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<p class="center"><b><big>THE WORKERS</big></b></p>
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<div class="figcenter illowp53" id="ifrontis" style="max-width: 114.875em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_frontis.jpg" alt="A man walking down a long street lit by many streetlights in the rain.." />
<div class="caption"><p>THE SENSE OF INFINITY IS HEIGHTENED BY THE FLOATING MIST.</p>
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<div class="chapter" />
<h1><big>THE WORKERS</big><br/> <br/> <small>AN</small><br/> EXPERIMENT IN REALITY </h1>
<p class="center">BY<br/>
<big><b>WALTER A. WYCKOFF</b></big><br/>
<br/>
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF POLITICAL ECONOMY IN<br/>
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY</p>
<p class="center"><br/><i><b>THE WEST</b></i><br/></p>
<p class="center">NEW YORK<br/>
CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS<br/>
1909</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p class="center"><small>COPYRIGHT, 1898 BY</small><br/>
CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS</p>
<div class="figcenter illowp64" id="ilogo" style="max-width: 6em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100 smaller" src="images/i_logo.jpg" alt="Charles Scribner's Sons Logo" /></div>
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<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2></div>
<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Table of Contents">
<tr>
<td class="tdc"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb"><small>PAGE</small></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_I">The Army of the Unemployed</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">1</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdc"><br/><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_II">Living by Odd Jobs</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">40</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdc"><br/><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_III">Finding Steady Work</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">86</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdc"><br/><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_IV">A Hand-truckman in a Factory</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">147</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdc"><br/><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_V">Among the Revolutionaries</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">190</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdc"><br/><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VI">A Road Builder on the World’s Fair Grounds</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">247</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdc"><br/><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VII">From Chicago to Denver</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">288</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdc"><br/><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VIII">From Denver to the Pacific</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">338</td>
</tr>
</table>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 class="nobreak" id="LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2></div>
<table summary="Table of Illustrations1" cellpadding="4">
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#ifrontis">
The Sense of Infinity is Heightened by The Floating Mist</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb"><i>Frontispiece</i></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"> </td>
<td class="tdc"><small>FACING<br/>PAGE</small></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i029">
<span class="smcap">“That Meeting is not Far,” He is Saying,
“and it’s Warm There. Won’t You Go?”</span></SPAN></td>
<td class="tdr">16</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i039">
<span class="smcap">In the Corner near Us are Three Men, Slouching,
Listless, Weary Specimens of their Kind, who are Playing “Comrades”</span></SPAN> </td>
<td class="tdrb">24</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i047">
<span class="smcap">She is Facing Us near at Hand, Her Head
Framed in the Dark Umbrella which
Rests upon Her Shoulder</span></SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">30</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i055">
<span class="smcap">Overflowing through the Open Door of
The Farthest Passage upon the Floor
of the Main Corridor are the Sprawling
Figures of Men Asleep</span></SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">36</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i063">
The Police-station Breakfast</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">42</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i073">
“Out You Go, Now”</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">50</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i079">
“We’ll Feed, Partner, We’ll Feed”</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">54</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i087">
<span class="smcap">All of Them were Shouting Oaths and
Violent Abuse</span></SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">60</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i095">
She Drew Back and Looked at Me Perplexed</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">66</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i119">
<span class="smcap">He was Putting the Men through a Catechism
respecting Their Nationalities,
Their Homes and Occupations, and Their
Motives in Coming to Chicago</span></SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">88</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i127">
<span class="smcap">I Think that the Cook Thoroughly Enjoyed
Feeding Us</span></SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">94</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i141">
<span class="smcap">In the Midst of the Applause which
Marked the Passage of the Resolution,
She was on Her Feet</span></SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">106</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i151">
“Don’t You Touch it,” She said, Fiercely</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">114</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i157">
<span class="smcap">“We’ve Got Some Grub, Ma!” Cried the
Older Child, in a Tone of Success, as
She Ran Up to Her Mother with the
Basket. “Riley’s Barrel was Full To-night”</span></SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">118</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i171">
<span class="smcap">Waiting for a Job Outside the Factory
Gates</span></SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">130</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i179">
<span class="smcap">I was Strong and Warm in the Wild Joy
of the Lust for Blood</span></SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">136</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i195">
Loading the Box-cars under Crist’s Guidance</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">150</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i201">
In the Factory</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">154</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i209">
<span class="smcap">Crowds of Men Streaming from Every
Door and Pressing Swiftly Through
the Gate</span></SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">160</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i215">
The Noon Hour</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">164</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i221">
Mrs. Schulz’s Boarding-house</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">168</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i251">
<span class="smcap">Never Once Did I Fail of a Friendly
Greeting</span></SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">196</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i271">
<span class="smcap">He Hated Kings and Potentates and All
Governmental Authority</span></SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">214</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i281">
The Socialist Meeting</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">222</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i293">
<span class="smcap">There was Nothing in the Domestic Scene
which Met Us to Suggest the Home of
a Revolutionary</span></SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">232</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i299">
<span class="smcap">An Evasion of the Factory System of
Production</span></SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">236</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i305">
Returning Work from Sweat Shops</SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">240</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i313">
<span class="smcap">“Don’t Talk to Us about Disease; it’s
<i>bread</i> We’re After, <i>bread</i>!”</span></SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">246</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i325">
<span class="smcap">It was a Well-fed Crowd which Sat Smoking
for a Quarter of an Hour or More
on the Rough Embankments, Overlooking
the Agricultural Building before
Going Back to Work</span></SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">256</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i389">
<span class="smcap">The Fourth of July—“Two Townships were
to Play Each Other”</span></SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">318</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdl"><SPAN href="#i443">
<span class="smcap">Price could Speak Their Language, and
Now and Then One Joined Us in Camp</span></SPAN></td>
<td class="tdrb">370</td>
</tr>
</table>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I"> THE WORKERS<br/><br/><br/> CHAPTER I<br/> <br/> <small>THE ARMY OF THE UNEMPLOYED</small></h2></div>
<p class="location">
Rooms of the Young Men’s Christian<br/>
Association, Chicago, Ill.</p>
<p class="date">
Saturday Evening, December 5, 1891.</p>
<p>A new phase of my experiment is begun.
Hitherto I have been in the open country, and
have found work with surprising readiness.
Now I am in the heart of a congested labor market,
and I am learning, by experience, what it is
to look for work and fail to find it; to renew
the search under the spur of hunger and cold,
and of the animal instinct of self-preservation
until any employment, no matter how low in
the scale of work, that would yield food and
shelter, appears to you the very Kingdom of
Heaven; and if it could suffer violence, it would
seem as though the strength of your desire must
take that kingdom by force. But it remains impregnable
to your attack, and, baffled and weakened,
you are thrust back upon yourself and held
down remorselessly to the cold, naked fact that
you, who in all the universe are of supremest importance
to yourself, are yet of no importance to
the universe. You are a superfluous human
being. For you there is no part in the play of
the world’s activity. There remains for you simply
this alternative: Have you the physical and
moral qualities which fit you to survive, and
which will place you at last within the working
of the large scheme of things, or, lacking these
qualities, does there await you inevitable wreck
under the onward rush of the world’s great moving
life?</p>
<p>That, at all events, is pretty much as it appears
to-night to Tom Clark and me. Clark is
my “partner,” and we are not in good luck nor
in high spirits. We each had a ten-cent breakfast
this morning, but neither has tasted food since,
and to-night, after an exhausting search for
work, we must sleep in the station-house.</p>
<p>We are doing our best to pass the time in
warmth and comfort until midnight. We know
better than to go to the station-house earlier than
that hour. Clark is in the corner at my side
pretending to read a newspaper, but really trying
to disguise the fact that he is asleep.</p>
<p>An official who walks periodically through the
reading-room, recalling nodding figures to their
senses, has twice caught Clark asleep, and has
threatened to put him out.</p>
<p>I shall be on the alert, and shall warn Clark
of his next approach, for after this place is closed
we shall have long enough to wait in the naked
street before we can be sure of places in the larger
corridor of the station, where the crowding is less
close and the air a degree less foul than in the
inner passage, where men are tightly packed
over every square foot of the paved floor.</p>
<p>We are tired and very hungry, and not a little
discouraged; we should be almost desperate but
for one redeeming fact. The silver lining of our
cloud has appeared to-night in the form of falling
snow. From the murky clouds which all
day have hung threateningly over the city, a
quiet, steady snow-fall has begun, and we shall
be singularly unfortunate in the morning if we
can find no pavements to clean.</p>
<p>In the growing threat of snow we have encouraged
each other with the brightening prospect
of a little work, and for quite half an hour
after nightfall we stood alternately before the
windows of two cheap restaurants in Madison
Street, studying the square placards in the windows
on which the bills of fare are printed, and
telling each other, with nice discriminations between
bulk and strengthening power of food,
what we shall choose to-morrow.</p>
<p>It is a little strange, when I think of it, the
closeness of the intimacy between Clark and me.
We never saw each other until last Wednesday
evening, and we know little of each other’s past.
But I feel as though the ties that bound me to
him had their roots far back in our histories.
Perhaps men come to know one another quickest
and best on a plane of life, where in the fellowship
of destitution they struggle for the primal
needs and feel the keen sympathies which attest
the basal kinship of our common humanity.
Ours are not intellectual affinities—at least they
are not consciously these—but we feel shrewdly
the community of hunger and cold and isolation,
and we have drawn strangely near to each other
in this baffling struggle for a social footing, and
have tempered in our comradeship the biting cold
of the loneliness that haunts us on the outskirts
of a crowded working world.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Early on last Wednesday morning, in the gray
light of a cloudy day, I began the last stage of
the march to Chicago. A walk of something
less than thirty miles would take me to the heart
of the city.</p>
<p>There is an unfailing inspiration in these early
renewals of the journey. Solid food and a night
of unfathomable sleep have restored the waste of
tissue. I set out in the morning with a sense of
boundless freedom, with an opening day and the
whole wide world before me, with my heart leaping
in the joy of living and in high expectancy
of what the day may hold of experience and of
insight into the lives of my fellow-men.</p>
<p>On this particular morning there is added fulness
and freshness in that inbreathing which
gives the zest of life. Long had Chicago loomed
large to my imagination, and now it stood before
me, its volumes of black smoke mingling with
the leaden sky in the northern horizon.</p>
<p>How much it had come to mean to me, this
huge metropolis of the shifting centre of our
population! The unemployed were there, and I
had not seen them yet; hundreds lived there
who are fiercely at war with the existing state
of things, and their speech was an unknown
tongue to me, and my conventional imagination
could not compass the meaning of their imaginings;
and then the poor were there, the really
destitute, who always feel first and last of all
the pressure upon the limits of subsistence, and
who in the grim clutch of starvation underbid
one another for the work of the sweaters, until
the brain reels at the knowledge of the incredible
toil by which body and soul are kept together.
All this awaited me, the very core of the social
problem whose conditions I had set out to learn
in the terms of concrete experience.</p>
<p>Nor was I insensible to the charm of other
novelties. I have been pressing westward
through a land unknown to me. Gradually I
am beginning to see the essential provinciality
of a mind which knows the Eastern seaboard, and
has some measure of acquaintance with countries
and cities and with men from Ireland to Italy,
but which is densely ignorant of our own vast
domain, and shrinks from all that lies beyond
Philadelphia as belonging to “the West,” which
sums up the totality of a frontier, where man and
nature share a sympathetic wildness, and sometimes
vie in outbursts of lawless force. I have
not yet reached “the West” in any essential
departure from the social and industrial structure
of the East. And from the new point of
view, “the West” recedes ever farther from my
sight, until impatient desire sometimes spurs me
to a quicker journey, in the fear that the real
West may have faded from our map before I
reach it, and I may miss the delight of vital contact
with the untamed frontier.</p>
<p>Moreover, I could but feel a student’s kindling
interest in the larger vision of this great
centre of industrial life.—Its renaissance with
augmented vigor from the ashes of its earlier history.—The
swelling tide of its swarming people
until the fifteen hundred thousand mark is
reached and passed, and the mounting waves of
population roll in, each with the strength of an
army of fighting men.—The vastness of its productive
enterprises, where all the shrewd economies
of modern commerce reveal themselves, and
where skill and organizing power and the genius
of initiative win their quick recognition and rewards,
and men of parts pass swiftly from the
lowest to the highest places in the scale of productive
usefulness and power.—And then the
splendid vigor of its nobler living, its churches
and public schools and libraries and wise philanthropies,
and its impatient hunger after art,
which impels it to lay eager, unrelenting hands
upon the products of a score of centuries, and,
in a single day, to call them “mine.”</p>
<p>But I was fast nearing the goal of my desire,
and the claims of pressing needs were crowding
out the visions of the morning. I had passed
through the wilderness by which the Pittsburg
& Fort Wayne Railroad enters the outskirts of
Chicago. As far as the eye could reach had
stretched a dreary plain broken by the ridges of
sand-dunes, among which stood dwarfed oaks,
and gnarled and stunted pines, and the slender,
graceful stems of white-barked birches, on whose
twigs the last brown leaves of autumn rustled in
the winter wind. Upon my right I saw at last
the broad bosom of the lake, gleaming like
burnished steel under the threatening sky, and
breaking into a line of inky blackness where it
lapped the pebbles on the beach.</p>
<p>Presently I learn that I am in South Chicago,
and I note the converging lines of railways that
cross the streets on the level at every possible
angle, and the surface cable-cars, and the long
line of blast-furnaces by the lake, and elevators
here and there, and huge factories, and the myriad
homes of workingmen. It is all a blackened
chaos to my eyes, rude and crude and raw,
and I wonder that orderly commerce can flow
through channels so confused.</p>
<p>But the streets are soon more regular, and for
some time I have been checking off, by their decreasing
numerals, the approach to my journey’s
end. I am in the midst of a seemingly endless
suburban region. There are wide stretches of
open prairie, cut through by city streets; there
are city buildings of brick and stone standing
alone, or in groups of twos and threes, stark and
appealing in their lonely waiting for flanking
neighbors; and there are comfortable wooden
cottages set with an air of rural seclusion among
trees, and having lawns and garden areas about
them; and then there are whole squares built up
like the <i>nuclei</i> of new communities with conventional
three-storied dwellings, and the varied
shops of local retail trade, and abundant saloons.</p>
<p>Early in the afternoon I stop to rest on the
platform of the Woodlawn station of the Illinois
Central Railway. For some time I have had
glimpses within a highly boarded enclosure of
towering iron frames, with their graceful, sweeping
arches meeting at dizzy heights, and appearing
like the fragmentary skeletons of mammoths
mounted in an open paleontological museum.</p>
<p>The suburban trains are rushing in and out of
the station with nearly the frequency of elevated
trains in New York, and not far away are lines
of cable-cars, where a five-cent fare would take
me, in a few minutes, over the weary miles
which intervene to the business portion of the
town. But I have not one cent, and much less
five, and if I had so much as that it would go for
food, for I am tired, it is true, but I am much
hungrier than tired.</p>
<p>There is a hopeful prospect in the air of immense
activity in this neighborhood. I have
easily recognized the vast enclosure beyond as
Jackson Park, and the steel skeletons as the
frames of the exposition buildings. Thousands
of men are at work there, and the growing volume
of the enterprise may furnish a ready chance
of employment. I am but a few steps from the
Sixty-third Street entrance, and, in my ignorance,
I am soon pressing through, when a gate-keeper
challenges me, civilly:</p>
<p>“Let me see your ticket.”</p>
<p>“I have no ticket,” I reply.</p>
<p>He is roused in an instant, and he steps threateningly
toward me, his voice deepening in anger.</p>
<p>“Get out of this, then, you d—— hobo, or I’ll
put you out!”</p>
<p>At the gate I stand my ground in the right of
a citizen and explain that I am looking for work,
and am hopeful of a job from one of the bosses.</p>
<p>“This ain’t no time to see a boss,” is his retort;
“they’re all busy. If we let you fellows
in here we’d be lousy with hoboes in an hour.
Come at seven in the morning, if you like, and
take your chances with the others. Only my private
tip to you is that you ain’t got no chance,
not yet.”</p>
<p>Not far away there are many new buildings
going up, huge, unlovely shells of brick that
even at this stage tell plainly their struggles with
the purely utilitarian problem of a maximum of
room accommodation at a minimum of cost. I
walk toward the nearest one, pondering, the
while, the meaning of the word <i>hobo</i>, new to me,
and having an uncomfortable feeling that, for
the first time, I have been taken, not for an unemployed
laborer in honest search of work, but
for one of the professionally idle.</p>
<p>It has begun to rain, a dreary, sopping drizzle,
half mist, half melting snow, heavy with the soot
of the upper air, and it clings tenaciously, until
my threadbare outer coat is twice its normal
weight, and my leaking boots pump the slimy
pavement water at every step.</p>
<p>For two hours or more I go from one contractor
to another, among the new buildings, asking
work. The interviews are short and decisive.
The typical boss is he who is moving anxious-eyed
among his men with attention fixed upon
some detail. He hears without heeding my request,
and he shouts an order before he turns to
me with an imperative “No, I don’t want you!”
and sometimes an added curse.</p>
<p>“I guess you are the fiftieth man that has
asked me for a job to-day,” said one boss, more
communicative than the others. “I’m sorry for
you poor devils,” he added, with a searching look
into my face, “but there’s too many of you.”</p>
<p>My walk has carried me now through the coming
Midway Plaisance and past the grounds of
the new Chicago University to the outskirts of a
park. I enter there with a feeling of relief, for
I am soon out of the atmosphere of infinite employment
where there is no work for me. Here
there are open lawns, with snow crystals clinging
to the tender turf, and trees of bewildering
variety whose boughs are outstretched in graceful
benediction over winding walks and drives
and the curving, mossy banks of lakes.</p>
<p>When I emerge from this touch of nature and
high art it is upon a stately boulevard of double
drives and quadruple rows of sturdy elms which
line the bridle-paths and wide pavements. Mile
after mile I walk, tired and hungry and wet, and
quite lost in wonder. Is there in the wide world
a city street to match with this? Rising in a
paradise of landscape gardening it stretches its
majestic length like the broad sweep of another
<i>Champs Elysees</i>, flanked by palaces of uncounted
cost and unimagined horror of architecture,
opening here to a stretch of wide prairie, and
closing there to the front of a “block” of houses
of uncompromising Philistinism and decorations
of “unchastened splendor,” and reaching, at
times, its native dignity in a setting of buildings
which tell the final truth of the elegance of
simplicity.</p>
<p>It has grown dark when I enter Michigan
Avenue, and again my way stretches far before
me, this time under converging lines of lights
that seem to meet at an almost infinite distance.
The sense of infinity is heightened by the floating
mist, in which the nearer lights play with
an effect of orange halo about them, and the farther
lamps shine in an ever vaguer distance behind
their clinging veils of fog.</p>
<p>Scarcely a soul is in the street. It is a residence
quarter of much wealth, and like all else
that I have seen so far, of strangest incongruities.
Houses of lavish cost and shabbiest economy of
taste, so gorgeous that you can scarcely believe
them private homes, give way, at times, to lines
of brown fronts precisely like those which in unvarying
uniformity of basement and “stoop”
and four-storied façade, flank miles of dreary
side-streets in New York. These yield in turn
to churches and apartment-houses and hotels and
clubs—all creating an atmosphere of wealth and
of social refinement, while almost interspersed
with them are homes of apparent poverty and
certainly of gentility on the ravelled edge of
things. And bursting now through all this medley
is the clanging, rumbling rush of railway
traffic. I can scarcely believe my eyes at first,
but under the frowning walls of a towering armory
I am held up by the downward sweep of the
gates of a railway crossing, on the dead level of
the avenue, and am kept there until a freight-train
has crawled past its creaking length.</p>
<p>It all seems a meaningless chaos at the first,
but soon I feel the pulse of the life within it,
a young life of glorious vigor and of indomitable
resolve to attain what it so strongly feels though
vaguely knows. And here and there I can see
the promise of its fair fruition in lines of strength
and power and beauty, where the hand of some
true master has wrought a home for the abiding
of good taste.</p>
<p>Soon there is an abrupt end of buildings on
my right, and the land fades away into an open
plain, and from out the sleet-swept darkness beyond
comes faintly the sound of “crisping ripples
on the beach.” I know that I am at my
journey’s end, for I have begun to catch glimpses
of Ossa-piled-on-Pelion structures which rise in
graceless lines into the black night. I come up
all standing before one of these, a veritable Palazzo
Vecchio, huge, impenetrable, vast, bringing
into this New-World city something of the sense
of time and density of the Piazza della Signoria.</p>
<p>Here, too, the avenue is almost deserted, and
I turn sharply under the massive battlements of
this Florentine palace, to where the glare of
many lights and the counter-currents of street-crowds
attract me. Across Wabash Avenue I
pass on to State Street. My eye has just begun to
note the novelties of the scene when it falls upon
the figure of a young man. He stands in the
middle of the pavement at the corner, and swiftly
hands printed slips of white paper among the
moving crowd. Many persons pass unheeding,
but a few accept the proffered notice. I take
one, and I stop for a moment on the curb to read
it. Its purport as an invitation to attend a Gospel
meeting has become clear to me, when I find
the young man at my side. He wears a heavy
winter ulster that reaches to his boot-tops, and its
rolling collar is turned up snugly about his ears.
On his hands are dog-skin gloves, and the rays of
street-lights glisten in the myriad drops of half-frozen
mist that cling like heavy dew to the
rough, woollen surface of his coat. I must cut
a figure standing there, wet and travel-stained,
my teeth chattering audibly in the cold night-air,
and it is plainly my evident fitness as a field
for Christian work that has drawn to me the
notice of this young evangelist.</p>
<p>“That meeting is not far,” he is saying, “and
it’s warm there. Won’t you go?”</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_029.jpg" alt="It is raining. A man dressed in worn out clothes accepts a piece of paper from a well dressed man." /> <div class="caption"><p>“THAT MEETING IS NOT FAR,” HE IS SAYING, “AND IT’S WARM THERE. WON’T YOU GO?”</p> </div>
</div>
<p>“Thank you, I will,” is my ready reply, and
then he politely points the way down a side street
on the left where, he says, a large transparency
over the door marks the entrance to the meeting-hall.</p>
<p>The place is crowded with men—workingmen
many of them—and many are plainly of that
blear-eyed, bedraggled, cowering type which one
soon learns to distinguish from the workers.
Men pass freely in and out with no disturbance
to the meeting, and watching my chance I soon
slip into a vacant seat near the great stove that
burns red-hot half way up the room. Ah, the
luxury of the warmth and the undisputed right
to sit in restful comfort! Again and again, in the
afternoon I had sat down on the steps of some
public building, but from every passing eye had
come a shot of questioning suspicion, and once
a patrolling officer ordered me to move on with a
sharp reminder that “the step of a church was
no loafing-place.”</p>
<p>Deeper and deeper I sink into my seat. A
warm, seductive ease enfolds me. I dare not fall
asleep for fear of being turned into the street.
And yet the very hint of going out again into the
shelterless night comes over me in the dim sense
of fading consciousness as a thought so grotesquely
impossible that I nearly laugh aloud.
Out from this warmth and light and cover into
the pitiless inhospitality of the open town? Oh,
no, that is beyond conceiving! And all the while
I know—such is the subtlety of our instinctive
thinking—that it is the awful fear of this that
conquers now the overmastering sleep which
woos me.</p>
<p>The men are singing lustily under inspiring
leadership and to the accompaniment of a cornet
and harmonium. Short prayers are offered, and
fervent exhortations, interspersed with hymns,
are made, and finally the men are urged to
“testify.”</p>
<p>I follow in vague anxiety the change of exercise,
but, no clear idea reaches me; for in full
possession of my mind is the haunting fear of a
benediction which will send us out again. But
while the men are speaking in quick succession
there begins to pierce to the benumbed seat of
thought a sense of something very living. Their
speech, in simplest, homeliest phrase, is of things
most intimate and real. They speak of life—their
own—sunk to deepest degradation. They
tell the story of growing drunkenness and vice,
of hope fast fading out of life, of faith and honor
and self-respect all gone, and at last the outer
dark wherein men live to feed their passions and
blaspheme until they dare to die, or death anticipates
the courage of despair. And then the purport
of it all shines clear in what they have to tell
of a Divine hand reached out to them, of trembling
hope and love reborn, of desire after righteousness
breathing anew in a prayer for help.</p>
<p>Now I am all vividly alive and keen, for
standing straight not far from where I sit, is a
grand figure of a man. He is bronzed, deep-chested,
lithe, and in the setting of his shoulders
there is splendid strength, which shows again in
the broad, clean-cut hands that quiver in their
grip upon the seat in front. He has the modest
bearing of a gentleman, and his unfaltering voice
vibrates with a compelling sense of deep sincerity.</p>
<p>“I haven’t any story different from what
you’ve heard to-night, but I, too, want to tell
what God has done for me. When I got my
growth I went West, and turned cow-puncher.
I was young, and I liked the life and the men,
and I went over pretty much all the western
country, and there ain’t any kind of devilment
that cowboys get into that I didn’t have a hand
in. I never thought of God nor of my soul. I
never cared. I despised religion. I thought that
I was strong and master of myself. I drank and
swore and gambled, and did worse, and it never
troubled me a bit. But a time came when I
found that I wasn’t master. There was something
in me stronger than me, and that was the
love of drink. And, friends, that was the beginning
of the end. I began to lose my self-respect,
and the end of it was that there ain’t a poor
devil in this town that is sunk any lower than
what I was. You know what that means. One
night, a year and a half ago, I was walking
through Harrison Street. I was half-drunk on
barrel-house whiskey, and all I was thinking of
was how I could get up pluck enough to kill myself.
But I stopped in a crowd around some
Salvation Army people. A man older than me
was telling how he was helped by the power of
God out of a life like mine and made a man of
again. I liked the way he had, for he seemed
straight. I waited for him, and he told me, all
to myself, the story of Christ’s power to save
lost men, and how He lived and died to save us.
It seemed too good to be true. I’d known it in
a way, but I never knew it was meant for me.
And right away when I began to see that there
was hope for me yet, that I could get back my
self-respect, and be master of myself, not in my
own strength, which had failed me, but in His
strength, why, friends, my heart went right out
to the Saviour in a prayer for help. And what
I want to say most of all is this, that in all the
hard fight that I’ve had since, in all the ups and
downs of it, He hasn’t failed me once. He’s
made my life new to me, and I love Him from
my heart, and I know that in His strength I will
gain the victory at last. Friends, what the Bible
tells us about His ‘saving us from our sins’ is
true.”</p>
<p>He sits down, and a hymn is given out and
sung, but the truth which has found lodgement
in our hearts is the living truth of a human life
reclaimed. We have listened to the story of the
prodigal from his own lips. We have heard
again the cosmic parable of wandering and return;
the mystery of creation, and fall, and re-creation
by a power divine; the great, irrefutable
witness to the Truth in the history of a lost
soul come to itself and returning to the Father’s
house.</p>
<p>In the midst of the singing the leader walks
quietly down the aisle to the rear. Two ladies
are there struggling in a vain effort to quiet an
old man. They have come to help in the conduct
of the service, and the old man has increasingly
claimed their care, for he is drunk and is growing
violent. I have noticed him in his restless
movements. Upon his stooping figure he wears
an old army coat and cape that are dripping with
the rain. His gray mustache and beard are
long and matted, and stained all round his
mouth with the deep brown of tobacco-juice.
His unkempt hair falls in frowsy masses about
his ears, and his lustreless eyes, inflamed and expressionless,
bulge from their swollen sockets.</p>
<p>In an instant the leader’s strong hand is upon
him, and with no commotion above the sound
of song the old man is soon without the hall, and
the leader back in his place again singing as
heartily as ever.</p>
<p>When the meeting ends the crowd moves
slowly and listlessly toward the door, as though
its prevailing mood were aimless beyond the dull
necessity of passing the time. The fine rain and
melting snow are still falling through the mist.
The men drift away singly or in groups of
twos and threes, under the flickering lights,
their heads bent slightly forward and their
bare hands thrust into the side-pockets of their
trousers.</p>
<p>In the crush about the foot of the aisle a young
man speaks to me:</p>
<p>“You are pretty wet, aren’t you?” he says,
quietly, as the jam presses him against me.</p>
<p>I see at a glance that he is far more respectable
than I, and my first mental attitude is one of
hospitality to further evangelizing effort. But
I shift at once, for without waiting for a reply
from me, he adds:</p>
<p>“It’s d—— tough to go out into that,” as he
turns up the collar of his light covert coat in the
blast of piercing dampness which strikes our
faces through the open door.</p>
<p>“It is tough,” I agree, as I study his face. He
is about thirty, I should say, and almost six feet
high, but of rather slender figure. He is smooth-shaven,
and an effect of pallor is heightened by
yellow hair and pale blue eyes, with dark arcs
beneath them and a bluish tinge about his
mouth. Plainly he has been little exposed to the
outer air, but he is an habitual workman, as his
hands attest unmistakably when he lifts them to
adjust his coat-collar.</p>
<p>“Ain’t you got no place to go to?” he asks.</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“No more have I,” he adds, laconically. And
then, after a pause:</p>
<p>“When did you strike this town?”</p>
<p>“This evening.”</p>
<p>“Looking for a job?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Same as me. What kind of a job?”</p>
<p>“Any kind that I can get.”</p>
<p>“Ain’t you got a trade?”</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“Well, I don’t believe you are any worse off
for that here. I struck the place yesterday and
I ain’t never seen so many idle men and hoboes
in my life before. When the iron-works in
Cleveland closed down, that laid me off. I
couldn’t get no job there, and so I beat my way
here. I had fifty cents in my clothes and that
got me something to eat yesterday and a bed
last night, but I spent my last cent for grub this
noon. I’ve been to most every foundry in Chicago,
I guess, but I ain’t found any sign of a job
yet. Where are you going to put in the night?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know, for I haven’t any money
either.”</p>
<p>“I am going to the Harrison Street station
and I’ll show you the way, partner, if you like.
My name is Clark, Thomas L. Clark,” he adds,
with a particularity which is another proof of his
belonging to a higher order of workingmen
than I.</p>
<p>I tell him my name, but he evidently considers
it not a serviceable one, for he ignores it
from the first, and consistently makes use of
“partner.”</p>
<p>We walk together in the direction of State
Street, and Clark explains to me that we must
not go to the station until after midnight, a fact
which he had learned, and the reasons for it,
from an acquaintance in a cheap lodging-house
where he had spent the night before.</p>
<p>At the corner I hold Clark for a moment until
my eyes have caught the character of the street.
It is wide, with broad pavements on each side,
and is lined with great business houses of retail
trade, the “department store” the prevailing
type. The shop-windows are ablaze with electric
lights, and gorgeous as to displays which are
taking on a holiday character. Whole fronts of
some of the buildings are fairly covered with
temporary signs, painted in gigantic letters on
canvas stretched on wooden frames, and vying
fiercely in strident announcements of “sweeping
reductions” and “moving,” and “bankrupt,”
and “fire sales.”</p>
<p>There is little noise upon the street aside from
the almost constant swishing rush of cable-cars
and the irritating clangor of their gongs. The
crowds had wholly disappeared. There are a few
pedestrians, who hold their umbrellas close above
their heads, and step briskly in evident haste to
get in out of the stormy night, and we pass men
of our own type who are drifting aimlessly, and
now and then a stalwart officer, well-booted and
snug under his waterproof, with his arms folded
and his club held tight in the pressure of an
armpit.</p>
<p>We are walking south along the west side of
State Street. There is a swift social decline
here, for every door we pass is that of a saloon,
and above us hang frequent transparencies which
advertise lodgings at ten and fifteen cents, while
across the way are the flaring lights of a cheap
theatre.</p>
<p>“We can get warm in here,” says Clark, abruptly,
and he turns into a doorway which opens
on the street.</p>
<p>I follow him down a narrow passage whose
faint light enters through a stained-glass partition,
which hems it in along the inner side-wall of
the building. Through a door at the end of
the passage we enter a large room brilliantly
lighted, and I follow Clark to an iron stove at
one side in which a coal fire burns furiously. In
the corner near us are three men, slouching, listless,
weary specimens of their kind, who are playing
“Comrades” with a gusto curiously out of
keeping with their looks of bored fatigue. One
has a harp, another a violin, and the third drums
ceaselessly upon a piano of harsh, metallic tone.</p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i039" style="max-width: 155.5em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_039.jpg" alt="A room full of men and women sitting a tables. In the foreground there are two musicians and two men huddled around a heater." />
<div class="caption"><p>IN THE CORNER NEAR US ARE THREE MEN, SLOUCHING, LISTLESS,
WEARY SPECIMENS OF THEIR KIND, WHO ARE PLAYING “COMRADES.”</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>There are a dozen round tables in the room,
and at these are seated small groups of men and
women drinking beer. Some of the men are
workmen, but most are loafers, not of the tramp
but of the rough civic type.</p>
<p>The women are young, most of them very
young, and there is little trace of beauty and almost
none of hard brutality in any face among
them. They are simply commonplace. As a company
the women lack the hale robustness of the
men. They are mostly little women, of slight figures,
and some add to this a transparency of skin
and a feverish brightness of eye which clearly
mark the sure burning of consumption. A few
are cast in sturdier mould, and, with faces flushed
with drink, they look strong and healthy. All
seem warmly dressed in cheap, worn garments
suited to the season, and there are many touches
of finery and some even of taste in their shabby
winter hats. Each carries a leather purse in her
hand, or allows it to lie on the table before her
with her gloves. The hands of nearly all of
them are bare, and you see at once that they are
large and coarse and very dirty.</p>
<p>Suddenly you note that the social atmosphere
is one of strangest, completest camaraderie. The
conversation is the blasphemous, obscenest gossip
of degraded men that keeps the deal level of
the ordinary unrelieved by anger or by mirth,
and varying only with the indifferent interchange
of men’s and women’s voices.</p>
<p>The naturalness and untrammelled social ease
have blinded you for a time to what you really
see, and then the black reality reveals itself in
human degradation below which there is no
depth—as though lost, sexless souls were already
met upon a common plane of deepest knowledge
of all evil. And yet in very truth they are living
fellow men and women, in whom have centred
the strength of natural love and hope, and centres
still the constraining love of a Heavenly Father.</p>
<p>Clark is whispering in my ear:</p>
<p>“I guess we’d better get out of this. That
waiter has his eye on us. In a minute he’ll ask
us for our orders.”</p>
<p>We pass again through the garish lights that
flood the pavements before saloons from whose
inner chambers come the tinkling, brassy notes
of cheap music.</p>
<p>“Are they all like that place we’ve been in?”
I ask.</p>
<p>“These dives, you mean?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“They are all the same. There are hundreds
like them in this town,” he answers.</p>
<p>Near the centre of what appears to be the
chief business section of the street Clark turns
into a dark entry.</p>
<p>“Come up here,” he says to me over his
shoulder.</p>
<p>“What is this?” I call after him from the
threshold.</p>
<p>“Here’s where I slept last night,” he replies.</p>
<p>I follow up a flight of filthy wooden steps.
Under the light of a single gas-jet which burns
faintly over the first landing, we turn to a door
at the right. Within is a sustained volume of
men’s voices at conversation pitch, and we enter
at once upon a company of thirty or forty men
seated on wooden benches around a base-burner,
or standing in groups within the compass of its
grateful warmth. The unmoving air is thick
with tobacco-smoke, and dense with pollution beyond
all but the suggesting power of words. An
electric arc gleams from the centre-ceiling, and
sputters and hisses above the noise of mingled
speech. In the ghastly light the floor and walls
are covered with black shadows, sharply articulated,
and revealing clearly through their restless
movements the ragged, unkempt condition
of the men.</p>
<p>In one corner is an office quite like a ticket-booth
at an athletic field, and behind the narrow
window stands a man with an open book before
him. His eyes wander ceaselessly over the company,
and presently he steps out into the open
room. He is making straight for Clark and me;
his grease-stained, worn, black suit hanging loose
about his wasted figure, a something not unlike a
small decanter-stopper glistening on the bosom
of his soiled, collarless, white shirt, his singularly
repulsive face growing clearer as he comes, the
receding forehead and small, weak, close-set
piercing eyes, the high cheek-bones and bristling
black mustache over a drooping mouth stained
with tobacco. He walks straight up to Clark.</p>
<p>“You was here last night?” he asks with rising
inflection and a German accent.</p>
<p>“Yes,” says Clark. “I come up to-night to
see a fellow I know,” he adds of his own initiative.</p>
<p>“Do you see him?” says the clerk.</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“Was you and your pal going to take beds?”</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>And in the awkward situation thus created,
Clark and I go out once more from the luxury of
warmth and shelter.</p>
<p>The pavements are now in possession of
crowds returning from the theatres, and at certain
crossings is a rush for cable-cars going
south. We turn down Quincy Street. It is still
almost an hour before midnight. Simultaneously
we notice a deep, wide entry of a business
house, so deep that its inner corners are quite
dry, and one of them is fairly shielded from the
wind. With a mutual impulse we turn in, and
crouch close together on the paved floor in the
shade of the sheltered corner.</p>
<p>We sit in perfect silence for a time. Our
teeth have begun again to chatter, and it is difficult
to speak. Besides, we have nothing to say
beyond the wish that we were fed and warmed
and sheltered, and this is such a deepening longing
to us both that we have begun to keep a reverent
silence about it.</p>
<p>Not half a score of people pass us as we crouch
there through a quarter of an hour or more, and
none of them sees us, which is fortunate; for one
of the number is a policeman, who walks down
the other side, swinging his club in easy rhythm
to his sauntering steps.</p>
<p>But now once more we feel the tension of anxious
waiting, for again we hear the sound of footsteps
fast approaching. A lifted umbrella first
appears, and under it a woman’s dark skirt, all wet
about the hem, and clinging to her ankles as she
walks and vainly tries to hold it free from the
sloppy pavement. Her eyes are on the ground,
and she is humming softly to herself, and we
think that she is safely past, when both of us
start suddenly to a little cry, an exclamation of
surprise:</p>
<p>“Oh-h-h! what in h— are you boys doing
there?” And the question has in it a note of
light-hearted merriment, as though the words
had come upon a wave of rippling laughter.</p>
<p>She is facing us near at hand, her head framed
in the dark umbrella which rests upon her
shoulder, and her face in the full side-light of a
neighboring window. Out of large dark eyes she
is looking straight at us, and I mark at once the
clean-cut pencilling of her eyebrows against a
skin of natural pallor, and the backward sweep
of black hair from a low forehead and about her
ears. She is no beauty, but her mouth is one of
almost faultless drawing, large and sensitive and
firm, with a dimple at each corner, and her chin
of perfect moulding fades into the graceful lines
of a well-rounded throat.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_047.jpg" alt="It is raining. A woman with an umbrella over her head stands in front of men sitting on the sidewalk." /> <div class="caption"><p>SHE IS FACING US NEAR AT HAND, HER HEAD FRAMED IN THE DARK UMBRELLA WHICH RESTS UPON HER SHOULDER.</p> </div>
</div>
<p>I am struck dumb for the moment, but Clark
is disturbed in no wise by the situation, and is
answering her in perfect calmness that we have
taken shelter there, and “won’t you go on,” he
asks, “for you may attract to us the notice of a
cop.”</p>
<p>“He’s not coming this way yet awhile,” she
retorted; “I met him just now at the corner.”</p>
<p>They fall into easy, natural dialogue, and the
girl soon learns that we are newly come to Chicago
seeking work, and hungry and shelterless
we are waiting for the right hour in which to go
to the station-house.</p>
<p>“And why did you ever come to this God-condemned
town?” she asks. “There’s thousands
of boys like you here, and no jobs for none
of you.”</p>
<p>There is quick resentment in Clark’s sharp
rejoinder:</p>
<p>“And why in h— did <em>you</em> come?” But
the girl’s good-nature is unruffled; you simply
feel an instinctive tightening of her grip upon
herself as her figure straightens slightly to the
reply:</p>
<p>“I come to hustle, sonny, and I guess this is
as good a place to hustle in as any. I’m in ——
hard luck to-night, for I ain’t made a cent, and
I met that cop on —— Street. He’s spotted me.
I had to go down into my stocking and give him
my last dollar to fix him, or else he’d have run
me in, and I’ve been up three times this week.
The judge told me he’d send me to the Bridewell
next time.” She is a girl of eighteen, or, perhaps,
of twenty years.</p>
<p>In another moment I see her lift her young,
unfaltering eyes to a passing stranger, and in
them, unashamed, is the nameless questioning
which takes surest hold on hell.</p>
<p>And now she has turned again, and one soiled,
gloveless hand is outstretched to us.</p>
<p>“I’m going, boys,” she says. “Good-night.
You are in harder luck than me, for I ain’t hungry
and I’ve got a place to sleep, so you take this.
It ain’t much, but it’s all I’ve got. Good luck to
you. Good-night.”</p>
<p>Men who have felt it never speak lightly of
fear, nor are they ashamed to own to it—the fear
that is fear, when unprepared you face a sudden
danger whose measure you cannot know; when
the scalp tightens with a creeping movement and
the hair lifts itself on end, and each muscle
stiffens in the cold of swift paralysis, while your
brain throbs with the sudden rush of hot blood.
But there is a feeling beyond that—“when the
nerves prick and tingle and the heart is sick,”
and the soul in ineffable agony of doubt and fear
cries through a black and Godless void for some
answer to the mystery of life.</p>
<p>A silver coin is glistening in Clark’s open
palm.</p>
<p>“There’s two beers in this, partner, and a free
lunch for both of us,” he is saying. “Let’s go
to a saloon.”</p>
<p>Five minutes later he leaves me in high indignation,
with a “Stay, then, and be damned!”
and I feel some uncertainty about his coming
back.</p>
<p>Soon I fall into the dreamless torpor which
comes to relieve the too-heavy hearted. But
from out its stupor I waken sharply to quickest
sensibility. Quivering darts of pain are shooting
swiftly through my body from a burning
centre in my thigh. A night watchman stands
over me, holding a dark lantern to my face. He
has roused me with a brutal kick. In my heart
black murder reigns alone for a moment, and
then I remember what I am, and I limp
into the street speechless under the watchman’s
curses.</p>
<p>I had misjudged Clark. I have not waited
long when I see him walking toward me. He is
warmed and fed, and has soon forgot his earlier
wrath in eagerness to “do” the night watchman.
From this, however, it is not difficult to dissuade
him on the ground of the weakness of our
legal status as compared with his.</p>
<p>We walk now toward Harrison Street, and as
we enter it, there shines high from out the darkness
an illumined face of a clock with its hands
pointing to a few minutes past the hour of twelve.
A freight-train is drawing slowly into the station-yard,
creaking and jolting with the varying
tug of a locomotive that pants deeply to a steady
pull, and then puffs hard in sudden spurts which
send its wheels “racing” on the icy rails. The
train stands still with a sound of communicated
bumping which loses itself far down the yard,
and then there come swarming from the cars a
score or two of tramps who have beaten their way
into the city. They know their ground, for silent
and stooping in the wet they make straight,
as with a common impulse, to the station-house
on the corner.</p>
<p>“We’ll leave them go in first,” says Clark,
“it’s all the better for us,” and then we walk up
and down before the plain brick building, with
the lights streaming from its basement and first-floor
windows.</p>
<p>By a short flight of steps we finally enter a
small passage which opens into a large, square
room. A few police officers and reporters are
standing about in casual conversation. One officer,
with unerring judgment of our need, beckons
us his way, and, without a word, he points
us down the steps into the basement. A locked
door of iron grating blocks the way at the foot of
the steps, and we stand there for some minutes
while a newly arrived prisoner is being registered
and searched. Behind a high desk sits a typical,
robust officer who asks questions and notes the
answers in his book, and beside him, near at hand,
a matronly woman is sewing with an air of domesticity
and entire oblivion to her unusual surroundings,
while near the prisoner before the
desk, stand two policemen who have “run him
in.”</p>
<p>All these are in a wide corridor which extends
east and west through the depth of the building.
In its south wall are some half dozen doors of iron
grating, each opening into a small passage at right
angles to the main corridor, and the cells range
along the sides of these.</p>
<p>The prisoner has soon been disposed of. The
officer on duty then unlocks the door behind
which we stand, and admits us before the desk.
The registrar looks up, an expression of irritation
in his face.</p>
<p>“More men to spend the night?” he asks.</p>
<p>“Well, turn in,” he adds, with a jerk of his
head to the left. “I’ve got no more room for
names. I guess I’ve entered two hundred lodgers
and more already to-night.”</p>
<p>Clark and I need no further directions. Overflowing
through the open door of the farthest passage
upon the floor of the main corridor are the
sprawling figures of men asleep. We walk in
among them.</p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i055" style="max-width: 154.9375em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_055.jpg" alt="Men, without jackets or shoes, sprawled all over the floor with little open space. The bars of a jail can be seen." />
<div class="caption"><p>OVERFLOWING THROUGH THE OPEN DOOR OF THE FARTHEST PASSAGE UPON THE
FLOOR OF THE MAIN CORRIDOR ARE THE SPRAWLING FIGURES OF MEN ASLEEP.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>“If we ain’t never had ’em, I guess we’ll catch
’em to-night,” says Clark, softly in my ear, and
the words take on a sickening significance as we
enter an unventilated atmosphere of foulest pollution,
and we see more clearly the frowzy, ragged
garments of unclean men, and have glimpses
here and there of caking filth upon a naked limb.</p>
<p>The wisdom of a late hour of retiring is at once
apparent when we have sight of the inner passage.
Not a square foot of the dark, concrete floor is
visible. The space is packed with men all lying
on their right sides with their legs drawn up, and
each man’s legs pressed close in behind those of
the man in front.</p>
<p>Clark draws from an inside pocket a roll of old
newspapers, and hands me one. We spread them
on the pavement as a Mohammedan unrolls his
mat for prayers, and then we take off our boots
and coats. Our soaked, pulpy boots we fold in
our jackets and use them as pillows, and we soften
our bed by spreading over the newspapers our
outer coats, which thus have a chance to dry in
the warmth of the room and in that which comes
from our bodies. We need no covering in the
steaming heat in which we lie, and I can see at a
glance that Clark and I are more fortunate than
most of the other men, for few of them have outer
coats, and in their threadbare, filthy garments
they lie with nothing but paper between them
and the floor, their heads pillowed on their arms.</p>
<p>By no means are all of them asleep. In the
thick air above their reclining figures there is an
unceasing murmur of low, gruff voices. What
words can fit the hellish quality of that strange
converse? It is not human, though it comes from
living men; it has no humor though it touches
life most intimately; it knows hot hate and craving
need and blank indifference, but all these
feelings speak alike a tongue of utter blasphemy;
and it is not prurient even, though it reeks with
coarse obscenity.</p>
<p>And in the men themselves, how widely severed
from all things human is the prevailing type!—Their
bloated, unwashed flesh and unkempt
hair; their hideous ugliness of face, unreclaimed
by marks of inner strength and force, but revealing
rather, in the relaxation of sleep, a deepening
of the lines of weakness, until you read in
plainest characters the paralysis of the will. And
then there are the stealthy, restless eyes of those
who are awake, eyes set in faces which lack utterly
the strength of honest labor and even that
of criminal wit.</p>
<p>But there are marked exceptions to the prevailing
type, men like Clark, sound and strong
in flesh, and having about them the signs of habitual
decency, and their faces stamped with the
open frankness which comes of earning a living
by honest work. Some of these are young immigrants,
newly come, most evidently, and I picture
their rude awakenings from golden dreams of a
land of plenty.</p>
<p>Clark is fast asleep beside me, but I cannot
sleep for gnawing hunger and the dull pain of
lying bruised and sore upon the hard, paved floor.</p>
<p>There is sudden, nervous movement near me.
Looking up I see a man seated straight, tugging
frantically at his shirt, and swearing viciously the
while in muffled tones. In a moment he has torn
the garment off, and his crooked, bony fingers are
passing swiftly over the shrivelled skin of his old,
lean body in search of his tormentors, and his
oaths come lisping from his toothless mouth. The
men about him are ordering him, with deepening
curses, to lie down and keep still.</p>
<p>The former quiet soon returns, and in it I lie
thinking of another world I know, a world of
men and women whose plane of life is removed
from this by all the distance of the infinite.
Faith and love and high resolve are there, the inspirers
of true living, and courage spurs to unflinching
effort, and hope lights the way of unsuccess
and gives vision through the vale of sorrow
and of death. And the common intercourse is
the perfect freedom which is bred of high allegiance
to inborn courtesy and honor.</p>
<p>What living link is there that joins these
worlds together, and gives vital meaning to the
confirmation of brotherhood spoken in the divine
words of the Apostle: “We, being many, are
one body in Christ, and everyone members one
of another?”</p>
<p>Pondering this mystery I fall asleep, and so
ends my first day in the army of the unemployed.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II<br/><br/> <small>LIVING BY ODD JOBS</small></h2></div>
<p class="location">
No. — Blue Island Avenue, Chicago,</p>
<p class="date">
Saturday, December 19, 1891.</p>
<p>When life is lived in its simplest terms, one
is brought to marvellous intimacy with vital processes.
And through this intimacy no disclosure
is more wonderful than that of nature’s quick
response. Exhausted by hard labor, until your
muscles quiver in impotent loss of energy, you
sit down to eat and drink, and rise up to the play
of a physical revival wherein you are renewed by
the mystery of intussusception, and your responsive
mood quickens to the tension of the involution
whence life’s energies flow new and fresh again.
Another hour may bring as great a change, and
the full tide of your rising spirits may set swiftly
back. It is as though you were a little child
once more, and your moods obedient to little
things.</p>
<p>When living is a daily struggle with the problems
of what you shall eat and what you shall
drink, and wherewithal you shall be clothed, you
take no anxious thought for the morrow, quite
content to let the morrow take thought for the
things of itself, for sufficient unto the day is the
evil thereof. Your heart will leap with hope at
any brightening of your lot, and will sink in deep
despair when the way grows dark. The road of
your salvation is by the strait gate and the narrow
way of courage and persistent effort and provident
foresight, and whence are these to come to
you whose courage is born of warmth and a
square meal, and whose despair comes with returning
hunger? A world all bright with hope
can be had on the terms of heat and food, and
the sense of these can be induced for a nickel in
a “barrel-house.”</p>
<p>When Clark and I awakened in the early morning,
after our first night in the station, the dull
gray dawn was dimming the gas, and in the lurid
light we could see a writhing movement in the
prostrate coiling mass of reeking humanity about
us. We had lost the feeling of hunger, but a
feverish thirst was burning to the roots of our
tongues. We could scarcely move for the pain
of sore and stiffened muscles, and I thought at
first that my right leg was paralyzed from the
night watchman’s kick. Only a few hours before,
we had entered the station-house from the
streets in eager willingness for any escape from
their cold exposure, and now with intensified desire
we longed for the outer air at any cost of
hardship.</p>
<p>But we were not free to go out at once. The
officer on duty brusquely ordered us back among
the men when we approached him with a request
to be allowed to leave. We were greeted with a
burst of mocking glee as we walked back to our
places, and among the comments was a call to me:
“What have you pinched, whiskers?”</p>
<p>The reason for the delay was soon apparent,
for in a few moments we were all marched down
the main corridor and into the passage which
opened nearest to the registrar’s desk. There we
waited, closely huddled, the iron door locked upon
us, while an examination was made as to whether
any of the prisoners had been robbed. When all
was reported right, the door was unlocked and we
were allowed to file slowly out past the entrance
of the kitchen. There stood the cook with an
assistant, and he gave to each man as he passed a
bowl of steaming coffee and a piece of bread. We
drank the coffee at a gulp, and each man was eating
bread with wolfish bites as he climbed the
steps and walked out into the street.</p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i063" style="max-width: 157.0625em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_063.jpg" alt="A line of men in worn out clothes exiting through a door watched by a policeman. Many of them are eating bread." />
<div class="caption"><p>THE POLICE-STATION BREAKFAST.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>Every succeeding breath in the outer air
seemed to carry its cleansing coolness farther
down into our lungs. It was like the feeling of
cold water to a parched throat. The sky was overcast,
but the storm had ceased, and the temperature
had fallen to several degrees of frost, and
this gave a freshness and vigor to the air which
brightened the world for us amazingly.</p>
<p>We could walk dry-shod in the measure that
we could walk at all. Clark was rather stiff at
the start, and I could make scarcely any progress
alone, but Clark generously lent me a shoulder,
and his arm was frequently around me at the
street crossings. All this was most naturally
done. The thought of deserting me because I
had gone lame seemed never to occur to him. He
must have known that his own good chances were
seriously lessened by his having me upon his
hands, but he accepted this as though it were inevitable.
There was no mawkish sympathy in
his manner; he was in for practical helpfulness
only, and now and again he would withdraw his
support, and, standing off, would watch me execute
his command: “Now take a brace, partner,
and let’s see you go it alone.”</p>
<p>At Van Buren Street we turned, to the Rock
Island Railway station, and in the waiting-room
we quenched our thirst as best we could at the
drinking-fountain. Many of the men had taken
the direction of South Clark Street. I asked
Clark why.</p>
<p>“There’s barrel-houses down there,” he explained.</p>
<p>The word had come upon me repeatedly in the
last day, with only a dim suggestion of its meaning,
and so I owned to my ignorance.</p>
<p>“A barrel-house?” said Clark. “That’s a
dive where they keep cheap whiskey on tap; you
can get a pint for a nickel. It’s about the size
of the whiskey you want for the thirst you get in
a station-house, I’m thinking,” he added. And
then more to himself than to me: “I’m damned
if I don’t wish I had some now to wash that air
out of my mouth.”</p>
<p>His face was very wry, and there was returning
to it the expression of hopelessness which it
had worn while we crouched for shelter in the
doorway on the night before. It cut you to the
quick. His light-blue eyes, which had drawn
me from the first by the honest directness of their
gaze, now began to lose their human, speaking
quality and to take on the dumb, beseeching look
of a hunted beast.</p>
<p>The bread and coffee and clean air had revived
us both. I dreaded a swift relapse, and so I urged
a wash, in the hope of its bracing effect. But
where could we achieve this simple need? Certainly
not in the wash-room of the station, for we
had trespassed dangerously far in drinking at the
fountain, and the eye of more than one employee
was already upon us. There was no hotel into
whose public lavatory we could pass unchallenged,
and not so much upon Clark’s account as
upon mine. There remained the open lake; so
we walked up Van Buren Street and across the
Lake Park and the railway tracks to the edge of
the outer harbor. Here we knelt among the
broken fragments of ice and bathed our faces and
hands. It was vigorous exercise to rub them dry
before they chapped in the winter wind. It
warmed us, and the feeling of relative cleanness
was enheartening. And then I sat down and
dipped up water in one hand and applied it, until
I had a cold saturated cushion against the bruise
on my leg. This wrought wonderful relief until
the wet cloth froze, and then it chafed the bruise
badly for a time.</p>
<p>But I could walk alone and fairly well now.
We turned up Michigan Avenue and followed it
to the river, discussing, as we went, a plan of
action. Clark was for going at once to the far
North Side in search of employment at various
iron-works and foundries there, of whose existence
he had learned. I longed for the means of
early relief from the reviving pangs of hunger
through some chance job which I hoped that we
might obtain. This was a new idea to Clark.
He was a raw recruit in the army of the unemployed.
That he might look for other work than
that which was in the line of his trade had not
yet presented itself to him as a possibility. He
shrank from it with the instinctive dislike of a
conservative for a new way. And all our early
essays confirmed him in his aversion. We went
from door to door of the great wholesale business
houses at the head of Michigan Avenue. Large
delivery trucks stood lined up along the curb on
both sides, and there was the bustle across the
pavement of much loading and unloading of
wares. Workmen in leather aprons were handling
packed boxes with the swiftness and dexterity
of long practice. At half a score of houses we
sought out an overseer or a superintendent and
asked to be set to work; but, without a moment’s
hesitation in a single case, we were told, with
varying degrees of emphasis, that we were not
needed, not even for some chance, exceptional
demand.</p>
<p>It is difficult to describe the discouragement
which results from such an experience. All
about you is the tumultuous industry of a great
city. You feel something of the splendid power
of its ceaseless productivity; you guess at its vast
consuming; and in the din of its noisy traffic you
watch the swift shuttles which weave the varied
fabric of its business. Its complexities and
interdependencies bear down upon you with
an inspiring sense of the volume of human life
spent in ministering to life. Its multitudes
throng you upon the streets, and you read in
countless faces the story of unending struggle
to keep abreast with pressing duty. Work?
Everywhere about you there is work, stupendous,
appalling, cumulative in its volume and intensity
with the increasing momentum of a world-wide
trade, which is driven by the natural forces of
demand and supply and keenest competition.
Men everywhere are staggering under burdens
too grievous to be borne. And here are you idle,
yet counting it the greatest boon if you might
but add your strength to the mighty struggle.</p>
<p>Is there then no demand for labor? There is
most importunate, insatiable demand for all work
of finer skilfulness, for all men who can assume
responsibility and give new efficiency to productive
forces, or direct them into channels for the
development of new wealth. But in the presence
of this demand Clark and I stood asking hire for
the potential physical energies of two hungry
human bodies, and, standing so, we were but two
units in a like multitude of unemployed.</p>
<p>When we reached the river I had difficulty in
dissuading Clark from his confirmed resolve to
pass on to the North Side in pursuit of his earlier
plan. He had no thought of leaving me behind.
He urged that a chance job was as probable along
his route as any other. But he consented at last
to another hour of search in the immediate vicinity.</p>
<p>We were in South Water Street; we walked
west until we had crossed State and had come to
the corner of Dearborn Street. Walking became
increasingly difficult, for the pavements were
piled high with boxes and barrels and crates full
of all manner of fruits and vegetables, and
wooden coops packed with live game and poultry.
A narrow passage remained between the piles.
Through this we picked our way, carefully avoiding
empty boxes and hand-trucks and stray measures
that lay strewn about. On each side of the
street buildings of brick or stone, fairly uniform
in height, rose four-storied and many windowed,
with the monotony of their straight lines relieved
by the curves of arched windows, each bearing a
protruding keystone. Over the wide fronts of
the shops sagged awnings in various stages of
faded color and unrepair, their iron frames lying
uncovered and unsightly against the fluted canvas.
Along both curbs were backed continuous
rows of drays and trucks and market-wagons.
The two lines of horses stood blanketed in the
cold, facing each other across a narrow opening
down the stone-paved street, and more than anything
else they resembled lines of picketed
cavalry.</p>
<p>We soon felt the friction of the crowd as it
steered its devious course along the littered pavement,
brushing against groups of purchasers who
stood examining sample wares, and against idlers
leaning to the doorposts with hands in their trousers’
pockets, and through the cross currents of
drivers and shopmen who busily took on or discharged
the loads.</p>
<p>The very confusion and hurry of the scene,
while they suggested the chance of work, were
really an added embarrassment to our search.
More than under other circumstances we shrank
from asking employment from men hard driven
by the “instant need of things.” And this instinctive
feeling was fully justified in the course
of the actual quest. Of common hands there was
an abundance, and ours, held out for sale, were
of the nature of a provocation to men cumbered
by complex care. Occasionally we could not get
access to an employer; and when we did, we
sometimes received a civil “no,” but commonly
an emphatic one in a vent of evil temper.</p>
<p>At one moment an old gentleman was looking
up at us over the tops of his spectacles as we stood
at the foot of his desk. There was much shrewdness
in his eye, and his face was deeply lined, but
his speech revealed the frankness of a courteous
nature.</p>
<p>“No, I’m sorry,” he was saying, “I’m sorry
that I can give you nothing to do. The fact is,
I’ve got to lay off three men at the end of the
week. My business don’t warrant my keeping
them. I hope you’ll be more fortunate elsewhere.”</p>
<p>A minute later we were standing waiting
for the attention of a square-shouldered, thick-necked
dealer who was in angry dispute with a
subordinate. His face was still distorted when
he turned upon us, and his dilating eyes sought
mine with an expression of growing impatience.</p>
<p>“We are looking for a job, sir,” I began.
“Can you give us a chance to work?”</p>
<p>“No, I can’t, —— you! Out you go, now!”
And then to a man near the door: “—— your
soul, Kelly, I’ve told you to keep these bums out
of here. If you let in another one I’ll fire you,
as sure as hell.”</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_073.jpg" alt="In a warehouse one well dressed man is pointing at two poorly dressed men." /> <div class="caption"><p>“OUT YOU GO, NOW.”</p> </div>
</div>
<p>The hour was nearly up, and there was apparently
nothing for it but to start north in accordance
with Clark’s plan and in hope of better fortune.
I felt as though I could not go. I was
fairly faint with hunger, and a curious light-headedness
had possessed me. The sights and
sounds about us took on a strange unreality, and
I could not rid myself of the feeling of moving
and speaking in a dream. Again and again I was
conscious of a repetition of identical experience,
recalling the same circumstances in some faintly
remembered past, and even before I spoke at
times, I had an eerie sense of having uttered the
coming sentences before under precisely similar
conditions. The one fact to which consciousness
held with unshaken certainty was the strong
craving for food. And this was not so much a
positive pain, as it was a sickening, benumbing
influence. My hand would all but go out in
reach for fruit that lay exposed about me, and
the thought that the act would be wrong, and
would get me into trouble, followed the impulse
afar, and was forced into action as a checking
conviction by a distinct effort of the will.</p>
<p>We turned into one shop more. The pavement
in front was heaped with crates packed with
oranges, and bound around the centre and the
ends with iron bands. Three high they stood on
end, and four and five in a row along the curb,
while backed up against them were two empty
trucks with slats sloping capaciously at the
sides.</p>
<p>There was confusion within the shop. A
dealer and two drivers were swearing loudly,
each on a line of independent grievance. Two
or three shopmen were bustling about in zealous
execution of orders. Men who may have been
customers were waiting impatiently for attention,
and clerks added to the confusion as with papers
in hand they passed quickly in and out of offices
at the rear. It appeared the most unpromising
place for us that we had entered, and we were
prepared for a refusal more than commonly emphatic,
when to our almost overwhelming surprise
the dealer hailed us:</p>
<p>“Say, you men, do you want a job? Go out
and load them oranges, and I’ll give you fifty
cents apiece.”</p>
<p>We did not stagger nor clasp each other’s
hands in an ecstasy of relief; we simply turned
without a word, and hurrying to the street, we
began to lift the heavy crates into the box of an
empty truck.</p>
<p>Clark was the first to speak.</p>
<p>“Fifty cents, partner, fifty cents!” he kept
repeating in an awed undertone. He seemed to
be trying to get firm hold of the fact of our almost
incredible good fortune, and then, in a voice
that was thick with a heaving sob, he said:</p>
<p>“We’ll feed, partner, we’ll feed!”</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_079.jpg" alt="Two men hauling a crate. There is a cart and a tall pile of goods." /> <div class="caption"><p>“WE’LL FEED, PARTNER, WE’LL FEED.”</p> </div>
</div>
<p>But we did not “feed” at once when the
money was actually in our possession. The first
load had gone fairly well, for the certain prospect
of food nerved us to such a degree that, weakened
though we were, we scarcely felt the effort of
loading, and we were quite unaware that our
bare hands were being scratched by the sharp
ends of iron bands about the boxes until we felt
the flow of blood. But before the second load
was half on, our nerve began to fail us. Each
succeeding crate went on board with a greater
effort. And the task itself grew harder, as the
tiers of boxes rose higher in the truck. It seemed
as though the driver would never be satisfied
with the load; but at last he called a halt, and,
mounting his seat, drove off in the direction in
which the other truck had gone.</p>
<p>We were paid at once, Clark a half-dollar coin
and I two silver quarters. We held our money
with the grip of drowning men upon a saving
support. We sat down upon a doorstep to rest.
We were panting hard, and the circles under
Clark’s eyes had grown darker, and his thin
bloodless lips were quivering as with cold. But
his spirits were rising, and his eyes grew brighter
every moment, and his pale face, already flushed
with exercise, glowed again with the pleasure of
anticipating the sure breaking of our fast.</p>
<p>When we set off, Clark was in the full swing
of a provident plan.</p>
<p>“There’s lots of saloons,” he said, “where you
can get a free lunch with a glass of beer.” And
he began to point them out to me along our route.
Large signs in front competed for the drifting
trade. On one was painted a huge schooner
brimming over with frothing beer, and it bore
the legend: “The largest glass of beer for five
cents in Chicago.” Another sign claimed for its
shop, “The best free lunch in the city,” and
others told of hot sausages with every drink, or
a certain number of oysters in any style, or hot
stews at choice, and bread and cold meats and
cheese in unstinted abundance.</p>
<p>All this so exactly met our needs. And there
were warmth and shelter and companionship
within the saloons, and having drunk at the bar
and eaten at the free-lunch counter, we should
be free to sit at ease about the fire. And how
cheap it all was! For fifteen cents, Clark was
saying, we could get three fair meals a day, and
even ten cents would save us from the actual pain
of hunger. There was no other chance that compared
with this. The utmost that five cents
would buy in the cheapest eating-houses was a
cup of coffee and two small rolls. There were
ten-cent meals to be had, but they were not the
equals of a free lunch and a glass of beer. To get
their equivalent in a restaurant you must spend
fifteen cents at least.</p>
<p>My objections were wholly unintelligible to
Clark. From these he would bring the argument
back to the question of wise management, and
there he had me. Presently he lost his temper,
and told me that I was a “damn fool,” and that
I might go “to a restaurant, or to hell,” as I
chose, but that for his part he was going in for
a free lunch and a glass of beer. But before we
separated he was so far pacified that he agreed
to meet me in the early evening in front of the
shop where we had earned our money.</p>
<p>It was at the juncture of Dearborn and Madison
Streets that we parted. Not far from there
I found a restaurant whose placards in the windows
offered tempting dishes at astonishingly
cheap rates. “Roast beef and baked potato, fifteen
cents,” was printed on the one that lured
me most. I walked inside and sat down at a
small round table, spread with a cloth which was
faultlessly clean. A long line of such tables
reached down the centre of the deep room in inviting
whiteness, and was flanked on each side
by a row of others, oblong in shape, pressed close
in against the walls. To a height of several feet
above these tables the walls were wainscoted with
mirrors, and the white ceiling was gay with paper
festoons. Customers were streaming in, for it
was about noon. Most of these were evidently
men from neighboring business houses, but there
were workmen, too, some of them in blue jeans;
and the first fear that I felt at entering, the fear
of having come to a place too respectable to accept
me as a guest, vanished completely, and gave
place to a feeling of security and comfort.</p>
<p>A corps of colored waiters were hurrying
through the narrow passages between the tables,
bearing aloft tin trays heaped with dishes; to
the noisy clatter and hum of the diners, they
added a babel of discordant sound as they shouted
in unintelligible phrase their varying orders into
the dim regions at the rear, whence answered a
muffled echo to each call.</p>
<p>My order came in a deep dinner-plate, a slice
of roast beef, generous and juicy, shading from
brown to the rich, raw red of the centre that
oozed with a strengthening flow. With it was a
large baked potato, piping hot, and when I
broke it upon the table with a blow of my fist,
the fragrant steam rose in a cloud to my face.</p>
<p>At the end of a fast of thirty-six hours, which
had been relieved only by a few swallows of
coffee and a little bread, I knew enough to eat
slowly. But I was unprepared for the difficulty
which this precaution involved. As when one
swallows cautiously in quenching a consuming
thirst, and checks by sheer force the muscles
which would drink with choking draughts, so it
was only by a sustained restraint that I ate carefully,
in small morsels, until the brutish hunger
was appeased. And when all the beef and potato,
and an amazing quantity of the bread, with
which the table was abundantly supplied, were
gone, I could not forego the expenditure of five
cents more for a cup of coffee, by the aid of
which another deep inroad upon the bread was
soon accomplished.</p>
<p>At the desk where I paid the amount stamped
upon a check which the waiter had left at my
place, I inquired for the manager. When I received
his assurance that he could give me no
work as a dishwasher, nor, in fact, in any capacity
in his restaurant, and that he knew of no opening
for me anywhere, I walked out into the streets
once more and found my way to the public reading-room
of the Young Men’s Christian Association.
There I looked through the advertising
columns of the morning newspapers. Of applications
for positions there was an almost countless
number, but of openings offered there were
few, and not one of these was promising to a man
whose only resource was unskilled labor. Reading
on somewhat aimlessly through the day’s
news I presently fell asleep, and was soon awakened
by a young secretary, who was shaking me
vigorously by the shoulder.</p>
<p>“Wake up, my man, wake up!” he was saying.
“You can’t sleep in here. You must keep
awake, or go out.”</p>
<p>I went out. It was easier to keep awake in the
streets than in that warm room, and besides, I
must not slacken the search for work.</p>
<p>By the time that I had fully recovered possession
of my senses I found that an aimless walk
had taken me near to the railway station, at whose
fountain Clark and I had drunk in the morning.
A crowd of newly arrived passengers was issuing
into Van Buren Street, many of them carrying
hand-luggage. With a flash of association there
came to my mind the recollection of the boys and
men who follow you persistently on Cortlandt
Street between the Pennsylvania station and the
elevated railway, with importunate offers to carry
your bag for a dime. I wondered that this industry
had not occurred to me before as a resource
in my present need.</p>
<p>In a moment I was plying it with high hope of
success, but in the next I stood agape at a fierce
onslaught of street Arabs and men. One or two
had picked up stones with which they menaced
me. All of them were shouting oaths and violent
abuse, and one half-grown boy, who was the first
to reach me, held a clenched fist to my face, as he
screamed hoarsely profane threats, and his keen
dark eyes blazed with anger, and his lean face
worked convulsively in the strength of violent
passion. It appeared that I had trespassed upon
a field which was pre-empted by a “ring” well-organized
for its possession and cultivation, and
for the further purpose of excluding competition.</p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i087" style="max-width: 158.8125em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_087.jpg" alt="A small number of men are gathered under an elevated subway. Some of the men have their fists balled up ready to fight." />
<div class="caption"><p>ALL OF THEM WERE SHOUTING OATHS AND VIOLENT ABUSE.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>I fell back to a safe distance. On the opposite
side of the street I saw a gentleman carrying a
heavy portmanteau. He was well past the beat
of the organized ring about the station. In an
instant I was beside him, and was offering to
carry his load. He seemed disinclined to pay
any heed at first, but he stopped in a moment
with the remark:</p>
<p>“I’ll give you a quarter to carry this bag to my
hotel.”</p>
<p>I assented joyfully. I swung the bag to my
shoulder, and passed on ahead, while the traveller
walked close behind me in the crowd, and directed
me to his hotel in Wabash Avenue, where,
together with what I already had, I was soon
fifty-five cents to the good.</p>
<p>That afternoon yielded nothing more either in
prospect of a steady job or in the fruit of chance
employment, and at dusk I stood again in South
Water Street anxiously awaiting Clark’s return.
It was dark when he came at last, and as he approached
me in the fierce light of the electric arc
which gleamed from the top of the high iron post
near by, I could see that he was paler and more
careworn, and deeply dejected. We sat down for
a few moments upon a doorstep. The street was
nearly deserted, and the lights shone dismally
through its blackened length. Clark began to
tell me of his afternoon. No chance of work had
been revealed beyond the vague suggestion of
one boss that he might need an extra man in a
week or two. Moreover Clark had found the
shops so far away that he had been obliged, both
in his going and return, to take a Lincoln Avenue
cable-car, and so was out a fruitless ten cents in
fare. He said very little beyond the bare statement
of his afternoon’s experience. He was sitting
with his elbows resting on his knees, with
his hands clasped, and his flaxen head bowed almost
to his arms. I knew that he was struggling
with thoughts and feelings which he could not
analyze, nor in the least express, and I waited in
silence beside him.</p>
<p>The whole experience was new to him. He
had been out of work before, but he had had a
home, and in its shelter he could tide over the depression
which had cost him his job. Now his
home was gone, and he was adrift without support.
But he was young and strong and accustomed
to work, and all that he sought was a
chance to win his way. And yet his very struggles
for a footing seemed to sink him into deeper
difficulty. The conditions which he was forced
to face seemed to conspire against the possibility
of his success.</p>
<p>It was the feeling inspired by this seeming
truth, a dim, dull feeling vaguely realized, yet
awful, that bore hard upon him, and that loomed
portentous as with remorseless fate. He was
struggling with it in an agony of helpless discouragement,
and presently he found utterance
for it in concrete form.</p>
<p>“One boss I struck for a job, I thought he was
going to give it to me sure,” he said. “He asked
me where I’d worked before, and why I’d quit,
and how long I’d been at the trade. And just
then I felt something crawling on my neck. It
was a crumb, —— it! The boss seen it, too. He
got mad, —— him! and he chewed a rag, and
he said if he had twenty jobs, he wouldn’t give
one to a lousy hobo like me.” Clark was growing
increasingly vehement in his recital. He
rose to his feet and bent over me, while the hot
words came hissing between his teeth:</p>
<p>“I ain’t never been like this in my life before,
and, great God Almighty! I’d be clean if I
could!” After a moment he added, in a hard,
clear tone:</p>
<p>“We’ve got some money, partner, let’s go and
get a drink.”</p>
<p>My extra quarter flashed into my mind as a
hopeful resource. I held out the two quarters
and a nickel on the palm of my hand where the
street light would strike them. I told Clark of
my windfall, and of the possible chance of many
another such to help us out in the future.</p>
<p>“I earned this in ten minutes,” I said, holding
out a quarter, “and I know where twenty cents
of it will buy us each a hot stew and all the bread
that we can eat. And then I’ve found a lodging-house
in South Clark Street where we can each
get a wash and a fairly decent bed in good air for
fifteen cents, and we’ll have enough left to keep
us in food to-morrow.”</p>
<p>Clark hesitated. I enlarged on the attractiveness
of the restaurant and the comfort of eating
at leisure at one of its clean tables, and the long,
unbroken rest that we should have at the lodgings.
Clark was tired to the bone, and he yielded.
It was my turn now to give him a shoulder as we
walked to our evening meal.</p>
<p>We were soon seated opposite each other at one
of the side tables of the restaurant. The lights
were reproduced in myriad reflections in the mirrors,
and we seemed to be sitting near the centre
of a vast dining-hall with multitudes at its countless
tables and its farther portions fading in the
perspective of dim distance. The Irish stew and
bread were indescribably good, and in the company
of other diners we felt that we were among
our fellow-men and of them, and we were free
for the time from the torment of that haunting
isolation which keeps one unspeakably lonely
even in the thronging crowd.</p>
<p>Light-hearted and full of hope again we
walked to the lodging-house, and after a wash we
were soon fast asleep, each on a rough cot in a
wooden closet, the electric lights streaming in
upon us through the wire netting which was
spread over the tops of long lines of such sleeping
booths, that stood separated by thin board
partitions like the bath-houses at the sea.</p>
<p>Friday and Saturday came and passed with
the same vain search for work, and with varying
fortune in odd jobs. We took separate routes
through the day, but always agreed at parting
upon an hour and place of meeting. The Young
Men’s Christian Association rooms became our
rendezvous. When we met there on Friday evening
I had a quarter and Clark was high-spirited
and opulent with forty-five cents to his credit.
He was full of his good fortune. In the middle
of the forenoon he had chanced upon the job of
shifting coal in the cellar of a private house.
The work having been finished he was allowed to
wash himself in the kitchen with an abundance
of hot water and soap and the luxury of a towel.
And then he sat down at the kitchen-table to a
dinner of hot turkey and cranberry-sauce, and
any number of vegetables, and all the bread and
coffee he wanted, and finally a towering saucer of
plum-pudding. Fifty cents was added to the
dinner in payment for his work, and, as he had
had a dime left in his pocket after breakfast, he
did not hesitate at an expenditure of fifteen cents
in car-fare to facilitate his search for work.</p>
<p>My quarter had come, as on the day before, by
way of a porter’s service—only this time from a
woman. I caught sight of her as she was crossing
the Lake Front from the station of the Illinois
Central Railroad at the head of Randolph Street.
Under her left arm were parcels of various shapes
and sizes, and with some apparent effort she carried
a bag in her right hand. The parcels were
troublesome, for now and again she was obliged
to rest the bag upon the pavement until she had
adjusted her arm to a surer hold upon them.
She was a woman nearing middle life, well
dressed in warm, comfortable, winter garments
which bore the general marks of the prevailing
mode.</p>
<p>So completely had the present way of living
possessed me that I fear that my first impulse at
sight of her was born of the hope of a porter’s
fee and not of the thought of helpfulness. But
I grew more interested as I neared her, and increasingly
embarrassed. There was a touch of
beautiful coloring in her round, full face, and
about the mouth was an expression of rare sweetness,
while her dark-blue eyes looked out through
gold-rimmed spectacles with preternatural seriousness.
But my eye was drawn most by the
hair that appeared beneath her bonnet; a heavy
mass it was, and tawny red like that of Titian’s
“Magdalene” in the Pitti. She might have
been a shopkeeper’s wife come to the city from
the suburbs or from some provincial village, and
she was nervous in the noisy atmosphere of the
unfamiliar. I had not yet offered my services to
a woman in this new capacity of street porter, and
I found myself puzzled as to how I should approach
her. But the actual situation solved the
difficulty, for when we were but a few steps apart,
her bundles fell again into a state of irritating insecurity
under her arm and she was again obliged
to adjust them.</p>
<p>Instantly I was beside her, bowing, hat in
hand:</p>
<p>“I beg your pardon, madam; won’t you let
me help you?”</p>
<p>She drew back and looked at me perplexed,
and I could see the gathering alarm in her wide,
innocent, serious eyes.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_095.jpg" alt="A poorly dressed man is tipping his hat to a well dressed woman with many packages. A sailing ship is visible in the background." /> <div class="caption"><p>SHE DREW BACK AND LOOKED AT ME PERPLEXED.</p> </div>
</div>
<p>“Oh, no, thanks!” she said, and I knew that
all that she had ever heard of bunco-steerers and
of the wily crafts of the town was mingling in
terrifying confusion in her mind with thoughts
of possible escape.</p>
<p>My distress was as great as her own. I had
forgotten for the moment how dismaying to a
woman must be an unexpected offer of service
from a sudden apparition of full grown, masculine,
street poverty. I felt guilty as though I had
wantonly frightened a child. A parcel had fallen
to the ground. I picked it up, and returned it
to her with an apology most spontaneous and sincere.
But as I turned away in haste to escape
from the embarrassment of the situation, I found
myself checked to my great surprise by a timid
question: “Perhaps you can tell me the shortest
way to number — La Salle Street?” she said.</p>
<p>My hat was off at once.</p>
<p>“It will give me great pleasure to show you
the way,” I replied, and not waiting for a refusal,
I set off with, “Won’t you follow me, pray?”
over my shoulder.</p>
<p>At the curb of the first crossing I waited for
her.</p>
<p>“Keep close to me,” I said, “and I’ll see you
safe across the street.” But I ignored the parcels,
which were once more awry. On the opposite
pavement she stopped.</p>
<p>“Would you mind holding my bag,” she
asked, “while I get a better grip on these bundles?”
I accepted the bag with an assurance of
the pleasure that it gave me. It was soon followed
by a parcel, the largest and most unwieldy
of the lot. She finished adjusting the others, and
then extended her free hand for the remaining
parcel.</p>
<p>“We’ll carry this between us,” I said, “and
I’ll walk with you to the place.”</p>
<p>Without a word of demur she took firm hold
of the stout twine with which the parcel was tied,
and thus linked we set off together down Randolph
Street to La Salle. Conversation was
nearly impossible, for we were edging our way
for the most part along crowded pavements.</p>
<p>When we stood for a few moments at a crossing,
waiting for a check in the tide of traffic, she
confided to me that she had come to Chicago from
“——ville” to see a lawyer.</p>
<p>“You are often in the city,” I suggested, delighted
to talk on the pleasant, easy terms which
were springing up between us.</p>
<p>“Oh, no! I ain’t,” she said, and then she was
innocently superior to the compliment implied in
my feigned surprise, and she began to question
me about myself.</p>
<p>“What do you do for a living, young man?”</p>
<p>“I am out of work, and I am looking for a
job,” I said, evasively.</p>
<p>“What is your line of work?” she continued;
for the bucolic mind was bent on a sure footing
from which to launch out into further inquiry.</p>
<p>“I shall be glad of any work that I can get,” I
said. “Any work at all,” I reiterated, thinking
that she might put me in the way of a job.</p>
<p>“Where do you live when you’re to home?”
and the question indicated a new tack in the
quest for certitude.</p>
<p>“I came out here from the East” I answered;
“I have no home here.”</p>
<p>“I guess you ain’t been doing just right, or
else you wouldn’t be ashamed to tell,” she said,
while a graver look came into her sober eyes.</p>
<p>The situation was so keenly delightful that I
lacked the moral strength to do aught but prolong
it.</p>
<p>“Ah, madam, if you but knew!” I said, and
I fear that my tone conveyed to her a tacit confession
of deep depravity.</p>
<p>We had reached the required number in La
Salle Street. I led the way to the elevator, and
found the door of the lawyer’s office. The woman
stood for a few moments in the passage; I was
evidently on her conscience.</p>
<p>“Haven’t you got any family or friends?” she
continued, in a voice tender with sympathy.</p>
<p>“I had both,” I replied.</p>
<p>“Then, young man, you take my advice, and
just go back to your family, and tell them you’re
sorry that you done wrong, and you mean to do
better. They’ll be good to you and help you.”
Her words were swift with the energy of conviction.</p>
<p>“I am sure that you are right,” I agreed.</p>
<p>And now a well-filled open purse was in her
hand, and I saw her fingers hesitating among some
loose coins. Presently she held out a quarter.</p>
<p>“You’ve been real nice to me,” she said, “and
I want to ask you not to make a wrong use of this
money. You’ll not buy liquor with it, will you?”</p>
<p>“Indeed I will not,” I assured her. “I have
little temptation to do that, for I can quench my
thirst for nothing; it is food that I find it hard
to get. And, madam,” I continued, “I am
deeply grateful to you for your good advice.”</p>
<p>She smiled upon me, her pretty mouth and
dimpled cheeks and dark blue eyes all playing
their part in the friendly salutation.</p>
<p>“You will go back to your friends, won’t
you?” she said, persuasively.</p>
<p>“I will indeed,” I replied. “Already I look
forward to that with keenest pleasure.”</p>
<p>Then richer by a quarter and all aglow with
the sense of human sympathy I returned to the
streets, and to the exhausting, dreary round of
place-hunting.</p>
<p>That this in itself should be such hard work is
largely due, I fancy, to the double strain, both
on your strength and on your sensibilities. Certainly
it is strangely enervating. Even when
you are not weakened by the want of food, you
find yourself at the far end of a fruitless search
worn out beyond the exhaustion of a hard day’s
work. And then the actual ground covered by
your most persistent effort is always so sadly disappointing.
You may begin the day’s hunt
rested and fed and full of energy and resolve;
you may have planned the search
with care, taking pains to find out the various
forms of unskilled labor which are employed
within the chosen area; with utmost regard to
systematic, time-saving expenditure of energy,
you may go carefully over the ground, leaving no
stone unturned; and yet, at the day’s end, you
have not covered half the area of your careful
plan, and your whole body aches with weariness,
and your heart is heavy and sore within
you. Nor does the task grow easier with long
practice. You acquire a certain facility in
search; you come, by practical acquaintance, to
some knowledge of the ins and outs of the labor
market; but you must begin each day’s quest
with a greater draft upon your courage and resolution.
For the actual barriers grow greater, as
the outward marks of your mode of life become
clearer upon you, and you feel yourself borne
upon a tide that you cannot stem, out from the
haven of a man’s work, where you would be, to
the barren wastes, where drift to certain wreck
the lives of the destitute idle who have lost all
hold upon a “sure intent.”</p>
<p>All the days of this vagrant living were not
equally hard. Some were harder than others.
Saturday was a case in point. After an early
frugal breakfast, for which Clark paid his last
penny, we separated with an agreement to meet
again at six o’clock in the evening in the reading-room
of the Young Men’s Christian Association.
We were bent on different quests. Clark was
determined to find work at his trade if he could,
and I had no choice apart from unskilled labor.
For odd jobs we were each to have out an eye,
and our acquaintance thus far with such a course
made us fairly confident of at least the means of
bare subsistence.</p>
<p>But nothing is less predictable than the outcome
of this fortuitous living. The days vary
with the variability which belongs to existence.
Things “come your way” at times, and then
again they have another destination which your
widest and closest search fails to reveal.</p>
<p>It was hard, but it was not impossible through
that Saturday morning to keep one’s purpose
fairly firm. From the ebb of the city’s traffic in
the darkness before the dawn I felt it flowing to
its full tide. However destitute a man may be
he cannot fail to share the quickening to waking
life of a great city. The mystery of deepest night
enfolds the place, and from out its veiling darkness
the vague conformations of streets and buildings
gradually emerge to the sharp outlines of the
day’s reality. An occasional delivery wagon from
the market, or a milkman’s cart goes rattling down
a street, awaking echoes as of a deserted town, or
a heavy truck laden with great rolls of white
paper for the printing-press passes slowly, drawn
by gigantic horses whose flat, hairy hoofs patiently
pound the cobbles in their plodding pace,
while whiffs of white vapor puff from their nostrils
with their deep, regular breathing. The
driver’s oath can be heard a square away.</p>
<p>Standing at the curb along an open space in
front of a public building are a few “night
hawks.” The horses are heavily blanketed and
their noses buried in eating-bags. The cabmen
have drawn together in social community on the
pavement, where, as they gossip in the cold,
they alternately stamp the flagging with their
feet and clasp themselves in hard, sweeping
embraces of the arms to stir the sluggish blood
to swifter movement. An empty cable-car goes
tearing round a “loop” with noise to awake
the dead, and sets off again to some outermost
portion of the town with a sleepy policeman on
board and a newsboy, his bundle, damp from the
press, upon his lap, who is bent on being first with
news to that suburban region. The cars fill first
with workingmen who are bound for distant factories
and workshops and their posts along the
lines of railways.</p>
<p>The streets are echoing now to the sounds of increasing
traffic and to the steps of the vanguard
of workers. These are the wage-earners, men for
the most part, but there are women, too, and children.
Here is humanity in the raw, hard-handed
and roughly wrought for the Atlasian task of sustaining,
by sheer physical strength and manual
skill, the towering, delicate, intricate structure
of progressive civilization.</p>
<p>The first of the salaried workers follow these,
and youth swarms upon the streets moving with
swift steps to the great co-educational schools of
practical business. There are countless “cash”
children in the throng, and office boys, and saleswomen
and men, and clerks, and secretaries, and
fledgling lawyers. There are marks of poverty
on the faces and in the garments of the children,
but most of the older ones are dressed in all the
warmth and comfort of the well-to-do, while the
young women who form so large a portion of the
crowd step briskly in dainty boots carrying
themselves with figures erect and graceful,
clothed with the style and <i>chic</i> which are theirs
as a national trait. Many of the men are, in contrast,
markedly careless and unkempt.</p>
<p>All these are at work by eight o’clock, the
wage-earners having been at it an hour already.
Then come, mingling in the miscellaneous concourse
of business streets which have taken on the
full day’s complexity, the superintendents and
managers, and the heads of business houses and
of legal firms, and bankers, and brokers, and all
the company of rare men, whose native gifts of
creative power or organizing capacity or executive
ability, joined to great energy and resolution,
have placed them in command of their co-workers,
and made them responsible, as only the few
can be responsible, for the lives and well-being of
their fellows.</p>
<p>I recognize an eminent lawyer in the moving
crowd, who, in democratic fashion, is walking
to his office. He is a nobleman by every gift of
nature, and his sensitive, expressive face, responsive
to the grace of passing thought, is an unconscious
appeal to my flagging courage, and to that,
perhaps, of many another man in the pressing
throng.</p>
<p>I see in a jolting omnibus a noted merchant,
his head bowed over a morning paper as he rides
to his business house. He holds a foremost place
in business, yet it is fully equalled by his standing
as a Christian gentleman and as a wise and
most efficient philanthropist.</p>
<p>Almost touching elbows we pass each other on
the street, a fellow-alumnus of my college and I,
he an inheritor of great wealth and of a vast
enterprise far-reaching in its scope to distant portions
of the earth. And yet, so unmarred has he
remained under the lavish gifts of fortune that his
is already the dominant genius in the administration
of immense productive power, and his influence
is increasingly felt as a helpful and guiding
force in great educational institutions of the land.</p>
<p>But this resurgence of the city’s life, while it
quickens the pulses for the time, is not an inspiration
to last one through a day of disappointing
search. By noon I had been turned many times
away, and a sharp refusal to a polite request to be
given a chance to work cuts deeper than men
know who have never felt its wound. You try
to ignore it at the first, and you bring greater
energy to bear upon the hunt, but your wounds
are there; and, in each succeeding advance, it is
a sterner self-compulsion that forces you to lay
bare again the shrinking quick of your quivering
sensibilities. How often have I loitered about a
door, passing and repassing it again and yet again
before I could summon courage for the ordeal
of a simple request for work!</p>
<p>Early in my experience I learned never to ask
after a possible vacancy. Employers have no vacancies
to be filled by such an inquirer. I simply
said that I was looking for a job, and should be
glad of any work that I could do; and that, if I
could be given a chance to work, I would do my
best to earn a place.</p>
<p>This request in practically the same terms produced
often the most opposite effects. One man
would answer with a kindliness so genuine and a
regret so evidently sincere that it was with an utmost
effort at times that I could control myself
And but a few minutes later another man might
answer, if not with oaths and threats of violence,
yet with a cynical sharpness which would leave
a sorer rankling.</p>
<p>Despondency had almost conquered hope at
last, and well-nigh worn one’s courage out, and
all but brought your drooping spirits to the brink
of that abyss, where men think that they can give
the struggle up. It is marvellous how the external
aspect of all things changes to you here.
The very stones beneath your feet are the hard
paving of your prison-house; the threatening
winter sky above you is the vaulted ceiling of
your dungeon; the buildings towering to nearly
twenty stories about you are your prison walls,
and, as by a keen refinement of cruelty, they
swarm with hiving industry, as if to mock you in
your bitter plight.</p>
<p>Suddenly there dawns upon you an undreamed-of
significance in the machinery of social restraint.
The policeman on the crossing in his
slouching uniform bespattered with the oozing
slime of the miry streets where he controls the
streams of traffic, even as the Fellaheen direct the
water of the Nile through the net-work of their
irrigation ditches, is the outstretched hand of the
law ready to lay hold on you, should you violate
in your despair the rules of social order. Behind
him you see the patrol wagon and the station-house
and the courts of law and the State’s prison
and enforced labor, the whole elaborate process
by means of which society would reassimilate
you, an excrement, a non-social being as a transgressor
of the law, into the body politic once
more, and set you to fulfilling a functional activity
as a part of the social organism.</p>
<p>This result, with the means of living which it
implies and the link that it gives you to your
kind, even if it be the relation of a criminal to
society, may become the object of a desire so
strong that the shame and punishment involved
may lose their deterring force for you.</p>
<p>There are simple means of setting all this process
in motion in your behalf. Men break shop-windows
in full view of the police, or voluntarily
hold out to them hands weighted with the spoils
of theft.</p>
<p>Perhaps it is in the moving crowds upon the
pavements that one, in such a mood, feels most of
all this change in external aspect. The loneliness,
the sense of being a thing apart in the presence
of your working kind, a thing unvitalized by real
contact with the streams of life, is the seat of your
worst suffering, and the pain is augmented by
what seems an actual antagonism to you as to
something beyond the range of human sympathy.</p>
<p>By the middle of that Saturday afternoon I
had fairly given up the search for work, and I
found myself on State Street, wandering aimlessly
in the hope of an odd job. Hunger and
utter weariness were playing their part, as well as
the loneliness and the sense of imprisonment.
One had the feeling that, if he could but sit down
somewhere and rest, all other troubles would vanish
for the time at least. And there were, I
knew, many public rooms to which I could go
in unquestioned right or privilege, but once
within their warmth, I was well aware that to
keep awake would tax all my power of will, and
that, as a sleeping lounger, I should soon be
turned adrift again.</p>
<p>The street was coated with a murky mire,
kneaded by hoofs and wheels to the consistency
of paste, and tracked by countless feet upon the
pavements, where it lay as thick almost as on the
cobbles. The skyline on both sides was a ragged
<i>sierra</i>, mounting from three to five and seven
stories, then leaping suddenly on the right to the
appalling height of the Masonic Temple, and grotesque
in all its length with rearing signs and flagstaffs
that pierced the smoky vapor of the upper
air, while the sagging halyards fluttered like fine
threads in the icy gusts from off the lake. Whole
fronts of flamboyant architecture were almost
concealed behind huge bombastic signs, while
other advertising devices hung suspended overhead,
watches three feet in diameter, and boots
and hats of a giant race.</p>
<p>The shop windows were draped with the scalloped
fringes of idle awnings, and merely a glance
at their displays was enough to disclose a commercial
difference separated by only the width of the
thoroughfare, a difference like that between
Twenty-third Street and the Bowery.</p>
<p>From Polk Street and State I drifted northward
to the river. No longer was there any stimulus
in contact with the intermingling crowds.
All that was hard and sordid in one’s lot seemed
to have blinded one to all but the hard and sordid
in the world about. Beneath its structural veiling
you could not see the warm heart of life, tender
and strong and true. Multitudes of human
faces passed you, deeply marked with the lines of
baser care. Human eyes looked out of them full
of the unconscious tragic pathos of the blind,
blind to all vision but the light of common day;
eyes of the money grubbers, sharpened to a needle’s
point yet incapable of deeper insight than
the prospect of gain; eyes of the haunted poor,
furtive in the fear of things, and seeing only the
incalculable, threatening hand of fateful poverty;
eyes of ragged children who were selling
papers on the streets, their eyes old with the age
of the ages, as though there gazed through them
the unnumbered generations of the poor who
have endured “long labor unto aged breath;”
eyes of the rich, hardened by a subtler misery in
the artificial lives they lead in sternest bondage
to powers in whom all faith is gone, but whom
they serve in utter fear, scourged by convention
to the acting of an unmeaning part in life, seeking
above all things escape from self in the fantastic
<i>stimuli</i> of fashion, yet feeling ever, in the
dark, the remorseless closing in of the contracting
prison walls of self-indulgence narrowing
daily the scope of self, and threatening life with
its grimmest tragedy, in the hopeless, faithless,
purposeless <i>ennui</i> of existence.</p>
<p>And now there passed me in the street two sisters
of charity walking side by side. Their sweet,
placid faces, framed in white, reflected the limpid
purity of unselfish useful living, and their eyes,
deep-seeing into human misery and evil, were yet
serene in the all-conquering strength of goodness.</p>
<p>It was in some saner thought inspired by this
vision that I walked on across the river to the
comparative quiet of the North Side. I needed
all the sanity that I could summon. The
setting sun had broken for a moment through
snow-laden clouds, and it shone in blazing shafts
of blood-red light through the hazy lengths of
westward streets. Its rays fell warmly upon a
wide, deep window as I passed, and the rich reflection
caught my eye. For some time I stood
still, a prey to conflicting feelings. Just within
the window with the shades undrawn, sat a friend
in lounging ease before an open fire, absorbed in
his evening paper. There flashed before me the
scene of our last encounter. We stood at parting
on a wharf in the balmy warmth of late winter in
the far South. Behind my friend was the brilliant
carpeting of open lawns and blooming beds of
flowers, and beyond lay the deep olive green of
forests of live-oak with palmettos growing in
dense underbrush, and the white “shell road”
gleaming in the varied play of lights and shadows
until it lost itself, in its course to the beach, in the
deepening gloom of overdrooping boughs weighted
with hanging moss in an effect of tropical luxuriance.
And from out that vivid mental picture
there came again, almost articulate in its reality,
the graceful urging of my friend that I should
visit him in his Western home.</p>
<p>It was so short a step by which I could emerge
from the submerged, and the temptation to take
it was so strong and inviting. The want and hardship
and hideous squalor were bad enough, but
these things could be endured for the sake of the
end in view. It was the longing for fellowship
that had grown to almost overmastering desire,
the sight of a familiar face, the sound of a familiar
voice, the healing touch of cultivated speech
to feelings all raw under the brutalities of the
street vernacular.</p>
<p>And after all, what real purpose was my experiment
to serve? I had set out to learn and in
the hope of gaining from what I learned something
worth the while of a careful investigation.
I had discovered much that was new to me, but
nothing that was new to science, and the experience
of a single individual could never furnish
data for a valid generalization, and all
that I had learned or could learn was already
set forth in tabulated, statistical accuracy in
blue books and economic treatises. Moreover
it was impossible for me to rightly interpret
even the human conditions in which I found
myself, for between me and the actual workers
was the infinite difference of necessity in
relation to any lot in which I was. How could
I, who at any moment could change my status if
I chose, enter really into the life and feelings of
the destitute poor who are bound to their lot by
the hardest facts of stern reality? It was all
futile and inadequate and absurd. I had learned
something, and as for further inquiry of this kind,
I would better give it up, and return to a life that
was normal to me.</p>
<p>The sense of futility was strong upon me.
Never before had the temptation to abandon the
attempt assailed me with such force. It was no
clean-cut, definite resolution that won in favor
of continued effort. Not at all. I think that
when I turned away I was more than half-resolved
to give over the experiment. But even as
a man, who, contemplating suicide, allows himself
to be borne upon the aimless stream of common
events past the point of many an early resolution
to the deed, so I found myself gradually
awaking to the thought, “Ah, well, I will try it
a little longer.”</p>
<p>It was in this mood that I went to find Clark
at our rendezvous. Our eyes met in quick inquiry,
and before either of us spoke, we knew
each the other’s story. But Clark wished the
confirmation of actual confession.</p>
<p>“Ain’t you had no luck too?” he whispered,
his eyes close to mine, and contracting with a
sense of the incredibility of such a result, which
might be altered, if one would only insist strongly
enough upon its being other than it actually
was.</p>
<p>“No,” I said, “I’ve had no luck, nor anything
to eat since morning.” We were speaking in the
low tones which were permitted in the reading-room.
“Well, I’ll be ——.” And Clark’s drawling
oath seemed exactly suited to the absurdity of
the situation. We both laughed softly over our
coincident dilemma, and by a mutual impulse we
walked out into the street, where we spent an
agreeable half-hour in discussing the placards in
the windows of two restaurants.</p>
<p>There was an especial attraction for us in the
lower window where there stood a <i>chef</i> all white
from his spotless cap to where his white garments
were lost to view behind a gas-stove of ingenious
contrivance, on whose clean, polished upper surface
he was turning well-browned griddle-cakes.
I do not know what the association was, and it was
in entire good-humor that Clark suddenly turned
to me with the remark:</p>
<p>“Say, partner, we’d get all we want to eat, if
we’d heave a rock through this window.”</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III<br/><br/> <small>FINDING STEADY WORK</small></h2></div>
<p class="location">
No. — Blue Island Avenue, Chicago, Ill.,</p>
<p class="date">
December 22, 1891.</p>
<p>That night when Clark and I reached the head
of the staircase which descends to the basement of
the station-house we found the way blocked by
men. We thought at first that a prisoner was
being booked, but a second glance revealed the
fact that the door of iron grating was wide open.
With his back against it stood an officer. The
lodgers were passing him in slow order, and, as
they filed by, the policeman held each in sharp
examination for a moment. Soon I could see him
clearly. He stood, obstructing the exit from the
stairs, a straight, massive figure well on to two
hundred and fifty pounds. A side-view was
toward us, and I took delight in the clean-shaven
face with the well-chiselled Grecian profile, the
eye deep-set and widening to the upward lift of
the lashes, and the dark, abundant hair rising in
short, crisp curls from under the pressure of his
cap-rim.</p>
<p>He was putting the men through a catechism
respecting their nationalities, their homes and occupations,
and their motives in coming to Chicago.
Beside him stood two men, the elder a
man past middle life, of sober, dignified appearance,
and with an air of philosophical interest in
what he saw. The younger was a callow youth,
just grown to manhood, and he may have been
the other’s son. They were out “slumming,”
evidently, and the officer had been detailed as
their guide. Their purpose may have been a
good one, but the boy’s face, as I watched it,
seemed to me to show plainly the marks of an unwholesome
curiosity. And certainly as they stood
there in well-dressed, well-fed comfort, eying at
leisure, as though it were exhibited for their diversion,
this company of homeless, ragged, needful
men, there was to my mind a deliberate insult
in the attitude sharper than the sting of a blow in
the face. I thought at first that I might be alone
in feeling this, until I heard a man behind me
say, as the cause of the delay became clear to
him:</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_119.jpg" alt="Two well dressed men and two poorly dressed men are looking at a policeman who appears to be explaining something." /> <div class="caption"><p>HE WAS PUTTING THE MEN THROUGH A CATECHISM RESPECTING THEIR NATIONALITIES, THEIR HOMES AND OCCUPATIONS, AND THEIR MOTIVES IN COMING TO CHICAGO.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>“Who is them jays, and what business have
they inspectin’ us?”</p>
<p>On the step below me was as good a vagrant
type as the slowly moving line on the staircase
disclosed. I could not see his face, but I
could guess at its effect from the dark, bristling,
unkempt beard that sprouted in tangled, wiry
masses from his cheeks and throat, and the heavy,
cohering hair that lay long and thick about his
ears and on his neck. There was an unnatural
corpulence about the figure, the reality of which
was belied by the lean, sharp lines that appeared
beneath a bulging collar and in the emaciated
arms that were red, and raw, and almost bare
below the elbows, where the ragged sleeves hung
in fraying ribbons.</p>
<p>The obesity was purely artificial. The tramp
had on three flannel shirts, at least, besides several
heavy waistcoats and two pairs of trousers
and as many coats, with a possibility of there being
three. The outer garments were quaint mosaics
of patches, positively ingenious in their interlacing
adherence to one another and in their
rude preservation of original outlines of dress.
From him came the pungent reek of bad whiskey
and stale tobacco.</p>
<p>It was as though the man stood clothed in outward
and visible signs of unseen realities, enveloped
in the rigid habit of his own wrong-doing,
draped in the mystery of inherited tendencies,
and cloaked in the stern facts of a hard environment.
And yet, as beneath the filthy outer covering
there was a human being, so under these veiling,
unseen vestures was a man, a living soul
created by the Almighty.</p>
<p>I could hear him muttering gruffly to himself
as he slowly descended to his turn at the foot of
the steps.</p>
<p>“Well, Weary, where are you from? A hobo
from Hoboville, I guess,” and the officer’s voice
rang strong and clear up the staircase to the dim
landing, where stood the waiting line of men.</p>
<p>The two slummers laughed aloud.</p>
<p>“From Maine,” said the tramp. The voice
came hoarse and thin and broken-winded from
a throat eaten out by disease.</p>
<p>“Well, you’re a rare one, if you’re a Yankee.
But what brought you to Chicago?”</p>
<p>“Lookin’ for work at the World’s Fair.”</p>
<p>“You lie, you lazy loafer. The last thing
you’re looking for is work. You all tell that
World’s Fair lie. There’s been as many of you
in Chicago every winter for the last ten years as
there is this winter.”</p>
<p>The man was stung.</p>
<p>“I’ve as good a right here as you,” he said.</p>
<p>“You have, have you!” cried the officer in
quick rejoinder, but with no loss of temper.
“Look at me, you filthy hobo,” he added, drawing
himself to his full, imposing height. “I’m
a police officer. I’ve held my job for eleven
years, and got my promotions. I’m earning
eighty dollars a month, do you see? Now go
down there where you belong,” and he pointed
imperiously to the far end of the corridor.</p>
<p>My turn came next.</p>
<p>“Here’s another whiskers,” announced the officer
in explanation to his charges; “same kind,
only younger and newer to the business.” And
then to me, “Where are you from?” he said.</p>
<p>I replied with some inanity in mock German.
“Oh, he’s a Dutchman. We get a few of them.
But they’re mostly older men, and kind of moody,
and they tramp alone a good bit. Can’t you talk
English?”</p>
<p>I said something in very bad French.</p>
<p>“Oh, I guess he’s a Frenchy. That’s very uncommon——”</p>
<p>I interrupted his information with a line from
Virgil, spoken with an inflection of inquiry.</p>
<p>“He may be a Dago, or a—ah——” he hesitated.</p>
<p>I broke in with a sentence in Greek.</p>
<p>“Or a Russian,” concluded the officer.</p>
<p>I thought that I could mystify him finally,
and so I pronounced a verse from Genesis in Hebrew.
But he was equal to the emergence.</p>
<p>“I’ve got it,” he exclaimed, with a note of exultation;
“he’s a Sheeny!” And free to go I
walked down the corridor, feeling that I had
come rather badly out of that encounter.</p>
<p>None of us, I think, resented much the action
of the officer. The policemen understand us perfectly,
and in a certain broad, human sense we
know them for our friends. I have been much
impressed with this quality of natural <i>bonhomie</i>
in the relation of the police officers to the vagrant
and criminal classes. It seems to be the outcome
of sturdy common sense and genuine knowledge
and human sympathy. It would be difficult, I
fancy, seriously to deceive an average officer of
good experience. He may not know his man personally
in every case, but he knows his type, and
he takes his measure with admirable accuracy.
He is not far misled by either his virtue or his
vice. He knows him for a human being, even if
he be a vagrant or a criminal, and he has come
by practical experience to a fair acquaintance
with human limitations in these spheres of life.</p>
<p>The sympathy of which I have spoken is conspicuously
innocent of sentimentality. It comes
from a saner source, and is of a hardier fibre.
Unfortunately it lays open a way of corruption
to corrupt men on the force, but it is the basis,
too, of high practical efficiency in the difficult
task of locating crime and keeping it within control.
And it has another value little suspected,
perhaps. I have met more than one workingman
at work who owed his job to the friendly aid
of a policeman, who had singled him out from
the ranks of the unemployed as being worthy of
his help. And this sort of timely succor is
bounded, I judge, only by the limits of opportunity.
Certainly I shall never forget the kindness
of an officer who had evidently grown familiar
with me on the streets, and who to my great surprise
stopped me suddenly one day with the question:</p>
<p>“Ain’t yous got a job yet?”</p>
<p>“No,” I said, as I stood looking up in deep
admiration of his height and breadth and ruddy,
wholesome face and generous Irish brogue.</p>
<p>“Well, that is hard luck,” he went on.
“There isn’t many jobs ever at this season of
the year, but just yous come around this way now
and again, and I’ll tell yous, if I hears of anything.”</p>
<p>That was only a day or two before I found
work, and when I had a chance to tell him of
my success, his pleasure seemed as genuine as my
own.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Sunday morning was all that Clark and I
could wish. To the pallor of the earliest dawn
was added a soft, white muffling of snow. It lay
almost untracked over the filthy streets and upon
the pavements, and in dainty cones it capped the
fence-palings, and roofed in pure white the sheds
and flat-cars in the railway station yard.</p>
<p>Clark and I walked rapidly across Wabash
Avenue, then south to Twentieth Street, and then
east again across Michigan and Indiana to Prairie
Avenue. Here we were in the midst of a wealthy
residence quarter. Most hopefully we wandered
about in anxious waiting for some signs of life.
From the first house at which we could apply we
were turned away with the assurance that there
was a man on the place whose duties included
the cleaning of the pavements, and that, therefore,
our services were not needed. We had expected
this to be the case in the majority of instances;
it was of the possible exception that we
were in search. Soon we began to fear that there
were no exceptions. Our spirits had fallen low
under repeated refusals, when suddenly they
rose with a bound, when we finally got a pavement
to clean, and twenty-five cents each in payment.</p>
<p>The temptation to quit at once and get something
to eat was strong, for the swallow of coffee
and piece of bread at the station-house had not
gone far toward satisfying an appetite which was
of twenty-four hours’ growth. But then in another
hour or two all further chance of work like
this would be gone, and so we stuck at it. Our
reward was almost instant.</p>
<p>Not only were we given a job at sweeping
snow, and paid another quarter each for it, but
we were asked whether we had breakfasted, and
were invited to a meal in the kitchen. I think
that the cook thoroughly enjoyed feeding us, we
did such ample justice to her fare. After two
large bowls of steaming porridge, we began on
omelettes and beefsteak and crisp potatoes and
fresh bread, drinking the while great quantities
of coffee, not the flat, bitter, diluted wash of the
cheap restaurants, but the hot, creamy, fragrant
beverage which tones one for the day.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_127.jpg" alt="Two men are sitting and eating at a dining room table. A smiling woman watches over them." /> <div class="caption"><p>I THINK THAT THE COOK THOROUGHLY ENJOYED FEEDING US.</p> </div>
</div>
<p>We had little time to talk, and very selfishly
I left our end of the conversation wholly to Clark.
The cook drew from him some of the facts of our
position, and the further fact of our having been
so long without food. This made her very indignant,
not at us, but at the existing order of things.</p>
<p>“There should be a law,” she said, emphatically,
“a law to give a job to every decent man
that’s out of work.” Then, with the sweet facility
of feminine remedy, “And another law,” she
added, “to keep all them I-talians from comin’
in and takin’ the bread out of the mouths of honest
people. They ain’t no better than heathens
anyway, and they do tell me that they’ll work for
what a Christian dog wouldn’t live on. Why,
there’s me own cousin as come over from County
Down a month ago last Tuesday, and he ain’t got
a job yet, and I be obliged to support him, and
all on account of them unclean I-talians.”</p>
<p>There seemed to be no end to our good luck
that morning. After a right royal breakfast
we got still another belated pavement to clean,
and when we had finished that our joint earnings
made the sumptuous total of one dollar and fifty
cents, and we were not hungry.</p>
<p>It was a delightful walk back to the familiar
lodging-house, where we paid for a night’s lodging
in advance, and so secured immediate access
to the washing and cleaning facilities of the establishment.</p>
<p>When we set forth again Clark looked fairly
trim. His clothes were well brushed and his
boots were clean. He had been shaven, and his
face glowed with healthful exercise and the effects
of nourishing, sustaining food. We had
been in conversation on the subject of going to
church. Clark opposed it warmly; besides, he
had another plan. There were certain foremen
whom he was bent on seeing in the unoccupied
quiet of Sunday, in relation to the matter of a
possible job.</p>
<p>“And I don’t take no stock in church, anyway,”
he explained. “Fellows like us ain’t expected
there, and we ain’t wanted. If you ain’t
dressed in the style, you’re different from everybody
else that’s there, and there ain’t no fun in
that. And if you do go, what do you hear?
Sometimes a preacher talks sense, and makes
things reasonable to you, but most of them talks
rot, that you don’t believe nor they either. I’d
sooner read Tom Paine than hear all the preachers
in this town. He talks to you straight, in a
way you can understand.”</p>
<p>I pleaded my knowledge of a preacher who
would talk to us as “straight” as Tom Paine, but
to no purpose, for there remained the question of
dress. Then I urged our going to mass, where
we should not be embarrassed by our singularity;
but this plea met with no favor at all, and I was
obliged to go alone to church, and did not see
Clark again until we met late in the evening at
the lodging-house.</p>
<p>It was snowing fast at the end of the service-hour,
giving high promise of abundant work in
the morning. On the strength of it I ate a fifteen-cent
dinner with a twofold feeling of satisfaction.
Then I began a diligent search for
the place of meeting of the Socialists. Sunday
afternoon, I had learned, was their time of meeting.
A knowledge of the place was wanting, but
only because it had not occurred to me to look
for an announcement of it in the newspapers of
the day before. And this was wholly indicative
of my general frame of mind in the connection.
My preconceptions were strong. I had vision of
a bare, dimly lighted room in the far recess of
an unfrequented building, a room reached by
dusty stairs and long, dark corridors, closely
guarded by sentries, whose duty was to demand
the countersign from those who entered and to
give warning of danger in an emergency, so that
the inmates might escape by secret passages to
the street.</p>
<p>I had made frequent inquiries of the men
whom I met, and it was from one of these that I
learned that the time was Sunday afternoon; but
none of them knew the place nor seemed to take
the smallest interest in the matter. I thought
that a policeman might be able to put me on the
track of the meeting, if he chose, but then I
feared that there were even chances that he
would “run me in” as a revolutionary, upon
hearing my request. I concluded that if I should
be so fortunate as to find the place, it would be
by some happy chance; and that if I gained admission,
it would be by a happier one, due largely
to my rough appearance.</p>
<p>I pictured this rude hall thronged with men,
grizzled, bearded men, with eyes aflame and hair
dishevelled, listening in high excitement to leaders
whose inflammatory speeches lashed them into
fury against all established order. Curiosity kindled
to liveliest interest under the free play of
imagination. In my eagerness I grew bolder.
Repeatedly I stopped workingmen upon the
street, and asked to be directed. No one knew,
until I chanced upon a man who had a vague suspicion
that the Socialists met in a hall over a saloon
somewhere in West Lake Street.</p>
<p>I crossed the river and passed under the dark-steel
framework of the elevated railway. The
snow was falling through the still, sooty air in
heavy flakes, which clung to every exposed surface,
and turned the street-slime into a dark, granular
slush. It seemed to be a region of warehouses
and cheap shops, but chiefly of saloons;
scarcely a soul was to be seen on the pavements;
and brooding over the long, deserted street was
the decorous quiet of Sunday.</p>
<p>I quickened my pace to overtake three men in
front of me. Before I caught up with them they
disappeared through a door which opened on the
pavement. It was that of a saloon. The shades
were drawn, and the place, like all the others
of its kind, had every appearance of being closed
for the day. I tried the door, and, finding it unlocked,
followed the men inside. They had already
mingled in a group of workingmen who
sat about a large stove in the far corner of the
bar-room, drinking beer and talking quietly.</p>
<p>They did not notice me until the one of whom
I inquired appealed to the others for some knowledge
of the question. Then there was a moment
of passing the inquiry from one to another, until
a good-looking young workman spoke up.</p>
<p>“Why, I know,” he said; “I’ve just come
from there. It’s over in Waverley Hall, corner
of Lake and Clark.”</p>
<p>“Will you help me to get into the meeting?”
I asked. “I am a stranger here, and I should
very much like to go.”</p>
<p>“There ain’t no trouble,” he responded; “you
just go up two flights of steps from the street,
and walk right in.”</p>
<p>It was even as he said. At the level of the first
landing was a restaurant, with a strikingly fine
portrait of Burns near the entrance. My curiosity
was at a high pitch when I reached the second
landing. It was ill-lighted, and it opened first
into an almost dark store-room, in whose deep
recesses were great stacks of chairs. But a single
step to the right brought one to the wide-open
door of Waverley Hall and a company of Socialists
in full session. A man sat beside the door
with a small table before him, on which in neat
array were some attractive paper editions for sale.
My eye fell in passing upon “The Fabian Essays,”
and Thorold Rogers’s “Six Centuries of
Work and Wages,” and an English version of
Schäffle’s “Quintessence of Socialism.”</p>
<p>“May I go in?” I asked of the man.</p>
<p>“Oh, certainly,” he replied. “Walk right in,
and take any vacant seat you choose.”</p>
<p>I thanked him, and walked up a central aisle
with rows of seats on either side, where sat from
two or three hundred men and a few women.
By the time that I had found a seat half way to
the daïs, at the far end of the hall, where sat the
chairman of the meeting, I was already deeply interested
in the speech of a man who stood facing
the company from the side, with his back against
the wall. Slender and of medium height, with
sandy hair slightly touched with gray, with an
expression of ready alertness on his intelligent
face, he was speaking fluently in good, well articulated
English, and with deep conviction his evident
inspiration.</p>
<p>“What we want is education,” he was saying;
“an education which will enlighten the capitalistic
class as well as our own. We serve no useful
end in denouncing the capitalists. They, like
us, are simply a product of the competitive system,
and individually many of them are good and
generous men. But we shall be furthering the
cause of Socialism in trying to show them their
share of the evils under which we all live. How
that, for example, owing to the present organization
of society, in spite of all the safeguards
which entrench private property, not even a capitalist
can feel assured that his children or grandchildren
may not be beggars upon the streets.”</p>
<p>Such views, it seemed to me, at least suggested
some catholicity of mind in “the Peddler,” as
the speaker afterward declared himself to be.
When he took his seat several men were on their
feet at once, appealing to the chair, and I saw
that the meeting was well in hand, for the chairman
instantly singled out one for the privilege
of the floor, addressing him politely by name,
prefixing, however, the title “Comrade,” much
as “Citizen” was used in the French Revolution
and after.</p>
<p>The well-grown muscular, intelligent workingman
was the dominant type among them, but
the general average in point of respectability was
so high that it gave to the company rather the
appearance of a gathering of the <i>bourgeoisie</i> than
of proletarians. Had the proportion between
men and women been reversed, without change
of average status, I might have been in a prayer-meeting.
But the prayer-meeting in sustaining
the resemblance would have been one of marked
vitality.</p>
<p>Speeches were following one another in quick
succession. Some were good and some were
vapid; some were in broken English, and others
were in English more than broken; but all were
surcharged with the kind of earnestness which
captivates attention. Irresistibly at times one
was reminded of the propaganda of a new faith.
Much was said the meaning of which I could not
catch, but the spirit of it all was not far to seek.
Here there was no cant; there was room for
none. These men believed that they had hold
of a truth which is regenerating society. In the
face of a world deep-rooted in an individualistic
organization of industry and of social order, they
preached a gospel of collectivism, with unbounded
belief in its ultimate triumph.</p>
<p>At times there was a malignant animus in
what they said, when argument was enforced
from sources of personal experience; for men
would speak with the intensity of feeling of those
who know what hunger is and what it is to hear
their children cry for bread, while within their
sight is the wasteful luxury of the rich. But a
certain earnest moderateness of speech was far
more common, and it sometimes revealed a
breadth of view and an acquaintance with economics
which to me were astonishing.</p>
<p>Yet, after all, it was the personal note that
they touched most effectively in what they said.
Strong, sturdy men, with every mark upon them
of workmanlike efficiency, spoke feelingly of the
relation, which they said, was growing up between
what they called “the two great classes of society,”
the employing and the employed. They
declared the wage-earner essentially a “wage-slave”
under present conditions, and they contrasted
his lot unfavorably with that of an actual
bondsman. The chattel-slave, they said, his master
buys outright, and having made him thus a
part of his invested capital, he shields him, out
of a purely selfish motive, it is true, yet shields
him, from bodily harm. But not the body of an
industrial slave, merely his capacity for work, his
employer buys, and he may drive him to the exhaustion
of his last power of endurance, knowing
perfectly well that, should he wreck him
physically, the labor market would instantly supply
a hundred men eager to take the vacant place
on the same terms. And it is little relief to the
feelings of the wage-slave, they added, to be assured
that he is not sold, but is free to sell his
labor in the open market, when he recalls the
hard necessity that conditions that freedom. It
was interesting to find them paraphrasing, as Old
Pete had done in the logging camp, the dictum of
Carlyle—</p>
<p>“Liberty, I am told, is a divine thing. Liberty,
when it becomes the liberty to die by starvation,
is not so divine.”</p>
<p>Then, as an expression of the belief of the
gathering, a member introduced a resolution
which pronounced it to be a truth in the relation
of the individual to society, that “in case a man,
acting upon the theory that society owes him a
living, should refuse to work, and should steal,
<em>he</em> would be a criminal, and ought to be deprived
of his personal liberty and be forced to work.
But in case a man, acting upon the theory that
society owes him a chance to earn a living, should
find no opportunity, and should, therefore, be
forced to steal, <em>society</em> would be the criminal, and
ought to furnish the remedy.”</p>
<p>The resolution was passed unanimously and
with much show of approval. But I was more
interested in its introducer. He was a curious
departure from the prevailing type; short and
straight and slender, with a small, thin face
whose skin was like old, exquisite, wrinkled
parchment. His bright eyes, set close together,
moved ceaselessly as though sensitive to a certain
mental restlessness; a thin aquiline nose curved
delicately in the nostrils above a gray mustache
which half concealed a thin-lipped mouth of uncertain
drawing. Over all was a really fine,
dome-like brow, quite bald and polished, while
from the sides and back of his head there grew a
mass of iron-gray hair which fell curling to his
shoulders. I shall take the liberty of calling him
“the Poet.” There was a nervous grace in his
movements, and a thorough self-possession in his
manner, and a quality of cultivation and refinement
in his voice and speech, which were clearly
indicative of breeding and education and of native
talent. Yet his position among the Socialists
seemed not at all that of a distinctive leader; he
was simply one of the company, on terms of perfect
equality, and he addressed the others and
was himself addressed with the fraternal “Comrade”
in all the intimacy of primitive Christianity.
It was with instant anticipation of the pleasure
of it that I learned from the announcements
that the Poet would read, in an early meeting, a
paper on the burning question of the opening of
the World’s Fair on Sundays.</p>
<p>A woman sat near the front. I had seen her
in frequent whispered consultation with the chairman,
whom I shall call “the Leader,” and with
the Poet and the Peddler and other members who
sat about her, and I judged that she was high in
the councils of the Socialists, and I shall name her
“the Citizeness.”</p>
<p>In the midst of the applause which marked the
passage of the resolution, she was on her feet—a
dark, portly woman of middle age, dressed very
simply in black, bearing herself with an air of
accustomedness which showed that she was by no
means a novice on the floor, and speaking, when
quiet was restored, with a directness and an unaffected
ease which had in them no loss of femininity.
But you had only to watch closely in
order to see nature avenge herself in a certain
self-assertation which the Citizeness felt forced
at times to assume, for the sake of emphasis, and
in a certain very feminine straining after the
sarcastic.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_141.jpg" alt="A room full of people sitting in pews. One woman is walking back down the aisle." /> <div class="caption"><p>IN THE MIDST OF THE APPLAUSE WHICH MARKED THE PASSAGE OF THE RESOLUTION, SHE WAS ON HER FEET.</p> </div>
</div>
<p>She held a newspaper in her hand, and from
it, she said, she wished to read a fragment of a
speech made by Mr. —— to a large gathering of
his subordinates in the administration of a railway
system of which he is the president.</p>
<p>It was a short paragraph, in the characteristic,
oratorical English of that genial railway president
when he becomes serious, and its purport
was simply a charge to those who bear to workingmen
the relation of authoritative direction
to treat them with the utmost consideration.
“These are anxious times,” he said, substantially,
“and there are grave indications which go to
show that workingmen are increasingly regarding
themselves as a class apart and their interests
as being antagonized by those of their employers.
All employers and directors of labor in all personal
contact with their men should, therefore,
exercise the greatest care in their treatment of
them, to the end that these men may not be
made to feel unnecessarily what is distasteful to
them in their condition of subordination.”</p>
<p>“That,” said the Citizeness, “is a significant
sign of the times. I have rarely seen words which
indicate more clearly the growing frame of mind
of the capitalists. They are beginning to wake
up to the fact of danger. Oh, yes, when it begins
to be a question of self-preservation they show
signs of some knowledge of the actual situation!
But just see how foxy they are. Mr. —— does
not tell his fellow-employers to treat their men
well because they ought to, and he doesn’t talk
any foolishness about the interests of labor and
capital being identical. He knows better than
that. He knows perfectly well that the men in
the employ of his corporation are wage-slaves.
He knows it a good deal better than most of the
men themselves know it. And what he is telling
his fellow-capitalists, who are beginning to feel
alarm over the situation, is this, that in all their
treatment of their men they must make a point
of disguising from them their real condition of
servitude. Keep them in servitude, of course,
but by all possible means keep them in ignorance
of it, for the greatest danger to the existing order
of things lies in an awakening of workingmen,
and already there are signs of such an awakening,
and ‘the times’ are, therefore, ‘anxious.’”</p>
<p>Tumultuous applause followed this sally. It
expressed the prevalent thought as no word of
the afternoon had done. “Capital conspiring to
maintain the existing bondage of labor—growing
anxious at symptoms of dawning intelligence
among its slaves, and disclosing, in a moment of
unguarded anxiety, its real spirit through a
feigned one!” “What clearer proof of the
truth could be asked?” men seemed to say, as
they looked eagerly into one another’s faces, and
kept on applauding.</p>
<p>Before the noise subsided the Peddler again
had gained the floor. He harked back to his original
theme of “education,” and was showing its
applicability to the situation from the new point
of view.</p>
<p>“The greatest obstacle to Socialism,” he exclaimed,
with some vehemence, “is the brute
ignorance among ourselves, the working-classes.
And the greatest bulwark of the cruel, crushing,
competitive anarchy under which we suffer and
die is this same ignorance of the workers. It is
not organized capital that blocks the way of Socialism,
for organized capital is unconsciously
hastening the day when all capital will be organized
under the common ownership of all the people.
It is the dead weight of poor, blinded, befooled
wage-slaves which hangs like an incubus
about the neck of Socialism. It is through this
that the truth must make its way, and will make
its way, until workingmen at last awake to an
acceptance of that which so long has been striving
with them to get itself accepted.</p>
<p>“But alas! alas! how slow the process is!
And through what density of ignorance and indifference
and prejudice must the light shine!</p>
<p>“Sitting in the street-car beside me, as I rode
down this afternoon, was a workingman whom I
know well. I invited him to come to this meeting
with me. I told him that we were going to
talk about matters which concerned him deeply.
And what did he say? Why, he laughed in my
face, and said that he did not see much sense in
talking about such things, and that he preferred
putting in his Sunday afternoon at the ‘mat-in-ee,’
and having a good laugh. Poor, miserable
wretch! working like a galley-slave through the
week, and caring for nothing on his day of rest
but an extra allowance of sleep, and then further
forgetfulness of his daily lot in the crowds and
the lights and the illusions and heart-breaking
fun of the cheap theatres. All that remains for
him then is to go home drunk, and get up the next
morning to the twofold hell of his common life.”</p>
<p>It was growing dark within the hall, and the
meeting was quietly adjourned until the next
Sunday. But the members were slow in leaving.
They formed into small groups, and went on discussing
earnestly the topics of the afternoon, as
they stood among the benches, or moved slowly
toward the door.</p>
<p>The street-lights were burning with flickering,
dancing effect through the falling snow, and
under them great crowds of working-people came
streaming through the wide-open doors of the
theatres, swarming upon the pavements and in
the street-cars, well-dressed, and quiet in the pre-occupation
of pleasure-seekers homeward bound,
and not a little impatient for early transportation.</p>
<p>I walked alone in the direction of the lodging-house.
Deep is the spell of real conviction, and
the thoughts of these working-people, all alive
with belief, were passing warm and glowing
through my mind. That there are multitudes of
workers who are looking earnestly for a better social
order, and who intelligently and firmly believe
in its possibility, I had known, but never
before had I felt the inspiration of actual contact
with them.</p>
<p>And the fascination of their point of view!
“A world full of want and misery and cruelty,
by reason, most of all, of the wasteful war of
competition between man and his brother man in
the wilderness of anarchical production in which
the people blindly wander; while over against
them, awaiting their occupation, is a promised
land of peace and plenty, where poverty and
want, and their attendant miseries and tendencies
to moral evil, will be unknown, if men can but
be induced to cross the Jordan which separates
lawless competition from intelligent and provident
co-operation.”</p>
<p>How quick and sure is such an appeal to
the human heart! It is the world-old charm,
charming men anew. A royal road at last,
a wide gate and a broad way leading unto
life! The way of salvation made easy! It is the
Patriarchs again trusting to their sacrifices; the
old Jews to circumcision and the blood of Abraham;
the spiritually blinded Christians to their
outward symbols; and all of them deaf to that
truest word of all philosophy, “The kingdom of
heaven is within you.”</p>
<p>It is so easy to conceive of some change in outward
conditions, some “remedy,” some “solution”
for the ills from which we suffer, and
which, having been accepted, would lift life to
a plane of harmonious and frictionless movement,
and set us free henceforth to follow our own wills
and purposes and desires. And it is so supremely
difficult to realize that the way of life lies not that
way at all, not in the pursuit of happiness nor in
the fulfilment of our own wills, but in realizing
that the universe is governed by laws of right and
justice and truth, and in bringing our wills into
subjection to those laws and our actions into harmony
with them.</p>
<p>One of these laws, I take it, is the law “the
universal brotherhood of man.” And it is by
the practical denial of this law in the dealing of
men with their fellow-men that much of the
world’s cruelest misery has been caused, and
much of the seed of terrible retribution has been
sown.</p>
<p>It was their firm belief in the truth of brotherhood
which gave to the words of the Socialists
their greatest strength and charm. It was plainly
fundamental to all their views. Ignorance and
prejudice and unphilosophical thinking warped
their expressed ideas and made their speeches
very human, but yet in them all was this saving
hold on truth, a living belief in the solidarity of
the human race and in the responsibilities which
grow out of the bond of universal kinship.</p>
<p>At the corner near my lodging-house I stood
still for a few moments watching the deft movements
of two young children who were busy near
the curb. The long, wide street lay a field of
glistening diamonds where the blue-white electric
light was reflected from the snow. A
drunken man reeled past me, tracking the untrodden
snow at the sides of the beaten path along
the centre of the pavement. A dim alley at my
right lost itself in almost impenetrable darkness,
on the verge of which a small wooden house appeared
tottering to ruin and as though the weight
of the falling snow were hastening its end. From
out the alley came the figures of three young
women who were laughing gayly as they crossed
the street in company and walked on toward the
post-office. The street was very still and lonely
for that quarter, and the two little girls worked
diligently, talking to each other, but oblivious
apparently to everything but their task. I drew
nearer to see what they were doing. A street-light
shone strong and clear above them, and they
were in the path of a broad stream of yellow glare
that poured from the windows of a cheap chop-house.
They were at work about a barrel which
stood on the curb. I could see that it was full of
the refuse of the eating-house. Scraps of meat
and half-eaten fragments of bread and of vegetables
lay mixed with bones and egg-shells and
vegetable skins in a pulpy ooze, rising to the barrel
rim and overflowing upon the pavement and
in the gutter. An old wicker basket, with paper
covering its ragged holes, rested between the
children, and into this they dropped selected morsels
of food. The larger girl was tall enough to
see over the top of the barrel, and so she worked
there, and I saw her little hands dive into the
soft, glutinous mass after new treasures. The
smaller one could only crouch upon the pavement
and gather thence and from the gutter what
edible fragments she could find. I watched them
closely. The older child was dressed in thin,
ragged cotton, black with filth, and her matted,
stringy hair fell from her uncovered head about
a lean, peaked face that was as dirty almost as
her dress. She wore both shoes and stockings,
but the shoes were far too large for her, and
through their gaping holes the cold and wet entered
freely. Her sister was more interesting to
me. She was a child of four or five. The snow
was falling upon her bare brown curls and upon
the soft white flesh of her neck, and over the
damp, clinging, threadbare dress, through which
I could trace the delicate outlines of an infant’s
figure. Her warm breath passed hissing through
chattering teeth in the intervals between outbursts
of a deep, hoarse cough which shook her
frame. Through the streaking dirt upon her
hands appeared in childish movement the dimples
above the knuckles, and the dainty fingers, red
and cold and washed clean at their tips in the
melting snow, had in them all the power and
mystery of the waxen baby touch.</p>
<p>With the quick illusion of childhood they
had turned their task into a game, and they
would break into exclamations of delight as they
held up to each other’s view some discovered
morsel which the finder claimed to be the best.</p>
<p>“What are you going to do with these
scraps?” I asked of the older child.</p>
<p>Her bloodless lips were trembling with the
cold, and her small, dark eyes appeared among
the shreds of tangled hair with an expression in
them of a starved pariah whose cherished bone is
threatened. She clasped the basket with both
hands and half covered it with her little body.</p>
<p>“Don’t you touch it!” she said, fiercely, while
her anxious eyes searched the street in hope of
succor.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_151.jpg" alt="A street scene where it is raining. An adult man is looking down at two children with a basket." /> <div class="caption"><p>“DON’T YOU TOUCH IT!” SHE SAID, FIERCELY.</p> </div>
</div>
<p>It was easy to reassure her, and then she spoke
freely.</p>
<p>“Ma sent us to get some grub for supper,” she
explained. “Ma’s got three boarders, only two
of ’em ain’t paid nothing for a month, and pa, he’s
drunk. He ain’t got no job, but he went out to
shovel snow to-day, and ma thought he’d bring
her some money, but he came home drunk.
She’s mindin’ the baby, and she sent us for grub.
She’d lick us if we didn’t find none; but I guess
she won’t lick us now, will she? That’s where
we live,” and one little chapped finger pointed
down the alley to the crumbling hovel in the
dark.</p>
<p>The children were ready to go home, and I
lifted the younger girl into my arms. Her sister
walked beside us with the basket in her hand.
The little one lay soft and warm against me.
After the first moment of surprise, she had relaxed
with the gentle yielding of a little child,
and I could feel her nestle close to me with the
trustful ease which thrills one’s inmost heart with
feeling for which there are no words.</p>
<p>We opened the shanty door. It was difficult
at first to make out the room’s interior. Dense
banks of tobacco-smoke drifted lazily through
foul air in the cheerful light of a small oil-lamp.
Shreds of old wall-paper hung from dark, greasy
plaster, which was crumbling from the walls
and ceiling and which lay in accumulations of
lime-dust upon a rotting wooden floor. A
baby of pallid, putty flesh was crying fretfully
in the arms of a haggard, slatternly woman of
less than thirty years, who sat in a broken chair,
rocking the baby in her arms beside a dirty
wooden table, on which were strewn fragments
of broken pottery and unwashed forks and spoons
and knives. A rough workman, stripped to his
shirt and trousers, sat smoking a clay pipe, his
bare feet resting in the oven of a rusty cooking-stove
in which a fire was smouldering. Upon a
heap of rags in one corner lay a drunken man
asleep.</p>
<p>“We’ve got some grub, ma!” cried the older
child, in a tone of success, as she ran up to her
mother with the basket. “Riley’s barrel was full
to-night.”</p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i157" style="max-width: 145.25em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_157.jpg" alt="Several poorly dressed people in a a room. One woman is nursing a child. One man is carrying a child in the doorway." />
<div class="caption"><p>“WE’VE GOT SOME GRUB, MA!” CRIED THE OLDER CHILD,
IN A TONE OF SUCCESS, AS SHE RAN UP TO HER MOTHER WITH THE BASKET.
“RILEY’S BARREL WAS FULL TO-NIGHT.”</p>
</div>
</div>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>In the continued search for work through the
succeeding day it was natural to drift early into
the employment bureaus. Clark and I made a
careful round of these, he in search of employment
at his trade and I of any job that offered.
Here, too, however, we were but units in the
great number of seekers. Some of the agencies
offered for a small fee and a nominal price of
transportation to ship us to the farther West or
to the Northwest and insure us employment with
gangs of day-laborers, but of work in Chicago
they could promise none.</p>
<p>In the course of a day last week, as I was going
about alone, I was attracted by the prominent
sign of an employment bureau, on the West
Side, which we had not visited so far. It was the
conventional bureau, much like the office of a
steamship company. It occupied the floor above
the basement, reached by a flight of steps from
the pavement; a row of wooden chairs stood
along the outer wall; a wooden partition extended
down the centre of the room, with a door
and two windows in it. The hour was noon and
the office was deserted but for a comparatively
young man of florid face and close-set, light-brown
eyes, thin hair, and a bristling mustache
clipped close above his mouth. He was at work
upon his books behind one of the windows.
With a direct, matter-of-fact glance he looked
me over, and then his eye sought the place on the
open page held by his finger.</p>
<p>“What can I do for you?” he asked.</p>
<p>“I am looking for work,” I said. “Have you
any employment to offer?”</p>
<p>“What kind of work?”</p>
<p>“I am a day-laborer,” I replied.</p>
<p>“Nothing,” he said, laconically, and his eye
followed the finger as it moved across the open
page.</p>
<p>I waited for a moment, thinking that he might
say more, but he remained silent at his work.</p>
<p>“If not in Chicago, perhaps you can put me
in the way of work near here,” I ventured.</p>
<p>“Young man,” he said, and his clear, cold
eyes were looking straight into mine, “Young
man, we can’t get enough of you fellows in the
spring and summer time; we have to go to you
and beg you to go to work. You’re mighty independent
then, and you don’t give a damn for us.
But it’s our turn now. You can do some begging
now and see how you like it. It’s good enough
for you. No, there ain’t a job that I know of in
Chicago that you can get, unless it is in the
sewers, and you ain’t fit for that.”</p>
<p>“But give me a chance at it,” I urged.</p>
<p>“I wouldn’t take the responsibility,” he answered.
“It would kill a man of your build in
a week, and you couldn’t pass the first inspection,
anyway.” And so ended my efforts through the
employment agencies.</p>
<p>The newspapers are always an unfailing resort,
as a hopeful source of information of any demand
for labor. A newspaper in the very early morning,
before the city is astir, is a treasure, for any
clew to work can then be promptly followed up
with some chance of one’s being the first to apply.
Papers are to be had in abundance later in the
day in public reading-rooms and about railway stations
and hotel-corridors. It is, however, the
newspaper damp from press that is most valuable
to us, and between us and its possession is often
the insuperable barrier of its price. The journals
which early post their issues upon bulletin-boards
are public benefactors, and about these boards in
the early dawn often there are groups of men who
study closely the “want columns.”</p>
<p>A very little experience was enough to disclose
the fact that there is a wide difference in the
character of these notices in different newspapers.
In some issues the want-column is very short, but
the statements bear every mark of genuineness;
in others it is promisingly long, but, when carefully
analyzed, it proves to be chiefly a collection
of decoys for the unwary. The city seems to be
full of men and women seeking employment.
Not only are there the penniless common workmen
of my class, whose number must be reckoned
in many thousands, and among whom the
professionally idle form, of course, a large percentage,
but there are multitudes of mechanics
and skilled workers, of whom Clark is a type.
And beyond these is an army of seekers after
salaried posts like those of clerks and bookkeepers
and the various subordinate positions of business
and professional life. Not all were penniless
when they began their search for work there.
Hundreds of them had a little store of money
when their last employment gave out, or they
brought with them when they came their savings,
which they hopefully counted upon to last until
a new place had been found.</p>
<p>How large a body of sharpers live by preying
upon the credulity of these classes it would be
difficult to discover, as it also would be difficult
to discover all the tricks of their trade. The craft
of the bunco-steerers is certainly well known, and
yet it perennially finds its victims, and largely, no
doubt, among the classes of whom I am speaking.
But there are other snares, less sudden but quite
as disastrous as those of the bunco-steerers, and
far more insidious, since they have about them
the apparent sanction of legitimate business. It
is these that make most open use of the want-columns
of certain of the newspapers. Agencies
are advertised, and in them, after the payment
of a small fee and the purchase of the needed outfit,
large earnings are guaranteed as the result of
putting some product upon the market. Opportunities
are offered for the investment of a little
capital—sums as low as five and ten dollars are
solicited—and immense returns are promised.
Requests for men are made in urgent terms:
“Wanted—three—five—seven men at once.
Steady employment guaranteed; good pay. No
previous experience necessary. Apply at No. — —— Street,
second floor front.”</p>
<p>One morning I marked a dozen or more of
these notices in one newspaper, and carefully
made the rounds of the addresses given. In
every case I found an establishment which purported
to do business at coloring photographs. I
was offered employment in each instance. The
conditions were as uniform as those governing a
regular market. Two dollars was the invariable
fee for being taught the secret of the process.
One dollar would purchase the needed materials.</p>
<p>There was always a strong demand, enough to
insure abundant work until spring. “Our agents
are sending in large orders all the time,” was the
conventional explanation. “You can soon learn
to color ten or twelve photographs in a day, and
we will pay you at the rate of three dollars a
dozen for them.” The discovery that I had no
money invariably brought the interview abruptly
to an end in an atmosphere which cooled suddenly.
I met many actual victims of these devices;
one will serve as a type.</p>
<p>We both had been sitting for some time on a
crowded bench in the lobby of a lodging-house.
Each was absorbed in his own “bitterness,” and
oblivious to the presence of other men and to the
tumult of the room. My companion was cheerfully
responsive when I spoke to him, and we
both accepted gladly the relief of an interchange
of confidence. He was three days beyond the
end of his resources. So far he had been fortunate
in securing the cost of food and the price of
a ten-cent lodging, and had not yet been forced
to the station-house. But on that evening, for
the first time, he had learned of the station lodging.
It loomed for him as the logic of events,
and he dreaded it. It was of this that he was
thinking gloomily when I spoke to him.</p>
<p>Born and bred in the country, he had grown
up in ignorance, not of hard, honest work, nor
altogether of books, but of the world. He had
lived at home and worked on his father’s farm
and attended the winter sessions of the district
school until he was sixteen, when his father and
mother died, and the farm and all of their possessions
were sold to pay the mortgage, and he was
left penniless. Then he worked for other farmers
for two years, and studied as best he could.
Finally he secured a “second-grade certificate”
to teach school, and he had taught in the winter
sessions for two years, working as a farm-hand
through the summers.</p>
<p>His coming to Chicago was a stroke of ambition.
A post as a salesman or a bookkeeper
could be got, he had felt sure, if he was persistent
enough in his search, and this, he thought, would
serve him as a starting-point to a business career.
He had counted upon a long, hard search for
place, and so he had come forearmed with his savings,
which, when he reached Chicago, more than
two months before this evening, amounted to a
little over fifty dollars when he found himself
in lodgings in a decent flat on Division Street.</p>
<p>He paid at first two dollars a week for a room
which contained a bed and bureau and a wash-stand,
and which was warmed by a small oil-stove.
There was a strip of carpet on the floor,
and a shade at the window which looked out upon
an alley and the blank brick wall of a house opposite.
The bed-linen was changed once in two
weeks. In addition to that outlay he was spending,
on an average, fifty cents a day for food and
an occasional dime in car-fare. All this was luxury.
His last lodging, before he was forced upon
the street, was a seventy-five-cent closet in a house
on Meridian Street, on the West Side. The room
contained a cot with an old mattress and some
blankets, and there was a soap-box on end which
would hold a lamp. He was obliged to wash himself
at the sink in the public passage.</p>
<p>There had been an analogous change in the
range of employment sought. All idea of a mercantile
post had been at last abandoned, and he
was in for any honest living to which his hands
could help him.</p>
<p>It was when he had broken his last five-dollar
note that he made once more the rounds of the
doubtful offices which offer work. A photograph-coloring
establishment was his final choice. He
paid the fee of two dollars, received the instructions,
which were very simple, purchased for a
dollar a box of materials, accepted half a dozen
photographs to begin upon, and then went to his
room with his mind made up to succeed at the
work if there was any success in it.</p>
<p>With utmost patience and care he practised
upon the pictures. Difficulties in the process
arose against which he had not been warned. He
went for further instructions and was given them
willingly. After nearly three days of almost constant
industry he finished the six photographs.
These were to yield him a dollar and a half, and
he took them with a sense of achievement to the
office. His employer examined them and good-naturedly
pointed out certain defects which he
was asked to remedy. The remedy seemed simple,
but he saw at a glance that, in reality, it
would require his undoing practically all his
work and performing it over again, at a great
risk of ruining the photographs in the attempt.</p>
<p>He thought that he saw an escape from that,
so he proposed to his employer that the alterations
should be made at the establishment; that he
himself should be paid nothing for the first work,
but that he should be given a second lot of pictures
to color. The man agreed instantly, and
handed to him a fresh package containing half a
dozen photographs. These he carried back to his
room. When he undid the wrapper he found
that he had been given a job which would require
at least a week to finish. Each photograph was
unlike the others. Besides one or two more or
less difficult human figures in each, there were
elaborate backgrounds of draperies and rustic
benches and potted plants. He took the package
back and asked for something simpler—more
within his power as a beginner. His employer
explained to him cheerfully that he had nothing
else just then, but that he was sure of easier work
for him by the time that he had finished this.</p>
<p>The poor fellow walked out into the street
knowing that he had been swindled out of three
dollars and three days’ hard work, and that penniless
now, he must take up the search again, and
that there was no redress for him.</p>
<p>Several times after this I saw him and I pressed
upon him each time the plan of returning to his
former home in northern Indiana, or striking out
anywhere into the open country, where his intelligence
and his former experience would stand
him in good stead, and where he would probably
not have to look long for a job. This was keenly
distasteful to him, for it would be a tacit acknowledgment
of defeat, and the man was not
without courage and pluck. I met him last one
early morning after his first night as a lodger in
a station-house. His eyes were starting from his
head, and he wore the wild, hunted look which I
had watched with alarm in Clark. He would
scarcely stop to talk. He was off for the open
country and his former home.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Before many days had passed Clark and I began
to lose the sense of being recruits in the army
of the unemployed. We soon acquired the feeling
of veterans, and with it a certain naturalness
as of long habit. It is not a little strange how
swift this adjustment is. We fell into some of
the ways of the other men with an ease which
seemed to imply a long antecedent wont. This
was after Clark had despaired of work in a
foundry, and had reached the level of willingness
to sweep a crossing for a living, if only he could
get the job.</p>
<p>One of the habits which came most readily to
us was to join the crowds which stand in the
early morning about the gates of large productive
institutions. Sometimes a superintendent finds
himself short-handed of common labor in a permanent
department of the work or for an emergency,
and he sends a foreman out to the gates to
secure the needed men. This happens very
rarely, if I may judge from our experience; and
yet, upon so slender a chance as this, hundreds of
men stand each day in the market-places for
labor, waiting hopefully for some husbandman in
want of workers.</p>
<p>Clark and I soon made a considerable round.
One morning we were at the gates of the Exposition
grounds, another at the Stock-yards, and
then at various factory gates on the West Side.</p>
<p>We were up at five one clear, cold morning
near the middle of December, in order to try our
luck at the gates of a factory which lies four
miles or more from the heart of the city. It was
no great hardship to set off without a breakfast,
for we had supped heartily on the night before,
and had gladly spent our remaining cash for beds
in preference to sleeping in the station-house.</p>
<p>Out of a cloudless sky blew a strong, dry,
northwest wind across the snowless prairies, and
it cut sharply, at right angles, through the long
diagonal street which we followed to the far
southwest. We did not loiter, for it took our
fastest gait to keep us warm. The buildings
shielded us in part, but around the corners the
wind caught us with its unchecked force, and enveloped
us often in clouds of driven dust which
rose from the surface of the frozen streets. There
was exhilaration in the walk; when we reached
the centre of the viaduct which carries Blue Island
Avenue across the various lines of railway
which enter the city between Fifteenth and Sixteenth
Streets, we were in the full, unimpeded
gale, and looking back we could see across the
dark city the first slender shafts of light dimming
the eastern stars.</p>
<p>It was still dark when we reached the factory
gates, for the better part of an hour remained before
the sun would be well up, and it was almost
half an hour before the beginning of the day’s
work. We were not the first to be on hand. Already
there were groups of men who stood before
the fast-closed gate, or stamped slowly up and
down on the sleepers of the railway which enters
the factory yard, or gathered for shelter behind
the walls of neighboring buildings. The number
of these men was growing fast. I thought at first
that many of them were employees waiting for
the morning opening of the factory. But when
the heavy gate moved down its groove in answer
to the keeper’s push, disclosing the open area of
the factory yard and the long platforms flanking
the warehouses, this company of waiting men,
grown now to eighty or a hundred strong, stood
against the high board fence and along the edges
of a great stream of workingmen, which began
to pour with increasing volume through the narrow
way. A bell sounded from the factory tower,
and you could hear the first slow movements of
the piston-rods, and the answering stir among the
fly-wheels as they warmed to swifter motion, and
the straps and pulleys tuning up to the canticle
of the working-day.</p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i171" style="max-width: 143.1875em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_171.jpg" alt="Men gathered outside. A fence is visible behind them with a wide building visible behind the fence." />
<div class="caption"><p>WAITING FOR A JOB OUTSIDE THE FACTORY GATES.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>The sudden on-rush of factory-hands was almost
a miracle. Men seemed to rise as by magic
from the soil. They streamed from neighboring
tenements, and along the wooden sidewalks, and
from out the horse-cars which came down the
streets loaded to the couplers. They had grown
to the number of an army, and in rough, uneven,
changing ranks they walked briskly, five, six,
nine men abreast, while the bell tapped off nervously
the swift approach of seven o’clock. Two
men seated in a buggy drove their horse slowly
into the thick of the crowd, which deflected at
the gate to let them pass, and then closed in behind
with increased momentum. The superintendent
of the factory stepped down from the
buggy and climbed the staircase to his office.</p>
<p>The converging lines of workmen made denser
the mass that pressed quickly through the gate.
There was little speech among them, and the
noise they made was the shuffling, broken step of
an unorganized crowd. But there was not wanting
the inspiration of a moving throng of men.
Some of them were old and much bent with pain
and labor, and there were boys in the crowd who
could be but little beyond their first decade of
life, but the great body of the hands were young
men between the ages of twenty and thirty-five.
One could trace upon these faces all the stages of
life’s handicraft, in distorting human countenances
into grotesque variations from all normal
types of beauty, and bringing out upon them, in
infinite variety, individual expressions of aggressive
power and the strength which comes of long
endurance. Ah, the hideous ugliness of the race
to which we belong, and yet the more than
beauty of it in the strong lines it bears of honest
work faithfully done and of pain and sorrow
bravely borne!</p>
<p>With the last sharp ringing of the bell there
was a sudden rush of the living stream of workers,
and then it abruptly ceased, and we, the unemployed,
stood at both sides along the high
board fence, like so much useless foam tossed off
by the swift current which had poured through
the narrow gate. The keeper began a monotonous
march up and down the opening before his
sentry-box. He was a muscular, blue-eyed Irishman
of fifty-five or sixty, and he was in no wise
ignorant of his business. There was nothing to
indicate that he was aware of the presence of the
crowd of expectant men, until some of us pressed
too near to the gate in our anxiety to catch sight
of a foreman in search of extra hands, and then
he ordered us back with a violence which showed
that we were one of the pests of his existence.</p>
<p>From some unseen quarter of the factory yard
a closely covered wagon suddenly appeared. The
paymaster presently descended from the superintendent’s
office, and entering the wagon, he was
driven to the gate, where a halt was made while
two loaded revolvers were handed to him by the
porter, in full view of the idle men, and then he
was driven rapidly up the avenue toward the city.</p>
<p>It was the usual heterogeneous crowd that lingered
there about the gate. Most of them were
Irishmen, I think, and there were certainly Italians
and Scandinavians and some Welshmen, and
even a few Polish Jews, while Clark and I, so far
as I could judge, were the only native born. Not
all of them could have been in the homeless
plight in which we were, and there was scarcely
a case of insufficient clothing among them, while
many seemed to be habitual workmen who knew
the decencies of home and of some home comfort.
But there were not wanting men who, like us,
were evidently upon the streets, and not only in
dress, but in face, they suggested those who, if
not already of that class, are swiftly approximating
to professional tramps.</p>
<p>There was wonderful stillness in the crowd,
which now had broken into small groups. A conscious
tension possessed us, as of nervous watching
for an uncertain event. Men spoke to one
another in low tones scarcely above a whisper.
An hour passed with nothing to break the monotony
of its long anxiety. We were fairly shielded
from the wind, and the sun had risen high and
had begun to lend a generous aid to our efforts
at keeping warm in the frost-bit air. The pale
crescent of the waning moon had almost faded
into the clear blue of the western sky. We soon
were aware of the relaxing of tension, and then
the men began to drift away toward other factories,
or, disappointed, to their homes, or back
to the aimless living of the streets.</p>
<p>Just then a young Hungarian came among us—a
man of twenty-five, perhaps, short and erect
and stocky, with an appearance of great muscular
strength and a nervous quickness of step which
was in full keeping with the wide-eyed inquisitiveness
of his round, swarthy face. He was looking
inquiringly at the clusters of loitering men
and the open gate and the stolid porter in apparently
heedless guard before it. I saw his eye
sweep the crowd in seeking for a fellow-countryman,
for it was written plain upon him that he
was an immigrant and innocent of any language
but his own. One could fairly see his mental
process, it was all so clear: “I am looking for a
job in this wide land of freedom to workingmen.
Here is a great factory, and the open gate invites
me. Why waste the time outside? For my part
I shall go in at once and see the boss, and then go
quickly on with no loss of time, if I should not
be wanted here.” One foot was just over the
steel rail upon which the sliding gate moves,
when, with the swiftness of the spring of a panther
which has been crouching for its prey, the
heavy hands of the seemingly careless watchman
were upon his shoulders, and the man was held,
amazed and paralyzed, in a vice-like grip.</p>
<p>“What are you after?” roared the porter in
his face.</p>
<p>There was a murmured attempt at speech, and
then the laborer was faced about with a suddenness
and force that set his teeth to rattling in his
head, and the porter turned him loose with successive
parting kicks, which seemed to lift the
fellow from the ground.</p>
<p>He was tingling with pain as he slunk in
among us, but the expression which he wore was
one of strong, appealing bewilderment at the
meaning of it all.</p>
<p>It was over in a moment, and then the cold,
cowering, hungry mass of unhuman humanity at
the gate broke into a low, gruff laugh.</p>
<p>It must have been this laugh that stung me to
hot fury, for in an instant I had lost all sense of
cold and weariness and hunger, and I was strong
and warm in the wild joy of the lust for blood.
With one hand gripping his hairy throat I was
pounding the porter’s eyes with my right fist in
blows whose frequency and precision surprised
me into greater joy. But there was a sudden end
of clear memory when, with a full-armed swing
of his huge fist the keeper struck me in the face
and knocked me, limp and almost senseless, upon
the planks, where I lay choking down gulps of
blood which flowed from a cut against my teeth.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_179.jpg" alt="Two men are fighting out of doors while several other men watch on. They are all shabbily dressed." /> <div class="caption"><p>I WAS STRONG AND WARM IN THE WILD JOY OF THE LUST FOR BLOOD.</p> </div>
</div>
<p>Clark was bending over me.</p>
<p>“What in — did you hit him for, you —
fool?” he hissed at me.</p>
<p>“I had a jolly good time doing it,” I explained;
and I was sufficiently recovered to laugh
a little at the momentary sport which I had had
in making a fool of myself.</p>
<p>Clark helped me to my feet, and we walked
off together, only I could not walk very far at a
stretch. He did not desert me, and he would not
leave the subject of my folly. But he changed
his point of view at length, and acknowledged,
finally, that he was “glad that I had got in a few
licks on the porter’s eye,” an emotion which I
warmly shared.</p>
<p>That day was chiefly memorable because of
Clark’s final success in finding work. It came
from a most unexpected quarter. We were walking
together through Adams Street when a man
touched Clark upon the shoulder and withdrew
to the doorway of a shop. Clark recognized him
at once as a foundry superintendent with whom
he had been importunate for work, and his face
lighted up with a hopefulness which made the
moment almost tragic. I stood at the doorstep
and listened.</p>
<p>“Ain’t you found a job yet?” began the
superintendent.</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“Well, I’ve been thinking about your case,”
he continued. “We ain’t got a job for you at
the foundry,” he hastened to explain, “but I’ve
heard from a friend of mine in Milwaukee, and
they’re short of men in your line. Could you go
up there?”</p>
<p>“I could walk,” said Clark.</p>
<p>“Well, that ain’t necessary. I—I’m good for
a ticket,” added the superintendent, with a look
of embarrassment.</p>
<p>And he was as good as his word, for he went
with Clark to the station, where he added to the
ticket a dollar, both of which were accepted as a
loan.</p>
<p>Clark was nearly mad with suppressed delight
when he met me in the entrance of the post-office,
where he had asked me to await his return. With
his usual generosity he shared his good fortune
with me, and, before we went to the railway station
together we had a farewell dinner on beefsteak
and onions and unlimited coffee and bread.</p>
<p>My own success followed Clark’s by only a few
days, when I was taken on as a hand-truckman
in a factory on the West Side; but there is one
intervening experience which belongs distinctively
to this part of the general experiment.</p>
<p>I found, one early morning, among a lot of
“fake” advertisements, which I had come to recognize
with ease, one notice of “a man wanted”
which rang with genuineness. Applicants were
told to report at a certain shop just without the
Stock-yards at twelve o’clock that day. In
ample time I crossed over to Halsted Street and
walked in a leisurely way down that marvellous
thoroughfare. It was not new to me, and I
was missing Clark sorely and was experiencing
a new phase of the loneliness of being “left behind.”
And yet I could but mark again with
fresh interest the wonders of this great artery of
the West Side in the five miles of its length
through which I walked to the appointed number.
It is essentially a cheap street: cheap buildings
line it, in which tenants rent cheap lodgings and
shop-keepers employ cheap labor and sell cheap
wares of every kind to those of the poor “whose
destruction is their poverty.” Every sort of
structural flimsiness looks down upon you as you
pass: ghastly imitations in stone of real, substantial
buildings; the unblinking fronts of glaring
red-brick shells, whose shoddiness is the more apparent
in gaudy shops and in “all the modern
improvements” and in the heavy cotton-lace at
the upper windows. And there are wooden shanties
with “false fronts,” after the manner of
frontier “cities,” and wooden hovels with sloping
roofs which are far along in process of decay,
and here and there a substantial house which was
built upon the open prairie, and which looks with
amazement upon the fungus growth about it,
while struggling pitifully to maintain its dignity
in the uncongenial company which it is forced to
keep.</p>
<p>Down miles of such a street I went on sidewalks
which were chiefly rotting planks, with
black mire, as of a pig-sty, straining through the
cracks under the pressure of passing feet. The
street itself is paved with cylindrical blocks of
wood, ill laid at the beginning, and having now
closely pounded filth between them, while the
whole surface presents an infinite variety of concavities,
in which, especially along the gutters,
lay garbage in frozen, shallow cesspools.</p>
<p>A saloon stood on almost every corner, and
sometimes I counted seven pawnbrokers’ signs
within the limits of a square. It was interesting
to watch the run of “loan agencies,” and “collateral
banks,” and other euphemisms under
which the business was disguised.</p>
<p>Large quantities of provisions lay heaped in
baskets and measures along the pavements in
front of grocers’ shops, catching the soot and the
floating dust of the open street. Cheap ready-made
and second-hand garments hung flapping
like scare-crows overhead, or clothed grotesque
wooden dummies which stood chained to the shop
doors or to the wood-work below the show-windows.
Scores of idle men, with the unvarying
leaden eye and soggy droop of their kind, loungingly
exchanged the comfort of a mutual support
with doorposts, chiefly of saloons. Little
children in every stage of condition, from decent
warmth to utter rags, and from wholesome cleanliness
to dirt grown clean in unconsciousness of
itself, played about the pavements and in the gutters,
or ran screaming with delight across the
street-car lines, along which the trams moved
slowly, drawn by horses with bells tinkling from
the harness.</p>
<p>The first sight of my destination was very reassuring.
It was evidently a shop of the first
class. A second glance was disheartening, for
already there were fully thirty men before me,
and the number was increasing. From one of
the men employed in the shop I learned that a
man from the packing-house of the firm would be
out to see us at the appointed hour. The appointed
hour came and passed, and we waited on,
our numbers grown now to nearly fifty. It was
not far from two o’clock when the man appeared
who had been commissioned to see us.</p>
<p>There is no tyranny like the tyranny of a hireling
who is puffed up with momentary authority
but who knows nothing of responsibility. The
man who finally came among us was a clerical
subordinate, sleek, clean-shaven, overfed; a man
of thirty, dressed as any like Johnnie of the town,
and, except for his slender hold upon the means
of livelihood, no better than most of the men who
now hung breathless upon his words.</p>
<p>He swaggered in among us with a leer and a
call across the shop to a fellow-employee.</p>
<p>“Say, Jim, how’s this for a collection of
freaks, all out for a fifteen-dollar job?”</p>
<p>Jim was silent; he did not see the joke any
better than did we, who now crowded about the
clerk.</p>
<p>“Stand off,” he ordered us, with a gesture of
impatience and an oath. “Don’t you fellows
come so near. I guess most of you need water
more than you need a job.”</p>
<p>There followed some minutes of such banter,
while the clerk looked us over and examined hastily
some letters of recommendation which were
held out to him. Then abruptly, with the air of
a busy man chafing at the useless waste of his valuable
time, he withdrew a step or two from the
crowd, and from this coign of vantage he arbitrarily
singled out four men. Having called them
aside he ordered them to report at ten o’clock on
the next morning at the packing-house, where a
member of the firm would see them and select
one of them for the place, which was that of general utility
man about a private house, at a wage
of board and lodging and fifteen dollars a month.</p>
<p>I was not one of the number. In a few
moments the men had all gone their several
ways, but I waited behind, and seeing a chance
of speaking to the clerk alone, I went up to
him.</p>
<p>“Would you mind looking at these references?”
I asked, and handed out two, one from
the proprietor of the “—— House,” where I had
served as porter, and another from Mr. Hill, the
farmer.</p>
<p>“Certainly not,” he said, good-naturedly;
and when he had read them he handed them
back to me with the remark that I, too, might
call with the others at ten o’clock.</p>
<p>Under the stone arch which spans the entrance
to the Union Stock-yards I passed unchallenged
the next morning. A wooden sidewalk led me
along a miry road which seemed to pierce the
centre of the yards. Men of widely varying ages
passed and repassed me, mounted upon branded
mustangs. They were riders who cared nothing
for appearance in either kit or form, but rode
with the free grace of cowboys. On every side
were scores of acres of open pens enclosed by
stout wooden fences six palings high, with water
and fodder troughs along the sides. From them
came the deep, far lowing of a thousand herds
of cattle which stood crowded in the pens or
thinned to a few remaining, all of them patiently
awaiting death. From great covered sheds you
could hear the ceaseless bleating of countless
flocks of sheep. From long covered passages overhead,
each an awful bridge of sighs, there came
the sharp clatter of cloven hoofs on wooden
planks, along which droves of cattle were being
driven to slaughter. In the distance beyond all
this loomed high the unsightly packing-houses,
where, with scientific efficiency and carefulest
economy of materials, daily hecatombs are offered
up for human life.</p>
<p>I soon found my way to the desired office. It
was ten o’clock exactly, and to my great surprise
I alone of the five selected men was on hand. I
was told to wait, and a corner near a high desk
was indicated as a place where I might stand.
It was in a wide passage along which ranged
inner offices enclosed by ground-glass partitions.
Clerks were passing constantly from one office
to another and meeting the requirements of business
errands as they came in. Presently one of
them spoke to me, and learning that I had received
no reply from the clerk to whom I had
first made my purpose known, he politely volunteered
his services, and soon brought back word
that Mr. —— would see me in a few minutes.</p>
<p>The few minutes had grown to thirty, when
one of the other five men appeared. He was a
fair-haired Swede of five-and-twenty, rather stout
in frame, and dressed all in black, his coat, of the
“Prince Albert” type, falling short of his
knees, and disclosing about his neck and wrists
the white of neat linen. With his hair brushed
smooth, and one black-gloved hand grasping a fat
umbrella and the other a soft felt hat, he might
have been a divinity student.</p>
<p>We nodded to each other as he took up his stand
in another out-of-the-way quarter of the hall and
joined me in waiting for a summons. Among
the passing clerks there presently appeared the
one who had met us on the day before. He was
not in bantering mood now, so he asserted his
superiority by ignoring us. The one who had already
spoken to me lost no opportunity as he
passed of saying an encouraging word, assuring
us that Mr. —— would certainly see us before
long.</p>
<p>It was a little after twelve when I was finally
called into the private office of Mr. ——. I was
rather faint from hunger and stiff from standing
still so long after a long walk.</p>
<p>Mr. —— sat with his back to a window, in
whose full light I stood, hat in hand.</p>
<p>“You’re after this job I advertised, I understand,”
he began.</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Well, it ain’t no great job; it’s just doin’
chores round the house, and I can’t afford to pay
much for it. Have you ever done work like
that?”</p>
<p>“I have been a porter at a hotel.”</p>
<p>“Have you any recommends?” he asked,
sharply. I handed to him the two already mentioned,
and as he read them I watched him with
close interest. Young, alert, intensely energetic,
at the head, or near it, of a prominent house, the
controller, in part at least, of an enormous enterprise,
and a considerable personage, no doubt, in
his own social circle, yet his wholesale butchery
of swine could scarcely be a ghastlier slaughter
than was his treatment of his mother-tongue.</p>
<p>He looked up at me.</p>
<p>“Say, young fellow, is them all the recommends
you have? You was a very short time at
both of them places.”</p>
<p>This fatal defect in my references had never
occurred to me, and I began to stammer explanations
which only served to get me into deeper
water. Mr. —— interrupted me, and handing
back my letters, he said:</p>
<p>“You’ll have to bring me something more
satisfactory than them,” and went on with his
work.</p>
<p>The young Swede followed me out of the passage.</p>
<p>“Did you get the job?” he asked, in good
English.</p>
<p>“No,” I said, “not yet. You have a good
chance; you would better wait until the boss
sends for you.”</p>
<p>“I guess not to-day,” he answered, and he
stolidly refused my advice, and I saw him disappear
by another way from the Stock-yards.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV<br/><br/> <small>A HAND-TRUCKMAN IN A FACTORY</small></h2></div>
<p class="location">
No. — Blue Island Avenue, Chicago,</p>
<p class="date">
Wednesday, February 3, 1892.</p>
<p>At half-past five this afternoon I completed
seven weeks of service as a hand-truckman in a
factory. Mrs. Schultz, my landlady, tells me
that she is sorry that I am going away; and now
that the long-looked-for end is come, I am not in
the least elated, as I thought that I should be.
But the days are lengthening markedly with the
promise of the coming spring, and I am forcefully
reminded that the time grows short for the
study at close range of much that still awaits me
in this great working city before I can well set
out again upon my westward journey.</p>
<p>Seven weeks as a factory-hand is very little.
Like all phases of my experiment, it is but the
lightest touch upon the surface of the life which
I seek to understand. Strong and infinitely appealing
are the basal elements of existence, and
yet mysterious, evasive, receding like a spectre
from your craving grasp. And in the secret
of its veiled presence speaks a Voice: “Only
through living is it given unto men to know;
none but the heaven-sent may know otherwise.
Not by experiment, but only through the poignancy
of real agony and joy is my secret learned.”</p>
<p>As a witness of certain external conditions and
as a sharer in them, I may tell nothing but the
truth, and yet the whole truth reaches far beyond
the compass of my vision—the joys and creature
comforts of men whose birth and breeding and
life-long training fit them smoothly to circumstances
which seem to me all friction; the blind
human agony of these men, as necessity bears
hard upon them, and, helpless, they watch the
sufferings of their wives and children, and have
no hope nor any escape but death; the unconscious
delight in living intensely in the present
with easy adjustment to homely surroundings,
and no anxious thought for the future
and no morbid introspection; the sharply conscious
endurance of grim realities, which baffle
the untrained reason and paralyze the will, and
make of a strong man a terrified child in the
grip of the superstitious horrors of disease, and
loss of work, and the “bad luck” which plays
so large a part in that sordid thing which he calls
life.</p>
<p>For seven weeks I have worked daily in the
company of two thousand hands, and have lived
with half a score of them in a tenement-house
near the factory, and yet I am leaving them with
but the slenderest knowledge of their lives.</p>
<p>It was one bitter cold morning a little past the
middle of December that I was taken on. I had
had a good supper on the night before and a sound
night’s sleep; and the pleasure of being set to
work once more, of being caught up again into
the meaningful movement of men, was tempered
only by a lack of breakfast and a long walk
through the cold gray dawn.</p>
<p>Crist was my boss. Crist is foreman of the
gangs of men who load the box-cars which flank
the long platforms beside the warehouses of the
factory. Wide sloping eaves project from the
buildings’ sides to a point nearly over the edge
of the platforms, and under these are stored the
new mowers and reapers and harvesters, gay in
gorgeous paint, and reduced to the point of easiest
handling, their subordinate parts near by in
compact crates and boxes, all ready for immediate
shipment.</p>
<p>The proper loading of the cars is a work requiring
great skill and ingenuity on Crist’s part;
for the men it is the mere muscular carrying out
of his directions. Under Crist’s guidance the
superficial area of a car is made to hold an incredible
amount. By long practice he has learned
the greatest possible economy of space, in the nice
adjustments of varying bulks, so that each load
is a maximum, in point of number, of complete
machines.</p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i195" style="max-width: 126.875em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_195.jpg" alt="Three men are under cover on a loading dock. There are box cars next to the loading dock. One of the men is pushing a hand truck loaded with crates into one of the boxcars." />
<div class="caption"><p>LOADING THE BOX-CARS UNDER CRIST’S GUIDANCE.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>There was like shrewdness, I thought, in his
handling of the men. After his first orders to me
I came almost not at all under his direct control
through the few days in which I worked in his
department. But I had many opportunities then
and later, too, of observing him. A tall, old,
lithe Norwegian, with a certain awkward, lanky
efficiency of movement, he had the mild manner
and the soft, low speech of the hard-of-hearing.
He never blustered, certainly, and apparently he
never swore, but the men under him worked without
hurry and without intervals in a way which
told superbly in the total work accomplished.</p>
<p>A gang of six or eight laborers under his direction
was just beginning the loading of an
empty box-car when I was taken on. They were
stalwart, hardy workmen for the most part, their
faces aglow in the cold, their muscular bodies
warmly clothed, and the folded rims of their
heavy woollen caps drawn down to protect their
ears. Over their work-stained overalls some of
them wore thick leather aprons which were darkened
and polished by wear to the appearance of
well-seasoned razor-strops, and on their hands
they all wore stout gloves or mittens, which,
through long use, had reached a perfect flexibility
and fitness to their work.</p>
<p>“John,” said Crist, addressing one of the gang,
a short, rather slender Irishman, with a smooth-shaven,
sallow face, “John, you take this man
and fetch down the dry tongues from the paint-shop.
There’s the wagon-truck,” and he pointed
to a vehicle whose heavy box, open at both ends,
and rising at the sides to a height of three feet,
was supported on two small iron wheels, while an
iron leg under the heavier end kept the bottom
of the truck horizontal.</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” came instantly from John, as he
stepped alertly from among the men and joined
me, his small, gray eyes looking inquisitively into
mine and showing in their sudden light the pleasure
which he felt in being thus singled out for
special work and put in charge of a new hand.</p>
<p>“Come this way,” he said to me. “Me and
you is partners. What’s your name? My name’s
John, John Barry. Some calls me Jake, but my
name’s John,” he concluded, with an emphasis
which made it clear that he had a rooted objection
to “Jake.”</p>
<p>Barry’s Christian name I considered a poaching
upon my preserve, and I was feeling about
for a new handy prænomen; but without waiting
for an answer he continued swiftly on his loquacious
way, calling me “partner” the while, as
Clark had done, and “partner” I remained
through the days of our co-labor.</p>
<p>Barry was an old hand; he knew his way
about the factory perfectly. We pushed the
truck before us into a warehouse and through a
long, dim passage between piles of various portions
of the various machines which rose to the
ceiling in compact stacks on both sides of us as
we walked the great length of the building. It
was as dark as a tunnel, except where an occasional
gas-jet burned brightly in the centre of a
misty halo. The cold, unchanging air that never
knew the sunlight chilled us to the bone, and
near the gas we could see our breath rising in
clouds of white vapor. We came at last to an
elevator, and, having pushed our truck aboard,
we rose to the next landing. Then down another
long, dark, damp passage we passed until we
reached a covered bridge, a run-way, as the men
call it, which sloped upward to the paint-shop in
the main building of the factory.</p>
<p>The spring-doors at the head of the bridge flew
open to the sharp ram of our truck, and we followed
into a large room which was flooded with
sunlight from its serried windows. There appeared
to be hundreds of “binders” in the room,
all painted white and extending in long, straight
rows on wooden supports which held them a few
feet from the floor. Among these rows moved
the men who “stripe” the binders. Their hands
and clothing were daubed with paint, and even as
we passed we could see the slender, even lines of
brilliant color appearing as by magic along the
white surface of the machines under the swift,
sure stroke of these skilled painters.</p>
<p>This is their sole occupation. Along a side-wall
of the room moves slowly, on a ceiling-trolley,
a long line of steel binders, all grimy from
the hands of the men who join the different
parts. In one corner is a tank of white paint,
and by a system of pulleys each binder, as it
passes, is lowered to the bath, completely immersed,
and then drawn dripping back to the
trolley. Presently it is lowered to a support, and
is there allowed to dry. The stripers move down
the lines, following close upon the drying of the
paint, and the machines, soon ready for shipment
from their hands, are transferred to the packing-rooms,
the vacant places being quickly occupied
by binders fresh from the bath. This is one
phase of the endless chain of factory production
under high division of labor.</p>
<p>Barry and I passed on through a communicating
door to another room of about equal size and
of equal light and airiness with the last. The
temperate air was pungent with the smell of varnish
and new paint. It passed with a pleasant
sense of stinging freshness down into our lungs.
We had reached our destination; for large sections
of the room were closely stacked with
tongues of various sizes, all standing on end in an
ingenious system of grooves on the floor and ceiling.
Some were newly come from the turning-mill;
others had been painted, and now awaited
varnishing; some had passed both of these processes,
and were ready for the stripers; while in
one corner stood those which had been painted
and varnished and striped, and which were dry
and ready to be taken to the platform, where
Crist had ordered Barry and me to stack them.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_201.jpg" alt="A room full of men. Some are working at a bench. Some are pushing carts." /> <div class="caption"><p>IN THE FACTORY.</p> </div>
</div>
<p>Barry soon taught me how to load them properly,
and, having filled the truck, we descended
by an elevator to the ground-floor and passed out
again into the bracing air of the open platforms,
where we carefully stacked the tongues under the
eaves, convenient to the loading of the cars.
Round after round we made, going always and
returning by the same course, loading the truck
and stacking the tongues as quickly as we could.
The work was not hard. There was a knack in
the proper handling of the tongues, but it was
readily acquired, and then one could settle down
easily to the routine of work, whose monotony
was broken by the recurring trips.</p>
<p>One incident checked us in the way. It was
our happening to meet the timekeeper on his
rounds. Barry dropped everything until he had
made assurance doubly sure that his presence had
been duly noted in the book. Seeing that I was a
new hand the timekeeper quickly took my name,
and then passed on with a parting word of caution
to me about the proper record of my time.</p>
<p>Barry was evidently in high enjoyment of the
situation. The work suited him, and the directing
of a novice was hugely to his taste. There was
little stay in the even current of his talk. I began
to feel not unlike a “new boy” at school, for,
with the air of a mentor, he pointed out to me all
the sections of the factory, and the different occupations
of the men, and the individual foremen
as we chanced to see them. Once, as we were
busily stacking tongues, his voice fell suddenly
to a confidential tone, and his task was plied with
tenser energy.</p>
<p>“Do you see that man talking to Crist?” he
said to me, almost in a whisper, and with his eyes
intent upon his work.</p>
<p>I had noticed someone who seemed to be a
member of the managing staff.</p>
<p>“That’s Mr. Adams,” Barry continued. “He
ain’t the head boss, but he’s next to the head.
He’s an awful nice man. He was a workingman
himself once. I’ve heard that he was
a carpenter in the factory when the old man was
alive, and that he was promoted to be next to the
head boss. He knows what work is, and he’s awful
nice to the men, but you don’t never want to
let him catch you idle.”</p>
<p>We had just finished stacking the load and had
started again for the warehouse, when we caught
sight of a neatly dressed man of medium height
who was crossing a temporary bridge, which
joined the platform by the main building over
the railway-track to the one where we were at
work. I felt the truck shoot forward at a speed
which I had to follow almost at a run. In the
dark passage of the warehouse Barry was soon
talking again, and again in an awed undertone.</p>
<p>“That was the head boss,” he said, impressively.
“That was Mr. Young himself.” And
he looked surprised that I did not stagger under
the announcement, although, to do him justice,
I did feel a good deal as the new boy might,
brought unexpectedly for the first time into the
presence of the head master.</p>
<p>“He ain’t never worked a day in his life,”
Barry was continuing. “Only he’s a terrible fine
superintendent. You bet he gets big wages.
They say he can see when he ain’t looking, and
he comes down like a thousand of brick on any
man who shirks his work. He ain’t never
worked himself, and so he don’t know what it is.”</p>
<p>The noon-whistle sounded soon after this, to
my great relief, for a fast of eighteen hours was
telling on me. Barry left the truck where it
stood, and broke into a run. I followed him. In
a moment the whole building and the outer
platforms were echoing to the tread of running
feet. When I reached the factory yard I
found crowds of men streaming from every
door and pressing swiftly through the gate.
A stranger to the scene might at first sight
have supposed the building to be on fire and
that the men were escaping, but a second glance
would have corrected the idea. There was no
excitement in their mood; nor was there any
playfulness; but with set, serious faces they were
running for the careful economy of time. Barry
had explained to me that, in order to quit the
day’s work at half-past five, the hands take but
half an hour for their mid-day meal, and that I
must, therefore, be careful to be within the factory gates
by half-past twelve.</p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i209" style="max-width: 130em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_209.jpg" alt="A street scene with mostly men. A few children and women are visible carrying pails and baskets." />
<div class="caption"><p>CROWDS OF MEN STREAMING FROM EVERY DOOR AND
PRESSING SWIFTLY THROUGH THE GATE.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>Interesting as was the scene, I had no time to
note it carefully, for I had caught the contagion
of feverish hurry, and with the greater need on
my part, for in that half hour I must get food if
I was to return to work.</p>
<p>The situation was a little difficult. I had no
money and no knowledge of any neighboring
boarding-house. On the avenue, immediately
opposite the wide entrance of the factory, was a
line of cheap three-storied wooden tenements, the
ground-floors occupied by saloons or shops, and
the upper ones used evidently as the homes of
factory-hands, for I could see the men entering
the dark passages where narrow staircases connected
the dwelling-rooms with the street.</p>
<p>Quite at random I walked into a barber-shop.</p>
<p>“Can you direct me to a boarding-house near
by?” I asked the barber, who, dressed in soiled
white, sat reading a newspaper beside the stove.</p>
<p>“Sure,” he said, obligingly, as he rose to his
feet and came to the door and opened it. “You
just go up them steps,” he added, pointing to the
entry next door, “and you’ll find a lady that
keeps boarders. Her name’s Mrs. Schulz. You
tell her that I sent you.”</p>
<p>At the head of the landing I stood irresolute
for a moment. It was dark after the unclouded
mid-day. The light that entered came through
the narrow opening of a door at the end of the
passage, which stood ajar and which communicated
with a front room, where there seemed to
be a flood of sunlight. The prospect in the other
direction was not so bright. I was beginning to
see faintly, and could eventually make out the
figures of a dozen or more workingmen, who sat
about a table in a dim dining-room, eating hurriedly
their dinner, with a noise of much clatter,
and with bursts of loud talk and of hearty
laughter. In a deeper recess, and through a short,
dark, communicating passage, was a kitchen full
of steam and the vapors of cooking food, through
which came the light from the rear windows with
the effect of shining vaguely through a fog.</p>
<p>Summoned, I know not how, Mrs. Schulz
stepped out into the passage. I knew instantly
that I should be provided for. I could not see
her clearly, but her quiet, self-respecting manner
was reassuring from the start.</p>
<p>“I’ve just got a job in the factory,” I explained
at once. “Can you take me as a
boarder?”</p>
<p>“I guess I can,” she answered, cordially. “Do
you want your dinner?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” I said, and tried not to say it too
eagerly.</p>
<p>“Then come right in. You haven’t any too
much time,” she added, considerately.</p>
<p>At the vacant place which she indicated for
me at the table I sat down between a workman
of my own age and a hunchback operative who
was probably ten years our senior.</p>
<p>“How are you?” said the first man, in the
midst of the momentary lull which fell upon the
room, while I passed my first inspection.</p>
<p>My reply was drowned for farther ears than
his in the recurrent flow of talk about the table.
The men had just finished their first course, but
Mrs. Schulz brought in for me a plate of hot
vegetable soup, steaming with a savoriness which
was reviving in itself. My cordial neighbor
dropped out of the general conversation and devoted
himself to me. Nothing could have been
more agreeable. He was as natural as a child,
and genial to the point of readiest laughter. Like
most of the other men, he sat coatless in his working-clothes,
his face and hands black with the
grime of the machine-shop where he worked, and
his eyes shining with a light all the merrier for
their dark setting.</p>
<p>A young American, a farmer’s son, he was
recently come to Chicago from his home in central
Iowa, and was making his way as a factory-hand
and liked it greatly. His name was Albert.
All of this information I gathered in barter for
an equal share of my personal history, exchanged
while we both ate heartily of a dinner of boiled
meat and mashed potatoes, and stewed tomatoes
and bread and coffee, and finally a slice of pumpkin
pie, all of them excellent of their kind and
most excellently cooked; and, although not neatly
served, yet with as great a regard to neatness as
the circumstances allowed.</p>
<p>My interest through the meal, aside from the
food, was chiefly in Albert, but I caught, too, the
drift of the general talk. It was directed at one
Clarence, a fair-haired, fair-skinned, well-mannered
youth who sat opposite us and at an end
of the line. One noticed him immediately in the
contrast which he made with the other men, for
he was dressed in a “boiled” shirt and a collar,
and he wore a neat black coat and a black cravat.
It appeared that he had been promoted, on the
day before, from a subordinate position in one of
the machine-shops to the supervision of the tool-room
of the factory. On this morning for the
first time he had gone to work dressed, not in the
usual blue jeans, but as one of the clerical force.
The men were chaffing him on the change. Curiously
enough, from their point of view, his working-days
were over. There was no least disturbance
in their personal attitude to the man nor
in their feeling for him as a fellow. They
recognized the change of status as a promotion,
and you readily caught the note of sincere
congratulation in their banter, and the boy
bore his honors modestly and like a man. Yet it
was a change of status most complete, for he had
ceased to be a worker. To their way of thinking
there may be forms of toil which are hard and
even exhausting, but only that is “work” which
brings your hands into immediate contact with
the materials of production in their making from
the raw or in their transportation. The principle
is a broad one, incapable of application in full detail,
but, as a principle, it figures in the minds
of the workers as an unquestioned generalization
that men work only with their hands and in
forms of begriming labor.</p>
<p>Like Albert, Clarence, too, was an American,
a youth from a village home in Ohio, and with the
promise of a successful hazard of his fortunes in
the city. I employ my versions of their Christian
names because these were the only appellations
in use about the table.</p>
<p>The meal was far too short for any general acquaintance
among the men, and at its end we all
hurried back to the factory. Barry was awaiting
me beside the truck; as we began the rounds of
the afternoon’s work he questioned me with interest
about my success in getting a dinner. For
another five continuous hours we carted tongues
and stacked them.</p>
<p>The hands had been working by gas-light for
nearly an hour when the time came for quitting
the day’s labor. There was no rush now in leaving
the factory. We crowded out through the
gate, but under no high pressure, and the moving
mass disintegrated and disappeared as magically
as it had formed in the early morning. Beside the
entrance idle men were again waiting, but their
number was very few in contrast with the morning
crowds, and their apparent purpose was a
personal interview with the superintendent.</p>
<p>Mrs. Schulz’s boarders had soon reassembled,
this time in her kitchen. Everything was in
readiness for us. A row of tin basins stood in a
long sink which extended under the rear windows
nearly the length of the room; buckets of hot
water were convenient, and at the pump at one
end of the sink we could temper the water in the
basins to our liking. Finally, there were cakes of
soap cut from large bars, and the usual coarse
towels hanging from rollers on the walls. With
sleeves rolled up and our shirts wide open at the
neck, we took our turns at the basins. It was interesting
to watch the faces of the mechanics
emerge from the washing in frequent changes of
water to their natural flesh-color, in which the
features could be clearly distinguished.</p>
<p>The few minutes during which we had to wait
before the call to supper were spent in the front
room, which was the sitting-room for the boarders
and answered to the lobby in the logging-camp.
Two windows looked out upon the street and
commanded a farther view of the factory yard
and buildings. The room was heated by a cylindrical
iron stove, standing near the inner wall
upon a disc of zinc, that served to protect a well-worn
carpet with which the floor was covered.
From a square wooden table in the centre a large
oil-lamp flooded the room with light and brought
out in startling vividness the pink rose-buds
which in monotonous identity of design streaked
the walls in long diagonal lines, broken only by
an occasional chromo or a picture cut from an illustrated
print. There was an abundant supply
of wooden chairs, on which the men were seated,
for the most part about the stove, and there was
one large arm-chair on rockers, where sat Mr.
Schulz with the next to the youngest child in his
arms, an infant of between two and three. A
girl of perhaps seven years, and a boy of nearly
five, were playing together on the floor, and there
was yet another child, for while we were washing
in the kitchen I had heard the fretful cry of a
baby from a dark chamber opening from that
room.</p>
<p>Two of the men were intent upon the girl who
lay in her father’s lap. They were rivals for her
favor, and both were trying to coax her away.
When she at last put out her arms to one of them,
he tossed her toward the ceiling with a shout of
glee at his triumph over the other man.</p>
<p>After supper we all regathered in the sitting-room.
None of the men, so far as I could see,
went out for the evening. Some of them read the
newspapers of the day, and four had presently
started a game of “High, Low, Jack,” at the
table, with the result that most of the others were
soon gathered about the players in excited interest,
watching the varying fortunes of the game
and giving vent to their feelings in boisterous outbursts.</p>
<p>I sat beside the fire talking to Mr. Schulz.
There was inexpressible satisfaction in the feeling
of <i>raison d’être</i> which one had in being a
worker with a steady job once more and a decent
place in which to live. A boarding-house is not
a synonym for home, and yet it may stir the domestic
instincts deeply in the contrasts which it
offers with the homeless life of the streets. The
unquestioning hospitality with which I had been
accepted as a guest was in keeping with the best
of my experience so far. There was no suggestion
of my paying anything in advance, though I
had no security to offer beyond the fact that I was
regularly employed in the factory and my promise
to pay promptly out of the first instalment of
my wages.</p>
<p>Mrs. Schulz had offered me board and lodging
at four dollars a week, or at four dollars and a
quarter if I wished a room to myself. It was the
last bargain with which I closed when I was
shown the only vacant room. It opened from the
passage near the head of the landing and was perhaps
seven feet by six. A single bed filled most
of its area, and the rest was crowded with a chair
and a small stand which supported an oil-lamp
under a mirror on the wall. Some nails driven
into the door and along the wall beside it, served
the purpose of a closet. Light and air entered by
a window which opened only a foot or two from a
side-wall of the next building.</p>
<p>Cheerless as the room was and far from clean,
it yet had about it all the essentials of privacy,
and at a little past eight o’clock I went to bed
with almost the sense of luxury after a fortnight’s
experience of station-houses and cheap lodgings.</p>
<p>At six in the morning we were called by Mrs.
Schulz, who had already been up for an hour or
more preparing our breakfast, with the help of a
hired girl. The men turned out sleepy and half-dressed
into the kitchen to wash themselves, and
then we sat down to a breakfast of “mush,” meat
and potatoes, coffee and bread. The factory-bell
was ringing by the time that we had finished, and
there was a rush to get within the gate before
the last taps marked the advent of seven o’clock.</p>
<p>The routine of factory work does not lend itself
to varied narrative, and yet Barry’s work and
mine was far from the monotony of much of the
labor which we saw about us. There was a growing
supply of tongues in the paint-shop, sufficient
to keep us busy for several days, and while the
work of loading and carting and stacking them
was not hard in itself, ten hours of it daily was
enough to send a man very hungry to his meals
and thoroughly tired to his bed.</p>
<p>I was soon transferred from Crist’s department
to one of the packing-rooms, where, through the
remaining weeks of my service, I worked as a
general utility man under the orders of a short,
muscular foreman of singularly mild manner,
who appeared to have scruples against swearing,
but who was none the less vigilant and effective in
his management. Most of the work of his department,
as in all the departments of the factory,
came under the piece-work system, and I was
simply one of the two or three common laborers
who, under his commands, attended to the odds
and ends of jobs.</p>
<p>In one corner a man was packing boxes with
the subordinate parts of mowers—a very interesting
process, for the boxes were of such a size as to
exactly hold all the loose parts when packed in
a certain relation to one another, and the untiring
swiftness with which the packer drew his supplies
from their various bins and adjusted them
in the box and nailed the lid upon them was fascinating
in itself. I was sometimes employed in
carting these boxes on a hand-truck, through a
long run-way, to a warehouse and storing them
there.</p>
<p>There were mowers to be shipped to foreign
markets, and these had all to be done up in boxes.
Three or four of us would be employed for days
together in bringing the mowers up the run-way
from the warehouse and further separating them
into their parts and packing them in large boxes
and nailing down the covers, upon which afterward
appeared directions to distant ports, some
to Russia, and others as far off even as Australian
and New Zealand towns. A paint-shop was also
connected with this department of the factory,
where painting was done in the wholesale fashion
employed for the binders, and from it I often
carted the portions of the machines which were
ready for the warehouse.</p>
<p>Some of the jobs held steadily for days together,
and the foreman was never without work
to give me. I could but feel a growing liking for
him, for, although I was far from being an efficient
workman, he was patient with my awkward
efforts, and he accepted my mere dogged perseverance
as evidence of a willingness on my part
which reconciled him to me as a hand.</p>
<p>A like consideration had been shown me by the
men at the boarding-house. They accepted me
unhesitatingly as a workingman, but still I felt
that I had my way to make among them, and
very justly, for they were piece-workers all of
them, earning fifteen dollars a week at the very
least, some of them much more, while I was
merely a common laborer at a dollar and a half a
day. Their superiority to me was only the more
apparent when there came among us, a few days
after my arrival, a young Englishman from Jamaica,
who had secured a job at common labor in
the factory; for he, too, was far ahead of me,
and it was not long before he was promoted to
piece-work in one of the better-paid departments.</p>
<p>There was no discrimination against me. The
men were perfectly friendly, but for the most
part they had been associated for some time in
their work and in their life in the boarding-house,
and I was simply not of their set. The barriers
which prevented entire freedom of intercourse
were my own limitations and were never of their
making, for they made the most generous advances
when we had lived together for a time,
and no doubt I could eventually have risen to be
one of them on equal terms.</p>
<p>They were nearly all young Americans. Clarence
and Albert were representative of the lot.
Ned, the hunchback operative, was older than
most of us, but he, too, was a native, of public-school
education and decent antecedents, and he
made a very good wage as a piece-worker in
some department of the factory. Nothing that I
saw among the men charmed me more than their
treatment of Ned. He had an ungovernable temper
and a crabbed, sullen disposition, which had
been fostered by much suffering and an intense
mortification due to his deformity, which he
rarely forgot, apparently. At times he was as exasperating
as a spoiled, petulant child, but the
men endured him always with an evenness of
buoyant good-humor so genuine that it never
chafed him, and it sometimes transported him,
in spite of himself, to a mood in sympathy with
their own, in which he could be one of the best
fellows of the lot.</p>
<p>It was not long before I knew that the man
who was held in highest regard by the others was
Dennis. The reasons for this did not appear at
first. Dennis was of about the average age
among us, a man of between twenty-five and
thirty, an Irish-American of good appearance and
a gentlemanlike reserve. The men looked up to
him and paid a certain deference to his views in
a way which puzzled me, for he never played the
rôle of leader, being far less outspoken than some
of the others, and moving among them always in
a quiet, unassuming manner which laid no claim
to distinction.</p>
<p>By chance I learned that he was the best-paid
operative in the house, having a position of some
importance in a machine-shop of the factory, and
I noticed that he spent much of his leisure in the
study of mechanical problems. He did not hold
himself aloof from the evening game of cards,
but he would quit it early and would soon be absorbed
in his book in one corner of the room,
where the noise seemed never to disturb him.
Moreover, I came to realize that in certain important
social matters Dennis was an authority. He
would leave his work as black as the blackest man
from the shops, but on Saturday afternoon, when
we got off at five o’clock, half an hour earlier than
usual, he would come out after supper ready for
the evening’s gayety, dressed in what was unhesitatingly
accepted as the height of the fashion.
Saturday evenings were always devoted to pleasure,
and none of the men was better informed
than was Dennis as to the public balls which
were available and which performance at the
theatres (always spoken of as a “show”) was best
worth a visit. As a workman of high grade and
as a man of fashion and a social mentor with
much occult knowledge of social form, he was
yielded the first place. There was, moreover, a
certain punctiliousness about him which only
served to heighten his standing. It mattered not
how late he had been out on Saturday night, I always
found Dennis at his place for a seven o’clock
breakfast on Sunday morning, and saw him start
promptly for mass.</p>
<p>He was very evidently a favorite with Mrs.
Schulz, and with small wonder, for he was always
most considerately kind to her and to her children;
but I thought that her liking for him grew
quite as much out of her admiration for his strict
regard to his church duties. She went to early
mass herself, but she never failed to have breakfast
ready for Dennis at exactly seven o’clock.</p>
<p>Mr. Schulz and she were devout Catholics, only
I could but admire her devotion the more. It
seemed to me to be put to so crucial a test. With
but a raw Swedish girl to help her, she had the
care of her five children besides all the cooking
and other housework for a dozen boarders whose
meals must be served on the minute. I am sure
that I never saw her lose her temper, and I think
that I never heard her complain, which is the
greater wonder when one takes into account the
fact that she was the sole bread-winner of the
family. Mr. Schulz had had a job as a night watchman,
but had lost it, and was now looking
for work—not too conscientiously, I fear, for he
impressed me as a weak man who found his wife’s
support a welcome escape from a personal struggle
for existence. He had, at least, the negative
virtue of sobriety, and the positive one of loyalty
to church duty, and in the house he perhaps
could not have served his wife to better purpose
than by taking care of the children as he did. He
was certainly very proud of Mrs. Schulz. One
day he confided to me the fact that she was a cook
when he married her, and that in her day she had
served in some of the palaces on Michigan Avenue.
Such an experience explained the admirable
cooking of the simple fare which she gave us,
and the homelike management of her house; and
her knowledge and skill in these domestic matters
bore no small relation, I thought, to the spirit of
contentment among the men, which held them
to their quiet evenings in her sitting-room against
the allurements of the town.</p>
<p>Her sheer physical endurance was a marvel.
It was the unflinching courage of a brave soul,
for she had little strength besides. Very tall and
slight, emaciated almost to gauntness, she had a
long, thin face with sunken cheeks and a dark
complexion and jet-black hair, and round, soft,
innocent eyes, which, matched with her indomitable
spirit, were eloquent of the love which is
“comrade to the lesser faith that sees the course
of human things,” and seeing finds life worth living
and is willing to endure.</p>
<p>The absence of self-consciousness from the members
of this household lent a peculiar attractiveness
to the life there. There was nothing morbid
in their attitude to themselves nor in their relation
to one another. Life was so obviously their
master, and they so implicitly obedient to its control.
You could lose in a measure the thought
of self-directed effort to be something or do something,
in the sense that you got of nearness to the
spontaneity of primal force. Mrs. Schulz, for
example, never impressed one as trying to exercise
a certain influence in obedience to a volition
formed upon a preconceived plan, but rather as
being what she was as the expression of a life within
and exercising an influence which was dominant
by reason of its native virtue. And the men were
never awkward and constrained in their courteous
manner toward her, as they would have been had
this been prompted by a sense of formal politeness,
instead of being, as it was, their spontaneous
tribute to her gentle ladyhood.</p>
<p>One wondered at first how such serenity would
weather the storms. And when they came, the
wonder grew at the further naturalness which
they revealed.</p>
<p>Monday mornings were apt to be prolific of
bad weather. The long, monotonous week
loomed before us, and our nerves were unstrung
with the violent reaction bred of over-indulgence
in the freedom of a holiday. Our tempers, as a
result, were all out of tune, and there was no
merging of individuality in the harmony of a
home. One was reminded of the discordant harping,
each on its own string, of all the instruments
of an orchestra before they blend melodiously in
the accord of the overture. The hired girl, awkward
and ungainly and dense, had neglected
the mush and let it burn, and now with stupid
vacancy in her dull eyes she moved about more
in the way than of any service. The children,
half-dressed in their pitiful, soiled garments, were
sprawling underfoot, quarrelling among themselves
and whimpering in their appeals for their
mother’s intervention. Mrs. Schulz, at her wits’
end to get breakfast ready promptly, was bending
over a stove whose fire smouldered and smoked
and would not burn briskly in the raw east wind
which was blowing down the chimney, and at the
same time there grated on her ears the wails of the
children and the ill-tempered complaints of the
men and the stupid questions of the hired girl,
and all the while her nerves were throbbing to the
dull agony of a toothache. The men, roused from
insufficient sleep, were crowding into the over-crowded
kitchen, hectoring one another for their
slowness at the basins; one loud in his complaint
over the loss of some article of dress, another insistent
in his demand for a turn at the mirror,
and all of them perilously near the verge of a violent
outbreak. There was much swearing of a
very sincere kind and much plain speaking of
personal views without circumlocution or reservation,
but in the end the storm would spend its
fury and pass. And the marvel of it was in the
completeness of the clearing. The unrestrained
vent of ill-temper would be followed by no harboring
of malice. It was as though the men, who
had freed themselves of a load of ill-feeling, were
prepared to continue unhampered in the ease of
agreeable association. The secret of it lay, I presume,
in the absence of malignant antagonisms.
The distempers were merely the results of the common
attrition of life. At bottom these hard-working,
self-respecting persons respected and liked
one another, and in the intimacy of the crowded
tenement they lived in relative comfort on no
other possible terms than those of common liking
and respect.</p>
<p>The factory itself further illustrated the periodic
unevennesses of temper. Not that they were
strictly periodic in the home. Mondays were apt
to witness them, but there was no normal regularity
in their occurrence, for they might crop out
at any time. But Monday mornings in the factory
were almost fatally sure of their emergence.
You could not escape the feeling of unwonted
disturbance both in the humor of the men and in
the progress of their work. But nothing could
have been more potent in coaxing them again
into an accordant frame of mind than the routine
of factory labor. The very doing of what had
become to them a second nature by a quickness
of hand which itself was a mark of mastery,
seemed to win them back to cheerful acceptance
of life. I have often seen the men at the boarding-house
leave the breakfast-table in moods that
“varied mostly for the worse,” and return to it
at noon in high spirits that were finely attune.</p>
<p>There is a monotony about piece-work which
must take on at times the quality of a maddening
horror. I can bear no personal testimony to it,
because I did not rise to the position of a piece-worker.
The phases of the system which I saw,
however, in the limited insight into its practical
working to be gained in my range in the factory
as a common laborer, impressed me rather with
its advantages. Among the day-laborers here
there was apparent at once the same deadly uninterest
in their work which is characteristic of
their class in the present ordering of such labor.
The attitude is that of irresponsible school-boys
in their feeling of natural hostility to their masters
in the mutual struggle over the prescribed
tasks. But among the laborers it takes on the
tragedy of the relation of grown men to the serious
business of their lives. Interest in their
work? Not the faintest. Sense of responsibility
for it? Not the dimmest. Any day you could
see the bearded father of a family shirk his task
in a momentary absence of the boss, or steal truant
minutes from his time in idling on an errand,
with as puerile a spirit as that which prompts a
stroke of mischief in school-hours.</p>
<p>The piece-system lifts the labor instantly from
this plane to one where the motive of self-interest
conspicuously enters. A man is insured from the
first of at least the wage of day’s labor; his own
industry and deftness are then the factors in determining
his earnings up to a certain limit. For
I soon found that a hand was not free to employ
his utmost skill when he became an expert.
There seemed to be a tacit agreement in each department
of the factory as to what should constitute
the maximum of day’s labor. Below that
a man might fall if he chose, but beyond it he
was not at liberty to go. And the reason was
very obvious. Even a few men in continually
passing, by any considerable margin, the accepted
daily average would inevitably produce the result
of a cut in the <i>pro rata</i> price until wages were
down again to the accustomed level. The system
gives a man an incentive to work and to develop
his skill, but, in its practical operation, it holds
him rigorously to the level of mediocre attainment.</p>
<p>Barry incidentally pointed this out to me with
striking clearness one day while we were carting
tongues. Two of the varnishers were missing
from the paint-shop when we went up for our first
loads. Barry remarked on their absence, with
the comment that they were certain to be on hand
at half-past nine o’clock.</p>
<p>It appears that if an employee misses the open
factory-gate in the early morning by ever so little,
he may not enter then until the end of two
hours and a half, which marks the close of the
first quarter of the day’s work.</p>
<p>True to Barry’s prediction, we presently found
both varnishers at their places, and when, in the
late afternoon, he asked them, with the frankness
of working-people in such matters, as to how
much they had done, he again found himself
verified, since each had achieved the prescribed
amount, and so had earned full pay. They had
simply worked at a greater speed than usual;
and they might, so far as the time was concerned,
have accomplished this every day, except that a
man would soon gain a bad name by being habitually late,
and his promptness at seven o’clock
would be quickly insured by a cut in the rate
paid for his form of labor.</p>
<p>It was a very limited view of the factory as a
whole that I could get from the post of an unskilled
worker in one of its departments, but what
growing familiarity was possible served to increase
the sense of wonder at the possibilities of
such highly organized methods of production.</p>
<p>There were the great, substantial buildings
themselves with their ingenious adjustments of
parts, so related as to facilitate to the utmost the
processes of manufacture and shipment at the
lowest cost and with the least friction. There
were the lines of railway which entered the
grounds, by means of which the machines, loaded
into cars from the platforms of the factory, could
be forwarded without change to every quarter of
the continent. All needed materials, to the smallest
detail, entered the factory in their raw forms,
and passed out as finished product, delicately adjusted
machines ready for immediate use. The
imagination bounds to the conception of the
miraculous ingenuity of instruments, and the
trained skill of operatives, and the shrewd co-ordination
of labor, and, above all, the marvellous
captaincy by which all this differentiation
is systematized and is ordered and directed to the
effective achievement of its ends.</p>
<p>The large, well-ventilated rooms, comfortably
warmed in winter and admirably supplied with
the means of light and air, are a part of the general
efficacy of the system, and the untiring dexterity
of the men gives to it its strongly human
interest. There is a fascination in their movements
which determines the quality of the attractiveness
of the whole. You see no feverish haste
in the speed with which they work, but rather
the even, smooth, unfaltering sureness which is
the charm of mastery, and which must be attended
by its satisfaction as well.</p>
<p>I witnessed this with delight among the men
with whom I lived. Conversation at our meals
was nearly always of shop; at dinner and supper
especially we discussed the details of the day’s
work. Several of us were employed at constructing
binders. Albert was of that number. He
was making but little more than the wage of
common labor when I first knew him, but his income
began to increase with his increasing efficiency,
and it was a matter of great, vital interest
to us all to hear his reports each day, as he told of
a fraction of a binder and then of a whole one in
advance upon his previous work, until his daily
earnings rose to two dollars and a half, which was
accepted in his department as the normal sum.</p>
<p>Besides these elements of personal interest in
piece-work as a scheme of labor and the gratification
of the sense of effective workmanship, there
entered here the stimulus of ambition based upon
excellent chances of promotion. The factory system
of production creates strong demand for
manual skill, and stronger still for the capacity of
administration and control. Why the realization
of these facts did not possess more thoroughly the
minds of the common laborers, I could not understand.
They were strangely impervious to their
force, for nothing could have been more noticeable
than the alertness of the managing staff in watching
for evidences of unusual ability among the
men. It was not at all uncommon for a hand who
had been taken on as a day-laborer to be promoted,
as a result of his intelligence and industry,
to some department of piece-work. Nearly every
foreman in the factory is said to have begun far
down the scale, and Barry’s account of the career
of the assistant manager I have heard confirmed.</p>
<p>During my short stay I was actually witness to
the progress of two men who came in as day-laborers,
the young Englishman from Jamaica
and a stalwart, handsome Swede who secured a
job and joined us at the boarding-house about a
fortnight ago. Clarence earned a promotion and
got it at the time of my coming to the factory,
and I have seen Albert’s rise from a position removed
by very little from that of unskilled labor
to that of a workman whose skill commands the
sum of fifteen dollars a week. Dennis is a type
of craftsman whose future it is not difficult to
predict. Conscientious and industrious and persevering,
endowed with rare ability and real
capacity for work, his progress seems assured,
and a well-paid, authoritative position an ultimate
logical certainty.</p>
<p>All these are of the best class of factory-workers
that I came to know. There are other classes
quite as clearly defined, and most of them have
their representatives about our table. Men, for
example, who have an honest interest in their
work as such, and who have risen by force of ambition
and sheer development of manual skill to
good positions in the factory, and have there
stood still, their congenital qualities incapable,
presumably, of higher efficiency. But sadder far
than theirs is the case of men who are often best
endowed with native cleverness and aptitude,
who rise quickly in the scale of promotion, and
who might rise far higher than they do but for the
curse of their careless living. They know no interest
in their work nor pleasure in its doing. To
them it is the sordid drudgery by which they gain
the means of gratifying their real purposes and
desires. With sullen perseverance they endure
the torment of labor, with pay-day in view and
then Saturday night and Sunday with their mad
revels in what they call life. The future is a
meaningless word, with no claim upon them beyond
the prospect that it holds of more indulgence;
the present is their sole concern, and only
with reference to what it can be made to yield
to ruling passions.</p>
<p>From some phase of this last attitude to life
none of the men whom I knew personally seemed
to be entirely free. There is no improvidence like
the improvidence of the poor. Doubtless there is
no thrift like theirs, but among these young men,
with all of life before them, their reckless prodigality
in money-matters assumed at times an appalling
nature. Some of them made no pretence
of saving anything, and the few who did save
would show at times an audacity of extravagance
to match with the wastefulness of the worst.
They were not a drinking set in any sense of
excessive indulgence, for not one of them had the
reputation of a drunkard, and their spending was
much of it in comparatively innocent channels,
but it was monstrous in relation to their means
and to their prospects in the world.</p>
<p>A perfectly well-recognized philosophy justified
it to their minds.</p>
<p>“We’ll never be young but once,” they would
say, “and if we don’t have a good time now, we
never will.”</p>
<p>A good time was often secured at enormous
cost. I do not know whether it is the habitual
dissipation, or whether it happens to be the vogue
for this winter, but it is very certain that to the
men here the fancy-dress ball is now the incomparable
attraction. One or more such functions
within their range falls on nearly every Saturday
night. They are given for the most part by certain
“Brotherhoods” and labor organizations,
and they are free, apparently, to all who come
dressed in a manner sufficiently “fancy” to meet
the views of “the committee,” and pay the price
of a ticket, which admits “self and lady.”</p>
<p>As the men saw the night approaching, their
talk would turn more and more to the absorbing
subjects of costume and the girls whom they
meant to take with them. There are shops which
do business at letting out ready-made disguises for
such occasions, and I have repeatedly seen these
hard-working industrious fellows go deep into
their pockets, to the extent even of half a week’s
pay, for the use for a few hours of some tawdry
make-up of velvet and spangles and lace, which
reeked with promiscuous wear. And the outlay
did not end with dress, for there remained tickets
of admission, and the cost of at least two suppers
for each and of not a little drinking. It was exceptional
for any one of them to come home
drunk, and the man who did was sure of a course
of steady bantering for days, but some drinking
was the rule for the Saturday nights that were
given to masquerade. When a play would fall
in place in the order of amusement, the men were
sure to return by midnight, and there was always
then less evidence of drink.</p>
<p>All forms of public gayety seemed scrupulously
confined to Saturday nights and Sundays.
The men could not have been more punctual at
their work, and the habitual week-day evening
was the far from exciting one in Mrs. Schulz’s
sitting-room, which I have described. There they
regularly gathered after supper, and smoked, and
romped with the children, and played cards, and
read. I was usually off for bed by eight o’clock,
for nothing less than ten hours of sleep would fit
me for the ten hours of labor in the factory, and
the others would follow an hour or two later.</p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i221" style="max-width: 147.0625em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_221.jpg" alt="A room full of mostly men chatting. One man is sitting in a rocking chair holding a toddler." />
<div class="caption"><p>MRS. SCHULZ’S BOARDING-HOUSE.</p>
<p>There we regularly gathered after supper, and smoked,
and romped with the children, and played cards, and read.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>The morning brought the unwelcome summons
to get up in what seemed the dead of night and
but an hour or two after the time of going to bed.
Cold water would have its rousing effect, as, also,
a breakfast by lamplight with an anxious eye on
the clock, and then a rush through the sharp air
of the morning twilight until you were caught in
the living stream which poured through the factory-gate.
Work was begun on the minute, and
your ear caught the sharp metallic clink of the
mowers as the workmen pushed the frames down
the loading-platforms to the cars. Even within
the brick enclosures and in the stinging cold of
the winter air, there arose inevitably with the
sound the association of meadows fragrant with
the perfume of new-mown timothy and clover
drying in the hazy warmth of a long summer
afternoon.</p>
<p>Within the buildings, almost in a moment,
would rise the turmoil of production. You heard
the deafening uproar of far-reaching machinery,
as, with wheels whirling in dizzy motion and the
straps humming in their flight, it beat time in
deep, low throbs to the remorseless measures of
a tireless energy. Cleaving the tumult of the
sounding air you heard at frequent intervals the
buzz-saws as they bit hard with flying teeth into
multiple layers of wood, rising to piercing crescendo
and then dying away in a sob. There was
the din of many hammers, and over the wooden
floors and along the run-ways, and through the
dark, damp passages of the warehouses, and down
the deep vistas of the covered platforms, was the
almost constant rumble of hand-trucks pushed by
men and boys.</p>
<p>All this unceasingly for five continuous hours,
which always seem unending, and then the
abrupt signal for twelve o’clock, and the sound
of the machinery running down while the men
are hastening to their mid-day meal. About the
factory-gate are always at this hour groups of
women and young children who have brought in
pails and baskets hot dinners for their men. On
brighter days you can see long lines of operatives
sitting along the curbs or with their backs against
the high board fence, basking in the sunlight, as
they eat their dinners in the open air and converse
among themselves and with their wives or children.</p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i215" style="max-width: 131.625em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_215.jpg" alt="A long line of men sitting with their backs against a wall having lunch." />
<div class="caption"><p>THE NOON HOUR.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>Then back to your place in the afternoon while
the machinery is slowly working up to its accustomed
pace and the men about you reassembling
to take up again, on the stroke of the hour, the
work of the afternoon. Five more hours of the
thundering rush of factory labor follow, and you
leave the gate at night almost too tired to walk.
A wash is first in your recovery, and it rests you
more than would sleep. Then supper brings its
deep satisfaction and a smoke its peaceful content,
and you go to bed better off by a day’s wages.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V<br/><br/> <small>AMONG THE REVOLUTIONARIES</small></h2></div>
<p class="location">
No. — Sangamon Street, Chicago, Ill.,</p>
<p class="date">
February 27, 1892.</p>
<p>Again I am in the army of the unemployed,
and have been there for the past three weeks and
more, but on other than the terms of my first experience
in Chicago. I have been looking for
work and testing many phases of this lurid life of
enforced idleness, but with a wide difference from
the original venture here. My savings from
wages earned in the factory have put me on quite
another footing. The room in which I am writing
has been an adequate shelter, and I have paid
for it only one dollar and a half a week. Odd
jobs have helped me often in the matter of securing
food, and, when these failed, I have had my
dwindling store of savings to fall back upon; and
I have a not inconsiderable knowledge of the
cheap eating-houses of the town.</p>
<p>All through my time of service in the factory,
I saved scrupulously. A wage of nine dollars a
week held out a hopeful prospect as the result of
seven weeks of labor. I did not miss even a fraction
of a working day, and so the total of my earnings
would have reached sixty-three dollars but
for the unfortunate fact that, besides Sundays,
there fell two holidays within the limits of that
period. On Christmas and New Year’s Day the
factory was closed, and I found, to my surprise,
that holidays, which I should have supposed were
joyously welcome to all the world, are really of
very doubtful blessedness to the vast number of
workers who are paid for the actual amount accomplished,
and by the detailed reckoning of
time. I lost three dollars in hard cash by Christmas
Day and that of the New Year, while my
living expenses were uninterrupted; and three
dollars would pay for two weeks of comfortable
housing from the cruelties of this inclement life.</p>
<p>It was three weeks before I could get appreciably
ahead in the matter of saving. Nearly all
the first instalment of my wages was already due
for board, and a bill for washing cut deep into
the small remainder. A pair of shoes was an absolute
necessity at the end of the next week, for
I was going about almost barefooted, and some
other articles of clothing were equally requisite.
And so my wages for week by week together were
already mortgaged to nearly the last penny before
I had actually earned them. But at last the
materials of a fairly respectable appearance had
been secured, and then, out of the wages of the
last four weeks of factory work, I managed, by
closest economy, to save seventeen dollars and
a half.</p>
<p>Gradation in respectability in the matter of
dress, from the point at which a man is unmistakably
in his working-clothes to that in which
he readily passes as a workman in his Sunday
best, has furnished the means of some range in
the experiment of church-going. From the first
I have gone regularly to church. But appearing
in the garb of a day-laborer in the fashionable
churches of a great city is far removed as a matter
of experience from attending the service of a village
meeting-house. I am inclined to think that
the latter would be the greater ordeal to a real
workman. Country parishioners turn out on
Sundays with an amazing show of dress, and one
of their own number in flannel shirt and labor-stained
clothing would be oddly conspicuous;
and he would feel his peculiarity much more, I
imagine, than if he found himself among persons
whom he did not know on equal social footing.
For me the case was different and was wholly
artificial, but in going to church in the country,
dressed in working clothes which had been carefully
protected by overalls, and mended, and
brushed, and cleaned to the utmost, I yet could
but feel how intolerable to a workingman the
actual situation would have been. To slip early
into a quiet corner of the village church which
was usually free, and then out again before most
of the congregation had well started for the door,
was a widely dissimilar thing from regularly attending
service with your neighbors.</p>
<p>In overalls and a “jumper,” a man is easily
classified; without them, however plain may be
the stamp upon him of attempted cleanliness, it
is difficult to place him among a Sunday-dressed
community, whether in the country or in town,
unless he, too, is evidently in Sunday clothes. It
is not, in its general application, a question of
fashion; the cut of a man’s garments may be that
of ten years back, or may be foreign to any fashion
known, but his clothing must not bear the
marks of toil, and must have the linen accompaniments
which render, while they are worn,
all manual labor difficult. If he would conform,
a man must never worship in garments in which
he could work.</p>
<p>A want of conformity might quite possibly
expose him to aggressive criticism and ridicule
among his accustomed fellows. I never found it
so myself in the country, where I always went to
church in working clothes because I had no
others, for never once was I made to feel the least
embarrassment, while many times I wondered at
the gracious courtesy which met me. But I was
always a stranger, and had never to face companions
of long standing. And so, as in many
phases of my experiment, the unreality of my
position marred, in large measure, the value of
the result.</p>
<p>In Chicago, however, the circumstances were
not so clearly against me, and they served to give
to my own experience something of a normal
character. In entering a church door on Sunday
mornings, I was objectively in no other station
than that of any workingman who may have
wished to worship there. The treatment which I
received is, therefore, a fair gauge of the reception
which another worker might expect.</p>
<p>If it were a single instance I should not mention
it, and I venture to offer no generalization, although
I am speaking of tests which covered
many Sundays and included all the principal
churches of the town. All that can be said, I
think, is that the uniformity of result is some
evidence of what a like-conditioned workingman
might count upon in the way of treatment at the
hands of fashionable churches.</p>
<p>I was sure, in the first venture or two, that the
circumstances were exceptional, and that I had
chanced upon churches which, although most
evidently of the rich, were yet watchful for every
opportunity of welcoming the poor. It was not
until I had made the rounds of many churches of
many denominations that I realized how general
and how sincere among them is the spirit of hospitality
to the working poor.</p>
<p>In the vestibules, I always found young men
who acted as ushers, and who were charged with
the duty of receiving strangers. Never once did
I fail of a friendly greeting. With every test I
felt increasingly the difficulties of the situation
for these young men, and my wonder grew at
their graceful tactfulness. A touch of the patronizing
in their tone or manner would have
changed the welcome to an insult, and any
marked effusiveness of cordiality would have
robbed it as effectually of all virtue. It was the
golden mean of a man’s friendly recognition of
his fellow-man, with no regard for difference in
social standing, which was the course so successfully
followed by these young ushers.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_251.jpg" alt="People gathered in a room lit by the sun streaming in from a window. Some are seated in pews and some are standing." /> <div class="caption"><p>NEVER ONCE DID I FAIL OF A FRIENDLY GREETING.</p> </div>
</div>
<p>I had always to avoid a more desirable seat by
particularly asking for one far to the rear. And
in the pews there was no withdrawing of skirts,
nor were there other signs of objection to me as
a fellow-worshipper. On the contrary, a hymnal,
or a prayer-book would be promptly offered, and
sometimes shared; and, at the service-end, a cordial
invitation to come again would often follow
me from the pew-door, although frequently I noticed
that I was conspicuously lonely, as a representative
of the poor.</p>
<p>How natural it was and how inevitable that
the poor should not be there shone clear as day
the moment that I regarded the matter from the
subjective attitude of a genuine worker.</p>
<p>From their status as citizens in a free land,
American workingmen have acquired, together
with the sense of individual freedom, the quality,
in very marked degree, of self-respect. It exhibits
itself sometimes in highly contradictory
fashion, for it is sensitive and jealous in the making;
but self-respect is none the less a fundamental
characteristic.</p>
<p>Besides Dennis and three others, who were
Roman Catholics, the men at Mrs. Schulz’s boarding-house
did not go to church. In talking with
them I discovered that all had been more or less
in the habit of church-going in their country
homes, but that the habit had dropped completely
from them upon coming to live in town. The
case was perfectly apparent. The mere suggestion
of a mission church was insulting to them
and, from the new idea of churches for the rich,
they had learned their first lesson in class distinctions.
Every feature of such a church, its
richly dressed occupants in their high-priced
pews, and the general atmosphere of merely social
superiority, would have inflicted upon these
men, in spite of a cordial welcome, as deep a
wound to their self-respect as they would have
felt in being decoyed to a formal reception in a
lady’s drawing-room. To them, the latter function
could not be more obviously intended for another
class than theirs.</p>
<p>One night, before I left the factory, Albert
spoke his mind to me on the subject with much
freedom. Several times I had asked him to
come with me to church, and on this particular
Saturday evening I spoke of a preacher whom I
hoped to hear in the morning, and who, I urged,
would surely interest him.</p>
<p>“Look here, John,” he said, finally, “it’s all
right you asking me to go to church, but I ain’t
going. I used to go regular when I lived to home,
although I ain’t no church-member. It was different
out there, for most everybody went and
chipped in what they could, and everybody sat
where they liked, and it wasn’t one man’s church
more than another’s. You go to church if you
like. That’s your own business. But I ain’t
going to no one-horse mission chapel that the rich
has put up so they won’t be bothered with the
poor in their own churches. You say they treat
you well when you go to church on Michigan
Avenue. I don’t doubt it. What reason would
they have for not treating you well? But, all the
same, they take you in for charity, for you
couldn’t pay for a seat in one of them churches.
No, sir, the rich folks build their churches for
themselves, and they keep them up for themselves,
and I ain’t never going to interfere with
that arrangement. I don’t mind going to the
meetings of the Association once in awhile, for
there’s fellows of your own kind there, and you
hear some good speaking and singing. I ain’t
got much use even for that, for it’s only a sideshow
that’s run mostly by the rich, but I ain’t
got no use at all for your churches.”</p>
<p>Nevertheless, on the whole, I was sorry the
next morning that Albert was not with me.
There were moments when I did not regret it,
but the sermon, for all its strange setting, was one
which could scarcely have failed to impress him.</p>
<p>After a seven o’clock breakfast, which seemed
luxuriously late, and which Dennis and I shared
alone on Sunday mornings, I set out as usual for
the South Side. It was five miles to my destination
in that section of the city, and I always
walked both ways, for sometimes I had not the
fare, and, in any case, ten cents saved was no
mean item in a careful account of possible
economy.</p>
<p>The Sundays of my term of service in the factory
were, for the most part, splendid winter days,
and this was of the best. No snow lay on the
ground, no winter wind stirred the dust in the
long, quiet streets, and clear from out the cloudless
sky came the glowing rays of the sun, tempering
the cold air to the exquisite delicacy of reviving
warmth wherein you catch your breath
with wonder, so charged is it with the mystery
of the coming spring. Walking, on such a day,
is of the essence of delight. Some measure of
bodily exercise is needed to keep one warm, and
this forth-faring on a holiday, free from the necessity
of labor, which begins almost with the
dawn of consciousness after sleep and ends only as
the night of sleep closes down upon one, is a form
of pleasure which life does not often match.</p>
<p>The spell of it bore me company through the
factory region, and where there opened to my
view mile after mile of lumber-yards, with unsightly
piles of seasoning timber stretching away
to where the vessels lie in the canals which are
fed from the river, and there rise the gaunt bulks
of towering elevators, and the tall chimneys that
everywhere send forth their ceaseless volumes of
black smoke. All this was eloquent of work, and
wages, and the means of decent living, and it
therefore had a beauty which will not be denied
to it by one who knows something of the misery
of the unemployed. Even the grotesque ugliness
of the long lines of buildings, as I entered the
closely built-up sections of the town, could not
rob me of the comforting sense of shelter and
much legitimate business among the well-paid
working poor.</p>
<p>But, before crossing thence to the South Side,
there remains a belt through which even the
stanchest optimism on its way to church on a
bright Sunday morning could scarcely pass without
misgivings. A varying foreign population,
chiefly from southern and eastern Europe, thickens
here to a point of incredible crowding, and
sweat-shops abound, and cheap bakeries, and there
is a marked increase in the number of pawn-shops
and saloons.</p>
<p>The crowds in the streets had been in Sunday
dress thus far for the most part, and were evidently
on the way to mass or just returning.
Many children were among them, uniformly well-booted
and dressed, and here and there appeared
the white veil and crowning flowers of a first
communion.</p>
<p>There was no sharp transition to a region which
knows no Sunday, for everywhere were the outward
symbols of the day in closed shops, and
streets free from the noise of traffic, and the presence
of holiday garments; and yet more obvious
on every hand became now the evidences of a
poverty which finds no day of rest. The unemployed,
in the uniform of rags, were loafing on the
streets—the long, relentless waiting which is an
honest workman’s torment until he finds employment,
or loses hope and self-respect, when
it becomes his sure destruction. Children who
have scant knowledge of clean water or clean
clothes were playing in the unclean streets, or
emerging from the “family entrances” of saloons
with pitchers or tin-pails of beer, destined
for rooms swarming with workers whose labor
never ceases, except for a few hours each night,
unless there comes the calamity of no work at
even a bare-living rate.</p>
<p>It was the age-old picture of the lot of the
very poor, which alters not with the varying fortune
of the State. “The old order changeth,
yielding place to new,” one epoch of society
merges into another, and the lives of men are
lived on other planes; but there is a constant
quantity in it all at the point where the pressure
upon the limits of subsistence is the strongest,
and the weakest, driven to the wall, live from
hand to mouth in squalid wretchedness.</p>
<p>How familiar to our day has the picture come
to be of children who breathe moral death with
every breath they draw, and grow up to certain
crime and shamelessness from out the haggard
struggle for daily bread in sordid attics where
disease is born in reeking filth and in warrens of
beastly incest! Familiarity with it breeds no contempt,
but rather a wondering recognition of the
touch of better nature which reveals itself—the
shouts of true delight from children hard at play;
their rapt absorption in the game, an ecstasy in
which all the hidden beauty of their faces is disclosed;
the loving tending of a plant that grows
in the fetid air of a working-chamber; and, more
than all, the unfailing miracle of ministry,
wherein the poor, out of cramping penury, relieve
the grimmer needs of yet poorer brethren.</p>
<p>Once through the belt, and over a narrow river
which flows black with the noisome sewage of the
city, and past the region of unceasing railway
traffic, and through the chilling gloom of streets
which are like sunless caverns between sheer walls
of stone, almost a single step in an eastward walk
brought to sudden view the revelation of new
order. A long, wide avenue, bathed in winter
sunlight, lay radiant from polished windows and
the garnished pavements of all its length.
Glimpses were had of an inland sea which reflected,
as from clearest crystal, the infinite serenity
of unclouded skies. Down the far extent of
the thoroughfare, blending into indistinguishable
unity in distant, gleaming haze, were homes
where, in quiet and comfort, some in high refinement
and some in barbaric splendor, live the
strong of their generation, working out life’s fateful
ends.</p>
<p>It was down this avenue that I passed on the
way to church. An outward calm, as of perfect
peace, possessed it. There was no hint of hunger
there, nor of the cruel need which eats into the
living souls of men until it devours them or leaves
them maimed and stunted of their rightful
growth. Plethora here took the place of want.
Then quickly came the sense of excess, with its
end in sad satiety, and hard upon the sight of
lavish luxury followed the impression of a world
of men seeking at any cost to hedge themselves
with unstinted plenty from all sight and knowledge
of their kindred who know but little relief
from pangs of plague and famine.</p>
<p>Among the first to enter it, I walked up the
steps of a large stone church and into an inviting
vestibule. Several young men were grouped in
conversation between the inner doors, and the one
who first marked my entrance stepped out at once
to meet me. A little painfully regardful of his
dress, he yet was frank and cordial, and the ease
with which he greeted me could not have become
him better had he spent his life in leading workingmen
up the aisles of rich churches.</p>
<p>“I have a seat well up on this side, where you
can hear perfectly,” he suggested, looking me full
in the eyes, as we stood for a moment at the door.
“May I show you to that?”</p>
<p>“I should like to sit here if I may,” I said,
and I pointed to the corner of the first seat from
the wall.</p>
<p>“I am sorry,” he answered, “but that seat is
reserved for an old gentleman who has occupied
it for years, and who always prefers to sit there.
Would you mind taking the seat just in front of
it?”</p>
<p>“Certainly not,” I said. “That will suit me
quite as well,” and I sat myself down in the place
in question.</p>
<p>Not half a dozen persons were in the building,
and its restful quiet was unbroken even by the
prelude from the organ. Two ladies in deep
mourning entered now, in the company of the
church treasurer. It appeared, from their conversation,
that they had met him by appointment;
and, although they were speaking in low
tones, yet they stood so near me that I could not
help overhearing what they said.</p>
<p>The point in discussion among them related to
a pew, and the treasurer politely pointed out a
small one not far from where I sat, which was at
their service for two hundred dollars a year, and
also two sittings farther to the front, which they
might have on the same terms. There was much
considering of the <i>pros</i> and <i>cons</i> of this alternative,
and, incidentally, the treasurer indicated the
range of prices in the pews, from two hundred
dollars near the door to sixteen hundred where
seats were most in demand.</p>
<p>In growing numbers the congregation was assembling,
and above the gentle breathing of the
organ, which began to spread in soothing waves
of prayerful music through the church, rose the
soft rustle of rich dress, and the air, glowing
with deep colors from stained glass, took on a
subtle perfume.</p>
<p>When the pews were dense with worshippers,
scarcely a vacant seat remaining, and my closest
watchfulness had failed to note the presence of
a single other person of my class, there broke
faintly on the waiting company the clear, uplifting
sweetness of a rare contralto voice.
Vague and lightly stirring at the first, as when
some deeply buried feeling, recalled to life, gives
utterance to new being in “the language of a
cry,” it rose to ever fuller power, unfaltering and
pure in every tone, until it smote with the touch
of truth each silent chord of life and waked them
all to perfect harmony, wherein they sing the
mystic unity of things, where the senses mix and
whence they radiate, and where,</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">... in the midmost heart of grief</div>
<div class="verse">Our passions clasp a secret joy.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>I was not present, however, merely as a worshipper,
but also as a member of my chosen order.
I tried to see with their eyes, and then to think
their thoughts and feel their emotions. When I
held myself honestly to this task, with the aid of
what I had learned directly from the men and
caught of their ways of thinking, it was another
revulsion of feeling which set in.</p>
<p>I thought of my nine dollars a week, and of the
meagre pittance which resulted from utmost care
in saving, even when my own support was the
only claim upon me, and how far beyond my
reach was all possibility of a seat in the pews
which were held for barter. The image of Mrs.
Schulz rose up to me, worn, and wan, and almost
ill, yet always cheerful, and I remembered the
patient, unflinching courage with which she faced
the obligations of her life, and the heart-breaking
economies by which she must meet many of its
duties. On that very day, the two older children
had gone at different hours to church, because
there was but one pair of shoes and stockings between
them, and Mrs. Schulz herself went out to
mass, through the tingling cold of the early morning,
in clothing which would have been light for
summer.</p>
<p>While here, on every hand, was dress whose
cost, as indicating not warmth and comfort but
mere conformity to changing fashion, represented,
in scores of cases, more of annual individual
expenditure than the whole net income of many
a workman’s family. And even more poignant
to a mind made sensitive by this train of thought
was the impression which weighed upon it of a
company well-fed to a degree of comfort beyond
the sense of sympathy with hunger that rarely
learns the meaning of enough. The mere suggestion
of a breakfast of rich food in wide variety,
and served often at great cost in almost wasteful
plenty, to be followed soon after the hour of worship
by another meal yet more varied, and abundant,
and rich, seemed the very pitch of heartless
mockery, in the full presence almost of hundreds
of men and women to whom bare day’s bread is
an agony of anxious seeking, and of multitudes
of little children to whom, not nourishing food
alone but even food enough to stay the pangs of
hunger, is a luxury.</p>
<p>These familiar feelings, roused, as always, by
the common contrasts of life, which one follows
in close study through the bewildering complexities
of casual relations, were dominant, from the
new point of view, as the outcome of patent facts.
Superficial and undiscriminating, and yet most
real and living, is the thought of the actual workman,
as his mind responds to the obvious leading
of the things he sees. I was glad at this point
that Albert was not with me. A few minutes
later I deeply regretted his absence.</p>
<p>The minister had begun his sermon. I scarcely
heard the opening sentences, so oppressed
was my mind with the workman’s sense of the
ruthless Philistinism of this phase of modern
Christianity. It was the preacher’s tone which
first attracted me. There was quiet in it and a
great reserve, and he spoke as a pastor who holds
earnest conversation with his flock. I was all
attention in a moment, and I saw that I listened to
a man who knew his fellow-men, and whose words
made strong appeal to their intelligence.</p>
<p>It was as though he spoke from a heart well-nigh
broken with personal grief, but chastened
to new love and truth, and tenderness, by the
sorrow which it had borne.</p>
<p>He was speaking of the needs of men, and
through his thoughts there breathed a knowledge
of the <i>Weltschmerz</i> of to-day, and deep sympathy
with it. There was no weak ignoring of the difficulties
of honest doubt, and no false claims for
the basis of belief; and, when he spoke of the awful
suffering of our time, his words were true to
the high dignity of man through the infinite consequences
of free choice in his life upon the earth.
His appeal was no emotional blending of the false
and true, wherewith to blind men’s eyes to the
eternal verities, and to cause to rest lightly upon
comfortable consciences the sense of personal responsibility
for one’s fellows, but rather the sure
claim of clear conviction which comes from out
the facts of daily life seen in the light of their
true meaning.</p>
<p>The effect upon his hearers was unmistakable.
I was unaware of it for a time, so engrossed was I
in the speaker’s words, and in the strongly human
personality of the man, but by degrees I awoke
to the fact that all about me were listeners as
eagerly intent as I. The sense of hardened, pampered,
Philistinism gave way before the overwhelming
consciousness of a sympathetic unity
of thought and feeling. Indifferent to the vital
needs of the world and to the pressing problems
of its life? No emotion could have been farther
from these men and women, the intensity of
whose interest could be felt in almost an agony of
breathless attention to the sober truthfulness of
the minister. The very stillness was charged
with mute appeal for guidance from hearts wrung
with the hurt of the world and pleading for some
useful outlet to the tide of generous feeling. It
was as though distress had ceased to be for them
the visible sufferings of the poor, and had grown,
through the deepening sense of brotherhood, into
an anguish of their own, which must find healing
in forms of effective helpfulness. Very clearly
dawned the conviction that, if one could but
point out to the members of this waiting company
some “way,” “something to do,” which
would square well with their practical business
sense of things, instant and unmeasured would be
their response for the furthering of an end which
would work them such glad relief!</p>
<p>From the church my destination was the meeting
of the Socialists. But not immediately, for I
stopped on the way at the well-known haunt in
Madison Street for the usual Sunday dinner.</p>
<p>By this time I had attended several of the Socialists’
meetings, and had come to know personally
a number of the members of the order, and I
was not surprised, upon taking a seat in the restaurant,
to catch sight of three Socialists who
were nodding pleasantly to me from a neighboring
table. One was the broad-minded Pedler,
whose good impression made in the first speech of
his which I had heard was heightened by all my
later knowledge of him. Another I had learned
to know as a near approach to my original preconception
of a revolutionary. He was a Communistic
Anarchist, and just what peculiar variation
of individual belief it was which led him to
ally himself with the Socialists I could never
make clearly out.</p>
<p>It puzzled me not a little; for, by this time I
had thoroughly in mind the fundamental fact
that Socialism and Anarchy, as two schools of social
doctrine, are at the very poles of hostile opposition
to each other. And, if I may judge from
the little that I have seen and heard between
them, the vituperative heat of their controversies
is equalled only by the warmth and malignancy
which has marked the history of theological
debate.</p>
<p>I soon learned that Socialist and Anarchist are
not interchangeable terms, to be used with light
indifference in describing the general advocate of
revolution against established order. Indeed, to
my great surprise, I found that a policy of active,
aggressive revolution among these men had almost
no adherents. Certainly none among the
Socialists, for they repudiated the bare suggestion
of violence as being wholly inadequate and absurd,
and pinned their faith instead to what they
called the “natural processes of evolution.”
These, to their belief, would, in any case, work
out the appointed ends with men, but their operation
could be stimulated by education, they said,
and helped on by organized effort toward the
achievement of manifest destiny in the highly
centralized and perfected order which is to result
from the common ownership and administration
by all the people of all land and capital used in
production and distribution, for the common good
of all.</p>
<p>And even among the Anarchists the upholders
of a policy of bloody revolt against social order
were rare. Most of those whom I came to know
were distinctly of a metaphysical turn of mind.
It was easy to trace their intellectual kinship with
the Physiocrats of the last century, in their implicit
confidence in the universal efficacy of
<i>laissez faire</i>. Their views, reduced to simplest
terms, seemed to take the form of the epigram—that
“the cure for the evils of freedom is more
freedom.” The removal of all artificial restraint
in the form of man-made laws would result
eventually, to their thinking, in a society as natural
and as wholesome as is all physical order,
which is the exact resultant of the free play of
natural law.</p>
<p>It was the Socialist’s conception of a highly
centralized administration which drove the Anarchist
into a frenzy of vehement antagonism.
And it was the Anarchist’s <i>laissez faire</i> ideal
which roused the latent fighting-spirit of the Socialist.
The Anarchist would maintain with
stout conviction that centralized administration
is already the core of the malady of the world,
and that our need is for freedom in the absence
of artificial limitations wherein natural forces can
work their rightful ends. And the Socialist
would retort, with rising anger, that it is from
anarchy—the absence of wisely regulated system—that
the world even now suffers most, and
that the hope of men lies in the orderly management
of their own affairs in the interests of all,
and in the light of the revelations of science.
They were heartily at one in their dislike for what
they were fond of calling the present “<i>bourgeois</i>
society,” and for the existing rights of private
property, which they regarded as its chiefest bulwark,
but they parted company at once, and with
sharp recriminations, on the grounds of their dislike,
and of their purposes and hopes for a regenerated
state of things.</p>
<p>Such Anarchists were of the “Individualistic”
type. Not all of those I met were so philosophical,
however. The Communistic one, who was
nodding at me in a friendly manner from a near
table, notably was not. Very much the reverse.
He was for open revolution to the death, and he
made no secret of it. He had little patience for
the slow pace of evolution believed in by the Socialists,
but he had less, apparently, for the
<i>laissez faire</i> conception of his brother Anarchists.
At all events, I found him most commonly
in the meetings of the former sect, where
his revolutionary views were frowned down, but
his invectives against society were tolerated in a
spirit of free speech, and as being warranted by
the evils of the existing state.</p>
<p>He was a German, of tall, muscular frame,
erect, square-shouldered, well-poised, as a result
of long service, most bitterly against his will, in
the Prussian Army, and he hated kings and potentates
and all governmental authority, with a
burning hatred. His was the broad-featured likeness
of his race, and his stiff, fair hair was brushed
back in straight lines from a well-shaped forehead,
while his beard, brown and streaked with
white, bristled from his lower face like the bayonets
of a square in full formation. He was a
mechanic by trade, and a good one, as I had
happened to learn.</p>
<div class="figcenter illowp96" id="i271" style="max-width: 125.25em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_271.jpg" alt="Four men gathered around a table. One man is expounding to the others." />
<div class="caption"><p>HE HATED KINGS AND POTENTATES AND ALL GOVERNMENTAL AUTHORITY.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>The last of the three, like the Pedler, was a
Socialist, but was very unlike his two companions
as a man. My acquaintance among the Socialists
had not gone far before I began to observe that
I was meeting men who, whatever their mental
vagaries, were craftsmen of no mean order. They
were machinists and skilled workmen mostly, and
some were workers in sweat-shops. All of them
had known the full stress of the struggle for
bread, but they were decidedly not the inefficients
of their class, having fought their way to
positions of some advantage in the general fight.</p>
<p>Here, however, was an exception in this third
“comrade,” and I marvelled at the rarity of his
type. Incompetence was stamped on every feature.
His long, lank, flabby figure, with its disjointed
movements, suggested no virility. The
hair grew thin and blonde from his head and from
his colorless face, and his large, pale-blue eyes
flitted in their movements, as though there were
behind them not intelligence enough to hold them
in fixed attention. The man’s emotions were
boundless. He had, moreover, a gift of utterance,
and, when he spoke in meeting, it was sheer feeling
that expressed itself in words which were
marvellously void of any sane concatenation. It
was a psychological phenomenon, this public
speech of his. We had premonitory warnings of
it, for we could see him writhing in his seat when
his emotions were aroused, and starting nervously
until he had gained the floor, when a half-suppressed,
general groan would greet the torrent
of his sentences, which flowed directly from
chaotic feeling which had never reached his
mind.</p>
<p>We four left the restaurant together, and
walked on to Waverley Hall. I fell in with the
Pedler, and from him I was glad to learn that the
Poet was to read that afternoon his long-deferred
paper on the “Opening of the Exposition
Grounds on Sunday.”</p>
<p>It was a little before the appointed hour when
we reached the hall, but already there was promise
of an uncommon meeting. The audience was
larger than usual, the benches on both sides of the
central aisle being well filled nearly to the door.
The Pedler and I had some difficulty in finding
seats near the front. More than ever marked was
the atmosphere of keen alertness, which, from
the first, had so attracted me in the gatherings of
the Socialists. They might be futile, but their
meetings were never dull. And, while they
could not have been more orderly, they might
easily have proved far less engaging than they
were, had a saving sense of humor been more
conspicuously a characteristic of the members.</p>
<p>There was a sense of pleasurable excitement in
sinking back into my seat, whence, by turning a
little to the right, I could command the hall. The
afternoon sun was streaming through the two
large windows in the south end. The heavy draperies,
looped up to admit the light, were in perfect
keeping with the carpet on the daïs and the
pulpit chairs upholstered with plush, on one
of which sat the Leader, behind a reading-desk.
There were other paraphernalia of the Masonic
lodge which habitually held its meetings there,
and among the life-sized portraits on the walls
was one of Washington in the full regalia of a
Mason. At small wooden tables, resting on the
floor at the Leader’s right, sat a few young reporters,
sharpening their pencils in preparation
for any points which could be turned to good account
as “copy.”</p>
<p>To the pleasure of excited interest was added
the ease of some familiarity, for, besides the
heads of meeting, I recognized among the gathering
company the faces of <i>habitués</i>. In a seat
across the aisle the Poet sat in earnest conversation
with the Citizeness, holding fast a roll of
manuscript in both hands. And at the end of
the bench behind them was a young man who interested
me far more than any of the Socialists
whom I had met. A long black overcoat of
cheap material concealed his work-worn garments
to the knees, and his hands, dark with
the dye of clothing, lay folded in his lap. His
face showed faintly the marks of Jewish origin,
and, although he was full three-and-twenty, he
bore a strange resemblance to the Christ-child in
Hoffmann’s picture of “Jesus among the Doctors
in the Temple.”</p>
<p>Quite oblivious to what was passing about him,
he sat in his usual mood, with an expression of
much serenity on his pale face, and his great,
dark, luminous eyes glowing with the ardor of
his thought.</p>
<p>I have never lost the first impression which he
made upon me; it was in one of these meetings,
when an idle slur had been cast upon his race and
the Leader had given him an opportunity to reply.
He rose modestly to his feet, and from the
first my attention was riveted by the convincing
quality in his rich, deep voice. Without a word
of cheap rejoinder, he simply restated the issues
of debate in clear, incisive sentences, which
seemed to gather force from their broken English,
until he had shown the entire irrelevance
of the insulting charge, even had it been true.</p>
<p>I had waited for him on that afternoon at the
meeting’s end, and we began an acquaintance
which to me has been of great value. It is easy
to predict for such a man an eventual escape from
the bondage of a sweat-shop, but, inasmuch as he
has been held in slavery to that work from his
earliest infant memories of a crowded den in Poland,
where he was born, I feel some measure of
justice in naming him “The Victim.”</p>
<p>Promptly on the hour the Leader called the
meeting to order, and introduced the Poet, whose
paper presented the topic of the day’s debate. In
a few moments we were all following in close
attention the ready flow of the Poet’s voice as
it passed with clear articulation over the well-chosen
words of his introductory sentences.
There was admirable precision in the statement
of the case at issue, and we were bracing ourselves
with pleasure for the logical sequences of
detailed discussion, when, to our surprise, the
Poet broke abruptly from all judicial treatment
of his theme. At a single leap, he took the
ground that certainly the Exposition should be
accessible every day—that its opening on Sundays
was not a subject for debate.</p>
<p>Then there followed a storm of hot invective.
Christianity was assailed as the giant superstition
of historic civilization, still, daring, to the shame
of high intelligence, to hold its fetich head aloft
in the light of modern science. Its ministers
were attacked as sycophantic parasites, whose
only motive, in urging the closing of the Fair on
Sundays, was the fear of the spread among working
people of that enlightenment which will
achieve the overthrow of capitalistic society and
with it the tottering structure of the Church.
Most of all, his bitterness spent itself upon these
“blind leaders of the blind,” as he called them,
who will not themselves enter into a knowledge
of a better state nor suffer others to enter it, and
who grievously break the law of rest on Sundays
in befooling their fellow-men, and then live
through the remaining days in luxurious unproductiveness
upon the labor of their dupes.</p>
<p>What was coming next we could not guess, and
it seemed a long cry to any shout of exultation
from all this, but he accomplished it with facility,
for his paper closed with a peroration, wherein
he rose to fervid panegyric upon the increasing
intellectual emancipation of workingmen. The
Romish Church, he said, keeps many of them in
bondage yet, but the Protestant organizations
have all but lost their hold upon them; and the
widening gulf between the two great classes in
society has left these churches in the nakedness
of their true character, as mere centres of the
social life of the very rich and of the upper <i>bourgeoisie</i>,
and as a prop to the social order from
which these idle classes so richly profit, at the
merciless cost of the wage-earners.</p>
<p>Instantly this was accepted as the dominant
note of the meeting. The applause which greeted
it was genuine and prolonged. With light-hearted
disregard of the subject appointed for
debate, men began ardently to speak to this new
theme: Modern Christianity a vast hypocrisy—a
cloak made use of by vested interest to conceal
from the common people the real nature of the
grounds on which it stands.</p>
<p>But for the masterly qualities of the Leader,
who held the meeting to strict parliamentary
order, it might have degenerated into a mob.
Men were crowding one another in their desire
to gain the floor, but not for a moment was the
peaceful conduct of the gathering disturbed.
With accurate knowledge of the shades of social
belief there represented and of the personalities
of the men, the Leader chose for recognition with
discriminating justice.</p>
<p>At one moment an American workman was
speaking, a Socialist of the general school of
Social Democracy. There was self-respecting
dignity about him and a calm reserve as he
began.</p>
<p>The Christian Church served as well as any
institution of the capitalistic order, he said, to
measure the growing cleavage between the classes
in society. But, to his mind, the paper of the
afternoon had emphasized unnecessarily the existence
of the <i>bourgeoisie</i>; for, economically
considered, there is no longer a middle-class to be
reckoned with in vital questions. There remain
simply the capitalists and the proletarians. The
old middle-class, which had made its living by
individual enterprise, was fast being forced (by
the play of natural laws, which showed themselves
in the increasing centralization of capital)
out of the possibility of successful competition
with aggregated wealth, and down, for the most
part, to the level of those who can bring to production,
not land nor capital, but merely their
native qualities of physical strength, or manual
skill, or mental ability—proletarians, all of them,
whether manual or intellectual, and coming
surely, in the slow development of evolution, to
a conscious knowledge of their community of interest
as against the vested “rights” of monopoly
in the material instruments of production. But
athwart this path of progress rose the hardened
structure of the Christian Church, bringing to
bear against it all her temporal power and the
full force of her accumulated superstitions.</p>
<p>But now the speaker’s calm deserted him, and,
with fist uplifted in threatening gesture, and his
strong, bronzed face working with the fervor of
his hate, he cried out against the ministers of
Christ, who preach to the wronged and downtrodden
poor the duty of patience with their “divinely
appointed lot,” and who try to soothe
them to blind submission with promises of an
endless future of ecstatic blessedness, when the
rich of this world shall burn in the unquenchable
fires of hell.</p>
<div class="figcenter illowp79" id="i281" style="max-width: 110em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_281.jpg" alt="Several people are seated in pews. One man is standing exclaiming passionately. A dais with a seated man is visible in the background." />
<div class="caption"><p>THE SOCIALIST MEETING.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>“Oh! the fiendishness of these men,” he
shouted, “who hide from ignorant minds the
truth, which they themselves know full well, that
for no mortal man is there any heaven or hell
which he does not realize in the span of his
earthly history, and if he misses here the happiness
to which he was rightly born, he misses it
forever! And the miserable paltriness of their
motive in working this cruel wrong—merely that
they may exempt themselves from toil and live in
comfort upon the labor of others, instead of being,
where most of them belong, out in the open
fields hoeing corn!”</p>
<p>In another moment a man of widely different
cult was speaking. For some time he had been
trying to gain the floor, and now the Leader recognized
him. He was a Christian Socialist, chief
spokesman of the little band of his persuasion,
who were very regular in their attendance upon
these meetings. An insignificant Englishman he
was, whose h’s transposed themselves with consistent
perversity, and whose general qualities of
physique, and tone, and manner reminded one
strongly of the type of parson with weak lungs
and a large family who is incumbent in out-of-the-way
English churches on the Continent. He was
not wanting in pluck nor in a certain strength of
conviction, but the gentleness of the dove was
his without the wisdom of the serpent, and the
words he spoke, in weak voice and apologetic
manner, while they would have met with sympathy
in a company of believers whose emotions
were already stirred, served here only to inflame
the antagonisms of men whose views were stoutly
materialistic.</p>
<p>The Communistic Anarchist was the first to
rise when the Christian Socialist sat down, and
the Leader gave to him the privilege of the floor.
There was the power of primal force in the suppressed
passion of the man, and joined to this the
exciting struggle of a human will in keeping rage
in bounds. His heavy frame heaved with paroxysms
of volcanic wrath, and the sibilants of English
speech, augmented by the z’s in Teutonic
struggle with the sound of th, came hissing
and sputtering through his teeth from a tongue
which could not frame words fast enough for his
impatience.</p>
<p>I have no power to reproduce his actual sentences,
and at best I can but suggest the purport
of his talk, which was in full sympathy with most
of what had gone before:</p>
<p>“God a decaying myth, and the Bible a silly
legend, and Jesus a good man seeing some human
truth, but gone mad in the credulous ignorance
of his age, and dead these two thousand years,
and Christianity a hoary superstition, made use of
in its last days by <i>bourgeois</i> civilization to stave
off a little longer its own fateful day of reckoning!
And here is a man, who calls himself a
Socialist, who dares to bring before us this enfeebled
monster of worn-out faith, which has
been the tyrant of the poor from the moment of
gaining temporal power, trying to hide its oppressions
under a guise of so-called charity! It
has been, too, from the beginning the stubbornest
foe of scientific knowledge, and even now,
in the last hour of its heartless cruelties, employs
its utmost craft to put off the manifest dawn of
freedom to the workers.”</p>
<p>Breaking through the forced restraint of the
beginning, his feelings bore him in resistless
course until, in the full sweep of his long arms,
his fingers were clutching wildly at the empty
air, and his blood-shot eyes were rolling in a
frenzy, and his hair stood straight on end, while
his voice rose to its highest pitch in fierce scorn
and denunciation.</p>
<p>The hall was still echoing to the roar, when
a scattered number of us were on our feet, straining
forward in our efforts to catch the Leader’s
eye. The Victim was recognized, and almost immediately
the meeting began to feel the calming
effect of a cool, conciliatory mind. Clearness was
highly characteristic of the Victim’s mental processes,
and, as his ideas slowly framed themselves,
in translation to English from the native language
in which he thought, they took on a charming
piquancy and precision, in the oddest mixtures of
strange idioms and bookish phrases and the current
coin of common slang.</p>
<p>“The assigned subject for debate this afternoon,”
he was saying (in a paraphrase which
wholly lacks his strongly individual character),
“is one which opens up questions of great economic
value and importance. It is a pity, it
seems to me, that the time has been consumed in
a discussion of side issues, rather than of the fundamental
question of the observance of Sunday
as an economic institution, and the relation borne
to that great issue by the present agitation over
the opening of the Exposition grounds on Sundays.
It is well to remember that this is a meeting
of Socialists. Freedom of speech is one of
our cardinal beliefs. But a freedom of speech
which ignores the subject appointed for debate
would make better use of its liberty by asking for
a particular afternoon to be devoted to the theme
which it wishes to discuss.</p>
<p>“Not only has the talk of to-day been wide of
the mark, but it has been out of harmony with
the genius of Socialism. I am proud to own myself
a Scientific Socialist, and a disciple of Karl
Marx. To my way of thinking, there can be no
verified truth which the mind of man can accept
as such aside from the established results of naturalistic
science. I, therefore, attach no more
value to Christianity, as an authoritative source
of truth, than I do to the sacred writings of my
race. Both are merely historical facts, to be
dealt with precisely as are all the facts of history.
This afternoon, however, they have been dealt
with in a spirit of intolerance, as malignant and
uncompromising as the spirit which is charged
against historic Christianity. It will be well for
us who profess Socialism to be on our guard, lest
there grow up among us an intolerance bred of
dogmatic science, which may prove in the future
as destructive of free thought and of true progress
as has proved in the past the bigotry of dogmatic
theology.”</p>
<p>It was now well past the ordinary time for adjourning.
The Leader announced the fact, and
I feared that he meant to call for a motion to adjourn
without making his usual closing speech.
It was his habit to sum up the discussion, and we
always looked forward to that address, for the
Leader had the gift of speech and a liking for it,
and a knowledge, moreover, of the minds of Socialists
which was by no means common. There
was little of the declamatory in his habitual
speaking, and he lacked the analytical skill of
some of the other members, but he had a shrewd
perception of the dramatic, and he could make
use of it to striking purpose. He had been born
and bred a workingman, and was an artisan of
much ability, and he knew thoroughly the workmen’s
point of view. I have watched him play
upon their feelings with the skill of a native
orator.</p>
<p>He spoke now in high commendation of what
The Victim had said, and deplored the fact that
the afternoon had passed without discussion of
the appointed theme. As a Socialist, he regretted,
he said, that the talk had taken the form
of an attack upon Christianity. Such a spirit
was directly counter to the tolerance of Socialism.
For his own part, although he had been brought
up under the influence of the Protestant religion,
he found himself very little in sympathy with
modern Christianity. Supernaturalism he was
willing to regard as a question apart, and as being
entitled to fair, dispassionate discussion, but
the Christian Church, as a practical embodiment
of the teachings of its founder, he felt justified
in judging in the light of every-day facts, and in
their light he was free to say that Christianity
was a failure.</p>
<p>“Let us take an illustration,” he went on.
“A very urgent problem in our city just now is
that of ‘the unemployed.’ Certain of the newspapers
have made a careful investigation in the
last few weeks, and the result of their inquiry
shows that, within the city limits to-day, there are
at least thirty thousand men out of work. There
may be fifty thousand, but the first estimate is
well within the truth.</p>
<p>“It is a matter primarily of supply and demand.
Among these idle men there may be
many inefficients and many chronic loafers, and
many who, from one cause and another, are incapable
of effective work. But the nature of the
present status is unaffected by these considerations.
It means, in its last analysis, that the local
labor market is overstocked to the extent of thirty
thousand men. However willing to work, and
however efficient as workmen they might be,
these men, or their equivalent in number, under
existing conditions, would invariably find themselves
unemployed.</p>
<p>“And how does the Christian Church among
us hold itself in relation to this problem? Its
members profess themselves the disciples of ‘the
meek and lowly Jesus,’ whom they call ‘divine.’
He said of Himself that ‘He had not where to
lay His head,’ and He was the first Socialist in
His teaching of universal brotherhood.</p>
<p>“His followers build gorgeous temples to His
worship in our city, and out of the fear, apparently,
that some of the shelterless waifs, whom
He taught them to know as brothers and who are
in the very plight their Master was, should lay
their weary heads upon the cushioned seats, they
keep the churches tight locked through six days
of the week, and then open them on one day for
the exclusive purpose of praising that Master’s
name!</p>
<p>“Nor is this condition truer of Chicago than
it is of any large industrial centre in this country,
or even in all Christendom,” he went on, warming
to his theme as the intently listening company
hailed vociferously the name of the Redeemer as
the first teacher of Socialism. “Only last week
news came from London that the unemployed
there had grown to an army of one hundred
thousand men. Picture the horror of it, and the
suffering, and the awful degradation, not in these
men alone, but among the women and children
whom they represent! Cold, and hunger, and
the ravages of disease were bad enough, in the
ferocity of this inclement winter; but imagine,
if you can, the pitiless despair which is eating the
hearts out of these our brothers, and then tell me
whether we have not here a fairly good imitation
of the hell where ‘the worm dieth not, and the
fire is not quenched.’</p>
<p>“Suppose, for a moment, that the Christ were
to appear in the heart of that ‘Christian’ city.
Most certainly He would be found among the
poor, ministering to their needs, and comforting
them in their sorrows, and bringing life and hope
among them. I can imagine His perplexity at
sight of the man-inflicted suffering and degradation,
and the Godless tyranny of men over their
brother men, in the very stronghold of Christianity
and two thousand years after He had taught
that, under the Fatherhood of God, to love our
neighbor as ourselves is the fulfilling of the law
to all who have need of our sympathy and help.</p>
<p>“I hear Him ask in His amazement for some
authoritative head of the brotherhood which He
established upon earth. I hear men tell Him
that He must see the Archbishop of Canterbury.
I watch Him as He walks to the palace of the
Archbishop, along narrow streets which thunder
to the din of mammon-worship and which are
blackened with the smoke from off its countless
altars, seeing everywhere the hideous contrasts
between rich and poor, and the lives of His toiling
ones worn out in ceaseless labor.</p>
<p>“Weighed down with the heartless misery of
the world, I see Him stand patiently at the palace-gate.
A footman in rich livery answers to His
knock.</p>
<p>“‘I would see the Archbishop,’ says the
Christ.</p>
<p>“‘And who shall I say wishes to see his Lordship?’
asks the flunky.</p>
<p>“‘Tell him that his Master is at the gate.’</p>
<p>“‘Oh,’ replies the servant, ‘but his Lordship
has no “master”; he is the primate of all England!’”</p>
<p>Here the speaker abruptly ceased, but for that
gathered company the picture was complete, and
the cheers with which the hall had rung at the
mention of Christ, the social teacher, were
changed to hisses against the church which calls
itself by His name.</p>
<p>On the crowded stairs, as we descended to the
street, I found myself beside a young German
mechanic whose acquaintance I had made in
these meetings. My knowledge of him was limited
to the fact that he was a Socialist and was
employed in a large factory on the North Side.</p>
<p>“What are you going to do, this evening?” he
asked, after our exchange of greetings.</p>
<p>“I have no definite plan,” I said.</p>
<p>“Then come home with me,” he suggested,
and I assented gladly.</p>
<p>We were a long time getting there, but when,
at last, we reached his door, the journey was
quickly forgotten.</p>
<p>As flat as the untroubled sea, the open prairie
lay about us, browned and seared by frosts and
gleaming faintly under the winter stars. Long
parallels of street-lamps, cutting one another
at right angles, marked the outlines of city
“blocks,” and threw into stronger relief the
deep black of clustered trees and the forms of
lonely cottages with lights glancing dimly from
their windows.</p>
<p>When my friend opened the door of his house,
there was nothing in the domestic scene which
met us to suggest the home of a revolutionary. It
was the typical home, rather, of the prosperous
American workman. The living-room, which
we entered, was aglow with light, and redolent
of dry, unwholesome, excessive heat from a closed
iron stove, and it seemed at first to be already
crowded by occupants. The wife was standing
over a cradle, in which she softly rocked her baby,
whose sleep was undisturbed by the conversation
between two young men of the family. An old
couple, seated in easy chairs, were reading to
themselves, and formed a feature of the picture
that fitted well with the books which stood
ranged in swinging brackets on the wall. There
was the usual floral paper, with a border sad
enough to move one to tears, and the worsted
tidies, and the prints wherein sentimentality has
so long and so often posed as sentiment. But the
plain, rough furniture was redeemed by the
marks of long usefulness, and the room, as a
whole, had all the cosey homeliness of fitness to
those whom it served.</p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i293" style="max-width: 126.4375em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_293.jpg" alt="A domestic scene with several generations of a family room." />
<div class="caption"><p>THERE WAS NOTHING IN THE DOMESTIC SCENE WHICH MET
US TO SUGGEST THE HOME OF A REVOLUTIONARY.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>Soon we were seated at supper, and the family,
accustomed, apparently, to the presence of a
stranger brought home from the meeting, left
my friend and me to our own discussion of Socialistic
themes. I found this deeply interesting,
for my host was finely representative of the views
of the majority of the Socialists whom I saw at
Waverley Hall. In the main he was a Social
Democrat. His economic views were drawn, I
found, entirely from Karl Marx. “<i>Das Kapital</i>”
was his Bible, and he seemed to know it by
heart. To question Marx’s theory of value or his
treatment of labor in relation to production was
blasphemy akin to casting doubt before a devout
believer upon the plenary inspiration of the
Scriptures.</p>
<p>He was a Socialist of serene temperament, with
boundless faith in the silent processes of development.
Propaganda was hysterical from his
point of view.</p>
<p>“There could be no propaganda in behalf of
Socialism,” he said to me, “one hundredth part
so effective as the unchecked activity of men who
imagine themselves the bulwarks of social order
and the bitterest foes of Socialism. We have no
quarrel with the increasing centralization of capital.
The opposition to ‘trusts’ and the like
comes mainly from the <i>bourgeoisie</i>, who feel
themselves being forced out of independent business.
We Socialists are already of the proletariat,
and we see clearly that all trusts and syndicates
are the inevitable forerunners of still greater centralization.
The men who are employing their
rare abilities in eliminating the useless wastes of
competitive production, by unifying its administration
and control, and so reducing greatly the
cost of the finished article, and who are perfecting
the machinery of transportation and distribution
by like unity of administration, are doing
far more in a year to bring about a co-operative
organization of society than we could do, by
preaching the theory of collectivism, in a hundred
years.</p>
<p>“The collectivist order of society may be distant,
but, at least, we have this comfort—that the
day of the old individualist, anarchical order is
past. We can never return to it. The centralization
of capital has proved the inadequacy of
all that, in the present stage of progress. We
have no choice but to go on to further centralization,
and the logical outcome must be eventually,
not the monopoly of everything by a few, but
the common ownership of all land and capital by
all the people.”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>It was in the middle of the next morning that
I chanced to meet, in the thick of a sweat-shop
region of the West Side, an old acquaintance of
the Socialist meetings. “The Unionist” I shall
call him, for he had much to do with organizing
the workers in sweat-shops into labor-unions. A
victim of the sweaters himself, earning his living
at a sewing-machine in a densely crowded shop,
he yet managed to get about among the other
victims and further their organization. More
than once he had taken me with him on his
rounds, and I had grown familiar with the sight
of rooms, in all the poorer sections of the city
where the rent is relatively low, turned into factories
on a small scale for the manufacture of
ready-made garments.</p>
<p>And this idea of miniature factories is really
the key to the situation. The industry of ready-made
clothing is an enormous one, involving millions
of dollars of invested capital, and competition
among the merchants is very keen. The
difference of a fraction of a cent in the cost of
production, by the piece, of a given garment may
mean the difference between profit and loss in
the whole output. Cheapness of production is,
therefore, of the first necessity.</p>
<p>Merchants of the greatest executive ability and
highest efficiency are able to secure the maximum
of cheap production through the legitimate factory
system. Men of less business ability, in
order to compete successfully, avoid the factory
system of production and make use of the sweat-shops
instead. The sweat-shop is, therefore, in
a single word, an evasion, under the stress of competition,
of the factory system of production.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_299.jpg" alt="About ten men, women, and children are crowded together in a room. Most appear to be sewing." /> <div class="caption"><p>AN EVASION OF THE FACTORY SYSTEM OF PRODUCTION.</p> </div>
</div>
<p>There are few industries which could profit
any longer by this system as opposed to that of
the factory, but the manufacture of ready-made
clothing is an exception; and, in it, the less fit to
survive are sure to take advantage of the sweat-shops,
until they have been driven out of the
business altogether by those whose superior abilities
enable them to undersell the product of the
shops with the product of legitimate factories.</p>
<p>The manufacturer who makes use of the factory
system at once subjects himself to certain
regulations. His work-rooms must show a certain
cubic area to every operative employed; certain
sanitary provisions must be regarded; children
under a certain age must not be set to work,
and a prescribed number of hours must be accepted
as the limit of the working day.</p>
<p>But the manufacture of ready-made clothing
lends itself to an easy escape from all this. Instead
of having his work done in a factory, subject
to wholesome but costly restrictions, a merchant
may give it out to the lowest bidders
among the sweaters. These men take it to their
homes, and secure there the services of their wives
and children, and employ the families of their
neighbors. Thousands of rooms are thus closely
packed with workers who have underbid one another
in the struggle for existence, until, in the
cheapest quarters available, without regard to
light and air, and decent sanitation, the work is
hurried forward at feverish haste by human
wretches whose utmost toil through excessive
hours can often earn them little more than the
means of bare subsistence.</p>
<p>The Unionist was leading me in a brisk walk
through a labyrinth of city squalor. Over unswept
wooden pavements we passed, along uncleaned,
wooden streets, in whose broken surfaces
lay heaps of decaying garbage. Wooden houses
for the most part flanked the way, hideous,
blackened shanties which leaned grotesquely on
insecure foundations, with rickety flights of
broken steps clinging to the buildings’ sides,
where, on warmer days, the teeming population
can be seen overflowing from work-rooms and
sewing ceaselessly, even in their search for fresh
air.</p>
<p>Opening directly upon the black rot of crumbling
pavements were the steep descents to dark
cellars which undermine these reeking hovels.
From many of them, as we passed, came the hot
breath of furnaces laden with the wholesome
smell of baking bread. These were the underground
bakeries of the region, and down their
wooden steps, whose surfaces were buried under
layers of hardened filth, were ranged the great
round loaves of dark bread on which this population
largely lives. While through the open
doors, which admitted freely the floating germs
from off the putrid streets, we caught glimpses of
baking-tins full of soft muffins ready for the oven,
and bakers in white dress who moved about in the
gloomy, fetid air over floors strewn with ashes
and the crumpled shells of eggs and crumbs of
unbaked dough.</p>
<p>Mingling in the squalid crowds upon the
streets were other figures peculiar to the scene.
Women they were for the most part, with
ragged, faded shawls tied round their heads and
falling over their shoulders, and limp skirts,
dangling about their legs and brushing the surface
slime of the pavements. Some upon their
shoulders, and others in Oriental fashion upon
their heads, they bore large bundles of clothing
which had been cut at the great dealers’ shops,
and which they were taking now to be made up
in the sweaters’ dens.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_305.jpg" alt="A cold winter scene. Two women carry large bundles under their arms with one coming down a set of stairs." /> <div class="caption"><p>RETURNING WORK FROM SWEAT SHOPS.</p> </div>
</div>
<p>The Unionist was talking rapidly, almost
vehemently, at my side, with the swift, nervous
gesticulation of his race, for he was a young Polish
Jew, of short, sturdy figure, with wiry black
hair, and eyes which were like burnished coals.
The scenes about us, which were far more interesting
to me, concerned him not at all in contrast
with the delight he felt in picturing the outcome
of political change. Like so many of the Socialists
whom I met, he was an admirable workman,
and thoroughly practical in his views of life, and
hugely energetic and efficient in the organization
of his trades-union; but yet he was possessed, as
most of them are, of a strange faculty of living
intensely at times in dreams of a fulfilment of
preconceptions of another social order. He was
hard at it now, and was completely blind to the
significant facts about us. With an amazing acquaintance
with contemporaneous political history,
he had been sketching for me what he regarded
as a great economic revolution in America.
The drift of what he said was simply that
in this country, from colonial days to the present,
the middle-class, who are the small owners
of land and capital, have been the main support
of the society in which we have lived, and that the
chief strength of the middle-class has been the
farmer.</p>
<p>In every movement in this country wherein
the wage-earners have sought for separate political
action in their own interests, they have invariably
found the farming classes in opposition
to them and supporters of conservatism. But
there are marked indications of a change, he went
on. The farming classes are no longer economically
independent, in the sense of owning their
land and capital, but are tenants of the capitalists
who hold their mortgages. And, with this
change in economic standing, they have begun
to find that their interests lie, not in maintaining
rights of private property, which have robbed
them of their own, but in joining forces with
all wage-earners to bring about a state of
things wherein property shall be a monopoly
of all.</p>
<p>And having touched once more in prophetic
spirit the beatific vision of the Socialist, he waxed
eloquent in high praise of it, and then turned to
me with an impatient:</p>
<p>“Can’t you see it, Comrade Vikoff—can’t you
see it?”</p>
<p>He sympathized with me as one of the countless
seekers for employment in the city, and he
had cultivated me because of my interest in the
meetings. Really admirable in their sincerity
were his patient efforts to convert me to Socialism;
and when, at last, he gave me up, I am
sure that it was from the conviction that he was
dealing with a mind hopelessly Philistine, whose
constant appeal to dry facts marked it as wholly
incapable of appreciation of the charming theory
of human perfectability.</p>
<p>We turned now and passed down a flight of
wooden steps to the basement of a small, brick
building. I knew that we were going into a
sweater’s den, for I had visited many of them
under the lead of the Unionist, and many of them
on my own account in futile search for work.</p>
<p>There was nothing exceptional in this one beyond
the fact that, more commonly than in the
cellar, I had found the shops on the ground floor,
and oftener still in the upper stories of tenements.</p>
<p>As we neared the door, there was the usual
sound of the clattering rush of sewing-machines
going at high speed—starting and stopping
abruptly, at uneven intervals, and giving you the
impression, in the meantime, of racing furiously
with one another.</p>
<p>The opened door revealed the customary sight
of a room perhaps twenty feet square, with daylight
entering faintly through two unwashed
windows, which looked out upon the level of the
street. The dampness showed itself in dew-like
beads along the walls and on the ceiling, which I
could easily reach as I stood erect. In spite of its
being winter, the dingy walls were dotted with
black flies, which swarmed most about a cooking-stove,
over which, stirring a steaming pot, stood
a ragged, dishevelled woman, who looked as
though she could never have known any but extreme
old age. In the remaining floor-space were
crowded a dozen machines or more, over which,
in the thick, unventilated atmosphere, were the
bending figures of the workers. Oil-lamps lit up
the inner recesses of the room, and seemed to lend
consistency to the heavy air. From an eye here
and there, which caught his in a single movement,
the Unionist received a look of recognition, but
not a head was turned to see who had entered, and
the whir of feverish work went on, unchecked
for an instant by our coming.</p>
<p>While the Unionist was talking to the sweater,
I walked between the close lines of machines over
a floor covered with deep accumulations of dirt,
and shreds of cloth, and broken threads, to where,
in a corner, a group of girls were sewing. The
oldest among them may have been twelve, and
the youngest could have been a little over eight,
and their wages averaged about seventy-five cents
a week for hours that varied widely according to
the stress of work.</p>
<p>Near the corner was a passage, and through
it I could see into a small room which had no window,
nor any opening but the door; there, in
perpetual darkness lit up by one oil-lamp, was a
man who, for twelve (and sometimes fifteen)
hours a day, pressed the new-made clothing for a
living.</p>
<p>It was ladies’ cloaks that the sewers were making;
of course, they worked by the piece, and the
best among them could earn a dollar in the day,
and sometimes more by working over-time. They
were very smart-looking garments, and their air
of jaunty stylishness was a most incongruous intrusion
upon their surroundings. When I asked
the Unionist for whose trade they were being
made, he seemed to think nothing of the fact that
he mentioned, in answer, one of the foremost merchant-citizens
of the town.</p>
<p>We were on the point of leaving, when a heavy
foot-fall sounded on the wooden steps, and the
door opened to the touch of an inspecting officer,
whose glowing health and neat, warm uniform
were as though a prosperous breeze were sweeping
the stagnant room. The work, however, was
as unaffected by his coming as it had been by ours.
Not a sewer noticed him, and the stitching of
machines went racing on with unabated swiftness.
Only “the old man” watched nervously the
movements of the officer, as he walked about
the shop, making note of the bad air, and the
filth upon the floors, and the group of little
girls, and the dark, unventilated chamber beyond.</p>
<p>The Unionist had caught me by the arm.</p>
<p>“We’ll wait,” he said; and we stood together
in the shadow of the open door.</p>
<p>Returning finally to the side of the old sweater,
the officer handed him a printed form.</p>
<p>“You must make out this blank,” he said,
“and have it ready for me when I call again.”
And without another word he started for the
stairs. But on the way some evidence of unsanitary
condition more shocking than any met with
yet—a heap of offal on the floor, or a fouler gust
of poisoned air—checked him, and he turned, indignantly,
to the nearest worker.</p>
<p>“Look here,” I could hear him say, “you’ve
got to clean up here, and right away. The first
thing you know you’ll start a fever that will
sweep the city before we can stop it.”</p>
<p>The young Hebrew had stopped his work and
turned half round in his chair until he faced the
officer. There were deep lines in his haggard,
beardless face, and his wolfish eyes were ablaze
with the sense of sharp injustice.</p>
<p>“You tell us we’ve got to keep clean,” he answered,
in broken English, lifting his voice to a
shout above the clatter of machines. “What
time have we to keep clean when it’s all we can
do to get bread? Don’t talk to us about disease;
it’s <em>bread</em> we’re after, <em>bread</em>!” And there
sounded in the voice of the boy the cry of the
hungry for food, which no man hears and can
ever forget.</p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i313" style="max-width: 149em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_313.jpg" alt="Many people in a room working at sewing machines. One man in the foreground is talking and appears angry." />
<div class="caption"><p>“DON’T TALK TO US ABOUT DISEASE;
IT’S <em>BREAD</em> WE’RE AFTER, <em>BREAD</em>!”</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>The officer passed, speechless, up the steps, and
we followed into the clean, pure air, under the
boundless blue of smiling skies.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI<br/><br/> <small>A ROAD BUILDER ON THE WORLD’S FAIR GROUNDS</small></h2></div>
<p class="location">
Columbian Anniversary Hotel—No. 1., Chicago, Ill.,</p>
<p class="date">Wednesday, April 27, 1892.</p>
<p>From the time that I began work on the Exposition
grounds, early in this month, it has
grown increasingly difficult to hark back in imagination
to the unemployed <i>régime</i> of the winter.
The change is a revolution of condition.
Hundreds of us live all together within this vast
enclosure, and have rare occasion to go out except
on Sundays, and then only if we choose.
We get up in the morning to an eight-hour day
of wholesome labor in the open air, and return
in the late afternoon with healthy appetites to
our temporary “hotel,” which is fragrant of
clean, raw pine, and stands commandingly on the
site of the future “court of honor” near the
quiet waters of the lake. About four hundred
of us are housed and fed in this one building;
men of half a score of nationalities and of as
many trades, ranging from expert carpenters and
joiners and staff-moulders and steel-workers to
the unskilled laborers who work in gangs, under
the direction of the landscape-gardeners or, as in
my case, on the temporary plank roads which are
built for the heavy carting.</p>
<p>Guarded by sentries and high barriers from
unsought contact with all beyond, great gangs
of us, healthy, robust men, live and labor in a
marvellous artificial world. No sight of misery
disturbs us, nor of despairing poverty out in vain
search for employment. Work is everywhere
abundant and well paid and directed with highest
skill. And here, amid delicate, web-like frames
of steel which are being clothed upon with forms
of exquisite beauty, and among broad, dreary
wastes of arid dunes and marshy pools which are
being transformed by our labor into gardens of
flowers and velvet lawns joined by graceful
bridges over wide lagoons, we work our eight
hours a day in peaceful security and in absolute
confidence of our pay.</p>
<p>Complete as the revolution is, it is yet in
perfect keeping, in some strange way, with the
general change wrought by the coming of the
spring. This spring, in its effect upon the labor
market in Chicago, was like the heralding of
peace and plenty after war.</p>
<p>There was no longer any real difficulty in securing
work. The employment bureaus offered
it in abundance in the country, and there was
some revival of demand even within the city limits.
This by no means solved the problem of the
unemployed, however. Many of the men were
so weakened by the want and hardship of the
winter that they were no longer in condition for
effective labor. Some of the bosses who were in
need of added hands were obliged to turn men
off because of physical incapacity. One instance
of this I shall not soon forget. It was
when I overheard, early one morning, at a
factory-gate, an interview between a would-be
laborer and the boss. I knew the applicant for
a Russian Jew who had at home an old mother
and a wife and two young children to support.
He had had intermittent employment throughout
the winter in a sweater’s den, barely enough
to keep them all alive, and, after the hardships
of the cold season, he was again in desperate
straits for work.</p>
<p>The boss had all but agreed to take him on for
some sort of unskilled labor, when, struck evidently
by the cadaverous look of the man, he told
him to bare his arm. Up went the sleeve of his
coat and of his ragged flannel shirt, exposing a
naked arm with the muscles nearly gone, and
the blue-white, transparent skin stretched over
sinews and the outlines of the bones. Pitiful
beyond words was his effort to give a semblance
of strength to the biceps which rose faintly to
the upward movement of the forearm. But the
boss sent him off with an oath and a contemptuous
laugh, and I watched the fellow as he turned
down the street, facing the fact of his starving
family with a despair at his heart which only
mortal men can feel and no mortal tongue can
speak.</p>
<p>Other men there were in large numbers who
during the winter had swelled the ranks of the
unemployed, but who now, in the reviving
warmth and the growing demand for labor,
drifted out upon the open country to their congenial
life of vagrancy. There still remained,
however, and apparently in full force, the
shrewd gentry who stop pedestrians on the street
with apologetic explanations of hard luck and
with begging appeals for a small sum wherewith
to satisfy immediate wants. Clark and I
had soon come to know this as a recognized occupation
among the men with whom we were
thrown. A highly profitable trade it often
proved, for a dollar a day is a gleaning not at all
uncommon to these men, and the more skilful
among them can average a dollar and a half.
They are rather the sporting spirits among the
professionally idle; gambling is their chief diversion,
and their contempt for honest work is
as genuine as that of a snob.</p>
<p>But within this chaotic maelstrom of the unemployed,
which in every industrial centre
seethes with infinite menace to social safety, is
always a large element which is not easily classified.
It was still to be found on the streets and
in the lodging-houses of Chicago when the winter
was gone, in seemingly undiminished numbers
and in much its accustomed thriftlessness.
The class has to be defined in negative terms.
The men are not physically incapable of work,
nor are they habitual tramps, nor yet the beggars
of the pavements, and they lack utterly the grit
for crime. If they have a distinctive, positive
characteristic as a class, it is that they are victims
of the gregarious instinct. By an attraction
which is apparently irresistible to them, they are
drawn to congested labor markets, and there they
cling, preferring instinctively a life of want and
squalor in fellowship with their kind to one of
comparative plenty in the intolerable loneliness
of the country.</p>
<p>There is a semblance of sincerity in their
search for work, but they are cursed with the
rudiments of imagination which makes cowards
of them all, and their incapacity is a weakness of
will rather than of brawn. Shrinkingly they
walk the narrow ledge which in many planes of
life separates from tramphood and crime, while
lacking the wit for the latter and the courage for
both lives, and looking ever for something to
turn up instead of resolutely turning something
up. Civilization is hard on such men, and their
sufferings are none the less real because chiefly
due to their incapacity for the struggle for existence.
And not only their own misery must be
reckoned with in any fair estimate of the case,
but far more the misery of their women and
children, for these men are proletarians in the
literalest meaning of the word.</p>
<p>Finding now that I could not only get work,
but that I could actually be eclectic in the matter,
I gladly took advantage of an opportunity of
employment among the unskilled laborers on the
Exposition grounds.</p>
<p>A sharp-eyed, energetic American, who superintends
the gangs of unskilled laborers, took me
on, and at once assigned me to duty under an
Irish sub-boss by the name of O’Shea. When I
became one of its number, Mr. O’Shea’s gang of
eight or ten men had torn up a considerable section
of the plank road near the Transportation
Building, for the purpose of altering the level.
Most of us were put in charge of wheel-barrows.
These we filled with sand at a neighboring pile
and then emptied it in heaps on the road-bed,
while the remaining members of the gang spread
the sand with shovels to the desired depth before
replacing the planks. It was a cloudy morning
early in April, with a cold, raw wind blowing in
from the lake, and the work, not very fatiguing
in itself, kept one comfortably warm until noon.
We had a free hour for dinner then, and I simply
accompanied the other gang-men to “Hotel
No. 1,” where my employment ticket, issued by
the general superintendent of construction, procured
for me without delay a meal-and-lodging
ticket on trust.</p>
<p>A large, zinc-lined trough half full of water
stood against the wall in an ante-chamber. Here
men by the score were washing their hands and
faces and drying them near by on roller towels.
They then passed singly through the wicket at
the dining-room door, where stood a man who
punched each boarder’s ticket as he entered.</p>
<p>Long wooden tables, heaped with dishes and
lined with round-bottom stools, ran the great
length of the room. The men took places in the
order of their coming, until they had filled one
table, when they would begin upon another, and
there arose a deafening clatter of knives and
forks and dishes and a tumult of mingled speech.</p>
<p>That dinner serves as a good illustration of our
fare, both in what it offered and in what it
lacked. A bowl of hot soup was at each man’s
place when he sat down, and, after finishing this,
he was given a choice between roast beef and
Irish stew. There were potatoes boiled in their
jackets, and pork-and-beans, and bread in wide
variety and in enormous quantity, and a choice
of tea or coffee, and finally a pudding for dessert.
Some of this was good, but all of it smacked of
wholesale preparation, and appetites nicer than
those of workingmen would have found difficulties
with the dinner. Even ours were not proof
against it all. I was struggling with a slice of
tough roast beef out of which the virtue had been
cooked, when suddenly I caught an expression of
comical dismay stealing over the ruddy, bristling
face of the man opposite me. He was eating a
piece of meat from a plate of Irish stew, and he
spat it out upon the floor with a deep-drawn oath,
and a frank assurance to his neighbors that “the
meat was rotten,” while his facial muscles were
contorted with strong disgust. And the pudding
was of such uncertain nature as to recall vividly
the oft-repeated saying of a classmate at a college
eating-club, that “flies in a pudding are quite as
good as currants.” Still the pork-and-beans were
excellent and the bread and potatoes fine, and
the coffee, which was served in large cups with
the roast, was not impossible; certainly it was
a well-fed crowd which sat smoking for a quarter
of an hour or more on the rough embankments
overlooking the Agricultural Building before
going back to work.</p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i325" style="max-width: 147.6875em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_325.jpg" alt="Men sitting on ground with factories in the background." />
<div class="caption"><p>IT WAS A WELL-FED CROWD WHICH SAT SMOKING FOR A QUARTER OF
AN HOUR OR MORE ON THE ROUGH EMBANKMENTS.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>Our gang was divided in the afternoon, and
Mr. O’Shea left three of us, a German, an Irishman,
and me, to open up a way for the teamsters
through two long piles of paving-stones, which
obstructed the road near the Fisheries Building.
His parting word to us was that the stint was
an afternoon’s job, and we could easily have finished
it in the four hours from one o’clock until
five, had we worked with moderate swiftness.</p>
<p>The German and the Irishman fell to lifting
stones to one side of the desired opening and I
to the other. Every condition favored us. We
had a definite task and not a difficult one, and no
one to watch us at our work, nor drive us in its
doing. The clouds had disappeared, and in the
soft spring sunshine, with the bushes blossoming
about us and the air full of the sounds of multiform
labor, there was every stimulus to energetic
effort for four hours. Not that the hours seemed
short—they never do, I am convinced, even to
well-seasoned unskilled workmen—but the difference
between four hours of manual labor at a
stretch and five is enormous, and to see my <i>confrères</i>
quite as impatient of their flight, even
under these most favoring conditions, and to
mark that the sober business of their lives was
still an abhorrent drudgery to be shirked if possible,
led the way to very sad reflection.</p>
<p>Neither of them paid any attention to me until,
late in the afternoon, there came a lull in
their talk and I heard the Irishman’s call.</p>
<p>“Hey, John!”</p>
<p>“Hello,” I said.</p>
<p>“Was you going to shave off them whiskers
for Easter?”</p>
<p>I told him that I had not thought of it.</p>
<p>“Well,” he went on, “I hear the boys as have
whiskers say as how they must go on Easter
morning, and I thought maybe it was the same
wid you.”</p>
<p>“What are you after doing, getting yourself
into a sweat?” he continued, for he had drawn
off from the German and was making my way.
“You be a fool to kill yourself; you don’t earn
the more by it, and they don’t think any the better
of you. Take it easy, man, take it easy;
there’s time enough.”</p>
<p>He was an authority on the time, for every
few minutes he would walk slowly over to where
his coat and waistcoat lay on a heap of stones,
and drawing out a great silver watch, would critically
examine it, and then announce the hour
in a loud call to the German and me. At a quarter
to five the two picked up their coats and went
off, dodging behind shrubs and piles of building
materials, until they made their exit at the gate,
leaving a good third of the job unfinished.</p>
<p>That was on a Saturday. On Monday morning
Mr. O’Shea singled out us three for as stiff
a cursing as a boat’s crew often gets, but to little
purpose, apparently, in its effect upon the other
men. On that very day I was again a member
of a gang, a gang of four this time, which was
left without an overseer. We were ordered to
unload a car of timber and pile the boards near
the mammoth framework on the east side of the
Manufactures Building. Besides native inertia
there was unusual cause for idling in the fact
that one of our number, a young Englishman,
Rosedale by name, proved to be uncommonly interesting.
He was rather a trim fellow, of the
adventurous, jack-of-all-trades kind, that roam
the world widely, and that always appear in
numbers at great celebrations and in new regions.
How they live and secure the means of
extensive travel is a secret which no member of
the fraternity ever tells. There was no mystery
about Rosedale just then, for he was a fellow-lodger
in Hotel No. 1, and was No. —— in the
gang of laborers in which I, for example, was
No. 472, and he fell into as natural association
with the men as though he had lived with us
always.</p>
<p>He was just up from South Africa, where he
had been in the diamond fields, he said. Seventeen
thousand dollars’ worth of diamonds was
the loot he was bringing with him to Canada,
when he was shipwrecked off the coast of Labrador
and escaped with only his life. Not one of
us, I suppose, was anything but sceptical of
much of Rosedale’s story, but the man told his
tale of free, reckless, vicious living on the diamond
fields, with a vividness of narrative and a
rough wealth of local color that charmed us into
most attentive listeners, and that sped the morning
hours with little regard to our job. Questions
began to crowd in upon Rosedale as to the
location of South Africa and the means of getting
there, and great disappointment was evident
in the discovery that it was not contiguous
to any familiar point.</p>
<p>Noon found us with a pitiful showing for the
morning’s work. In the afternoon I secured the
post inside the car, and passed the boards out to
the three other men, who piled them near the
building. By hastening the work at that end,
I hoped to quicken the pace at which the job was
being done. To be caught a second time in a
delinquent gang I feared would endanger my
position, and I was anxious to remain on the
grounds, and even more anxious to secure a promotion
if I could. It was easy to keep ahead of
the men, but it was impossible, apparently, to
urge them beyond the languid deliberation with
which they shouldered the timber and carried it
to the piles.</p>
<p>“Let up on that, John,” they were shouting at
me presently. “Go easy with that; there ain’t
no rush, and you’ll make nothing by your pains.”</p>
<p>It was the view which I had heard again and
again in gangs of unskilled laborers. One could
understand it in a measure among the older men,
who could hope at the best only to eke out an
existence free from the poor-house to the end.
But these and many others from whom it came
were relatively young men, with every chance,
one would suppose, of winning some preferment
through effective, energetic work.</p>
<p>At five o’clock, the end of the afternoon’s
labor, we had an hour in which to make leisurely
preparation for a supper which consisted of cold
meats in unstinted plenty, and potatoes, and
bread, and tea and coffee, and often some stewed
fruit with a little cake. After this most of the
men loafed in the lobby until bedtime. This
sitting-room includes the entire upper floor of a
large wing of the building. An enormous base-burner
heats it, and serves to render it stifling
in the evening, when the men are smoking with
every window closed. Games and newspapers
strew the tables, and the room is well lighted
with electric lamps.</p>
<p>On the same level is the upper section of the
main building, where are the sleeping-quarters
for the men. The provision here is similar in
design to that of a cheap lodging-house; only
this is almost immaculate in its cleanliness, and
the cabins are large and well ventilated, and the
ceilings high and airy, and the berths are supplied
with new wire and clean corn-husk mattresses,
and with sheets and pillow-cases fragrant
from the wash.</p>
<p>Mine is a middle, lower berth in a cabin for
six men, but it lodges at present only two besides
myself.</p>
<p>In a bunk nearest the door sleeps an Irishman,
whose acquaintance I made while getting ready
for bed on the first night of my stay. Opening
the door that evening and seeing me seated in
the middle bunk, he stood eyeing me for a time
with obvious displeasure. He was evidently not
in the best of humors, and although but two of
the six berths in the large cabin were occupied,
he plainly regarded my coming as an intrusion.
Neatly dressed in dark blue, and with an old felt
hat on the back of his head, he cut a fine figure
of a workman as he stood in the open door, a man
of five-and-thirty, with a massive frame bent
slightly forward and with a frown wrinkling the
low forehead, from which the thick hair grew
in tawny masses.</p>
<p>“Who let you in here?” was his first remark.</p>
<p>“The proprietor,” I answered.</p>
<p>“Did he say you could have that bunk?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Well, —— it, is he going to flood the
place?”</p>
<p>I knew no answer to that question, and so I
ventured to ask after the occupant of the bunk
nearest the window.</p>
<p>“He’s an Englishman; works in the landscape
gang wid me,” replied the Irishman, laconically.</p>
<p>By this time he had seated himself on his bed
with his elbows on his knees and his head bowed
with an air of weariness. The change of subject
had, fortunately, been effective, for he no longer
objected to my presence, and for some time he
sat talking freely in a droning, disjointed way.</p>
<p>I gathered that he was thoroughly dissatisfied
with his work and wages and his boarding-place
and with life in general. He did not enter into
details of his personal history; his mood spent
itself in anathemas against his present lot:
“Work, ceaseless, unprofitable, joyless work.
Eat and work; eat more and work; eat again
and sleep and eat and work. This and nothing
more; body and soul sold at a dollar and a half
a day. And nothing else to look forward to,
with chances only of a steadily hardening lot,
throughout the on-coming of old age to death.”</p>
<p>I had never heard a workman in pessimistic
mood so coherent, and I felt sure that the Irishman
was ill; for commonly with our class, a full
meal and a pipeful at the end of a day’s labor
are enough to banish care and to tinge living
with a glow of satisfaction. The suspicion proved
true enough, for the man soon began to shake
with a malarial chill in our cheerless barrack, and
he told me that the ague laid hold of him regularly
on alternate days.</p>
<p>It was the loneliness of the fellow that impressed
one as he lay shivering in his bunk.
There were hundreds of men in the house, but
not one of them was charged with any responsibility
for him, and there was no provision for
illness. On his bad days he would force himself
through the usual routine, but, when the day
was done, there was nothing for him but to lie
in lonely misery in his bed. Not that he whined
in the least. I gathered these facts by inference.
It was the barrenness of his life that he cursed,
not its hardness, for this he accepted as a matter
of course.</p>
<p>And yet one could not fail to see where finer
feeling inflicted a sharper pain in his suffering.
I had marked at once the neatness of his dress,
and especially the cleanliness of person by which
one distinguishes instantly between a workman
and a tramp.</p>
<p>There are interesting degrees of cleanness in
workingmen. One sees it at its best, I think,
among those of the building trades. The stains
of their labor are clean in themselves, and the
men partake of the wholesomeness of their employment.
The workers at rougher jobs must
show the marks of soiling labor, but there is infinite
difference between the earth stains of a
common laborer and the ingrained, begrimed uncleanness
of an unwashed vagrant. Having in
the house, however, so many men, and just at the
end of the long period of unemployment, it is
inevitable, perhaps, that there should be a few
of the number whose status as between workingmen
and tramps is not clearly defined. And
some of the consequences are unpleasant.</p>
<p>It was this that the Irishman had in mind as
he looked me over critically and was somewhat
slow in welcoming me to the cabin.</p>
<p>The same concern showed itself again when
he presently told me that the Englishman and
he always made up their berths themselves,
instead of leaving them for the regular bed-makers,
who might communicate vermin from other
bunks. The hint was sufficient, and I hastened
to set his mind at rest by assuring him that I
heartily endorsed the plan and would follow it
faithfully.</p>
<p>The Englishman I did not see until the next
morning. Upon getting up to the six o’clock call,
I found that he had turned in without waking
me. We sprang out of bed at the same moment,
and almost at a glance I knew him for the
ex-Tommy Atkins that he is. I shall call him
Brown. A wooden chest, studded with brass
nails and made fast with a heavy padlock, stood
near the foot of his berth. On it lay his working
clothes, not thrown down in confusion, but neatly
folded and lying in the order of dress. He
himself was as trim and straight and as clean as
a sapling, and when he returned from his wash
he fairly sparkled with the afterglow. Back
went the sheets with a single movement of his
hand the moment that he was dressed, and over
went the mattress, and the pillows began rollicking
in the shaking which he gave them. In marvellously
short time the bed was remade and the
sheets turned back over the foot of the bunk to
admit of proper airing.</p>
<p>We have been thrown together by reason of
the fact that neither of us is proof against the
lobby for long in the evening. It is usually dark
by the time I have finished supper, and I go first
of all to the sitting-room. It is ablaze with light,
and the huge stove is going under full head and
all the windows are closed and some scores of
men are smoking old pipes. I have known nights
when such a place would have been a most welcome
escape from exposure, but having now a
choice it is never long before I leave the lobby
for the cabin. Here I generally find Brown
seated on the box at the foot of his berth, playing
an old fife which is singularly pliant to his
touch. Throwing myself in my bunk I have lain
there by the hour together listening to his music
and watching him as he beat time to the “British
Grenadiers” and the “Blue Bells of Scotland,”
and to tunes of no end of barrack-room ballads,
wondering the while what vision it was of India
or of Burmah, perhaps, or of the Soudan, or possibly
of the Afghan frontier that brought that
look of longing to his eyes.</p>
<p>He is the soul of soldier-like precision; he
never misses a day at work except the one which
immediately follows pay-day, and that because
he never misses his spree. The Irishman and I
have come to count with perfect regularity upon
Brown’s not turning up on the evening when he
is paid. About three or four o’clock on the next
morning we hear him open the cabin door softly,
and, supporting himself with a hand on the upper
berths, move slowly across the floor until he
has reached his bed, where he throws himself
on his face as he is and sleeps for twenty-four
hours.</p>
<p>I was not long a member of Mr. O’Shea’s
gang, for at the end of the first week another
laborer and I were singled out for special duty
on the roads. But on Wednesday afternoon of
that week two men joined the force of unskilled
laborers who filled us all with curious interest.
There is another gang of about the same number
as Mr. O’Shea’s, with which we are often thrown
in our work and which is under the command
of a Mr. Russell.</p>
<p>At one o’clock on Wednesday afternoon I
went as usual to report with the other men at the
superintendent’s office where we receive our orders.
Mr. Dutton, the superintendent, always
comes out and looks us over and consults for a
few minutes with the sub-bosses, and then orders
the various gangs to different sections of the
grounds.</p>
<p>Two young men were standing near his office-door
on that Wednesday afternoon when I came
up at a few minutes before one. I did not give
them a second glance at first, for I took for granted
that they were tourists who had entered the
grounds by special permission and were now
waiting for a guide. But in another moment
I happened to see Mr. Dutton’s clerk beckon
them within the office where he took their names
and gave to each a metallic disk upon which a
number was stamped. Then they came out
again and, taking off their coats, stepped in
among the gathering company of workmen and
waited to be assigned.</p>
<p>By this time we were all staring at them agape,
but they stood the ordeal with a frank unconsciousness
which filled me with admiration.
They were about of age, two clean-cut, well-groomed,
clear-eyed English boys, who looked
as though they might be public-school bred, and
I noticed that their coats bore the name of a
London tailor. One, a brown-haired lad, with
large, sober, brown eyes and a manner of considerable
reserve, was exceedingly good-looking,
and the other, a fair-haired, fair-skinned, alert-looking
boy, plainly the spokesman for the two,
had a face of unusually fine drawing.</p>
<p>Mr. Dutton hesitated a moment in their case,
but finally ordered them to join Mr. Russell’s
gang, and in a few minutes we were widely separated.
Repeatedly in the early afternoon I
found myself thinking about them and wondering
why it was that they must earn their bread
by unskilled labor. Two hours of the afternoon
remained when there came an order from Mr.
Dutton to our gang to repair to the Transportation
Building. We found, upon getting there,
that we had been summoned to reinforce Mr.
Russell’s men, who were unloading from a car
two large steam-rollers. Again I saw the young
Englishmen, and I had a chance to watch them
at work.</p>
<p>By this time the gang-men had sated their
curiosity in staring, and now ignored the lads
as being anything but laborers with themselves,
which was much the best-bred thing that they
could have done.</p>
<p>As a preliminary to unloading, we had to
carry to the car some heavy wooden blocks to
serve as supports to an inclined plane by which
the machines could be slid to the ground. It
sometimes required four and even six men together
to lift these blocks, and repeatedly I
found myself next in line to the new-comers.
Their linen collars were wilting with the sweat
of labor, and it had apparently not occurred to
them to take them off. Their shirts, of delicate
color, were turned up above their elbows with
gold link-buttons dangling from the cuffs. The
rough wood was fretting their bare white arms
cruelly. I had a chance presently to speak to
one of them, and I showed him how he could get
a hold which would not be so chafing. In a moment
of leisure he came up and thanked me
frankly, and volunteered the information that
his friend and he were but a week over from
England and, having failed utterly to find other
work in Chicago where they had supposed that
employment was plentiful, they were glad
enough in an extremity to accept this means of
living.</p>
<p>Most pluckily have they stuck at it. I have
never again been associated with them in a job,
but, I see them almost every day, and through
rain and shine they have been the steadiest members
of their gang. Places better suited to them
will be found, no doubt, as the general work
progresses; and that will not be long, I hope,
for just now the boys are at a considerable disadvantage.
It was only two or three mornings
ago that I happened to meet them again near
Mr. Dutton’s office, where they had been sent
to fetch some tools. The fairer boy wore a bandage
which covered his left forearm and most
of the hand. I asked him what had happened,
and he explained to me how that in handling
some old sleepers he had missed his hold in one
case, and, with the fall of the heavy timber, a
rusty iron nail tore down through his arm and
the palm of his hand, leaving a ragged wound
open nearly to the bone. He had had it dressed
promptly by a good surgeon, who reassured him
as to danger of complications. But it had taken
all his companion’s savings and his own to pay
the original fee, and they were in arrears for the
daily dressing. Luckily, however, he was still
able to work, and Mr. Russell kept him employed,
he told me, in ways which brought his
injured arm very little into play.</p>
<p>Those of us who belong permanently to gangs
such as Mr. O’Shea’s and Mr. Russell’s are
known as “regulars,” to distinguish us from the
hands who are taken on, a day at a time, for
some particular need. Quite the most efficient
“regular” in my gang is a certain Henry Jerkener,
who is that rare exception, so far as my experience
goes, a native American in a company
of unskilled laborers. “Harry,” as he is called,
and I were early assigned to special duty. Mr.
Dutton beckoned us aside one afternoon and ordered
us to report to him at ten o’clock the next
morning, telling us that our day, beginning
henceforth at ten, would last until seven in the
evening instead of five o’clock. And our
wages would be raised from $1.50 to $1.75 a
day.</p>
<p>Our work was to be the general care of all the
plank roads on the grounds. They had been put
in fairly good condition, but they received hard
usage, and constant repairs were necessary. We
were, therefore, to give our attention, up to five
o’clock in the afternoon, to particular sections
of the road which were most in need of mending,
and after five, when the work for the day had
ceased, our duty was to go over all the roads and
see that they were in condition for the beginning
of the carting in the morning.</p>
<p>Harry appeared delighted with the arrangement.
Not that he took any special stock in me
as an assistant, but because, however indifferent
a workman, at least I was an American, and he
would be free of the gang of Irish regulars and
himself in charge of the work, instead of being
under the orders of Mr. O’Shea.</p>
<p>Harry’s good-humor is proof against anything,
apparently, his temperament being that of a
sunny May morning. But if there is anything
which bores him, it is to be ordered about by an
Irish sub-boss.</p>
<p>I did not discover this until after we had left
the gang. So long as he was one of their number
he was the life of the crew, jolly, high-spirited,
with a ready flow of banter that was never
delicate and never ill-tempered, always foremost
in the work, having at command a fund of resourceful
ingenuity which made him the real
leader and director of the men while the boss
looked on in silence. But after we had been assigned
to special duty he bloomed into new jollity,
which is at its best whenever in our work
we heave in sight of the old gang. It is deliciously
funny at such times to watch Harry.
The men are probably fretting and straining
over some heavy lifting or other difficult task.
He first lets fly some irritating raillery in which
he addresses them as “terriers;” and then, taking
up a position within ear-shot, he begins to
sing with a capital Irish brogue:</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">“Oh, ye work all day for Paddy O’Shea,</div>
<div class="verse indent2">Dhrrrill, ye terriers, dhrrrill!”</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>Human nature cannot endure this for long, and
presently a shower of sticks and tufts of turf
drive Harry from his position and put an end for
the time to his song.</p>
<p>Our place is by no means a sinecure. The
roads are constantly falling into unrepair and a
deal of hard work is necessary to keep them in
order. Pick and shovel work, that most heart-breaking
of manual toil so far as my experience
goes, is mostly in demand, for the old trenches
must be kept open and new ones dug, and sometimes
the sides of long sections of the road must
be buried under a layer of earth to prevent the
bare planks from warping in the sun. After six
hours of such labor there remain two in the
early evening in which we go over every foot
of roadway on the grounds and make whatever
immediate repairs are necessary. At seven
o’clock, Harry reports to the fire department,
and then we are free.</p>
<p>It is not altogether easy to account for Harry
as a common laborer. A well-set-up, muscular
American of about fifty, with a singularly intelligent,
shrewd face and the merriest of blue eyes,
he might be, from his appearance, a well-to-do
contractor. Only once with me has he touched
upon the general subject of his past, and then he
intimated that formerly he was well off, but that
in his business relations he had always passed as
a “good fellow.” “And that means, you know,”
he said, turning upon me with a significant look,
“that means a ‘damn fool!’”</p>
<p>Among the workmen on the grounds whom I
have come to know, none has interested me more
as a type than an American carpenter with whom
I sometimes spend an evening. The man is
lonely and uncomfortable in his new surroundings.
The novel conditions which here beset him
as a workingman are quite as disturbing to him
as the unfamiliar setting of his daily life. He
clings tenaciously to his individuality, and the
new order of things which confronts him here
lightly makes strange havoc of all that.</p>
<p>We had not been talking many minutes on the
embankment, where one day after dinner we
first met, when the man’s case shone clear as day.
He is a master-carpenter from a village home in
Ohio, and the certainty of steady work for many
months at four dollars a day was tempting
enough to induce him to leave his family behind
and come here. He had arrived a few days before
and had found instant employment.</p>
<p>Seeing the man, a tall, fine-looking, self-respecting
American mechanic, and hearing him
speak, and learning even this little of his history,
you had direct vision of his past. You
could almost see a comfortable, wooden cottage,
of his own building, with a garden-plot about it
and flower-beds in front, standing on a well-shaded
village street. He owns the cottage and
the plot of land, and his children were born there,
and he is an officer in the village church, and has
been justice of the peace, and more than once
has served as “school trustee.” Social inequality,
as applying to himself, is a new idea, and it
gives him a hitherto unexperienced sense of self-consciousness.
In his native village his family
meet the families of all his neighbors on the same
footing, except that they recognize in the minister,
and the doctor, and the village lawyer, and
the schoolmaster, a distinction which attaches to
special education. His children study and play
at school with the children of all his neighbors,
and mingle freely with them at church and in
their other social relations.</p>
<p>But here is something new and strange. He
is no longer a man with a name to distinguish
him, but has become a “hand,” having a number
which he wears conspicuous on his jacket.
He goes to his work as an integer in an army of
ten thousand numerals. Home has changed to
a barrack, where he, a number, sleeps in a numbered
bunk, and eats, never twice at the same
place, as one of half a thousand men. His comfort
and convenience are never consulted, and
his views have no smallest bearing upon the
course of things. The superintendent of the
building upon which he works, whose energy
and skill he admires hugely, shifts him about
with scores of other men, with as little regard
to him as an individual as though he were a
piece of timber. Once he spoke to his superintendent
about some detail of the work and
found him a most appreciative listener. Then
he ventured, in conversation, upon a subject of
general interest, only to find that by some mysterious
change he was speaking to a stone wall.</p>
<p>And now there confronts him what he regards
as another sacrifice of individuality, which he is
urged to make, and which gives him no little concern.
He had scarcely known of the existence
of Trades Unions, and now he is thronged with
appeals to join one.</p>
<p>No discrimination is made by the management
as between union and non-union men in
employing workers on the Exposition; but many
of the union men here are making the most of
the present opportunity for the propaganda of
their principles, and for bringing the desirable
non-union men within their organization. My
carpenter friend, whom I shall call Mr. Ford,
comes in for a large share of attention, and is,
as I have intimated, not a little perplexed by the
situation.</p>
<p>Two or three times he has asked me to go
with him in the evening to meetings which are
held near the Fair Grounds, and which are addressed
by delegates from the Central Labor
Union. These we have not found very enlightening.
There has been a good deal of beer-drinking
and much aimless speech, which has
grown heated at times in the stress of hostile
discussion; and now and then a plain, matter-of-fact
workingman has given us an admirable
talk on the history of Trades-Unionism and its
beneficent results, and the imperative need of
organization among workers as the only means
of safe-guarding their interests and of meeting,
on any approach to equal terms, the peculiar
economic relations which exist between labor and
organized capital.</p>
<p>Mr. Ford, much bewildered, has listened to
all this, and we have talked it over together on
the way back to our lodgings, and sometimes
late into the night. I have tried to explain to
him, as well as I understand it, the idea of organization,
and the necessity of organization
which has grown out of the great industrial
change since the middle of the last century. But
Mr. Ford, for all practical purposes, belongs to
the pre-revolutionary period; the industrial
change has little affected him. He served his
apprenticeship, and was then a journeyman and
then a master-carpenter in due course. In his
experience, work has always had its basis in a
personal relation, as, for example, between himself
as a contractor and the man whose job he
undertook and to whom he looked for payment.
A like personal relation has always existed between
himself and the men whom he has employed.</p>
<p>This new relation between a workman and an
impersonal, soulless corporation which hires him,
is one that he does not readily grasp. And, for
the sake of meeting the new relation, this “fusing
all the skirts of self” and merging individuality
into an organization which attempts to
regulate the hours of labor, and its wages, and
for whom one shall work, and for whom not, is
a thing abhorrent to him.</p>
<p>“Why,” he said to me, “I give up my independence,
and I’m no better than the worst carpenter
of the lot. We all get union-wages alike.
There’s no incentive for a man to do his best.
He ain’t a man any more, anyway; he’s only
a part of a machine. Why, such work as some
I see done here, I’d be ashamed to do by moonlight,
with my eyes shut. But it don’t make no
difference in the union, you’re all on the same
level, as near as I can make out.”</p>
<p>Finally I proposed to him that we should go
together, on some Sunday afternoon, to the meeting
of the Central Labor Union, where he could
become acquainted with some of the members
and learn at first hand the objects and ends of
organization and something of its actual working.
The members whom I particularly wished
him to know were some of the Socialists there,
who seemed to me to have a considerable knowledge
of Trades-Unionism, and who took, I
thought, a judicial view of it.</p>
<p>As an unskilled laborer I was not eligible to
membership in any union, but I was admitted
freely to the central meetings, to which I sometimes
went in company with Socialists who were
delegates of their respective orders. Under their
tutelage, I was shown the operation of an exceedingly
complex system, which, seen without
guidance, would have appeared to me hopelessly
chaotic. I was seeing it, I realized, from the
point of view of the Socialists, and I was interested
immediately in learning their attitude.</p>
<p>They are, I found, most ardent supporters of
the principle of organization among workingmen.
They regard the fact of the organization
of wage-earners as among the most significant
developments in the evolution of a socialistic
state. But they are very impatient of the slow
rate of progress in Trades-Unionism. The ignorance
of the great mass of workers of how to
further their own interests is, to the Socialist,
the most discouraging feature in labor-organization.
“Why,” they ask, “when we working
people already have so strong a nucleus of organization
for economic ends, do we not direct
it at once into the field of politics, and secure
immediately, by our overwhelming numbers, the
legislation which we need, and so inaugurate a
co-operative commonwealth?”</p>
<p>Nowhere have the walking-delegates and the
general agitators of their class sincerer foes
than among the Socialists who, more than to any
other active cause, attribute the comparative ineffectualness
of unionism to the influence of these
men. Very readily they believe them purchasable,
and that often they are little else than the
paid agents of the capitalists. Their great influence
over workingmen is used, the Socialists
seem to believe, chiefly in their own interests and
particularly for selfish political ends.</p>
<p>This habit of mind serves to illustrate what
eventually appeared to me to be highly characteristic
of the general attitude of Socialists. The
key to their mental processes in considering
things social, lies, I am quite sure, in the idea
of existing conditions as being maintained by a
vast capitalistic conspiracy. At all events this
clew has cleared up for me the mystery which
at first I found in many of their ways of thinking.</p>
<p>However natural may have been the social
order in some of its historic phases, they evidently
regard it at the present as largely artificial.
There is no real vitality, they contend, in
the political issues upon which the great national
parties are divided. The party cries of “free
trade” and “protection” and the like, are manufactured
by professional politicians who are in
the employ of the capitalists. The purpose is to
divert the minds of the working classes by these
sham contentions and so keep them about evenly
divided politically, and thus prevent their coalescing
in overwhelming force in political action
for their own interests. Nothing seems to anger
a Socialist more than the spectacle of workingmen
roused to enthusiasm by the crowds and
speeches and processions and brass bands of the
usual political campaign. They see in them then
only the ridiculous dupes of the capitalists, who
have contributed to the campaign funds for the
very purpose of thus befooling their employees,
and who look with about equal indifference upon
the momentary triumph of one party or the other
so long as no labor party is in the ascendant.</p>
<p>However free in the past the play of purely
natural evolutionary forces may have been in
determining social development, and however
free may be their course again in moulding a
future state, their operation is checked for the
present to the Socialists’ vision by the active intervention
of the capitalists, who, in some way,
have succeeded in effecting a social structure
which is highly favorable to themselves, and for
whose undisturbed continuance they unscrupulously
employ all the resources of wealth and
craft and dark conspiracy. The idea appeared
at its plainest, perhaps, in their more vindictive
speeches, where the strong undercurrent of feeling
was—“There is cruel injustice and wrong in
society as it is, and someone is to blame for it,
and unhesitatingly we charge the blame against
the capitalists.”</p>
<p>It was with this interpretation in mind that I
took Mr. Ford with me one afternoon to the
meeting of the Central Labor Union. I was
curious to see the effect of the gathering upon
him. A child of another age in his experience of
certain economic relations, he was an interesting
phenomenon in the sudden contact with modern
industrialism.</p>
<p>When we reached the building, in the upper
floor of which in a large hall are held the weekly
meetings of the Central Labor Union, numbers
of workingmen in their Sunday clothes were
passing in and out of the neighboring saloons
or loafing about the doors. The intersecting
streets were strewn with small handbills, which
we found covering the wide staircase leading
to the hall and scattered over the seats and floor
of the room itself. They were printed notices
instructing the members to boycott the beer of
certain breweries which were accused of employing
non-union men, and also the products of this
and that manufacturer, against whom similar
charges were made.</p>
<p>We were a little early, but we chanced upon
a Socialistic acquaintance of mine, who took us
in with him and seated us well to the front. As
the members entered I had a chance to point
out to Mr. Ford those among them who had been
pointed out to me as the officers of their various
unions. He was deeply interested from the first,
and much impressed apparently by the size of
the gathering and the enormous numbers of organized
workers which were represented there.</p>
<p>The stage of “new business” was barely
reached that afternoon when matters were well
beyond the control of the president. Motions
and amendments and questions of privilege and
points of order were fast driving him mad, when
in despair he called upon a fellow-member to
take charge of the meeting and become its temporary
chairman. By this time there was a good
deal of confusion; men in many parts of the hall
were clamoring for the floor, and trying to drown
one another’s voices. But there was immediate
recognition of a change of generalship. The
man who had taken the chair was a member of
a union of musicians, a person of excellent address
and well-appearing, and, as it proved
eventually, a masterly parliamentarian. To reduce
to quiet an assembly so excited was beyond
his power, but he did unravel the skein of its
tangled business, and through all the uproar and
confusion he kept his temper perfectly, and secured
some actual disposition of the affairs in
hand.</p>
<p>The intricacies of intermingling interests there
represented were beyond measure bewildering.
The Cigarmakers’ Union had a grievance, which
its representatives insisted upon presenting and
having righted at once. But the Waiters’ Union
claimed an antecedent right to the presentation
of a question with reference to admitting certain
men to their organization. And the Bricklayers’
Union demanded an immediate investigation of
the account of expenditure for a certain recent
Union picnic, charging directly, meanwhile, a
flagrant misappropriation of funds.</p>
<p>Passions were running high. The lie direct
was passed repeatedly, and men were all but
shaking fists in one another’s faces. The shouting
rose sometimes to such a pitch that the chairman’s
voice could not be heard. But the passion
was that of strong vitality. The Union, to its
members, was an intensely living thing, and its
issues, touching them so closely, most naturally
roused comparatively untutored men to strong
emotion.</p>
<p>I watched Mr. Ford with curious interest. Instead
of showing any impatience or disgust at
the show of temper and the loud disorder, he sat
through the long session deeply, intently absorbed.
Every question for debate, and every
phase of discussion, and all the progress of the
business, and the varying claims of the many
organizations, and the widely differing personalities
of the members, each won his vital interest,
and, with amazing discrimination, he seemed
to follow them with intelligent understanding.
And when there came a report of progress in a
strike among certain workers in shoe factories,
and a statement of the causes of the strike and
the measures which were being taken to carry it
to a successful issue, I could see that he was more
than ever roused.</p>
<p>“That’s the most interesting meeting I ever
was to,” he said to me, as we walked down the
street together. “I ain’t never realized before
how mixed up things can be when there’s so
many working people, and the men that hire
them are mostly all organized in big companies.
Why, the working people ain’t got nothing else
they can do but organize too, to get their just
rights. They have a pretty hot time in their
meetings, if that’s a sample, but I guess they’ll
know what they’re about. I guess I’ll join.”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>In a very few days I must leave Chicago. I
own to a longing to go and launch out upon the
great farming regions between the Lakes and
the Rocky Mountains, which I hope to cover in
my journey before the autumn is far spent. I
have been watching the coming of the spring in
the Exposition grounds and in the charming
parks of the city and along its beautiful boulevards,
and I feel its subtle drawings to the country,
to a life once more of labor in the fields. But
I am very far from being prepared to go. Some
little of a phase of life which in all large centres
of population accompanies the swift industrial
changes of the present I have seen here in Chicago,
where it differs but slightly from similar
conditions in every congested labor market. And
under the play of the modern gregarious instinct
there surely are few centralized markets which
are not congested. But of the real city as a great
positive force and a world-wide commercial power,
whose unfaltering energies have built a huge
metropolis in a generation, and are fast crowning
their labors with splendid achievements in education
and in art, I have been able to see little,
and I have given no impression whatever. This
much I have seen on the grounds where I am
now a workman: I have watched something of
the slow emerging from a scene of utter chaos
of a co-ordinated scheme of landscape-gardening
and of architecture, which has long passed the
experimental stage, and is unfolding to the
world, by a miracle of creative and constructive
genius, a real vision of beauty and power and
grace, which certainly holds for the living generation
of civilized men a promise of rich blessings.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII<br/><br/> <small>FROM CHICAGO TO DENVER</small></h2></div>
<p class="location">
The Barton Farm, Faribault County,</p>
<p class="date">
Minnesota, July 6, 1892.</p>
<p>For a week past I have been Mr. Barton’s
hired man, but in the early morning I must take
leave of the family and renew the long journey.
More than once during the past year I have
found it hard to say good-by to an employer, but
that is altogether apart from the real sadness of
the present farewell.</p>
<p>It might have been months ago, so strong has
my attachment to Mr. Barton’s family grown
and so well do I feel that I know them, that Mr.
Barton stopped me on the wayside as I was leaving
Blue Earth City and offered me work on his
farm. I hesitated, but finally agreed to accept
his offer for a week. I am staggered now at realizing
how near I came to missing an experience
which will always be a cherished memory of my
life.</p>
<p>With utmost hospitality I, a mere chance
workman, picked up on the public highway, was
taken in by the Bartons and made one of themselves;
and during the days since I have shared
their life of summer industry with hard work
for all of us from five in the morning until nightfall,
but healthful, worth-while work, and with
it a home most daintily neat, and having an atmosphere
of true refinement and of simple, genuine
religion.</p>
<p>My pain at leaving is precisely that which one
feels in the farewells which end the rare, halfborn
friendships of life. A voyage, perhaps, or
a short sojourn in a foreign country proves the
chance occasion of a meeting, and kindred hearts
awaken to quick recognition of one another, and
then their roads diverge and from the parting
of the ways each bears a sorrow which is of the
tragedy of existence. Who has not felt that sadness
and seen its shadow fall over the face of
nature and far over the coming days?</p>
<p>There is, in my mind, no smallest fear of fresh
encounter with an untried world. I have long
since lost all such feeling, and can set forth of a
morning as light of heart, as free from anxious
care as are the birds which share my early start,
and with a sense of pure animal enjoyment which
is, I sometimes dream, not far removed from
their own.</p>
<p>And with small wonder can I be so careless,
for ever since I left Chicago work has ceased to
be a difficult thing to find and has grown to be
an increasingly difficult matter to avoid. It has
come to be a positive embarrassment, for every
day I am stopped by the way and urged to go to
work, and it is not easy to refuse men who are
most evidently short-handed. I shall set out in
the morning with six dollars—five earned from
Mr. Barton and one remaining from my last employment—and
I shall try to cover a wide strip
of country before settling down to another job;
but, upon the basis of my past experience, I am
sure that on an average of at least once a day
in the coming march some farmer will ask me to
help him at his work. All through Illinois and
from Minneapolis to this point, which is near
the Iowa border, this has been my uniform experience.</p>
<p>It was late in the spring when I left Chicago.
Almost continuous rains compelled me to defer
my start from day to day until the month of
May was far advanced, and then I stopped at
Joliet and joined for a week a gang of laborers
in the works of the Illinois Steel Company. So
that it was the first of June before I found myself
in the open country once more, after six
months as a city workman. Even then the skies
continued threatening, and frequent rains forced
me from the soft loam of the country roads to a
firmer footing on the line of the Rock Island
Railway for most of the journey to the Mississippi.
I was relatively flush with wages earned
at Joliet, and so was under no necessity to stop.
But the chance of work never failed me, for not
only in the rich farming region about Morris but
also in the brick-kilns in the neighborhood of Ottawa
and Utica I found abundant offers of a job.</p>
<p>From Davenport I went by rail to Minneapolis,
for I had resolved to emerge for a week and
attend the National Republican Convention in
that city, and not days enough remained, when
I reached the river, to admit of my walking there
in time for the political gathering. But when
the Convention closed I started again, penniless
and afoot, on the long march which I have interrupted
twice, once when working for a fine old
Irish farmer near Belle Plain, and a second time
when I accepted Mr. Barton’s offer.</p>
<p>It is difficult to pass thus lightly over wide
stretches of the journey. Under every casual
sentence is a mine of what proved valuable experience
to me: The days in the Steel Works,
for example, as a member of a gang of foreign
laborers and associated with an army of skilled
and disciplined workmen, meeting some of them
on familiar terms at the boarding-house and at
the club, which is an interesting experiment on
the part of the company. Then a tramp along
the Illinois River through a rich country which
teemed with vegetation in the luxuriance of the
tropics; and a day’s march on the railway with
a veritable hobo who had lost his partner and
cheerfully took up with me, and who proved to
be a delightful fellow, by no means lost to manliness,
from whom I parted most regretfully
when a job was found for him in a brick-kiln
near Ottawa. Then the Convention itself, with
its vast array of party organization, and its highly
dramatic incidents as affecting the careers of
political leaders, and its strong undercurrents of
personal and sectional ambition, and the interesting
personages, and picturesque figures; all so
intensely real and finely typical and keenly alive
with national spirit, and splendidly representative
of wide, heterogeneous empire bound together
in marvellous union. And then a few
days spent near Belle Plain, where, driven by
the rain from the road, I found shelter in a farm-house
shed and was eagerly seized upon by the
farmer as a hired man, until one morning, when,
as usual, I had risen at sunrise and had cleaned
the stables and curried the horses and was milking
the old white cow, the longing for the tramp
laid sudden hold of me and soon after breakfast
my eager feet were again on the main-travelled
road. The storm had passed, the sun was shining
from a cloudless sky, and a strong, cool wind
was tossing the graceful branches of a cluster of
American elms at the roadside as I left the farm,
and was blowing through the dewy, dark recesses
of a bit of fragrant woodland as I climbed the
hill, giving the sense of infinite vitality; when
I reached the summit there lay below me, embedded
in deep green, one of the hundred exquisite
lakes of southern Minnesota, with its rippling
surface joyously dancing in the sunlight and adding
a touch of magic beauty to the rich, undulating
landscape of varying field and forest and deep
meadow-land. All about me were the homes of
original settlers, where yet live some of the very
men and women who, only a generation ago, began
to reclaim this paradise from a boundless
waste of treeless prairie. Looking out upon it
now from such a height, seeing its dense woodlands,
the fields rank with standing grain, the
farm-houses gleaming white in the sun, the blue
sheets of living water, and the distant Minnesota
threading its way by towns and villages along
fertile banks, one could but dream of its future,
when the crudeness will be gone, and close culture
will have made it all a very garden of the
Lord!</p>
<p>It was through such country as this that my
way led me toward the Iowa border. I walked
along the valley of the Minnesota by Le Sueur
and St. Peter to Mankato, where I spent Sunday,
and then, cutting over the ridge, I went
by Lake Crystal to Garden City, and so through
Vernon and Amboy to Winnebago and on to
Blue Earth City.</p>
<p>Not often on the march am I offered a lift,
but now and again I am picked up and hurried
over some miles of the road, and it was one of
the best of these windfalls that befell me on this
particular journey. I had left Amboy only a
few miles behind, and the long, dusty road
stretched far to the south in the direction of
Winnebago, where I meant to spend the night.
The day was clear and gratefully warm; in the
meadows had just begun the metallic music of
the mowers, and on the air was the first fragrance
of new-mown hay. Soon I caught the
sound of the rapid drum of horses’ hoofs behind
me, and, turning, I saw a gentleman seated in a
light open four-wheeler, driving a pair of Indian
ponies at a spanking pace in my direction. He
drew up beside me, and asked, pleasantly, whether
I cared to ride. I lost no time in thanking
him and in mounting to the seat at his side; in
a moment more we were off at a ten-mile gait,
and I was watching with delight the business-like
movement of the ponies’ pace, with their
backs so straight and level that each might almost
have held a coin without dropping it.</p>
<p>In the meantime Dr. Brooks (for so I shall call
the gentleman, who was returning to Winnebago
from a professional visit on the outskirts
of his practice) was engaging me in conversation.
We very naturally discussed the recent nominations
and the issues of the coming general election,
and then I had ample opportunity of learning
much from him of actual local conditions.</p>
<p>He seemed to me to be singularly well informed.
He had travelled widely over the West,
and this particular region he had known familiarly
since its early settlement. Every farm-house
which we passed he pointed out to me,
telling me the farmer’s name meanwhile, and
something of his history. There was a curious
uniformity in the narrative. The life was rough
enough in the beginning, no doubt, and of the
essence of hard frontier struggle, but it sounded
like a fairy tale as he told me of one man and
another who had come out in the early days almost
penniless from the East or the Middle West
or, in some cases, from a foreign country, and had
“squatted” on the soil; now these settlers had
each a hundred and sixty acres under high cultivation
and a good, substantial house and adequate
barns and machinery and stock; they could
secure money on easy terms at the local bank
when they needed it, and the market value of
their land had risen two hundred per cent and
even higher in the past twenty-five years.</p>
<p>I should have suspected a land-boomer in the
doctor had there been anything aggressive or
boastful in his manner, but he was speaking with
the simple directness of one who knows and who
needs no bluster to disguise ignorance or an ulterior
motive.</p>
<p>I was deeply interested, and presently remarked
that, coming as I did from the East, the
demand for labor on the Western farms had been
a surprise to me, and that I was sure that what
he was telling me would sound strange to Eastern
men, whose preconceptions of agrarian conditions
at the West are formed largely from the
representations of certain political parties which
are recruited from the farming classes.</p>
<p>Dr. Brooks smiled indulgently, and kept his
eyes straight ahead while he answered me.</p>
<p>“If you stay out here long enough,” he said,
“you’ll find that there are two kinds of farmers
in the West. There is one kind that know their
business and that are farmers, and there’s another
kind that are a good deal more interested
in politics than they are in farming. You can
put it down as a pretty safe rule that the farmers
who have the best knowledge of their business
and who are the most industrious and frugal and
economical are the least dissatisfied with their
conditions and the least anxious to change them
by political action, while the more inefficient and
shiftless and thriftless a farmer is, the more likely
he is to be a violent agitator for financial or
political change.</p>
<p>“There seems to be a growing weakness
among whole masses of our people,” he went on,
“which leads them to look to the Government
for help instead of to themselves in their own
industry and thrift. Not only the farmers are
affected by it, for every demand upon the Government
for special legislation in the interest of
one class or another is evidence of this spirit.
We need very much, as a people, to relearn the
simple, common-sense maxims of Benjamin
Franklin, and to practise them.”</p>
<p>I told him something at this point of my past
winter in Chicago—of an army of unemployed
and of other armies of underpaid workers, and
of hosts of sweat-shop victims who could scarcely
be said to be lacking in industry and at least a
measure of enforced economy.</p>
<p>He listened patiently and with some curiosity,
I thought, and when I had done he took up the
subject quite eagerly.</p>
<p>“What you say is true enough,” he answered.
“We live in an age of high civilization, and civilization
means city life, and that means great
centres of population, and that gives rise to congested
labor markets with all the want and misery
which you describe. All this, as we have it
now, in this country, is of comparatively recent
growth, being complicated by the vast numbers
of our ignorant immigrant population, and we
have by no means adjusted ourselves to it yet.
You tell me of an army of unemployed in Chicago,
and I can tell you, in reply, of a chronic
demand for help in this country-side, which I
know well; a demand so great that within the
limits of a few neighboring counties we could
put fifty thousand men of the right kind to
work.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” I said, “I have met with an amazing
demand for workers ever since I left Chicago.
But this is the busy season in the country; when
the winter comes, would not the men who answered
to the demand for agricultural laborers
be forced out of employment again and back upon
the chance livelihood of the towns?”</p>
<p>“Not unless they preferred it,” he replied.
“Of course the demand is exceptional at this
season. How great it is you can infer when I
tell you that, for the next five or six weeks, almost
any sort of a man could get his board and
a dollar a day, and men of fair skill and experience
two and two dollars and a half a day, while
the best men will command, for certain kinds of
work, as high a wage as three dollars and a half
a day besides their keep.</p>
<p>“But the point is that our farmers prefer to
hire men by the month for the whole season.
They want their help from the 1st of April until
the end of November, and they are willing to
pay an active, steady fellow twenty dollars a
month and everything found, even to his washing.
And the demand is so steady and the difficulty
of getting good, industrious men so great,
that multitudes of our farmers would be willing
enough to keep the right sort of hands through
the winter months and pay them something for
the little that they could find for them to do,
for the sake of having them through the spring
and summer and autumn when men are hard
to find.”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>On the next day I reached Blue Earth City
at noon, and spent a dime at a bakery for a mid-day
meal, and then went bowling off toward the
Iowa border at Elmore, which place I counted
upon reaching by nightfall.</p>
<p>One dollar remained to me of my last store,
and there is a marvellous fund of the feeling of
independence in a dollar for one who is familiar
with the sense of cowing, unmanning insecurity
which comes of being penniless. Already I had
stopped once in southern Minnesota, and so large
a sum as a dollar would certainly see me well
into Iowa, I was thinking, before I should be
obliged to halt again to replenish my purse.</p>
<p>It was this view of the case which made me
not very hospitable to the offer of a farmer who
presently called to me with an inquiry as to
whether I would work for him.</p>
<p>The incident was an every-day occurrence,
and I felt at first only the usual embarrassment
in my effort to evade the offer with some show
of reason; but Mr. Barton, for it was he, asked
me to at least give it a trial before deciding the
matter, and, seeing in the suggestion an admirable
opportunity for a short term of service, I
replied that, if I concluded to stay at all, I could
not consent to remain for longer than a week
together, and must be held free to go at the end
of the first week if I chose.</p>
<p>Mr. Barton agreed to this immediately, and
invited me to a seat beside him on a load of
wheat which he was taking to the mill. I said
that I preferred to walk on to his farm, the direction
of which he had pointed out to me and
which was but a couple of miles down a side
road.</p>
<p>At first every step which bore me away from
the main-travelled road added to my uncertainty
of mind. Was I acting wisely in stopping so
soon again when I might easily push on for another
fifty miles or more? Presently I came to
a railway crossing, and sitting down to rest on
the roadside, I thought the matter over, and
decided finally to go on to the farm.</p>
<p>I had no difficulty in recognizing it from Mr.
Barton’s description. A row of poplars stood
just within a trim picket-fence which enclosed
the farm-house yard from the road. Opening
the gate I walked up the foot-path which cut its
way for a hundred yards through a well-kept
lawn, shaded with fruit-trees, to the house standing
on the crest of the ridge, surrounded by well-grown
maples. It was the usual two-storied,
white farm-house with green shutters, having a
wing at the side with a porch in front of it overgrown
with honeysuckle.</p>
<p>I had come armed with a message for Mrs.
Barton from her husband; but for all that, an
increasing feeling of embarrassment accompanied
me up the walk, and when I knocked at the
screen-door which opened upon the porch, I was
sorely tempted for a moment to break and run.
The inner door was open, and through the screen
I could see Mrs. Barton and one of her daughters,
whom I shall call Miss Emily, ironing at
opposite ends of a table, while another daughter,
Miss Julia let us say, was sewing beside them.
The faultless order and precision which had appeared
in every external detail of the farm were
in perfect keeping with what I could see of the
interior of the home. It contained only the
plainest furniture, but the room was redolent of
a clean, cool, inviting comfort, perfectly suited
to the needs of men who come in from long, hard
work in the heat of the fields. The windows
and outer doors were guarded by close-fitting
screens; the inner wood-work was painted a
light, delicate color, as fresh and clean as though
newly applied; and the walls were covered with
a simple, harmonious paper which matched well
with the prevailing shade in the clean rag-carpet
on the floor. A large rocker and a sofa, covered
with Brussels carpet, were supplemented by a
plentiful supply of plain chairs.</p>
<p>Miss Julia was the first to notice me; putting
down her sewing, she stepped to the door and
stood facing me from behind the screen.</p>
<p>“Is this Mr. Barton’s house?” I asked.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said his daughter.</p>
<p>“Well, he has sent me here with a message
for Mrs. Barton,” I went on; “and wishes me
to say that he has hired me to work on the farm.”</p>
<p>I was sadly ill at ease by this time, and very
sorry that I had not accompanied Mr. Barton
to the mill, and then to his home, and left to him
all necessary explanations. But it was too late
now for regrets, and Mrs. Barton, a sweet-faced,
gentle little lady, had joined her daughter at the
door.</p>
<p>“I did not know that father meant to hire any
more men just now,” she said, while a nervous
alarm played in her timid eyes at sight of so
rough an applicant for work.</p>
<p>I do all that I can to keep a respectable appearance,
and never a day passes without the
opportunity of a bath in a lake or a wayside
stream, and sometimes I am so fortunate as to
come upon two or three such chances for refreshment
in a day’s march. But a long course
of wearing the same outer garments and sleeping
in brick-kilns and hay-ricks must inevitably produce
an effect in clothing which, accompanied by
an unshaven face, gives rise to a somewhat scandalous
figure.</p>
<p>I could only say, in reply to Mrs. Barton, that
her husband’s instructions to me were simply to
deliver the message which I had brought, and
then to await his coming at the farm.</p>
<p>She was by no means reassured, but her hospitality
overcame her fear, and, unfastening the
screen-door, she opened it with an invitation to
me to come in.</p>
<p>The dust on my boots and the general condition
of my dress became the instant source of
poignant feeling as I stepped upon the speckless
carpet and took a seat in a straight-backed wooden
chair which shone as though the varnish were
but newly dry.</p>
<p>The situation was unmistakably awkward,
and, under the disturbing spell of it, I sat very
straight in the chair with feet close together and
my hands on my knees, anathematizing myself
for stopping before there was any need for it
and getting myself into a mess. Then I began
to cast about for some excuse for going out-of-doors
once more, so that I could cut and run for
the road.</p>
<p>Out of purest kindness of heart Mrs. Barton
was trying to set me at ease. There was some
threat of rain, she remarked; and we had had
a great deal of rain this spring, she added; and
where had I met Mr. Barton? and when did he
say that he would be home? she inquired.</p>
<p>My best efforts at responsiveness were dismal
failures, and the gloom was growing denser
when Miss Julia came to my rescue with a copy
of <i>The Youth’s Companion</i>, which she suggested
that I might care to read while waiting.</p>
<p>Over and over again I read sections of continued
“boys’ stories” and a number of interesting
anecdotes and tried to study out certain puzzles,
but Mr. Barton did not come. Mrs. Barton and
her daughters had immediately resumed their
work and their conversation, and, with kind considerateness,
had left me to the paper. The hot
summer afternoon slowly dragged its length toward
evening. Through breaks in rolling clouds,
heavy with rain, the sun shone at intervals with
piercing heat. A warm, damp, sun-lit air, laden
with honeysuckle and the fragrance of strawberry-beds,
came floating idly through the open
doors and windows, bearing the droning hum
of many bees, which was like a low accompaniment
to the soft voices of the women. Moving
up the lane with the stately, steady motion of an
elephant, came presently a huge rick of hay, the
horses almost concealed under the overdrooping
load and two hired men seated comfortably on
top.</p>
<p>Soon after this Mr. Barton arrived, and I went
out to meet him in the yard and helped him unhitch
the horses. Then he set me to ploughing
potatoes in the garden with his youngest son, an
intelligent, gentlemanlike lad of seventeen, who,
as I discovered later, was preparing for college,
for scarcely a day passed that his sister Julia,
who teaches school in a neighboring town
through the winters, did not find time to help
him with his Algebra and Latin. When we were
called to supper I found that my case was satisfactorily
explained to the family, and that I
could now read my title clear to a perfectly comfortable
position among them.</p>
<p>Would that I could do justice to the exquisite
charm which I began to feel at once in that simple,
natural home-life! The men assembled at
the call to supper from different quarters of the
farm. There were five of us, Mr. Barton and his
son Richard, and, besides me, two other hired
men, Al, an inflexible Yankee transplanted from
far down East, and Harry, a stalwart young Englishman
of the grown-up “butcher’s boy” variety,
whose “h’s” had grown to be a source of
discomfort to him. We washed on the kitchen
porch, and, contrary to the usual custom on the
farms, we put on our coats before entering the
dining-room, which is also the family sitting-room,
where I had found Mrs. Barton and her
daughters at work.</p>
<p>The table was spread with clean linen, and
a napkin was at each place. Mr. Barton said
grace in the midst of a reverent silence, which
continued while we began upon a meal abundant
enough for a hungry man and dainty enough for
a lady.</p>
<p>After supper Harry and I went to fetch the
cows, which had to be driven in from a pasture
beyond a little river that flows through the farm.
There were thirty-seven of them in all to be
milked, but Miss Emily and Miss Julia lent a
hand, so that it did not take long, and when
the horses had been fed and their stalls made
ready for the night, we men were free. In the
dark, star-lit evening, which followed almost
instantly upon the setting of the sun, we walked
down to the river for the regular evening
bath.</p>
<p>It is early yet for sight of the past week in
true perspective, but even now its events take
form in memory with a certain natural sequence.
With only one exception, clear, radiant summer
days have followed one another, days begun for
us at five o’clock and spent in the hay-fields when
the chores were done and breakfast over. Long
days they were, full of hard work in the heat of
the meadows, but there was the refreshing cool
of the house at mid-day, and a dinner excellent
in itself but to our whetted appetites a keen physical
delight. And better even than dinner was
supper at the end of the day’s work in the fields,
a delicious supper of cold meats and potatoes and
home-made bread and milk and tea, and finally
cake with strawberries from the garden. If anything
could have been better than that it was
when Richard and we three hired men took
towels down to the river in the gloom of the early
evening, and under the clear summer stars from
the high embankment covered with soft turf,
with the glitter of fire-flies all about us and the
air full of the deep croaking of frogs and the
sharp reiterations of the katydids, dove headlong
into the dark, cool, flowing water. We swam
about for a quarter of an hour and came out with
scarcely a trace left in our muscles of the ache
of the day’s labor and then went to bed to eight
hours of deepest sleep.</p>
<p>One was a rainy day when work in the fields
was impossible, and we spent it in the barn running
some of last year’s wheat through the fanning
mill and measuring and sacking it ready for
shipment. Then Sunday came with its long,
peaceful rest. Al and Harry secured each a
buggy and were given the use of two of the farm
horses, and, in their best Sunday black, they
started after the chores were done to take their
best girls to church, and for a long drive in the
afternoon.</p>
<p>The family attend church in Blue Earth City,
but their rector has another parish and can
preach here only on alternate Sundays. This
was his Sunday in the other parish and there was
a Sunday-school service here. The restful observance
of the day seemed to me in most natural
keeping with the deeply religious tone of the
family life. Morning worship followed breakfast
as usual; then came the preparation for
church, and after the morning service and the
mid-day meal, which was almost wholly prepared
on Saturday, the afternoon was spent in reading.
After a light supper in the evening Miss Julia
played the harmonium in the parlor, and we all
joined in singing hymns until bedtime.</p>
<p>If there is one scene more than another which
I shall always remember as eminently characteristic
of the household, it surely is that of morning
prayers. No pressure of work, even at the
very height of the haying season, is allowed to
interfere with this act of worship. Immediately
after breakfast the family group themselves
about the dining-room, drawing off a little from
the table, and Mr. Barton, taking down an old
Bible from the mantel-shelf, seats himself in the
rocker and begins to read the morning lesson.
The passages have been from the prophecy of
Ezekiel, and, stronger than any other association
with that book, will hereafter be for me the
sturdy figure of Mr. Barton in his working
clothes, seated in a rocking-chair with his head
bowed over a Bible as he reads, reverently, the
oft-recurrent phrase:</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>The Word of the Lord came again unto me saying, Son
of Man, ——</p>
</div>
<p>The prayer that followed has been always a
simple, earnest appeal for help and guidance. It
was as though our dependence upon God and His
right to supreme devotion in every act of life was
instinctively recognized, and that the worship
was a natural expression of love to the Father
of us all, thus renewing our wills and bringing
us into captivity unto the obedience of Christ,
and sending us forth to the duties of the day
strong in the sense of the sacredness of work as
service to the Lord, and of His presence with us
as the source of all life and hope and strength.</p>
<p>Monday was the Fourth of July. Harry and
Al were early off again with buggies and best
girls, and Mr. Barton invited me to join the family
in celebrating the day in town. We hitched
a team to a four-seated market wagon, and Mr.
Barton’s son and his wife, who live on an adjoining
farm, drove with us to Blue Earth City,
where we were to attend the festivities and go
for dinner to the home of a married daughter of
Mr. Barton, whose husband is a merchant there.</p>
<p>All along the country roads converging toward
the county seat we saw lines of farmers’
wagons driving to the common centre. There
was great variety of equipage; some were very
rude and plain, but others were exceedingly well
appointed, and not a few of the low phaeton-buggy
type rose to a degree of elegance.</p>
<p>Many of the nearer dwellers were walking in,
and as we approached our destination the foot-paths
were crowded, chiefly with young men and
boys, and the town itself, when we entered it, we
found thronged with holiday-seekers, the women
in light dresses and bright ribbons, the men in
sober black, and all of them in their movements
giving the sense of heavily conscientious merry-making
in spite of the glorious sunshine and the
air that throbbed with the joy of a ripe summer’s
day.</p>
<p>When the horses were put up we fell in with
the stream of people moving toward the main
street, and there in the thick of the serious throng
we stood on the curb watching a procession of
local organizations file past, headed by a brass
band from Winnebago, all gorgeous in new uniform
and led by citizens on horseback as important
and uncomfortable as the marshals in a
St. Patrick’s Day parade.</p>
<p>There was a common movement then of the
crowd, through streets which cracked to the continuous
discharge of explosives, toward a wood
on the outskirts, where a rough booth had been
erected and row on row of benches placed before
it in the shade. We found seats near to the
front, and presently there fell a hush upon the
assembly which quieted the flutter of fans and
the mingled interchange of neighborly conversation.
A procession of little girls in white, with
bright blue sashes, each wearing the name of a
State or Territory in silver letters across the band
of her sailor hat, which had long blue streamers
behind, came filing in among the crowd, all intensely
trim and self-conscious with their fingers
protruding stiffly from white cotton mits. Following
them were a minister and a schoolmaster
and a small group of other prominent citizens,
from among whom towered the tall, massive figure
and the clean-cut, rugged, beardless face of
an old ex-senator who was the orator of the day.</p>
<p>The little girls grouped themselves on benches
which rose like steps from the ground to the level
of the floor of the booth, and the citizens took
seats assigned them on the platform. One of
their number, the chairman of the occasion, introduced
the minister, who led the company in
prayer. Then the schoolmaster was presented as
the reader of the Declaration of Independence.
A few explanatory sentences in unconventional
English served to bring vividly to the minds of
the people the familiar circumstances of the signing
of the Declaration, and then in sonorous,
ringing voice he read, amid breathless stillness,
the deep natural stillness of the woodland, the
well-remembered phrases of that great document.
There was no applause when he ceased,
no outward demonstration of any kind, but
through the great still company one could feel
the strong movement of the sense of national
life.</p>
<p>The ex-senator then rose to speak. He was
himself a frontiersman, having known the
Northwest from its early settlement and having
represented it in Congress a generation ago, and
he spoke to people whose history he knew and
whose temper he thoroughly understood. It was
inspiriting to catch the dominant note of what
he said and to watch its effect upon his hearers.
There was talk of national growth, but without
boasting, and there was very serious reckoning
of national problems, but without carping, and
there was high appeal to national responsibility,
but without canting, and when at the end, out
of the wealth of his own personal association with
the man, he spoke of Lincoln and enforced all
that he had said with homely, cogent teachings
drawn from the life and the words of the great
apostle of the common people, the assembly was
moved and stirred as no other appeal could have
affected it.</p>
<p>After this the crowd scattered for dinner,
most of the people re-entering the town, and the
spirit of fun, no longer to be restrained by a conscientious
sense of the seriousness of enjoyment,
broke loose in a bit of genuine American horseplay,
when a company of boys and young men, in
most fantastic disguise, passed in grotesque procession
through the streets, and for a few minutes
the solemn crowds really lost self-consciousness
in true <i>abandon</i> to the spontaneous sport.</p>
<p>The Barton family had soon gathered at the
married daughter’s home, and there with the
greatest good cheer we had a picnic dinner of
delightful cold meats, and the thinnest of bread
and butter, and olives, and dainty home-made
cakes, and the reddest of ripe cherries—all served
to us as we sat just within the dining-room door
or ranged in a semicircle about it in the shade
on the lawn.</p>
<p>When it was over everyone was eager to start
for the public green outside the town, where the
afternoon’s sports were to be held. It was not
far, and we walked out, but almost a continuous
stream of carriages was passing us in a common
movement, and when we reached the bridge just
outside the town the stream had narrowed to an
unbroken line of vehicles moving slowly in single
file. At the centre of the bridge which spans
a narrow stream below the public green stood an
interesting figure as we drew up. He was a tall,
lean man of sixty, perhaps, but without a suggestion
of old age in his lithe, sinewy frame;
a Yankee by every gift of nature, with the sharply
inquisitive face of a ferret and shrewd blue
eyes with a gleam of humor in them and a little
tuft of whiskers on his chin. Every vehicle, as
it passed, underwent an interested scrutiny from
him, and his whiskers worked comically up and
down as he cordially greeted the occupants whom
he knew. I was walking with Mr. Barton, and
seeing us in the crowd on foot, he eagerly hailed
Mr. Barton as a sympathetic old acquaintance.</p>
<p>“John,” he said, “I was just thinking as I
stood here how I was to the Fourth of July celebration
in these parts thirty years ago to-day, in
’62. And my gracious, it’s hard to realize the
change! Why, there warn’t a team of horses in
the hull county then, and everybody come on
foot or else behind a yoke of oxen. But just
look at that percession now! There ain’t a ox-team
in the hull outfit, and ther’s some rigs here
that’s fine enough for the President to ride in.”</p>
<p>The common presented a truly festive scene
when we reached it. As large as a ten-acre lot,
it was covered with a soft, rich turf and enclosed
on three sides by beautiful woodland and on the
fourth by the main-travelled road. Horses, tied
in the shade along the outer rim of trees, were
munching hay from piles which had been thrown
down before them. Deserted vehicles, ranging
from white-canopied prairie-schooners and rough
market-carts to the smartest of new buggies,
stood idly among the trees, and, with changing
lights and shadows playing over them, were
groups of picnickers seated on the mossy ground
about white table-cloths which bore their viands,
and some on rustic benches at rough tables hastily
put up for the occasion.</p>
<p>But the dinner-hour was nearly over, and
those who had picnicked in the woods were fast
joining the crowds who poured in upon the common
from the town. The peanut and popcorn
and lemonade venders were out in force, and you
could hear from many quarters the professional
tones of fakirs who invited the crowds to throw
rings at walking-sticks, or rubber balls at stuffed
dolls for cigars, or to various tests of strength on
a variety of ingenious machines. These had
their votaries for a time, and there was much
laughter and chaffing about the jousts, but the
current of the crowd soon set overwhelmingly
toward a quarter of the field where a baseball
game was being started. Two townships were
to play each other. There was no organized nine
in either, but a volunteer one was presently secured
from both. Not without some difficulty,
however. I saw one sturdy young farmer offer
his services as pitcher, and his wife, who stood
by with her baby in her arms, pleaded with him
to desist.</p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i389" style="max-width: 148.9375em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_389.jpg" alt="A sunny day at the fairgrounds with many men and women sitting and standing. There is a baseball game in the background." />
<div class="caption"><p>THE FOURTH OF JULY—“TWO TOWNSHIPS WERE TO PLAY EACH OTHER.”</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>“Charlie,” she repeated with whining petulance,
“you hadn’t ought to; you <em>know</em> you
hadn’t ought to. Just think how stiff and sore
you’ll be to-morrow. You won’t be fit for the
haying.” But the spirit of the sport was upon
Charlie, and not only did he pitch for his township,
but he took off his boots and played in
stocking-feet to facilitate his base running.</p>
<p>Another young farmer, a gorgeous swell, with
his best girl beside him in a phaeton-buggy, and
with no end of a white waistcoat and a white
cravat, and with a high, stiff collar chafing his
well-burned neck, sat spectator to the scene for
a time; then, unable to resist longer the demand
for a catcher for his township nine, he asked the
young woman to hold the horses, and, leaving
his coat and waistcoat and high collar in her
care, he caught a plucky game without a mask
or a breast-pad and with only an indifferent
glove, and he threw so well to second that the
other side had to give up trying to steal that base.</p>
<p>It was a perfectly delightful game; not at all
a duel of batteries, but like a contest between
two newly organized rival freshman nines before
any team-work has been developed, for both
pitchers were hit freely, and there were plenty
of the most engaging errors and the wildest of
excited throwing, and at times a perfect merry-go-round
of frantic base-running, during which
it was difficult to keep track of the score.</p>
<p>We drove back to the farm in the cool of the
evening in time for supper and the chores before
nightfall, and at five o’clock on the next morning
began again a day of work in the hay-fields.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p class="location">
Denver, Col.,</p>
<p class="date">
September 21, 1892.</p>
<p>It is a long cry from Mr. Barton’s farm to this
beautiful Western city, but the story of the journey
can easily be shortened to a few pages, which
will serve to picture its salient incidents. Even
at this distance of time and space I cannot touch
in passing upon my parting with the Barton
family without feeling again the sense of homesickness
which accompanied me as, in the glory
of an early July morning, I walked down the
garden-path to the road, with her good-by and
a gentle “God bless you!” from Mrs. Barton
sounding in my ear, and a last repeated generous
offer from Mr. Barton of a permanent home, if
I would stay with them, almost following me
to the gate. It was the best of the many chances
which I have found open to men who are honestly
in search of work and willing to work their
way industriously and patiently to advancement.
I have found many jobs thus far, and in scarcely
one of them have I failed to see the means of
winning promotion and improved position, while
not a few have seemed to me to open a way to
considerable business success to a man shrewd
enough to seize it and persistent enough to
develop it. Often, as I look back upon two
thousand miles of country crossed—apart from
the splendor of it—the almost overwhelming
impression that it leaves of boundless empire
wherein a growing, intelligent, industrious, God-fearing
people are slowly working out great
ends in industrial achievement and personal
character and in national life, an impression
which thrills one with a new-found knowledge
and love of one’s country, with her “glorious
might of heaven-born freedom” and the resistless
resurgence of her boundless energies, and,
notwithstanding all waywardness, a deep-seated,
unalterable consciousness of national responsibility
to the most high God; apart from all this, the
strongest sense which possesses one in any retrospect
of a long, laborious expedition like mine,
is that of a wide land, which teems with opportunities
open to energy and patient toil. Local
labor markets there are which are terribly crowded,
as I found in Chicago to my cost. Awful
suffering there is among workers who are in the
clutch of illness, or, bound by ties which they
cannot break, are unable to move to more favorable
regions; pitiful degradation there is among
many who lack imagination to see a way and the
energy to pursue it, and who, without the congenital
qualities which make for successful struggle,
sink into the slough of purposeless idleness;
deep depravity and unutterable misery there are
in the great congested labor-centres, many of
whose conditions are the price which we pay for
our economic freedom. But the broad fact remains,
that the sun never shone upon a race of
civilized men whose responsibilities were greater
and whose problems were more charged with the
welfare of mankind, among whom energy and
thrift and perseverance and ability were surer
of their just rewards, and where there were so
many and such various chances of successful and
honorable career.</p>
<p>In leaving Mr. Barton’s farm I found much
the same external conditions as those with which
I had grown familiar ever since I left Chicago.
It was a rich agricultural region, and was inhabited
throughout this section in curious, clearly
defined communities. In one quarter was a German
settlement, and in another a Norwegian,
and a Swedish settlement in a third, while I
heard of a French colony as a curiosity in another
direction, and even an organization of
Quakers. But there were native-born Americans
in plenty, and chiefly of New England antecedents,
as I found in my chance acquaintance
with farmers by the way, and from observations
of such a charming town as Algona, in northern
Iowa, where I spent several days. On every hand
it was borne in upon one, not merely from what
appeared but from the invariable assurances of
those who have lived long in the region, that
among the foreign population no fact is more
thoroughly established than that of its swift assimilation.
So swift and sure a process is this
said to be that the children born upon the soil,
of immigrant parentage, seem to lose certain
physical characteristics which would link them
to an alien ancestry, and to take on others which
approximate to recognized American types.
Their children, in turn, are said to be natives
of established character; but of them all none
surpasses the first-comers, when once they are
settled and grown familiar with our institutions,
in a stanch, honest conservatism and in a loyal,
patriotic devotion to their adopted country.</p>
<p>It was nearly the end of July when I reached
Council Bluffs. I was well worn with walking,
for the last two hundred miles I had covered in
six days’ march, and I was glad enough to stop
for a time. But I did not wish to stop there, for
my letters for several weeks past had been forwarded
to Omaha, and were now awaiting me
across the river. Unluckily for me, there was
a five-cent toll for foot-passengers on the bridge,
and I had only one cent left.</p>
<p>It was the middle of an intensely hot afternoon.
I was too tired to begin an immediate
search for work, and so I took a seat on a bench
in the shade of the public square, near to a fountain
which played with a delicious sound of coolness
under the trees. The park walks converged
toward the fountain as a centre, and thither came
the people who wished to rest in the shade or
whose errands carried them through the public
square. Presently a sharer of my bench got up
and walked on, leaving behind him a copy of a
local paper, which I eagerly seized upon and
read and re-read until I became conscious of the
dimming light of early evening. I was stiff
and sore with the long, hot, dusty march, and
uncomfortable at failing to get the letters upon
which I had long counted, and I lacked utterly
the energy to surmount even so slight a difficulty.
But with the cool of the early evening
came the natural hunger bred of a day’s march,
and the necessity of providing for that and a
shelter for the night.</p>
<p>One of the streets of the city through which
I had walked to the central square was named
Fifth Avenue, and from one point on its pavement
I could see through the open windows of
a cheap hotel the tables in the dining-room spread
for supper. There were screens at the windows
and light cotton curtains, and the table-linen appeared
clean and the shaded depth of the room
looked to me, from the blistering pavement, like
the subdued, fragrant coolness of real luxury.</p>
<p>I retraced my steps to the hotel and asked for
work, but there was none for me. I found the
way to the stables and applied there, but an old
man with a long nose and a white, patriarchal
beard told me that they were in no need of more
men. This was very different from my experience
in the country, where everyone was in need
of men and one had not to ask for employment
but was everywhere urged to accept it, and I began
to wonder whether for the sake of work I
should be forced out again to the farms.</p>
<p>Near this “Fifth Avenue” hotel I had noticed
a livery-stable which fronted on one street
and extended through to another bordering the
public square. I went there next, and found its
keeper seated comfortably in the wide, open
doorway. Taciturn and non-committal at first,
he confessed eventually to his needing a man in
addition to the two already at work in the stable,
and, after some questioning, he told me to come
back at nine o’clock that evening and receive his
decision.</p>
<p>I was supperless and without the means of
securing anything to eat, and there remained an
hour and a half before nine o’clock. In this predicament
I had the good fortune to chance upon
a delightful public library on the second floor
of a building overlooking the square. It was
like the library at Wilkesbarre in its charming
accessibility; and, without a trace of the feeling
of weariness or hunger left, I was reading ravenously,
when, by some happy chance, I caught
sight of a clock that was almost on the stroke of
nine. With thanks, which were exceedingly
short and abrupt, I returned the books to an
attendant in the library and then bolted for Mr.
Holden’s livery-stable. He was standing in the
door when I came up, and, without preliminary
remarks,</p>
<p>“I will take you on,” he said, and then he
added, almost without a pause,</p>
<p>“I will give you twenty dollars a month and
arrange for your board at the hotel [indicating
the “Fifth Avenue” one], or thirty dollars a
month and you manage for your own keep. You
will sleep in the loft over the harness-room.”</p>
<p>Without a moment’s hesitation I accepted the
first offer, and wishing us good-night Mr. Holden
left the stable in charge of Ed, one of the other
hired men, and me.</p>
<p>It was too late to get anything to eat at the
hotel, and so I sat up with Ed and helped unhitch
the horses and put up the traps as they came in.
The last horse was housed by eleven o’clock. I
then found that with the aid of a hose a capital
bath was possible in the carriage-washing section
of the stable, and then I went to bed on a cot
in the well-ventilated loft, very content in the
knowledge that I had found a good place and
should have a breakfast in the morning.</p>
<p>Ed called me at five o’clock as he was going
below, and when I followed him he assigned me
the two rows of stalls next to his own, which
contained twelve horses and which were to be
my first care. All these stalls had to be cleaned
and the horses fed before I was at liberty to go
to breakfast, and it was with a royal appetite that
about seven o’clock I applied at the hotel. It
was a very decent hostelry, largely made use of
by farmers apparently. I was at once accepted
as an employé of Mr. Holden, and served to an
excellent meal by a trim little waitress, at one
of the very tables which I had looked in upon on
the previous afternoon with such genuine longing,
and with the feeling of its belonging to a
degree of luxury far beyond my reach.</p>
<p>The twelve horses which had fallen to my
share had all to be curried after breakfast and
got ready for the day’s orders. Calls for vehicles
began to arrive in the middle of the morning,
and they continued to come at intervals throughout
the day, so that there was much hitching and
unhitching to interfere with regular tasks.</p>
<p>Jake, the third hired man, was boss in the absence
of the owner. He had long been in Mr.
Holden’s employ, and had a wife and several
children in a home of his own somewhere in the
outskirts of the city. All the feeding, and cleaning,
and currying, and carriage-washing, fell to
Ed and me, while Jake, in addition to a general
superintendence, had as his special trust the care
of all the harnesses. He took great pride in
them, and certainly kept them in admirable condition.
Ed was chief carriage-washer and next
in command under Jake, while to me, when my
regular work was done, fell the odd jobs of keeping
the carriages oiled, and watering the horses
at the proper hours, and lending a hand at the
unloading of the hay and feed as they came in—of
holding myself in readiness, in short, to do
anything that anyone in the stable asked of me.
A very good position it was, as I very soon found.
I had no great difficulty in learning the various
tasks, and in a stable which, even in the fierce
heat of August, was always comfortable, and at
forms of work which were always interesting,
and with every cost of living provided for, I was
clearing five dollars a week.</p>
<p>By no means were the demands of our work
continuous. Nearly every afternoon we had an
hour or two or even three together, when there
was little to be done. I found a book-shop across
the way from the stable, where second-hand
books could be rented at the rate of six cents a
week and the books exchanged as often as you
pleased.</p>
<p>Then in the evenings, when we all had supped
in turn, and the stalls had been made ready for
the night, and the traps sent out in answer to the
evening trade, Jake and Ed and I used to sit out
in front, within easy hearing of the telephone-bell,
with our chairs tilted against the stable-wall
and our feet caught by the heels on the chair-rounds,
and there we talked by the hour together,
until Jake went home and left Ed and
me to care for the outstanding horses and traps,
and lock up the stable for the night.</p>
<p>I was at a disadvantage in these conversations.
Jake and Ed were Yankees, both of them shrewd,
hard-headed, steady fellows. Jake was the
father of a family, and Ed an unmarried man of
three-and-thirty, who was working with all his
might to pay off the mortgage on his father’s
farm back in Illinois. Both of them had had
some district-school training, but nothing beyond,
and while they had a perfectly intelligent
knowledge of affairs which concerned them as
men and as citizens, their farther intellectual
horizon was limited.</p>
<p>One evening as we sat under the stars the talk
turned upon astronomy, and Ed began to comment
disparagingly upon the claims of astronomers
of an ability to weigh the heavenly bodies,
and to measure their distances from one another
and from the earth. Jake heartily agreed with
him, and insisted that not until a line could be
carried from one to another, and each star
weighed accurately in a scale, would he put any
confidence in these pretended results. My attempt
to point out that there were methods of
determining weight and distance other than the
very direct ones which they insisted upon, was
very damaging to my reputation for intelligence,
and was set down as of a piece with the general
ignorance which I had shown in the work of a
livery-stable. And when, later in the discussion,
I stood out for the validity of the doctrine of the
conservation of energy, against Ed’s immediate
demonstration of its falsity in the heaps of refuse
which he pointed out were thrown every day
from our stable alone, and which must to some
degree effect a variation in the totality of matter—I
found that my position in the crew was
threatened with unpleasantness.</p>
<p>But in reality both Jake and Ed were exceedingly
friendly to me. They were at pains from
the first to teach me my work, and to give me a
hint now and again, which counted for much, in
the matter of getting the job well in hand. Soon
the days began to go by with astonishing rapidity.
I had told Mr. Holden that I should not be
with him very long, and at the end of two weeks
I left the livery-stable with ten dollars and one
cent in my pocket, minus the twelve cents which
were due for book-hire, and which I felt had
been well invested.</p>
<p>At Omaha I stopped for several days. Like
Minneapolis and Denver, of the Western towns
which I have seen, it is a splendid type of the
American city of a generation’s growth, where
almost miraculous progress has been made in
actual material development, and where the
higher demands of civilization are responded to
with an energy and enthusiasm which are inspiring,
and which are prophetic of splendid results.</p>
<p>Then out I walked one perfect afternoon upon
the level plains of Nebraska, with wild sunflowers
in prolific bloom and square miles of Indian-corn
fields standing lusty and stark to the very
horizon with puffs of belated pollen powdering
the warm red light, and the corn-silk turning
black at the ends, and the long, drooping, cane-like
blades beginning to show the ripe yellow
of the autumn.</p>
<p>The mere writing down the bare fact of the
journey stirs in one’s blood again the joy of that
free life. The boundlessness of the world and
your boundless enjoyment of it, the multiplicity
of abundant life and your blood-kinship with it
all, some goal on the distant horizon and your
“spirit leaping within you to be gone before you
then!” There is scarcely a recollection of all
the tramp through Illinois and Minnesota and
Iowa and eastern Nebraska which is without the
charm of a free, wandering life through a rich,
beautiful country. What I saw of the wealth
of a fertile region in central Illinois I found
again enhanced in beauty and productiveness in
southern Minnesota, and, varying in outward
configuration but scarcely less attractive or fruitful,
across the face of Iowa, losing only its variety
as it modulates in Nebraska to the plains
which slope upward gently for five hundred
miles to the Rockies.</p>
<p>My mind throngs with the pictures of splendid
cultivation, of leagues on leagues of farms
which were had for the taking or were purchased
from the Government at a dollar and a quarter
an acre, and where I saw countless comfortable
homes and fields white to the harvest, with no
demand so strong as the one for laborers.</p>
<p>It was not wealth in the sense of opulence, but
it was the plenty which is beyond the fear of
want that marked the character of that broad
domain. The poor were there, and the suffering
and the deeply discontented, and there were hard
conditions of life and very sordid ones, but never
the hopelessness which gives to town-bred destitution
its quality of despair. In the gradual development
of actual resources about you appeared
to be the remedies of most of the obvious ills.</p>
<p>“This is a rich region,” said a handsome young
farmer who had offered me a lift one blistering
hot day in Iowa—“this is a rich region, and it
is more than rich, it is reliable. We never know
a total failure of crops here; we can always make
a living. This country, for hundreds of miles
around, is a garden, and we live in the heart of
it.” And he was one of the discontented. I only
regret that I have not space here for his interesting
account of the tyranny of capital under
which, from his point of view, the farmers live
and work, and the imperative need of monetary
reform as a means of bringing about their emancipation.</p>
<p>It was the thing which I had heard many
times from many farmers at the West, only
never presented with quite equal cogency before.
The opposite views had been represented to me,
and there was often a singular alternation of
presentation within the course of a day or two,
and I had come to recognize a comical uniformity
between condition and views.</p>
<p>If I chanced upon a farmer who had no particular
quarrel with the existing order of things,
who was conservative and cautious and sceptical
of the efficacy of change, I was quite sure to find
that he was an admirable farmer, thrifty and energetic
and industrious, with a thorough knowledge
of his business down to a frugal care of minor
details. But if, on the other hand, I fell in
with a farmer who was clamorous for radical
economic change, on the ground that he and his
class were being ruined by the injustices of existing
economic conditions, I soon began to feel
a suspicion, which all my observation deepened
into a conviction, that the man of this type was
fundamentally a poor farmer; his buildings and
fences were sure to be out of repair, and his stock
showed signs of suffering for want of proper care,
and the weeds grew thick in his corn, and his
machines were left unhoused and suffered more
from rust than ever they did from wear.</p>
<p>This would be absurd as a generalization with
any claim to wide applicability, as would be any
generalization based upon my casual experimenting;
it was the comical uniformity of my experience
in this case as in some others that impressed
me.</p>
<p>The real difficulties of the situation for many
of the Western farmers one could not fail to see.
Apart from material misfortune and apart from
sickness and ill-luck, there is the inexorableness
of conditions which seem at times to hold them
to a life of servitude with no escape from unprofitable
drudgery, and from the carking care which
burdens men who are hopelessly in the clutch of
debt.</p>
<p>I grew impatient at times with the tone of
Philistine patronage and superiority adopted by
the sturdier farmers. Theirs was the harder
work no doubt and theirs the shrewder carefulness
and the more provident handling of their
instruments, but even hard-won success is sometimes
so strangely blind to the obligations which
arise from the fact that subjective difficulties are
as real and are often far more difficult of mastering
than those which are objective. Often it
appears at its worst as, with utter disregard of
the duty of helpfulness, it chants its heartless
creed in the terms of the fore-ordination which
lightly dooms all the non-elect of high efficiency
to the deep damnation of beggarly dependence
or of endless failure in the struggle of life.</p>
<p>Two hundred miles west of Omaha the wages
earned at the livery-stable in Council Bluffs were
exhausted, and I was obliged to look for another
job with which to replenish my store. I was following
the line of the Union Pacific Railway,
and, having spent my last cent one mid-day for
a dinner, I went up to the first section-boss whom
I met in the afternoon’s walk and asked him for
a job. He was a burly Irishman of massive figure.
Without a moment’s hesitation he told me
that he was in no need of a man, but that Osborn,
the boss of the next westward section, the
thirty-second, with head-quarters at Buda, he
knew was looking for one.</p>
<p>About eight miles farther on I came upon Osborn
and two men at work near the little station
at Buda, a scant four miles east of Kearney, and
it was as the Irishman had said, for instantly,
upon my application, Osborn accepted me as a
section-hand at wages of a dollar and a quarter
a day for ten hours’ work, and offered me board
and lodgings at his home for three dollars a week,
an arrangement with which I instantly closed.</p>
<p>For the remaining afternoon and until six
o’clock I lay resting in the tall prairie grass in
the shade of the railway station, and at seven
o’clock on the next morning I began a term of
three weeks’ service as a section-hand under the
orders of Osborn the boss, and with a strapping
young Irishman, “Cuckoo” Sullivan by name,
as my partner.</p>
<p>That was the last long stop before I reached
Denver. And now, as I am about to leave this
city for the remaining thousand miles of my journey,
I look back over a summer and autumn
spent in the country and in towns and villages
of the thousand miles from the seaboard to Chicago,
and then a winter and a spring within the
limits of the foremost city of the Middle West,
and then a summer in the vast farming region
between Chicago and Minneapolis and Denver.
A thousand miles remain, but with what eager
anticipation do I look forward to them! I shall
strike in among the mountains, and then leave
to the natural development of events the determining
of my westward journey. Whichever
course it takes, my way must lie through the
frontier, and by force of necessity I must come
into contact with a life which is something other
than the monotonous daily round of work. There
will be mining regions with the chances of prospecting,
and the ranches with the wide range of
their free living, and Indian reservations to be
crossed, and many lonely mountain-trails to be
followed.</p>
<p>It was never without interest and charm, this
summer’s walk with its intervals of work, over a
thousand miles of the mid-continent. It varied
in beauty with every day’s march, and even the
dead level of the Nebraska prairies as the Indian-corn
fields grew thinner and faded completely
into boundless plains of sage-brush, where the
alkali lay white on the glittering soil, and the
bleaching skeletons of cattle joined their mute
appeal to the cloudless sky for water to quench
a burning thirst—even here was an attraction
and an interest of its own.</p>
<p>Days ago I caught sight of the mountains rising
from out the level plain, and, through the
haze of distance and above the mists which
shrouded their gaunt sides, I saw their “silent
pinnacles of aged snow” appearing clear against
the blue of high heaven. Now, as I have drawn
nearer in this marvellous air, a hundred miles
of the range stand out in glorious vividness of
color and of every detail of configuration, and
my heart leaps again to the joy of their companionship,
and I realize with a tingling of blood
that the best of the journey, in any sense of adventure,
lies before me in the life which they
hold upon their slopes and fertile valleys, and in
the gloomy depths of their vast cañons.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII<br/><br/> <small>FROM DENVER TO THE PACIFIC</small></h2></div>
<p class="location">
Phœnix, Arizona,</p>
<p class="date">
January 3, 1893.</p>
<p>Journeying by no pre-arranged plan, but directing
my course according to the promptings
of chance circumstances, I have wandered far
from a direct westward line from Denver to the
sea, but I have come by a way that has furnished
in experience all that I could have hoped.</p>
<p>The very first step from Denver carried me out
of a due westward course. In the vague, ill-defined
manner of a tenderfoot, I knew that Cripple
Creek was a relatively new mining camp, and
that it lay somewhere beyond Pike’s Peak, and
I light-heartedly dreamed that, being a new
camp, it was just the place for a new-comer; so,
late in September, I set out from Denver with
Cripple Creek in view.</p>
<p>For seventy miles or more I went south, the
earlier part of the walk leading me through the
sandy tract which begins abruptly at the very
edge of the fresh green lawns that mark the end
of irrigation in the city. The road which first I
followed gradually faded out on the open plain.
Then I cut diagonally across country in the direction
of the foot-hills.</p>
<p>Near to the city as it was this bit of country,
after weeks of drought, was like a veritable
desert. Underfoot was the hot alkali dust, where
grew the short plain-grass that lay whitened in
tufts of crisping curls, as though dead beyond all
reviving. Thick on every side was a growth of
stunted cactus, well in keeping with the character
of the plain, while the deeper green of the long,
sharp Spanish needles was a sad mockery of fertility.
Along occasional ravines, washed deep
by sudden, rain-fed streams whose beds now lay
stony and parched and baked under the hot sun,
were here and there clusters of scrub-oaks, small
in growth but with their wiry branches spreading
a luxuriance of small oval leaves which supplied
the welcome of a shadow in a desert land. At
intervals among the dry, tufted grass small sand-heaps
appeared, and above them the heads of
prairie dogs, piping shrill warning of suspicious
approach, or darting in swift flight from one burrow
to another.</p>
<p>For some miles I walked through such a region,
growing momentarily thirstier as the sun
beat down upon me and I inhaled the alkali with
the sensation of having eaten soap. The only
sign of habitation that I saw was a shanty, a mere
shell of boards tacked upon a frame and standing
ten feet square, perhaps, and seven feet high.
The hill on which it stood sloped to a deep ravine,
and past the shanty door wound a smaller water-course,
where a line of scrub-oaks grew, suggesting
the presence of a spring. But the bed was
dry and yawned in thirsty cracks, and no source
of water could I find, although the shanty was
plainly inhabited; for the door was heavily padlocked,
and a half-starved dog, with a broken leg,
limped from his kennel among some old soap-boxes
and barked a feeble protest against my
approach, and a few fowls were squatting
in the dust in the shade of the scrub-oaks, or
scratching for food in the dry grass near the
shanty.</p>
<p>Two or three miles farther on I came out upon
a highway, which follows the general direction
of the Santa Fé and the Rio Grande railways, as
they parallel each other to the south. Here was
a very different tale to tell. There were many
ranches along the route with abundant supplies
of water from artesian wells, apparently, whose
streams were playing ceaselessly over gardens and
at the roots of thrifty fruit-trees. I passed
through a number of typical Western villages
on the march, and once through an encampment
of a regiment of regulars, whose officers were at
mess and many of the men lying at full length
on the ground with their legs protruding from
under the slight shelter tents, while foraging expeditions
could be seen bargaining among their
out-houses with the neighboring ranchmen, with
all the womenkind and children in interested attendance.</p>
<p>The road was gradually drawing nearer to the
foot-hills. Instead of a hundred miles of unbroken
mountain-range, from Long’s to Pike’s
Peak, that seemed to rise abruptly from the plain
only an hour’s walk away, I began to be aware
of the magnificent distances so strangely disguised
in that clear, rarefied air, and to appreciate
altitudes by comparison with lesser heights. The
view lost in extent, only to gain in the grander
outlines of splendid detail. And with the nearer
view there grew clear the marvellous coloring in
the exposed strata and the fantastic shapes which
mark the play of erosion among the rocks. There
were deep saffrons and reds of every hue, from
a delicate flush to crimson; there were browns
and grays without number, and a soft cream color
deepening to yellow, and now and then a jut of
rock that in certain lights appeared milk-white.
To boundless variety in color was added a weird
charm of form with which the imagination could
play endlessly. Sitting a rugged bowlder with
the dainty poise of an egg upon a conjurer’s finger
would appear a round-bellied Hindu god in
solid stone, and near him, in exquisitely delicate
tracery, a flying buttress or the tapering spire of
a cathedral, while crowning some sheer height
in all the glory of gorgeous color would rise the
grim towers and battlements of a mediæval fortress.</p>
<p>It was after nightfall on Saturday evening
when I entered Colorado Springs. With the aid
of the electric lights I soon gathered an impression
of a considerable town of large hotels and
wide, regular thoroughfares, with the squares
built up, many of them, in detached villas, after
the manner of Eastern summer-resorts by the sea.
In the course of a walk about the town I came
upon an empty prairie schooner, which stood in
a cluster of trees on the outskirts of an open
square, and creeping under the sheltering canopy
I slept there for the night.</p>
<p>The Sunday which followed I remember chiefly
for its glorious sunshine and the view which
I had in the morning of Pike’s Peak. Its summit
seemed to leap into the sky as it rose stark
and bald above the timber-line, and yet there was
infinite repose in its splendid height, standing out
clear and majestic in the full rays of the morning
sun. I remember, too, a service in a well-filled
church, and an odd reminder in its worshippers
of the Eastern seaboard, and the exciting expectancy
of chance sight of some familiar face,
and, finally, the figure of a girl, who, entering
after the service had begun, slipped noiselessly
into a seat at my side in a pew near the door. A
wonderful vision she was of what men mean when
they speak feelingly out here of “God’s country,”
for you no sooner saw her than there flashed
into sight the long vista of the avenue as it heaves
to the lift of Murray Hill. You could see her
there—and can see her superior nowhere under
heaven—with the light streaming in red, level
rays through the side streets on a late afternoon
in the cold, crisp air of autumn, with the tan of
a summer on the New England coast upon her,
and her exquisite figure instinct with the vitality
which comes of yachting and hard riding, her
frock and jacket fitting her like a glove, and her
clear, frank eyes looking you straight between
your own and making you feel in her presence
what a clean, wholesome, manly thing is life!
She little dreamed, as she cordially shared her
prayer-book with me, how deeply indebted to her
I was for being so fine a type of the finest and
handsomest women in the world, and how much
I owed her for so fair a vision before I launched
into the mining regions of the frontier.</p>
<p>Monday dawned as bright as Sunday had been,
and by eight o’clock I reached Manitou and was
ready to begin the ascent of Pike’s Peak. There
was a wide choice of route, for there was a road,
and a well-beaten trail, and the bed of the cog
railway. I took to the railway as the most unmistakable
and very likely the directest course.</p>
<p>With infinite engineering skill the first ascent
of the cog-road is cut as a ledge along the side of
a deep gorge or cañon, down which rushes a
mountain stream of considerable volume. Following
the great turns of the cañon the road ascends
in the shadow of huge rocks, that tower
straight above it or slope in a more gradual rise,
furnishing place for the cabin of a miner or of
some lover of camp life. The mountain-sides are
dark with evergreen, which seems to grow deep-rooted
in the rock, clinging at times to a bare,
protruding ledge with naked roots thrust deep
into crevices where soil and moisture are found.
The quaking aspen shares this bare subsistence
with the pine, and, green with the rich green of
late summer at the mountain-base, it marked all
the stages of the autumn in the ascent, until at
the timber-line I found its leaves turned yellow
and fast falling to the ground.</p>
<p>About two miles below Windy Point I had
the good luck to overtake a miner, who had been
spending Sunday with his family near Colorado
Springs and was now on his way back to work in
Cripple Creek. He was not at all encouraging
as to the prospect of my finding work in the camp,
but before we parted at Windy Point he gave me
careful directions about the way, and I began to
feel, in his calling me “partner” and in his talk
of “claims” and “gulches” and “blazed trails,”
my first intimation of nearing the mining regions
of the Rockies.</p>
<p>We separated where the cog-road sweeps
around the southern side of the mountain, only
because I was bent on reaching the summit before
going on to Cripple Creek. All the difficulty of
the ascent I found concentrated in the last hour
of climbing. It no longer was a matter of steady
uphill work, but a succession of short spurts
wherein one breathed more by accident than design.
You were not tired in the least, but, at an
altitude of some 14,000 feet, your breath failed
completely in an upward walk of fifty yards, and
you were obliged to stand still, panting until respiration
became normal again.</p>
<p>Exactly at twelve o’clock I reached the summit,
where I found a piercing cold wind blowing
and small drifts of snow lying in crevices among
the rocks on the northern slope; in an air as clear
as crystal my eye swept boundless mountain-ranges
to the north and west and south and a
boundless plain below, where, at the foot of the
mountain, lay Colorado Springs, a few, dim
squares formed by the intersection of faint parallel
lines at right angles to one another. Above
the rushing of the wind among the grim, naked
crags which form the summit, a wind, which at
that solemn height suggests the sweep of awful
interstellar spaces, the only sound I heard was
the voice of an attendant in a stone building near
by as he sang, again and again, the chorus of
“Ta, ra, ra, ra, boom, de ay!”</p>
<p>I remained at the summit as long as I dared,
held by the fascination of the view; then I returned
to Windy Point and went down the south
face of the mountain and across a beautiful grass-grown
level to the brink of another descent,
where, according to my miner friend of the morning,
I should find a blazed trail. I found instead
the sheer side of a cañon. I followed the brink
of the precipice for some distance, and coming
at last upon a less abrupt point, I plunged down
and made my way over shelving rock and fallen
trees until I eventually chanced upon the trail.
This I followed to the deep bed of the cañon,
where I saw some claims staked out and lost my
way in a tangle of cattle trails. It was growing
dark, and there was no sign of the journey’s end,
but I knew the general direction of Cripple
Creek, and the moon was at its first quarter.</p>
<p>Even the cattle trails failed at last, and in the
dark forest I was soon lunging on over bowlders
and rotting trees and the <i>débris</i> of a mountain
wood in the direction of the camp, hoping, meanwhile,
that I should not be obliged to spend the
night in the open, for at that altitude in late September
it was turning “wondrous cold.”</p>
<p>Down one ridge and up another I forged ahead
through the tangled undergrowth of the forest,
and at last, from the top of a rock which cleared
the trees about it, I caught the glimmer of a light
through the window of a cabin a mile or two
away.</p>
<p>It was an ore-crushing camp I found; I was
made most cordially welcome, and given a bed
on a pile of blankets in a tent where slept the
half dozen men of the crew. They were a hearty,
healthy lot of young farmers to all appearances,
and I gathered that they had come up from Kansas
at the time of the “boom” at Cripple Creek.</p>
<p>A walk of only four or five miles carried me
into the camp after breakfast next morning. The
first view that I had of it was very striking, I
thought, as I looked down upon it from a sudden
turn in the road. The settlement lay in the southeastern
bend of a basin whose bottom was as flat
as the prairie and well turfed. The hills rose
quite bare for some distance about it, and their
sides looked oddly, as though heavy artillery had
been playing upon them, for they were peppered
with holes made by prospectors, with loose earth
and stones lying about them.</p>
<p>Straggling lines of wooden buildings followed
roughly the rude course of a long, dusty street,
which ran southward to the mouth of a gulch and
then turned abruptly west until it lost itself on
the level. Some of these buildings were log-cabins,
of much solidity, and others were trim,
substantial frame houses, neatly painted; but for
the most part they were crude, unpainted shanties,
and there were many tents dotting the hillsides,
and a few lines of light structures which
marked the outlines of prospective streets branching
from the main thoroughfare.</p>
<p>The camp itself wore an air of desertion, which
was only confirmed when I entered it. There
were few persons in the streets, and some of the
houses were abandoned. The picture formed a
very welcome contrast when I saw a school-mistress
step to the door of a long log-cabin, with
grass growing thick on its roof, and ring a bell
to summon a troop of little children, who came
running and shouting from unexpected quarters,
dispelling at once the loneliness and quiet of the
place.</p>
<p>It was but nine in the morning, and I had the
full day in which to look for work. There were
very few mines in actual operation in the neighborhood,
I found, but I visited all of them, asking
for any form of unskilled labor.</p>
<p>I was struck at once with the wide difference
in bearing out here, as compared with the East
and Middle West, on the part of employers toward
workingmen. It did not take long to discover
that there were scores, possibly hundreds,
about the camp who were out of work, and yet
the manner of men to whom I applied for employment
was most uniformly courteous, and
courteous in the best possible way. Invariably I
found myself treated as a fellow-man, and that
was a wonderful salve to one’s self-respect.
There was no effort at politeness, but simply an
instinctive recognition of fellowship.</p>
<p>“Why, no, I ain’t got nothing that I can give
you to do now, partner,” a boss would say. “You
see it’s like this——,” and then would follow a
friendly talk on the general situation, as one man
might naturally explain a case to another.</p>
<p>It was all easily intelligible. The camp had
enjoyed its “boom” during the last autumn and
winter, but especially through the spring. There
had been the usual rush of fortune-seekers, with
an uncommon preponderance, however, of farmers
from Kansas and Nebraska. Some silver had
been found, but much more gold-bearing quartz
and a little placer deposit. Evidently Cripple
Creek is to become a gold-producing centre, but
the ore discovered so far is of rather a low grade.
Very little of it can be worked at a profit so long
as it must meet the great cost of transportation
by mule train to the railway at Cañon City, more
than thirty miles away. There are two railways
now making for the camp; so soon as they have
entered the region and reduced greatly the present
cost of transportation and other costs attached
to mining there, many claims will rise instantly
to the position of paying properties which cannot
now be worked to any profit whatever. The
miners were all sanguine of rich results when
once this period of waiting has been tided over.</p>
<p>But in the meantime it was “hard scrapping”
for a living. There were golden prospects, but
very little immediate work, and the best of prospects
makes but an indifferent diet. After a long
and tiring round of mines, I went at last, very
hungry, in the direction of an ore-crushing outfit,
which stood in the bottom of the basin near the
camp. Nothing in the way of work was to be had
there, but I was fortunate enough to see an old
prospector test some placer diggings, deftly washing
out a panful of soil, and exhibit the few tiny
specks of gold deposit at the last.</p>
<p>Turning back to the camp I began a round
of the lodging- and eating-houses and shops, in
the hope that some opening might be found. But
there was as little demand for help there as I had
found about the mines, with the exception of
one cheap chop-house, where a notice was exposed
advertising for a dishwasher. I applied
for the place with high hope of getting it, but
the buxom, stolid woman who was in charge, met
every advance on my part with an unvarying
“No” and with nothing more, and, worsted at
last, I was obliged to withdraw.</p>
<p>It was by mere accident that I drifted in the
evening to Squaw’s Gulch, and fell in there with
an old prospector who was working out the assessment
on his claim, and who offered me food
and shelter in his cabin and a certain share in the
mine if I would help at the work.</p>
<p>When, finally, I left Cripple Creek, Créede
was my next objective point. Down the mountain
road in the direction of Cañon City I went,
but I did not get so far as that on the first day’s
march, for I was late in leaving Cripple Creek
and darkness overtook me when some fifteen
miles of the way yet remained. For some time
I had been following an excellent road which
wound through a charming valley in its easy descent
to the plain. The valley narrowed presently,
leaving but a few hundred yards between
the steep sides of mountains, which hemmed it in.
A stream was flowing swiftly along its rocky bed,
and the evening winds were blowing with the
sound of a low murmur among the pines as I
pressed on in the darkness through the ankle-deep
dust of the road.</p>
<p>It was not a light that first attracted me, but
the black bulk of a cabin that seemed to rise
suddenly from the ground on my right. Soon
I saw that it was occupied, and, going near, I
found a side door wide open, with lamplight
streaming from it into the night. For a moment
I stood unnoticed in the doorway, and
could see at a glance the heavy wooden table
and the chairs and the large, old-fashioned cooking-stove,
and the prints tacked to the walls, and
the cooking utensils hanging behind the stove,
which made up the furniture. The floor was of
well-planed boards, which had been scrubbed
white, and the whole room partook of the atmosphere
of cool, wholesome cleanliness, characteristic
of the best New England kitchens. And
the figure that stood ironing at the table in the
centre of the room was in perfect keeping with
her surroundings. A tall woman, evidently past
fifty, of strong, muscular frame, and with a face
of high intelligence, wearing in repose an expression
of sweetness and of lady-like serenity,
which gives to the wrinkled faces of some women
so high-bred and distinctive a grace.</p>
<p>I knocked on the open door, and she looked
up in no wise disturbed at sight of a stranger
there. I explained my purpose and asked
whether there was anything that I could do in
payment of shelter and a breakfast. She drew
out a chair from the wall and invited me to be
seated, saying that we should consider that matter
in the morning. For some time I sat talking
with her, and while she ironed she conversed in
an easy, natural manner, bred of the free life out
here, which has in it all the charm of the directness
and simplicity of a true woman of the
world.</p>
<p>Presently she invited me to meet her husband,
and, leading the way, she took me to an inner
room, where, in a rocking-chair before a wood
fire on a large, open hearth, sat a man of about
her own age. He looked his character perfectly,
for he was a hard-handed frontiersman of rugged,
sinewy frame, with hair and beard unkempt, apparently,
but you saw at once that he was faultlessly
clean, as was the beautifully whitewashed
room in which he sat, with its muslin ceiling sagging
here and there. He did not rise to meet us,
only turned a little in his chair and allowed his
paper to rest on his knees as, for a moment, he
fixed upon me his dark eyes full of the unfathomable
mystery and sadness of life. I marked in
him at once the same well-bred repose and self-possession
which I had noticed in his wife.</p>
<p>We talked at first of indifferent matters until
I, keen with interest in the shelves of books which
I saw about the walls, and other shelves on which
fragments of many kinds of rock were lying in
order and all labelled, ventured an inquiry as to
whether he was interested in geology.</p>
<p>With shame do I confess that there was in my
witless head at the moment a patronizing, supercilious
curiosity at the fact that the rough old
backwoodsman who sat before me in his shirt-sleeves
should have surrounded himself with objects
about which he could know so little. I got
it full between the eyes.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he said quietly, in answer to my inquiry,
“I have been a good deal interested in the
science for the last twenty-five years, for my
ranch turned out to be remarkably rich in paleontological
remains and in geological material,
particularly of the cretaceous period.”</p>
<p>And then with natural straightforward ease he
began to go into details, describing to me his first
chance discoveries on the ranch when, soon after
the civil war, he had moved out from New England
and pre-empted a homestead here. It was
a fascinating narrative most modestly told, of one
discovery leading to another, of interest awakened
in an unknown field, of a book secured here
and there, of a widening intellectual horizon, and
of an awakening to undreamed-of worlds of infinite
interest and wonder, of communication
with men of science, of personal acquaintance
with some of them, and finally of a recent visit
to a great Eastern university where the best of
his specimens are all mounted in the Geological
Museum. Now and then he would reach down
a fragment of rock bearing the impress of some
paleontologic form and would illustrate in concrete
detail. In a single sentence he would be
far beyond my shallow depth of meagre, book-learned
science, but he generously paid me the
compliment of taking for granted that I knew,
and he could hardly have had a more interested
listener.</p>
<p>In the morning he was driving to Cañon City
and he invited me to go with him. On the way
he talked of science, geology this time, and he
amply illustrated what he said by means of the
vast exposed strata which rose tier on tier in the
sheer sides of the cañon through which we drove
to the plain.</p>
<p>From Cañon City I crossed the Arkansas and
struck up into the mountains in the direction of
Green Mountain Valley. The weather had favored
me marvellously. Not since I had left my
job as a navvy at Buda on the Union Pacific Railway
had I been hampered by a drop of rain.
Down through Colorado and among the mountains
so far, I had enjoyed an unbroken succession
of most delightful autumn days. But the
clouds began to gather now as I made my way
through Green Mountain Valley. I well remember
the cold, threatening morning of October
18th, when I walked through the all but deserted
mining camp of Silver Cliff. That night I spent
with a ranchman in the heart of the rich valley;
when I set out in the morning snow had begun to
fall, and I realized, with some concern, that I
still had a considerable range to cross and several
days’ march to the mining camp of Créede.</p>
<p>I did not get very far on that memorable 19th.
For an hour or two I had no difficulty in keeping
the road, but the snow had thickened to a blinding
storm by then, and the wind was fast rising
to a gale. Anything like that snow-fall I have
never seen. A whole landscape was blotted out
as in a moment, and the road which just now
was a clearly defined way through the valley became
almost instantly indistinguishable in the
general sweep of flaky whiteness, over which
fresh snow was falling so fast that you could not
see ten yards ahead.</p>
<p>I found out afterward that I had been very
near to losing my way on a plain where I might
have wandered in endless circles, for the falling
snow instantly covered one’s tracks and left no
trace of the way one had come. As it was, seeing
that it was impossible to make headway in
such a storm, I struck out for shelter, and before
I realized my actual danger I ran up against a
ranchman’s cabin.</p>
<p>It was a very small affair, with a lean-to for
a kitchen, but a dark little German woman with
a soft musical voice, who opened the door, bade
me a most cordial welcome; and as she placed a
chair for me before the fire, she assured me, again
and again, of the anxiety that she should feel if
one of her boys were caught out in such a storm,
and of her gratitude to anyone who might shelter
him. I began to understand that I was coming
in for a good deal of vicarious attention, for she
took my wet coat and boots to dry them in the
kitchen and insisted upon my drinking some hot
tea.</p>
<p>It was a very cosy nest into which I had fallen.
The ranchman himself was a mild-mannered
German, with a blonde beard and dreamy eyes,
and an air of abstraction, who looked up to his
wife in all things, for she was vastly his superior.
Two boys were at home, magnificent young fellows
of about fifteen or sixteen, handsome, clear-eyed,
ruddy-faced lads, with the carriage of men
who are most at ease in the saddle. And visiting
her prospective in-law relations, was the fiancée
of the oldest son, who is a merchant, I think, in
West Cliff. It was worth far more than all the
risks of the storm to see her. She was a Swedish
girl in the very bloom of youth, and her light
hair had in it the living fire of red gold. It was
brushed straight back and done up behind her
head in a great mass of interweaving coils in
which the light played superbly. Some shorter
hairs had worked loose, and these fell in almost
invisible curling threads of gold about her white
forehead. Her cheeks were of translucent pink,
and her rich red lips were as delicately formed
as in the Psyche of Praxiteles.</p>
<p>The child was perfectly unaware of her beauty.
In her wide, blue eyes there was not a suggestion
of self-consciousness. And the family about her
seemed not to consider it either; perhaps they all
regarded it, as the poor instinctively accept much
in life, as belonging to the natural order and not
to be counted in an individual sense.</p>
<p>We had a jolly time that day playing games
and telling stories far into the evening. It was
perfectly clear next morning, with a warm sun
fast melting the deep snow. I could not venture
on, however, for the way was too obstructed, and
in another day spent in the cabin I got on quite
intimate terms with the family, especially with
the ranchman’s wife, who told me much of their
life and many of her troubles. They were very
serious, though her life was not without its compensations.
It was pitiful to see the care-lines
deepen in her sensitive face and an infinite perplexity
cloud her eyes as she talked to me of her
sorrows.</p>
<p>“My man is a good husband,” she would say,
“but he’s not a good farmer. I don’t know
what’s to become of us. He gets deeper and
deeper into debt. Sometimes he works hard and
manages well and I think that we are going to
get on; and then in the middle of it the prospecting
fever takes him, and he leaves everything
and goes off into the mountains and spends every
cent that he can raise, looking for silver.</p>
<p>“You see a fortune-teller told him once that
he’d ‘find his fortune in stone,’ and ever since
then he’s been crazy to prospect and he’s squandered
everything off there in the mountains.
The boys have to work too hard and they don’t
get the proper schooling, and I don’t know what’s
to become of us.</p>
<p>“But there’s my son John that keeps store in
West Cliff”—and it was beautiful to see her face
light up—“no woman ever had a better son than
him. He’s been like a father to the family. I
don’t know what we’d ever have done without
him, for he’s been the greatest help to us in all
our troubles.”</p>
<p>They urged me to stay longer on Friday morning,
but the day was perfectly clear and patches
of dry ground had begun to appear through the
snow, and so I set out early, hoping to cover before
night most of the distance to the entrance
of Musa Pass, which leads from Green Mountain
Valley over the Sangre De Cristo Range to the
San Luis country.</p>
<p>I accomplished it comfortably, and early on
the next morning made my way into the pass.
The snow lay deep about the entrance, and it
deepened as I climbed the range, but a party of
prospectors had just come over the trail as I
started in, and it was a simple matter to walk in
the path which their burros had made through
the snow. The prospectors did me another unconscious
service, for when I met them two of
the five men were suffering keenly from snow
blindness, and, taking warning, I tore a strip from
a coarse cotton handkerchief and bound it around
my eyes, in a way that interfered very little with
vision and yet acted as an adequate protection
from the blinding glare of the sunlight on the
snow.</p>
<p>That night I reached a Mormon’s ranch well
in the San Luis Valley. It was a matter of easy
marching after that, for the snow was all gone
in a day or two and I had only to walk by way
of Alamosa and Monte Vista and Del Norte to
the Wagon Wheel Gap region and so up to
Créede.</p>
<p>I was much disappointed there in not finding
work in the mines. Numbers of them were in
operation, and there were large gangs of men
employed, but there were plenty of experienced
hands about, and nothing whatever in the mines
for a raw tenderfoot to do. Still I had no difficulty,
for at the very first asking I got work with
a gang which was cutting a new road down Bachelor
Mountain from the New York Chance Mine
to Créede. And so, while not a member of a
mining crew, I was a member of one which contained
many miners, and I lived in the camp on
Bachelor Mountain with scores of the men from
the New York Chance and the Amethyst Mines.
I fell in eventually with a group of truest Bohemians,
a mine superintendent of the best type, and
a magnificent chap who was an engineer and surveyor
and whom I liked best of all, and a young
Harvard-bred barrister who was on the high road
to being the District Attorney, and a newspaper
editor. I cannot now recall how I came to be one
of their number, it was done so quickly and naturally;
but I was suddenly aware that I had been
accepted as such, and all that belonged to my
new-found friends was mine, and the engineer
and barrister and I were sleeping three in a bed.</p>
<p>My pen rebels against the necessity which
spurs it to so swift a pace over details where it
longs to linger. For those were hard but glorious
days on the mountain; there were always new
and strange men to be known among the crews,
men whose emancipation from conventionality
was complete, and whose personalities possessed
a marvellous richness. The railway and statutory
laws and honest women and the ten commandments
were there, so that the camp “enjoyed
the blessings of civilization,” and was widely
different from the camps of earlier days—much
to the regret of the older men who knew
the earlier days and many of the younger ones
who would have liked to know them.</p>
<p>Already there were apparent the phases of human
nature which seem by a curious contradiction
to reveal themselves under the very protection
of the vast improvement wrought by the
reign of “law and order.” But the freer, braver
elements of human nature were present, too, and
were not always beneath the surface of convention.
How it stirred one’s better blood to see
those free, strong, natural men face one another
in the common intercourse of life and meet the
exigencies of their work! And under what spells
have I sat looking in the eye some tawny-bearded
giant of a prospector as he told of thirty years or
more among the mountains and in the mining
camps, of hardships endured and difficulties overcome
and death and danger faced, and of the rare
times when he “struck it rich,” and then the
lordly, vicious days when he “blew it in!” How
much may have been concocted for the ready ear
of a tenderfoot I did not know; I only knew that
it reeked with the red, raw blood of life, and
whether true or false it thrust roots deep into
grim and stanch realities.</p>
<p>Hamilton will answer as the name of the engineer.
It was in his office that the little coterie
which I have mentioned would gather in the
evenings. There were rough chairs of most comfortable
shape, and there was always a roaring fire
in the stove, for the nights were bitter cold, and
a number of Hamilton’s drawings in crayons and
blue prints were tacked upon the walls, for besides
being a skilful engineer he was a splendid
draughtsman. His surveying instruments stood
together in a corner, and the ample tables were
covered with unfinished drawings and with the
tools of his art.</p>
<p>Never was more diverting talk than that which
ranged around the room where we sat in easy attitudes,
with feet cocked up and chairs tilted, in
the soft light of Hamilton’s well-shaded lamps
and in a deepening density of tobacco-smoke.
And the talk was catholic in its range, for the
editor was an authority on local and state and
national politics, and, as a recent convert to “free
silver,” he could argue its cause with all the fervor
of a novice. The barrister was a man of liberal
education who had taught the classics and
loved them, and who could, with real enthusiasm,
lead the talk back from all things modern to</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">“—those old days which poets say were golden.”</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>And the mine superintendent, for all his shrewd
and efficient practicality—for he was counted
the best superintendent in the camp who, in the
face of the declining price of silver and of other
difficulties as great, had accomplished marvels
with his mine—was profoundly interested in Biblical
criticism; he could speak with the knowledge
of a theologian on the authorship of the
Pentateuch and the question of the inerrancy of
Scripture and the authenticity and genuineness
of the synoptic Gospels.</p>
<p>But I liked most of all to hear Hamilton as he
would sit left ankle crossing his right knee, his
right foot tip-toe on the floor balancing his tilted
chair, and his guitar resting on his lap. Over the
strings his great strong fingers would pass, striking
soft harmonies, and his handsome, manly face
would respond to the free play of emotion as in
his rich voice and with unconscious vividness of
camp speech he would talk of life and of its
revelations to him throughout his varied history.</p>
<p>“I have had every experience but that of
death,” he said very quietly to me one day, when
we had come to know each other well. As I
watched him and saw his innate, thoughtful
courtesy to women, and his strong, tender-hearted
love of little children, and the frankness of his
life, and his useful efficiency as a man, and his
devotion to the truth, and his utter hatred of all
cowardice and hypocrisy, I began to understand
what royal possibilities there are in the men who
prove best fitted to survive in the struggle of the
frontier.</p>
<p>It was Hamilton who introduced me to Price.
Price shall stand for the name of a prospector of
a sort that is becoming rare at the West. The son
of an officer in an Irish regiment, he was brought
to America in his early boyhood and was reared
on the Pacific coast. But the strictures of high
civilization were too much for him, and long before
he was out of his teens he was living the
rough, fortuitous life of the mining camps and
cattle tracts of the Southwest. Price is about
forty now, and his range of occupation includes
almost everything from a “burro puncher” to a
member of the Legislature of Arizona. He seems
to know, moreover, every trail in the two Territories
and every soul along them, to the very
Indians and “greasers” of the youngest generation,
and he is just the sort who is looked upon
out here as likely at any time “to strike it rich.”
So far, however, he has not struck it rich; very
much the reverse. In the spring he punched his
burros up from Phœnix to the Wagon Wheel
Gap region and prospected there all summer, but
with no luck. When Hamilton introduced me
to him, his burros were in hock and so were his
blankets and his very cooking utensils and even
his “gun,” and he was longing for the means to
redeem them that he might get out of the bitter
cold of the mountains and down into the balmy
Indian summer of the Salt River Valley which
was “God’s country” to him.</p>
<p>No more ideal opportunity could have presented
itself to me. It was late in November and the
problem of going alone westward through the
thinly settled country was a difficult one, and
here, as by miracle, was its perfect solution.
Moreover, as it proved, Price was a good fellow
with a truly Irish sense of humor and a perfect
adaptability born of long habit. And withal he
was patient with my inexperience. He taught
me the “diamond hitch,” and how to make a fire
from next to nothing, and tea out of water that
was thick and green on the surface, how to cook
“spuds” and fry bacon and make gravy and
bake bread in a saucepan. He tried to make a
burro puncher of me, but his patience gave out
there, and he declared that I’d “never be worth
my salt at that until I learned to swear.” Then
suiting the action to the word he would take a
hand himself at this point, and fairly dancing
in a frenzy of rage, would rip the air with uncouth,
fluent curses, and the stubborn beasts
would meekly take the ford or cease their aimless
wandering and quicken their pace along the trail.</p>
<p>I had been working for two dollars and a half
a day, the highest wages I had ever received; I
soon got Price’s animals and gun and camping
outfit from the pawn-shop, and, on the morning
of November 20th, we set out together to cross
some five or six hundred miles of the frontier
from Créede to central Arizona.</p>
<p>Ours was rather a typical prospecting outfit, I
thought, for Price had an old, gaunt Indian pony
which he rode, and our blankets and cooking
utensils and provisions were made fast to packing
saddles on the backs of two burros, one of
which was called California and the other,
Beecher. I was free to ride, when I chose,
another burro, an uncommonly big one, which
Price called Sacramento; but I generally preferred
to walk, for the pace was slow, and, besides
the three which I have named, there were
two little burros, California’s foals, and punching
five, I soon found, was best accomplished on foot.</p>
<p>We camped that night far up among the head
waters of the Rio Grande, and next day with
much difficulty we began the toilsome journey
of the Winnemonche Pass. It was hard work
crossing the “divide.” For many miles the trail
lay through nearly three feet of snow. There
was no driving the animals ahead; we were
obliged to take turns in breaking a way ourselves,
and then leading the animals through. Very
soon we were drenched with sweat and with the
snow that melted in the heat of our bodies, and
all the while we were assailed by mountain winds
which seemed to cut to the marrow in one’s bones.
But we always found a sheltered place in which
to camp, where wood and water were plenty, and
where after a good supper, we slept gloriously,
huddled close together on our bed of canvas and
gunny sacks, our blankets drawn up snugly over
our heads.</p>
<p>With what a sense of keen relief did we begin
the descent and pass swiftly into warmer regions,
where the snow became thinner and gradually
disappeared, and the sun warmed us with mild
rays, and we came upon a settler’s cabin here and
there and had speech once more with our fellow-men!</p>
<p>Price had promised me Indian summer when
once we should get so far on our way as Durango,
and most amply was his promise fulfilled, for we
passed through the town on a day when the sun
shone from clear, cloudless blue, and the horizon
was a <i>sierra</i> in sharp lines, and the twigs of distant
trees stood clean-cut against the sky, and
the withering, dusty earth reflected the glory of
the sun, and the cool, buoyant air seemed almost
vocal of a solemn ecstasy.</p>
<p>We camped that night in a wilderness region
to the south of Durango, where we could see the
smoke rising from encampments of Ute Indians,
many of whom we met on the next day’s march
with droves of fine Indian ponies, which they
were raising for the market. Our course was
southward now across the San Juan River and
through a section of the Navajo reservation in
northern New Mexico.</p>
<p>The trail led us then through a dreary desert,
where at times it was with great difficulty that
we got fodder for our burros and wood enough
to cook our meals and water enough to drink.
After days of such marching and camping, there
was immense delight in coming eventually to
some cedar grove, where living water flowed and
grass grew thick and we could build a huge campfire
at night of well-seasoned cedar boughs.</p>
<p>The only sign of habitation that we saw for
days together was an occasional trader’s post,
about which we usually found a considerable
company of Navajos. Price could speak their
language, and the young braves occasionally
passed us on the march. Now and then one
joined us in camp, shared a meal with us, and,
after a long talk with Price, rolled himself in his
blanket and slept beside our fire.</p>
<div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i443" style="max-width: 145.875em;">
<ANTIMG class="w100" src="images/i_443.jpg" alt="Three men sit on the ground around a campfire with one a Native American. It is near sunset and there are horses in the background." />
<div class="caption"><p>PRICE COULD SPEAK THEIR LANGUAGE,
AND NOW AND THEN ONE JOINED US IN CAMP.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>At last we came out upon the Santa Fé Railway,
not far from Fort Wingate, and followed
the line to Gallup, where, in a grove on the hill
above the village, we went into camp for the
night. As a matter of fact we remained there
nearly a week. Quite buried under a soft, wet
snow we awoke on the first morning to find ourselves
lying in melting slush, and the trail so obstructed
that we could not get on. Then a bitter
cold set in, and, in a region where I imagined
the whole winter like a balmy spring, the thermometer
sank to ten and twelve degrees below
zero every night until we had nearly perished
from the cold.</p>
<p>But the wave passed over us at last, and on
December 10th we set out again, really none the
worse for the touch of Arctic weather. Following
the line of the Santa Fé Railway we crossed
into Arizona, and, from a point due north of it,
we cut down to the Petrified Forest and on down
to a Mormon settlement called Woodruff on the
Little Colorado River. It was two days’ march
thence to another Mormon settlement, Heber by
name, among the Mogollon Mountains.</p>
<p>All this time Indian summer had utterly
failed us, and had been succeeded by a season of
lowering days wherein light snow-falls were frequent.
Price hated snow as he hated nothing else
in nature. It got upon his nerves and drove him
to a species of madness. Frequently in the course
of the journey from Gallup to Heber snow fell
at night. Price was usually the first to stir in
the morning. We had knowledge of a snow-fall
in the added weight upon us when we woke, and
it was something memorable to see Price throw
back the blankets and the heavy tarpaulin which
were drawn over our heads, and lift himself on
his elbow in the gray dawn, and gaze about with
fierce anger in his black eyes upon a pure, white,
flawless world, with soft snow clinging to every
twig in the still morning air, and delicate crystal
prisms beginning to form in the warmth of the
coming sun, and hear him growl, in deep disgust,</p>
<p>“This is hell!”</p>
<p>But Heber marked nearly the last stage of that
phase of our journey. We spent Sunday, the
18th December, there with an old Mormon elder
and his son; worked for them on Monday for our
keep and then renewed the march on Tuesday
morning. It was a long, hard day’s pull up the
northern side of the mountain to the “rimrock,”
in deep snow through a vast primeval forest of
spruce and pine. Then a wonderful thing happened,
for we made a sharp descent on the south
side and, in the space of a little more than a day,
reached a country where there was no snow, and
the sun shone warm, and the cotton-wood was in
full bloom along the water-courses, and the cedar
and live-oak stood green against the winter brown
of the grass-grown hills.</p>
<p>We had Indian summer once more, and the
softest, balmiest Indian summer has accompanied
us thence all the way to Phœnix. We had hardships
to endure, for the way was long and our
provisions sometimes ran out. Once we lost our
way for a time in a maze of “box cañons” and
had nothing to eat for twenty-four hours, until,
late on Christmas afternoon, we came out upon
the ranch of a Virginian settler, whom Price
knew well, and whose wife gave us a royal dinner
of “hog and hominy,” which I have heard
lightly spoken of as a dish, but which I shall always
remember as a most satisfying delicacy.</p>
<p>On we went then over the mountains to the
Tonto Basin and through the Reno Pass to the
Verde River. We were encamped there over
Sunday on January 1st in the former reservation
of the now deserted Fort McDowell, and early on
Monday morning we started for Phœnix. By
a forced march of thirty miles we entered the
city at ten o’clock the same evening and had a
huge supper in a Chinese restaurant; then, while
our animals were eating their fill of fresh alfalfa
in a corral attached to a livery-stable, we slept
deeply near by on a heap of hay, glad to have
reached the end of our six weeks’ march across
the narrowing frontier.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p class="location">
San Francisco, Cal.,</p>
<p class="date">
February 1, 1893.</p>
<p>Not the most interesting nor profitable and
certainly not the most adventurous of the many
miles which I have walked in a slow progress
across the continent has been this last stage of
the journey up through California. And yet the
remembrance of it will always have a place apart.
Work was plenty, but I made no long stops,
pressed on at the rate of thirty miles a day, impelled
by the delight of walking in so glorious an
air through the marvellous beauty of this Pacific
slope.</p>
<p>Fresh from the dusty plains I was soon in the
midst of the orange-groves heavily laden with
ripe fruit all about Colton and Riverside, where
the hills were terraced as in the Riviera and the
sky was the deep, unfathomable blue of Italy. It
was January, and the first, fresh green of the new
year was upon the fields and had touched with
infinite delicacy the rugged sides of the mountains
whose summits flashed white in places from
melting snow. The early mornings were frosty,
but mid-day warmed to a gentle glow, and the cool
of the evening came with the declining sun.</p>
<p>Many a time, on the plains or in the mountains,
in the presence of some Mexican Pueblo of adobe
huts in a strangely foreign setting of cedar-trees,
with threads of water apparently flowing up hill
along the irrigation ditches to scant fields reclaimed
from the desert, it had been difficult to
realize that one was still in America. Here again
was strongest suggestion of the foreign, in the
houses which survive from the Spanish period,
and especially the old Mission churches, where
dwells the dignity of age and one can pass completely
into the very atmosphere of Spain.</p>
<p>It was on the third day’s march, I think,
from Los Angeles that I found myself nearing
San Buenaventura. It was late in the afternoon,
and the road ahead was an easy upward slope for
several miles. Just at sunset I reached the summit.
The town of San Buenaventura lay below
me, with its long main street curving through
rows of houses of widely various kind, and the
Mission church standing on an elevation to the
left, with its stucco walls bathed in sunset light,
making a strange contrast with the modern town.
And beyond, with the sun’s red disc a half circle
on the horizon line, lay the peaceful sea, with a
tongue of living flame across it turning to black
coals the islands in its wake. In a moment the
sun was gone, the shadow of the evening was
upon the ocean, and over the town had fallen the
transfiguration light which rests after sunset in
spring-time upon Naples.</p>
<p>Three thousand miles away, and a year and a
half in point of time for me, was Long Island
Sound. I recalled the last glimpse of it as I
looked back from Greenfield Hill in the early
morning of my start, and saw it radiant in the
sunshine of a midsummer day. And here again,
after many months and many leagues of land
journey, was the sea. Θἁλαττα! Θἁλαττα! I
called aloud, for there was no one near enough
to hear.</p>
<p>It was a rare moment, worth living for, that
first unexpected glimpse of the Pacific. But
strangely enough the feeling which it bred was
no harbinger of an eager willingness to end my
long experiment. Many a time when work was
hard, and far more ardently when there was no
work and the physical conditions of life seemed
well-nigh unendurable, had I looked with longing
to a return to normal living. And yet, as I
neared my journey’s end I found possessing me a
strange indifference to the idea of return. I do
not attempt to analyze the feeling, I simply note
it as a fact; but in some degree I recognize in it
a vague unwillingness to have done with a phase
of experience which for me has opened avenues of
useful knowledge. Among them all there rises
clearest at this moment the way of added knowledge
of my country. I may have travelled it to
little purpose, but I am conscious at least of a
new-born sense of things which comes of actual
contact with the soil and with the primal struggle
for existence among men. One stands awestruck
before the vastness of our great domain and its
quick redemption from the wilderness. But most
of all it is contact with the people which breeds in
one the strongest patriotic feeling. Local conditions
and the presence of large numbers of yet
unassimilated foreign elements and rapid changes
in economic relations and native weaknesses and
vagaries are responsible for awful sores upon the
body politic, while the power of aggregated
wealth grows apace, and fierce antagonisms and
sectional differences arise. Yet beneath the troubled
surface of events one comes to know of the
great body of a nation whose unity has been purchased
and made sure by such a cost of blood and
treasure as was never poured out upon the altar of
a nation’s life before, and one sees a people intelligent,
resourceful, and hugely vital, having much
to learn and surely learning much, assimilating
foreign elements with miraculous swiftness and
growing stronger thereby, living laborious days
wherein the rewards are to thrift and energy and
enterprising skill, knowing no defeat and unacquainted
with the sense of fear, and awakening
year by year to a fuller consciousness of national
life and of the glorious mission of high destiny.
And with increasing knowledge the love of country
grows until all thought of worth in her is
merged and lost in reverence, and love of her
becomes a summons to live worthy of the name
and calling of an American.</p>
<h2>THE END.</h2>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<div class="transnote">
<p>Transcriber’s Notes:</p>
<p>A number of typographical errors have been corrected silently.</p>
<p>Archaic spellings have been retained.</p>
<p>Cover image is in the public domain.</p>
<p>Variations in spelling of hyphenated words have been normalized to
a single form when there either was a preponderance of one version or
the first version to appear was used.</p>
<p>Alt text for illustrations were written by the transcriber and are
in the public domain.</p>
<p>The snip of Greek "Θἁλαττα!" translates to "The Sea!" in English.</p>
</div>
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