The Jungle eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 550 pages of information about The Jungle.

The Jungle eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 550 pages of information about The Jungle.

Grandmother Majauszkiene came to the door herself.  She cried out when she saw Jurgis, wild-eyed and shaking.  Yes, yes, she could tell him.  The family had moved; they had not been able to pay the rent and they had been turned out into the snow, and the house had been repainted and sold again the next week.  No, she had not heard how they were, but she could tell him that they had gone back to Aniele Jukniene, with whom they had stayed when they first came to the yards.  Wouldn’t Jurgis come in and rest?  It was certainly too bad—­if only he had not got into jail—­

And so Jurgis turned and staggered away.  He did not go very far round the corner he gave out completely, and sat down on the steps of a saloon, and hid his face in his hands, and shook all over with dry, racking sobs.

Their home!  Their home!  They had lost it!  Grief, despair, rage, overwhelmed him—­what was any imagination of the thing to this heartbreaking, crushing reality of it—­to the sight of strange people living in his house, hanging their curtains to his windows, staring at him with hostile eyes!  It was monstrous, it was unthinkable—­they could not do it—­it could not be true!  Only think what he had suffered for that house—­what miseries they had all suffered for it—­the price they had paid for it!

The whole long agony came back to him.  Their sacrifices in the beginning, their three hundred dollars that they had scraped together, all they owned in the world, all that stood between them and starvation!  And then their toil, month by month, to get together the twelve dollars, and the interest as well, and now and then the taxes, and the other charges, and the repairs, and what not!  Why, they had put their very souls into their payments on that house, they had paid for it with their sweat and tears—­yes, more, with their very lifeblood.  Dede Antanas had died of the struggle to earn that money—­he would have been alive and strong today if he had not had to work in Durham’s dark cellars to earn his share.  And Ona, too, had given her health and strength to pay for it—­she was wrecked and ruined because of it; and so was he, who had been a big, strong man three years ago, and now sat here shivering, broken, cowed, weeping like a hysterical child.  Ah! they had cast their all into the fight; and they had lost, they had lost!  All that they had paid was gone—­every cent of it.  And their house was gone—­they were back where they had started from, flung out into the cold to starve and freeze!

Jurgis could see all the truth now—­could see himself, through the whole long course of events, the victim of ravenous vultures that had torn into his vitals and devoured him; of fiends that had racked and tortured him, mocking him, meantime, jeering in his face.  Ah, God, the horror of it, the monstrous, hideous, demoniacal wickedness of it!  He and his family, helpless women and children, struggling to live, ignorant and defenseless and forlorn as they

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Project Gutenberg
The Jungle from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.