FIVE
THEY HAD bought their home. It was hard for them
to realize that the wonderful house was theirs to move into
whenever they chose. They spent all their time thinking about it,
and what they were going to put into it. As their week with Aniele
was up in three days, they lost no time in getting ready. They had
to make some shift to furnish it, and every instant of their
leisure was given to discussing this.
A person who had such a task before him would not
need to look very far in Packingtown—he had only to walk up the
avenue and read the signs, or get into a street-car, to obtain full
information as to pretty much everything a human creature could
need. It was quite touching, the zeal of people to see that his
health and happiness were provided for. Did the person wish to
smoke? There was a little discourse about cigars, showing him
exactly why the Thomas Jefferson Five-cent Perfecto was the only
cigar worthy of the name. Had he, on the other hand, smoked too
much? Here was a remedy for the smoking habit, twenty-five doses
for a quarter, and a cure absolutely guaranteed in ten doses. In
innumerable ways such as this, the traveller found that somebody
had been busied to make smooth his paths through the world, and to
let him know what had been done for him. In Packingtown the
advertisements had a style all of their own, adapted to the
peculiar population. One would be tenderly solicitous. “Is your
wife pale?” it would inquire. “Is she discouraged, does she drag
herself about the house and find fault with everything? Why do you
not tell her to try Dr. Lanahan’s Life Preservers?” Another would
be jocular in tone, slapping you on the back, so to speak. “Don’t
be a chump!” it would exclaim. “Go and get the Goliath Bunion
Cure.” “Get a move on you!” would chime in another. “It’s easy, if
you wear the Eureka Two-fifty Shoe.”
Among these importunate signs was one that had
caught the attention of the family by its pictures. It showed two
very pretty little birds building themselves a home; and Marija had
asked an acquaintance to read it to her, and told them that it
related to the furnishing of a house. “Feather your nest,” it
ran—and went on to say that it could furnish all the necessary
feathers for a four-room nest for the ludicrously small sum of
seventy-five dollars. The particularly important thing about this
offer was that only a small part of the money need be had at
once—the rest one might pay a few dollars every month. Our friends
had to have some furniture, there was no getting away from that;
but their little fund of money had sunk so low that they could
hardly get to sleep at night, and so they fled to this as their
deliverance. There was more agony and another paper for Elzbieta to
sign, and then one night when Jurgis came home, he was told the
breathless tidings that the furniture had arrived and was safely
stowed in the house: a parlor set of four pieces, a bedroom set of
three pieces, a dining-room table and four chairs, a toilet-set
with beautiful pink roses painted all over it, an assortment of
crockery, also with pink roses—and so on. One of the plates in the
set had been found broken when they unpacked it, and Ona was going
to the store the first thing in the morning to make them change it;
also they had promised three sauce-pans, and there had only two
come, and did Jurgis think that they were trying to cheat
them?
The next day they went to the house; and when the
men came from work they ate a few hurried mouthfuls at Aniele‘s,
and then set to work at the task of carrying their belongings to
their new home. The distance was in reality over two miles, but
Jurgis made two trips that night, each time with a huge pile of
mattresses and bedding on his head, with bundles of clothing and
bags and things tied up inside. Anywhere else in Chicago he would
have stood a good chance of being arrested; but the policemen in
Packingtown were apparently used to these informal movings, and
contented themselves with a cursory examination now and then. It
was quite wonderful to see how fine the house looked, with all the
things in it, even by the dim light of a lamp: it was really home,
and almost as exciting as the placard had described it. Ona was
fairly dancing, and she and Cousin Marija took Jurgis by the arm
and escorted him from room to room, sitting in each chair by turns,
and then insisting that he should do the same. One chair squeaked
with his great weight, and they screamed with fright, and woke the
baby and brought everybody running. Altogether it was a great day;
and tired as they were, Jurgis and Ona sat up late, contented
simply to hold each other and gaze in rapture about the room. They
were going to be married as soon as they could get everything
settled, and a little spare money put by; and this was to be their
home—that little room yonder would be theirs!
It was in truth a never-ending delight, the fixing
up of this house. They had no money to spend for the pleasure of
spending, but there were a few absolutely necessary things, and the
buying of these was a perpetual adventure for Ona. It must always
be done at night, so that Jurgis could go along; and even if it
were only a pepper-cruet, or half a dozen glasses for ten cents,
that was enough for an expedition. On Saturday night they came home
with a great basketful of things, and spread them out on the table,
while every one stood round, and the children climbed up on the
chairs, or howled to be lifted up to see. There were sugar and salt
and tea and crackers, and a can of lard and a milk-pail, and a
scrubbing-brush, and a pair of shoes for the second oldest boy, and
a can of oil, and a tack-hammer, and a pound of nails. These last
were to be driven into the walls of the kitchen and the bedrooms,
to hang things on; and there was a family discussion as to the
place where each one was to be driven. Then Jurgis would try to
hammer, and hit his fingers because the hammer was too small, and
get mad because Ona had refused to let him pay fifteen cents more
and get a bigger hammer; and Ona would be invited to try it
herself, and hurt her thumb, and cry out, which necessitated the
thumb’s being kissed by Jurgis. Finally, after every one had had a
try, the nails would be driven, and something hung up. Jurgis had
come home with a big packing-box on his head, and he sent Jonas to
get another that he had bought. He meant to take one side out of
these to-morrow, and put shelves in them, and make them into
bureaus and places to keep things for the bedrooms. The nest which
had been advertised had not included feathers for quite so many
birds as there were in this family.
They had, of course, put their dining-table in the
kitchen, and the dining-room was used as the bedroom of Teta
Elzbieta and five of her children. She and the two youngest slept
in the only bed, and the other three had a mattress on the floor.
Ona and her cousin dragged a mattress into the parlor and slept at
night, and the three men and the oldest boy slept in the other
room, having nothing but the very level floor to rest on for the
present. Even so, however, they slept soundly—it was necessary for
Teta Elzbieta to pound more than once on the door at a quarter past
five every morning. She would have ready a great pot full of
steaming black coffee, and oatmeal and bread and smoked sausages;
and then she would fix them their dinner pails with more thick
slices of bread with lard between them-they could not afford
butter—and some onions and a piece of cheese, and so they would
tramp away to work.
This was the first time in his life that he had
ever really worked, it seemed to Jurgis; it was the first time that
he had ever had anything to do which took all he had in him. Jurgis
had stood with the rest up in the gallery and watched the men on
the killing-beds, marvelling at their speed and power as if they
had been wonderful machines; it somehow never occurred to one to
think of the flesh-and-blood side of it—that is, not until he
actually got down into the pit and took off his coat. Then he saw
things in a different light, he got at the inside of them. The pace
they set here, it was one that called for every faculty of a
man—from the instant the first steer fell till the sounding of the
noon whistle, and again from half-past twelve till heaven only knew
what hour in the late afternoon or evening, there was never one
instant’s rest for a man, for his hand or his eye or his brain.
Jurgis saw how they managed it; there were portions of the work
which determined the pace of the rest, and for these they had
picked men whom they paid high wages, and whom they changed
frequently. You might easily pick out these pace-makers, for they
worked under the eye of the bosses, and they worked like men
possessed. This was called “speeding up the gang,” and if any man
could not keep up with the pace, there were hundreds outside
begging to try.
Yet Jurgis did not mind it; he rather enjoyed it.
It saved him the necessity of flinging his arms about and fidgeting
as he did in most work. He would laugh to himself as he ran down
the line, darting a glance now and then at the man ahead of him. It
was not the pleasantest work one could think of, but it was
necessary work; and what more had a man the right to ask than a
chance to do something useful, and to get good pay for doing
it?
So Jurgis thought, and so he spoke, in his bold,
free way; very much to his surprise, he found that it had a
tendency to get him into trouble. For most of the men here took a
fearfully different view of the thing. He was quite dismayed when
he first began to find it out—that most of the men hated
their work. It seemed strange, it was even terrible, when you came
to find out the universality of the sentiment; but it was certainly
the fact—they hated their work. They hated the bosses and they
hated the owners; they hated the whole place, the whole
neighborhood—even the whole city, with an all-inclusive hatred,
bitter and fierce. Women and little children would fall to cursing
about it; it was rotten, rotten as hell—everything was rotten. When
Jurgis would ask them what they meant, they would begin to get
suspicious, and content themselves with saying, “Never mind, you
stay here and see for yourself.”
One of the first problems that Jurgis ran upon was
that of the unions. He had had no experience with unions, and he
had to have it explained to him that the men were banded together
for the purpose of fighting for their rights. Jurgis asked them
what they meant by their rights, a question in which he was quite
sincere, for he had not any idea of any rights that he had, except
the right to hunt for a job, and do as he was told when he got it.
Generally, however, this harmless question would only make his
fellow-workingmen lose their tempers and call him a fool. There was
a delegate of the butcher-helpers’ union who came to see Jurgis to
enroll him; and when Jurgis found that this meant that he would
have to part with some of his money, he froze up directly, and the
delegate, who was an Irishman and only knew a few words of
Lithuanian, lost his temper and began to threaten him. In the end
Jurgis got into a fine rage, and made it sufficiently plain that it
would take more than one Irishman to scare him into a union. Little
by little he gathered that the main thing the men wanted was to put
a stop to the habit of “speeding-up”; they were trying their best
to force a lessening of the pace, for there were some, they said,
who could not keep up with it, whom it was killing. But Jurgis had
no sympathy with such ideas as this—he could do the work himself,
and so could the rest of them, he declared, if they were good for
anything. If they couldn’t do it, let them go somewhere else.
Jurgis had not studied the books, and he would not have known how
to pronounce “laissez-faire”;7 but he
had been round the world enough to know that a man has to shift for
himself in it, and that if he gets the worst of it, there is nobody
to listen to him holler.
Yet there have been known to be philosophers and
plain men who swore by Malthus in the books, and would,
nevertheless, subscribe to a relief fund in time of a famine.8 It was
the same with Jurgis, who consigned the unfit to destruction, while
going about all day sick at heart because of his poor old father,
who was wandering somewhere in the yards begging for a chance to
earn his bread. Old Antanas had been a worker ever since he was a
child; he had run away from home when he was twelve, because his
father beat him for trying to learn to read. And he was a faithful
man, too; he was a man you might leave alone for a month, if only
you had made him understand what you wanted him to do in the
meantime. And now here he was, worn out in soul and body, and with
no more place in the world than a sick dog. He had his home, as it
happened, and some one who would care for him if he never got a
job; but his son could not help thinking, suppose this had not been
the case. Antanas Rudkus had been into every building in
Packingtown by this time, and into nearly every room; he had stood
mornings among the crowd of applicants till the very policemen had
come to know his face and to tell him to go home and give it up. He
had been likewise to all the stores and saloons for a mile about,
begging for some little thing to do; and everywhere they had
ordered him out, sometimes with curses, and not once even stopping
to ask him a question.
So, after all, there was a crack in the fine
structure of Jurgis’s faith in things as they are. The crack was
wide while Dede Antanas was hunting a job—and it was yet wider when
he finally got it. For one evening the old man came home in a great
state of excitement, with the tale that he had been approached by a
man in one of the corridors of the pickle-rooms of Durham‘s, and
asked what he would pay to get a job. He had not known what to make
of this at first; but the man had gone on with matter-of-fact
frankness to say that he could get him a job, provided that he were
willing to pay one-third of his wages for it. Was he a boss?
Antanas had asked; to which the man had replied that that was
nobody’s business, but that he could do what he said.
Jurgis had made some friends by this time, and he
sought one of them and asked what this meant. The friend, who was
named Tamoszius Kuszleika, was a sharp little man who folded hides
on the killing-beds, and he listened to what Jurgis had to say
without seeming at all surprised. They were common enough, he said,
such cases of petty graft. It was simply some boss who proposed to
add a little to his income. After Jurgis had been there awhile he
would know that the plants were simply honeycombed with rottenness
of that sort—the bosses grafted off the men, and they grafted off
each other; and some day the superintendent would find out about
the boss, and then he would graft off the boss. Warming to the
subject, Tamoszius went on to explain the situation. Here was
Durham‘s, for instance, owned by a man who was trying to make as
much money out of it as he could, and did not care in the least how
he did it; and underneath him, ranged in ranks and grades like an
army, were managers and superintendents and foremen, each one
driving the man next below him and trying to squeeze out of him as
much work as possible. And all the men of the same rank were pitted
against each other; the accounts of each were kept separately, and
every man lived in terror of losing his job, if another made a
better record than he. So from top to bottom the place was simply a
seething cauldron of jealousies and hatreds; there was no loyalty
or decency anywhere about it, there was no place in it where a man
counted for anything against a dollar. And worse than there being
no decency, there was not even any honesty. The reason for that?
Who could say? It must have been old Durham in the beginning; it
was a heritage which the self-made merchant had left to his son,
along with his millions.
Jurgis would find out these things for himself, if
he stayed there long enough; it was the men who had to do all the
dirty jobs, and so there was no deceiving them; and they caught the
spirit of the place, and did like all the rest. Jurgis had come
there, and thought he was going to make himself useful, and rise
and become a skilled man; but he would soon find out his error—for
nobody rose in Packingtown by doing good work. You could lay that
down for a rule—if you met a man who was rising in Packingtown, you
met a knave. That man who had been sent to Jurgis’s father by the
boss, he would rise; the man who told tales and spied upon his
fellows would rise; but the man who minded his own business and did
his work—why, they would “speed him up” till they had worn him out,
and then they would throw him into the gutter.
Jurgis went home with his head buzzing. Yet he
could not bring himself to believe such things—no, it could not be
so. Tamoszius was simply another of the grumblers. He was a man who
spent all his time fiddling; and he would go to parties at night
and not get home till sunrise, and so of course he did not feel
like work. Then, too, he was a puny little chap; and so he had been
left behind in the race, and that was why he was sore. And yet so
many strange things kept coming to Jurgis’s notice every day!
He tried to persuade his father to have nothing to
do with the offer. But old Antanas had begged until he was worn
out, and all his courage was gone; he wanted a job, any sort of a
job. So the next day he went and found the man who had spoken to
him, and promised to bring him a third of all he earned; and that
same day he was put to work in Durham’s cellars. It was a
“pickle-room,” where there was never a dry spot to stand upon, and
so he had to take nearly the whole of his first week’s earnings to
buy him a pair of heavy-soled boots. He was a “squeedgie” man; his
job was to go about all day with a long-handled mop, swabbing up
the floor. Except that it was damp and dark, it was not an
unpleasant job, in summer.
Now Antanas Rudkus was the meekest man that God
ever put on earth; and so Jurgis found it a striking confirmation
of what the men all said, that his father had been at work only two
days before he came home as bitter as any of them, and cursing
Durham’s with all the power of his soul. For they had set him to
cleaning out the traps; and the family sat round and listened in
wonder while he told them what that meant. It seemed that he was
working in the room where the men prepared the beef for canning,
and the beef had lain in vats full of chemicals, and men with great
forks speared it out and dumped it into trucks, to be taken to the
cooking-room. When they had speared out all they could reach, they
emptied the vat on the floor, and then with shovels scraped up the
balance and dumped it into the truck. This floor was filthy, yet
they set Antanas with his mop slopping the “pickle” into a hole
that connected with a sink, where it was caught and used over again
forever; and if that were not enough, there was a trap in the pipe,
where all the scraps of meat and odds and ends of refuse were
caught, and every few days it was the old man’s task to clean these
out, and shovel their contents into one of the trucks with the rest
of the meat!
This was the experience of Antanas; and then there
came also Jonas and Marija with tales to tell. Marija was working
for one of the independent packers, and was quite beside herself
and outrageous with triumph over the sums of money she was making
as a painter of cans. But one day she walked home with a pale-faced
little woman who worked opposite to her, Jadvyga Marcinkus by name,
and Jadvyga told her how she, Marija, had chanced to get her job.
She had taken the place of an Irish woman who had been working in
that factory ever since any one could remember, for over fifteen
years, so she declared. Mary Dennis was her name, and a long time
ago she had been seduced, and had a little boy; he was a cripple,
and an epileptic, but still he was all that she had in the world to
love, and they had lived in a little room alone somewhere back of
Halsted Street, where the Irish were. Mary had had consumption, and
all day long you might hear her coughing as she worked; of late she
had been going all to pieces, and when Marija came, the “forelady”
had suddenly decided to turn her off. The forelady had to come up
to a certain standard herself, and could not stop for sick people,
Jadvyga explained. The fact that Mary had been there so long had
not made any difference to her—it was doubtful if she even knew
that, for both the forelady and the superintendent were new people,
having only been there two or three years themselves. Jadvyga did
not know what had become of the poor creature; she would have gone
to see her, but had been sick herself. She had pains in her back
all the time, Jadvyga explained, and feared that she had womb
trouble. It was not fit work for a woman, handling fourteen-pound
cans all day.
It was a striking circumstance that Jonas, too, had
gotten his job by the misfortune of some other person. Jonas pushed
a truck loaded with hams from the smoke-rooms on to an elevator,
and thence to the packing-rooms. The trucks were all of iron, and
heavy, and they put about threescore hams on each of them, a load
of more than a quarter of a ton. On the uneven floor it was a task
for a man to start one of these trucks, unless he was a giant; and
when it was once started he naturally tried his best to keep it
going. There was always the boss prowling about, and if there was a
second’s delay he would fall to cursing; Lithuanians and Slovaks
and such, who could not understand what was said to them, the
bosses were wont to kick about the place like so many dogs.
Therefore these trucks went for the most part on the run; and the
predecessor of Jonas had been jammed against the wall by one and
crushed in a horrible and nameless manner.
All of these were sinister incidents; but they were
trifles compared to what Jurgis saw with his own eyes before long.
One curious thing he had noticed, the very first day, in his
profession of shoveller of guts; which was the sharp trick of the
floor-bosses whenever there chanced to come a “slunk” calf. Any man
who knows anything about butchering knows that the flesh of a cow
that is about to calve, or has just calved, is not fit for food. A
good many of these came every day to the packing-houses—and, of
course, if they had chosen, it would have been an easy matter for
the packers to keep them till they were fit for food. But for the
saving of time and fodder, it was the law that cows of that sort
came along with the others, and whoever noticed it would tell the
boss, and the boss would start up a conversation with the
government inspector, and the two would stroll away. So in a trice
the carcass of the cow would be cleaned out, and the entrails would
have vanished; it was Jurgis’s task to slide them into the trap,
calves and all, and on the floor below they took out these “slunk”
calves, and butchered them for meat, and used even the skins of
them.
One day a man slipped and hurt his leg; and that
afternoon, when the last of the cattle had been disposed of, and
the men were leaving, Jurgis was ordered to remain and do some
special work which this injured man had usually done. It was late,
almost dark, and the government inspectors had all gone, and there
were only a dozen or two of men on the floor. That day they had
killed about four thousand cattle, and these cattle had come in
freight trains from far states, and some of them had got hurt.
There were some with broken legs, and some with gored sides; there
were some that had died, from what cause no one could say; and they
were all to be disposed of, here in darkness and silence.
“Downers,” the men called them; and the packing-house had a special
elevator upon which they were raised to the killing-beds, where the
gang proceeded to handle them, with an air of businesslike
nonchalance which said plainer than any words that it was a matter
of everyday routine. It took a couple of hours to get them out of
the way, and in the end Jurgis saw them go into the chilling-rooms
with the rest of the meat, being carefully scattered here and there
so that they could not be identified. When he came home that night
he was in a very sombre mood, having begun to see at last how those
might be right who had laughed at him for his faith in
America.