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Read Ebook: Continental Monthly Vol. 6 No. 1 July 1864 Devoted to Literature and National Policy. by Various
Font size: Background color: Text color: Add to tbrJar First Page Next Page Prev PageEbook has 336 lines and 54789 words, and 7 pagesHe was looking at a boy of six, asleep at his feet on a pile of ashes and cinder, which was not so bad a bed, for the gentle heat left in it was as good as a lullaby, and Shakspeare long ago told us that sleep has a preference for sitting by hard pillows. The child was an odd bit of humanity. An accident at an early age had given it a hump, though otherwise it was fair enough; and now perhaps society would have seen there only an animal watching its sleeping cub. Presently the boy woke and got on his feet, and began to walk toward the cold air with short, uncertain steps, almost falling against a furnace door. The old man jumped and caught him. 'Ta, ta, Nobby,' he said, 'what's thou doin'? Them's hotter nor cender. Burnt child dreads fire--did knowst 'twas fire?' He had a sort of language of his own, and his voice was singularly harsh, as if breathing in that grimy place so long had roughened his throat. 'There, go, Nobby, look thee out an' see howst black she is. Ta, but it's hawt,' and he rubbed his forehead with his sleeve; 'it's a deal pity this hot can nawt go out where's cold, an' people needin' it. Here's hot, there's cold, but 'twill stay here, as it loved the place 'twas born--home, like. Why, Net, that thee?' There was no door to the place to knock at or open, but the craunch of a foot was heard on the coal outside, and a girl came in, moist and shivering. The stoker set her down in a warm corner, and looked at her now. 'Is thee, my little Net?' he repeated. 'Yes, and I've brought your breakfast, father; 'twas striking six before I come in.' 'Too early, my girl, sleep her sleep out. Here's hot an' cosey like, an' time goes, an' I could wait for breakfast, till I'm home. I'll nawt let my little girl's sleep.' 'No, father, I couldn't sleep after five, anyway; and I thought I must bring your breakfast to-day. You'll walk back through the cold easier after something hot to eat.' 'That's my dear little girl. Shiverin' yet, she is. There, lay down on this,' raking out a heap of fresh ashes, 'them warm an' soft like, an' go ye to sleep till I go.' 'No, I must heat your coffee,' she answered, steadying the pot before one of the furnaces with bits of coal. ''Ware that door doan' fly back an' hurt ye; them does so sometimes.' 'Yes, I'll be careful. Why, you've got Whitney here!' 'Yes, cinder's a good bed, when the eyes are shut,' said the girl, bitterly. 'The coffee was smoking hot when I started, but it's cold out this morning, so there's all this to be done over.' 'Yes, outdoors has cooled it. The world was hungry, like, an' wanted to eat it. Small nubbin' for all the world, but it stole the hot an' the smell o' the meat.' The girl did not reply to this bit of pleasantry. She was about eighteen, and her face would have been strikingly pretty except for the eager, hungering look of the eye; but in every motion, every look, and even the way in which she wore her neat and simple clothing, there was the word 'unsatisfied.' Finally, she brought coffee and meat to him. 'Here, Net, take ye a sip,' said he; ''twill warm ye nice. Shiverin' yet she is; 'deed the mornin's clammy cold; there's naw love in thet. Drink! I cawnt take ye home so, an' my time's most up; it's gettin' light.' But she refused it, and sat and watched him as he ate, never taking her eyes from his face. 'Father,' she presently said, 'what do you do here?' The old stoker laughed: 'Do, my girl? Why, keep up the fires. It's like I'm a spoke in a wheel or summut. I keeps the fires, an' the fires makes the angeen go, an' thet turns the works thet makes the pistols, so't folks may kill theirsel's. There's naw peace anywheres in the world.' 'I didn't mean that; but what do you do the rest of the time? Don't you think? Aren't you tired of this place, father?' 'Sometimes it's like I think so; but how's the use, my Net? Here's rough, an' here's rough too,' touching his chest. 'On smooth floors, such as I couldn't work, if we could get there. How's the use o' bein' tired? We've got to keep steady at summut. It's best to be content, like Nobby there; cender's as good a bed as the king's got.' 'What's that mean?' 'You've got through here, that's all,' cried the girl, with a smothered sob. He set down his pot of coffee and his pail: 'Who told ye so?' he demanded. 'Margery Eames.' Catching the girl's hand, the old man half dragged her through the opening into a yard devoted to coal storage. Picking their way through the spotted mire, they entered a shed where trip hammers were pounding in showers of sparks, stepped over a great revolving shaft, and came to a stairway; up, up, to the fifth floor, where the finishing rooms were. Faint daylight was straggling through the narrow windows, and most of the lamps were out, those that were burning being very sickly, as if they did it under protest. A number of women were employed here, because much of the work was merely automatic, and just now men were scarce and women would work cheaper. The women were coarse and rough, rather the scum of the city--perhaps some might have fallen; but the place was noisome and grimy, with a sickening smell of oil everywhere, repulsive enough to be fit for any workers. The stoker and his daughter walked to the farther end, and came to where a little group of women were sitting round a bench; one of the group tipped a wink to the rest. 'How's coal an' fires now, Adam?' she said. 'Did ye tell my girl anythin'?' he demanded. 'Of course I did.' 'What was't then?' 'Well,' said she, wiping her greasy hands on the bosom of her dress, 'I watched on the road for her this morning, an' I told her.' 'I told her she needn't try to put on airs, she was only a stoker's daughter, an' he'll not have that place any more.' 'Did ye knaw she didn't knaw't?' 'Yes. What do you care, old dusty? She's got a good place.' 'Yes, she has, Lord's good for't.' 'Shall we fight it out, Adam? Hold on till I wipe my hands.' 'Nawt till one can fight by hersel', Margery. I forgive yer spite, an' hope Lord woan' bring it back to ye ever. What's said can nawt be helped. Come, Net.' 'You're a mean creature, Margery, to tell him that,' said one, after they were gone. 'I expected to hear you tell him about the place his girl's got. Lord! he's innocent as a baby about it, an' thinks she's on the way up, while everybody else knows it, an' knows it's the way down.' ''Tis that,' said Margery, 'but I've that much decency that I didn't say it. Let the old man take one thing at a time; he'll know it soon enough when she fetches up at the bottom.' 'What did you want to trouble old Adam for?' Adam seated his girl again, opened the doors one after another, and raked and fed the fires; then he shut them, and stood his rake in the corner, and seated himself. 'Well, it's come out,' he said; 'but I didn't mean ye should know, yet. Margery's ill willed, but it's like she didn't think.' 'I oughtn't to have told you till after to-morrow, father.' 'There's how't seems hard, thet it must come to Christmas. An' when I've been here so long, twenty year noo, Net.' 'Oh, don't call me that any more, father; I don't like it.' 'Why nawt, little girl? What should I call her? You used to love to hear it.' 'Not now, not now,' said the girl, in a choking voice, 'not to-day, not till Christmas is over. Call me Jane.' Add to tbrJar First Page Next Page Prev Page |
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