<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0030" id="link2HCH0030"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter 30 </h2>
<p>Jurgis had breakfast with Ostrinski and his family, and then he went home
to Elzbieta. He was no longer shy about it—when he went in, instead
of saying all the things he had been planning to say, he started to tell
Elzbieta about the revolution! At first she thought he was out of his
mind, and it was hours before she could really feel certain that he was
himself. When, however, she had satisfied herself that he was sane upon
all subjects except politics, she troubled herself no further about it.
Jurgis was destined to find that Elzbieta's armor was absolutely
impervious to Socialism. Her soul had been baked hard in the fire of
adversity, and there was no altering it now; life to her was the hunt for
daily bread, and ideas existed for her only as they bore upon that. All
that interested her in regard to this new frenzy which had seized hold of
her son-in-law was whether or not it had a tendency to make him sober and
industrious; and when she found he intended to look for work and to
contribute his share to the family fund, she gave him full rein to
convince her of anything. A wonderfully wise little woman was Elzbieta;
she could think as quickly as a hunted rabbit, and in half an hour she had
chosen her life-attitude to the Socialist movement. She agreed in
everything with Jurgis, except the need of his paying his dues; and she
would even go to a meeting with him now and then, and sit and plan her
next day's dinner amid the storm.</p>
<p>For a week after he became a convert Jurgis continued to wander about all
day, looking for work; until at last he met with a strange fortune. He was
passing one of Chicago's innumerable small hotels, and after some
hesitation he concluded to go in. A man he took for the proprietor was
standing in the lobby, and he went up to him and tackled him for a job.</p>
<p>"What can you do?" the man asked.</p>
<p>"Anything, sir," said Jurgis, and added quickly: "I've been out of work
for a long time, sir. I'm an honest man, and I'm strong and willing—"</p>
<p>The other was eying him narrowly. "Do you drink?" he asked.</p>
<p>"No, sir," said Jurgis.</p>
<p>"Well, I've been employing a man as a porter, and he drinks. I've
discharged him seven times now, and I've about made up my mind that's
enough. Would you be a porter?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
<p>"It's hard work. You'll have to clean floors and wash spittoons and fill
lamps and handle trunks—"</p>
<p>"I'm willing, sir."</p>
<p>"All right. I'll pay you thirty a month and board, and you can begin now,
if you feel like it. You can put on the other fellow's rig."</p>
<p>And so Jurgis fell to work, and toiled like a Trojan till night. Then he
went and told Elzbieta, and also, late as it was, he paid a visit to
Ostrinski to let him know of his good fortune. Here he received a great
surprise, for when he was describing the location of the hotel Ostrinski
interrupted suddenly, "Not Hinds's!"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Jurgis, "that's the name."</p>
<p>To which the other replied, "Then you've got the best boss in Chicago—he's
a state organizer of our party, and one of our best-known speakers!"</p>
<p>So the next morning Jurgis went to his employer and told him; and the man
seized him by the hand and shook it. "By Jove!" he cried, "that lets me
out. I didn't sleep all last night because I had discharged a good
Socialist!"</p>
<p>So, after that, Jurgis was known to his "boss" as "Comrade Jurgis," and in
return he was expected to call him "Comrade Hinds." "Tommy" Hinds, as he
was known to his intimates, was a squat little man, with broad shoulders
and a florid face, decorated with gray side whiskers. He was the
kindest-hearted man that ever lived, and the liveliest—inexhaustible
in his enthusiasm, and talking Socialism all day and all night. He was a
great fellow to jolly along a crowd, and would keep a meeting in an
uproar; when once he got really waked up, the torrent of his eloquence
could be compared with nothing save Niagara.</p>
<p>Tommy Hinds had begun life as a blacksmith's helper, and had run away to
join the Union army, where he had made his first acquaintance with
"graft," in the shape of rotten muskets and shoddy blankets. To a musket
that broke in a crisis he always attributed the death of his only brother,
and upon worthless blankets he blamed all the agonies of his own old age.
Whenever it rained, the rheumatism would get into his joints, and then he
would screw up his face and mutter: "Capitalism, my boy, capitalism!
'Ecrasez l'infame!'" He had one unfailing remedy for all the evils of this
world, and he preached it to every one; no matter whether the person's
trouble was failure in business, or dyspepsia, or a quarrelsome
mother-in-law, a twinkle would come into his eyes and he would say, "You
know what to do about it—vote the Socialist ticket!"</p>
<p>Tommy Hinds had set out upon the trail of the Octopus as soon as the war
was over. He had gone into business, and found himself in competition with
the fortunes of those who had been stealing while he had been fighting.
The city government was in their hands and the railroads were in league
with them, and honest business was driven to the wall; and so Hinds had
put all his savings into Chicago real estate, and set out singlehanded to
dam the river of graft. He had been a reform member of the city council,
he had been a Greenbacker, a Labor Unionist, a Populist, a Bryanite—and
after thirty years of fighting, the year 1896 had served to convince him
that the power of concentrated wealth could never be controlled, but could
only be destroyed. He had published a pamphlet about it, and set out to
organize a party of his own, when a stray Socialist leaflet had revealed
to him that others had been ahead of him. Now for eight years he had been
fighting for the party, anywhere, everywhere—whether it was a G.A.R.
reunion, or a hotel-keepers' convention, or an Afro-American
business-men's banquet, or a Bible society picnic, Tommy Hinds would
manage to get himself invited to explain the relations of Socialism to the
subject in hand. After that he would start off upon a tour of his own,
ending at some place between New York and Oregon; and when he came back
from there, he would go out to organize new locals for the state
committee; and finally he would come home to rest—and talk Socialism
in Chicago. Hinds's hotel was a very hot-bed of the propaganda; all the
employees were party men, and if they were not when they came, they were
quite certain to be before they went away. The proprietor would get into a
discussion with some one in the lobby, and as the conversation grew
animated, others would gather about to listen, until finally every one in
the place would be crowded into a group, and a regular debate would be
under way. This went on every night—when Tommy Hinds was not there
to do it, his clerk did it; and when his clerk was away campaigning, the
assistant attended to it, while Mrs. Hinds sat behind the desk and did the
work. The clerk was an old crony of the proprietor's, an awkward, rawboned
giant of a man, with a lean, sallow face, a broad mouth, and whiskers
under his chin, the very type and body of a prairie farmer. He had been
that all his life—he had fought the railroads in Kansas for fifty
years, a Granger, a Farmers' Alliance man, a "middle-of-the-road"
Populist. Finally, Tommy Hinds had revealed to him the wonderful idea of
using the trusts instead of destroying them, and he had sold his farm and
come to Chicago.</p>
<p>That was Amos Struver; and then there was Harry Adams, the assistant
clerk, a pale, scholarly-looking man, who came from Massachusetts, of
Pilgrim stock. Adams had been a cotton operative in Fall River, and the
continued depression in the industry had worn him and his family out, and
he had emigrated to South Carolina. In Massachusetts the percentage of
white illiteracy is eight-tenths of one per cent, while in South Carolina
it is thirteen and six-tenths per cent; also in South Carolina there is a
property qualification for voters—and for these and other reasons
child labor is the rule, and so the cotton mills were driving those of
Massachusetts out of the business. Adams did not know this, he only knew
that the Southern mills were running; but when he got there he found that
if he was to live, all his family would have to work, and from six o'clock
at night to six o'clock in the morning. So he had set to work to organize
the mill hands, after the fashion in Massachusetts, and had been
discharged; but he had gotten other work, and stuck at it, and at last
there had been a strike for shorter hours, and Harry Adams had attempted
to address a street meeting, which was the end of him. In the states of
the far South the labor of convicts is leased to contractors, and when
there are not convicts enough they have to be supplied. Harry Adams was
sent up by a judge who was a cousin of the mill owner with whose business
he had interfered; and though the life had nearly killed him, he had been
wise enough not to murmur, and at the end of his term he and his family
had left the state of South Carolina—hell's back yard, as he called
it. He had no money for carfare, but it was harvest-time, and they walked
one day and worked the next; and so Adams got at last to Chicago, and
joined the Socialist party. He was a studious man, reserved, and nothing
of an orator; but he always had a pile of books under his desk in the
hotel, and articles from his pen were beginning to attract attention in
the party press.</p>
<p>Contrary to what one would have expected, all this radicalism did not hurt
the hotel business; the radicals flocked to it, and the commercial
travelers all found it diverting. Of late, also, the hotel had become a
favorite stopping place for Western cattlemen. Now that the Beef Trust had
adopted the trick of raising prices to induce enormous shipments of
cattle, and then dropping them again and scooping in all they needed, a
stock raiser was very apt to find himself in Chicago without money enough
to pay his freight bill; and so he had to go to a cheap hotel, and it was
no drawback to him if there was an agitator talking in the lobby. These
Western fellows were just "meat" for Tommy Hinds—he would get a
dozen of them around him and paint little pictures of "the System." Of
course, it was not a week before he had heard Jurgis's story, and after
that he would not have let his new porter go for the world. "See here," he
would say, in the middle of an argument, "I've got a fellow right here in
my place who's worked there and seen every bit of it!" And then Jurgis
would drop his work, whatever it was, and come, and the other would say,
"Comrade Jurgis, just tell these gentlemen what you saw on the
killing-beds." At first this request caused poor Jurgis the most acute
agony, and it was like pulling teeth to get him to talk; but gradually he
found out what was wanted, and in the end he learned to stand up and speak
his piece with enthusiasm. His employer would sit by and encourage him
with exclamations and shakes of the head; when Jurgis would give the
formula for "potted ham," or tell about the condemned hogs that were
dropped into the "destructors" at the top and immediately taken out again
at the bottom, to be shipped into another state and made into lard, Tommy
Hinds would bang his knee and cry, "Do you think a man could make up a
thing like that out of his head?"</p>
<p>And then the hotel-keeper would go on to show how the Socialists had the
only real remedy for such evils, how they alone "meant business" with the
Beef Trust. And when, in answer to this, the victim would say that the
whole country was getting stirred up, that the newspapers were full of
denunciations of it, and the government taking action against it, Tommy
Hinds had a knock-out blow all ready. "Yes," he would say, "all that is
true—but what do you suppose is the reason for it? Are you foolish
enough to believe that it's done for the public? There are other trusts in
the country just as illegal and extortionate as the Beef Trust: there is
the Coal Trust, that freezes the poor in winter—there is the Steel
Trust, that doubles the price of every nail in your shoes—there is
the Oil Trust, that keeps you from reading at night—and why do you
suppose it is that all the fury of the press and the government is
directed against the Beef Trust?" And when to this the victim would reply
that there was clamor enough over the Oil Trust, the other would continue:
"Ten years ago Henry D. Lloyd told all the truth about the Standard Oil
Company in his Wealth versus Commonwealth; and the book was allowed to
die, and you hardly ever hear of it. And now, at last, two magazines have
the courage to tackle 'Standard Oil' again, and what happens? The
newspapers ridicule the authors, the churches defend the criminals, and
the government—does nothing. And now, why is it all so different
with the Beef Trust?"</p>
<p>Here the other would generally admit that he was "stuck"; and Tommy Hinds
would explain to him, and it was fun to see his eyes open. "If you were a
Socialist," the hotel-keeper would say, "you would understand that the
power which really governs the United States today is the Railroad Trust.
It is the Railroad Trust that runs your state government, wherever you
live, and that runs the United States Senate. And all of the trusts that I
have named are railroad trusts—save only the Beef Trust! The Beef
Trust has defied the railroads—it is plundering them day by day
through the Private Car; and so the public is roused to fury, and the
papers clamor for action, and the government goes on the war-path! And you
poor common people watch and applaud the job, and think it's all done for
you, and never dream that it is really the grand climax of the
century-long battle of commercial competition—the final death
grapple between the chiefs of the Beef Trust and 'Standard Oil,' for the
prize of the mastery and ownership of the United States of America!"</p>
<p>Such was the new home in which Jurgis lived and worked, and in which his
education was completed. Perhaps you would imagine that he did not do much
work there, but that would be a great mistake. He would have cut off one
hand for Tommy Hinds; and to keep Hinds's hotel a thing of beauty was his
joy in life. That he had a score of Socialist arguments chasing through
his brain in the meantime did not interfere with this; on the contrary,
Jurgis scrubbed the spittoons and polished the banisters all the more
vehemently because at the same time he was wrestling inwardly with an
imaginary recalcitrant. It would be pleasant to record that he swore off
drinking immediately, and all the rest of his bad habits with it; but that
would hardly be exact. These revolutionists were not angels; they were
men, and men who had come up from the social pit, and with the mire of it
smeared over them. Some of them drank, and some of them swore, and some of
them ate pie with their knives; there was only one difference between them
and all the rest of the populace—that they were men with a hope,
with a cause to fight for and suffer for. There came times to Jurgis when
the vision seemed far-off and pale, and a glass of beer loomed large in
comparison; but if the glass led to another glass, and to too many
glasses, he had something to spur him to remorse and resolution on the
morrow. It was so evidently a wicked thing to spend one's pennies for
drink, when the working class was wandering in darkness, and waiting to be
delivered; the price of a glass of beer would buy fifty copies of a
leaflet, and one could hand these out to the unregenerate, and then get
drunk upon the thought of the good that was being accomplished. That was
the way the movement had been made, and it was the only way it would
progress; it availed nothing to know of it, without fighting for it—it
was a thing for all, not for a few! A corollary of this proposition of
course was, that any one who refused to receive the new gospel was
personally responsible for keeping Jurgis from his heart's desire; and
this, alas, made him uncomfortable as an acquaintance. He met some
neighbors with whom Elzbieta had made friends in her neighborhood, and he
set out to make Socialists of them by wholesale, and several times he all
but got into a fight.</p>
<p>It was all so painfully obvious to Jurgis! It was so incomprehensible how
a man could fail to see it! Here were all the opportunities of the
country, the land, and the buildings upon the land, the railroads, the
mines, the factories, and the stores, all in the hands of a few private
individuals, called capitalists, for whom the people were obliged to work
for wages. The whole balance of what the people produced went to heap up
the fortunes of these capitalists, to heap, and heap again, and yet again—and
that in spite of the fact that they, and every one about them, lived in
unthinkable luxury! And was it not plain that if the people cut off the
share of those who merely "owned," the share of those who worked would be
much greater? That was as plain as two and two makes four; and it was the
whole of it, absolutely the whole of it; and yet there were people who
could not see it, who would argue about everything else in the world. They
would tell you that governments could not manage things as economically as
private individuals; they would repeat and repeat that, and think they
were saying something! They could not see that "economical" management by
masters meant simply that they, the people, were worked harder and ground
closer and paid less! They were wage-earners and servants, at the mercy of
exploiters whose one thought was to get as much out of them as possible;
and they were taking an interest in the process, were anxious lest it
should not be done thoroughly enough! Was it not honestly a trial to
listen to an argument such as that?</p>
<p>And yet there were things even worse. You would begin talking to some poor
devil who had worked in one shop for the last thirty years, and had never
been able to save a penny; who left home every morning at six o'clock, to
go and tend a machine, and come back at night too tired to take his
clothes off; who had never had a week's vacation in his life, had never
traveled, never had an adventure, never learned anything, never hoped
anything—and when you started to tell him about Socialism he would
sniff and say, "I'm not interested in that—I'm an individualist!"
And then he would go on to tell you that Socialism was "paternalism," and
that if it ever had its way the world would stop progressing. It was
enough to make a mule laugh, to hear arguments like that; and yet it was
no laughing matter, as you found out—for how many millions of such
poor deluded wretches there were, whose lives had been so stunted by
capitalism that they no longer knew what freedom was! And they really
thought that it was "individualism" for tens of thousands of them to herd
together and obey the orders of a steel magnate, and produce hundreds of
millions of dollars of wealth for him, and then let him give them
libraries; while for them to take the industry, and run it to suit
themselves, and build their own libraries—that would have been
"Paternalism"!</p>
<p>Sometimes the agony of such things as this was almost more than Jurgis
could bear; yet there was no way of escape from it, there was nothing to
do but to dig away at the base of this mountain of ignorance and
prejudice. You must keep at the poor fellow; you must hold your temper,
and argue with him, and watch for your chance to stick an idea or two into
his head. And the rest of the time you must sharpen up your weapons—you
must think out new replies to his objections, and provide yourself with
new facts to prove to him the folly of his ways.</p>
<p>So Jurgis acquired the reading habit. He would carry in his pocket a tract
or a pamphlet which some one had loaned him, and whenever he had an idle
moment during the day he would plod through a paragraph, and then think
about it while he worked. Also he read the newspapers, and asked questions
about them. One of the other porters at Hinds's was a sharp little
Irishman, who knew everything that Jurgis wanted to know; and while they
were busy he would explain to him the geography of America, and its
history, its constitution and its laws; also he gave him an idea of the
business system of the country, the great railroads and corporations, and
who owned them, and the labor unions, and the big strikes, and the men who
had led them. Then at night, when he could get off, Jurgis would attend
the Socialist meetings. During the campaign one was not dependent upon the
street corner affairs, where the weather and the quality of the orator
were equally uncertain; there were hall meetings every night, and one
could hear speakers of national prominence. These discussed the political
situation from every point of view, and all that troubled Jurgis was the
impossibility of carrying off but a small part of the treasures they
offered him.</p>
<p>There was a man who was known in the party as the "Little Giant." The Lord
had used up so much material in the making of his head that there had not
been enough to complete his legs; but he got about on the platform, and
when he shook his raven whiskers the pillars of capitalism rocked. He had
written a veritable encyclopedia upon the subject, a book that was nearly
as big as himself—And then there was a young author, who came from
California, and had been a salmon fisher, an oyster-pirate, a
longshoreman, a sailor; who had tramped the country and been sent to jail,
had lived in the Whitechapel slums, and been to the Klondike in search of
gold. All these things he pictured in his books, and because he was a man
of genius he forced the world to hear him. Now he was famous, but wherever
he went he still preached the gospel of the poor. And then there was one
who was known at the "millionaire Socialist." He had made a fortune in
business, and spent nearly all of it in building up a magazine, which the
post office department had tried to suppress, and had driven to Canada. He
was a quiet-mannered man, whom you would have taken for anything in the
world but a Socialist agitator. His speech was simple and informal—he
could not understand why any one should get excited about these things. It
was a process of economic evolution, he said, and he exhibited its laws
and methods. Life was a struggle for existence, and the strong overcame
the weak, and in turn were overcome by the strongest. Those who lost in
the struggle were generally exterminated; but now and then they had been
known to save themselves by combination—which was a new and higher
kind of strength. It was so that the gregarious animals had overcome the
predaceous; it was so, in human history, that the people had mastered the
kings. The workers were simply the citizens of industry, and the Socialist
movement was the expression of their will to survive. The inevitability of
the revolution depended upon this fact, that they had no choice but to
unite or be exterminated; this fact, grim and inexorable, depended upon no
human will, it was the law of the economic process, of which the editor
showed the details with the most marvelous precision.</p>
<p>And later on came the evening of the great meeting of the campaign, when
Jurgis heard the two standard-bearers of his party. Ten years before there
had been in Chicago a strike of a hundred and fifty thousand railroad
employees, and thugs had been hired by the railroads to commit violence,
and the President of the United States had sent in troops to break the
strike, by flinging the officers of the union into jail without trial. The
president of the union came out of his cell a ruined man; but also he came
out a Socialist; and now for just ten years he had been traveling up and
down the country, standing face to face with the people, and pleading with
them for justice. He was a man of electric presence, tall and gaunt, with
a face worn thin by struggle and suffering. The fury of outraged manhood
gleamed in it—and the tears of suffering little children pleaded in
his voice. When he spoke he paced the stage, lithe and eager, like a
panther. He leaned over, reaching out for his audience; he pointed into
their souls with an insistent finger. His voice was husky from much
speaking, but the great auditorium was as still as death, and every one
heard him.</p>
<p>And then, as Jurgis came out from this meeting, some one handed him a
paper which he carried home with him and read; and so he became acquainted
with the "Appeal to Reason." About twelve years previously a Colorado
real-estate speculator had made up his mind that it was wrong to gamble in
the necessities of life of human beings: and so he had retired and begun
the publication of a Socialist weekly. There had come a time when he had
to set his own type, but he had held on and won out, and now his
publication was an institution. It used a carload of paper every week, and
the mail trains would be hours loading up at the depot of the little
Kansas town. It was a four-page weekly, which sold for less than half a
cent a copy; its regular subscription list was a quarter of a million, and
it went to every crossroads post office in America.</p>
<p>The "Appeal" was a "propaganda" paper. It had a manner all its own—it
was full of ginger and spice, of Western slang and hustle: It collected
news of the doings of the "plutes," and served it up for the benefit of
the "American working-mule." It would have columns of the deadly parallel—the
million dollars' worth of diamonds, or the fancy pet-poodle establishment
of a society dame, beside the fate of Mrs. Murphy of San Francisco, who
had starved to death on the streets, or of John Robinson, just out of the
hospital, who had hanged himself in New York because he could not find
work. It collected the stories of graft and misery from the daily press,
and made a little pungent paragraphs out of them. "Three banks of
Bungtown, South Dakota, failed, and more savings of the workers swallowed
up!" "The mayor of Sandy Creek, Oklahoma, has skipped with a hundred
thousand dollars. That's the kind of rulers the old partyites give you!"
"The president of the Florida Flying Machine Company is in jail for
bigamy. He was a prominent opponent of Socialism, which he said would
break up the home!" The "Appeal" had what it called its "Army," about
thirty thousand of the faithful, who did things for it; and it was always
exhorting the "Army" to keep its dander up, and occasionally encouraging
it with a prize competition, for anything from a gold watch to a private
yacht or an eighty-acre farm. Its office helpers were all known to the
"Army" by quaint titles—"Inky Ike," "the Bald-headed Man," "the
Redheaded Girl," "the Bulldog," "the Office Goat," and "the One Hoss."</p>
<p>But sometimes, again, the "Appeal" would be desperately serious. It sent a
correspondent to Colorado, and printed pages describing the overthrow of
American institutions in that state. In a certain city of the country it
had over forty of its "Army" in the headquarters of the Telegraph Trust,
and no message of importance to Socialists ever went through that a copy
of it did not go to the "Appeal." It would print great broadsides during
the campaign; one copy that came to Jurgis was a manifesto addressed to
striking workingmen, of which nearly a million copies had been distributed
in the industrial centers, wherever the employers' associations had been
carrying out their "open shop" program. "You have lost the strike!" it was
headed. "And now what are you going to do about it?" It was what is called
an "incendiary" appeal—it was written by a man into whose soul the
iron had entered. When this edition appeared, twenty thousand copies were
sent to the stockyards district; and they were taken out and stowed away
in the rear of a little cigar store, and every evening, and on Sundays,
the members of the Packingtown locals would get armfuls and distribute
them on the streets and in the houses. The people of Packingtown had lost
their strike, if ever a people had, and so they read these papers gladly,
and twenty thousand were hardly enough to go round. Jurgis had resolved
not to go near his old home again, but when he heard of this it was too
much for him, and every night for a week he would get on the car and ride
out to the stockyards, and help to undo his work of the previous year,
when he had sent Mike Scully's ten-pin setter to the city Board of
Aldermen.</p>
<p>It was quite marvelous to see what a difference twelve months had made in
Packingtown—the eyes of the people were getting opened! The
Socialists were literally sweeping everything before them that election,
and Scully and the Cook County machine were at their wits' end for an
"issue." At the very close of the campaign they bethought themselves of
the fact that the strike had been broken by Negroes, and so they sent for
a South Carolina fire-eater, the "pitchfork senator," as he was called, a
man who took off his coat when he talked to workingmen, and damned and
swore like a Hessian. This meeting they advertised extensively, and the
Socialists advertised it too—with the result that about a thousand
of them were on hand that evening. The "pitchfork senator" stood their
fusillade of questions for about an hour, and then went home in disgust,
and the balance of the meeting was a strictly party affair. Jurgis, who
had insisted upon coming, had the time of his life that night; he danced
about and waved his arms in his excitement—and at the very climax he
broke loose from his friends, and got out into the aisle, and proceeded to
make a speech himself! The senator had been denying that the Democratic
party was corrupt; it was always the Republicans who bought the votes, he
said—and here was Jurgis shouting furiously, "It's a lie! It's a
lie!" After which he went on to tell them how he knew it—that he
knew it because he had bought them himself! And he would have told the
"pitchfork senator" all his experiences, had not Harry Adams and a friend
grabbed him about the neck and shoved him into a seat.</p>
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