<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></SPAN>CHAPTER II</h2>
<p class="center">LEAVING HOME—A MAIDEN</p>
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<p class="cap_1">I WAS seventeen when I at last left M—pls.
I accepted a rough job at a dollar and
a quarter a day in a car manufacturing
concern in a town of eight thousand
population, about eight hundred being colored.
I was unable to save very much, for work was dull
that summer, and I was only averaging about
four days' work a week. Besides, I had an attack
of malaria at intervals for a period of two months,
but by going to work at five o'clock A.M. when I
was well I could get in two extra hours, making
a dollar-fifty. The concern employed about twelve
hundred men and paid their wages every two weeks,
holding back one week's pay. I came there in
June and it was some time in September that I
drew my fullest pay envelope which contained sixteen
dollars and fifty cents.</p>
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<p>About this time a "fire eating" colored evangelist,
who apparently possessed great converting powers
and unusual eloquence, came to town. These
qualities, however, usually became very uninteresting
toward the end of a stay. He had been to
M—pls the year before I left and at that place his
popularity greatly diminished before he left. The
greater part of the colored people in this town were
of the emotional kind and to these he was as attractive
as he had been at M—pls in the beginning.</p>
<p>Coincident with the commencement of Rev.
McIntyre's soul stirring sermons a big revival
was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</SPAN></span>
inaugurated, and although the little church
was filled nightly to its capacity, the aisles were
kept clear in order to give those that were "steeping
in Hell's fire" (as the evangelist characterized those
who were not members of some church) an open
road to enter into the field of the righteous; also
to give the mourners sufficient room in which to
exhaust their emotions when the spirit struck
them—and it is needless to say that they were used.
At times they virtually converted the entire floor
into an active gymnasium, regardless of the rights
of other persons or of the chairs they occupied.
I had seen and heard people shout at long intervals
in church, but here, after a few soul stirring sermons,
they began to run outside where there was more
room to give vent to the hallucination and this
wandering of the mind. It could be called nothing
else, for after the first few sermons the evangelist
would hardly be started before some mourner would
begin to "come through." This revival warmed
up to such proportions that preaching and shouting
began in the afternoon instead of evening. Men
working in the yards of the foundry two block away
could hear the shouting above the roaring furnaces
and the deafening noise of machinery of a great
car manufacturing concern. The church stood on
a corner where two streets, or avenues, intersected
and for a block in either direction the influence of
fanaticism became so intense that the converts
began running about like wild creatures, tearing
their hair and uttering prayers and supplications
in discordant tones.</p>
<p>At the evening services the sisters would gather
around<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</SPAN></span>
a mourner that showed signs of weakening
and sing and babble until he or she became so befuddled
they would jump up, throw their arms wildly
into the air, kick, strike, then cry out like a dying
soul, fall limp and exhausted into the many arms
outstretched to catch them. This was always
conclusive evidence of a contrite heart and a thoroughly
penitent soul. Far into the night this performance
would continue, and when the mourners'
bench became empty the audience would be searched
for sinners. I would sit through it all quite unemotional,
and nightly I would be approached with
"aren't you ready?" To which I would make no
answer. I noticed that several boys, who were
not in good standing with the parents of girls they
wished to court, found the mourners' bench a
convenient vehicle to the homes of these girls—all
of whom belonged to church. Girls over eighteen
who did not belong were subjects of much gossip
and abuse.</p>
<p>A report, in some inconceivable manner, soon
became spread that Oscar Devereaux had said
that he wanted to die and go to hell. Such a
sensation! I was approached on all sides by men
and women, regardless of the time of day or night,
by the young men who gloried in their conversion
and who urged me to "get right" with Jesus before
it was too late. I do not remember how long
these meetings lasted but they suddenly came to
an end when notice was served on the church trustees
by the city council, which irreverently declared
that so many converts every afternoon and night
was disturbing the white neighborhood's rest as
well<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</SPAN></span>
as their nerves. It ordered windows and doors
to be kept closed during services, and as the church
was small it was impossible to house the congregation
and all the converts, so the revival ended
and the community was restored to normal and
calm once more prevailed.</p>
<p>That was in September. One Sunday afternoon
in October, as I was walking along the railroad
track, I chanced to overhear voices coming from
under a water tank, where a space of some eight or
ten feet enclosed by four huge timbers made a
small, secluded place. I stopped, listened and was
sure I recognized the voices of Douglas Brock, his
brother Melvin, and two other well known colored
boys. Douglas was betting a quarter with one of
the other boys that he couldn't pass. (You who
know the dice and its vagaries will know what he
meant.) This was mingled with words and commands
from Melvin to the dice in trying to make
some point. It must have been four. He would
let out a sort of yowl; "Little Joe, can't you do it?"
I went my way. I didn't shoot craps nor drink
neither did I belong to church but was called a
dreadful sinner while three of the boys under the
tank had, not less than six weeks before, joined
church and were now full-fledged members in good
standing. Of course I did not consider that all
people who belonged to church were not Christians,
but was quite sure that many were not.</p>
<p>The following January a relative of mine got a
job for me bailing water in a coal mine in a little
town inhabited entirely by negroes. I worked from
six o'clock P.M. to six A.M., and received two
dollars<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</SPAN></span>
and twenty-five cents therefor. The work
was rough and hard and the mine very dark. The
smoke hung like a cloud near the top of the tunnel-like
room during all the night. This was because
the fans were all but shut off at night, and just
enough air was pumped in to prevent the formation
of black damp. The smoke made my head
ache until I felt stupid and the dampness made me
ill, but the two dollars and twenty-five cents per
day looked good to me. After six weeks, however,
I was forced to quit, and with sixty-five dollars—more
money than I had ever had—I went to see
my older sister who was teaching in a nearby town.</p>
<p>I had grown into a strong, husky youth of eighteen
and my sister was surprised to see that I was working
and taking care of myself so well. She shared
the thought of nearly all of my acquaintances that
I was too lazy to leave home and do hard work,
especially in the winter time. After awhile she
suddenly looked at me and spoke as though afraid
she would forget it, "O, Oscar! I've got a girl for you;
what do you think of that?" smiling so pleasantly,
I was afraid she was joking. You see, I had never
been very successful with the girls and when she
mentioned having a girl for me my heart was all
a flutter and when she hesitated I put in eagerly.</p>
<p>"Aw go on—quit your kidding. On the level
now, or are you just chiding me?" But she took
on a serious expression and speaking thoughtfully,
she went on.</p>
<p>"Yes, she lives next door and is a nice little girl,
and pretty. The prettiest colored girl in town."</p>
<p>Here I lost interest for I remembered my sister
was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</SPAN></span>
foolish about beauty and I said that I didn't
care to meet her. I was suspicious when it came to
the pretty type of girls, and had observed that the
prettiest girl in town was oft times petted and spoiled
and a mere butterfly.</p>
<p>"O why?" She spoke like one hurt. Then I
confessed my suspicions. "O, You're foolish,"
she exclaimed softly, appearing relieved. "Besides,"
she went on brightly "Jessie isn't a spoiled
girl, you wait until you meet her." And in spite
of my protests she sent the landlady's little girl
off for Miss Rooks. She came over in about an
hour and I found her to be demure and thoughtful,
as well as pretty. She was small of stature, had
dark eyes and beautiful wavy, black hair, and an
olive complexion. She wouldn't allow me to look
into her eyes but continued to cast them downward,
sitting with folded hands and answering when spoken
to in a tiny voice quite in keeping with her small
person.</p>
<p>During the afternoon I mentioned that I was
going to Chicago, "Now Oscar, you've got no
business in Chicago," my sister spoke up with a
touch of authority. "You're too young, and
besides," she asked "do you know whether W.O.
wants you?" W.O. was our oldest brother and
was then making Chicago his home.</p>
<p>"Huh!" I snorted "I'm going on my own hook,"
and drawing up to my full six feet I tried to look
brave, which seemed to have the desired effect
on my sister.</p>
<p>"Well" she said resignedly, "you must be careful
and not get into bad company—be good and try
to make a man of yourself."</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</SPAN></span></p>
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