“Oh, reason not the deed; our basest beggars
Are in the poorest things superfluous:
Allow not nature more than nature needs,
Man’s life is cheap as beast’s.”
King Lear.
A short fit of rain came on whilst
we were in the cottage in Newton Street, so we sat
a little while with Ruth, listening to her quaint
tattle about the old man and his feathered pets; about
the children, the hard times, and her own personal
ailments; for, though I could not help
thinking her a very good-hearted, humorous old woman,
bravely disposed to fight it out with the troubles
of her humble lot, yet it was clear that she was inclined
to ease her harassed mind now and then by a little
wholesome grumbling; and I dare say that sometimes
she might lose her balance so far as to think, like
“Natterin’ Nan,” “No livin’
soul atop o’t earth’s bin tried as I’ve
bin tried: there’s nob’dy but the
Lord an’ me that knows what I’ve to bide.”
Old age and infirmity, too, had found
Ruth out, in her penurious obscurity; and she was
disposed to complain a little, like Nan, sometimes,
of “the ills that flesh is heir to:"-
“Fro’ t’ wind i’t stomach,
rheumatism,
Tengin pains i’t gooms,
An’ coughs, an’ cowds, an’ t’
spine o’t back,
I suffer martyrdom.
“Yet nob’dy pities mo, or thinks
I’m ailin’ owt at all;
T’ poor slave mun tug an’ tew wi’t
wark,
Wolivver shoo can crawl.”
Old Ruth was far from being as nattle
and querulous as the famous ill-natured grumbler so
racily pictured by Benjamin Preston, of Bradford;
but, like most of the dwellers upon earth, she was
a little bit touched with the same complaint.
When the rain was over, we came away. I cannot
say that the weather ever “cleared up”
that day; for, at the end of every shower, the dark,
slow-moving clouds always seemed to be mustering for
another downfall. We came away, and left the
“cant” old body “busy bakin’
for Betty,” and “shooing” the hens
away from her feet, and she shuffled about the house.
A few yards lower in Newton Street, we turned up a
low, dark entry, which led to a gloomy little court
behind. This was one of those unhealthy, pent-up
cloisters, where misery stagnates and broods among
the “foul congregation of pestilential vapours”
which haunt the backdoor life of the poorest parts
of great towns. Here, those viewless ministers
of health the fresh winds of heaven had
no free play; and poor human nature inhaled destruction
from the poisonous effluvia that festered there.
And, in such nooks as this, there may be found many
decent working people, who have been accustomed to
live a cleanly life in their humble way in healthy
quarters, now reduced to extreme penury, pinching,
and pining, and nursing the flickering hope of better
days, which may enable them to flee from the foul
harbour which strong necessity has driven them to.
The dark aspect of the day filled the court with a
tomb-like gloom. If I remember aright, there
were only three or four cottages in it. We called
at two of them. Before we entered the first, my
friend said, “A young couple lives here.
They are very decent people. They have not been
here long; and they have gone through a great deal
before they came here.” There were two
or three pot ornaments on the cornice; but there was
no furniture in the place, save one chair, which was
occupied by a pale young woman, nursing her child.
Her thin, intelligent face looked very sad. Her
clothing, though poor, was remarkably clean; and,
as she sat there, in the gloomy, fireless house, she
said very little, and what she said she said very
quietly, as if she had hardly strength to complain,
and was even half-ashamed to do so. She told
us, however, that her husband had been out of work
six months. “He didn’t know what to
turn to after we sowd th’ things,” said
she; “but he’s takken to cheer-bottomin’,
for he doesn’t want to lie upo’ folk for
relief, if he can help it. He doesn’t get
much above a cheer, or happen two in a week, one week
wi’ another, an’ even then he doesn’t
olez get paid, for folks ha’ not brass.
It runs very hard with us, an’ I’m nobbut
sickly.” The poor soul did not need to
say much; her own person, which evinced such a touching
struggle to keep up a decent appearance to the last,
and everything about her, as she sat there in the gloomy
place, trying to keep the child warm upon her cold
breast, told eloquently what her tongue faltered at
and failed to express.
The next place we called at in this
court was a cottage kept by a withered old woman,
with one foot in the grave. We found her in the
house, sallow, and shrivelled, and panting for breath.
She had three young women, out of work, lodging with
her; and, in addition to these, a widow with her two
children lived there. One of these children,
a girl, was earning 2d. a week for working short
time at a mill; the other, a lad, was earning 3s.
a week. The rest were all unemployed, and had
been so for several months past. This 5d.
a week was all the seven people had to live upon, with
the exception of a trifle the sickly old woman received
from the Board of Guardians. As we left the court,
two young fellows were lounging at the entry end,
as if waiting for us. One of them stepped up to
my friend, and whispered something plaintively, pointing
to his feet. I did not catch the reply; but my
friend made a note, and we went on. Before we
had gone many yards down the street a storm of rain
and thunder came on, and we hurried into the house
of an old Irishwoman close by. My friend knew
the old woman. She was on his list of relief
cases. “Will you let us shelter a few minutes,
Mrs ?” said he. “I will, an’
thank ye,” replied she. “Come in an’
sit down. Sure, it’s not fit to turn out
a dog. Faith, that’s a great storm.
Oh, see the rain! Thank God it’s not him
that made the house that made the pot! Dear,
dear; did ye see the awful flash that time? I
don’t like to be by myself, I am so terrified wi’ the thunder. There has been a great
dale o’ wet this long time.” “There,
has,” replied my friend; “but how have
ye been getting on since I called before?” “Well,”
said the old woman, sitting down, “things is
quare with us as ever they can be, an’ that
you know very well.” There was a young
woman reared against the table by the window.
My friend turned towards her, and said, “Well,
and how does the Indian meal agree with you?”
The young woman blushed, and smiled, but said nothing;
but the old woman turned sharply round and replied,
“Well, now, it is better nor starvation; it
is chape, an’ it fills up an’
that’s all.” “Is your son working?”
inquired my friend. “Troth, he is,”
replied she. “He does be gettin’ a
day now an’ again at the breek-croft in Ribbleton
Lone. Faith, it is time he did somethin’,
too, for he was nine months out o’ work entirely.
I am got greatly into debt, an’ I don’t
think I’ll ever be able to get over it any more.
I don’t know how does poor folk be able to spind
money on drink such times as thim; bedad, I cannot
do it. It is bard enough to get mate of any kind
to keep the bare life in a body. Oh, see now;
but for the relief, the half o’ the country
would die out.” “You’re a native
of Ireland, missis,” said I. “Troth,
I am,” replied she; “an’ had a good
farm o’ greawnd in it too, one time. Ah!
many’s the dark day I went through between that
an’ this. Before thim bad times came on,
long ago, people were well off in ould Ireland.
I seen them wid as many as tin cows standin’
at the door at one time. . . . Ah, then! but
the Irish people is greatly scattered now! . . .
But, for the matter of that, folk are as badly off
here as anywhere in the world, I think. I dunno
know how does poor folk be able to spind money for
dhrink. I am a widow this seventeen year now,
an’ the divle a man or woman uvver seen me goin’
to a public-house. I seen women goin’ a
drinkin’ widout a shift to their backs.
I dunno how the divvle they done it. Begorra,
I think, if I drunk a glass of ale just now, my two
legs would fail from under me immadiately I
am that wake.” The old woman was a little
too censorious, I think. There is no doubt that
even people who are starving do drink a little sometimes.
The wonder would be if they did not, in some degree,
share the follies of the rest of the world. Besides,
it is a well-known fact, that those who are in employ,
are apt, from a feeling of misdirected kindness, to
treat those who are out of work to a glass of ale or
two, now and then; and it is very natural, too, that
those who have been but ill-fed for a long time are
not able to stand it well.
After leaving the old Irishwoman’s
house, we called upon a man who had got his living
by the sale of newspapers. There was nothing
specially worthy of remark in this case, except that
he complained of his trade having fallen away a good
deal. “I used to sell three papers where
I now sell one,” said he. This may not arise
from there being fewer papers sold, but from there
being more people selling them than when times were
good. I came back to Manchester in the evening.
I have visited Preston again since then, and have spent
some time upon Preston Moor, where there are nearly
fifteen hundred men, principally factory operatives,
at work. Of this I shall have something to say
in my next paper.