Part 2 (1/2)

They looked as if they had been sacked by b.u.m-bailiffs. The topmost house was the only place where I saw a fire. A family of eight lived there. They were Irish people. The wife, a tall, cheerful woman, sat suckling her child, and giving a helping hand now and then to her husband's work. He was a little, pale fellow, with only one arm, and he had an impediment in his speech. He had taken to making cheap boxes of thin, rough deal, afterwards covered with paper. With the help of his wife he could make one in a day, and he got ninepence profit out of it--when the box was sold. He was working at one when we went in, and he twirled it proudly about with his one arm, and stammered out a long explanation about the way it had been made; and then he got upon the lid, and sprang about a little, to let us see how much it would bear. As the brave little tattered man stood there upon the box-lid, springing, and sputtering, and waving his one arm, his wife looked up at him with a smile, as if she thought him ”the greatest wight on ground.” There was a little curly-headed child standing by, quietly taking in all that was going on. I laid my hand upon her head; and asked her what her name was. She popped her thumb into her mouth, and looked shyly about from one to another, but never a word could I get her to say. ”That's Lizzy,” said the woman; ”she is a little visitor belongin' to one o' the neighbours. They are badly off, and she often comes in. Sure, our childer is very fond of her, an' so she is of them. She is fine company wid ourselves, but always very shy wid strangers. Come now, Lizzy, darlin'; tell us your name, love, won't you, now?” But it was no use; we couldn't get her to speak. In the next cottage where we called, in this row, there was a woman was.h.i.+ng. Her mug was standing upon a stool in the middle of the floor; and there was not any other thing in the place in the shape of furniture or household utensil.

The walls were bare of everything, except a printed paper, bearing these words:

”The wages of sin is death. But the gift of G.o.d is eternal life, through Jesus Christ our Lord.” We now went to another street, and visited the cottage of a blind chairmaker, called John Singleton. He was a kind of oracle among the poor folk of the neighbourhood. The old chairmaker was sitting by the fire when we went in; and opposite to him sat ”Old John,” the hero of the broken windows in Nile Street. He had come up to have a crack with his blind crony. The chairmaker was seventy years of age, and he had benefited by the advantage of good fundamental instruction in his youth. He was very communicative. He said he should have been educated for the priesthood, at Stonyhurst College. ”My clothes were made, an'

everything was ready for me to start to Stonyhurst. There was a stagecoach load of us going; but I failed th' heart, an' wouldn't go--an' I've forethought ever sin'. Mr Newby said to my friends at the same time, he said, 'You don't need to be frightened of him; he'll make the brightest priest of all the lot--an' I should, too. .

. . I consider mysel' a young man yet, i' everything, except it be somethin' at's uncuth to me.” And now, old John, the grinder, began to complain again of how badly he had been used about the broken windows in Nile Street. But the old chairmaker stopped him; and, turning up his blind eyes, he said, ”John, don't you be foolish.

Bother no moor abeawt it. All things has but a time.”

CHAPTER VIII.

A man cannot go wrong in Trinity Ward just now, if he wants to see poor folk. He may find them there at any time, but now he cannot help but meet them; and n.o.body can imagine how badly off they are, unless he goes amongst them. They are biding the hard time out wonderfully well, and they will do so to the end. They certainly have not more than a common share of human frailty. There are those who seem to think that when people are suddenly reduced to poverty, they should become suddenly endowed with the rarest virtues; but it never was so, and, perhaps, never will be so long as the world rolls. In my rambles about this ward, I was astonished at the dismal succession of dest.i.tute homes, and the number of struggling owners of little shops, who were watching their stocks sink gradually down to nothing, and looking despondingly at the cold approach of pauperism. I was astonished at the strings of dwellings, side by side, stript, more or less, of the commonest household utensils--the poor little bare houses, often crowded with lodgers, whose homes had been broken up elsewhere; sometimes crowded, three or four families of decent working people in a cottage of half-a-crown a-week rental; sleeping anywhere, on benches or on straw, and afraid to doff their clothes at night time because they had no other covering. Now and then the weekly visitor comes to the door of a house where he has regularly called. He lifts the latch, and finds the door locked. He looks in at the window. The house is empty, and the people are gone- -the Lord knows where. Who can tell what tales of sorrow will have their rise in the pressure of a time like this--tales that will never be written, and that no statistics will reveal.

Trinity Ward swarms with factory operatives; and, after our chat with blind John, the chairmaker, and his ancient crony the grinder from Nile Street, we set off again to see something more of them.

Fitful showers came down through the day, and we had to shelter now and then. In one cottage, where we stopped a few minutes, the old woman told us that, in addition to their own family, they had three young women living with them--the orphan daughters of her husband's brother. They had been out of work thirty-four weeks, and their uncle--a very poor man--had been obliged to take them into his house, ”till sich times as they could afford to pay for lodgin's somewheer else.” My companion asked whether they were all out of work still. ”Naw,” replied the old woman, ”one on 'em has getten on to wortch a few days for t' sick (that is, in the place of some sick person). Hoo's wortchin' i' th' cardreawn at 'Th' Big-un.'” (This is the name they give to Messrs Swainson and Birley's mill.)

The next place we called at was the house of an old joiner. He was lying very ill upstairs. As we drew up to the door, my companion said, ”Now, this is a clean, respectable family. They have struggled hard and suffered a great deal, before they would ask for relief.”

When we went in, the wife was cleaning her well-nigh empty house.

”Eh,” said she,” I thought it wur th' clubman comin', an' I wur just goin' to tell him that I had nothin' for him.” The family was seven in number--man, wife, and five children. The husband, as I have said, was lying ill. The wife told me that they had only 6s. a-week coming in for the seven to live upon. My companion was the weekly visitor who relieved them. She told me that her husband was sixty- eight years old; she was not forty. She said that her husband was not strong, and he had been going nearly barefoot and ”clemmed” all through last winter, and she was afraid he had got his death of cold. They had not a bed left to lie upon. ”My husband,” said she,”was a master joiner once, an' was doin' very well. But you see how we are now.” There were two portraits--oil paintings--hanging against the wall. ”Whose portraits are these?” said I. ”Well; that's my master--an' this is me,” replied she. ”He would have 'em taken some time since. I couldn't think o' sellin' 'em; or else, yo see, we've sold nearly everything we had. I did try to p.a.w.n 'em, too, thinkin' we could get 'em back again when things came round; but, I can a.s.sure yo, I couldn't find a broker anywhere that would tak' 'em in.” ”Well, Missis,” said my companion, ”yo have one comfort; you are always clean.” ”Eh, bless yo!” replied she, ”I couldn't live among dirt! My husban' tells me that I clean all the luck away; but aw'm sure there's no luck i' filth; if there is, anybody may tak' it for me.”

The rain had stopt again; and after my friend had made a note respecting some additional relief for the family, we bade the woman good day. We had not gone far before a little ragged la.s.s looked up admiringly at two pinks I had stuck in my b.u.t.tonhole, and holding up her hand, said, ”Eh, gi' me a posy!” My friend pointed to one of the cottages we pa.s.sed, and said that the last time he called there, he found the family all seated round a large bowl of porridge, made of Indian meal. This meal is sold at a penny a pound. He stopped at another cottage and said, ”Here's a house where I always find them reading when I call. I know the people very well.” He knocked and tried the latch, but there was n.o.body in. As we pa.s.sed an open door, the pleasant smell of oatcake baking came suddenly upon me. It woke up many memories of days gone by. I saw through the window a stout, meal-dusted old woman, busy with her wooden ladle and baking-shovel at a brisk oven. ”Now, I should like to look in there for a minute or two, if it can be done,” said I. ”Well,” replied my friend, ”this woman is not on our books; she gets her own living in the way you see. But come in; it will be all right; I know her very well.” I was glad of that, for I wanted to have a chat with her, and to peep at the baking. ”Good morning, Missis,” said he; ”how are you?” ”Why, just in a middlin' way.” ”How long is this wet weather going to last, think you?” ”Nay, there ye hev me fast;--but what brings ye here this mornin'?” said the old woman, resting the end of her ladle on the little counter; ”I never trouble sic like chaps as ye.” ”No, no,” replied my friend; ”we have not called about anything of that kind.” ”What, then, pray ye?” ”Well, my friend, here, is almost a stranger in Preston; and as soon as ever he smelt the baking, he said he should like to see it, so I took the liberty of bringing him in.” ”Oh, ay; come in, an' welcome. Ye're just i' time, too; for I've bin sat at t' back to sarra (serve) t' pigs.” ”You're not a native of Lancas.h.i.+re, Missis,” said I. ”Why, wheer then? come, now; let's be knowin', as ye're so sharp.” ”c.u.mberland,” said I. ”Well, now; ye're reight, sewer enough. But how did ye find it out, now?”

”Why, you said that you had been out to sarra t' pigs. A native of Lancas.h.i.+re would have said 'serve' instead of 'sarra.'” ”Well, that's varra queer; for I've bin a lang time away from my awn country. But, whereivver do ye belang to, as ye're so bowd wi' me?”

said she, smiling, and turning over a cake which was baking upon the oven. I told her that I was born a few miles from Manchester.

”Manchester! never, sewer;” said she, resting her ladle again; ”why, I lived ever so long i' Manchester when I was young. I was cook at th' Swan i' Shudehill, aboon forty year sin.” She said that, in those days, the Swan, in Shudehill, was much frequented by the commercial men of Manchester. It was a favourite dining house for them. Many of them even brought their own beefsteak on a skewer; and paid a penny for the cooking of it. She said she always liked Manchester very well; but she had not been there for a good while.

”But,” said she, ”ye'll hev plenty o' oatcake theer--sartin.” ”Not much, now,” replied I; ”it's getting out o' fas.h.i.+on.” I told her that we had to get it once a week from a man who came all the way from Stretford into Manchester, with a large basketful upon his head, crying ”Woat cakes, two a penny!” ”Two a penny!” said she; ”why, they'll not be near as big as these, belike.” ”Not quite,”

replied I. ”Not quite! naw; not hauf t' size, aw warnd! Why, th'

poor fellow desarves his bra.s.s iv he niver gev a farthin' for th'

stuff to mak 'eni on. What! I knaw what oatcake bakin' is.”

Leaving the canny old c.u.mberland woman at her baking, we called at a cottage in Everton Gardens. It was as clean as a gentleman's parlour; but there was no furniture in sight except a table, and, upon the table, a fine bush of fresh hawthorn blossom, stuck in a pint jug full of water. Here, I heard again the common story--they had been several months out of work; their household goods had dribbled away in ruinous sales, for something to live upon; and now, they had very little left but the walls. The little woman said to me, ”Bless yo, there is at thinks we need'n nought, becose we keepen a daycent eawtside. But, I know my own know abeawt that. Beside, one doesn't like to fill folk's meawths, iv one is ill off.”

It was now a little past noon, and we spent a few minutes looking through the Catholic schoolhouse, in Trinity Ward--a s.p.a.cious brick building. The scholars were away at dinner. My friend is master of the school. His a.s.sistant offered to go with us to one or two Irish families in a close wynd, hard by, called Wilkie's Court. In every case I had the great advantage of being thus accompanied by gentlemen who were friendly and familiar with the poor we visited.

This was a great facility to me. Wilkie's Court is a little cul de sac, with about half-a-dozen wretched cottages in it, fronted by a dead wall. The inhabitants of the place are all Irish. They were nearly all kept alive by relief from one source or other; but their poverty was not relieved by that cleanliness which I had witnessed in so many equally poor houses, making the best use of those simple means of comfort which are invaluable, although they cost little or nothing. In the first house we called at, a middle-aged woman was pacing slowly about the unwholesome house with a child in her arms.

My friend inquired where the children were. ”They are in the houses about; all but the one poor boy.” ”And where is he?” said I. ”Well, he comes home now an' agin; he comes an' goes; sure, we don't know how. . . . Ah, thin, sir,” continued she, beginning to cry, ”I'll tell ye the rale truth, now. He was drawn away by some bad lads, an'

he got three months in the New Bailey; that's G.o.d's truth. . . . Ah, what'll I do wid him,” said she, bursting into tears afresh; ”what'll I do wid him? sure, he is my own!” We did not stop long to intrude upon such trouble as this. She called out as we came away to tell us that the poor crayter next door was quite helpless. The next house was, in some respects, more comfortable than the last, though it was quite as poor in household goods. There was one flimsy deal table, one little chair, and two half-penny pictures of Catholic saints pinned against the wall. ”Sure, I sold the other table since you wor here before,” said the woman to my friend; ”I sold it for two-an'-aightpence, an' bought this one for sixpence.” At the house of another Irish family, my friend inquired where all the chairs were gone. ”Oh,” said a young woman,” the baillies did fetch uvverything away, barrin' the one sate, when we were livin' in Lancaster Street.” ”Where do you all sit now, then?” ”My mother sits there,” replied she, ”an' we sit upon the flure.” ”I heard they were goin' to sell these heawses,” said one of the lads, ”but, begorra,”

continued he, with a laugh, ”I wouldn't wonder did they sell the ground from under us next.” In the course of our visitation a thunder storm came on, during which we took shelter with a poor widow woman, who had a plateful of steeped peas for sale, in the window. She also dealt in rags and bones in a small way, and so managed to get a living, as she said, ”beawt troublin' onybody for charity.” She said it was a thing that folk had to wait a good deal out in the cold for.

It was market-day, and there were many country people in Preston. On my way back to the middle of the town, I called at an old inn, in Friargate, where I listened with pleasure a few minutes to the old- fas.h.i.+oned talk of three farmers from the Fylde country. Their conversation was princ.i.p.ally upon cow-drinks. One of them said there was nothing in the world like ”peppermint tay an' new b.u.t.ter” for cows that had the belly-ache. ”They'll be reet in a varra few minutes at after yo gotten that into 'em,” said he. As evening came on the weather settled into one continuous shower, and I left Preston in the heavy rain, weary, and thinking of what I had seen during the day. Since then I have visited the town again, and I shall say something about that visit hereafter.

CHAPTER IX.

The rain had been falling heavily through the night. It was raw and gusty, and thick clouds were sailing wildly overhead, as I went to the first train for Preston. It was that time of morning when there is a lull in the streets of Manchester, between six and eight. The ”knocker-up” had shouldered his long wand, and paddled home to bed again; and the little stalls, at which the early workman stops for his half-penny cup of coffee, were packing up. A cheerless morning, and the few people that were about looked damp and low spirited. I bought the day's paper, and tried to read it, as we flitted by the glimpses of dirty garret-life, through the forest of chimneys, gus.h.i.+ng forth their thick morning fumes into the drizzly air, and over the dingy web of Salford streets. We rolled on through Pendleton, where the country is still trying to look green here and there, under increasing difficulties; but it was not till we came to where the green vale of Clifton open out, that I became quite reconciled to the weather. Before we were well out of sight of the ancient tower of Prestwich Church, the day brightened a little. The s.h.i.+fting folds of gloomy cloud began to glide asunder, and through the gauzy veils which lingered in the inters.p.a.ces, there came a dim radiance which lighted up the rain-drops ”lingering on the pointed thorns;” and the tall meadow gra.s.ses were swaying to and fro with their loads of liquid pearls, in courtesies full of exquisite grace, as we whirled along. I enjoyed the ride that raw morning, although the sky was all gloom again long before we came in sight of the Ribble.

I met my friend, in Preston, at half-past nine; and we started at once for another ramble amongst the poor, in a different part of Trinity Ward. We went first to a little court, behind Bell Street.

There is only one house in the court, and it is known as ”Th' Back Heawse.” In this cottage the little house-things had escaped the ruin which I had witnessed in so many other places. There were two small tables, and three chairs; and there were a few pots and a pan or two. Upon the cornice there were two pot spaniels, and two painted stone apples; and, between them, there was a sailor waving a union jack, and a little pudgy pot man, for holding tobacco. On the windowsill there was a musk-plant; and, upon the table by the staircase, there was a rude cage, containing three young throstles.

The place was tidy; and there was a kind-looking old couple inside.

The old man stood at the table in the middle of the floor, was.h.i.+ng the pots, and the old woman was wiping them, and putting them away.