In
Honor Of The 95th Anniversary Of The Founding Of The Communist
International-Take Five- A Worker’s Dread
From
The Pen Of Frank Jackman
They, the murky union leadership, the dockers’
leadership, if that was what you could call it, wanted to call the whole thing
off, call all hands back to work just when they, the rank and file, had shut
everything on the waterfront down, and shut it down tight. Just because Lloyd
George, that bloody Liberal Party Welshman, called their bluff, called their
number and they came up short. They didn’t have the guts to take things into
their own hands and so they were parlaying what do next. Hell, not a damn ship
was moving, not a damn ship was being unloaded, nothing. Tom Jackson could see
as he looked out on the Thames that in the year of our lord 1919 that there
were more ships, ships from every port of call, than he had ever seen filling
up each and every estuary. And with a certain pride he looked out just then
because he had been the delegate in his area that had responsible for closing
most of the port down, and having those beautiful ships, ships from each port
of call as he liked to say to the boys over a pint at the Black Swan after a hard day of unloading those damn cargoes,
sitting idle, sitting idle upon a workingman’s decision that they stay idle.
And now the damn leadership wanted to give up the game.
Tom Jackson had been a union man, a dockers’ union
man, for all of his twenty –seven years, or at least since he knew what a union
was, and his father before him (that was how he got the job as a casual that
started his career) and the Jackson clan had been working men since, since he
reckoned Chartist times when old Ben Jackson led his clan out of Scotland to
raise hell about the working man’s right to vote, something like that, Tom
wasn’t always clear on the particulars of that history although he knew for
certain that it involved the Chartists of blessed memory.
Most of the time he had been content to be a union
man, pay his dues, and support any actions that the leadership proposed. And
have a pint or two with the boys at his beloved Black Swan and then go home to Anne and the two little ones. But
the damn war of unblessed memory had changed things. He had been lucky enough
to be exempt since the government desperately needed men to unload the massive
loads of materials to be eaten up by the war. They had worked twelve, fourteen,
sixteen hour shifts to whittle down the backlog. At the same pay. And no one,
no one least of all Tom Jackson, complained while the war was on. They, he, saw
the work as their patriotic duty. But now, now that war was over the dock
owners, the shipping companies, and their agents wanted to keep all the dough
for themselves and keep the steady dockers working at that same damn rate. And
hence the strike.
Tom Jackson was also a Labor Party man, although
unlike in the union he held not office nor was he active in his local branch.
He just voted Labor, like his father before him (and before that Liberal when
Gladstone of blessed memory was alive). The party was also ready to call it
quits, call all hands back. Tom Jackson was in a quandary. His assistant
steward (and pint or two companion in sunnier times), Bill Armstrong, was a
headstrong younger man who had been a member of the Social-Democratic
Federation before the war and since had been tinkering with the small groups of
communists that were running around London of late. Bill had told him that the
Labor Party would sell them out, the union leaders would sell them out but that
a new group, a group headed by the Bolsheviks over in Russia, the same ones
they, the dockers, had previously helped by not loading military equipment the
government wanted to send the White Guards that were fighting a civil war
against those same Bolsheviks, a grouping called the Communist International
would not sell the out.
Tom listened to what Bill had to say but dismissed
it out of hand. He was not going to get involved, get Anne and the two kids
involved in international intrigue. No, something would happen and things would
work out. Something did happen a couple of days later. The strike was
officially called off with nothing won. Tom was angry for a time but then, with
a shrug of his shoulders, he said he could not abandon his union, his Labor
Party or his Black Swan for some new
adventure…
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