<h3 align="center">Chapter LII</h3>
<p>Ellen resolved that she would say as little as possible about the
trouble at home that night. She did not wish her parents to worry
over it until it was settled in one way or another.</p>
<p>When her mother asked what they had done about the wage-cutting,
she replied that a committee had been appointed to wait on Mr. Lloyd
that evening, and talk it over with him; then she said nothing
more.</p>
<p>“He won't give in if he's like his uncle,” said
Fanny.</p>
<p>Ellen went on eating her supper in silence. Her father glanced at
her with sharp solicitude.</p>
<p>“Maybe he will,” said he.</p>
<p>“No, he won't,” returned Fanny.</p>
<p>Ellen was very pale and her eyes were bright. After supper she
went to the window and pressed her face against the glass, shielding
her eyes from the in-door light, and saw that the storm had quite
ceased. The stars were shining and the white boughs of the trees
lashing about in the northwest wind. She went into the entry, where
she had hung her hat and coat, and began putting them on.</p>
<p>“Where are you going, Ellen?” asked her mother.</p>
<p>“Just down to Abby's a minute.”</p>
<p>“You don't mean to say your are goin' out again in this
snow, Ellen Brewster? I should think you were crazy.” When
Fanny said crazy, she suddenly started and shuddered as if she had
struck herself. She thought of Eva. Always the possibility of a like
doom was in her own mind.</p>
<p>“It has stopped snowing, mother,” Ellen said.</p>
<p>“Stopped snowing! What if it has? The roads ain't cleared.
You can't get down to Abby Atkins's without gettin' wet up to your
knees. I should think if you got into the house after such a storm
you'd have sense enough to stay in. I've worried just about
enough.”</p>
<p>Ellen took off her coat and hat and hung them up again.
“Well, I won't go if you feel so, mother,” she said,
patiently.</p>
<p>“It seems as if you might get along without seein' Abby
Atkins till to-morrow mornin', when you'd seen her only an hour
ago,” Fanny went on, in the high, nagging tone which she often
adopted with those whom she loved the dearest.</p>
<p>“Yes, I can,” said Ellen. It seemed to her that she
must see somebody with whom she could talk about the trouble in the
factory, but she yielded. There was always with the girl a perfect
surface docility, as that she seemed to have no resistance, but a
little way down was a rock-bed of firmness. She lighted her lamp, and
took her library book and went up-stairs to bed to read. But she
could not read, and she could not sleep when she had put aside her
book and extinguished her lamp. She could think of nothing except
Robert, and what he would say to the committee. She lay awake all
night thinking of it. Ellen was a girl who was capable of the most
devoted love, and the most intense dissent and indignation towards
the same person. She could love in spite of faults, and she could see
faults in spite of love. She thought of Robert Lloyd as of the one
human soul whom she loved best out of the whole world, whom she put
before everybody else, even her own self, and she also thought of him
with a wrath which was pitiless and uncompromising, and which seemed
to tear her own heart to pieces, for one cannot be wroth with love
without a set-back of torture. “If he does not give in and
raise the wages, I shall hate him,” thought Ellen; and her
heart stung her as if at the touch of a hot iron, and then she could
have struck herself for the supposition that he would not give in.
“He must,” she told herself, with a great fervor of love.
“He must.”</p>
<p>But when she went down to breakfast the next morning her mother
stared at her sharply.</p>
<p>“Ellen Brewster, what is the matter with you?” she
cried.</p>
<p>“Nothing. Why?”</p>
<p>“Nothing! You look like a ghost.”</p>
<p>“I feel perfectly well,” said Ellen. She made an
effort to eat as much breakfast as usual in order that her mother
should not suspect that she was troubled. When at last she set out
for the factory, in the early morning dusk, she was chilled and
trembling with excitement.</p>
<p>The storm had quite ceased, and there was a pale rose-and-violet
dawn-light in the east, and presently came effects like
golden-feathered shafts shooting over the sky. The road was alive
with shovelling men, construction-cars of the railroad company were
laboring back and forth to clear the tracks, householders were making
their way from their doors to their gates, clearing their paths,
lifting up the snow in great, glittering, blue-white blocks on their
clumsy shovels. Everywhere were the factory employés hastening
to their labor; the snow was dropping from the overladen tree
branches in great blobs; there was an incessant, shrill chatter of
people, and occasional shouts. It was the rally of mankind after a
defeat by a primitive force of nature. It was the eternal reassertion
of human life and a higher organization over the elemental. Men who
had walked doggedly the morning before now moved with a spring of
alacrity, although the road was very heavy. There was a new light in
their eyes; their cheeks glowed. Ellen had no doubt whatever that if
Robert Lloyd had not yielded the attitude of the employés of
Lloyd's would be one of resistance. She herself seemed to breathe in
resistance to tyranny, and strength for the right in every breath of
the clear, crisp morning air. She felt as if she could trample on
herself and her own weakness, for the sake of justice and the
inalienable good of her kind, with as little hesitation as she
trampled on the creaking snow. Yet she trembled with that deadly
chill before a sense of impending fate. When she returned the
salutations of her friends on the road she felt that her lips were
stiff.</p>
<p>“You look dreadful queer, Ellen,” Abby Atkins said,
anxiously, when she joined her. Maria also was out that morning.</p>
<p>“Have you heard what they are going to do?” Ellen
asked, in a sort of breathless fashion.</p>
<p>“You mean about the wage-cutting? Don't look so,
Ellen.”</p>
<p>Maria pressed close to Ellen, and slid her thin arm through
hers.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Ellen. “What did John Sargent say
when he got home last night?”</p>
<p>Abby hesitated a second, looking doubtfully at Ellen. “I
don't see that there is any need for you to take all this so much to
heart,” she said.</p>
<p>“What did he say?”</p>
<p>“Well,” Abby replied, reluctantly, “I believe
Mr. Lloyd wouldn't give in. Ellen Brewster, for Heaven's sake, don't
look so!”</p>
<p>Ellen walked on, her head high, her face as white as death. Maria
clung closely to her, her own lips quivering.</p>
<p>“What are the men going to do, do you think?” asked
Ellen, presently, in a low voice.</p>
<p>“I don't know,” replied Abby. “John Sargent
seems to think they'll give in. He says he doesn't know what else
they can do. The times are hard. I believe Amos Lee and Tom Peel are
for striking, but he says he doesn't believe the men will support
them. The amount of it all is, a man with money has got it all his
own way. It's like fighting with bare hands to oppose him, and
getting yourself cut, and not hurting him at all. He's got all the
weapons. We simply can't go without work all winter. It is better to
do with less than with nothing at all. What can a man like Willy
Jones do if he hasn't any work? He and his mother would actually
suffer. What could we do?”</p>
<p>“I don't think we ought to think so much about that,”
said Ellen.</p>
<p>“What do you think we ought to think about, for goodness'
sake?”</p>
<p>“Whether we are doing right or not, whether we are
furthering the cause of justice and humanity, or hindering it.
Whether it is for good in the long run or not. There have always been
martyrs; I don't see why it is any harder for us to be martyrs than
for those we read about.”</p>
<p>Sadie Peel came pressing up behind eagerly, her cheeks glowing,
holding up her dress, and displaying a cheap red petticoat.
“Ellen Brewster,” she exclaimed, “if you dare say
anything more to-day I'm goin' to talk. Father is tearing, though he
goes around looking as if he wouldn't jump at a cannon-ball. Do, for
Heaven's sake, keep still; and if you can't get what you want, take
what you can get. I ain't goin' to be cheated out of my nearseal
cape, nohow.”</p>
<p>“Sadie Peel, you make me tired,” cried Abby Atkins.
“I don't say that I'm striking, but I'd strike for all a
nearseal cape. I'm ashamed of you.”</p>
<p>“I don't care if you be,” said the girl, tossing her
head. “A nearseal cape means as much to me as some other things
to you. I want Ellen Brewster to hold her tongue.”</p>
<p>“Ellen Brewster will hold her tongue or not, just as she has
a mind to,” responded Abby, with a snap. She did not like Sadie
Peel.</p>
<p>“Oh, stick up for her if you want to, and get us all into
trouble.”</p>
<p>“I shall stick up for her, you can be mighty sure of
that,” declared Abby.</p>
<p>Ellen walked on as if she heard nothing of it at all, with little
Maria clinging closely to her. Robert Lloyd got out of his sleigh and
went up-stairs just before they reached the factory, and she heard a
very low, subdued mutter of execration.</p>
<p>“They don't mean to strike,” she told herself.
“They mean to submit.”</p>
<p>All went to their tasks as usual. In a minute after the whistle
blew the great pile was in the full hum of labor. Ellen stood for a
few moments at her machine, then she left it deliberately, and made
her way down the long room to where John Sargent stood at his bench
cutting shoes, with a swift faithfulness born of long practice. She
pressed close to him, while the men around stared.</p>
<p>“What is going to be done?” she asked, in a low
voice.</p>
<p>Sargent turned and looked at her in a troubled fashion, and spoke
in a pacific, soothing tone, as her father might have done. He was
much older than Ellen.</p>
<p>“Now look here, child,” he said, “I don't dare
take the responsibility of urging all these men into starvation this
kind of weather. The times are hard. Lloyd has some
reason—”</p>
<p>Ellen walked away from him swiftly and went to the row of
lasting-machines where Amos Lee and Tom Peel stood. She walked up to
them and spoke in a loud, clear voice.</p>
<p>“You are not going to give in?” said she. “You
don't mean to give in?”</p>
<p>Lee turned and gave her one stare, and left his machine.</p>
<p>“Not another stitch of work will I do under this new
wage-list, so help me, God!” he proclaimed.</p>
<p>Tom Peel stood for a second like an automaton, staring at them
both. Then he turned back to his post.</p>
<p>“I'm with ye,” he said.</p>
<p>The lasters, for some occult reason, were always the most
turbulent element in Lloyd's. In less than three minutes the
enthusiasm of revolt had spread, and every laster had left his
machine. In a half-hour more there was an exodus of workmen from
Lloyd's. There were very few left in the factory. Among them were
John Sargent, the laster who was a deacon and had formed one of the
consulting committee, Sadie Peel, who wanted her nearseal cape, and
Mamie Brady, who would do nothing which she thought would displease
the foreman, Flynn.</p>
<p>“If father's mind to be such a fool, it's no reason why I
should,” said Sadie Peel, stitching determinedly away. Mamie
Brady looked at Flynn, when he came up to her, with a gentle,
wheedling smile. There was no one near, and she fancied that he might
steal a kiss. But instead he looked at her, frowning.</p>
<p>“No use you tying away any longer, Mamie,” he said.
“The strike's on.”</p>
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