CONTENTS
PREFACE
CHAPTER I. A FISHING EXPEDITION
CHAPTER II. THE FIGHT ON THE MOOR
CHAPTER III. A CROPPER VILLAGE
CHAPTER IV. THE WORMS TURN
CHAPTER V. THE NEW MASTER
CHAPTER VI. THE THIEF DETECTED
CHAPTER VII. A TERRIBLE SHOCK
CHAPTER VIII. NED IS SORELY TRIED
CHAPTER IX. A PAINFUL TIME
CHAPTER X. TROUBLES AT HOME
CHAPTER XI. THE NEW MACHINERY
CHAPTER XII. MURDERED!
CHAPTER XIII. COMMITTED FOR TRIAL
CHAPTER XIV. COMMITTED FOR TRIAL
CHAPTER XV. NOT GUILTY
CHAPTER XVI. LUKE MARNER'S SACRIFICE
CHAPTER XVII. A LONELY LIFE
CHAPTER XVIII. NED IS ATTACKED
CHAPTER XIX. THE ATTACK ON CARTWRIGHT'S MILL
CHAPTER XX. CLEARED AT LAST
My Dear Lads:
The beginning of the present century, glorious as it was for British arms abroad, was a dark time to those who lived by their daily labor at home. The heavy taxation entailed by the war, the injury to trade, and the enormous prices of food, all pressed heavily upon the working classes. The invention of improved machinery, vast as has been the increase of trade which it has brought about, at first pressed heavily upon the hand workers, who assigned all their distress to the new inventions. Hence a movement arose, which did much damage and for a time threatened to be extremely formidable. It had its ramifications through all the manufacturing districts of England, the object being the destruction of the machinery, and a return to the old methods of work. The troubles which occurred in various parts of the country were known as the Luddite Riots, and the secret body which organized them was called King or General Lud. In the present story I have endeavored to give you an idea of the state of things which prevailed in Yorkshire, where, among the croppers and others employed in the woolen manufactures, was one of the most formidable branches of the secret association. The incidents of the murder of Mr. Horsfall and the attack upon Mr. Cartwright's mill are strictly accurate