Page:Once a Week Volume V.djvu/165

158 idols, West Indian pickle-jars, aloe-plants, tamarind pots, African ivory, dried alligators, hippopotamus teeth, walrus tusks, birds of Paradise, beetles, moths, ostrich eggs, carved cocoanut shells, sponges, Australian boomerangs, Ceylon pearls, and other articles with which the interior of the shop is crowded in most picturesque confusion.

Here is one of those seaport pests, an Emigration Agency Office, where but too frequently the poor intending emigrant is regularly swindled of his last penny, on every possible and impossible pretence, and then hastily bundled on board some unseaworthy, ill-provisioned, under-manned, and anything but A 1 vessel, which generally makes the voyage in about double the advertised time, and ofttimes gets quietly wrecked on some convenient rocks, to the no small profit of the captain and owner.

What a long, dreary expanse of dingy yellow brick wall stretches out on the right of us. It is the boundary wall of the St. Katherine’s Docks, and the huge bonded warehouses tower above it, like sullen giants, frowning on the world of misery, debauchery, and devilry, which exists within their very shadow. And now we come on a scene, which from our infancy we have been accustomed to, yet which has always possessed a strange and fearful degree of interest for us. Large numbers of gaunt-featured, squalid, hungry-looking men, are silently but nervously lounging about the gate which forms the entrance to the London Docks. From morning till night they linger there, with restless eye and hopeless heart, in the vain hope of obtaining employment as an “extra” in unlading the ships. A large number of labourers are employed in the docks, as porters, or to assist in removing the cargoes from the ships to the bonded warehouses; and it frequently happens that a sudden influx of shipping necessitates the employment of additional hands, consequently numbers of unemployed men find their way here, in the hope of obtaining a chance job, for the work, though ill paid and heavy, requires no skill, but merely brute strength. The dock gates are one of the last resources of the poverty-stricken, and the crowd forms a strange medley as it stands in doorways, crouches on pavement curbs, stands at flaunting public-house doors, slouches against greasy walls, or darkens the plate-glass windows of magnificent gin-palaces. Hour after hour, day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year, there it is. True, some of its members gain other employment; many become beggars or criminals; while not a few drag their weary fever-wasted limbs to dark cellars, or miserable windowless lofts, where they lay themselves down to await the death-angel. Still there are hundreds to supply their places, for the ranks of the unemployed are continually recruited by the victims of dissipation, misfortune, or crime; and so the ball whirls ceaselessly round.

We are Social Economists, and, as such, we are perfectly aware that much, if not all, of this misery and suffering is occasioned by the popular disregard, dislike, or neglect of the fundamental principles of social science; but we are human, and cannot gaze on the scene before us without a throb of compassion for the helpless victims of poverty and misfortune, who are the chief actors therein.

But, hark! a stentorian voice shouts “Men wanted.” The effect is magical. The listless demeanour of the crowd changes in a moment to one of bustle and activity; and it speeds with desperate headlong haste to the dock gate, where it blocks up the road, and renders the pavement totally impassable.

Perhaps only a dozen hands are required, but there are already two or three hundred applicants, besieging the sturdy, determined-looking man, to whom is entrusted the unenviable duty of selecting the necessary men, which is instantly done by his practised eye.

The labourers thus picked out, have—despite their energetic and sometimes fistic remonstrances—to fight their way through the dense, heaving mass, which commences a terrific clamour. Shouting, wrestling, struggling, fighting, kicking, and swearing, the disappointed men strive to prevent their successful competitors from approaching the gate, and for a few moments cries, curses, groans, imprecations, and hisses commingle in deafening discord. The strongest dash aside the weakest, all friendship is forgotten, and the animal passions predominate in the breasts of those who compose the crowd; as they push and grapple with each other in the frenzied, savage excitement of disappointment and despair. Then the loud clear voice of the foreman is heard threatening the foremost of the refractory, and instantly the tempest subsides, and all is comparatively silent. The men with scowling, sullen looks, slowly retreat to the old nooks and corners, to await another chance. A few strive to obtain liquor on credit at the beershop, others retreat slowly homewards, while the remainder settle down into the old attitude of listless expectancy; and the careless pedestrian passing by would perceive few traces of the recent agitation occasioned by the “battle for bread” as one of the men graphically described it. So the men wait, wait, and wait, till they drop off, one by one, and leave their places to be filled by others, who in their turn go through the same dismal, heart-crushing routine.

We wish that some of our sturdy building operatives, who are so fond of “striking” on every trivial pretence, could behold the sight. It might possibly induce them to consider whether there are not worse things than toiling ten hours per day, for thirty-three shillings per week.

2em

The Library of the British Museum contains two exceedingly attenuated quarto volumes of very considerable value, on account of their rarity, one of which is entitled “Mother Shipton’s Prophecies,” published in 1663; the other “The Life and Death of Mother Shipton,” published in 1687. As there are some very remarkable events recorded in this latter, touching the parentage and infancy of this renowned lady, I shall draw upon its contents, previous to referring to the