TWENTY
BUT A big man cannot stay drunk very long on three
dollars. That was Sunday morning, and Monday night Jurgis came
home, sober and sick, realizing that he had spent every cent the
family owned, and had not bought a single instant’s forgetfulness
with it.
Ona was not yet buried; but the police had been
notified, and on the morrow they would put the body in a pine
coffin and take it to the potter’s field. Elzbieta was out begging
now, a few pennies from each of the neighbors, to get enough to pay
for a mass for her; and the children were upstairs starving to
death, while he, good-for-nothing rascal, had been spending their
money on drink. So spoke Aniele, scornfully, and when he started
toward the fire she added the information that her kitchen was no
longer for him to fill with his phosphate stinks. She had crowded
all her boarders into one room on Ona’s account, but now he could
go up in the garret where he belonged—and not there much longer,
either, if he did not pay her some rent.
Jurgis went without a word, and, stepping over half
a dozen sleeping boarders in the next room, ascended the ladder. It
was dark up above; they could not afford any light; also it was
nearly as cold as outdoors. In a corner, as far away from the
corpse as possible, sat Marija, holding little Antanas in her one
good arm and trying to soothe him to sleep. In another corner
crouched poor little Juozapas, wailing because he had had nothing
to eat all day. Marija said not a word to Jurgis; he crept in like
a whipped cur, and went and sat down by the body.
Perhaps he ought to have meditated upon the hunger
of the children, and upon his own baseness; but he thought only of
Ona, he gave himself up again to the luxury of grief. He shed no
tears, being ashamed to make a sound; he sat motionless and
shuddering with his anguish. He had never dreamed how much he loved
Ona, until now that she was gone; until now that he sat here,
knowing that on the morrow they would take her away, and that he
would never lay eyes upon her again—never all the days of his life.
His old love, which had been starved to death, beaten to death,
awoke in him again; the flood-gates of memory were lifted—he saw
all their life together, saw her as he had seen her in Lithuania,
the first day at the fair, beautiful as the flowers, singing like a
bird. He saw her as he had married her, with all her tenderness,
with her heart of wonder; the very words she had spoken seemed to
ring now in his ears, the tears she had shed to be wet upon his
cheek. The long, cruel battle with misery and hunger had hardened
and embittered him, but it had not changed her—she had been the
same hungry soul to the end, stretching out her arms to him,
pleading with him, begging him for love and tenderness. And she had
suffered—so cruelly she had suffered, such agonies, such
infamies—ah, God, the memory of them was not to be borne. What a
monster of wickedness, of heartlessness, he had been! Every angry
word that he had ever spoken came back to him and cut him like a
knife; every selfish act that he had done—with what torments he
paid for them now! And such devotion and awe as welled up in his
soul—now that it could never be spoken, now that it was too late,
too late! His bosom was choking with it, bursting with it; he
crouched here in the darkness beside her, stretching out his arms
to her—and she was gone forever, she was dead! He could have
screamed aloud with the horror and despair of it; a sweat of agony
beaded his forehead, yet he dared not make a sound—he scarcely
dared to breathe, because of his shame and loathing of
himself.
Late at night came Elzbieta, having gotten the
money for a mass, and paid for it in advance, lest she should be
tempted too sorely at home. She brought also a bit of stale
rye-bread that some one had given her, and with that they quieted
the children and got them to sleep. Then she came over to Jurgis
and sat down beside him.
She said not a word of reproach—she and Marija had
chosen that course before; she would only plead with him, here by
the corpse of his dead wife. Already Elzbieta had choked down her
tears, grief being crowded out of her soul by fear. She had to bury
one of her children—but then she had done it three times before,
and each time risen up and gone back to take up the battle for the
rest. Elzbieta was one of the primitive creatures: like the
angleworm, which goes on living though cut in half; like a hen,
which, deprived of her chickens one by one, will mother the last
that is left her. She did this because it was her nature—she asked
no questions about the justice of it, nor the worthwhileness of
life in which destruction and death ran riot.
And this old common-sense view she labored to
impress upon Jurgis, pleading with him with tears in her eyes. Ona
was dead, but the others were left and they must be saved. She did
not ask for her own children. She and Marija could care for them
somehow, but there was Antanas, his own son. Ona had given Antanas
to him—the little fellow was the only remembrance of her that he
had; he must treasure it and protect it, he must show himself a
man. He knew what Ona would have had him do, what she would ask of
him at this moment, if she could speak to him. It was a terrible
thing that she should have died as she had; but the life had been
too hard for her, and she had to go. It was terrible that they were
not able to bury her, that he could not even have a day to mourn
her—but so it was. Their fate was pressing; they had not a cent,
and the children would perish—some money must be had. Could he not
be a man for Ona’s sake, and pull himself together? In a little
while they would be out of danger—now that they had given up the
house they could live more cheaply, and with all the children
working they could get along, if only he would not go to pieces. So
Elzbieta went on, with feverish intensity. It was a struggle for
life with her; she was not afraid that Jurgis would go on drinking,
for he had no money for that, but she was wild with dread at the
thought that he might desert them, might take to the road, as Jonas
had done.
But with Ona’s dead body beneath his eyes, Jurgis
could not well think of treason to his child. Yes, he said, he
would try, for the sake of Antanas. He would give the little fellow
his chance—would get to work at once, yes, to-morrow, without even
waiting for Ona to be buried. They might trust him, he would keep
his word, come what might.
And so he was out before daylight the next morning,
headache, heartache, and all. He went straight to Graham’s
fertilizer-mill, to see if he could get back his job. But the boss
shook his head when he saw him—no, his place had been filled long
ago, and there was no room for him.
“Do you think there will be?” Jurgis asked. “I may
have to wait.”
“No,” said the other, “it will not be worth your
while to wait—there will be nothing for you here.”
Jurgis stood gazing at him in perplexity. “What is
the matter?” he asked. “Didn’t I do my work?”
The other met his look with one of cold
indifference, and answered, “There will be nothing for you here, I
said.”
Jurgis had his suspicions as to the dreadful
meaning of that incident, and he went away with a sinking at the
heart. He went and took his stand with the mob of hungry wretches
who were standing about in the snow before the time-station. Here
he stayed, breakfastless, for two hours, until the throng was
driven away by the clubs of the police. There was no work for him
that day.
Jurgis had made a good many acquaintances in his
long services at the yards—there were saloon-keepers who would
trust him for a drink and a sandwich, and members of his old union
who would lend him a dime at a pinch. It was not a question of life
and death for him, therefore; he might hunt all day, and come again
on the morrow, and try hanging on thus for weeks, like hundreds and
thousands of others. Meantime, Teta Elzbieta would go and beg, over
in the Hyde Park district, and the children would bring home enough
to pacify Aniele, and keep them all alive.
It was at the end of a week of this sort of
waiting, roaming about in the bitter winds or loafing in saloons,
that Jurgis stumbled on a chance in one of the cellars of Jones’s
big packing plant. He saw a foreman passing the open doorway, and
hailed him for a job.
“Push a truck?” inquired the man, and Jurgis
answered, “Yes, sir!” before the words were well out of his
mouth.
“What’s your name?” demanded the other.
“Jurgis Rudkus.”
“Worked in the yards before?”
“Yes.”
“Whereabouts?”
“Two places,—Brown’s killing-beds and Durham’s
fertilizer-mill.”
“Why did you leave there?”
“The first time I had an accident, and the last
time I was sent up for a month.”
“I see. Well, I’ll give you a trial. Come early
tomorrow and ask for Mr. Thomas.”
So Jurgis rushed home with the wild tidings that he
had a job—that the terrible siege was over. The remnants of the
family had quite a celebration that night; and in the morning
Jurgis was at the place half an hour before the time of opening.
The foreman came in shortly afterward, and when he saw Jurgis he
frowned.
“Oh,” he said, “I promised you a job, didn’t
I?”
“Yes, sir,” said Jurgis.
“Well, I’m sorry, but I made a mistake. I can’t use
you.”
Jurgis stared, dumfounded. “What’s the matter?” he
gasped.
“Nothing,” said the man, “only I can’t use
you.”
There was the same cold, hostile stare that he had
had from the boss of the fertilizer-mill. He knew that there was no
use in saying a word, and he turned and went away.
Out in the saloons the men could tell him all about
the meaning of it; they gazed at him with pitying eyes—poor devil,
he was blacklisted! What had he done? they asked—knocked down his
boss? Good heavens, then he might have known! Why, he stood as much
chance of getting a job in Packingtown as of being chosen mayor of
Chicago. Why had he wasted his time hunting? They had him on a
secret list in every office, big and little, in the place. They had
his name by this time in St. Louis and New York, in Omaha and
Boston, in Kansas City and St. Joseph. He was condemned and
sentenced, without trial and without appeal; he could never work
for the packers again—he could not even clean cattle-pens or drive
a truck in any place where they controlled. He might try it, if he
chose, as hundreds had tried it, and found out for themselves. He
would never be told anything about it; he would never get any more
satisfaction than he had gotten just now; but he would always find
when the time came that he was not needed. It would not do for him
to give any other name, either—they had company “spotters” for just
that purpose, and he wouldn’t keep a job in Packingtown three days.
It was worth a fortune to the packers to keep their blacklist
effective, as a warning to the men and a means of keeping down
union agitation and political discontent.
Jurgis went home, carrying these new tidings to the
family council. It was a most cruel thing; here in this district
was his home, such as it was, the place he was used to and the
friends he knew—and now every possibility of employment in it was
closed to him. There was nothing in Packingtown but packing-houses;
and so it was the same thing as evicting him from his home.
He and the two women spent all day and half the
night discussing it. It would be convenient, down-town, to the
children’s place of work; but then Marija was on the road to
recovery, and had hopes of getting a job in the yards; and though
she did not see her old-time lover once a month, because of the
misery of their state, yet she could not make up her mind to go
away and give him up forever. Then, too, Elzbieta had heard
something about a chance to scrub floors in Durham’s offices, and
was waiting every day for word. In the end it was decided that
Jurgis should go down-town to strike out for himself, and they
would decide after he got a job. As there was no one from whom he
could borrow there, and he dared not beg for fear of being
arrested, it was arranged that every day he should meet one of the
children and be given fifteen cents of their earnings, upon which
he could keep going. Then all day he was to pace the streets with
hundreds and thousands of other homeless wretches, inquiring at
stores, warehouses, and factories for a chance; and at night he was
to crawl into some doorway or underneath a truck, and hide there
until midnight, when he might get into one of the station-houses,
and spread a newspaper upon the floor, and lie down in the midst of
a throng of “bums” and beggars, reeking with alcohol and tobacco,
and filthy with vermin and disease.
So for two weeks more Jurgis fought with the demon
of despair. Once he got a chance to load a truck for half a day,
and again he carried an old woman’s valise and was given a quarter.
This let him into a lodging-house on several nights when he might
otherwise have frozen to death; and it also gave him a chance now
and then to buy a newspaper in the morning and hunt up jobs while
his rivals were watching and waiting for a paper to be thrown away.
This, however, was really not the advantage it seemed, for the
newspaper advertisements were a cause of much loss of precious time
and of many weary journeys. A full half of these were “fakes,” put
in by the endless variety of establishments which preyed upon the
helpless ignorance of the unemployed. If Jurgis lost only his time,
it was because he had nothing else to lose; whenever a
smooth-tongued agent would tell him of the wonderful positions he
had on hand, he could only shake his head sorrowfully and say that
he had not the necessary dollar to deposit; when it was explained
to him what “big money” he and all his family could make by
coloring photographs, he could only promise to come in again when
he had two dollars to invest in the outfit.
In the end Jurgis got a chance through an
accidental meeting with an old-time acquaintance of his union days.
He met this man on his way to work in the giant factories of the
Harvester Trust; and his friend told him to come along and he would
speak a good word for him to his boss, whom he knew well. So Jurgis
trudged four or five miles, and passed through a waiting throng of
unemployed at the gate under the escort of his friend. His knees
nearly gave way beneath him when the foreman, after looking him
over and questioning him, told him that he could find an opening
for him.
How much this accident meant to Jurgis he realized
only by stages; for he found that the harvester-works were the sort
of place to which philanthropists and reformers pointed with pride.
It had some thought for its employees; its workshops were big and
roomy, it provided a restaurant where the workmen could buy good
food at cost, it had even a reading-room, and decent places where
its girl-hands could rest; also the work was free from many of the
elements of filth and repulsiveness that prevailed at the
stockyards. Day after day Jurgis discovered these things—things
never expected nor dreamed of by him—until this new place came to
seem a kind of a heaven to him.
It was an enormous establishment, covering a
hundred and sixty acres of ground, employing five thousand people,
and turning out over three hundred thousand machines every year—a
good part of all the harvesting and mowing machines used in the
country. Jurgis saw very little of it, of course—it was all
specialized work, the same as at the stockyards; each one of the
hundreds of parts of a mowing-machine was made separately, and
sometimes handled by hundreds of men. Where Jurgis worked there was
a machine which cut and stamped a certain piece of steel about two
square inches in size; the pieces came tumbling out upon a tray,
and all that human hands had to do was to pile them in regular
rows, and change the trays at intervals. This was done by a single
boy, who stood with eyes and thought centered upon it, and fingers
flying so fast that the sounds of the bits of steel striking upon
each other was like the music of an express train as one hears it
in a sleeping-car at night. This was “piece-work,” of course; and
besides it was made certain that the boy did not idle, by setting
the machine to match the highest possible speed of human hands.
Thirty thousand of these pieces he handled every day, nine or ten
millions every year—how many in a lifetime it rested with the gods
to say. Near by him men sat bending over whirling grindstones,
putting the finishing touches to the steel knives of the reaper;
picking them out of a basket with the right hand, pressing first
one side and then the other against the stone and finally dropping
them with the left hand into another basket. One of these men told
Jurgis that he had sharpened three thousand pieces of steel a day
for thirteen years. In the next room were wonderful machines that
ate up long steel rods by slow stages, cutting them off, seizing
the pieces, stamping heads upon them, grinding them and polishing
them, threading them, and finally dropping them into a basket, all
ready to bolt the harvesters together. From yet another machine
came tens of thousands of steel burs to fit upon these bolts. In
other places all these various parts were dipped into troughs of
paint and hung up to dry, and then slid along on trolleys to a room
where men streaked them with red and yellow, so that they might
look cheerful in the harvest-fields.
Jurgis’s friend worked upstairs in the
casting-rooms, and his task was to make the moulds of a certain
part. He shovelled black sand into an iron receptacle and pounded
it tight and set it aside to harden; then it would be taken out,
and molten iron poured into it. This man, too, was paid by the
mould—or rather for perfect castings, nearly half his work going
for naught. You might see him, along with dozens of others, toiling
like one possessed by a whole community of demons; his arms working
like the driving rods of an engine, his long, black hair flying
wild, his eyes starting out, the sweat rolling in rivers down his
face. When he had shovelled the mould full of sand, and reached for
the pounder to pound it with, it was after the manner of a canoeist
running rapids and seizing a pole at sight of a submerged rock. All
day long this man would toil thus, his whole being centred upon the
purpose of making twenty-three instead of twenty-two and a half
cents an hour; and then his product would be reckoned up by the
census-taker, and jubilant captains of industry would boast of it
in their banquet-halls, telling how our workers are nearly twice as
efficient as those of any other country. If we are the greatest
nation the sun ever shone upon, it would seem to be mainly because
we have been able to goad our wage-earners to this pitch of frenzy;
though there are a few other things that are great among us,
including our drink-bill, which is a billion and a quarter of
dollars a year, and doubling itself every decade.
There was a machine which stamped out the iron
plates, and then another which, with a mighty thud, mashed them to
the shape of the sitting-down portion of the American farmer. Then
they were piled upon a truck, and it was Jurgis’s task to wheel
them to the room where the machines were “assembled.” This was
child’s play for him, and he got a dollar and seventy-five cents a
day for it; on Saturday he paid Aniele the seventy-five cents a
week he owed her for the use of her garret, and also redeemed his
overcoat, which Elzbieta had put in pawn when he was in jail.
This last was a great blessing. A man cannot go
about in midwinter in Chicago with no overcoat and not pay for it,
and Jurgis had to walk or ride five or six miles back and forth to
his work. It so happened that half of this was in one direction and
half in another, necessitating a change of cars; the law required
that transfers be given at all intersecting points, but the railway
corporation had gotten round this by arranging a pretence at
separate ownership. So whenever he wished to ride, he had to pay
ten cents each way, or over ten per cent of his income to this
power, which had gotten its franchises long ago by buying up the
city council, in the face of popular clamor amounting almost to a
rebellion. Tired as he felt at night, and dark and bitter cold as
it was in the morning, Jurgis generally chose to walk; at the hours
other workmen were travelling, the street-car monopoly saw fit to
put on so few cars that there would be men hanging to every foot of
the backs of them and often crouching upon the snow-covered roof.
Of course the doors could never be closed, and so the cars were as
cold as outdoors; Jurgis, like many others, found it better to
spend his fare for a drink and a free lunch, to give him strength
to walk.
These, however, were all slight matters to a man
who had escaped from Durham’s fertilizer-mill. Jurgis began to pick
up heart again and to make plans. He had lost his house, but then
the awful load of the rent and interest was off his shoulders, and
when Marija was well again they could start over and save. In the
shop where he worked was a man, a Lithuanian like himself, whom the
others spoke of in admiring whispers, because of the mighty feats
he was performing. All day he sat at a machine turning bolts; and
then in the evening he went to the public school to study English
and learn to read. In addition, because he had a family of eight
children to support and his earnings were not enough, on Saturdays
and Sundays he served as a watchman; he was required to press two
buttons at opposite ends of a building every five minutes, and as
the walk only took him two minutes, he had three minutes to study
between each trip. Jurgis felt jealous of this fellow; for that was
the sort of thing he himself had dreamed of, two or three years
ago. He might do it even yet, if he had a fair chance—he might
attract attention and become a skilled man or a boss, as some had
done in this place. Suppose that Marija could get a job in the big
mill where they made binder-twine-then they would move into this
neighborhood, and he would really have a chance. With a hope like
that, there was some use in living; to find a place where you were
treated like a human being—by God! he would show them how he could
appreciate it. He laughed to himself as he thought how he would
hang on to this job!
And then one afternoon, the ninth of his work in
the place, when he went to get his overcoat he saw a group of men
crowded before a placard on the door, and when he went over and
asked what it was, they told him that beginning with the morrow his
department of the harvester works would be closed until further
notice!