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[-63-]
BELLE-ISLE.
ON a piping hot summer's day - the thermometer marking 80 in the shade I took
it into my head that I would go and see how such weather agreed with a place so
terrible as Belle-Isle was made out to be.
    It is doubtful if, left to himself, the stranger would ever
discover the place in question. Those who are disposed for a similar
exploration, however, may accept the following simple direction. Turn up a road
called the York-road, by the side of the King's-cross railway station, and
follow your nose. Even should the wind be unfavourable, the air will certainly
be laden with peculiar indications that may safely be trusted for guidance. Keep
straight along the York-road, and gradually you will be sensible of leaving
civilization behind you. You will discover on the right-hand side of the way,
opposite to some cottages which stand in a street that is "no
thoroughfare," a modest pair of gates attached to a red-brick lodge bearing
the inscription "Cemetery Entrance." Here it is that bodies intended
for interment in out-of-town cemeteries are housed until the stated time arrives
for their conveyance down the line.
    It is a terribly deserted and melancholy place, looking as
though every one connected with its proper and decent keeping had given up the
ghost and slipped down the line with the rest. Between the gates and the dismal
house where the coffins are stored, there is a space which desperate efforts
have been made to con-[-64-]vert into a kitchen
garden; but never was there a more ghastly failure. Barren, sickly,
yellow-cabbage stalks, that have out-grown their strength, crop out of the
ground all aslant; while fierce rank weeds have seized on more tender plants of
the green tribe, and strangled them till they are absolutely black in the face.
The iron gate has long shed the coat of paint by which it was originally
covered, and glows dusky red with rust.
    It is evident that no one now resides at the lodge; for there
is a board on which are inscribed directions to "apply over the way,"
and when last I passed a dozen or so of shoeless, almost breechesless young
Belle-Islanders were swarming over the wall, and deriving immense satisfaction
from the pastime of pitching old tin pots and other gutter refuse upon a sort of
high-up window-ledge.
    But you do not arrive at Belle-Isle proper until you reach
the archway that spans the road. At this point you may dispense with the
services of your faithful olfactory guide; indeed, it will be better, provided
you do it in a way that shall not be remarkable-for the act is one that the
inhabitants may resent - to mask its keen discrimination with your pocket
handkerchief. Here, an appropriate sentinel at the threshold of this delectable
place, stands the great horse-slaughtering establishment of the late celebrated
Mr. John Atcheler.
    As a horse-slaughtering establishment nothing can be said
against it. I am afraid to say how many hundred lame, diseased, and worn-out
animals weekly find surcease of sorrow within Atcheler's gates-or how many tons
of nutriment for the feline species are daily boiled in the immense coppers and
carried away every morning by a legion of industrious barrowmen. Everything, I
have no doubt, is managed in the best possible way; [-65-]
but that best still leaves a terribly broad margin for odours that can
only be described as nauseating. In the shadow of the slaughter-yard is a
public-house-a house of call for the poleaxe men and those who, with a hook to
catch fast hold, and an enormous knife, denude the worn-out horses' bones of the
little flesh that remains attached to them.
    They are terrible looking fellows, these honest horse
slaughterers. They seem rather to cultivate than avoid stains of a crimson
colour; and they may be seen at the bar of the public-house before-mentioned,
merry as sandboys, haw-hawing in the true and original "fee-fo-fum"
tone, drinking pots of beer with red hands and with faces that look as though
they had been swept with a sanguinary hearth-broom. You can see all this from
the gateway where the savage young Belle-Islanders congregate to give fierce
prods with pointed sticks at the miserable bare-ribbed old horses as they come
hobbling in. Altogether the picture is one to be remembered.
    The horse slaughterer's place, however, is by no means the
ugliest feature of Belle-Isle. Its inodorous breath is fragrant compared with
the pestilent blast that greets the sense of smell before a distance of fifty
paces further has been accomplished. The spot that holds the horse slaughter
houses is modestly called "The Vale;" the first turning beyond is,
with goblin like humour, designated "Pleasant Grove." It is hardly too
much to say, that almost every trade banished from the haunts of men, on account
of the villanous smells and the dangerous atmosphere which it engenders is
represented in Pleasant Grove. There are bone boilers,
fat-melters, "chemical works," firework makers, lucifer-match
factories, and several most extensive and flourishing dust-[-66-]yards,
where - at this delightful season so excellent for ripening corn - scores of
women and young girls find employment in sifting the refuse of dust-bins,
standing knee-high in what they sift. In the midst of all this is a long row of
cottages, each tenanted by at least one family; and little children, by dozens
and scores, find delight in the reeking kennels. These are the very little ones;
those of somewhat larger growth turn their attention to matters less trivial.
    For instance, a knot of half-a-dozen were calmly enjoying, at
the wide-open gates of a sort of yard, the edifying and instructive spectacle of
a giant, stripped to his waist, smashing up with a sledge-hammer the entire red
skeletons of horses that had just been dragged from the cutting and stripping
department. Again, the juvenile Bell-Islanders are not so benighted that they
have not heard of the game of cricket; nor did a lack of the recognised
appliances needed for that noble game frustrate their praiseworthy determination
to do something like what other boys do. A green sward was, of course, out of
the question; but they had; to the number of eight or ten, chosen a tolerably
level bit between two dust-heaps. For wickets they had a pile of old hats and
broken crockery; for bat the stump leg of an old bedstead, and for ball the
head of a kitten.
    This is not romance, but earnest fact. With the thermometer at
80 in the shade, there was the merry young band of cricketers, their faces and
the rest of their visible flesh the very colour of the dust they sported among;
and, the sun blazing down on their uncovered heads, they were bowling up the
kitten's head, giving it fair spanks with the bedstead - leg for ones and twos,
and looking out with barbarous relish for "catches." Evidently they
were boys employed in some of the sur-[-67-]rounding
factories, and this was the way in which they sought recreation in their
dinner-hour! I say evidently they were factory-lads, because their fantastic
aspect bespoke them such. There were boys whose rags were of a universal yellow
tint, as though they were intimately acquainted with the manufacture of sulphur
or some such material; boys whose rags were black as a sweep's; and other boys
who were splashed with many colours, that made them twinkle in the sun like
demon harlequins as they wrestled in the ashes for possession of the
"ball."
    Belle-Isle is by no means a small place. Beyond the
delectable Pleasant Grove is another thoroughfare called Brandon Road. Brandon
Road has cottages on either side of the way, and gives harbourage to several
hundred cottagers little and big. The road is hemmed in, as Pleasant Grove is,
by stench-factories, and the effect on an individual used to ordinarily
wholesome air is simply indescribable. The odour makes the nostrils tingle; you
can taste it on the tongue as though you had sipped a weak solution of some
nauseating acid ; it makes the eyes water. And yet, as before stated, swarms of
little children and grown men and women abide winter and summer in this awful
place; here they cook and eat their food, and, these sultry nights, when even in
open places scarcely a breath of air stirs, they retire to bed amid it all. It
is utterly impossible that the poor wretches doomed to Pleasant Grove and
Brandon Road should not be afflicted occasionally with illness; and just imagine
the sick bed at this time of year!
    But there is another feature of this pestilent colony of too
grave importance to be passed over. The row of barrows and
"half-carts," as they are called, unmistakably denotes that Brandon
Road is a place where [-68-] costermongers
congregate - vendors of fruit and vegetables who hawk their wares through the
day, and bring home at night what remains unsold. And where is that remainder
stored ? It cannot be left in the street all night; it must be carried into the
house - into the ill-ventilated hovel containing three rooms and a wash- house;
every apartment affording sleeping accommodation for some member of the
householder's family or his "lodgers." One shudders even to think of
it. The temperature of 80 in the shade, and the plums and apples and pears-more
often than not just a little "damaged" before the costermonger brought
them - heaped all night in one of these Belle-Isle fever-dens on the same floor
on which the sack and straw bed is made, to be taken out to-morrow and sold and
eaten raw or made into pies and puddings by the thrifty poor, who, before
everything, look out for what is cheap! I saw under one gateway several hundreds
of herrings split open and hung up to "cure" in that hotbed of
pestilence.
    It is not nice to talk about such matters; it was very far
from nice to investigate them; but, since such vileness exists, has existed
doubtless for years, and will continue to exist for all that the parochial
authorities can do to make an end of it, it becomes necessary to expose it for
common safety, no less than for mercy's sake. The risk we run in shirking such
questions is incalculable. Not because we are far removed from plague-spots are
they no concern of ours; not because we are cleanly in our own homes, and take
scrupulous care, in a sanitary sense, of every nook and corner from the garret
to the kitchen, can we afford, with no more than a disgustful shrug of the
shoulders, to dismiss from our minds all consideration of the deplorable
condition of [-69-]  the Belle-Islanders. It
is not only the residents of Belle Isle that are in daily danger from its
poisoned air. As I have mentioned, there are many factories the operations of
which admit of boy labour. I don't know whether the factory inspectors ever
visit Belle-Isle, or whether any member of the Metropolitan School Board has yet
happened to pass that way at the hour when the gangs of poor little wretches are
respited from their disgusting drudgery. It is always unsafe, with regard to
this class of juvenile humanity, to rely on size and appearance as guides in
judging of age. Stunted in growth and ill-fed as they are, it is easy to
miscalculate by a year or so; but I think I might allow at least as broad a
margin as that, and then declare that many of the industrious little chaps that
came trooping out of the match factories and other factories near at dinner
time, had not yet witnessed their ninth birthday. All of them were ragged and
hideously dirty, and, so far as might be judged by the little of their
complexion that was accidentally brushed clear of its coat of grime, they were
one and all sickly and unhealthy-looking.
    I wish that a member of the School Board would find leisure
to look in on Belle-Isle some fine dinner time or evening. I think it not
unlikely that his benevolent eyes would be opened to the fact that the bold and
easygoing youth who is proud to be known as a street Arab is not the only young
person who would be benefited by his fatherly attention. The street Arab, at his
worst, is a homeless, ragged, wretched little waif, who will tolerate
semi-starvation, but beyond that point may not be relied on to keep his hands
from picking and stealing; so he is a proper object for rescue, and it comes
cheap for the country to take him and place him at a trade by following which he
may obtain an honest live-[-70-]lihood. But who
would think of apprenticing him to a lucifer matchmaker, or a worker in chemical
compositions, the handling of which would certainly enfeeble his health, and
bring him to an early grave? Did only half a dozen such instances occur, the
whole nation would raise its hands in horror at the deliberate barbarity; yet
here, in Belle-Isle, and in a few other places that might be mentioned, we have
hundreds of poor, patient little boys and girls, who never in their lives did a
dishonest thing, kept in ignorance and doomed to work through their young lives
in dirt and squalor and the very shadow of death, for little if anything more in
the shape of wages than the free street Arab contrives to pick up in his
vagabond rovings.