“Come, child of misfortune, come hither!
I’ll weep with thee, tear for tear.”
Tom Moore.
The weaver’s wife spoke very
feelingly of the young governess who had been so good
to the family. Her voice trembled with emotion
as she told of her kindnesses, which had so won the
hearts of the poor folk thereabouts, that whenever
they hear her name now, their tongues leap at once
into heart-warm praise of her. It seems to have
been her daily pleasure to go about helping those who
needed help most, without any narrowness of distinction;
in the spirit of that “prime wisdom” which
works with all its might among such elements as lie
nearest to the hand. Children and gray-haired
working men crowded into the poor cottages to hear
her read, and to learn the first elements of education
at her free classes. She left the town, some
time ago, to live in the south of England; but the
blessings of many who were ready to perish in Wigan
will follow her all her days, and her memory will
long remain a garden of good thoughts and feelings
to those she has left behind. The eyes of the
weaver’s wife grew moist as she told of the
old blacksmith, who could not bear to hear her name
mentioned without tears. On certain nights of
the week he used to come regularly with the rest to
learn to read, like a little child, from that young
teacher. As I said in my last, she still sends
a weekly letter to her poor scholars in Wigan to encourage
them in their struggles, and to induce as many of them
as are able to write to her in return. “This
is one of her letters,” said the poor woman,
handing a paper to me. The manner of the handwriting
was itself characteristic of kind consideration for
her untrained readers. The words stood well apart.
The letters were clearly divided, and carefully and
distinctly written, in Roman characters, a quarter
of an inch long; and there was about three-quarters
of an inch of space between each line, so as to make
the whole easier to read by those not used to manuscript.
The letter ran as follows: “Dear
friends, I send you with this some little
books, which I hope you will like to try to read;
soon, I hope, I shall be able to help you with those
texts you cannot make out by yourselves. I often
think of you, dear friends, and wish that I could sometimes
take a walk to Scholefield’s Lane. This
wish only makes me feel how far I am from you, but
then I remember with gladness that I may mention you
all by name to our one Father, and ask Him to bless
you. Very often I do ask Him, and one of my strongest
wishes is that we, who have so often read His message
of love together, may all of us love the Saviour,
and, through Him, be saved from sin. Dear friends,
do pray to Him. With kind love and best wishes
to each one of you, believe me always, your sincere
friend, .” I have dwelt a little upon
this instance of unassuming beneficence, to show that
there is a great deal of good being done in this world,
which is not much heard of, except by accident.
One meets with it, here and there, as a thirsty traveller
meets with an unexpected spring in the wilderness,
refreshing its own plot of earth, without noise or
ostentation.
My friend and I left the weaver’s
cottage, and came down again into a part of Scholes
where huddled squalor and filth is to be found on
all sides. On our way we passed an old tattered
Irishwoman, who was hurrying along, with two large
cabbages clipt tight in her withered arms. “You’re
doin’ well, old lady,” said I. “Faith,”
replied she, “if I had a big lump ov a ham bone,
now, wouldn’t we get over this day in glory,
anyhow. But no matter. There’s not
wan lafe o’ them two fellows but will be clane
out o’ sight before the clock strikes again.”
The first place we called at in this quarter was a
poor half-empty cottage, inhabited by an old widow
and her sick daughter. The girl sat there pale
and panting, and wearing away to skin and bone.
She was far gone in consumption. Their only source
of maintenance was the usual grant of relief from
the committee, but this girl’s condition needed
further consideration. The old widow said to
my friend, “Aw wish yo could get me some
sort o’ nourishment for this lass, Mr Lea; aw
cannot get it mysel’, an’ yo see’n
heaw hoo is.” My friend took a note of
the case, and promised to see to it at once.
When great weltering populations, like that of Lancashire,
are thrown suddenly into such a helpless state as now,
it is almost impossible to lay hold at once of every
nice distinction of circumstances that gives a speciality
of suffering to the different households of the poor.
But I believe, as this time of trouble goes on, the
relief committees are giving a more careful and delicate
consideration to the respective conditions of poor
families.
After leaving the old widow’s
house, as we went farther down into the sickly hive
of penury and dirt, called “Scholes,” my
friend told me of an intelligent young woman, a factory
operative and a Sunday-school teacher, who had struggled
against starvation, till she could bear it no longer;
and, even after she had accepted the grant of relief,
she “couldn’t for shame” fetch the
tickets herself, but waited outside whilst a friend
of hers went in for them. The next house we visited
was a comfortable cottage. The simple furniture
was abundant, and good of its kind, and the whole
was remarkably clean. Amongst the wretched dwellings
in its neighbourhood, it shone “like a good
deed in a naughty world.” On the walls there
were several Catholic pictures, neatly framed; and
a large old-fashioned wooden wheel stood in the middle
of the floor, with a quantity of linen yarn upon it.
Old Stephen I and his cosy goodwife lived there.
The old woman was “putting the place to rights”
after their noontide meal; and Stephen was “cottering”
about the head of the cellar steps when we went in.
There were a few healthy plants in the windows, and
everything gave evidence of industry and care.
The good-tempered old couple were very communicative.
Old Stephen was a weaver of diaper; and, when he had
anything to do, he could earn about eight shillings
a week. “Some can get more than that at
the same work,” said he; “but I am gettin’
an old man, ye see. I shall be seventy-three on
the 10th of next October, and, beside that, I have
a very bad arm, which is a great hindrance to me.”
“He has had very little work for months, now,”
said his wife; “an’ what makes us feel
it more, just now, is that my son is over here on
a visit to us, from Oscott College. He is studying
for the priesthood. He went to St John’s,
here, in Wigan, for five years, as a pupil teacher;
an’ he took good ways, so the principals of
the college proposed to educate him for the Church
of Rome. He was always a good boy, an’ a
bright one, too. I wish we had been able to entertain
him better. But he knows that the times are again
us. He is twenty-four years of age; an’
I often think it strange that his father’s birthday
and his own fall on the same day of the month the
10th of October. I hope we’ll both live
to see him an ornament to his profession yet.
There is only the girl, an’ Stephen, an’
myself left at home now, an’ we have hard work
to pull through, I can assure ye; though there are
many people a dale worse off than we are.”
From this place we went up to a street
called “Vauxhall Road.” In the first
cottage we called at here the inmates were all out
of work, as usual, and living upon relief. There
happened to be a poor old white-haired weaver sitting
in the house, an aged neighbour out of
work, who had come in to chat with my friend a bit.
My friend asked how he was getting on. “Yo
mun speak up,” said the woman of the house,
“he’s very deaf.” “What
age are yo, maister?” said I. “What?”
“How old are yo?” “Aw’m
a beamer,” replied the old man, “a twister-in, when
there’s ought doin’. But it’s
nowt ov a trade neaw. Aw’ll tell yo
what ruins me; it’s these lung warps. They
maken ‘em seven an’ eight cuts in, neaw
an’ then. There’s so mony ‘fancies’
an’ things i’ these days; it makes my job
good to nought at o’ for sich like chaps
as me. When one gets sixty year owd, they needen
to go to schoo again neaw; they getten o’erta’en
wi’ so many kerly-berlies o’ one mak and
another. Mon, owd folk at has to wortch for a
livin’ cannot keep up wi’ sich times
as these, nought o’th sort.”
“Well, but how do you manage to live?”
“Well, aw can hardly tell, aw’ll
be sunken iv aw can tell. It’s very thin
pikein’; but very little does for me, an’
aw’ve nought but mysel’. Yo see’n,
aw get a bit ov a job neaw an’ then, an’
a scrat amung th’ rook, like an owd hen.
But aw’ll tell yo one thing; aw’ll
not go up yon, iv aw can help it, aw’ll
not.” ("Up yon” meant to the Board of
Guardians.) “Eh, now,” said the woman of
the house, “aw never see’d sich a
man as him i’ my life. See yo, he’ll
sit an’ clem fro mornin’ to neet afore
he’ll ax oather relief folk or onybody else for
a bite.”
In the same street we called at a
house where there was a tall, pale old man, sitting
sadly in an old arm-chair, by the fireside. The
little cottage was very sweet and orderly. Every
window was cleaned to its utmost nook of glass, and
every bit of metal was brightened up to the height.
The flagged floor was new washed; and everything was
in its own place. There were a few books on little
shelves, and a Bible lay on the window-sill; and there
was a sad, chapel-like stillness in the house.
A clean, staid-looking girl stood at a table, peeling
potatoes for dinner. The old man said, “We
are five, altogether, in this house. This lass
is a reeler. I am a weighver; but we’n
bin out o’ wark nine months, now. We’n
bin force’t to tak to relief at last; an’
we’n getten five tickets. We could happen
ha’ manage’t better, but aw’m
sore wi’ rheumatism, yo see’n.
Aw’ve had a bit o’ weighvin’ i’th
heawse mony a day, but aw’ve th’ rheumatic
so bad i’ this hond it’s hond
that aw pick wi’ that aw couldn’t
bide to touch a fither with it, bless yo.
Aw have th’ rheumatic all o’er mo, nearly;
an’ it leads one a feaw life. Yo happen
never had a touch on it, had yo?” “Never.”
“Well; yo’re weel off. When is this
war to end, thinken yo?” “Nay; that’s
a very hard thing to tell.” " Well, we mun grin
an’ abide till it’s o’er, aw guess.
It’s a mad mak o’ wark. But it’ll
happen turn up for best i’th end ov o’.”