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<h2> Chapter 11 </h2>
<p>During the summer the packing houses were in full activity again, and
Jurgis made more money. He did not make so much, however, as he had the
previous summer, for the packers took on more hands. There were new men
every week, it seemed—it was a regular system; and this number they
would keep over to the next slack season, so that every one would have
less than ever. Sooner or later, by this plan, they would have all the
floating labor of Chicago trained to do their work. And how very cunning a
trick was that! The men were to teach new hands, who would some day come
and break their strike; and meantime they were kept so poor that they
could not prepare for the trial!</p>
<p>But let no one suppose that this superfluity of employees meant easier
work for any one! On the contrary, the speeding-up seemed to be growing
more savage all the time; they were continually inventing new devices to
crowd the work on—it was for all the world like the thumbscrew of
the medieval torture chamber. They would get new pacemakers and pay them
more; they would drive the men on with new machinery—it was said
that in the hog-killing rooms the speed at which the hogs moved was
determined by clockwork, and that it was increased a little every day. In
piecework they would reduce the time, requiring the same work in a shorter
time, and paying the same wages; and then, after the workers had
accustomed themselves to this new speed, they would reduce the rate of
payment to correspond with the reduction in time! They had done this so
often in the canning establishments that the girls were fairly desperate;
their wages had gone down by a full third in the past two years, and a
storm of discontent was brewing that was likely to break any day. Only a
month after Marija had become a beef-trimmer the canning factory that she
had left posted a cut that would divide the girls' earnings almost
squarely in half; and so great was the indignation at this that they
marched out without even a parley, and organized in the street outside.
One of the girls had read somewhere that a red flag was the proper symbol
for oppressed workers, and so they mounted one, and paraded all about the
yards, yelling with rage. A new union was the result of this outburst, but
the impromptu strike went to pieces in three days, owing to the rush of
new labor. At the end of it the girl who had carried the red flag went
downtown and got a position in a great department store, at a salary of
two dollars and a half a week.</p>
<p>Jurgis and Ona heard these stories with dismay, for there was no telling
when their own time might come. Once or twice there had been rumors that
one of the big houses was going to cut its unskilled men to fifteen cents
an hour, and Jurgis knew that if this was done, his turn would come soon.
He had learned by this time that Packingtown was really not a number of
firms at all, but one great firm, the Beef Trust. And every week the
managers of it got together and compared notes, and there was one scale
for all the workers in the yards and one standard of efficiency. Jurgis
was told that they also fixed the price they would pay for beef on the
hoof and the price of all dressed meat in the country; but that was
something he did not understand or care about.</p>
<p>The only one who was not afraid of a cut was Marija, who congratulated
herself, somewhat naively, that there had been one in her place only a
short time before she came. Marija was getting to be a skilled
beef-trimmer, and was mounting to the heights again. During the summer and
fall Jurgis and Ona managed to pay her back the last penny they owed her,
and so she began to have a bank account. Tamoszius had a bank account
also, and they ran a race, and began to figure upon household expenses
once more.</p>
<p>The possession of vast wealth entails cares and responsibilities, however,
as poor Marija found out. She had taken the advice of a friend and
invested her savings in a bank on Ashland Avenue. Of course she knew
nothing about it, except that it was big and imposing—what possible
chance has a poor foreign working girl to understand the banking business,
as it is conducted in this land of frenzied finance? So Marija lived in a
continual dread lest something should happen to her bank, and would go out
of her way mornings to make sure that it was still there. Her principal
thought was of fire, for she had deposited her money in bills, and was
afraid that if they were burned up the bank would not give her any others.
Jurgis made fun of her for this, for he was a man and was proud of his
superior knowledge, telling her that the bank had fireproof vaults, and
all its millions of dollars hidden safely away in them.</p>
<p>However, one morning Marija took her usual detour, and, to her horror and
dismay, saw a crowd of people in front of the bank, filling the avenue
solid for half a block. All the blood went out of her face for terror. She
broke into a run, shouting to the people to ask what was the matter, but
not stopping to hear what they answered, till she had come to where the
throng was so dense that she could no longer advance. There was a "run on
the bank," they told her then, but she did not know what that was, and
turned from one person to another, trying in an agony of fear to make out
what they meant. Had something gone wrong with the bank? Nobody was sure,
but they thought so. Couldn't she get her money? There was no telling; the
people were afraid not, and they were all trying to get it. It was too
early yet to tell anything—the bank would not open for nearly three
hours. So in a frenzy of despair Marija began to claw her way toward the
doors of this building, through a throng of men, women, and children, all
as excited as herself. It was a scene of wild confusion, women shrieking
and wringing their hands and fainting, and men fighting and trampling down
everything in their way. In the midst of the melee Marija recollected that
she did not have her bankbook, and could not get her money anyway, so she
fought her way out and started on a run for home. This was fortunate for
her, for a few minutes later the police reserves arrived.</p>
<p>In half an hour Marija was back, Teta Elzbieta with her, both of them
breathless with running and sick with fear. The crowd was now formed in a
line, extending for several blocks, with half a hundred policemen keeping
guard, and so there was nothing for them to do but to take their places at
the end of it. At nine o'clock the bank opened and began to pay the
waiting throng; but then, what good did that do Marija, who saw three
thousand people before her—enough to take out the last penny of a
dozen banks?</p>
<p>To make matters worse a drizzling rain came up, and soaked them to the
skin; yet all the morning they stood there, creeping slowly toward the
goal—all the afternoon they stood there, heartsick, seeing that the
hour of closing was coming, and that they were going to be left out.
Marija made up her mind that, come what might, she would stay there and
keep her place; but as nearly all did the same, all through the long, cold
night, she got very little closer to the bank for that. Toward evening
Jurgis came; he had heard the story from the children, and he brought some
food and dry wraps, which made it a little easier.</p>
<p>The next morning, before daybreak, came a bigger crowd than ever, and more
policemen from downtown. Marija held on like grim death, and toward
afternoon she got into the bank and got her money—all in big silver
dollars, a handkerchief full. When she had once got her hands on them her
fear vanished, and she wanted to put them back again; but the man at the
window was savage, and said that the bank would receive no more deposits
from those who had taken part in the run. So Marija was forced to take her
dollars home with her, watching to right and left, expecting every instant
that some one would try to rob her; and when she got home she was not much
better off. Until she could find another bank there was nothing to do but
sew them up in her clothes, and so Marija went about for a week or more,
loaded down with bullion, and afraid to cross the street in front of the
house, because Jurgis told her she would sink out of sight in the mud.
Weighted this way she made her way to the yards, again in fear, this time
to see if she had lost her place; but fortunately about ten per cent of
the working people of Packingtown had been depositors in that bank, and it
was not convenient to discharge that many at once. The cause of the panic
had been the attempt of a policeman to arrest a drunken man in a saloon
next door, which had drawn a crowd at the hour the people were on their
way to work, and so started the "run."</p>
<p>About this time Jurgis and Ona also began a bank account. Besides having
paid Jonas and Marija, they had almost paid for their furniture, and could
have that little sum to count on. So long as each of them could bring home
nine or ten dollars a week, they were able to get along finely. Also
election day came round again, and Jurgis made half a week's wages out of
that, all net profit. It was a very close election that year, and the
echoes of the battle reached even to Packingtown. The two rival sets of
grafters hired halls and set off fireworks and made speeches, to try to
get the people interested in the matter. Although Jurgis did not
understand it all, he knew enough by this time to realize that it was not
supposed to be right to sell your vote. However, as every one did it, and
his refusal to join would not have made the slightest difference in the
results, the idea of refusing would have seemed absurd, had it ever come
into his head.</p>
<p>Now chill winds and shortening days began to warn them that the winter was
coming again. It seemed as if the respite had been too short—they
had not had time enough to get ready for it; but still it came,
inexorably, and the hunted look began to come back into the eyes of little
Stanislovas. The prospect struck fear to the heart of Jurgis also, for he
knew that Ona was not fit to face the cold and the snowdrifts this year.
And suppose that some day when a blizzard struck them and the cars were
not running, Ona should have to give up, and should come the next day to
find that her place had been given to some one who lived nearer and could
be depended on?</p>
<p>It was the week before Christmas that the first storm came, and then the
soul of Jurgis rose up within him like a sleeping lion. There were four
days that the Ashland Avenue cars were stalled, and in those days, for the
first time in his life, Jurgis knew what it was to be really opposed. He
had faced difficulties before, but they had been child's play; now there
was a death struggle, and all the furies were unchained within him. The
first morning they set out two hours before dawn, Ona wrapped all in
blankets and tossed upon his shoulder like a sack of meal, and the little
boy, bundled nearly out of sight, hanging by his coat-tails. There was a
raging blast beating in his face, and the thermometer stood below zero;
the snow was never short of his knees, and in some of the drifts it was
nearly up to his armpits. It would catch his feet and try to trip him; it
would build itself into a wall before him to beat him back; and he would
fling himself into it, plunging like a wounded buffalo, puffing and
snorting in rage. So foot by foot he drove his way, and when at last he
came to Durham's he was staggering and almost blind, and leaned against a
pillar, gasping, and thanking God that the cattle came late to the killing
beds that day. In the evening the same thing had to be done again; and
because Jurgis could not tell what hour of the night he would get off, he
got a saloon-keeper to let Ona sit and wait for him in a corner. Once it
was eleven o'clock at night, and black as the pit, but still they got
home.</p>
<p>That blizzard knocked many a man out, for the crowd outside begging for
work was never greater, and the packers would not wait long for any one.
When it was over, the soul of Jurgis was a song, for he had met the enemy
and conquered, and felt himself the master of his fate.—So it might
be with some monarch of the forest that has vanquished his foes in fair
fight, and then falls into some cowardly trap in the night-time.</p>
<p>A time of peril on the killing beds was when a steer broke loose.
Sometimes, in the haste of speeding-up, they would dump one of the animals
out on the floor before it was fully stunned, and it would get upon its
feet and run amuck. Then there would be a yell of warning—the men
would drop everything and dash for the nearest pillar, slipping here and
there on the floor, and tumbling over each other. This was bad enough in
the summer, when a man could see; in wintertime it was enough to make your
hair stand up, for the room would be so full of steam that you could not
make anything out five feet in front of you. To be sure, the steer was
generally blind and frantic, and not especially bent on hurting any one;
but think of the chances of running upon a knife, while nearly every man
had one in his hand! And then, to cap the climax, the floor boss would
come rushing up with a rifle and begin blazing away!</p>
<p>It was in one of these melees that Jurgis fell into his trap. That is the
only word to describe it; it was so cruel, and so utterly not to be
foreseen. At first he hardly noticed it, it was such a slight accident—simply
that in leaping out of the way he turned his ankle. There was a twinge of
pain, but Jurgis was used to pain, and did not coddle himself. When he
came to walk home, however, he realized that it was hurting him a great
deal; and in the morning his ankle was swollen out nearly double its size,
and he could not get his foot into his shoe. Still, even then, he did
nothing more than swear a little, and wrapped his foot in old rags, and
hobbled out to take the car. It chanced to be a rush day at Durham's, and
all the long morning he limped about with his aching foot; by noontime the
pain was so great that it made him faint, and after a couple of hours in
the afternoon he was fairly beaten, and had to tell the boss. They sent
for the company doctor, and he examined the foot and told Jurgis to go
home to bed, adding that he had probably laid himself up for months by his
folly. The injury was not one that Durham and Company could be held
responsible for, and so that was all there was to it, so far as the doctor
was concerned.</p>
<p>Jurgis got home somehow, scarcely able to see for the pain, and with an
awful terror in his soul, Elzbieta helped him into bed and bandaged his
injured foot with cold water and tried hard not to let him see her dismay;
when the rest came home at night she met them outside and told them, and
they, too, put on a cheerful face, saying it would only be for a week or
two, and that they would pull him through.</p>
<p>When they had gotten him to sleep, however, they sat by the kitchen fire
and talked it over in frightened whispers. They were in for a siege, that
was plainly to be seen. Jurgis had only about sixty dollars in the bank,
and the slack season was upon them. Both Jonas and Marija might soon be
earning no more than enough to pay their board, and besides that there
were only the wages of Ona and the pittance of the little boy. There was
the rent to pay, and still some on the furniture; there was the insurance
just due, and every month there was sack after sack of coal. It was
January, midwinter, an awful time to have to face privation. Deep snows
would come again, and who would carry Ona to her work now? She might lose
her place—she was almost certain to lose it. And then little
Stanislovas began to whimper—who would take care of him?</p>
<p>It was dreadful that an accident of this sort, that no man can help,
should have meant such suffering. The bitterness of it was the daily food
and drink of Jurgis. It was of no use for them to try to deceive him; he
knew as much about the situation as they did, and he knew that the family
might literally starve to death. The worry of it fairly ate him up—he
began to look haggard the first two or three days of it. In truth, it was
almost maddening for a strong man like him, a fighter, to have to lie
there helpless on his back. It was for all the world the old story of
Prometheus bound. As Jurgis lay on his bed, hour after hour there came to
him emotions that he had never known before. Before this he had met life
with a welcome—it had its trials, but none that a man could not
face. But now, in the nighttime, when he lay tossing about, there would
come stalking into his chamber a grisly phantom, the sight of which made
his flesh curl and his hair to bristle up. It was like seeing the world
fall away from underneath his feet; like plunging down into a bottomless
abyss into yawning caverns of despair. It might be true, then, after all,
what others had told him about life, that the best powers of a man might
not be equal to it! It might be true that, strive as he would, toil as he
would, he might fail, and go down and be destroyed! The thought of this
was like an icy hand at his heart; the thought that here, in this ghastly
home of all horror, he and all those who were dear to him might lie and
perish of starvation and cold, and there would be no ear to hear their
cry, no hand to help them! It was true, it was true,—that here in
this huge city, with its stores of heaped-up wealth, human creatures might
be hunted down and destroyed by the wild-beast powers of nature, just as
truly as ever they were in the days of the cave men!</p>
<p>Ona was now making about thirty dollars a month, and Stanislovas about
thirteen. To add to this there was the board of Jonas and Marija, about
forty-five dollars. Deducting from this the rent, interest, and
installments on the furniture, they had left sixty dollars, and deducting
the coal, they had fifty. They did without everything that human beings
could do without; they went in old and ragged clothing, that left them at
the mercy of the cold, and when the children's shoes wore out, they tied
them up with string. Half invalid as she was, Ona would do herself harm by
walking in the rain and cold when she ought to have ridden; they bought
literally nothing but food—and still they could not keep alive on
fifty dollars a month. They might have done it, if only they could have
gotten pure food, and at fair prices; or if only they had known what to
get—if they had not been so pitifully ignorant! But they had come to
a new country, where everything was different, including the food. They
had always been accustomed to eat a great deal of smoked sausage, and how
could they know that what they bought in America was not the same—that
its color was made by chemicals, and its smoky flavor by more chemicals,
and that it was full of "potato flour" besides? Potato flour is the waste
of potato after the starch and alcohol have been extracted; it has no more
food value than so much wood, and as its use as a food adulterant is a
penal offense in Europe, thousands of tons of it are shipped to America
every year. It was amazing what quantities of food such as this were
needed every day, by eleven hungry persons. A dollar sixty-five a day was
simply not enough to feed them, and there was no use trying; and so each
week they made an inroad upon the pitiful little bank account that Ona had
begun. Because the account was in her name, it was possible for her to
keep this a secret from her husband, and to keep the heartsickness of it
for her own.</p>
<p>It would have been better if Jurgis had been really ill; if he had not
been able to think. For he had no resources such as most invalids have;
all he could do was to lie there and toss about from side to side. Now and
then he would break into cursing, regardless of everything; and now and
then his impatience would get the better of him, and he would try to get
up, and poor Teta Elzbieta would have to plead with him in a frenzy.
Elzbieta was all alone with him the greater part of the time. She would
sit and smooth his forehead by the hour, and talk to him and try to make
him forget. Sometimes it would be too cold for the children to go to
school, and they would have to play in the kitchen, where Jurgis was,
because it was the only room that was half warm. These were dreadful
times, for Jurgis would get as cross as any bear; he was scarcely to be
blamed, for he had enough to worry him, and it was hard when he was trying
to take a nap to be kept awake by noisy and peevish children.</p>
<p>Elzbieta's only resource in those times was little Antanas; indeed, it
would be hard to say how they could have gotten along at all if it had not
been for little Antanas. It was the one consolation of Jurgis' long
imprisonment that now he had time to look at his baby. Teta Elzbieta would
put the clothes-basket in which the baby slept alongside of his mattress,
and Jurgis would lie upon one elbow and watch him by the hour, imagining
things. Then little Antanas would open his eyes—he was beginning to
take notice of things now; and he would smile—how he would smile! So
Jurgis would begin to forget and be happy because he was in a world where
there was a thing so beautiful as the smile of little Antanas, and because
such a world could not but be good at the heart of it. He looked more like
his father every hour, Elzbieta would say, and said it many times a day,
because she saw that it pleased Jurgis; the poor little terror-stricken
woman was planning all day and all night to soothe the prisoned giant who
was intrusted to her care. Jurgis, who knew nothing about the age-long and
everlasting hypocrisy of woman, would take the bait and grin with delight;
and then he would hold his finger in front of little Antanas' eyes, and
move it this way and that, and laugh with glee to see the baby follow it.
There is no pet quite so fascinating as a baby; he would look into Jurgis'
face with such uncanny seriousness, and Jurgis would start and cry:
"Palauk! Look, Muma, he knows his papa! He does, he does! Tu mano
szirdele, the little rascal!"</p>
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