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<h2> CHAPTER III: A CROPPER VILLAGE </h2>
<p>Bad as were times in Varley, the two public houses, one of which stood at
either end of the village, were for the most part well filled of an
evening; but this, as the landlords knew to their cost, was the result
rather of habit than of thirst. The orders given were few and far between,
and the mugs stood empty on the table for a long time before being
refilled. In point of numbers the patrons of the "Brown Cow" and the
"Spotted Dog" were not unequal; but the "Dog" did a larger trade than its
rival, for it was the resort of the younger men, while the "Cow" was the
meeting place of the elders. A man who had neither wife nor child to
support could manage even in these hard times to pay for his quart or two
of liquor of an evening; but a pint mug was the utmost that those who had
other mouths than their own to fill could afford.</p>
<p>Fortunately tobacco, although dear enough if purchased in the towns, cost
comparatively little upon the moors, for scarce a week passed but some
lugger ran in at night to some little bay among the cliffs on the eastern
shore, and for the most part landed her bales and kegs in spite of the
vigilance of the coast guard. So there were plenty of places scattered all
over the moorland where tobacco could be bought cheap, and where when the
right signal was given a noggin of spirits could be had from the keg which
was lying concealed in the wood stack or rubbish heap. What drunkenness
there was on the moors profited his majesty's excise but little.</p>
<p>The evenings at the "Cow" were not lively. The men smoked their long pipes
and sipped their beer slowly, and sometimes for half an hour no one spoke;
but it was as good as conversation, for every one knew what the rest were
thinking of—the bad times, but no one had anything new to say about
them. They were not brilliant, these sturdy Yorkshiremen. They suffered
patiently and uncomplainingly, because they did not see that any effort of
theirs could alter the state of things. They accepted the fact that the
high prices were due to the war, but why the war was always going on was
more than any of them knew. It gave them a vague satisfaction when they
heard that a British victory had been won; and when money had been more
plentiful, the occasion had been a good excuse for an extra bout of
drinking, for most of them were croppers, and had in their time been as
rough and as wild as the younger men were now; but they had learned a
certain amount of wisdom, and shook their heads over the talk and doings
of the younger men who met at the "Dog."</p>
<p>Here there was neither quiet nor resignation, but fiery talk and stern
determination; it was a settled thing here that the machines were
responsible for the bad times. The fact that such times prevailed over the
whole country in no way affected their opinion. It was not for them to
deny that there was a war, that food was dear, and taxation heavy. These
things might be; but the effect of the machinery came straight home to
them, and they were convinced that if they did but hold together and wreck
the machines prosperity would return to Varley.</p>
<p>The organization for resistance was extensive. There were branches in
every village in West Yorkshire, Lancashire, Nottingham, and Derby—all
acting with a common purpose. The members were bound by terrible oaths
upon joining the society to be true to its objects, to abstain on pain of
death from any word which might betray its secrets, and to carry into
execution its orders, even if these should involve the slaying of a near
relation proved to have turned traitor to the society.</p>
<p>Hitherto no very marked success had attended its doings. There had been
isolated riots in many places; mills had been burned, and machinery
broken. But the members looked forward to better things. So far their only
successes had been obtained by threats rather than deeds, for many
manufacturers had been deterred from adopting the new machinery by the
receipt of threatening letters signed "King Lud," saying that their
factories would be burned and themselves shot should they venture upon
altering their machinery.</p>
<p>The organ of communication between the members of the society at Varley
and those in other villages was the blacksmith, or as he preferred to be
called, the minister, John Stukeley, who on weekdays worked at the forge
next door to the "Spotted Dog," and on Sundays held services in "Little
Bethel"—a tiny meeting house standing back from the road.</p>
<p>Had John Stukeley been busier during the week he would have had less time
to devote to the cause of "King Lud;" but for many hours a day his fire
was banked up, for except to make repairs in any of the frames which had
got out of order, or to put on a shoe which a horse had cast on his way up
the hill from Marsden, there was but little employment for him.</p>
<p>The man was not a Yorkshireman by birth, but came from Liverpool, and his
small, spare figure contrasted strongly with those of the tall, square
built Yorkshiremen, among whom he lived.</p>
<p>He was a good workman, but his nervous irritability, his self assertion,
and impatience of orders had lost him so many places that he had finally
determined to become his own master, and, coming into a few pounds at the
death of his father, had wandered away from the great towns, until finding
in Varley a village without a smith, he had established himself there, and
having adopted the grievances of the men as his own, had speedily become a
leading figure among them.</p>
<p>A short time after his arrival the old man who had officiated at Little
Bethel had died, and Stukeley, who had from the first taken a prominent
part in the service, and who possessed the faculty of fluent speech to a
degree rare among the Yorkshiremen, was installed as his successor, and
soon filled Little Bethel as it had never been filled before. In his
predecessor's time, small as the meeting house was, it had been
comparatively empty; two or three men, half a dozen women, and their
children being the only attendants, but it was now filled to crowding.</p>
<p>Stukeley's religion was political; his prayers and discourses related to
the position of affairs in Varley rather than to Christianity. They were a
downtrodden people whom he implored to burst the bonds of their Egyptian
taskmasters. The strength he prayed for was the strength to struggle and
to fight. The enemy he denounced was the capitalist rather than the devil.</p>
<p>Up to that time "King Lud" had but few followers in Varley; but the fiery
discourses in Little Bethel roused among the younger men a passionate
desire to right their alleged wrongs, and to take vengeance upon those
denounced as their oppressors, so the society recruited its numbers fast.
Stukeley was appointed the local secretary, partly because he was the
leading spirit, partly because he alone among its members was able to
write, and under his vigorous impulsion Varley became one of the leading
centers of the organization in West Yorkshire.</p>
<p>It was on a Saturday evening soon after Bill Swinton had become
convalescent. The parlor of the "Brown Cow" was filled with its usual
gathering; a peat fire glowed upon the hearth, and two tallow candles
burned somewhat faintly in the dense smoke. Mugs of beer stood on the
tables, but they were seldom applied to the lips of the smokers, for they
had to do service without being refilled through the long evening. The
silence was broken only by the short puffs at the pipes. All were thinking
over the usual topic, when old Gideon Jones unexpectedly led their ideas
into another channel.</p>
<p>"Oive heern," he said slowly, taking his pipe from his mouth, "as how
Nance Wilson's little gal is wuss."</p>
<p>"Ay, indeed!"</p>
<p>"So oi've heern;"</p>
<p>"Be she now?" and various other exclamations arose from the smokers.</p>
<p>Gideon was pleased with the effect he had produced, and a few minutes
later continued the subject.</p>
<p>"It be the empty coopbud more nor illness, I expect."</p>
<p>There was another chorus of assent, and a still heartier one when he wound
up the subject: "These be hard toimes surely."</p>
<p>Thinking that he had now done sufficient to vindicate his standing as one
of the original thinkers of the village, Gideon relapsed into silence and
smoked away gravely, with his eyes fixed on the fire, in the post of honor
on one side of which was his regular seat. The subject, however, was too
valuable to be allowed to drop altogether, and Luke Marner brought it into
prominence again by remarking:</p>
<p>"They tell oi as how Nance has asked Bet Collins to watch by the rood
soide to catch doctor as he droives whoam. He went out this arternoon to
Retlow."</p>
<p>"Oi doubt he woant do she much good; it be food, and not doctor's stuff as
the child needs," another remarked.</p>
<p>"That be so, surely," went up in a general chorus, and then a newcomer who
had just entered the room said:</p>
<p>"Oi ha' joost coom vrom Nance's and Bill Swinton ha' sent in a basin o'
soup as he got vrom the feyther o' that boy as broke his leg. Nance war a
feeding the child wi' it, and maybe it will do her good. He ha' been
moighty koind to Bill, that chap hav."</p>
<p>"He ha' been that," Gideon said, after the chorus of approval had died
away.</p>
<p>"Oi seed t' young un today a-sitting in front o' th' cottage, a-talking
and laughing wi' Bill."</p>
<p>"They be good uns, feyther and son, though they tells oi as neither on
them bain't Yaarkshire."</p>
<p>The general feeling among the company was evidently one of surprise that
any good thing should be found outside Yorkshire. But further talk on the
subject was interrupted by a slight exclamation at the door.</p>
<p>"O what a smoke, feyther! I can't see you, but I suppose you're somewhere
here. You're wanted at home."</p>
<p>Although the speaker was visible to but few in the room there was no doubt
as to her identity, or as to the person addressed as feyther. Mary Powlett
was indeed the niece and not the daughter of Luke Marner, but as he had
brought her up from childhood she looked upon him as her father. It was
her accent and the tone of her voice which rendered it unnecessary for any
of those present to see her face.</p>
<p>Luke was a bachelor when the child had arrived fifteen years before in the
carrier's cart from Marsden, having made the journey in a similar
conveyance to that town from Sheffield, where her father and mother had
died within a week of each other, the last request of her mother being
that little Polly should be sent off to the care of Luke Marner at Varley.</p>
<p>Luke had not then settled down into the position of one of the elders of
the village, and he had been somewhat embarrassed by the arrival of the
three year old girl. He decided promptly, however, upon quitting the
lodgings which he had as a single man occupied and taking a cottage by
himself. His neighbors urged upon him that so small a child could not
remain alone all day while he was away at Marsden at work—a
proposition to which he assented; but to the surprise of every one,
instead of placing her during the day under the care of one of the women
of the place, he took her down with him to Marsden and placed her under
the care of a respectable woman there who had children of her own.</p>
<p>Starting at five every morning from his cottage with Polly perched on his
shoulder he tramped down to the town, leaving her there before going to
work, and calling for her in the evening. A year later he married, and the
village supposed that Polly would now be left behind. But they were
mistaken. When he became engaged he had said:</p>
<p>"Now, Loiza, there's one point as oi wish settled. As oi have told ye, oi
ha' partly chosen ye becos oi knowed as how ye would maake a good mother
to my little Polly; but oi doan't mean to give up taking her down with me
o' days to the town. Oi likes to ha' her wi' me on the roade—it
makes it shorter like. As thou knowest thyself, oi ha' bin a chaanged man
sin she coom. There warn't a cropper in the village drank harder nor oi,
but oi maad oop moi moind when she came to gi' it up, and oi have gi'd it
up."</p>
<p>"I know, Luke," the girl said, "I wouldna have had ye, hadn't ye doon so,
as I told ye two years agone. I know the child ha' done it, and I loves
her for it, and will be a good mother to her."</p>
<p>"Oi knows you will, Loiza, and oi bain't feared as ye'll be jealous if so
be as ye've children o' your own. Oi shan't love 'em a bit the less coss
oi loves little Polly. She be just the image o' what moi sister Jane was
when she war a little thing and oi used to take care o' her. Mother she
didn't belong to this village, and the rough ways of the men and the drink
frightened her. She war quiet and tidy and neat in her ways, and Jane took
arter her, and glad she was when the time came to marry and get away from
Varley. Oi be roight sure if she knows owt what's going on down here, she
would be glad to know as her child ain't bein' brought oop in Varley ways.
I ha' arranged wi' the woman where she gets her meals for her to go to
school wi' her own children. Dost thee object to that, lass?—if so,
say so noo afore it's too late, but doon't thraw it in moi face
arterwards. Ef thou'st children they shalt go to school too. Oi don't want
to do more for Polly nor oi'd do for moi own."</p>
<p>"I ha' no objection, Luke. I remembers your sister, how pretty and quiet
she wor; and thou shalt do what you likest wi' Polly, wi'out no grumble
from me."</p>
<p>Eliza Marner kept the promise she had made before marriage faithfully. If
she ever felt in her heart any jealousy as she saw Polly growing up a
pretty bright little maiden, as different to the usual child product of
Varley as could well be, she was wise enough never to express her
thoughts, and behaved with motherly kindness to her in the evening hours
spent at home. She would perhaps have felt the task a harder one had her
own elder children been girls; but three boys came first, and a girl was
not born until she had been married eleven years. Polly, who was now
fourteen, had just come home from her schooling at Marsden for good, and
was about to go out into service there. But after the birth of her little
girl Mrs. Marner, who had never for a Varley girl been strong, faded
rapidly away; and Polly's stay at home, intended at first to last but a
few weeks, until its mother was about again, extended into months.</p>
<p>The failing woman reaped now the benefit of Polly's training. Her gentle,
quiet way, her soft voice, her neatness and tidiness, made her an
excellent nurse, and she devoted herself to cheer and brighten the
sickroom of the woman who had made so kind an adopted mother to her. Her
influence kept even the rough boys quiet; and all Varley, which had at
first been unanimous in its condemnation of the manner in which Luke
Marner was bringing up that "gal" of his, just as if the place was not
good enough for her, were now forced to confess that the experiment had
turned out well.</p>
<p>"Polly, my dear," the sick woman said to her one afternoon when the girl
had been reading to her for some time, and was now busy mending some of
the boys' clothes, while baby, nearly a year old, was gravely amusing
herself with a battered doll upon the floor, "I used to think, though I
never said so, as your feyther war making a mistake in bringing you up
different to other gals here; but I see as he was right. There ain't one
of them as would have been content to give up all their time and thoughts
to a sick woman as thou hast done. There ain't a house in the village as
tidy and comfortable as this, and the boys mind you as they never minded
me. When I am gone Luke will miss me, but thar won't be no difference in
his comfort, and I know thou'lt look arter baby and be a mother to her. I
don't suppose as thou wilt stay here long; thou art over fifteen now, and
the lads will not be long afore they begin to come a-coorting of thee. But
doan't ee marry in Varley, Polly. My Luke's been a good husband to me. But
thou know'st what the most of them be—they may do for Varley bred
gals, but not for the like of thee. And when thou goest take baby wi' thee
and bring her up like thysel till she be old enough to coom back and look
arter Luke and the house."</p>
<p>Polly was crying quietly while the dying woman was speaking. The doctor,
on leaving that morning, had told her that he could do no more and that
Mrs. Marner was sinking rapidly. Kneeling now beside the bed she promised
to do all that her adopted mother asked her, adding, "and I shall never,
never leave feyther as long as he lives."</p>
<p>The woman smiled faintly.</p>
<p>"Many a girl ha' said that afore now, Polly, and ha' changed her moind
when the roight man asked her. Don't ee make any promises that away, lass.
'Tis natural that, when a lassie's time comes, she should wed; and if Luke
feels loanly here, why he's got it in his power to get another to keep
house for him. He be but a little over forty now; and as he ha' lived
steady and kept hisself away from drink, he be a yoonger man now nor many
a one ten year yoonger. Don't ye think to go to sacrifice your loife to
hissen. And now, child, read me that chapter over agin, and then I think I
could sleep a bit."</p>
<p>Before morning Eliza Marner had passed away, and Polly became the head of
her uncle's house. Two years had passed, and so far Mary Powlett showed no
signs of leaving the house, which, even the many women in the village, who
envied her for her prettiness and neatness and disliked her for what they
called her airs, acknowledged that she managed well. But it was not from
lack of suitors. There were at least half a dozen stalwart young croppers
who would gladly have paid court to her had there been the smallest sign
on her part of willingness to accept their attentions; but Polly, though
bright and cheerful and pleasant to all, afforded to none of them an
opportunity for anything approaching intimacy.</p>
<p>On Sundays, the times alone when their occupations enabled the youth of
Varley to devote themselves to attentions to the maidens they favored,
Mary Powlett was not to be found at home after breakfast, for, having set
everything in readiness for dinner, she always started for Marsden, taking
little Susan with her, and there spent the day with the woman who had even
more than Eliza Marner been her mother. She had, a month after his wife's
death, fought a battle with Luke and conquered. The latter had, in
pursuance of the plans he had originally drawn up for her, proposed that
she should go into service at Marsden.</p>
<p>"Oi shall miss thee sorely, Polly," he said; "and oi doan't disguise it
from thee, vor the last year, lass, thou hast been the light o' this
house, and oi couldna have spared ye. But oi ha' always fixed that thou
shouldst go into service at Marsden—Varley is not fit vor the likes
o' ye. We be a rough lot here, and a drunken; and though oi shall miss
thee sorely for awhile, oi must larn to do wi'out thee."</p>
<p>Polly heard him in silence, and then positively refused to go.</p>
<p>"You have been all to me, feyther, since I was a child, and I am not going
to leave you now. I don't say that Varley is altogether nice, but I shall
be very happy here with you and the boys and dear little Susan, and I am
not going to leave, and so—there!"</p>
<p>Luke knew well how great would be the void which her absence would make,
but he still struggled to carry out his plans.</p>
<p>"But, Polly, oi should na loike to see thee marry here, and thy mother
would never ha' loiked it, and thou wilt no chance of seeing other men
here."</p>
<p>"Why, I am only sixteen, feyther, and we need not talk of my marriage for
years and years yet, and I promise you I shan't think of marrying in
Varley when the time comes; but there is one thing I should like, and that
is to spend Sundays, say once a fortnight, down with Mrs. Mason; they were
so quiet and still there, and I did like so much going to the church; and
I hate that Little Bethel, especially since that horrible man came there;
he is a disgrace, feyther, and you will see that mischief will come out of
his talk."</p>
<p>"Oi don't like him myself, Polly, and maybe me and the boys will
sometoimes come down to the church thou art so fond of. However, if thou
wilt agree to go down every Sunday to Mrs. Mason, thou shalt stay here for
a bit till oi see what can best be done."</p>
<p>And so it was settled, and Polly went off every Sunday morning, and Luke
went down of an evening to fetch her back.</p>
<p>"Well, what is't, lass?" he asked as he joined her outside the "Brown
Cow."</p>
<p>"George has scalded his leg badly, feyther. I was just putting Susan to
bed, and he took the kettle off the fire to pour some water in the teapot,
when Dick pushed him, or something, and the boiling water went over his
leg."</p>
<p>"Oi'll give that Dick a hiding," Luke said wrathfully as he hastened along
by her side. "Why didn't ye send him here to tell me instead of cooming
thyself?"</p>
<p>"It was only an accident, feyther, and Dick was so frightened when he saw
what had happened and heard George cry out that he ran out at once. I have
put some flour on George's leg; but I think the doctor ought to see him,
that's why I came for you."</p>
<p>"It's no use moi goaing voor him now, lass, he be expected along here
every minute. Jack Wilson, he be on the lookout by the roadside vor to
stop him to ask him to see Nance, who be taken main bad. I will see him
and ask him to send doctor to oor house when he comes, and tell Jarge I
will be oop in a minute."</p>
<p>Upon the doctor's arrival he pronounced the scald to be a serious one, and
Dick, who had been found sobbing outside the cottage, and had been cuffed
by his father, was sent down with the doctor into the town to bring up
some lint to envelop the leg. The doctor had already paid his visit to
Nance Wilson, and had rated her father soundly for not procuring better
food for her.</p>
<p>"It's all nonsense your saying the times are bad," he said in reply to the
man's excuses. "I know the times are bad; but you know as well as I do
that half your wages go to the public house; your family are starving
while you are squandering money in drink. That child is sinking from pure
want of food, and I doubt if she would not be gone now if it hadn't have
been for that soup your wife tells me Bill Swinton sent in to her. I tell
you, if she dies you will be as much her murderer as if you had chopped
her down with a hatchet."</p>
<p>The plain speaking of the doctor was the terror of his parish patients,
who nevertheless respected him for the honest truths he told them. He
himself used to say that his plain speaking saved him a world of trouble,
for that his patients took good care never to send for him except when he
was really wanted.</p>
<p>The next day Mary Powlett was unable to go off as usual to Marsden as
George was in great pain from his scald. She went down to church, however,
in the evening with her father, Bill Swinton taking her place by the
bedside of the boy.</p>
<p>"Thou hast been a-sitting by moi bedside hours every day, Polly," he said,
"and it's moi turn now to take thy place here. Jack ha' brought over all
moi books, for oi couldn't make shift to carry them and use moi crutches,
and oi'll explain all the pictures to Jarge jest as Maister Ned explained
'em to oi."</p>
<p>The sight of the pictures reconciled George to Polly's departure, and
seeing the lad was amused and comfortable, she started with Luke, Dick
taking his place near the bed, where he could also enjoy a look at the
pictures.</p>
<p>"Did you notice that pretty girl with the sweet voice in the aisle in a
line with us, father," Ned asked that evening, "with a great, strong,
quiet looking man by the side of her?"</p>
<p>"Yes, lad, the sweetness of her singing attracted my attention, and I
thought what a bright, pretty face it was!"</p>
<p>"That's Mary Powlett and her uncle. You have heard me speak of her as the
girl who was so kind in nursing Bill."</p>
<p>"Indeed, Ned! I should scarcely have expected to find so quiet and tidy
looking a girl at Varley, still less to meet her with a male relation in
church."</p>
<p>"She lives at Varley, but she can hardly be called a Varley girl," Ned
said. "Bill was telling me about her. Her uncle had her brought up down
here. She used to go back to sleep at night, but otherwise all her time
was spent here. It seems her mother never liked the place, and married
away from it, and when she and her husband died and the child came back to
live with her uncle he seemed to think he would be best carrying out his
dead sister's wishes by having her brought up in a different way to the
girls at Varley. He has lost his wife now, and she keeps house for him,
and Bill says all the young men in Varley are mad about her, but she won't
have anything to say to them."</p>
<p>"She is right enough there," Captain Sankey said smilingly. "They are
mostly croppers, and rightly or wrongly—rightly, I am afraid—they
have the reputation of being the most drunken and quarrelsome lot in
Yorkshire. Do you know the story that is current among the country people
here about them?"</p>
<p>"No, father, what is it?"</p>
<p>"Well, they say that no cropper is in the place of punishment. It was
crowded with them at one time, but they were so noisy and troublesome that
his infernal majesty was driven to his wits' end by their disputes. He
offered to let them all go. They refused. So one day he struck upon a plan
to get rid of them. Going outside the gates he shouted at the top of his
voice, 'Beer, beer, who wants beer?' every cropper in the place rushed
out, and he then slipped in again and shut the gates, and has taken good
care ever since never to admit a cropper into his territory."</p>
<p>Ned laughed at the story.</p>
<p>"It shows at any rate, father, what people think of them here; but I don't
think they are as bad as that, though Bill did say that there are awful
fights and rows going on there of an evening, and even down here if there
is a row there is sure to be a cropper in it. Still you see there are some
good ones; look at Luke Marner, that's the man we saw in church, see how
kind he has been to his niece."</p>
<p>"There are good men of all sorts, and though the croppers may be rough and
given to drink, we must not blame them too severely; they are wholly
uneducated men, they work hard, and their sole pleasure is in the beer
shop. At bottom they are no doubt the same as the rest of their
countrymen, and the Yorkshire men, though a hard headed, are a soft
hearted race; the doctor tells me that except that their constitutions are
ruined by habitual drinking he has no better patients; they bear pain
unflinchingly, and are patient and even tempered. I know he loves them
with all their faults, and I consider him to be a good judge of
character."</p>
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