| BOOK VI. THE WIDOW AND THE WIFE.
56. CHAPTER LVI.
 (continued)"The best way would be to say nothing, and set somebody on to send 'em
 away with a flea in their ear, when they came spying and measuring,"
 said Solomon.  "Folks did that about Brassing, by what I can understand. 
 It's all a pretence, if the truth was known, about their being
 forced to take one way.  Let 'em go cutting in another parish. 
 And I don't believe in any pay to make amends for bringing a lot
 of ruffians to trample your crops.  Where's a company's pocket?" "Brother Peter, God forgive him, got money out of a company,"
 said Mrs. Waule.  "But that was for the manganese.  That wasn't
 for railways to blow you to pieces right and left." "Well, there's this to be said, Jane," Mr. Solomon concluded,
 lowering his voice in a cautious manner--"the more spokes we put
 in their wheel, the more they'll pay us to let 'em go on, if they
 must come whether or not." This reasoning of Mr. Solomon's was perhaps less thorough than
 he imagined, his cunning bearing about the same relation to the course
 of railways as the cunning of a diplomatist bears to the general
 chill or catarrh of the solar system.  But he set about acting on his
 views in a thoroughly diplomatic manner, by stimulating suspicion. 
 His side of Lowick was the most remote from the village, and the
 houses of the laboring people were either lone cottages or were
 collected in a hamlet called Frick, where a water-mill and some
 stone-pits made a little centre of slow, heavy-shouldered industry. In the absence of any precise idea as to what railways were,
 public opinion in Frick was against them; for the human mind in that
 grassy corner had not the proverbial tendency to admire the unknown,
 holding rather that it was likely to be against the poor man,
 and that suspicion was the only wise attitude with regard to it. 
 Even the rumor of Reform had not yet excited any millennial expectations
 in Frick, there being no definite promise in it, as of gratuitous
 grains to fatten Hiram Ford's pig, or of a publican at the "Weights
 and Scales" who would brew beer for nothing, or of an offer on the
 part of the three neighboring farmers to raise wages during winter. 
 And without distinct good of this kind in its promises, Reform seemed
 on a footing with the bragging of pedlers, which was a hint for
 distrust to every knowing person.  The men of Frick were not ill-fed,
 and were less given to fanaticism than to a strong muscular suspicion;
 less inclined to believe that they were peculiarly cared for by heaven,
 than to regard heaven itself as rather disposed to take them in--
 a disposition observable in the weather. |