<h2><SPAN name="No_III" id="No_III"></SPAN>No. III.</h2>
<h3>MAKING BREAD.</h3>
<p>77. Little time need be spent in dwelling on the necessity of <i>this</i>
article to all families; though, on account of the modern custom of using
<i>potatoes</i> to supply the place of <i>bread</i>, it seems necessary to say a few
words here on the subject, which, in another work I have so amply, and, I
think, so triumphantly discussed. I am the more disposed to revive the
subject for a moment, in this place, from having read, in the evidence
recently given before the Agricultural Committee, that many labourers,
especially in the West of England, use potatoes <i>instead</i> of bread to a
very great extent. And I find, from the same evidence, that it is the
custom to allot to labourers “<i>a potatoe ground</i>” in part payment of their
wages! This has a tendency to bring English labourers down to the state of
the Irish, whose mode of living, as to food, is but one remove from that
of the pig, and of the ill-fed pig too.</p>
<p>78. I was, in reading the above-mentioned<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42"></SPAN></span> Evidence, glad to find, that
Mr. <span class="smcap">Edward Wakefield</span>, the best informed and most candid of all the
witnesses, gave it as his opinion, that the increase which had taken place
in the cultivation of potatoes was “<i>injurious to the country</i>;” an
opinion which must, I think, be adopted by every one who takes the trouble
to reflect a little upon the subject. For leaving out of the question the
slovenly and beastly habits engendered amongst the labouring classes by
constantly lifting their principal food at once out of the earth to their
mouths, by eating without the necessity of any implements other than the
hands and the teeth, and by dispensing with everything requiring skill in
the preparation of the food, and requiring cleanliness in its consumption
or preservation; leaving these out of the question, though they are all
matters of great moment, when we consider their effects in the rearing of
a family, we shall find, that, in mere quantity of food, that is to say of
<i>nourishment</i>, bread is the preferable diet.</p>
<p>79. An acre of land that will produce 300 bushels of potatoes, will
produce 32 bushels of wheat. I state this as an average fact, and am not
at all afraid of being contradicted by any one well acquainted with
husbandry. The potatoes are supposed to be of a <i>good sort</i>, as it is
called, and the wheat may be supposed to weigh 60 pounds a bushel. It is a
fact clearly established, that, after the <i>water</i>, the <i>stringy</i>
substance, and the <i>earth</i>, are taken from the potatoe, there remains only
one <i>tenth</i> of the rough raw weight of nutritious matter, or matter which
is deemed equally nutritious with bread, and, as the raw potatoes weigh
56lb. a bushel, the acre will yield 1,830lb. of nutritious matter. Now
mind, a bushel of wheat, weighing 60lb. will make of <i>household bread</i>
(that is to say, taking out only the <i>bran</i>) 65lb. Thus, the acre yields
2,080lb. of bread. As to the <i>expenses</i>, the seed and act of planting are
about equal in the two cases. But, while the potatoes <i>must</i> have
cultivation during their growth, the wheat needs none; and while the wheat
straw is worth from three to five pounds an acre, the haulm of the
potatoes is not worth one single truss<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43"></SPAN></span> of that straw. Then, as to the
expense of gathering, housing, and keeping the potatoe crop, it is
enormous, besides the risk of loss by frost, which may be safely taken, on
an average, at a tenth of the crop. Then comes the expense of <i>cooking</i>.
The thirty-two bushels of wheat, supposing a bushel to be baked at a time,
(which would be the case in a large family,) would demand <i>thirty-two
heatings of the oven</i>. Suppose a bushel of potatoes to be cooked every day
in order to supply the place of this bread, then we have <i>nine hundred
boilings of the pot</i>, unless <i>cold potatoes</i> be eaten at some of the
meals; and, in that case, the diet must be <i>cheering</i> indeed! Think of the
<i>labour</i>; think of the <i>time</i>; think of all the peelings and scrapings and
washings and messings attending these <i>nine hundred boilings of the pot</i>!
For it must be a considerable time before English people can be brought to
eat potatoes in the Irish style; that is to say, scratch them out of the
earth with their paws, toss them into a pot without washing, and when
boiled, turn them out upon a dirty board, and then sit round that board,
peel the skin and dirt from one at a time and eat the inside. Mr. Curwen
was delighted with “<i>Irish hospitality</i>,” because the people there receive
no parish relief; upon which I can only say, that I wish him the exclusive
benefit of such hospitality.</p>
<p>80. I have here spoken of a large quantity of each of the sorts of food. I
will now come to a comparative view, more immediately applicable to a
labourer’s family. When wheat is <i>ten</i> shillings the bushel, potatoes,
bought at best hand, (I am speaking of the country generally,) are about
<i>two</i> shillings (English) a bushel. Last spring the average price of wheat
might be <i>six and sixpence</i>, (English;) and the average price of potatoes
(in small quantities) was about <i>eighteen-pence</i>; though, by the
wagon-load, I saw potatoes bought at a <i>shilling</i> (English) a bushel, to
give to sheep; then, observe, these were of the coarsest kind, and the
farmer had to fetch them at a considerable expense. I think, therefore,
that I give the advantage to the potatoes when I say that they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44"></SPAN></span> sell, upon
an average, for full a <i>fifth</i> part as much as the wheat sells for, per
bushel, while they contain four pounds less weight than the bushel of
wheat; while they yield only five pounds and a half of nutritious matter
equal to bread; and while the bushel of wheat will yield <i>sixty-five
pounds of bread</i>, besides the ten pounds of bran. Hence it is clear, that,
instead of that <i>saving</i>, which is everlastingly dinned in our ears, from
the use of potatoes, there is a <i>waste of more than one half</i>; seeing
that, when wheat is <i>ten shillings</i> (English) the bushel, you can have
<i>sixty-five pounds of bread for the ten shillings</i>; and can have out of
potatoes only five pounds and a half of nutritious matter equal to bread
for <i>two shillings</i>! (English.) This being the case, I trust that we shall
soon hear no more of those <i>savings</i> which the labourer makes by the use
of potatoes; I hope we shall, in the words of Dr. <span class="smcap">Drennan</span>, “leave Ireland
to her <i>lazy</i> root,” if she choose still to adhere to it. It is the root,
also, of slovenliness, filth, misery, and slavery; its cultivation has
increased in England with the increase of the paupers: both, I thank God,
are upon the decline. Englishmen seem to be upon the return to beer and
bread, from water and potatoes: and, therefore, I shall now proceed to
offer some observations to the cottager, calculated to induce him to bake
his own bread.</p>
<p>81. As I have before stated, sixty pounds of wheat, that is to say, where
the Winchester bushel weighs sixty pounds, will make sixty-five pounds of
bread, besides the leaving of about ten pounds of bran. This is household
bread, made of flour from which the bran only is taken. If you make fine
flour, you take out pollard, as they call it, as well as bran, and then
you have a smaller quantity of bread and a greater quantity of offal; but,
even of this finer bread, bread equal in fineness to the baker’s bread,
you get from <i>fifty-eight to fifty-nine</i> pounds out of the bushel of
wheat. Now, then, let us see how many quartern loaves you get out of the
bushel of wheat, supposing it to be fine flour, in the first place.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45"></SPAN></span> You
get thirteen quartern loaves and a half; these cost you, at the present
average price of wheat (seven and sixpence a bushel,) in the first place
7<i>s</i>. 6<i>d.</i>;<small><SPAN name="f5.1" id="f5.1" href="#f5">[5]</SPAN></small> then 3<i>d.</i> for yeast; then not more than 3<i>d.</i> for
grinding; because you have about thirteen pounds of offal, which is worth
more than a ½<i>d.</i> a pound, while the grinding is 9<i>d.</i> a bushel. Thus,
then, the bushel of bread of fifty-nine pounds costs you <i>eight
shillings</i>; and it yields you the weight of thirteen and a half quartern
loaves: these quartern loaves <i>now</i> (Dec. 1821) sell at Kensington, at the
baker’s shop, at 1<i>s.</i> ½<i>d.</i>; that is to say, the thirteen quartern
loaves and a half cost 14<i>s.</i> 7½<i>d.</i> I omitted to mention the salt,
which would cost you 4<i>d.</i> more. So that, here is 6<i>s.</i> 3½<i>d.</i> saved
upon the baking of a bushel of bread. The baker’s quartern loaf is indeed
cheaper in the country than at Kensington, by, probably, a penny in the
loaf; which would still, however, leave a saving of 5<i>s.</i> upon the bushel
of bread. But, besides this, pray think a little of the materials of which
the baker’s loaf is composed. The <i>alum</i>, the <i>ground potatoes</i>, and other
materials; it being a notorious fact, that the bakers, in London at least,
have <i>mills</i> wherein to grind their potatoes; so large is the scale upon
which they use that material. It is probable, that, out of a bushel of
wheat, they make between <i>sixty</i> and <i>seventy</i> pounds of bread, though
they have no more <i>flour</i>, and, of course, no more nutritious matter, than
you have in your fifty-nine pounds of bread. But, at the least, supposing
their bread to be as good as yours in quality, you have, allowing a
shilling for the heating of the oven, a clear 4<i>s.</i> saved upon every
bushel of bread. If you consume half a bushel a week, that is to say about
a quartern loaf a day, this is a saving of 5<i>l.</i> 4<i>s.</i> a year, or full a
sixth part, if not a fifth part, of the earnings of a labourer in
husbandry.</p>
<p>82. How wasteful, then, and, indeed, how shameful,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46"></SPAN></span> for a labourer’s wife
to go to the baker’s shop; and how negligent, how criminally careless of
the welfare of his family, must the labourer be, who permits so scandalous
a use of the proceeds of his labour! But I have hitherto taken a view of
the matter the least possibly advantageous to the home-baked bread. For,
ninety-nine times out of a hundred, the fuel for heating the oven costs
very little. The hedgers, the copsers, the woodmen of all descriptions,
have fuel for little or nothing. At any rate, to heat the oven cannot,
upon an average, take the country through, cost the labourer more than
6<i>d.</i> a bushel. Then, again, fine flour need not ever be used, and ought
not to be used. This adds six pounds of bread to the bushel, or nearly
another quartern loaf and a half, making nearly fifteen quartern loaves
out of the bushel of wheat. The finest flour is by no means the most
wholesome; and, at any rate, there is more nutritious matter in a pound of
household bread than in a pound of baker’s bread. Besides this, rye, and
even barley, especially when mixed with wheat, make very good bread. Few
people upon the face of the earth live better than the Long Islanders. Yet
nine families out of ten seldom eat wheaten-bread. Rye is the flour that
they principally make use of. Now, rye is seldom more than two-thirds the
price of wheat, and barley is seldom more than half the price of wheat.
Half rye and half wheat, taking out a little more of the offal, make very
good bread. Half wheat, a quarter rye and a quarter barley, nay, one-third
of each, make bread that I could be very well content to live upon all my
lifetime; and, even barley alone, if the barley be good, and none but the
finest flour taken out of it, has in it, measure for measure, ten times
the nutrition of potatoes. Indeed the fact is well known, that our
forefathers used barley bread to a very great extent. Its only fault, with
those who dislike it, is its sweetness, a fault which we certainly have
not to find with the baker’s loaf, which has in it little more of the
<i>sweetness</i> of grain than is to be<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47"></SPAN></span> found in the offal which comes from
the sawings of deal boards. The nutritious nature of barley is amply
proved by the effect, and very rapid effect, of its meal, in the fatting
of hogs and of poultry of all descriptions. They will fatten quicker upon
meal of barley than upon any other thing. The flesh, too, is sweeter than
that proceeding from any other food, with the exception of that which
proceeds from <i>buck wheat</i>, a grain little used in England. That
proceeding from Indian corn is, indeed, still sweeter and finer; but this
is wholly out of the question with us.</p>
<p>83. I am, by-and-by, to speak of the <i>cow</i> to be kept by the labourer in
husbandry. Then there will be <i>milk</i> to wet the bread with, an exceedingly
great improvement in its taste as well as in its quality! This, of all the
ways of using skim milk, is the most advantageous: and this great
advantage must be wholly thrown away, if the bread of the family be bought
at the shop. With milk, bread with very little wheat in it may be made far
better than baker’s bread; and, leaving the milk out of the question,
taking a third of each sort of grain, you would get bread weighing as much
as fourteen quartern loaves, for about 5<i>s.</i> 9<i>d.</i> at present prices of
grain; that is to say, you would get it for about 5<i>d.</i> the quartern loaf,
all expenses included; thus you have nine pounds and ten ounces of bread a
day for about 5<i>s.</i> 9<i>d.</i> a week. Here is enough for a very large family.
Very few labourers’ families can want so much as this, unless indeed there
be several persons in it capable of earning something by their daily
labour. Here is cut and come again. Here is bread always for the table.
Bread to carry a field; always a hunch of bread ready to put into the hand
of a hungry child. We hear a great deal about “<i>children crying for
bread</i>,” and objects of compassion they and their parents are, when the
latter have not the means of obtaining a sufficiency of bread. But I
should be glad to be informed, how it is possible for a labouring man, who
earns, upon an average, 10<i>s.</i> a week, who has not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48"></SPAN></span> more than four
children (and if he have more, some ought to be doing something;) who has
a garden of a quarter of an acre of land (for that makes part of my plan;)
who has a wife as industrious as she ought to be; who does not waste his
earnings at the ale-house or the tea shop: I should be glad to know how
such a man, while wheat shall be at the price of about 6<i>s.</i> a bushel,
<i>can possibly have children crying for bread</i>!</p>
<p>84. Cry, indeed, they must, if he will persist in giving 13<i>s.</i> for a
bushel of bread instead of 5<i>s.</i> 9<i>d.</i> Such a man is not to say that the
bread which I have described is <i>not good enough</i>. It was good enough for
his forefathers, who were too proud to be paupers, that is to say, abject
and willing slaves. “Hogs eat barley.” And hogs will eat wheat, too, when
they can get at it. Convicts in condemned cells eat wheaten bread; but we
think it no degradation to eat wheaten bread, too. I am for depriving the
labourer of none of his rights; I would have him oppressed in no manner or
shape; I would have him bold and free; but to have him such, he must have
bread in his house, sufficient for all his family, and whether that bread
be fine or coarse must depend upon the different circumstances which
present themselves in the cases of different individuals.</p>
<p>85. The married man has no right to expect the same plenty of food and of
raiment that the single man has. The time before marriage is the time to
lay by, or, if the party choose, to indulge himself in the absence of
labour. To marry is a voluntary act, and it is attended in the result with
great pleasures and advantages. If, therefore, the laws be fair and equal;
if the state of things be such that a labouring man can, with the usual
ability of labourers, and with constant industry, care and sobriety; with
decency of deportment towards all his neighbours, cheerful obedience to
his employer, and a due subordination to the laws; if the state of things
be such, that such a man’s earnings be sufficient to maintain himself and
family with food, raiment, and lodging needful<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49"></SPAN></span> for them; such a man has
no reason to complain; and no labouring man has reason to complain, if the
numerousness of his family should call upon him for extraordinary
exertion, or for frugality uncommonly rigid. The man with a large family
has, if it be not in a great measure his own fault, a greater number of
pleasures and of blessings than other men. If he be wise, and <i>just</i> as
well as wise, he will see that it is reasonable for him to expect less
delicate fare than his neighbours, who have a less number of children, or
no children at all. He will see the justice as well as the necessity of
his resorting to the use of coarser bread, and thus endeavour to make up
that, or at least a part of that, which he loses in comparison with his
neighbours. The quality of the bread ought, in every case, to be
proportioned to the number of the family and the means of the head of that
family. Here is no injury to health proposed; but, on the contrary, the
best security for its preservation. Without bread, all is misery. The
Scripture truly calls it the staff of life; and it may be called, too, the
pledge of peace and happiness in the labourer’s dwelling.</p>
<p>86. As to the act of making bread, it would be shocking indeed if that had
to be taught by the means of books. Every woman, high or low, ought to
know how to make bread. If she do not, she is unworthy of trust and
confidence; and, indeed, a mere burden upon the community. Yet, it is but
too true, that many women, even amongst those who have to get their living
by their labour, know nothing of the making of bread; and seem to
understand little more about it than the part which belongs to its
consumption. A Frenchman, a Mr. <span class="smcap">Cusar</span>, who had been born in the West
Indies, told me, that till he came to Long Island, he never knew <i>how the
flour came</i>: that he was surprised when he learnt that it was squeezed out
of little grains that grew at the tops of straw; for that he had always
had an idea that it was got out of some large substances, like the yams
that grow in tropical climates. He was a very sincere and good man, and I
am sure he told me truth. And<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50"></SPAN></span> this may be the more readily believed, when
we see so many women in England, who seem to know no more of the
constituent parts of a loaf than they know of those of the moon. Servant
women in abundance appear to think that loaves are made by the baker, as
knights are made by the king; things of their pure creation, a creation,
too, in which no one else can participate. Now, is not this an enormous
evil? And whence does it come? Servant women are the children of the
labouring classes; and they would all know how to make bread, and know
well how to make it too, if they had been fed on bread of their mother’s
and their own making.</p>
<p>87. How serious a matter, then, is this, even in this point of view! A
servant that cannot make bread is not entitled to the same wages as one
that can. If she can neither bake nor brew; if she be ignorant of the
nature of flour, yeast, malt, and hops, what is she good for? If she
understand these matters well; if she be able to supply her employer with
bread and with beer, she is really <i>valuable</i>; she is entitled to good
wages, and to consideration and respect into the bargain; but if she be
wholly deficient in these particulars, and can merely dawdle about with a
bucket and a broom, she can be of very little consequence; to lose her, is
merely to lose a consumer of food, and she can expect very little indeed
in the way of desire to make her life easy and pleasant. Why should any
one have such desire? She is not a child of the family. She is not a
relation. Any one as well as she can take in a loaf from the baker, or a
barrel of beer from the brewer. She has nothing whereby to bind her
employer to her. To sweep a room any thing is capable of that has got two
hands. In short, she has no useful skill, no useful ability; she is an
ordinary drudge, and she is treated accordingly.</p>
<p>88. But, if such be her state in the house of an employer, what is her
state in the house of a <i>husband</i>? The lover is blind; but the husband has
eyes to see with. He soon discovers that there is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51"></SPAN></span> something wanted
besides dimples and cherry cheeks; and I would have fathers seriously
reflect, and to be well assured, that the way to make their daughters to
be long admired, beloved and respected by their husbands, is to make them
skilful, able and active in the most necessary concerns of a family.
Eating and drinking come three times every day; the preparations for
these, and all the ministry necessary to them, belong to the wife; and I
hold it to be impossible, that at the end of two years, a really ignorant,
sluttish wife should possess any thing worthy of the name of love from her
husband. This, therefore, is a matter of far greater moment to the father
of a family, than, whether the Parson of the parish, or the Methodist
Priest, be the most “<i>Evangelical</i>” of the two; for it is here a question
of the daughter’s happiness or misery for life. And I have no hesitation
to say, that if I were a labouring man, I should prefer teaching my
daughters to bake, brew, milk, make butter and cheese, to teaching them to
read the Bible till they had got every word of it by heart; and I should
think, too, nay I should know, that I was in the former case doing my duty
towards God as well as towards my children.</p>
<p>89. When we see a family of dirty, ragged little creatures, let us inquire
into the cause; and ninety-nine times out of every hundred we shall find
that the parents themselves have been brought up in the same way. But a
consideration which ought of itself to be sufficient, is the contempt in
which a husband will naturally hold a wife that is ignorant of the matters
necessary to the conducting of a family. A woman who understands all the
things above mentioned, is really a skilful person; a person <ins class="correction" title="original: whorthy">worthy</ins> of
respect, and that will be treated with respect too, by all but brutish
employers or brutish husbands; and such, though sometimes, are not very
frequently found. Besides, if natural justice and our own interest had not
the weight which they have, such valuable persons will be treated with
respect. They know their own worth; and, accordingly, they are<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52"></SPAN></span> more
careful of their character, more careful not to lessen by misconduct the
value which they possess from their skill and ability.</p>
<p>90. Thus, then, the interest of the labourer; his health; the health of
his family; the peace and happiness of his home; the prospects of his
children through life; their skill, their ability, their habits of
cleanliness, and even their moral deportment; all combine to press upon
him the adoption and the constant practice of this branch of domestic
economy. “Can she <i>bake</i>?” is the question that I always put. If she can,
she is <i>worth a pound or two a year more</i>. Is that nothing? Is it nothing
for a labouring man to make his four or five daughters worth eight or ten
pounds a year more; and that too while he is by the same means providing
the more plentifully for himself and the rest of his family? The reasons
on the side of the thing that I contend for are endless; but if this one
motive be not sufficient, I am sure, all that I have said, and all that I
could say, must be wholly unavailing.</p>
<p>91. Before, however, I dismiss this subject, let me say a word or two to
those persons who do not come under the denomination of labourers. In
London, or in any very large town where the space is so confined, and
where the proper fuel is not handily to be come at and stored for use, to
bake your own bread may be attended with too much difficulty; but in all
other situations there appears to me to be hardly any excuse for not
baking bread at home. If the family consist of twelve or fourteen persons,
the money actually saved in this way (even at present prices) would be
little short of from twenty to thirty pounds a year. At the utmost here is
only the time of one woman occupied one day in the week. Now mind, here
are twenty-five pounds to be employed in some way different from that of
giving it to the baker. If you add five of these pounds to a woman’s
wages, is not that full as well employed as giving it in wages to the
baker’s men? Is it not better employed for you? and is it not better
employed for the community?<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53"></SPAN></span> It is very certain, that if the practice were
as prevalent as I could wish, there would be a large deduction from the
regular baking population; but would there be any harm if less alum were
imported into England, and if some of those youths were left at the
plough, who are now bound in apprenticeships to learn the art and mystery
of doing that which every girl in the kingdom ought to be taught to do by
her mother? It ought to be a maxim with every master and every mistress,
never to employ another to do that which can be done as well by their own
servants. The more of their money that is retained in the hands of their
own people, the better it is for them altogether. Besides, a man of a
right mind must be pleased with the reflection, that there is a great mass
of skill and ability under his own roof. He feels stronger and more
independent on this account, all pecuniary advantage out of the question.
It is impossible to conceive any thing more contemptible than a crowd of
men and women living together in a house, and constantly looking out of it
for people to bring them food and drink, and to fetch their garments to
and fro. Such a crowd resemble a nest of unfledged birds, absolutely
dependent for their very existence on the activity and success of the old
ones.</p>
<p>92. Yet, on men go, from year to year, in this state of wretched
dependence, even when they have all the means of living within themselves,
which is certainly the happiest state of life that any one can enjoy. It
may be asked, Where is the mill to be found? where is the wheat to be got?
The answer is, Where is there not a mill? where is there not a market?
They are every where, and the difficulty is to discover what can be the
particular attractions contained in that long and luminous manuscript, a
baker’s half-yearly bill.</p>
<p>93. With regard to the mill, in speaking of families of any considerable
number of persons, the mill has, with me, been more than once a subject of
observation in print. I for a good while experienced the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54"></SPAN></span> great
inconvenience and expense of sending my wheat and other grain to be ground
at a mill. This expense, in case of a considerable family, living at only
a mile from a mill, is something; but the inconveniency and uncertainty
are great. In my “Year’s Residence in America,” from Paragraphs 1031 and
onwards, I give an account of a horse-mill which I had in my farm yard;
and I showed, I think very clearly, that corn could be ground cheaper in
this way than by wind or water, and that it would answer well to grind for
sale in this way as well as for home use. Since my return to England I
have seen a mill, erected in consequence of what the owner had read in my
book. This mill belongs to a small farmer, who, when he cannot work on his
land with his horses, or in the season when he has little for them to do,
grinds wheat, sells the flour; and he takes in grists to grind, as other
millers do. This mill goes with three small horses; but what I would
recommend to gentlemen with considerable families, or to farmers, is a
mill such as I myself have at present.</p>
<p>94. With this mill, turned by a man and a stout boy, I can grind six
bushels of wheat in a day and dress the flour. The grinding of six bushels
of wheat at ninepence a bushel comes to four and sixpence, which pays the
man and the boy, supposing them (which is not and seldom can be the case)
to be hired for the express purpose out of the street. With the same mill
you grind meat for your pigs; and of this you will get eight or ten
bushels ground in a day. You have no trouble about sending to the mill;
you are sure to have your <i>own wheat</i>; for strange as it may seem, I used
sometimes to find that I sent white Essex wheat to the mill, and that it
brought me flour from very coarse red wheat. There is no accounting for
this, except by supposing that wind and water power has something in it to
change the very nature of the grain; as, when I came to grind by horses,
such as the wheat went into the hopper, so the flour came out into the
bin.</p>
<p>95. But mine now is only on the petty scale of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55"></SPAN></span> providing for a dozen of
persons and a small lot of pigs. For a farm-house, or a gentleman’s house
in the country, where there would be <i>room</i> to have a walk for a horse,
you might take the labour from the men, clap any little horse, pony, or
even ass to the wheel; and he would grind you off eight or ten bushels of
wheat in a day, and both he and you would have the thanks of your men into
the bargain.</p>
<p>96. The cost of this mill is twenty pounds. The dresser is four more; the
horse-path and wheel might, possibly, be four or five more; and, I am very
certain, that to any farmer living at a mile from a mill, (and that is
less than the average distance perhaps;) having twelve persons in family,
having forty pigs to feed, and twenty hogs to fatten, the savings of such
a mill would pay the whole expenses of it the very first year. Such a
farmer cannot send less than <i>fifty times</i> a year to the mill. Think of
that, in the first place! The elements are not always propitious:
sometimes the water fails, and sometimes the wind. Many a farmer’s wife
has been tempted to vent her spleen on both. At best, there must be horse
and man, or boy, and, perhaps, cart, to go to the mill; and that, too,
observe, in all weathers, and in the harvest as well as at other times of
the year. The case is one of imperious necessity: neither floods nor
droughts, nor storms nor calms, will allay the cravings of the kitchen,
nor quiet the clamorous uproar of the stye. Go, somebody must, to some
place or other, and back they must come with flour and with meal. One
summer many persons came down the country more than fifty miles to a mill
that I knew in Pennsylvania; and I have known farmers in England carry
their grists more than fifteen miles to be ground. It is surprising, that,
under these circumstances, hand-mills and horse-mills should not, long
ago, have become of more general use; especially when one considers that
the labour, in this case, would cost the farmer next to nothing. To grind
would be the work of a wet day. There is no farmer who does not at least
fifty days in every year<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56"></SPAN></span> exclaim, when he gets up in the morning, “What
shall I set <i>them</i> at to-day?” If he had a mill, he would make them pull
off their shoes, sweep all out clean, winnow up some corn, if he had it
not already done, and grind and dress, and have every thing in order. No
scolding within doors about the grist; no squeaking in the stye; no boy
sent off in the rain to the mill.</p>
<p>97. But there is one advantage which I have not yet mentioned; and which
is the greatest of all; namely, that you would have the power of supplying
your married labourers; your blacksmith’s men sometimes; your
wheelwright’s men at other times; and, indeed, the greater part of the
persons that you employed, with good flour, instead of their going to
purchase their flour, after it had passed through the hands of a Corn
Merchant, a Miller, a Flour Merchant, and a Huckster, every one of whom
does and must have a profit out of the flour, arising from wheat grown
upon, and sent away from, your very farm! I used to let all my people have
flour at the same price that they would otherwise have been compelled to
give for worse flour. <i>Every Farmer</i> will understand me when I say, that
he ought to pay for nothing in <i>money</i>, which he can pay for in any thing
but money. His maxim is to keep the money that he takes as long as he can.
Now here is a most effectual way of putting that maxim in practice to a
very great extent. Farmers know well that it is the Saturday night which
empties their pockets; and here is the means of cutting off a good half of
the Saturday night. The men have better flour for the same money, and
still the farmer keeps at home those profits which would go to the
maintaining of the dealers in wheat and in flour.</p>
<p>98. The maker of my little mill is Mr. <span class="smcap">Hill</span>, of Oxford-street. The expense
is what I have stated it to be. I, with my small establishment, find the
thing convenient and advantageous; what then must it be to a gentleman in
the country who has room and horses, and a considerable family to provide
for?<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57"></SPAN></span> The dresser is so contrived as to give you at once, meal, of four
degrees of fineness; so that, for certain purposes, you may take the very
finest; and, indeed, you may have your flour, and your bread of course, of
what degree of fineness you please. But there is also a <i>steel mill</i>, much
less <i>expensive</i>, requiring <i>less labour</i>, and yet quite sufficient for a
<i>family</i>. Mills of this sort, very good, and at a reasonable price, are to
be had of Mr. <span class="smcap">Parkes</span>, in <i>Fenchurch-street</i>, London. These are very
complete things of their kind. Mr. <span class="smcap">Parkes</span> has, also, excellent Malt-Mills.</p>
<p>99. In concluding this part of my Treatise, I cannot help expressing my
hope of being instrumental in inducing a part of the labourers, at any
rate, to bake their own bread; and, above all things, to abandon the use
of “Ireland’s <i>lazy</i> root.” Nevertheless, so extensive is the erroneous
opinion relative to this villanous root, that I really began to despair of
checking its cultivation and use, till I saw the declaration which Mr.
<span class="smcap">Wakefield</span> had the good sense and the spirit to make before the
“<span class="smcap">Agricultural Committee</span>.” Be it observed, too, that Mr. <span class="smcap">Wakefield</span> had
himself made a survey of the state of Ireland. What he saw there did not
encourage him, doubtless, to be an advocate for the growing of this root
of wretchedness. It is an undeniable fact, that, in the proportion that
this root is in use, as a <i>substitute for bread</i>, the people are wretched;
the reasons for which I have explained and enforced a hundred times over.
Mr. <span class="smcap">William Hanning</span> told the Committee that the labourers in his part of
Somersetshire were “almost wholly supplied with potatoes, <i>breakfast</i> and
<i>dinner</i>, brought them <i>in the fields</i>, and nothing but potatoes; and that
they used, in better times, to get a certain portion of bacon and cheese,
which, on account of their “poverty, they do not eat now.” It is
impossible that men can be <i>contented</i> in such a state of things: it is
unjust to desire them to be contented: it is a state of misery and
degradation to which no part of any community can have any show of right
to reduce another<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58"></SPAN></span> part: men so degraded have no protection; and it is a
disgrace to form part of a community to which they belong. This
degradation has been occasioned by a silent change in the value of the
money of the country. This has purloined the wages of the labourer; it has
reduced him by degrees to housel with the spider and the bat, and to feed
with the pig. It has changed the habits, and, in a great measure, the
character of the people. The sins of this system are enormous and
undescribable; but, thank God! they seem to be approaching to their end!
Money is resuming its value, labour is recovering its price: let us hope
that the wretched potatoe is disappearing, and that we shall, once more,
see the knife in the labourer’s hand and the loaf upon his board.</p>
<p>[This was written in 1821. <i>Now</i> (1823) we have had the experience of
1822, when, for the first time, the world saw a considerable part of a
people, plunged into all the horrors of <i>famine</i>, at a moment when the
government of that nation declared <i>food to be abundant</i>! Yes, the year
1822 saw Ireland in this state; saw the people of whole parishes receiving
the <i>extreme unction</i> preparatory to yielding up their breath for want of
food; and this while large exports of meat and flour were taking place in
that country! But horrible as this was, disgraceful as it was to the name
of Ireland, it was attended with this good effect: it brought out, from
many members of Parliament (in their places,) and from the public in
general, the acknowledgment, that the <i>misery</i> and <i>degradation</i> of the
Irish were chiefly owing to the <i>use of the potatoe as the almost sole
food of the people</i>.]</p>
<p>100. In my next number I shall treat of the <i>keeping of cows</i>. I have said
that I will teach the cottager how to keep a cow all the year round upon
the produce of a quarter of an acre, or, in other words, <i>forty rods</i>, of
land; and, in my next, I will make good my promise.</p>
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