<h2>CHAPTER XXI—THE PRECARIOUSNESS OF LIFE</h2>
<p>I was talking with a very vindictive man. In his opinion, his
wife had wronged him and the law had wronged him. The merits and
morals of the case are immaterial. The meat of the matter is that
she had obtained a separation, and he was compelled to pay ten shillings
each week for the support of her and the five children. “But
look you,” said he to me, “wot’ll ’appen to
’er if I don’t py up the ten shillings? S’posin’,
now, just s’posin’ a accident ’appens to me, so I
cawn’t work. S’posin’ I get a rupture, or the
rheumatics, or the cholera. Wot’s she goin’ to do,
eh? Wot’s she goin’ to do?”</p>
<p>He shook his head sadly. “No ’ope for ’er.
The best she cawn do is the work’ouse, an’ that’s
’ell. An’ if she don’t go to the work’ouse,
it’ll be a worse ’ell. Come along ’ith me an’
I’ll show you women sleepin’ in a passage, a dozen of ’em.
An’ I’ll show you worse, wot she’ll come to if anythin’
’appens to me and the ten shillings.”</p>
<p>The certitude of this man’s forecast is worthy of consideration.
He knew conditions sufficiently to know the precariousness of his wife’s
grasp on food and shelter. For her game was up when his working
capacity was impaired or destroyed. And when this state of affairs
is looked at in its larger aspect, the same will be found true of hundreds
of thousands and even millions of men and women living amicably together
and co-operating in the pursuit of food and shelter.</p>
<p>The figures are appalling: 1,800,000 people in London live on the
poverty line and below it, and 1,000,000 live with one week’s
wages between them and pauperism. In all England and Wales, eighteen
per cent. of the whole population are driven to the parish for relief,
and in London, according to the statistics of the London County Council,
twenty-one per cent. of the whole population are driven to the parish
for relief. Between being driven to the parish for relief and
being an out-and-out pauper there is a great difference, yet London
supports 123,000 paupers, quite a city of folk in themselves.
One in every four in London dies on public charity, while 939 out of
every 1000 in the United Kingdom die in poverty; 8,000,000 simply struggle
on the ragged edge of starvation, and 20,000,000 more are not comfortable
in the simple and clean sense of the word.</p>
<p>It is interesting to go more into detail concerning the London people
who die on charity.</p>
<p>In 1886, and up to 1893, the percentage of pauperism to population
was less in London than in all England; but since 1893, and for every
succeeding year, the percentage of pauperism to population has been
greater in London than in all England. Yet, from the Registrar-General’s
Report for 1886, the following figures are taken:-</p>
<p>Out of 81,951 deaths in London (1884):-</p>
<p>In workhouses 9,909<br/>
In hospitals 6,559<br/>
In lunatic asylums 278<br/>
Total in public refuges 16,746</p>
<p>Commenting on these figures, a Fabian writer says: “Considering
that comparatively few of these are children, it is probable that one
in every three London adults will be driven into one of these refuges
to die, and the proportion in the case of the manual labour class must
of course be still larger.”</p>
<p>These figures serve somewhat to indicate the proximity of the average
worker to pauperism. Various things make pauperism. An advertisement,
for instance, such as this, appearing in yesterday morning’s paper:-</p>
<p>“Clerk wanted, with knowledge of shorthand, typewriting, and
invoicing: wages ten shillings ($2.50) a week. Apply by letter,”
&c.</p>
<p>And in to-day’s paper I read of a clerk, thirty-five years
of age and an inmate of a London workhouse, brought before a magistrate
for non-performance of task. He claimed that he had done his various
tasks since he had been an inmate; but when the master set him to breaking
stones, his hands blistered, and he could not finish the task.
He had never been used to an implement heavier than a pen, he said.
The magistrate sentenced him and his blistered hands to seven days’
hard labour.</p>
<p>Old age, of course, makes pauperism. And then there is the
accident, the thing happening, the death or disablement of the husband,
father, and bread-winner. Here is a man, with a wife and three
children, living on the ticklish security of twenty shillings per week—and
there are hundreds of thousands of such families in London. Perforce,
to even half exist, they must live up to the last penny of it, so that
a week’s wages (one pound) is all that stands between this family
and pauperism or starvation. The thing happens, the father is
struck down, and what then? A mother with three children can do
little or nothing. Either she must hand her children over to society
as juvenile paupers, in order to be free to do something adequate for
herself, or she must go to the sweat-shops for work which she can perform
in the vile den possible to her reduced income. But with the sweat-shops,
married women who eke out their husband’s earnings, and single
women who have but themselves miserably to support, determine the scale
of wages. And this scale of wages, so determined, is so low that
the mother and her three children can live only in positive beastliness
and semi-starvation, till decay and death end their suffering.</p>
<p>To show that this mother, with her three children to support, cannot
compete in the sweating industries, I instance from the current newspapers
the two following cases:-</p>
<p>A father indignantly writes that his daughter and a girl companion
receive 8.5d. per gross for making boxes. They made each day four
gross. Their expenses were 8d. for car fare, 2d. for stamps, 2.5d.
for glue, and 1d. for string, so that all they earned between them was
1s. 9d., or a daily wage each of 10.5d.</p>
<p>In the second ewe, before the Luton Guardians a few days ago, an
old woman of seventy-two appeared, asking for relief. “She
was a straw-hat maker, but had been compelled to give up the work owing
to the price she obtained for them—namely, 2.25d. each.
For that price she had to provide plait trimmings and make and finish
the hats.”</p>
<p>Yet this mother and her three children we are considering have done
no wrong that they should be so punished. They have not sinned.
The thing happened, that is all; the husband, father and bread-winner,
was struck down. There is no guarding against it. It is
fortuitous. A family stands so many chances of escaping the bottom
of the Abyss, and so many chances of falling plump down to it.
The chance is reducible to cold, pitiless figures, and a few of these
figures will not be out of place.</p>
<p>Sir A. Forwood calculates that—</p>
<p>1 of every 1400 workmen is killed annually.<br/>
1 of every 2500 workmen is totally disabled.<br/>
1 of every 300 workmen is permanently partially disabled.<br/>
1 of every 8 workmen is temporarily disabled 3 or 4 weeks.</p>
<p>But these are only the accidents of industry. The high mortality
of the people who live in the Ghetto plays a terrible part. The
average age at death among the people of the West End is fifty-five
years; the average age at death among the people of the East End is
thirty years. That is to say, the person in the West End has twice
the chance for life that the person has in the East End. Talk
of war! The mortality in South Africa and the Philippines fades
away to insignificance. Here, in the heart of peace, is where
the blood is being shed; and here not even the civilised rules of warfare
obtain, for the women and children and babes in the arms are killed
just as ferociously as the men are killed. War! In England,
every year, 500,000 men, women, and children, engaged in the various
industries, are killed and disabled, or are injured to disablement by
disease.</p>
<p>In the West End eighteen per cent. of the children die before five
years of age; in the East End fifty-five per cent. of the children die
before five years of age. And there are streets in London where
out of every one hundred children born in a year, fifty die during the
next year; and of the fifty that remain, twenty-five die before they
are five years old. Slaughter! Herod did not do quite so
badly.</p>
<p>That industry causes greater havoc with human life than battle does
no better substantiation can be given than the following extract from
a recent report of the Liverpool Medical Officer, which is not applicable
to Liverpool alone:-</p>
<blockquote><p>In many instances little if any sunlight could get to
the courts, and the atmosphere within the dwellings was always foul,
owing largely to the saturated condition of the walls and ceilings,
which for so many years had absorbed the exhalations of the occupants
into their porous material. Singular testimony to the absence
of sunlight in these courts was furnished by the action of the Parks
and Gardens Committee, who desired to brighten the homes of the poorest
class by gifts of growing flowers and window-boxes; but these gifts
could not be made in courts such as these, <i>as flowers and plants
were susceptible to the unwholesome surroundings, and would not live</i>.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Mr. George Haw has compiled the following table on the three St.
George’s parishes (London parishes):-</p>
<p> Percentage of<br/>
Population Death-rate<br/>
Overcrowded per 1000<br/>
St. George’s West 10 13.2<br/>
St. George’s South 35 23.7<br/>
St. George’s East 40 26.4</p>
<p>Then there are the “dangerous trades,” in which countless
workers are employed. Their hold on life is indeed precarious—far,
far more precarious than the hold of the twentieth-century soldier on
life. In the linen trade, in the preparation of the flax, wet
feet and wet clothes cause an unusual amount of bronchitis, pneumonia,
and severe rheumatism; while in the carding and spinning departments
the fine dust produces lung disease in the majority of cases, and the
woman who starts carding at seventeen or eighteen begins to break up
and go to pieces at thirty. The chemical labourers, picked from
the strongest and most splendidly-built men to be found, live, on an
average, less than forty-eight years.</p>
<p>Says Dr. Arlidge, of the potter’s trade: “Potter’s
dust does not kill suddenly, but settles, year after year, a little
more firmly into the lungs, until at length a case of plaster is formed.
Breathing becomes more and more difficult and depressed, and finally
ceases.”</p>
<p>Steel dust, stone dust, clay dust, alkali dust, fluff dust, fibre
dust—all these things kill, and they are more deadly than machine-guns
and pom-poms. Worst of all is the lead dust in the white-lead
trades. Here is a description of the typical dissolution of a
young, healthy, well-developed girl who goes to work in a white-lead
factory:-</p>
<blockquote><p>Here, after a varying degree of exposure, she becomes
anaemic. It may be that her gums show a very faint blue line,
or perchance her teeth and gums are perfectly sound, and no blue line
is discernible. Coincidently with the anaemia she has been getting
thinner, but so gradually as scarcely to impress itself upon her or
her friends. Sickness, however, ensues, and headaches, growing
in intensity, are developed. These are frequently attended by
obscuration of vision or temporary blindness. Such a girl passes
into what appears to her friends and medical adviser as ordinary hysteria.
This gradually deepens without warning, until she is suddenly seized
with a convulsion, beginning in one half of the face, then involving
the arm, next the leg of the same side of the body, until the convulsion,
violent and purely epileptic form in character, becomes universal.
This is attended by loss of consciousness, out of which she passes into
a series of convulsions, gradually increasing in severity, in one of
which she dies—or consciousness, partial or perfect, is regained,
either, it may be, for a few minutes, a few hours, or days, during which
violent headache is complained of, or she is delirious and excited,
as in acute mania, or dull and sullen as in melancholia, and requires
to be roused, when she is found wandering, and her speech is somewhat
imperfect. Without further warning, save that the pulse, which
has become soft, with nearly the normal number of beats, all at once
becomes low and hard; she is suddenly seized with another convulsion,
in which she dies, or passes into a state of coma from which she never
rallies. In another case the convulsions will gradually subside,
the headache disappears and the patient recovers, only to find that
she has completely lost her eyesight, a loss that may be temporary or
permanent.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>And here are a few specific cases of white-lead poisoning:-</p>
<blockquote><p>Charlotte Rafferty, a fine, well-grown young woman with
a splendid constitution—who had never had a day’s illness
in her life—became a white-lead worker. Convulsions seized
her at the foot of the ladder in the works. Dr. Oliver examined
her, found the blue line along her gums, which shows that the system
is under the influence of the lead. He knew that the convulsions
would shortly return. They did so, and she died.</p>
<p>Mary Ann Toler—a girl of seventeen, who had never had a fit
in her life—three times became ill, and had to leave off work
in the factory. Before she was nineteen she showed symptoms of
lead poisoning—had fits, frothed at the mouth, and died.</p>
<p>Mary A., an unusually vigorous woman, was able to work in the lead
factory for <i>twenty years</i>, having colic once only during that
time. Her eight children all died in early infancy from convulsions.
One morning, whilst brushing her hair, this woman suddenly lost all
power in both her wrists.</p>
<p>Eliza H., aged twenty-five, <i>after five months</i> at lead works,
was seized with colic. She entered another factory (after being
refused by the first one) and worked on uninterruptedly for two years.
Then the former symptoms returned, she was seized with convulsions,
and died in two days of acute lead poisoning.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Mr. Vaughan Nash, speaking of the unborn generation, says: “The
children of the white-lead worker enter the world, as a rule, only to
die from the convulsions of lead poisoning—they are either born
prematurely, or die within the first year.”</p>
<p>And, finally, let me instance the case of Harriet A. Walker, a young
girl of seventeen, killed while leading a forlorn hope on the industrial
battlefield. She was employed as an enamelled ware brusher, wherein
lead poisoning is encountered. Her father and brother were both
out of employment. She concealed her illness, walked six miles
a day to and from work, earned her seven or eight shillings per week,
and died, at seventeen.</p>
<p>Depression in trade also plays an important part in hurling the workers
into the Abyss. With a week’s wages between a family and
pauperism, a month’s enforced idleness means hardship and misery
almost indescribable, and from the ravages of which the victims do not
always recover when work is to be had again. Just now the daily
papers contain the report of a meeting of the Carlisle branch of the
Dockers’ Union, wherein it is stated that many of the men, for
months past, have not averaged a weekly income of more than from four
to five shillings. The stagnated state of the shipping industry
in the port of London is held accountable for this condition of affairs.</p>
<p>To the young working-man or working-woman, or married couple, there
is no assurance of happy or healthy middle life, nor of solvent old
age. Work as they will, they cannot make their future secure.
It is all a matter of chance. Everything depends upon the thing
happening, the thing with which they have nothing to do. Precaution
cannot fend it off, nor can wiles evade it. If they remain on
the industrial battlefield they must face it and take their chance against
heavy odds. Of course, if they are favourably made and are not
tied by kinship duties, they may run away from the industrial battlefield.
In which event the safest thing the man can do is to join the army;
and for the woman, possibly, to become a Red Cross nurse or go into
a nunnery. In either case they must forego home and children and
all that makes life worth living and old age other than a nightmare.</p>
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