On Discovering This
Fact, I Immediately Instituted A System Of
Piecework, And Drew Up A Scale Of Pay Which Would
Enable the genuine mason to earn his forty-five
rupees a month - and a little more if he felt
inclined
- And would cut down the impostors to
about their proper pay as coolies. Now, as is
often the case in this world, the impostors were
greatly in the majority; and accordingly they
attempted to intimidate the remainder into coming
down to their own standard as regards output
of work, in the hope of thereby inducing me to
abandon the piece-work system of payment.
This, however, I had no intention of doing, as
I knew that I had demanded only a perfectly
fair amount of work from each man.
These masons were continually having quarrels
and fights amongst themselves, and I had frequently
to go down to their camp to quell disturbances and
to separate the Hindus from the Mohammedans.
One particularly serious disturbance of this sort
had a rather amusing sequel. I was sitting after
dusk one evening at the door of my hut, when I
heard a great commotion in the masons' camp,
which lay only a few hundred yards away.
Presently a jemadar came rushing up to me to say
that the men were all fighting and murdering
each other with sticks and stones. I ran back
with him at once and succeeded in restoring order,
but found seven badly injured men lying stretched
out on the ground. These I had carried up to
my own boma on charpoys (native beds); and
Brock being away, I had to play the doctor myself
as best I could, stitching one and bandaging
another and generally doing what was possible.
There was one man, however, who groaned
loudly and held a cloth over his face as if he
were dying. On lifting this covering, I found
him to be a certain mason called Karim Bux,
who was well known to me as a prime
mischief-maker among the men. I examined him carefully,
but as I could discover nothing amiss, I concluded
that he must have received some internal injury,
and accordingly told him that I would send him
to the hospital at Voi (about thirty miles down
the line) to be attended to properly. He was
then carried back to his camp, groaning grievously
all the time.
Scarcely had he been removed, when the head
jemadar came and informed me that the man
was not hurt at all, and that as a matter of fact
he was the sole cause of the disturbance. He
was now pretending to be badly injured, in order
to escape the punishment which he knew he
would receive if I discovered that he was the
instigator of the trouble. On hearing this, I gave
instructions that he was not to go to Voi in the
special train with the others; but I had not heard
the last of him yet. About eleven o'clock that
night I was called up and asked to go down to
the masons' camp to see a man who was supposed
to be dying.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 21 of 130
Words from 10978 to 11501
of 68125