

Hale is also sickened by the smoky atmosphere, and she soon receives a fatal diagnosis. Margaret and Bessy often discuss Bessy’s yearning for heaven and her dread of the upheaval stirred by strikes, and Margaret comforts Bessy in her illness. Bessy, who is the same age as Margaret, is dying of a respiratory illness she contracted after years of working in a cotton mill. While walking through the streets of Milton, Margaret befriends a working-class father and daughter, Nicholas Higgins and Bessy Higgins, and begins visiting Bessy often. Thornton, meanwhile, admires Margaret’s regal beauty, but thinks her proud. Margaret finds him off-putting and “not quite a gentleman.” She especially dislikes the antagonistic way he speaks about employers and workers, despite Thornton’s own humble background. Soon after their arrival in smoky Milton, Margaret meets John Thornton, a young, successful cotton-mill owner who will be her father’s primary pupil. Hale confides that, due to unspecified religious doubts, he must no longer be a minister in the Church of England the entire family must therefore move to Milton, a Northern industrial city, where Mr. Soon after Margaret’s longed-for homecoming, however, Mr. After her cousin Edith Shaw’s wedding, eighteen-year-old Margaret Hale returns from London, her home for the past decade, to Helstone, the small Southern England village where her father, Richard Hale, and her mother, Maria Hale, still live.
