The Woman Who Toils eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 253 pages of information about The Woman Who Toils.

The Woman Who Toils eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 253 pages of information about The Woman Who Toils.

On! on! bundle of pains!  For you this is one day’s work in a thousand of peace and beauty.  For those about you this is the whole of daylight, this is the winter dawn and twilight, this is the glorious summer noon, this is all day, this is every day, this is life.  Rest is only a bit of a dream, snatched when the sleeper’s aching body lets her close her eyes for a moment in oblivion.

Out beyond the chimney tops the snowfields and the river turn from gray to pink, and still the work goes on.  Each crate I lift grows heavier, each bottle weighs an added pound.  Now and then some one lends a helping hand.

“Tired, ain’t you?  This is your first day, ain’t it?”

The acid smell of vinegar and mustard penetrates everywhere.  My ankles cry out pity.  Oh! to sit down an instant!

“Tidy up the table,” some one tells me; “we’re soon goin’ home.”

Home!  I think of the stifling fumes of fried food, the dim haze in the kitchen where my supper waits me; the children, the band of drifting workers, the shrill, complaining voice of the hired mother.  This is home.

I sweep and set to rights, limping, lurching along.  At last the whistle blows!  In a swarm we report; we put on our things and get away into the cool night air.  I have stood ten hours; I have fitted 1,300 corks; I have hauled and loaded 4,000 jars of pickles.  My pay is seventy cents.

The impressions of my first day crowd pell-mell upon my mind.  The sound of the machinery dins in my ears.  I can hear the sharp, nasal voices of the forewoman and the girls shouting questions and answers.

A sudden recollection comes to me of a Dahomayan family I had watched at work in their hut during the Paris Exhibition.  There was a magic spell in their voices as they talked together; the sounds they made had the cadence of the wind in the trees, the running of water, the song of birds:  they echoed unconsciously the caressing melodies of nature.  My factory companions drew their vocal inspiration from the bedlam of civilization, the rasping and pounding of machinery, the din which they must out-din to be heard.

For the two days following my first experience I am unable to resume work.  Fatigue has swept through my blood like a fever.  Every bone and joint has a clamouring ache.  I pass the time visiting other factories and hunting for a place to board in the neighbourhood of the pickling house.  At the cork works they do not need girls; at the cracker company I can get a job, but the hours are longer, the advantages less than where I am; at the broom factory they employ only men.  I decide to continue with tin caps and pickle jars.

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Project Gutenberg
The Woman Who Toils from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.