
II

A MAN WITH A red, mottled face put forth his head
from a window and cursed violently. He flung a bottle high across
two backyards at a window of the opposite tenement. It broke
against the bricks of the house and the fragments fell crackling
upon the stones below. The man shook his fist.1
A bare-armed woman, making an array of clothes on a
line in one of the yards, glanced casually up at the man and
listened to his words. Her eyes followed his to the other tenement.
From a distant window, a youth with a pipe, yelled some comments
upon the poor aim. Two children, being in the proper yard, picked
up the bits of broken glass and began to fondle them as new
toys.
From the window at which the man raged came the
sound of an old voice, singing. It quavered and trembled out into
the air as if a sound-spirit had a broken wing.
“Should I be car-reed tew th’ skies
0-on flow’ry be-eds of ee-ease,
While others fought tew win th’ prize
An’ sailed through blood-ee seas.”
0-on flow’ry be-eds of ee-ease,
While others fought tew win th’ prize
An’ sailed through blood-ee seas.”
The man in the opposite window was greatly enraged.
He continued to swear.
A little old woman was the owner of the voice. In a
fourth-story room of the red and black tenement she was trudging on
a journey. In her arms she bore pots and pans, and sometimes a
broom and dust-pan. She wielded them like weapons. Their weight
seemed to have bended her back and crooked her arms until she
walked with difficulty. Often she plunged her hands into water at a
sink. She splashed about, the dwindled muscles working to and fro
under the loose skin of her arms. She came from the sink, steaming
and bedraggled as if she had crossed a flooded river.
There was the flurry of a battle in this room.
Through the clouded dust or steam one could see the thin figure
dealing mighty blows. Always her way seemed beset. Her broom was
continually poised, lance-wise, at dust demons. There came
clashings and clangings as she strove with her tireless foes.
It was a picture of indomitable courage. And as she
went on her way her voice was often raised in a long cry, a strange
war-chant, a shout of battle and defiance, that rose and fell in
harsh screams, and exasperated the ears of the man with the red,
mottled face.
“Should I be car-reed tew th’ skies
0-on flow’ry be-eds of ee-ease—”
0-on flow’ry be-eds of ee-ease—”
Finally she halted for a moment. Going to the
window she sat down and mopped her face with her apron. It was a
lull, a moment of respite. Still it could be seen that she even
then was planning skirmishes, charges, campaigns. She gazed
thoughtfully about the room and noted the strength and position of
her enemies. She was very alert.
At last, she turned to the mantel. “Five o’clock,”
she murmured, scrutinizing a little, swaggering, nickel-plated
clock.
She looked out at chimneys growing thickly on the
roofs. A man at work on one seemed like a bee. In the intricate
yards below, vine-like lines had strange leaves of cloth. To her
ears there came the howl of the man with the red, mottled face. He
was engaged in a furious altercation with the youth who had called
attention to his poor aim. They were like animals in a
jungle.
In the distance an enormous brewery2
towered over the other buildings. Great gilt letters advertised a
brand of beer. Thick smoke came from funnels and spread near it
like vast and powerful wings. The structure seemed a great bird,
flying. The letters of the sign made a chain of gold hanging from
its neck. The little old woman looked at the brewery. It vaguely
interested her, for a moment, as a stupendous affair, a machine of
mighty strength.
Presently she sprang from her rest and began to
buffet with her shrivelled arms. In a moment the battle was again
in full swing. Terrific blows were given and received. There arose
the clattering uproar of a new fight. The little intent warrior
never hesitated nor faltered. She fought with a strong and
relentless will. Beads and lines of perspiration stood upon her
forehead.
Three blue plates were leaning in a row on the
shelf back of the stove. The little old woman had seen it done
somewhere. In front of them swaggered the round nickel-plated
clock. Her son had stuck many cigarette pictures in the rim of a
looking-glass that hung near. Occasional chromosak
were tacked upon the yellowed walls of the room. There was one in a
gilt frame. It was quite an affair, in reds and greens. They all
seemed like trophies.
It began to grow dark. A mist came winding. Rain
plashed softly upon the window-sill. A lamp had been lighted in the
opposite tenement; the strong orange glare revealed the man with a
red, mottled face. He was seated by a table, smoking and
reflecting.
The little old woman looked at the clock again.
“Quarter ’a six.”
She had paused for a moment, but she now hurled
herself fiercely at the stove that lurked in the gloom, red-eyed,
like a dragon. It hissed, and there was renewed clangor of blows.
The little old woman dashed to and fro.