Greetings, Recently there has been talk of forming a union in the textile, to protect the workers, better working conditions, and lower working hours. The leaders of this union say that we are more powerful in numbers, and if we all band together under one cause, we can make our factory experience much better. On the surface, the thought of forming a union sounds very good, and sounds like it could work, but if you look deeper into what the union is, you start to realize that the union has a very slim chance that it will work. The upper class owners of the factory will simply fire all of the rebelling workers and replace them with new ones if we go on a strike. And the government wouldn't be likely to notice a small rebellion like one in our factory, so they will be unlikely to help us. I think that if I want to keep my job, I should just stay put, doing what I am doing now and not get into any risky business. Wish me luck, James Miller
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Greetings, Recently I have found a job I could take in the city. The job is for a worker at a textile factory, and I am happy that I was able to find myself a job. But I soon found out that this job is very difficult. First of all, the transition from a laid-back farm to a bustling city was very stressful. On top of that, the textile factory requires me to work 12 hours a day, every day of the week with only a small break for meals. The factory is loud and dark, and already many people have come near or have lost their lives to the spinning machines. My boss is ruthless and if we are late or absent, he docks some of our pay, which is very small in the first place. Anyways, wish me luck for the future. James Miller
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Greetings, Even though our landowner has been taxing us heavily we have worked through the taxes and earned just enough to stay alive, but we have recently been informed that he will be selling the land permanenly and forcing all of the farmers to move out. Even though I was already planning on moving out, this is expecially hard on all of the other farmers that were planning on staying, and I can only wish them good luck. As for me, I have been planning on moving to the city to find a low-skill factory job that recenty have been popping up. They say even though those jobs are very manual and time consuming, they earn more than farming jobs and they require less skill. As long as I can make enough money to survive, I will be happy.
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Greetings, My name is James Miller, and I am a farmer from the English countryside that recently moved to the city. I am currently 19 years old and I moved from a maize farm in Worcestershire. Recently, the landlord that I worked has been taxing my fellow farmers and I, and we needed to move to the city in order to make a living in another profession. Sadly I had to leave behind my collection of rocks shaped like my dog Oliver. Even though I can barely read and can't write, I love looking at books with pictures in them. I am very fond of exploring new things and I often question the orders of the king, making me a target for interrogation from the King's agents. I don't have a wife or kids, and both of my parents died from the plague, so I had to tend the fields alone, another reason for me to move to the city. Every day I get up at 5:00 and tend to the maize fields for the entire day, only stopping for lunch for an hour. At 9:00 I go back to my...