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Ernest Jones was born in Berlin 25 January 1819 and died in Manchester 26
January 1869, just fifty years old. He was brought up in the Black Forest area
of Germany and lived there until he was nineteen years of age. His father,
equerry to the Duke of Cumberland who was uncle to Queen Victoria, later served
under Wellington. He was a gifted child and at age ten he was writing poetry
which was published in 1830 along with a transcription of Voltaire's Henriade.
He attended the College of St. Michael, Lüneberg, an establishment only for the
nobility, by invitation by 'letter patent' from the King. His democratic spirit
first showed, when, at the age of eleven, he disappeared 'to help the Poles'.
On leaving St. Michael's he gave a farewell address in German in front of
nobility, which was later published, and received a certificate of honour, the
highest ever recorded there.
His father returned to England in 1838 with his family and in 1841 Ernest was
presented to Queen Victoria and became a regular court visitor. In 1841 he
wrote a romance in two volumes called The Wood Spirit Despite his first
marriage in 1840 into an old Cumberland Conservative family and a promising
career at the bar at Middle Temple he still had a passion for popular liberty
and a devotion to literature and broke away to become the leader of the
Chartists in 1845 in an honorary capacity. His private means allowed him to
financially support the interests of the people and he forewent a legacy of two
thousand pounds per annum rather than abandon the Chartist cause. He issued
periodicals such as The Labourer, the Northern Star and the Notes of the People
in 1851 containing 'some of his best political and social writings.' and
established The People's Paper which he ran from 1852-1858 seeing its function
as the maintenance of an independent working class party.
Many of the Chartist meetings were dispersed and branded as seditious but Jones
battled on with fervour. He urged the people to 'go on organising, organising,
organising and the rest will come.... and you will see the green flag flying
over Downing Street.' He was arrested on a charge of sedition after a lecture
in Manchester's Campfield, sent for trial at Newgate on 10 July 1848 and
sentenced to two years' solitary confinement, with no writing materials, in a
thirteen foot by six foot cell. But with the help of friends he managed to
write his epic poem The Revolt of Hindostan. He wrote to Chief Justice Wilde
objecting to the conviction and accused the jury of being prejudiced through
the press looking at him as a 'designing demagogue' to which he commented, 'I
come from ranks far higher than any in that box and have sacrificed domestic
comfort and pecuniary resources to the cause' for he never gained from the
Chartist movement.
The Notes of the People contained serialised novels and articles in which the
working man was invited to write in with grievances which he printed. For
example a 'Practical Miner' wrote to him about the Colliers of South
Staffordshire and 'The Butty System' which told about contractors demanding
rises which the master could not turn down unless he closed the pit. Also 'air
heading' if contracted for by the Butty, was done on the cheap or not at all,
leaving the pit improperly ventilated. Jones also printed in each edition an
address to the Chartists and news on the Co-operative Movement. He also
included his poems and songs, one of the most famous being 'The Song of the
Low' which echoes the feelings of the working class man of the times when he is
'not too low - the bread to grow, But too low the bread to eat' and the chorus:
We're low-we're low-we're very low,
As low as low can be;
The rich are high-for we make them so-
And a miserable lot are we!
And a miserable lot are we! Are we!
And a miserable lot are we!
Apart from poems Jones also wrote several novels including The Battle Day, The
Painter of Florence, The Emperor's Vigil, Beldagon Church' and Corayda.
With Chartism no longer a coherent movement, the People's Paper and the London
News could not exist and after criticism from the Reynolds Weekly Newspaper he
was forced to sell both. He launched the Cabinet Newspaper but it only lasted
three months as an advocate of reform. After the extinction of Chartism and
owing to pecuniary losses he returned as a barrister on the North Circuit and
went on to gain distinctions showing the extent of his capabilities. But his
political views never altered and he attained an unquestioned place in the
public mood as a representative of the working-class man seeking a spokesman in
Parliament. The epitaph in the 'Memoir' was very fitting 'He is no longer with
us except in body, but his memory will not only ever be cherished by the
working men of England but will live in the History of his Country, whose true
and faithful son he was.'
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