Tom Pinder, Foundling: A Story of the Holmfirth Flood
very thing. Good Molly, rem acu tetigisti, as we say in the classics.”

“Exactly,” assented the farmer. “By the way, Aleck, did yo’ say owt to Mr. Whitelock about th’ chrisenin’? Aw’d welly (well-nigh) forgetten it.”

“After th’ buryin’, t’ same day,” said Aleck the terse.

“Yo’ll be god-mother, Betty, na’ who’ll stand godfather?”

“I’ve always understood in case of a foundling it takes the finder’s name,” said Mr. Black.

“That’s Aleck,” said the landlady.

“Nay it wer’ Pinder theer,” protested Aleck.

“The very thing,” exclaimed Mr. Redfearn, smiting the table so the glasses danced. “Tom Pinder, fit him like a glove. We’ll weet his yed i’ glasses round an’ then whom (home) and bed, say I.”

Mr. Redfearn glanced at the schoolmaster, the schoolmaster at Mr. Redfearn.

“You’re the chairman of the Guardians,” said the teacher mildly.

“An’ th’ biggest ratepayer, worse luck,” said his crony.

 

CHAPTER III.

 

THE Workhouse for the Saddleworth Union is a low stone building of no great dimensions, standing on about as bleak and cold a site as could well I have been selected. It stands on the hill-side on your left hand as you walk from Diggle to Saddleworth, part of that dorsal Pennine Range we call “the back bone of Old England.” Its exterior is grim and forbidding, nor is the external promise redeemed by any extravagance of luxury inside. It is in unenviable contrast to the palatial structures modern architects design for the option of the sick and destitute. But it is healthily situated, and that counts for much. All in front as you look down the valley, are the green fields; at its rear stretch the moors on which sheep graze and lambs bleat and gamble conies sport and burrow and where the warning "Go-back, go-back” of the grouse salutes the ear as summer softens into autumn, and the purple heather hides the luscious bilberry.

At the time of which I write no mill chimney belched their smoke into the air and the breezes that swept the Workhouse on every side though 
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