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the dwelling place of ligh-第50部分

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suggestions of a race…experience not her own; but in which she was now
somehow summoned to share。  That these were the intruders whom she; as a
native American; had once resented and despised did not occur to her。
The racial sense so strong in her was drowned in a sense of fellowship。
Their anger seemed to embody and express; as nothing else could have
done; the revolt that had been rising; rising within her soul; and the
babel to which she listened was not a confusion of tongues; but one voice
lifted up to proclaim the wrongs of all the duped; of all the exploited
and oppressed。  She was fused with them; their cause was her cause; their
betrayers her betrayers。

Suddenly was heard the cry for which she had been tensely but
unconsciously awaiting。  Another cry like that had rung out in another
mob across the seas more than a century before。  〃Ala Bastille!〃 became
〃To the Chippering!〃  Some man shouted it out in shrill English; hundreds
repeated it; the Sicilian leaped from the trolley car; and his path could
be followed by the agitated progress of the alien banner he bore。  〃To
the Chippering!〃  It rang in Janet's ears like a call to battle。  Was she
shouting it; too?  A galvanic thrill ran through the crowd; an impulse
that turned their faces and started their steps down East Street toward
the canal; and Janet was irresistibly carried along。  Nay; it seemed as
if the force that second by second gained momentum was in her; that she
herself had released and was guiding it!  Her feet were wet as she
ploughed through the trampled snow; but she gave no thought to that。  The
odour of humanity was in her nostrils。  On the left a gaunt Jew pressed
against her; on the right a solid Ruthenian woman; one hand clasping her
shawl; the other holding aloft a miniature emblem of New World liberty。
Her eyes were fixed on the grey skies; and from time to time her lips
were parted in some strange; ancestral chant that could be heard above
the shouting。  All about Janet were dark; awakening faces。。。。

It chanced that an American; a college graduate; stood gazing down from a
point of vantage upon this scene。  He was ignorant of anthropology;
psychology; and the phenomena of environment; but bits of 〃knowledge〃
which he embodied in a newspaper article composed that evening stuck wax…
like in his brain。  Not thus; he deplored; was the Anglo…Saxon wont to
conduct his rebellions。  These Czechs and Slavs; Hebrews and Latins and
Huns might have appropriately been clad in the skins worn by the hordes
of Attila。  Had they not been drawn hither by the renown of the
Republic's wealth?  And how essentially did they differ from those other
barbarians before whose bewildered; lustful gaze had risen the glittering
palaces on the hills of the Tiber?  The spoils of Rome!  The spoils of
America!  They appeared to him ferocious; atavistic beasts as they broke
into the lumberyard beneath his window to tear the cord…wood from the
piles and rush out again; armed with billets。。。。

Janet; in the main stream sweeping irresistibly down the middle of the
street; was carried beyond the lumberyard into the narrow roadway beside
the canalpresently to find herself packed in the congested mass in
front of the bridge that led to the gates of the Chippering Mill。  Across
the water; above the angry hum of human voices could be heard the
whirring of the looms; rousing the mob to a higher pitch of fury。  The
halt was for a moment only。  The bridge rocked beneath the weight of
their charge; they battered at the great gates; they ran along the snow…
filled tracks by the wall of the mill。  Some; in a frenzy of passion;
hurled their logs against the windows; others paused; seemingly to
measure the distance and force of the stroke; thus lending to their act a
more terrible and deliberate significance。  A shout of triumph announced
that the gates; like a broken dam; had given way; and the torrent poured
in between the posts; flooding the yard; pressing up the towered
stairways and spreading through the compartments of the mill。  More
ominous than the tumult seemed the comparative silence that followed this
absorption of the angry spirits of the mob。  Little by little; as the
power was shut off; the antiphonal throbbing of the looms was stilled。
Pinioned against the parapet above the canalalmost on that very spot
where; the first evening; she had met DitmarJanet awaited her chance to
cross。  Every crashing window; every resounding blow on the panels gave
her a fierce throb of joy。  She had not expected the gates to yieldher
father must have insecurely fastened them。  Gaining the farther side of
the canal; she perceived him flattened against the wall of the gatehouse
shaking his fist in the faces of the intruders; who rushed past him
unheeding。  His look arrested her。  His face was livid; his eyes were red
with anger; he stood transformed by a passion she had not believed him to
possess。  She had indeed heard him give vent to a mitigated indignation
against foreigners in general; but now the old…school Americanism in
which he had been bred; the Americanism of individual rights; of respect
for the convention of property; had suddenly sprung into flame。  He was
ready to fight for it; to die for it。  The curses he hurled at these
people sounded blasphemous in Janet's ears。

〃Father!〃 she cried。  〃Father!〃

He looked at her uncomprehendingly; seemingly failing to recognize her。

〃What are you doing here?〃 he demanded; seizing her and attempting to
draw her to the wall beside him。  But she resisted。  There sprang from
her lips an unpremeditated question: 〃Where is Mr。 Ditmar?〃  She was;
indeed; amazed at having spoken it。

〃I don't know;〃 Edward replied distractedly。  〃We've been looking for him
everywhere。  My God; to think that this should happen with me at the
gates!〃 he lamented。  〃Go home; Janet。  You can't tell what'll happen;
what these fiends will do; you may get hurt。  You've got no business
here。〃  Catching sight of a belated and breathless policeman; he turned
from her in desperation。  〃Get 'em out!  Far God's sake; can't you get
'em out before they ruin the machines?〃

But Janet waited no longer。  Pushing her way frantically through the
people filling the yard she climbed the tower stairs and made her way
into one of the spinning rooms。  The frames were stilled; the overseer
and second hands; thrust aside; looked on helplessly while the intruders
harangued; cajoled or threatened the operatives; some of whom were cowed
and already departing; others; sullen and resentful; remained standing in
the aisles; and still others seemed to have caught the contagion of the
strike。  Suddenly; with reverberating strokes; the mill bells rang out;
the electric gongs chattered; the siren screeched; drowning the voices。
Janet did not pause; but hurried from room to room until; in passing
through an open doorway in the weaving department she ran into Mr。
Caldwell。  He halted a moment; in surprise at finding her there; calling
her by name。  She clung to his sleeve; and again she asked the question:

〃Where's Mr。 Ditmar?〃

Caldwell shook his head。  His answer was the same as Edward's。  〃I don't
know;〃 he shouted excitedly above the noise。  〃We've got to get this mob
out before they do any damage。〃

He tore himself away; she saw him expostulating with the overseer; and
then she went on。  These tower stairs; she remembered; led to a yard
communicating by a little gate with the office entrance。  The door of the
vestibule was closed; but the watchman; Simmons; recognizing her;
permitted her to enter。  The offices were deserted; silent; for the bells
and the siren had ceased their clamour; the stenographers and clerks had
gone。  The short day was drawing to a close; shadows were gathering in
the corners of Ditmar's room as she reached the threshold and gazed about
her at the objects there so poignantly familiar。  She took off her coat。
His desk was littered with books and papers; and she started;
mechanically; to set it in order; replacing the schedule books on the
shelves; sorting out the letters and putting them in the basket。  She
could not herself have told why she should take up again these trivial
tasks as though no cataclysmic events had intervened to divide forever
the world of yesterday from that of to…morrow。  With a movement
suggestive of tenderness she was picking up Ditmar's pen to set it in the
glass rack when her ear caught the sound of voices; and she stood
transfixed; listening intently。  There were footsteps in the corridor;
the voices came nearer; one; loud and angered; she detected above the
others。  It was Ditmar's!  Nothing had happened to him!  Dropping the
pen; she went over to the window; staring out over the grey waters;
trembling so violently that she could scarcely stand。

She did not look around when they entered the room Ditmar; Caldwell;
Orcutt; and evidently a few watchmen and overseers。  Some one turned on
the electric switch; darkening the scene without。  Ditmar continued to
speak in vehement tones of uncontrolled rage。

〃Why in hell weren't those gates bolted tight?〃 he demanded。  〃That's
what I want to know!  There was plenty of time after they turned the
corner of East Street。  You might have guessed what they would do。  But
instead of that you let 'em into the mill to shut off the power and
intimidate our own people。〃  He called the strikers an unprintable name;
and though Janet stood; with her back turned; directly before him; he
gave no sign of being aware of her presence。

〃It wasn't the gatekeeper's fault;〃 she heard Orcutt reply in a tone
quivering with excitement and apprehension。  〃They really didn't give us
a chancethat's the truth。  They were down Canal Street and over the
bridge before we knew it。〃

〃It's just as I've said a hundred times;〃 Ditmar retorted。  〃I can't
afford to leave this mill a minute; I can't trust anybody 〃 and he
broke out in another tirade against the intruders。  〃By God; I'll fix 'em
for thisI'll crush 'em。  And if any operatives try to walkout here I'll
see that they starve before they get backafter all I've done for 'em;
kept the mill going in slack times just to give 'em work。  If they deser
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