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Life in the Iron Mills
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Davis, Rebecca Harding. "Life in the Iron Mills."
The Online Books Page.
Online. Internet. Posted: April, 1997.
ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext97/liron10.txt
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" Is this the end?
O Life, as futile, then, as frail!
What hope of answer or redress? ''
A CLOUDY day: do you know what that is in a town of iron-works?
The sky sank down before dawn, muddy, flat, immovable. The air is thick,
clammy with the breath of crowded human beings. It stifles me. I open
the window, and, looking out, can scarcely see through the rain the
grocer's shop opposite, where a crowd of drunken Irishmen are puffing
Lynchburg tobacco in their pipes. I can detect the scent through all
the foul smells ranging loose in the air.
The idiosyncrasy of this town is smoke. It rolls sullenly
in slow folds from the great chimneys of the iron-founderies, and settles
down in black, slimy pools on the muddy streets. Smoke on the wharves,
smoke on the dingy boats, on the yellow river,--clinging in a coating
of greasy soot to the house-front, the two faded poplars, the faces
of the passers-by. The long train of mules, dragging masses of pig-iron
through the narrow street, have a foul vapor hanging to their reeking
sides. Here, inside, is a little broken figure of an angel pointing
upward from the mantel-shelf; but even its wings are covered with smoke,
clotted and black. Smoke everywhere! A dirty canary chirps desolately
in a cage beside me. Its dream of green fields and sunshine is a very
old dream,--almost worn out, I think.
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From the back-window I can see a narrow brick-yard sloping down to
the river-side, strewed with rain-butts and tubs. The river, dull and
tawny-colored, (la belle riviere!) drags itself sluggishly along, tired
of the heavy weight of boats and coal- barges. What wonder? When I was
a child, I used to fancy a look of weary, dumb appeal upon the face
of the negro-like river slavishly bearing its burden day after day.
Something of the same idle notion comes to me to-day, when from the
street-window I look on the slow stream of human life creeping past,
night and morning, to the great mills. Masses of men, with dull, besotted
faces bent to the ground, sharpened here and there by pain or cunning;
skin and muscle and flesh begrimed with smoke and ashes; stooping all
night over boiling caldrons of metal, laired by day in dens of drunkenness
and infamy; breathing from infancy to death an air saturated with fog
and grease and soot, vileness for soul and body. What do you make of
a case like that, amateur psychologist? You call it an altogether serious
thing to be alive: to these men it is a drunken jest, a joke,--horrible
to angels perhaps, to them commonplace enough. My fancy about the river
was an idle one: it is no type of such a life. What if it be stagnant
and slimy here? It knows that beyond there waits for it odorous sunlight,--quaint
old gardens, dusky with soft, green foliage of apple-trees, and flushing
crimson with roses,--air, and fields, and mountains. The future of the
Welsh puddler passing just now is not so pleasant. To be stowed away,
after his grimy work is done, in a hole in the muddy graveyard, and
after that,--not air, nor green fields, nor curious roses.
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Can you see how foggy the day is ? As I stand here,
idly tapping the window-pane, and looking out through the rain at the
dirty back-yard and the coal-boats below, fragments of an old story
float up before me,--a story of this house into which I happened to
come to-day. You may think it a tiresome story enough, as foggy as the
day, sharpened by no sudden flashes of pain or pleasure.--I know: only
the outline of a dull life, that long since, with thousands of dull
lives like its own, was vainly lived and lost: thousands of them,--massed,
vile, slimy lives, like those of the torpid lizards in yonder stagnant
water-butt.--Lost ? There is a curious point for you to settle, my friend,
who study psychology in a lazy, dilettante way. Stop a moment. I am
going to be honest. This is what I want you to do. I want you to hide
your disgust, take no heed to your clean clothes, and come right down
with me,--here, into the thickest of the fog and mud and foul effluvia.
I want you to hear this story. There is a secret down here, in this
nightmare fog, that has lain dumb for centuries: I want to make it a
real thing to you. You, Egoist, or Pantheist, or Arminian, busy in making
straight paths for your feet on the hills, do not see it clearly,--this
terrible question which men here have gone mad and died trying to answer.
I dare not put this secret into words. I told you it was dumb. These
men, going by with drunken faces, and brains full of unawakened power,
do not ask it of Society or of God. Their lives ask it; their deaths
ask it. There is no reply. I will tell you plainly that I have a great
hope; and I bring it to you to be tested. It is this: that this terrible
dumb question is its own reply; that it is not the sentence of death
we think it, but, from the very extremity of its darkness, the most
solemn prophecy which the world has known of the Hope to come. I dare
make my meaning no clearer, but will only tell my story. It will, perhaps,
seem to you as foul and dark as this thick vapor about us, and as pregnant
with death, but if your eyes are free as mine are to look deeper, no
perfume-tinted dawn will be so fair with promise of the day that shall
surely come.
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My story is very simple,--only what I remember of the life of one
of these men,--a furnace-tender in one of Kirby & John's rolling-mills,--Hugh
Wolfe. You know the mills? They took the great order for the lower Virginia
railroads there last winter; run usually with about a thousand men.
I cannot tell why I choose the half-forgotten story of this Wolfe more
than that of myriads of these furnace-hands. Perhaps because there is
a secret, underlying sympathy between that story and this day with its
impure fog and thwarted sunshine,--or perhaps simply for the reason
that this house is the one where the Wolfes lived. There were the father
and son,--both hands, as I said, in one of Kirby & John's mills
for making railroad-iron,--and Deborah, their cousin, a picker in some
of the cotton-mills. The house was rented then to half a dozen families.
The Wolfes had two of the cellar-rooms. The old man, like many of the
puddlers and feeders of the mills, was Welsh,--had spent half of his
life in the Cornish tin-mines. You may pick the Welsh emigrants, Cornish
miners, out of the throng passing the windows, any day. They are a trifle
more filthy; their muscles are not so brawny, they stoop more. When
they are drunk, they neither yell, nor shout, nor stagger, but skulk
along like beaten hounds. A pure, unmixed blood, I fancy, shows itself
in the slight angular bodies and sharply-cut facial lines. It is nearly
thirty years since the Wolfes lived here. Their lives were like those
of their class: incessant labor, sleeping in kennel-like rooms, eating
rank pork and molasses, drinking--God and the distillers only know what;
with an occasional night in jail, to atone for some drunken excess.
Is that all of their lives?--of the portion given to them and these
their duplicates swarming the streets to-day?--nothing beneath?--all?
So many a political reformer will tell you,--and many a private reformer,
too, who has gone among them with a heart tender with Christ's charity,
and come out outraged, hardened.
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One rainy night, about eleven o'clock, a crowd of halfclothed women
stopped outside of the cellar-door. They were going home from the cotton-mill.
"Good-night, Deb," said one, a mulatto, steadying herself
against the gas-post. She needed the post to steady her. So did more
than one of them.
"Dah's a baH to Miss Potts' to-night. Ye 'd best come."
"Inteet, Deb, if hur'll come, hur'll hef fun," said a shrill
Welsh voice in the crowd.
Two or three dirty hands were thrust out to catch the gown of the woman,
who was groping for the latch of the door.
"No."
"No ? Where's Kit Small, then?"
"Begorra! on the spools. Alleys behint, though we helped her, we
dud. An wid ye! Let Deb alone! It's ondacent frettin' a quite body.
Be the powers, an' we'll have a night of it! there'll be lashin's o'
drink,--the Vargent be blessed and praised for't!"
They went on, the mulatto inclining for a moment to show fight, and
drag the woman Wolfe off with them; but, being pacified, she staggered
away.
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Deborah groped her way into the cellar, and, after considerable stumbling,
kindled a match, and lighted a tallow dip, that sent a yellow glimmer
over the room. It was low, damp,--the earthen floor covered with a green,
slimy moss,--a fetid air smothering the breath. Old Wolfe lay asleep
on a heap of straw, wrapped in a torn horse-blanket. He was a pale,
meek little man, with a white face and red rabbit-eyes. The woman Deborah
was like him; only her face was even more ghastly, her lips bluer, her
eyes more watery. She wore a faded cotton gown and a slouching bonnet.
When she walked, one could see that she was deformed, almost a hunchback.
She trod softly, so as not to waken him, and went through into the room
beyond. There she found by the half-extinguished fire an iron saucepan
filled with cold boiled potatoes, which she put upon a broken chair
with a pint-cup of ale. Placing the old candlestick beside this dainty
repast, she untied her bonnet, which hung limp and wet over her face,
and prepared to eat her supper. It was the first food that had touched
her lips since morning. There was enough of it, however: there is not
always. She was hungry,--one could see that easily enough,--and not
drunk, as most of her companions would have been found at this hour.
She did not drink, this woman,--her face told that too,--nothing stronger
than ale. Perhaps the weak, flaccid wretch had some stimulant in her
pale life to keep her up,--some love or hope, it might be, or urgent
need. When that stimulant was gone, she would take to whiskey. Man cannot
live by work alone.
While she was skinning the potatoes, and munching them, a noise behind
her made her stop.
"Janey!" she called, lifting the candle and peering into the
darkness. "Janey, are you there?"
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A heap of ragged coats was heaved up, and the face of a young girl
emerged, staring sleepily at the woman.
"Deborah," she said, at last, "I'm here the night."
"Yes, child. Hur's welcome," she said, quietly eating on.
The girl's face was haggard and sickly; her eyes were heavy with sleep
and hunger: real Milesian eyes they were, dark, delicate blue, glooming
out from black shadows with a pitiful fright.
"I was alone," she said, timidly.
"Where's the father?" asked Deborah, holding out a potato,
which the girl greedily seized.
"He's beyant,--wid Haley,--in the stone house." (Did you ever
hear the word jail from an Irish mouth?)
"I came here. Hugh told me never to stay me-lone.""Hugh?"
"Yes."
A vexed frown crossed her face. The girl saw it, and added quickly,--
"I have not seen Hugh the day, Deb. The old man says his watch
lasts till the mornin'."
The woman sprang up, and hastily began to arrange some bread and flitch
in a tin pail, and to pour her own measure of ale into a bottle. Tying
on her bonnet, she blew out the candle.
"Lay ye down, Janey dear," she said, gently, covering her
with the old rags. "Hur can eat the potatoes, if hur's hungry."
"Where are ye goin', Deb? The rain's sharp."
"To the mill, with Hugh's supper."
"Let him bide till th' morn. Sit ye down."
"No, no,"--sharply pushing her off. "The boy'll starve."
She hurried from the cellar, while the child wearily coiled herself
up for sleep. The rain was falling heavily, as the woman, pail in hand,
emerged from the mouth of the alley, and turned down the narrow street,
that stretched out, long and black, miles before her. Here and there
a flicker of gas lighted an uncertain space of muddy footwalk and gutter;
the long rows of houses, except an occasional lagerbier shop, were closed;
now and then she met a band of millhands skulking to or from their work.
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Not many even of the inhabitants of a manufacturing town know the
vast machinery of system by which the bodies of workmen are governed,
that goes on unceasingly from year to year. The hands of each mill are
divided into watches that relieve each other as regularly as the sentinels
of an army. By night and day the work goes on, the unsleeping engines
groan and shriek, the fiery pools of metal boil and surge. Only for
a day in the week, in half-courtesy to public censure, the fires are
partially veiled; but as soon as the clock strikes midnight, the great
furnaces break forth with renewed fury, the clamor begins with fresh,
breathless vigor, the engines sob and shriek like "gods in pain."
As Deborah hurried down through the heavy rain, the noise of these thousand
engines sounded through the sleep and shadow of the city like far-off
thunder. The mill to which she was going lay on the river, a mile below
the citylimits. It was far, and she was weak, aching from standing twelve
hours at the spools. Yet it was her almost nightly walk to take this
man his supper, though at every square she sat down to rest, and she
knew she should receive small word of thanks.
Perhaps, if she had possessed an artist's eye, the picturesque oddity
of the scene might have made her step stagger less, and the path seem
shorter; but to her the mills were only "summat deilish to look
at by night."
The road leading to the mills had been quarried from the solid rock,
which rose abrupt and bare on one side of the cinder- covered road,
while the river, sluggish and black, crept past on the other. The mills
for rolling iron are simply immense tent-like roofs, covering acres
of ground, open on every side.
Beneath these roofs Deborah looked in on a city of fires, that burned
hot and fiercely in the night. Fire in every horrible form: pits of
flame waving in the wind; liquid metal-flames writhing in tortuous streams
through the sand; wide caldrons filled with boiling fire, over which
bent ghastly wretches stirring the strange brewing; and through all,
crowds of half-clad men, looking like revengeful ghosts in the red light,
hurried, throwing masses of glittering fire. It was like a street in
Hell. Even Deborah muttered, as she crept through, "'T looks like
t' Devil's place ! " It did,--in more ways than one.
She found the man she was looking for, at last, heaping coal on a furnace.
He had not time to eat his supper; so she went behind the furnace, and
waited. Only a few men were with him, and they noticed her only by a
" Hyur comes t' hunchback, Wolfe."
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Deborah was stupid with sleep; her back pained her sharply; and her
teeth chattered with cold, with the rain that soaked her clothes and
dripped from her at every step. She stood, however, patiently holding
the pail, and waiting.
"Hout, woman! ye look like a drowned cat. Come near to the fire,"--said
one of the men, approaching to scrape away the ashes.
She shook her head. Wolfe had forgotten her. He turned, hearing the
man, and came closer.
"I did not think; g'me my supper, woman."
She watched him eat with a painful eagerness. With a woman's quick instinct,
she saw that he was not hungry,--was eating to please her. Her pale,
watery eyes began to gather a strange light.
"Is't good, Hugh? T' ale was a bit sour, I feared."
"No, good enough." He hesitated a moment. "Ye're tired,
poor lass! Bide here till I go. Lay down there on that heap of ash,
and go to sleep."
He threw her an old coat for a pillow, and turned to his work. The heap
was the refuse of the burnt iron, and was not a hard bed; the half-smothered
warmth, too, penetrated her limbs, dulling their pain and cold shiver.
Miserable enough she looked, Iying there on the ashes like a limp,
dirty rag,--yet not an unfitting figure to crown the scene of hopeless
discomfort and veiled crime: more fitting, if one looked deeper into
the heart of things,--at her thwarted woman's form, her colorless life,
her waking stupor that smothered pain and hunger,--even more fit to
be a type of her class. Deeper yet if one could look; was there nothing
worth reading in this wet, faded thing, half covered with ashes? no
story of a soul filled with groping, passionate love, heroic unselfishness,
fierce jealousy? of years of weary trying to please the one human being
whom she loved, to gain one look of real heart-kindness from him? If
anything like this were hidden beneath the pale, bleared eyes, and dull,
washed-out-looking face, no one had ever taken the trouble to read its
faint signs: not the halfclothed furnace-tender, Wolfe, certainly. Yet
he was kind to her: it was his nature to be kind, even to the very rats
that swarmed in the cellar: kind to her in just the same way.
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She knew that. And it might be that very knowledge had given to her
face its apathy and vacancy more than her low, torpid life. One sees
that dead, vacant look steal sometimes over the rarest, finest of women's
faces,--in the very midst, it may be, of their warmest summer's day;
and then one can guess at the secret of intolerable solitude that lies
hid beneath the delicate laces and brilliant smile. There was no warmth,
no brilliancy, no summer for this woman; so the stupor and vacancy had
time to gnaw into her face perpetually. She was young, too, though no
one guessed it; so the gnawing was the fiercer.
She lay quiet in the dark corner, listening, through the monotonous
din and uncertain glare of the works, to the dull plash of the rain
in the far distance,--shrinking back whenever the man Wolfe happened
to look towards her. She knew, in spite of all his kindness, that there
was that in her face and form which made him loathe the sight of her.
She felt by instinct, although she could not comprehend it, the finer
nature of the man, which made him among his fellow-workmen something
unique, set apart. She knew, that, down under all the vileness and coarseness
of his life, there was a groping passion for whatever was beautiful
and pure,--that his soul sickened with disgust at her deformity, even
when his words were kindest. Through this dull consciousness, which
never left her, came, like a sting, the recollection of the dark blue
eyes and lithe figure of the little Irish girl she had left in the cellar.
The recollection struck through even her stupid intellect with a vivid
glow of beauty and of grace. Little Janey, timid, helpless, clinging
to Hugh as her only friend: that was the sharp thought, the bitter thought,
that drove into the glazed eyes a fierce light of pain. You laugh at
it? Are pain and jealousy less savage realities down here in this place
I am taking you to than in your own house or your own heart,--your heart,
which they clutch at sometimes? The note is the same, I fancy, be the
octave high or low.
If you could go into this mill where Deborah lay, and drag out from
the hearts of these men the terrible tragedy of their lives, taking
it as a symptom of the disease of their class, no ghost Horror would
terrify you more. A reality of soul-starvation, of living death, that
meets you every day under the besotted faces on the street,--I can paint
nothing of this, only give you the outside outlines of a night, a crisis
in the life of one man: whatever muddy depth of soul-history lies beneath
you can read according to the eyes God has given you.
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Wolfe, while Deborah watched him as a spaniel its master, bent over
the furnace with his iron pole, unconscious of her scrutiny, only stopping
to receive orders. Physically, Nature had promised the man but little.
He had already lost the strength and instinct vigor of a man, his muscles
were thin, his nerves weak, his face (a meek, woman's face) haggard,
yellow with consumption. In the mill he was known as one of the girl-men:
"Molly Wolfe" was his sobriquet. He was never seen in the
cockpit, did not own a terrier, drank but seldom; when he did, desperately.
He fought sometimes, but was always thrashed, pommelled to a jelly.
The man was game enough, when his blood was up: but he was no favorite
in the mill; he had the taint of school-learning on him,--not to a dangerous
extent, only a quarter or so in the free-school in fact, but enough
to ruin him as a good hand in a fight.
For other reasons, too, he was not popular. Not one of themselves, they
felt that, though outwardly as filthy and ash-covered; silent, with
foreign thoughts and longings breaking out through his quietness in
innumerable curious ways: this one, for instance. In the neighboring
furnace-buildings lay great heaps of the refuse from the ore after the
pig-metal is run. Korl we call it here: a light, porous substance, of
a delicate, waxen, flesh-colored tinge. Out of the blocks of this korl,
Wolfe, in his off-hours from the furnace, had a habit of chipping and
moulding figures,--hideous, fantastic enough, but sometimes strangely
beautiful: even the mill-men saw that, while they jeered at him. It
was a curious fancy in the man, almost a passion. The few hours for
rest he spent hewing and hacking with his blunt knife, never speaking,
until his watch came again,--working at one figure for months, and,
when it was finished, breaking it to pieces perhaps, in a fit of disappointment.
A morbid, gloomy man, untaught, unled, left to feed his soul in grossness
and crime, and hard, grinding labor.
I want you to come down and look at this Wolfe, standing there among
the lowest of his kind, and see him just as he is, that you may judge
him justly when you hear the story of this night. I want you to look
back, as he does every day, at his birth in vice, his starved infancy;
to remember the heavy years he has groped through as boy and man,--the
slow, heavy years of constant, hot work. So long ago he began, that
he thinks sometimes he has worked there for ages. There is no hope that
it will ever end.
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Think that God put into this man's soul a fierce thirst for beauty,--to
know it, to create it; to be--something, he knows not what,--other than
he is. There are moments when a passing cloud, the sun glinting on the
purple thistles, a kindly smile, a child's face, will rouse him to a
passion of pain,--when his nature starts up with a mad cry of rage against
God, man, whoever it is that has forced this vile, slimy life upon him.
With all this groping, this mad desire, a great blind intellect stumbling
through wrong, a loving poet's heart, the man was by habit only a coarse,
vulgar laborer, familiar with sights and words you would blush to name.
Be just: when I tell you about this night, see him as he is. Be just,--not
like man's law, which seizes on one isolated fact, but like God's judging
angel, whose clear, sad eye saw all the countless cankering days of
this man's life, all the countless nights, when, sick with starving,
his soul fainted in him, before it judged him for this night, the saddest
of all.
I called this night the crisis of his life. If it was, it stole on him
unawares. These great turning-days of life cast no shadow before, slip
by unconsciously. Only a trifle, a little turn of the rudder, and the
ship goes to heaven or hell.
Wolfe, while Deborah watched him, dug into the furnace of melting iron
with his pole, dully thinking only how many rails the lump would yield.
It was late,--nearly Sunday morning; another hour, and the heavy work
would be done,--only the furnaces to replenish and cover for the next
day. The workmen were growing more noisy, shouting, as they had to do,
to be heard over the deep clamor of the mills. Suddenly they grew less
boisterous,--at the far end, entirely silent. Something unusual had
happened.
After a moment, the silence came nearer; the men stopped their jeers
and drunken choruses. Deborah, stupidly lifting up her head, saw the
cause of the quiet. A group of five or six men were slowly approaching,
stopping to examine each furnace as they came. Visitors often came to
see the mills after night: except by growing less noisy, the men took
no notice of them. The furnace where Wolfe worked was near the bounds
of the works; they halted there hot and tired: a walk over one of these
great founderies is no trifling task. The woman, drawing out of sight,
turned over to sleep. Wolfe, seeing them stop, suddenly roused from
his indifferent stupor, and watched them keenly. He knew some of them:
the overseer, Clarke,--a son of Kirby, one of the mill-owners,--and
a Doctor May, one of the
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town-physicians. The other two were strangers. Wolfe came closer. He
seized eagerly every chance that brought him into contact with this
mysterious class that shone down on him perpetually with the glamour
of another order of being. What made the difference between them ? That
was the mystery of his life. He had a vague notion that perhaps to-night
he could find it out. One of the strangers sat down on a pile of bricks,
and beckoned young Kirby to his side.
"This is hot, with a vengeance. A match, please?"--lighting
his cigar. "But the walk is worth the trouble. If it were not that
you must have heard it so often, Kirby, I would tell you that your works
look like Dante's Inferno."
Kirby laughed.
"Yes. Yonder is Farinata himself in the burning tomb,"--pointing
to some figure in the shimmering shadows.
"Judging from some of the faces of your men," said the other,
"they bid fair to try the reality of Dante's vision, some day."
Young Kirby looked curiously around, as if seeing the faces of his hands
for the first time.
"They're bad enough, that's true. A desperate set, I fancy. Eh,
Clarke?"
The overseer did not hear him. He was talking of net profits just then,--giving,
in fact, a schedule of the annual business of the firm to a sharp peering
little Yankee, who jotted down notes on a paper laid on the crown of
his hat: a reporter for one of the city papers, getting up a series
of reviews of thc leading manufactories. The other gentlemen had accompanied
them merely for amusement. They were silent until the notes were finished,
drying their feet at the furnaces, and sheltering their faces from the
intolerable heat. At last the overseer concluded with--
"I believe that is a pretty fair estimate, Captain."
"Here, some of you men!" said Kirby, "bring up those
boards. We may as well sit down, gentlemen, until the rain is over.
It cannot last much longer at this rate."
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"Pig-metal,"--mumbled the reporter,--"um!--coal facilities,--um!--hands
employed, twelve hundred,--bitumen,--um!--all right, I believe, Mr.
Clarke;--sinking-fund,--what did you say was your sinking-fund?"
"Twelve hundred hands?" said the stranger, the young man who
had first spoken. "Do you control their votes, Kirby?"
"Control? No." The young man smiled complacently. "But
my father brought seven hundred votes to the polls for his candidate
last November. No force-work, you understand,--only a speech or two,
a hint to form themselves into a society, and a bit of red and blue
bunting to make them a flag. The
Invincible Roughs,--I believe that is their name. I forget the motto:
'Our country's hope,' I think."
There was a laugh. The young man talking to Kirby sat with an amused
light in his cool gray eye, surveying critically the half-clothed figures
of the puddlers, and the slow swing of their brawny muscles.
He was a stranger in the city,--spending a couple of months in the borders
of a Slave State, to study the institutions of the South,--a brother-in-law
of Kirby's,--Mitchell. He was an amateur gymnast,--hence his anatomical
eye; a patron, in a blase way, of the prize-ring; a man who sucked the
essence out of a science or philosophy in an indifferent, gentlemanly
way; who took Kant, Novalis, Humboldt, for what they were worth in his
own scales; accepting all, despising nothing, in heaven, earth, or hell,
but one-idead men; with a temper yielding and brilliant as summer water,
until his Self was touched, when it was ice, though brilliant still.
Such men are not rare in the States.
As he knocked the ashes from his cigar, Wolfe caught with a quick pleasure
the contour of the white hand, the blood-glow of a red ring he wore.
His voice, too, and that of Kirby's, touched him like music,--low, even,
with chording cadences. About this man Mitchell hung the impalpable
atmosphere belonging to the thoroughbred gentleman. Wolfe, scraping
away the ashes beside him, was conscious of it, did obeisance to it
with his artist sense, unconscious that he did so.
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The rain did not cease. Clarke and the reporter left
the mills; the others, comfortably seated near the furnace, lingered,
smoking and talking in a desultory way. Greek would not have been more
unintelligible to the furnacetenders, whose presence they soon forgot
entirely. Kirby drew out a newspaper from his pocket and read aloud
some article, which they discussed eagerly. At every sentence, Wolfe
listened more and more like a dumb, hopeless animal, with a duller,
more stolid look creeping over his face, glancing now and then at Mitchell,
marking acutely every smallest sign of refinement, then back to himself,
seeing as in a mirror his filthy body, his more stained soul.
Never! He had no words for such a thought, but he knew now, in all the
sharpness of the bitter certainty, that between them there was a great
gulf never to be passed. Never!
The bell of the mills rang for midnight. Sunday morning had dawned.
Whatever hidden message lay in the tolling bells floated past these
men unknown. Yet it was there. Veiled in the solemn music ushering the
risen Saviour was a key-note to solve the darkest secrets of a world
gone wrong,--even this social riddle which the brain of the grimy puddler
grappled with madly to-right.
The men began to withdraw the metal from the caldrons. The mills were
deserted on Sundays, except by the hands who fed the fires, and those
who had no lodgings and slept usually on the ash-heaps. The three strangers
sat still during the next hour, watching the men cover the furnaces,
laughing now and then at some jest of Kirby's.
"Do you know," said Mitchell, "I like this view of the
works better than when the glare was fiercest?
These heavy shadows and the amphitheatre of smothered fires are ghostly,
unreal. One could fancy these red smouldering lights to be the half-shut
eyes of wild beasts, and the spectral figures their victims in the den."
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Kirby laughed. "You are fanciful. Come, let us get out of the
den. The spectral figures, as you call them, are a little too real for
me to fancy a close proximity in the darkness,--unarmed, too."
The others rose, buttoning their overcoats, and lighting cigars.
"Raining still," said Doctor May, "and hard. Where did
we leave the coach, Mitchell?"
"At the other side of the works.--Kirby, what's that?"
Mitchell started back, half-frightened, as, suddenly turning a corner,
the white figure of a woman faced him in the darkness,--a woman, white,
of giant proportions, crouching on the ground, her arms flung out in
some wild gesture of warning.
"Stop! Make that fire burn there!" cried Kirby, stopping short.
The flame burst out, flashing the gaunt figure into bold relief.
Mitchell drew a long breath
"I thought it was alive," he said, going up curiously.
The others followed.
"Not marble, eh?" asked Kirby, touching it.
One of the lower overseers stopped.
"Korl, Sir."
"Who did it?"
"Can't say. Some of the hands; chipped it out in off-hours."
"Chipped to some purpose, I should say. What a flesh-tint the stuff
has! Do you see, Mitchell?"
"I see."
He had stepped aside where the light fell boldest on the figure, looking
at it in silence. There was not one line of beauty or grace in it: a
nude woman's form, muscular, grown coarse with labor, the powerful limbs
instinct with some one poignant longing. Onc idea: there it was in the
tense, rigid muscles, the clutching hands, the wild, eager face, like
that of a starving wolf's. Kirby and Dr. May walked around it, critical,
curious. MitcheH stood aloof, silent. The figure touched him strangely.
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"Not badly done," said Doctor May. "Where did the fellow
learn that sweep of the muscles in the arm and hand? Look at them! They
are groping,--do you see?--clutching: the peculiar action of a man dying
of thirst."
"They have ample facilities for studying anatomy," sneered
Kirby, glancing at the half-naked figures.
"Look," continued the Doctor, "at this bony wrist, and
the strained sinews of the instep! A working-woman,--the very type of
her class."
"God forbid!" muttered Mitchell.
"Why?" demanded May. "What does the fellow intend by
the figure? I cannot catch the meaning."
"Ask him," said the other, dryly. "There he stands,"--pointing
to Wolfe, who stood with a group of men, leaning on his ash-rake.
The Doctor beckoned him with the affable smile which kind-hearted men
put on, when talking to these people.
"Mr. Mitchell has picked you out as the man who did this,--I'm
sure I don't know why. But what did you mean by it?"
"She be hungry."
Wolfe's eyes answered Mitchell, not the Doctor.
"Oh-h! But what a mistake you have made, my fine fellow! You have
given no sign of starvation to the body. It is strong,--terribly strong.
It has the mad, half-despairing gesture of drowning."
Wolfe stammered, glanced appealingly at Mitchell, who saw the soul of
the thing, he knew. But the cool, probing eyes were turned on himself
now,--mocking, cruel, relentless.
"Not hungry for meat," the furnace-tender said at last.
"What then? Whiskey?" jeered Kirby, with a coarse laugh.
Wolfe was silent a moment, thinking.
"I dunno," he said, with a bewildered look. "It mebbe.
Summat to make her live, I think,--like you.
Whiskey ull do it, in a way."
The young man laughed again. Mitchell flashed a look of disgust somewhere,--not
at Wolfe.
"May," he broke out impatiently, "are you blind? Look
at that woman's face! It asks questions of God, and says, 'I have a
right to know.' Good God, how hungry it is!"
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They looked a moment; then May turned to the millowner:--
"Have you many such hands as this? What are you going to do with
them? Keep them at puddling iron?"
Kirby shrugged his shoulders. Mitchell's look had irritated him.
"Ce n'est pas mon affaire. I have no fancy for nursing infant geniuses.
I suppose there are some stray gleams of mind and soul among these wretches.
The Lord will take care of his own; or else they can work out their
own salvation. I have heard you call our American system a ladder which
any man can scale. Do you doubt it? Or perhaps you want to banish all
social ladders, and put us all on a flat table-land,--eh, May?"
The Doctor looked vexed, puzzled. Some terrible problem lay hid in
this woman's face, and troubled these men. Kirby waited for an answer,
and, receiving none, went on, warming with his subject.
"I tell you, there's something wrong that no talk of 'Liberte'
or 'Egalite' will do away. If I had the making of men, these men who
do the lowest part of the world's work should be machines,--nothing
more,--hands. It would be kindness. God help them! What are taste, reason,
to creatures who must live such lives as that?" He pointed to Deborah,
sleeping on the ash-heap. "So many nerves to sting them to pain.
What if God had put your brain, with all its agony of touch, into your
fingers, and bid you work and strike with that?"
"You think you could govern the world better?" laughed the
Doctor.
"I do not think at all."
"That is true philosophy. Drift with the stream, because you cannot
dive deep enough to find bottom, eh?"
"Exactly," rejoined Kirby. "I do not think. I wash my
hands of all social problems,--slavery, caste, white or black. My duty
to my operatives has a narrow limit,--the payhour on Saturday night.
Outside of that, if they cut korl, or cut each other's throats, (the
more popular amusement of the two,) I am not responsible."
The Doctor sighed,--a good honest sigh, from the depths of his stomach.
"God help us! Who is responsible?"
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"Not I, I tell you," said Kirby, testily. "What has the
man who pays them money to do with their souls' concerns, more than
the grocer or butcher who takes it?"
"And yet," said Mitchell's cynical voice, "look at her!
How hungry she is!"
Kirby tapped his boot with his cane. No one spoke. Only the dumb face
of the rough image looking into their faces with the awful question,
"What shall we do to be saved?" Only Wolfe's face, with its
heavy weight of brain, its weak, uncertain mouth, its desperate eyes,
out of which looked the soul of his class,--only Wolfe's face turned
towards Kirby's. Mitchell laughed,--a cool, musical laugh.
"Money has spoken!" he said, seating himself lightly on a
stone with the air of an amused spectator at a play. "Are you answered?"--turning
to Wolfe his clear, magnetic face.
Bright and deep and cold as Arctic air, the soul of the man lay tranquil
beneath. He looked at the furnace-tender as he had looked at a rare
mosaic in the morning; only the man was the more amusing study of the
two.
"Are you answered? Why, May, look at him ! 'De profundis clamavi.'
Or, to quote in English, 'Hungry and thirsty, his soul faints in him.'
And so Money sends back its answer into the depths through you,
Kirby! Very clear the answer, too!--I think I remember reading the same
words somewhere:--washing your hands in Eau de Cologne, and saying,
'I am innocent of the blood of this man. See ye to it!"'
Kirby flushed angrily.
"You quote Scripture freely."
"Do I not quote correctly? I think I remember another line, which
may amend my meaning:
'Inasmuch as ye did it unto one of the least of these, ye did it unto
me.' Deist? Bless you, man, I was raised on the milk of the Word. Now,
Doctor, the pocket of the world having uttered its voice, what has the
heart to say? You are a philanthropist, in a small way,--n'est ce pas?
Here, boy, this gentleman can show you how to cut korl better,--or your
destiny. Go on, May!"
"I think a mocking devil possesses you to-night," rejoined
the Doctor, seriously.
He went to Wolfe and put his hand kindly on his arm. Something of a
vague idea possessed the
Doctor's brain that much good was to be done here by a friendly word
or two: a latent genius to be warmed into life by a waited-for sunbeam.
Here it was: he had brought it. So he went on complacently:--
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"Do you know, boy, you have it in you to be a great sculptor, a
great man?--do you understand?" (talking down to the capacity of
his hearer: it is a way people have with children, and men like Wolfe)--"
to live a better, stronger life than I, or Mr. Kirby here? A man may
make himself anything he chooses. God has given you stronger powers
than many men,--me, for instance."
May stopped, heated, glowing with his own magnanimity. And it was magnanimous.
The puddler had drunk in every word, looking through the Doctor's flurry,
and generous heat, and self-approval, into his will, with those slow,
absorbing eyes of his.
"Make yourself what you will. It is your right."
"I know," quietly. "Will you help me?"
"Go back, Mitchell! You say the pocket and the heart of the world
speak without meaning to these people. What has its head to say? Taste,
culture, refinement? Go!"
Mitchell was leaning against a brick wall. He turned his head indolently,
and looked into the mills. There hung about the place a thick, unclean
odor. The slightest motion of his hand marked that he perceived it,
and his insufferable disgust. That was all. May said nothing, only quickened
his angry tramp.
"Besides," added Mitchell, giving a corollary to his answer,
"it would be of no use. I am not one of them."
"You do not mean "--said May, facing him.
"Yes, I mean just that. Reform is born of need, not pity. No vital
movement of the people's has worked down, for good or evil; fermented,
instead, carried up the heaving, cloggy mass. Think back through history,
and you will know it. What will this lowest deep--thieves, Magdalens,
negroes--do with the light filtered through ponderous Church creeds,
Baconian theories, Goethe schemes? Some day, out of their bitter need
will be thrown up their own light-bringer,--their Jean Paul, their Cromwell,
their Messiah."
"Bah!" was the Doctor's inward criticism. However, in practice,
he adopted the theory; for, when, night and morning, afterwards, he
prayed that power might be given these degraded souls to rise, he glowed
at heart, recognizing an accomplished duty.
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Wolfe and the woman had stood in the shadow of the works as the coach
drove off. The Doctor had held out his hand in a frank, generous way,
telling him to "take care of himself, and to remember it was his
right to rise." Mitchell had simply touched his hat, as to an equal,
with a quiet look of thorough recognition. Kirby had thrown Deborah
some money, which she found, and clutched eagerly enough. They were
gone now, all of them. The man sat down on the cinder-road, looking
up into the murky sky.
"'T be late, Hugh. Wunnot hur come?"
He shook his head doggedly, and the woman crouched out of his sight
against the wall. Do you remember rare moments when a sudden light flashed
over yourself, your world, God? when you stood on a mountain-peak, seeing
your life as it might have been, as it is? one quick instant, when custom
lost its force and every-day usage? when your friend, wife, brother,
stood in a new light? your soul was bared, and the grave,--a foretaste
of the nakedness of the Judgment-Day? So it came before him, his life,
that night. The slow tides of pain he had borne gathered themselves
up and surged against his soul. His squalid daily life, the brutal coarseness
eating into his brain, as the ashes into his skin: before, these things
had been a dull aching into his consciousness; to-night, they were reality.
He gripped the filthy red shirt that clung, stiff with soot, about him,
and tore it savagely from his arm. The flesh beneath was muddy with
grease and ashes,--and the heart beneath that! And the soul? God knows.
Then flashed before his vivid poetic sense the man who had left him,--the
pure face, the delicate, sinewy limbs, in harmony with all he knew of
beauty or truth. In his cloudy fancy he had pictured a Something like
this. He had found it in this Mitchell, even when he idly scoffed at
his pain: a Man all-knowing, all-seeing, crowned by Nature, reigning,--the
keen glance of his eye falling like a sceptre on other men. And yet
his instinct taught him that he too--He! He looked at himself with sudden
loathing, sick, wrung his hands with a cry, and then was silent. With
all the phantoms of his heated, ignorant fancy, Wolfe had not been vague
in his ambitions. They were practical, slowly built up before him out
of his knowledge of what he could do. Through years he had day by day
made this hope a real thing to himself,--a clear, projected figure of
himself, as he might become.
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Able to speak, to know what was best, to raise these men and women
working at his side up with him: sometimes he forgot this defined hope
in the frantic anguish to escape,--only to escape,--out of the wet,
the pain, the ashes, somewhere, anywhere,--only for one moment of free
air on a hill side, to lie down and let his sick soul throb itself out
in the sunshine. But to-night he panted for life. The savagestrength
of his nature was roused; his cry was fierce to God for justice.
"Look at me!" he said to Deborah, with a low, bitter laugh,
striking his puny chest savagely. "What amI worth, Deb? Is it my
fault that I am no better? My fault? My fault?"
He stopped, stung with a sudden remorse, seeing her hunchback shape
writhing with sobs. For Deborah was crying thankless tears, according
to the fashion of women.
"God forgi' me, woman! Things go harder wi' you nor me. It's a
worse share."
He got up and helped her to rise; and they went doggedly down the muddy
street, side by side.
"It's all wrong," he muttered, slowly,--"all wrong! I
dunnot understan'. But it'll end some day."
"Come home, Hugh!" she said, coaxingly; for he had stopped,
looking around bewildered.
"Home,--and back to the mill!" He went on saying this over
to himself, as if he would mutter down every pain in this dull despair.
She followed him through the fog, her blue lips chattering with cold.
They reached the cellar at last. Old Wolfe had been drinking since she
went out, and had crept nearer the door. The girl Janey slept heavily
in the corner. He went up to her, touching softly the worn white arm
with his fingers. Some bitterer thought stung him, as he stood there.
He wiped the drops from his forehead, and went into the room beyond,
livid, trembling. A hope, trifling, perhaps, but very dear, had died
just then out of the poor puddler's life, as he looked at the sleeping,
innocent girl,--some plan for the future, in which she had borne a part.
He gave it up that moment, then and forever. Only a trifle, perhaps,
to us: his face grew a shade paler,--that was all. But, somehow, the
man's soul, as God and the angels looked down on it, never was the same
afterwards.
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Deborah followed him into the inner room. She carried
a candle, which she placed on the floor, closing the door after her.
She had seen the look on his face, as he turned away; her own grew deadly.
Yet, as she came up to him, her eyes glowed. He was seated on an old
chest, quiet, holding his face in his hands.
"Hugh!" she said, softly.
He did not speak.
"Hugh, did hur hear what the man said,--him with the clear voice?
Did hur hear? Money, money,--that it wud do all?"
He pushed her away,--gently, but he was worn out; her rasping tone fretted
him.
"Hugh!"
The candle flared a pale yellow light over the cobwebbed brick walls,
and the woman standing there. He looked at her. She was young, in deadly
earnest; her faded eyes, and wet, ragged figure caught from their frantic
eagerness a power akin to beauty.
"Hugh, it is true! Money ull do it! Oh, Hugh, boy, listen till
me! He said it true! It is money!"
"I know. Go back! I do not want you here."
"Hugh, it is t' last time. I'll never worrit hur again."
There were tears in her voice now, but she choked them back.
"Hear till me only to-night! If one of t' witch people wud come,
them we heard of t' home, and gif hur all hur wants, what then? Say,
Hugh!"
"What do you mean?"
"I mean money."
Her whisper shrilled through his brain.
"If one of t' witch dwarfs wud come from t' lane moors to-night,
and gif hur money, to go out,--out, I say,--out, lad, where t' sun shines,
and t' heath grows, and t' ladies walk in silken gownds, and God stays
all t' time,--where t' man lives that talked to us to-night,--Hugh knows,--
Hugh could walk there like a king!"
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He thought the woman mad, tried to check her, but she
went on, fierce in her eager haste.
"If I were t' witch dwarf, if I had t' money, wud hur thank me?
Wud hur take me out o' this place wid hur and Janey? I wud not come
into the gran' house hur wud build, to vex hur wid t' hunch,--only at
night, when t' shadows were dark, stand far off to see hur."
Mad? Yes! Are many of us mad in this way?
"Poor Deb! poor Deb!" he said, soothingly.
"It is here," she said, suddenly jerking into his hand a small
roll. "I took it! I did it! I shall be hanged! I shall be burnt
in hell, if anybody knows I took it! Me, me! not hur! Out of his pocket,
as he leaned against t' bricks. Hur knows?"
She thrust it into his hand, and then, her errand done, began to gather
chips together to make a fire, choking down hysteric sobs.
"Has it come to this?"
That was all he said. The Welsh Wolfe blood was honest. The roll was
a small green pocket-book containing one or two gold pieces, and a check
for an incredible amount, as it seemed to the poor puddler. He laid
it down, hiding his face again in his hands.
"Hugh, don't be angry wud me! It's only poor Deb,--hur knows?"
He took the long skinny fingers kindly in his.
"Angry? God help me, no! Let me sleep. I am tired."
He threw himself heavily down on the wooden bench, stunned with pain
and weariness. She brought some old rags to cover him.
It was late on Sunday evening before he awoke. I tell God's truth, when
I say he had then no thought of keeping this money. Deborah had hid
it in his pocket. He found it there. She watched him eagerly, as he
took it out.
"I must gif it to him," he said, reading her
face.
"Hur knows," she said with a bitter sigh of disappointment.
"But it is hur right to keep it."
His right! The word struck him. Doctor May had used the same. He washed
himself, and went out to find this man Mitchell. His right! Why did
this chance word cling to him so obstinately? Do you hear the fierce
devils whisper in his ear, as he went slowly down the darkening street?
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The evening came on, slow and calm. He seated himself at the end of
an alley leading into one of the larger streets. His brain was clear
to-night, keen, intent, mastering. It would not start back, cowardly,
from any hellish temptation, but meet it face to face. Therefore the
great temptation of his life came to him veiled by no sophistry, but
bold, defiant, owning its own vile name, trusting to one bold blow for
victory.
He did not deceive himself. Theft! That was it. At first the word sickened
him; then he grappled with it. Sitting there on a broken cart-wheel,
the fading day, the noisy groups, the church-bells' tolling passed before
him like a panorama, while the sharp struggle went on within. This money!
He took it out, and looked at it. If he gave it back, what then? He
was going to be cool about it.
People going by to church saw only a sickly mill-boy watching them quietly
at the alley's mouth. They did not know that he was mad, or they would
not have gone by so quietly: mad with hunger; stretching out his hands
to the world, that had given so much to them, for leave to live the
life God meant him to live. His soul within him was smothering to death;
he wanted so much, thought so much, and knew--nothing. There was nothing
of which he was certain, except the mill and things there. Of God and
heaven he had heard so little, that they were to him what fairy-land
is to a child: something real, but not here; very far off. His brain,
greedy, dwarfed, full of thwarted energy and unused powers, questioned
these men and women going by, coldly, bitterly, that night. Was it not
his right to live as they,--a pure life, a good, true-hearted life,
full of beauty and kind words? He only wanted to know how to use the
strength within him. His heart warmed, as he thought of it. He suffered
himself to think of it longer. If he took the money?
Then he saw himself as he might be, strong, helpful, kindly. The night
crept on, as this one image slowly evolved itself from the crowd of
other thoughts and stood triumphant. He looked at it. As he might be!
What wonder, if it blinded him to delirium,--the madness that underlies
all revolution, all progress, and all fall?
You laugh at the shallow temptation? You see the error underlying its
argument so clearly,--that to him a true life was one of full development
rather than self-restraint? that he was deaf to the higher tone in a
cry of voluntary suffering for truth's sake than in the fullest flow
of spontaneous harmony? I do not plead his cause. I only want to show
you the mote in my brother's eye: then you can see clearly to take it
out.
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The money,--there it lay on his knee, a little blotted slip of paper,
nothing in itself; used to raise him out of the pit; something straight
from God's hand. A thief! Well, what was it to be a thief? He met the
question at last face to face, wiping the clammy drops of sweat from
his forehead. God made this money--the fresh air, too--for his children's
use. He never made the difference between poor and rich. The Something
who looked down on him that moment through the cool gray sky had a kindly
face, he knew,--loved his children alike. Oh, he knew that!
There were times when the soft floods of color in the crimson and purple
flames, or the clear depth of amber in the water below the bridge, had
somehow given him a glimpse of another world than this,--of an infinite
depth of beauty and of quiet somewhere,--somewhere,--a depth of quiet
and rest and love. Looking up now, it became strangely real. The sun
had sunk quite below the hills, but his last rays struck upward, touching
the zenith. The fog had risen, and the town and river were steeped in
its thick, gray damp; but overhead, the sun-touched smoke-clouds opened
like a cleft ocean,--shifting, rolling seas of crimson mist, waves of
billowy silver veined with blood-scarlet, inner depths unfathomable
of glancing light. Wolfe's artist-eye grew drunk with color. The gates
of that other world! Fading, flashing before him now! What, in that
world of Beauty, Content, and Right, were the petty laws, the mine and
shine, of mill-owners and mill- hands?
A consciousness of power stirred within him. He stood up. A man,--he
thought, stretching out his hands,--free to work, to live, to love!
Free! His right! He folded the scrap of paper in his hand. As his nervous
fingers took it in, limp and blotted, so his soul took in the mean temptation,
lapped it in fancied rights, in dreams of improved existences, driffing
and endless as the cloud-seas of color. Clutching it, as if the tightness
of his hold would strengthen his sense of possession, he went aimlessly
down the street. It was his watch at the mill. He need not go, need
never go again, thank God!--shaking off the thought with unspeakable
loathing.
Shall I go over the history of the hours of that night? how the man
wandered from one to another of his old haunts, with a half-consciousness
of bidding them farewell,--lanes and alleys and back-yards where the
mill-hands lodged,--noting, with a new eagerness, the filth and drunkenness,
the pig-pens, the ash-heaps covered with potatoskins, the bloated, pimpled
women at the doors,--with a new disgust, a new sense of sudden triumph,
and, under all, a new, vague dread, unknown before, smothered down,
kept under, but still there?
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It left him but once during the night, when, for the second time in
his life, he entered a church. It was a sombre Gothic pile, where the
stained light lost itself in far-retreating arches; built to meet the
requirements and sympathies of a far other class than Wolfe's. Yet it
touched, moved him uncontrollably. The distances, the shadows, the still,
marble figures, the mass of silent, kneeling worshippers, the mysterious
music, thrilled, lifted his soul with a wonderful pain. Wolfe forgot
himself, forgot the new life he was going to live, the mean terror gnawing
underneath. The voice of the speaker strengthened the charm; it was
clear, feeling, full, strong. An old man, who had lived much, suffered
much; whose brain was keenly alive, dominant; whose heart was summer-warm
with charity. He taught it to-night. He held up Humanity in its grand
total; showed the great world-cancer to his people. Who could show it
better ? He was a Christian reformer; he had studied the age thoroughly;
his outlook at man had been free, world-wide, over all time. His faith
stood sublime upon the Rock of Ages; his fiery zeal guided vast schemes
by which the Gospel was to be preached to all nations. How did he preach
it to-night? In burning, light-laden words he painted Jesus, the incarnate
Life, Love, the universal Man: words that became reality in the lives
of these people,--that lived again in beautiful words and actions, trifling,
but heroic. Sin, as he defined it, was a real foe to them; their trials,
temptations, were his. His words passed far over the furnace-tender's
grasp, toned to suit another class of culture; they sounded in his ears
a very pleasant song in an unknown tongue. He meant to cure this world-cancer
with a steady eye that had never glared with hunger, and a hand that
neither poverty nor strychnine-whiskey had taught to shake. In this
morbid, distorted heart of the Welsh puddler he had failed.
Wolfe arose at last, and turned from the church down the street. He
looked up; the night had come on foggy, damp; the golden mists had vanished,
and the sky lay dull and ash-colored. He wandered again aimlessly down
the street, idly wondering what had become of the cloud-sea of crimson
and scarlet. The trial-day of this man's life was over, and he had lost
the victory. What followed was mere drifting circumstance,--a quicker
walking over the path,--that was all. Do you want to hear the end of
it? You wish me to make a tragic story out of it? Why, in the police-
reports of the morning paper you can find a dozen such tragedies; hints
of shipwrecks unlike any that ever befell on the high seas; hints that
here a power was lost to heaven,--that there a soul went down where
no tide can ebb or flow. Commonplace enough the hints are,--jocose sometimes,
done up in rhyme.
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Doctor May, a month after the night I have told you of, was reading
to his wife at breakfast from this fourth column of the morning-paper:
an unusual thing,--these police-reports not being, in general, choice
reading for ladies; but it was only one item he read.
"Oh, my dear! You remember that man I told you of, that we saw
at Kirby's mill?--that was arrested for robbing Mitchell? Here he
is; just listen:--'Circuit Court. Judge Day. Hugh Wolfe, operative
in Kirby & John's Loudon Mills. Charge, grand larceny. Sentence,
nineteen years hard labor in penitentiary.'--Scoundrel! Serves him
right! After all our kindness that night! Picking Mitchell's pocket
at the very time!"
His wife said something about the ingratitude of that kind of people,
and then they began to talk of something else.
Nineteen years! How easy that was to read! What a simple word for
Judge Day to utter! Nineteen years! Half a lifetime!
Hugh Wolfe sat on the window-ledge of his cell, looking out. His ankles
were ironed. Not usual in such cases; but he had made two desperate
efforts to escape. "Well," as Haley, the jailer, said, "small
blame to him! Nineteen years' imprisonment was not a pleasant thing
to look forward to.". Haley was very good-natured about it, though
Wolfe had fought him savagely.
"When he was first caught," the jailer said afterwards,
in telling the story, "before the trial, the fellow was cut down
at once,--laid there on that pallet like a dead man, with his hands
over his eyes. Never saw a man so cut down in my life. Time of the
trial, too, came the queerest dodge of any customer I ever had. Would
choose no lawyer. Judge gave him one, of course. Gibson it was. He
tried to prove the fellow crazy; but it would n't go. Thing was plain
as daylight: check found on him. 'T was a hard sentence,--all the
law allows; but it was for 'xample's sake. These mill-hands are gettin'
onbearable. When the sentence was read, he just looked up, and said
the money was his by rights, and that all the world had gone wrong.
That night, after the trial, a gentleman came to see him here, name
of Mitchell,--him as he stole from. Talked to him for an hour. Thought
he came for curiosity, like. After he was gone, thought Wolfe was
remarkable quiet, and went into his cell. Found him very low; bed
all bloody. Doctor said he had been bleeding at the lungs. He was
as weak as a cat; yet, if ye'll b'lieve me, he tried to get a-past
me and get out. I just carried him like a baby, and threw him on the
pallet. Three days after, he tried it again: that time reached the
wall. Lord help you! he fought like a tiger,--giv' some terrible blows.
Fightin' for life, you see;
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He let her in. Wolfe did not see her. She crept into a
corner of the cell, and stood watching him. He was scratching the iron
bars of the window with a piece of tin which he had picked up, with
an idle, uncertain, vacant stare, just as a child or idiot would do.
"Tryin' to get out, old boy?" laughed Haley. "Them irons
will need a crowbar beside your tin, before you can open 'em."
Wolfe laughed, too, in a senseless way.
"I think I'll get out," he said.
"I believe his brain's touched," said Haley, when he came
out.
The puddler scraped away with the tin for half an hour. Still Deborah
did not speak. At last she ventured nearer, and touched his arm.
"Blood?" she said, looking at some spots on his coat with
a shudder.
He looked up at her. "\Vhy, Deb!" he said, smiling,--such
a bright, boyish smile, that it went to poor Deborah's heart directly,
and she sobbed and cried out loud.
"Oh, Hugh, lad! Hugh! dunnot look at me, when it wur my fault!
To think I brought hur to it! And I loved hur so! Oh, lad, I dud!"
The confession, even in this wretch, came with the woman's blush through
the sharp cry.
He did not seem to hear her,--scraping away diligently at the bars with
the bit of tin.
Was he going mad? She peered closely into his face. Something she saw
there made her draw suddenly back,--something which Haley had not seen,
that lay beneath the pinched, vacant look it had caught since the trial,
or the curious gray shadow that rested on it. That gray shadow,--yes,
she knew what that meant. She had often seen it creeping over women's
faces for months, who died at last of slow hunger or consumption. That
meant death, distant, lingering: but this-- Whatever it was the woman
saw, or thought she saw, used as she was to crime and misery, seemed
to make her sick with a new horror. Forgetting her fear of him, she
caught his shoulders, and looked keenly, steadily, into his eyes.
"Hugh!" she cried, in a desperate whisper,--"oh, boy,
not that! for God's sake, not that!"
The vacant laugh went off his face, and he answered her in a muttered
word or two that drove her away. Ye the words were kindly enough. Sitting
there on his pallet, she cried silently a hopeless sort of tears, but
did not speak again. The man looked up furtively at her now and then.
Whatever his own trouble was, her distress vexed him with a momentary
sting.
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It was market-day. The narrow window of the jail looked
down directly on the carts and wagons drawn up in a long line, where
they had unloaded. He could see, too, and hear distinctly the clink
of money as it changed hands, the busy crowd of whites and blacks shoving,
pushing one another, and the chaffering and swearing at the stalls.
Somehow, the sound, more than anything else had done, wakened him up,--made
the whole real to him. He was done with the world and the business of
it. He let the tin fall, and looked out, pressing his face close to
the rusty bars. How they crowded and pushed! And he,_he should never
walk that pavement again! There came Neff Sanders, one of the feeders
at the mill, with a basket on his arm. Sure enough, Neff was married
the other week. He whistled, hoping he would look up; but he did not.
He wondered if Neff remembered he was there,--if any of the boys thought
of him up there, and thought that he never was to go down that old cinder-road
again. Never again! He had not quite understood it before; but now he
did. Not for days or years, but never!--that was it.
How clear the light fell on that stall in front of the market! and how
like a picture it was, the dark-green heaps of corn, and the crimson
beets, and golden melons! There was another with game: how the light
flickered on that pheasant's breast, with the purplish blood dripping
over the brown feathers! He could see the red shining of the drops,
it was so near. In one minute he could be down there. It was just a
step. So easy, as it seemed, so natural to go! Yet it could never be--not
in all the thousands of years to come--that he should put his foot on
that street again! He thought of himself with a sorrowful pity, as of
some one else. There was a dog down in the market, walking after his
master with such a stately, grave look!--only a dog, yet he could go
backwards and forwards just as he pleased: he had good luck! Why, the
very vilest cur, yelping there in the gutter, had not lived his life,
had been free to act out whatever thought God had put into his brain;
while he--No, he would not think of that! He tried to put the thought
away, and to listen to a dispute between a countryman and a woman about
some meat; but it would come back. He, what had he done to bear this?
Then came the sudden picture of what might have been, and now. He knew
what it was to be in the penitentiary,--how it went with men there.
He knew how in these long years he should slowly die, but not until
soul and body had become corrupt and rotten,--how, when he came out,
if he lived to come, even the lowest of the mill-hands would jeer him,-
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-how his hands would be weak, and his brain senseless
and stupid. He believed he was almost that now. He put his hand to his
head, with a puzzled, weary look. It ached, his head, with thinking.
He tried to quiet himself. It was only right, perhaps; he had done wrong.
But was there right or wrong for such as he? What was right? And who
had ever taught him? He thrust the whole matter away. A dark, cold quiet
crept through his brain. lt was all wrong; but let it be! It was nothing
to him more than the others. Let it be!
The door grated, as Haley opened it.
"Come, my woman! Must lock up for t' night. Come, stir yerself!"
She went up and took Hugh's hand.
"Good-night, Deb," he said, carelessly.
She had not hoped he would say more; but the tired pain on her mouth
just then was bitterer than death. She took his passive hand and kissed
it.
"Hur'll never see Deb again!" she ventured, her lips growing
colder and more bloodless.
What did she say that for? Did he not know it? Yet he would not be impatient
with poor old Deb. She had trouble of her own, as well as he.
"No, never again," he said, trying to be cheerful.
She stood just a moment, looking at him. Do you laugh at her, standing
there, with her hunchback, her rags, her bleared, withered face, and
the great despised love tugging at her heart?
"Come you!" called Haley, impatiently.
She did not move.
"Hugh!" she whispered.
It was to be her last word. What was it?
"Hugh, boy, not THAT!"
He did not answer. She wrung her hands, trying to be silent, looking
in his face in an agony of entreaty. He smiled again, kindly.
"It is best, Deb. I cannot bear to be hurted any more."
"Hur knows," she said, humbly.
"Tell my father good-by; and--and kiss little Janey."
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She nodded, saying nothing, looked in his face again,
and went out of the door. As she went, she staggered.
"Drinkin' to-day?" broke out Haley, pushing her before him.
"Where the Devil did you get it? Here, in with ye!" and he
shoved her into her cell, next to Wolfe's, and shut the door.
Along the wall of her cell there was a crack low down by the floor,
through which she could see the light from Wolfe's. She had discovered
it days before. She hurried in now, and, kneeling down by it, listened,
hoping to hear some sound. Nothing but the rasping of the tin on the
bars. He was at his old amusement again. Something in the noise jarred
on her ear, for she shivered as she heard it. Hugh rasped away at the
bars. A dull old bit of tin, not fit to cut korl with.
He looked out of the window again. People were leaving the market now.
A tall mulatto girl, following her mistress, her basket on her head,
crossed the street just below, and looked up. She was laughing; but,
when she caught sight of the haggard face peering out through the bars,
suddenly grew grave, and hurried by. A free, firm step, a clear-cut
olive face, with a scarlet turban tied on one side, dark, shining eyes,
and on the head the basket poised, filled with fruit and flowers, under
which the scarlet turban and bright eyes looked out half-shadowed. The
picture caught his eye. It was good to see a face like that. He would
try to-morrow, and cut one like it. To-morrow! He threw down the tin,
trembling, and covered his face with his hands. When he looked up again,
the daylight was gone.
Deborah, crouching near by on the other side of the wall, heard no noise.
He sat on the side of the low pallet, thinking. Whatever was the mystery
which the woman had seen on his face, it came out now slowly, in the
dark there, and became fixed,--a something never seen on his face before.
The evening was darkening fast. The market had been over for an hour;
the rumbling of the carts over the pavement grew more infrequent: he
listened to each, as it passed, because he thought it was to be for
the last time. For the same reason, it was, I suppose, that he strained
his eyes to catch a glimpse of each passer-by, wondering who they were,
what kind of homes they were going to, if they had children,--listening
eagerly to every chance word in the stree't, as if--(God be merciful
to the man! what strange fancy was this?)--as if he never should hear
human voices again.
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It was quite dark at last. The street was a lonely one.
The last passenger, he thought, was gone. No,--there was a quick step:
Joe Hill, lighting the lamps. Joe was a good old chap; never passed
a fellow without some joke or other. He remembered once seeing the place
where he lived with his wife. "Granny Hill" the boys called
her. Bedridden she was; but so kind as Joe was to her! kept the room
so clean!--and the old woman, when he was there, was laughing at "some
of t' lad's foolishness." The step was far down the street; but
he could see him place the ladder, run up, and light the gas. A longing
seized him to be spoken to once more.
"Joe!" he called out of the grating. "Good-by, Joe!"
The old man stopped a moment, listening uncertainly; then hurried on.
The prisoner thrust his hand out of the window, and called again, louder;
but Joe was too far down the street. It was a little thing; but it hurt
him,--this disappointment.
"Good-by, Joe!" he called, sorrowfully enough.
"Be quiet!" said one of the jailers, passing the door, striking
on it with his club.
Oh, that was the last, was it ?
There was an inexpressible bitterness on his face, as he lay down on
the bed, taking the bit of tin, which he had rasped to a tolerable degree
of sharpness, in his hand,--to play with, it may be. He bared his arms,
looking intently at their corded veins and sinews. Deborah, listening
in the next cell, heard a slight clicking sound, often repeated. She
shut her lips tightly, that she might not scream; the cold drops of
sweat broke over her, in her dumb agony.
"Hur knows best," she muttered at last, fiercely clutching
the boards where she lay.
If she could have seen Wolfe, there was nothing about him to frighten
her. He lay quite still, his arms outstretched, looking at the pearly
stream of moonlight coming into the window. I think in that one hour
that came then he lived back over all the years that had gone before.
I think that all the low, vile life, all his wrongs, all his starved
hopes, came then, and stung him with a farewell poison that made him
sick unto death. He made neither moan nor cry, only turned his worn
face now and then to the pure light, that seemed so far off, as one
that said, "How long, O Lord? how long?"
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The hour was over at last. The moon, passing over her
nightly path, slowly came nearer, and threw the light across his bed
on his feet. He watched it steadily, as it crept up, inch by inch, slowly.
It seemed to him to carry with it a great silence. He had been so hot
and tired there always in the mills! The years had been so fierce and
cruel! There was coming now quiet and coolness and sleep. His tense
limbs relaxed, and settled in a calm languor. The blood ran fainter
and slow from his heart. He did not think now with a savage anger of
what might be and was not; he was conscious only of deep stillness creeping
over him. At first he saw a sea of faces: the mill-men,--women he had
known, drunken and bloated,--Janey's timid and pitiful,--poor old Debs:
then they floated together like a mist, and faded away, leaving only
the clear, pearly moonlight.
Whether, as the pure light crept up the stretched-out figure, it brought
with it calm and peace, who shall say ? His dumb soul was alone with
God in judgment. A Voice may have spoken for it from far-off Calvary,
"Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do!" Who
dare say? Fainter and fainter the heart rose and fell, slower and slower
the moon floated from behind a cloud, until, when at last its full tide
of white splendor swept over the cell, it seemed to wrap and fold into
a deeper stillness the dead figure that never should move again. Silence
deeper than the Night! Nothing that moved, save the black, nauseous
stream of blood dripping slowly from the pallet to the floor!
There was outcry and crowd enough in the cell the next day. The coroner
and his jury, the local editors, Kirby himself, and boys with their
hands thrust knowingly into their pockets and heads on one side, jammed
into the corners. Coming and going all day. Only one woman. She came
late, and outstayed them all. A Quaker, or Friend, as they call themselves.
I think this woman was known by that name in heaven. A homely body,
coarsely dressed in gray and white. Deborah (for Haley had let her in)
took notice of her. She watched them all--sitting on the end of the
pallet, holding his head in her arms--with the ferocity of a watch-dog,
if any of them touched the body. There was no meekness, no sorrow, in
her face; the stuff out of which murderers are made, instead. All the
time Haley and the woman were laying straight the limbs and cleaning
the cell, Deborah sat still, keenly watching the Quaker's face. Of all
the crowd there that day, this woman alone had not spoken to her,--only
once or twice had put some cordial to her lips. Affer they all were
gone, the woman, in the same still, gentle way, brought a vase of wood-leaves
and berries, and placed it by the pallet, then opened the narrow window.
The fresh air blew in, and swept the woody fragrance over the dead face.
Deborah looked up with a quick wonder.
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"Did hur know my boy wud like it ? Did hur know Hugh?"
"I know Hugh now."
The white fingers passed in a slow, pitiful way over the dead, worn
face. There was a heavy shadow in the quiet eyes.
"Did hur know where they'll bury Hugh?" said Deborah in a
shrill tone, catching her arm.
This had been the question hanging on her lips all day.
"In t' town-yard? Under t' mud and ash? T' lad'll smother, woman!
He wur born on t' lane moor, where t' air is frick and strong. Take
hur out, for God's sake, take hur out where t' air blows!"
The Quaker hesitated, but only for a moment. She put her strong arm
around Deborah and led her to the window.
"Thee sees the hills, friend, over the river? Thee sees how the
light lies warm there, and the winds of God blow all the day? I live
there,--where the blue smoke is, by the trees. Look at me." She
turned Deborah's face to her own, clear and earnest. "Thee will
believe me? I will take Hugh and bury him there to-morrow."
Deborah did not doubt her. As the evening wore on, she leaned against
the iron bars, looking at the hills that rose far off, through the thick
sodden clouds, like a bright, unattainable calm. As she looked, a shadow
of their solemn repose fell on her face: its fierce discontent faded
into a pitiful, humble quiet. Slow, solemn tears gathered in her eyes:
the poor weak eyes turned so hopelessly to the place where Hugh was
to rest, the grave heights looking higher and brighter and more solemn
than ever before. The Quaker watched her keenly. She came to her at
last, and touched her arm.
"When thee comes back," she said, in a low, sorrowful tone,
like one who speaks from a strong heart deeply moved with remorse or
pity, "thee shall begin thy life again,--there on the hills. I
came too late; but not for thee,--by God's help, it may be."
Not too late. Three years after, the Quaker began her work. I end my
story here. At evening-time it was light. There is no need to tire you
with the long years of sunshine, and fresh air, and slow, patient Christ-love,
needed to make healthy and hopeful this impure body and soul. There
is a homely pine house, on one of these hills, whose windows overlook
broad, wooded slopes and clover-crimsoned meadows,--niched into the
very place where the light is warmest, the air freest. It is the Friends'
meetinghouse.
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Once a week they sit there, in their grave, earnest way, waiting for
the Spirit of Love to speak, opening their simple hearts to receive
His words. There is a woman, old, deformed, who takes a humble place
among them: waiting like them: in her gray dress, her worn face, pure
and meek, turned now and then to the sky. A woman much loved by these
silent, restful people; more silent than they, more humble, more loving.
Waiting: with her eyes turned to hills higher and purer than these on
which she lives,--dim and far off now, but to be reached some day. There
may be in her heart some latent hope to meet there the love denied her
here,--that she shall find him whom she lost, and that then she will
not be all-unworthy. Who blames her? Something is lost in the passage
of every soul from one eternity to the other,--something pure and beautiful,
which might have been and was not: a hope, a talent, a love, over which
the soul mourns, like Esau deprived of his birthright. What blame to
the meek Quaker, if she took her lost hope to make the hills of heaven
more fair?
Nothing remains to tell that the poor Welsh puddler once lived, but
this figure of the mill-woman cut in korl. I have it here in a corner
of my library. I keep it hid behind a curtain,--it is such a rough,
ungainly thing. Yet there are about it touches, grand sweeps of outline,
that show a master's hand. Sometimes,--to-night, for instance,--the
curtain is accidentally drawn back, and I see a bare arm stretched out
imploringly in the darkness, and an eager, wolfish face watching mine:
a wan, woful face, through which the spirit of the dead korl-cutter
looks out, with its thwarted life, its mighty hunger, its unfinished
work. Its pale, vague lips seem to tremble with a terrible question.
"Is this the End?"--they say,--"nothing beyond?--no more?"
Why, you tell me you have seen that look in the eyes of dumb brutes,--horses
dying under the lash. I know.
The deep of the night is passing while I write. The gas-light wakens
from the shadows here and there the objects which lie scattered through
the room: only faintly, though; for they belong to the open sunlight.
As I glance at them, they each recall some task or pleasure of the coming
day. A half-moulded child's head; Aphrodite; a bough of forest-leaves;
music; work; homely fragments, in which lie the secrets of all eternal
truth and beauty. Prophetic all! Only this dumb, woful face seems to
belong to and end with the night. I turn to logk at it. Has the power
of its desperate need commanded the darkness away? While the room is
yet steeped in heavy shadow, a cool, gray light suddenly touches its
head like a blessing hand, and its groping arm points through the broken
cloud to the far East, where, in the flickering, nebulous crimson, God
has set the promise of the Dawn.
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