TEXT C Britain has always been
fortunate in having plentiful energy resources. At the end of the
eighteenth century these were principally coal and, in places water power from
swift-flowing streams and rivers. Coal-mining is one of the oldest and most
basic of all industries. Deep mining began in Britain 300 years ago and has
since been an integral part of the country’s industrial life. In coal-producing
areas, other industries that could be serviced by coal grew rapidly.
Factories came into being because it was more economical to manufacture
goods under one large roof, where power could be concentrated rather than in the
small rooms and backyards of thousands of individual workers. Industrial
complexes developed where natural resources, like coal and iron, were readily
available and cheap labor flowed in as a result of declining living standards in
rural areas. At the time this rapid industrialization had many
critics but for working people there was no real choice: working long hours in
factories and coal-mines seemed to promise a chance of a better life than
staying in country areas where jobs were scarce and poverty and hunger were
common. In the early 1800s a group calling themselves Luddites smashed and
destroyed new factory machinery in the Midlands and north. As craftsmen who
traditionally worked at home, the Luddites were protesting that factory machines
had robbed them of their livelihood. Industrialization, for all
its negative social effects, did bring many economic advantages and made Britain
an exceedingly rich and powerful nation. It increased the population of urban
areas and expanded industrial output; it encouraged technical invention and
promoted competition to improve the quality of goods and services Offered; it
also led to better communication systems. Yet the successes and achievements of
industrialization were founded on the exploitation of working people who were to
endure long working hours for low wages and to live in inadequate housing,
crowded together. As far as industrialization was concerned, the working people thought that ______.
A.it brought them a better life B.there was no alternative C.it brought them bad luck D.it was better to work at home