, in accents that poor
- Michael both heard and understood. 'Fine as he is, the strap will
- do him good.'
-
- "In saying this, the great man turned to reconnoitre the space
- he had traversed, and by which his confidential servant must
- approach, and found that he was already within a good yard of him.
-
- "'That's good—I want you, Parsons. Do you see this little
- rebel here, that I have dressed and treated like one of my own
- children? What d'ye think of his refusing to kiss Miss No. 3,
- scavenger, when I bid him?'
-
- "'The devil he does?' said the manager, grinning: 'we must see if
- we can't mend that. Mind your hits, Master Piecer, and salute the
- young lady when the mules go back, like a gentleman.'
-
- "Sir Matthew perceived that his favourite agent feared to enforce
- his first brutal command, and was forced, therefore, to content
- himself with seeing the oiled and grimy face of the filthy little
- girl in contact with that of the now clean and delicate-looking
- Michael. But he felt he had been foiled, and cast a glance upon
- his _protégé_, which seemed to promise that he would not forget
- it."
-
-Nor is the delineation, in the following verses, by Francis M. Blake,
-less truthful and touching:—
-
-THE FACTORY CHILD.
-
- Early one winter's morning,
- The weather wet and wild,
- Some hours before the dawning,
- A father call'd his child;
- Her daily morsel bringing,
- The darksome room he paced,
- And cried, "The bell is ringing—
- My hapless darling, haste."
-
- "Father, I'm up, but weary,
- I scarce can reach the door,
- And long the way and dreary—
- Oh, carry me once more!
- To help us we've no mother,
- To live how hard we try—
- They kill'd my little brother—
- Like him I'll work and die!"
-
- His feeble arms they bore her,
- The storm was loud and wild—
- God of the poor man, hear him!
- He prays, "Oh, save my child!"
- Her wasted form seem'd nothing—
- The load was in his heart;
- The sufferer he kept soothing,
- Till at the mill they part.
-
- The overlooker met her,
- As to the frame she crept,
- And with the thong he beat her,
- And cursed her as she wept.
- Alas! what hours of horror
- Made up her latest day!
- In toil, and pain, and sorrow,
- They slowly pass'd away.
-
- It seem'd, as she grew weaker,
- The threads the oftener broke,
- The rapid wheels ran quicker,
- And heavier fell the stroke.
- The sun had long descended,
- But night brought no repose:
- _Her_ day began and ended
- As her task-masters chose.
-
- Then to her little neighbour
- Her only cent she paid,
- To take her last hour's labour,
- While by her frame she laid.
- At last, the engine ceasing,
- The captives homeward flee,
- One thought her strength increasing—
- Her parent soon to see.
-
- She left, but oft she tarried,
- She fell, and rose no more,
- But by her comrades carried,
- She reach'd her father's door.
- All night with tortured feeling,
- He watch'd his speechless child;
- While close beside her kneeling,
- She knew him not, nor smiled.
-
- Again the loud bell's ringing,
- Her last perceptions tried,
- When, from her straw bed springing,
- "'Tis time!" she shriek'd, and—died.
- That night a chariot pass'd her,
- While on the ground she lay,
- The daughters of her master
- An evening visit pay;
- Their tender hearts were sighing,
- As negro wrongs were told,
- While the white slave was dying,
- Who gain'd their father's gold!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-SLAVERY IN THE BRITISH WORKSHOPS.
-
-
-When Captain Hugh Clapperton, the celebrated English traveller,
-visited Bello, the sultan of the Felatahs, at Sackatoo, he made
-the monarch some presents, in the name of his majesty the king of
-England. These were—two new blunderbusses, a pair of double-barrelled
-pistols, a pocket compass, an embroidered jacket, a scarlet bornonse,
-a pair of scarlet breeches, thirty-four yards of silk, two turban
-shawls, four pounds of cloves, four pounds of cinnamon, three cases
-of gunpowder with shot and balls, three razors, three clasp-knives,
-three looking-glasses, six snuff-boxes, a spy-glass, and a large
-tea-tray. The sultan said—"Every thing is wonderful, but you are the
-greatest curiosity of all!" and then added, "What can I give that is
-most acceptable to the king of England?" Clapperton replied—"The
-most acceptable service you can render to the king of England is to
-co-operate with his majesty in putting a stop to the slave-trade on the
-coast, as the king of England sends large ships to cruise there, for
-the sole purpose of seizing all vessels engaged in this trade, whose
-crews are thrown into prison, and of liberating the unfortunate slaves,
-on whom lands and houses are conferred, at one of our settlements in
-Africa." "What!" exclaimed the sultan, "have you no slaves in England?"
-"No: whenever a slave sets his foot in England, he is from that moment
-free," replied Clapperton. "What do you then do for servants?" inquired
-the sultan. "We hire them for a stated period, and give them regular
-wages; nor is any person in England allowed to strike another; and the
-very soldiers are fed, clothed, and paid by the government," replied
-the English captain. "God is great!" exclaimed the sultan. "You are
-a beautiful people." Clapperton had succeeded in putting a beautiful
-illusion upon the sultan's imagination, as some English writers have
-endeavoured to do among the civilized nations of the earth. If the
-sultan had been taken to England, to see the freedom of the "servants"
-in the workshops, perhaps he would have exclaimed—"God is great!
-Slaves are plenty."
-
-The condition of the apprentices in the British workshops is at
-least as bad as that of the children in the factories. According to
-the second report of the commissioners appointed by Parliament, the
-degrading system of involuntary apprenticeship—in many cases without
-the consent of parents—and merely according to the regulations of the
-brutal guardians of the workhouses, is general. The commissioners say—
-
- "That in some trades, those especially requiring skilled workmen,
- these apprentices are bound by legal indentures, usually at the
- age of fourteen, and for a term of seven years, the age being
- rarely younger, and the period of servitude very seldom longer;
- but by far the greater number are bound _without any prescribed
- legal forms_, and in almost all these cases they are required to
- serve their masters, _at whatever age they may commence their
- apprenticeship, until they attain the age of twenty-one_, in some
- instances in employments in which there is nothing deserving
- the name of skill to be acquired, and in other instances in
- employments in which they are taught to make only one particular
- part of the article manufactured: _so that at the end of their
- servitude they are altogether unable to make any one article of
- their trade in a complete state_. That a large proportion of
- these apprentices consist of orphans, or are the children of
- widows, or belong to the very poorest families, and frequently
- are apprenticed by boards of guardians.
-
- "That in these districts it is common for parents to borrow money
- of the employers, and to stipulate, by express agreement, to
- repay it from their children's wages; a practice which prevails
- likewise in Birmingham and Warrington: in most other places no
- evidence was discovered of its existence."—_Second Report of the
- Commissioners_, p. 195, 196.
-
-Here we have a fearful text on which to comment. In these few sentences
-we see the disclosure of a system which, if followed out and abused,
-must produce a state of slavery of the very worst and most oppressive
-character. To show that it _is_ thus abused, here are some extracts
-from the Reports on the Wolverhampton district, to which the Central
-Board of Commissioners direct special attention:—
-
- "The peculiar trade of the Wolverhampton district, with the
- exception of a very few large proprietors, is in the hands of
- a great number of small masters, who are personally known only
- to some of the foremen of the factors to whom they take their
- work, and scarcely one of whom is sufficiently important to have
- his name over his door or his workshop in front of a street.
- In the town of Wolverhampton alone there are of these small
- masters, for example, two hundred and sixty locksmiths, sixty
- or seventy key-makers, from twenty to thirty screwmakers, and a
- like number of latch, bolt, snuffer, tobacco-box, and spectacle
- frame and case makers. Each of these small masters, if they have
- not children of their own, generally employ from one to three
- apprentices."—_Horne, Report_; App. pt. ii. p. 2. s. 13 et seq.
-
-The workshops of the small masters are usually of the dirtiest, most
-dilapidated, and confined description, and situated in the most filthy
-and undrained localities, at the back of their wretched abodes.
-
- "There are two modes of obtaining apprentices in this district,
- namely, the legal one of application to magistrates or boards of
- guardians for sanction of indentures; and, secondly, the illegal
- mode of taking the children to be bound by an attorney, without
- any such reference to the proper authorities. There are many more
- bound by this illegal mode than by the former.
-
- "In all cases, the children, of whatever age, are bound till
- they attain the age of twenty-one years. If the child be only
- seven years of age, the period of servitude remains the same,
- however simple the process or nature of the trade to be learnt.
- During the first year or two, if the apprentice be very young,
- he is merely used to run errands, do dirty household work, nurse
- infants, &c.
-
- "If the master die before the apprentice attain the age of
- twenty-one years, the apprentice is equally bound as the servant
- of his deceased master's heirs, executors, administrators,
- and assigns—in fact, the apprentice is part of the deceased
- master's goods and chattels. Whoever, therefore, may carry on
- the trade, he is the servant of such person or persons until his
- manumission is obtained by reaching his one-and-twentieth year.
- The apprentice has no regular pocket-money allowed him by the
- master. Sometimes a few halfpence are given to him. An apprentice
- of eighteen or nineteen years of age often has 2_d._ or 3_d._ a
- week given him, but never as a rightful claim."—_Second Report
- of Commissioners._
-
- "Among other witnesses, the superintendent registrar states that
- in those trades particularly in which the work is by the piece,
- the growth of the children is injured; that in these cases more
- especially their strength is over-taxed for profit. One of the
- constables of the town says that 'there are examples without
- number in the place, of deformed men and boys; their backs or
- their legs, and often both, grow wrong; the backs grow out and
- the legs grow in at the knees—hump-backed and knock-kneed.
- There is most commonly only one leg turned in—a K leg; it is
- occasioned by standing all day for years filing at a vice; the
- hind leg grows in—the leg that is hindermost. Thinks that among
- the adults of the working classes of Willenhall, whose work is
- all forging and filing, one-third of the number are afflicted
- with hernia,' &c."—_Horne, Evidence_, p. 28, No. 128.
-
-As the profits of many of the masters are small, it may be supposed
-that the apprentices do not get the best of food, shelter, and
-clothing. We have the evidence of Henry Nicholls Payne, superintendent
-registrar of Wolverhampton, Henry Hill, Esq., magistrate, and Paul Law,
-of Wolverhampton, that it is common for masters to buy offal meat, and
-the meat of animals that have died from all manner of causes, for the
-food of apprentices. The clothing of these poor creatures is but thin
-tatters for all seasons. The apprentices constantly complain that they
-do not get enough to eat.
-
- "They are frequently fed," says the sub-commissioner, "especially
- during the winter season, on red herrings, potatoes, bread with
- lard upon it, and have not always sufficient even of this.
-
- "Their living is poor; they have not enough to eat. Did not know
- what it was to have butcher's meat above once a week; often a red
- herring was divided between two for dinner. The boys are often
- clemmed, (almost starved;) have often been to his house to ask
- for a bit of pudding—are frequent complaints. In some trades,
- particularly in the casting-shops of founderies, in the shops in
- which general forge or smith's work is done, and in the shops
- of the small locksmiths, screwmakers, &c., there are no regular
- meal-hours, but the children swallow their food as they can,
- during their work, often while noxious fumes or dust are flying
- about, and perhaps with noxious compositions in their unwashed
- hands."
-
-The apprentices employed in nail-making are described as so many
-poorly fed and poorly clad slaves. Almost the whole population of
-Upper Sedgley and Upper Gormal, and nearly one-half of the population
-of Coseley, are employed in nail-making. The nails are made at forges
-by the hammer, and these forges, which are the workshops, are usually
-at the backs of the wretched hovels in which the work-people reside.
-"The best kind of forges," says Mr. Horne, "are little brick shops, of
-about fifteen feet long and twelve feet wide, in which seven or eight
-individuals constantly work together, with no ventilation except the
-door, and two slits, or loopholes, in the wall; but the great majority
-of these work-places are very much smaller, (about ten feet long by
-nine wide,) filthily dirty; and on looking in upon one of them when
-the fire is not lighted, presents the appearance of a dilapidated
-coal-hole, or little black den." In these places children are first put
-to labour from the ages of seven to eight, where they continue to work
-daily, from six o'clock in the morning till seven or eight at night;
-and on weigh-days—the days the nails are taken to the factors—from
-three or four in the morning till nine at night. They gradually advance
-in the number of nails they are required to make per day, till they
-arrive at the _stint_ of one thousand. A girl or boy of from ten to
-twelve years of age continually accomplishes this arduous task from day
-to day, and week to week. Their food at the same time is, in general,
-insufficient, their clothing miserable, and the wretchedness of their
-dwellings almost unparalleled.
-
- "Throughout the long descent of the main roadway, or rather
- sludgeway, of Lower Gormal," says Mr. Horne, "and throughout the
- very long winding and straggling roadway of Coseley, I never saw
- one abode of a working family which had the least appearance of
- comfort or wholesomeness, while the immense majority were of
- the most wretched and sty-like description. The effect of these
- unfavourable circumstances is greatly to injure the health of the
- children, and to stop their growth; and it is remarkable that
- the boys are more injured than the girls, because the girls are
- not put to work as early as the boys by two years or more. They
- appear to bear the heat of the forges better, and they sometimes
- even become strong by their work."
-
-The children employed in nail-making, in Scotland, evince the nature
-of their toil by their emaciated looks and stunted growth. They are
-clothed in apparel in which many paupers would not dress; and they are
-starved into quickness at their work, as their meals depend on the
-quantity of work accomplished.
-
-In the manufacture of earthenware there are many young slaves employed.
-The mould-runners are an especially pitiable class of workmen; they
-receive on a mould the ware as it is formed by the workmen, and carry
-it to the stove-room, where both mould and ware are arranged on shelves
-to dry. The same children liberate the mould when sufficiently dry,
-and carry it back to receive a fresh supply of ware, to be in like
-manner deposited on the shelves. They are also generally required by
-the workmen to "wedge their clay;" that is, to lift up large lumps of
-clay, which are to be thrown down forcibly on a hard surface to free
-the clay from air and to render it more compact. Excepting when thus
-engaged, they are constantly "on the run" from morning till night,
-always carrying a considerable weight. These children are generally
-pale, thin, weak, and unhealthy.
-
-In the manufacture of glass the toil and suffering of the apprentices,
-as recorded in the evidence before the commissioners, are extreme. One
-witness said—
-
- "From his experience he thinks the community has no idea of what
- a boy at a bottle-work goes through; 'it would never be allowed,
- if it were known;' he knows himself; he has been carried home
- from fair fatigue; and on two several occasions, when laid in
- bed, could not rest, and had to be taken out and laid on the
- floor. These boys begin work on Sabbath evenings at ten o'clock,
- and are not at home again till between one and three on Monday
- afternoon. The drawing the bottles out of the arches is a work
- which no child should be allowed, on any consideration, to do;
- he himself has been obliged several times to have planks put in
- to walk on, which have caught fire under the feet; and a woollen
- cap over the ears and always mits on the hands; and a boy cannot
- generally stop in them above five minutes. There is no man that
- works in a bottle-work, but will corroborate the statement that
- such work checks the growth of the body; the irregularity and the
- unnatural times of work cause the boys and men to feel in a sort
- of stupor or dulness from heavy sweats and irregular hours. The
- boys work harder than any man in the works; all will allow that.
- From their experience of the bad effect on the health, witness
- and five others left the work, and none but one ever went to a
- bottle-work after."
-
-The young females apprenticed to dressmakers suffer greatly from
-over-work and bad treatment, as has long been known. John Dalrymple,
-Esq., Assistant Surgeon, Royal London Ophthalmic Hospital, narrates the
-following case:—
-
- "A delicate and beautiful young woman, an orphan, applied at
- the hospital for very defective vision, and her symptoms were
- precisely as just described. Upon inquiry it was ascertained that
- she had been apprenticed to a milliner, and was in her last year
- of indentureship. Her working hours were eighteen in the day,
- occasionally even more; her meals were snatched with scarcely an
- interval of a few minutes from work, and her general health was
- evidently assuming a tendency to consumption. An appeal was made,
- by my directions, to her mistress for relaxation; but the reply
- was that, in the last year of her apprenticeship, her labours had
- become valuable, and that her mistress was entitled to them as a
- recompense for teaching. Subsequently a threat of appeal to the
- Lord Mayor, and a belief that a continuation of the occupation
- would soon render the apprentice incapable of labour, induced the
- mistress to cancel the indentures, and the victim was saved."
-
-Frederick Tyrrell, Esq., Surgeon to the London Ophthalmic Hospital, and
-to St. Thomas's Hospital, mentions a case equally distressing:—
-
- "A fair and delicate girl, about seventeen years of age, was
- brought to witness in consequence of total loss of vision. She
- had experienced the train of symptoms which have been detailed,
- to the fullest extent. On examination, both eyes were found
- disorganized, and recovery therefore was hopeless. She had been
- an apprentice as a dress-maker at the west end of the town; and
- some time before her vision became affected, her general health
- had been materially deranged from too close confinement and
- excessive work. The immediate cause of the disease in the eyes
- was excessive and continued application to making mourning. She
- stated that she had been compelled to remain without changing
- her dress for nine days and nights consecutively; that during
- this period she had been permitted only occasionally to rest on a
- mattrass placed on the floor, for an hour or two at a time; and
- that her meals were placed at her side, cut up, so that as little
- time as possible should be spent in their consumption. Witness
- regrets that he did not, in this and a few other cases nearly as
- flagrant and distressing, induce the sufferers to appeal to a
- jury for compensation."
-
-It may be asserted, without fear of successful contradiction, that,
-in proportion to the numbers employed, there are no occupations in
-which so much disease is produced as in dress-making. The report of a
-sub-commissioner states that it is a "serious aggravation of this evil,
-that the unkindness of the employer very frequently causes these young
-persons, when they become unwell, to conceal their illness, from the
-fear of being sent out of the house; and in this manner the disease
-often becomes increased in severity, or is even rendered incurable.
-Some of the principals are so cruel, as to object to the young women
-obtaining medical assistance."
-
-[Illustration: SLAVES OF THE NEEDLE.]
-
-The London Times, in an exceedingly able article upon "Seamstress
-Slavery," thus describes the terrible system:—
-
- "Granting that the negro gangs who are worked on the cotton
- grounds of the Southern States of North America, or in the sugar
- plantations of Brazil, are slaves, in what way should we speak
- of persons who are circumstanced in the manner we are about
- to relate? Let us consider them as inhabitants of a distant
- region—say of New Orleans—no matter about the colour of their
- skins, and then ask ourselves what should be our opinion of a
- nation in which such things are tolerated. They are of a sex
- and age the least qualified to struggle with the hardships of
- their lot—young women, for the most part, between sixteen and
- thirty years of age. As we would not deal in exaggerations, we
- would promise that we take them at their busy season, just as
- writers upon American slavery are careful to select the season
- of cotton-picking and sugar-crushing as illustrations of their
- theories. The young female slaves, then, of whom we speak, are
- worked in gangs, in ill-ventilated rooms, or rooms that are not
- ventilated at all; for it is found by experience that if air
- be admitted it brings with it "blacks" of another kind, which
- damage the work upon which the seamstresses are employed. Their
- occupation is to sew from morning till night and night till
- morning—stitch, stitch, stitch—without pause, without speech,
- without a smile, without a sigh. In the gray of the morning they
- must be at work, say at six o'clock, having a quarter of an hour
- allowed them for breaking their fast. The food served out to them
- is scanty and miserable enough, but still, in all probability,
- more than their fevered system can digest. We do not, however,
- wish to make out a case of starvation; the suffering is of
- another kind, equally dreadful of endurance. From six o'clock
- till eleven it is stitch, stitch. At eleven a small piece of dry
- bread is served to each seamstress, but still she must stitch
- on. At one o'clock, twenty minutes are allowed for dinner—a
- slice of meat and a potato, with a glass of toast-and-water to
- each workwoman. Then again to work—stitch, stitch, until five
- o'clock, when fifteen minutes are again allowed for tea. The
- needles are then set in motion once more—stitch, stitch, until
- nine o'clock, when fifteen minutes are allowed for supper—a
- piece of dry bread and cheese and a glass of beer. From nine
- o'clock at night until one, two, and three o'clock in the
- morning, stitch, stitch; the only break in this long period being
- a minute or two—just time enough to swallow a cup of strong tea,
- which is supplied lest the young people should 'feel sleepy.' At
- three o'clock A.M., to bed; at six o'clock A.M., out of it again
- to resume the duties of the following day. There must be a good
- deal of monotony in the occupation.
-
- "But when we have said that for certain months in the year these
- unfortunate young persons are worked in the manner we describe,
- we have not said all. Even during the few hours allotted
- to sleep—should we not rather say to a feverish cessation
- from toil—their miseries continue. They are cooped up in
- sleeping-pens, ten in a room which would perhaps be sufficient
- for the accommodation of two persons. The alternation is from the
- treadmill—and what a treadmill!—to the Black Hole of Calcutta.
- Not a word of remonstrance is allowed, or is possible. The
- seamstresses may leave the mill, no doubt, but what awaits them
- on the other side of the door?—starvation, if they be honest;
- if not, in all probability, prostitution and its consequence.
- They would scarcely escape from slavery that way. Surely this
- is a terrible state of things, and one which claims the anxious
- consideration of the ladies of England who have pronounced
- themselves so loudly against the horrors of negro slavery in the
- United States. Had this system of oppression against persons of
- their own sex been really exercised in New Orleans, it would
- have elicited from them many expressions of sympathy for the
- sufferers, and of abhorrence for the cruel task-masters who could
- so cruelly over-work wretched creatures so unfitted for the toil.
- It is idle to use any further mystification in the matter. The
- scenes of misery we have described exist at our own doors, and in
- the most fashionable quarters of luxurious London. It is in the
- dress-making and millinery establishments of the 'West-end' that
- the system is steadily pursued. The continuous labour is bestowed
- upon the gay garments in which the 'ladies of England' love to
- adorn themselves. It is to satisfy their whims and caprices that
- their wretched sisters undergo these days and nights of suffering
- and toil. It is but right that we should confess the fault
- does not lie so much at the door of the customers as with the
- principals of these establishments. The milliners and dressmakers
- of the metropolis will not employ hands enough to do the work.
- They increase their profits from the blood and life of the
- wretched creatures in their employ. Certainly the prices charged
- for articles of dress at any of the great West-end establishments
- are sufficiently high—as most English heads of families know to
- their cost—to enable the proprietors to retain a competent staff
- of work-people, and at the same time to secure a very handsome
- profit to themselves. Wherein, then, lies the remedy? Will the
- case of these poor seamstresses be bettered if the ladies of
- England abstain partially, or in great measure, from giving their
- usual orders to their usual houses? In that case it may be said
- some of the seamstresses will be dismissed to starvation, and
- the remainder will be over-worked as before. We freely confess
- we do not see our way through the difficulty; for we hold the
- most improbable event in our social arrangements to be the fact,
- that a lady of fashion will employ a second-rate instead of a
- first-rate house for the purchase of her annual finery. The
- leading milliners and dressmakers of London have hold of English
- society at both ends. They hold the ladies by their vanity and
- their love of fine clothes, and the seamstresses by what appears
- to be their interest and by their love of life. Now, love of fine
- clothes and love of life are two very strong motive springs of
- human action."
-
-In confirmation of this thrilling representation of the seamstress
-slavery in London, the following letter subsequently appeared in the
-Times:—
-
- "_To the Editor of the Times_:
-
- "Sir,—May I beg of you to insert this letter in your valuable
- paper at your earliest convenience, relative to the letters of
- the 'First Hand?' I can state, without the slightest hesitation,
- that they are perfectly true. My poor sister was apprenticed to
- one of those fashionable West-end houses, and my father paid the
- large sum of £40 only to procure for his daughter a lingering
- death. I was allowed to visit her during her illness; I found her
- in a very small room, which two large beds would fill. In this
- room there were six children's bedsteads, and these were each to
- contain three grown-up young women. In consequence of my sister
- being so ill, she was allowed, on payment of 5_s._ per week, a
- bed to herself—one so small it might be called a cradle. The
- doctor who attended her when dying, can authenticate this letter.
-
- "Apologizing for encroaching on your valuable time, I remain your
- obedient servant,
-
- A POOR CLERK."
-
-Many witnesses attest the ferocious bodily chastisement inflicted upon
-male apprentices in workshops:—
-
- "In Sedgley they are sometimes struck with a red-hot iron, and
- burned and bruised simultaneously; sometimes they have 'a flash
- of lightning' sent at them. When a bar of iron is drawn white-hot
- from the forge it emits fiery particles, which the man commonly
- flings in a shower upon the ground by a swing of his arm, before
- placing the bar upon the anvil. This shower is sometimes directed
- at the boy. It may come over his hands and face, his naked arms,
- or on his breast. If his shirt be open in front, which is usually
- the case, the red-hot particles are lodged therein, and he has
- to shake them out as fast as he can."—_Horne, Report_, p. 76, §
- 757. See also witnesses, p. 56, 1. 24; p. 59, 1. 54.
-
- "In Darlaston, however, the children appear to be very little
- beaten, and in Bilston there were only a few instances of cruel
- treatment: 'the boys are kicked and cuffed abundantly, but not
- with any vicious or cruel intention, and only with an idea that
- this is getting the work done.'"—Ibid. p. 62, 65, §§ 660, 688.
-
- "In Wednesbury the treatment is better than in any other town in
- the district. The boys are not generally subject to any severe
- corporal chastisement, though a few cases of ill-treatment
- occasionally occur. 'A few months ago an adult workman broke a
- boy's arm by a blow with a piece of iron; the boy went to school
- till his arm got well; his father and mother thought it a good
- opportunity to give him some schooling.'"—Ibid. _Evidence_, No.
- 331.
-
- "But the class of children in this district the most abused and
- oppressed are the apprentices, and particularly those who are
- bound to the small masters among the locksmiths, key and bolt
- makers, screwmakers, &c. Even among these small masters, there
- are respectable and humane men, who do not suffer any degree of
- poverty to render them brutal; but many of these men treat their
- apprentices not so much with neglect and harshness, as with
- ferocious violence, the result of unbridled passions, excited
- often by ardent spirits, acting on bodies exhausted by over-work,
- and on minds which have never received the slightest moral or
- religious culture, and which, therefore, never exercise the
- smallest moral or religious restraint."—Ibid.
-
-Evidence from all classes,—masters, journeymen, residents,
-magistrates, clergymen, constables, and, above all, from the mouths of
-the poor oppressed sufferers themselves, is adduced to a heart-breaking
-extent. The public has been excited to pity by Dickens's picture of
-Smike—in Willenhall, there are many Smikes.
-
- "— —, aged sixteen: 'His master stints him from six in
- the morning till ten and sometimes eleven at night, as much as
- ever he can do; and if he don't do it, his master gives him no
- supper, and gives him a good hiding, sometimes with a big strap,
- sometimes with a big stick. His master has cut his head open
- five times—once with a key and twice with a lock; knocked the
- corner of a lock into his head twice—once with an iron bolt, and
- once with an iron shut—a thing that runs into the staple. His
- master's name is — —, of Little London. There is another
- apprentice besides him, who is treated just as bad.'"—Ibid. p.
- 32, 1. 4.
-
- "— —, aged fifteen: 'Works at knob-locks with — —.
- Is a fellow-apprentice with — —. Lives in the house of his
- master. Is beaten by his master, who hits him sometimes with
- his fists, and sometimes with the file-haft, and sometimes with
- a stick—it's no matter what when he's a bit cross; sometimes
- hits him with the locks; has cut his head open four or five
- times; so he has his fellow apprentice's head. Once when he cut
- his head open with a key, thinks half a pint of blood run off
- him.'"—Ibid. p. 32, 1. 19.
-
- "— —, aged fourteen: 'Has been an in-door apprentice three
- years. Has no wages; nobody gets any wages for him. Has to serve
- till he is twenty-one. His master behaves very bad. His mistress
- behaves worse, like a devil; she beats him; knocks his head
- against the wall. His master goes out a-drinking, and when he
- comes back, if any thing's gone wrong that he (the boy) knows
- nothing about, he is beat all the same.'"—Ibid. p. 32, 1. 36.
-
- "— —, aged sixteen: 'His master sometimes hits him with his
- fist, sometimes kicks him; gave him the black eye he has got;
- beat him in bed while he was asleep, at five in the morning,
- because he was not up to work. He came up-stairs and set about
- him—set about him with his fist. Has been over to the public
- office, Brummagem, to complain; took a note with him, which was
- written for him; his brother gave it to the public office there,
- but they would not attend to it; they said they could do no good,
- and gave the note back. He had been beaten at that time with a
- whip-handle—it made wales all down his arms and back and all;
- everybody he showed it to said it was scandalous. Wishes he could
- be released from his master, who's never easy but when he's
- a-beating of me. Never has enough to eat at no time; ax him for
- more, he won't gie it me.'"—Ibid. p. 30, 1. 5.
-
- "— —, aged seventeen: 'Has no father or mother to take his
- part. His master once cut his head open with a flat file-haft,
- and used to pull his ears nearly off; they bled so he was obliged
- to go into the house to wipe them with a cloth,'"—Ibid. p. 37,
- 1. 7.
-
- "— —, aged fifteen: 'The neighbours who live agen the shop
- will say how his master beats him; beats him with a strap, and
- sometimes a nut-stick; sometimes the wales remain upon him for a
- week; his master once cut his eyelid open, cut a hole in it, and
- it bled all over his files that he was working with,'"—Ibid. p.
- 37, 1. 47.
-
- "— —, aged 18: 'His master once ran at him with a hammer,
- and drove the iron-head of the hammer into his side—he felt it
- for weeks; his master often knocks him down on the shop-floor;
- he can't tell what it's all for, no more than you can; don't
- know what it can be for unless it's this, his master thinks he
- don't do enough work for him. When he is beaten, his master
- does not lay it on very heavy, as some masters do, only beats
- him for five minutes at a time; should think that was enough,
- though.'"—_Horne, Evidence_, p. 37, 1. 57.
-
-All this exists in a Christian land! Surely telescopic philanthropists
-must be numerous in Great Britain. Wonderful to relate, there are many
-persons instrumental in sustaining this barbarous system, who profess
-a holy horror of slavery, and who seldom rise up or lie down without
-offering prayers on behalf of the African bondsmen, thousands of miles
-away. Verily, there are many people in this motley world so organized
-that they can scent corruption "afar off," but gain no knowledge of the
-foulness under their very noses.
-
-Henry Mayhew, in his "London Labour and the London Poor," gives some
-very interesting information in regard to the workshops in the great
-metropolis of the British Empire. "In the generality of trades,
-the calculation is that one-third of the hands are fully employed,
-one-third partially, and one-third unemployed throughout the year." The
-wages of those who are regularly employed being scant, what must be
-the condition of those whose employment is but casual and precarious?
-Mayhew says—
-
- "The hours of labour in mechanical callings are usually twelve,
- two of them devoted to meals, or seventy-two hours (less by the
- permitted intervals) in a week. In the course of my inquiries for
- the _Chronicle_, I met with slop cabinet-makers, tailors, and
- milliners, who worked sixteen hours and more daily, their toil
- being only interrupted by the necessity of going out, if small
- masters, to purchase materials, and offer the goods for sale; or,
- if journeymen in the slop trade, to obtain more work and carry
- what was completed to the master's shop. They worked on Sundays
- also; one tailor told me that the coat he worked at on the
- previous Sunday was for the Rev. Mr. —, who 'little thought
- it,' and these slop-workers rarely give above a few minutes to
- a meal. Thus they toil forty hours beyond the hours usual in an
- honourable trade, (112 hours instead of 72,) in the course of a
- week, or between three and four days of the regular hours of work
- of the six working days. In other words, two such men will in
- less than a week accomplish work which should occupy three men a
- full week; or 1000 men will execute labour fairly calculated to
- employ 1500 at the least. A paucity of employment is thus caused
- among the general body, by this system of over-labour decreasing
- the share of work accruing to the several operatives, and so
- adding to surplus hands.
-
- "Of over-work, as regards excessive labour, both in the general
- and fancy cabinet trade, I heard the following accounts, which
- different operatives concurred in giving; while some represented
- the labour as of longer duration by at least an hour, and some by
- two hours a day, than I have stated.
-
- "The labour of the men who depend entirely on 'the
- slaughter-houses' for the purchase of their articles is usually
- seven days a week the year through. That is, seven days—for
- Sunday-work is all but universal—each of thirteen hours, or
- ninety-one hours in all; while the established hours of labour
- in the 'honourable trade' are six days of the week, each of ten
- hours, or sixty hours in all. Thus fifty per cent. is added to
- the extent of the production of low-priced cabinet work, merely
- from 'over-hours'; but in some cases I heard of fifteen hours for
- seven days in the week, or 105 hours in all.
-
- "Concerning the hours of labour in this trade, I had the
- following minute particulars from a garret-master who was a
- chair-maker:—
-
- "'I work from six every morning to nine at night; some work
- till ten. My breakfast at eight stops me for ten minutes. I can
- breakfast in less time, but it's a rest. My dinner takes me say
- twenty minutes at the outside; and my tea eight minutes. All
- the rest of the time I'm slaving at my bench. How many minutes'
- rest is that, sir? Thirty-eight; well, say three-quarters of an
- hour, and that allows a few sucks at a pipe when I rest; but I
- can smoke and work too. I have only one room to work and eat in,
- or I should lose more time. Altogether, I labour fourteen and a
- quarter hours every day, and I must work on Sundays—at least
- forty Sundays in the year. One may as well work as sit fretting.
- But on Sundays I only work till it's dusk, or till five or six in
- summer. When it's dusk I take a walk. I'm not well dressed enough
- for a Sunday walk when it's light, and I can't wear my apron on
- that day very well to hide patches. But there's eight hours that
- I reckon I take up every week, one with another, in dancing about
- to the slaughterers. I'm satisfied that I work very nearly 100
- hours a week the year through; deducting the time taken up by the
- slaughterers, and buying stuff—say eight hours a week—it gives
- more than ninety hours a week for my work, and there's hundreds
- labour as hard as I do, just for a crust.'
-
- "The East-end turners generally, I was informed, when inquiring
- into the state of that trade, labour at the lathe from six
- o'clock in the morning till eleven and twelve at night, being
- eighteen hours' work per day, or one hundred and eight hours
- per week. They allow themselves two hours for their meals. It
- takes them, upon an average, two hours more every day fetching
- and carrying their work home. Some of the East-end men work on
- Sundays, and not a few either,' said my informant. 'Sometimes
- I have worked hard,' said one man, 'from six one morning till
- four the next, and scarcely had any time to take my meals in the
- bargain. I have been almost suffocated with the dust flying down
- my throat after working so many hours upon such heavy work too,
- and sweating so much. It makes a man drink where he would not.'
-
- "This system of over-work exists in the 'slop' part of almost
- every business; indeed, it is the principal means by which the
- cheap trade is maintained. Let me cite from my letters in the
- _Chronicle_ some more of my experience on this subject. As
- regards the London mantuamakers, I said:—'The workwomen for good
- shops that give fair, or tolerably fair wages, and expect good
- work, can make six average-sized mantles in a week, _working from
- ten to twelve hours a day_; but the slop-workers by toiling from
- thirteen to sixteen hours a day, will make _nine_ such sized
- mantles in a week. In a season of twelve weeks, 1000 workers for
- the slop-houses and warehouses would at this rate make 108,000
- mantles, or 36,000 more than workers for the fair trade. Or, to
- put it in another light, these slop-women, by being compelled, in
- order to live, to work such over-hours as inflict lasting injury
- on the health, supplant, by their over-work and over-hours, the
- labour of 500 hands, working the regular hours."
-
-Mr. Mayhew states it as a plain, unerring law, that "over-work makes
-under-pay, and under-pay makes over-work." True; but under-pay in the
-first place gave rise to prolonged hours of toil; and in spite of all
-laws that may be enacted, as long as a miserable pittance is paid to
-labourers, and that, too, devoured by taxes, supporting an aristocracy
-in luxury, so long will the workman be compelled to slave for a
-subsistence.
-
-The "strapping" system, which demands an undue quantity of work from a
-journeyman in the course of a day, is extensively maintained in London.
-Mr. Mayhew met with a miserable victim of this system of slavery, who
-appeared almost exhausted with excessive toil. The poor fellow said—
-
- "'I work in what is called a strapping-shop, and have worked
- at nothing else for these many years past in London. I call
- "strapping" doing as much work as a human being or a horse
- possibly can in a day, and that without any hanging upon the
- collar, but with the foreman's eyes constantly fixed upon you,
- from six o'clock in the morning to six o'clock at night. The shop
- in which I work is for all the world like a prison; the silent
- system is as strictly carried out there as in a model jail. If a
- man was to ask any common question of his neighbour, except it
- was connected with his trade, he would be discharged there and
- then. If a journeyman makes the least mistake he is packed off
- just the same. A man working at such places is almost always in
- fear; for the most trifling things he's thrown out of work in an
- instant. And then the quantity of work that one is forced to get
- through is positively awful; if he can't do a plenty of it he
- don't stop long where I am. No one would think it was possible
- to get so much out of blood and bones. No slaves work like we
- do. At some of the strapping shops the foreman keeps continually
- walking about with his eyes on all the men at once. At others
- the foreman is perched high up, so that he can have the whole of
- the men under his eye together. I suppose since I knew the trade
- that a _man does four times the work that he did formerly_. I
- know a man that's done four pairs of sashes in a day, and one is
- considered to be a good day's labour. What's worse than all, the
- men are every one striving one against the other. Each is trying
- to get through the work quicker than his neighbours. Four or
- five men are set the same job, so that they may be all pitted
- against one another, and then away they go, every one striving
- his hardest for fear that the others should get finished first.
- They are all tearing along, from the first thing in the morning
- to the last at night, as hard as they can go, and when the time
- comes to knock off they are ready to drop. It was hours after I
- got home last night before I could get a wink of sleep; the soles
- of my feet were on fire, and my arms ached to that degree that I
- could hardly lift my hand to my head. Often, too, when we get up
- of a morning, we are more tired than when we went to bed, for we
- can't sleep many a night; but we musn't let our employers know
- it, or else they'd be certain we couldn't do enough for them,
- and we'd get the sack. So, tired as we may be, we are obliged to
- look lively, somehow or other, at the shop of a morning. If we're
- not beside our bench the very moment the bell's done ringing,
- our time's docked—they won't give us a single minute out of the
- hour. If I was working for a fair master, I should do nearly
- one-third, and sometimes a half, less work than I am now forced
- to get through; and, even to manage that much, I shouldn't be
- idle a second of my time. It's quite a mystery to me how they
- _do_ contrive to get so much work out of the men. But they are
- very clever people. They know how to have the most out of a man,
- better than any one in the world. They are all picked men in the
- shop—regular "strappers," and no mistake. The most of them are
- five foot ten, and fine broad-shouldered, strong-backed fellows
- too—if they weren't they wouldn't have them. Bless you, they
- make no words with the men, they sack them if they're not strong
- enough to do all they want; and they can pretty soon tell, the
- very first shaving a man strikes in the shop, what a chap is
- made of. Some men are done up at such work—quite old men and
- gray, with spectacles on, by the time they are forty. I have
- seen fine strong men, of thirty-six, come in there, and be bent
- double in two or three years. They are most all countrymen at
- the strapping shops. If they see a great strapping fellow, who
- they think has got some stuff about him that will come out, they
- will give him a job directly. We are used for all the world like
- cab or omnibus-horses. Directly they've had all the work out
- of us, we are turned off, and I am sure, after my day's work
- is over, my feelings must be very much the same as one of the
- London cab-horses. As for Sunday, it is _literally_ a day of rest
- with us, for the greater part of us lay a-bed all day, and even
- that will hardly take the aches and pains out of our bones and
- muscles. When I'm done and flung by, of course I must starve.'"
-
-It may be said that, exhausting as this labour certainly is, it is not
-slavery; for the workman has a will of his own, and need not work if
-he does not choose to do it. Besides, he is not held by law; he may
-leave the shop; he may seek some other land. These circumstances make
-his case very different from the negro slave of America. True, but the
-difference is in favour of the negro slave. The London workman has only
-the alternative—such labour as has been described, the workhouse, or
-starvation. The negro slave seldom has such grinding toil, is provided
-for whether he performs it or not, and can look forward to an old age
-of comfort and repose. The London workman may leave his shop, but he
-will be either consigned to the prison of a workhouse or starved. He
-might leave the country, if he could obtain the necessary funds.
-
-Family work, or the conjoint labour of a workman's wife and children,
-is one of the results of the wretchedly rewarded slavery in the various
-trades. Mr Mayhew gives the following statement of a "fancy cabinet"
-worker upon this subject:—
-
- "The most on us has got large families; we put the children to
- work as soon as we can. My little girl began about six, but about
- eight or nine is the usual age. 'Oh, poor little things,' said
- the wife, 'they are obliged to begin the very minute they can
- use their fingers at all.' The most of the cabinet-makers of the
- East end have from five to six in family, and they are generally
- all at work for them. The small masters mostly marry when they
- are turned of twenty. You see our trade's coming to such a pass,
- that unless a man has children to help him he can't live at all.
- I've worked more than a month together, and the longest night's
- rest I've had has been an hour and a quarter; ay, and I've been
- up three nights a week besides. I've had my children lying ill,
- and been obliged to wait on them into the bargain. You see we
- couldn't live if it wasn't for the labour of our children, though
- it makes 'em—poor little things!—old people long afore they are
- growed up.'
-
- "'Why, I stood at this bench,' said the wife, 'with my child,
- only ten years of age, from four o'clock on Friday morning till
- ten minutes past seven in the evening, without a bit to eat or
- drink. I never sat down a minute from the time I began till I
- finished my work, and then I went out to sell what I had done.
- I walked all the way from here [Shoreditch] down to the Lowther
- Arcade to get rid of the articles.' Here she burst out into
- a violent flood of tears, saying, 'Oh, sir, it is hard to be
- obliged to labour from morning till night as we do, all of us,
- little ones and all, and yet not be able to live by it either.'
-
- "'And you see the worst of it is, this here children's labour is
- of such value now in our trade, that there's more brought into
- the business every year, so that it's really for all the world
- _like breeding slaves_. Without my children I don't know how we
- should be able to get along.' 'There's that little thing,' said
- the man, pointing to the girl ten years of age, before alluded
- to, as she sat at the edge of the bed, 'why she works regularly
- every day from six in the morning till ten at night. She never
- goes to school; we can't spare her. There's schools enough about
- here for a penny a week, but we could not afford to keep her
- without working. If I'd ten more children I should be obliged to
- employ them all the same way, and there's hundreds and thousands
- of children now slaving at this business. There's the M—'s;
- they have a family of eight, and the youngest to the oldest of
- all works at the bench; and the oldest a'n't fourteen. I'm sure,
- of the two thousand five hundred small masters in the cabinet
- line, you may safely say that two thousand of them, at the very
- least, have from five to six in family, and that's upward of
- twelve thousand children that's been put to the trade since
- prices have come down. Twenty years ago I don't think there was a
- child at work in our business; and I am sure there is not a small
- master now whose whole family doesn't assist him. But what I want
- to know is, what's to become of the twelve thousand children when
- they're growed up and come regular into the trade? Here are all
- my ones growing up without being taught any thing but a business
- that I know they must starve at.'
-
- "In answer to my inquiry as to what dependence he had in case
- of sickness, 'Oh, bless you,' he said, 'there's nothing but the
- parish for us. I _did_ belong to a benefit society about four
- years ago, but I couldn't keep up my payments any longer. I was
- in the society above five-and-twenty years, and then was obliged
- to leave it after all. I don't know of one as belongs to any
- friendly society, and I don't think there is a man as can afford
- it in our trade now. They must all go to the workhouse when
- they're sick or old.'"
-
-The "trading operatives," or those labourers who employ subordinate and
-cheaper work-people, are much decried in England; but they, also, are
-the creations of the general system. A workman frequently ascertains
-that he can make more money with less labour, by employing women or
-children at home, than if he did all of his own work; and very often
-men are driven to this resource to save themselves from being worked
-to death. The condition of those persons who work for the "trading
-operatives," or "middlemen," is as miserable as imagination may
-conceive.
-
-In Charles Kingsley's popular novel, "Alton Locke," we find a vivid and
-truthful picture of the London tailor's workshop, and the slavery of
-the workmen, which may be quoted here in illustration:—
-
- "I stumbled after Mr. Jones up a dark, narrow iron staircase,
- till we emerged through a trap-door into a garret at the top
- of the house. I recoiled with disgust at the scene before me;
- and here I was to work—perhaps through life! A low lean-to
- room, stifling me with the combined odours of human breath and
- perspiration, stale beer, the sweet sickly smell of gin, and the
- sour and hardly less disgusting one of new cloth. On the floor,
- thick with dust and dirt, scraps of stuff and ends of thread, sat
- some dozen haggard, untidy, shoeless men, with a mingled look
- of care and recklessness that made me shudder. The windows were
- tight closed to keep out the cold winter air; and the condensed
- breath ran in streams down the panes, checkering the dreary
- outlook of chimney-tops and smoke. The conductor handed me over
- to one of the men.
-
- "'Here Crossthwaite, take this younker and make a tailor of
- him. Keep him next you, and prick him up with your needle if he
- shirks.'
-
- "He disappeared down the trap-door, and mechanically, as if in a
- dream, I sat down by the man and listened to his instructions,
- kindly enough bestowed. But I did not remain in peace two
- minutes. A burst of chatter rose as the foreman vanished, and a
- tall, bloated, sharp-nosed young man next me bawled in my ear—
-
- "'I say, young 'un, fork out the tin and pay your footing at
- Conscrumption Hospital!'
-
- "'What do you mean?'
-
- "'An't he just green?—Down with the stumpy—a tizzy for a pot of
- half-and-half.'
-
- "'I never drink beer.'
-
- "'Then never do,' whispered the man at my side; 'as sure as
- hell's hell, it's your only chance.'
-
- "There was a fierce, deep earnestness in the tone, which made me
- look up at the speaker, but the other instantly chimed in.
-
- "'Oh, yer don't, don't yer, my young Father Mathy! then yer'll
- soon learn it here if yer want to keep your victuals down.'
-
- "'And I have promised to take my wages home to my mother.'
-
- "'Oh criminy! hark to that, my coves! here's a chap as is going
- to take the blunt home to his mammy.'
-
- "'Ta'nt much of it the old un'll see,' said another. 'Ven yer
- pockets it at the Cock and Bottle, my kiddy, yer won't find much
- of it left o' Sunday mornings.'
-
- "'Don't his mother know he's out?' asked another; 'and won't she
- know it—
-
- Ven he's sitting in his glory
- Half-price at the Vic-tory.
-
- Oh no, ve never mentions her—her name is never heard. Certainly
- not, by no means. Why should it?'
-
- "'Well, if yer won't stand a pot,' quoth the tall man, 'I will,
- that's all, and blow temperance. 'A short life and a merry one,'
- says the tailor—
-
- The ministers talk a great deal about port,
- And they makes Cape wine very dear,
- But blow their hi's if ever they tries
- To deprive a poor cove of his beer.
-
- Here, Sam, run to the Cock and Bottle for a pot of half-and-half
- to my score.'
-
- "A thin, pale lad jumped up and vanished, while my tormentor
- turned to me:
-
- "I say, young 'un, do you know why we're nearer heaven here than
- our neighbours?'
-
- "'I shouldn't have thought so,' answered I with a _naïveté_ which
- raised a laugh, and dashed the tall man for a moment.
-
- "'Yer don't? then I'll tell yer. Acause we're atop of the house
- in the first place, and next place yer'll die here six months
- sooner nor if yer worked in the room below. A'n't that logic and
- science, Orator?' appealing to Crossthwaite.
-
- "'Why?' asked I.
-
- "'Acause you get all the other floors' stinks up here, as well
- as your own. Concentrated essence of man's flesh, is this here
- as you're a-breathing. Cellar work-room we calls Rheumatic Ward,
- because of the damp. Ground-floor's, Fever Ward—them as don't
- get typhus gets dysentery, and them as don't get dysentery
- gets typhus—your nose 'd tell yer why if you opened the back
- windy. First floor's Ashmy Ward—don't you hear 'um now through
- the cracks in the boards, a-puffing away like a nest of young
- locomotives? And this here more august and upper-crust cockloft
- is the Conscrumptive Hospital. First you begins to cough, then
- you proceed to expectorate—spittoons, as you see, perwided free
- gracious for nothing—fined a kivarten if you spits on the floor—
-
- Then your cheeks they grow red, and your nose it grows thin,
- And your bones they sticks out, till they comes through
- your skin:
-
- and then, when you've sufficiently covered the poor dear
- shivering bare backs of the hairystocracy,
-
- Die, die, die,
- Away you fly,
- Your soul is in the sky!
-
- as the hinspired Shakspeare wittily remarks.'
-
- "And the ribald lay down on his back, stretched himself out, and
- pretended to die in a fit of coughing, which last was alas! no
- counterfeit, while poor I, shocked and bewildered, let my tears
- fall fast upon my knees.
-
- "'Fine him a pot!' roared one, 'for talking about kicking the
- bucket. He's a nice young man to keep a cove's spirits up, and
- talk about "a short life and a merry one." Here comes the heavy.
- Hand it here to take the taste of that fellow's talk out of my
- mouth.'
-
- "'Well, my young 'un,' recommenced my tormentor, 'and how do you
- like your company?'
-
- "'Leave the boy alone,' growled Crossthwaite: 'don't you see he's
- crying?'
-
- "'Is that any thing good to eat? Give me some on it, if it
- is—it'll save me washing my face.' And he took hold of my hair
- and pulled my head back.
-
- "'I'll tell you what, Jemmy Downes,' said Crossthwaite, in a
- voice that made him draw back, 'if you don't drop that, I'll give
- you such a taste of my tongue as shall turn you blue.'
-
- "'You'd better try it on, then. Do—only just now—if you please.'
-
- "'Be quiet, you fool!' said another. 'You're a pretty fellow to
- chaff the orator. He'll slang you up the chimney afore you can
- get your shoes on.'
-
- "'Fine him a kivarten for quarrelling,' cried another; and
- the bully subsided into a minute's silence, after a _sotto
- voce_—'Blow temperance, and blow all Chartists, say I!' and then
- delivered himself of his feelings in a doggrel song:
-
- Some folks leads coves a dance,
- With their pledge of temperance,
- And their plans for donkey sociation;
- And their pocket-fulls they crams
- By their patriotic flams,
- And then swears 'tis for the good of the nation.
-
- But I don't care two inions
- For political opinions,
- While I can stand my heavy and my quartern;
- For to drown dull care within,
- In baccy, beer, and gin,
- Is the prime of a working-tailor's fortin!
-
- "'There's common sense for you now; hand the pot here.'
-
- "I recollect nothing more of that day, except that I bent
- myself to my work with assiduity enough to earn praises from
- Crossthwaite. It was to be done, and I did it. The only virtue
- I ever possessed (if virtue it be) is the power of absorbing my
- whole heart and mind in the pursuit of the moment, however dull
- or trivial, if there be good reason why it should be pursued at
- all.
-
- "I owe, too, an apology to my readers for introducing all this
- ribaldry. God knows it is as little to my taste as it can be to
- theirs, but the thing exists; and those who live, if not by,
- yet still beside such a state of things, ought to know what the
- men are like, to whose labour, ay, life-blood, they owe their
- luxuries. They are 'their brothers' keepers,' let them deny it as
- they will."
-
-As a relief from misery, the wretched workmen generally resort to
-intoxicating liquors, which, however, ultimately render them a
-hundredfold more miserable. In "Alton Locke," this is illustrated with
-an almost fearful power, in the life and death of the tailor Downes.
-After saving the wretched man from throwing himself into the river,
-Alton Locke accompanies him to a disgusting dwelling, in Bermondsey.
-The story continues:—
-
- "He stopped at the end of a miserable blind alley, where a dirty
- gas-lamp just served to make darkness visible, and show the
- patched windows and rickety doorways of the crazy houses, whose
- upper stories were lost in a brooding cloud of fog; and the pools
- of stagnant water at our feet: and the huge heap of cinders which
- filled up the waste end of the alley—a dreary black, formless
- mound, on which two or three spectral dogs prowled up and down
- after the offal, appearing and vanishing like dark imps in and
- out of the black misty chaos beyond.
-
- "The neighbourhood was undergoing, as it seemed, 'improvements,'
- of that peculiar metropolitan species which consists in pulling
- down the dwellings of the poor, and building up rich men's houses
- instead; and great buildings, within high temporary palings,
- had already eaten up half the little houses; as the great fish
- and the great estates, and the great shopkeepers, eat up the
- little ones of their species—by the law of competition, lately
- discovered to be the true creator and preserver of the universe.
- There they loomed up, the tall bullies, against the dreary sky,
- looking down with their grim, proud, stony visages, on the misery
- which they were driving out of one corner, only to accumulate and
- intensify it in another.
-
- "The house at which we stopped was the last in the row; all its
- companions had been pulled down; and there it stood, leaning
- out with one naked ugly side into the gap, and stretching out
- long props, like feeble arms and crutches, to resist the work of
- demolition.
-
- "A group of slatternly people were in the entry, talking loudly,
- and as Downes pushed by them, a woman seized him by the arm.
-
- "'Oh! you unnatural villain!—To go away after your drink, and
- leave all them poor dead corpses locked up, without even letting
- a body go in to stretch them out!'
-
- "'And breeding the fever, too, to poison the whole house!'
- growled one.
-
- "'The relieving-officer's been here, my cove,' said another; 'and
- he's gone for a peeler and a search-warrant to break open the
- door, I can tell you!'
-
- "But Downes pushed past unheeding, unlocked a door at the end
- of the passage, thrust me in, locked it again, and then rushed
- across the room in chase of two or three rats, who vanished into
- cracks and holes.
-
- "And what a room! A low lean-to with wooden walls, without a
- single article of furniture; and through the broad chinks of the
- floor shone up as it were ugly glaring eyes, staring at us. They
- were the reflections of the rushlight in the sewer below. The
- stench was frightful—the air heavy with pestilence. The first
- breath I drew made my heart sink, and my stomach turn. But I
- forgot every thing in the object which lay before me, as Downes
- tore a half-finished coat off three corpses laid side by side on
- the bare floor.
-
- "There was his little Irish wife;—dead—and naked—the wasted
- white limbs gleamed in the lurid light; the unclosed eyes stared,
- as if reproachfully, at the husband whose drunkenness had brought
- her there to kill her with the pestilence; and on each side of
- her a little, shrivelled, impish, child-corpse—the wretched man
- had laid their arms round the dead mother's neck—and there they
- slept, their hungering and wailing over at last for ever: the
- rats had been busy already with them—but what matter to them now?
-
- "'Look!' he cried; 'I watched 'em dying! Day after day I saw
- the devils come up through the cracks, like little maggots and
- beetles, and all manner of ugly things, creeping down their
- throats; and I asked 'em, and they said they were the fever
- devils.'
-
- "It was too true; the poisonous exhalations had killed them.
- The wretched man's delirium tremens had given that horrible
- substantiality to the poisonous fever gases.
-
- "Suddenly Downes turned on me almost menacingly. 'Money! money! I
- want some gin!'
-
- "I was thoroughly terrified—and there was no shame in feeling
- fear, locked up with a madman far my superior in size and
- strength, in so ghastly a place. But the shame, and the folly
- too, would have been in giving way to my fear; and with a
- boldness half assumed, half the real fruit of excitement and
- indignation at the horrors I beheld, I answered—
-
- "'If I had money, I would give you none. What do you want with
- gin? Look at the fruits of your accursed tippling. If you had
- taken my advice, my poor fellow,' I went on, gaining courage as I
- spoke, 'and become a water-drinker, like me'—
-
- "'Curse you and your water-drinking! If you had had no water to
- drink or wash with for two years but that—that,' pointing to the
- foul ditch below—'If you had emptied the slops in there with one
- hand, and filled your kettle with the other'—
-
- "'Do you actually mean that that sewer is your only drinking
- water?'
-
- "'Where else can we get any? Everybody drinks it; and you shall
- too—you shall!' he cried, with a fearful oath, 'and then see if
- you don't run off to the gin-shop, to take the taste of it out of
- your mouth. Drink! and who can help drinking, with his stomach
- turned with such hell-broth as that—or such a hell's blast as
- this air is here, ready to vomit from morning till night with the
- smells? I'll show you. You shall drink a bucket-full of it, as
- sure as you live, you shall.'
-
- "And he ran out of the back door, upon a little balcony, which
- hung over the ditch.
-
- "I tried the door, but the key was gone, and the handle
- too. I beat furiously on it, and called for help. Two gruff
- authoritative voices were heard in the passage.
-
- "'Let us in; I'm the policeman!'
-
- "'Let me out, or mischief will happen!'
-
- "The policeman made a vigorous thrust at the crazy door; and just
- as it burst open, and the light of his lantern streamed into the
- horrible den, a heavy splash was heard outside.
-
- "'He has fallen into the ditch!'
-
- "'He'll be drowned, then, as sure as he's a born man,' shouted
- one of the crowd behind.
-
- "We rushed out on the balcony. The light of the policeman's
- lantern glared over the ghastly scene—along the double row of
- miserable house-backs, which lined the sides of the open tidal
- ditch—over strange rambling jetties, and balconies, and sleeping
- sheds, which hung on rotting piles over the black waters, with
- phosphorescent scraps of rotten fish gleaming and twinkling out
- of the dark hollows, like devilish gravelights—over bubbles
- of poisonous gas, and bloated carcases of dogs, and lumps of
- offal, floating on the stagnant olive-green hell-broth—over the
- slow sullen rows of oily ripple which were dying away into the
- darkness far beyond, sending up, as they stirred, hot breaths
- of miasma—the only sign that a spark of humanity, after years
- of foul life, had quenched itself at last in that foul death. I
- almost fancied that I could see the haggard face staring up at me
- through the slimy water; but no—it was as opaque as stone."
-
-Downes had been a "sweater," and before his death was a "sweater's
-slave."
-
-When the comparatively respectable workshop in which Alton Locke
-laboured was broken up, and the workmen were told by the heartless
-employer that he intended to give out work, for those who could labour
-at home, these toil-worn men held a meeting, at which a man named John
-Crossthwaite, thus spoke for his oppressed and degraded class:—
-
- "We were all bound to expect this. Every working tailor must come
- to this at last, on the present system; and we are only lucky in
- having been spared so long. You all know where this will end—in
- the same misery as fifteen thousand out of twenty thousand of
- our class are enduring now. We shall become the slaves, often
- the bodily prisoners, of Jews, middlemen, and sweaters, who draw
- their livelihood out of our starvation. We shall have to face, as
- the rest have, ever-decreasing prices of labour, ever-increasing
- profits made out of that labour by the contractors who will
- employ us—arbitrary fines, inflicted at the caprice of
- hirelings—the competition of women, and children, and starving
- Irish—our hours of work will increase one-third, our actual pay
- decrease to less than one-half; and in all this we shall have no
- hope, no chance of improvement in wages, but ever more penury,
- slavery, misery, as we are pressed on by those who are sucked by
- fifties—almost by hundreds—yearly, out of the honourable trade
- in which we were brought up, into the infernal system of contract
- work, which is devouring our trade and many others, body and
- soul. Our wives will be forced to sit up night and day to help
- us—our children must labour from the cradle, without chance of
- going to school, hardly of breathing the fresh air of heaven—our
- boys as they grow up must turn beggars or paupers—our daughters,
- as thousands do, must eke out their miserable earnings by
- prostitution. And, after all, a whole family will not gain what
- one of us had been doing, as yet, single-handed. You know there
- will be no hope for us. There is no use appealing to government
- or Parliament. I don't want to talk politics here. I shall keep
- them for another place. But you can recollect as well as I can,
- when a deputation of us went up to a member of Parliament—one
- that was reputed a philosopher, and a political economist,
- and a liberal—and set before him the ever-increasing penury
- and misery of our trade and of those connected with it; you
- recollect his answer—that, however glad he would be to help us,
- it was impossible—he could not alter the laws of nature—that
- wages were regulated by the amount of competition among the men
- themselves, and that it was no business of government, or any
- one else, to interfere in contracts between the employer and
- employed, that those things regulated themselves by the laws of
- political economy, which it was madness and suicide to oppose.
- He may have been a wise man. I only know that he was a rich one.
- Every one speaks well of the bridge which carries him over. Every
- one fancies the laws which fill his pockets to be God's laws. But
- I say this: If neither government nor members of Parliament can
- help us, we must help ourselves. Help yourselves, and Heaven will
- help you. Combination among ourselves is the only chance. One
- thing we can do—sit still.'
-
- "'And starve!' said some one."
-
-Crossthwaite is represented as having preferred to endure want rather
-than work under the sweating system. But there are few men who possess
-such spirit and determination. Men with families are compelled, by
-considering those who are dependent upon them, to work for whatever
-prices the masters choose to pay. They are free labourers—if they do
-not choose to work—they are perfectly free—to starve!
-
-The government took the initiative in the sweating system. It set the
-example by giving the army and navy clothes to contractors, and taking
-the lowest tenders. The police clothes, the postmen's clothes, the
-convict's clothes, are all contracted for by sweaters and sub-sweaters,
-till government work is the very last, lowest resource to which a poor,
-starved-out wretch betakes himself, to keep body and soul together.
-Thus is profit made from the pauperism of men, the slavery of children,
-and the prostitution of women, in Great Britain.
-
-Some years ago the following announcement appeared in the Village
-Gazette:—
-
- "Peter Moreau and his wife are dead, aged twenty-five years. Too
- much work has killed them and many besides. We say—Work like a
- negro, like a galley-slave: we ought to say—Work like a freeman."
-
-Work like negro slaves, indeed! There is no such work in America, even
-among the slaves; all day long, from Monday morning till Saturday
-night, week after week, and year after year, till the machine is worn
-out. American slaves and convicts in New South Wales are fat and happy,
-compared with the labourers of England. It frequently happens that
-Englishmen commit crimes for the purpose of becoming galley-slaves in
-New South Wales. They do not keep their purpose secret; they declare
-it loudly with tears and passionate exclamations to the magistrate who
-commits them for trial, to the jury who try them, and to the judge who
-passes sentence on them. This is published in the newspapers, but so
-often that it excites no particular comment.
-
-The parish apprentices are the worst-treated slaves in the world. They
-are at the mercy of their masters and mistresses during their term of
-apprenticeship, without protectors, and without appeal against the most
-cruel tyranny. In the reign of George III., one Elizabeth Brownrigg was
-hanged for beating and starving to death her parish apprentices. In
-1831, another woman, Esther Hibner by name, was hanged in London for
-beating and starving to death a parish apprentice. Two instances of
-punishment, for thousands of cases of impunity!
-
- "The evidence in the case of Esther Hibner proved that a number
- of girls, pauper apprentices, were employed in a workshop; that
- their victuals consisted of garbage, commonly called hog's-wash,
- and that of this they never had enough to stay the pains of
- hunger; that they were kept half-naked, half-clothed in dirty
- rags; that they slept in a heap on the floor, amid filth and
- stench; that they suffered dreadfully from cold; that they were
- forced to work so many hours together that they used to fall
- asleep while at work; that for falling asleep, for not working
- as hard as their mistress wished, they were beaten with sticks,
- with fists, dragged by the hair, dashed on to the ground,
- trampled upon, and otherwise tortured; that they were found, all
- of them more or less, covered with chilblains, scurvy, bruises,
- and wounds; that one of them died of ill-treatment; and—mark
- this—that the discovery of that murder was made in consequence
- of the number of coffins which had issued from Esther Hibner's
- premises, and raised the curiosity of her neighbours. For this
- murder Mrs. Hibner was hanged; but what did she get for all the
- other murders which, referring to the number of coffins, we have
- a right to believe that she committed? She got for each £10.
- That is to say, whenever she had worked, starved, beaten, dashed
- and trampled a girl to death, she got another girl to treat in
- the same way, with £10 for her trouble. She carried on a trade
- in the murder of parish apprentices; and if she had conducted
- it with moderation, if the profit and custom of murder had not
- made her grasping and careless, the constitution, which protects
- the poor as well as the rich, would never have interfered with
- her. The law did not permit her to do what she liked with her
- apprentices, as Americans do with their slaves; oh no. Those
- free-born English children were merely bound as apprentices, with
- their own consent, under the eye of the magistrate, in order
- that they might learn a trade and become valuable subjects. But
- did the magistrate ever visit Mrs. Hibner's factory to see how
- she treated the free-born English girls? never. Did the parish
- officers? no. Was there any legal provision for the discovery of
- the woman's trade in murder? none."
-
- "You still read on the gates of London poorhouses, 'strong,
- healthy boys and girls,' &c.; and boys or girls you may obtain
- by applying within, as many as you please, free-born, with the
- usual fee. Having been paid for taking them, and having gone
- through the ceremonies of asking their consent and signing bonds
- before a magistrate, you may make them into sausages, for any
- thing the constitution will do to prevent you. If it should be
- proved that you kill even one of them, you will be hanged; but
- you may half-starve them, beat them, torture them, any thing
- short of killing them, with perfect security; and using a little
- circumspection, you may kill them too, without much danger.
- Suppose they die, who cares? Their parents? they are orphans, or
- have been abandoned by their parents. The parish officers? very
- likely, indeed, that these, when the poorhouse is crammed with
- orphan and destitute children, should make inquiries troublesome
- to themselves; inquiries which, being troublesome to you, might
- deprive them of your custom in future. The magistrate? he asked
- the child whether it consented to be your apprentice; the child
- said 'Yes, your worship;' and there his worship's duty ends. The
- neighbours? of course, if you raise their curiosity like Esther
- Hibner, but not otherwise. In order to be quite safe, I tell you
- you must be a little circumspect. But let us suppose that you are
- timid, and would drive a good trade without the shadow of risk.
- In that case, half-starve your apprentices, cuff them, kick them,
- torment them till they run away from you. They will not go back
- to the poorhouse, because there they would be flogged for having
- run away from you: besides, the poorhouse is any thing but a
- pleasant place. The boys will turn beggars or thieves, and the
- girls prostitutes; you will have pocketed £10 for each of them,
- and may get more boys and girls on the same terms, to treat in
- the same way. This trade is as safe as it is profitable."[89]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE WORKHOUSE SYSTEM OF BRITAIN.
-
-
-The English writers generally point to the poor-laws of their country
-as a proud evidence of the merciful and benevolent character of the
-government. Look at those laws! so much have we done in the cause of
-humanity. See how much money we expend every year for the relief of the
-poor! Our workhouses are maintained at an enormous expense. Very well;
-but it takes somewhat from the character of the doctor, to ascertain
-that he gave the wound he makes a show of healing. What are the sources
-of the immense pauperism of Britain? The enormous monopoly of the soil,
-and the vast expense of civil and ecclesiastical aristocracy. The first
-takes work from one portion of the people, and the latter takes the
-profits of work from the other portion. The "glorious institutions" of
-Britain crowd the workhouses; and we are now going to show the horrible
-system under which paupers are held in these establishments.
-
-The labouring classes are constantly exposed to the chance of going to
-the workhouse. Their wages are so low, or so preyed upon by taxes, that
-they have no opportunity of providing for a "rainy day." A few weeks'
-sickness, a few weeks' absence of work, and, starvation staring them
-in the face, they are forced to apply to the parish authorities for
-relief. Once within the gate of the workhouse, many never entertain the
-idea of coming out until they are carried forth in their coffins.
-
-Each parish has a workhouse, which is under the control of several
-guardians, who, again, are under the orders of a Board of Commissioners
-sitting at London. Many—perhaps a majority—of the guardians of the
-parishes are persons without those humane feelings which should belong
-to such officials, and numerous petty brutalities are added to those
-which are inherent in the British workhouse system.
-
-Robert Southey says—
-
- "When the poor are incapable of contributing any longer to their
- own support, they are removed to what is called the workhouse.
- I cannot express to you the feelings of hopelessness and
- dread with which all the decent poor look on to this wretched
- termination of a life of labour. To this place all vagrants are
- sent for punishment; unmarried women with child go here to be
- delivered; and poor orphans and base-born children are brought
- up here until they are of age to be apprenticed off; the other
- inmates are of those unhappy people who are utterly helpless,
- parish idiots and madmen, the blind and the palsied, and the
- old who are fairly worn out. It is not in the nature of things
- that the superintendents of such institutions as these should be
- gentle-hearted, when the superintendence is undertaken merely
- for the sake of the salary. To this society of wretchedness
- the labouring poor of England look as their last resting-place
- on this side of the grave; and, rather than enter abodes so
- miserable, they endure the severest privations as long as it is
- possible to exist. A feeling of honest pride makes them shrink
- from a place where guilt and poverty are confounded; and it is
- heart-breaking for those who have reared a family of their own
- to be subjected, in their old age, to the harsh and unfeeling
- authority of persons younger than themselves, neither better born
- nor better bred."
-
-This is no less true, than admirable as a specimen of prose. It was
-true when Southey penned it, and it is true now. Let us look at some of
-the provisions of the poor-laws of England, which form the much-lauded
-system of charity.
-
-One of these provisions refuses relief to those who will not accept
-that relief except in the character of inmates of the workhouse, and
-thus compels the poor applicants to either perish of want or tear
-asunder all the ties of home. To force the wretched father from the
-abode of his family, is a piece of cruelty at which every humane breast
-must revolt. What wonder that many perish for want of food, rather than
-leave all that is dear to them on earth? If they must die, they prefer
-to depart surrounded by affectionate relatives, rather than by callous
-"guardians of the poor," who calculate the trouble and the expense
-of the burial before the breath leaves the body. The framers of the
-poor-laws forgot—perchance—that, "Be it ever so humble, there's no
-place like home."
-
-Another provision of the poor-laws denies the consolations of religion
-to those whose conscientious scruples will not allow them to worship
-according to the forms of the established church. This is totally at
-variance with the spirit of true Christianity, and a most barbarous
-privation. One would think that British legislators doubted the supreme
-efficacy of the Christian faith in saving souls from destruction. Why
-should not the balm be applied, regardless of the formal ceremonies, if
-it possesses any healing virtues? But the glory of the English Church
-is its iron observance of forms; and, rather than relax one jot, it
-would permit the souls of millions to be swept away into the gloom of
-eternal night.
-
-Then, there is the separation regulation, dragging after it a long
-train of horrors and heart-rending sufferings—violating the law of
-holy writ—"Whom God hath joined together, let no man put asunder"—and
-trampling upon the best feelings of human nature.
-
-A thrilling illustration of the operation of this law is narrated by
-Mr. James Grant.[90] We quote:—
-
- "Two persons, man and wife, of very advanced years, were at
- last, through the infirmities consequent on old age, rendered
- incapable of providing for themselves. Their friends were like
- themselves, poor; but, so long as they could, they afforded
- them all the assistance in their power. The infirmities of the
- aged couple became greater and greater; so, as a necessary
- consequence, did their wants. The guardians of the poor—their
- parish being under the operation of the new measure—refused to
- afford them the slightest relief. What was to be done? They had
- no alternative but starvation and the workhouse. To have gone to
- the workhouse, even had they been permitted to live together,
- could have been painful enough to their feelings; but to go there
- to be separated from each other, was a thought at which their
- hearts sickened. They had been married for nearly half a century;
- and during all that time had lived in the greatest harmony
- together. I am speaking the language of unexaggerated truth when
- I say, that their affection for each other increased, instead
- of suffering diminution, as they advanced in years. A purer or
- stronger attachment than theirs has never, perhaps, existed in a
- world in which there is so much of mutability as in ours. Many
- were the joys and many were the sorrows which they had equally
- shared with each other. Their joys were increased, because
- participated in by both: their sorrows were lessened, because of
- the consolations they assiduously administered to each other when
- the dispensations of Providence assumed a lowering aspect. The
- reverses they had experienced, in the course of their long and
- eventful union, had only served to attach them the more strongly
- to each other, just as the tempestuous blast only serves to
- cause the oak to strike its roots more deeply in the earth. With
- minds originally constituted alike, and that constitution being
- based on a virtuous foundation, it was, indeed, to be expected
- that the lapse of years would only tend to strengthen their
- attachment. Nothing, in a word, could have exceeded the ardour
- of their sympathy with each other. The only happiness which this
- world could afford them was derived from the circumstance of
- being in each other's company; and the one looked forward to the
- possibility of being left alone, when the other was snatched away
- by death, with feelings of the deepest pain and apprehension.
- Their wish was, in subordination to the will of the Supreme
- Being, that as they had been so long united in life, so in death
- they might not be divided. Their wish was in one sense realized,
- though not in the sense they had desired. The pressure of want,
- aggravated by the increasing infirmities of the female, imposed
- on her the necessity of repairing to the workhouse. The husband
- would most willingly have followed, had they been permitted
- to live together when there, in the hope that they should,
- even in that miserable place, be able to assuage each other's
- griefs, as they had so often done before. That was a permission,
- however, which was not to be granted to them. The husband
- therefore determined that he would live on a morsel of bread and
- a draught of cold water, where he was, rather than submit to
- the degradation of a workhouse, in which he would be separated
- from her who had been the partner of his joys and griefs for
- upward of half a century. The hour of parting came; and a sad
- and sorrowful hour it was to the aged couple. Who shall describe
- their feelings on the occasion? Who can even enter into those
- feelings? No one. They could only be conceived by themselves.
- The process of separation was as full of anguish to their mental
- nature as is the severance of a limb from the body to the
- physical constitution. And that separation was aggravated by the
- circumstance, that both felt a presentiment, so strong as to have
- all the force of a thorough conviction, that their separation was
- to be final as regarded this world. What, then, must have been
- the agonies of the parting hour in the case of a couple whose
- mental powers were still unimpaired, and who had lived in the
- most perfect harmony for the protracted period of fifty years?
- They were, I repeat, not only such as admit of no description,
- but no one, who has not been similarly circumstanced, can even
- form an idea of them. The downcast look, the tender glances
- they emitted to each other, the swimming eye, the moist cheek,
- the deep-drawn sigh, the choked utterance, the affectionate
- embrace—all told, in the language of resistless eloquence, of
- the anguish caused by their separation. The scene was affecting
- in the extreme, even to the mere spectator. It was one which must
- have softened the hardest heart, as it drew tears from every
- eye which witnessed it; what, then, must the actual realization
- of it in all its power have been to the parties themselves? The
- separation did take place; the poor woman was wrenched from the
- almost death-like grasp of her husband. She was transferred to
- the workhouse; and he was left alone in the miserable hovel in
- which they had so long remained together. And what followed?
- What followed! That may be soon told: it is a short history. The
- former pined away, and died in three weeks after the separation;
- and the husband only survived three weeks more. Their parting was
- thus but for a short time, though final as regarded this world.
- Ere six weeks had elapsed they again met together—
-
- Met on that happy, happy shore,
- Where friends do meet to part no more."
-
-Here was an outrage, shocking to every heart of ordinary sensibility,
-committed by authority of the British government, in due execution
-of its "charitable enactments." In searching for a parallel, we can
-only find it among those savage tribes who kill their aged and infirm
-brethren to save trouble and expense. Yet such actions are sanctioned
-by the government of a civilized nation, in the middle of the
-nineteenth century; and that, too, when the government is parading its
-philanthropy in the face of the world, and, pharisaically, thanking God
-that it is not as other nations are, authorizing sin and wrong.
-
-It was said by the advocates of this regulation of separation, that
-paupers themselves have no objection to be separated from each other;
-because, generally speaking, they have become old and unable to
-assist each other, before they throw themselves permanently on the
-parish—in other words, that the poor have not the same affection for
-relatives and friends that the wealthy have. Well, that argument was
-characteristic of a land where the fineness of a man's feelings are
-assumed to be exactly in proportion to the position of his ancestry
-and the length of his purse—perfectly in keeping, as an artist would
-say. A pauper husband and wife, after living together, perhaps for
-thirty years, become old and desire to be separated, according to the
-representations of the British aristocrat. His iron logic allows no
-hearts to the poor. To breathe is human—to feel is aristocratic.
-
-Equally to be condemned is the regulation which prohibits the visits
-to the workhouse of the friends of the inmates. The only shadow of a
-reason for this is an alleged inconvenience attending the admission
-of those persons who are not inmates; and for such a reason the wife
-is prevented from seeing her husband, the children from seeing their
-father, and the poor heart-broken inmate from seeing a friend—perhaps
-the only one he has in the world. We might suppose that the authors
-of this regulation had discovered that adversity multiplies friends,
-instead of driving them away from its gloom. Paupers must be blessed
-beyond the rest of mankind in that respect. Instances are recorded in
-which dying paupers have been refused the consolation of a last visit
-from their children, under the operation of this outrageous law. Mr.
-James Grant mentions a case that came to his notice:—
-
- "An instance occurred a few months since in a workhouse in the
- suburbs of the metropolis, in which intelligence was accidentally
- conveyed to a daughter that her father was on his death-bed; she
- hurried that moment to the workhouse, but was refused admission.
- With tears in her eyes, and a heart that was ready to break, she
- pleaded the urgency of the case. The functionary was deaf to
- her entreaties; as soon might she have addressed them to the
- brick wall before her. His answer was, 'It is contrary to the
- regulations of the place; come again at a certain hour,' She
- applied to the medical gentleman who attended the workhouse, and
- through his exertions obtained admission. She flew to the ward
- in which her father was confined: he lay cold, motionless, and
- unconscious before her—his spirit was gone; he had breathed
- his last five minutes before. Well may we exclaim, when we hear
- of such things, 'Do we live in a Christian country? Is this a
- civilized land?'"
-
-Certainly, Mr. Grant, it is a land of freedom and philanthropy unknown
-upon the rest of the earth's surface.
-
-From a survey of the poor-laws it appears that poverty is considered
-criminal in Great Britain. The workhouses, which are declared to have
-been established for the relief of the poor, are worse than prisons for
-solitary confinement; for the visits of friends and the consolations
-of religion, except under particular forms, are denied to the unhappy
-inmates, while they are permitted to the criminal in his dungeon.
-
-What an English pauper is may be learned from the following description
-of the "bold peasantry," which we extract from one of the countless
-pamphlets on pauperism written by Englishmen.
-
- "What is that defective being, with calfless legs and stooping
- shoulders, weak in body and mind, inert, pusillanimous and
- stupid, whose premature wrinkles and furtive glance tell of
- misery and degradation? That is an English peasant or pauper;
- for the words are synonymous. His sire was a pauper, and his
- mother's milk wanted nourishment. From infancy his food has been
- bad, as well as insufficient; and he now feels the pains of
- unsatisfied hunger nearly whenever he is awake. But half-clothed,
- and never supplied with more warmth than suffices to cook his
- scanty meals, cold and wet come to him, and stay by him, with
- the weather. He is married, of course; for to this he would have
- been driven by the poor-laws, even if he had been, as he never
- was, sufficiently comfortable and prudent to dread the burden
- of a family. But, though instinct and the overseer have given
- him a wife, he has not tasted the highest joys of husband and
- father. His partner and his little ones being, like himself,
- often hungry, seldom warm, sometimes sick without aid, and always
- sorrowful without hope, are greedy, selfish, and vexing; so,
- to use his own expression, he 'hates the sight of them,' and
- resorts to his hovel only because a hedge affords less shelter
- from the wind and rain. Compelled by parish law to support his
- family, which means to join them in consuming an allowance from
- the parish, he frequently conspires with his wife to get that
- allowance increased, or prevent its being diminished. This brings
- begging, trickery, and quarrelling; and ends in settled craft.
- Though he has the inclination he wants the courage to become,
- like more energetic men of his class, a poacher or smuggler on
- a large scale; but he pilfers occasionally, and teaches his
- children to lie and steal. His subdued and slavish manner toward
- his great neighbours shows that they treat him with suspicion
- and harshness. Consequently he at once dreads and hates them;
- but he will never harm them by violent means. Too degraded to be
- desperate, he is only thoroughly depraved. His miserable career
- will be short; rheumatism and asthma are conducting him to the
- workhouse, where he will breathe his last without one pleasant
- recollection, and so make room for another wretch, who may live
- and die in the same way. This is a sample of one class of English
- peasants. Another class is composed of men who, though paupers
- to the extent of being in part supported by the parish, were not
- bred and born in extreme destitution, and who, therefore, in so
- far as the moral depends on the physical man, are qualified to
- become wise, virtuous, and happy. They have large muscles, an
- upright mien, and a quick perception. With strength, energy, and
- skill, they would earn a comfortable subsistence as labourers,
- if the modern fashion of paying wages out of the poor-box did
- not interfere with the due course of things, and reduce all
- the labourers of a parish, the old and the young, the weak
- and the strong, the idle and the industrious, to that lowest
- rate of wages, or rather of weekly payment to each, which, in
- each case, is barely sufficient for the support of life. If
- there were no poor-laws, or if the poor-laws were such that
- labour was paid in proportion to the work performed, and not
- according to a scale founded on the power of gastric juice under
- various circumstances, these superior men would be employed in
- preference to the inferior beings described above, would earn
- twice as much as the others could earn, and would have every
- motive for industry, providence, and general good conduct. As
- it is, their superior capacity as labourers is of no advantage
- to them. They have no motive for being industrious or prudent.
- What they obtain between labour and the rate is but just enough
- to support them miserably. They are tempted to marry for the
- sake of an extra allowance from the parish: and they would be
- sunk to the lowest point of degradation but for the energy of
- their minds, which they owe to their physical strength. Courage
- and tenderness are said to be allied: men of this class usually
- make good husbands and affectionate parents. Impelled by want of
- food, clothes, and warmth, for themselves and their families,
- they become poachers wherever game abounds, and smugglers when
- opportunity serves. By poaching or smuggling, or both, many of
- them are enabled to fill the bellies of their children, to put
- decent clothes on the backs of their wives, and to keep the
- cottage whole, with a good fire in it, from year's end to year's
- end. The villains! why are they not taken up? They are taken up
- sometimes, and are hunted always, by those who administer rural
- law. In this way they learn to consider two sets of laws—those
- for the protection of game, and those for the protection of
- home manufactures—as specially made for their injury. Be just
- to our unpaid magistrates! who perform their duty, even to the
- shedding of man's blood, in defence of pheasants and restrictions
- on trade. Thus the bolder sort of husbandry labourers, by
- engaging in murderous conflicts with gamekeepers and preventive
- men, become accustomed to deeds of violence, and, by living
- in jails, qualified for the most desperate courses. They also
- imbibe feelings of dislike, or rather of bitter hatred, toward
- the rural magistracy, whom they regard as oppressors and natural
- enemies; closely resembling, in this respect, the defective
- class of peasants from whom they differ in so many particulars.
- Between these two descriptions of peasantry there is another,
- which partakes of the characteristics of both classes, but in
- a slighter degree, except as regards their fear and hatred of
- the rural aristocracy. In the districts where paupers and game
- abound, it would be difficult to find many labourers not coming
- under one of these descriptions. By courtesy, the entire body
- is called the bold peasantry of England. But is nothing done by
- the 'nobility, clergy, and gentry,' to conciliate the affection
- of the pauper mass, by whose toil all their own wealth is
- produced? Charity! The charity of the poor-laws, which paupers
- have been taught to consider a right, which operates as a curse
- to the able-bodied and well-disposed, while it but just enables
- the infirm of all ages to linger on in pain and sorrow. Soup!
- Dogs'-meat, the paupers call it. They are very ungrateful; but
- there is a way of relieving a man's necessities which will make
- him hate you; and it is in this way, generally, that soup is
- given to the poor. Books, good little books, which teach patience
- and submission to the powers that be! With which such paupers
- as obtain them usually boil their kettles, when not deterred by
- fear of the reverend donor. Of this gift the design is so plain
- and offensive, that its effect is contrary to what was intended,
- just as children from whom obedience is very strictly exacted are
- commonly rebels at heart. What else? is nothing else done by the
- rural rich to win the love of the rural poor? Speaking generally,
- since all rules have exceptions, the privileged classes of our
- rural districts take infinite pains to be abhorred by their
- poorest neighbours. They enclose commons. They stop footpaths.
- They wall in their parks. They set spring-guns and man-traps.
- They spend on the keep of high-bred dogs what would support half
- as many children, and yet persecute a labouring man for owning
- one friend in his cur. They make rates of wages, elaborately
- calculating the minimum of food that will keep together the soul
- and body of a clodhopper. They breed game in profusion for their
- own amusement, and having thus tempted the poor man to knock
- down a hare for his pot, they send him to the treadmill, or the
- antipodes, for that inexpiable offence. They build jails, and
- fill them. They make new crimes and new punishments for the poor.
- They interfere with the marriages of the poor, compelling some,
- and forbidding others, to come together. They shut up paupers in
- workhouses, separating husband and wife, in pounds by day and
- wards by night. They harness poor men to carts. They superintend
- alehouses, decry skittles, deprecate beer-shops, meddle with
- fairs, and otherwise curtail the already narrow amusements of
- the poor. Even in church, where some of them solemnly preach
- that all are equal, they sit on cushions, in pews boarded,
- matted, and sheltered by curtains from the wind and the vulgar
- gaze, while the lower order must put up with a bare bench on a
- stone floor, which is good enough for them. Everywhere they are
- ostentatious in the display of wealth and enjoyment; while, in
- their intercourse with the poor, they are suspicious, quick at
- taking offence, vindictive when displeased, haughty, overbearing,
- tyrannical, and wolfish; as it seems in the nature of man to be
- toward such of his fellows as, like sheep, are without the power
- to resist."
-
-In London, a species of slavery pertains to the workhouse system which
-has justly excited much indignation. This is the employment of paupers
-as scavengers in the streets, without due compensation, and compelling
-them to wear badges, as if they were convicted criminals. Mr. Mayhew
-has some judicious remarks upon this subject:—
-
- "If pauperism be a disgrace, then it is unjust to turn a man into
- the public thoroughfare, wearing the badge of beggary, to be
- pointed at and scorned for his poverty, especially when we are
- growing so particularly studious of our criminals that we make
- them wear masks to prevent even their faces being seen.[91] Nor
- is it consistent with the principles of an enlightened national
- morality that we should force a body of honest men to labour
- upon the highways, branded with a degrading garb, like convicts.
- Neither is it _wise_ to do so, for the shame of poverty soon
- becomes deadened by the repeated exposure to public scorn; and
- thus the occasional recipient of parish relief is ultimately
- converted into the hardened and habitual pauper. "Once a pauper
- always a pauper," I was assured was the parish rule; and here
- lies the _rationale_ of the fact. Not long ago this system of
- employing _badged_ paupers to labour on the public thoroughfares
- was carried to a much more offensive extent than it is even at
- present. At one time the pauper labourers of a certain parish
- had the attention of every passer-by attracted to them while at
- their work, for on the back of each man's garb—a sort of smock
- frock—was marked, with sufficient prominence, 'CLERKENWELL.
- STOP IT!' This public intimation that the labourers were not
- only paupers, but regarded as thieves, and expected to purloin
- the parish dress they wore, attracted public attention, and was
- severely commented upon at a meeting. The 'STOP IT!' therefore
- was cancelled, and the frocks are now _merely_ lettered
- 'CLERKENWELL.' Before the alteration the men very generally wore
- the garment inside out."
-
-The pauper scavengers employed by the metropolitan parishes are
-divided into three classes: 1. The in-door paupers, who receive no
-wages whatever, their lodging, food, and clothing being considered to
-be sufficient remuneration for their labour; 2. The out-door paupers,
-who are paid partly in money and partly in kind, and employed in some
-cases three days, and in others six days in the week; 3. The unemployed
-labourers of the district, who are set to scavenging work by the
-parish and paid a regular money-wage—the employment being constant,
-and the rate of remuneration varying from 1_s._ 3_d._ to 2_s._ 6_d._ a
-day for each of the six days, or from 7_s._ 6_d._ to 15_s._ a week.
-
-The first class of pauper-scavengers, or those who receive nothing for
-their labour beyond their lodging, food, and clothing, are treated as
-slaves. The labour is compulsory, without inducements for exertion,
-and conducted upon the same system which the authorities of the
-parish would use for working cattle. One of these scavengers gave the
-following account of this degrading labour to Mr. Mayhew:—
-
- "'Street-sweeping,' he said, 'degrades a man, and if a man's poor
- he hasn't no call to be degraded. Why can't they set the thieves
- and pickpockets to sweep? they could be watched easy enough;
- there's always idle fellers as reckons theirselves real gents,
- as can be got for watching and sitch easy jobs, for they gets
- as much for them as three men's paid for hard work in a week. I
- never was in a prison, but I've heerd that people there is better
- fed and better cared for than in workusses. What's the meaning of
- that, sir, I'd like to know. You can't tell me, but I can tell
- you. The workus is made as ugly as it can be, that poor people
- may be got to leave it, and chance dying in the street rather.'
- [Here the man indulged in a gabbled detail of a series of pauper
- grievances which I had a difficulty in diverting or interrupting.
- On my asking if the other paupers had the same opinion as to the
- street-sweeping as he had, he replied:—] 'To be sure they has;
- all them that has sense to have a 'pinion at all has; there's
- not two sides to it anyhow. No, I don't want to be kept and do
- nothink. I want _proper_ work. And by the rights of it I might
- as well be kept with nothink to do as — or —' [parish
- officials]. 'Have they nothing to do?' I asked. 'Nothink, but to
- make mischief and get what ought to go to the poor. It's salaries
- and such like as swallers the rates, and that's what every poor
- family knows as knows any think. Did I ever like my work better?
- Certainly not. Do I take any pains with it? Well, where would be
- the good? I can sweep well enough, when I please, but if I could
- do more than the best man as ever Mr. Drake paid a pound a week
- to, it wouldn't be a bit better for me—not a bit, sir, I assure
- you. We all takes it easy whenever we can, but the work _must_ be
- done. The only good about it is that you get outside the house.
- It's a change that way certainly. But we work like horses and is
- treated like asses.'"
-
-The second mode of pauper scavenging, viz. that performed by out-door
-paupers, and paid for partly in money and partly in kind, is strongly
-condemned, as having mischievous and degrading tendencies. The men
-thus employed are certainly not independent labourers, though the
-means of their subsistence are partly the fruits of their toil.
-Their exceedingly scant payment keeps them hard at work for a very
-unreasonable period. Should they refuse to obey the parish regulations
-in regard to the work, the pangs of hunger are sure to reach them and
-compel them to submit. Death is the only door of escape. From a married
-man employed by the parish in this work, Mr. Mayhew obtained the
-following interesting narrative, which is a sad revelation of pauper
-slavery:—
-
- "'I was brought up as a type-founder; my father, who was one,
- learnt me his trade; but he died when I was quite a young man,
- or I might have been better perfected in it. I was comfortably
- off enough then, and got married. Very soon after that I was
- taken ill with an abscess in my neck, you can see the mark of it
- still,' [He showed me the mark.] 'For six months I wasn't able
- to do a thing, and I was a part of the time, I don't recollect
- how long, in St. Bartholomew's Hospital. I was weak and ill when
- I came out, and hardly fit for work; I couldn't hear of any work
- I could get, for there was a great bother in the trade between
- master and men. Before I went into the hospital, there was money
- to pay to doctors; and when I came out I could earn nothing, so
- every thing went; yes, sir, every thing. My wife made a little
- matter with charing for families she'd lived in, but things are
- in a bad way if a poor woman has to keep her husband. She was
- taken ill at last, and then there was nothing but the parish
- for us. I suffered a great deal before it come to that. It was
- awful. No one can know what it is but them that suffers it. But I
- didn't know what in the world to do. We lived then in St. Luke's,
- and were passed to our own parish, and were three months in the
- workhouse. The living was good enough, better than it is now,
- I've heard, but I was miserable.' ['And I was _very_ miserable,'
- interposed the wife, 'for I had been brought up comfortable; my
- father was a respectable tradesman in St. George's-in-the-East,
- and I had been in good situations.'] 'We made ourselves,' said
- the husband, 'as useful as we could, but we were parted of
- course. At the three months' end, I had 10_s._ given to me to
- come out with, and was told I might start costermongering on it.
- But to a man not up to the trade, 10_s._ won't go very far to
- keep up costering. I didn't feel master enough of my own trade by
- this time to try for work at it, and work wasn't at all regular.
- There were good hands earning only 12_s._ a week. The 10_s._
- soon went, and I had again to apply for relief, and got an order
- for the stone-yard to go and break stones. Ten bushels was to be
- broken for 15_d._ It was dreadful hard work at first. My hands
- got all blistered and bloody, and I've gone home and cried with
- pain and wretchedness. At first it was on to three days before
- I could break the ten bushels. I felt shivered to bits all over
- my arms and shoulders, and my head was splitting. I then got to
- do it in two days, and then in one, and it grew easier. But all
- this time I had only what was reckoned three days' work in a
- week. That is, you see, sir, I had only three times ten bushels
- of stones given to break in a week, and earned only 3_s._ 9_d._
- Yes, I lived on it, and paid 1_s._ 6_d._ a week rent, for the
- neighbours took care of a few sticks for us, and the parish or a
- broker wouldn't have found them worth carriage. My wife was then
- in the country with a sister. I lived upon bread and dripping,
- went without fire or candle (or had one only very seldom) though
- it wasn't warm weather. I can safely say that for eight weeks
- I never tasted one bite of meat, and hardly a bite of butter.
- When I couldn't sleep of a night, but that wasn't often, it was
- terrible, very. I washed what bits of things I had then, myself,
- and had sometimes to get a ha'porth of soap as a favour, as the
- chandler said she 'didn't make less than a penn'orth.' If I ate
- too much dripping, it made me feel sick. I hardly know how much
- bread and dripping I ate in a week. I spent what money I had
- in it and bread, and sometimes went without. I was very weak,
- you may be sure, sir; and if I'd had the influenza or any thing
- that way, I should have gone off like a shot, for I seemed to
- have no constitution left. But my wife came back again and got
- work at charing, and made about 4_s._ a week at it; but we were
- still very badly off. Then I got to work on the roads every day,
- and had 1_s._ and a quartern loaf a day, which was a rise. I
- had only one child then, but men with larger families got two
- quartern loaves a day. Single men got 9_d._ a day. It was far
- easier work than stone-breaking too. The hours were from eight
- to five in winter, and from seven to six in summer. But there's
- always changes going on, and we were put on 1_s._ 1½_d._ a
- day and a quartern loaf, and only three days a week. All the
- same as to time of course. The bread wasn't good; it was only
- cheap. I suppose there was twenty of us working most of the
- times as I was. The gangsman, as you call him, but that's more
- for the regular hands, was a servant of the parish, and a great
- tyrant. Yes, indeed, when we had a talk among ourselves, there
- was nothing but grumbling heard of. Some of the tales I've heard
- were shocking; worse than what I've gone through. Everybody was
- grumbling, except perhaps two men that had been twenty years in
- the streets, and were like born paupers. They didn't feel it,
- for there's a great difference in men. They knew no better. But
- anybody might have been frightened to hear some of the men talk
- and curse. We've stopped work to abuse the parish officers as
- might be passing. We've mobbed the overseers; and a number of
- us, I was one, were taken before the magistrate for it: but we
- told him how badly we were off, and he discharged us, and gave us
- orders into the workhouse, and told 'em to see if nothing could
- be done for us. We were there till next morning, and then sent
- away without any thing being said.'"
-
- "'It's a sad life, sir, is a parish worker's. I wish to God I
- could get out of it. But when a man has children he can't stop
- and say, "I can't do this," and "I won't do that." Last week,
- now, in costering, I lost 6_s._ [he meant that his expenses, of
- every kind, exceeded his receipts by 6_s._,] and though I can
- distil nectar, or any thing that way, [this was said somewhat
- laughingly,] it's only when the weather's hot and fine that any
- good at all can be done with it. I think, too, that there's
- not the money among working-men that there once was. Any thing
- regular in the way of pay must always be looked at by a man with
- a family.
-
- "'Of course the streets must be properly swept, and if I can
- sweep them as well as Mr. Dodd's men, for I know one of them very
- well, why should I have only 1_s._ 4½_d._ a week and three
- loaves, and he have 16_s._, I think it is. I don't drink, my
- wife knows I don't, [the wife assented,] and it seems as if in a
- parish a man must be kept down when he is down, and then blamed
- for it. I may not understand all about it, but it looks queer."'
-
-The third system of parish work, where the labourer is employed
-regularly, and paid a certain sum out of the parochial fund, is
-superior to either of the other modes; but still, the labourers are
-very scantily paid, subjected to a great deal of tyranny by brutal
-officers, and miserably provided. They endure the severest toil for a
-wretched pittance, without being able to choose their masters or their
-employment. No slaves could be more completely at the mercy of their
-masters.
-
-The common practice of apprenticing children born and reared in
-workhouses, to masters who may feed, clothe, and beat them as they
-please, is touchingly illustrated in Dickens's famous story of Oliver
-Twist. After Oliver had been subjected for some time to the tender
-mercies of guardians and overseers in the workhouse, it was advertised
-that any person wanting an apprentice could obtain him, and five
-pounds as a premium. He narrowly escaped being apprenticed to a sweep,
-and finally fell into the hands of Mr. Sowerberry, an undertaker. In
-the house of that dismal personage, he was fed upon cold bits, badly
-clothed, knocked about unmercifully, and worked with great severity.
-Such is the common fate of parish apprentices; and we do not think
-a more truthful conception of the _beauties_ of the system could be
-conveyed than by quoting from the experience of Dickens's workhouse
-boy:—
-
- "Oliver had not been within the walls of the workhouse a quarter
- of an hour, and had scarcely completed the demolition of a second
- slice of bread, when Mr. Bumble, who had handed him over to the
- care of an old woman, returned, and, telling him it was a board
- night, informed him that the board had said he was to appear
- before it forthwith.
-
- "Not having a very clearly defined notion what a live board was,
- Oliver was rather astounded by this intelligence, and was not
- quite certain whether he ought to laugh or cry. He had no time
- to think about the matter, however; for Mr. Bumble gave him a
- tap on the head with his cane to wake him up, and another on his
- back to make him lively, and, bidding him follow, conducted him
- into a large whitewashed room, where eight or ten fat gentlemen
- were sitting round a table, at the top of which, seated in an
- armchair rather higher than the rest, was a particularly fat
- gentleman with a very round, red face.
-
- "'Bow to the board,' said Bumble. Oliver brushed away two or
- three tears that were lingering in his eyes, and seeing no board
- but the table, fortunately bowed to that.
-
- "'What's your name, boy?' said the gentleman in the high chair.
-
- "Oliver was frightened at the sight of so many gentlemen, which
- made him tremble: and the beadle gave him another tap behind,
- which made him cry; and these two causes made him answer in a
- very low and hesitating voice; whereupon a gentleman in a white
- waistcoat said he was a fool, which was a capital way of raising
- his spirit, and putting him quite at his ease.
-
- "'Boy,' said the gentleman in the high chair: 'listen to me. You
- know you're an orphan, I suppose?'"
-
- "'What's that, sir?" inquired poor Oliver.
-
- "'The boy _is_ a fool—I thought he was,' said the gentleman
- in the white waistcoat in a very decided tone. If one member
- of a class be blessed with an intuitive perception of others
- of the same race, the gentleman in the white waistcoat was
- unquestionably well qualified to pronounce an opinion on the
- matter.
-
- "'Hush!' said the gentleman who had spoken first. 'You know
- you've got no father or mother, and that you are brought up by
- the parish, don't you?'
-
- "'Yes, sir,' replied Oliver, weeping bitterly.
-
- "'What are you crying for?' inquired the gentleman in the white
- waistcoat; and to be sure it was very extraordinary. What _could_
- he be crying for?
-
- "'I hope you say your prayers every night,' said another
- gentleman in a gruff voice, 'and pray for the people who feed
- you, and take care of you, like a Christian.'
-
- "'Yes, sir,' stammered the boy. The gentleman who spoke last was
- unconsciously right. It would have been _very_ like a Christian,
- and a marvellously good Christian, too, if Oliver had prayed for
- the people who fed and took care of _him_. But he hadn't, because
- nobody had taught him.
-
- "'Well you have come here to be educated, and taught a useful
- trade,' said the red-faced gentleman in the high chair.
-
- "'So you'll begin to pick oakum to-morrow morning at six
- o'clock,' added the surly one in the white waistcoat.
-
- "For the combination of both these blessings in the one simple
- process of picking oakum, Oliver bowed low by the direction of
- the beadle, and was then hurried away to a large ward, where,
- on a rough hard bed, he sobbed himself to sleep. What a noble
- illustration of the tender laws of this favoured country! they
- let the paupers go to sleep!
-
- "Poor Oliver! he little thought, as he lay sleeping in happy
- unconsciousness of all around him, that the board had that very
- day arrived at a decision which would exercise the most material
- influence over all his future fortunes. But they had. And this
- was it:—
-
- "The members of this board were very sage, deep, philosophical
- men; and when they came to turn their attention to the workhouse,
- they found out at once, what ordinary folks would never have
- discovered,—the poor people liked it! It was a regular place
- of public entertainment for the poorer classes,—a tavern where
- there was nothing to pay,—a public breakfast, dinner, tea, and
- supper, all the year round,—a brick and mortar elysium, where
- it was all play and no work. 'Oho!' said the board, looking very
- knowing; 'we are the fellows to set this to rights; we'll stop
- it all in no time.' So they established the rule, that all poor
- people should have the alternative (for they would compel nobody,
- not they,) of being starved by a gradual process in the house,
- or by a quick one out of it. With this view, they contracted
- with the water-works to lay on an unlimited supply of water, and
- with a corn-factor to supply periodically small quantities of
- oat-meal: and issued three meals of thin gruel a-day, with an
- onion twice a week, and half a roll on Sundays. They made a great
- many other wise and humane regulations having reference to the
- ladies, which it is not necessary to repeat; kindly undertook to
- divorce poor married people, in consequence of the great expense
- of a suit in Doctors' Commons; and, instead of compelling a
- man to support his family, as they had theretofore done, took
- his family away from him, and made him a bachelor! There is no
- telling how many applicants for relief under these last two heads
- would not have started up in all classes of society, if it had
- not been coupled with the workhouse. But they were long-headed
- men, and they had provided for this difficulty. The relief was
- inseparable from the workhouse and the gruel; and that frightened
- people.
-
- "For the first three months after Oliver Twist was removed, the
- system was in full operation. It was rather expensive at first,
- in consequence of the increase in the undertaker's bill, and the
- necessity of taking in the clothes of all the paupers, which
- fluttered loosely on their wasted, shrunken forms, after a week
- or two's gruel. But the number of workhouse inmates got thin, as
- well as the paupers; and the board were in ecstasies. The room
- in which the boys were fed was a large stone hall, with a copper
- at one end, out of which the master, dressed in an apron for
- the purpose, and assisted by one or two women, ladled the gruel
- at meal-times; of which composition each boy had one porringer,
- and no more,—except on festive occasions, and then he had two
- ounces and a quarter of bread besides. The bowls never wanted
- washing—the boys polished them with their spoons, till they
- shone again; and when they had performed this operation, (which
- never took very long, the spoons being nearly as large as the
- bowls,) they would sit staring at the copper with such eager
- eyes, as if they could devour the very bricks of which it was
- composed; employing themselves meanwhile in sucking their fingers
- most assiduously, with the view of catching up any stray splashes
- of gruel that might have been cast thereon. Boys have generally
- excellent appetites: Oliver Twist and his companions suffered
- the tortures of slow starvation for three months; at last they
- got so voracious and wild with hunger, that one boy, who was
- tall for his age, and hadn't been used to that sort of thing,
- (for his father had kept a small cook's shop,) hinted darkly to
- his companions, that unless he had another basin of gruel _per
- diem_, he was afraid he should some night eat the boy who slept
- next him, who happened to be a weakly youth of tender age. He had
- a wild, hungry eye, and they implicitly believed him. A council
- was held; lots were cast who should walk up to the master after
- supper that evening, and ask for more; and it fell to Oliver
- Twist.
-
- The evening arrived: the boys took their places; the master, in
- his cook's uniform, stationed himself at the copper; his pauper
- assistants ranged themselves behind him; the gruel was served
- out, and a long grace was said over the short commons. The gruel
- disappeared, and the boys whispered to each other and winked at
- Oliver, while his next neighbours nudged him. Child as he was,
- he was desperate with hunger, and reckless with misery. He rose
- from the table, and, advancing, basin and spoon in hand, to the
- master, said, somewhat alarmed at his own temerity—
-
- "'Please, sir, I want some more.'
-
- "The master was a fat, healthy man, but he turned very pale.
- He gazed in stupefied astonishment on the small rebel for some
- seconds, and then clung for support to the copper. The assistants
- were paralyzed with wonder, and the boys with fear.
-
- "'What!' said the master at length, in a faint voice.
-
- "'Please, sir,' replied Oliver, 'I want some more.'
-
- "The master aimed a blow at Oliver's head with the ladle,
- pinioned him in his arms, and shrieked aloud for the beadle.
-
- "The board were sitting in solemn conclave, when Mr. Bumble
- rushed into the room in great excitement, and addressing the
- gentleman in the high chair, said—
-
- "'Mr. Limbkins, I beg your pardon, sir;—Oliver Twist has asked
- for more.' There was a general start. Horror was depicted on
- every countenance.
-
- "'For _more_!' said Mr. Limbkins. 'Compose yourself, Bumble, and
- answer me distinctly. Do I understand that he asked for more,
- after he had eaten the supper allotted by the dietary?'
-
- "'He did, sir,' replied Bumble.
-
- "'That boy will be hung,' said the gentleman in the white
- waistcoat; 'I know that boy will be hung.'
-
- "Nobody controverted the prophetic gentleman's opinion. An
- animated discussion took place. Oliver was ordered into instant
- confinement; and a bill was next morning pasted on the outside of
- the gate, offering a reward of five pounds to anybody who would
- take Oliver Twist off the hands of the parish; in other words,
- five pounds and Oliver Twist were offered to any man or woman who
- wanted an apprentice to any trade, business, or calling.
-
- "'I never was more convinced of any thing in my life,' said the
- gentleman in the white waistcoat, as he knocked at the gate and
- read the bill next morning,—'I never was more convinced of any
- thing in my life, than I am that that boy will come to be hung.'
-
- "For a week after the commission of the impious and profane
- offence of asking for more, Oliver remained a close prisoner in
- the dark and solitary room to which he had been consigned by the
- wisdom and mercy of the board. It appears, at first sight, not
- unreasonable to suppose, that, if he had entertained a becoming
- feeling of respect for the prediction of the gentleman in the
- white waistcoat, he would have established that sage individual's
- prophetic character, once and for ever, by tying one end of his
- pocket-handkerchief to a hook in the wall, and attaching himself
- to the other. To the performance of this feat, however, there was
- one obstacle, namely, that pocket-handkerchiefs being decided
- articles of luxury, had been, for all future times and ages,
- removed from the noses of paupers by the express order of the
- board in council assembled, solemnly given and pronounced under
- their hands and seals. There was a still greater obstacle in
- Oliver's youth and childishness. He only cried bitterly all day;
- and when the long, dismal night came on, he spread his little
- hands before his eyes to shut out the darkness, and crouching in
- the corner, tried to sleep, ever and anon waking with a start and
- tremble, and drawing himself closer and closer to the wall, as if
- to feel even its cold hard surface were a protection in the gloom
- and loneliness which surrounded him.
-
- "Let it not be supposed by the enemies of 'the system,' that,
- during the period of his solitary incarceration, Oliver was
- denied the benefit of exercise, the pleasure of society, or the
- advantages of religious consolation. As for exercise, it was nice
- cold weather, and he was allowed to perform his ablutions every
- morning under the pump, in a stone yard, in the presence of Mr.
- Bumble, who prevented his catching cold, and caused a tingling
- sensation to pervade his frame, by repeated applications of the
- cane; as for society, he was carried every other day into the
- hall where the boys dined, and there sociably flogged, as a
- public warning and example; and, so far from being denied the
- advantages of religious consolation, he was kicked into the same
- apartment every evening at prayer-time, and there permitted to
- listen to, and console his mind with, a general supplication of
- the boys, containing a special clause therein inserted by the
- authority of the board, in which they entreated to be made good,
- virtuous, contented, and obedient, and to be guarded from the
- sins and vices of Oliver Twist, whom the supplication distinctly
- set forth to be under the exclusive patronage and protection
- of the powers of wickedness, and an article direct from the
- manufactory of the devil himself.
-
- "It chanced one morning, while Oliver's affairs were in
- this auspicious and comfortable state, that Mr. Gamfield,
- chimney-sweeper, was wending his way adown the High-street,
- deeply cogitating in his mind his ways and means of paying
- certain arrears of rent, for which his landlord had become rather
- pressing. Mr. Gamfield's most sanguine calculation of funds
- could not raise them within full five pounds of the desired
- amount; and, in a species of arithmetical desperation, he was
- alternately cudgelling his brains and his donkey, when, passing
- the workhouse, his eyes encountered the bill on the gate.
-
- "'Woo!' said Mr. Gamfield to the donkey.
-
- "The donkey was in a state of profound abstraction—wondering,
- probably, whether he was destined to be regaled with a
- cabbage-stalk or two, when he had disposed of the two sacks of
- soot with which the little cart was laden; so, without noticing
- the word of command, he jogged onward.
-
- "Mr. Gamfield growled a fierce imprecation on the donkey
- generally, but more particularly on his eyes; and running after
- him, bestowed a blow on his head which would inevitably have
- beaten in any skull but a donkey's; then, catching hold of the
- bridle, he gave his jaw a sharp wrench, by way of gentle reminder
- that he was not his own master; and, having by these means turned
- him round, he gave him another blow on the head, just to stun him
- until he came back again; and, having done so, walked to the gate
- to read the bill.
-
- "The gentleman with the white waistcoat was standing at the
- gate with his hands behind him, after having delivered himself
- of some profound sentiments in the board-room. Having witnessed
- the little dispute between Mr. Gamfield and the donkey, he smiled
- joyously when that person came up to read the bill, for he saw
- at once that Mr. Gamfield was just exactly the sort of master
- Oliver Twist wanted. Mr. Gamfield smiled, too, as he perused
- the document, for five pounds was just the sum he had been
- wishing for; and, as to the boy with which it was encumbered,
- Mr. Gamfield, knowing what the dietary of the workhouse was,
- well knew he would be a nice small pattern, just the very thing
- for register stoves. So he spelt the bill through again, from
- beginning to end; and then, touching his fur cap in token of
- humility, accosted the gentleman in the white waistcoat.
-
- "'This here boy, sir, wot the parish wants to 'prentis,' said Mr.
- Gamfield.
-
- "'Yes, my man,' said the gentleman in the white waistcoat, with a
- condescending smile, 'what of him?'
-
- "'If the parish vould like him to learn a light, pleasant
- trade, in a good 'spectable chimbley-sweepin bisness,' said Mr.
- Gamfield, 'I wants a 'prentis, and I'm ready to take him.'
-
- "'Walk in,' said the gentleman with the white waistcoat. And Mr.
- Gamfield having lingered behind, to give the donkey another blow
- on the head, and another wrench of the jaw, as a caution not to
- run away in his absence, followed the gentleman in the white
- waistcoat into the room where Oliver had first seen him.
-
- "'It's a nasty trade,' said Mr. Limbkins, when Gamfield had again
- stated his case.
-
- "'Young boys have been smothered in chimeys, before now,' said
- another gentleman.
-
- "'That's acause they damped the straw afore they lit it in the
- chimbley to make'em come down again,' said Gamfield; 'that's
- all smoke, and no blaze: vereas smoke a'n't o' no use at all in
- makin' a boy come down; it only sinds him to sleep, and that's
- wot he likes. Boys is wery obstinit, and wery lazy, gen'lm'n,
- and there's nothink like a good hot blaze to make em come down
- vith a run; it's humane, too, gen'lm'n, acause, even if they've
- stuck in the chimbley, roastin' their feet makes 'em struggle to
- hextricate theirselves.'
-
- "The gentleman in the white waistcoat appeared very much amused
- with this explanation; but his mirth was speedily checked by a
- look from Mr. Limbkins. The board then proceeded to converse
- among themselves for a few minutes, but in so low a tone that
- the words, 'saving of expenditure,' 'look well in the accounts,'
- 'have a printed report published,' were alone audible; and
- they only chanced to be heard on account of their being very
- frequently repeated with great emphasis.
-
- "At length the whispering ceased, and the members of the board
- having resumed their seats and their solemnity, Mr. Limbkins said,
-
- "'We have considered your proposition, and we don't approve of
- it.'
-
- "'Not at all,' said the gentleman in the white waistcoat.
-
- "'Decidedly not,' added the other members.
-
- "As Mr. Gamfield did happen to labour under the slight imputation
- of having bruised three or four boys to death already, it
- occurred to him that the board had perhaps, in some unaccountable
- freak, taken it into their heads that this extraneous
- circumstance ought to influence their proceedings. It was very
- unlike their general mode of doing business, if they had; but
- still, as he had no particular wish to revive the rumour, he
- twisted his cap in his hands, and walked slowly from the table.
-
- "'So you won't let me have him, gen'lmen,' said Mr. Gamfield,
- pausing near the door.
-
- "'No,' replied Mr. Limbkins; 'at least, as it's a nasty business,
- we think you ought to take something less than the premium we
- offered.'
-
- "Mr. Gamfield's countenance brightened, as with a quick step he
- returned to the table, and said,
-
- "'What'll you give, gen'lmen? Come, don't be too hard on a poor
- man. What'll you give?'
-
- "'I should say three pound ten was plenty,' said Mr. Limbkins.
-
- "'Ten shillings too much,' said the gentleman in the white
- waistcoat.
-
- "'Come,' said Gamfield, 'say four pound, gen'lmen. Say four
- pound, and you've got rid of him for good and all. There!'
-
- "'Three pound ten,' repeated Mr. Limbkins, firmly.
-
- "'Come, I'll split the difference, gen'lmen,' urged Gamfield.
- 'Three pound fifteen.'
-
- "'Not a farthing more,' was the firm reply of Mr. Limbkins.
-
- "'You're desp'rate hard upon me, gen'lmen,' said Gamfield,
- wavering.
-
- "'Pooh! pooh! nonsense!' said the gentleman in the white
- waistcoat. 'He'd be cheap with nothing at all as a premium. Take
- him, you silly fellow! He's just the boy for you. He wants the
- stick now and then; it'll do him good; and his board needn't come
- very expensive, for he hasn't been overfed since he was born. Ha!
- ha! ha!'
-
- "Mr. Gamfield gave an arch look at the faces round the table,
- and, observing a smile on all of them, gradually broke into
- a smile himself. The bargain was made, and Mr. Bumble was at
- once instructed that Oliver Twist and his indentures were to be
- conveyed before the magistrate for signature and approval, that
- very afternoon.
-
- "In pursuance of this determination, little Oliver, to his
- excessive astonishment, was released from bondage, and ordered to
- put himself into a clean shirt. He had hardly achieved this very
- unusual gymnastic performance, when Mr. Bumble brought him with
- his own hands, a basin of gruel, and the holiday allowance of two
- ounces and a quarter of bread; at sight of which Oliver began to
- cry very piteously, thinking, not unnaturally, that the board
- must have determined to kill him for some useful purpose, or they
- never would have begun to fatten him up in this way.
-
- "'Don't make your eyes red, Oliver, but eat your food, and be
- thankful,' said Mr. Bumble, in a tone of impressive pomposity.
-
- 'You're a-going to be made a 'prentice of, Oliver.'
-
- "'A 'prentice, sir!' said the child, trembling.
-
- "'Yes, Oliver,' said Mr. Bumble. 'The kind and blessed gentlemen
- which is so many parents to you, Oliver, when you have none
- of your own, are a-going to 'prentice you, and to set you up
- in life, and make a man of you, although the expense to the
- parish is three pound ten!—three pound ten, Oliver!—seventy
- shillin's!—one hundred and forty sixpences!—and all for a
- naughty orphan which nobody can love.'
-
- "As Mr. Bumble paused to take breath after delivering this
- address, in an awful voice, the tears rolled down the poor
- child's face, and he sobbed bitterly.
-
- "'Come,' said Mr. Bumble, somewhat less pompously; for it was
- gratifying to his feelings to observe the effect his eloquence
- had produced. 'Come, Oliver, wipe your eyes with the cuffs of
- your jacket, and don't cry into your gruel; that's a very foolish
- action, Oliver.' It certainly was, for there was quite enough
- water in it already.
-
- "On their way to the magistrate's, Mr. Bumble instructed Oliver
- that all he would have to do would be to look very happy,
- and say, when the gentleman asked him if he wanted to be
- apprenticed, that he should like it very much indeed; both of
- which injunctions Oliver promised to obey, the more readily as
- Mr. Bumble threw in a gentle hint, that if he failed in either
- particular, there was no telling what would be done to him. When
- they arrived at the office he was shut up in a little room by
- himself, and admonished by Mr. Bumble to stay there until he came
- back to fetch him.
-
- "There the boy remained with a palpitating heart for half an
- hour, at the expiration of which time Mr. Bumble thrust in his
- head, unadorned with the cocked hat, and said aloud,
-
- "'Now, Oliver, my dear, come to the gentleman.' As Mr. Bumble
- said this, he put on a grim and threatening look, and added in a
- low voice, 'Mind what I told you, you young rascal.'
-
- "Oliver stared innocently in Mr. Bumble's face at this somewhat
- contradictory style of address; but that gentleman prevented his
- offering any remark thereupon, by leading him at once into an
- adjoining room, the door of which was open. It was a large room
- with a great window; and behind a desk sat two old gentlemen with
- powdered heads, one of whom was reading the newspaper, while the
- other was perusing, with the aid of a pair of tortoise-shell
- spectacles, a small piece of parchment which lay before him. Mr.
- Limbkins was standing in front of the desk, on one side; and Mr.
- Gamfield, with a partially washed face, on the other; while two
- or three bluff-looking men in top-boots were lounging about.
-
- "The old gentleman with the spectacles gradually dozed off, over
- the little bit of parchment; and there was a short pause after
- Oliver had been stationed by Mr. Bumble in front of the desk.
-
- "'This is the boy, your worship,' said Mr. Bumble.
-
- "The old gentleman who was reading the newspaper raised his head
- for a moment, and pulled the other old gentleman by the sleeve,
- whereupon the last-mentioned old gentleman woke up.
-
- "'Oh, is this the boy?' said the old gentleman.
-
- "'This is him, sir,' replied Mr. Bumble. 'Bow to the magistrate,
- my dear.'
-
- "Oliver roused himself, and made his best obeisance. He had
- been wondering, with his eyes fixed on the magistrate's powder,
- whether all boards were born with that white stuff on their
- heads, and were boards from thenceforth, on that account.
-
- "'Well,' said the old gentleman, 'I suppose he's fond of
- chimney-sweeping?'
-
- "'He dotes on it, your worship,' replied Bumble, giving Oliver a
- sly pinch, to intimate that he had better not say he didn't.
-
- "'And he _will_ be a sweep, will he?' inquired the old gentleman.
-
- "'If we was to bind him to any other trade to-morrow, he'd run
- away simultaneously, your worship,' replied Bumble.
-
- "'And this man that's to be his master,—you, sir,—you'll treat
- him well, and feed him, and do all that sort of thing,—will
- you?' said the old gentleman.
-
- "'When I says I will, I means I will,' replied Mr. Gamfield,
- doggedly.
-
- "'You're a rough speaker, my friend, but you look an honest,
- open-hearted man,' said the old gentleman, turning his spectacles
- in the direction of the candidate for Oliver's premium, whose
- villanous countenance was a regular stamped receipt for cruelty.
- But the magistrate was half blind, and half childish, so he
- couldn't reasonably be expected to discern what other people did.
-
- "'I hope I am, sir,' said Mr. Gamfield with an ugly leer.
-
- "'I have no doubt you are, my friend,' replied the old gentleman,
- fixing his spectacles more firmly on his nose, and looking about
- him for the inkstand.
-
- "It was the critical moment of Oliver's fate. If the inkstand
- had been where the old gentleman thought it was, he would have
- dipped his pen into it and signed the indentures, and Oliver
- would have been straightway hurried off. But, as it chanced to be
- immediately under his nose, it followed as a matter of course,
- that he looked all over his desk for it, without finding it; and
- happening in the course of his search to look straight before
- him, his gaze encountered the pale and terrified face of Oliver
- Twist, who, despite of all the admonitory looks and pinches of
- Bumble, was regarding the very repulsive countenance of his
- future master with a mingled expression of horror and fear, too
- palpable to be mistaken even by a half-blind magistrate.
-
- "The old gentleman stopped, laid down his pen, and looked from
- Oliver to Mr. Limbkins, who attempted to take snuff with a
- cheerful and unconcerned aspect.
-
- "'My boy,' said the old gentleman, leaning over the desk. Oliver
- started at the sound,—he might be excused for doing so, for
- the words were kindly said, and strange sounds frighten one. He
- trembled violently, and burst into tears.
-
- "'My boy,' said the old gentleman, 'you look pale and alarmed.
- What is the matter?'
-
- "'Stand a little away from him, beadle,' said the other
- magistrate, laying aside the paper and leaning forward with
- an expression of some interest. 'Now, boy, tell us what's the
- matter; don't be afraid.'
-
- "Oliver fell on his knees, and, clasping his hands together,
- prayed that they would order him back to the dark room—that they
- would starve him—beat him—kill him if they pleased, rather than
- send him away with that dreadful man.
-
- "'Well!' said Mr. Bumble, raising his hands and eyes with most
- impressive solemnity—'Well! of _all_ the artful and designing
- orphans that ever I see, Oliver, you are one of the most
- bare-facedest.'
-
- "'Hold your tongue, beadle,' said the second old gentleman, when
- Mr. Bumble had given vent to this compound adjective.
-
- "'I beg your worship's pardon,' said Mr. Bumble, incredulous of
- his having heard aright—'did your worship speak to me?'
-
- "'Yes—hold your tongue.'
-
- "Mr. Bumble was stupefied with astonishment. A beadle ordered to
- hold his tongue! A moral revolution.
-
- "The old gentleman in the tortoise-shell spectacles looked at his
- companion; he nodded significantly.
-
- "'We refuse to sanction these indentures,' said the old
- gentleman, tossing aside the piece of parchment as he spoke.
-
- "'I hope,' stammered Mr. Limbkins—'I hope the magistrates will
- not form the opinion that the authorities have been guilty of any
- improper conduct, on the unsupported testimony of a mere child.'
-
- "'The magistrates are not called upon to pronounce any opinion on
- the matter,' said the second old gentleman, sharply. 'Take the
- boy back to the workhouse and treat him kindly; he seems to want
- it.'
-
- "That same evening the gentleman in the white waistcoat most
- positively and decidedly affirmed, not only that Oliver would be
- hung, but that he would be drawn and quartered into the bargain.
- Mr. Bumble shook his head with gloomy mystery, and said he wished
- he might come to good: to which Mr. Gamfield replied that he
- wished he might come to him, which, although he agreed with the
- beadle in most matters, would seem to be a wish of a totally
- opposite description.
-
- "The next morning the public were once more informed that Oliver
- Twist was again to let, and that five pounds would be paid to
- anybody who would take possession of him.
-
- "In great families, when an advantageous place cannot be
- obtained, either in possession, reversion, remainder, or
- expectancy, for the young man who is growing up, it is a very
- general custom to send him to sea. The board, in imitation
- of so wise and salutary an example, took counsel together on
- the expediency of shipping off Oliver Twist in some small
- trading-vessel bound to a good unhealthy port, which suggested
- itself as the very best thing that could possibly be done with
- him; the probability being that the skipper would either flog him
- to death in a playful mood, some day after dinner, or knock his
- brains out with an iron bar, both pastimes being, as is pretty
- generally known, very favourite and common recreations among
- gentlemen of that class. The more the case presented itself to
- the board in this point of view, the more manifold the advantages
- of the step appeared; so they came to the conclusion that the
- only way of providing for Oliver effectually, was to send him to
- sea without delay.
-
- "Mr. Bumble had been despatched to make various preliminary
- inquiries, with the view of finding out some captain or other
- who wanted a cabin-boy without any friends; and was returning
- to the workhouse to communicate the result of his mission,
- when he encountered just at the gate no less a person than Mr.
- Sowerberry, the parochial undertaker.
-
- "Mr. Sowerberry was a tall, gaunt, large-jointed man, attired in
- a suit of threadbare black, with darned cotton stockings of the
- same colour, and shoes to answer. His features were not naturally
- intended to wear a smiling aspect, but he was in general rather
- given to professional jocosity; his step was elastic, and his
- face betokened inward pleasantry as he advanced to Mr. Bumble and
- shook him cordially by the hand.
-
- "'I have taken the measure of the two women that died last night,
- Mr. Bumble,' said the undertaker.
-
- "'You'll make your fortune, Mr. Sowerberry,' said the beadle, as
- he thrust his thumb and forefinger into the proffered snuff-box
- of the undertaker, which was an ingenious little model of a
- patent coffin. 'I say you'll make your fortune, Mr. Sowerberry,'
- repeated Mr. Bumble, tapping the undertaker on the shoulder in a
- friendly manner with his cane.
-
- "'Think so?' said the undertaker in a tone which half admitted
- and half disputed the probability of the event. 'The prices
- allowed by the board are very small, Mr. Bumble.'
-
- "'So are the coffins,' replied the beadle, with precisely as near
- an approach to a laugh as a great official ought to indulge in.
-
- "Mr. Sowerberry was much tickled at this, as of course he ought
- to be, and laughed a long time without cessation. 'Well, well,
- Mr. Bumble,' he said at length, 'there's no denying that, since
- the new system of feeding has come in, the coffins are something
- narrower and more shallow than they used to be; but we must have
- some profit, Mr. Bumble. Well-seasoned timber is an expensive
- article, sir; and all the iron handles come by canal from
- Birmingham.'
-
- "'Well, well,' said Mr. Bumble, 'every trade has its drawbacks,
- and a fair profit is of course allowable.'
-
- "'Of course, of course,' replied the undertaker; 'and if I don't
- get a profit upon this or that particular article, why I make it
- up in the long run, you see—he! he! he!'
-
- "'Just so,' said Mr. Bumble.
-
- "'Though I must say,'—continued the undertaker, resuming
- the current of observations which the beadle had
- interrupted,—'though I must say, Mr. Bumble, that I have to
- contend against one very great disadvantage, which is, that all
- the stout people go off the quickest—I mean that the people who
- have been better off, and have paid rates for many years, are
- the first to sink when they come into the house; and let me tell
- you, Mr. Bumble, that three or four inches over one's calculation
- makes a great hole in one's profits, especially when one has a
- family to provide for, sir.'
-
- "As Mr. Sowerberry said this, with the becoming indignation of
- an ill-used man, and as Mr. Bumble felt that it rather tended
- to convey a reflection on the honour of the parish, the latter
- gentleman thought it advisable to change the subject; and Oliver
- Twist being uppermost in his mind, he made him his theme.
-
- "'By-the-by,' said Mr. Bumble, 'you don't know anybody who
- wants a boy, do you—a parochial 'prentis, who is at present
- a dead-weight—a millstone, as I may say—round the parochial
- throat? Liberal terms, Mr. Sowerberry—liberal terms;' and, as
- Mr. Bumble spoke, he raised his cane to the bill above him and
- gave three distinct raps upon the words 'five pounds,' which were
- printed therein in Roman capitals of gigantic size.
-
- "'Gadso!' said the undertaker, taking Mr. Bumble by the
- gilt-edged lappel of his official coat; 'that's just the very
- thing I wanted to speak to you about. You know—dear me, what
- a very elegant button this is, Mr. Bumble; I never noticed it
- before.'
-
- "'Yes, I think it is rather pretty,' said the beadle, glancing
- proudly downward at the large brass buttons which embellished
- his coat. 'The die is the same as the parochial seal—the Good
- Samaritan healing the sick and bruised man. The board presented
- it to me on New-year's morning, Mr. Sowerberry. I put it on,
- I remember, for the first time to attend the inquest on that
- reduced tradesman who died in a doorway at midnight.'
-
- "' I recollect,' said the undertaker. 'The jury brought in—Died
- from exposure to the cold, and want of the common necessaries of
- life—didn't they?'
-
- "Mr. Bumble nodded.
-
- "'And they made it a special verdict, I think,' said the
- undertaker, 'by adding some words to the effect, that if the
- relieving officer had'—
-
- 'Tush—foolery!' interposed the beadle, angrily. 'If the board
- attended to all the nonsense that ignorant jurymen talk, they'd
- have enough to do.'
-
- "'Very true,' said the undertaker; 'they would indeed.'
-
- "'Juries,' said Mr. Bumble, grasping his cane tightly, as was his
- wont when working into a passion—'juries is ineddicated, vulgar,
- grovelling wretches.'
-
- "'So they are,' said the undertaker.
-
- "'They haven't no more philosophy or political economy about 'em
- than that,' said the beadle, snapping his fingers contemptuously.
-
- "'No more they have,' acquiesced the undertaker.
-
- "'I despise 'em,' said the beadle, growing very red in the face.
-
- "'So do I,' rejoined the undertaker.
-
- "'And I only wish we'd a jury of the independent sort in the
- house for a week or two,' said the beadle; 'the rules and
- regulations of the board would soon bring their spirit down for
- them.'
-
- "'Let'em alone for that,' replied the undertaker. So saying, he
- smiled approvingly to calm the rising wrath of the indignant
- parish officer.
-
- "Mr. Bumble lifted off his cocked-hat, took a handkerchief from
- the inside of the crown, wiped from his forehead the perspiration
- which his rage had engendered, fixed the cocked hat on again,
- and, turning to the undertaker, said in a calmer voice, 'Well,
- what about the boy?'
-
- "'Oh!' replied the undertaker; 'why, you know, Mr. Bumble, I pay
- a good deal toward the poor's rates.'
-
- "'Hem!' said Mr. Bumble. 'Well?'
-
- "'Well,' replied the undertaker, 'I was thinking that if I pay so
- much toward 'em, I've a right to get as much out of 'em as I can,
- Mr. Bumble; and so—and so—I think I'll take the boy myself.'
-
- "Mr. Bumble grasped the undertaker by the arm and led him into
- the building. Mr. Sowerberry was closeted with the board for five
- minutes, and then it was arranged that Oliver should go to him
- that evening 'upon liking'—a phrase which means, in the case of
- a parish apprentice, that if the master find, upon a short trial,
- that he can get enough work out of a boy without putting too much
- food in him, he shall have him for a term of years to do what he
- likes with.
-
- "When little Oliver was taken before 'the gentlemen' that
- evening, and informed that he was to go that night as general
- house-lad to a coffin-maker's, and that if he complained of his
- situation, or ever came back to the parish again, he would be
- sent to sea, there to be drowned or knocked on the head, as the
- case might be, he evinced so little emotion, that they by common
- consent pronounced him a hardened young rascal, and ordered Mr.
- Bumble to remove him forthwith."
-
-Some years ago an investigation into the treatment of the poor in St.
-Pancras workhouse was made. It originated in the suicide of a girl,
-who, having left her place, drowned herself rather than return to the
-workhouse to be confined in the "shed"—a place of confinement for
-refractory and ill-disposed paupers. The unanimous verdict of the
-coroner's jury was to this effect, and had appended to it an opinion
-that the discipline of the shed was unnecessarily severe. This verdict
-led to an investigation.
-
-Mr. Howarth, senior churchwarden, a guardian, and a barrister,
-explained that the shed was used for separating able-bodied, idle, and
-dissolute paupers from the aged and respectable inmates of the house.
-The shed was not, he declared, a place of confinement any more than
-the workhouse itself. The place in question consists of two rooms, a
-day-room and a dormitory, on the basement of the main building, two
-feet below the level of the soil, each about thirty-five feet long by
-fifteen wide and seven high. The bedroom contains ten beds, occupied
-sometimes by sixteen, sometimes by twenty or twenty-four paupers.
-According to the hospital calculation of a cube of nine feet to an
-occupant, the dormitory should accommodate six persons. The damp from
-an adjoining cesspool oozes through the walls. This pleasant apartment
-communicates with a yard forty feet long, and from fifteen to twenty
-broad, with a flagged pavement and high walls. This yard is kept always
-locked. But it is not a place of confinement. Oh no! it is a place of
-separation.
-
-Let us see the evidence of James Hill, who waits on the occupants of
-the shed:—"They are locked up night and day. They frequently escape
-over the walls. They are put in for misconduct."
-
-Mr. Lee, the master of the workhouse, declares that if the persons in
-the shed make application to come out, they are frequently released.
-He is "not aware if he has any legal right to refuse them, but does
-sometimes exercise that authority." One of the women is there for
-throwing her clothes over the wall; another for getting "overtaken
-in liquor" while out of the house, and losing her pail and brush. A
-third inmate is a girl of weak intellect, who went out for a day, was
-made drunk and insensible by a male pauper, and suffered dreadful
-maltreatment.
-
-All the pauper witnesses represent the shed as a place of punishment.
-The six ounces of meat given three times a week by the dietary, is
-reduced to four ounces for the shed paupers. Still all this, in Mr.
-Howarth's eyes, neither constitutes the shed a place of confinement
-nor of punishment. It is a place of separation. So is a prison. It is
-a prison in a prison; a lower depth in the lowest deep of workhouse
-wretchedness and restraint.
-
-Are we to be told that this is "classification," (as the report of the
-directors impudently calls it,) by which the young and old, imbecile
-and drunken, sickly and turbulent, are shut up together day and night
-picking oakum; looking out through the heavy day on the bare walls of
-their wretched yard—at night breathing their own fœtid exhalations
-and the miasma of a cesspool, twenty-four of them sometimes in a space
-only fit to accommodate six with due regard to health and decency? And
-all this at the arbitrary will of master or matron, unchecked by the
-board! One poor creature had been there for three years. She had not
-come out because "she was in such bad health, and had nowhere to go."
-Yet she was shut up, because she was considered able bodied and fit for
-work, when her appearance belied it, and spoke her broken spirit and
-shattered constitution.
-
-Mr. W. Lee, guardian, seemed blessed with an unusual amount of
-ignorance as to his legal powers and responsibilities. He kept no
-account of persons confined in the black-hole, for forty-eight hours
-sometimes, and without directions from the board. He thought the
-matron had power to put paupers in the strong room. On one point he
-was certain: he "had no doubt that persons have been confined without
-his orders." He "had no doubt that he had received instructions from
-the board about the refractory ward, but he does not know where to
-find them." "If any paupers committed to the ward feel aggrieved,
-they can apply to be released, and he had no doubt he would release
-them." He made no weekly report of punishments. He reigned supreme,
-monarch of all he surveyed, wielding the terrors of shed and black-hole
-unquestioned and unchecked.
-
-In Miss Stone, the matron, he had a worthy coadjutrix. The lady felt
-herself very much "degraded" by the coroner's jury. They asked her
-some most inconvenient questions, to which she gave awkwardly ready
-answers. She confined to the shed a girl who returned from place,
-though she admitted the work of the place was too much for her. She
-confessed she might have punished Jones (the suicide) by putting her
-in the black-hole; but it was a mere trifle—"only a few hours" in an
-underground cell, "perhaps from morning till night, for refusing to
-do some domestic service." Jones was helpless; her mistress brought
-her back to the workhouse. Jones cried, and begged to be taken back
-to service, offering to work for nothing. Her recollections of the
-workhouse do not seem to have been pleasant. Hard work, unpaid;
-suicide; any thing rather than the shed.
-
-A precious testimony to the St. Pancras system of "classification!"
-These paupers in the shed are clearly a refractory set. "They complain
-of being shut up so long." "They say they would like more bread and
-more meat." Audacious as Oliver Twist! They even complain of the damp
-and bad smell. Ungrateful, dainty wretches! On the whole, as Mr.
-Howarth says, it is evidently "unjust to suppose that the system of
-separation adopted in the house is regarded as a mode of punishment."
-The directors issued a solemn summons to the members of the parochial
-medical board. District surgeons and consulting surgeons assembled,
-inspected the shed, and pronounced it a very pleasant place if the roof
-were higher, and if the ventilation were better, and if the damp were
-removed, and if fewer slept in a bed, and six instead of twenty-four in
-the room. They then examined the dietary, and pronounced it sufficient
-if the allowances were of full weight, if the meat were of the best
-quality, if there were plenty of milk in the porridge, and if the broth
-were better. Great virtue in an "if!" Unhappily, in the present case,
-the allowances were not full weight; the meat not of the best quality;
-there is not milk enough in the porridge; and the broth might be very
-much better, and yet not good.
-
-Mr. Cooper, the parish surgeon, was a special object of antipathy
-to the worthy and humane Howarth; he was one of those ridiculously
-particular men, unfit to deal with paupers. He actually objected to
-the pauper women performing their ablutions in the urinals, and felt
-aggrieved when the master told him to "mind his shop," and Howarth
-stood by without rebuking the autocrat! Mr. Cooper, too, admits that
-the dietary would be sufficient with all the above-mentioned "ifs." But
-he finds that the milk porridge contains one quart of milk to six of
-oat-meal; that the meat is half fat, and often uneatable from imperfect
-cooking; and that the frequent stoppages of diet are destructive of
-the health of the younger inmates. His remonstrances, however, have
-been received in a style that has read him a lesson, and he ceases to
-remonstrate accordingly, and the guardians have it as they would—a
-silent surgeon and an omnipotent master.
-
-The saddest part of the farce, however, was that of the last day's
-proceedings. The quality and quantity of the diet had been discussed;
-the directors felt bound to examine into both; so they proceeded to
-the house. Of course the master knew nothing of the intended visit. Who
-can suspect the possibility of such a thing after the previous display
-of Howarth's impartiality and determination to do justice? So to the
-house they went. They took the excellent Lee quite by surprise, and
-enjoyed parish pot-luck. Dr. Birmingham's description makes one's mouth
-water:—
-
- "He came to the house on Saturday, in order to examine the food;
- he found that, on that day, the inmates had what was called
- ox-cheek soup; he tasted it, and he was so well satisfied with
- it that he took all that was given to him. He then went into the
- kitchen, and saw the master cutting up meat for the sick and
- infirm. He tasted the mutton, and found it as succulent and as
- good as that which he purchased for his own consumption."
-
-The picture of this patriarchal and benevolent master "cutting up meat
-for the sick and infirm," is perfectly beautiful. Howarth, too, did his
-duty, and was equally lucky.
-
- "Mr. Howarth stated that he had visited the house yesterday, and
- had examined the food, with the quality of which he was perfectly
- satisfied. He tasted the soup, and was so well pleased with it
- that he obtained an allowance. (A laugh.)"
-
-But not satisfied with this, that Rhadamanthus of a Birmingham proposed
-a crucial test.
-
- "He begged to move that the master of the workhouse be desired to
- bring before the board the ordinary rations allowed the paupers
- for breakfast, dinner, and supper; and that any gentleman present
- be allowed to call and examine any of the paupers as to whether
- the food they usually received was of the same quality, and in
- the same quantity."
-
-The rations were produced; "and, lo! the porridge smoked upon the
-board." Thus it was, in tempting and succulent array—the pauper bill
-of fare:—
-
- Soup.
-
- Cheese. Pease porridge. Potatoes.
-
- Meat. Beer.
-
-Nothing can be more tempting; who would not be a pauper of St. Pancras?
-Six paupers are called in, and one and all testify that the rations of
-meat, potatoes, soup, and porridge are better in quality and greater
-in quantity than the workhouse allowance. There is a slight pause.
-Birmingham looks blank at Howarth, and Howarth gazes uneasily on
-Birmingham; but it is only for a minute: ready wits jump:—
-
- "_Dr. Birmingham._ This is the allowance for Sunday.
-
- "_Mr. Marley._ I understand there is no difference between the
- allowance on Sunday and on any other day.
-
- "_Mr. Howarth._ They have better meat on Sundays."
-
-What follows this glaring exposure? Impeachment of the master, on this
-clear proof of malversation in the house and dishonesty before the
-board? So expects Mr. Halton, and very naturally suggests that Mr.
-Lee be called on for an explanation. Mr. Lee is not called on, and no
-explanation takes place. The room is cleared, and, after an hour and a
-half's discussion, a report is unanimously agreed to. Our readers may
-anticipate its tenour. It finds that there is no place deserving to
-be called the shed; that the rooms so called are very admirable places
-of "separation" for refractory paupers; that the diet is excellent;
-that every thing is as it ought to be. It recommends that reports of
-punishments be more regularly made to the board, that classification of
-old and young be improved, and that some little change be made in the
-ventilation of the refractory wards!
-
-And so concludes this sad farce of the St. Pancras investigation. One
-more disgraceful to the guardians cannot be found even in the pregnant
-annals of workhouse mismanagement.[92]
-
-"Farming out" paupers, especially children, is one of the most prolific
-sources of misery among the English poor who are compelled to appeal
-to the parish authorities. This practice consists of entering into
-contracts with individuals to supply the paupers with food, clothing,
-and lodging. The man who offers to perform the work for the smallest
-sum commonly gets the contract, and then the poor wretches who look to
-him for the necessaries of life must submit to all kinds of treatment,
-and be stinted in every thing. During the last visit of that scourge,
-the cholera, to England, a large number of farmed pauper children were
-crowded, by one Mr. Drouet, a contractor, into a close and filthy
-building, where they nearly all perished. An investigation was
-subsequently held, but influential persons screened the authors of this
-tragedy from justice. During the investigation, it was clearly shown
-that the children confided to the care of Mr. Drouet were kept in a
-state of filth and semi-starvation.
-
-So much for the boasted charity of the dominant class in Great Britain!
-By its enormous drain upon the public purse, and its vast monopoly of
-that soil which was given for the use of all, it creates millions of
-paupers—wretches without homes, without resources, and almost without
-hope; and then, to prevent themselves from being hurled from their high
-and luxurious places, and from being devoured as by ravenous wolves,
-they take the miserable paupers in hand, separate families, shut them
-up, as in the worst of prisons, and give them something to keep life in
-their bodies. Then the lords and ladies ask the world to admire their
-charitable efforts. What they call charity is the offspring of fear!
-
-A member of the humbler classes in England no sooner begins to exist,
-than the probability of his becoming a pauper is contemplated by the
-laws. A writer in Chambers's Journal says, in regard to this point—
-
- "Chargeability is the English slave system. The poor man cannot
- go where he lists in search of employment—he may become
- chargeable. He cannot take a good place which may be offered to
- him, for he cannot get a residence, lest he become chargeable.
- Houses are pulled down over the ears of honest working-men, and
- decent poor people are driven from Dan to Beersheba, lest they
- become chargeable. There is something infinitely distressing in
- the whole basis of this idea—that an English peasant must needs
- be regarded from his first breath, and all through life, as a
- possible pauper. But the positive hardships arising from the idea
- are what we have at present to deal with.
-
- "These are delineated in a happy collection of facts lately
- brought forward by Mr. Chadwick at a meeting of the Farmers'
- Club in London. It appears that the company assembled, who, from
- their circumstances, were all qualified to judge of the truth of
- the facts and the soundness of the conclusions, gave a general
- assent to what was said by the learned poor-law secretary.
- Unfortunately, we can only give a few passages from this very
- remarkable speech.
-
- "Mr. Chadwick first referred to the operation of the existing
- law upon _unsettled_ labouring men. 'The lower districts of
- Reading were severely visited with fever during the last year,
- which called attention to the sanitary condition of the labouring
- population. I was requested to visit it. While making inquiries
- upon the subject, I learned that some of the worst-conditioned
- places were occupied by agricultural labourers. Many of them, it
- appeared, walked four, six, seven, and even eight miles, in wet
- and snow, to and from their places of work, after twelve hours'
- work on the farm. Why, however, were agricultural labourers in
- these fever-nests of a town? I was informed, in answer, that they
- were driven in there by the pulling down of cottages, to avoid
- parochial settlements and contributions to their maintenance in
- the event of destitution. Among a group, taken as an example
- there, in a wretched place consisting of three rooms, ten feet
- long, lived Stephen Turner, a wife, and three children. He
- walked to and from his place of work about seven miles daily,
- expending two hours and a half in walking before he got to his
- productive work on the farm. His wages are 10_s._ a week, out
- of which he pays 2_s._ for his wretched tenement. If he were
- resident on the farm, the two and a half hours of daily labour
- spent in walking might be expended in productive work; his labour
- would be worth, according to his own account, and I believe to
- a farmer's acknowledgment, 2_s._ 6_d._ per week more. For a
- rent of £5 5_s._, such as he now pays, he would be entitled
- to a good cottage with a garden; and his wife and children
- being near, would be available for the farm labour. So far as
- I could learn there are between one hundred and two hundred
- agricultural labourers living in the borough of Reading, and the
- numbers are increasing. The last week brought to my notice a
- fact illustrative of the present unjust state of things, so far
- as regards the labourer. A man belonging to Maple-Durham lived
- in Reading; walked about four miles a day to his work, the same
- back, frequently getting wet; took fever, and continued ill some
- time, assisted by the Reading Union in his illness; recovered,
- and could have returned to his former employment of 10_s._ per
- week, but found he was incapable of walking the distance; the
- consequence was, he took work that only enabled him to earn 5_s._
- per week; he is now again unable to work. Even in Lincolnshire,
- where the agriculture is of a high order, and the wages of the
- labourer consequently not of the lowest, similar displacements
- have been made, to the prejudice of the farmer as well as the
- labourer, and, as will be seen, of the owner himself. Near
- Gainsborough, Lincoln, and Louth, the labourers walk even longer
- distances than near Reading. I am informed of instances where
- they walk as far as six miles; that is, twelve miles daily, or
- seventy-two miles weekly, to and from their places of work. Let
- us consider the bare economy, the mere waste of labour, and what
- a state of agricultural management is indicated by the fact that
- such a waste can have taken place. Fifteen miles a day is the
- regular march of infantry soldiers, with two rest-days—one on
- Monday, and one on Thursday; twenty-four miles is a forced march.
- The man who expends eight miles per diem, or forty-eight miles
- per week, expends to the value of at least two days' hard labour
- per week, or one hundred in the year, uselessly, that might be
- expended usefully and remuneratively in production. How different
- is it in manufactories, and in some of the mines, or at least in
- the best-managed and most successful of them! In some mines as
- much as £2000 and £3000 is paid for new machinery to benefit the
- labourers, and save them the labour of ascending and descending
- by ladders. In many manufactories they have hoists to raise
- them and their loads from lower to upper rooms, to save them the
- labour of toiling up stairs, to economize their strength for
- piece-work to mutual advantage. It is not in county and borough
- towns only that this unwholesome over-crowding is going on. I am
- informed that from the like cause the evil of over-crowding is
- going on in the ill-conditioned villages of open parishes. It is
- admitted, and made manifest in extensive evidence given before a
- committee of the house of lords by practical farmers, that when
- an agricultural labourer applies for work, the first question
- put to him is, not what has been his experience, what can he do,
- but to what parish does he belong. If he do not belong to the
- parish of the occupier, the reply is usually an expression of
- regret that he can only employ the labourer of his own parish. To
- the extent to which the farmer is directly liable to the payment
- of rates, by the displacement of a settled parish labourer, he
- is liable to a penalty for the employment of any other labourer
- who is not of the parish. To the same extent is he liable to a
- penalty if he do not employ a parish labourer who is worthless,
- though a superior labourer may be got by going farther a-field,
- to whom he would give better wages. This labourer who would go
- farther is thus driven back upon his parish; that is to say,
- imposed, and at the same time made dependent, upon the two or
- three or several farmers, by whom the parish is occupied. He
- then says, 'If this or that farmer will not employ me, one of
- them must; if none of them will, the parish must keep me, and
- the parish pay is as good as any.' Labour well or ill, he will
- commonly get little more, and it is a matter of indifference to
- him: it is found to be, in all its essential conditions, labour
- without hope—slave labour; and he is rendered unworthy of his
- hire. On the other hand, in what condition does the law place
- the employer? It imposes upon him the whole mass of labourers of
- a narrow district, of whatsoever sort, without reference to his
- wants or his capital. He says, 'I do not want the men at this
- time, or these men are not suitable to me; they will not do the
- work I want; but if I must have them, or pay for keeping them in
- idleness if I do not employ them, why, then, I can only give them
- such wages as their labour is worth to me, and that is little.'
- Hence wages are inevitably reduced. What must be the effect upon
- the manufacturer if he were placed in the same position as tenant
- farmers are in the smaller parishes in the southern counties,
- if he were restricted to the employment only of the labourers
- in the parish?—if, before he engaged a smith, a carpenter, or
- a mason, he were compelled to inquire, 'To what parish do you
- belong?' Why, that the 24_s._ a week labour would fall to 12_s._
- or 10_s._, or the price of agricultural labour. Agriculturists
- from northern districts, who work their farms with 12_s._ and
- 15_s._ a week free labour, have declined the temptation of low
- rents, to take farms in parishes where the wages are 7_s._ or
- 8_s._ a week. While inspecting a farm in one of these pauperized
- districts, an able agriculturist could not help noticing the
- slow, drawling motions of one of the labourers there, and said,
- 'My man, you do not sweat at that work,' 'Why, no, master,' was
- the reply; 'seven shillings a week isn't sweating wages,' The
- evidence I have cited indicates the circumstances which prevent
- the adoption of piece-work, and which, moreover, restrict the
- introduction of machinery into agricultural operations, which,
- strange though it may appear to many, is greatly to the injury of
- the working classes; for wherever agricultural labour is free,
- and machinery has been introduced, there more and higher-paid
- labour is required, and labourers are enabled to go on and earn
- good wages by work with machines long after their strength has
- failed them for working by hand. In free districts, and with high
- cultivation by free and skilled labour, I can adduce instances
- of skilled agricultural labourers paid as highly as artisans. I
- could adduce an instance, bordering upon Essex, where the owner,
- working it with common parish labour at 1_s._ 6_d._, a day,
- could not make it pay; and an able farmer now works it with free
- labour, at 2_s._ 6_d._, 3_s._, and 3_s._ 6_d._, and even more,
- per day, for task-work, and, there is reason to believe, makes it
- pay well. A farmer, who died not long ago immensely wealthy, was
- wont to say that 'he could not live upon poor 2_s._ a day labour;
- he could not make his money upon less than half-crowners.' The
- freedom of labour, not only in the northern counties, but in
- some places near the slave-labour districts of the southern
- counties, is already attended with higher wages—at the rate
- of 12_s._, 14_s._, and 15_s._ weekly. In such counties as Berks
- and Bedford, the freedom of the labour market, when it came into
- full operation, could not raise wages less than 2_s._ a week;
- and 2_s._ a week would, in those counties, represent a sum of
- productive expenditure and increased produce equal to the whole
- amount of unproductive expenditure on the poor-rates.'"
-
-By this arrangement of parochial settlement, the English agricultural
-labourer has a compulsory residence, like that of the American slave
-upon the plantation where he is born. This, therefore, is one of the
-most striking manifestations of the peasant being a serf. A free and
-beautiful system is that of the English Unions!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-IMPRESSMENT, OR KIDNAPPING WHITE MEN FOR SLAVES IN THE NAVAL SERVICE.
-
-
-One of the most repulsive features of the general system of slavery in
-Great Britain, is called impressment. It is the forcible removal of
-seamen from their ordinary employment, and compelling them to serve,
-against their will, in the ships of war. Long ago, some of the maritime
-nations condemned men to the galleys for crime. But Great Britain dooms
-peaceable and unoffending men to her vessels of war, severs all the
-ties of home and kindred, and outrages every principle of justice,
-in this practice of impressment. The husband is torn from his wife,
-the father from his children, the brother from the sister, by the
-press-gangs—the slave-hunters of Britain.
-
-[Illustration: KIDNAPPING OF WILLIE MORRISON.]
-
-This practice is not expressly sanctioned by any act of Parliament, but
-it is so, indirectly, by the numerous statutes that have been passed
-granting exemptions from it. According to Lord Mansfield, it is "a
-power founded upon immemorial usage," and is understood to make a part
-of the common law. All _seafaring_ men are liable to impressment,
-unless specially protected by custom or statute. Seamen executing
-particular services for government, not unfrequently get protections
-from the Admiralty, Navy Board, &c. Some are exempted by local custom;
-and _ferrymen_ are everywhere privileged from impressment. The
-statutory exemptions are as follows:—
-
- I. _Every ship in the coal-trade_ has the following persons
- protected, viz. two able seamen (such as the master shall
- nominate) for every ship of one hundred tons, and one for every
- fifty tons for every ship of one hundred tons and upward; and
- every officer who presumes to impress any of the above, shall
- forfeit, to the master or owner of such vessel, £10 for every man
- so impressed; and such officers shall be incapable of holding any
- place, office, or employment in any of his majesty's ships of
- war.—6 and 7 Will. 3, c. 18, § 19.[93]
-
- II. _No parish apprentice_ shall be compelled or permitted to
- enter into his majesty's sea-service, until he arrives at the age
- of eighteen years.—2 and 3 Anne, c. 6, § 4.
-
- III. Persons voluntarily binding themselves apprentices to
- sea-service, shall not be impressed for three years from the date
- of their indentures. [This is a protection for the master—not
- for the parish apprentice.] But no persons above eighteen
- years of age shall have any exemption or protection from his
- majesty's service, if they have been at sea before they became
- apprentices.—2 and 3 Anne, c. 6, § 15; 4 Anne, c. 19, § 17; and
- 13 Geo. 2, c. 17, § 2.
-
- IV. _Apprentices._—The act 4 Geo. 4, c. 25, enacts some new
- regulations with respect to the number of apprentices that ships
- must have on board, according to their tonnage, and grants
- protection to such apprentices till they have attained the age of
- twenty-one years.
-
- V. _Persons employed in the fisheries._—The act 50 Geo. 3, c.
- 108, grants the following exemptions from impressment, viz.:
-
- 1. _Masters of fishing vessels or boats_, who, either themselves
- or their owners, have, or within six months before applying for a
- protection shall have had, one apprentice or more, under sixteen
- years of age, bound for five years, and employed in the business
- of fishing.
-
- 2. All such apprentices, not exceeding _eight_ to every master
- or owner of any fishing vessel of fifty tons or upward; not
- exceeding _seven_ to every vessel or boat of thirty-five
- tons, and under fifty; not exceeding _six_ to every vessel of
- thirty tons, or under thirty-five; and not exceeding _four_
- to every boat under thirty tons burden, during the time of
- their apprenticeship, and till the age of twenty years; they
- continuing, for the time, in the business of fishing only.
-
- 3. _One mariner_, besides the master and apprentices, to every
- fishing vessel of one hundred tons or upward, employed on the
- sea-coast, during his continuance in such service.
-
- 4. _Any landsman_, above the age of eighteen, entering and
- employed on board such vessel for two years from his first going
- to sea and to the end of the voyage then engaged in, if he so
- long continue in such service. [The ignorance of a landsman seems
- to be the only reason for this exemption.]
-
- An affidavit sworn before a justice of the peace, containing
- the tonnage of such fishing vessel or boat, the port or place
- to which she belongs, the name and description of the master,
- the age of every apprentice, the term for which he is bound and
- the date of his indenture, and the name, age, and description of
- every such mariner and landsman respectively, and the time of
- such landsman's first going to sea, is to be transmitted to the
- Admiralty; who, upon finding the facts correctly stated, grant
- a separate protection to every individual. In case, however,
- "_of an actual invasion of these kingdoms, or imminent danger
- thereof_," such protected persons may be impressed; but except
- upon such an emergency, any officer or officers impressing
- such protected person, shall respectively forfeit £20 to the
- party impressed, if not an apprentice, or to his master if he
- be an apprentice.—§§ 2, 3, 4 [The phrase, "imminent danger
- of invasion," is susceptible of a wide interpretation for the
- purposes of tyranny.]
-
- VI. _General exemptions._—All persons fifty-five years of age
- and upward, and under eighteen years. Every person being a
- foreigner, who shall serve in any merchant ship, or other trading
- vessels or privateers, belonging to a subject of the crown of
- Great Britain; and all persons, of what age soever, who shall
- use the sea, shall be protected for two years, to be computed
- from the time of their first using it.—13 Geo. 2, c. 17. [The
- impressment of American seamen, before the war of 1812, shows how
- easily these exemptions may be disregarded.]
-
- VII. _Harpooners_, line-managers, or boat-steerers, engaged in
- the Southern whale fishery, are also protected.—26 Geo. 3, c. 50.
-
- VIII. _Mariners employed in the herring fisheries_ are exempted
- while actually employed.—48 Geo. 3, c. 110.
-
- "The practice of impressment," says McCulloch, "so subversive of
- every principle of justice, is vindicated on the alleged ground
- of its being absolutely necessary to the manning of the fleet.
- But this position, notwithstanding the confidence with which it
- has been taken up, is not quite so tenable as has been supposed.
- The difficulties experienced in procuring sailors for the fleet
- at the breaking out of a war are not natural, but artificial,
- and might be got rid of by a very simple arrangement. During
- peace, not more than a fourth or fifth part of the seamen are
- retained in his majesty's service that are commonly required
- during war; and, if peace continue for a few years, the total
- number of sailors in the king's and the merchant service is
- limited to that which is merely adequate to supply the reduced
- demand of the former and the ordinary demand of the latter. When,
- therefore, war is declared, and 30,000 or 40,000 additional
- seamen are wanted for the fleet, they cannot be obtained, unless
- by withdrawing them from the merchant service, which has not
- more than its complement of hands. But to do this by offering
- the seamen higher wages would be next to impossible, and would,
- supposing it were practicable, impose such a sacrifice upon the
- public as could hardly be borne. And hence, it is said, the
- necessity of impressment, a practice which every one admits can
- be justified on no other ground than that of its being absolutely
- essential to the public safety. It is plain, however, that a
- necessity of this kind may be easily obviated. All, in fact, that
- is necessary for this purpose, is merely to keep such a number of
- sailors in his majesty's service during peace, as may suffice,
- with the ordinary proportion of landsmen and boys, to man the
- fleet at the breaking out of a war. Were this done, there would
- not be the shadow of a pretence for resorting to impressment; and
- the practice, with the cruelty and injustice inseparable from it,
- might be entirely abolished.
-
- "But it is said that, though desirable in many respects, the
- _expense_ of such a plan will always prevent its being adopted.
- It admits, however, of demonstration, that instead of being
- dearer, this plan would be actually cheaper than that which is
- now followed. Not more than 1,000,000_l._ or 1,200,000_l._ a year
- would be required to be added to the navy estimates, and that
- would not be a real, but merely a nominal advance. The violence
- and injustice to which the practice of impressment exposes
- sailors operates at all times to raise their wages, by creating
- a disinclination on the part of many young men to enter the
- sea-service; and this disinclination is vastly increased during
- war, when wages usually rise to four or five times their previous
- amount, imposing a burden on the commerce of the country,
- exclusive of other equally mischievous consequences, many times
- greater than the tax that would be required to keep up the peace
- establishment of the navy to its proper level. It is really,
- therefore, a vulgar error to suppose that impressment has the
- recommendation of cheapness in its favour; and, though it had,
- no reasonable man will contend that that is the only, or even
- the principal, circumstance to be attended to. In point of fact,
- however, it is as costly as it is oppressive and unjust."
-
-These remarks are creditable to the good sense and humanity of
-McCulloch; but are too much devoted to the _expediency_ of outrage. To
-speak more clearly, the discussion is conducted in too cool-blooded a
-style. We defy any man of ordinary sensibility to read the accounts of
-scenes attending many cases of impressment, without feeling the deepest
-pity for the enslaved seaman and his bereaved relatives and friends,
-and burning with indignation at the heartless tyranny displayed by the
-government. After a long and laborious voyage in a merchant vessel, the
-sun-burned seamen arrives in sight of home. His wife and children, who
-have long bewailed his absence and feared for his fate, stand, with
-joyous countenances, upon the shore, eager to embrace the returned
-wanderer. Perhaps a government vessel, on the search for seaman, then
-sends its barbarous press-gang aboard the merchantman, and forces the
-husband and father once more from the presence of the beloved ones. Or,
-he is permitted to land. He visits his home, and is just comfortably
-settled, resolved to pass the rest of his days with his family, when
-the gang tears him from their arms—and years—long, dragging years
-will pass away before he will be allowed to return. Then, the wife
-may be dead, the children at the mercy of the parish. This is English
-freedom! A gang of manacled negroes shocks humanity, and calls down the
-vengeance of heaven upon the head of the slave-driver; but a press-gang
-may perform its heart-rending work in perfect consistency with the
-free and glorious institutions of Britain.
-
-By far the most thrilling narrative of the scenes attending
-impressments, with which we are acquainted, is to be found in the
-romance of "Katie Stewart," published in Blackwood's Magazine, without
-the author's name. We quote:—
-
- "The next day was the Sabbath, and Willie Morison, with his
- old mother leaning on his arm, reverently deposited his silver
- half-crown in the plate at the door of West Anster Church, an
- offering of thankfulness, for the parish poor. There had been
- various returns during the previous week; a brig from the Levant,
- and another from Riga—where, with its cargo of hemp, it had been
- frozen in all the winter—had brought home each their proportion
- of welcome family fathers, and young sailor men, like Willie
- Morison himself, to glad the eyes of friends and kindred. One of
- these was the son of that venerable elder in the lateran, who
- rose to read the little notes which the thanksgivers had handed
- to him at the door; and Katie Stewart's eyes filled as the old
- man's slow voice, somewhat moved by reading his son's name just
- before, intimated to the waiting congregation before him, and to
- the minister in the pulpit behind, also waiting to include all
- these in his concluding prayer, that William Morison gave thanks
- for his safe return.
-
- "And then there came friendly greetings as the congregation
- streamed out through the churchyard, and the soft, hopeful
- sunshine of spring threw down a bright flickering network of
- light and shade through the soft foliage on the causewayed
- street;—peaceful people going to secure and quiet
- homes—families joyfully encircling the fathers or brothers for
- whose return they had just rendered thanks out of full hearts,
- and peace upon all and over all, as broad as the skies and as
- calm.
-
- "But as the stream of people pours again in the afternoon from
- the two neighbour churches, what is this gradual excitement
- which manifests itself among them? Hark! there is the boom of
- a gun plunging into all the echoes; and crowds of mothers and
- sisters cling about these young sailors, and almost struggle
- with them, to hurry them home. Who is that hastening to the
- pier, with his staff clenched in his hand, and his white 'haffit
- locks' streaming behind him? It is the reverend elder who to-day
- returned thanks for his restored son. The sight of him—the sound
- of that second-gun pealing from the Firth puts the climax on the
- excitement of the people, and now, in a continuous stream from
- the peaceful churchyard gates, they flow toward the pier and the
- sea.
-
- "Eagerly running along by the edge of the rocks, at a pace which,
- on another Sabbath, she would have thought a desecration of
- the day, clinging to Willie Morison's arm, and with an anxious
- heart, feeling her presence a kind of protection to him, Katie
- Stewart hastens to the Billy Ness. The gray pier of Anster is
- lined with anxious faces, and here and there a levelled telescope
- under the care of some old shipmaster attracts round it a still
- deeper, still more eager knot of spectators. The tide is out,
- and venturous lads are stealing along the sharp low ranges of
- rock, slipping now and then with incautious steps into the little
- clear pools of sea-water which surround them; for their eyes are
- not on their own uncertain footing, but fixed, like the rest, on
- that visible danger up the Firth, in which all feel themselves
- concerned.
-
- "Already there are spectators, and another telescope on the Billy
- Ness, and the whole range of 'the braes' between Anstruther and
- Pittenweem is dotted with anxious lookers-on; and the far away
- pier of Pittenweem, too, is dark with its little crowd.
-
- "What is the cause! Not far from the shore, just where that
- headland, which hides you from the deep indentation of Largo Bay,
- juts out upon the Firth, lies a little vessel, looking like a
- diminutive Arabian horse, or one of the aristocratic young slight
- lads who are its officers, with high blood, training, and courage
- in every tight line of its cordage and taper stretch of its
- masts. Before it, arrested in its way, lies a helpless merchant
- brig, softly swaying on the bright mid-waters of the Firth, with
- the cutter's boat rapidly approaching its side.
-
- "Another moment and it is boarded; a very short interval of
- silence, and again the officer—you can distinguish him with that
- telescope, by his cocked hat, and the flash which the scabbard
- of his sword throws on the water as he descends the vessel's
- side—has re-entered the cutter's boat. Heavily the boat moves
- through the water now, crowded with pressed men—poor writhing
- hearts, whose hopes of home-coming and peace have been blighted
- in a moment; captured, some of them, in sight of their homes, and
- under the anxious, straining eyes of wives and children, happily
- too far off to discern their full calamity.
-
- "A low moan comes from the lips of that poor woman, who, wringing
- her hands and rocking herself to and fro, with the unconscious
- movement of extreme pain, looks pitifully in Willie Morison's
- face, as he fixes the telescope on the scene. She is reading the
- changes of its expression, as if her sentence was there; but he
- says nothing, though the very motion of his hand, as he steadies
- the glass, attracts, like something of occult significance, the
- agonized gaze which dwells upon him.
-
- "'Captain, captain!' she cried at last, softly pulling his coat,
- and with unconscious art using the new title: 'Captain, is't the
- Traveller? Can ye make her out? She has a white figure-head at
- her bows, and twa white lines round her side. Captain, captain!
- tell me for pity's sake!'
-
- "Another long keen look was bent on the brig, as slowly and
- disconsolately she resumed her onward way.
-
- "'No, Peggie,' said the young sailor, looking round to meet her
- eye, and to comfort his companion, who stood trembling by his
- side: 'No, Peggie—make yourself easy; it's no the Traveller.'
-
- "The poor woman seated herself on the grass, and, supporting her
- head on her hands, wiped from her pale cheek tears of relief and
- thankfulness.
-
- "'God be thanked! and oh! God pity thae puir creatures, and their
- wives, and their little anes. I think I have the hardest heart in
- a' the world, that can be glad when there's such misery in sight.'
-
- "But dry your tears, poor Peggie Rodger—brace up your trembling
- heart again for another fiery trial; for here comes another white
- sail peacefully gliding up the Firth, with a flag fluttering
- from the stern, and a white figure-head dashing aside the
- spray, which seems to embrace it joyfully, the sailors think,
- as out of the stormy seas it nears the welcome home. With a
- light step the captain walks the little quarter-deck—with
- light hearts the seamen lounge amidship, looking forth on the
- green hills of Fife. Dark grows the young sailor's face, as he
- watches the unsuspicious victim glide triumphantly up through
- the blue water into the undreaded snare; and a glance round,
- a slight contraction of those lines in his face which Katie
- Stewart, eagerly watching him, has never seen so strongly marked
- before, tells the poor wife on the grass enough to make her
- rise hysterically strong, and with her whole might gaze at the
- advancing ship; for, alas! one can doubt its identity no longer.
- The white lines on its side—the white figure-head among the
- joyous spray—and the Traveller dashes on, out of its icy prison
- in the northern harbour—out of its stormy ocean voyage—homeward
- bound!
-
- "Homeward bound! There is one yonder turning longing looks to
- Anster's quiet harbour as the ship sails past; carefully putting
- up in the coloured foreign baskets those little wooden toys which
- amused his leisure during the long dark winter among the ice, and
- thinking with involuntary smiles how his little ones will leap
- for joy as he divides the store. Put them up, good seaman, gentle
- father!—the little ones will be men and women before you look on
- them again.
-
- "For already the echoes are startled, and the women here on
- shore shiver and wring their hands as the cutter's gun rings out
- its mandate to the passenger; and looking up the Firth you see
- nothing but a floating globe of white smoke, slowly breaking
- into long streamers, and almost entirely concealing the fine
- outline of the little ship of war. The challenged brig at first
- is doubtful—the alarmed captain does not understand the summons;
- but again another flash, another report, another cloud of white
- smoke, and the Traveller is brought to.
-
- "There are no tears on Peggie Rodger's haggard cheeks, but a
- convulsive shudder passes over her now and then, as, with intense
- strained eyes, she watches the cutter's boat as it crosses the
- Firth toward the arrested brig.
-
- "'God! an' it were sunk like lead!' said a passionate voice
- beside her, trembling with the desperate restraint of impotent
- strength.
-
- "'God help us!—God help us!—curse na them,' said the poor woman
- with an hysteric sob. 'Oh, captain, captain! gie _me_ the glass;
- if they pit him in the boat _I'll_ ken Davie—if naebody else
- would, I can—gie me the glass.'
-
- "He gave her the glass, and himself gladly turned away, trembling
- with the same suppressed rage and indignation which had dictated
- the other spectator's curse.
-
- "'If ane could but warn them wi' a word,' groaned Willie Morison,
- grinding his teeth—'if ane could but lift a finger! but to see
- them gang into the snare like innocents in the broad day—Katie,
- it's enough to pit a man mad!'
-
- "But Katie's pitiful compassionate eyes were fixed on Peggie
- Rodger—on her white hollow cheeks, and on the convulsive
- steadiness with which she held the telescope in her hand.
-
- "'It's a fair wind into the Firth—there's another brig due.
- Katie, I canna stand and see this mair!'
-
- "He drew her hand through his arm, and unconsciously grasping
- it with a force which at another time would have made her cry
- with pain, led her a little way back toward the town. But the
- fascination of the scene was too great for him, painful as it
- was, and far away on the horizon glimmered another sail.
-
- "'Willie!' exclaimed Katie Stewart, 'gar some of the Sillardyke
- men gang out wi' a boat—gar them row down by the coast, and then
- strike out in the Firth, and warn the men.'
-
- "He grasped her hand again, not so violently. 'Bless you, lassie!
- and wha should do your bidding but myself? but take care of
- yourself, Katie Stewart. What care I for a' the brigs in the
- world if any thing ails you? Gang hame, or'—
-
- "'I'll no stir a fit till you're safe back again. I'll never
- speak to you mair if ye say anither word. Be canny—be canny—but
- haste ye away.'
-
- "Another moment, and Katie Stewart stands alone by Peggie
- Rodger's side, watching the eager face which seems to grow old
- and emaciated with this terrible vigil, as if these moments were
- years; while the ground flies under the hounding feet of Willie
- Morison, and he answers the questions which are addressed to him,
- as to his errand, only while he himself continues at full speed
- to push eastward to Cellardyke.
-
- "And the indistinct words which he calls back to his comrades,
- as he 'devours the way,' are enough to send racing after him
- an eager train of coadjutors; and with his bonnet off, and
- his hands, which tremble as with palsy, clasped convulsively
- together, the white-haired elder leans upon the wall of the pier,
- and bids God bless them, God speed them, with a broken voice,
- whose utterance comes in gasps and sobs; for he has yet another
- son upon the sea.
-
- "Meanwhile the cutter's boat has returned from the Traveller with
- its second load; and a kind bystander relieves the aching arms
- of poor Peggie Rodger of the telescope, in which now she has no
- further interest.
-
- "'Gude kens, Gude kens,' said the poor woman slowly, as Katie
- strove to comfort her. 'I didna see him in the boat; but ane
- could see nothing but the wet oars flashing out of the water, and
- blinding folks e'en. What am I to do? Miss Katie, what am I to
- think? They maun have left some men in the ship to work her. Oh!
- God grant they have ta'en the young men, and no heads of families
- wi' bairns to toil for. But Davie's a buirdly man, just like
- ane to take an officer's ee. Oh, the Lord help us! for I'm just
- distraught, and kenna what to do.'
-
- "A faint cheer, instantly suppressed, rises from the point of
- the pier and the shelving coast beyond; and yonder now it glides
- along the shore, with wet oars gleaming out of the dazzling sunny
- water, the boat of the forlorn hope. A small, picked, chosen
- company bend to the oars, and Willie Morison is at the helm,
- warily guiding the little vessel over the rocks, as they shelter
- themselves in the shadow of the coast. On the horizon the coming
- sail flutters nearer, nearer—and up the Firth yonder there is a
- stir in the cutter as she prepares to leave her anchor and strike
- into the mid-waters of the broad highway which she molests.
-
- "The sun is sinking lower in the grand western skies, and
- beginning to cast long, cool, dewy shadows of every headland and
- little promontory over the whole rocky coast; but still the Firth
- is burning with his slanting fervid rays, and Inchkeith far away
- lies like a cloud upon the sea, and the May, near at hand, lifts
- its white front to the sun—a Sabbath night as calm and full of
- rest as ever natural Sabbath was—and the reverend elder yonder
- on the pier uncovers his white head once more, and groans within
- himself, amid his passionate prayers for these perilled men upon
- the sea, over the desecrated Sabbath-day.
-
- "Nearer and nearer wears the sail, fluttering like the snowy
- breast of some sea-bird in prophetic terror; and now far off
- the red fishing-boat strikes boldly forth into the Firth with a
- signal-flag at its prow.
-
- "In the cutter they perceive it now; and see how the anchor
- swings up her shapely side, and the snowy sail curls over the
- yards, as with a bound she darts forth from her lurking-place,
- and flashing in the sunshine, like an eager hound leaps forth
- after her prey.
-
- "The boat—the boat! With every gleam of its oars the hearts
- throb that watch it on its way; with every bound it makes
- there are prayers—prayers of the anguish which will take no
- discouragement—pressing in at the gates of heaven; and the
- ebbing tide bears it out, and the wind droops its wings, and
- falls becalmed upon the coast, as if repenting it of the evil
- service it did to those two hapless vessels which have fallen
- into the snare. Bravely on as the sun grows lower—bravely out as
- the fluttering stranger sail draws nearer and more near—and but
- one other strain will bring them within hail.
-
- "But as all eyes follow these adventurers, another flash from
- the cutter's side glares over the shining water; and as the
- smoke rolls over the pursuing vessel, and the loud report again
- disturbs all the hills, Katie's heart grows sick, and she
- scarcely dares look to the east. But the ball has ploughed the
- water harmlessly, and yonder is the boat of rescue—yonder is
- the ship within hail; and some one stands up in the prow of the
- forlorn hope, and shouts and waves his hand.
-
- "It is enough. 'There she goes—there she tacks!' cries exulting
- the man with the telescope, 'and in half an hour she'll be safe
- in St. Andrew's Bay.'
-
- "But she sails slowly back—and slowly sails the impatient
- cutter, with little wind to swell her sails, and that little in
- her face; while the fisherboat, again falling close inshore with
- a relay of fresh men at the oars, has the advantage of them both.
-
- "And now there is a hot pursuit—the cutter's boat in full chase
- after the forlorn hope; but as the sun disappears, and the long
- shadows lengthen and creep along the creeks and bays of the rocky
- coast so well known to the pursued, so ill to the pursuer, the
- event of the race is soon decided; and clambering up the first
- accessible landing-place they can gain, and leaving their boat on
- the rocks behind them, the forlorn hope joyously make their way
- home.
-
- "'And it's a' Katie's notion and no a morsel of mine,' says
- the proud Willie Morison. But alas for your stout heart,
- Willie!—alas for the tremulous, startled bird which beats
- against the innocent breast of little Katie Stewart, for no
- one knows what heavy shadows shall vail the ending of this
- Sabbath-day.
-
- * * * * *
-
- "The mild spring night has darkened, but it is still early, and
- the moon is not yet up. The worship is over in John Stewart's
- decent house, and all is still within, though the miller and
- his wife still sit by the 'gathered' fire, and talk in half
- whispers about the events of the day, and the prospects of 'the
- bairns.' It is scarcely nine yet, but it is the reverent usage
- of the family to shut out the world earlier than usual on the
- Sabbath; and Katie, in consideration of her fatigue, has been
- dismissed to her little chamber in the roof. She has gone away
- not unwillingly, for, just before, the miller had closed the door
- on the slow, reluctant, departing steps of Willie Morison, and
- Katie is fain to be alone.
-
- "Very small is this chamber in the roof of the Milton, which
- Janet and Katie used to share. She has set down her candle on the
- little table before that small glass in the dark carved frame,
- and herself stands by the window, which she has opened, looking
- out. The rush of the burn fills the soft air with sound, into
- which sometimes penetrates a far-off voice, which proclaims the
- little town still awake and stirring: but save the light from
- Robert Moulter's uncurtained window—revealing a dark gleaming
- link of the burn, before the cot-house door—and the reddened
- sky yonder, reflecting that fierce torch on the May, there is
- nothing visible but the dark line of fields, and a few faint
- stars in the clouded sky.
-
- "But the houses in Anster are not yet closed or silent. In
- the street which leads past the town-house and church of West
- Anster to the shore, you can see a ruddy light streaming out
- from the window upon the causeway, the dark churchyard wall, and
- over-hanging trees. At the fire stands a comely young woman,
- lifting 'a kettle of potatoes' from the crook. The 'kettle' is
- a capacious pot on three feet, formed not like the ordinary
- 'kail-pat,' but like a little tub of iron; and now, as it is
- set down before the ruddy fire, you see it is full of laughing
- potatoes, disclosing themselves, snow-white and mealy, through
- the cracks in their clear dark coats. The mother of the household
- sits by the fireside, with a volume of sermons in her hand; but
- she is paying but little attention to the book, for the kitchen
- is full of young sailors, eagerly discussing the events of the
- day, and through the hospitable open door others are entering
- and departing with friendly salutations. Another such animated
- company fills the house of the widow Morison, 'aest the town,'
- for still the afternoon's excitement has not subsided.
-
- "But up this dark leaf-shadowed street, in which we stand, there
- comes a muffled tramp as of stealthy footsteps. They hear nothing
- of it in that bright warm kitchen—fear nothing, as they gather
- round the fire, and sometimes rise so loud in their conversation
- that the house-mother lifts her hand, and shakes her head, with
- an admonitory, 'Whist bairns; mind, it's the Sabbath-day.'
-
- "Behind backs, leaning against the sparkling panes of the window,
- young Robert Davidson speaks aside to Lizzie Tosh, the daughter
- of the house. They were 'cried' to-day in West Anster kirk, and
- soon will have a blithe bridal—'If naething comes in the way,'
- says Lizzie, with her downcast face; and the manly young sailor
- answers—'Nae fear.'
-
- "'Nae fear!' But without, the stealthy steps come nearer; and if
- you draw far enough away from the open door to lose the merry
- voices, and have your eyes no longer dazzled with the light, you
- will see dim figures creeping through the darkness, and feel that
- the air is heavy with the breath of men. But few people care to
- use that dark road between the manse and the churchyard at night,
- so no one challenges the advancing party, or gives the alarm.
-
- "Lizzie Tosh has stolen to the door; it is to see if the moon
- is up, and if Robert will have light on his homeward walk to
- Pittenweem; but immediately she rushes in again, with a face as
- pale as it had before been blooming, and alarms the assembly. 'A
- band of the cutter's men;—an officer, with a sword at his side.
- Rin, lads, rin, afore they reach the door.'
-
- "But there is a keen, eager face, with a cocked hat surmounting
- it, already looking in at the window. The assembled sailors make
- a wild plunge at the door; and, while a few escape under cover of
- the darkness, the cutter's men have secured, after a desperate
- resistance, three or four of the foremost. Poor fellows! You
- see them stand without, young Robert Davidson in the front, his
- broad, bronzed forehead bleeding from a cut he has received in
- the scuffle, and one of his captors, still more visibly wounded,
- looking on him with evil, revengeful eyes: his own eye, poor lad,
- is flaming with fierce indignation and rage, and his broad breast
- heaves almost convulsively. But now he catches a glimpse of the
- weeping Lizzie, and fiery tears, which scorch his eyelids, blind
- him for a moment, and his heart swells as if it would burst. But
- it does not burst, poor desperate heart! until the appointed
- bullet shall come, a year or two hence, to make its pulses quiet
- for ever.
-
- "A few of the gang entered the house. It is only 'a but and a
- ben;' and Lizzie stands with her back against the door of the
- inner apartment, while her streaming eyes now and then cast a
- sick, yearning glance toward the prisoners at the door—for her
- brother stands there as well as her betrothed.
-
- "'What for would you seek in there?' asked the mother, lifting up
- her trembling hands. 'What would ye despoil my chaumer for, after
- ye've made my hearthstane desolate. If ye've a license to steal
- men, ye've nane to steal gear. Ye've dune your warst: gang out o'
- my house ye thieves, ye locusts, ye'—
-
- "'We'll see about that, old lady,' said the leader:—'put the
- girl away from that door. Tom, bring the lantern.'
-
- "The little humble room was neatly arranged. It was their best,
- and they had not spared upon it what ornament they could attain.
- Shells far travelled, precious for the giver's sake, and many
- other heterogeneous trifles, such as sailors pick up in foreign
- parts, were arranged upon the little mantel-piece and grate.
- There was no nook or corner in it which could possibly be used
- for a hiding-place; but the experienced eye of the foremost
- man saw the homely counterpane disordered on the bed; and
- there indeed the mother had hid her youngest, dearest son. She
- had scarcely a minute's time to drag him in, to prevail upon
- him to let her conceal him under her feather-bed, and all its
- comfortable coverings. But the mother's pains were unavailing,
- and now she stood by, and looked on with a suppressed scream,
- while that heavy blow struck down her boy as he struggled—her
- youngest, fair-haired, hopeful boy.
-
- "Calm thoughts are in your heart, Katie Stewart—dreams of
- sailing over silver seas under that moon which begins to rise,
- slowly climbing through the clouds yonder, on the south side of
- the Firth. In fancy, already, you watch the soft Mediterranean
- waves rippling past the side of the Flower of Fife, and see
- the strange beautiful countries of which your bridegroom has
- told you shining under the brilliant southern sun. And then the
- home-coming—the curious toys you will gather yonder for the
- sisters and the mother; the pride you will have in telling them
- how Willie has cared for your voyage—how wisely he rules the one
- Flower of Fife, how tenderly he guards the other.
-
- "Your heart is touched, Katie Stewart, touched with the calm
- and pathos of great joy; and tears lie under your eyelashes,
- like the dew on flowers. Clasp your white hands on the sill of
- the window—heed not that your knees are unbended—and say your
- child's prayers with lips which move but utter nothing audible,
- and with your head bowed on the moonbeam, which steals into your
- window like a bird. True, you have said these child's prayers
- many a night, as in some sort a charm, to guard you as you slept;
- but now there comes upon your spirit an awe of the great Father
- yonder, a dim and wonderful apprehension of the mysterious Son
- in whose name you make those prayers. Is it true, then, that he
- thinks of all our loves and sorrows, this One, whose visible
- form realizes to us the dim, grand, glorious heaven—knows us by
- name—remembers us with the God's love in his wonderful human
- heart;—_us_, scattered by myriads over his earth, like the motes
- in the sunbeam? And the tears steal over your cheeks, as you end
- the child's prayer with the name that is above all names.
-
- "Now, will you rest? But the moon has mastered all her hilly way
- of clouds, and from the full sky looks down on you, Katie, with
- eyes of pensive blessedness like your own. Tarry a little—linger
- to watch that one bright spot on the Firth, where you could
- almost count the silvered waves as they lie beneath the light.
-
- "But a rude sound breaks upon the stillness—a sound of
- flying feet echoing over the quiet road; and now they become
- visible—one figure in advance, and a band of pursuers
- behind—the same brave heart which spent its strength to-day
- to warn the unconscious ship—the same strong form which Katie
- has seen in her dreams on the quarter-deck of the Flower of
- Fife;—but he will never reach that quarter-deck, Katie Stewart,
- for his strength flags, and they gain upon him.
-
- "Gain upon him, step by step, unpitying bloodhounds!—see him
- lift up his hands to you, at your window, and have no ruth
- for his young hope, or yours;—and now their hands are on his
- shoulder, and he is in their power.
-
- "'Katie!' cries the hoarse voice of Willie Morison, breaking the
- strange fascination in which she stood, 'come down and speak
- to me ae word, if ye wouldna break my heart. Man—if ye are a
- man—let me bide a minute; let me say a word to her. I'll maybe
- never see her in this world again.'
-
- "The miller stood at the open door—the mother within was wiping
- the tears from her cheeks. 'Oh Katie, bairn, that ye had been
- sleeping!' But Katie rushed past them, and crossed the burn.
-
- "What can they say?—only convulsively grasp each other's
- hands—wofully look into each other's faces, ghastly in the
- moonlight; till Willie—Willie, who could have carried her like
- a child, in his strength of manhood—bowed down his head into
- those little hands of hers which are lost in his own vehement
- grasp, and hides with them his passionate tears.
-
- "'Willie, I'll never forget ye,' says aloud the instinctive
- impulse of little Katie's heart, forgetting for the moment that
- there is any grief in the world but to see his. 'Night and day
- I'll mind ye, think of ye. If ye were twenty years away, I would
- be blither to wait for ye, than to be a queen. Willie, if ye must
- go, go with a stout heart—for I'll never forget ye, if it should
- be twenty years!'
-
- "Twenty years! Only eighteen have you been in the world yet,
- brave little Katie Stewart; and you know not the years, how they
- drag their drooping skirts over the hills when hearts long for
- their ending, or how it is only day by day, hour by hour, that
- they wear out at length, and fade into the past.
-
- "'Now, my man, let's have no more of this,' said the leader of
- the gang. 'I'm not here to wait your leisure; come on.'
-
- "And now they are away—truly away—and the darkness settles down
- where this moment Katie saw her bridegroom's head bowing over the
- hands which still are wet with his tears. Twenty years! Her own
- words ring into her heart like a knell, a prophecy of evil—if he
- should be twenty years away!"
-
-There is no exaggeration in the above narrative. Similar scenes have
-occurred on many occasions, and others of equally affecting character
-might be gathered from British sailors themselves. In the story of
-"Katie Stewart," ten years elapse before Willie Morison is permitted to
-return to his betrothed. In many cases the pressed seamen never catch
-a glimpse of home or friends again. Sometimes decoys and stratagems
-are used to press the seamen into the service of the government. Such
-extensive powers are intrusted to the officers of men-of-war, that
-they may be guilty of the grossest violations of right and justice with
-impunity, and even those "protections" which the government extends to
-certain persons, are frequently of no effect whatever. In the novel of
-"Jacob Faithful," Captain Marryatt has given a fine illustration of
-the practice of some officers. The impressment of Jacob and Thomas the
-waterman, is told with Marryatt's usual spirit. Here it is:—
-
- "'I say, you watermen, have you a mind for a good fare?' cried
- a dark-looking, not over clean, square built, short young man
- standing on the top of the flight of steps.
-
- "'Where to, sir?'
-
- "'Gravesend, my jokers, if you a'n't afraid of salt water.'
-
- "'That's a long way, sir!' replied Tom, 'and for salt water we
- must have salt to our porridge.'
-
- "'So you shall, my lads, and a glass of grog into the bargain.'
-
- "'Yes, but the bargain a'n't made yet, sir. Jacob, will you go?'
-
- "'Yes, but not under a guinea.'
-
- "'Not under two guineas,' replied Tom, aside.
-
- "'Are you in a great hurry, sir?' continued he, addressing the
- young man.
-
- "'Yes, in a devil of a hurry; I shall lose my ship. What will you
- take me for?'
-
- "'Two guineas, sir.'
-
- "'Very well. Just come up to the public-house here, and put in my
- traps.'
-
- "We had brought down his luggage, put it into the wherry
- and started down the river with the tide. Our fare was very
- communicative, and we found out that he was master's mate of
- the Immortalité, forty-gun frigate, lying off Gravesend, which
- was to drop down the next morning, and wait for sailing orders
- at the Downs. We carried the tide with us, and in the afternoon
- were close to the frigate, whose blue ensign waved proudly over
- the taffrail. There was a considerable sea arising from the wind
- meeting the tide, and before we arrived close to her, we had
- shipped a great deal of water; and when we were alongside, the
- wherry, with the chest in her bows, pitched so heavily, that
- we were afraid of being swamped. Just as a rope had been made
- fast to the chest, and they were weighing it out of the wherry,
- the ship's launch with water came alongside, and whether from
- accident or wilfully I know not, although I suspect the latter,
- the midshipman who steered her, shot her against the wherry,
- which was crushed in, and immediately filled, leaving Tom and
- me in the water, and in danger of being jammed to death between
- the launch and the side of the frigate. The seamen in the boat,
- however, forced her off with their oars, and hauled us in, while
- our wherry sank with her gunnel even with the water's edge, and
- floated away astern.
-
- "As soon as we had shaken ourselves a little, we went up the
- side and asked one of the officers to send a boat to pick up our
- wherry.
-
- "'Speak to the first lieutenant—there he is,' was the reply.
-
- "I went up to the person pointed out to me: 'If you please
- sir'—
-
- "'What the devil do you want?'
-
- "'A boat, sir, to'—
-
- "'A boat! the devil you do!'
-
- "'To pick up our wherry, sir,' interrupted Tom.
-
- "'Pick it up yourself,' said the first lieutenant, passing us
- and hailing the men aloft. 'Maintop there, hook on your stay.
- Be smart. Lower away the yards. Marines and afterguard, clear
- launch. Boatswain's-mate.'
-
- "'Here, sir.'
-
- "'Pipe marines and afterguard to clear launch.'
-
- "'Ay, ay, sir.'
-
- "'But we shall lose our boat, Jacob,' said Tom, to me. 'They
- stove it in, and they ought to pick it up.' Tom then went up to
- the master's-mate, whom we had brought on board, and explained
- our difficulty.
-
- "'Upon my soul, I dar'n't say a word. I'm in a scrape for
- breaking my leave. Why the devil didn't you take care of your
- wherry, and haul ahead when you saw the launch coming.'
-
- "'How could we when the chest was hoisting out?'
-
- "'Very true. Well, I'm very sorry for you, but I must look after
- my chest.' So saying, he disappeared down the gangway ladder.
-
- "'I'll try it again, any how,' said Tom, going up to the first
- lieutenant. 'Hard case to lose our boat and our bread, sir,' said
- Tom, touching his hat.
-
- "The first lieutenant, now that the marines and afterguard were
- at a regular stamp and go, had, unfortunately, more leisure
- to attend to us. He looked at us earnestly, and walked aft to
- see if the wherry was yet in sight. At that moment up came the
- master's-mate who had not yet reported himself to the first
- lieutenant.
-
- "'Tom,' said I, 'there's a wherry close to; let us get into it,
- and go after our boat ourselves.'
-
- "'Wait one moment to see if they will help us—and get our money,
- at all events,' replied Tom; and we walked aft.
-
- "'Come on board, sir,' said the master's mate, touching his hat
- with humility.
-
- "'You've broke your leave, sir,' replied the first lieutenant,
- 'and now I've to send a boat to pick up the wherry through your
- carelessness.'
-
- "'If you please, they are two very fine young men,' observed the
- mate. 'Make capital foretop-men. Boat's not worth sending for,
- sir.'
-
- "This hint, given by the mate to the first lieutenant, to regain
- his favour, was not lost. 'Who are you, my lads?' said the first
- lieutenant to us.
-
- "'Watermen, sir.'
-
- "'Watermen, hey! was that your own boat?'
-
- "'No, sir,' replied I, 'it belonged to the man that I serve with.'
-
- "'Oh! not your own boat? Are you an apprentice then?'
-
- "Yes, sir, both apprentices.'
-
- "'Show me your indentures.'
-
- "'We don't carry them about with us.'
-
- "'Then how am I to know that you are apprentices?'
-
- "'We can prove it, sir, if you wish it.'
-
- "'I do wish it; at all events, the captain will wish it.'
-
- "'Will you please to send for the boat, sir? she's almost out of
- sight.'
-
- "'No, my lads, I can't find king's boats for such service.'
-
- "'Then, we had better go ourselves, Tom,' said I, and we went
- forward to call the waterman who was lying on his oars close to
- the frigate.
-
- "'Stop—stop—not so fast. Where are you going, my lads?'
-
- "'To pick up our boat, sir.'
-
- "'Without my leave, hey!'
-
- "'We don't belong to the frigate, sir.'
-
- "'No; but I think it very likely that you will, for you have no
- protections.'
-
- "'We can send for them and have them down by to-morrow morning.'
-
- "'Well, you may do so, if you please, my lads; you cannot expect
- me to believe every thing that is told me. Now, for instance, how
- long have you to serve, my lad?' said he, addressing Tom.
-
- "'My time is up to-morrow, sir.'
-
- "'Up to-morrow. Why, then, I shall detain you until to-morrow,
- and then I shall press you.'
-
- "'If you detain me now, sir, I am pressed to-day.'
-
- "'Oh no! you are only detained until you prove your
- apprenticeship, that's all.'
-
- "'Nay, sir, I certainly am pressed during my apprenticeship.'
-
- "'Not at all, and I'll prove it to you. You don't belong to
- the ship until you are victualled on her books. Now, I shan't
- _victual_ you to-day, and therefore, you won't be _pressed_.'
-
- "'I shall be pressed with hunger, at all events,' replied Tom,
- who never could lose a joke.
-
- "'No, you shan't; for I'll send you both a good dinner out of
- the gun-room, so you won't be pressed at all,' replied the
- lieutenant, laughing at Tom's reply.
-
- "You will allow me to go, sir, at all events,' replied I; 'for I
- knew that the only chance of getting Tom and myself clear was by
- hastening to Mr. Drummond for assistance.
-
- "'Pooh! nonsense; you must both row in the same boat as you have
- done. The fact is, my lads, I've taken a great fancy to you both,
- and I can't make up my mind to part with you.'
-
- "'It's hard to lose our bread, this way,' replied I.
-
- "'We will find you bread, and hard enough you will find it,'
- replied the lieutenant, laughing; 'it's like a flint.'
-
- "'So we ask for bread, and you give us a stone,' said Tom;
- 'that's 'gainst Scripture.'
-
- "'Very true, my lad; but the fact is, all the scriptures in the
- world won't man the frigate. Men we must have, and get them how
- we can, and where we can, and when we can. Necessity has no law;
- at least it obliges us to break through all laws. After all,
- there's no great hardship in serving the king for a year or two,
- and filling your pockets with prize-money. Suppose you volunteer?'
-
- "'Will you allow us to go on shore for half an hour to think
- about it?' replied I.
-
- "'No; I'm afraid of the crimps dissuading you. But, I'll give you
- till to-morrow morning, and then I shall be sure of one, at all
- events.'
-
- "'Thanky, for me,' replied Tom.
-
- "'You're very welcome,' replied the first lieutenant, as,
- laughing at us, he went down the companion ladder to his dinner.
-
- "'Well, Jacob, we are in for it,' said Tom, as soon as we were
- alone. 'Depend upon it, there's no mistake this time.'
-
- "'I'm afraid not,' replied I, 'unless we can get a letter to your
- father, or Mr. Drummond, who, I am sure, would help us. But that
- dirty fellow, who gave the first lieutenant the hint, said the
- frigate sailed to-morrow morning; there he is, let us speak to
- him.'
-
- "'When does the frigate sail?' said Tom to the master's-mate, who
- was walking the deck.
-
- "'My good fellow, it's not the custom on board of a man-of-war
- for men to ask officers to answer such impertinent questions.
- It's quite sufficient for you to know that when the frigate
- sails, you will have the honour of sailing in her.'
-
- "'Well, sir,' replied I, nettled at his answer, 'at all events,
- you will have the goodness to pay us our fare. We have lost our
- wherry, and our liberty, perhaps, through you; we may as well
- have our two guineas.'
-
- "'Two guineas! It's two guineas you want, heh?'
-
- "'Yes, sir, that was the fare agreed upon.'
-
- "'Why, you must observe, my men,' said the master's-mate, hooking
- a thumb into each arm-hole of his waistcoat, 'there must be a
- little explanation as to that affair. I promised you two guineas
- as watermen; but now that you belong to a man-of-war, you are no
- longer watermen. I always pay my debts honourably when I can find
- the lawful creditors; but where are the watermen?'
-
- "'Here we are, sir.'
-
- "'No, my lads, you are men-of-war's men now, and that quite
- alters the case."
-
- "'But we are not so yet, sir: even if it did alter the case, we
- are not pressed yet.'
-
- "'Well, then, you will be to-morrow, perhaps; at all events we
- shall see. If you are allowed to go on shore again, I owe you two
- guineas as watermen; and if you are detained as men-of-war's men,
- why then you will only have done your duty in pulling down one of
- your officers. You see, my lads, I say nothing but what's fair.'
-
- "'Well, sir, but when you hired us, we were watermen,' replied
- Tom.
-
- "'Very true, so you were; but recollect the two guineas were not
- due until you had completed your task, which was not until you
- came on board. When you came on board you were pressed and became
- men-of-war's men. You should have asked for your fare before the
- first lieutenant got hold of you. Don't you perceive the justice
- of my remarks?'
-
- "'Can't say I do, sir; but I perceive that there is very little
- chance of our being paid,' said Tom.
-
- "'You are a lad of discrimination,' replied the master's-mate;
- 'and now I advise you to drop the subject, or you may induce me
- to pay you man-of-war fashion.'
-
- "'How's that, sir?'
-
- "'Over the face and eyes, as the cat paid the monkey,' replied
- the master's-mate, walking leisurely away.
-
- "No go, Tom,' said I, smiling at the absurdity of the arguments.
-
- "'I'm afraid it's _no go_, in every way, Jacob. However, I don't
- care much about it. I have had a little hankering after seeing
- the world, and perhaps now's as well as any other time; but I'm
- sorry for you, Jacob.'
-
- "'It's all my own fault,' replied I; and I fell into one of
- those reveries so often indulged in of late as to the folly of
- my conduct in asserting my independence, which had now ended in
- my losing my liberty. But we were cold from the ducking we had
- received, and moreover very hungry. The first lieutenant did not
- forget his promise: he sent us up a good dinner, and a glass of
- grog each, which we discussed under the half-deck between two
- of the guns. We had some money in our pockets, and we purchased
- some sheets of paper from the bumboat people, who were on the
- main-deck supplying the seamen; and I wrote to Mr. Drummond and
- Mr. Turnbull, as well as to Mary and old Tom, requesting the
- two latter to forward our clothes to Deal, in case of our being
- detained. Tom also wrote to comfort his mother, and the greatest
- comfort he could give was, as he said, to promise to keep sober.
- Having intrusted these letters to the bumboat women, who promised
- faithfully to put them into the post-office, we had then nothing
- else to do but to look out for some place to sleep. Our clothes
- had dried on us, and we were walking under the half-deck, but
- not a soul spoke to, or even took the least notice of us. In
- a newly manned ship, just ready to sail, there is a universal
- feeling of selfishness prevailing among the ship's company. Some,
- if not most, had, like us, been pressed, and their thoughts
- were occupied with their situation, and the change in their
- prospects. Others were busy making their little arrangements with
- their wives or relations; while the mass of the seamen, not yet
- organized by discipline, or known to each other, were in a state
- of dis-union and individuality, which naturally induced every
- man to look after himself, without caring for his neighbour. We
- therefore could not expect, nor did we receive any sympathy;
- we were in a scene of bustle and noise, yet alone. A spare
- topsail, which had been stowed for the present between two of the
- guns, was the best accommodation which offered itself. We took
- possession of it, and, tired with exertion of mind and body, were
- soon fast asleep."
-
-In the mean time, doubtless, there was weeping and wailing at the
-homes of the pressed seamen. Parents, tottering on the verge of the
-grave, and deprived of their natural support—wives and children at the
-fireside uncheered by the presence of the head of the family—could
-only weep for the absent ones, and pray that their government might one
-day cease to be tyrannical.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-IRISH SLAVERY.
-
-
-For centuries the Irish nation has groaned under the yoke of England.
-The chain has worn to the bone. The nation has felt its strength
-depart. Many of its noblest and fairest children have pined away in
-dungeons or starved by the roadside. The tillers of the soil, sweating
-from sunrise to sunset for a bare subsistence, have been turned from
-their miserable cabins—hovels, yet homes—and those who have been
-allowed to remain have had their substance devoured by a government
-seemingly never satisfied with the extent of its taxation. They have
-suffered unmitigated persecution for daring to have a religion of their
-own. Seldom has a conquered people suffered more from the cruelties
-and exactions of the conquerors. While Clarkson and Wilberforce were
-giving their untiring labours to the cause of emancipating negro slaves
-thousands of miles away, they overlooked a hideous system of slavery
-at their very doors—the slavery of a people capable of enjoying the
-highest degree of civil and religious freedom. Says William Howitt—
-
-[Illustration: IRISH TENANT ABOUT TO EMIGRATE.]
-
- "The great grievance of Ireland—the Monster Grievance—is just
- England itself. The curse of Ireland is bad government, and
- nothing more. And who is the cause of this? Nobody but England.
- Who made Ireland a conquered country? England. Who introduced all
- the elements of wrangling, discontent, and injustice? England.
- Who set two hostile churches, and two hostile races, Celts and
- Saxons, together by the ears in that country? England, of course.
- Her massacres, her military plantations, her violent seizure of
- ancient estates, her favouritism, her monstrous laws and modes
- of government, were the modern emptying of Pandora's box—the
- shaking out of a bag-full of Kilkenny cats on the soil of that
- devoted country. The consequences are exactly those that we have
- before us. Wretched Saxon landlords, who have left one-fourth of
- the country uncultivated, and squeezed the population to death
- by extortion on the rest. A great useless church maintained on
- the property of the ejected Catholics—who do as men are sure to
- do, kick at robbery, and feel it daily making their gall doubly
- bitter. And then we shake our heads and sagely talk about race.
- If the race be bad, why have we not taken pains to improve it?
- Why, for scores of years, did we forbid them even to be educated?
- Why do we complain of their being idle and improvident, and
- helpless, when we have done every thing we could to make them so?
- Are our ministers and Parliaments any better? Are they not just
- as idle, and improvident, and helpless, as it regards Ireland?
- Has not this evil been growing these three hundred years? Have
- any remedies been applied but those of Elizabeth, and the Stuarts
- and Straffords, the Cromwells, and Dutch William's? Arms and
- extermination? We have built barracks instead of schools; we have
- sown gunpowder instead of corn—and now we wonder at the people
- and the crops. The wisest and best of men have for ages been
- crying out for reform and improvement in Ireland, and all that we
- have done has been to augment the army and the police."
-
-The condition of the Irish peasantry has long been most miserable.
-Untiring toil for the lords of the soil gives the labourers only
-such a living as an American slave would despise. Hovels fit for
-pig-styes—rags for clothing—potatoes for food—are the fruits of the
-labour of these poor wretches. A vast majority of them are attached to
-the Roman Catholic Church, yet they are compelled to pay a heavy tax
-for the support of the Established Church. This, and other exactions,
-eat up their little substance, and prevent them from acquiring any
-considerable property. Their poor homes are merely held by the
-sufferance of grasping agents for landlords, and they are compelled to
-submit to any terms he may prescribe or become wandering beggars, which
-alternative is more terrible to many of them than the whip would be.
-
-O'Connell, the indomitable advocate of his oppressed countrymen, used
-the following language in his repeal declaration of July 27, 1841:—
-
- "It ought to sink deep into the minds of the English aristocracy,
- that no people on the face of the earth pay to another such a
- tribute for permission to live, as Ireland pays to England in
- absentee rents and surplus revenues. There is no such instance;
- there is nothing like it in ancient or modern history. There is
- not, and there never was, such an exhausting process applied
- to any country as is thus applied to Ireland. It is a solecism
- in political economy, inflicted upon Ireland alone, of all the
- nations that are or ever were."
-
-Surely it is slavery to pay such a price for a miserable existence. We
-cannot so abuse terms as to call a people situated as the Irish are,
-free. They are compelled to labour constantly without receiving an
-approach to adequate compensation, and they have no means of escape
-except by sundering the ties of home, kindred, and country.
-
-The various repulsive features of the Irish system can be illustrated
-much more fully than our limits will permit. But we will proceed to a
-certain extent, as it is in Ireland that the results of British tyranny
-have been most frightfully manifested.
-
-The population of Ireland is chiefly agricultural, yet there are no
-agricultural labourers in the sense in which that term is employed in
-Great Britain. A peasant living entirely by hire, without land, is
-wholly unknown.
-
-The persons who till the ground may be divided into three classes,
-which are sometimes distinguished by the names of small farmers,
-cottiers, and casual labourers; or, as the last are sometimes called,
-"con-acre" men.
-
-The class of small farmers includes those who hold from five to twelve
-Irish acres. The cottiers are those who hold about two acres, in return
-for which they labour for the farmer of twenty acres or more, or for
-the gentry.
-
-Con-acre is ground hired, not by the year, but for a single crop,
-usually of potatoes. The tenant of con-acre receives the land in time
-to plant potatoes, and surrenders it so soon as the crop has been
-secured. The farmer from whom he receives it usually ploughs and
-manures the land, and sometimes carts the crop. Con-acre is taken by
-tradesmen, small farmers, and cottiers, but chiefly by labourers,
-who are, in addition, always ready to work for hire when there is
-employment for them. It is usually let in roods, and other small
-quantities, rarely exceeding half an acre. These three classes, not
-very distinct from each other, form the mass of the Irish population.
-
- "According to the census of 1831," says Mr. Bicheno, "the
- population of Ireland was 7,767,401; the 'occupiers employing
- labourers' were 95,339; the 'labourers employed in agriculture,'
- (who do not exist in Ireland as a class corresponding to that
- in England,) and the 'occupiers not employing labourers,'
- amounted together to 1,131,715. The two last descriptions pretty
- accurately include the cottier tenants and cottier labourers;
- and, as these are nearly all heads of families, it may be
- inferred from hence how large a portion of the soil of Ireland
- is cultivated by a peasant tenantry; and when to these a further
- addition is made of a great number of little farmers, a tolerably
- accurate opinion may be formed of the insignificant weight and
- influence that any middle class in the rural districts can have,
- as compared with the peasants. Though many may occupy a greater
- extent of land than the 'cottiers,' and, if held immediately
- from the proprietor, generally at a more moderate rent, and may
- possess some trifling stock, almost all the inferior tenantry of
- Ireland belong to one class. The cottier and the little farmer
- have the same feelings, the same interests to watch over, and
- the same sympathies. Their diet and their clothing are not very
- dissimilar, though they may vary in quantity; and the one cannot
- be ordinarily distinguished from the other by any external
- appearance. Neither does the dress of the children of the little
- farmers mark any distinction of rank, as it does in England;
- while their wives are singularly deficient in the comforts of
- apparel."—_Report of Commissioners of Poor Inquiry._
-
-The whole population, small farmers, cottiers, and labourers, are
-equally devoid of capital. The small farmer holds his ten or twelve
-acres of land at a nominal rent—a rent determined not by what the
-land will yield, but by the intensity of the competition to obtain
-it. He takes from his farm a wretched subsistence, and gives over the
-remainder to his landlord. This remainder rarely equals the nominal
-rent, the growing arrears of which are allowed to accumulate against
-him.
-
-The cottier labours constantly for his landlord, (or master, as he
-would have been termed of old,) and receives, for his wages as a serf,
-land which will afford him but a miserable subsistence. Badly off as
-these two classes are, their condition is still somewhat better than
-that of the casual labourer, who hires con-acre, and works for wages at
-seasons when employment can be had, to get in the first place the means
-of paying the rent for his con-acre.
-
-Mr. Bicheno says—
-
- "It appears from the evidence that the average crops of con-acre
- produce about as much or a little more, (at the usual price of
- potatoes in the autumn,) than the amount of the rent, seed, and
- tenant's labour, say 5_s._ or 10_s._ Beyond this the labourer
- does not seem to derive any other direct profit from taking
- con-acre; but he has the following inducements. In some cases
- he contracts to work out a part, or the whole, of his con-acre
- rent; and, even when this indulgence is not conceded to him by
- previous agreement, he always hopes, and endeavours to prevail on
- the farmer to be allowed this privilege, which, in general want
- of employment, is almost always so much clear gain to him. By
- taking con-acre he also considers that he is _securing_ food to
- the extent of the crop for himself and family at the low autumn
- price; whereas, if he had to go to market for it, he would be
- subject to the loss of time, and sometimes expense of carriage,
- to the fluctuations of the market, and to an advance of price in
- spring and summer."
-
-Of the intensity of the competition for land, the following extracts
-from the evidence may give an idea:—
-
- "_Galway_, F. 35.—'If I now let it be known that I had a farm
- of five acres to let, I should have fifty bidders in twenty-four
- hours, and all of them would be ready to promise any rent that
- might be asked.'—_Mr. Birmingham._ The landlord takes on account
- whatever portion of the rent the tenant may be able to offer;
- the remainder he does not remit, but allows to remain over. A
- remission of a portion of the rent in either plentiful or scarce
- seasons is never made as a matter of course; when it does take
- place, it is looked upon as a favour.
-
- 'The labourer is, from the absence of any other means of
- subsisting himself and family, thrown upon the hire of land, and
- the land he must hire at any rate; the payment of the promised
- rent is an after consideration. He always offers such a rent as
- leaves him nothing of the produce for his own use but potatoes,
- his corn being entirely for his landlord's claim.'—_Rev. Mr.
- Hughes_, P. P., and _Parker_.
-
- "_Leitrim_, F. 36 and 37.—'So great is the competition for small
- holdings, that, if a farm of five acres were vacant, I really
- believe that nine out of every ten men in the neighbourhood would
- bid for it if they thought they had the least chance of getting
- it: they would be prepared to outbid each other, _ad infinitum_,
- in order to get possession of the land. _The rent which the
- people themselves would deem moderate, would not in any case
- admit of their making use of any other food than potatoes_; there
- are even many instances in this barony where the occupier cannot
- feed himself and family off the land he holds. In his anxiety to
- grow as much oats (his only marketable produce) as will meet
- the various claims upon him, he devotes so small a space to the
- cultivation of potatoes, that he is obliged to take a portion of
- con-acre, and to pay for it by wages earned at a time when he
- would have been better employed on his own account.'—_Rev. T.
- Maguire_, P. P."
-
-The land is subdivided into such small portions, that the labourer has
-not sufficient to grow more than a very scanty provision for himself
-and family. The better individuals of the class manage to secrete some
-of its produce from the landlord, to do which it is of course necessary
-that they should not employ it on their land: but if land is offered to
-be let, persons will be found so eager for it as to make compliments to
-some one of the family of the landlord or of his agent.
-
-The exactions of agents and sub-agents are the most frequent causes
-of suffering among the peasantry. These agents are a class peculiar
-to Ireland. They take a large extent of ground, which they let out in
-small portions to the real cultivator. They grant leases sometimes, but
-the tenant is still in their power, and they exact personal services,
-presents, bribes; and draw from the land as much as they can, without
-the least regard for its permanent welfare. That portion of the poor
-peasant's substance which escapes the tithes and tax of government is
-seized by the remorseless agents, and thus the wretched labourer can
-get but a miserable subsistence by the severest toil.
-
-In general the tenant takes land, promising to pay a "nominal rent,"
-in other words, a rent he never can pay. This rent falls into arrear,
-and the landlord allows the arrear to accumulate against him, in the
-hope that if he should chance to have an extraordinary crop, or if he
-should obtain it from any unexpected source, the landlord may claim it
-for his arrears.
-
-The report of Poor-Law Commissioners states that "Agricultural wages
-vary from 6_d._ to 1_s._ a day; that the average of the country in
-general is about 8½_d._; and that the earnings of the labourers, on
-an average of the whole class, are from 2_s._ to 2_s._ 6_d._ a week, or
-thereabout."
-
- "Thus circumstanced, it is impossible for the able-bodied, in
- general, to provide against sickness or the temporary absence of
- employment, or against old age or the destitution of their widows
- and children in the contingent event of their own premature
- decease.
-
- "A great portion of them are insufficiently provided at any time
- with the commonest necessaries of life. Their habitations are
- wretched hovels; several of a family sleep together upon straw
- or upon the bare ground, sometimes with a blanket, sometimes not
- even so much to cover them; their food commonly consists of dry
- potatoes, and with these they are at times so scantily supplied
- as to be obliged to stint themselves to one spare meal in the
- day. There are even instances of persons being driven by hunger
- to seek sustenance in wild herbs. They sometimes get a herring,
- or a little milk, but they never get meat, except at Christmas,
- Easter, and Shrovetide."
-
-The peasant finds himself obliged to live upon the cheapest food,
-_potatoes_, and potatoes of the worst quality, because they yield
-most, and are consequently the cheapest. These potatoes are "little
-better than turnips." "Lumpers" is the name given to them. They are two
-degrees removed from those which come ordinarily to our tables, and
-which are termed "apples." Mr. Bicheno says, describing the three sorts
-of potatoes—apples, cups, and lumpers—
-
- "The first named are of the best quality, but produce the least
- in quantity; the cups are not so good in quality as the apples,
- but produce more; and the lumpers are the worst of the three
- in quality, but yield the heaviest crop. For these reasons
- the apples are generally sent to Dublin and other large towns
- for sale. The cups are grown for the consumption of smaller
- towns, and are eaten by the larger farmers, and the few of the
- small occupiers and labourers who are in better circumstances
- than the generality of their class; and the lumpers are grown
- by large farmers for stall-feeding cattle, and by most of the
- small occupiers and all the labourers (except a few in constant
- employment, and having but small families) for their own food.
- Though most of the small occupiers and labourers grow apples and
- cups, they do not use them themselves, with the few exceptions
- mentioned, except as holiday fare, and as a little indulgence
- on particular occasions. They can only afford to consume the
- lumpers, or coarsest quality, themselves, on account of the much
- larger produce and consequent cheapness of that sort. The apples
- yield 10 to 15 per cent. less than the cups, and the cups 10 to
- 15 per cent. less than the lumpers, making a difference of 20
- to 30 per cent. between the produce of the best and the worst
- qualities. To illustrate the practice and feeling of the country
- in this respect, the following occurrence was related by one of
- the witnesses:—'A landlord, in passing the door of one of his
- tenants, a small occupier, who was in arrears with his rent, saw
- one of his daughters washing potatoes at the door, and perceiving
- that they were of the apple kind, asked her if they were intended
- for their dinner. Upon being answered that they were, he entered
- the house, and asked the tenant what he meant by eating _apple_
- potatoes when they were fetching so good a price in Dublin, and
- while he did not pay him (the landlord) his rent?'"
-
-Lumpers, dry, that is, without milk or any other addition to them, are
-the ordinary food of the people. The pig which is seen in most Irish
-cabins, and the cow and fowls kept by the small farmers, go to market
-to pay the rent; even the eggs are sold. Small farmers, as well as
-labourers, rarely have even milk to their potatoes.
-
-The following graphic description of an Irish peasant's home, we quote
-from the Pictorial Times, of February 7, 1846. Some districts in
-Ireland are crowded with such hovels:—
-
- "_Cabin of J. Donoghue._—The hovel to which the eye is now
- directed scarcely exceeds Donoghue's length. He will have almost
- as much space when laid in his grave. He can stand up in no part
- of his cabin except the centre; and yet he is not an aged man,
- who has outlived all his connections, and with a frame just ready
- to mingle with its native dust. Nor is he a bachelor, absolutely
- impenetrable to female charms, or looking out for some damsel
- to whom he may be united, 'for better or for worse.' Donoghue,
- the miserable inmate of that hovel, on the contrary, has a wife
- and three children; and these, together with a dog, a pig, and
- sundry fowls, find in that cabin their common abode. Human beings
- and brutes are there huddled together; and the motive to the
- occupancy of the former is just the same as that which operates
- to the keeping of the latter—what they produce. Did not the
- pig and the fowls make money, Donoghue would have none; did not
- Donoghue pay his rent, the cabin would quickly have another
- tenant. Indeed, his rent is only paid, and he and his family
- saved from being turned adrift into the wide world, by his pig
- and his fowls.
-
- "But the cabin should be examined more particularly. It has a
- hole for a door, it has another for a window, it has a third
- through which the smoke may find vent, and nothing more. No
- resemblance to the door of an English cottage, however humble,
- nor the casement it is never without, nor even the rudest chimney
- from which the blue smoke arises, suggesting to the observer many
- ideas of comfort for its inmates, can possibly be traced. The
- walls, too, are jet black; and that which ought to be a floor is
- mud, thick mud, full of holes. The bed of the family is sod. The
- very cradle is a sort of swing suspended from the roof, and it is
- set in motion by the elbow of the wretched mother of the wretched
- child it contains, if she is not disposed to make use of her
- hands.
-
- "The question may fairly be proposed—What comfort can a man have
- in such circumstances? Can he find some relief from his misery,
- as many have found and still find it, by conversing with his
- wife? No. To suppose this, is to imagine him standing in a higher
- class of beings than the one of which he has always formed a
- part. Like himself, too, his wife is oppressed; the growth of her
- faculties is stunted; and, it may be, she is hungry, faint, and
- sick. Can he talk with his children? No. What can he, who knows
- nothing, tell them? What hope can he stimulate who has nothing to
- promise? Can he ask in a neighbour? No. He has no hospitality to
- offer him, and the cabin is crowded with his own family. Can he
- accost a stranger who may travel in the direction of his hovel,
- to make himself personally acquainted with his condition and that
- of others? No. He speaks a language foreign to an Englishman
- or a Scotchman, and which those who hate the 'Saxon,' whatever
- compliments they may pay him for their own purposes, use all the
- means they possess to maintain. Can he even look at his pig with
- the expectation that he will one day eat the pork or the bacon it
- will yield? No; not he. He knows that not a bone of the loin or
- a rasher will be his. That pig will go, like all the pigs he has
- had, to pay his rent. Only one comfort remains, which he has in
- common with his pig and his dog, the warmth of his peat fire.
- Poor Donoghue! thou belongest to a race often celebrated as 'the
- finest peasantry in the world,' but it would be difficult to find
- a savage in his native forest who is not better off than thou!"
-
-There is one other comfort besides the peat fire, which Donoghue may
-have, and that is an occasional gill of whisky—a temporary comfort,
-an ultimate destruction—a new fetter to bind him down in his almost
-brutal condition. In Ireland, as in England, intoxication is the Lethe
-in which the heart-sick labourers strive to forget their sorrows.
-Intemperance prevails most where poverty is most generally felt.
-
-The Pictorial Times thus sketches a cabin of the better class,
-belonging to a man named Pat Brennan:—
-
- "We will enter it, and look round with English eyes. We will do
- so, too, in connection with the remembrance of an humble dwelling
- in England. There we find at least a table, but here there is
- none. There we find some chairs, but here there are none. There
- we find a cupboard, but here there is none. There we find some
- crockery and earthenware, but here there is none. There we find
- a clock, but here there is none. There we find a bed, bedstead,
- and coverings, but here there are none. There is a brick, or
- stone, or boarded floor, but here there is none. What a descent
- would an English agricultural labourer have to make if he changed
- situations with poor Pat Brennan, who is better off than most
- of the tenants of Derrynane Beg, and it may be in the best
- condition of them all! Brennan's cabin has one room, in which he
- and his family live, of course with the fowls and pigs. One end
- is partitioned off in the manner of a loft, the loft being the
- potato store. The space underneath, where the fire is kindled,
- has side spaces for seats. In some instances, the turf-bed is
- on one side and the seats on the other. The other contents of
- the dwelling are—a milk-pail, a pot, a wooden bowl or two, a
- platter, and a broken ladder. A gaudy picture of the Virgin Mary
- may sometimes be seen in such cabins."
-
-The eviction of the wretched peasantry has caused an immense amount of
-misery, and crowds of the evicted ones have perished from starvation.
-The tillers of the soil are mere tenants at will, and may ejected
-from their homes without a moment's notice. A whim of the landlord,
-the failure of the potato crop, or of the ordinary resources of the
-labourers, by which they are rendered unable to pay their rent for a
-short time, usually results in an edict of levelling and extermination.
-A recent correspondent of the London Illustrated News, thus describes
-the desolation of an Irish village:—
-
- "The village of Killard forms part of the Union of Kilrush, and
- possesses an area of 17,022 acres. It had a population, in 1841,
- of 6850 souls, and was valued to the poor-rate at £4254. It is
- chiefly the property, I understand, of Mr. John McMahon Blackall,
- whose healthy residence is admirably situated on the brow of a
- hill, protected by another ridge from the storms of the Atlantic.
- His roof-tree yet stands there, but the people have disappeared.
- The village was mostly inhabited by fishermen, who united with
- their occupation on the waters the cultivation of potatoes. When
- the latter failed, it might have been expected that the former
- should have been pursued with more vigour than ever; but boats
- and lines were sold for present subsistence, and to the failure
- of the potatoes was added the abandonment of the fisheries. The
- rent dwindled to nothing, and then came the leveller and the
- exterminator. What has become of the 6850 souls, I know not; but
- not ten houses remain of the whole village to inform the wayfarer
- where, according to the population returns, they were to be found
- in 1841. They were here, but are gone for ever; and all that
- remains of their abodes are a few mouldering walls, and piles of
- offensive thatch turning into manure. Killard is an epitome of
- half Ireland. If the abodes of the people had not been so slight,
- that they have mingled, like Babylon, with their original clay,
- Ireland would for ages be renowned for its ruins; but, as it is,
- the houses are swept away like the people, and not a monument
- remains of a multitude, which, in ancient Asia or in the wilds of
- America, would numerically constitute a great nation."
-
-The same correspondent mentions a number of other instances of the
-landlord's devastation, and states that large tracts of fertile land
-over which he passed were lying waste, while the peasantry were
-starving by the roadside, or faring miserably in the workhouses. At
-Carihaken, in the county of Galway, the levellers had been at work, and
-had tumbled down eighteen houses. The correspondent says—
-
- "In one of them dwelt John Killian, who stood by me while I made
- a sketch of the remains of his dwelling. He told me that he and
- his fathers before him had owned this now ruined cabin for ages,
- and that he had paid £4 a year for four acres of ground. He owed
- no rent; before it was due, the landlord's drivers cut down his
- crops, carried them off, gave him no account of the proceeds,
- and then tumbled his house. The hut made against the end wall
- of a former habitation was not likely to remain, as a decree
- had gone forth entirely to clear the place. The old man also
- told me that his son having cut down, on the spot that was once
- his own garden, a few sticks to make him a shelter, was taken
- up, prosecuted, and sentenced to two months' confinement, for
- destroying trees and making waste of the property.
-
- "I must supply you with another sketch of a similar subject,
- on the road between Maam and Clifden, in Joyce's County, once
- famous for the Patagonian stature of the inhabitants, who are now
- starved down to ordinary dimensions. High up on the mountain,
- but on the roadside, stands the scalpeen of Keillines. It is
- near General Thompson's property. Conceive five human beings
- living in such a hole: the father was out, at work; the mother
- was getting fuel on the hills, and the children left in the hut
- could only say they were hungry. Their appearance confirmed their
- words—want was deeply engraved in their faces, and their lank
- bodies were almost unprotected by clothing.
-
- "From Clifden to Ouchterade, twenty-one miles, is a dreary drive
- over a moor, unrelieved except by a glimpse of Mr. Martin's house
- at Ballynahinch, and of the residence of Dean Mahon. Destitute
- as this tract is of inhabitants, about Ouchterade some thirty
- houses have been recently demolished. A gentleman who witnessed
- the scene told me nothing could exceed the heartlessness of
- the levellers, if it were not the patient submission of the
- sufferers. They wept, indeed; and the children screamed with
- agony at seeing their homes destroyed and their parents in tears;
- but the latter allowed themselves unresistingly to be deprived of
- what is to most people the dearest thing on earth next to their
- lives—their only home.
-
- "The public records, my own eyes, a piercing wail of wo
- throughout the land—all testify to the vast extent of the
- evictions at the present time. Sixteen thousand and odd persons
- unhoused in the Union of Kilrush before the month of June in
- the present year; seventy-one thousand one hundred and thirty
- holdings done away in Ireland, and nearly as many houses
- destroyed, in 1848; two hundred and fifty-four thousand holdings
- of more than one acre and less than five acres, put an end to
- between 1841 and 1848: six-tenths, in fact, of the lowest class
- of tenantry driven from their now roofless or annihilated cabins
- and houses, makes up the general description of that desolation
- of which Tullig and Mooven are examples. The ruin is great and
- complete. The blow that effected it was irresistible. It came in
- the guise of charity and benevolence; it assumed the character
- of the last and best friend of the peasantry, and it has struck
- them to the heart. They are prostrate and helpless. The once
- frolicksome people—even the saucy beggars—have disappeared,
- and given place to wan and haggard objects, who are so resigned
- to their doom that they no longer expect relief. One beholds
- only shrunken frames, scarcely covered with flesh—crawling
- skeletons, who appear to have risen from their graves, and are
- ready to return frightened to that abode. They have little other
- covering than that nature has bestowed on the human body—a
- poor protection against inclement weather; and, now that the
- only hand from which they expected help is turned against them,
- even hope is departed, and they are filled with despair. Than
- the present Earl of Carlisle there is not a more humane nor a
- kinder-hearted nobleman in the kingdom; he is of high honour and
- unsullied reputation; yet the poor-law he was mainly the means of
- establishing for Ireland, with the best intentions, has been one
- of the chief causes of the people being at this time turned out
- of their homes, and forced to burrow in holes, and share, till
- they are discovered, the ditches and the bogs with otters and
- snipes.
-
- "The instant the poor-law was passed, and property was made
- responsible for poverty, the whole of the land-owners, who
- had before been careless about the people, and often allowed
- them to plant themselves on untenanted spots, or divide their
- tenancies—delighted to get the promise of a little additional
- rent—immediately became deeply interested in preventing that,
- and in keeping down the number of the people. Before they had
- rates to pay, they cared nothing for them; but the law and their
- self-interest made them care, and made them extirpators. Nothing
- less than some general desire like that of cupidity falling
- in with an enactment, and justified by a theory—nothing less
- than a passion which works silently in all, and safely under
- the sanction of a law—could have effected such wide-spread
- destruction. Even humanity was enlisted by the poor-law on the
- side of extirpation. As long as there was no legal provision
- for the poor, a landlord had some repugnance to drive them
- from every shelter; but the instant the law took them under its
- protection, and forced the land-owner to pay a rate to provide
- for them, repugnance ceased: they had a legal home, however
- inefficient, to go to; and eviction began. Even the growth
- of toleration seems to have worked to the same end. Till the
- Catholics were emancipated, they were all—rich and poor, priests
- and peasants—united by a common bond; and Protestant landlords
- beginning evictions on a great scale would have roused against
- them the whole Catholic nation. It would have been taken up as a
- religious question, as well as a question of the poor, prior to
- 1829. Subsequent to that time—with a Whig administration, with
- all offices open to Catholics—no religious feelings could mingle
- with the matter: eviction became a pure question of interest; and
- while the priests look now, perhaps, as much to the government as
- to their flocks for support, Catholic landlords are not behind
- Protestant landlords in clearing their estates."
-
-The person from whom we make the above quotation visited Ireland after
-the famine consequent upon the failure of the potato crop had done its
-worst—in the latter part of 1849. But famine seems to prevail, to a
-certain extent, at all times, in that unhappy land—and thus it is
-clear that the accidental failure of a crop has less to do with the
-misery of the people than radical misgovernment.
-
- "To the Irish, such desolation is nothing new. They have long
- been accustomed to this kind of skinning. Their history, ever
- since it was written, teems with accounts of land forcibly taken
- from one set of owners and given to another; of clearings and
- plantings exactly similar in principle to that which is now
- going on; of driving men from Leinster to Munster, from Munster
- to Connaught, and from Connaught into the sea. Without going
- back to ancient proscriptions and confiscations—all the land
- having been, between the reign of Henry II. and William III.
- confiscated, it is affirmed, three times over—we must mention
- that the clearing so conspicuous in 1848 has now been going on
- for several years. The total number of holdings in 1841, of above
- one acre, and not exceeding five acres each, was 310,375; and,
- in 1847, they had been diminished to 125,926. In that single
- class of holdings, therefore, 184,449, between 1841 and 1847
- inclusive, had been done away with, and 24,147 were extinguished
- in 1848. Within that period, the number of farms of five acres
- and upward, particularly of farms of thirty acres and upward, was
- increased 210,229, the latter class having increased by 108,474.
- Little or no fresh land was broken up; and they, therefore,
- could only have been formed by amassing in these larger farms
- numerous small holdings. Before the year 1847, therefore,
- before 1846, when the potato rot worked so much mischief, even
- before 1845, the process of clearing the land, of putting down
- homesteads and consolidating farms, had been carried to a great
- extent; before any provision had been made by a poor-law for the
- evicted families, before the turned-out labourers and little
- farmers had even the workhouse for a refuge, multitudes had
- been continually driven from their homes to a great extent, as
- in 1848. The very process, therefore, on which government now
- relies for the present relief and the future improvement of
- Ireland, was begun and was carried to a great extent several
- years before the extremity of distress fell upon it in 1846.
- We are far from saying that the potato rot was caused by the
- clearing system; but, by disheartening the people, by depriving
- them of security, by contributing to their recklessness, by
- paralyzing their exertions, by promoting outrages, that system
- undoubtedly aggravated all the evils of that extraordinary
- visitation."—_Illustrated News_, October 13, 1849.
-
-The correspondent of the News saw from one hundred and fifty to one
-hundred and eighty funerals of victims to the want of food, the whole
-number attended by not more than fifty persons. So hardened were the
-men regularly employed in the removal of the dead from the workhouse,
-that they would drive to the churchyard sitting upon the coffins, and
-smoking with apparent enjoyment. These men had evidently "supped full
-of horrors." A funeral was no solemnity to them. They had seen the
-wretched peasants in the madness of starvation, and death had come as a
-soothing angel. Why should the quieted sufferers be lamented?
-
-[Illustration: MULLIN'S HUT AT SCULL.]
-
-A specimen of the in-door horrors of Scull may be seen in the sketch
-of a hut of a poor man named Mullins, who lay dying in a corner, upon
-a heap of straw supplied by the Relief Committee, while his three
-wretched children crouched over a few embers of turf, as if to raise
-the last remaining spark of life. This poor man, it appears, had buried
-his wife about five days before, and was, in all probability, on the
-eve of joining her, when he was found out by the efforts of the vicar,
-who, for a few short days, saved him from that which no kindness could
-ultimately avert. The dimensions of Mullins's hut did not exceed ten
-feet square, and the dirt and filth was ankle-deep upon the floor.
-
- "Commander Caffin, the captain of the steam-sloop _Scourge_, on
- the south coast of Ireland, has written a letter to a friend,
- dated February 15, 1847, in which he gives a most distressing
- and graphic account of the scenes he witnessed in the course of
- his duty in discharging a cargo of meal at Scull. After stating
- that three-fourths of the inhabitants carry a tale of wo in their
- countenances, and are reduced to mere skeletons, he mentions the
- result of what he saw while going through the parish with the
- rector, Dr. Traill. He says—
-
- "'Famine exists to a fearful degree, with all its horrors. Fever
- has sprung up, consequent upon the wretchedness; and swellings
- of limbs and body, and diarrhœa, upon the want of nourishment,
- are everywhere to be found. Dr. Traill's parish is twenty-one
- miles in extent, containing about eighteen thousand souls, with
- not more than half a dozen gentlemen in the whole of it. He drove
- me about five or six miles; but we commenced our visits before
- leaving the village, and in no house that I entered was there not
- to be found the dead or dying. In particularizing two or three,
- they may be taken as the features of the whole. There was no
- picking or choosing, but we took them just as they came.
-
- "'The first which I shall mention was a cabin, rather above the
- ordinary ones in appearance and comfort; in it were three young
- women, and one young man, and three children, all crouched over
- a fire—pictures of misery. Dr. Traill asked after the father,
- upon which one of the girls opened a door leading into another
- cabin, and there were the father and mother in bed; the father
- the most wretched picture of starvation possible to conceive, a
- skeleton with life, his power of speech gone; the mother but a
- little better—her cries for mercy and food were heart-rending.
- It was sheer destitution that had brought them to this. They had
- been well to do in the world, with their cow, and few sheep, and
- potato-ground. Their crops failed, and their cattle were stolen;
- although, anticipating this, they had taken their cow and sheep
- into the cabin with them every night, but they were stolen in the
- daytime. The son had worked on the road, and earned his 8_d._ a
- day, but this would not keep the family, and he, from work and
- insufficiency of food, is laid up, and will soon be as bad as his
- father. They had nothing to eat in the house, and I could see no
- hope for any one of them.
-
- "'In another cabin we went into, a mother and her daughter were
- there—the daughter emaciated, and lying against the wall—the
- mother naked upon some straw on the ground, with a rug over
- her—a most distressing object of misery. She writhed about, and
- bared her limbs, in order to show her state of exhaustion. She
- had wasted away until nothing but the skin covered the bones—she
- cannot have survived to this time.
-
- "'Another that I entered had, indeed, the appearance of
- wretchedness without, but its inside was misery! Dr. Traill, on
- putting his head inside the hole which answered for a door, said,
- 'Well, Philis, how is your mother to-day?—he having been with
- her the day before—and was replied to, 'Oh, sir, is it you?
- Mother is dead!' and there, fearful reality, was the daughter,
- a skeleton herself, crouched and crying over the lifeless body
- of her mother, which was on the floor, cramped up as she had
- died, with her rags and her cloak about her, by the side of a
- few embers of peat. In the next cabin were three young children
- belonging to the daughter, whose husband had run away from
- her, all pictures of death. The poor creature said she did not
- know what to do with the corpse—she had no means of getting
- it removed, and she was too exhausted to remove it herself:
- this cabin was about three miles from the rectory. In another
- cabin, the door of which was stopped with dung, was a poor woman
- whom we had taken by surprise, as she roused up evidently much
- astonished. She burst into tears upon seeing the doctor, and said
- she had not been enabled to sleep since the corpse of the woman
- had lain in her bed. This was a poor creature who was passing
- this miserable cabin, and asked the old woman to allow her to
- rest herself for a few moments, when she had laid down, but never
- rose up again; she died in an hour or so, from sheer exhaustion.
- The body had remained in this hovel of six feet square with the
- poor old woman for four days, and she could not get anybody to
- remove it.'
-
- "The letter proceeds:—
-
- "'I could in this manner take you through the thirty or more
- cottages we visited; but they, without exception, were all
- alike—the dead and the dying in each; and I could tell you
- more of the truth of the heart-rending scene were I to mention
- the lamentations and bitter cryings of each of these poor
- creatures on the threshold of death. Never in my life have I
- seen such wholesale misery, nor could I have thought it so
- complete.'"—_Illustrated News_, February 20, 1847. [At this
- period, famine prevailed throughout Ireland.]
-
-At the village of Mienils, a man named Leahey perished during the great
-famine, with many circumstances of horror. When too weak, from want of
-food, to help himself, he was stretched in his filthy hovel, when his
-famished dogs attacked and so mangled him that he expired in intense
-agony. Can the history of any other country present such terrible
-instances of misery and starvation? The annals of Ireland have been
-dark, indeed; and those who have wilfully cast that gloom upon them,
-must emancipate Africans, and evangelize the rest of mankind, for a
-century, at least, to lay the ghosts of the murdered Irish.
-
-An Irish funeral of later days, with its attendant circumstances of
-poverty and gloom, is truly calculated to stir the sensitive heart of a
-poet. The obsequies display the meagre results of attempts to bury the
-dead with decency. The mourners are few, but their grief is sincere;
-and they weep for the lost as they would be wept for when Death, who
-is ever walking by their side, lays his cold hand on them. During the
-great famine, some poor wretches perished while preparing funerals for
-their friends. In the following verses, published in Howitt's Journal,
-of the 1st of April, 1847, we have a fine delineation of an Irish
-funeral, such as only a poet could give:—
-
-
-
-
- AN IRISH FUNERAL.
-
- BY THE AUTHOR OF "ORION."
-
-
- "Funerals performed."—_London_ Trades.
-
- "On Wednesday, the remains of a poor woman, who died of hunger,
- were carried to their last resting-place by three women, and a
- blind man the son-in-law of the deceased. The distance between
- the wretched hut of the deceased and the grave-yard was nearly
- three miles."—_Tuam Herald._
-
-
- Heavily plod
- Highroad and sod,
- With the cold corpse clod
- Whose soul is with God!
-
- An old door's the hearse
- Of the skeleton corpse,
- And three women bear it,
- With a blind man to share it:
- Over flint, over bog,
- They stagger and jog:—
- Weary, and hungry, and hopeless, and cold,
- They slowly bear onward the bones to the mould.
- Heavily plod
- Highroad and sod,
- With the cold corpse clod,
- Whose soul is with God!
-
- Barefoot ye go,
- Through the frost, through the snow;
- Unsteady and slow,
- Your hearts mad with woe;
- Bewailing and blessing the poor rigid clod—
- The dear dead-and-cold one, whose soul is with God.
- Heavily plod
- Highroad and sod,
- This ruin and rod
- Are from man—and not God!
-
- Now out spake her sister,—
- "Can we be quite sure
- Of the mercy of Heaven,
- Or that Death is Life's cure?
- A cure for the misery, famine, and pains,
- Which our cold rulers view as the end of their gains?"
- Heavily plod
- Highroad and sod,
- With the cold corpse clod,
- Whose soul is with God!
-
- "In a land where's plenty,"
- The old mother said,—
- "But not for poor creatures
- Who pawn rags and bed—
- There's plenty for rich ones, and those far away,
- Who drain off our life-blood, so thoughtless and gay!"
- Heavily plod
- Highroad and sod,
- With the cold corpse clod,
- Whose soul is with God!
-
- Then wailed the third woman—
- "The darling was worth
- The rarest of jewels
- That shine upon earth.
- When hunger was gnawing her—wasted and wild—
- She shared her last morsel with my little child."
- Heavily plod
- Highroad and sod,
- With the cold corpse clod,
- Whose soul is with God!
-
- "O Christ!" pray'd the blind man,
- "We are not so poor,
- Though we bend 'neath the dear weight
- That crushes this door;
- For we know that the grave is the first step to Heaven,
- And a birthright we have in the riches there given."
- Heavily plod,
- Highroad and sod,
- With the cold corpse clod,
- Whose soul is with God!
-
-What wonder if the evicted peasants of Ireland, made desperate by the
-tyranny of the landlords, sometimes make "a law unto themselves,"
-and slay their oppressors! Rebellion proves manhood under such
-circumstances. Instances of landlords being murdered by evicted tenants
-are numerous. In the following sketch we have a vivid illustration of
-this phase of Irish life:—
-
- "The moorland was wide, level, and black; black as night, if you
- could suppose night condensed on the surface of the earth, and
- that you could tread on solid darkness in the midst of day. The
- day itself was fast dropping into night, although it was dreary
- and gloomy at the best; for it was a November day. The moor, for
- miles around, was treeless and houseless; devoid of vegetation,
- except heather, which clad with its gloomy frieze coat the
- shivering landscape. At a distance you could discern, through the
- misty atmosphere, the outline of mountains apparently as bare
- and stony as this wilderness, which they bounded. There were no
- fields, no hedgerows, no marks of the hand of man, except the
- nakedness itself, which was the work of man in past ages; when,
- period after period, he had tramped over the scene with fire
- and sword, and left all that could not fly before him, either
- ashes to be scattered by the savage winds, or stems of trees,
- and carcasses of men trodden into the swampy earth. As the Roman
- historians said of other destroyers, 'They created solitude, and
- called it peace.' That all this was the work of man, and not of
- Nature, any one spot of this huge and howling wilderness could
- testify, if you would only turn up its sable surface. In its
- bosom lay thousands of ancient oaks and pines, black as ebony;
- which told, by their gigantic bulk, that forests must have once
- existed on this spot, as rich as the scene was now bleak. Nobler
- things than trees lay buried there; but were, for the most part,
- resolved into the substance of the inky earth. The dwellings of
- men had left few or no traces, for they had been consumed in
- flames; and the hearts that had loved, and suffered, and perished
- beneath the hand of violence and insult, were no longer human
- hearts, but slime. If a man were carried blindfold to that place,
- and asked when his eyes were unbandaged where he was, he would
- say—'Ireland!'
-
- "He would want no clue to the identity of the place, but the
- scene before him. There is no heath like an Irish heath. There
- is no desolation like an Irish desolation. Where Nature herself
- has spread the expanse of a solitude, it is a cheerful solitude.
- The air flows over it lovingly: the flowers nod and dance in
- gladness; the soil breathes up a spirit of wild fragrance, which
- communicates a buoyant sensation to the heart. You feel that you
- tread on ground where the peace of God, and not the 'peace' of
- man created in the merciless hurricane of war, has sojourned:
- where the sun shone on creatures sporting on ground or on tree,
- as the Divine Goodness of the Universe meant them to sport: where
- the hunter disturbed alone the enjoyment of the lower animals by
- his own boisterous joy: where the traveller sang as he went over
- it, because he felt a spring of inexpressible music in his heart:
- where the weary wayfarer sat beneath a bush, and blessed God,
- though his limbs ached with travel, and his goal was far off.
- In God's deserts dwells gladness; in man's deserts, death. A
- melancholy smites you as you enter them. There is a darkness from
- the past that envelopes your heart, and the moans and sighs of
- ten-times perpetrated misery seem still to live in the very winds.
-
- "One shallow and widely spread stream struggled through the
- moor; sometimes between masses of gray stone. Sedges and
- the white-headed cotton-rush whistled on its margin, and on
- island-like expanses that here and there rose above the surface
- of its middle course.
-
- "I have said that there was no sign of life; but on one of those
- gray stones stood a heron watching for prey. He had remained
- straight, rigid, and motionless for hours. Probably his appetite
- was appeased by his day's success among the trout of that dark
- red-brown stream, which was coloured by the peat from which it
- oozed. When he did move, he sprang up at once, stretched his
- broad wings, and silent as the scene around him, made a circuit
- in the air; rising higher as he went, with slow and solemn
- flight. He had been startled by a sound. There was life in the
- desert now. Two horsemen came galloping along a highway not far
- distant, and the heron, continuing his grave gyrations, surveyed
- them as he went. Had they been travellers over a plain of India,
- an Austrian waste, or the pampas of South America, they could not
- have been grimmer of aspect, or more thoroughly children of the
- wild. They were Irish from head to foot.
-
- "They were mounted on two spare but by no means clumsy horses.
- The creatures had marks of blood and breed that had been
- introduced by the English to the country. They could claim, if
- they knew it, lineage of Arabia. The one was a pure bay, the
- other and lesser, was black; but both were lean as death, haggard
- as famine. They were wet with the speed with which they had been
- hurried along. The soil of the damp moorland, or of the field
- in which, during the day, they had probably been drawing the
- peasant's cart, still smeared their bodies, and their manes flew
- as wildly and untrimmed as the sedge or the cotton-rush on the
- wastes through which they careered. Their riders, wielding each
- a heavy stick instead of a riding-whip, which they applied ever
- and anon to the shoulders or flanks of their smoking animals,
- were mounted on their bare backs, and guided them by halter
- instead of bridle. They were a couple of the short frieze-coated,
- knee-breeches and gray-stocking fellows who are as plentiful
- on Irish soil as potatoes. From beneath their narrow-brimmed,
- old, weather-beaten hats, streamed hair as unkemped as their
- horses' manes. The Celtic physiognomy was distinctly marked—the
- small and somewhat upturned nose; the black tint of skin; the
- eye now looking gray, now black; the freckled cheek, and sandy
- hair. Beard and whiskers covered half the face, and the short
- square-shouldered bodies were bent forward with eager impatience,
- as they thumped and kicked along their horses, muttering curses
- as they went.
-
- "The heron, sailing on broad and seemingly slow vans, still kept
- them in view. Anon, they reached a part of the moorland where
- traces of human labour were visible. Black piles of peat stood on
- the solitary ground, ready, after a summer's cutting and drying.
- Presently patches of cultivation presented themselves; plots of
- ground raised on beds, each a few feet wide, with intervening
- trenches to carry off the boggy water, where potatoes had grown,
- and small fields where grew more stalks of ragwort than grass,
- inclosed by banks cast up and tipped here and there with a brier
- or a stone. It was the husbandry of misery and indigence. The
- ground had already been freshly manured by sea-weeds, but the
- village—where was it? Blotches of burnt ground, scorched heaps
- of rubbish, and fragments of blackened walls, alone were visible.
- Garden-plots were trodden down, and their few bushes rent up,
- or hung with tatters of rags. The two horsemen, as they hurried
- by with gloomy visages, uttered no more than a single word:
- 'Eviction!'
-
- "Further on, the ground heaved itself into a chaotic confusion.
- Stony heaps swelled up here and there, naked, black, and barren:
- the huge bones of the earth protruded themselves through her
- skin. Shattered rocks arose, sprinkled with bushes, and smoke
- curled up from what looked like mere heaps of rubbish, but which
- were in reality human habitations. Long dry grass hissed and
- rustled in the wind on their roofs, (which were sunk by-places,
- as if falling in;) and pits of reeking filth seemed placed
- exactly to prevent access to some of the low doors; while to
- others, a few stepping-stones made that access only possible.
- Here the two riders stopped, and hurriedly tying their steeds to
- an elder-bush, disappeared in one of the cabins.
-
- "The heron slowly sailed on to the place of its regular roost.
- Let us follow it.
-
- "Far different was this scene to those the bird had left. Lofty
- trees darkened the steep slopes of a fine river. Rich meadows
- lay at the feet of woods and stretched down to the stream. Herds
- of cattle lay on them, chewing their cuds after the plentiful
- grazing of the day. The white walls of a noble house peeped, in
- the dusk of night, through the fertile timber which stood in
- proud guardianship of the mansion; and broad winding walks gave
- evidence of a place where nature and art had combined to form a
- paradise. There were ample pleasure-grounds. Alas! the grounds
- around the cabins over which the heron had so lately flown, might
- be truly styled pain-grounds.
-
- "Within that home was assembled a happy family. There was the
- father, a fine-looking man of forty. Proud you would have deemed
- him, as he sate for a moment abstracted in his cushioned chair;
- but a moment afterward, as a troop of children came bursting into
- the room, his manner was instantly changed into one so pleasant,
- so playful, and so overflowing with enjoyment, that you saw him
- only as an amiable, glad, domestic man. The mother, a handsome
- woman, was seated already at the tea-table; and, in another
- minute, sounds of merry voices and childish laughter were mingled
- with the jocose tones of the father, and the playful accents of
- the mother; addressed, now to one, now to another of the youthful
- group.
-
- "In due time the merriment was hushed, and the household
- assembled for evening prayer. A numerous train of servants
- assumed their accustomed places. The father read. He had
- paused once or twice, and glanced with a stern and surprised
- expression toward the group of domestics, for he heard sounds
- that astonished him from one corner of the room near the door.
- He went on—Remember the children of Edom, O Lord, in the day of
- judgment, how they said, Down with it, down with it, even to the
- ground. O daughter of Babylon, wasted with misery, yea, happy
- shall he be who rewardeth thee, as thou hast served us!"
-
- "There was a burst of smothered sobs from the same corner, and
- the master's eye flashed with a strange fire as he again darted a
- glance toward the offender. The lady looked equally surprised, in
- the same direction; then turned a meaning look on her husband—a
- warm flush was succeeded by a paleness in her countenance, and
- she cast down her eyes. The children wondered, but were still.
- Once more the father's sonorous voice continued—'Give us this
- day our daily bread, and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive
- them that trespass against us.' Again the stifled sound was
- repeated. The brow of the master darkened again—the mother
- looked agitated; the children's wonder increased; the master
- closed the book, and the servants, with a constrained silence,
- retired from the room.
-
- "'What _can_ be the matter with old Dennis?' exclaimed the lady,
- the moment that the door had closed on the household.—'Oh! what
- _is_ amiss with poor old Dennis!' exclaimed the children.
-
- "'Some stupid folly or other,' said the father, morosely. 'Come!
- away to bed, children. You can learn Dennis's troubles another
- time.' The children would have lingered, but again the words,
- 'Away with you!' in a tone which never needed repetition, were
- decisive: they kissed their parents and withdrew. In a few
- seconds the father rang the bell. 'Send Dennis Croggan here.'
-
- "The old man appeared. He was a little thin man, of not less
- than seventy years of age, with white hair and a dark spare
- countenance. He was one of those nondescript servants in a large
- Irish house, whose duties are curiously miscellaneous. He had,
- however, shown sufficient zeal and fidelity through a long life,
- to secure a warm nook in the servants' hall for the remainder of
- his days.
-
- "Dennis entered with an humble and timid air, as conscious that
- he had deeply offended; and had to dread at least a severe
- rebuke. He bowed profoundly to both the master and mistress.
-
- "'What is the meaning of your interruptions during the prayers,
- Dennis?' demanded the master abruptly. 'Has any thing happened to
- you?'
-
- "'No, sir.'
-
- "'Any thing amiss in your son's family?'
-
- "'No, your honour.'
-
- "The interrogator paused; a storm of passion seemed slowly
- gathering within him. Presently he asked in a loud tone, 'What
- does this mean? Was there no place to vent your nonsense in, but
- in this room, and at prayers?'
-
- "Dennis was silent. He cast an imploring look at the master, then
- at the mistress.
-
- "'What is the matter, good Dennis?' asked the lady, in a kind
- tone. 'Compose yourself, and tell us. Something strange must have
- happened to you.'
-
- "Dennis trembled violently; but he advanced a couple of paces,
- seized the back of a chair as if to support him, and, after a
- vain gasp or two, declared, as intelligibly as fear would permit,
- that the prayer had overcome him.
-
- "'Nonsense, man!' exclaimed the master, with fury in the same
- face, which was so lately beaming with joy on the children.
- 'Nonsense! Speak out without more ado, or you shall rue it.'
-
- "Dennis looked to the mistress as if he would have implored her
- intercession; but as she gave no sign of it, he was compelled to
- speak; but in a brogue that would have been unintelligible to
- English ears. We therefore translate it:
-
- "'I could not help thinking of the poor people at Rathbeg, when
- the soldiers and police cried, "Down with them! down with them,
- even to the ground!" and then the poor bit cabins came down all
- in fire and smoke, amid the howls and cries of the poor creatures.
-
- "'Oh! it was a fearful sight, your honour—it was, indeed—to
- see the poor women hugging their babies, and the houses where
- they were born burning in the wind. It was dreadful to see the
- old bedridden man lie on the wet ground among the few bits of
- furniture, and groan to his gracious God above. Oh, your honour!
- you never saw such a sight, or—you—sure a—it would never have
- been done!'
-
- "Dennis seemed to let the last words out as if they were jerked
- from him by a sudden shock.
-
- "The master, whose face had changed during this speech to a livid
- hue of passion, his eyes blazing with rage, was in the act of
- rushing on old Dennis, when he was held back by his wife, who
- exclaimed, 'Oswald! be calm; let us hear what Dennis has to say.
- Go on, Dennis, go on.'
-
- "The master stood still, breathing hard to overcome his rage. Old
- Dennis, as if seeing only his own thoughts, went on: 'O, bless
- your honour, if you had seen that poor frantic woman when the
- back of the cabin fell and buried her infant, where she thought
- she had laid it safe for a moment while she flew to part her
- husband and a soldier who had struck the other children with the
- flat of his sword, and bade them to troop off. Oh, your honour,
- but it was a killing sight. It was that came over me in the
- prayer, and I feared that we might be praying perdition on us
- all, when we prayed about our trespasses. If the poor creatures
- of Rathbeg should meet us, your honour, at Heaven's gate (I was
- thinking) and say—These are the heathens that would not let us
- have a poor hearth-stone in poor ould Ireland.—And that was all,
- your honour, that made me misbehave so; I was just thinking of
- that, and I could not help it.'
-
- "'Begone, you old fool!' exclaimed the master; and Dennis
- disappeared with a bow and an alertness that would have done
- credit to his earlier years.
-
- "There was a moment's silence after his exit. The lady turned to
- her husband, and clasping his arm with her hands and looking into
- his darkened countenance with a look of tenderest anxiety, said:—
-
- "'Dearest Oswald, let me, as I have so often done, once more
- entreat that these dreadful evictions may cease. Surely there
- must be some way to avert them and to set your property right,
- without such violent measures.'
-
- "The stern proud man said, 'Then why, in the name of Heaven,
- do you not reveal some other remedy? why do you not enlighten
- all Ireland? why don't you instruct Government? The unhappy
- wretches who have been swept away by force are no people, no
- tenants of mine; they squatted themselves down, as a swarm of
- locusts fix themselves while a green blade is left; they obstruct
- all improvement; they will not till the ground themselves, nor
- will they quit it to allow me to provide more industrious and
- provident husbandmen to cultivate it. Land that teems with
- fertility, and is shut out from hearing and bringing forth food
- for man, is accursed. Those who have been evicted not only rob
- me, but their more industrious fellows.'
-
- "'They will murder us,' said the wife, 'some day for these
- things. They will—'
-
- "Her words were cut short suddenly by her husband starting, and
- standing in a listening attitude. 'Wait a moment,' he said, with
- a peculiar calmness, as if he had just got a fresh thought; and
- his lady, who did not comprehend what was the cause, but hoped
- that some better influence was touching him, unloosed her hands
- from his arm. 'Wait just a moment,' he repeated, and stepped from
- the room, opened the front door, and, without his hat, went out.
-
- "'He is intending to cool down his anger,' thought his wife;
- 'he feels a longing for the freshness of the air,' But she had
- not caught the sound which had startled his quicker, because
- more excited ear; she had been too much engrossed by her own
- intercession with him; it was a peculiar whine from the mastiff,
- which was chained near the lodge-gate, that had arrested his
- attention. He stepped out. The black clouds which overhung the
- moor had broken, and the moon's light straggled between them.
-
- "The tall and haughty man stood erect in the breeze and listened.
- Another moment-there was a shot, and he fell headlong upon the
- broad steps on which he stood. His wife sprang with a piercing
- shriek from the door and fell on his corpse. A crowd of servants
- gathered about them, making wild lamentations and breathing vows
- of vengeance. The murdered master and the wife were borne into
- the house.
-
- "The heron soared from its lofty perch, and wheeled with
- terrified wings through the night air. The servants armed
- themselves, and, rushing furiously from the house, traversed the
- surrounding masses of trees; fierce dogs were let loose, and
- dashed frantically through the thickets: all was, however, too
- late. The soaring heron saw gray figures, with blackened faces,
- stealing away—often on their hands and knees—down the hollows
- of the moorlands toward the village, where the two Irish horsemen
- had, in the first dusk of that evening, tied their lean steeds
- to the old elder bush.
-
- "Near the mansion no lurking assassin was to be found. Meanwhile
- two servants, pistol in hand, on a couple of their master's
- horses, scoured hill and dale. The heron, sailing solemnly on the
- wind above, saw them halt in a little town. They thundered with
- the butt-ends of their pistols on a door in the principal street;
- over it there was a coffin-shaped board, displaying a painted
- crown and the big-lettered words, 'POLICE STATION.' The mounted
- servants shouted with might and main. A night-capped head issued
- from a chamber casement with—'What is the matter?'
-
- "'Out with you, police! out with all your strength, and lose not
- a moment. Mr. FitzGibbon, of Sporeen, is shot at his own door.'
-
- "The casement was hastily clapped to, and the two horsemen
- galloped forward up the long, broad street, now flooded with the
- moon's light. Heads full of terror were thrust from upper windows
- to inquire the cause of that rapid galloping, but ever too late.
- The two men held their course up a steep hill outside of the
- town, where stood a vast building overlooking the whole place; it
- was the barracks. Here the alarm was also given.
-
- "In less than an hour a mounted troop of police in olive-green
- costume, with pistols at holster, sword by side, and carbine
- on the arm, were trotting briskly out of town, accompanied
- by the two messengers, whom they plied with eager questions.
- These answered, and sundry imprecations vented, the whole party
- increased their speed, and went on, mile after mile, by hedgerow
- and open moorland, talking as they went.
-
- "Before they reached the house of Sporeen, and near the village
- where the two Irish horsemen had stopped the evening before,
- they halted and formed themselves into more orderly array. A
- narrow gully was before them on the road, hemmed in on each
- side by rocky steeps, here and there overhung with bushes. The
- commandant bade them be on their guard, for there might be danger
- there. He was right; for the moment they began to trot through
- the pass, the flash and rattle of firearms from the thickets
- above saluted them, followed by a wild yell. In a second,
- several of their number lay dead or dying in the road. The fire
- was returned promptly by the police, but it was at random; for,
- although another discharge and another howl announced that the
- enemy were still there, no one could be seen. The head of the
- police commanded his troops to make a dash through the pass; for
- there was no scaling the heights from this side, the assailants
- having warily posted themselves there, because at the foot of
- the eminence were stretched on either hand impassable bogs. The
- troop dashed forward, firing their pistols as they went, but were
- met by such deadly discharges of firearms as threw them into
- confusion, killed and wounded several of their horses, and made
- them hastily retreat.
-
- "There was nothing for it but to await the arrival of the
- cavalry; and it was not long before the clatter of horses' hoofs
- and the ringing of sabres were heard on the road. On coming
- up, the troop of cavalry, firing to the right and left on the
- hillsides, dashed forward, and, in the same instant, cleared the
- gully in safety, the police having kept their side of the pass.
- In fact, not a single shot was returned, the arrival of this
- strong force having warned the insurgents to decamp. The cavalry,
- in full charge, ascended the hills to their summits. Not a foe
- was to be seen, except one or two dying men, who were discovered
- by their groans.
-
- "The moon had been for a time quenched in a dense mass of clouds,
- which now were blown aside by a keen and cutting wind. The heron,
- soaring over the desert, could now see gray-coated men flying
- in different directions to the shelter of the neighbouring
- hills. The next day he was startled from his dreamy reveries
- near the moorland stream, by the shouts and galloping of mingled
- police and soldiers, as they gave chase to a couple of haggard,
- bare-headed, and panting peasants. These were soon captured, and
- at once recognised as belonging to the evicted inhabitants of the
- recently deserted village.
-
- "Since then years have rolled on. The heron, who had been
- startled from his quiet haunts by these things, was still
- dwelling on the lofty tree with his kindred, by the hall of
- Sporeen. He had reared family after family in that airy lodgment,
- as spring after spring came round; but no family, after that
- fatal time, had ever tenanted the mansion. The widow and
- children had fled from it so soon as Mr. FitzGibbon had been laid
- in the grave. The nettle and dock flourished over the scorched
- ruins of the village of Rathbeg; dank moss and wild grass tangled
- the proud drives and walks of Sporeen. All the woodland rides and
- pleasure-grounds lay obstructed with briers; and young trees in
- time grew luxuriantly where once the roller in its rounds could
- not crush a weed; the nimble frolics of the squirrel were now the
- only merry things where formerly the feet of lovely children had
- sprung with elastic joy.
-
- "The curse of Ireland was on the place. Landlord and tenant,
- gentleman and peasant, each with the roots and the shoots of many
- virtues in their hearts, thrown into a false position by the
- mutual injuries of ages, had wreaked on each other the miseries
- sown broadcast by their ancestors. Beneath this foul spell men
- who would, in any other circumstances, have been the happiest and
- the noblest of mankind, became tyrants; and peasants, who would
- have glowed with grateful affection toward them, exulted in being
- their assassins. As the traveller rode past the decaying hall,
- the gloomy woods, and waste black moorlands of Sporeen, he read
- the riddle of Ireland's fate, and asked himself when an Œdipus
- would arise to solve it."
-
-A large number of the peasantry of Connemara, a rocky and romantic
-region, are among the most recent evictions.
-
- "These hardy mountaineers, whose lives, and the lives of their
- fathers and great-grandfathers have been spent in reclaiming
- the barren hills where their hard lot has been cast, were the
- victims of a series of oppressions unparalleled in the annals
- of Irish misrule. They were thickly planted over the rocky
- surface of Connemara for political purposes. In the days of
- the 40_s._ freeholder, they were driven to the hustings like
- a flock of sheep, to register not alone one vote, but in many
- instances three or four votes each; and it was no uncommon thing
- to see those unfortunate serfs evicted from their holdings when
- an election had terminated— not that they refused to vote
- according to the wish of their landlords, but because they did
- not go far enough in the sin of perjury and the diabolical crime
- of impersonation. When they ceased to possess any political
- importance, they were cast away like broken tools. It was no
- uncommon thing, in the wilds of Connemara, to see the peasantry,
- after an election, coming before the Catholic Archbishop, when
- holding a visitation of his diocese, to proclaim openly the crime
- of impersonation which their landlords compelled them to commit,
- and implore forgiveness for such. Of this fact we have in the
- town of Galway more than one living witness; so that, while every
- thing was done, with few exceptions, to demoralize the peasantry
- of Connemara, and plant in their souls the germs of that slavery
- which is so destructive to the growth of industry, enterprise,
- or manly exertion—no compassion for their wants was ever
- evinced—no allowance for their poverty and inability to meet the
- rack-renting demands of their landlords was ever made."
-
-Perhaps, it requires no Œdipus to tell what will be the future of the
-Irish nation, if the present system of slavery is maintained by their
-English conquerors. If they do not cease to exist as a people, they
-will continue to quaff the dark waters of sorrow, and to pay a price,
-terrible to think of, for the mere privilege of existence.
-
-During the famine of 1847, the heartlessness of many Irish landlords
-was manifested by their utter indifference to the multitudes starving
-around their well-supplied mansions. At that period, the Rev. A. King,
-of Cork, wrote to the Southern Reporter as follows:—
-
- "The town and the surrounding country for many miles are
- possessed by twenty-six proprietors, whose respective yearly
- incomes vary from one hundred pounds, or less, to several
- thousands. They had all been respectfully informed of the
- miserable condition of the people, and solicited to give relief.
- Seventeen of the number had not the politeness to answer the
- letters of the committee, four had written to say they would not
- contribute, and the remaining five had given a miserable fraction
- of what they ought to have contributed. My first donation from
- a small portion of a small relief fund, received from English
- strangers, exceeded the aggregate contributions of six-and-twenty
- landed proprietors, on whose properties human beings were
- perishing from famine, filth, and disease, amid circumstances of
- wretchedness appalling to humanity and disgraceful to civilized
- men! I believe it my sacred duty to gibbet this atrocity in
- the press, and to call on benevolent persons to loathe it as a
- monster crime. Twenty-one owners of property, on which scores,
- nay hundreds, of their fellow-creatures are dying of hunger, give
- nothing to save their lives! Are they not virtually guilty of
- wholesale murder? I ask not what human law may decide upon their
- acts, but in the name of Christianity I arraign them as guilty of
- treason against the rights of humanity and the laws of God!"
-
-It is to escape the responsibility mentioned by Mr. King, as well as
-to avoid the payment of poor-rates, that the landlords resort to the
-desolating process of eviction. To show the destructive nature of the
-tyrannical system that has so long prevailed in Ireland, we will take
-an abstract of the census of 1841 and 1851.
-
- 1841. 1851.
-
- Houses: Inhabited 1,328,839 1,047,935
- " Uninhabited, built 52,203 65,159
- " " building 3,318 2,113
- — —
- Total 1,384,360 1,115,207
-
- Families 1,472,287 1,207,002
-
- Persons: Males 4,019,576 3,176,727
- " Females 4,155,548 3,339,067
- — —
- Total 8,175,124 6,515,794
-
- Population in 1841 8,175,124
- " 1851 6,515,794
- —
- Decrease 1,659,330
-
- Or, at the rate of 20 per cent.
-
- Population in 1821 6,801,827
- " 1831 7,767,401
- " 1841 8,175,124
- " 1851 6,515,794
-
- Or, 286,030 souls fewer than in 1821, thirty years ago.
-
- "We shall impress the disastrous importance of the reduction in
- the number of the people on our readers, by placing before them a
- brief account of the previous progress of the population. There
- is good reason to suppose, that, prior to the middle of the last
- century, the people continually, though slowly, increased; but
- from that time something like authentic but imperfect records
- give the following as their numbers at successive periods:—
-
- 1754 2,372,634
- 1767 2,544,276 Increase per cent. 7·2
- 1777 2,690,556 " 5·7
- 1785 2,845,932 " 5·8
- 1805 5,359,456 " 84·0
- 1813 5,937,858 " 10·8
- 1821 6,801,829 " 14·6
- 1831 7,767,401 " 14·9
- 1841 8,175,124 " 5·3
- 1851 6,515,794 Decrease 20·0
-
- "Though there are some discrepancies in these figures, and
- probably the number assigned to 1785 is too small, and that
- assigned to 1805 too large, they testify uniformly to a continual
- increase of the people for eighty-seven years, from 1754 to 1841.
- Now, for the first time in nearly a century, a complete change
- has set in, and the population has decreased in the last ten
- years 20 per cent. It is 1,659,330 less than in 1841, and less by
- 286,033 than in 1821.
-
- "But this is not quite all. The census of 1851 was taken 68
- days earlier than the census of 1841; and it is obvious, if the
- same rate of decrease continued through those 68 days, as has
- prevailed on the average through the ten years, that the whole
- amount of decrease would be so much greater. Sixty-eight days is
- about the 54th part of ten years—say the 50th part; and the 50th
- part of the deficiency is 33,000 odd—say 30,000. We must add
- 30,000, therefore, to the 1,659,330, making 1,689,330, to get the
- true amount of the diminution of the people in ten years.
-
- "Instead of the population increasing in a healthy manner,
- implying an increase in marriages, in families, and in all the
- affections connected with them, and implying an increase in
- general prosperity, as for nearly a century before, and now
- amounting, as we might expect, to 8,600,000, it is 2,000,000
- less. This is a disastrous change in the life of the Irish. At
- this downward rate, decreasing 20 per cent. in ten years, five
- such periods would suffice to exterminate the whole population
- more effectually than the Indians have been exterminated from
- North America. Fifty years of this new career would annihilate
- the whole population of Ireland, and turn the land into an
- uninhabited waste. This is a terrible reverse in the condition of
- a people, and is the more remarkable because in the same period
- the population of Great Britain has increased 12 per cent., and
- because there is no other example of a similar decay in any part
- of Europe in the same time, throughout which the population has
- continued to increase, though not everywhere equally, nor so fast
- as in Great Britain. Indeed, it may be doubted whether the annals
- of mankind can supply, in a season of peace—when no earthquakes
- have toppled down cities, no volcanoes have buried them beneath
- their ashes, and no inroads of the ocean have occurred—such
- wholesale diminution of the population and desolation of the
- country.
-
- "The inhabited houses in Ireland have decreased from 1,328,839
- in 1841 to 1,047,735 in 1851, or 281,104, (21·2 per cent.,) and
- consequently more than the population, who are now worse lodged
- and more crowded in relation to houses than they were in 1841.
- As the uninhabited houses have increased only 12,951, no less
- than 268,153 houses must have been destroyed in the ten years.
- That informs us of the extent of the 'clearances' of which we
- have heard so much of late; and the 1,659,300 people less in the
- country is an index to the number of human beings who inhabited
- the houses destroyed. We must remember, too, that within the
- period a number of union workhouses have been built in Ireland,
- capable of accommodating 308,885 persons, and that, besides the
- actual diminution of the number of the people, there has been a
- change in their habits, about 300,000 having become denizens of
- workhouses, who, prior to 1841, lived in their own separate huts.
- With distress and destruction pauperism has also increased.
-
- "The decrease has not been equal for the males and females; the
- numbers were as follows.—
-
- 1841. 1851.
-
- Males 4,019,576 3,176,124 Decrease 20·9 per cent.
- Females 4,155,548 3,336,067 " 29·6 "
-
- "The females now exceed the males by 162,943, or 2 per cent. on
- the whole population. It is not, however, that the mortality has
- been greater among the males than the females, but that more of
- the former than of the latter have escaped from the desolation.
-
- "Another important feature of the returns is the increase of
- the town population:—Dublin, 22,124, or 9 per cent.; Belfast,
- 24,352, or 32 per cent.; Galway, 7422, or 43 per cent.; Cork,
- 5765, or 7 per cent. Altogether, the town population has
- increased 71,928, or nearly 1 per cent., every town except
- Londonderry displaying the same feature; and that increase makes
- the decrease of the rural population still more striking. The
- whole decrease is of the agricultural classes: Mr. O'Connell's
- 'finest pisantry' are the sufferers."
-
-The London Illustrated News, in an article upon the census, says—
-
- "The causes of the decay of the people, subordinate to
- inefficient employment and to wanting commerce and manufactures,
- are obviously great mortality, caused by the destruction of the
- potatoes and the consequent want of food, the clearance system,
- and emigration. From the retarded increase of the population
- between 1831 and 1841—only 5·3 per cent., while in the previous
- ten years it had been nearly 15 per cent.—it may be inferred
- that the growth of the population was coming to a stand-still
- before 1841, and that the late calamities only brought it down to
- its means of continued subsistence, according to the distribution
- of property and the occupations of the people. The potato rot,
- in 1846, was a somewhat severer loss of that root than had
- before fallen on the Irish, who have suffered occasionally from
- famines ever since their history began; and it fell so heavily
- on them then, because they were previously very much and very
- generally impoverished. Thousands, and even millions, of them
- subsisted almost exclusively on lumpers, the very worst kind
- of potatoes, and were reduced in health and strength when they
- were overtaken by the dearth of 1846. The general smallness of
- their consumption, and total abstinence from the use of tax
- paying articles, is made painfully apparent by the decrease of
- the population of Ireland having had no sensible influence in
- reducing the revenue. They were half starved while alive. Another
- remarkable fact which we must notice is, that, while the Irish
- population have thus been going to decay, the imports and exports
- of the empire have increased in a much more rapid ratio than the
- population of Great Britain. For them, therefore, exclusively,
- is the trade of the empire carried on, and the Irish who have
- been swept away, without lessening the imports and exports, have
- had no share in our commerce. It is from these facts apparent,
- that, while they have gone to decay, the population of Great
- Britain have increased their well-being and their enjoyments
- much more than their numbers. We need not remind our readers of
- the dreadful sufferings of the Irish in the years 1847, 1848,
- and 1849; for the accounts we then published of them were too
- melancholy to be forgotten. As an illustration, we may observe
- that the Irish Poor-law Commissioners, in their fourth report,
- dated May 5, 1851, boast that the 'worst evils of the famine,
- such as the occurrence of _deaths by the wayside_, a high rate of
- mortality in the workhouses, and the prevalence of dangerous and
- contagious diseases in or out of the workhouse, have undergone
- a very material abatement.' There have been, then, numerous
- deaths by the wayside, alarming contagious diseases, and great
- mortality in the workhouses."
-
-The Poor-law Commissioners kept a most mysterious silence during the
-worst period of the famine; and, it was only when the horrors of that
-time were known to the whole civilized world that they reported the
-"abatement of the evils." Perhaps, they had become so accustomed to
-witnessing misery in Ireland that even the famine years did not startle
-them into making a humane appeal to the British government upon behalf
-of the sufferers.
-
-The Illustrated News, in the same article we have quoted above, says,
-quite sensibly, but with scarcely a due appreciation of the causes of
-Ireland's decay—
-
- "The decline of the population has been greatest in Connaught;
- now the Commissioners tell us that in 1847 the maximum rate of
- mortality in the workhouses of that province was 43.6 per week
- in a thousand persons, so that in about 23 weeks at this rate
- the whole 1000 would be dead. The maximum rate of mortality in
- all the workhouses in that year was 25 per 1000 weekly, or the
- whole 1000 would die in something more than 39 weeks. That was
- surely a very frightful mortality. It took place among that part
- of the population for which room was found in the workhouses;
- and among the population out of the workhouses perishing by the
- wayside, the mortality must have been still more frightful. We
- are happy to believe, on the assurance of the commissioners, that
- matters are now improved, that workhouse accommodation is to
- be had—with one exception, Kilrush—for all who need it; that
- the expense of keeping the poor is diminished; that contagious
- disorders are less frequent, and that the rate of mortality has
- much declined. But the statement that such improvements have
- taken place, implies the greatness of the past sufferings. There
- can be no doubt, therefore, that the decay of the population
- has partly arisen from increased mortality on the one hand, and
- from decreasing marriages and decreasing births on the other.
- Now that the Irish have a poor-law fairly administered, we may
- expect that, in future, such terrible scenes as were witnessed
- in 1847-49 will not again occur. But the state which authorized
- the landlords, by a law, to clear their estates of the peasantry,
- as if they were vermin, destroying, as we have seen, 268,153
- dwellings, without having previously imposed on those landlords
- the obligation of providing for the people, did a great wrong,
- and the decay of the people now testifies against it.
-
- "With reference to emigration—the least objectionable mode
- of getting rid of a population—there are no correct returns
- kept of the number of Irish who emigrate, because a great part
- of them go from Liverpool, and are set down in the returns as
- emigrants from England. It is supposed by those best acquainted
- with the subject, that more than nine-tenths of the emigrants
- from Liverpool are Irish. Taking that proportion, therefore, and
- adding it to the emigrants who proceed direct from Ireland, the
- number of Irish emigrants from 1842 to the present year was—
-
- 1843 39,549 │ 1847 214,970
- 1844 55,910 │ 1848 177,720
- 1845 76,523 │ 1849 208,759
- 1846 106,767 │ 1850 207,853
- — │ —
- Total, 4 years, 278,749 │ Total, 4 years, 809,302
- Total, 8 years 1,088,051.
-
- "If we add 70,000 for the two first years of the decennial period
- not included in the return, we shall have 1,158,051 as the total
- emigration of the ten years. It was probably more than that—it
- could not well have been less. To this we must add the number of
- Irish who came to England and Scotland, of whom no account is
- kept. If we put them down at 30,000 a year, we shall have for
- the ten years 300,000; or the total expatriation of the Irish in
- the ten years may be assumed at 1,458,000, or say 1,500,000. At
- first sight this appears a somewhat soothing explanation of the
- decline of the Irish population; but, on being closely examined,
- it diminishes the evil very little in one sense, and threatens to
- enhance it in another.
-
- "So far as national strength is concerned, it is of no
- consequence whether the population die out or emigrate to another
- state, except that, if the other state be a rival or an enemy, it
- may be worse for the parent state that the population emigrate
- than be annihilated. In truth, the Irish population in the United
- States, driven away formerly by persecution, have imbittered the
- feelings of the public there against England. Emigration is only
- very beneficial, therefore, when it makes room for one at home
- for every one removed. Such is the emigration from England to her
- colonies or to the United States, with which she has intimate
- trade relations; but such is not the case with the emigration
- from Ireland, for there we find a frightful void. No one fills
- the emigrant's place. He flies from the country because he cannot
- live in it; and being comparatively energetic, we may infer
- that few others can. In the ordinary course, had the 1,500,000
- expatriated people remained, nearly one-third of them would have
- died in the ten years; they would have increased the terrible
- mortality, and, without much adding to the present number of the
- people, would have added to the long black catalogue of death.
-
- "For the emigrants themselves removal is a great evil, a mere
- flying from destruction. The Poor-law Commissioners state that
- the number of pauper emigrants sent from Ireland in 1850 was
- about 1800, or less than one per cent. of the whole emigration;
- the bulk of the emigrants were not paupers, but persons of some
- means as well as of some energy. They were among the best of the
- population, and they carried off capital with them—leaving the
- decrepit, the worn-out, and the feeble behind them; the mature
- and the vigorous, the seed of future generations, went out of
- the land, and took with them the means of future increase. We
- doubt, therefore, whether such an emigration as that from Ireland
- within the last four years will not be more fatal to its future
- prosperity than had the emigrants swelled the mortality at
- home. All the circumstances now enumerated tend to establish the
- conclusion, that, for the state, and for the people who remain
- behind, it is of very little consequence whether a loss of
- population, such as that in Ireland, be caused by an excessive
- mortality or excessive emigration.
-
- "To the emigrants themselves, after they have braved the pain of
- the separation and the difficulties of the voyage, and after they
- are established in a better home, the difference is very great;
- but it may happen that, to Ireland as a state, their success
- abroad will be rather dangerous than beneficial. On the whole,
- emigration does not account for the decrease of people; and if it
- did account for it, would not afford us the least consolation."
-
-In the above article, the Kilrush Union is mentioned as an exception
-to the general improvement in Ireland, in respect to workhouse
-accommodation. Mr. Sidney Godolphin Osborne, the able and humane
-correspondent of the London Times, can enlighten us in regard to the
-treatment of the poor of Kilrush in 1851.
-
- "I am sorry to be compelled again to call public attention to
- the state of things in the above ill-fated union. I do not
- dispute the interest which must attach to the transactions of the
- Encumbered Estates Court, the question of the so-called Godless
- Colleges, the campaign now commencing against the national
- schools, and the storm very naturally arising against the Papal
- Aggression Bill, in a country so Catholic as Ireland. But I must
- claim some interest upon the part of the British public on the
- question of life and death now cruelly working out in the West of
- Ireland.
-
- "The accommodation for paupers in the Kilrush union-houses was,
- in the three weeks ending the 8th, 15th, and 22d of this month,
- calculated for 4654; in the week ending the 8th of March there
- were 5005 inmates, 56 deaths!—in the week ending the 15th of
- March, 4980 inmates, 68 deaths!—in the week ending the 22d of
- March, 4868 inmates, 79 deaths! That is to say, _there were 203
- deaths in 21 days_. I last week called your attention to the
- fact of the over-crowding and the improper feeding of the poor
- creatures in these houses, as proved by a report made by the
- medical officer on the 1st of February, repeated on the 22d,
- and, at the time of my letter, evidently unheeded. Behold the
- result—79 deaths in a population of under 5000 in one week! I
- have, I regret to say, besides these returns, a large mass of
- returns of deaths outside the house, evidently the result of
- starvation; on some, coroners' juries have admitted it to be so.
-
- "Eye-witnesses of the highest respectability, as well as my own
- paid agent, report to me the state of the town and neighbourhood
- of the workhouse on the admission-days in characters quite
- horrifying: between 100 and 200 poor, half-starved, almost naked
- creatures may be seen by the roadside, under the market-house—in
- short, wherever the famished, the houseless, and the cold can get
- for a night's shelter. Many have come twelve Irish miles to seek
- relief, and then have been refused, though their sunken eyes and
- projecting bones write the words 'destitute' and 'starving' in
- language even the most callous believers in pauper cunning could
- not misunderstand. I will defy contradiction to the fact, that
- the business of the admission-days is conducted in a way which
- forbids common justice to the applicants; it is a mere mockery
- to call the scene of indecent hurry and noisy strife between
- guardians, officers, and paupers, which occupies the few hours
- weekly given to this work, a hearing of applicants.
-
- "I have before me some particulars of a visit of inspection paid
- to these houses a short time since by a gentleman whose position
- and whose motives are above all cavil for respectability and
- integrity; I have a mass of evidence, voluntarily given me, from
- sources on which I can place implicit confidence, all tending
- to one and the same point. The mortality so fast increasing can
- only be ascribed to the insufficiency of the out-relief given to
- the destitute, and the crowding and improper diet of the in-door
- paupers. From the published statement of the half-year ending
- September 29, 1850, signed 'C. M. Vandeleur, chairman,' I find
- there were 1014 deaths in that said half-year. Average weekly
- cost per head—food, 11¼_d._; clothing, 2_d._ I shall look
- with anxiety for the return of the half-year just ended; it will
- be a curious document, as emanating from a board the chairman
- of which has just trumpeted in your columns with regard to this
- union, 'that the lands, with little exception, are well occupied,
- and a spirit of industry visible among all classes.' It will at
- least prove a more than usual occupation of burying-land, and a
- spirit of increased energy in the grave-digging class.
-
- "With regard to the diet of the old and infirm, I can conceive it
- possible that since the publication of my last letter there may
- be some improvement, though I am not yet aware of it. I am now
- prepared to challenge all contradiction to the fact that the diet
- has been not only short of what it ought to be by the prescribed
- dietary, but, in the case of the bread, it has frequently been
- unfit for human food—such as very old or very young people could
- only touch under the pressure of famine, and could not, under any
- circumstances, sustain health upon.
-
- "Let the authorities investigate the deaths of the last six
- weeks, taking the cause of death from the medical officers, and
- how soon after admission each individual died; they will then,
- with me, cease to wonder that the poor creatures who come in
- starving should so soon sink, when the sanatory condition of the
- law's asylum is just that which would tell most severely even
- on the most healthy. I admit, sir, that Kilrush market may be
- well supplied with cheap food, but the evicted peasantry have
- no money, and vendors do not give. I admit that the season for
- the growth of nettles, and cornkale, and other weeds, the of
- late years normal food of these poor creatures, has not yet set
- in, and this I do not deny is all against them. I leave to the
- British public the forming any conclusion they like from this
- admission.
-
- "What I now contend for is this—that in a particular part of
- Great Britain there are certain workhouses, asylums for the
- destitute, supervised by salaried inspectors, directly under the
- cognizance of the Government, in which the crowding of the sick
- is most shameful, the diet equally so. The mortality for the
- weeks ending January 25 to March 22—484, upon a population which
- in those weeks never exceeded 5200 souls! I believe these to be
- facts which cannot be disputed, and I claim on them the immediate
- interference of the Government, and the more especially as the
- chairman of this union makes a public favourable comparison
- between it and the union of Ennistymon, in the same county. I
- am myself prepared, on very short notice, to go over at my own
- expense with any person of respectability from this country,
- appointed by Government, and I have no doubt we shall prove that
- I have, if any thing, understated matters; if so, am I wrong,
- sir, in saying, that such a state of things, within a twenty
- hours' journey from London, is in a sad and shameful contrast
- to the expected doings of the 'World's Fair' on English ground?
- _When, the other day, I looked on the Crystal Palace, and thought
- of Kilrush workhouse, as I have seen it and now know it to be,
- I confess I felt, as a Christian and the subject of a Christian
- Government, utter disgust._ Again, sir, I thank you from my heart
- for your indulgence to these my cries for justice for Ireland."
-
-Alas! poor country, where each hour teems with a new grievance; where
-tyranny is so much a custom that the very institutions which have
-charity written upon their front are turned to dangerous pest-houses,
-slaving shops, or tombs; where to toil even to extremity is to be
-rewarded with semi-starvation in styes, and, perhaps, by sudden
-eviction, and a grave by the wayside; where to entertain certain
-religious convictions is to invite the whips of persecution, and
-the particular tyranny of the landlord who adheres to the Church of
-England; where to speak the faith of the heart, the opinions of the
-mind, is to sacrifice the food doled out by the serf-holders; where to
-live is to be considered a glorious mercy—to hope, something unfit for
-common men.
-
-The struggles and achievements of Con McNale, as related in "Household
-Words," give us a tolerably truthful representation of the milder
-features of Irish peasant life. Con had better luck than most of his
-class, and knew better how to improve it. Yet the circumstances of his
-existence were certainly not those of a freeman:—
-
- "My father," said he, "lived under ould Squire Kilkelly, an'
- for awhile tinded his cattle; but the Squire's gone out iv this
- part iv the counthry, to Australia or some furrin part, an' the
- mentioned house (mansion-house) an' the fine property was sould,
- so it was, for little or nothin', for the fightin' was over in
- furrin parts; Boney was put down, an' there was no price for corn
- or cattle, an' a jontleman from Scotland came an' bought the
- istate. We were warned by the new man to go, for he tuk in his
- own hand all the in-land about the domain, bein' a grate farmer.
- He put nobody in our little place, but pulled it down, an' he guv
- father a five-guinea note, but my father was ould an' not able to
- face the world agin, an' he went to the town an' tuk a room—a
- poor, dirty, choky place it was for him, myself, and sisther to
- live in. The neighbours were very kind an' good though. Sister
- Bridget got a place wid a farmer hereabouts, an' I tuk the world
- on my own showlders. I had nothin' at all but the rags I stud up
- in, an' they were bad enuf. Poor Biddy got a shillin' advanced iv
- her wages that her masther was to giv her. She guv it me, for I
- was bent on goin' toward Belfast to look for work. All along the
- road I axed at every place; they could giv it me, but to no good;
- except when I axed, they'd giv me a bowl iv broth, or a piece iv
- bacon, or an oaten bannock, so that I had my shillin' to the fore
- when I got to Belfast.
-
- "Here the heart was near lavin' me all out intirely. I went
- wandtherin' down to the quay among the ships, and what should
- there be but a ship goin' to Scotland that very night wid pigs.
- In throth it was fun to see the sailors at cross-purposes wid
- 'em, for they didn't know the natur iv the bastes. I did. I
- knew how to coax 'em. I set to an' I deludhered an' coaxed the
- pigs, an' by pullin' them by the tail, knowing that if they took
- a fancy I wished to pull 'em back out of the ship they'd run
- might an' main into her, and so they did. Well, the sailors were
- mightily divarted, an' when the pigs was aboord I wint down to
- the place; an' the short iv it is that in three days I was in
- Glasgow town, an' the captain an' the sailors subscribed up tin
- shillins an' guv it into my hand. Well, I bought a raping-hook,
- an' away I trudged till I got quite an' clane into the counthry,
- an' the corn was here and there fit to cut. At last I goes an' ax
- a farmer for work. He thought I was too wake to be paid by the
- day, but one field havin' one corner fit to cut, an' the next
- not ready, 'Paddy,' says he, 'you may begin in that corner, an'
- I'll pay yees by the work yees do,' an' he guv me my breakfast
- an' a pint of beer. Well, I never quit that masther the whole
- harvest, an' when the raping was over I had four goolden guineas
- to carry home, besides that I was as sthrong as a lion. Yees
- would wonder how glad the sailors was to see me back agin, an'
- ne'er a farthin' would they take back iv their money, but tuk me
- over agin to Belfast, givin' me the hoighth of good thratemint of
- all kinds. I did not stay an hour in Belfast, but tuk to the road
- to look afther the ould man an' little Biddy. Well, sorrows the
- tidins I got. The ould man had died, an' the grief an' disthress
- of poor little Biddy had even touched her head a little. The
- dacent people where she was, may the Lord reward 'em, though they
- found little use in her, kep her, hoping I would be able to come
- home an' keep her myself, an' so I was. I brought her away wid
- me, an' the sight iv me put new life in her. I was set upon not
- being idle, an' I'll tell yees what I did next.
-
- "When I was little _bouchaleen_ iv a boy I used to be ahead on
- the mountain face, an' 'twas often I sheltered myself behind
- them gray rocks that's at the gable iv my house; an' somehow it
- came into my head that the new Squire, being a grate man for
- improvin' might let me try to brake in a bit iv land there; an'
- so I goes off to him, an' one iv the sarvints bein' a sort iv
- cousin iv mine, I got to spake to the Squire, an' behould yees
- he guv me lave at onst. Well, there's no time like the prisint,
- an' as I passed out iv the back yard of the mentioned (mansion)
- house, I sees the sawyers cutting some Norway firs that had been
- blown down by the storm, an' I tells the sawyers that I had got
- lave to brake in a bit iv land in the mountains, an' what would
- some pieces iv fir cost. They says they must see what kind of
- pieces they was that I wished for; an' no sooner had I set about
- looking 'em through than the Squire himself comes ridin' out of
- the stable-yard, an' says he at onst, 'McNale,' says he, 'you may
- have a load iv cuttins to build your cabin, or two if you need
- it.' 'The Heavens be your honour's bed,' says I, an' I wint off
- to the room where I an' Biddy lived, not knowin' if I was on my
- head or my heels. Next day, before sunrise, I was up here, five
- miles up the face of Slieve-dan, with a spade in my fist, an'
- I looked roun' for the most shiltered spot I could sit my eyes
- an. Here I saw, where the house an' yard are stan'in', a plot
- iv about an acre to the south iv that tall ridge of rocks, well
- sheltered from the blast from the north an' from the aste, an'
- it was about sunrise an' a fine morning in October that I tuk
- up the first spadeful. There was a spring then drippin' down
- the face iv the rocks, an' I saw at once that it would make
- the cabin completely damp, an' the land about mighty sour an'
- water-_slain_; so I determined to do what I saw done in Scotland.
- I sunk a deep drain right under the rock to run all along the
- back iv the cabin, an' workin' that day all alone by myself, I
- did a grate dale iv it. At night it was close upon dark when I
- started to go home, so I hid my spade in the heath an' trudged
- off. The next morning I bargained with a farmer to bring me up a
- load iv fir cuttins from the Squire's, an' by the evenin' they
- were thrown down within a quarter iv a mile iv my place, for
- there was no road to it then, an' I had to carry 'em myself for
- the remainder of the way. This occupied me till near nightfall;
- but I remained that night till I placed two upright posts of fir,
- one at each corner iv the front iv the cabin.
-
- "I was detarmined to get the cabin finished as quickly as
- possible, that I might be able to live upon the spot, for much
- time was lost in goin' and comin'. The next day I was up betimes,
- an' finding a track iv stiff blue clay, I cut a multitude of
- thick square sods iv it, an' having set up two more posts at
- the remainin' two corners iv the cabin, I laid four rows iv one
- gable, rising it about three feet high. Havin' laid the rows, I
- sharpind three or four straight pine branches, an' druv them down
- through the sods into the earth, to pin the wall in its place.
- Next day I had a whole gable up, each three rows iv sods pinned
- through to the three benathe. In about eight days I had put up
- the four walls, makin' a door an' two windows; an' now my outlay
- began, for I had to pay a thatcher to put on the sthraw an' to
- assist me in risin' the rafthers. In another week it was covered
- in, an' it was a pride to see it with the new thatch an' a wicker
- chimbly daubed with clay, like a pallis undernathe the rock. I
- now got some turf that those who had cut 'em had not removed, an'
- they sould 'em for a thrifle, an' I made a grate fire an' slept
- on the flure of my own house that night. Next day I got another
- load iv fir brought to make the partitions in the winter, an' in
- a day or two after I had got the inside so dhry that I was able
- to bring poor Biddy to live there for good and all. The Heavens
- be praised, there was not a shower iv rain fell from the time I
- began the cabin till I ended it, an' when the rain did fall, not
- a drop came through—all was carried off by my dhrain into the
- little river before yees.
-
- "The moment I was settled in the house I comminced dhraining
- about an acre iv bog in front, an' the very first winter I sowed
- a shillin's worth of cabbidge seed, an' sold in the spring a
- pound's worth of little cabbidge plants for the gardins in the
- town below. When spring came, noticin' how the early-planted
- praties did the best, I planted my cabbidge ground with praties,
- an' I had a noble crap, while the ground was next year fit for
- the corn. In the mane time, every winther I tuk in more and more
- ground, an' in summer I cut my turf for fewel, where the cuttins
- could answer in winther for a dhrain; an' findin' how good the
- turf were, I got a little powney an' carried 'em to the town to
- sell, when I was able to buy lime in exchange an' put it on my
- bog, so as to make it produce double. As things went on I got
- assistance, an' when I marrid, my wife had two cows that guv me a
- grate lift.
-
- "I was always thought to be a handy boy, an' I could do a turn
- of mason-work with any man not riglarly bred to it; so I took
- one of my loads of lime, an' instead of puttin' it on the land,
- I made it into morthar—and indeed the stones being no ways
- scarce, I set to an' built a little kiln, like as I had seen down
- the counthry. I could then burn my own lime, an' the limestone
- were near to my hand, too many iv 'em. While all this was goin'
- on, I had riz an' sould a good dale iv oats and praties, an'
- every summer I found ready sale for my turf in the town from one
- jontleman that I always charged at an even rate, year by year.
- I got the help of a stout boy, a cousin iv my own, who was glad
- iv a shilter; an' when the childher were ould enough, I got some
- young cattle that could graze upon the mountain in places where
- no other use could be made iv the land, and set the gossoons to
- herd 'em.
-
- "There was one bit iv ground nigh han' to the cabin that puzzled
- me intirely. It was very poor and sandy, an' little better than
- a rabbit burrow; an' telling the Squire's Scotch steward iv it,
- he bade me thry some flax; an' sure enuf, so I did, an' a fine
- crap iv flax I had as you might wish to see; an' the stame-mills
- being beginnin' in the counthry at that time, I sould my flax
- for a very good price, my wife having dhried it, beetled it, an'
- scutched it with her own two hands.
-
- "I should have said before that the Squire himself came up here
- with a lot iv fine ladies and jontlemen to see what I had done;
- an' you never in your life seed a man so well plased as he was,
- an' a mimber of Parlimint from Scotland was with him, an' he
- tould me I was a credit to ould Ireland; an' sure didn't Father
- Connor read upon the papers, how he tould the whole story in
- the Parlimint house before all the lords an' quality. But faix,
- he didn't forgit me; for a month or two after he was here, an'
- it coming on the winter, comes word for me an' the powney to go
- down to the mentioned (mansion) house, for the steward wanted
- me. So away I wint, an' there, shure enuf, was an illigant
- Scotch plough, every inch of iron, an' a lot of young Norroway
- pines—the same you see shiltering the house an' yard—an' all
- was a free prisint for me from the Scotch jontleman that was the
- mimber of Parlimint. 'Twas that plough that did the meracles iv
- work hereabouts; for I often lint it to any that I knew to be
- a careful hand, an' it was the manes iv havin' the farmers all
- round send an' buy 'em. At last I was able to build a brave snug
- house; and, praised be Providence, I have never had an hour's ill
- health nor a moment's grief, but when poor Biddy, the cratur,
- died from us. It is thirty years since that morning that I tuk up
- the first spadeful from the wild mountain side; an' twelve acres
- are good labour land, an' fifteen drained an' good grazin'. I
- have been payin' rint twinty years, an' am still, thank God, able
- to take my own part iv any day's work—plough, spade, or flail."
-
- "Have you got a lease?" said I.
-
- "No, indeed, nor a schrape of a pin; nor I never axed it. Have I
- not my _tinnant-rite_?"
-
-At any moment the labours of poor Con might have been rendered of no
-benefit to him. He held the wretched hovel and the ground he tilled
-merely by the permission of the landlord, who could have desolated all
-by the common process of eviction; and Con would then have been driven
-to new exertions or to the workhouse. The rugged ballad of "Patrick
-Fitzpatrick's Farewell," presents a case more common than that of Con
-McNale:—
-
- "Those three long years I've labour'd hard as any on Erin's isle,
- And still was scarcely able my family to keep;
- My tender wife and children three, under the lash of misery,
- Unknown to friends and neighbours, I've often seen to weep.
- Sad grief it seized her tender heart, when forced her only cow
- to part,
- And canted[94] was before her face, the poor-rates for to pay;
- Cut down in all her youthful bloom, she's gone into her
- silent tomb;
- Forlorn I will mourn her loss when in America."
-
-In the same ballad we have an expression of the comparative paradise
-the Irish expect to find—and do find, by the way—in that land which
-excites so much the pity of the philanthropic aristocracy:—
-
- "Let Erin's sons and daughters fair now for the promised
- land prepare,
- America, that beauteous soil, will soon your toil repay;
- _Employment, it is plenty there, on beef and mutton you can fare,
- From five to six dollars is your wages every day_.
- Now see what money has come o'er these three years from
- Columbia's shore;
- But for it numbers now were laid all in their silent clay;
- California's golden mines, my boys, are open now to crown our joys,
- So all our hardships we'll dispute when in America."
-
-As an illustration of the manner in which eviction is sometimes
-effected by heartless landlords in Ireland, and the treatment which the
-lowly of Great Britain generally receive from those who become their
-masters, we may quote "Two Scenes in the Life of John Bodger," from
-"Dickens's Household Words." The characters in this sketch are English;
-but the incidents are such as frequently occur in Ireland:—
-
- "In the year 1832, on the 24th of December, one of those clear
- bright days that sometimes supersede the regular snowy, sleety
- Christmas weather, a large ship lay off Plymouth; the Blue Peter
- flying from her masthead, quarters of beef hanging from her
- mizzen-booms, and strings of cabbages from her stern rails;
- her decks crowded with coarsely-clad blue-nosed passengers, and
- lumbered with boxes, barrels, hen-coops, spars, and chain-cables.
- The wind was rising with a hollow, dreary sound. Boats were
- hurrying to and fro, between the vessel and the beach, where
- stood excited groups of old people and young children. The
- hoarse, impatient voices of officers issuing their commands, were
- mingled with the shrill wailing of women on the deck and the
- shore.
-
- "It was the emigrant ship 'Cassandra,' bound for Australia
- during the period of the 'Bounty' system, when emigration
- recruiters, stimulated by patriotism and a handsome percentage,
- rushed frantically up and down the country, earnestly entreating
- 'healthy married couples,' and single souls of either sex,
- to accept a free passage to 'a land of plenty.' The English
- labourers had not then discovered that Australia was a country
- where masters were many and servants scarce. In spite of
- poverty and poorhouse fare, few of the John Bull family could
- be induced to give heed to flaming placards they could not
- read, or inspiring harangues they could not understand. The
- admirable education which in 1832, at intervals of seven days,
- was distributed in homœopathic doses among the agricultural
- olive-branches of England, did not include modern geography, even
- when reading and writing were imparted. If a stray Sunday-school
- scholar did acquire a faint notion of the locality of Canaan, he
- was never permitted to travel as far as the British Colonies.
-
- "To the ploughman out of employ, Canaan, Canada, and Australia
- were all '_furrin parts_;' he did not know the way to them; but
- he knew the way to the poorhouse, so took care to keep within
- reach of it.
-
- "Thus it came to pass that the charterers of the good ship
- 'Cassandra' were grievously out in their calculations; and
- failing to fill with English, were obliged to make up their
- complement with Irish; who, having nothing to fall upon, but
- the charity of the poor to the poorer, are always ready to go
- anywhere for a daily meal.
-
- "The steamers from Cork had transferred their ragged, weeping,
- laughing, fighting cargoes; the last stray groups of English
- had been collected from the western counties; the Government
- officers had cleared and passed the ship. With the afternoon
- tide two hundred helpless, ignorant, destitute souls were to
- bid farewell to their native land. The delays consequent on
- miscalculating the emigrating taste of England had retarded until
- midwinter, a voyage which should have been commenced in autumn.
-
- "In one of the shore-boats, sat a portly man—evidently neither
- an emigrant nor a sailor—wrapped in a great coat and comforters;
- his broad-brimmed beaver secured from the freezing blast by a
- coloured bandanna tied under the chin of a fat, whiskerless face.
- This portly personage was Mr. Joseph Lobbit, proprietor of 'The
- Shop,' farmer, miller, and chairman of the vestry of the rich
- rural parish of Duxmoor.
-
- "At Duxmoor, the chief estate was in Chancery, the manor-house in
- ruins, the lord of it an outlaw, and the other landed proprietors
- absentees, or in debt; a curate preached, buried, married, and
- baptized, for the health of the rector compelled him to pass the
- summer in Switzerland, and the winter in Italy; so Mr. Lobbit was
- almost the greatest, as he was certainly the richest, man in the
- parish.
-
- "Except that he did not care for any one but himself, and did not
- respect any one who had not plenty of money, he was not a bad
- sort of man. He had a jolly hearty way of talking and shaking
- hands, and slapping people on the back; and until you began to
- count money with him, he seemed a very pleasant, liberal fellow.
- He was fond of money, but more fond of importance; and therefore
- worked as zealously at parish-business as he did at his own farm,
- shop, and mill. He centred the whole powers of the vestry in one
- person, and would have been beadle, too, if it had been possible.
- He appointed the master and matron of the workhouse, who were
- relations of his wife; supplied all the rations and clothing for
- 'the house,' and fixed the prices in full vestry (viz. himself,
- and the clerk, his cousin,) assembled. He settled all the
- questions of out-door relief, and tried hard, more than once, to
- settle the rate of wages too.
-
- "Ill-natured people did say that those who would not work on
- Master Lobbit's farm, at _his_ wages, stood a very bad chance
- if they wanted any thing from the parish, or came for the doles
- of blankets, coals, bread, and linsey-woolsey petticoats,
- which, under the provisions of the tablets in Duxmoor church,
- are distributed every Christmas. Of course, Mr. Lobbit supplied
- these gifts, as chief shopkeeper, and dispensed them, as senior
- and perpetual churchwarden. Lobbit gave capital dinners; plenty
- smoked on his board, and pipes of negro-head with jorums of gin
- punch followed, without stint.
-
- "The two attorneys dined with him—and were glad to come, for
- he had always money to lend, on good security, and his gin was
- unexceptionable. So did two or three bullfrog farmers, very rich
- and very ignorant. The doctor and curate came occasionally; they
- were poor, and in his debt at 'The Shop,' therefore bound to
- laugh at his jokes—which were not so bad, for he was no fool—so
- that, altogether, Mr. Lobbit had reason to believe himself a very
- popular man.
-
- "But there was—where is there not?—a black drop in his
- overflowing cup of prosperity.
-
- "He had a son whom he intended to make a gentleman; whom he
- hoped to see married to some lady of good family, installed in
- the manor-house of Duxmoor, (if it should be sold cheap, at the
- end of the Chancery suit,) and established as the squire of the
- parish. Robert Lobbit had no taste for learning, and a strong
- taste for drinking, which his father's customers did their best
- to encourage. Old Lobbit was decent in his private habits; but,
- as he made money wherever he could to advantage, he was always
- surrounded by a levee of scamps, of all degrees—some agents and
- assistants, some borrowers, and would-be borrowers. Young Lobbit
- found it easier to follow the example of his father's companions
- than to follow his father's advice. He was as selfish and greedy
- as his father, without being so agreeable or hospitable. In the
- school-room he was a dunce, in the play-ground a tyrant and
- bully; no one liked him; but, as he had plenty of money, many
- courted him.
-
- "As a last resource his father sent him to Oxford; whence, after
- a short residence, he was expelled. He arrived home drunk, and in
- debt; without having lost one bad habit, or made one respectable
- friend. From that period he lived a sot, a village rake, the
- king of the taproom, and the patron of a crowd of blackguards,
- who drank his beer and his health; hated him for his insolence,
- and cheated him of his money.
-
- "Yet Joseph Lobbit loved his son, and tried not to believe the
- stories good-natured friends told of him.
-
- "Another trouble fell upon the prosperous churchwarden. On
- the north side of the parish, just outside the boundaries of
- Duxmoor Manor, there had been, in the time of the Great Civil
- Wars, a large number of small freehold farmers: each with from
- forty to five acres of land; the smaller, fathers had divided
- among their progeny; the larger had descended to eldest sons
- by force of primogeniture. Joseph Lobbit's father had been one
- of these small freeholders. A right of pasture on an adjacent
- common was attached to these little freeholds; so, what with
- geese and sheep, and a cow or so, even the poorest proprietor,
- with the assistance of harvest work, managed to make a living,
- up to the time of the last war. War prices made land valuable,
- and the common was enclosed; though a share went to the little
- freeholders, and sons and daughters were hired, at good wages,
- while the enclosure was going on, the loss of the pasture for
- stock, and the fall of prices at the peace, sealed their fate.
- John Lobbit, our portly friend's father, succeeded to his little
- estate, of twenty acres, by the death of his elder brother, in
- the time of best war prices, after he had passed some years as a
- shopman in a great seaport. His first use of it was to sell it,
- and set up a shop in Duxmoor, to the great scandal of his farmer
- neighbours. When John slept with his fathers, Joseph, having
- succeeded to the shop and savings, began to buy land and lend
- money. Between shop credit to the five-acred and mortgages to
- the forty-acred men, with a little luck in the way of the useful
- sons of the freeholders being constantly enlisted for soldiers,
- impressed for sailors, or convicted for poaching offences, in
- the course of years Joseph Lobbit became possessed, not only of
- his paternal freehold, but, acre by acre, of all his neighbours'
- holdings, to the extent of something like five hundred acres.
- The original owners vanished; the stout and young departed, and
- were seen no more; the old and decrepit were received and kindly
- housed in the workhouse. Of course it could not have been part
- of Mr. Lobbit's bargain to find them board and lodging for the
- rest of their days at the parish expense. A few are said to have
- drunk themselves to death; but this is improbable, for the cider
- in that part of the country is extremely sour, so that it is more
- likely they died of colic.
-
- "There was, however, in the very centre of the cluster of
- freeholds which the parochial dignitary had so successfully
- acquired, a small barren plot of five acres with a right of road
- through the rest of the property. The possessor of this was a
- sturdy fellow, John Bodger by name, who was neither to be coaxed
- nor bullied into parting with his patrimony.
-
- "John Bodger was an only son, a smart little fellow, a capital
- thatcher, a good hand at cobhouse building—in fact a handy man.
- Unfortunately, he was as fond of pleasure as his betters. He sang
- a comic song till peoples' eyes ran over, and they rolled on
- their seats: he handled a singlestick very tidily; and, among the
- light weights, was not to be despised as a wrestler. He always
- knew where a hare was to be found; and, when the fox-hounds were
- out, to hear his view-halloo did your heart good. These tastes
- were expensive; so that when he came into his little property,
- although he worked with tolerable industry, and earned good wages
- for that part of the country, he never had a shilling to the
- fore, as the Irish say. If he had been a prudent man, he might
- have laid by something very snug, and defied Mr. Lobbit to the
- end of his days.
-
- "It would take too long to tell all Joseph Lobbit's ingenious
- devices—after plain, plump offers—to buy Bodger's acres had
- been refused. John Bodger declined a loan to buy a cart and
- horse; he refused to take credit or a new hat, umbrella, and
- waistcoat, after losing his money at Bidecot Fair. He went on
- steadily slaving at his bit of land, doing all the best thatching
- and building jobs in the neighbourhood, spending his money, and
- enjoying himself without getting into any scrapes; until Mr.
- Joseph Lobbit, completely foiled, began to look on John Bodger as
- a personal enemy.
-
- "Just when John and his neighbours were rejoicing over the defeat
- of the last attempt of the jolly parochial, an accident occurred
- which upset all John's prudent calculations. He fell in love. He
- might have married Dorothy Paulson, the blacksmith's daughter—an
- only child, with better than two hundred pounds in the bank, and
- a good business—a virtuous, good girl, too, except that she was
- as thin as a hurdle, with a skin like a nutmeg-grater, and rather
- a bad temper. But instead of that, to the surprise of every
- one, he went and married Carry Hutchins, the daughter of Widow
- Hutchins, one of the little freeholders bought out by Mr. Lobbit,
- who died, poor old soul, the day after she was carried into the
- workhouse, leaving Carry and her brother Tom destitute—that is
- to say, destitute of goods, money, or credit, but not of common
- sense, good health, good looks, and power of earning wages.
-
- "Carry was nearly a head taller than John, with a face like a
- ripe pear. He had to buy her wedding gown, and every thing else.
- He bought them at Lobbit's shop. Tom Hutchins—he was fifteen
- years old—a tall, spry lad, accepted five shillings from his
- brother-in-law, hung a small bundle on his bird's-nesting stick,
- and set off to walk to Bristol, to be a sailor. He was never
- heard of any more at Duxmoor.
-
- "At first all went well. John left off going to wakes and fairs,
- except on business; stuck to his trades; brought his garden
- into good order, and worked early and late, when he could spare
- time, at his two fields, while his wife helped him famously. If
- they had had a few pounds in hand, they would have had 'land and
- beeves.'
-
- "But the first year twins came—a boy and girl; and the next
- another girl, and then twins again, and so on. Before Mrs. Bodger
- was thirty she had nine hearty, healthy children, with a fair
- prospect of plenty more; while John was a broken man, soured,
- discontented, hopeless. No longer did he stride forth eagerly to
- his work, after kissing mother and babies; no longer did he hurry
- home to put a finishing-stroke to the potato-patch, or broadcast
- his oat crop; no longer did he sit whistling and telling stories
- of bygone feats at the fireside, while mending some wooden
- implement of his own, or making one for a neighbour. Languid and
- moody, he lounged to his task with round shoulders and slouching
- gait; spoke seldom—when he did, seldom kindly. His children,
- except the youngest, feared him, and his wife scarcely opened her
- lips, except to answer.
-
- "A long, hard, severe winter, and a round of typhus fever, which
- carried off two children, finished him. John Bodger was beaten,
- and obliged to sell his bit of land. He had borrowed money on it
- from the lawyer; while laid up with fever he had silently allowed
- his wife to run up a bill at 'The Shop.' When strong enough for
- work there was no work to be had. Lobbit saw his opportunity,
- and took it. John Bodger wanted to buy a cow, he wanted seed, he
- wanted to pay the doctor, and to give his boys clothes to enable
- them to go to service. He sold his land for what he thought
- would do all this and leave a few pounds in hand. He attended to
- sign the deed and receive money; when instead of the balance of
- twenty-five pounds he had expected, he received one pound ten
- shillings, and a long lawyer's bill _receipted_.
-
- "He did not say much; for poor countrymen don't know how to talk
- to lawyers, but he went toward home like a drunken man; and, not
- hearing the clatter of a horse behind him that had run away, was
- knocked down, run over, and picked up with his collar-bone and
- two ribs broken.
-
- "The next day he was delirious; in the course of a fortnight he
- came to his senses, lying on a workhouse bed. Before he could
- rise from the workhouse bed, not a stick or stone had been left
- to tell where the cottage of his fathers had stood for more
- than two hundred years, and Mr. Joseph Lobbit had obtained, in
- auctioneering phrase, a magnificent estate of five hundred acres
- within a ring fence.
-
- "John Bodger stood up at length a ruined, desperate, dangerous
- man, pale, and weak, and even humble. He said nothing; the fever
- seemed to have tamed every limb—every feature—except his eyes,
- which glittered like an adder's when Mr. Lobbit came to talk to
- him. Lobbit saw it and trembled in his inmost heart, yet was
- ashamed of being afraid of a _pauper_!
-
- "About this time Swing fires made their appearance in the
- country, and the principal insurance companies refused to insure
- farming stock, to the consternation of Mr. Lobbit; for he had
- lately begun to suspect that among Mr. Swing's friends he was not
- very popular, yet he had some thousand pounds of corn-stacks in
- his own yards and those of his customers.
-
- "John Bodger, almost convalescent, was anxious to leave the
- poorhouse, while the master, the doctor, and every official,
- seemed in a league to keep him there and make him comfortable,
- although a short time previously the feeling had been quite
- different. But the old rector of Duxmoor having died at the early
- age of sixty-six, in spite of his care for his health, had been
- succeeded by a man who was not content to leave his duties to
- deputies; all the parish affairs underwent a keen criticism, and
- John and his large family came under investigation. His story
- came out. The new rector pitied and tried to comfort him; but his
- soothing words fell on deaf ears. The only answer he could get
- from John was, 'A hard life while it lasts, sir, and a pauper's
- grave, a pauper widow, pauper children; Parson, while this is all
- you can offer John Bodger, preaching to him is of no use.'
-
- "With the wife the clergyman was more successful. Hope and belief
- are planted more easily in the hearts of women than of men, for
- adversity softens the one and hardens the other. The rector was
- not content with exhorting the poor; he applied to the rich
- Joseph Lobbit on behalf of John Bodger's family, and as the
- rector was not only a truly Christian priest, but a gentleman of
- good family and fortune, the parochial ruler was obliged to hear
- and to heed.
-
- "Bland and smooth, almost pathetic, was Joseph Lobbit: he was
- 'heartily sorry for the poor man and his large family; should be
- happy to offer him and his wife permanent employment on his Hill
- farm, as well as two of the boys and one of the girls.'
-
- "The eldest son and daughter, the first twins, had been for some
- time in respectable service. John would have nothing to do with
- Mr. Lobbit.
-
- "While this discussion was pending, the news of a ship at
- Plymouth waiting for emigrants, reached Duxmoor.
-
- "The parson and the great shopkeeper were observed in a long warm
- conference in the rectory garden, which ended in their shaking
- hands, and the rector proceeding with rapid strides to the
- poorhouse.
-
- "The same day the lately established girls' school was set to
- work sowing garments of all sizes, as well as the females of
- the rector's family. A week afterward there was a stir in the
- village; a wagon moved slowly away, laden with a father, mother,
- and large family, and a couple of pauper orphan girls. Yes, it
- was true; John and Carry Bodger were going to 'furrin parts,'
- 'to be made slaves on.' The women cried, and so did the children
- from imitation. The men stared. As the emigrants passed the Red
- Lion there was an attempt at a cheer from two tinkers; but it
- was a failure; no one joined in. So staring and staring, the men
- stood until the wagon crept round the turn of the lane and over
- the bridge, out of sight; then bidding the 'wives' go home and be
- hanged to 'em, their lords, that had twopence, went in to spend
- it at the Red Lion, and those who had not, went in to see the
- others drink, and talk over John Bodger's 'bouldness,' and abuse
- Muster Lobbit quietly, so that no one in top-boots should hear
- them;—for they were poor ignorant people in Duxmoor—they had
- no one to teach them, or to care for them, and after the fever,
- and a long hard winter, they cared little for their own flesh
- and blood, still less for their neighbours. So John Bodger was
- forgotten almost before he was out of sight.
-
- "By the road-wagon which the Bodgers joined when they reached the
- highway, it was a three days' journey to Plymouth.
-
- "But, although they were gone, Mr. Lobbit did not feel quite
- satisfied; he felt afraid lest John should return and do him
- some secret mischief. He wished to see him on board ship, and
- fairly under sail. Besides his negotiation with Emigration
- Brokers had opened up ideas of a new way of getting rid, not
- only of dangerous fellows like John Bodger, but of all kinds of
- useless paupers. These ideas he afterward matured, and although
- important changes have taken place in our emigrating system,
- even in 1851, a visit to government ships, will present many
- specimens of parish inmates converted, by dexterous diplomacy,
- into independent labourers.
-
- "Thus it was, that contrary to all precedent, Mr. Lobbit left his
- shopman to settle the difficult case of credit with his Christmas
- customers, and with best horse made his way to Plymouth; and now
- for the first time in his life floated on salt water.
-
- "With many grunts and groans he climbed the ship's side; not
- being as great a man at Plymouth as at Duxmoor, no chair was
- lowered to receive his portly person. The mere fact of having to
- climb up a rope-ladder from a rocking boat on a breezy, freezing
- day, was not calculated to give comfort or confident feelings to
- an elderly gentleman. With some difficulty, not without broken
- shins, amid the sarcastic remarks of groups of wild Irishmen, and
- the squeaks of barefooted children—who not knowing his awful
- parochial character, tumbled about Mr. Lobbit's legs in a most
- impertinently familiar manner—he made his way to the captain's
- cabin, and there transacted some mysterious business with the
- Emigration Agent over a prime piece of mess beef and a glass of
- Madeira. The Madeira warmed Mr. Lobbit. The captain assured him
- positively that the ship would sail with the evening tide. That
- assurance removed a heavy load from his breast: he felt like
- a man who had been performing a good action, and also cheated
- himself into believing that he had been spending _his own_ money
- in charity; so, at the end of the second bottle, he willingly
- chimed in with the broker's proposal to go down below and see how
- the emigrants were stowed, and have a last look at his 'lot.'
-
- "Down the steep ladder they stumbled into the misery of a
- 'bounty' ship. A long, dark gallery, on each side of which were
- ranged the berths; narrow shelves open to every prying eye;
- where, for four months, the inmates were to be packed like
- herrings in a barrel, without room to move, almost without air
- to breathe; the mess table, running far aft the whole distance
- between the masts, left little room for passing, and that little
- was encumbered with all manner of boxes, packages, and infants,
- crawling about like rabbits in a warren.
-
- "The groups of emigrants were characteristically employed.
- The Irish 'coshering,' or gossiping; for, having little or
- no baggage to look after, they had little care; but lean and
- ragged, monopolized almost all the good-humour of the ship. Acute
- cockneys, a race fit for every change, hammering, whistling,
- screwing and making all snug in their berths; tidy mothers,
- turning with despair from alternate and equally vain attempts to
- collect their numerous children out of danger, and to pack the
- necessaries of a room into the space of a small cupboard, wept
- and worked away. Here, a ruined tradesman, with his family,
- sat at the table, dinnerless, having rejected the coarse, tough
- salt meat in disgust: there, a half-starved group fed heartily
- on rations from the same cask, luxuriated over the allowance of
- grog, and the idea of such a good meal daily. Songs, groans,
- oaths: crying, laughing, complaining, hammering and fiddling
- combined to produce a chaos of strange sounds; while thrifty
- wives, with spectacle on nose, mended their husband's breeches,
- and unthrifty ones scolded.
-
- "Amid this confusion, under the authoritative guidance of the
- second mate, Mr. Lobbit made his way, inwardly calculating how
- many poachers, pauper refractories, Whiteboys, and Captain
- Rocks, were about to benefit Australia by their talents, until
- he reached a party which had taken up its quarters as far as
- possible from the Irish, in a gloomy corner near the stern. It
- consisted of a sickly, feeble woman, under forty, but worn,
- wasted, retaining marks of former beauty in a pair of large,
- dark, speaking eyes, and a well-carved profile, who was engaged
- in nursing two chubby infants, evidently twins, while two little
- things, just able to walk, hung at her skirts; a pale, thin boy,
- nine or ten years old, was mending a jacket; an elder brother, as
- brown as a berry, fresh from the fields, was playing dolefully on
- a hemlock flute. The father, a little, round-shouldered man, was
- engaged in cutting wooden buttons from a piece of hard wood with
- his pocket-knife; when he caught sight of Mr. Lobbit he hastily
- pulled off his coat, threw it into his berth, and, turning his
- back, worked away vigorously at the stubborn bit of oak he was
- carving.
-
- "'Hallo, John Bodger, so here you are at last,' cried Mr. Lobbit;
- 'I've broken my shins, almost broken my neck, and spoilt my coat
- with tar and pitch, in finding you out. Well, you're quite at
- home, I see: twins all well?—both pair of them? How do you find
- yourself, Missis?'
-
- "The pale woman sighed, and cuddled her babies—the little man
- said nothing, but sneered, and made the chips fly faster.
-
- "'You're on your way now to a country where twins are no object;
- your passage is paid, and you've only got now to pray for the
- good gentlemen that have given you a chance of earning an honest
- living.'
-
- "No answer.
-
- "'I see them all here except Mary, the young lady of the family.
- Pray, has she taken rue, and determined to stay in England, after
- all; I expected as much'—
-
- "As he spoke, a young girl, in the neat dress of a parlour
- servant, came out of the shade.
-
- "'Oh! you are there, are you, Miss Mary? So you have made up your
- mind to leave your place and Old England, to try your luck in
- Australia; plenty of husbands there: ha, ha!'
-
- "The girl blushed, and sat down to sew at some little garments.
- Fresh, rosy, neat, she was as great a contrast to her brother,
- the brown, ragged ploughboy, as he was to the rest of the family,
- with their flabby, bleached complexions.
-
- "There was a pause. The mate, having done his duty by finding
- the parochial dignitary's _protegés_, had slipped away to more
- important business; a chorus of sailors 'yo heave ho-ing' at a
- chain cable had ceased, and for a few moments, by common consent,
- silence seemed to have taken possession of the long, dark gallery
- of the hold.
-
- "Mr. Lobbit was rather put out by the silence, and no answers; he
- did not feel so confident as when crowing on his own dunghill,
- in Duxmoor; he had a vague idea that some one might steal behind
- him in the dark, knock his hat over his eyes, and pay off old
- scores with a hearty kick: but parochial dignity prevailed, and,
- clearing his throat with a 'hem,' he began again—
-
- "'John Bodger, where's your coat?—what are you shivering there
- for, in your sleeves?—what have you done with the excellent coat
- generously presented to you by the parish—a coat that cost, as
- per contract, fourteen shillings and fourpence—you have not
- dared to sell it, I hope?'
-
- "'Well, Master Lobbit, and if I did, the coat was my own, I
- suppose?'
-
- "'What, sir?'
-
- "The little man quailed; he had tried to pluck up his spirit,
- but the blood did not flow fast enough. He went to his berth and
- brought out the coat.
-
- "It was certainly a curious colour, a sort of yellow brown, the
- cloth shrunk and cockled up, and the metal buttons turned a dingy
- black.
-
- "Mr. Lobbit raved; 'a new coat entirely spoiled, what had he
- done to it?' and as he raved he warmed, and felt himself at
- home again, deputy acting chairman of the Duxmoor Vestry. But
- the little man, instead of being frightened, grew red, lost his
- humble mien, stood up, and at length, when his tormentor paused
- for breath, looked him full in the face, and cried, 'Hang your
- coat!—hang you!—hang all the parochials of Duxmoor! What have
- I done with your coat? Why, I've dyed it; I've dipped it in a
- tan-yard; I was not going to carry your livery with me. I mean
- to have the buttons off before I'm an hour older. Gratitude you
- talk of;—thanks you want, you old hypocrite, for sending me
- away. I'll tell you what sent me,—it was that poor wench and
- her twins, and a letter from the office, saying they would not
- insure your ricks, while lucifer matches are so cheap. Ay, you
- may stare—you wonder who told me that; but I can tell you more.
- Who is it writes so like his father the bank can't tell the
- difference?'
-
- "Mr. Lobbit turned pale.
-
- "'Be off!' said the little man; 'plague us no more. You have
- eaten me up with your usury; you've got my cottage and my bit of
- land; you've made paupers of us all, except that dear lass, and
- the one lad, and you'd wellnigh made a convict of me. But never
- mind. This will be a cold, drear Christmas to us, and a merry,
- fat one to you; but, perhaps, the Christmas may come when Master
- Joseph Lobbit would be glad to change places with poor, ruined
- John Bodger. I am going where I am told that sons and daughters
- like mine are better than "silver, yea, than fine gold." I leave
- you rich on the poor man's inheritance, and poor man's flesh and
- blood. You have a son and daughter that will revenge me. "Cursed
- are they that remove landmarks, and devour the substance of the
- poor!"'
-
- "While this, one of the longest speeches that John Bodger
- was ever known to make, was being delivered, a little crowd
- had collected, who, without exactly understanding the merits
- of the case, had no hesitation in taking side with their
- fellow-passenger, the poor man with the large family. The Irish
- began to inquire if the stout gentleman was a tithe-proctor or
- a driver? Murmurs of a suspicious character arose, in the midst
- of which, in a very hasty, undignified manner, Mr. Lobbit backed
- out, climbed up to the deck with extraordinary agility, and,
- without waiting to make any complaints to the officers of the
- ship, slipped down the side into a boat, and never felt himself
- safe, until called to his senses by an attempt on the part of the
- boatman to exact four times the regular fare.
-
- "But a good dinner at the Globe (at parochial expense) and a
- report from the agent that the ship had sailed, restored Mr.
- Lobbit's equanimity; and by the time that, snugly packed in the
- mail, he was rattling along toward home by a moonlight Christmas,
- he began to think himself a martyr to a tender heart, and to
- console himself by calculating the value of the odd corner of
- Bodger's acres, cut up into lots for his labourers' cottages. The
- result—fifty per cent.—proved a balm to his wounded feelings.
-
- "I wish I could say that at the same hour John Bodger was
- comforting his wife and little ones; sorry am I to report that he
- left them to weep and complain, while he went forward and smoked
- his pipe, and sang, and drank grog with a jolly party in the
- forecastle—for John's heart was hardened, and he cared little
- for God or man.
-
- "This old, fond love for his wife and children seemed to have
- died away. He left them, through the most part of the voyage, to
- shift for themselves—sitting forward, sullenly smoking, looking
- into vacancy, and wearying the sailors with asking, 'How many
- knots to-day, Jack? When do you think we shall see land?' So that
- the women passengers took a mortal dislike to him; and it being
- gossiped about that when his wife was in the hospital he never
- went to see her for two days, they called him a brute. So 'Bodger
- the Brute' he was called until the end of the voyage. Then they
- were all dispersed, and such stories driven out of mind by new
- scenes.
-
- "John was hired to go into the far interior, where it was
- difficult to get free servants at all; so his master put up with
- the dead-weight encumbrance of the babies, in consideration
- of the clever wife and string of likely lads. Thus, in a
- new country, he began life again in a blue jersey and ragged
- corduroys, but with the largest money income he had ever known."
-
-The second scene is a picture of John Bodger's prosperity in Australia,
-where eviction and workhouses are forgotten. If Australia had not
-been open to John as a refuge, most probably he would have become a
-criminal, or a worthless vagrant. Here is the second scene:—
-
- "In 1842, my friend Mrs. C. made one of her marches through the
- bush with an army of emigrants. These consisted of parents with
- long families, rough, country-bred single girls, with here and
- there a white-handed, useless young lady—the rejected ones of
- the Sydney hirers. In these marches she had to depend for the
- rations of her ragged regiment on the hospitality of the settlers
- on her route, and was never disappointed, although it often
- happened that a day's journey was commenced without any distinct
- idea of who would furnish the next dinner and breakfast.
-
- "On one of these foraging excursions—starting at day-dawn on
- horseback, followed by her man Friday, an old _lag_, (prisoner,)
- in a light cart, to carry the provender—she went forth to look
- for the flour, milk, and mullet, for the breakfast of a party
- whose English appetites had been sharpened by travelling at the
- pace of the drays all day, and sleeping in the open air all night.
-
- "The welcome smoke of the expected station was found; the light
- cart, with the complements and empty sack despatched; when
- musing, at a foot-pace, perhaps on the future fortune of the
- half-dozen girls hired out the previous day, Mrs. C. came upon a
- small party which had also been encamping on the other side of
- the hills.
-
- "It consisted of two gawky lads, in docked smock frocks, woolly
- hats, rosy, sleepy countenances—fresh arrivals, living monuments
- of the care bestowed in developing the intelligence of the
- agricultural mind in England. They were hard at work on broiled
- mutton. A regular, hard-dried bushman had just driven up a pair
- of blood mares from their night's feed, and a white-headed, brisk
- kind of young old man, the master of the party, was sitting
- by the fire, trying to feed an infant with some sort of mess
- compounded with sugar. A dray, heavily laden, with a bullock-team
- ready harnessed, stood ready to start under the charge of a
- bullock-watchman.
-
- "The case was clear to a colonial eye; the white-headed man had
- been down to the port from his bush-farm to sell his stuff, and
- was returning with two blood mares purchased, and two emigrant
- lads hired; but what was the meaning of the baby? We see strange
- things in the bush, but a man-nurse is strange even there.
-
- "Although they had never met before, the white-headed man almost
- immediately recognised Mrs. C.,—for who did not know her, or of
- her, in the bush?—so was more communicative than he otherwise
- might have been; so he said—
-
- "'You see, ma'am, my lady, I have only got on my own place these
- three years; having a long family, we found it best to disperse
- about where the best wages was to be got. We began saving the
- first year, and my daughters have married pretty well, and my
- boys got to know the ways of the country. There's three of them
- married, thanks to your ladyship; so we thought we could set up
- for ourselves. And we've done pretty tidy. So, as they were all
- busy at home, I went down for the first time to get a couple of
- mares, and see about hiring some lads out of the ships to help
- us. You see I have picked up two newish ones; I have docked
- their frocks to a useful length, and I think they'll do after a
- bit; they can't read, neither of them—no more could I when I
- first came—but our teacher (she's one my missis had from you)
- will soon fettle them; and I've got a power of things on the
- dray; I wish you could be there at unloading; for it being my
- first visit, I wanted something for all of them. But about this
- babby is a curious job. When I went aboard the ship to hire my
- shepherds, I looked out for some of my own country; and while
- I was asking, I heard of a poor woman whose husband had been
- drowned in a drunken fit on the voyage, that was lying very ill,
- with a young babby, and not likely to live.
-
- "'Something made me go to see her; she had no friends on board,
- she knew no one in the colony. She started, like, at my voice;
- one word brought on another, when it came out she was the wife of
- the son of my greatest enemy.
-
- "'She had been his father's servant, and married the son
- secretly. When it was found out, he had to leave the country;
- thinking that once in Australia, the father would be reconciled,
- and the business that put her husband in danger might be settled.
- For this son was a wild, wicked man, worse than the father, but
- with those looks and ways that take the hearts of poor lasses.
- Well, as we talked, and I questioned her—for she did not seem so
- ill as they had told me—she began to ask me who I was, and I did
- not want to tell; when I hesitated, she guessed, and cried out,
- 'What, John Bodger, is it thee!'—and with that she screamed, and
- screamed, and went off quite light-headed, and never came to her
- senses until she died.
-
- "'So, as there was no one to care for the poor little babby,
- and as we had such a lot at home, what with my own children and
- my grandchildren, I thought one more would make no odds, so the
- gentleman let me take it, after I'd seen the mother decently
- buried.
-
- "'You see this feeding's a very awkward job, ma'am—and I've been
- five days on the road. But I think my missis will be pleased as
- much as with the gown I've brought her.'
-
- "'What,' said Mrs. C., 'are you the John Bodger that came over in
- the 'Cassandra,'—the John B.?'
-
- "'Yes, ma'am.'
-
- "'John, the Brute?'
-
- "'Yes, ma'am. But I'm altered, sure-_ly_.'
-
- "'Well,' continued John, 'the poor woman was old Joseph Lobbit's
- daughter-in-law. Her husband had been forging, or something, and
- would have been lagged if he'd staid in England. I don't know but
- I might have been as bad if I had not got out of the country when
- I did. But there's something here in always getting on; and not
- such a struggling and striving that softens a poor man's heart.
- And I trust what I've done for this poor babby and its mother
- may excuse my brutish behaviour. I could not help thinking when
- I was burying poor Jenny Lobbit, (I mind her well, a nice little
- lass, about ten years old,) I could not help thinking as she lay
- in a nice, cloth-covered coffin, and a beautiful stone cut with
- her name and age, and a text on her grave, how different it is
- even for poor people to be buried here. Oh, ma'am! a man like
- me, with a long family, can make ahead here, and do a bit of
- good for others worse off. We live while we live; when we die we
- are buried with decency. I remember, when my wife's mother died,
- the parish officers were so cross, and the boards of the coffin
- barely stuck together, and it was terrible cold weather, too. My
- Carry used to cry about it uncommonly all the winter. The swells
- may say what they like about it, but I'll be blessed if it be'ent
- worth all the voyage to die in it.'
-
- "Not many days afterward, Mrs. C. saw John at home, surrounded
- by an army of sons and daughters; a patriarch, and yet not sixty
- years old; the grandchild of his greatest enemy the greatest pet
- of the family.
-
- "In my mind's eye there are sometimes two pictures. John Bodger
- in the workhouse, thinking of murder and fire-raising in the
- presence of his prosperous enemy; and John Bodger, in his happy
- bush-home, nursing little Nancy Lobbit.
-
- "At Duxmoor the shop has passed into other hands. The
- ex-shopkeeper has bought and rebuilt the manor-house. He is the
- squire, now, wealthier than ever he dreamed; on one estate a
- mine has been found; a railway has crossed and doubled the value
- of another; but his son is dead; his daughter has left him,
- and lives, he knows not where, a life of shame. Childless and
- friendless, the future is, to him, cheerless and without hope."
-
-Poor-law guardians are characters held in very low esteem by the Irish
-serfs, who are not backward in expressing their contempt. The feeling
-is a natural one, as will appear from considering who those guardians
-generally are, and how they perform their duties:—
-
- "At the introduction of the poor-law into Ireland, the workhouses
- were built by means of loans advanced by the Government on the
- security of the rates. Constructed generally in that style of
- architecture called 'Elizabethan,' they were the most imposing
- in the country in elevation and frequency, and, placed usually
- in the wretched suburbs of towns and villages, formed among the
- crumbling and moss-grown cottages, a pleasing contrast in the
- eye of the tourist. They were calculated to accommodate from
- five hundred to two thousand inmates, according to the area and
- population of the annexed district; but some of them remained for
- years altogether closed, or, if open, nearly unoccupied, owing
- to the ingenious shifts of the 'Guardians,' under the advice
- of the 'Solicitor of the Board,' Their object was to economize
- the resources of the Union, to keep the rates down, and in some
- instances they evaded the making of any rate for years after the
- support of the destitute was made nominally imperative by the law
- of the land.
-
- "As there was a good deal of patronage in a small way placed at
- the disposal of the 'Guardians,' great anxiety was manifested
- by those eligible to the office. Most justices of the peace
- were, indeed, _ipso facto_, Guardians, but a considerable
- number had to be elected by the rate-payers, and an active
- canvass preceded every election. A great deal of activity and
- conviviality, if not gayety, was the result, and more apparently
- important affairs were neglected by many a farmer, shopkeeper,
- and professional man, to insure his being elected a 'Guardian,'
- while the unsuccessful took pains to prove their indifference, or
- to vent their ill-humour in various ways, sometimes causing less
- innocuous effects than the following sally:—
-
- "At a certain court of quarter sessions, during the dog-day heat
- of one of these contests, a burly fellow was arraigned before
- 'their worships' and the jury, charged with some petty theft; and
- as he perceived that the proofs were incontestably clear against
- him, he fell into a very violent trepidation. An attorney of the
- court, not overburdened with business, and fond of occupying his
- idle time in playing off practical jokes, perceiving how the case
- stood, addressed the prisoner in a whisper over the side of the
- dock, with a very ominous and commiserating shake of his head:
-
- "'Ah, you unfortunate man, ye'll be found guilty; and as sure
- as ye are, ye'll get worse than hangin' or thransportation. As
- sure as ever the barristher takes a pinch of snuff, that's his
- intention; ye'll see him put on the black cap immaydiately. Plaid
- guilty at once, and I'll tell ye what ye'll say to him afther.'
-
- "The acute practitioner knew his man; the poor half-witted
- culprit fell into the snare; and after a short and serious
- whispering between them, which was unobserved in the bustle of
- the court-house usual on such occasions, the prisoner cried out,
- just as the issue-paper was going up to the jury, 'Me lord, me
- lord, I plaid guilty; I beg your wortchip's an' their honours'
- pardon.
-
- "'Very well,' said the assistant barrister, whose duty it was to
- advise upon the law of each case, and preside at the bench in
- judicial costume; 'very well, sir. Crier, call silence.'
-
- "Several voices immediately called energetically for silence,
- impressing the culprit with grave ideas at once of his worship's
- great importance, and the serious nature of the coming sentence.
-
- "'Withdraw the plea of not guilty, and take one of guilty to the
- felony,' continued the assistant barrister, taking a pinch of
- snuff and turning round to consult his brother magistrates as to
- the term of intended incarceration.
-
- "'Don't lose yer time, ye omodhaun!' said the attorney, with an
- angry look at the prisoner.
-
- "'Will I be allowed to spake one word, yer wortchips?' said the
- unfortunate culprit.
-
- "'What has he to say?' said the assistant barrister with
- considerable dignity.
-
- "'Go on, ye fool ye,' urged the attorney.
-
- "'My lord, yer wortchips, and gintlemin av the jury,' exclaimed
- the culprit, 'sind me out o' the counthry, or into jail, or
- breakin' stones, or walkin' on the threadmill, or any thing else
- in the coorse o' nature, as yer wortchips playses; but for the
- love o' the Virgin Mary, _don't make me a Poor-Law Gargin_.'"[95]
-
-The most recent legislation of the British government in regard to
-Ireland, the enactment of the Poor-law and the Encumbered Estates Act,
-has had but one grand tendency—that of diminishing the number of the
-population, which is, indeed, a strange way to improve the condition
-of the nation. The country was not too thickly populated; far from it:
-great tracts of land were entirely uninhabited. The exterminating acts
-were, therefore, only measures of renewed tyranny. To enslave a people
-is a crime of sufficient enormity; but to drive them from the homes
-of their ancestors to seek a refuge in distant and unknown lands, is
-such an action as only the most monstrous of governments would dare to
-perform.
-
-We have thus shown that Ireland has long endured, and still endures, a
-cruel system of slavery, for which we may seek in vain for a parallel.
-It matters not that the Irish serf may leave his country; while he
-remains he is a slave to a master who will not call him property,
-chiefly because it would create the necessity of careful and expensive
-ownership. If the Irish master took his labourer for his slave in the
-American sense, he would be compelled to provide for him, work or not
-work, in sickness and in old age. Thus the master reaps the benefits,
-and escapes the penalties of slave-holding. He takes the fruits of
-the labourer's toil without providing for him as the negro slaves of
-America are provided for; nay, very often he refuses the poor wretch
-a home at any price. In no other country does the slaveholder seem so
-utterly reckless in regard to human life as in Ireland. After draining
-all possible profit from his labourer's service he turns him forth as
-a pauper, to get scant food if workhouse officials choose to give it,
-and if not, to starve by the wayside. The last great famine was the
-direct result of this accursed system of slavery. It was oppression
-of the worst kind that reduced the mass of the people to depend for
-their subsistence upon the success or failure of the potato crop; and
-the horrors that followed the failure of the crop were as much the
-results of misgovernment as the crimes of the French Revolution were
-the consequences of feudal tyranny, too long endured. Can England ever
-accomplish sufficient penance for her savage treatment of Ireland?
-
-Some English writers admit that the degradation of the Irish and the
-wretched condition of the country can scarcely be overdrawn, but
-seek for the causes of this state of things in the character of the
-people. But why does the Irishman work, prosper, and achieve wealth
-and position under every other government but that of Ireland? This
-would not hbe the case if there was any thing radically wrong in the
-Irish nature. In the following extract from an article in the Edinburgh
-Review, we have a forcible sketch of the condition of Ireland, coloured
-somewhat to suit English views:—
-
- "It is obvious that the insecurity of a community in which the
- bulk of the population form a conspiracy against the law, must
- prevent the importation of capital; must occasion much of what is
- accumulated there to be exported; and must diminish the motives
- and means of accumulation. Who will send his property to a place
- where he cannot rely on its being protected? Who will voluntarily
- establish himself in a country which to-morrow may be in a state
- of disturbance? A state in which, to use the words of Chief
- Justice Bushe, 'houses and barns and granaries are levelled,
- crops are laid waste, pasture-lands are ploughed, plantations are
- torn up, meadows are thrown open to cattle, cattle are maimed,
- tortured, killed; persons are visited by parties of banditti,
- who inflict cruel torture, mutilate their limbs, or beat them
- almost to death. Men who have in any way become obnoxious to the
- insurgents, or opposed their system, or refused to participate
- in their outrages, are deliberately assassinated in the open
- day; and sometimes the unoffending family are indiscriminately
- murdered by burning the habitation.'[96] A state in which even
- those best able to protect themselves, the gentry, are forced to
- build up all their lower windows with stone and mortar; to admit
- light only into one sitting-room, and not into all the windows
- of that room; to fortify every other inlet by bullet-proof
- barricades; to station sentinels around during all the night
- and the greater part of the day, and to keep firearms in all
- the bedrooms, and even on the side-table at breakfast and
- dinner-time.[97] Well might Bishop Doyle exclaim, 'I do not blame
- the absentees; I would be an absentee myself if I could.'
-
- "The state of society which has been described may be considered
- as a proof of the grossest ignorance; for what can be a greater
- proof of ignorance than a systematic opposition to law, carried
- on at the constant risk of liberty and of life, and producing
- where it is most successful, in the rural districts, one level
- of hopeless poverty, and in the towns, weeks of high wages and
- months without employment—a system in which tremendous risks
- and frightful sufferings are the means, and general misery is
- the result? The ignorance, however, which marks the greater
- part of the population in Ireland, is not merely ignorance of
- the moral and political tendency of their conduct—an ignorance
- in which the lower orders of many more advanced communities
- participate—but ignorance of the businesses which are their
- daily occupations. It is ignorance, not as citizens and subjects,
- but as cultivators and labourers. They are ignorant of the proper
- rotation of crops, of the preservation and use of manure—in a
- word, of the means by which the land, for which they are ready
- to sacrifice their neighbours' lives, and to risk their own, is
- to be made productive. Their manufactures, such as they are, are
- rude and imperfect, and the Irish labourer, whether peasant or
- artisan, who emigrates to Great Britain, never possesses skill
- sufficient to raise him above the lowest ranks in his trade.
-
- "Indolence—the last of the causes to which we have attributed
- the existing misery of Ireland—is not so much an independent
- source of evil as the result of the combination of all others.
- The Irishman does not belong to the races that are by nature
- averse from toil. In England, Scotland, or America he can work
- hard. He is said, indeed, to require more overlooking than the
- natives of any of these countries, and to be less capable, or, to
- speak more correctly, to be less willing to surmount difficulties
- by patient intellectual exertion; but no danger deters, no
- disagreeableness disgusts, no bodily fatigue discourages him.
-
- "But in his own country he is indolent. All who have compared
- the habits of hired artisans or of the agricultural labourers in
- Ireland with those of similar classes in England or Scotland,
- admit the inferiority of industry of the former. The indolence
- of the great mass of the people, the occupiers of land, is
- obvious even to the passing traveller. Even in Ulster, the
- province in which, as we have already remarked, the peculiarities
- of the Irish character are least exhibited, not only are the
- cabins, and even the farm-houses, deformed within and without by
- accumulations of filth, which the least exertion would remove,
- but the land itself is suffered to waste a great portion of its
- productive power. We have ourselves seen field after field in
- which the weeds covered as much space as the crops. From the time
- that his crops are sowed and planted until they are reaped the
- peasant and his family are cowering over the fire, or smoking, or
- lounging before the door, when an hour or two a day employed in
- weeding their potatoes, oats, or flax, would perhaps increase the
- produce by one-third.
-
- "The indolence of the Irish artisan is sufficiently accounted for
- by the combinations which, by prohibiting piece-work, requiring
- all the workmen to be paid by the day and at the same rate,
- prohibiting a good workman from exerting himself, have destroyed
- the motives to industry. 'I consider it,' says Mr. Murray, 'a
- very hard rule among them, that the worst workman that ever took
- a tool in his hand, should be paid the same as the best, but that
- is the rule and regulation of the society; and that there was
- only a certain quantity of work allowed to be done; so that, if
- one workman could turn more work out of his hands, he durst not
- go on with it. There is no such thing as piece-work; and if a bad
- man is not able to get through his work, a good workman dare not
- go further than he does.'[98]
-
- "The indolence of the agricultural labourer arises, perhaps,
- principally from his labour being almost always day-work, and
- in a great measure a mere payment of debt—a mere mode of
- working out his rent. That of the occupier may be attributed
- to a combination of causes. In the first place, a man must be
- master of himself to a degree not common even among the educated
- classes, before he can be trusted to be his own task-master. Even
- among the British manufacturers, confessedly the most industrious
- labourers in Europe, those who work in their own houses are
- comparatively idle and irregular, and yet they work under the
- stimulus of certain and immediate gain. The Irish occupier,
- working for a distant object, dependent in some measure on the
- seasons, and with no one to control or even to advise him, puts
- off till to-morrow what need not necessarily be done to-day—puts
- off till next year what need not necessarily be done this year,
- and ultimately leaves much totally undone.
-
- "Again, there is no damper so effectual as liability to taxation
- proportioned to the means of payment. It is by this instrument
- that the Turkish government has destroyed the industry, the
- wealth, and ultimately the population of what were once the most
- flourishing portions of Asia—perhaps of the world. It is thus
- that the _taille_ ruined the agriculture of the most fertile
- portions of France. Now, the Irish occupier has long been subject
- to this depressive influence, and from various sources. The
- competition for land has raised rents to an amount which can be
- paid only under favourable circumstances. Any accident throws
- the tenant into an arrear, and the arrear is kept a subsisting
- charge, to be enforced if he should appear capable of paying it.
- If any of the signs of prosperity are detected in his crop, his
- cabin, his clothes, or his food, some old demand may be brought
- up against him. Again, in many districts a practice prevails of
- letting land to several tenants, each of whom is responsible
- for the whole rent. It is not merely the consequence, but the
- intention, that those who can afford to pay should pay for those
- who cannot. Again, it is from taxation, regulated by apparent
- property, that all the revenues of the Irish Catholic Church
- are drawn. The half-yearly offerings, the fees on marriages and
- christenings, and, what is more important, the contributions
- to the priests made on those occasions by the friends of the
- parties, are all assessed by public opinion, according to the
- supposed means of the payer. An example of the mode in which this
- works, occurred a few months ago, within our own knowledge. £300
- was wanted by a loan fund, in a Catholic district in the North
- of Ireland. In the night, one of the farmers, a man apparently
- poor, came to his landlord, the principal proprietor in the
- neighbourhood, and offered to lend the money, if the circumstance
- could be kept from his priest. His motive for concealment was
- asked, and he answered, that, if the priest knew he had £300 at
- interest, his dues would be doubled. Secrecy was promised, and a
- stocking was brought from its hiding-place in the roof, filled
- with notes and coin, which had been accumulating for years until
- a secret investment could be found. Again, for many years past a
- similar taxation has existed for political purposes. The Catholic
- rent, the O'Connell tribute, and the Repeal rent, like every
- other tax that is unsanctioned by law, must be exacted, to a
- larger or smaller amount, from every _cottier_, or farmer, as he
- is supposed to be better or worse able to provide for them.
-
- "Who can wonder that the cultivator, who is exposed to these
- influences, should want the industry and economy which give
- prosperity to the small farmer in Belgium? What motive has he
- for industry and economy? It may be said that he has the same
- motive in kind, though not in degree, as the inhabitants of a
- happier country; since the new demand to which any increase of
- his means would expose him probably would not exhaust the whole
- of that increase. The same might be said of the subjects of the
- Pasha. There are inequalities of fortune among the cultivators
- of Egypt, just as there were inequalities in that part of France
- which was under the _taille_. No taxation ever exhausted the
- whole surplus income of all its victims. But when a man cannot
- calculate the extent to which the exaction may go—when all he
- knows is, that the more he appears to have the more will be
- demanded—when he knows that every additional comfort which he is
- seen to enjoy, and every additional productive instrument which
- he is found to possess, may be a pretext for a fresh extortion,
- he turns careless or sulky—he yields to the strong temptation of
- indolence and of immediate excitement and enjoyment—he becomes
- less industrious, and therefore produces less—he becomes less
- frugal, and therefore, if he saves at all, saves a smaller
- portion of that smaller product."
-
-For the turbulence of the Irish people, the general indolence of the
-labourers and artisans, and the misery that exists, the writer of the
-above sketch has causes worthy of the acuteness of Sir James Graham, or
-some other patent political economist of the aristocracy of England.
-We need not comment. We have only made the above quotation to show to
-what a condition Ireland has been reduced, according to the admissions
-of an aristocratic organ of England, leaving the reader acquainted with
-the history of English legislation in regard to the unhappy island to
-make the most natural inferences.
-
-The ecclesiastical system of Ireland has long been denounced as an
-injury and an insult. As an insult it has no parallel in history.
-Oppression and robbery in matters connected with religion have been
-unhappily frequent; but in all other cases the oppressed and robbed
-have been the minority. That one-tenth of the population of a great
-country should appropriate to themselves the endowment originally
-provided for all their countrymen; that, without even condescending
-to inquire whether there were or were not a congregation of their own
-persuasion to profit by them, they should seize the revenues of every
-benefice, should divert them from their previous application, and
-should hand them over to an incumbent of their own, to be wasted as a
-sinecure if they were not wanted for the performance of a duty—this is
-a treatment of which the contumely stings more sharply even than the
-injustice, enormous as that is.[99]
-
-The tax of a tithe for the support of a church in which they have no
-faith is a grievance of which Irish Catholics, who compose nine-tenths
-of the population of Ireland, complain with the greatest reason.
-Of what benefit to them is a church which they despise? The grand
-reason for the existence of an established church fails under such
-circumstances. The episcopal institutions can communicate no religious
-instruction, because the creed which they sustain is treated with
-contempt. But where is the use of argument in regard to this point. The
-Established Church affords many luxurious places for the scions of the
-aristocracy, and there lies the chief purpose of its existence. The
-oppressive taxation of Catholics to support a Protestant church will
-cease with the aristocracy.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-THE MENIAL SLAVES OF GREAT BRITAIN.
-
-
-The spirit of British institutions is nowhere more plainly and
-offensively manifested than in the treatment which domestic servants
-receive. The haughty bearing, the constant display of supreme contempt,
-and the frequency of downright cruelty on the part of the master or
-mistress, and the complete abasement and submission of the servant,
-have been repeatedly subjects of observation, and show clearly that the
-days of "lord and thrall" are vividly remembered in Great Britain. In
-Miss Martineau's "Society in America," we find some observations to the
-point. She says—
-
- "However fascinating to Americans may be the luxury,
- conversational freedom, and high intellectual cultivation of
- English society, they cannot fail to be disgusted with the
- aristocratic insolence which is the vice of the whole. The
- puerile and barbaric spirit of contempt is scarcely known in
- America; the English insolence of class to class, of individuals
- toward each other, is not even conceived of, except in the one
- highly disgraceful instance of the treatment of people of colour.
- Nothing in American civilization struck me so forcibly and so
- pleasurably as the invariable respect paid to man, as man.
- Nothing since my return to England has given me so much pain as
- the contrast there. Perhaps no Englishman can become fully aware,
- without going to America, of the atmosphere of insolence in
- which he dwells; of the taint of contempt which infects all the
- intercourses of his world. He cannot imagine how all he can say
- that is truest and best about the treatment of people of colour
- in America, is neutralized on the spot by its being understood
- how the same contempt is spread over the whole of society here,
- which is there concentrated upon the blacks."
-
-It has been remarked that those who are most submissive as serfs are
-the most arrogant and tyrannical as lords. In Great Britain, from dukes
-down to workhouse officials, the truth of this remark is obvious. Each
-class treats its superior with abject deference, and its inferior
-with overbearing insolence. The corollary of our quotation from Miss
-Martineau is that the treatment masters give to their negro slaves in
-America, in their common intercourse, is what masters give to their
-servants in Great Britain. In the free States of America a master may
-command his servant, and if obedience is refused he may deduct from
-his wages or give him a discharge, but the laws prevent all violence;
-the man is never forgotten in the servant. Another state of affairs
-is to be found in Great Britain. The laws are inadequate in their
-construction and too costly in their administration to protect the poor
-servant. Should he refuse obedience, or irritate his master in any way,
-his punishment is just as likely to be kicks and blows as a discharge
-or a reduction of wages. Englishmen have frequently complained, while
-doing business in the United States, because they were prevented from
-striking refractory persons in their employ. In attempting to act out
-their tyrannical ideas, such employers have been severely chastised by
-their free, republican servants.
-
-What the serf of the feudal baron in the twelfth century was, the
-servant of modern days is, in the eyes of the lords and ladies of Great
-Britain. Between these aristocrats and their retainers there exists
-no fellow-feeling; the ties of our common brotherhood are snapped
-asunder, and a wide and startling gap intervenes. "Implicit obedience
-to commands, and a submissive, respectful demeanour on the one hand,
-are repaid by orders given in the most imperative tone, to perform the
-most degrading offices, and by a contemptuous, haughty demeanour on the
-other hand. In the servant the native dignity of our nature is for the
-time broken and crushed. In the master the worst passion of our nature
-is exhibited in all its hideous deformity. The spirit that dictated
-the expression, 'I am the porcelain, you are only the common clay,'
-is not confined to the original speaker, but, with few exceptions,
-is very generally participated in. It is not, however, solely by the
-aristocratic class that the servant is treated with such contumely, the
-fault is largely participated in by the middle and working classes.
-The feelings of the English people are essentially aristocratic."[100]
-
-Until recently an order was placed at the entrance to Kensington
-Gardens, which read as follows:—"_No Dogs or Livery Servants
-admitted_." What more conclusive evidence of the degraded condition
-of menial servants in Great Britain could be obtained. A fellow-man,
-of good character—a necessary conclusion from his being in a
-situation—is placed on a level with brutes. The livery seems as much
-the badge of slavery in the nineteenth century as the collar of iron
-was in the days of baron and villain. It is a bar to the reception of
-a servant in any genteel society, and thus constantly reminds him of
-his debased condition. He can have but little hope of improving that
-condition, when all intercourse with persons of superior fortune or
-attainments is so effectually prevented. A menial he is, and menials
-must his children be, unless they should meet with extraordinary
-fortune. The following letter of a footman recently appeared in the
-"Times" newspaper. It is manly, and to the point.
-
- "Many articles having appeared in your paper under the term
- 'Flunkeyana,' all depreciatory of poor flunkeys, may I be allowed
- to claim a fair and impartial hearing on the other side? I am
- a footman, a liveried flunkey, a pampered menial—terms which
- one Christian employs to another, simply because he is, by
- the Almighty Dispenser of all things, placed, in his wisdom,
- lower in life than the other. Not yet having seen any defence
- of servants, may I trust to your candour and your generosity
- to insert this humble apology for a set of men constrained by
- circumstances to earn their living by servitude? The present
- cry seems to be to lower their wages. I will state simply a few
- broad facts. I am a footman in a family in which I have lived
- thirteen years. My master deems my services worth 24 guineas
- a year. The question is, is this too much? I will strike the
- average of expenditure. I am very economical, it is considered. I
- find for washing I pay near £6 a year; shoes, £4 10_s._; tea and
- sugar, £2 12_s._; wearing apparel, say £4 4_s._; for books—I am
- a reader—I allow myself £1 7_s._ You will see this amounts to
- £18 7_s._ each year. I include nothing for amusement of any kind,
- but say 13_s._ yearly. I thus account for £19 yearly, leaving £6
- for savings. One or two other things deserve, I think, a slight
- notice. What is the character required of a mechanic or labourer?
- None. What of a servant? Is he honest, sober, steady, religious,
- cleanly, active, industrious, an early riser? Is he married? Wo
- be to the poor fellow who does not answer yes to this category
- of requests, save the last! The answer is, Your character does
- not suit; you will not do for me. Again: does a servant forget
- himself for once only, and get tipsy?—he is ruined for life. In
- a word, sir, a thorough servant must be sober, steady, honest,
- and single; 'he must never marry, must never be absent from his
- duties, must attend to his master in sickness or in health, must
- be reviled and never reply, must be young, able, good-tempered,
- and willing, and think himself overpaid, if at the year's end he
- has 5_s._ to put in his pocket. In old age or sickness he may go
- to the workhouse, the only asylum open. In youth he has plenty
- of the best, and can get one service when he leaves another, if
- his character is good; but when youth deserts him, and age and
- sickness creep on, what refuge is there for him? No one will have
- him. He is too old for service, that is his answer. In service
- he is trusted with valuable articles of every description; and
- in what state of life, whether servant or artisan, surely he
- who is placed in situations of trust deserves a trifle more of
- recompense than is sufficient to pay his way and no more."
-
-We have mentioned, in other chapters, some instances of the cruel
-treatment of parish children apprenticed to trades. We have also
-evidence that those who are hound out as servants are subjected to the
-most brutal tyranny. Occasionally, when the cases become so outrageous
-as to be noised abroad, investigations are held; but these instances
-are few compared with the vast number of cases of cruel treatment of
-which the public are permitted to hear nothing.
-
-In the latter part of December, 1850, one Mr. Sloane, a special
-pleader, residing in the Middle Temple, was guilty of the most
-frightful cruelty to a servant-girl named Jane Wilbred, formerly an
-inmate of the West London Union. The girl, or some of her friends,
-complained, and Mr. Sloane was brought before Alderman Humphrey,
-at Guildhall. During the examination, evidence of the most brutal
-treatment of the poor girl was given, and such was the nature of the
-statements made on oath that the fury of the people was aroused. Mr.
-Sloane was committed for trial. When he was conveyed to the Compter the
-mob attacked the cab, and seemed determined to apply Lynch law. But the
-wretch was safely deposited in prison, through the exertions of the
-police. He was tried, convicted, and sentenced to imprisonment; but
-whether he served out his sentence we are not informed. This was one
-case of punishment for a thousand of impunity.
-
-So great was the indignation of the people at the developments made
-upon the trial of Sloane, that some measure of alleviation in regard
-to parish apprentices and servants was deemed necessary. The Earl
-of Carlisle, (late Lord Morpeth), brought in a bill in the House of
-Commons, the object of which was to compel the parish guardians and the
-binding magistrates to watch over and protect the helpless servants and
-apprentices. The bill was passed by Parliament; but it is inoperative
-and ineffectual. Parish guardians are too glad to get the children
-off their hands to take any steps which might retard the desired
-consummation; and the children can easily be prevented from making
-complaints to magistrates by the threats of masters and mistresses, and
-the common fear of consequences. In this case, as in all legislation
-concerning the poor, the Parliament of Great Britain has proceeded upon
-the same principle as the physician who applies external remedies for
-diseases which have internal causes. Instead of endeavouring to remove
-the great causes of pauperism—the monopolies of the aristocracy—it
-only seeks to render the paupers easier in their condition.
-
-Mr. Mayhew, in his "London Labour and the London Poor," shows that a
-large number of the vagrants of London and other English cities, are
-young persons who have been servants, and have run away in consequence
-of ill-treatment. Rather than be constantly treated as slaves, the
-boys prefer to be vagabonds and the girls prostitutes. They then enjoy
-a wild kind of freedom, which, with all its filth and vice, has some
-share of pleasure, unknown to those who move at the beck of a master or
-mistress, and live in constant dread of the rod.
-
-In those countries where society is untainted with aristocracy, the
-servant when performing duties is respected as a human being—with a
-mind to think and a heart to feel—one to be reprimanded or discharged
-from service for neglect or positive wrong, but never beaten as a
-soulless beast. In England, the servant, to hold a place, must be a
-most abject, cringing, and submissive slave. In some countries, the
-taint of negro blood keeps a man always in the position of an inferior.
-In England, the man of "serf blood," though he be a Celt or Saxon, is
-ever treated as a hind by the man of "noble blood;" and the possession
-of this same "noble blood" justifies the most infamous scoundrel in
-treating his domestics, not only with contempt, but positive cruelty.
-Americans have been charged with having an undying horror of the negro
-taint. In England, the _common_ blood is just as steadily abhorred by
-the dominant class. The slavery of servants—their hopeless, abject,
-and demoralizing condition—is the result, direct and unmistakable, of
-the existence of the aristocracy. When the serfs are completely freed;
-when the country is no longer ruled by a few thousand persons; when
-a long line of ancestry and magnificent escutcheons cease to dignify
-imbeciles and blackguards; in short, when England takes a few steps
-upon that glorious path which the great American republic has hewn for
-the nations of the earth—there will be sure respect for man, as man;
-and the servants may have some hope of improving their condition.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-MENTAL AND MORAL CONDITION OF THE WHITE SLAVES IN GREAT BRITAIN.
-
-
-The moral degradation and mental darkness of the labouring classes in
-Great Britain in the middle of the Nineteenth century, are appalling to
-contemplate. Beneath the wing of a government professedly Christian,
-there is sheltered a vast number of people who must be characterized
-as heathen—as fit subjects of missionary labours, such as are freely
-given to the dark sons of India and Africa. They know nothing of God
-but his prevailing name; and the Bible's light is hid from them as
-completely as if its pages were inscribed with Egyptian hieroglyphics.
-Their code of morals is the creature of their sensual inclinations;
-their intelligence seemingly the superior instinct of the animal.
-Scotland is far beyond other portions of Great Britain in the moral and
-mental cultivation of its people; but there is a large class in that
-country to which the above observations may be justly applied.
-
-According to Kay, more than half the poor in England and Wales cannot
-read and write, while the majority of the remainder know nothing of
-science, history, geography, music, or drawing, and very little of the
-Scripture history. In the great mercantile and manufacturing towns,
-it is true that poor men, if they defer their marriage, and have no
-extraordinary encumbrances, may improve their condition; but scarcely
-any facilities are offered for their acquiring the intelligence
-necessary for the control of passion. The schools in the towns are
-wretchedly arranged and managed. Many are nothing more than "dame
-schools," conducted often in cellars or garrets, by poor women, who
-know how to read, but who often know nothing else. The schools for the
-peasants are still fewer in number, and inefficient in character; and
-hence the result, that the English peasantry are more ignorant and
-demoralized, less capable of helping themselves, and more pauperized,
-than those of any other country in Europe, if we except Russia, Turkey,
-South Italy, and some parts of the Austrian Empire. A writer in a
-recent number of "Household Words," makes some remarkable statements in
-regard to the ignorance of the English masses:—
-
- "Wherever we turn, ignorance, not always allied to poverty,
- stares us in the face. If we look in the Gazette, at the list
- of partnerships dissolved, not a month passes but some unhappy
- man, rolling perhaps in wealth, but wallowing in ignorance,
- is put to the _experimentum crucis_ of 'his mark,' The number
- of petty jurors—in rural districts especially—who can only
- sign with a cross is enormous. It is not unusual to see parish
- documents of great local importance defaced with the same
- humiliating symbol by persons whose office shows them to be
- not only 'men of mark,' but men of substance. We have printed
- already specimens of the partial ignorance which passes under
- the ken of the post-office authorities, and we may venture to
- assert, that such specimens of penmanship and orthography are
- not to be matched in any other country in Europe. A housewife
- in humble life need only turn to the file of her tradesmen's
- bills to discover hieroglyphics which render them so many
- arithmetical puzzles. In short, the practical evidences of the
- low ebb to which the plainest rudiments of education in this
- country has fallen, are too common to bear repetition. We cannot
- pass through the streets, we cannot enter a place of public
- assembly, or ramble in the fields, without the gloomy shadow
- of Ignorance sweeping over us. The rural population is indeed
- in a worse plight than the other classes. We quote—with the
- attestation of our own experience—the following passage from
- one of a series of articles which have recently appeared in
- a morning newspaper: 'Taking the adult class of agricultural
- labourers, it is almost impossible to exaggerate the ignorance in
- which they live and move and have their being. As they work in
- the fields, the external world has some hold upon them through
- the medium of their senses; but to all the higher exercises of
- intellect they are perfect strangers. You cannot address one of
- them without being at once painfully struck with the intellectual
- darkness which enshrouds him. There is in general neither
- speculation in his eyes nor intelligence in his countenance. The
- whole expression is more that of an animal than of a man. He is
- wanting, too, in the erect and independent bearing of a man. When
- you accost him, if he is not insolent—which he seldom is—he
- is timid and shrinking, his whole manner showing that he feels
- himself at a distance from you greater than should separate any
- two classes of men. He is often doubtful when you address, and
- suspicious when you question him; he is seemingly oppressed with
- the interview while it lasts, and obviously relieved when it is
- over. These are the traits which I can affirm them to possess as
- a class, after having come in contact with many hundreds of farm
- labourers. They belong to a generation for whose intellectual
- culture little or nothing was done. As a class, they have no
- amusements beyond the indulgence of sense. In nine cases out of
- ten, recreation is associated in their minds with nothing higher
- than sensuality. I have frequently asked clergymen and others, if
- they often find the adult peasant reading for his own or others'
- amusement? The invariable answer is, that such a sight is seldom
- or never witnessed. In the first place, _the great bulk of them
- cannot read_. In the next, a large proportion of those who can,
- do so with too much difficulty to admit of the exercise being
- an amusement to them. Again, few of those who can read with
- comparative ease, have the taste for doing so. It is but justice
- to them to say that many of those who cannot read have bitterly
- regretted, in my hearing, their inability to do so. I shall never
- forget the tone in which an old woman in Cornwall intimated to
- me what a comfort it would now be to her could she only read her
- Bible in her lonely hours.'"
-
-From statistics given by Kay, it is apparent that the proportional
-amount of crime to population, calculated in two years, 1841 and 1847,
-was greater in almost all the agricultural counties of England than it
-was in the mining and manufacturing districts. The peasants of England
-must be subjected to a singularly demoralizing system to produce so
-terrible a result. The extreme poverty of the agricultural labourers
-is the great stimulant to crime of all kinds; but the darkness of
-ignorance is also a powerful agent. Poverty renders the peasants
-desperate, and they are too ignorant to see the consequences of crime.
-
-In a former part of this work, it was mentioned that the miserable
-cottages in which the peasants are compelled to reside have
-considerable influence in demoralizing them. This deserves to be fully
-illustrated. The majority of the cottages have but two small rooms;
-in one of which husband and wife, young men and young women, boys and
-girls, and, very often, a married son and his wife all sleep together.
-Kay says—
-
- "The accounts we receive from all parts of the country show
- that these miserable cottages are crowded to an extreme, and
- that the crowding is progressively increasing. People of both
- sexes, and of all ages, both married and unmarried—parents,
- brothers, sisters, and strangers—sleep in the same rooms and
- often in the same beds. One gentlemen tells us of six people of
- different sexes and ages, two of whom were man and wife, sleeping
- in the same bed, three with their heads at the top and three
- with their heads at the foot of the bed. Another tells us of
- adult uncles and nieces sleeping in the same room close to each
- other; another, of the uncles and nieces sleeping in the same
- bed together; another, of adult brothers and sisters sleeping
- in the same room with a brother and his wife just married; many
- tell us of adult brothers and sisters sleeping in the same beds;
- another tells us of rooms so filled with beds that there is no
- space between them, but that brothers, sisters, and parents
- crawl over each other half naked in order to get to their
- respective resting-places; another, of its being common for men
- and women, not being relations, to undress together in the same
- room, without any feeling of its being indelicate; another, of
- cases where women have been delivered in bedrooms crowded with
- men, young women, and children; and others mention facts of
- these crowded bedrooms much too horrible to be alluded to. Nor
- are these solitary instances, but similar reports are given by
- gentlemen writing in ALL parts of the country."
-
-The young peasants from their earliest years are accustomed to sleep
-in the same bedrooms with people of both sexes; and they lose all
-sense of the indecency of such a life, taking wives before they are
-twenty years of age to sleep in the same room with their parents. The
-policy now pursued by the aristocratic landlords, of clearing their
-estates, tends to crowd the cottages which are allowed to remain, and
-thus the demoralization of the peasantry is stimulated. Adultery is the
-very mildest form of the vast amount of crime which it is engendering.
-Magistrates, clergymen, surgeons, and parish-officers bear witness
-that cases of incest are increasing in all parts of the country.
-An eminent writer represents the consequences of the state of the
-peasant's cottages in England and Wales in the following startling, but
-unexaggerated terms:—
-
- "A man and woman intermarry, and take a cottage. In eight cases
- out of ten it is a cottage with but two rooms. For a time, so
- far as room at least is concerned, this answers their purpose;
- but they take it, not because it is at the time sufficiently
- spacious for them, but because they could not procure a more
- roomy dwelling, even if they desired it. In this they pass with
- tolerable comfort, considering their notions of what comfort
- is, the first period of married life; but, by-and-by they have
- children, and the family increases, until, in the course of a few
- years, they number, perhaps, from eight to ten individuals. But
- in all this time there has been no increase to their household
- accommodation. As at first, so to the very last, there is but the
- ONE SLEEPING-ROOM. As the family increases, additional beds are
- crammed into this apartment, until at last it is so filled with
- them, that there is scarcely room left to move between them. _I
- have known instances in which they had to crawl over each other
- to get to their beds._ So long as the children are very young,
- the only evil connected with this is the physical one arising
- from crowding so many people together into what is generally
- a dingy, frequently a damp, and invariably an ill-ventilated
- apartment. But years steal on, and the family continues thus
- bedded together. Some of its members may yet be in their infancy,
- but others of both sexes have crossed the line of puberty. But
- there they are, still together in the same room—the father and
- mother, the sons and the daughters—young men, young women,
- and children. Cousins, too, of both sexes, are often thrown
- together into the same room, _and not unfrequently into the
- same bed_. I have also known of cases in which uncles slept in
- the same room with their grown-up nieces, and newly-married
- couples occupied the same chamber with those long married, and
- with others marriageable but unmarried. A case also came to my
- notice, already alluded to in connection with another branch of
- the subject, in which two sisters, who were married on the same
- day, occupied adjoining rooms in the same hut, with nothing but
- a thin board partition, which did not reach the ceiling, between
- the two rooms, and a door in the partition which only partly
- filled up the doorway. For years back, in these same two rooms,
- have slept twelve people of both sexes and all ages. Sometimes,
- when there is but one room, a praiseworthy effort is made for
- the conservation of decency. But the hanging up of a piece of
- tattered cloth between the beds, which is generally all that is
- done in this respect, and even that but seldom, is but a poor
- set-off to the fact, that a family, which, in common decency,
- should, as regards sleeping accommodations, be separated at
- least into three divisions, occupy, night after night, but one
- and the same chamber. This is a frightful position for them
- to be in when an infectious or epidemic disease enters their
- abode. But this, important though it be, is the least important
- consideration connected with their circumstances. That which
- is most so, is the effect produced by them upon their habits
- and morals. In the illicit intercourse to which such a position
- frequently gives rise, _it is not always that the tie of blood
- is respected_. Certain it is, that when the relationship is even
- but one degree removed from that of brother and sister, that tie
- is frequently overlooked. And when the circumstances do not lead
- to such horrible consequences, the mind, particularly of the
- female, is wholly divested of that sense of delicacy and shame,
- which, so long as they are preserved, are the chief safeguards of
- her chastity. She therefore falls an early and an easy prey to
- the temptations which beset her beyond the immediate circle of
- her family. People in the other spheres of life are but little
- aware of the extent to which this precocious demoralization of
- the female among the lower orders in the country has proceeded.
- But how could it be otherwise? The philanthropist may exert
- himself in their behalf, the moralist may inculcate even the
- worldly advantages of a better course of life, and the minister
- of religion may warn them of the eternal penalties which they
- are incurring; but there is an instructor constantly at work,
- more potent than them all—an instructor in mischief, of which
- they must get rid ere they can make any real progress in their
- laudable efforts—and that is, _the single bedchamber in the
- two-roomed cottage_."
-
-But such cottages will continue to be the dwellings of the peasantry
-until the system of lord and serf is abolished, until they can obtain
-ground of their own, and have no fear of eviction at a moment's notice.
-It has often been a matter of wonder that there is less discontent and
-murmuring among the miserable peasants than among the workmen in the
-manufacturing towns. The reason lies upon the surface. The workmen in
-the factories are generally more intelligent than the agricultural
-labourers, and have a keen feeling of their degradation. It requires a
-certain degree of elevation to render a man discontented. The wallowing
-pig is satisfied.
-
-We need not be surprised to find that where so much misery prevails
-crime is frightfully frequent. The "Times" of the 30th of November,
-1849, shows the terrible increase of crime in the last few years in
-Dorsetshire. The "Times" says—
-
- "We yesterday published, in a very short compass, some grave
- particulars of the unfortunate county of Dorset. It is not
- simply the old story of wages inadequate for life, hovels unfit
- for habitation, and misery and sin alternately claiming our
- pity and our disgust. This state of things is so normal, and
- we really believe so immemorial in that notorious county, that
- we should rather deaden than excite the anxiety of the public
- by a thrice-told tale. What compels our attention just now is
- a sudden, rapid, and, we fear, a forced aggravation of these
- evils, measured by the infallible test of crime. Dorsetshire is
- fast sinking into a slough of wretchedness, which threatens the
- peace and morality of the kingdom at large. The total number of
- convictions, which
-
- "In 1846 was 798, and
- "In 1847 was 821, mounted up,
- "In 1848, to 950;
-
- "and up to the special general session, last Tuesday, (Dec.
- 1849,) for less than eleven months of the present year, to the
- astonishing number of 1193, being at the rate of 1300 for the
- whole year! Unless something is done to stop this flood of crime,
- or the tide happily turns of itself, the county will have more
- than _doubled_ its convictions within four years! Nor is it
- possible for us to take refuge in the thought that the increase
- is in petty offences. In no respect is it a light thing for a
- poor creature to be sent to jail, whatever be the offence. He
- has broken the laws of his country, and forfeited his character.
- His name and his morals are alike tainted with the jail. He is
- degraded and corrupted. If his spirit be not crushed, it is
- exasperated into perpetual hostility to wealth and power.
-
- * * * * *
-
- "It is, then, no light affair that a rural county, the abode of
- an ancient and respectable aristocracy, somewhat removed from
- the popular influences of the age, with a population of 175,043
- by the late census, should produce in four years near 4000
- convictions, being at the rate of one conviction in that period
- for every sixty persons, or every twelve householders."
-
-We might express our doubts of the real respectability of the ancient
-aristocracy of Dorsetshire. They do not injure society in a way of
-which the laws take notice; but had they nothing to do with the making
-of the 4000 criminals? In 1834, an English writer estimated that about
-120,000 of the people were always in jail. At the present time the
-number is still greater.
-
-The humane and able author of "Letters on Rural Districts," published
-in the "Morning Chronicle" of London, thus speaks of the frightful
-immorality among the agricultural population of Norfolk and Suffolk
-counties:—
-
- "One species of immorality, which is peculiarly prevalent in
- Norfolk and Suffolk, is that of bastardy. With the exception
- of Hereford and Cumberland, there are no counties in which the
- percentage of bastardy is so high as it is in Norfolk—being
- there 53.1 per cent. above the average of England and Wales; in
- Suffolk it is 27 per cent. above, and in Essex 19.1 per cent.
- below the average. In the two first-named counties, and even in
- the latter one, though not to the same extent, _there appears to
- be a perfect want of decency among the people_. 'The immorality
- of the young women,' said the rector of one parish to me, 'is
- literally horrible, and I regret to say it is on the increase in
- a most extraordinary degree. When I first came to the town, the
- mother of a bastard child used to be ashamed to show herself. The
- case is now quite altered; no person seems to think any thing at
- all of it. When I first came to the town, there was no such thing
- as a common prostitute in it; now there is an enormous number
- of them. When I am called upon to see a woman confined with an
- illegitimate child, I endeavour to impress upon her the enormity
- of the offence; and there are no cases in which I receive more
- insult from those I visit than from such persons. They generally
- say they'll get on as well, after all that's said about it; and
- if they never do any thing worse than that, they shall get to
- heaven as well as other people.' Another clergyman stated to me,
- that he never recollected an instance of his having married a
- woman who was not either pregnant at the time of her marriage,
- or had had one or more children before her marriage. Again, a
- third clergyman told me, that he went to baptize the illegitimate
- child of one woman, who was thirty-five years of age, and it
- was absolutely impossible for him to convince her that what she
- had done was wrong. 'There appears,' said he, 'to be among the
- lower orders a perfect deadness of all moral feeling upon this
- subject.' Many of the cases of this kind, which have come under
- my knowledge, evince such horrible depravity, that I dare not
- attempt to lay them before the reader. Speaking to the wife of a
- respectable labourer on the subject, who had seven children, one
- of whom was then confined with an illegitimate child, she excused
- her daughter's conduct by saying, 'What was the poor girl to do!
- The chaps say that they won't marry 'em first, and then the girls
- give way. I did the same myself with my husband.' There was one
- case in Cossey, in Norfolk, in which the woman told me, without a
- blush crimsoning her cheek, that her daughter and self had each
- had a child by a sweep, who lodged with them, and who promised
- to marry the daughter. The cottage in which these persons slept
- consisted of but one room, and there were two other lodgers who
- occupied beds in the same room; in one of which 'a young woman
- occasionally slept with the young man she was keeping company
- with.' The other lodger was an old woman of seventy-four years
- of age. To such an extent is prostitution carried on in Norwich,
- that out of the 656 licensed public-houses and beer-shops in the
- city, there are not less than 220, which are known to the police
- as common brothels. And, although the authorities have the power
- of withholding the licenses, nothing is done to put a stop to the
- frightful vice."
-
-A want of chastity is universal among the female peasants of Wales,
-arising chiefly from the herding of many persons in the small cottages.
-In the vicinity of the mines, the average of inhabitants to a house is
-said to be nearly twelve. The Rev. John Griffith, vicar of Aberdare,
-says—
-
- "Nothing can be lower, I would say more degrading, than the
- character in which the women stand relative to the men. The men
- and the women, married as well as single, live in the same house,
- _and sleep in the same room_. The men do not hesitate to wash
- themselves naked before the women; on the other hand, the women
- do not hesitate to change their under garments before the men.
- Promiscuous intercourse is most common, is thought of as nothing,
- and the women do not lose caste by it."
-
-The Welsh are peculiarly exempt from the guilt of great crimes.
-But petty thefts, lying, cozening, every species of chicanery and
-drunkenness are common among the agricultural population, and are
-regarded as matters of course.
-
-Infanticide is practised to a terrible extent in England and Wales. In
-most of the large provincial towns, "burial clubs" exist. A small sum
-is paid every year by the parent, and this entitles him to receive from
-£3 to £5 from the club on the death of the child. Many persons enter
-their children in several clubs; and, as the burial of the child does
-not necessarily cost more than £1, or at the most £1 10_s._, the parent
-realizes a considerable sum after all the expenses are paid. For the
-sake of this money, it has become common to cause the death of the
-children, either by starvation, ill-usage, or poison. No more horrible
-symptom of moral degradation could be conceived.
-
- "Mr. Chadwick says,[101] 'officers of these burial societies,
- relieving officers, and others, whose administrative duties put
- them in communication with the lowest classes in these districts,
- (the manufacturing districts,) express their moral conviction
- of the operation of such bounties to produce instances of the
- visible neglect of children of which they are witnesses. They
- often say—You are not treating that child properly, it will not
- live; _is it in the club_? And the answer corresponds with the
- impression produced by the sight.
-
- "'Mr. Gardiner, the clerk of the Manchester union, while
- registering the causes of death, deemed the cause assigned by
- a labouring man for the death of a child unsatisfactory, and
- staying to inquire, found that popular rumour assigned the death
- to wilful starvation. The child (according to a statement of the
- case) had been entered in at least _ten_ burial clubs; _and its
- parents had had six other children, who only lived from nine to
- eighteen months respectively_. They had received from several
- burial clubs twenty pounds for _one_ of these children, and they
- expected at least as much on account of this child. An inquest
- was held at Mr. Gardiner's instance, when several persons, who
- had known the deceased, stated that she was a fine fat child
- shortly after her birth, but that she soon became quite thin, was
- badly clothed, and seemed as if she did not get a sufficiency of
- food.... The jury, having expressed it as their opinion that the
- evidence of the parents was made up for the occasion and entitled
- to no credit, returned the following verdict:—Died through want
- of nourishment, but whether occasioned by a deficiency of food,
- or by disease of the liver and spine brought on by improper food
- and drink or otherwise, does not appear.
-
- "'Two similar cases came before Mr. Coppock, the clerk and
- superintendent-registrar of the Stockport union, in both of which
- he prosecuted the parties for murder. In one case, where three
- children had been poisoned with arsenic, the father was tried
- with the mother and convicted at Chester, and sentenced to be
- transported for life, but the mother was acquitted. In the other
- case, where the judge summed up for a conviction, the accused,
- the father, was, to the astonishment of every one, acquitted.
- In this case the body was exhumed after interment, and _arsenic
- was detected in the stomach_. In consequence of the suspicion
- raised upon the death on which the accusation was made in the
- first case, the bodies of two other children were taken up and
- examined, when _arsenic was found in their stomachs_. In all
- these cases payments on the deaths of the children were insured
- from the burial clubs; the cost of the coffin and burial dues
- would not be more than about one pound, and the allowance from
- the club is three pounds.
-
- "'It is remarked on these dreadful cases by the
- superintendent-registrar, _that the children who were boys, and
- therefore likely to be useful to the parents, were not poisoned_;
- the female children were the victims. It was the clear opinion
- of the medical officers that infanticides have been committed in
- Stockport to obtain the burial money.'"
-
-Such parents must be placed upon a level with the swine that devour
-their farrow. We are led to doubt whether they could sink much lower
-in the animal scale; poverty and ignorance seem to have thoroughly
-quenched the spark of humanity. The author of "Letters on Labour, and
-the Poor in the Rural Districts," writing of the burial clubs in the
-eastern counties, says:
-
- "The suspicion that a great deal of 'foul play' exists with
- respect to these clubs is supported, not only by a comparison
- of the different rates of mortality, but it is considerably
- strengthened by the facts proved upon the trial of Mary May.
- The Rev. Mr. Wilkins, the vicar of Wickes, who was mainly
- instrumental in bringing the case before a court of justice,
- stated to me that, from the time of Mary May coming to live in
- his parish, he was determined to keep a very strict watch upon
- her movements, as he had heard that _fourteen of her children had
- previously died suddenly_.
-
- "A few weeks after her arrival in his parish, she called upon
- him to request him to bury one of her children. Upon his asking
- her which of the children it was, she told him that it was
- Eliza, a fine healthy-looking child of ten years old. Upon his
- expressing some surprise that she should have died so suddenly,
- she said, 'Oh, sir, she went off like a snuff; all my other
- children did so too.' A short time elapsed, and she again waited
- upon the vicar to request him to bury her brother as soon as
- he could. His suspicions were aroused, and he endeavoured to
- postpone the funeral for a few days, in order to enable him to
- make some inquiries. Not succeeding in obtaining any information
- which would warrant further delay in burying the corpse, he most
- reluctantly proceeded in the discharge of his duty.
-
- "About a week after the funeral, Mary May again waited upon him
- to request him to sign a certificate to the effect that her
- brother was in perfect health a fortnight before he died, that
- being the time at which, as it subsequently appeared, she had
- entered him as nominee in the Harwich Burial Club. Upon inquiring
- as to the reason of her desiring this certificate, she told him
- that, unless she got it, she could not get the money for him from
- the club. This at once supplied the vicar with what appeared
- to be a motive for 'foul play' on the part of the woman. He
- accordingly obtained permission to have the body of her brother
- exhumed; doses of arsenic were detected, and the woman was
- arrested. With the evidence given upon the trial the reader is,
- no doubt, perfectly conversant, and it will be unnecessary for
- me to detail it. She was convicted. Previously to her execution
- she refused to make any confession, but said, 'If I were to tell
- all I know, it would give the hangman work for the next twelve
- months.' Undue weight ought not to be attached to the declaration
- of such a woman as Mary May; but, coupled with the disclosures
- that took place upon the trial with respect to some of her
- neighbours and accomplices, and with the extraordinary rate of
- mortality among the clubs, it certainly does appear that the
- general opinion with respect to the mischievous effects of these
- societies is not altogether without foundation.
-
- "Although there are not in Essex, at present, any burial clubs
- in which children are admitted under fourteen years of age as
- members or nominees, still, as illustrating the evils arising
- from these clubs, I may state that many persons who are fully
- conversant with the working of such institutions have stated that
- they have frequently been shocked by hearing women of the lower
- classes, when speaking of a neighbour's child, make use of such
- expressions as, 'Oh, depend upon it, the child'll not live; it's
- in the burial club.' When speaking to the parents of a child who
- may be unwell, it is not unfrequently that they say, 'You should
- do so and so,' or, 'You should not do so and so;' '_You should
- not treat it in that way; is it in the burial club_?' Instances
- of the most culpable neglect, if not of graver offences, are
- continually occurring in districts where clubs exist in which
- children are admitted. A collector of one of the most extensive
- burial societies gave it as his opinion, founded upon his
- experience, that it had become a constant practice to neglect the
- children for the sake of the allowance from the clubs; and he
- supported his opinion by several cases which had come under his
- own observation."
-
-A vast number of other facts, of equally shocking character, have
-been ascertained. The Rev. J. Clay, chaplain of the Preston House of
-Correction, in a sanitary report, makes some statements of a nature to
-startle:—
-
- "It appears, on the unimpeachable authority of a burial-club
- official, that '_hired nurses speculate on the lives of infants
- committed to their care, by entering them in burial clubs_;' that
- 'two young women proposed to enter a child into his club, and
- to pay the weekly premium alternately. Upon inquiring as to the
- relation subsisting between the two young women and the child, he
- learned that the infant was placed at nurse with the mother of
- one of these young women,' The wife of a clergymen told me that,
- visiting a poor district just when a child's death had occurred,
- instead of hearing from the neighbours the language of sympathy
- for the bereaved parent, she was shocked by such observations
- as—'Ah! it's a fine thing for the mother, the child's in two
- clubs!'
-
- "As regards one town, I possess some evidence of the amount of
- burial-club membership and of infant mortality, which I beg to
- lay before you. The reports of this town refer to 1846, when
- the population of the town amounted to about 61,000. I do not
- name the town, because, as no actual burial-club murders are
- known to have been committed in it, and as such clubs are not
- more patronized there than in other places, it is, perhaps, not
- fair to hold it up to particular animadversion; indeed, as to
- its general character, this very town need not fear comparison
- with any other. Now this place, with its sixty-one thousand
- people of all classes and ages, maintains at least eleven burial
- clubs, the members of which amount in the aggregate to nearly
- fifty-two thousand; nor are these all. Sick clubs, remember, act
- as burial clubs. Of these there are twelve or fourteen in the
- town, mustering altogether, probably, two thousand members. Here,
- then, we have good data for comparing population with '_death
- lists_;' but it will be necessary, in making the comparison, to
- deduct from the population all that part of it which has nothing
- to do with these clubs, viz. all infants under two months old,
- and all persons of unsound health, (both of these classes being
- excluded by the club rules;) all those also of the working
- classes, whose sound intelligence and feeling lead them to abhor
- burial-club temptations; and all the better classes, to whom five
- or twenty pounds offer no consolation for the death of a child.
- On the hypothesis that these deductions will amount to one-sixth
- of the entire population, it results that the _death lists_
- are more numerous by far than the entire mass—old, young, and
- infants—which support them; and, according to the statement of a
- leading death-list officer, _three-fourths_ of the names on these
- catalogues of the doomed are the names of children. Now, if this
- be the truth—and I believe it is—hundreds, if not thousands
- of children must be entered each into _four_, _five_, or even
- _twelve_ clubs, their chances of life diminishing, of course,
- in proportion to the frequency with which they are entered. Lest
- you should imagine that such excessive addiction to burial clubs
- is only to be found in one place, I furnish you with a report for
- 1846, of a single club, which then boasted thirty-four thousand
- one hundred members, _the entire population of the town to which
- it belongs having been, in 1841, little more than thirty-six
- thousand_!"
-
-The authorities from whom these statements are derived are of the
-highest respectability; they hear witness to a state of affairs
-scarcely to be conceived by people of other civilized countries.
-Hundreds of thousands of human beings seem to be driven into an awful
-abyss of crime and misery by the iron rule of the aristocracy—an
-abyss where mothers forget maternal feelings, where marriage vows are
-scoffed, and where the momentary gratification of brutal passions is
-alone esteemed. There, indeed, there is no fear of God, and heathenism
-spreads its upas shade to poison and destroy.
-
-The only amusement which the English poor possess in many parts of the
-country, is to visit taverns. In the towns the "gin-palaces" and the
-beer-houses are very numerous; and whenever the poor have leisure,
-these places are thronged by drunken men and abandoned women. In all
-the rural districts there is a frightful amount of drunkenness. British
-legislation has increased the number of these hot-beds of crime and
-pauperism.
-
- "In the beginning of the revolutionary war the duties on malt
- were _augmented_, and in 1825 the duties on spirits were
- _decreased_. It was thus that whisky was substituted for ale as
- the beverage of the Scotch, and that gin and brandy began to be
- generally drunk by the English poor.
-
- "The consumption of spirits immediately increased in a tremendous
- proportion. From 4,132,263 gallons, the consumption in 1825, it
- rose in one year to 8,888,648 gallons; that is, the consumption
- was _in one year_ more than _doubled_ by the change; and from
- that period, with the exception of the year next following, viz.
- 1827, the consumption has been progressively augmenting.
-
- "Since that time the noted beer-shop act has been passed. By that
- act, any one was enabled to obtain a license to enable him to
- sell beer, whether the person desirous of doing so was a person
- of respectable character or not.
-
- "But this was the least of the evils which were effected by that
- act. A clause, which was still more injurious, was that which
- prescribed that the liquor _must be drunk upon the premises of
- the beer-house_, i. e. either in the beer-house or on a bench
- just outside the door.
-
- "This has the effect in many cases, where the poor would
- otherwise take the beer home to their own cottages, of forcing
- the young men who wish to have a little to drink, to sit down and
- take it in the society of the worst people of the neighbourhood,
- who always, as a matter of course, spend their leisure in the
- tavern. I am convinced that nothing can be more injurious in its
- effects upon the poor than this clause. It may be said to _force_
- the honest labourers into the society and companionship of the
- most depraved, and so necessarily to demoralize the young and
- honest labourer.
-
- "The following is the number of gallons of _native_ proof spirits
- on which duty was paid for home consumption in the United
- Kingdom, in the undermentioned years:—
-
- Years. Gallons.
-
- 1843 18,841,890
- 1844 20,608,525
- 1845 23,122,588
- 1846 24,106,697
-
-
- "To the above must be added the number of gallons of foreign and
- colonial spirits retained for home consumption, as follows:—
-
- ┌───────┬────────────────────────┬──────────────────────────────┐
- │ │ │ No. of Gallons of Home │
- │ Years.│ No. of Gallons of │ and Foreign Spirits consumed │
- │ │ Foreign, &c. Spirits. │ in the United Kingdom. │
- ├———————┼————————————————————————┼——————————————————————————————┤
- │ 1843 │ 3,161,957 │ 22,026,289 │
- │ 1844 │ 3,242,606 │ 22,042,905 │
- │ 1845 │ 3,549,889 │ 26,672,477 │
- │ 1846 │ 4,252,237 │ 28,360,934 │
- └———————┴————————————————————————┴——————————————————————————————┘
-
- "From the above statistics it appears that the consumption of
- spirits in the United Kingdom is increasing much more rapidly
- than the population!
-
- "The number of licenses granted to retailers of spirits or beer
- amounted, in 1845, to 237,345; that is, there was to be found,
- in 1845, a retailer of beer or spirits in every 115 of the
- population! Of the beer licenses, 68,086 were for dwellings rated
- under £20 per annum, and 35,340 were licenses for premises rated
- under £10 per annum! This shows how large a proportion of the
- beer-shops are situated in the poorest districts, for the use of
- the poorest classes.[102]
-
-There is a section of London, which in 1847 had 2000 inhabitants, one
-butcher's shop, two bakers' shops, and seventeen beer-houses. The total
-cost of the spirits and beer consumed in the United Kingdom was, in
-1848, estimated at £65,000,000, a sum greater, by several millions,
-than the whole revenue of the government. The inimitable Dickens has
-given us a vivid sketch of a London gin-palace and its attendants. He
-says—
-
- "The extensive scale on which these places are established,
- and the ostentatious manner in which the business of even the
- smallest among them is divided into branches, is most amusing.
- A handsome plate of ground glass in one door directs you 'To
- the Counting-house;' another to the 'Bottle Department;' a
- third to the 'Wholesale Department,' a fourth to the 'Wine
- Promenade;' and so forth, until we are in daily expectation
- of meeting with a 'Brandy Bell,' or a 'Whisky Entrance.' Then
- ingenuity is exhausted in devising attractive titles for the
- different descriptions of gin; and the dram-drinking portion of
- the community, as they gaze upon the gigantic black and white
- announcements, which are only to be equalled in size by the
- figures beneath them, are left in a state of pleasing hesitation
- between 'The Cream of the Valley,' 'The Out and Out,' 'The No
- Mistake,' 'The Good for Mixing,' 'The real Knock-me-down,' 'The
- celebrated Butter Gin,' 'The regular Flare-up,' and a dozen other
- equally inviting and wholesome _liqueurs_. Although places of
- this description are to be met with in every second street, they
- are invariably numerous and splendid in precise proportion to the
- dirt and poverty of the surrounding neighbourhood. The gin-shops
- in and near Drury-lane, Holborn, St. Giles's, Covent-garden, and
- Clare-market, are the handsomest in London. There is more of
- filth and squalid misery near those great thoroughfares than in
- any part of this mighty city.
-
- "We will endeavour to sketch the bar of a large gin-shop, and its
- ordinary customers, for the edification of such of our readers as
- may not have had opportunities of observing such scenes; and on
- the chance of finding one well suited to our purpose we will make
- for Drury-lane, through the narrow streets and dirty courts which
- divide it from Oxford street, and that classical spot adjoining
- the brewery at the bottom of Tottenham-court-road, best known to
- the initiated as the 'Rookery.'
-
- "The filthy and miserable appearance of this part of London
- can hardly be imagined by those (and there are many such) who
- have not witnessed it. Wretched houses with broken windows
- patched with rags and paper, every room let out to a different
- family, and in many instances to two or even three; fruit
- and 'sweet-stuff' manufacturers in the cellars, barbers and
- red-herring venders in the front parlours, and cobblers in the
- back; a bird-fancier in the first floor, three families on the
- second, starvation in the attics, Irishmen in the passage; a
- 'musician' in the front kitchen, and a charwoman and five hungry
- children in the back one—filth everywhere—a gutter before the
- houses and a drain behind them—clothes drying and slops emptying
- from the windows; girls of fourteen or fifteen with matted hair,
- walking about barefooted, and in white great-coats, almost their
- only covering; boys of all ages, in coats of all sizes and no
- coats at all; men and women, in every variety of scanty and dirty
- apparel, lounging, scolding, drinking, smoking, squabbling,
- fighting, and swearing.
-
- "You turn the corner, what a change! All is light and brilliancy.
- The hum of many voices issues from that splendid gin-shop which
- forms the commencement of the two streets opposite, and the
- gay building with the fantastically ornamented parapet, the
- illuminated clock, the plate-glass windows surrounded by stucco
- rosettes, and its profusion of gas-lights in richly gilt burners,
- is perfectly dazzling when contrasted with the darkness and dirt
- we have just left. The interior is even gayer than the exterior.
- A bar of French polished mahogany, elegantly carved, extends the
- whole width of the place; and there are two side-aisles of great
- casks, painted green and gold, enclosed within a light brass
- rail, and bearing such inscriptions as 'Old Tom, 549;' 'Young
- Tom, 360;' 'Samson, 1421.' Beyond the bar is a lofty and spacious
- saloon, full of the same enticing vessels, with a gallery running
- round it, equally well furnished. On the counter, in addition
- to the usual spirit apparatus, are two or three little baskets
- of cakes and biscuits, which are carefully secured at the top
- with wicker-work, to prevent their contents being unlawfully
- abstracted. Behind it are two showily-dressed damsels with large
- necklaces, dispensing the spirits and 'compounds.' They are
- assisted by the ostensible proprietor of the concern, a stout
- coarse fellow in a fur cap, put on very much on one side, to give
- him a knowing air, and display his sandy whiskers to the best
- advantage.
-
- "It is growing late, and the throng of men, women, and children,
- who have been constantly going in and out, dwindles down to
- two or three occasional stragglers—cold, wretched-looking
- creatures, in the last stage of emaciation and disease. The knot
- of Irish labourers at the lower end of the place, who have been
- alternately shaking hands with, and threatening the life of, each
- other for the last hour, become furious in their disputes, and
- finding it impossible to silence one man, who is particularly
- anxious to adjust the difference, they resort to the infallible
- expedient of knocking him down and jumping on him afterward.
- The man in the fur cap and the potboy rush out; a scene of riot
- and confusion ensues; half the Irishmen get shut out, and the
- other half get shut in; the potboy is knocked among the tubs
- in no time; the landlord hits everybody, and everybody hits
- the landlord; the barmaids scream; the police come in; and the
- rest is a confused mixture of arms, legs, staves, torn coats,
- shouting, and struggling. Some of the party are borne off to the
- station-house, and the remainder slink home to beat their wives
- for complaining, and kick the children for daring to be hungry."
-
-The neglected and frightfully wretched condition of a great part of
-the juvenile population in the British towns has frequently excited
-the attention of philanthropic Englishmen. On the 6th of June, 1848,
-Lord Ashley made a speech on juvenile destitution in the House of
-Commons, in which he drew an awful picture of misery and degradation.
-He showed that in the midst of London there is a large and continually
-increasing number of lawless persons, forming a separate class, having
-pursuits, interests, manners, and customs of their own. These are quite
-independent of the number of mere pauper children who crowd the streets
-of London, and who never attend a school. The lawless class were
-estimated by Lord Ashley to number thirty thousand.
-
- "Of 1600 who were examined, 162 confessed that they had been in
- prison, not merely once, or even twice, but some of them several
- times; 116 had run away from their homes; 170 slept in the
- 'lodging houses;' 253 had lived altogether by beggary; 216 had
- neither shoes nor stockings; 280 had no hat or cap, or covering
- for the head; 101 had no linen; 249 had never slept in a bed;
- many had no recollection of ever having been in a bed; 68 were
- the children of convicts.
-
- "In 1847 it was found that of 4000 examined, 400 confessed that
- they had been in prison, 660 lived by beggary, 178 were the
- children of convicts, and 800 had lost one or both their parents.
- Now, what was the employment of these people? They might be
- classed as street-sweepers; vendors of lucifer matches, oranges,
- cigars, tapes, and ballads; they held horses, ran errands,
- jobbed for 'dealers in marine stores,' that being the euphonious
- term for receivers of stolen goods—an influential race in the
- metropolis, but for whose agency a very large proportion of
- juvenile crime would be extinguished. It might be asked, how did
- the large number who never slept in bed pass the night? In all
- manner of places: under dry arches of bridges and viaducts, under
- porticos, sheds, carts in outhouses, sawpits, or staircases, or
- in the open air, and some in lodging-houses. Curious, indeed, was
- their mode of life. One boy, during the inclement period of 1847,
- passed the greater part of his nights in the large iron roller in
- the Regent's Park. He climbed over the railings, and crept to the
- roller, where he lay in comparative security.
-
- "Lord Ashley says, 'many of them were living in the dry arches
- of houses not finished, inaccessible except by an aperture,
- only large enough to admit the body of a man. When a lantern
- was thrust in, six or eight, ten or twelve people might be
- found lying together. Of those whom we found thus lodged, we
- invited a great number to come the following day, and there
- an examination was instituted. The number examined was 33.
- Their ages varied from 12 to 18, and some were younger. 24 had
- no parents, 6 had one, 3 had stepmothers, 20 had no shirts, 9
- no shoes, 12 had been once in prison, 3 twice, 3 four times, 1
- eight times, and 1 (only 14 years old) twelve times. The physical
- condition of these children was exceedingly bad; they were a
- prey to vermin, they were troubled with itch, they were begrimed
- with dirt, not a few were suffering from sickness, and two or
- three days afterward several died from disease and the effects
- of starvation. I privately examined eight or ten. I was anxious
- to obtain from them the truth. I examined them separately,
- taking them into a room alone. I said, "I am going to ask you
- a variety of questions, to which I trust you will give me true
- answers, and I will undertake to answer any question you may
- put." They thought that a fair bargain. I put to several of
- them the question, "How often have you slept in a bed during
- the last three years?" One said, perhaps twelve times, another
- three times, another could not remember that he ever had. I
- asked them, how they passed the night in winter. They said, "We
- lie eight or ten together, to keep ourselves warm." I entered
- on the subject of their employments and modes of living. They
- fairly confessed they had no means of subsistence but begging
- and stealing. The only way of earning a penny in a legitimate
- way was by picking up old bones. But they fairly acknowledged
- for themselves and others scattered over the town, with whom
- they professed themselves acquainted, that they had not and
- could not have any other means of subsistence than by begging
- and stealing. A large proportion of these young persons were at
- a most dangerous age for society. What was the moral condition
- of those persons? A large proportion of them (it was no fault
- of theirs) did not recognise the distinctive rights of _meum_
- and _tuum_. Property appeared to them to be only the aggregate
- of plunder. They held that every thing which was possessed was
- common stock; that he who got most was the cleverest fellow, and
- that every one had a right to abstract from that stock what he
- could by his own ingenuity. Was it matter of surprise that they
- entertained those notions, which were instilled into their minds
- from the time they were able to creep on all fours—that not only
- did they disregard all the rights of property, but gloried in
- doing so, unless they thought the avowal would bring them within
- the grasp of the law. To illustrate their low state of morality,
- and to show how utterly shameless they were in speaking on these
- subjects, I would, mention what had passed at a ragged school
- to which fourteen or fifteen boys, having presented themselves
- on a Sunday evening, were admitted as they came. They sat down,
- and the lesson proceeded. The clock struck eight. They all rose
- with the exception of one little boy. The master took him by the
- arm and said, "You must remain; the lesson is not over." The
- reply was, "We must go to business." The master inquired what
- business? "We must all go to catch them as they come out of the
- chapels." It was necessary for them, according to the remark of
- this boy, to go at a certain time in pursuit of their calling.
- They had no remorse or shame, in making the avowal, because they
- believed that there were no other means of saving themselves
- from starvation. I recollect a very graphic remark made by one
- of those children in perfect simplicity, but which yet showed
- the horrors of their position. The master had been pointing out
- to him the terrors of punishment in after-life. The remark of
- the boy was, "That may be so, but I don't think it can be any
- worse than this world has been to me." Such was the condition of
- hundreds and thousands.'"
-
-A large number of the depraved children live in what are called the
-"lodging-houses." Most Americans have heard of the "Old Brewery" at the
-Five Points in New York city, where more than two hundred persons of
-all ages and sexes were crowded together. Such lodging-houses as this,
-(which fortunately has been destroyed,) are common in London and the
-provincial towns of Great Britain. Mr. Mayhew, in his "London Labour
-and the London Poor," has given us very full information concerning
-them. He obtained much of it from one who had passed some time among
-the dens of infamy. He says of these lodging-houses—
-
- "'They have generally a spacious, though often ill-ventilated
- kitchen, the dirty, dilapidated walls of which are hung with
- prints, while a shelf or two are generally, though barely,
- furnished with crockery and kitchen utensils. In some places
- knives and forks are not provided, unless a penny is left with
- the "deputy," or manager, till they are returned. A brush of any
- kind is a stranger, and a looking-glass would be a miracle. The
- average number of nightly lodgers is in winter seventy, in the
- summer (when many visit the provinces) from forty to forty-five.
- The general charge is, if two sleep together, 3_d._ per night, or
- 4_d._ for a single bed. In either case, it is by no means unusual
- to find eighteen or twenty in one small room, the heat and horrid
- smell from which are insufferable; and, where there are young
- children, the staircases are the lodgment of every kind of filth
- and abomination. In some houses there are rooms for families,
- where, on a rickety machine, which they dignify by the name of a
- bedstead, may be found the man, his wife, and a son or daughter,
- perhaps eighteen years of age; while the younger children, aged
- from seven to fourteen, sleep on the floor. If they have linen,
- they take it off to escape vermin, and rise naked, one by one,
- or sometimes brother and sister together. This is no ideal
- picture; the subject is too capable of being authenticated to
- need any meaningless or dishonest assistance called "allowable
- exaggeration." The amiable and deservedly popular minister of a
- district church, built among lodging-houses, has stated that he
- has found twenty-nine human beings in one apartment; and that
- having with difficulty knelt down between two beds to pray with a
- dying woman, his legs became so jammed that he could hardly get
- up again.
-
- "'Out of some fourscore such habitations,' continues my
- informant, 'I have only found _two_ which had any sort of garden;
- and, I am happy to add, that in neither of these two was there
- a single case of cholera. In the others, however, the pestilence
- raged with terrible fury.'"
-
-There are other lodging-houses still lower in character than those
-described above, and where there is a total absence of cleanliness
-and decency. A man who had slept in these places, gave the following
-account to Mr. Mayhew:—
-
- "He had slept in rooms so crammed with sleepers—he believed
- there were thirty where twelve would have been a proper
- number—that their breaths in the dead of night and in the
- unventilated chamber, rose (I use his own words) 'in one foul,
- choking steam of stench.' This was the case most frequently a
- day or two prior to Greenwich Fair or Epsom Races, when the
- congregation of the wandering classes, who are the supporters of
- the low lodging-houses, was the thickest. It was not only that
- two or even three persons jammed themselves into a bed not too
- large for one full-sized man; but between the beds—and their
- partition one from another admitted little more than the passage
- of a lodger—were placed shakedowns, or temporary accommodation
- for nightly slumber. In the better lodging-houses the shakedowns
- are small palliasses or mattrasses; in the worst they are bundles
- of rags of any kind; but loose straw is used only in the country
- for shakedowns. Our informant saw a traveller, who had arrived
- late, eye his shakedown in one of the worst houses with any thing
- but a pleased expression of countenance; and a surly deputy,
- observing this, told the customer he had his choice, 'which,' the
- deputy added, 'is not as all men has, or I shouldn't have been
- waiting here on you. But you has your choice, I tell you;—sleep
- there on that shakedown, or turn out and be—; that's fair.'
- At some of the busiest periods, numbers sleep on the kitchen
- floor, all huddled together, men and women, (when indecencies are
- common enough,) and without bedding or any thing but their scanty
- clothes to soften the hardness of the stone or brick floor. A
- penny is saved to the lodger by this means. More than two hundred
- have been accommodated in this way in a large house. The Irish,
- in harvest-time, very often resort to this mode of passing the
- night.
-
- "I heard from several parties, of the surprise, and even fear or
- horror, with which a decent mechanic—more especially if he were
- accompanied by his wife—regarded one of these foul dens, when
- destitution had driven him there for the first time in his life.
- Sometimes such a man was seen to leave the place abruptly, though
- perhaps he had prepaid his last halfpenny for the refreshment
- of a night's repose. Sometimes he was seized with sickness. I
- heard also from some educated persons who had 'seen better days,'
- of the disgust with themselves and with the world, which they
- felt on first entering such places. 'And I have some reason to
- believe,' said one man, 'that a person, once well off, who has
- sunk into the very depths of poverty, often makes his first
- appearance in one of the worst of those places. Perhaps it is
- because he keeps away from them as long as he can, and then, in
- a sort of desperation fit, goes into the cheapest he can meet
- with; or if he knows it's a vile place, he very likely says to
- himself—as I did—"I may as well know the worst at once."'
-
- "Another man, who had moved in good society, said, when asked
- about his resorting to a low lodging-house: 'When a man's lost
- caste in society, he may as well go the whole hog, bristles and
- all, and a low lodging-house is the entire pig.'
-
- "Notwithstanding many abominations, I am assured that the
- lodgers, in even the worst of these habitations, for the most
- part, sleep soundly. But they have, in all probability, been
- out in the open air the whole of the day, and all of them may
- go to their couches, after having walked, perhaps, many miles,
- exceedingly fatigued, and some of them half drunk. 'Why, in
- course, sir,' said a 'traveller,' whom I spoke to on this
- subject, 'if you is in a country town or village, where there's
- only one lodging-house, perhaps, and that a bad one—an old hand
- can always suit hisself in London—you _must_ get half drunk, or
- your money for your bed is wasted. There's so much rest owing
- to you, after a hard day; and bugs and bad air'll prevent its
- being paid, if you don't lay in some stock of beer, or liquor
- of some sort, to sleep on. It's a duty you owes yourself; but,
- if you haven't the browns, why, then, in course, you can't pay
- it.' I have before remarked, and, indeed, have given instances,
- of the odd and sometimes original manner in which an intelligent
- patterer, for example, will express himself.
-
- "The information I obtained in the course of this inquiry into
- the condition of low lodging-houses, afforded a most ample
- corroboration of the truth of a remark I have more than once
- found it necessary to make before—that persons of the vagrant
- class will sacrifice almost any thing for warmth, not to say
- heat. Otherwise, to sleep, or even sit, in some of the apartments
- of these establishments would be intolerable.
-
- "From the frequent state of weariness to which I have alluded,
- there is generally less conversation among the frequenters of
- the low lodging-houses than might be expected. Some are busy
- cooking, some (in the better houses) are reading, many are drowsy
- and nodding, and many are smoking. In perhaps a dozen places
- of the worst and filthiest class, indeed, smoking is permitted
- even in the sleeping-rooms; but it is far less common than it
- was even half-a-dozen years back, and becomes still less common
- yearly. Notwithstanding so dangerous a practice, fires are and
- have been very unfrequent in these places. There is always some
- one awake, which is one reason. The lack of conversation, I ought
- to add, and the weariness and drowsiness, are less observable in
- the lodging-houses patronized by thieves and women of abandoned
- character, whose lives are comparatively idle, and whose labour
- a mere nothing. In their houses, if their conversation be at all
- general, it is often of the most unclean character. At other
- times it is carried on in groups, with abundance of whispers,
- shrugs, and slang, by the members of the respective schools of
- thieves or lurkers."
-
- * * * * *
-
- "The licentiousness of the frequenters, and more especially the
- juvenile frequenters, of the low lodging-houses, must be even
- more briefly alluded to. In some of these establishments, men
- and women, boys and girls,—but perhaps in no case, or in very
- rare cases, unless they are themselves consenting parties, herd
- together promiscuously. The information which I have given from a
- reverend informant indicates the nature of the proceedings, when
- the sexes are herded indiscriminately, and it is impossible to
- present to the reader, in full particularity, the records of the
- vice practised.
-
- "Boys have boastfully carried on loud conversations, and from
- distant parts of the room, of their triumphs over the virtue of
- girls, and girls have laughed at and encouraged the recital.
- Three, four, five, six, and even more boys and girls have been
- packed, head and feet, into one small bed; some of them perhaps
- never met before. On such occasions any clothing seems often
- enough to be regarded as merely an encumbrance. Sometimes there
- are loud quarrels and revilings from the jealousy of boys and
- girls, and more especially of girls whose 'chaps' have deserted
- or been inveigled from them. At others, there is an amicable
- interchange of partners, and next day a resumption of their
- former companionship. One girl, then fifteen or sixteen, who had
- been leading this vicious kind of life for nearly three years,
- and had been repeatedly in prison, and twice in hospitals—and
- who expressed a strong desire to 'get out of the life' by
- emigration—said: 'Whatever that's bad and wicked, that any one
- can fancy could be done in such places among boys and girls
- that's never been taught, or won't be taught, better, _is_ done,
- and night after night.' In these haunts of low iniquity, or
- rather in the room into which the children are put, there are
- seldom persons above twenty. The young lodgers in such places
- live by thieving and pocket-picking, or by prostitution. The
- charge for a night's lodging is generally 2_d._, but smaller
- children have often been admitted for 1_d._ If a boy or girl
- resort to one of these dens at night without the means of
- defraying the charge for accommodation, the 'mot of the ken'
- (mistress of the house) will pack them off, telling them plainly
- that it will be no use their returning until they have stolen
- something worth 2_d._ If a boy or girl do not return in the
- evening, and have not been heard to express their intention of
- going elsewhere, the first conclusion arrived at by their mates
- is that they have 'got into trouble,' (prison.)
-
- "The indiscriminate admixture of the sexes among adults, in many
- of these places, is another evil. Even in some houses considered
- of the better sort, men and women, husbands and wives, old and
- young, strangers and acquaintances, sleep in the same apartment,
- and if they choose, in the same bed. Any remonstrance at some act
- of gross depravity, or impropriety, on the part of a woman not so
- utterly hardened as the others, is met with abuse and derision.
- One man who described these scenes to me, and had long witnessed
- them, said that almost the only women who ever hid their faces or
- manifested dislike of the proceedings they could not but notice,
- (as far as he saw,) were poor Irishwomen, generally those who
- live by begging: 'But for all that,' the man added, 'an Irishman
- or Irishwoman of that sort will sleep anywhere, in any mess, to
- save a halfpenny, though they may have often a few shillings, or
- a good many, hidden about them.'"
-
-The recent report of Captain Hays, "on the operation of the Common
-Lodging-house Act," presents some appalling facts:—
-
- "Up to the end of February, it was ascertained that 3100 persons,
- mostly Irishmen, in the very heart of the metropolis, lodged
- every night, 84,000 individuals in 3712 rooms. The instances
- enumerated are heart sickening. In a small room in Rosemary
- lane, near the Tower, fourteen adults were sleeping on the floor
- without any partition or regard to decency. In an apartment
- in Church lane, St. Giles, not fifteen feet square, were
- thirty-seven women and children, all huddled together on the
- floor. There are thousands of similar cases. The eastern portion
- of London, comprising Whitechapel, Spitalfields, and Mile-end—an
- unknown land to all of the decent classes—is filled with a
- swarming population of above 300,000 beggars, costermongers,
- thieves, ragsellers, Jews, and the like. A single court is a fair
- example of this whole district. It contains eight houses of two
- rooms each. Three hundred persons—men, women, and children—live
- there. There is only one place of convenience; and one hydrant,
- which is served half an hour each day. The condition of this
- court may be imagined; it is too filthy to describe. Decayed
- matter, stagnant water, refuse fish, vegetables, broken baskets,
- dead cats, dogs, and rats, are strewed everywhere around. The
- prices of various kinds of provision in these neighbourhoods give
- a forcible notion of the condition of the population. You can
- purchase for a halfpenny fish or meat enough for a dinner.
-
- "In this neighbourhood is Rag Fair. It is worth a visit.
- Thousands of persons are assembled in the streets, which are so
- thickly covered with merchandise that it is difficult to step
- along without treading on heaps of gowns, shawls, bonnets, shoes,
- and articles of men's attire. There is no conceivable article of
- dress that may not be purchased here. It is not without danger
- that one even visits the place at noonday. You are in the midst
- of the refuse of all London,—of a whole race, whose chief
- employment is to commit depredations upon property, and whose
- lives are spent in the midst of a squalor, filth, deprivation
- and degradation, which the whole world cannot probably parallel.
- One of the London missionaries says—'Persons who are accustomed
- to run up heavy bills at the shops of fashionable tailors and
- milliners will scarcely believe the sums for which the poor are
- able to purchase the same kind of articles. I have recently
- clothed a man and woman, both decently, for the sum of nine
- shillings. There is as great a variety of articles in pattern,
- shape, and size, as could be found in any draper's shop in
- London. The mother may go to _Rag Fair_, with the whole of her
- family, both boys and girls—yes, and her husband, too—and for
- a very few shillings deck them out from top to toe. I have no
- doubt that a man and his wife, and five or six children, with £1
- would purchase for themselves an entire change. This may appear
- an exaggeration; but I actually overheard a conversation, in
- which two women were trying to bargain for a child's frock; the
- sum asked was 1½_d._, and the sum offered was 1_d._, and they
- parted on the difference.'
-
- "The following is a bill delivered by a dealer to one of the
- missionaries, who was requested to supply a suit of clothes for a
- man and woman whom he had persuaded to get married several years
- after the right time:—
-
- _s._ _d._
- A full linen-fronted shirt, very elegant 0 6
- A pair of warm worsted stockings 0 1
- A pair of light-coloured trousers 0 6
- A black cloth waistcoat 0 3
- A pair of white cotton braces 0 1
- A pair of low shoes 0 1
- A black silk velvet stock 0 1
- A black beaver, fly-fronted, double-breasted paletot coat,
- lined with silk, a very superior article 1 6
- A cloth cap, bound with a figured band 0 1
- A pair of black cloth gloves 0 1
- — —
- 3 3
-
- "The man had been educated, and could speak no fewer than five
- languages; by profession he was, however, nothing but a dusthill
- raker.
-
- "The bill delivered for the bride's costume is as follows:
-
- A shift 0 1
- A pair of stays 0 2
- A flannel petticoat 0 4
- A black Orleans ditto 0 4
- A pair of white cotton stockings 0 1
- A very good light-coloured cotton gown 0 10
- A pair of single-soled slippers, with spring heels 0 2
- A double-dyed bonnet, including a neat cap 0 2
- A pair of white cotton gloves 0 1
- A lady's green silk paletot, lined with crimson silk,
- trimmed with black 0 10
- — ——
- 3 1"
-
-Throughout the country there are low lodging-houses, which do not
-differ much in character from those of London. In all of them the most
-disgusting immorality is practised to an extent scarcely conceivable by
-those who do not visit such dens of vice and misery.
-
-The story of the Jew Fagan, and his felonious operations, in Dickens's
-Oliver Twist, is a true representation of a most extensive business
-in London. There are a large number of notorious receivers of stolen
-goods. Some of them keep a number of boys, who are instructed in
-stealing, and beaten severely when unsuccessful. Mayhew mentions one
-notorious case in George-yard. A wooden-legged Welshman, named Hughes,
-and commonly called Taff, was the miscreant. Two little boys were his
-chief agents in stealing, and when they did not obtain any thing, he
-would take the strap off his wooden leg, and beat them through the
-nakedness of their rags. He boarded and lodged about a dozen Chelsea
-and Greenwich pensioners. These he followed and watched closely until
-they were paid. Then, after they had settled with him, he would make
-them drunk and rob them of the few shillings they had left.
-
-The brutal treatment of servants, which we have already touched, drives
-many of them to the low lodging-houses, and to the commission of crime.
-In the following narrative, which a girl communicated to Mr. Mayhew,
-we have an illustration of this assertion, as well as some awful
-disclosures in regard to "life among the lowly:"—
-
- "'I am an orphan. When I was ten I was sent to service as a maid
- of all-work, in a small tradesman's family. It was a hard place,
- and my mistress used me very cruelly, beating me often. When I
- had been in place three weeks, my mother died; my father having
- died twelve years before. I stood my mistress's ill-treatment
- about six months. She beat me with sticks as well as with her
- hands. I was black and blue, and at last I ran away. I got
- to Mrs. —, a low lodging-house. I didn't know before that
- there was such a place. I heard of it from some girls at the
- Glasshouse, (baths and wash-houses,) where I went for shelter.
- I went with them to have a halfpenny worth of coffee, and they
- took me to the lodging-house. I then had three shillings, and
- stayed about a month, and did nothing wrong, living on the three
- shillings and what I pawned my clothes for, as I got some pretty
- good things away with me. In the lodging-house I saw nothing but
- what was bad, and heard nothing but what was bad. I was laughed
- at, and was told to swear. They said, 'Look at her for a d—
- modest fool'—sometimes worse than that, until by degrees I
- got to be as bad as they were. During this time I used to see
- boys and girls from ten to twelve years old sleeping together,
- but understood nothing wrong. I had never heard of such places
- before I ran away. I can neither read nor write. My mother was a
- good woman, and I wish I'd had her to run away to. I saw things
- between almost children that I can't describe to you—very often
- I saw them, and that shocked me. At the month's end, when I was
- beat out, I met with a young man of fifteen—I myself was going
- on to twelve years old—and he persuaded me to take up with him.
- I stayed with him three months in the same lodging-house, living
- with him as his wife, though we were mere children, and being
- true to him. At the three months' end he was taken up for picking
- pockets, and got six months. I was sorry, for he was kind to
- me; though I was made ill through him; so I broke some windows
- in St. Paul's churchyard to get into prison to get cured. I had
- a month in the Compter, and came out well. I was scolded very
- much in the Compter, on account of the state I was in, being so
- young. I had 2_s._ 6_d._ given to me when I came out, and was
- forced to go into the streets for a living. I continued walking
- the streets for three years, sometimes making a good deal of
- money, sometimes none, feasting one day and starving the next.
- The bigger girls could persuade me to do any thing they liked
- with my money. I was never happy all the time, but I could
- get no character, and could not get out of the life. I lodged
- all this time at a lodging-house in Kent-street. They were all
- thieves and bad girls. I have known between three and four dozen
- boys and girls sleep in one room. The beds were horrid filthy and
- full of vermin. There was very wicked carryings on. The boys, if
- any difference, was the worst. We lay packed, on a full night, a
- dozen boys and girls squeedged into one bed. That was very often
- the case—some at the foot and some at the top—boys and girls
- all mixed. I can't go into all the particulars, but whatever
- could take place in words or acts between boys and girls did take
- place, and in the midst of the others. I am sorry to say I took
- part in these bad ways myself, but I wasn't so bad as some of the
- others. There was only a candle burning all night, but in summer
- it was light great part of the night. Some boys and girls slept
- without any clothes, and would dance about the room that way. I
- have seen them, and, wicked as I was, felt ashamed. I have seen
- two dozen capering about the room that way; some mere children,
- the boys generally the youngest. * * * There were no men or women
- present. There were often fights. The deputy never interfered.
- This is carried on just the same as ever to this day, and is
- the same every night. I have heard young girls shout out to one
- another how often they had been obliged to go to the hospital,
- or the infirmary, or the workhouse. There was a great deal of
- boasting about what the boys and girls had stolen during the
- day. I have known boys and girls change their 'partners,' just
- for a night. At three years' end I stole a piece of beef from a
- butcher. I did it to get into prison. I was sick of the life I
- was leading, and didn't know how to get out of it. I had a month
- for stealing. When I got out I passed two days and a night in
- the streets doing nothing wrong, and then went and threatened to
- break Messrs. —'s windows again. I did that to get into prison
- again; for when I lay quiet of a night in prison I thought things
- over, and considered what a shocking life I was leading, and how
- my health might be ruined completely, and I thought I would stick
- to prison rather than go back to such a life. I got six months
- for threatening. When I got out I broke a lamp next morning for
- the same purpose, and had a fortnight. That was the last time
- I was in prison. I have since been leading the same life as I
- told you of for the three years, and lodging at the same houses,
- and seeing the same goings on. I hate such a life now more than
- ever. I am willing to do any work that I can in washing and
- cleaning. I can do a little at my needle. I could do hard work,
- for I have good health. I used to wash and clean in prison, and
- always behaved myself there. At the house where I am it is 3_d._
- a night; but at Mrs. —'s it is 1_d._ and 2_d._ a night, and
- just the same goings on. Many a girl—nearly all of them—goes
- out into the streets from this penny and twopenny house, to get
- money for their favourite boys by prostitution. If the girl can
- not get money she must steal something, or will be beaten by her
- 'chap' when she comes home. I have seen them beaten, often kicked
- and beaten until they were blind from bloodshot, and their teeth
- knocked out with kicks from boots as the girl lays on the ground.
- The boys, in their turn, are out thieving all day, and the
- lodging-house keeper will buy any stolen provisions of them, and
- sell them to the lodgers. I never saw the police in the house. If
- a boy comes to the house on a night without money or sawney, or
- something to sell to the lodgers, a handkerchief or something of
- that kind, he is not admitted, but told very plainly, 'Go thieve
- it, then,' Girls are treated just the same. Anybody may call in
- the daytime at this house and have a halfpenny worth of coffee
- and sit any length of time until evening. I have seen three dozen
- sitting there that way, all thieves and bad girls. There are
- no chairs, and only one form in front of the fire, on which a
- dozen can sit. The others sit on the floor all about the room,
- as near the fire as they can. Bad language goes on during the
- day, as I told you it did during the night, and indecencies too,
- but nothing like so bad as at night. They talk about where there
- is good places to go and thieve. The missioners call sometimes,
- but they're laughed at often when they're talking, and always
- before the door's closed on them. If a decent girl goes there to
- get a ha'porth of coffee, seeing the board over the door, she is
- always shocked. Many a poor girl has been ruined in this house
- since I was, and boys have boasted about it. I never knew boy or
- girl do good, once get used there. Get used there, indeed, and
- you are life-ruined. I was an only child, and haven't a friend
- in the world. I have heard several girls say how they would
- like to get out of the life, and out of the place. From those I
- know, I think that cruel parents and mistresses cause many to
- be driven there. One lodging-house keeper, Mrs. —, goes out
- dressed respectable, and pawns any stolen property, or sells it
- at public-houses.'
-
- "As a corroboration of the girl's statement, a wretched-looking
- boy, only thirteen years of age, gave me the following additional
- information. He had a few rags hanging about him, and no
- shirt—indeed, he was hardly covered enough for purposes of
- decency, his skin being exposed through the rents in his jacket
- and trousers. He had a stepfather, who treated him very cruelly.
- The stepfather and the child's mother went 'across the country,'
- begging and stealing. Before the mother died, an elder brother
- ran away on account of being beaten.
-
- "'Sometimes,' I give his own words, 'he (the stepfather) wouldn't
- give us a bit to eat, telling us to go and thieve for it. My
- brother had been a month gone (he's now a soldier in Gibraltar)
- when I ran away to join him. I knew where to find him, as we
- met sometimes. We lived by thieving, and I do still—by pulling
- flesh, (stealing meat.) I got to lodge at Mrs. —, and have
- been there this eight months. I can read and write a little.'
- This boy then confirmed what the young girl had told me of the
- grossest acts night by night among the boys and girls, the
- language, &c., and continued:—'I always sleep on the floor for
- 1_d._, and pay ½_d._ besides for coke. At this lodging-house
- cats and kittens are melted down, sometimes twenty a day. A quart
- pot is a cat, and pints and half-pints are kittens. A kitten
- (pint) brings 3_d._ from the rag-shops, and a cat 6_d._ There's
- convenience to melt them down at the lodging-house. We can't sell
- clothes in the house, except any lodger wants them; and clothes
- nearly all go to the Jews in Petticoat-lane. Mrs. — buys the
- sawney of us; so much for the lump, 2_d._ a pound about; she
- sells it again for twice what she gives, and more. Perhaps 30
- lbs. of meat every day is sold to her. I have been in prison six
- times, and have had three dozen; each time I came out harder. If
- I left Mrs. —'s house I don't know how I could get my living.
- Lots of boys would get away if they could. I never drink. I don't
- like it. Very few of us boys drink. I don't like thieving, and
- often go about singing; but I can't live by singing, and I don't
- know how I could live honestly. If I had money enough to buy a
- stock of oranges, I think I could be honest.'"
-
-Mr. Mayhew called a meeting of thieves and beggars at the Bristol
-Union School-room, Shakspeare Walk, Shadwell. One hundred and fifty
-of them—all under twenty years of age—attended. It may be doubted
-whether such a meeting could have been brought about in any other
-city. The young thieves and beggars were very fair samples of their
-numerous class. Of professed beggars, there were fifty; and sixty-six
-acknowledged themselves habitual thieves. The announcement that the
-greater number present were thieves, pleased them exceedingly, and was
-received with three rounds of applause! Fourteen of them had been in
-prison over twenty times, and twenty stated that they had been flogged
-in prison. Seventy-eight of them regularly roamed through the country
-every year; sixty-five slept regularly in the casual wards of the
-Unions; and fifty-two occasionally slept in trampers' lodging-houses
-throughout the country.
-
-The ignorance prevailing among the vast number of street-sellers in
-London, is rather comically illustrated by Mr. Mayhew, in the following
-instance:—
-
- "One boy gave me his notions of men and things. He was a
- thick-limbed, red-cheeked fellow; answered very freely, and
- sometimes, when I could not help laughing at his replies, laughed
- loudly himself, as if he entered into the joke.
-
- "Yes, he had heer'd of God who made the world. Couldn't exactly
- recollec' when he'd heerd on him, but he had, most sarten-ly.
- Didn't know when the world was made, or how anybody could do it.
- It must have taken a long time. It was afore his time, 'or yourn
- either, sir.' Knew there was a book called the Bible; didn't
- know what it was about; didn't mind to know; knew of such a book
- to a sartinty, because a young 'oman took one to pop (pawn)
- for an old 'oman what was on the spree—a bran new 'un—but
- the cove wouldn't have it, and the old 'oman said he might be
- d—d. Never heer'd tell on the deluge, of the world having
- been drownded; it couldn't, for there wasn't water enough to do
- it. He weren't a going to fret hisself for such things as that.
- Didn't know what happened to people after death, only that they
- was buried. Had seen a dead body laid out; was a little afeared
- at first; poor Dick looked so different, and when you touched his
- face he was so cold! oh, so cold! Had heer'd on another world;
- wouldn't mind if he was there hisself, if he could do better, for
- things was often queer here. Had heer'd on it from a tailor—such
- a clever cove, a stunner—as went to 'Straliar, (Australia,)
- and heer'd him say he was going into another world. Had never
- heer'd of France, but had heer'd of Frenchmen; there wasn't half
- a quarter so many on 'em as of Italians, with their ear-rings
- like flash gals. Didn't dislike foreigners, for he never saw
- none. What was they? Had heer'd of Ireland. Didn't know where
- it was, but it couldn't be very far, or such lots wouldn't come
- from there to London. Should say they walked it, ay, every bit
- of the way, for he'd seen them come in all covered with dust.
- Had heer'd of people going to sea, and had seen the ships in the
- river, but didn't know nothing about it, for he was very seldom
- that way. The sun was made of fire, or it wouldn't make you feel
- so warm. The stars was fire, too, or they wouldn't shine. They
- didn't make it warm, they was too small. Didn't know any use they
- was of. Didn't know how far they was off; a jolly lot higher
- than the gas lights some on 'em was. Was never in a church; had
- heer'd they worshipped God there; didn't know how it was done;
- had heer'd singing and praying inside when he'd passed; never was
- there, for he hadn't no togs to go in, and wouldn't be let in
- among such swells as he had seen coming out. Was a ignorant chap,
- for he'd never been to school, but was up to many a move, and
- didn't do bad. Mother said he would make his fortin yet.
-
- "Had heer'd of the Duke of Wellington; he was Old Nosey; didn't
- think he ever seed him, but had seen his statty. Hadn't heer'd
- of the battle of Waterloo, nor who it was atween; once lived
- in Webber-row, Waterloo-road. Thought he had heer'd speak of
- Bonaparte; didn't know what he was; thought he'd heer'd of
- Shakspeare, but didn't know whether he was alive or dead, and
- didn't care. A man with something like that name kept a dolly
- and did stunning; but he was sich a hard cove that if _he_ was
- dead it wouldn't matter. Had seen the queen, but didn't recollec'
- her name just at the minute; oh! yes, Wictoria and Albert. Had
- no notion what the queen had to do. Should think she hadn't such
- power [he had first to ask me what 'power' was] as the lord
- mayor, or as Mr. Norton as was the Lambeth beak, and perhaps is
- still. Was never once before a beak, and didn't want to. Hated
- the crushers; what business had they to interfere with him if he
- was only resting his basket in a street? Had been once to the
- Wick, and once to the Bower; liked tumbling better; he meant to
- have a little pleasure when the peas came in."
-
-The vagabond propensities of the street-children are thus described by
-Mr. Mayhew:—
-
- "As soon as the warm weather commences, boys and girls, but more
- especially boys, leave the town in shoals, traversing the country
- in every direction; some furnished with trifling articles (such
- as I have already enumerated) to sell, and others to begging,
- lurking, or thieving. It is not the street-sellers who so much
- resort to the tramp, as those who are devoid of the commonest
- notions of honesty; a quality these young vagrants sometimes
- respect when in fear of a jail, and the hard work with which such
- a place is identified in their minds—and to which, with the
- peculiar idiosyncrasy of a roving race, they have an insuperable
- objection.
-
- "I have met with boys and girls, however, to whom a jail had no
- terrors, and to whom, when in prison, there was only one dread,
- and that a common one among the ignorant, whether with or without
- any sense of religion—superstition. 'I lay in prison of a night,
- sir,' said a boy who was generally among the briskest of his
- class, 'and think I shall see things.' The 'things' represent
- the vague fears which many, not naturally stupid, but untaught
- or ill-taught persons, entertain in the dark. A girl, a perfect
- termagant in the breaking of windows and suchlike offences, told
- me something of the same kind. She spoke well of the treatment
- she experienced in prison, and seemed to have a liking for the
- matron and officials; her conduct there was quiet and respectful.
- I believe she was not addicted to drink.
-
- "Many of the girls, as well as the boys, of course trade as
- they 'tramp.' They often sell, both in the country and in town,
- little necklaces composed of red berries strung together upon
- thick thread, for dolls and children; but although I have asked
- several of them, I have never yet found one who collected the
- berries and made the necklaces themselves; neither have I met
- with a single instance in which the girl vendors knew the name
- of the berries thus used, nor indeed even that they _were_
- berries. The invariable reply to my questions upon this point
- has been that they 'are called necklaces;' that 'they are just
- as they sells 'em to us;' that they 'don't know whether they are
- made or whether they grow;' and in most cases, that they 'gets
- them in London, by Shoreditch;' although in one case a little
- brown-complexioned girl, with bright sparkling eyes, said that
- 'she got them from the gipsies.' At first I fancied, from this
- child's appearance, that she was rather superior in intellect to
- most of her class; but I soon found that she was not a whit above
- the others, unless, indeed, it were in the possession of the
- quality of cunning."
-
-The regular "tramps," or wandering vagabonds, are very numerous
-throughout Great Britain. At certain periods they issue from all the
-large towns, and prey upon the rural districts like swarms of locusts.
-In no other country can be found so constant a class of vagrants. The
-gipsies form but a small portion of the "tramps." These vagrants are
-miserably clothed, filthy, covered with vermin, and generally very
-much diseased—sometimes from debauchery, and sometimes from want
-of food and from exposure. Very few of them are married. The women
-are nearly all prostitutes. The manner of life of these wanderers is
-curious. They beg during the day in the towns, or along the roads;
-and they so arrange their day's tramp as to arrive, most nights, in
-the neighbourhood of the workhouses. They then hide the money they
-have collected by begging, and present themselves, after sunset, at
-the gates of the workhouse, to beg a night's lodging. To nearly every
-workhouse there are attached vagrant wards, or buildings which are
-specially set apart for the reception of tramps such as those we have
-described. These wards are commonly brick buildings, of one story
-in height. They have brick floors and guard-room beds, with loose
-straw and rugs for the males, and iron bedsteads, with straw, for the
-females. They are badly ventilated, and unprovided with any means for
-producing warmth. All holes for ventilation are sure to be stopped up
-at night, by the occupants, with rags or straw, so that the stench
-of these sleeping-places is disgusting in the extreme. Guards are
-appointed for these wards, but such is the immorality and indecency
-of the vagrants, that the most disgusting scenes are common in them.
-The wards resound with the vilest songs and the foulest language; and
-so numerous are the "tramps" that the guardians find it impossible
-to separate the sexes. This vast evil of vagrancy is constantly
-increasing, and is a natural result of the monopolies and oppressions
-of the aristocracy. It is stated that on the 25th of March, 1848, the
-626 Unions of England and Wales relieved 16,086 vagrants. But this
-scarcely gives an idea of the magnitude of the evil. Between 40,000
-and 50,000 "tramps" infest the roads and streets of England and Wales
-every day. The majority of them are thieves, and nearly all are almost
-brutally ignorant.
-
-In London there are large numbers of small dealers, called
-costermongers and patterers. Persons belonging to these classes seldom
-or never rise above their trade, and they seem to have a kind of
-hereditary pride in their degraded position. Many of the costermongers
-and patterers are thieves, and the general character of these classes
-is very debased; ignorance and immorality prevail to a fearful
-extent. The patterers are more intelligent than the costermongers,
-but they are also more immoral. They help off their wares, which are
-chiefly stationery and quack medicines, by long harangues, while the
-costermongers merely cry their fish, greens, &c. about the streets.
-The number of people dependent upon costermongering in London is about
-thirty thousand. The patterers are not so numerous.
-
-Concubinage is the rule and marriage the exception among both
-costermongers and patterers. Mr. Mayhew estimates that only one-tenth
-of the couples living together and carrying on the costermongering
-trade are married. There is no honour attached to the marriage state
-and no shame to concubinage. In good times the women are rigidly
-faithful to their paramours, but in the worst pinch of poverty a
-departure from fidelity is not considered heinous. About three out of
-a hundred costermongers ever attend a church, and the majority of them
-have no knowledge of Christianity; they associate the Church of England
-and aristocracy, and hate both. Slang is acquired very rapidly, and
-some costermongers will converse in it by the hour. The women use it
-sparingly; the girls more than the women; the men more than the girls;
-and the boys most of all. Pronouncing backward is the simple principle
-upon which the costermonger slang is founded.
-
-The patterers, though a vagrant, are an organized class. Mr. Mayhew
-says—
-
- "There is a telegraphic despatch between them, through the
- length and breadth of the land. If two patterers (previously
- unacquainted) meet in the provinces, the following, or something
- like it, will be their conversation:—Can you 'voker romeny'
- (can you speak cant?) What is your 'monekeer?' (name.) Perhaps
- it turns out that one is 'White-headed Bob,' and the other
- 'Plymouth Ned,' They have a 'shant of gatter' (pot of beer)
- at the nearest 'boozing ken,' (ale-house,) and swear eternal
- friendship to each other. The old saying, that 'When the
- liquor is in the wit is out,' is remarkably fulfilled on these
- occasions, for they betray to the 'flatties' (natives) all their
- profits and proceedings.
-
- "It is to be supposed that in country districts, where there are
- no streets, the patterer is obliged to call at the houses. As
- they are mostly without the hawker's license, and sometimes find
- wet linen before it is lost, the rural districts are not fond
- of their visits; and there are generally two or three persons
- in a village reported to be 'gammy,' that is, unfavourable. If
- a patterer has been 'crabbed,' that is, offended, at any of the
- 'cribs,' (houses,) he mostly chalks a signal on or near the door.
- I give one or two instances:—
-
- "'Bone,' meaning good.
-
- "'Cooper'd,' spoiled by the imprudence of some other patterer.
-
- "'Gammy,' likely to have you taken up.
-
- "'Flummut,' sure of a month in quod.
-
- "In most lodging-houses there is an old man who is the guide to
- every 'walk' in the vicinity, and who can tell every house on
- every round that is 'good for a cold 'tater.' In many cases there
- is over the kitchen mantel-piece a map of the district, dotted
- here and there with memorandums of failure or success.
-
- "Patterers are fond of carving their names and avocations about
- the houses they visit. The old jail at Dartford has been some
- years a 'padding-ken.' In one of the rooms appear the following
- autographs:—
-
- "'Jemmy, the Rake, bound to Bristol; bad beds, but no bugs. Thank
- God for all things.'
-
- "'Razor George and his moll slept here the day after Christmas;
- just out of "stir," (jail,) for "muzzling a peeler."'
-
- "'Scotch Mary, with "driz," (lace,) bound to Dover and back,
- please God.'
-
- "Sometimes these inscriptions are coarse and obscene; sometimes
- very well written and orderly. Nor do they want illustrations.
-
- "At the old factory, Lincoln, is a portrait of the town beadle,
- formerly a soldier; it is drawn with different-coloured chalks,
- and ends with the following couplet:—
-
- 'You are a B for false swearing,
- In hell they'll roast you like a herring.'
-
- "Concubinage is very common among patterers, especially on
- their travels; they have their regular rounds, and call the
- peregrination 'going on circuit.' For the most part they are
- early risers; this gives them a facility for meeting poor girls
- who have had a night's shelter in the union workhouses. They
- offer such girls some refreshments, swear they are single men,
- and promise comforts certainly superior to the immediate position
- of their victims. Consent is generally obtained; perhaps a girl
- of fourteen or fifteen, previously virtuous, is induced to
- believe in a promise of constant protection, but finds herself,
- the next morning, ruined and deserted; nor is it unlikely that,
- within a month or two, she will see her seducer in the company of
- a dozen incidental wives. A gray-headed miscreant, called 'Cutler
- Tom,' boasts of five hundred such exploits; and there is too
- great reason to believe that the picture of his own drawing is
- not greatly overcharged."
-
-A reverend gentleman, who had enjoyed the best opportunities for
-observing the patterers, gave Mr. Mayhew the following information:—
-
- "I have seen fathers and mothers place their boys and girls in
- positions of incipient enormity, and command them to use language
- and gestures to each other which would make a harlot blush, and
- almost a heathen tremble. I have hitherto viewed the patterer
- as a salesman, having something in his hand, on whose merits,
- real or pretended, he talks people out of their money. By slow
- degrees prosperity rises, but rapid is the advance of evil. The
- patterer sometimes gets 'out of stock,' and is obliged, at no
- great sacrifice of conscience, to 'patter' in another strain. In
- every large town, sham official documents, with crests, seals,
- and signatures, can be got for half-a-crown. Armed with these,
- the patterer becomes a 'lurker,' that is, an impostor; his papers
- certify any and every 'ill that flesh is heir to.' Shipwreck is
- called a 'shake lurk;' loss by fire is a 'glim.' Sometimes the
- petitioner has had a horse which has dropped dead with the mad
- staggers; or has a wife ill or dying, and six or seven children
- at once sickening of the small-pox. Children are borrowed to
- support the appearance; the case is certified by the minister and
- churchwardens of a parish which exists only in imagination; and
- as many people dislike the trouble of investigation, the patterer
- gets enough to raise a stock in trade, and divides the spoil
- between the swag-shop and the gin-palace. Sometimes they are
- detected, and get a 'drag,' (three months in prison.)
-
- "They have many narrow escapes; one occurs to me of a somewhat
- ludicrous character:—A patterer and lurker (now dead) known
- by the name of 'Captain Moody,' unable to get a 'fakement'
- written or printed, was standing almost naked in the streets
- of a neighbouring town. A gentleman stood still and heard his
- piteous tale, but, having been 'done' more than once, he resolved
- to examine the affair, and begged the petitioner to conduct
- him to his wife and children, who were in a garret on a bed
- of languishing, with neither clothes, food, nor fire, but, it
- appeared, with faith enough to expect a supply from 'Him who
- feedeth the ravens,' and in whose sacred name even a cold 'tater
- was implored. The patterer, or half-patterer and half-beggar,
- took the gentleman (who promised a sovereign if every thing was
- square) through innumerable and intricate windings, till he came
- to an outhouse or sort of stable. He saw the key outside the
- door, and begged the gentleman to enter and wait till he borrowed
- a light of a neighbour to show him up-stairs. The illumination
- never arrived, and the poor charitable man found that the
- miscreant had locked him into the stable. The patterer went to
- the padding-ken, told the story with great glee, and left that
- locality within an hour of the occurrence."
-
-Liverpool, Manchester, Birmingham, and other provincial cities possess
-an ignorant and immoral population quite equal, in proportion to the
-entire population of each city, to that of London. In each may be found
-a degraded class, with scarcely any ideas of religion or morality,
-living in the most wretched manner, and practising every species
-of vice. The cellar-houses, in which many of them live, have been
-described in another chapter. They are the filthy abodes of a people
-almost reduced to a brutish condition. In Liverpool parish there is a
-_cellar-population of 20,000_, a large number of whom are continually
-engaged in criminal practices. There are portions of the city of
-Glasgow which a stranger could scarcely traverse safely at night,
-and where an amount of vice and misery may be witnessed which is not
-exceeded in either London or Liverpool.
-
-In the mining and manufacturing districts of England there is much
-ignorance and more vice. In both, there are schools of a miserable
-character, but those young persons who can find time to attend them
-learn nothing beyond reading, writing, and the simplest rules of
-arithmetic. The mining labour, as carried on in the mines of England,
-is extremely demoralizing in its tendency, as we have shown in another
-part of this work. The report of parliamentary commissioners contains
-some statements in regard to the darkness of mind and corruption
-of heart among young persons employed in the various trades and
-manufactures.
-
-The following facts are quoted from the Second Report of the
-"Children's Employment Commission."
-
-The moral and religious state of the children and young persons
-employed in the trades and manufactures of Birmingham, is described by
-the sub-commissioners as very unfavourable. The social and domestic
-duties and affections are but little cultivated and practised; great
-numbers never attend any place of public worship; and of the state of
-juvenile crime some conception may be formed by the statement, that of
-the total number of known or suspected offenders in this town, during
-the twelve last months—namely, 1223—at least one-half were under
-fifteen years of age.
-
-As to illicit sexual intercourse, it seems to prevail almost
-universally, and from a very early period of life; to this common
-conclusion witnesses of every rank give testimony.
-
-WOLVERHAMPTON.—Of the moral condition of the youthful population in
-the Wolverhampton district, Mr. Horne says—"Putting together all
-I elicited from various witnesses and conversations with working
-people, abroad and at home, and all that fell under my observation, I
-am obliged to come to the conclusion, that the moral virtues of the
-great majority of the children are as few in number and as feeble in
-practice as can well be conceived in a civilized country, surrounded by
-religious and educational institutions, and by individuals anxious for
-the improvement of the condition of the working classes."
-
-He adds of WITTENHALL—"A lower condition of morals, in the fullest
-sense of the term, could not, I think, be found. I do not mean by this
-that there are many more prominent vices among them, but that moral
-feelings and sentiments do not exist among them. They have no morals."
-
-SHEFFIELD.—In all the Sheffield trades, employing large numbers of
-children, it is stated that there is a much closer intermixture of the
-younger children with the elder youths, and with the men, than is usual
-in the cotton, woollen, and flax factories; and that the conversation
-to which the children are compelled to listen, would debase their minds
-and blunt their moral feelings even if they had been carefully and
-virtuously educated, but that of course this result takes place more
-rapidly and completely in the case of those who have had little or no
-religious culture, and little but bad example before their eyes from
-their cradle upward.
-
-Habits of drinking are formed at a very early age, malt liquor being
-generally introduced into the workshops, of which the youngest children
-are encouraged to partake. "Very many," say the police-officers,
-"frequent beer-shops, where they play at dominoes, bagatelle, &c. for
-money or drink." Early intemperance is assigned by the medical men as
-one cause of the great mortality of Sheffield. "There are beer-houses,"
-says the Rev. Mr. Farish, "attended by youths exclusively, for the
-men will not have them in the same houses with themselves. In these
-beer-houses are youths of both sexes encouraged to meet, and scenes
-destructive of every vestige of virtue or morality ensue.
-
-But it is stated by all classes of witnesses, that "the most revolting
-feature of juvenile depravity in this town is early contamination
-from the association of the sexes," that "juvenile prostitution is
-exceedingly common." "The evidence," says the sub-commissioner, "might
-have been doubled which attests the early commencement of sexual and
-promiscuous intercourse among boys and girls."
-
-SEDGLEY.—At Sedgley and the neighbouring villages, the number of girls
-employed in nail-making considerably exceeds that of the boys. Of these
-girls Mr. Horne reports—"Their appearance, manners, habits, and moral
-natures (so far as the word _moral_ can be applied to them) are in
-accordance with their half-civilized condition. Constantly associating
-with ignorant and depraved adults and young persons of the opposite
-sex, they naturally fall into all their ways; and drink, smoke, swear,
-throw off all restraint in word and act, and become as bad as a man.
-The heat of the forge and the hardness of the work renders few clothes
-needful in winter; and in summer, the six or seven individuals who are
-crowded into these little dens find the heat almost suffocating. The
-men and boys are usually naked, except a pair of trousers and an open
-shirt, though they very often have no shirt; and the women and girls
-have only a thin ragged petticoat, and an open shirt without sleeves."
-
-In the mining districts, there is even more ignorance and depravity
-than in the places where factories and workshops abound. The nature of
-the work, and various wants, such as no freemen would suffer from—want
-of proper schools and proper amusements—induce this state of things.
-An American visiting any of these mining districts, would be astounded
-at the dulness, ignorance, and viciousness that prevails among the
-labourers—men and women, boys and girls. Many of them are perfect
-heathens—never hearing of God except when his awful name is "taken in
-vain." Of Christ and his mission they hear somewhat, but know nothing
-positively. Newspapers—those daily and weekly messengers that keep
-Americans fully informed of the affairs of the world—they seldom see.
-The gin-shop and the brothel are their common resorts.
-
-Missionaries are wanted in Great Britain. Alas! that in the middle of
-the nineteenth century, there should be so many hundreds of thousands
-of people, in the vicinity of a costly church establishment, without
-any knowledge of the Bible!—that a professedly Christian government
-should keep so many souls in ignorance of Christianity!—that a country
-boasting of its civilization and enlightenment should contain so much
-darkness and depravity!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-COOLIE SLAVERY IN THE BRITISH COLONIES.
-
-
-The British government emancipated the negro slaves held under its
-authority in the West Indies, thereby greatly depreciating the value of
-the islands, permitting a half-tamed race to fall back into a state of
-moral and mental darkness, and adding twenty millions to the national
-debt, to be paid out of the sweat and blood of her own white serfs.
-This was termed a grand act of humanity; those who laboured for it have
-been lauded and laurelled without stint, and English writers have been
-exceedingly solicitous that the world should not "burst in ignorance"
-of the achievement.
-
-[Illustration: COOLIES.]
-
-Being free, the negroes, with the indolence inherent in their nature,
-would not work. Many purses suffered in consequence, and the purse is
-a very tender place to injure many persons. It became necessary to
-substitute other labourers for the free negroes, and the Coolies of
-India were taken to the Antilles for experiment. These labourers were
-generally sober, steady, and industrious. But how were they treated? A
-colonist of Martinique, who visited Trinidad in June, 1848, thus writes
-to the French author of a treatise on free and slave labour:—
-
- "If I could fully describe to you the evils and suffering endured
- by the Indian immigrants (Coolies) in that horribly governed
- colony, I should rend the heart of the Christian world by a
- recital of enormities unknown in the worst periods of colonial
- slavery.
-
- "Borrowing the language of the prophet, I can truly say,'The
- whole head is sick, and the whole heart is sad; from the sole of
- the foot to the top of the head nothing is sound;' wounds, sores,
- swollen ulcers, which are neither bandaged, nor soothed, nor
- rubbed with oil.
-
- "My soul has been deeply afflicted by all that I have seen.
- How many human beings lost! So far as I can judge, in spite of
- their wasting away, all are young, perishing under the weight of
- disease. Most of them are dropsical, for want of nourishment.
- Groups of children, the most interesting I have ever seen, scions
- of a race doomed to misfortune, were remarkable for their small
- limbs, wrinkled and reduced to the size of spindles—and not a
- rag to cover them! And to think that all this misery, all this
- destruction of humanity, all this waste of the stock of a ruined
- colony, might have been avoided, but has not been! Great God!
- it is painful beyond expression to think that such a neglect of
- duty and of humanity on the part of the colonial authorities,
- as well of the metropolis as of the colony—a neglect which
- calls for a repressive if not a retributive justice—will go
- entirely unpunished, as it has hitherto done, notwithstanding
- the indefatigable efforts of Colonel Fagan, the superintendent
- of the immigrants in this colony, an old Indian officer of large
- experience, of whom I have heard nothing but good, and never any
- evil thing spoken, in all my travels through the island.
-
- "I am told that Colonel Fagan prepared a regulation for the
- government and protection of the immigrants—which regulation
- would probably realize, beyond all expectation, the object aimed
- at; but scarcely had he commenced his operations when orders
- arrived from the metropolis to suppress it, and substitute
- another which proceeded from the ministry. The Governor, Mr.
- Harris, displeased that his own regulation was thus annulled,
- pronounced the new order impossible to be executed, and it was
- withdrawn without having been properly tried. The minister sent
- another order in regard to immigration, prepared in his hotel in
- Downing street; but Governor Harris pronounced it to be still
- more difficult of execution than the first, and it, too, failed.
- It is in this manner that, from beginning to end, the affairs of
- the Indian immigrants have been conducted. It was only necessary
- to treat them with justice and kindness to render them—thanks
- to their active superintendent—the best labourers that could
- be imported into the colony. They are now protected neither
- by regulations nor ordinances; no attention is paid to the
- experienced voice of their superintendent—full of benevolence
- for them, and always indefatigably profiting by what can be of
- advantage to them. If disease renders a Coolie incapable of work,
- he is driven from his habitation. This happens continually; he
- is not in that case even paid his wages. What, then, can the
- unfortunate creature do? Very different from the Creole or the
- African; far distant from his country, without food, without
- money; disease, the result of insufficient food and too severe
- labour, makes it impossible for him to find employment. He drags
- himself into the forests or upon the skirts of the roads, lies
- there and dies!
-
- "Some years since, the unfortunate Governor (Wall) of Gorea was
- hung for having pitilessly inflicted a fatal corporal punishment
- on a negro soldier found guilty of mutiny; and this soldier,
- moreover, was under his orders. In the present case, I can prove
- a neglect to a great extent murderous. The victims are Indian
- Coolies of Trinidad. In less than one year, as is shown by
- official documents, _two thousand_ corpses of these unfortunate
- creatures have furnished food to the crows of the island; and
- a similar system is pursued, not only without punishment, but
- without even forming the subject of an official inquest. Strange
- and deplorable contradiction! and yet the nation which gives us
- this example boasts of extending the ægis of its protection over
- all its subjects, without distinction! It is this nation, also,
- that complacently takes to itself the credit of extending justice
- equally over all classes, over the lordly peer and the humblest
- subject, without fear, favour, or affection!"
-
-In the Mauritius, the Coolies who have been imported are in a miserable
-condition. The planters have profited by enslaving these mild and
-gentle Hindoos, and rendering them wretched.
-
- "By aid of continued Coolie immigration," says Mr. Henry C.
- Carey,[103] "the export of sugar from the Mauritius has been
- doubled in the last sixteen years, having risen from seventy to
- one hundred and forty millions of pounds. Sugar is therefore very
- cheap, and the foreign competition is thereby driven from the
- British market. 'Such conquests,' however, says, very truly, the
- London Spectator, 'don't always bring profit to the conqueror;
- nor does production itself prove prosperity. Competition for
- the possession of a field may be carried so far as to reduce
- prices below prime cost; and it is clear, from the notorious
- facts of the West Indies—from the change of property, from the
- total unproductiveness of much property still—that the West
- India production of sugar has been carried on not only without
- replacing capital, but with a constant sinking of capital.' The
- 'free' Coolie and the 'free' negro of Jamaica have been urged
- to competition for the sale of sugar, and they seem likely to
- perish together; but compensation for this is found in the fact
- that 'free trade has, in reducing the prices of commodities
- for home consumption, enabled the labourer to devote a greater
- share of his income toward purchasing clothing and luxuries,
- and has increased the home trade to an enormous extent.' What
- effect this reduction of 'the prices of commodities for home
- consumption' has had upon the poor Coolies, may be judged from
- the following passage:—'I here beheld, for the first time, a
- class of beings of whom we have heard much, and for whom I have
- felt considerable interest. I refer to the Coolies imported by
- the British government to take the places of the _faineant_
- negroes, when the apprenticeship system was abolished. Those I
- saw were wandering about the streets, dressed rather tastefully,
- but always meanly, and usually carrying over their shoulder a
- sort of _chiffonnier's_ sack, in which they threw whatever refuse
- stuff they found in the streets or received as charity. Their
- figures are generally superb, and their Eastern costume, to which
- they adhere as far as their poverty will permit of any clothing,
- sets off their lithe and graceful forms to great advantage. Their
- faces are almost uniformly of the finest classic mould, and
- illuminated by pairs of those dark, swimming, and propitiatory
- eyes which exhaust the language of tenderness and passion at
- a glance. But they are the most inveterate mendicants on the
- island. It is said that those brought from the interior of India
- are faithful and efficient workmen, while those from Calcutta
- and its vicinity are good for nothing. Those that were prowling
- about the streets of Spanish Town and Kingston, I presume were
- of the latter class, for there is not a planter on the island,
- it is said, from whom it would be more difficult to get any work
- than from one of them. They subsist by begging altogether. They
- are not vicious nor intemperate, nor troublesome particularly,
- except as beggars. In that calling they have a pertinacity before
- which a Northern mendicant would grow pale. They will not be
- denied. They will stand perfectly still and look through a window
- from the street for a quarter of an hour, if not driven away,
- with their imploring eyes fixed upon you like a stricken deer,
- without saying a word or moving a muscle. They act as if it were
- no disgrace for them to beg, as if an indemnification which they
- are entitled to expect, for the outrage perpetrated upon them in
- bringing them from their distant homes to this strange island, is
- a daily supply of their few and cheap necessities, as they call
- for them. I confess that their begging did not leave upon my mind
- the impression produced by ordinary mendicancy. They do not look
- as if they ought to work. I never saw one smile; and though they
- showed no positive suffering, I never saw one look happy. Each
- face seemed to be constantly telling the unhappy story of their
- woes, and, like fragments of a broken mirror, each reflecting in
- all its hateful proportions the national outrage of which they
- are the victims.'"[104]
-
-English writers have frequently charged the citizens of the United
-States with being sordid, and caring more for pecuniary profit than
-honourable principle. No national measure of the great North American
-Republic, however, is so deeply tainted with avaricious motives as the
-colonial enactments and commercial schemes of Great Britain. Witness
-the government of British India, and the infamous traffic in opium
-forced upon the Chinese. In the conveyance of Coolies to the West
-Indies, and their treatment while toiling in those islands, we see the
-same base spirit displayed. All considerations of humanity have been
-sacrificed to calculations of profit. A people, naturally mild and
-intelligent, have been taken from their native land to distant islands,
-to take the place of the fierce and barbarous Africans, to whose
-civilization slavery seems almost necessary; and in their new land of
-bondage these poor creatures have been deprived of the inducements to
-steady exertion, and left to beg or starve.
-
-After the passage of the act abolishing negro slavery, an arrangement
-was sanctioned by the colonial government for the introduction of
-Indian labourers into the Mauritius, under a species of apprenticeship.
-The Coolies were engaged at five rupees, equal to ten shillings a
-month, for five years, with also one pound of rice, a quarter of a
-pound of dhall, or grain—a kind of pulse—and one ounce of butter, or
-ghee, daily. But for every day they were absent from their work they
-were to return two days to their masters, who retained one rupee per
-month to pay an advance made of six months' wages, and to defray the
-expense of their passage. If these men came into Port Louis to complain
-of their masters, they were lodged in the Bagne prison till their
-masters were summoned! Before the magistrates the masters had a great
-advantage over their servants. The latter being foreigners, but few of
-them could speak French, and they had no one to assist them in pleading
-their cause. They generally represented themselves as having been
-deceived with respect to the kind of labour to be required of them.[105]
-
-A large number of Indian convicts have been transported to the
-Mauritius, and their slavery is deplorable. Backhouse, who visited the
-island when these poor wretches were not so numerous as they now are,
-says—"Among the Indian convicts working on the road, we noticed one
-wearing chains; several had a slight single ring round the ankle. They
-are lodged in huts with flat roofs, or in other inferior dwellings near
-the road. There are about seven hundred of them in the island. What
-renders them peculiarly objects of sympathy is, that they were sent
-here for life, and no hope of any remission of sentence is held out to
-them for good conduct. Theirs is a hopeless bondage; and though it is
-said by some that they are not hard worked, yet they are generally,
-perhaps constantly, breaking stones and mending the roads, and under
-a tropical sun. There are among them persons who were so young when
-transported that, in their offences, they could only be looked on
-as the dupes of those who were older, and many of them bear good
-characters."
-
-The hopeless slavery of these convicts is a doom which displays, in
-a striking light, the characteristics of British philanthropy. Death
-would be preferable to such a punishment, in the estimation of many
-of the Hindoos; but the British authorities are determined to make
-the punishment pay! After the "eternal blazon" concerning the act of
-emancipating negroes, for which the pauperized labourers of Great
-Britain had to pay by their slavery, the colonial government created
-another system, attended with the misery and degradation of a people
-better fitted for freedom than the negroes. The civilized world is
-requested to look on and admire!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-SLAVERY IN BRITISH INDIA.
-
-
-The extensive, populous, and wealthy peninsula of Hindostan has
-suffered greatly from the crushing effects of the British slave system.
-From the foundation of the empire in India by Clive, conquest and
-extortion seem to have been the grand objects of the aristocratic
-government. There unscrupulous soldiers have fought, slaughtered,
-enslaved, and plundered. There younger sons, with rank, but without
-fortune, have filled their purses. There vast and magnificent tracts
-of country have been wasted with fire and sword, in punishment for
-the refusal of native princes to become slaves. There the fat of the
-land has been garnered up for the luxury of the conquerors, while
-famine has destroyed the people by thousands. There, indeed, has the
-British aristocracy displayed its most malignant propensities—rioting
-in robbery and bloodshed—setting all religion at defiance, while
-upholding the Christian standard—and earning to the full the continued
-execration of mankind.
-
-In a powerful work, called "The Aristocracy of England: a History for
-the People, by John Hampden, Jun.," a book we commend to the people of
-England, we have the following passage:—
-
- "From the hour that Clive and his coadjutors came into the
- discovery of the vast treasures of the native princes, whence
- he himself obtained, besides his jaghire of £30,000 per annum,
- about £300,000; and he and his fellows altogether, between
- 1759 and 1763, no less than £5,940,498, exclusive of this said
- jaghire, the cupidity of the aristocracy became excited to the
- highest degree; and from that period to the present, India has
- been one scene of flights of aristocratic locusts, of fighting,
- plundering, oppression, and extortion of the natives. We will not
- go into these things; they are fully and faithfully written in
- Mills's 'History of British India;' in Howitt's 'Colonization and
- Christianity;' and, above all, in the letters of the Honourable
- Frederick Shore, brother of Lord Teignmouth, a man who passed
- through all offices—from a clerk to that of a judge—and saw
- much of the system and working of things in many parts of India.
- He published his letters originally in the India papers, that
- any one on the spot might challenge their truth; and, since his
- death, they have been reprinted in England. The scene which
- that work opens up is the most extraordinary, and demands the
- attention of every lover of his country and his species. It fully
- accounts for the strange facts, that India is now drained of
- its wealth; that its public works, especially the tanks, which
- contributed by their waters to maintain its fertility, are fallen
- to decay; that one-third of the country is a jungle inhabited
- by tigers, who pay no taxes; that its people are reduced to the
- utmost wretchedness, and are often, when a crop fails, swept away
- by half a million at once by famine and its pendant, pestilence,
- as in 1770, and again in 1838-9. To such a degree is this
- reduction of the wealth and cultivation of India carried, that
- while others of our colonies pay taxes to the amount of a pound
- or thirty shillings per head, India pays only four shillings.
-
- "At the renewal of its charter in 1834, its income was about
- _twenty millions_, its debt about _forty millions_. Since then
- its income has gradually fallen to about _seventeen millions_,
- and its debt we hear now whispered to be about _seventy
- millions_. Such have been the effects of exhausted fields and
- physical energies on the one hand, and of wars, especially that
- of Afghanistan, on the other. It requires no conjurer, much less
- a very profound arithmetician, to perceive that at this rate we
- need be under no apprehension of Russia, for a very few years
- will take India out of our hands by mere financial force.
-
- "Our aristocratic government, through the Board of Control, keep
- up and exert a vast patronage in India. The patronage of the
- president of this board alone, independent of his salary of £5000
- a year, is about _twenty-one_ thousand pounds. But the whole
- aristocracy have an interest in keeping up wars in India, that
- their sons as officers, especially in these times of European
- peace, may find here both employment and promotion. This, then,
- the Company has to contend against; and few are they who are
- aware of the formidable nature of this power as it is exerted
- in this direction, and of the strange and unconstitutional
- legislative authority with which they have armed themselves for
- this purpose. How few are they who are aware that, while the
- East India Company has been blamed as the planners, authors,
- and movers of the fatal and atrocious invasion of Caboul,
- that the Directors of the Company only first, and to their
- great amazement, learned the outbreak of that war from the
- public Indian papers. So far from that war being one of their
- originating, it was most opposed to their present policy, and
- disastrous to their affairs. How then came this monstrous war
- about, and _who_ then did originate it? To explain this requires
- us to lay open a monstrous stretch of unconstitutional power
- on the part of our government—a monstrous stratagem for the
- maintenance of their aristocratic views in India, which it is
- wonderful could have escaped the notice and reprehension of the
- public. Let the reader mark well what follows.
-
- "In the last charter, granted in 1834, a clause was introduced,
- binding a secret committee of the East India Company, consisting
- of three persons only, the chairman, deputy chairman, and senior
- director, who are solemnly sworn to this work, to receive
- private despatches from the Board of Control, and without
- communicating them to a single individual besides themselves, to
- forward them to India, where the receivers are bound, _without
- question or appeal_, to enforce their immediate execution. By
- this inquisitorial system, this worse than Spanish or Venetian
- system of secret decrees, government has reserved to itself a
- direction of the affairs of India, freed from all constitutional
- or representative check, and reduced the India Company to a mere
- cat's-paw. By the sworn secrecy and implicit obedience of this
- mysterious triumvirate, the Company is made the unconscious
- instrument of measures most hostile to its own views, and most
- fatal to its best interests. It may at any hour become the
- medium of a secret order which may threaten the very destruction
- of its empire. Such was the case with the war of Caboul. The
- aristocratic government at home planned and ordered it; and the
- unconscious Company was made at once to carry out a scheme so
- atrocious, so wicked and unprincipled, as well as destructive
- to its plans of civil economy, and to bear also the infamy of
- it. Awaking, therefore, to the tremendous nature of the secret
- powers thus introduced into their machinery by government, the
- Company determined to exercise also a power happily intrusted to
- _them_. Hence the recall of Lord Ellenborough, who, in obedience
- to aristocratic views at home, was not only running headlong
- over all their plans of pacific policy, but with his armies
- and elephants was treading under foot their cotton and sugar
- plantations. Hence, on the other hand, the favour and support
- which this warlike lord finds with the great martial duke, and
- the home government."
-
-The policy of the European conquerors of India was fully illustrated
-during the gubernatorial term of Warren Hastings. Of his extortion the
-eloquent Macaulay says—
-
-
- "The principle which directed all his dealings with his
- neighbours is fully expressed by the old motto of one of the
- great predatory families of Teviotdale—'Thou shalt want ere
- I want,' He seems to have laid it down, as a fundamental
- proposition which could not be disputed, that when he had not
- as many lacs of rupees as the public service required, he was
- to take them from anybody who had. One thing, indeed, is to
- be said in excuse for him. The pressure applied to him by his
- employers at home was such as only the highest virtue could have
- withstood—such as left him no choice except to commit great
- wrongs, or to resign his high post, and with that post all his
- hopes of fortune and distinction. It is perfectly true, that the
- directors never enjoined or applauded any crime. Far from it.
- Whoever examines their letters at that time will find there many
- just and humane sentiments, many excellent precepts; in short, an
- admirable circle of political ethics. But every exhortation is
- modified or annulled by a demand for money. 'Govern leniently,
- and send more money; practise strict justice and moderation
- toward neighbouring powers, and send more money;' this is, in
- truth, the sum of almost all the instructions that Hastings ever
- received from home. Now these instructions, being interpreted,
- mean simply, 'Be the father and the oppressor of the people; be
- just and unjust, moderate and rapacious.' The directors dealt
- with India as the church, in the good old times, dealt with a
- heretic. They delivered the victim over to the executioners,
- with an earnest request that all possible tenderness might be
- shown. We by no means accuse or suspect those who framed these
- despatches of hypocrisy. It is probable that, writing fifteen
- thousand miles from the place where their orders were to be
- carried into effect, they never perceived the gross inconsistency
- of which they were guilty. But the inconsistency was at once
- manifest to their lieutenant at Calcutta, who, with an empty
- treasury, with an unpaid army, with his own salary often in
- arrear, with deficient crops, with government tenants daily
- running away, was called upon to remit home another half million
- without fail. Hastings saw that it was absolutely necessary for
- him to disregard either the moral discourses or the pecuniary
- requisitions of his employers. Being forced to disobey them in
- something, he had to consider what kind of disobedience they
- would most readily pardon; and he correctly judged that the
- safest course would be to neglect the sermons and to find the
- rupees."
-
-How were the rupees found? By selling provinces that had never belonged
-to the British dominions; by the destruction of the brave Rohillas
-of Rohilcund, in the support of the cruel tyrant, Surajah Dowlah,
-sovereign of Oude, of which terrible act Macaulay says—
-
- "Then the horrors of Indian war were let loose on the fair
- valleys and cities of Rohilcund; the whole country was in a
- blaze. More than a hundred thousand people fled from their
- homes to pestilential jungles, preferring famine and fever and
- the haunts of tigers to the tyranny of him to whom an English
- and a Christian government had, for shameful lucre, sold their
- substance and their blood, and the honour of their wives and
- daughters. Colonel Champion remonstrated with the Nabob Vizier,
- and sent strong representations to Fort William; but the governor
- had made no conditions as to the mode in which the war was to
- be carried on. He had troubled himself about nothing but his
- forty lacs; and, though he might disapprove of Surajah Dowlah's
- wanton barbarity, he did not think himself entitled to interfere,
- except by offering advice. This delicacy excites the admiration
- of the reverend biographer. 'Mr. Hastings,' he says, 'could not
- himself dictate to the Nabob, nor permit the commander of the
- Company's troops to dictate how the war was to be carried on.'
- No, to be sure. Mr. Hastings had only to put down by main force
- the brave struggles of innocent men fighting for their liberty.
- Their military resistance crushed, his duties ended; and he had
- then only to fold his arms and look on while their villages were
- burned, their children butchered, and their women violated."
-
-By such a course of action, Warren Hastings made the British empire in
-India pay. By such means did the aristocrats, of whom the governor was
-the tool, obtain the money which would enable them to live in luxury.
-
- "The servants of the Company obtained—not for their employers,
- but for themselves—a monopoly of almost the whole internal
- trade; they forced the natives to buy dear and sell cheap; they
- insulted with perfect impunity the tribunals, the police, and
- the fiscal authorities of the country; they covered with their
- protection a set of native dependants, who ranged through the
- provinces spreading desolation and terror wherever they appeared.
- Every servant of a British factor was armed with all the power
- of his master, and his master was armed with all the power of
- the Company. Enormous fortunes were thus rapidly accumulated at
- Calcutta, while thirty millions of human beings were reduced to
- the last extremity of wretchedness. They had been accustomed
- to live under tyranny, but never under tyranny like this; they
- found the little finger of the Company thicker than the loins
- of Surajah Dowlah. Under their old masters they had at least
- one resource; when the evil became insupportable, they rose and
- pulled down the government. But the English government was not
- to be so shaken off. That government, oppressive as the most
- oppressive form of barbarian despotism, was strong with all the
- strength of civilization; it resembled the government of evil
- genii rather than the government of human tyrants." * * *
-
- "The foreign lords of Bengal were naturally objects of hatred
- to all the neighbouring powers, and to all the haughty
- race presented a dauntless front; their armies, everywhere
- outnumbered, were everywhere victorious. A succession of
- commanders, formed in the school of Clive, still maintained
- the fame of their country. 'It must be acknowledged,' says
- the Mussulman historian of those times, 'that this nation's
- presence of mind, firmness of temper, and undaunted bravery are
- past all question. They join the most resolute courage to the
- most cautious prudence; nor have they their equal in the art of
- ranging themselves in battle array and fighting in order. If to
- so many military qualifications they knew how to join the arts of
- government—if they exerted as much ingenuity and solicitude in
- relieving the people of God as they do in whatever concerns their
- military affairs, no nation in the world would be preferable to
- them or worthier of command; but the people under their dominion
- groan everywhere, and are reduced to poverty and distress. O God!
- come to the assistance of thine afflicted servants, and deliver
- them from the oppressions they suffer.'"
-
-From the earliest times the "village system," with its almost
-patriarchal regulations, seems to have prevailed in Hindostan. Each
-village had its distinct organization, and over a certain number of
-villages, or a district, was an hereditary chief and an accountant,
-both possessing great local influence and authority, and certain
-estates.[106] The Hindoos were strongly attached to their native
-villages, and could only be forced to abandon them by the most constant
-oppressions. Dynasties might change and revolutions occur, but so
-long as each little community remained undisturbed, the Hindoos were
-contented. Mohammedan conquerors left this beautiful system, which
-had much more of genuine freedom than the British institutions at the
-present day, untouched. The English conquerors were not so merciful,
-although they were acquainted with Christianity. The destruction of
-local organizations and the centralization of authority, which is
-always attended with the increase of slavery,[107] have been the aims
-of English efforts. The principle that the government is the sole
-proprietor of the land, and therefore entitled to a large share of
-the produce, has been established, and slavery, to escape famine and
-misery, has become necessary to the Hindoos.
-
-Exhaustion was the result of the excessive taxation laid upon the
-Hindoos by the East India Company. As the government became stinted
-for revenue, Lord Cornwallis was instructed to make a permanent
-settlement, by means of which all the rights of village proprietors
-over a large portion of Bengal were sacrificed in favour of the
-Zemindars, or head men, who were thus at once constituted great landed
-proprietors—masters of a large number of poor tenants, with power to
-punish at discretion those who were not able to pay whatever rent was
-demanded.[108] From free communities, the villages were reduced to the
-condition of British tenants-at-will. The Zemindaree system was first
-applied to Bengal. In Madras another system, called the Ryotwar, was
-introduced. This struck a fatal blow at the local organizations, which
-were the sources of freedom and happiness among the Hindoos. Government
-assumed all the functions of an immediate landholder, and dealt with
-the individual cultivators as its own tenants, getting as much out of
-them as possible.
-
-The Zemindars are an unthrifty, rack-renting class, and take the
-uttermost farthing from the under-tenants. Oppressions and evictions
-are their constant employments; and since they have been constituted
-a landed aristocracy, they have fully acted out the character in the
-genuine British fashion.
-
-Another tenure, called the Patnee, has been established of late
-years, by some of the great Zemindars, with the aid of government
-enactments, and it is very common in Bengal. The great Zemindar,
-for a consideration, makes over a portion of his estate in fee to
-another, subject to a perpetual rent, payable through the collector,
-who receives it on behalf of the zemindar; and if it is not paid, the
-interests of the patneedar are sold by the collector. These, again,
-have sub-patneedars, and the system has become very much in vogue in
-certain districts. The parties are like the Irish middlemen, and the
-last screws the tenant to the uttermost.[109]
-
-During the British government of Bengal, wealth has been accumulated by
-a certain superior class, and population, cultivation, and the receipts
-from rent of land, have largely increased; but, as in England, the mass
-of the people are poor and degraded. In the rich provinces of Upper
-India, where the miserable landed system of the conquerors has been
-introduced, the results have been even more deplorable. Communities,
-once free, happy, and possessed of plenty, are now broken up, or
-subjected to such excessive taxation that their members are kept in
-poverty and slavery.
-
-Colonel Sleeman, in his "Rambles and Recollections of an Indian
-Official," records a conversation which he held with the head
-landholder of a village, organized under the Zemindar system. During
-the dialogue, some statements were made which are important for our
-purpose.
-
-The colonel congratulated himself that he had given satisfactory
-replies to the arguments of the Zemindar, and accounted naturally for
-the evils suffered by the villagers. The reader will, doubtless, form a
-different opinion:—
-
- "In the early part of November, after a heavy fall of rain, I
- was driving alone in my buggy from Garmuktesin on the Ganges,
- to Meerut. The roads were very bad, the stage a double one, and
- my horse became tired and unable to go on. I got out at a small
- village to give him a little rest and food; and sat down under
- the shade of one old tree upon the trunk of another that the
- storm had blown down, while my groom, the only servant I had with
- me, rubbed down and baited my horse. I called for some parched
- grain from the same shop which supplied my horse, and got a
- draught of good water, drawn from the well by an old woman, in a
- brass jug lent to me for the purpose by the shopkeeper.
-
- "While I sat contentedly and happily stripping my parched grain
- from its shell, and eating it grain by grain, the farmer, or head
- landholder of the village, a sturdy old Rajpoot, came up and sat
- himself, without any ceremony, down by my side, to have a little
- conversation. [To one of the dignitaries of the land, in whose
- presence the aristocracy are alone considered entitled to chairs,
- this easy familiarity seems at first strange and unaccountable;
- he is afraid that the man intends to offer him some indignity,
- or what is still worse, mistakes him for something less than a
- dignitary! The following dialogue took place:—]
-
- "'You are a Rajpoot, and a Zemindar?' (landholder.)
-
- "'Yes; I am the head landholder of this village.'
-
-
- "'Can you tell me how that village in the distance is elevated
- above the ground; is it from the debris of old villages, or from
- a rock underneath?'
-
- "'It is from the debris of old villages. That is the original
- seat of all the Rajpoots around; we all trace our descent from
- the founders of that village, who built and peopled it many
- centuries ago.'
-
- "'And you have gone on subdividing your inheritances here as
- elsewhere, no doubt, till you have hardly any of you any thing to
- eat?'
-
- "'True, we have hardly any of us enough to eat; but that is the
- fault of the government, that does not leave us enough—that
- takes from us as much when the season is bad as when it is good!'
-
- "'But your assessment has not been increased, has it?'
-
- "'No; we have concluded a settlement for twenty years upon the
- same footing as formerly.'
-
- "'And if the sky were to shower down upon you pearls and
- diamonds, instead of water, the government would never demand
- more from you than the rate fixed upon?'
-
- 'No.'
-
- "'Then why should you expect remissions in bad seasons?'
-
- "'It cannot be disputed that the _burkut_ (blessing from above)
- is less under you than it used to be formerly, and that the lands
- yield less from our labour.'
-
- "'True, my old friend, but do you know the reason why?'
-
- "'No.'
-
- "'Then I will tell you. Forty or fifty years ago, in what you
- call the times of the _burkut_, (blessing from above,) the
- cavalry of Seikh, free-booters from the Punjab, used to sweep
- over this fine plain, in which stands the said village from which
- you are all descended; and to massacre the whole population of
- some villages; and a certain portion of that of every other
- village; and the lands of those killed used to lie waste for want
- of cultivators. Is not this all true?'
-
- "'Yes, quite true.'
-
- "'And the fine groves which had been planted over this plain by
- your ancestors, as they separated from the great parent stock,
- and formed independent villages and hamlets for themselves, were
- all swept away and destroyed by the same hordes of free-booters,
- from whom your poor imbecile emperors, cooped up in yonder large
- city of Delhi, were utterly unable to defend you?'
-
- "'Quite true,' said the old man with a sigh. 'I remember when
- all this fine plain was as thickly studded with fine groves of
- mango-trees as Rohilcund, or any other part of India.'
-
- "'You know that the land requires rest from labour, as well as
- men and bullocks; and that if you go on sowing wheat, and other
- exhausting crops, it will go on yielding less and less returns,
- and at last not be worth the tilling?'
-
- "'Quite well.'
-
- "'Then why do you not give the land rest by leaving it longer
- fallow, or by a more frequent alternation of crops relieve it?'
-
- "'Because we have now increased so much, that we should not get
- enough to eat were we to leave it to fallow; and unless we tilled
- it with exhausting crops we should not get the means of paying
- our rents to government.'
-
- "'The Seikh hordes in former days prevented this; they killed off
- a certain portion of your families, and gave the land the _rest_
- which you now refuse it. When you had exhausted one part, you
- found another recovered by a long fallow, so that you had better
- returns; but now that we neither kill you, nor suffer you to be
- killed by others, you have brought all the cultivable lands into
- tillage; and under the old system of cropping to exhaustion, it
- is not surprising that they yield you less returns.'
-
- "By this time we had a crowd of people seated around us upon the
- ground, as I went on munching my parched grain and talking to the
- old patriarch. They all laughed at the old man at the conclusion
- of my last speech, and he confessed I was right.
-
- "'This is all true, sir, but still your government is not
- considerate; it goes on taking kingdom after kingdom and adding
- to its dominions, without diminishing the burden upon us its old
- subjects. Here you have had armies away taking Afghanistan, but
- we shall not have one rupee the less to pay.'
-
- "'True, my friend, nor would you demand a rupee less from those
- honest cultivators around us, if we were to leave you all your
- lands untaxed. You complain of the government—they complain of
- you. [Here the circle around us laughed at the old man again.]
- Nor would you subdivide the lands the less for having it rent
- free; on the contrary, it would be every generation subdivided
- the more, inasmuch as there would be more of local ties, and a
- greater disinclination on the part of the members of families to
- separate and seek service abroad.'
-
- "'True, sir, very true; that is, no doubt, a very great evil.'
-
- "'And you know it is not an evil produced by us, but one arising
- out of your own laws of inheritance. You have heard, no doubt,
- that with us the eldest son gets the whole of the land, and the
- younger sons all go out in search of service, with such share as
- they can get of the other property of their father?'
-
- "'Yes, sir; but where shall we get service—you have none to give
- us. I would serve to-morrow, if you would take me as a soldier,'
- said he, stroking his white whiskers.
-
- "The crowd laughed heartily, and some wag observed, 'that perhaps
- I should think him too old.'
-
- "'Well,' said the old man, smiling, 'the gentleman himself is
- not very young, and yet I dare say he is a good servant of his
- government.'
-
- "This was paying me off for making the people laugh at his
- expense. 'True, my old friend,' said I, 'but I began to serve
- when I was young, and have been long learning.'
-
- "'Very well,' said the old man; 'but I should be glad to serve
- the rest of my life upon a less salary than you got when you
- began to learn.'
-
- "'Well, my friend, you complain of our government; but you must
- acknowledge that we do all we can to protect you, though it is
- true that we are often acting in the dark.'
-
- "'Often, sir? you are always acting in the dark; you hardly any
- of you know any thing of what your revenue and police officers
- are doing; there is no justice or redress to be got without
- paying for it; and it is not often that those who pay can get it.'
-
- "'True, my old friend, that is bad all over the world. You cannot
- presume to ask any thing even from the Deity himself, without
- paying the priest who officiates in his temples; and if you
- should, you would none of you hope to get from your deity what
- you asked for.'
-
- "Here the crowd laughed again, and one of them said 'that there
- was certainly this to be said for our government, that the
- European gentlemen themselves never took bribes, whatever those
- under them might do.'
-
- "'You must not be too sure of that neither. Did not the Lal
- Beebee (red lady) get a bribe for soliciting the judge, her
- husband, to let go Ameer Sing, who had been confined in jail?'
-
- "'How did this take place?'
-
- "'About three years ago Ameer Sing was sentenced to imprisonment,
- and his friends spent a great deal of money in bribes to the
- native officers of the court, but all in vain. At last they were
- recommended to give a handsome present to the red lady. They did
- so, and Ameer Sing was released.'
-
- "'But did they give the present into the lady's own hand?'
-
- "'No, they gave it to one of her women.'
-
- "'And how do you know that she ever gave it to her mistress, or
- that her mistress ever heard of the transaction?'
-
- "'She might certainly have been acting without her mistress's
- knowledge; but the popular belief is, that Lal Beebee got the
- present.'
-
- "I then told them the story of the affair at Jubbulpore, when
- Mrs. Smith's name had been used for a similar purpose, and the
- people around us were highly amused; and the old man's opinion of
- the transaction evidently underwent a change.[110]
-
- "We became good friends, and the old man begged me to have my
- tents, which he supposed were coming up, pitched among them, that
- he might have an opportunity of showing that he was not a bad
- subject, though he grumbled against the government.
-
- "The next day, at Meerut, I got a visit from the chief native
- judge, whose son, a talented youth, is in my office. Among other
- things, I asked him whether it might not be possible to improve
- the character of the police by increasing the salaries of the
- officers, and mentioned my conversation with the landholder.
-
- "'Never, sir,' said the old gentleman; 'the man that now gets
- twenty-five rupees a month, is contented with making perhaps
- fifty or seventy-five more; and the people subject to his
- authority pay him accordingly. Give him a hundred, sir, and he
- will put a shawl over his shoulders, and the poor people will be
- obliged to pay him at a rate which will make up his income to
- four hundred. You will only alter his style of living, and make
- him a greater burden to the people; he will always take as long
- as he thinks he can with impunity.'
-
- "'But do you not think that when people see a man adequately paid
- by government, they will the more readily complain at any attempt
- at unauthorized exactions?'
-
- "'Not a bit, sir, as long as they see the same difficulties in
- the way of prosecuting them to conviction. In the administration
- of civil justice (the old gentleman is a civil judge) you may
- occasionally see your way, and understand what is doing; but in
- revenue and police you have never seen it in India, and never
- will, I think. The officers you employ will all add to their
- incomes by unauthorized means; and the lower their incomes, the
- less their pretensions, and the less the populace have to pay.'"
-
-In the "History of the Possessions of the Honourable East India
-Company," by R. Montgomery Martin, F. S. S., the following statements
-occur:—
-
- "The following estimate has been made of the population of the
- allied and independent states:—Hydrabad, 10,000,000; Oude,
- 6,000,000; Nagpoor, 3,000,000; Mysore, 3,000,000; Sattara,
- 1,500,000; Gurckwar, 2,000,000; Travancore and Cochin, 1,000,000;
- Rajpootana, and various minor principalities, 16,500,000;
- Sciudias territories, 4,000,000; the Seiks, 3,000,000; Nepál,
- 2,000,000; Cashmere, etc., 1,000,000; Scinde, 1,000,000; total,
- 51,000,000. This, of course, is but a rough estimate by Hamilton,
- (Slavery in British India.) For the last forty years the East
- India Company's government have been gradually, but safely,
- abolishing slavery throughout their dominions; they began in
- 1789 with putting down the maritime traffic, by prosecuting any
- person caught in exporting or importing slaves by sea, long
- before the British government abolished that infernal commerce
- in the Western world, and they have ever since sedulously sought
- the final extinction of that domestic servitude which had long
- existed throughout the East, as recognised by the Hindoo and
- Mohammedan law. In their despatches of 1798, it was termed
- '_an inhuman commerce and cruel traffic_.' French, Dutch, or
- Danish subjects captured within the limit of their dominions in
- the act of purchasing or conveying slaves were imprisoned and
- heavily fined, and every encouragement was given to their civil
- and military servants to aid in protecting the first rights of
- humanity.
-
- "Mr. Robertson,[111] in reference to Cawnpore,
- observes:—'Domestic slavery exists; but of an agricultural slave
- I do not recollect a single instance. When I speak of _domestic_
- slavery, I mean that _status_ which I must call slavery for want
- of any more accurate designation. It does not, however, resemble
- that which is understood in Europe to be slavery; it is the
- mildest species of servitude. The domestic slaves are certain
- persons purchased in times of scarcity; children purchased
- from their parents; they grow up in the family, and are almost
- entirely employed in domestic offices in the house; not liable to
- be resold.
-
- "'There is a certain species of slavery in South Bahar, where
- a man mortgages his labour for a certain sum of money; and this
- species of slavery exists also in Arracan and Ava. It is for his
- life, or until he shall pay the sum, that he is obliged to labour
- for the person who lends him the money; and if he can repay the
- sum, he emancipates himself.
-
- "'Masters have no power of punishment recognised by our laws.
- Whatever may be the provision of the Mohammedan or Hindoo
- codes to that effect, it is a dead letter, for we would not
- recognise it. The master doubtless may sometimes inflict
- domestic punishment; but if he does, the slave rarely thinks
- of complaining of it. Were he to do so his complaint would be
- received.' This, in fact, is the palladium of liberty in England.
-
- "In Malabar, according to the evidence of Mr. Baber, slavery, as
- mentioned by Mr. Robertson, also exists, and perhaps the same
- is the case in Guzerat and to the north; but the wonder is, not
- that such is the case, but that it is so partial in extent, and
- fortunately so bad in character, approximating indeed so much
- toward the feudal state as to be almost beyond the reach as well
- as the necessity of laws which at present would be practically
- inoperative. The fact, that of 100,000,000 British inhabitants,
- [or allowing five to a family, 20,000,000 families,] upward of
- 16,000,000 are landed proprietors, shows to what a confined
- extent even domestic slavery exists. A commission has been
- appointed by the new charter to inquire into this important but
- delicate subject.'"
-
-We have quoted this passage from a writer who is a determined advocate
-of every thing _British_, whether it be good or had, in order to show
-by his own admission that chattel slavery, that is the precise form
-of slavery of which the British express such a holy horror, exists in
-British India under the sanction of British laws. Nor does it exist to
-a small extent only, as he would have us believe. It has always existed
-there, and must necessarily be on the increase, from the very cause
-which he points out, viz. famine. No country in the world, thanks to
-British oppression, is so frequently and so extensively visited by
-famine as India; and as the natives can escape in many instances from
-starving to death by selling themselves, and can save their children
-by selling them into slavery, we can readily form an estimate of the
-great extent to which this takes place in cases of famine, where the
-people are perishing by thousands and tens of thousands. As to the
-statement that the government of the East India Company have been
-endeavouring to abolish this species of slavery, it proves any thing
-rather than a desire to benefit the natives of India. Chattel slaves
-are not desired by British subjects because the ownership of them
-involves the necessity of supporting them in sickness and old age. The
-kind of slavery which the British have imposed on the great mass of
-their East Indian subjects is infinitely more oppressive and inhuman
-than chattel slavery. Indeed it would not at all suit the views of
-the British aristocracy to have chattel slavery become so fashionable
-in India as to interfere with their own cherished system of political
-slavery, which is so extensively and successfully practised in England,
-Scotland, Ireland, and the West and East Indies. The money required for
-the support of chattel slaves could not be spared by the aristocratic
-governments in the colonies. The object is to take the fruits of the
-labourer's toil without providing for him at all. When labourers are
-part of a master's capital, the better he provides for them the more
-they are worth. When they are not property, the character of their
-subsistence is of no importance; but they must yield the greater part
-of the results of their toil.
-
-The "salt laws" of India are outrageously oppressive. An account of
-their operation will give the reader a taste of the character of the
-legislation to which the British have subjected conquered Hindoos. Such
-an account we find in a recent number of "Household Words," which Lord
-Shaftesbury and his associates in luxury and philanthropy should read
-more frequently than we can suppose they do:—
-
- "Salt, in India, is a government monopoly. It is partially
- imported, and partially manufactured in government factories.
- These factories are situated in dreary marshes—the workers
- obtaining certain equivocal privileges, on condition of following
- their occupation in these pestiferous regions, where hundreds of
- these wretched people fall, annually, victims to the plague or
- the floods.
-
- "The salt consumed in India must be purchased through the
- government, at a duty of upward of two pounds per ton, making the
- price to the consumer about eight pence per pound. In England,
- salt may be purchased by retail, three pounds, or wholesale, five
- pounds for one penny; while in India, upward of thirty millions
- of persons, whose average incomes do not amount to above three
- shillings per week, are compelled to expend one-fourth of that
- pittance in salt for themselves and families.
-
- "It may naturally be inferred, that, with such a heavy duty upon
- this important necessary of life, that underhand measures are
- adopted by the poor natives for supplying themselves. We shall
- see, however, by the following severe regulations, that the
- experiment is too hazardous to be often attempted. Throughout
- the whole country there are numerous 'salt chokies,' or police
- stations, the superintendents of which are invested with powers
- of startling and extraordinary magnitude.
-
- "When information is lodged with such superintendent that salt is
- stored in any place without a '_ruwana_,' or permit, he proceeds
- to collect particulars of the description of the article, the
- quantity stated to be stored, and the name of the owner of the
- store. If the quantity stated to be stored exceeds seventy
- pounds, he proceeds with a body of police to make the seizure.
- If the door is not opened to him at once, he is invested with
- full power to break it open; and if the police-officers exhibit
- the least backwardness in assisting, or show any sympathy with
- the unfortunate owner, they are liable to be heavily fined. The
- owner of the salt, with all persons found upon the premises,
- are immediately apprehended, and are liable to six months'
- imprisonment for the first offence, twelve for the second, and
- eighteen months for the third; so that if a poor Indian was to
- see a shower of salt in his garden, (there _are_ showers of
- salt sometimes,) and to attempt to take advantage of it without
- paying duty, he would become liable to this heavy punishment.
- The superintendent of police is also empowered to detain and
- search trading vessels, and if salt be found on board without
- a permit, the whole of the crew may be apprehended and tried
- for the offence. Any person erecting a distilling apparatus in
- his own house, merely to distil enough sea-water for the use
- of his household, is liable to such a fine as may ruin him.
- In this case, direct proof is not required, but inferred from
- circumstances at the discretion of the judge.
-
- "If a person wishes to erect a factory upon his own estate,
- he must first give notice to the collector of revenue of all
- the particulars relative thereto, failing which, the collector
- may order all the works to be destroyed. Having given notice,
- officers are immediately quartered upon the premises, who
- have access to all parts thereof, for fear the company should
- be defrauded of the smallest amount of duty. When duty _is_
- paid upon any portion, the collector, upon giving a receipt,
- specifies the name and residence of the person to whom it is to
- be delivered, to whom it _must_ be delivered within a stated
- period, or become liable to fresh duty. To wind up, and make
- assurance doubly sure, the police may seize and detain any load
- or package which may pass the stations, till they are satisfied
- such load or package does not contain contraband salt.
-
- "Such are the salt laws of India; such the monopoly by which
- a revenue of three millions sterling is raised; and such the
- system which, in these days of progress and improvement, acts as
- an incubus upon the energies, the mental resources, and social
- advancement of the immense population of India.
-
- "Political economists of all shades of opinion—men who have well
- studied the subject—deliberately assert that nothing would tend
- so much toward the improvement of that country, and to a more
- complete development of its vast natural resources, than the
- abolition of these laws; and we can only hope, without blaming
- any one, that at no distant day a more enlightened policy will
- pervade the councils of the East India Company, and that the poor
- Hindoo will be emancipated from the thraldom of these odious
- enactments.
-
- "But apart from every other consideration, there is one,
- in connection with the Indian salt-tax, which touches the
- domestic happiness and vital interest of every inhabitant in
- Great Britain. It is decided, by incontrovertible medical
- testimony, that cholera (whose ravages every individual among
- us knows something, alas! too well about) is in a great measure
- engendered, and its progress facilitated, by the prohibitory
- duties on salt in India, the very cradle of the pestilence. Our
- precautionary measures to turn aside the plague from our doors,
- appear to be somewhat ridiculous, while the plague itself is
- suffered to exist, when it might be destroyed—its existence
- being tolerated only to administer to the pecuniary advantage
- of a certain small class of the community. Let the medical men
- of this country look to it. Let the people of this country
- generally look to it; for there is matter for grave and solemn
- consideration, both nationally and individually, in the Indian
- salt-tax."
-
-Yes, the salt-tax is very oppressive; but it _pays_ those who
-authorized its assessment, and that is sufficient for them. When they
-discover some means of obtaining its equivalent—some oppression quite
-as cruel but not so obvious—we may expect to hear of the abolition of
-the odious salt monopoly.
-
-Famines (always frightfully destructive in India) have become
-more numerous than ever, under the blighting rule of the British
-aristocrats. Vast tracts of country, once the support of busy
-thousands, have been depopulated by these dreadful visitations.
-
- "The soil seems to lie under a curse. Instead of yielding
- abundance for the wants of its own population and the inhabitants
- of other regions, it does not keep in existence its own children.
- It becomes the burying-place of millions who die upon its bosom
- crying for bread. In proof of this, turn your eyes backward upon
- the scenes of the past year. Go with me into the North-west
- provinces of the Bengal presidency, and I will show you the
- bleaching skeletons of five hundred thousand human beings, who
- perished of hunger in the space of a few short months. Yes,
- died of hunger, in what has been justly called the granary of
- the world. Bear with me, if I speak of the scenes which were
- exhibited during the prevalence of this famine. The air for miles
- was poisoned by the effluvia emitted from the putrefying bodies
- of the dead. The rivers were choked with the corpses thrown
- into their channels. Mothers cast their little ones beneath the
- rolling waves, because they would not see them draw their last
- gasp and feel them stiffen in their arms. The English in the
- cities were prevented from taking their customary evening drives.
- Jackals and vultures approached, and fastened upon the bodies
- of men, women, and children before life was extinct. Madness,
- disease, despair stalked abroad, and no human power present to
- arrest their progress. It was the carnival of death. And this
- occurred in British India—in the reign of Victoria the First.
- Nor was the event extraordinary and unforeseen. Far from it:
- 1835-36 witnessed a famine in the Northern provinces; 1833 beheld
- one to the eastward; 1822-23 saw one in the Deccan."
-
-The above extract from one of George Thompson's "Lectures on India,"
-conveys an idea of the horrors of a famine in that country. What then
-must be the guilt of that government that adopts such measures as
-tend to increase the frequency and swell the horror of these scenes!
-By draining the resources of the people, and dooming them to the most
-pinching poverty, the British conquerors have greatly increased the
-dangers of the visitations of famine, and opened to it a wide field for
-destruction. The poor Hindoos may be said to live face to face with
-starvation. The following account of the famine of 1833 is given by
-Colonel Sleeman, in his "Rambles and Recollections:"—
-
- "During the famine of 1833, as on all similar occasions, grain
- of every kind, attracted by high prices, flowed up in large
- streams from this favoured province (Malwa) toward Bundelcund;
- and the population of Bundelcund, as usual in such times of
- dearth and scarcity, flowed off toward Malwa against the stream
- of supply, under the assurance that the nearer they got to the
- source the greater would be their chance of employment and
- subsistence. Every village had its numbers of the dead and the
- dying; and the roads were all strewed with them; but they were
- mostly concentrated upon the great towns, and civil and military
- stations, where subscriptions were open for their support by
- both the European and native communities. The funds arising from
- these subscriptions lasted till the rain had fairly set in, when
- all able-bodied persons could easily find employment in tillage
- among the agricultural communities of the villages around.
- After the rains have fairly set in, the _sick_ and _helpless_
- only should be kept concentrated upon large towns and stations,
- where little or no employment is to be found; for the oldest
- and youngest of those who are able to work can then easily find
- employment in weeding the cotton, rice, sugar-cane, and other
- fields under autumn crops, and in preparing the land for the
- reception of the wheat, grain, and other spring seeds; and get
- advances from the farmers, agricultural capitalists, and other
- members of the village communities, who are all glad to share
- their superfluities with the distressed, and to pay liberally for
- the little service they are able to give in return.
-
- "At large places, where the greater numbers are concentrated, the
- scene becomes exceedingly distressing, for in spite of the best
- dispositions and greatest efforts on the part of government and
- its officers, and the European and native communities, thousands
- commonly die of starvation. At Saugor, mothers, as they lay in
- the streets unable to walk, were seen holding up their infants,
- and imploring the passing stranger to take them in slavery,
- that they might at least live—hundreds were seen creeping into
- gardens, courtyards, and old ruins, concealing themselves under
- shrubs, grass, mats, or straw, where they might die quietly,
- without having their bodies torn by birds and beasts before the
- breath had left them! Respectable families, who left home in
- search of the favoured land of Malwa, while yet a little property
- remained, finding all exhausted, took opium rather than beg, and
- husband, wife, and children died in each other's arms! Still more
- of such families lingered on in hope until all had been expended;
- then shut their doors, took poison, and died all together,
- rather than expose their misery, and submit to the degradation
- of begging. All these things I have myself known and seen; and
- in the midst of these and a hundred other harrowing scenes which
- present themselves on such occasions, the European cannot fail to
- remark the patient resignation with which the poor people submit
- to their fate; and the absence of almost all those revolting
- acts which have characterized the famines of which he has read
- in other countries—such as the living feeding on the dead,
- and mothers devouring their own children. No such things are
- witnessed in Indian famines; here all who suffer attribute the
- disaster to its real cause, the want of rain in due season; and
- indulge in no feelings of hatred against their rulers, superiors,
- or more fortunate equals in society, who happen to live beyond
- the influence of such calamities. They gratefully receive the
- superfluities which the more favoured are always found ready to
- share with the afflicted in India; and though their sufferings
- often subdue the strongest of all pride—the pride of caste,
- they rarely ever drive people to acts of violence. The stream of
- emigration, guided as it always is by that of the agricultural
- produce flowing in from the more favoured countries, must
- necessarily concentrate upon the communities along the line it
- takes a greater number of people than they have the means of
- relieving, however benevolent their dispositions; and I must say,
- that I have never either seen or read of a nobler spirit than
- seems to animate all classes of these communities in India on
- such distressing occasions."
-
-The same writer has some judicious general remarks upon the causes of
-famine in India, which are worthy of quotation. We have only to add,
-that whatever may be found in the climate and character of the country
-that expose the people to the frequency of want, the conquerors have
-done their best to aggravate natural evils:—
-
- "In India, unfavourable seasons produce much more disastrous
- consequences than in Europe. In England, not more than one-fourth
- of the population derive their incomes from the cultivation of
- the land around them. Three-fourths of the people have incomes,
- independent of the annual returns from those lands; and with
- these incomes they can purchase agricultural produce from other
- lands when the crops upon them fail. The farmers, who form so
- large a portion of the fourth class, have stock equal in value
- to _four times the amount of the annual rent of their lands_.
- They have also a great variety of crops; and it is very rare
- that more than one or two of them fail, or are considerably
- affected, the same season. If they fail in one district or
- province, the deficiency is very easily supplied to people who
- have equivalents to give for the produce of another. The sea,
- navigable rivers, fine roads, all are open and ready at all times
- for the transport of the super-abundance of one quarter to supply
- the deficiencies of another. In India the reverse of all this
- is unhappily everywhere to be found; more than three-fourths of
- the whole population are engaged in the cultivation of the land,
- and depend upon its annual returns for subsistence. The farmers
- and cultivators have none of them stock equal in value to more
- than _half the amount of the annual rents of their lands_. They
- have a great variety of crops; but all are exposed to the same
- accidents, and commonly fail at the same time. The autumn crops
- are sown in June and July, and ripen in October and November;
- and if seasonable showers do not fall in July, August, and
- September, all fail. The spring crops are sown in October and
- November, and ripen in March; and if seasonable showers do not
- happen to fall during December or January, all, save what are
- artificially irrigated, fail. If they fail in one district or
- province, the people have few equivalents to offer for a supply
- of land produce from any other. Their roads are scarcely anywhere
- passable for wheeled carriages at _any season_, and nowhere _at
- all seasons_—they have nowhere a navigable canal, and only in
- one line a navigable river. Their land produce is conveyed upon
- the backs of bullocks, that move at the rate of six or eight
- miles a day, and add one hundred per cent. to the cost for every
- hundred miles they carry it in the best seasons, and more than
- two hundred in the worst. What in Europe is felt merely as a
- _dearth_, becomes in India, under all these disadvantages, a
- _scarcity_; and what is there a _scarcity_ becomes here a famine."
-
-Another illustration of the truth that poverty is the source of crime
-and depravity is found in India. Statistics and the evidence of recent
-travellers show that the amount of vice in the different provinces is
-just in proportion to the length of time they have been under British
-rule. No stronger proof of the iniquity of the government—of its
-poisonous tendencies as well as positive injustice—could be adduced.
-
-The cultivation and exportation of the pernicious drug, opium, which
-destroys hundreds of thousands of lives annually, have latterly been
-prominent objects of the East Indian government. The best tracts
-of land in India were chosen for the cultivation of the poppy. The
-people were told that they must either raise this plant, make opium,
-or give up their land. Furthermore, those who produced the drug were
-compelled to sell it to the Company. In the Bengal Presidency, the
-monopoly of the government is complete. It has its establishment for
-the manufacture of the drug. There are two great agencies at Ghazeepore
-and Patna, for the Benares and Bahar provinces. Each opium agent has
-several deputies in different districts, and a native establishment.
-They enter into contracts with the cultivator for the supply of opium
-at a rate fixed to suit the demand. The land-revenue authorities do
-not interfere, except to prevent cultivation without permission. The
-land cultivated is measured, and all the produce must be sold to the
-government. At the head agency the opium is packed in chests and sealed
-with the Company's seal.[112]
-
-The imperial government of China, seeing that the traffic in opium was
-sowing misery and death among its subjects, prohibited the introduction
-of the drug within the empire in 1839. But the British had a vast
-amount of capital at stake, and the profits of the trade were too
-great to be relinquished for any considerations of humanity. War was
-declared; thousands of Chinese were slaughtered, and the imperial
-government forced to permit the destructive traffic on a more extensive
-scale than ever, and to pay $2,000,000 besides for daring to protest
-against it!
-
-The annual revenue now realized from the opium traffic amounts to
-£3,500,000. It is estimated that about 400,000 Chinese perish every
-year in consequence of using the destructive drug, while the amount
-of individual and social misery proceeding from the same cause is
-appalling to every humane heart. Among the people of India who have
-been forced into the cultivation and manufacture of opium, the use of
-it has greatly increased under the fostering care of the government.
-The Company seems to be aware that a people enervated by excessive
-indulgence will make little effort to throw off the chains of slavery.
-Keep the Hindoo drunk with opium and he will not rebel.
-
-The effects of this drug upon the consumer are thus described by a
-distinguished Chinese scholar:—"It exhausts the animal spirits,
-impedes the regular performance of business, wastes the flesh and
-blood, dissipates every kind of property, renders the person
-ill-favoured, promotes obscenity, discloses secrets, violates the laws,
-attacks the vitals, and destroys life." This statement is confirmed by
-other natives, and also by foreign residents; and it is asserted that,
-as a general rule, a person does not live more than ten years after
-becoming addicted to the use of this drug.
-
-The recent Burmese war had for one of its objects the opening of
-a road to the interior of China, for the purpose of extending the
-opium trade. And for such an object thousands of brave Burmese were
-slaughtered, fertile and beautiful regions desolated, and others
-subjected to the peculiar slave-system of the East India Company. The
-extension of British dominion and the accumulation of wealth in British
-hands, instead of the spread of Christianity and the development of
-civilization, mark all the measures of the Company.
-
-William Howitt, one of the ablest as well as the most democratic
-writers of England, thus confirms the statements made above:—
-
- "The East India Company exists by monopolies of the land, of
- opium, and of salt. By their narrow, greedy, and purblind
- management of these resources, they have contrived to reduce
- that once affluent country to the uttermost depths of poverty
- and pauperism. The people starve and perish in famine every
- now and then by half a million at a time. One-third of that
- superb peninsula is reduced to waste and jungle. While other
- colonies pay from twenty to thirty shillings per head of revenue,
- India yields only four shillings per head. The income of the
- government at the last renewal of the charter was _twenty
- millions_; it is now reduced to about _seventeen millions_; and
- even to raise this, they have been obliged to double the tax
- on salt. The debt was _forty millions_; it is now said to be
- augmented by constant war, and the payment of the dividends,
- which, whatever the real proceeds, are always kept up to
- the usual height, to _seventy millions_. This is a state of
- things which cannot last. It is a grand march toward financial
- inanition. It threatens, if not arrested by the voice of the
- British people, the certain and no very distant loss of India.
-
- "We have some glimpses of the treatment of the people in the
- collection of the land-tax, as it is called, but really the rent.
- The government claims not the mere right of governing, but, as
- conquerors, the fee-simple of the land. Over the greater part of
- India there are no real freeholders. The land is the Company's,
- and they collect, not a tax, but a rent. They have their
- collectors all over India, who go and say as the crops stand, 'We
- shall take so much of this.' It is seldom less than one-half—it
- is more commonly sixty, seventy, and eighty per cent! This is
- killing the goose to come at the golden egg. It drives the people
- to despair; they run away and leave the land to become jungle;
- they perish by famine in thousands and tens of thousands.
-
- "This is why no capitalists dare to settle and grow for us
- cotton, or manufacture for us sugar. There is no security—no
- fixity of taxation. It is one wholesale system of arbitrary
- plunder, such as none but a conquered country in the first
- violence of victorious license ever was subjected to. But this
- system has here continued more than a generation; the country is
- reduced by it to a fatal condition—the only wonder is that we
- yet retain it at all.
-
- "The same system is pursued in the opium monopoly. The finest
- lands are taken for the cultivation of the poppy; the government
- give the natives what they please for the opium, often about as
- many shillings as they get paid for it guineas per pound, and
- ship it off to curse China with it. 'In India,' says a writer
- in the Chinese Repository, 'the extent of territory occupied
- with the poppy, and the amount of population engaged in its
- cultivation and the preparation of opium, are far greater than
- in any other part of the world.'
-
- "Turkey is said to produce only 2000 chests of opium annually;
- India produces 40,000 of 134 lbs. each, and yielding a revenue of
- about £4,000,000 sterling.
-
- "But perhaps worse than all is the salt monopoly. It is well
- known that the people of India are a vegetable diet people.
- Boiled rice is their chief food, and salt is an absolute
- necessary of life. With a vegetable diet in that hot climate,
- without plenty of salt, putrid diseases and rapid mortality are
- inevitable. Nature, or Providence, has therefore given salt
- in abundance. The sea throws it up already crystallized in
- many places; in others it is prepared by evaporation; but the
- Company steps in and imposes _two hundred per cent._ on this
- indispensable article, and guards it by such penalties that the
- native dare not stoop to gather it when it lies at his feet. The
- consequence is that mortality prevails, to a terrific extent
- often, among the population. Officers of government are employed
- to destroy the salt naturally formed; and government determines
- how much salt shall be annually consumed.
-
- "Now, let the people of England mark one thing. _The cholera
- originates in the East._ It has visited us once, and is on its
- march once more toward us. We have heard through the newspapers
- of its arrival in Syria, in Turkey, in Russia, at Vienna. In a
- few months it will probably be again among us.
-
- "_Has any one yet imagined that this scourge may possibly be the
- instrument of Divine retribution for our crimes and cruelties?_
- Has any one imagined that we have any thing to do with the
- creation of this terrible pestilence? Yet there is little, there
- is scarcely the least doubt, that this awful instrument of death
- is occasioned by this very monopoly of salt—that it is the
- direct work of the four-and-twenty men in Leadenhall-street.
- The cholera is found to arise in the very centre of India.
- It commences in the midst of this swarming population, which
- subsists on vegetables, and which is deprived by the British
- government of the necessary salt! In that hot climate it acquires
- a deadly strength—thousands perish by it as by the stroke of
- lightning, and it hence radiates over the globe, travelling at
- the speed of a horse in full gallop. Thus it is that God visits
- our deeds upon our heads.
-
- "Such is a brief glance at the mal-administration, the abuse,
- and the murderous treatment of India, permitted by great and
- Christian England to a knot of mere money-making traders. We
- commit the lives and happiness of one hundred and fifty millions
- of souls—the well-being, and probably the chance of retention,
- of one of the finest countries in the world, and the comfort and
- prosperity of every human creature in Great Britain, to the hands
- of those who are only, from day to day, grasping at the vitals
- of this glorious Eastern region to increase their dividends.
- This is bad enough, but this is not all. As if we had given them
- a charter in the most effectual manner to damage our dominions
- and blast all our prospects of trade, we have allowed these
- four-and-twenty men of Leadenhall-street not only to cripple
- India, but to exasperate and, as far as possible, close China
- against us. Two millions of people in India and three millions of
- people in China—all waiting for our manufactures, all capable
- of sending us the comforts and necessaries that we need—it
- would seem that to us, a nation especially devoted to trade, as
- if Providence had opened all the gorgeous and populous East to
- employ and to enrich us. One would have thought that every care
- and anxiety would have been aroused to put ourselves on the best
- footing with this swarming region. It has been the last thing
- thought of.
-
- "The men of Leadenhall-street have been permitted, after having
- paralyzed India, to send to China not the articles that the
- Chinese wanted, but the very thing of all others that its
- authorities abhorred—that is, opium.
-
- "It is well known with what assiduity these traders for years
- thrust this deadly drug into the ports of China; or it may be
- known from 'Medhurst's China,' from 'Thelwall's Iniquities of
- the Opium Trade,' from 'Montgomery Martin's Opium in China,'
- and various other works. It is well known what horrors, crimes,
- ruin of families, and destruction of individuals the rage of
- opium-smoking introduced among the millions of the Celestial
- Empire. Every horror, every species of reckless desperation,
- social depravity, and sensual crime, spread from the practice
- and overran China as a plague. The rulers attempted to stop the
- evil by every means in their power. They enacted the severest
- punishments for the sale of it. These did not avail. They
- augmented the punishment to death. Without a stop to it the whole
- framework of society threatened to go to pieces. 'Opium,' says
- the Imperial edict itself, 'coming from the distant regions of
- barbarians, has pervaded the country with its baneful influence.'
- The opium-smoker would steal, sell his property, his children,
- the mother of his children, and finally commit murder for it. The
- most ghastly spectacles were everywhere seen; instead of healthy
- and happy men, the most repulsive scenes. 'I visited one of the
- opium-houses,' said an individual quoted by Sir Robert Inglis,
- in the House of Commons, in 1843, 'and shall I tell you what I
- saw in this antechamber of hell? I thought it impossible to find
- anything worse than the results of drinking ardent spirits; but
- I have succeeded in finding something far worse. I saw Malays,
- Chinese, men and women, old and young, in one mass, in one common
- herd, wallowing in their filth, beastly, sensual, devilish, and
- this under the eyes of a Christian government.'
-
- "They were these abominations and horrors that the Emperor of
- China determined to arrest. They were these which our East India
- Company determined to perpetuate for this base gain. When the
- emperor was asked to license the sale of opium, as he could not
- effect its exclusion, and thus make a profit of it, what was his
- reply? '_It is true I cannot prevent the introduction of the
- flowing poison. Gain-seeking and corrupt men will, for profit
- and sensuality, defeat my wishes, but nothing will induce me to
- derive a benefit from the vice and misery of my people._'
-
- "These were the sentiments of the Chinese monarch; what was the
- conduct of the so-called Christian Englishmen? They determined to
- go on poisoning and demoralizing China, till they provoked the
- government to war, and then massacred the people to compel the
- continuance of the sale of opium."
-
-Howitt evidently has as ardent a sympathy for those who have
-suffered from the tyranny of British rule as Edmund Burke himself.
-The wholesale degradation of the Hindoos, which has resulted from
-the measures of the East India Company, calls loudly indeed for
-the denunciations of indignant humanity. The crime must have its
-punishment. The ill-gotten gains of the Company should be seized to
-carry out an ameliorating policy, and all concerned in enforcing the
-system of oppression should be taught that justice is not to be wounded
-with impunity.
-
-The burdens imposed upon the Hindoos are precisely of the character and
-extent of those that have reduced Ireland to poverty and her people to
-slavery. Besides the enormous rents, which are sufficient of themselves
-to dishearten the tillers of the soil, the British authorities seem to
-have exhausted invention in devising taxes. So dear a price to live
-was never paid by any people except the Irish. What remains to the
-cultivator when the rent of the land and almost forty different taxes
-are paid?
-
-Those Hindoos who wish to employ capital or labour in any other way
-than in cultivation of land are deterred by the formidable array
-of taxation. The chief taxes are styled the Veesabuddy, or tax on
-merchants, traders, and shopkeepers; the Mohturfa, or tax on weavers,
-carpenters, stonecutters, and other mechanical trades; and the
-Bazeebab, consisting of smaller taxes annually rented out to the
-highest bidder. The proprietor of the Bazeebab is thus constituted a
-petty chieftain, with power to exact fees at marriages and religious
-ceremonies; to inquire into and fine the misconduct of females in
-families, and other misdemeanours—in fact, petty tyrants, who
-can at all times allege engagements to the government to justify
-extortion.[113] These proprietors are the worst kind of slaveholders.
-
-The mode of settling the Mohturfa on looms is remarkable for the
-precision of its exaction. Every circumstance of the weaver's family
-is considered; the number of days which he devotes to his loom, the
-number of his children, the assistance which he receives from them, and
-the number and quality of the pieces which he can produce in a year;
-so that, let him exert himself as he will, his industry will always be
-taxed to the highest degree.[114] This method is so detailed that the
-servants of the government cannot enter into it, and the assessment
-of the tax is therefore left to the heads of the villages. It is
-impossible for a weaver to know what he is to pay to the government for
-being allowed to carry on his business till the yearly demand is made.
-If he has worked hard, and turned out one or two pieces of cloth more
-than he did the year before, his tax is increased. The more industrious
-he is the more he is forced to pay.
-
-The tax-gatherers are thorough inquisitors. According to Rikards,
-upward of seventy different kinds of buildings—the houses, shops,
-or warehouses of different castes and professions—were ordered to be
-entered into the survey accounts; besides the following implements of
-professions, which were usually assessed to the public revenue, viz.:
-"Oil-mills, iron manufactory, toddy-drawer's stills, potter's kiln,
-washerman's stone, goldsmith's tools, sawyer's saw, toddy-drawer's
-knives, fishing-nets, barber's hones, blacksmith's anvils,
-pack-bullocks, cocoa-nut safe, small fishing-boats, cotton-beater's
-bow, carpenter's tools, large fishing-boats, looms, salt-storehouses.
-If a landlord objects to the assessment on trees, as old and past
-bearing, they are, one and all, ordered to be cut down—a measure as
-ridiculous as unjust—as it not only inflicts injury upon the landlord,
-but takes away the chance of future profit for the government. Mr.
-Rikards bears witness, as a collector of Malabar, that lands and
-produce were sometimes inserted in the survey account which absolutely
-did not exist, while other lands were assessed to the revenue at more
-than their actual produce. From all this, it is obvious that the Hindoo
-labourer or artisan is the slave of the tax-collector, who, moreover,
-has no interest in the life of his victim.
-
-Labour being almost "dirt cheap" in India, whenever speculating
-companies of Englishmen wish to carry out any particular scheme
-for which labourers are required, they hire a number of Hindoo
-Coolies, induce them to visit any port of the country, and treat them
-abominably, knowing that the poor wretches have no protection. The
-operations of the Assam Tea Company illustrate this practice:—
-
- "An inconsiderate expenditure of capital placed the Assam Tea
- Company in great jeopardy, and at one time it was feared the
- scheme would be abandoned. The number of managers and assistants
- appointed by the Assam Company to carry on their affairs and
- superintend their tea gardens, on large salaries, was quite
- unnecessary; one or two experienced European superintendents
- to direct the native establishment would have answered every
- purpose. A vast number of Coolies (or labourers) were induced
- to proceed to Upper Assam to cultivate the gardens; but bad
- arrangements having been made to supply them with proper,
- wholesome food, many were seized with sickness. On their
- arrival at the tea-plantations, in the midst of high and dense
- tree jungle, numbers absconded, and others met an untimely
- end. The rice served out to the Coolies from the Assam Tea
- Company's store-rooms, was so bad as not to be fit to be given
- to elephants, much less to human beings. The loss of these
- labourers, who had been conveyed to Upper Assam at a great
- expense, deprived the company of the means of cultivating so
- great an extent of country as would otherwise have been insured;
- for the scanty population of Upper Assam offered no means of
- replacing the deficiency of hands. Nor was the improvidence of
- the company in respect to labourers the only instance of their
- mismanagement. Although the company must have known that they
- had no real use or necessity for a steamer, a huge vessel was
- nevertheless purchased, and frequently sent up and down the
- Burrampooter river from Calcutta; carrying little else than a few
- thousand rupees for the payment of their establishment in Upper
- Assam, which might have been transmitted through native bankers,
- and have saved the company a most lavish and unprofitable
- expenditure of capital."[115]
-
-Ay, and the expense is all that is thought worthy of consideration.
-The miserable victims to the measures of the company might perish like
-brutes without being even pitied.
-
-On the verge of starvation, as so many of the Hindoo labourers
-generally are, it does not excite surprise that they are very ready
-to listen to the offers of those who are engaged in the "Cooley
-slave-trade." In addition to the astounding facts given by us in the
-previous chapter, in regard to this traffic in men, we quote the
-following from the London Spectator of October, 1838:—
-
- "Under Lord Glenelg's patronage, the Eastern slave-trade prospers
- exceedingly. The traffic in Hill Coolies promises to become one
- of the most extensive under the British flag. A cargo arrived
- in Berbice about the beginning of May, in prime condition: and
- the Berbice Advertiser, one of the most respectable of the West
- India journals, states, that out of 289, conveyed in the Whitby,
- only eight died on the passage, and very few were ill. Only one
- circumstance was wanting to make them the happiest of human(?)
- beings—only eight women were sent as companions for the 280
- men; and the deficiency of females was the more to be regretted
- because it was 'probable they would be shunned by the negroes
- from jealousy and speaking a different language.'
-
- "The same newspaper contains a very curious document respecting
- the Hill Cooley traffic. It is a circular letter, dated the 8th
- January, 1838, from Henley, Dowson, and Bethel, of Calcutta, the
- agents most extensively engaged in the shipment of labourers from
- India to the Mauritius and British Guiana. These gentlemen thus
- state their claims to preference over other houses in the same
- business:—
-
- "'We have within the last two years procured and shipped
- upward of 5000 free agricultural labourers for our friends at
- Mauritius; and, from the circumstance of nearly 500 of the
- number being employed on estates in which we possess a direct
- interest, we can assure you that a happier and more contented
- labouring population is seldom to be met with in any part of the
- world, than the Dhargas or mountain tribes sent from this vast
- country.'
-
- "Five thousand within two years to the Mauritius alone! This
- is pretty well, considering that the trade is in its infancy.
- As to the statement of the happiness and contentment of the
- labourers, rather more impartial evidence than the good word of
- the exporters of the commodity advertised would be desirable.
- If Englishmen could fancy themselves Hill Coolies for an
- instant—landed in Berbice, in the proportion of 280 men to 8 of
- the gentler sex, 'speaking a different language,' and shunned by
- the very negroes—we are inclined to think they would not, even
- in that imaginary and momentary view, conceit themselves to be
- among the happiest of mankind.
-
- "We proceed with the Calcutta circular:—
-
- "'The labourers hitherto procured by us have cost their
- employers, _landed at the Mauritius_, about one hundred rupees
- (or 10_l._ sterling) per man; which sum comprises six months'
- advance of wages, provisions and water for the voyage, clothing,
- commission, passage, insurance, and all incidental charges.'
-
- "'The expense attending the shipment of Indian labourers to the
- West India Colonies would be necessarily augmented—firstly, by
- the higher rate of passage-money, and the increased quantity of
- provisions and water; and, secondly, from the necessity of making
- arrangements, indispensable to the health and comfort of native
- passengers, on a voyage of so long a duration, in the course of
- which they would be exposed to great vicissitude of climate.
-
- "'On making ample allowance for these charges, we do not
- apprehend that a labourer, sent direct from this country to
- Demerara, and engaged to work on your estates for a period of
- five consecutive years, would cost, landed there, above two
- hundred and ten rupees, or 21_l._ sterling.'
-
- "This sum of 210 rupees includes _six months' wages_—at what
- rate does the reader suppose? Why, five rupees, or ten shillings
- sterling a month—half-a-crown a week—in Demerara! The passage
- is 10_l._, and the insurance 12_s._; for they are insured at so
- much a head, like pigs or sheep.
-
- "It is manifest that after their arrival in Demerara, the Indians
- will not, unless on compulsion, work for five years at the
- rate of 10_s._ a month, while the negroes receive much higher
- wages. They are therefore placed under strict control, and are
- just as much slaves as the Redemptioners, whom the virtuous
- Quakers inveigled into Pennsylvania a century or more ago. The
- Indians bind themselves to work in town or country, wherever
- their consignee or master may choose to employ them. One of the
- articles of their agreement is this:—
-
- "'In order that the undersigned natives of India may be fully
- aware of the engagement they undertake, it is hereby notified,
- that they will be required to do _all such work as the object
- for which they are engaged necessitates_; and that, as labourers
- attached to an estate, they will be required to clear forest and
- extract timber, carry manure, dig and prepare land for planting,
- also to take charge of horses, mules, and cattle of every
- description; _in short, to do all such work as an estate for the
- cultivation of sugar-cane and the manufacture of sugar demands_,
- or any branch of agriculture to which they may be destined.'
-
- "In case of disobedience or misconduct—that is, at the caprice
- of the master—they may be 'degraded,' and sent back at their own
- charge to Calcutta. They are to receive no wages during illness;
- and a rupee a month is to be deducted from their wages—thereby
- reducing them to 2_s._ a week—as an indemnity-fund for the
- cost of sending them back. What security there is for the kind
- treatment of the labourers does not appear: there is nothing in
- the contract but a promise to act equitably.
-
- "Now, in what respect do these men differ in condition from
- negro slaves, except very much for the worse? They must be more
- helpless than the negroes—if for no other reason, because of
- their ignorance of the language their masters use. They will not,
- for a long period certainly, be formidable from their numbers.
- How easily may even the miserable terms of the contract with
- their employers be evaded! Suppose the Indian works steadily for
- four years, it may suit his master to describe him as refractory
- and idle during the fifth, and then he will be sent back at his
- own cost; and the whole of his earnings may be expended in paying
- for his passage to Calcutta, where, after all, he is a long way
- from home.
-
- "It is impossible to contemplate without pain the inevitable lot
- of these helpless beings; but the conduct of the government,
- which could sanction the infamous commerce of which the Hill
- Cooley will be the victims, while professing all the while
- such a holy horror of dealing in negroes, should rouse general
- indignation.
-
- Is it only a certain shade of black, and a peculiar physical
- conformation, which excites the compassion of the Anti-Slavery
- people? If it is cruelty, oppression, and fraud which they abhor
- and desire to prevent, then let them renew their agitation in
- behalf of the kidnapped natives of India, now suffering, probably
- more acutely, all that made the lot of the negro a theme for
- eloquence and a field for Christian philanthropy."
-
-This is written in the right spirit. The trade described has increased
-to an extent which calls for the interference of some humane power.
-Should the British government continue to sanction the traffic, it must
-stand responsible for a national crime.
-
-Oppressive and violent as the British dominion in India undoubtedly
-is, the means devised to extend it are even more worthy of strong
-condemnation. The government fixes its eyes upon a certain province,
-where the people are enjoying peace and plenty, and determines to
-get possession of it. The Romans themselves were not more fertile
-in pretences for forcible seizure of territory than these British
-plunderers. They quickly hunt up a pretender to the throne, support his
-claims with a powerful army, make him their complete tool, dethrone
-the lawful sovereign, and extend their authority over the country. The
-course pursued toward Afghanistan in 1838 illustrates this outrageous
-violation of national rights.
-
-The following account of the origin and progress of the Afghanistan war
-is given by an English writer in the Penny Magazine:—
-
- "In 1747, Ahmeed Shah, an officer of an Afghan troop in the
- service of Persia, refounded the Afghan monarchy, which was
- maintained until the death of his successor in 1793. Ahmeed
- was of the Douranee tribe, and the limits over which his sway
- extended is spoken of as the Douranee empire. Four of the sons of
- Ahmeed's successor disputed, and in turn possessed, the throne;
- and during this civil war several of the principal chiefs threw
- off their allegiance, and the Douranee empire ceased to exist,
- but was split up into the chiefships of Candahar, Herat, Caboul,
- and Peshawur. Herat afterward became a dependency of Persia, and
- Shah Shooja ool Moolook, the chief of Peshawur, lost his power
- after having enjoyed it for about six years. Dost Mohammed Kahn,
- the chief of Caboul, according to the testimony of the late
- Sir Alexander Burnes, writing in 1832, governed his territory
- with great judgment, improved its internal administration and
- resources, and became the most powerful chief in Afghanistan.
- Shah Shooja was for many years a fugitive and a pensioner of the
- British government. He made one unsuccessful attempt to regain
- his territory, but Peshawur eventually became a tributary to the
- ruler of the Punjab. Such was the state of Afghanistan in 1836.
-
- "In the above year the Anglo-Indian government complained that
- Dost Mohammed Khan, chief of Caboul, had engaged in schemes of
- aggrandizement which threatened the stability of the British
- frontier in India; and Sir Alexander Burnes, who was sent with
- authority to represent to him the light in which his proceedings
- were viewed, was compelled to leave Caboul without having
- effected any change in his conduct. The siege of Herat, and the
- support which both Dost Mohammed and his brother, the chief of
- Candahar, gave to the designs of Persia in Afghanistan, the
- latter chief especially openly assisting the operations against
- Herat, created fresh alarm in the Anglo-Indian government as to
- the security of our frontier. Several minor chiefs also avowed
- their attachment to the Persians. As our policy, instead of
- hostility, required an ally capable of resisting aggression on
- the western frontier of India, the Governor-general, from whose
- official papers we take these statements, 'was satisfied,' after
- serious and mature deliberation, 'that a pressing necessity, as
- well as every consideration of policy and justice, warranted
- us in espousing the cause of Shah Shooja ool Moolk;' and it
- was determined to place him on the throne. According to the
- Governor-general, speaking from the best authority, the testimony
- as to Shah Shooja's popularity was unanimous. In June, 1838,
- the late Sir William Macnaghten formed a tripartite treaty with
- the ruler of the Punjab and Shah Shooja; the object of which
- was to restore the latter to the throne of his ancestors. This
- policy it was conceived would conduce to the general freedom and
- security of commerce, the restoration of tranquillity upon the
- most important frontier of India, and the erection of a lasting
- barrier against hostile intrigue and encroachment; and, while
- British influence would thus gain its proper footing among the
- nations of Central Asia, the prosperity of the Afghan people
- would be promoted.
-
- "Troops were despatched from the Presidencies of Bengal and
- Bombay to co-operate with the contingents raised by the Shah and
- our other ally, the united force being intended to act together
- under the name of the 'Army of the Indus.' After a march of
- extraordinary length, through countries which had never before
- been traversed by British troops, and defiles which are the
- most difficult passes in the world, where no wheeled carriage
- had ever been, and where it was necessary for the engineers in
- many places to construct roads before the baggage could proceed,
- the combined forces from Bengal and Bombay reached Candahar in
- May, 1839. According to the official accounts, the population
- were enthusiastic in welcoming the return of Shah Shooja. The
- next step was to advance toward Ghiznee and Caboul. On the 23d
- July, the strong and important fortress and citadel of Ghiznee,
- regarded throughout Asia as impregnable, was taken in two hours
- by blowing up the Caboul gate. The army had only been forty-eight
- hours before the place. An 'explosion party' carried three
- hundred pounds of gunpowder in twelve sand-bags, with a hose
- seventy-two feet long, the train was laid and fired, the party
- having just time to reach a tolerable shelter from the effects
- of the concussion, though one of the officers was injured by
- its force. On the 7th of August the army entered Caboul. Dost
- Mohammed had recalled his son Mohammed Akhbar from Jellalabad
- with the troops guarding the Khyber Pass, and their united forces
- amounted to thirteen thousand men; but these troops refused to
- advance, and Dost Mohammed was obliged to take precipitate fight,
- accompanied only by a small number of horsemen. Shah Shooja made
- a triumphant entry into Caboul, and the troops of Dost Mohammed
- tendered their allegiance to him. The official accounts state
- that in his progress toward Caboul he was joined by every person
- of rank and influence in the country. As the tribes in the Bolan
- Pass committed many outrages and murders on the followers of the
- army of the Indus, at the instigation of their chief, the Khan
- of Khelat, his principal town (Khelat) was taken on the 13th
- of November, 1839. The political objects of the expedition had
- now apparently been obtained. The hostile chiefs of Caboul and
- Candahar were replaced by a friendly monarch. On the side of
- Scinde and Herat, British alliance and protection were courted.
- All this had been accomplished in a few months, but at an expense
- said to exceed three millions sterling."
-
-The _expense_ of national outrage is only of importance to the sordid
-and unprincipled men who conceived and superintended the Afghanistan
-expedition. In the first part of the above extract, the writer
-places the British government in the position of one who strikes in
-self-defence. It was informed that Dost Mohammed entertained schemes
-of invasion dangerous to the British supremacy—informed by the
-exiled enemy of the chief of Caboul. The information was seasonable
-and exceedingly useful. Straightway a treaty was formed, by which the
-British agreed to place their tool for the enslavement of the Afghans
-upon the throne from which he had been driven. Further on, it is
-said, that when Shah Sooja appeared in Afghanistan he was joined by
-every person of rank and influence in the country. Just so; and the
-followers and supporters of Dost Mohammed nearly all submitted to the
-superior army of the British general. But two years afterward, the
-strength of the patriotic party was seen, when Caboul rose against Shah
-Sooja, drove him again from the throne, and defeated and massacred a
-considerable British garrison. Shah Sooja was murdered soon afterward.
-But the British continued the war against the Afghans, with the object
-of reducing them to the same slavery under which the remainder of
-Hindostan was groaning. The violation of national rights, the massacre
-of thousands, and the enslavement of millions were the glorious aims of
-British policy in the Afghan expedition. The policy then carried out
-has been more fully illustrated since that period. Whenever a territory
-was thought desirable by the government, neither national rights,
-the principles of justice and humanity, nor even the common right of
-property in individuals has been respected. Wealth has been an object
-for the attainment of which plunder and massacre were not considered
-unworthy means.
-
-Said Mr. John Bright, the radical reformer of Manchester, in a speech
-delivered in the House of Commons:—"It cannot be too universally
-known that the cultivators of the soil (in India) are in a very
-unsatisfactory condition; that they are, in truth, in a condition of
-almost extreme and universal poverty. All testimony concurred upon
-that point. He would call the attention of the House to the statement
-of a celebrated native of India, the Rajah Rammohun Roy, who, about
-twenty years ago, published a pamphlet in London, in which he pointed
-out the ruinous effects of the Zemindaree system, and the oppressions
-experienced by the ryots in the Presidencies of Bombay and Madras.
-After describing the state of affairs generally, he added, 'Such was
-the melancholy condition of the agricultural labourers, that it always
-gave him the greatest pain to allude to it.' Three years afterward, Mr.
-Shore, who was a judge in India, published a work which was considered
-as a standard work till now, and he stated 'that the British government
-was not regarded in a favourable light by the native population
-of India—that a system of taxation and extortion was carried on
-unparalleled in the annals of any country.'"
-
-From all quarters we receive unimpeachable evidence that the locust
-system has performed its devouring work on the broadest scale in
-India; and that the Hindoos are the victims of conquerors, slower,
-indeed, in their movements, than Tamerlane or Genghis Khan, but more
-destructive and more criminal than either of those great barbarian
-invaders.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-THE CRIME AND THE DUTY OF THE ENGLISH GOVERNMENT.
-
-
-It remains to sum up the charges against the English oligarchy, and to
-point out the path which justice, humanity, and the age require the
-government to pursue. In so doing, we shall go no farther than the
-facts previously adduced will afford us sure ground, nor speak more
-harshly than our duty to our oppressed fellow-men will demand. We pity
-the criminal even while we pass sentence upon her.
-
-A government originating in, and suited for, a barbarous age must
-necessarily be unfit for one enjoying the meridian of civilization. The
-arrangement of lord and serf was appropriate to the period when war
-was regarded as the chief employment of mankind, and when more respect
-was paid to the kind of blood flowing in a man's veins than to his
-greatness or generosity of soul. But, in the nineteenth century, war
-is regarded as an evil to be avoided as long as possible. Peace is the
-rule, and conflict the exception. Christianity has taught us, also,
-that the good and the great in heart and mind—wherever born, wherever
-bred—are the true nobility of our race. It is the sin of the English
-government that it works against the bright influence of the times and
-throws the gloomy shadow of feudalism over some of the fairest regions
-of the earth. It legislates for the age of William the Conqueror
-instead of the reign of Victoria.
-
-The few for hereditary luxury and dominion, the many for hereditary
-misery and slavery, is the grand fundamental principle of the English
-system. For every gorgeous palace there are a thousand hovels, where
-even beasts should not be forced to dwell. For every lord who spends
-his days in drinking, gambling, hunting, horse-racing, and indulging
-himself in all the luxuries that money can purchase, a thousand
-persons, at least, must toil day and night to obtain the most wretched
-subsistence. In no country are the few richer than in England, and
-in no country are the masses more fearfully wretched. The great bulk
-of the property of England, both civil and ecclesiastical, is in the
-grasp of the aristocracy. All offices of church and state, yielding
-any considerable emolument, are monopolized by the lords and their
-nominees. The masses earn—the lords spend. The lords have all the
-property, but the masses pay all the taxes, and slave and starve that
-the taxes may be paid.
-
-Without such a system, is it possible that there could be millions of
-acres of good land lying waste, and millions of paupers who dare not
-cultivate it?—that the workhouses could be crowded—that men, women,
-and children could be driven to all kinds of work, and yet by the most
-exhausting toil not earn enough to enable them to live decently and
-comfortably—that honest and industrious people could starve by the
-wayside, or die of disease engendered in dirty hovels—that vice and
-crime could be practised to an appalling extent—that whole villages
-could be swept away and the poor labourers either driven into the
-crowded cities, or to a distant land, far from kindred and friends?
-
-The aristocrats of England are the most extensive slaveholders in the
-world. In England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland, they have the entire
-labouring mass for their slaves—men, women, and children being doomed
-to the most grinding toil to enable their masters to live in luxurious
-ease. In India and the other colonies they have treated the natives
-as the conquered were treated in the Middle Ages. They have drained
-their resources, oppressed them in every way, and disposed of tribes
-and nations as if they had been dealing with cattle. Add the slaves
-of India to the slaves of the United Kingdom, and we may count them
-by tens of millions. These slaves are not naturally inferior to their
-masters. They belong to races fertile in great and good men and women.
-Poets, artists, philosophers, historians, statesmen, and warriors of
-the first magnitude in genius have sprung from these down-trodden
-people. They have fully proved themselves capable of enjoying the
-sweets of freedom. They remain slaves because their masters find it
-profitable, and know how to cozen and bully them into submission.
-
-The following description of France before the great revolution of
-1789, by M. Thiers, is strikingly applicable to the condition of Great
-Britain at the present day:—
-
- "The condition of the country, both political and economical, was
- intolerable. There was nothing but privilege—privilege vested
- in individuals, in classes, in towns, in provinces, and even in
- trades and professions. Every thing contributed to check industry
- and the natural genius of man. All the dignities of the state,
- civil, ecclesiastical, and military, were exclusively reserved
- to certain individuals. No man could take up a profession
- without certain titles and the compliance with certain pecuniary
- conditions. Even the favours of the crown were converted into
- family property, so that the king could scarcely exercise his
- own judgment, or give any preference. Almost the only liberty
- left to the sovereign was that of making pecuniary gifts, and he
- had been reduced to the necessity of disputing with the Duke of
- Coigny for the abolition of a useless place. Every thing, then,
- was made immovable property in the hands of a few, and everywhere
- these few resisted the many who had been despoiled. The burdens
- of the state weighed on one class only. The noblesse and the
- clergy possessed about two-thirds of the landed property; the
- other third, possessed by the people, paid taxes to the king,
- a long list of feudal _droits_ to the noblesse, tithes to the
- clergy, and had, moreover, to support the devastations committed
- by noble sportsmen and their game. The taxes upon consumption
- pressed upon the great multitude, and consequently on the people.
- The collection of these imposts was managed in an unfair and
- irritating manner; the lords of the soil left long arrears with
- impunity, but the people, upon any delay in payment, were harshly
- treated, arrested, and condemned to pay in their persons, in
- default of money to produce. The people, therefore, nourished
- with their labour and defended with their blood the higher
- classes of society, without being able to procure a comfortable
- subsistence for themselves. The townspeople, a body of citizens,
- industrious, educated, less miserable than the people, could
- nevertheless obtain none of the advantages to which they had a
- right to aspire, seeing that it was their industry that nourished
- and their talents that adorned the kingdom."
-
-The elements of revolution are all to be found in Great Britain. A
-Mirabeau, with dauntless will and stormy eloquence, could use them with
-tremendous effect. Yet the giant of the people does not raise his voice
-to plead the cause of the oppressed, and to awaken that irresistible
-enthusiasm which would sweep away the pampered aristocracy.
-
-The armorial escutcheons of the aristocracy are fearfully significant
-of its character. Says John Hampden, Jun.:[116]—
-
- "The whole emblazonment of aristocracy is one manifesto of savage
- barbarism, brute force, and propensity to robbery and plunder.
- What are these objects on their shields? Daggers, swords, lions'
- heads, dogs' heads, arrow-heads, boars' heads, cannon balls,
- clubs, with a medley of stars, moons, and unmeaning figures.
- What are the crests of these arms? Lascivious goats, rampant
- lions, fiery dragons, and griffins gone crazed: bulls' heads,
- block-heads, arms with uplifted daggers, beasts with daggers,
- and vultures tearing up helpless birds. What, again, are the
- supporters of these shields? What are the emblems of the powers
- by which they are maintained and upheld? The demonstration is
- deeply significant. They are the most singular assemblage of
- all that is fierce, savage, rampageous, villanous, lurking,
- treacherous, blood-thirsty, cruel, and bestial in bestial
- natures. They are infuriated lions, boars, and tigers; they
- are raging bulls, filthy goats, horrid hyenas, snarling dogs,
- drunken bears, and mad rams; they are foxes, wolves, panthers,
- every thing that is creeping, sneaking, thievish, and perfidious.
- Nay, nature cannot furnish emblems extensive enough, and so
- start up to our astonished sight the most hideous shapes of
- fiendlike dragons and griffins, black, blasted as by infernal
- fires; the most fuliginous of monsters; and if the human shape
- is assumed for the guardians and supporters of aristocracy, they
- are wild and savage men, armed with clubs and grim with hair,
- scowling brute defiance, and seeming ready to knock down any man
- at the command of their lords. Ay, the very birds of prey are
- called in; and eagles, vultures, cormorants, in most expressive
- attitudes, with most ludicrous embellishments of crowned heads,
- collared necks, escutcheoned sides, and with hoisted wings and
- beaks of open and devouring wrath, proclaim the same great
- truth, that aristocracy is of the class of what the Germans call
- _Raub-thieren_, or robber-beasts—in our vernacular, _beasts of
- prey_."
-
-And the character thus published to the world has been acted out to the
-full from the days of the bastard Duke of Normandy and his horde of
-ruffians to the time of the "Iron Duke" and his associates in title and
-plunder. The hyenas and vultures have never been satisfied.
-
-The crime of England lies in maintaining the slavery of a barbarous
-age in the middle of the nineteenth century; in keeping her slaves in
-physical misery, mental darkness, moral depravity, and heathenism;
-in carrying fire and sword into some of the loveliest regions of
-the earth, in order to gratify that thirst for wealth and dominion
-ever characteristic of an aristocracy; in forcing her slaves in
-India to cultivate poison, and her weak neighbours of China to buy
-it; in plundering and oppressing the people of all her colonies; in
-concentrating the wealth of the United Kingdom and the dependencies
-in the purses of a few persons, and thus dooming all others beneath
-her iron rule to constant, exhausting, and unrewarded toil! We arraign
-her before the tribunal of justice and humanity, as the most powerful
-and destructive of tyrannies; as the author of Ireland's miseries,
-and a course of action toward that island compared with which the
-dismemberment of Poland was merciful; as the remorseless conqueror of
-the Hindoos; as a government so oppressive that her people are flying
-by thousands to the shores of America to escape its inflictions! Though
-most criminals plead "not guilty," she cannot have the front to do so!
-The general judgment of civilized mankind has long ago pronounced a
-verdict of conviction.
-
-Yet, guilty as is the English oligarchy, certain of its members
-have taken to lecturing the world about the duties of Christians
-and philanthropists. This, we suppose, in charity, is done upon the
-principle given by Hamlet to his mother—
-
- "Assume a virtue if you have it not."
-
-But a loftier authority than Shakspeare tells us to remove the beam
-from our own eye before we point to the mote that is in the eye of
-a brother. Example, also, is more powerful than precept. Pious
-exhortations from a villain are usually disregarded. A preacher should
-never have the blood of slaughtered victims on his hands.
-
-We think it not difficult to show that England is the best friend of
-slavery, while professing an aversion to it, and dictating to other
-governments to strive for its abolition. At an enormous expense, she
-maintains men-of-war upon the coast of Africa, with the object of
-suppressing the trade in negro slaves. This expense her white slaves
-are taxed to pay; while the men-of-war have not only not suppressed
-the slave-trade, but have doubled its horrors, by compelling the
-slave-traders to inflict new tortures upon the negroes they capture
-and conceal. In the mean time, the government is doing all in its
-power to impoverish and enslave (for the slavery of a people follows
-its poverty) the more intelligent races of the world. England prides
-herself upon her efforts to destroy the trade in African savages and
-chattel slavery. Her philanthropy is all black; miserable wretches with
-pale faces have no claims upon her assisting hand; and she refuses to
-recognise the only kind of slavery by which masters are necessitated
-to provide well for their slaves, while she enforces that system which
-starves them! England is the best friend of the most destructive
-species of slavery, and has extended it over tens of millions of human
-beings.
-
-Justice, humanity, and the age demand the abolition of this exhausting,
-famine-breeding, and murderous system. It is hostile to every principle
-of right—to civilization, and to the loving spirit of Christianity.
-Starving millions groan beneath the yoke. From the crowded factories
-and workshops—from the pestilential hovels—from the dark and
-slave-filled coal-pits—from the populous workhouses—from the vast
-army of wandering beggars in England and Scotland—from the perishing
-peasantry of Ireland—from the wretched Hindoos upon the Ganges and the
-Indus—from the betrayed Coolies in the West-India Islands—arises the
-cry for relief from the plunderers and the oppressors. "How long, O
-Lord, how long!"
-
-A few thousand persons own the United Kingdom. They have robbed and
-reduced to slavery not only their own countrymen, but millions in
-other lands. They continue to rob wherever they find an opportunity.
-They spend what their crime has accumulated in all kinds of vice and
-dissipation, and rear their children to the same courses. Money raised
-for religious purposes they waste in luxurious living. They trade in
-all the offices of church and state. They persecute, by exclusion,
-all who do not subscribe to "thirty-nine articles" which they wish to
-force upon mankind. In brief, the oligarchy lies like an incubus upon
-the empire, and the people cannot call themselves either free or happy
-until the aristocrats be driven from their high places. Burst, then,
-the chains, ye countrymen of Hampden and Vane! Show to the world that
-the old fire is not yet quenched! that the spirits of your martyrs to
-liberty are yet among you, and their lessons in your hearts! Obtain
-your freedom—peaceably, if you can—_but obtain it_, for it expands
-and ennobles the life of a nation! In the air of liberty alone can
-a people enjoy a healthy existence. A day of real freedom is worth
-more than years in a dungeon. What have you to dread? Do you not know
-your strength? Be assured, this aristocracy could not stand an hour,
-were you resolved against its existence! It would be swept away as a
-feather before a hurricane. Do you fear that much blood would flow in
-the struggle? Consider the hundreds of thousands who are crushed out of
-existence every year by this aristocracy, and ask yourselves if it is
-not better that the system should be over-thrown, even at the expense
-of blood, than that it should continue its destructive career? Had
-not men better make an effort to secure freedom and plenty for their
-posterity, than starve quietly by the wayside? These are the questions
-you should take home to your hearts. One grand, determined, glorious
-effort, and you are free.
-
- "Hereditary bondsmen, know ye not
- Who would be free, themselves must strike the blow?"
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] The butties are the men who superintend the conveyance of the coal
-from the digger to the pit-shaft.
-
-[2] To _hurry_ is to draw or push the coal-cars.
-
-[3] Mitchell, Evidence, No. 7; App. pt. i. p. 65, 1. 31.
-
-[4] Ibid. in loco.
-
-[5] Fellows, Report, s. 58; App. pt. ii. p. 256.
-
-[6] Mitchell, Evidence, No. 99; App. pt. i. p. 155, 1. 8.
-
-[7] Dr. Mitchell, Report, s. 314; App. pt. i. p. 39.
-
-[8] Fellows, Evidence, No. 10; App. pt. ii. p. 266, 1. 10.
-
-[9] Symons, Report, s. 200; App. pt. i. p. 193.
-
-[10] Wood, Report, s. 36; App. pt. ii. p. H 7. Also Evidence, Nos. 60,
-75, 76.
-
-[11] Kennedy, Report, s. 296; App. pt. ii. p. 188.
-
-[12] Ibid. s. 304; p. 188.
-
-[13] Austin, Evidence, No. 1; App. pt. ii. p. 811; i. 12. See also the
-remarks by Mr. Fletcher on the vicinity of Oldham, App. pt. ii. s. 59,
-p. 832.
-
-[14] Mitchell, Report, s. 214; App. pt. i. p. 143.
-
-[15] Mitchell, Evidence, No. 97; App. pt. i. p. 154, 1. 19.
-
-[16] Leifchild, Report, s. 72; App. pt. i. p. 252.
-
-[17] Leifchild, Evidence, No. 97; App. pt. i. p. 587, 1. 39.
-
-[18] Ibid. No. 497, p. 665, 1. 7.
-
-[19] Ibid. No. 504, p. 672, 1. 22.
-
-[20] Symons, Report, s. 22; App. pt. i. p. 302.
-
-[21] Symons, Evidence, No. 312; App. pt. i. p. 305, 1. 59.
-
-[22] Franks, Report, App. A, No. 2; App. pt. i. p. 410, 411.
-
-[23] Franks, Report, s. 85; App. pt. ii. p. 485.
-
-[24] Franks, Evidence, No. 144; App. pt. ii. p. 582, 1. 4.
-
-[25] Ibid. No. 2, p. 503, 1. 21.
-
-[26] R. W. Jones, Evidence, No. 102; App. pt. ii. p. 64, 1. 28.
-
-[27] Fellows, Report, s. 45; App. pt. ii. p. 255.
-
-[28] Symons, Report, s. 110; App. pt. i. p. 181.
-
-[29] Symons, Evidence, No. 199; App. pt. i. p. 279, 1. 3.
-
-[30] Ibid. No. 21; p. 282, 1. 246.
-
-[31] Wood, Evidence, No. 60; App. pt. ii. p. h 27, 1. 46.
-
-[32] Kennedy, Evidence, No. 30; App. pt. ii. p. 218, 1. 6.
-
-[33] Austin, Evidence, No. 7; App. pt. ii. p. 812. 1. 160.
-
-[34] Ibid. No. 17; p. 815, 1. 53.
-
-[35] Leifchild, Evidence, No. 97; App. pt. i. p. 587, 1. 32.
-
-[36] Leichfield, Evidence, No. 504; p. 672, 1. 22.
-
-[37] Ibid. No. 498; p. 665, 1. 50.
-
-[38] Ibid. No. 496; p. 662, 1. 62.
-
-[39] Mitchell, Evidence, No. 46; App. pt. i. p. 81, 1. 47.
-
-[40] Mitchell, Evidence, No. 77; p. 113, 1. 6.
-
-[41] Ibid. No. 81; p. 114, 1. 22.
-
-[42] Ibid. No. 82; p. 114, 1. 61.
-
-[43] Fellows, Report, s. 49; App. pt. ii. p. 256.
-
-[44] Fellows, Evidence, No. 105; p. 292, 1. 48.
-
-[45] Fellows, Evidence, No. 10; p. 262, 1. 8.
-
-[46] Symons, Report, s. 209; App. pt. i. p. 193.
-
-[47] Wood, Report, s. 42; App. pt. ii. p. 167.
-
-[48] Leifchild, Evidence, No. 499; App. pt. i. p. 668, 1. 44.
-
-[49] Ibid. No. 498; p. 665, 1. 52.
-
-[50] Franks, Report, s. 68; App. pt. i. p. 396.
-
-[51] Tancred, Evidence, No. 34; App. pt. i. p. 371, 1. 58.
-
-[52] H. H. Jones, Report, s. 83; App. pt. ii. p. 375.
-
-[53] H. H. Jones, Evidence, No. 96; App. pt. ii. p. 407, 1. 51.
-
-[54] Waring, Evidence, No. 38; App. pt. ii. p. 25, 1. 57.
-
-[55] Stewart, Evidence, No. 7; App. pt. ii. p. 50, 1. 48.
-
-[56] Fellows, Evidence, No. 84; App. pt. ii. p. 287, 1. 38.
-
-[57] Symons, Report, s. 110, App. pt. i. p. 181.
-
-[58] Symons, Evidence, No. 221; App. pt. i. p. 282, 1. 45.
-
-[59] Ibid. No. 268; p. 292, 1. 51.
-
-[60] Kennedy, Report, s. 299; App. pt. ii. p. 188.
-
-[61] Mitchell, Report, s. 212; App. pt. i. p. 143.
-
-[62] Mitchell, Evidence, No. 96; App. pt. i. p. 153, 1. 57.
-
-[63] Ibid. No. 97; p. 153, 1. 64.
-
-[64] Franks, Report, s. 121; App. pt. i. p. 408.
-
-[65] Franks, Evidence, No. 273; App. pt. i. p. 487, 1. 25.
-
-[66] Franks, Evidence, No. 73; p. 450, 1. 31.
-
-[67] Ibid. No. 83; p. 452, 1. 29.
-
-[68] H. H. Jones, Report, s. 84; App. pt. ii. p. 375.
-
-[69] H. H. Jones, Evidence, No. 96; App. pt. ii. p. 407, 1. 53.
-
-[70] Ibid. No. 2; p. 378, 1. 35.
-
-[71] Ibid. No. 3; p. 379, 1. 34.
-
-[72] Scriven, Report, s. 83; App. pt. ii. p. 72.
-
-[73] Symons, Evidence, s. 96; App. pt. i. p. 187.
-
-[74] Wood, Evidence, No. 76; App. pt. ii. p. _h_ 32, 1. 18.
-
-[75] Symons, Evidence, No. 197; App. pt. i. p. 277, 1. 68.
-
-[76] Austin, Evidence, No. 9; App. pt. ii. p. 813, 1. 40.
-
-[77] Scriven, Report, s. 82; App. pt. ii. p. 72.
-
-[78] Scriven, Evidence, No. 2; App. pt. ii. p. 101, 1. 33.
-
-[79] Ibid. No. 79, p. 124, 1. 28. See also Nos. 12, 13, 18, 25.
-
-[80] Leifchild, Evidence, No. 86; App. pt. i. p. 583, 1. 27.
-
-[81] Leifchild, Evidence, No. 201; p. 610, 1. 52.
-
-[82] Ibid. No. 267, p. 623, 1. 11.
-
-[83] Franks, Evidence, No. 31; App. pt. ii. p. 510, 1. 49.
-
-[84] Leifchild, Evidence, No. 385; App. pt. i. p. 645, 1. 35.
-
-[85] Ibid. No. 375, p. 644, 1. 48.
-
-[86] Tancred, Evidence, No. 9; App. pt. i. p. 361, 1. 45.
-
-[87] Leifchild, Evidence, No. 376; App. pt. i. p. 644, 1. 54.
-
-[88] Enclosed for the inspection of the Central Board. It is entitled,
-"A Memoir of Robert Blincoe, &c., Manchester." J. Doherty. 1852.
-
-[89] _England and America_, Harpers & Brothers, publishers, 1834.
-
-[90] Every-day Life in London.
-
-[91] This is done at the Model Prison, Pentonville.
-
-[92] London Daily News.
-
-[93] In order that these men shall be thus protected, it is necessary
-for the master TO NAME THEM, before they are impressed; this is to
-be done by going before the mayor or other chief magistrate of the
-place, who is to give the master a certificate, in which is contained
-the names of the particular men whom he thus nominates; and this
-certificate will be their protection.
-
-[94] Auctioned.
-
-[95] Household Words.
-
-[96] Charge on the Marlborough Commission, p. 5. Cited in Lewis's Irish
-Disturbances, p. 227.
-
-[97] See the evidence of Mr. Blacker, House of Commons' Report on the
-State of Ireland, 1824, p. 75; that of Mr. Griffiths, _ibid._ 232; and
-that of Mr. Blacker, House of Lords' Report, 1824, p. 14.
-
-[98] House of Commons' Committee on Combinations, 1838. Questions
-5872-5876.
-
-[99] Edinburgh Review.
-
-[100] Servants and Servitude, in Howitt's Journal.
-
-[101] Sanitary Inquiry Report, 1843, p.64.
-
-[102] Kay.
-
-[103] The Slave Trade, Domestic and Foreign.
-
-[104] Bigelow's Jamaica in 1850.
-
-[105] Backhouse's Visit to the Mauritius.
-
-[106] Brigg's Historical Fragments.
-
-[107] Carey.
-
-[108] Carey.
-
-[109] Campbell's Modern India.
-
-[110] "Some of Mr. Smith's servants entered into a combination to
-defraud a suitor in his court of a large sum of money, which he was to
-pay to Mrs. Smith as she walked in the garden. A dancing-girl from the
-town of Jubbulpore was made to represent Mrs. Smith, and a suit of Mrs.
-Smith's clothes were borrowed for her from the washer-woman. The butler
-took the suitor into the garden and introduced him to the supposed Mrs.
-Smith, who received him very graciously, and condescended to accept his
-offer of five thousand rupees in gold mohurs. The plot was afterward
-discovered, and the old butler, washer-woman and all, were sentenced to
-labour in a rope on the roads."
-
-[111] Lords' Evidence, 1687.
-
-[112] Campbell's Modern India.
-
-[113] Rikards.
-
-[114] Collector's Report.
-
-[115] Sketch of Assam.
-
-[116] The Aristocracy of England.
-
-
-
-
-_MILLER, ORTON & MULLIGAN PUBLISH_
-
-
- *=FERN LEAVES FROM FANNY'S PORTFOLIO,—First Series=,
- 8 illustrations by Coffin, engraved by N. Orr, muslin, 400 pp.,
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-
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- in March.)
-
-
- *=LITTLE FERNS FOR FANNY'S LITTLE FRIENDS=,
- By the Author of Fern Leaves, 6 illustrations, muslin, 298 pp.,
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- Edited by J. CLEMENT and Mrs. L. H. SIGOURNEY, 7 illustrations
- on steel and wood, muslin, 480 pp. 12mo. 1 50
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- with five illustrations on steel, muslin, 12mo. 248 pp 1 00
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- *=WILD SCENES OF A HUNTER'S LIFE=,
-
- Including Cummings' Adventures among the Lions, Elephants and
- other wild Animals of Africa, by JOHN FROST, LL. D., with 8
- colored and 300 letter-press illustrations, muslin, 467 pp.,
- 12mo. 1 50
-
-
- =LIFE ON THE PLAINS=,
-
- And among the Diggings, being Scenes and Adventures of an
- Overland Journey to California, with particular Incidents of
- the Route, Sufferings of Emigrants, Indian Tribes, &c., by
- A. DELANO, illustrated, 384 pp., 12mo. 1 25
-
-
- =THE AUSTRALIAN CAPTIVE=,
-
- Or, Fifteen Years' Adventures of William Jackman, including his
- Residence among the Cannibals of Nuyts' Land, with portraits
- and other illustrations, edited by Rev. I. CHAMBERLAIN, muslin,
- 392 pp., 12mo. 1 25
-
-
- =FRONTIER LIFE=,
-
- Or Scenes and Adventures in the South-west, by F. HARDMAN,
- illustrated, muslin, 376 pp., 12mo. 1.25
-
-
- =THRILLING ADVENTURES=,
-
- By Land and Sea, being remarkable Facts from Authentic Sources,
- edited by J. O. BRAYMAN, illustrated, muslin, 504 pp., 12mo. 1 25
-
-
- =DARING DEEDS OF AMERICAN HEROES=,
-
- With Biographical Sketches, by J. O. BRAYMAN, illustrated, 12mo.
- 450 pp. 1 25
-
-
- =LIFE AT THE SOUTH=,
-
- Being Narratives, Scenes, and Incidents in Slave Life, by W.
- L. G. SMITH, illustrated, muslin, 519 pp., 12mo. 1 25
-
-
- =BORDER WARS OF THE WEST=,
-
- Comprising the Frontier Wars of Pennsylvania, Virginia,
- Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Tennessee and Wisconsin, and
- embracing the Individual Adventures among the Indians, and
- Exploits of Boone, Kenton, Clark, Logan, and other Border
- Heroes of the West, by PROFESSOR FROST, 300 illustrations,
- muslin, 608 pp., muslin, 8vo. 2 50
-
-
- =WESTERN SCENES=,
-
- And Reminiscences, together with thrilling Legends and
- Traditions of the Red Man of the Forest, illustrated, muslin,
- 8vo. 2 00
-
-
- =GIFT BOOK FOR YOUNG MEN=,
-
- Or Familiar Letters on Self-knowledge, Self-education, Female
- Society, Marriage, &c., by Dr. WM. A. ALCOTT, frontispiece,
- muslin, 312 pp., 12mo. 84
-
- THE SAME—muslin, gilt edges and full gilt sides, 1 50
-
-
- =GIFT BOOK FOR YOUNG LADIES=,
-
- Or Woman's Mission; being Familiar Letters to a Young Lady on
- her Amusements, Employments, Studies, Acquaintances, male and
- female, Friendships, &c., by Dr. WM. A. ALCOTT, frontispiece
- on steel, muslin, 307 pp., 12mo. 84
-
- THE SAME—muslin, gilt edges and full gilt sides, 1 50
-
-
- =YOUNG MAN'S BOOK=,
-
- Or, Self-Education, by Rev. WM. HOSMER, frontispiece on
- steel, muslin, 291 pp., 12mo. 84
-
- THE SAME—muslin, gilt edges and full gilt sides, 1 50
-
-
- =YOUNG LADY'S BOOK=,
-
- Or, Principles of Female Education, by Rev. WM. HOSMER,
- frontispiece on steel, muslin, 301 pp., 12mo. 84
-
- THE SAME—muslin, gilt edges and full gilt sides, 1 50
-
-
- =GOLDEN STEPS FOR THE YOUNG=,
-
- To Usefulness, Respectability and Happiness, by JOHN MATHER
- AUSTIN, author of "Voice to Youth," frontispiece on steel,
- muslin, 243 pp., 12mo. 84
-
- THE SAME—muslin, gilt edges and full gilt sides, 1 50
-
-
- =VOICE TO THE YOUNG=,
-
- Or, Lectures for the Times, by W. W. PATTON, muslin, 213 pp.,
- 12mo. 75
-
-
- =THE YOUTH'S BOOK OF GEMS=,
-
- By F. C. WOODWORTH, with 100 illustrations, muslin, 386 pp.,
- 8vo. 1 25
-
-
- =THE STRING OF PEARLS=,
-
- For Boys and Girls, by T. S. ARTHUR and F. C. WOODWORTH, with
- many illustrations, muslin, 288 pp., 16mo. 84
-
-
- =STORIES ABOUT BIRDS=,
-
- By F. C. WOODWORTH, with illustrative engravings, muslin,
- 336 pp., 16mo. 84
-
-
- =STORIES ABOUT ANIMALS=,
-
- By F. C. WOODWORTH, with illustrative engravings, muslin,
- 336 pp., 16mo. 84
-
-
- =WONDERS OF THE INSECT WORLD=,
-
- By F. C. WOODWORTH, with illustrative engravings, muslin,
- 336 pp., 16mo. 84
-
-
-
-
- ┌───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
- │ Transcriber's Note: │
- │ │
- │ Minor typographical errors have been corrected without note. │
- │ │
- │ Punctuation and spelling were made consistent when a predominant │
- │ form was found in this book; otherwise they were not changed. │
- │ │
- │ Ambiguous hyphens at the ends of lines were retained. │
- │ │
- │ Footnotes were moved to the end of the book and numbered in one │
- │ continuous sequence. │
- │ │
- │ Italicized words are surrounded by underline characters, _like │
- │ this_. Words in bold characters are surrounded by equal signs, │
- │ =like this=. │
- │ │
- │ Other notes: │
- │ p. 26: be at changed to bear. (...that parish must bear the │
- │ cost....) │
- │ p. 29: Frith → Firth. (Firth of Forth.) │
- │ p. 84: Chesterle → Chester le. (Chester le Street.) │
- │ p. 336: an → on. (I could sit my eyes on.) │
- └───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The White Slaves of England, by John C. Cobden
-
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