Part 68 (1/2)
Book 6 Chapter 10
About noon of this day there was a great stir in Mowbray. It was generally whispered about that the Liberator at the head of the h.e.l.l-cats and all others who chose to accompany them was going to pay a visit to Mr Trafford's settlement, in order to avenge an insult which his envoys had experienced early in the morning when, accompanied by a rabble of two or three hundred persons, they had repaired to the Mowedale works in order to signify the commands of the Liberator that labour should stop, and if necessary to enforce those commands. The injunctions were disregarded, and when the mob in pursuance of their further instructions began to force the great gates of the premises, in order that they might enter the building, drive the plugs out of the steam-boilers, and free the slaves enclosed, a masqued battery of powerful engines was suddenly opened upon them, and the whole band of patriots were deluged. It was impossible to resist a power which seemed inexhaustible, and wet to the skins and amid the laughter of their adversaries they fled. This ridiculous catastrophe had terribly excited the ire of the Liberator. He vowed vengeance, and as, like all great revolutionary characters and military leaders, the only foundation of his power was constant employment for his troops and constant excitement for the populace, he determined to place himself at the head of the chastising force, and make a great example which should establish his awful reputation and spread the terror of his name throughout the district.
Field the Chartist had soon discovered who were the rising spirits of Mowbray, and Devilsdust and Dandy Mick were both sworn on Monday morning of the council of the Liberator, and took their seats at the board accordingly. Devilsdust, used to public business and to the fulfilment of responsible duties, was calm and grave, but equally ready and determined. Mick's head on the contrary was quite turned by the importance of his novel position. He was greatly excited, could devise nothing and would do anything, always followed Devilsdust in council, but when he executed their joint decrees and showed himself about the town, he strutted like a peac.o.c.k, swore at the men and winked at the girls, and was the idol and admiration of every gaping or huzzaing younker.
There was a large crowd a.s.sembled in the Market Place, in which were the Liberator's lodgings, many of them armed in their rude fas.h.i.+on, and all anxious to march. Devilsdust was with the great man and Field; Mick below was marshalling the men, and swearing like a trooper at all who disobeyed or who misunderstood.
”Come stupid,” said he addressing Tummas, ”what are you staring about?
Get your men in order or I'll be among you.”
”Stupid!” said Tummas, staring at Mick with immense astonishment. ”And who are you who says 'Stupid?' A white-livered Handloom as I dare say, or a son of a gun of a factory slave. Stupid indeed! What next, when a h.e.l.l-cat is to be called stupid by such a thing as you?”
”I'll give you a piece of advice young man,” said Master Nixon taking his pipe out of his mouth and blowing an immense puff; ”just you go down the shaft for a couple of months, and then you'll learn a little of life, which is wery useful.”
The lively temperament of the Dandy would here probably have involved him in an inconvenient embroilment had not some one at this moment touched him on the shoulder, and looking round he recognised Mr Morley.
Notwithstanding the difference of their political schools Mick had a profound respect for Morley, though why he could not perhaps precisely express. But he had heard Devilsdust for years declare that Stephen Morley was the deepest head in Mowbray, and though he regretted the unfortunate weakness in favour of that imaginary abstraction called Moral Force for which the editor of the Phalanx was distinguished, still Devilsdust used to say that if ever the great revolution were to occur by which the rights of labour were to be recognised, though bolder spirits and brawnier arms might consummate the change, there was only one head among them that would be capable when they had gained their power to guide it for the public weal, and as Devilsdust used to add, ”carry out the thing,” and that was Morley.
It was a fine summer day, and Mowedale was as resplendent as when Egremont amid its beauties first began to muse over the beautiful. There was the same bloom over the sky, the same shadowy l.u.s.tre on the trees, the same sparkling brilliancy on the waters. A herdsman following some kine was crossing the stone bridge, and except their lowing as they stopped and sniffed the current of fresh air in its centre, there was not a sound.
Suddenly the tramp and hum of a mult.i.tude broke upon the suns.h.i.+ny silence. A vast crowd with some a.s.sumption of an ill-disciplined order approached from the direction of Mowbray. At their head rode a man on a white mule. Many of his followers were armed with bludgeons and other rude weapons, and moved in files. Behind them spread a more miscellaneous throng, in which women were not wanting and even children.
They moved rapidly; they swept by the former cottage of Gerard; they were in sight of the settlement of Trafford.
”All the waters of the river shall not dout the blaze that I will light up to-day,” said the Liberator.
”He is a most inveterate Capitalist,” said Field, ”and would divert the minds of the people from the Five Points by allotting them gardens and giving them baths.”
”We will have no more gardens in England; everything shall be open,”
said the Liberator, ”and baths shall only be used to drown the enemies of the People. I was always against was.h.i.+ng; it takes the marrow out of a man.”
”Here we are,” said Field, as the roofs and bowers of the village, the spire and the spreading factory, broke upon them. ”Every door and every window closed! The settlement is deserted. Some one has been before us and apprised them of our arrival.”
”Will they pour water on me?” said the Bishop. ”It must be a stream indeed that shall put out the blaze that I am going to light. What shall we do first? Halt there, you men,” said the Liberator looking back with that scowl which his apprentices never could forget. ”Will you halt or won't you? or must I be among you?”
There was a tremulous shuffling and then a comparative silence.
The women and children of the village had been gathered into the factory yard, of which the great gates were closed.
”What shall we burn first?” asked the Bishop.
”We may as well parley with them a little,” said Field; ”perhaps we may contrive to gain admission and then we can sack the whole affair, and let the people burn the machinery. It will be a great moral lesson.”
”As long as there is burning,” said the Bishop, ”I don't care what lessons you teach them. I leave them to you; but I will have fire to put out that water.”
”I'll advance,” said Field, and so saying he went forward and rang at the gate; the Bishop, on his mule, with a dozen h.e.l.l-cats accompanying him; the great body of the people about twenty yards withdrawn.
”Who rings?” asked a loud voice.
”One who by the order of the Liberator wishes to enter and see whether his commands for a complete cessation of labour have been complied with in this establishment.”