Authors: Evelyn Conlon
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Contemporary, #Contemporary Fiction, #book, #FA, #FIC000000
After hunger comes starvation, being in continuous want, the suffering greatly from hunger.
And after starvation comes death, which precedes being dead by a few seconds.
Hunger and starvation might be a solitary matter, a thing known to one person, not a disaster. But when hunger is happening all over a place, when people look at each other and know that the other person is also hungry, then it’s a state of famine. What we do not want to know is that while famine infers extreme scarcity of food, this may not always be the truth. Famine could be extreme scarcity of food getting into mouths, not extreme scarcity of food in fields; in other words, food being taken away, stolen, used to pay debt, in the middle of the night, used to feed faraway armies, causing extreme scarcity of food going into mouths and leading to a person being able to read his neighbours’ eyes.
The resulting slow chaos grew worse until this hunger could no longer be ignored. In London many people spent time thinking about what to do. This may have included deciding to do nothing, or deciding what not to do, or deciding to put these thoughts to the back of minds, where they could not interfere with London life. It may have included the promise to re-visit the facts a year on, to check the progress of death and hunger, checking also the strain on public funds. It may have included a continuous desire that when the facts were re-visited, all would have sorted itself out. It may have included a lot of worry. Or it may not.
The response did include the making of these lists, which were now in Matt’s hands. He would have to think about the journey he was to make and how best to deliver these papers. The background provided to him, in the elegantly slanted black ink, had been sent to help him explain at a local level how this scheme was perceived. It was time he made arrangements.
CHAPTER 2
In the previous year, Caroline Chisholm had come to London from New South Wales, where she had chosen to put her blessed life down among the people who had tripped and fallen into one of the holes littering the setting up of a faraway colony. She had seen many things, far more than her outward appearance would suggest.
When Caroline James from Northampton accepted the proposal of marriage from Lieutenant Archibald Chisholm she did so with the stipulation that she be able to continue her philanthropic work, rather than sew and narrow her eyes. She had already spent six years in India doing such work before she and her husband went to Australia, no doubt a bright posting. But she was soon horrified by the condition of the young migrant women unable to get jobs. She saw them skulking on the streets, trying to pretend they were not, and if a woman could not get a job, there was only one other way to get food.
Caroline wore a blue dress with a high-necked collar the day she went to see the Governor of New South Wales. He did not want to meet her, but was doing so in the hope it would stop her intrusive insistence. Good Lord, the woman had even written to his wife. Sir George Gipps was surprised by the blue dress and Caroline’s clear eyes, not to mention her handsomeness, which he tried to not let distract him. She drew a picture of the streets for him: migrants arriving off boats into a city with no work and no help being given to them by the people who had allowed them to come. She spoke of dusk horrors, sparing no sensitivities. If at moments he felt annoyed—it was because he too took a carriage home—he knew something of the city. But Caroline’s facts and figures finally swayed him. She wanted a home for girls who were forced to live on the street, and she wanted a registry where workers and employers could meet. She was a practical woman.
George Gipps thought about this practicality and about how much it was needed in this place. It was true that small changes could help move things along more smoothly. While he was thinking of this, although still distracted by the neck of her dress—I suppose you’d call that a silk bow—he said yes. So Caroline got both her wishes. And even if on her first nights in the quarters provided she had to lure and poison rats, shaking as anybody would, they would not run her out of these rooms, because if they did, her project would fall into a hole. She was convinced they thought the rats would change her mind, but she had no intention of falling for that one.
She wore a dark dress the second time she met Sir George Gipps, yet somehow the staidness of the colour managed to burst into a red collar. Sir George couldn’t see how it did, but he noticed it nevertheless.
Caroline Chisholm was good at overall pictures; she too could think into the future. She became concerned about attracting suitable female emigrants, female domestics, to come to a place where they were truly needed. Scottish, Welsh and English girls did not appear to want to come in the numbers required, and if they weren’t being caught committing crimes, they could not be forced. Yet there was such a scarcity of these domestics, a famine you might say, that Caroline could see trouble ahead, and she was dedicated to notions that would erase trouble for this colony, which she was determined was going to offer a better home to so many.
Earl Grey had not
made
tea nor had his father, but he had imported tea from India. He had sat in an office and organised ships that sailed the seas with cargo upon cargo of tea. He had moved ships on maps. He had made sure there was another ship to follow as soon as the wake of the last one had spread back into the ocean and swallowed into the flatness of the sea. He was good at getting ships back onto the ocean fast, at solving the everyday problems of dozens of decks at the beginning, middle, and end of sea journeys. If he wasn’t, he was good at getting men who were. He too was dedicated to the notion of the colony.
Earl Grey’s and Caroline Chisholm’s thoughts collided, making one thought. And that thought collided with what had come to the surface of a government’s worry: what to do about the Irish workhouses filling up with female orphans, or girls unable to be cared for at home. They were flocking into workhouses at an alarming rate. They were young, scared and hardened with fright, and they sat there becoming a burden.
In London a second collision of thought occurred, making a ripple that could be heard growing into a solid idea. The futures of the girls in workhouses around Ireland were taking a possible shape. They knew nothing of this.
Caroline Chisholm came to London to talk to Earl Grey. Outside the House of Commons two members of parliament debated the ideas that were being bandied about. They spoke quietly. One of them approached the topic with an academic gesture, smiling slightly, as a boy might who was playing with a ball where he shouldn’t. The second showed signs of agitation, further aggravated by the waving hand and the smile.
‘But if they are sitting idle in workhouses and we are paying for that, surely it behoves us to think of a better solution than their continued useless sitting there. Even you must see that.’
‘Is it not a dangerous precedent to pick up orphan girls in their vulnerable state, unable to put up a fight, and ship them to our colony simply because we need domestic servants?’
‘Females to bear children, don’t forget that. And wouldn’t it be a better place for them to do that, better than where they are now, where the likelihood of a happy outcome is limited. At this present time I mean of course,’ he added hastily, as he saw the frowns gathering before him.
‘But I am concerned about the moral implications of such a plan.’
‘And what would you have us do, my good fellow. Do you have a better solution in that worried mind of yours? We are, after all, assisting them to stay alive.’
‘We could try feeding them in their own homes.’
‘Balderdash. The crop has failed, again. Haven’t you heard the news? Failed repeatedly.’
‘But there is other food being grown there, shipped out to pay rents and such like.’
‘What do you suggest we do about that? Allow an entire region to renege on its rent? Do you suggest that we no longer feed our armies in India and other places?’
‘For the time being perhaps. Yes. About the rent I mean. Surely we can get food for the army elsewhere.’
‘But if you allow one or more who have not paid their rent to stay in their houses what would you say to the person who has paid? Should you tell him that he must continue while his neighbour doesn’t bother?’
‘I think that most people will want to pay their rents, for their own security and peace of mind, if not from good will.’
‘Enough. This discussion is for the history books, waste of time having it today. It will solve nothing. No more than your knotted brows will. I believe my man is waiting for me. Good day.’
There was work to be done. A plan had to be agreed. An argument had to be made foolproof, so that the doubters, the downright against and the lazy or unconcerned, could all be brought into line. Ships had to be made available, perhaps pulled off more lucrative routes, but it would pay in the end. Ships had to made seaworthy, new ones might have to be built, but they could later be diverted to more immediately profitable use. Public servants had to get excited, go to their clubs and then home, not telling their wives in case the spilling of the half-made plan might scupper the whole. Wives would have to feed their husbands, so that each day the imaginations of these men could stretch a little more to allow the plan to grow. Non-scrupulous men had to be contacted, and scrupulous men had to be talked to. And surgeon-superintendents had to be found so that the cargo would arrive alive.
And so the plan was made. God made the world and the public servants made the plan and it was agreed upon down to the last nut and bolt, so the lives of girls in workhouses made a leap forward into what they would be.
The plan was put into action. It looked well thought out, neatly written on the papers that were passed around. These contained the ships and their dates, with four of the embarkation dates not yet agreed. This was a pity because it gave the sheet a lack of symmetry, but surely that would not destroy the appeal of this worthy scheme. Even the numbers were already meticulously decided.
Ship | Embarkation date | Port of Arrival | Date of arrival |
Earl Grey | June 1848 | Sydney | 6th October 1848 |
Roman Emperor | July 1848 | Adelaide | 23rd October 1848 |
Lady Kennaway | September 1848 | Port Phillip | 6th December 1848 |
Inchinnan | November 1848 | Sydney | 20th February 1849 |
Ramilies | Adelaide | 24th March 1849 | |
Digby | December 1848 | Sydney | 4th April 1849 |
Pemberton | January 1849 | Port Phillip | 14th May 1849 |
Inconstant | February 1849 | Adelaide | 7th June 1849 |
Lady Peel | March 1849 | Sydney | 3rd July 1849 |
New Liverpool | April 1849 | Port Phillip | 9th August 1849 |
Elgin | Adelaide | 12th September 1849 | |
William & Mary | July 1849 | Sydney | 21st November 1849 |
Lismoyne | August 1849 | Sydney | 29th November 1849 |
Diadem | Port Phillip | 10th January 1850 | |
Panama | October 1849 | Sydney | 12th January 1850 |
Thomas Arbuthnot | October 1849 | Sydney | 3rd February 1850 |
Derwent | November 1849 | Port Phillip | 25th February 1850 |
Eliza Caroline | Port Phillip/ Geelong | 31st March 1850 | |
John Knox | December 1850 | Sydney | 29th April 1850 |
Tippoo Sail Saib | April 1850 | Sydney | 29th July 1850 |
Maria | March 1850 | Sydney | 1st August 1850 |