Chapter 19 – EMILY
Alas! he may not claim a bone
Even in the workhouse, be it known,
Though Bethnal-Green might own his sire
That Bob was born in Monmouthsire
The porridge having been made by cook, by my instructions, to the old recipe, I tasted it before it was sent down to the casuals last night. It was not inedible, but not very pleasant either - thin and tasteless.
I asked John to peek into the rooms while the men were eating and I did the same with the women. I must admit that I was somewhat taken aback by the group that I visited - having not spent much time with that group of people before. I tried to be inconspicuous, and just observe, but sometimes I put direct questiions to them. I tried to put myself in the shoes of one of the women I saw there.
The day was gloomy and damp, but not actually wet, except for a slight drizzle at intervals. She was lame in one leg with rheumatism, and walked slowly. She said she was walking from Pewsey to Tidworth to find her brother, having been in a workhouse infirmary for many months. She said she had received a letter from her brother, offering her a home if she would come to him. She lost his address and could not write, so she had no resource but to walk from workhouse to workhouse till she reached her destination.
She had arrived, alone, a few minutes before six, at the workhouse lodge. This was occupied by a man on his own, and I wondered if that had worried her. The man was a male pauper, and no one else was in sight. She entered his hut to answer questions, which he recorded in a book.
He took her bundle, (all her worldly goods) and asked if she had any money. she gave him her last penny (I presume) and received a wooden token for the bundle.
The woman plus two younger ones who had come in after her went into an oblong room containing six bedsteads with wire bedsteads with straw mattresses and pillows. I was deeply embarrassed at how pathetic they looked. A wooden table and bench and a copy of "Regulations for Tramps" were the remaining articles of furniture. There are big, rather low, windows on three sides; the bottom panes are frosted, except one, which had been broken and mended with plain glass, and overlooked the yard where the male tramps worked.
It was some time before Fanny Gingell, the female pauper who manages this part of the house, came. She asked them if they were clean. The old lady (whose garments were at any rate not clean) was let off, as she had spent the last night in a workhouse tramp ward. The younger women said they should like a bath, and were shown into a bath-room and allowed to bathe themselves. They were given blue nightgowns. These looked fairly clean, but I wondered if they had been worn before. They seemed to have dirty marks round the neck. They should at least have been stoved!
The old woman dressed in one without bathing. After the bath they were each given four blankets and told to make their beds and get into them. The art of bed-making is a difficult one, even with four blankets. The previous management had only given two. With four I thought the best plan would be to put one down doubled for padding, then, roll oneself round in one, and lie on the mattress. Even with one spread all over and another doubled under the body and two above they still looked cold.
Put to bed, like babies, at about half-past six, the pauper in charge brought in their food. The women seemed rather more cheerful after their bath, with the large, airy room, They appeared very hungry and thirsty. They were given a small lading-can three parts full of hot gruel and a thick crust of bread each. The latter they were quite hungry enough to eat, but when they tasted the gruel, their expressions said how unpleasant it was.
They asked for salt and were shown a salt-box on the table, into which many fingers had been dipped. The old woman said they were "lucky to get that." But they had no spoons (why not? I must find out.) so it was hard for them to mix the salt in. One of the younger women said, “I am fond of gruel, and in my hunger and thirst could easily have taken it if fairly palatable.” She cast in a few grains of salt into the gruel and used a little to moisten the dry bread; her companion could not stomach it at all, and the old woman, being accustomed to workhouse ways, had a little tea in her pocket, and got Fanny to pour her gruel down the bog and infuse her tea with hot water from the bath tap.
They were then left locked alone, and I went back to our bit of the house to write up my notes. What a lot of changes needed to come just as a result of this one viewing.
The next morning, I again wished to see how they reacted to the food. I decided to have a few words with them and asked how they slept. They had been wakened about seven and told to dress. “Not at all,” was the answer. “It was cold and noisy and they were bugs on the ceiling. The floor would have been preferable to the bed,” said one.
“The pillow was too dirty to put my face on, so I covered it with a blanket,” said another. I was again astounded and ashamed to find out what was happening in my workhouse.
I noticed that both blankets and nightgowns were folded up and put away on shelves, just where they had been the night before, apparently, and left for new corners. As soon as I could, I would have words with the woman in charge.
Then the breakfast arrived, which was exactly a repetition of supper - salt-less gruel and dry bread. They ate as much as we could and complained of being very thirsty. They put what bread they could not eat into their pockets as a supply for the day, and were told to empty the remains of their gruel (most of it) down the bog. One of the women told me, “A mug of coffee or tea would at least have washed down the dry bread; or a quarter of the quantity of gruel, properly made, would have been acceptable, with a mug of cold water for a proper drink.”
The women were told to clean the tramp ward and go.
Fanny told them to "sweep the ward and make all clean." They did not scrub the room, but Fanny afterwards scolded them for not doing so. They swept the floor, cleaned the bath, and wash-basins, washed up the pots, dusted, and, having made all tidy and then sat and waited for release. I could not fault them for lack of energy due to their porridge being made without milk.
I stood at the door and watched them receive their things from the male pauper and leave the gates. He hastened to give them without a word, and also restored their two pennies. They waited a bit, sheltering from the heavy rain. At last it moderated, and they set off again.
As soon as I saw them leave, I went to Fanny and told her that there must be several changes made immediately. The gowns and blankets must be stoved.
“We don’t do that every night,” she said sullenly.
“You will from now on,” I said, “starting with right now. And see if you can’t find some pillows that don’t look as if they are crawling with bugs.”
She went off to do as I requested, but I could tell that she was not happy about the extra work this would entail, and despite being one who had milk in her porridge this morning, she had not impressed me as being either happy or healthy.
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Written by Bottleblondesurfer (3362 comments posted) 1st June 2008 | This intimate and detailed insight into the workings of this poor house is fascinating and very upsetting; looking at it from the perspective of our modern day attitude with all the social services that there are to day. It really shows up the contrast and also the attitude to the poor and dispossessed. This reads very smoothly in a clear and engaging style. I'm guessing, jean, that these are your own words and our the result of voluminous research. This is a real glimpse into a very dark past cheers jane | Thanks BBS Written by jean.day (2283 comments posted) 2nd June 2008 | Yes, all of the odd numbered chapters are written by Emily, and it is all my writing - based on research. The even numbered chapters of William (with an enormous amount of help from Sam) are taken from a book written anonymously in 1885 about a very well educated man who spent several years in a workhouse. That's why I use so many quotation marks in it. Emily and William are both ancestors of my husband. I know very little about them except for their presence on the family tree and what I could find on the census details over the years - so the story details are fiction - except for the fact that Emily and her husband were in charge of a workhouse, and William was an inmate. I didn't mean to imply, in my response to reviews after Winston the Worm, that people should be reviewing my books instead. I just found it amazing that so many people were interested in my 50 words of pretty much nothing. I know its hard to keep up with books - and I do post frequently - because the book is finished except for final editing - which I do after I post each chapter. And I am keen to get it over and done with. | Written by bluecity (377 comments posted) 4th June 2008 | Ugh! It all sounds pretty disgusting! I know that if you go to a swimming pool without a towel, you will be lent one left by someone else which has not been washed.It would seem as if they were deliberately trying to make the food repulsive! I'm a bit surprised that Emily, who seems an energetic sort of person, hadn't been aware of what was going on with the casuals before. I suppose all these things take time. You wrote "He took her bundle, (all her worldly goods)" You didn't need the comma after bundle. Another interesting chapter, Jean. Rosemary | Thanks Rosemary Written by jean.day (2283 comments posted) 4th June 2008 | | I had a lot of research relating to women paupers, and I wanted it to come from Emily rather than William. So I had to make it sound like she missed out on how bad things were in the beginning, so as to fit the details into the story. I expect that it would be natural to try to sort out the permanent residents before you tackled the problems of the tramps - who only stayed a night or two. |
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