LORD BYRON “These machines were to them an advantage, inasmuch as
they superseded the necessity of employing a number of workmen, who were left
in consequence to starve”
The
Luddites, 1812-02-27
My
Lords,
The
subject now submitted to your Lordships, for the first time, though new to the
House, is, by no means, new to the country. I believe it had occupied the
serious thoughts of all descriptions of persons long before its introduction to
the notice of that Legislature whose interference alone could be of real
service. As a person in some degree connected with the suffering county, though
a stranger, not only to this House in general, but to almost every individual
whose attention I presume to solicit, I must claim some portion of your
Lordships' indulgence, whilst I offer a few observations on a question in which
I confess myself deeply interested.
To
enter into any detail of these riots would be superfluous; the House is already
aware that every outrage short of actual bloodshed has been perpetrated, and
that the proprietors of the frames obnoxious to the rioters, and all persons
supposed to be connected with them, have been liable to insult and violence.
During the short time I recently passed in Notts, not twelve hours elapsed
without some fresh act of violence ; and, on the day I left the county, I was
informed that forty frames had been broken the preceding evening as usual,
without resistance and without detection.
Such
was then the state of that county, and such I have reason to believe it to be
at this moment. But whilst these outrages must be admitted to exist to an
alarming extent, it cannot be denied that they have arisen from circumstances
of the most unparalelled distress. The perseverance of these miserable men in
their proceedings, tends to prove that nothing but absolute want could have
driven a large and once honest and industrious body of the people into the
commission of excesses so hazardous to themselves, their families, and the
community. At the time to which I allude, the town and county were burdened
with large detachments of the military; the police was in motion, the
magistrates assembled, yet all these movements, civil and military had led
to—nothing. Not a single instance had occurred of the apprehension of any real
delinquent actually taken in the fact, against whom there existed legal
evidence sufficient for conviction. But the police, however useless, were by no
means idle: several notorious delinquents had been detected; men liable to
conviction, on the clearest evidence, of the capital crime of poverty; men, who
had been nefariously guilty of lawfully begetting several children, whom,
thanks to the times!—they were unable to maintain. Considerable injury has been
done to the proprietors of the improved frames. These machines were to them an
advantage, inasmuch as they superseded the necessity of employing a number of
workmen, who were left in consequence to starve. By the adoption of one species
of frame in particular, one man performed the work of many, and the superfluous
labourers were thrown out of employment. Yet it is to be observed, that the
work thus executed was inferior in quality, not marketable at home, and merely
hurried over with a view to exportation. It was called, in the cant of the
trade, by the name of Spider-work. The rejected workmen, in the blindness of
their ignorance, instead of rejoicing at these improvements in arts so
beneficial to mankind, conceived themselves to be sacrificed to improvements in
mechanism. In the foolishness of their hearts, they imagined that the
maintenance and well doing of the industrious poor, were objects of greater
consequence than the enrichment of a few individuals by any improvement in the
implements of trade which threw the workmen out of employment, and rendered the
labourer unworthy of his hire. And, it must be confessed, that although the
adoption of the enlarged machinery, in that state of our commerce which the
country once boasted, might have been beneficial to the master without being
detrimental to the servant; yet, in the present situation of our manufactures,
rotting in warehouses without a prospect of exportation, with the demand for
work and workmen equally diminished, frames of this construction tend
materially to aggravate the distresses and discontents of the disappointed
sufferers. But the real cause of these distresses, and consequent disturbances,
lies deeper. When we are told that these men are leagued together, not only for
the destruction of their own comfort, but of their very ' means of subsistence,
can we forget that it is the bitter policy, the destructive warfare, of the
last eighteen years, which has destroyed their comfort, your comfort, all men's
comfort;—that policy which, originating with " great statesmen now no
more," has survived the dead to become a curse on the living unto the
third and fourth generation! These men never destroyed their looms till they
were become useless, worse than useless; till they were become actual
impediments to their exertions in obtaining their daily bread. Can you then
wonder, that in times like these, when bankruptcy, convicted fraud, and imputed
felony, are found in a station not far beneath that of your Lordships, the
lowest, though once most useful portion of the people, should forget their duty
in their distresses, and become only less guilty than one of their
representatives ? But while the exalted offender can find means to baffle the
law, new capital punishments must be devised, new snares of death must be
spread, for the wretched mechanic who is famished into guilt. These men were
willing to dig, but the spade was in other hands; they were not ashamed to beg,
but there was none to relieve them. Their own means of subsistence were cut
off; all other employments pre-occupied; and their excesses, however to be
deplored and condemned, can hardly be the subject of surprise.
It
has been stated, that the persons in the temporary possession of frames connive
at their destruction; if this be proved upon inquiry, it were necessary that
such material accessories to the crime should be principals in the punishment.
But I did hope that any measure proposed by His Majesty's Government for your
Lordships' decision, would have had conciliation for its basis; or, if that
were hopeless, that some previous inquiry, some deliberation, would have been
deemed requisite; not that we should have been called at once, without
examination and without cause, to pass sentences by wholesale, and sign
death-warrants blindfold. But admitting that these men had no cause of
complaint, that the grievances of them and their employers were alike
groundless, that they deserved the worst; what inefficiency, what imbecility,
has been evinced in the method chosen to reduce them! Why were the military
called out to be made a mockery of—if they were to be called out at all? As far
as the difference of seasons would permit, they have merely parodied the summer
campaign of Major Sturgeon; and, indeed, the whole proceedings, civil and
military, seem formed on the model of those of the Mayor and Corporation of
Garrett. Such marchings and countermarchings ! from Nottingham to Bulnell—from
Bulnell to Bareford—from Bareford to Mansfield ! and, when at length, the
detachments arrived at their destination, in all' the pride, pomp, and
circumstance of glorious war,' they came just in time to witness the mischief
which had been done, and ascertain the escape of the perpetrators ;—to collect
the spolia opima, in the fragments of broken frames, and return to their
quarters amidst the derision of old women, and the hootings of children. Now,
though in a free country, it were to be wished that our military should never
be too formidable, at least, to ourselves, I cannot see the policy of placing
them in situations where they can only be made ridiculous. As the sword is the
worst argument that can be used, so should it be the last : in this instance it
has been the first, but, providentially as yet, only in the scabbard. The
present measure will, indeed, pluck it from the sheath ; yet had proper
meetings been held in the earlier stages of these riots,— had the grievances of
these men and their masters (for they also have had their grievances) been
fairly weighed and justly examined, I do think that means might have been
devised to restore these workmen to their avocations, and tranquillity to the
country. At present the county suffers from the double infliction of an idle
military and a starving population. In what state of apathy have we been
plunged so long, that now, for the first time, the house has been officially
apprised of these disturbances ? All this has been transacting within one
hundred and thirty miles of London, and yet we, 'good easy men ! have deemed
full sure our greatness was a ripening,' and have sat down to enjoy our foreign
triumphs in the midst of domestic calamity. But all the cities you have taken,
all the armies which have retreated before your leaders, are but paltry
subjects of self-congratution, if your land divides against itself, and your
dragoons and executioners must be let loose against your fellow-citizens. You
call these men a mob, desperate, dangerous, and ignorant; and seem to think
that the only way to quiet the 'Bellua multorum capitum' is to lop off a few of
its superfluous heads. But even a mob may be better reduced to reason by a
mixture of conciliation and firmness, than by additional irritation and
redoubled penalties. Are we aware of our obligations to a mob ! It is the mob
that labour in your fields, and serve in your houses— that man your navy, and
recruit your army—that have enabled you to defy all the world,—and can also
defy you, when neglect and calamity have driven them to despair. You may call
the people a mob, but do not forget that a mob too often speaks the sentiments
of the people. And here I must remark with what alacrity you are accustomed to
fly to the succour of your distressed allies, leaving the distressed of your
own country to the care of Providence or—the parish. When the Portuguese
suffered under the retreat of the French, every arm was stretched out, every
hand was opened,—from the rich man's largess to the widow's mite, all was
bestowed to enable them to rebuild their villages and replenish their
granaries. And at this moment, when thousands of misguided but most unfortunate
fellow-countrymen are struggling with the extremes of hardship and hunger, as
your charity began abroad, it should end at home. A much less sum—a tithe of
the bounty bestowed on Portugal, even if these men (which I cannot admit
without inquiry) could not have been restored to their employments, would have
rendered unnecessary the tender mercies of the bayonet and the gibbet But
doubtless our funds have too many foreign claims to admit a prospect of
domestic relief,— though never did such objects demand it. I have traversed the
seat of war in the peninsula; I have been in some of the most oppressed
provinces of Turkey; but never, under the most despotic of infidel governments,
did' I behold such squalid wretchedness as I have seen since my return, in the
very heart of a Christian country. And what are your remedies 1 After months of
inaction, and months of action worse than inactivity, at length comes forth the
grand specific, the never-failing nostrum of all state-physicians, from the
days of Draco to the present time. After feeling the pulse and shaking the head
over the patient, prescribing the usual course of warm water and bleeding—the
warm water of your mawkish police, and the lancets of your military—these
convulsions must terminate in death, the sure consummation of the prescriptions
of all political Sangrados. Setting aside the palpable injustice and the
certain inefficiency of the bill, are there not capital punishments sufficient
on your statutes ? Is there not blood enough upon your penal code ! that more
must be poured forth to ascend to heaven and testify against you ? How will you
carry this bill into effect ? Can you commit a whole county to their own
prisons ? Will you erect a gibbet in every field, and hang up men like
scarescrows ? or will you proceed (as you must to bring this measure into
effect) by decimation; place the country under martial law; depopulate and lay
waste all around you; and restore Sherwood Forest as an acceptable gift to the
crown in its former condition of a royal chase, and an asylum for outlaws? Are
these the remedies for a starving and desperate populace ? Will the famished
wretch who has braved your bayonets be appalled by your gibbets ? When death is
a relief, and the only relief it appears that you will afford him, will he be
dragooned into tranquillity ? Will that which could not be effected by your
grenadiers, be accomplished by your executioners ? If you proceed by the forms
of law, where is your evidence ? Those who have refused to impeach their
accomplices when transportation only was the punishment, will hardly be tempted
to witness against them when death is the penalty. With all due deference to
the noble lords opposite, I think a little investigation, some previous
inquiry, would induce even them to change their purpose. That most favourite
state measure, so marvellously efficacious in many and recent
instances,temporising, would not be without its advantage in this. When a
proposal is made to emancipate or relieve, you hesitate, you deliberate for
years, you temporize and tamper with the minds of men; but a death-bill must be
passed off hand, without a thought of the consequences. Sure I am, from what I
have heard and from what I have seen, that to pass the bill under all the
existing circumstances, without inquiry, without deliberation, would only be to
add injustice to irritation, and barbarity to neglect. The framers of such a
bill must be content to inherit the honours of that Athenian lawgiver whose
edicts were said to be written, not in ink, but in blood. But suppose it
past,—suppose one of these men, as I have seen them meagre with famine, sullen
with despair, careless of a life which your lordships are perhaps about to
value at something less than the price of a stocking-frame ; suppose this man
surrounded by those children for whom he is unable to procure bread at the
hazard of his existence, about to be torn for ever from a family which he
lately supported in peaceful industry, and which it is not his fault than he
can no longer so support; suppose this man—and there are ten thousand such from
whom you may select your victims,—dragged into court to be tried for this new
offence, by this new law,—still there are two things wanting to convict and
condemn him, and these are, in my opinion, twelve butchers for a jury, and a
Jefferies for a judge!
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