登陆注册
5434900000126

第126章 CHAPTER XXIX.(5)

Two days after this, young Whitbread's wife received an anonymous letter, advising her, as a friend, to avert the impending fate of her husband, by persuading him to dismiss the police and take back his Hands. The letter concluded with this sentence, "He is generally respected; but we have come to a determination to shoot him."

Young Whitbread took no apparent notice of this, and soon afterward the secretary of the Union proposed a conference. Bolt got wind of this, and was there when the orators came. The deputation arrived, and, after a very short preamble, offered to take the six-pence.

"Why," said Bolt, "you must be joking. Those are the terms poor Wilde came back on, and you have hashed him for it."

Old Whitbread looked the men in the face, and said, gravely, "You are too late. You have shed that poor man's blood; and you have sent an anonymous letter to my son's wife. That lady has gone on her knees to us to leave the trade, and we have consented. Fifteen years ago, your Union wrote letters of this kind to my wife (she was pregnant at the time), and drove her into her grave, with fright and anxiety for her husband. You shall not kill Tom's wife as well.

The trade is a poor one at best, thanks to the way you have ground your employers down, and, when you add to that needling our clay, and burning our gear, and beating our servants to death's door, and driving our wives into the grave, we bid you good-by. Mr. Bolt, I'm the sixth brickmaster this Union has driven out of the trade by outrages during the last ten years."

"Thou's a wrong-headed old chap," said the brickmakers' spokesman;

"but thou canst not run away with place. Them as takes to it will have to take us on."

"Not so. We have sold our plant to the Barton Machine Brickmaking Company; and you maltreated them so at starting that now they won't let a single Union man set his foot on their premises."

The company in question made bricks better and cheaper than any other brickmaster; but, making them by machinery, were ALWAYS at war with the Brickmakers' Union, and, whenever a good chance occurred for destroying their property, it was done. They, on their part, diminished those chances greatly by setting up their works five miles from the town, and by keeping armed watchmen and police. Only these ran away with their profits.

Now, when this company came so near the town, and proceeded to work up Whitbread's clay, in execution of the contract with which their purchase saddled them, the Brickmakers' Union held a great meeting, in which full a hundred brickmakers took part, and passed extraordinary resolutions, and voted extraordinary sums of money, and recorded both in their books. These books were subsequently destroyed, for a reason the reader can easily divine who has read this narrative with his understanding.

Soon after that meeting, one Kay, a brickmaker, who was never seen to make a brick--for the best of all reasons, he lived by blood alone--was observed reconnoitering the premises, and that very night a quantity of barrows, utensils, and tools were heaped together, naphtha poured over them, and the whole set on fire.

Another dark night, twenty thousand bricks were trampled so noiselessly that the perpetrators were neither seen nor heard.

But Bolt hired more men, put up a notice he would shoot any intruder dead, and so frightened them by his blustering that they kept away, being cowards at bottom, and the bricks were rapidly made, and burnt, and some were even delivered; these bricks were carted from the yard to the building site by one Harris, who had nothing to do with the quarrel; he was a carter by profession, and wheeled bricks for all the world.

One night this poor man's haystack and stable were all in flames in a moment, and unearthly screams issued from the latter.

The man ran out, half-naked, and his first thought was to save his good gray mare from the fire. But this act of humanity had been foreseen and provided against. The miscreants had crept into the stable, and tied the poor docile beast fast by the head to the rack; then fired the straw. Her screams were such as no man knew a horse could utter. They pierced all hearts, however hard, till her burnt body burst the burnt cords, and all fell together. Man could not aid her. But God can avenge her.

As if the poor thing could tell whether she was drawing machine-made bricks, or hand-made bricks!

The incident is painful to relate; but it would be unjust to omit it. It was characteristic of that particular Union; and, indeed, without it my reader could not possibly appreciate the brickmaking mind.

Bolt went off with this to Little; but Amboyne was there, and cut his tales short. "I hope," said he, "that the common Creator of the four-legged animal and the two-legged beasts will see justice done between them; but you must not come here tormenting my inventor with these horrors. Your business is to relieve him of all such worries, and let him invent in peace."

"Yes," said Little, "and I have told Mr. Bolt we can't avoid a difficulty with the cutlers. But the brickmakers--what madness to go and quarrel with them! I will have nothing to do with it, Mr. Bolt."

"The cutlers! Oh, I don't mind them," said Bolt. "They are angels compared with the brickmakers. The cutlers don't poison cows, and hamstring horses, and tie them to fire; the cutlers don't fling little boys into water-pits, and knock down little girls with their fists, just because their fathers are non-Union men; the cutlers don't strew poisoned apples and oranges about, to destroy whole families like rats. Why, sir, I have talked with a man the brickmakers tried to throw into boiling lime; and another they tried to poison with beer, and, when he wouldn't drink it, threw vitriol in his eyes, and he's blind of an eye to this day. There's full half a dozen have had bottles of gunpowder and old nails flung into their rooms, with lighted fuses, where they were sleeping with their families; they call that 'bottling a man;' it's a familiar phrase.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 异灵来袭

    异灵来袭

    九日耀空!沉寂几千年的皇陵开始逸动。秦帝陵、草原王的陵冢、武帝陵外为何烟气缭绕,异像不断…………这一切的背后难道是灵气复苏?不太可能!难道是人祸?也许吧!而此时,夏兵因为吃了一颗过期的蓝色小药丸,并因此拥有了一双不同的眼睛。他随手拿起一本《九阳神功》,看了一眼,九阳神功没有变化他又看了一眼桌上的无名道经,竟然学会了《浩然天罡决》。他再次看了一眼另一本无名经文,又学会了《药皇密典》。于是他开始找秦帝谈人生,找武帝聊感情,找草原王聊理想,在这条作死的道路上越走越远…………
  • 创世嚣魔

    创世嚣魔

    平衡世界穿梭寻找自己的轮回,轮回中应证悟道,平凡中走出奇迹。番禺国的小可怜,天才的禁区,爱并着痛。恨并着愧疚。万年大劫,谁成就了谁。苍天大帝那个都成为了历史。只有前进才会有希望
  • 深夜咨询师

    深夜咨询师

    在我们生活的世界中有这样一群特殊的人,他们能让你的精神放松下来,能做你的知心朋友,或是你的人生导师。人的思维和情绪非常的微妙,有时候简单的一个动作就能体现出你内心真正的含义。而在众多的人群中,总会有一些没有办法用常理解释的事情。在深夜的小巷总是有一家店开着长明灯,对于内心孤独的人来说,在此静下心来喝杯咖啡也许就是最温馨的瞬间,或许在此刻的你正在了解自己,了解世界。每天无数的事情会发生在世界的各个角落,而我们就是这个世界的修理员,一个穿梭在夜晚为无解答案解密的深夜咨询师。
  • 阿育王传

    阿育王传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 妃一样的公主

    妃一样的公主

    她是从火灾里逃生的公主,她活下来就是为了父皇的死找出真相!误打误撞与邻国神秘公子三皇子天相遇,卷入了皇位争夺之战,被人要挟利用……所幸遇到了他——二皇子歌,他英俊潇洒,幽默风趣,又是性情中人。她求他娶了她,最后却又毅然决然地嫁给了风流多情四皇子下……多情总被无情恼,历经乱世变化,他是不是还会在原地等她……
  • 灵神驾到魔尊别想逃

    灵神驾到魔尊别想逃

    穿越还是归来?废物还是天才?是受人欺负卑微到角落还是唯我独尊睥睨天下?是珠落尘埃还是风华绝代?且看她翻手覆云雨,如何踏破九州回归神位!只是,这成神路上怎么多了一个他?唔……魔尊?尊上大人,我们仙魔殊途,是绝对不可能修成正果的!所以你还是尽早放弃吧!什么?!!魔尊秒变战神?魔至神的蜕变!这到底是阴谋还是迷局?看他们如何携手看透这迷雾下的真相,破了一切阻遏他们的障碍!
  • 病娇boss她来了

    病娇boss她来了

    他自看到那个娃娃的那一天,他就明白,自己注定和别人不一样。
  • 御宠法医狂妃

    御宠法医狂妃

    一朝穿越,她堂堂首席女法医不仅成了杀人凶手,杀的竟然还是自己的奸夫?什么鬼?这种啤酒肚地中海的糟老头子倒贴给她一沓都嫌油腻的好吗!验尸查案找线索,各路美男誓不休,面瘫王爷太冷酷,浪荡皇子太难缠,风流公子统统涌过来!都让开!脸这么大挡住了她接收理想的WiFi信号了好吗!惹不起还躲不起?可她见了死人就想凑上去,看见尸体眼冒光。既然美男缠不休,那就个个来一刀,剖开你们的黑心黑肺黑肚肠,看看你们打的什么坏主意!忍无可忍无需再忍,左手拿刀右手拿药,看现代女法医如何挑起半边天。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 漫漫鹤鸣路

    漫漫鹤鸣路

    他奉神帝之名来到人间,与温漫相遇,为了共同的目标。平城客栈的窃窃私语,某夜突然随箭而来的字条,洛河的连环杀人案,温漫身上特有的鬼界胎记,不断出现的黑衣人………这一切,是偶然?还是有人刻意而为之?本以为一切已经结束的时候,却掀起了一场情感纠葛……
  • 我爱你,与你无关:张爱玲传

    我爱你,与你无关:张爱玲传

    张爱玲一直以来都是一个说不尽的人物,有着说不尽的话题,她像一部未完的《红楼梦》一样引得世人对她进行各种解读。有人说她是个天才,才华横溢;有人说她性情孤僻冷傲,不近人情;有人说她无情自私,毫无安全感;有人说她痴心,被人伤害了却不知反抗……众说纷纭,莫衷一是。在中国,她是文艺青年口中的谈资,人人都可以发表自己对她的看法,然而却没人敢说自己懂得她、理解她——就像没人敢说自己读懂了《红楼梦》一样。