<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter 7 </h2>
<p>All summer long the family toiled, and in the fall they had money enough
for Jurgis and Ona to be married according to home traditions of decency.
In the latter part of November they hired a hall, and invited all their
new acquaintances, who came and left them over a hundred dollars in debt.</p>
<p>It was a bitter and cruel experience, and it plunged them into an agony of
despair. Such a time, of all times, for them to have it, when their hearts
were made tender! Such a pitiful beginning it was for their married life;
they loved each other so, and they could not have the briefest respite! It
was a time when everything cried out to them that they ought to be happy;
when wonder burned in their hearts, and leaped into flame at the slightest
breath. They were shaken to the depths of them, with the awe of love
realized—and was it so very weak of them that they cried out for a
little peace? They had opened their hearts, like flowers to the
springtime, and the merciless winter had fallen upon them. They wondered
if ever any love that had blossomed in the world had been so crushed and
trampled!</p>
<p>Over them, relentless and savage, there cracked the lash of want; the
morning after the wedding it sought them as they slept, and drove them out
before daybreak to work. Ona was scarcely able to stand with exhaustion;
but if she were to lose her place they would be ruined, and she would
surely lose it if she were not on time that day. They all had to go, even
little Stanislovas, who was ill from overindulgence in sausages and
sarsaparilla. All that day he stood at his lard machine, rocking
unsteadily, his eyes closing in spite of him; and he all but lost his
place even so, for the foreman booted him twice to waken him.</p>
<p>It was fully a week before they were all normal again, and meantime, with
whining children and cross adults, the house was not a pleasant place to
live in. Jurgis lost his temper very little, however, all things
considered. It was because of Ona; the least glance at her was always
enough to make him control himself. She was so sensitive—she was not
fitted for such a life as this; and a hundred times a day, when he thought
of her, he would clench his hands and fling himself again at the task
before him. She was too good for him, he told himself, and he was afraid,
because she was his. So long he had hungered to possess her, but now that
the time had come he knew that he had not earned the right; that she
trusted him so was all her own simple goodness, and no virtue of his. But
he was resolved that she should never find this out, and so was always on
the watch to see that he did not betray any of his ugly self; he would
take care even in little matters, such as his manners, and his habit of
swearing when things went wrong. The tears came so easily into Ona's eyes,
and she would look at him so appealingly—it kept Jurgis quite busy
making resolutions, in addition to all the other things he had on his
mind. It was true that more things were going on at this time in the mind
of Jurgis than ever had in all his life before.</p>
<p>He had to protect her, to do battle for her against the horror he saw
about them. He was all that she had to look to, and if he failed she would
be lost; he would wrap his arms about her, and try to hide her from the
world. He had learned the ways of things about him now. It was a war of
each against all, and the devil take the hindmost. You did not give feasts
to other people, you waited for them to give feasts to you. You went about
with your soul full of suspicion and hatred; you understood that you were
environed by hostile powers that were trying to get your money, and who
used all the virtues to bait their traps with. The store-keepers plastered
up their windows with all sorts of lies to entice you; the very fences by
the wayside, the lampposts and telegraph poles, were pasted over with
lies. The great corporation which employed you lied to you, and lied to
the whole country—from top to bottom it was nothing but one gigantic
lie.</p>
<p>So Jurgis said that he understood it; and yet it was really pitiful, for
the struggle was so unfair—some had so much the advantage! Here he
was, for instance, vowing upon his knees that he would save Ona from harm,
and only a week later she was suffering atrociously, and from the blow of
an enemy that he could not possibly have thwarted. There came a day when
the rain fell in torrents; and it being December, to be wet with it and
have to sit all day long in one of the cold cellars of Brown's was no
laughing matter. Ona was a working girl, and did not own waterproofs and
such things, and so Jurgis took her and put her on the streetcar. Now it
chanced that this car line was owned by gentlemen who were trying to make
money. And the city having passed an ordinance requiring them to give
transfers, they had fallen into a rage; and first they had made a rule
that transfers could be had only when the fare was paid; and later,
growing still uglier, they had made another—that the passenger must
ask for the transfer, the conductor was not allowed to offer it. Now Ona
had been told that she was to get a transfer; but it was not her way to
speak up, and so she merely waited, following the conductor about with her
eyes, wondering when he would think of her. When at last the time came for
her to get out, she asked for the transfer, and was refused. Not knowing
what to make of this, she began to argue with the conductor, in a language
of which he did not understand a word. After warning her several times, he
pulled the bell and the car went on—at which Ona burst into tears.
At the next corner she got out, of course; and as she had no more money,
she had to walk the rest of the way to the yards in the pouring rain. And
so all day long she sat shivering, and came home at night with her teeth
chattering and pains in her head and back. For two weeks afterward she
suffered cruelly—and yet every day she had to drag herself to her
work. The forewoman was especially severe with Ona, because she believed
that she was obstinate on account of having been refused a holiday the day
after her wedding. Ona had an idea that her "forelady" did not like to
have her girls marry—perhaps because she was old and ugly and
unmarried herself.</p>
<p>There were many such dangers, in which the odds were all against them.
Their children were not as well as they had been at home; but how could
they know that there was no sewer to their house, and that the drainage of
fifteen years was in a cesspool under it? How could they know that the
pale-blue milk that they bought around the corner was watered, and
doctored with formaldehyde besides? When the children were not well at
home, Teta Elzbieta would gather herbs and cure them; now she was obliged
to go to the drugstore and buy extracts—and how was she to know that
they were all adulterated? How could they find out that their tea and
coffee, their sugar and flour, had been doctored; that their canned peas
had been colored with copper salts, and their fruit jams with aniline
dyes? And even if they had known it, what good would it have done them,
since there was no place within miles of them where any other sort was to
be had? The bitter winter was coming, and they had to save money to get
more clothing and bedding; but it would not matter in the least how much
they saved, they could not get anything to keep them warm. All the
clothing that was to be had in the stores was made of cotton and shoddy,
which is made by tearing old clothes to pieces and weaving the fiber
again. If they paid higher prices, they might get frills and fanciness, or
be cheated; but genuine quality they could not obtain for love nor money.
A young friend of Szedvilas', recently come from abroad, had become a
clerk in a store on Ashland Avenue, and he narrated with glee a trick that
had been played upon an unsuspecting countryman by his boss. The customer
had desired to purchase an alarm clock, and the boss had shown him two
exactly similar, telling him that the price of one was a dollar and of the
other a dollar seventy-five. Upon being asked what the difference was, the
man had wound up the first halfway and the second all the way, and showed
the customer how the latter made twice as much noise; upon which the
customer remarked that he was a sound sleeper, and had better take the
more expensive clock!</p>
<p>There is a poet who sings that</p>
<p>"Deeper their heart grows and nobler their bearing,<br/>
Whose youth in the fires of anguish hath died."<br/></p>
<p>But it was not likely that he had reference to the kind of anguish that
comes with destitution, that is so endlessly bitter and cruel, and yet so
sordid and petty, so ugly, so humiliating—unredeemed by the
slightest touch of dignity or even of pathos. It is a kind of anguish that
poets have not commonly dealt with; its very words are not admitted into
the vocabulary of poets—the details of it cannot be told in polite
society at all. How, for instance, could any one expect to excite sympathy
among lovers of good literature by telling how a family found their home
alive with vermin, and of all the suffering and inconvenience and
humiliation they were put to, and the hard-earned money they spent, in
efforts to get rid of them? After long hesitation and uncertainty they
paid twenty-five cents for a big package of insect powder—a patent
preparation which chanced to be ninety-five per cent gypsum, a harmless
earth which had cost about two cents to prepare. Of course it had not the
least effect, except upon a few roaches which had the misfortune to drink
water after eating it, and so got their inwards set in a coating of
plaster of Paris. The family, having no idea of this, and no more money to
throw away, had nothing to do but give up and submit to one more misery
for the rest of their days.</p>
<p>Then there was old Antanas. The winter came, and the place where he worked
was a dark, unheated cellar, where you could see your breath all day, and
where your fingers sometimes tried to freeze. So the old man's cough grew
every day worse, until there came a time when it hardly ever stopped, and
he had become a nuisance about the place. Then, too, a still more dreadful
thing happened to him; he worked in a place where his feet were soaked in
chemicals, and it was not long before they had eaten through his new
boots. Then sores began to break out on his feet, and grow worse and
worse. Whether it was that his blood was bad, or there had been a cut, he
could not say; but he asked the men about it, and learned that it was a
regular thing—it was the saltpeter. Every one felt it, sooner or
later, and then it was all up with him, at least for that sort of work.
The sores would never heal—in the end his toes would drop off, if he
did not quit. Yet old Antanas would not quit; he saw the suffering of his
family, and he remembered what it had cost him to get a job. So he tied up
his feet, and went on limping about and coughing, until at last he fell to
pieces, all at once and in a heap, like the One-Horse Shay. They carried
him to a dry place and laid him on the floor, and that night two of the
men helped him home. The poor old man was put to bed, and though he tried
it every morning until the end, he never could get up again. He would lie
there and cough and cough, day and night, wasting away to a mere skeleton.
There came a time when there was so little flesh on him that the bones
began to poke through—which was a horrible thing to see or even to
think of. And one night he had a choking fit, and a little river of blood
came out of his mouth. The family, wild with terror, sent for a doctor,
and paid half a dollar to be told that there was nothing to be done.
Mercifully the doctor did not say this so that the old man could hear, for
he was still clinging to the faith that tomorrow or next day he would be
better, and could go back to his job. The company had sent word to him
that they would keep it for him—or rather Jurgis had bribed one of
the men to come one Sunday afternoon and say they had. Dede Antanas
continued to believe it, while three more hemorrhages came; and then at
last one morning they found him stiff and cold. Things were not going well
with them then, and though it nearly broke Teta Elzbieta's heart, they
were forced to dispense with nearly all the decencies of a funeral; they
had only a hearse, and one hack for the women and children; and Jurgis,
who was learning things fast, spent all Sunday making a bargain for these,
and he made it in the presence of witnesses, so that when the man tried to
charge him for all sorts of incidentals, he did not have to pay. For
twenty-five years old Antanas Rudkus and his son had dwelt in the forest
together, and it was hard to part in this way; perhaps it was just as well
that Jurgis had to give all his attention to the task of having a funeral
without being bankrupted, and so had no time to indulge in memories and
grief.</p>
<p>Now the dreadful winter was come upon them. In the forests, all summer
long, the branches of the trees do battle for light, and some of them lose
and die; and then come the raging blasts, and the storms of snow and hail,
and strew the ground with these weaker branches. Just so it was in
Packingtown; the whole district braced itself for the struggle that was an
agony, and those whose time was come died off in hordes. All the year
round they had been serving as cogs in the great packing machine; and now
was the time for the renovating of it, and the replacing of damaged parts.
There came pneumonia and grippe, stalking among them, seeking for weakened
constitutions; there was the annual harvest of those whom tuberculosis had
been dragging down. There came cruel, cold, and biting winds, and
blizzards of snow, all testing relentlessly for failing muscles and
impoverished blood. Sooner or later came the day when the unfit one did
not report for work; and then, with no time lost in waiting, and no
inquiries or regrets, there was a chance for a new hand.</p>
<p>The new hands were here by the thousands. All day long the gates of the
packing houses were besieged by starving and penniless men; they came,
literally, by the thousands every single morning, fighting with each other
for a chance for life. Blizzards and cold made no difference to them, they
were always on hand; they were on hand two hours before the sun rose, an
hour before the work began. Sometimes their faces froze, sometimes their
feet and their hands; sometimes they froze all together—but still
they came, for they had no other place to go. One day Durham advertised in
the paper for two hundred men to cut ice; and all that day the homeless
and starving of the city came trudging through the snow from all over its
two hundred square miles. That night forty score of them crowded into the
station house of the stockyards district—they filled the rooms,
sleeping in each other's laps, toboggan fashion, and they piled on top of
each other in the corridors, till the police shut the doors and left some
to freeze outside. On the morrow, before daybreak, there were three
thousand at Durham's, and the police reserves had to be sent for to quell
the riot. Then Durham's bosses picked out twenty of the biggest; the "two
hundred" proved to have been a printer's error.</p>
<p>Four or five miles to the eastward lay the lake, and over this the bitter
winds came raging. Sometimes the thermometer would fall to ten or twenty
degrees below zero at night, and in the morning the streets would be piled
with snowdrifts up to the first-floor windows. The streets through which
our friends had to go to their work were all unpaved and full of deep
holes and gullies; in summer, when it rained hard, a man might have to
wade to his waist to get to his house; and now in winter it was no joke
getting through these places, before light in the morning and after dark
at night. They would wrap up in all they owned, but they could not wrap up
against exhaustion; and many a man gave out in these battles with the
snowdrifts, and lay down and fell asleep.</p>
<p>And if it was bad for the men, one may imagine how the women and children
fared. Some would ride in the cars, if the cars were running; but when you
are making only five cents an hour, as was little Stanislovas, you do not
like to spend that much to ride two miles. The children would come to the
yards with great shawls about their ears, and so tied up that you could
hardly find them—and still there would be accidents. One bitter
morning in February the little boy who worked at the lard machine with
Stanislovas came about an hour late, and screaming with pain. They
unwrapped him, and a man began vigorously rubbing his ears; and as they
were frozen stiff, it took only two or three rubs to break them short off.
As a result of this, little Stanislovas conceived a terror of the cold
that was almost a mania. Every morning, when it came time to start for the
yards, he would begin to cry and protest. Nobody knew quite how to manage
him, for threats did no good—it seemed to be something that he could
not control, and they feared sometimes that he would go into convulsions.
In the end it had to be arranged that he always went with Jurgis, and came
home with him again; and often, when the snow was deep, the man would
carry him the whole way on his shoulders. Sometimes Jurgis would be
working until late at night, and then it was pitiful, for there was no
place for the little fellow to wait, save in the doorways or in a corner
of the killing beds, and he would all but fall asleep there, and freeze to
death.</p>
<p>There was no heat upon the killing beds; the men might exactly as well
have worked out of doors all winter. For that matter, there was very
little heat anywhere in the building, except in the cooking rooms and such
places—and it was the men who worked in these who ran the most risk
of all, because whenever they had to pass to another room they had to go
through ice-cold corridors, and sometimes with nothing on above the waist
except a sleeveless undershirt. On the killing beds you were apt to be
covered with blood, and it would freeze solid; if you leaned against a
pillar, you would freeze to that, and if you put your hand upon the blade
of your knife, you would run a chance of leaving your skin on it. The men
would tie up their feet in newspapers and old sacks, and these would be
soaked in blood and frozen, and then soaked again, and so on, until by
nighttime a man would be walking on great lumps the size of the feet of an
elephant. Now and then, when the bosses were not looking, you would see
them plunging their feet and ankles into the steaming hot carcass of the
steer, or darting across the room to the hot-water jets. The cruelest
thing of all was that nearly all of them—all of those who used
knives—were unable to wear gloves, and their arms would be white
with frost and their hands would grow numb, and then of course there would
be accidents. Also the air would be full of steam, from the hot water and
the hot blood, so that you could not see five feet before you; and then,
with men rushing about at the speed they kept up on the killing beds, and
all with butcher knives, like razors, in their hands—well, it was to
be counted as a wonder that there were not more men slaughtered than
cattle.</p>
<p>And yet all this inconvenience they might have put up with, if only it had
not been for one thing—if only there had been some place where they
might eat. Jurgis had either to eat his dinner amid the stench in which he
had worked, or else to rush, as did all his companions, to any one of the
hundreds of liquor stores which stretched out their arms to him. To the
west of the yards ran Ashland Avenue, and here was an unbroken line of
saloons—"Whiskey Row," they called it; to the north was
Forty-seventh Street, where there were half a dozen to the block, and at
the angle of the two was "Whiskey Point," a space of fifteen or twenty
acres, and containing one glue factory and about two hundred saloons.</p>
<p>One might walk among these and take his choice: "Hot pea-soup and boiled
cabbage today." "Sauerkraut and hot frankfurters. Walk in." "Bean soup and
stewed lamb. Welcome." All of these things were printed in many languages,
as were also the names of the resorts, which were infinite in their
variety and appeal. There was the "Home Circle" and the "Cosey Corner";
there were "Firesides" and "Hearthstones" and "Pleasure Palaces" and
"Wonderlands" and "Dream Castles" and "Love's Delights." Whatever else
they were called, they were sure to be called "Union Headquarters," and to
hold out a welcome to workingmen; and there was always a warm stove, and a
chair near it, and some friends to laugh and talk with. There was only one
condition attached,—you must drink. If you went in not intending to
drink, you would be put out in no time, and if you were slow about going,
like as not you would get your head split open with a beer bottle in the
bargain. But all of the men understood the convention and drank; they
believed that by it they were getting something for nothing—for they
did not need to take more than one drink, and upon the strength of it they
might fill themselves up with a good hot dinner. This did not always work
out in practice, however, for there was pretty sure to be a friend who
would treat you, and then you would have to treat him. Then some one else
would come in—and, anyhow, a few drinks were good for a man who
worked hard. As he went back he did not shiver so, he had more courage for
his task; the deadly brutalizing monotony of it did not afflict him so,—he
had ideas while he worked, and took a more cheerful view of his
circumstances. On the way home, however, the shivering was apt to come on
him again; and so he would have to stop once or twice to warm up against
the cruel cold. As there were hot things to eat in this saloon too, he
might get home late to his supper, or he might not get home at all. And
then his wife might set out to look for him, and she too would feel the
cold; and perhaps she would have some of the children with her—and
so a whole family would drift into drinking, as the current of a river
drifts downstream. As if to complete the chain, the packers all paid their
men in checks, refusing all requests to pay in coin; and where in
Packingtown could a man go to have his check cashed but to a saloon, where
he could pay for the favor by spending a part of the money?</p>
<p>From all of these things Jurgis was saved because of Ona. He never would
take but the one drink at noontime; and so he got the reputation of being
a surly fellow, and was not quite welcome at the saloons, and had to drift
about from one to another. Then at night he would go straight home,
helping Ona and Stanislovas, or often putting the former on a car. And
when he got home perhaps he would have to trudge several blocks, and come
staggering back through the snowdrifts with a bag of coal upon his
shoulder. Home was not a very attractive place—at least not this
winter. They had only been able to buy one stove, and this was a small
one, and proved not big enough to warm even the kitchen in the bitterest
weather. This made it hard for Teta Elzbieta all day, and for the children
when they could not get to school. At night they would sit huddled round
this stove, while they ate their supper off their laps; and then Jurgis
and Jonas would smoke a pipe, after which they would all crawl into their
beds to get warm, after putting out the fire to save the coal. Then they
would have some frightful experiences with the cold. They would sleep with
all their clothes on, including their overcoats, and put over them all the
bedding and spare clothing they owned; the children would sleep all
crowded into one bed, and yet even so they could not keep warm. The
outside ones would be shivering and sobbing, crawling over the others and
trying to get down into the center, and causing a fight. This old house
with the leaky weatherboards was a very different thing from their cabins
at home, with great thick walls plastered inside and outside with mud; and
the cold which came upon them was a living thing, a demon-presence in the
room. They would waken in the midnight hours, when everything was black;
perhaps they would hear it yelling outside, or perhaps there would be
deathlike stillness—and that would be worse yet. They could feel the
cold as it crept in through the cracks, reaching out for them with its
icy, death-dealing fingers; and they would crouch and cower, and try to
hide from it, all in vain. It would come, and it would come; a grisly
thing, a specter born in the black caverns of terror; a power primeval,
cosmic, shadowing the tortures of the lost souls flung out to chaos and
destruction. It was cruel iron-hard; and hour after hour they would cringe
in its grasp, alone, alone. There would be no one to hear them if they
cried out; there would be no help, no mercy. And so on until morning—when
they would go out to another day of toil, a little weaker, a little nearer
to the time when it would be their turn to be shaken from the tree.</p>
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