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In some cases no doubt there was ground for the
feeling. The girls and lads, eager to introduce the
new lessons of order and neatness which they had
learned, may have gone too fast and acted with too
much zeal, although their teacher had specially warned
them against so doing. Hence the feeling of hostility
to the movement was strong among a small section of
Stokebridge, and the feeling was heightened by the
secession in a body of the young people from the feast. As the day went on the public-houses were as full as
ever, indeed it was said that never before had so much
liquor been consumed; the fiddles played and the
dancing and boisterous romping went on as usual, but
there was less real fun and enjoyment. As evening
came on the young fellows talked together in angry
groups. Whether the proposal emanated from some of
the Stokebridge men or from the visitors from other
villages was afterwards a matter of much dispute, but
it gradually became whispered about among the dancing
booths and public-houses that there was an intention
to give the party from Brook's a warm reception when
they arrived. Volleys of mud and earth were prepared,
and some of the overdressed young women tossed their
heads, and said that a spattering with mud would do
the stuck-up girls no harm. The older pitmen, who would have certainly opposed
any such design being carried out, were kept in ignorance
of what was intended; the greater portion were
indeed drunk long before the time came when the party
would be returning from the f�te. At a quarter before twelve Jane Haden, who had
been sitting quietly at home, went up to the "Chequers"
to look after her husband, and to see about his being
brought home should he be incapable of walking.
The music was still playing in the dancing booths, but
the dancing was kept up without spirit, for a number
of young men and lads were gathered outside. As she
passed she caught a few words which were sufficient
to inform her of what was going on. "Get some sticks
oot o' hedges." "Fill your pockets oop wi' stones."
"We'll larn 'em to spoil the feast." Jane saw that an attack was going to be made upon
the party, and hesitated for a moment what to do. The
rockets were going up in Mr. Brook's grounds, and she
knew she had a few minutes yet. First she ran to the
house of James Shepherd. The pitman, who was a
sturdy man, had been asleep for the last three hours.
She knocked at the door, unlocked it, and went
in. "Jim," she called in a loud voice. "Aye, what be't?" said a sleepy voice upstairs; "be't
thou, Harry and Sally?" "No, it be I, Jane Haden; get up quickly, Jim; quick,
man, there be bad doings, and thy lad and lass are like
to have their heads broke if no worse." Alarmed by the words and the urgent manner of his
neighbour, Jim and his wife slipped on a few clothes
and came down. Jane at once told them what she had
heard. "There be between two and three hundred of 'em,"
she said, "as far as I could see the wust lot out o'
Stokebridge, and a lot o' roughs from t' other villages.
Quick, Jim, do you and Ann go round quick to the
houses o' all the old hands who ha' kept away from
the feast or who went home drunk early, they may ha'
slept 't off by this, and get 'un together. Let 'em take
pick-helves, and if there's only twenty of ye and ye fall
upon this crowd ye'll drive 'em. If ye doan't it will go
bad wi' all our lads and lasses. I'll go an' warn 'em,
and tell 'em to stop a few minutes on t' road to give
'ee time to coom up. My Jack and the lads will foight,
no fear o' that, but they can't make head agin so many
armed wi' sticks and stones too; but if ye come up behind
and fall on 'em when it begins ye'll do, even though
they be stronger." Fully awake now to the danger which threatened the
young people, for the pitman and his wife knew that
when blows were exchanged and blood heated things
would go much further than was at first intended, they
hurried off to get a few men together, while Jane
Haden started for the hall. Already the riotous crowd had gone on and she
had to make a detour, but she regained the road, and
burst breathless and panting into the midst of the
throng of young people coming along the lane chatting
gaily of the scenes of the evening. "Stop, stop!" she cried; "don't go a foot further—where
be my Jack?" "It's Mrs. Haden," Nelly Hardy said. "Jack, it's
your mother." "What is it?" Jack said in astonishment. "Anything
wrong wi' dad?" "Stop!" Mrs. Haden gasped again; "there's three
hundred and more young chaps and boys wi' sticks and
stones joost awaiting on this side t'village, awaiting to
pay you all oot." Ejaculations of alarm were heard all round, and
several of the girls began to whimper. "Hush!" Mr. Dodgson said, coming forward. "Let
all keep silence, there may be no occasion for alarm;
let us hear all about it, Mrs. Haden." Mrs. Haden repeated her story, and said that Harry's
father and mother were getting a body of pitmen to
help them. "I think, Mr. Dodgson," said Jack, "the girls had
best go back to Mr. Brook's as quickly as possible; we
will come and fetch them when it's all over." "I think so too," said Mr. Dodgson, "they might be
injured by stones. My dear, do you lead the girls back
to Mr. Brook's. The house will hardly be shut up yet,
and even if it is, Mr. Brook will gladly receive you.
There is no chance of any of the ruffians pursuing
them, do you think, Jack, when they find they have
only us to deal with?" "I don't know, sir. If three or four of us were to
put on their cloaks, something light to show in the
dark, they will think the girls are among us." "Quick! here they come," Mr. Dodgson said, "go
back silently, girls, not a word." Two or three cloaks and shawls were hastily borrowed
and the lads then turned up the road, where the
sound of suppressed laughter and coarse oaths could be
heard, while the young women went off at a rapid pace
towards the hall. "There are four of the clubs, nigh twenty in each,"
Jack said; "let each club keep together and go right at
'em. Stick together whatever ye do." "I'll take my place by you, Jack," Mr. Dodgson said;
"you are our captain now." Talking in a careless voice the party went forward.
The road here was only divided from the fields on either
side by a newly planted hedge of a foot or so in height.
Jack had arranged that he, with the few married pitmen,
Mr. Dodgson, and the eight Bull-dogs who did
not belong to the other associations, should hold the
road; that two of the other clubs should go on each
side, fight their way as far as they could, and then close
in on the road to take the assailants there on both
flanks. The spirit of association did wonders; many of the
lads were but fourteen or fifteen, yet all gathered under
their respective leaders and prepared for what they felt
would be a desperate struggle. Presently they saw a
dark mass gathered in the road. As soon as the light shawls were seen there was a
cry of "Here they be, give it 'em well, lads;" and a volley
of what were, in the majority of cases, clods of earth,
but among which were many stones, was poured in.
Without an instant's pause the party attacked separated,
two bands leapt into the field on either side, and then
the whole rushed at the assailants. No such charge as
this had been anticipated. The cowardly ruffians had
expected to give a complete surprise, to hear the shrieks
of the girls, and perhaps some slight resistance from
a few of the older lads; the suddenness of this attack
astonished them. In an instant Jack and his supporters were in their
midst, and the fury which animated them at this
cowardly attack, and the unity of their action, bore all
before them; and in spite of their sticks the leaders of
the assailants were beaten to the ground. Then the
sheer weight of the mass behind stopped the advance
and the conflict became a general one. In the crowd
and confusion it was difficult to distinguish friend from
foe, and this prevented the assailants from making full
use of their stakes, rails, and other implements with
which they were armed. They were, however, getting
the best of it, Mr. Dodgson had been knocked down
with a heavy stake and several others were badly hurt,
when the strong bands in the field who had driven
back the scattered assailants there, fell upon the flanks
of the main body in the road. For five minutes the fight was a desperate one, and
then, just as numbers and weapons were telling, there
was a shout in the rear, and fifteen pitmen, headed by
Jim Shepherd and armed with pick handles, as formidable
weapons as could be desired in the hands of strong
men, fell upon the rear of the assailants. Yells, shouts,
and heavy crashing blows told the tale to those engaged
in front; and at once the assailants broke and scattered
in flight. "Catch 'em and bring 'em down," Jack shouted;
"they shall pay for this night's work." Such of the lads as were not disabled started off, and
being fleet of foot, those of the assailants nearest to
them had little chance of escape. Two or three lads
together sprung upon one and pulled him down, and
so when the pursuit ended twenty-nine of the assailants
had fallen into their hands. In addition to this
a score of them lay or sat by the road with broken
heads and bones, the work of the pitmen's weapons. Of the lads the greater part had been badly knocked
about, and some lay insensible in the road. The
prisoners were brought together, five of the pitmen
with twenty of the lads marched with those able to
walk, to the village, where they shut them up in the
school-room. The other pitmen remained in charge of
the wounded of both sides, and the rest of the party
were sent back to Mr. Brook's to fetch the women and
girls. Near the house they met Mr. Brook, accompanied
by his two men-servants and gardener, armed with
spades, hurrying forward; and he expressed his delight
at the issue of the conflict, but shook his head at the
number of serious injuries on both sides. In a shed near the house were a number of hurdles,
and twenty of these were at once sent forward with
the men to carry those unable to walk into the village. Mrs. Dodgson turned pale as her husband, his face
covered with blood, entered the dining-room, where,
huddled together, the frightened girls were standing;
Mrs. Dodgson, aided by Nelly Hardy, having done her
utmost to allay their fears. "I am not hurt," Mr. Dodgson said heartily, "at least
not seriously; but I fear that some are. It is all over now,
and those ruffians have fled. Jack Simpson and a party
are outside to escort you home. We don't know who
are hurt yet, but they will be carried to the girls' school-room
and attended there. Harry Shepherd has gone
on to get the doctor up, and Mr. Brook is sending off
a man on horseback to Birmingham for some more medical
aid and a body of police to take charge of the fellows
we have captured; they will be in by the early train." Everything was quiet in Stokebridge when the party
with the prisoners arrived. The pitmen, before starting,
had gone into the public-house to get any sober
enough to walk to join them; and the few who had
kept up the dancing, alarmed at the serious nature of
the affair, of which they had tacitly approved, scattered
to their homes. The news of the conflict, however, quickly circulated,
lights appeared in windows, and the women who had
sons or daughters at the f�te flocked out into the streets
to hear the news. Many other pitmen, whom there
had not been time enough to summon, soon joined
them, and deep indeed was the wrath with which the
news of the assault was received. Most of the men at
once hurried away to the scene of conflict to see who
were hurt, and to assist to carry them in; and the sole
ground for satisfaction was that the women and girls
had all escaped injury.
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