top of another, announcing the merits of “Stewart’s
Amberine Ale,” of “Cooley’s Oats,
the Digestible Breakfast Food,” of graphophones
and “spring heeled” shoes, tobacco, and
naphtha soaps. “No, We don’t give
Trading Stamps, Our Products are Worth all You Pay.”
These “ten foot” stores were the repositories
of pianos, automobiles, hardware, and millinery, and
interspersed amongst them were buildings of various
heights; The Bagatelle, where Lise worked, the Wilmot
Hotel, office buildings, and an occasional relic of
old Hampton, like that housing the Banner. Here,
during those months when the sun made the asphalt soft,
on a scaffolding spanning the window of the store,
might be seen a perspiring young man in his shirt
sleeves chalking up baseball scores for the benefit
of a crowd below. Then came the funereal, liver-coloured,
long-windowed Hinckley Block (1872), and on the corner
a modern, glorified drugstore thrusting forth plate
glass bays—two on Faber Street and three
on Stanley—filled with cameras and candy,
hot water bags, throat sprays, catarrh and kidney
cures, calendars, fountain pens, stationery, and handy
alcohol lamps. Flanking the sidewalks, symbolizing
and completing the heterogeneous and bewildering effect
of the street were long rows of heavy hemlock trunks,
unpainted and stripped of bark, with crosstrees bearing
webs of wires. Trolley cars rattled along, banging
their gongs, trucks rumbled across the tracks, automobiles
uttered frenzied screeches behind startled pedestrians.
Janet was always galvanized into alertness here, Faber
Street being no place to dream. By night an endless
procession moved up one sidewalk and down another,
staring hypnotically at the flash-in and flash-out
electric, signs that kept the breakfast foods and ales,
the safety razors, soaps, and soups incessantly in
the minds of a fickle public.
Two blocks from Faber Street was the North Canal,
with a granite-paved roadway between it and the monotonous
row of company boarding houses. Even in bright
weather Janet felt a sense of oppression here; on dark,
misty mornings the stern, huge battlements of the mills
lining the farther bank were menacing indeed, bristling
with projections, towers, and chimneys, flanked by
heavy walls. Had her experience included Europe,
her imagination might have seized the medieval parallel,—the
arched bridges flung at intervals across the water,
lacking only chains to raise them in case of siege.
The place was always ominously suggestive of impending
strife. Janet’s soul was a sensitive instrument,
but she suffered from an inability to find parallels,
and thus to translate her impressions intellectually.
Her feeling about the mills was that they were at
once fortress and prison, and she a slave driven thither
day after day by an all-compelling power; as much
a slave as those who trooped in through the gates
in the winter dawn, and wore down, four times a day,
the oak treads of the circular tower stairs.
The sound of the looms was like heavy rain hissing
on the waters of the canal.