had the work of five men—with his accounts,
with the distribution of the funds to the ever-increasing
number of the needy who were facing starvation.
The money was paid out to them in proportion to the
size of their families; as the strike became more
and more effective their number increased until many
mills had closed; other mills, including the Chippering,
were still making a desperate attempt to operate their
looms, and sixteen thousand operatives were idle.
She grew to know these operatives who poured all day
long in a steady stream through Headquarters; she
heard their stories, she entered into their lives,
she made decisions. Some, even in those early
days of the strike, were frauds; were hiding their
savings; but for the most part investigation revealed
an appalling destitution, a resolution to suffer for
the worker’s cause. A few complained, the
majority were resigned; some indeed showed exaltation
and fire, were undaunted by the task of picketing
in the cold mornings, by the presence of the soldiery.
In this work of dealing with the operatives Janet
had the advice and help of Anna Mower, a young woman
who herself had been a skilled operative in the Clarendon
Mill, and who was giving evidence of unusual qualities
of organization and leadership. Anna, with no
previous practise in oratory, had suddenly developed
the gift of making speeches, the more effective with
her fellow workers because unstudied, because they
flowed directly out of an experience she was learning
to interpret and universalize. Janet, who heard
her once or twice, admired and envied her. They
became friends.
The atmosphere of excitement in which Janet now found
herself was cumulative. Day by day one strange
event followed another, and at times it seemed as
if this extraordinary existence into which she had
been plunged were all a feverish dream. Hither,
to the absurd little solle de reunion of the Franco-Belgian
Hall came notables from the great world, emissaries
from an uneasy Governor, delegations from the Legislature,
Members of the Congress of the United States and even
Senators; students, investigators, men and women of
prominence in the universities, magazine writers to
consult with uncouth leaders of a rebellion that defied
and upset the powers which hitherto had so serenely
ruled, unchallenged. Rolfe identified these visitors,
and one morning called her attention to one who he
said was the nation’s foremost authority on social
science. Janet possessed all unconsciously the
New England reverence for learning, she was stirred
by the sight of this distinguished-looking person who
sat on the painted stage, fingering his glasses and
talking to Antonelli. The two men made a curious
contrast. But her days were full of contrasts
of which her mood exultingly approved. The politicians
were received cavalierly. Toward these, who sought
to act as go-betweens in the conflict, Antonelli was
contemptuous; he behaved like the general of a conquering
army, and his audacity was reflected in the other leaders,
in Rolfe, in the Committee itself.