DARK SATANIC MILLS 65 on the least expensive and therefore most congested model attainable. Unrestrained individualism was the order of the day. Since the rate of profits was not affected if their inhabitants died prematurely no consideration was paid to matters of sanita- tion and health. The dwellings which housed the factory population were run up by small-jerry builders and local car- penters, who like the millowners were out for the maximum of profit with the minimum of responsibility. They were erected back to back and on the cheapest available site, in many cases marshes. There was no Ventilation and no drainage. The intervals between the houses which passed for streets were unpaved and often followed the line of streams serving a conduit for excrement. The appearance of such towns was dark and forbidding. Many years had now passed since the first factories appeared among the northern hills. Now the tall chimneys and gaunt mills had been multiplied a hundredfold, and armies of grimy, grey-sfated houses had encamped around them. Overhead hung a perpetual pall of smoke so that their inhabitants groped to their work as in a fog. There were no parks or trees: nothing to remind men of the green fields from which they came or to break the squalid monotony of the houses and factories. From the open drains and ditches that flowed beneath the shade of sulphurous chimneys and between pestilential hovels arose a foetid smell. The only symbols of normal human society were the giijshops. Here on the rare days of leisure the entire popula- tion vftmld repair, men, women and children, to suck themselves into insemibility on "Cream of the Valley" or Godfrey's Cordial. In a • terrible passage in one of his novels of the 'forties, Disraeli'described such a town. "Wodgate had the appearance of a vast squalid suburb. As you advanced, leaving behind you long lines of little dingy tenements, with infants lying about the r8Sd, you expected every moment to emerge into some streets^"aSid encounter buildings bearing some correspondence, in theiinstee and comfort, to the considerable population swarm- ing atfS busied around you. Nothing of the kind. JThere were no public buildings of any sort; no churches, chapels, town-hall, institute, theatre; and the principal streets in the heart of the towifin whidTVere.situated the coarse and grimy shops . . . were*>egually7 narrow, and if possible more dirty. At every fourth/ dr^fifth house, alleys seldom above a yard wide, and