登陆注册
19623300000125

第125章 CHAPTER XXIX.(4)

"Yes, my man: and you grumbled at my taking two-thirds. Labor is harder on you inventors than capital is, you see. Well, I told 'em I wondered at their cheek; but the old man stopped me, and spoke quite mild: says he, 'You are too hard on us; we ought to gain a trifle by our own improvement; if it had come from you, we should pay you for it;' and he should stand by his offer of sixpence. So then the men told them it would be the worse for them, and the old gentleman gave a bit of sigh, and said he couldn't help that, he must live in the trade, or leave it, he didn't much care which.

Next morning they all struck work; and there we are--stopped."

"Well," said Henry, "it is provoking; but you mustn't ask me to meddle. It's your business."

"It is, and I'll show you I'm bad to beat." With this doughty resolve he went off and drove the contractors; they drove the brickmakers, and the brickmakers got fresh hands from a distance, and the promise of some more.

Bolt rubbed his hands, and kept popping into the yard to see how they got on. By this means he witnessed an incident familiar to brickmakers in that district, but new to him. Suddenly loud cries of pain were heard, and two of the brickmakers held up hands covered with blood, and transfixed by needles. Some ruffian had filled the clay with needles. The sufferers were both disabled, and one went to the hospital. Tempered clay enough to make two hundred thousand bricks had been needled, and had to be cleared away at a loss of time and material.

Bolt went and told Henry, and it only worried him; he could do nothing. Bolt went and hired a watchman and a dog, at his own expense. The dog was shot dead one dark night, and the watchman's box turned over and sat upon, watchman included, while the confederates trampled fifty thousand raw bricks into a shapeless mass.

The brickmasters, however, stood firm, and at last four of the old hands returned to him, and accepted the sixpence profit due to the master's invention. These four were contribution-men, that is to say, they paid the Union a shilling per week for permission to make bricks; but this weekly payment was merely a sort of blackmail, it entitled them to no relief from the Union when out of work: so a three-weeks' strike brought them to starvation, and they could cooperate no longer with the genuine Union men, who were relieved from the box all this time. Nevertheless, though their poverty, and not their will, brought them back to work, they were all threatened, and found themselves in a position that merits the sympathy of all men, especially of the very poor. Starvation on one side, sanguinary threats on the other, from an Union which abandoned them in their need, yet expected them to stick by it and starve. In short, the said Union was no pupil of Amboyne; could not put itself in the place of these hungry men, and realize their dilemma; it could only see the situation from its own point of view. From that intellectual defect sprang a crime. On a certain dark night, Thomas Wilde, one of these contribution-men, was burning bricks all by himself, when a body of seven men came crawling up to within a little distance. These men were what they call "victims," i.e., men on strike, and receiving pay from the box.

Now, when a man stands against the fire of a kiln, he cannot see many yards from him: so five of the "victims" stood waiting, and sent two forward. These two came up to Wilde, and asked him a favor. "Eh, mister, can you let me and my mate lie down for an hour by your fire?"

"You are welcome," said honest Wilde. He then turned to break a piece of coal, and instantly one of those who had accepted his hospitality struck him on the back of the head, and the other five rushed in, and they all set on him, and hit him with cartlegs, and kicked him with their heavy shoes. Overpowered as he was, he struggled away from them, groaning and bleeding, and got to a shed about thirty yards off. But these relentless men, after a moment's hesitation, followed him, and rained blows and kicks on him again, till he gave himself up for dead. He cried out in his despair, "Lord, have mercy on me; they have finished me!" and fainted away in a pool of his own blood. But, just before he became insensible, he heard a voice say, "Thou'll burn no more bricks." Then the "victims" retired, leaving this great criminal for dead.

After a long while he came to himself, and found his arm was broken, and his body covered with cuts and bruises. His house was scarcely a furlong distant, yet he was an hour crawling to it. His room was up a short stair of ten steps. The steps beat him; he leaned on the rail at the bottom, and called out piteously, "My wife! my wife! my wife!" three times.

Mrs. Wilde ran down to him, and caught hold of his hand, and said, "Whatever is to do?"

When she took his hand the pain made him groan, and she felt something drip on to her hand. It was blood from his wounded arm.

Then she was terrified, and, strong with excitement, she managed to get him into the house and lay him on the floor. She asked him, had he fallen off the kiln? He tried to reply, but could not, and fainted again. This time he was insensible for several hours. In the morning he came to, and told his cruel story to Whitbread, Bolt, and others. Bolt and Whitbread took it most to heart. Bolt went to Mr. Ransome, and put the case in his hands.

Ransome made this remark:--"Ah, you are a stranger, sir. The folk hereabouts never come to us in these Union cases. I'll attend to it, trust me."

Bolt went with this tragedy to Henry, and it worried him; but he could do nothing. "Mr. Bolt," said he, "I think you are making your own difficulties. Why quarrel with the Brickmakers' Union? Surely that is superfluous."

"Why, it is them that quarreled with me; and I'm Ben Bolt, that is bad to beat." He armed himself with gun and revolver, and watched the Whitbreads' yard himself at night.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 百妖萌主

    百妖萌主

    何澹澹漂泊江湖,卖艺为生,只为给小妖们赚口粮。本以为代嫁的生意好做,骗婚却骗来一场盛大的爱情。她好歹也是放生百妖赚功德的正经女仙,怎能为纨绔公子的玩闹爱情停留?她无情拒绝,却被公子哥一句话打败:你能管得了你不爱我,还能管得了我爱你吗?她无语,看来以后的江湖生活,注定要跟这个家伙纠缠了。
  • EXO许我们下一个十年

    EXO许我们下一个十年

    慵懒的夏日午后,阳光透过树叶的缝隙撒在脸上,想起那些裙角飞扬的尔然时光,曾经背着画框走过栀子花香。好想问问那个骑单车的少年,当初的梦想实现了吗?十年前,他从死神手里救了她,她向他许诺,十年之后,我们一定要再相见,做同一份职业,在一个公司,从朋友做到恋人,从恋人做到夫妻,十年中,她百般努力,只为了跟他在一个学校学习,他却被星探发现当了练习生,十年之后,她终于见到了他,可事情偏偏不尽人意。是上天的阻挠还是缘分就是如此,那个骑单车的少年,我好想和你在一起
  • 网游之侠行天下

    网游之侠行天下

    不解的身世,奇异的功法、神秘的杀手,受雇主之请进入游戏!现实中的冷酷杀手,游戏中的多情男儿!为保护自己的爱人与兄弟,他杀戮成神!为了心中的那份执着与责任,他与世人为敌!粉碎一切阻挡前进步伐敌人,为的就是成为最终的强者!从此,他侠行天下!然而这就是他想要的吗?不!他想要的还在后面……问苍天!血洒疆场,为何惜!本书以一名杀手的游戏生涯为主线,保镖生涯、校园生涯、复仇生涯、商战生涯为辅助,三分都市七分游戏。
  • 炎师天下

    炎师天下

    "傲行天下逍遥者,唯我炎师!”天下最大的官商成为他的经济源泉,百变性感的美人成为他的间谍头子,鲁班高超技艺的传承家族成为他的工程部门,隐匿于暗夜的杀手是他忠诚的刺客,溜须拍马,口舌如簧的马屁精们竟然为他宣传广告,利用一部《金瓶梅》,各类子弟竟然与他称兄道弟,关系纠结,所有人爱他的智慧,赞赏他的度量,但害怕他的心机和霸道。这股庞大的组织被称为------炎师,一个让他纵横天下,逍遥人间的工具!一个穿越到古朝的保镖的魅力人生!-------------------------------------PS:1.本书坚决反对11,但也坚决支持因为感情的升华而进行的身心交流。2.本文是架空历史,所以较真者,本人将拉出古墓大学士与你辩论。3.本文秉着人道主义精神,坚决抵制太监。推荐其间,麻烦给我个书架,收藏下,感激不尽!
  • 无相天门

    无相天门

    无相天门,无形无相,以无相化有形,可穿梭时空,化天地万法,乃天地间极品灵宝!且看唐朝小修士许扬借无相天门穿越时空,感悟大千红尘,得天地间大自在,成就无上大道!
  • 惜今有你一生不悔

    惜今有你一生不悔

    她十五岁时随他征战,为他打这天下,甚至是为了他的天下不惜嫁给那个她不爱的皇上——萧锦之。只是,大婚之夜,皇上竟不碰她,而是在她的床上呆了一夜,她和皇上之间竟隔了一个枕头……;她一步一步都按照他说的做,最终皇上还是发现了她是他的人……;那日大雪,她在黑暗的大牢里苦苦等待他来救她,最终,等来的却是萧锦之……;萧锦之带她出去,没有质问她,依旧如从前般宠爱她……最后的最后,萧锦之终于因为她丢了帝位,他终于坐上了皇位……而她等来的却是焚骨之刑,那日,萧锦之再次救她,舍身为她挡了一箭。萧锦之那刻才说自己是爱她的,爱了好久了……她拿着匕首在手腕上一划,血一滴一滴的落在地上……只是这却不是她和他的结局。
  • 妖孽皇夫来敲门

    妖孽皇夫来敲门

    “喂,你哭完了吗?”身后突然响起的男性声音打断了端木傲雪的哭声,但她并没有理会只是抬起袖子擦了擦眼泪,因为哭得太久了有点累了不想开口说话。“你还是男人吗?”......一片寂静。“你哭有什么用处?真是丢脸!”烦人的声音不断响起,“关你什么事?”端木傲雪终于扭头看向这个突然冒出来的人,眼睛哭得有点酸痛,看到的只有模糊的人脸和在黑暗中特别显眼的白袍。夜司溟眼里有一瞬间的惊艳,因为他看清楚了这个月黑风高夜在山头大哭的男人的样貌,确实很美,但惊艳马上被嘲讽代替。“因为我刚刚在解手,你说有没有关系。”端木傲雪这才看清楚他的手还做着撩袍子的动作(⊙o⊙)…这是一个怎样的故事呢?喜欢请收藏,可以养肥了再看!
  • 恋爱与十分之一战争

    恋爱与十分之一战争

    飞行员世家出身的鸷翔在某知名军校附属高中里作为预备战斗机飞行员,艰苦地向着最强飞行员努力,不知不觉中度过了两年。然而因为他无法克制的暴力倾向,两年里居然一个朋友都没有交上,不时发生的单方面暴力事件更让全校学生对其敬而远之,甚至面临被军队拒收的危机!在这即将毕业的第三年,他空虚地、第三次地揍扁了全校第二的飞行员杨勇后,被杨勇愤怒的女友讥讽为‘没有女朋友的人生败犬’。恐惧人生失败的鸷翔于是暗自下定决心‘我也要称为人生赢家’。这个时候,学校第一美少女,某花瓶的学生会会长柳遥香邀请他加入某个奇怪的比赛……十分之一大赛是什么玩意?我是开真飞机的,不是开遥控飞机的啊!啊咧?原来我们学校有这么多学渣的吗?!
  • 倾城第一毒后

    倾城第一毒后

    天煞孤星难预料,千金杀人手段狠。安国候府三小姐何云珠,在自己十五岁生辰之日喝醉酒杀死了自己的贴身丫鬟紫鸢,据说手段残忍凶狠,紫鸢的尸首面目难辨,支离破碎。安国候请来非常有名气的清虚道长来家里做法,超度亡魂。然而清虚道长见到安国候三小姐的时候,居然连番摇头,嘴中吐出四个字:“天煞孤星!”最终尘埃落定时,真相才浮出水面,原来,那个母仪天下之人,原本就是她。什么天煞孤星,都是骗人的。
  • 异物见闻录

    异物见闻录

    26岁的楚远,为了偿还债务而进入了一家古怪的事务所工作,在第一单事务调查中,就被神秘而诡异的男人重伤,死而复生的他,在不得不接受自己已然半人半吸血鬼的同时,也见识到了这个世界表面之下,另外一个光怪陆离的里世界。流传千年的僵、魅、魑魅魍魉,龙九子,乃至西方的吸血鬼,东瀛的百鬼夜行,种种只存在于传说中的异物,逐一出现在他的面前。