Chapter 25
"May I look too?" he asked.
"Sure. These are the working plans for the new Episcopal cathedral at A.;" he named a well known city; "you've heard of it, I s'pose?"
The man shook his head.
"Here for a job?"
"Yes. Is all this work to be done by the company?"
"Every stone. We got the contract eleven months ago. We're at work on these courses now." He turned the plates that the man might see.
He bent over to examine them, noting the wonderful detail of arch and architrave, of keystone, cornice and foundation course. Each stone, varying in size and shape, was drawn with utmost accuracy, dimensions given, numbered with its own number for the place of its setting into the perfect whole. The stability of the whole giant structure was dependent upon the perfection and right placing of each individual stone from lowest foundation to the keystones of the vaulting arches of the nave; the harmony of design dependent on rightly maintained proportions of each granite block, large or small--and all this marvellous structure was the product of the rude granite veins in The Gore! That adamantine mixture of gneiss and quartz, prepared in nature's laboratory throughout millions of years, was now furnishing the rock which, beneath human manipulation, was flowering into the great cathedral! And that perfect whole was _ideaed_ first in the brain of man, and a sketch of it transferred by the sun itself to the blue paper which lay on the table!
What a combination and transmutation of those forceful powers that originate in the Unnamable!
The manager entered, passed into the next room and, sitting down at his desk, began to make notes on a pad. At a sign from the two men, the stranger followed him, cap in hand.
The manager spoke without looking at him:--"Well?"
"I'd like a job in the sheds."
At the sound of that voice, the manager glanced up quickly, keenly. He saw before him a man evidently prematurely gray. The broad shoulders bowed slightly as if from long-continued work involving much stooping. He looked at the hands; they were rough, calloused with toil, the knuckles spread, the nails broken and worn. Then he looked again into the face; that puzzled him. It was smooth-shaven, square in outline and rather thin, but the color was good; the eyes--what eyes!
The manager found himself wondering if there were a pair to match them in the wide world. They were slightly sunken, large, blue, of a depth and beauty and clarity rarely seen in that color. Within them, as if at home, dwelt an expression of inner quiet, and sadness combined with strength and firmness. It was not easy to look long into them without wanting to grasp the possessor's hand in fellowship. They smiled, too, as the manager continued to stare. That broke the spell; they were undeniably human. The manager smiled in response.
"Learned your trade?"
"Yes."
"How long have you been working at it?"
"Between six and seven years."
"Any tools with you?"
"No."
"Union man?"
"No."
"Hm-m."
The manager chewed the handle of his pen, and thought something out with himself; his eyes were on the pad before him.
"We've got to take on a lot of new men for the next two years--as many as we can of skilled workmen. The break will have to be made sometime. Anyhow, if you'll risk it they've got a job for you in Shed Number Two--cutting and squaring for a while--forty cents an hour--eight hour day. I'll telephone to the boss if you want it."
"I do."
He took up the desk-telephone and gave his message.
"It's all right." He drew out a ledger from beneath the desk. "What's your letter?"
"Letter?" The man looked startled for a moment.
"Yes, initial of your last name."
"G."
The manager found the letter, thrust in his finger, opened the page indicated and shoved the book over the desk towards the applicant. He handed him his pen.
"Write your name, your age, and what you're native of." He indicated the columns.
The man took the pen. He seemed at first slightly awkward in handling it. The entry he made was as follows:
"Louis C. Googe--thirty-four--United States."
The manager glanced at it. "That's a common enough name in Maine and these parts," he said. Then he pointed through the window. "That's the shed over there--the middle one. The boss'll give you some tools till you get yours."
"Thank you." The man put on his cap and went out.
"Well, I'll be hanged!" was all the manager said as he looked after the applicant. Then he rose, went to the office door and watched the man making his way through the stone-yards towards the sheds. "Well, boys," he said further, turning to the two men bending over the plans, "that suit ain't exactly a misfit, but it hasn't seen the light of day for a good many years--and it's the same with the man. What in thunder is he doing in the sheds! Did he say anything specially to you before I came in?"
"No; only he seemed mighty interested in the plans, examined the detail of some of them--as if he knew."
"We'll keep our eyes on him." The manager went back to his desk.
IV
Perhaps the dreariest environment imaginable is a stone-cutters' shed on a bleak day in the first week in March. The large ones stretching along the north shore of Lake Mesantic are no exception to this statement. A high wind from the northeast was driving before it particles of ice, and now and then a snow flurry. It penetrated every crack and crevice of the huge buildings, the second and largest of which covered a ground space of more than an acre. Every gust made itself both felt and heard among the rafters. Near the great doors the granite dust whirled in eddies.
At this hour in the afternoon Shed Number Two was a study in black and gray and white. Gray dust several inches thick spread underfoot; all about were gray walls, gray and white granite piles, gray columns, arches, uncut blocks, heaps of granite waste, gray workmen in gray blouses and canvas aprons covered with gray dust. In one corner towered the huge gray-black McDonald machine in mighty strength, its multiple revolving arms furnished with gigantic iron fists which manipulate the unyielding granite with Herculean automatonism--an invention of the film-like brain of man to conquer in a few minutes the work of nature's æons! Gray-black overhead stretched the running rails for the monster electric travelling crane; some men crawling out on them looked like monkeys. Here and there might be seen the small insignificant "Lewis Key"--a thing that may be held on a woman's palm--sustaining a granite weight of many tons.
There were three hundred men at work in this shed, and the ringing _chip-chip-chipping_ monotone from the hundreds of hammers and chisels, filled the great space with industry's wordless song that has its perfect harmony for him who listens with open ears and expansive mind.
Jim McCann was at work near the shed doors which had been opened several times since one o'clock to admit the flat cars with the granite. He was alternately blowing on his benumbed fingers and cursing the doors and the draught that was chilling him to the marrow. The granite dust was swirling about his legs and rising into his nostrils. It lacked a half-hour to four.
Two cars rolled in silently.
"Shut thim damned doors, man!" he shouted across to the door-tender; "God kape us but we' it's our last death we'll be ketchin' before we can clane out our lungs o' the dust we've swallowed the day. It's after bein' wan damned slitherin' whorl of grit in the nose of me since eight the morn."
He struck hard on his chisel and a spark flew. A workman, an Italian, laughed.
"That's arll-rright, Jim--fire up!"
"You kape shet," growled McCann. He was unfriendly as a rule to the Dagos. "It's in me blood," was his only excuse.
"An' if it's a firin' ye be after," he continued, "ye'll get it shurre if ye lave off workin' to warm up yer tongue wid such sass.--Shut thim doors!" he shouted again; but a gust of wind failed to carry his voice in the desired direction.
In the swirling roar and the small dust-spout that followed in its wake, Jim and the workmen in his cold section were aware of a man who had been half-blown in with the whirling dust. He took shelter for a moment by the inner wall. The foreman saw him and recognized him for the man who, the manager had just telephoned, was coming over from the office. He came forward to meet him.
"You're the man who has just taken on a job in Shed Number Two?"
"Yes."
The foreman signed to one of the men and told him to bring an extra set of tools.
"Here's your section," he said indicating McCann's; "you can begin on this block--just squaring it for to-night."
The man took his tools with a "Thank you," and went to work. The others watched him furtively, as Jim told Maggie afterwards "from the tail of me eye."
He knew his work. They soon saw that. Every stroke told. The doors were shut at last and the electric lights turned on. Up to the stroke of four the men worked like automatons--_chip-chip-chipping_. Now and then there was some chaffing, good-natured if rough.
The little Canuck, who by dint of running had caught the car, was working nearby. McCann called out to him:
"I say, Antwine, where you'd be after gettin' that cap with the monkey ears?"
"Bah gosh, Ah have get dis à Mo'real--at good marché--sheep." He stroked the small skin earlaps caressingly with one hand, then spat upon his palm and fell to work again.
"Montreal is it? When did you go?"
"Ah was went tree day--le Père Honoré tol' mah Ah better was go to mon maître; he was dead las' week."
"Wot yer givin' us, Antwine? Three days to see yer dead mater an' lavin' yer stiddy job for the likes of him, an' good luck yer come back this afternoon or the new man 'ud 'a' had it."
"Ah, non--ah, non! De boss haf tol' mah, Ah was keep mah shob. Ah, non--ah, non. Ah was went pour l'amour de Père Honoré."
"Damn yer lingo--shpake English, I tell you."
Antoine grinned and shook his head.
"Wot yer givin' us about his Riverince, eh?"
"Le Père Honoré, hein? Ah-h-h-rr, le bon Père Honoré! Attendez--he tol' mah Ah was best non raconter--mais, Ah raconte you, Shim--"
"Go ahead, Johnny Frog; let's hear."
"Ah was been lee'l garçon--lee'l bébé, no père; ma mère was been--how you say?--gypsee à cheval, hein?" he appealed to McCann.
"You mane a gypsy that rides round the counthry?"
Antoine nodded emphatically. "Yah--oui, gypsee à cheval, an' bars--"
"Bears?"
"Mais oui, bruins--bars; pour les faire dancer--"
"You mane your mother was a gypsy that went round the counthry showin' off dancin' bears?"
"Yah-oui. Ah mane so. She haf been seek--malade--how you say, petite vérole--so like de Père Honoré?" He made with his forefinger dents in his face and forehead.
"An' is it the shmall pox yer mane?"
"Yah-oui, shmall pookes. She was haf it, an' tout le monde--how you say?--efferybodyee was haf fear. She was haf nottin' to eat--nottin' to drrink; le Père Honoré was fin' her in de bois--forêt, an' was been tak' ma pauvre mère in hees ahrms, an' he place her in de sugair-house, an' il l'a soignée--how you say?" He appealed to the Italian whose interest was on the increase.
"Nurrsed?"
"Yah--oui, nurrsed her, an' moi aussi--lee'l bébé'--"
"D' yer mane his Riverince nursed you and yer mother through the shmall pox?" demanded McCann. Several of the workmen stopped short with hammers uplifted to hear Antoine's answer.
"Mais oui, il l'a soignée jusqu'à ce qu'elle was been dead; he l'a enterrée--place in de terre--airth, an' moi he haf place chez un farmyer à Mo'real. An' le Père Honoré was tak' la petite vérole--shmall pookes in de sugair-house, an' de farmyer was gif him to eat an' to drrink par la porte--de door; de farmyer haf non passé par de door. Le Père Honoré m'a sauvé--haf safe, hein? An' Ah was been work ten, twenty, dirty year, Ah tink. Ah gagne--gain, hein?--two hundert pièces. Ah been come to de quairries, pour l'amour de bon Père Honoré qui m'a safe, hein? Ah be très content; Ah gagne, gain two, tree pièces--dollaires--par jour."
He nodded at one and all, his gold half-moon earrings twinkling in his evident satisfaction with himself and "le bon Père Honoré."
The men were silent. Jim McCann's eyes were blurred with tears. The thought of his own six-months boy presented itself in contrast to the small waif in the Canada woods and the dying gypsy mother, nursed by the priest who had christened his own little Billy.
"It's a bad night for the lecture," said a Scotchman, and broke therewith the emotional spell that was holding the men who had made out the principal points of Antoine's story.
"Yes, but Father Honoré says it's all about the cathedrals, an' not many will want to miss it," said another. "They say there's a crowd coming down from the quarries to-night to hear it."
"Faith, an' it's Mr. Van Ostend will be after havin' to put on an a trailer to his new hall," said McCann; "the b'ys know a good thing whin they see it, an' we was like to smother, the whole kit of us, whin they had the last pitchers of them mountins in Alasky on the sheet. It's the stairioptican that takes best wid the b'ys."
The four o'clock whistle began to sound. Three hundred chisels and hammers were dropped on the instant. The men hurried to the doors that were opened their full width to give egress to the hastening throngs. They streamed out; there was laughing and chaffing; now and then, among the younger ones, some good-natured fisticuffs were exchanged. Many sought the electrics to The Gore; others took the car to The Corners. From the three sheds, the power-house, the engine-house, the office, the dark files streamed forth from their toil. Within fifteen minutes the lights were turned out, the watchman was making his first round. Instead of the sounds of a vast industry, nothing was heard but the _sz-szz-szzz_ of the vanishing trams, the sputter of an arc-light, the barking of a dog. The gray twilight of a bleak March day shut down rapidly over frozen field and ice-rimmed lake.
V
Champney Googe left the shed with the rest; no one spoke to him, although many a curious look was turned his way when he had passed, and he spoke to no one. He waited for a car to Flamsted. There he got out. He found a restaurant near The Greenbush and ordered something to eat. Afterwards he went about the town, changed almost beyond recognition. He saw no face he knew. There were foreigners everywhere--men who were to be the fathers of the future American race. A fairly large opera house attracted his attention; it was evidently new. He looked for the year--1901. A little farther on he found the hall, built, so he had gathered from the few words among the men in the sheds, by Mr. Van Ostend. The name was on the lintel: "Flamsted Quarries Hall." Every few minutes an electric tram went whizzing through Main Street towards The Bow. Crowds of young people were on the street.
He looked upon all he saw almost indifferently, feeling little, caring little. It was as if a mental and spiritual numbness had possession of every faculty except the manual; he felt at home only while he was working for that short half-hour in the shed. He was not at ease here among this merry careless crowd. He stopped to look in at the windows of a large fine shop for fruits and groceries; he glanced up at the sign:--"Poggi and Company."
"Poggi--Poggi" he said to himself; he was thinking it out. "Luigi Poggi--Luigi--Ah!" It was a long-drawn breath. He had found his clew.
He heard again that cry: "Champney,--O Champney! what has he done to you!" The night came back to him in all its detail. It sickened him.
He was about to turn from the window and seek the quiet of The Bow until the hall should be open--at "sharp seven" he heard the men say--when a woman passed him and entered the shop. She took a seat at the counter just inside the show-window. He stood gazing at her, unable to move his eyes from the form, the face. It was she--Aileen!
The sickening feeling increased for a moment, then it gave place to strange electric currents that passed and repassed through every nerve. It was a sensation as if his whole body--flesh, muscles, nerves, arteries, veins, every lobe of his brain, every cell within each lobe, had been, as the saying is of an arm or leg, "asleep" and was now "coming to." The tingling sensation increased almost to torture; but he could not move. That face held him.
He must get away before she came out! That was his one thought. The first torment of awakening sensation to a new life was passing. He advanced a foot, then the other; he moved slowly, but he moved at last. He walked on down the street, not up towards The Bow as he had intended; walked on past The Greenbush towards The Corners; walked on and on till the nightmare of this awakening from a nearly seven-years abnormal sleep of feeling was over. Then he turned back to the town. The town clock was striking seven. The men were entering the hall by tens and twenties.
He took his seat in a corner beneath the shadow of a large gallery at the back, over the entrance.
There were only men admitted. He looked upon the hundreds assembled, and realized for the first time in more than six years that he was again a free man among free men. He drew a long breath of relief, of realization.
At a quarter past seven Father Honoré made his appearance on the platform. The men settled at once into silence, and the priest began without preface:
"My friends, we will take up to-night what we may call the Brotherhood of Stone."
The men looked at one another and smiled. Here was something new.
"That is the right thought for all of you to take with you into the quarries and the sheds. Don't forget it!"
He made certain distinct pauses after a few sentences. This was done with intention; for the men before him were of various nationalities, although he called this his "English night." But many were learning and understood imperfectly; it was for them he paused frequently. He wanted to give them time to take in what he was saying. Sometimes he repeated his words in Italian, in French, that the foreigners might better comprehend his meaning.
"Perhaps some of you have worked in the limestone quarries on the Bay? All who have hold up hands."
A hundred hands, perhaps more, were raised.
"Any worked in the marble quarries of Vermont?"
A dozen or more Canucks waved their hands vigorously.
"Here are three pieces--limestone, marble, and granite." He held up specimens of the three. "All of them are well known to most of you. Now mark what I say of these three:--first, the limestone gets burned principally; second, the marble gets sculptured principally; third, the granite gets hammered and chiselled principally. Fire, chisel, and hammer at work on these three rocks; but, they are all _quarried_ first. This fact of their being quarried puts them in the Brotherhood--of Labor."
The men nudged one another, and nodded emphatically.
"They are all three taken from the crust of the earth; this Earth is to them the earth-mother. Now mark again what I say:--this fact of their common earth-mother puts them in the Brotherhood--of Kin."
He took up three specimens of quartz crystals.
"This quartz crystal"--he turned it in the light, and the hexagonal prisms caught and reflected dazzling rays--"I found in the limestone quarry on the Bay. This," he took up another smaller one, "I found after a long search in the marble quarries of Vermont. This here," he held up a third, a smaller, less brilliant, less perfect one--"I took out of our upper quarry after a three weeks' search for it.
"This fact, that these rocks, although of different market value and put to different uses, may yield the same perfect crystal, puts the limestone, the marble, the granite in the Brotherhood--of Equality.
"In our other talks, we have named the elements of each rock, and given some study to each. We have found that some of their elements are the basic elements of our own mortal frames--our bodies have a common earth-mother with these stones.
"This last fact puts them in the Brotherhood--of Man."
The seven hundred men showed their appreciation of the point made by prolonged applause.
"Now I want to make clear to you that, although these rocks have different market values, are put to different uses, the real value for us this evening consists in the fact that each, in its own place, can yield a crystal equal in purity to the others.--Remember this the next time you go to work in the quarries and the sheds."
He laid aside the specimens.
"We had a talk last month about the guilds of four hundred years ago. I asked you then to look upon yourselves as members of a great twentieth century working guild. Have you done it? Has every man, who was present then, said since, when hewing a foundation stone, a block for a bridge abutment, a corner-stone for a cathedral or a railroad station, a cap-stone for a monument, a milestone, a lintel for a door, a hearthstone or a step for an altar, 'I belong to the great guild of the makers of this country; I quarry and hew the rock that lays the enduring bed for the iron or electric horses which rush from sea to sea and carry the burden of humanity'?--Think of it, men! Yours are the hands that make this great track of commerce possible. Yours are the hands that curve the stones, afterwards reared into noble arches beneath which the people assemble to do God reverence. Yours are the hands that square the deep foundations of the great bridges which, like the Brooklyn, cross high in mid-air from shore to shore! Have you said this? Have you done it?"
"Ay, ay.--Sure.--We done it." The murmuring assent was polyglot.
"Very well--see that you keep on doing it, and show that you do it by the good work you furnish."
He motioned to the manipulators in the gallery to make ready for the stereopticon views. The blank blinding round played erratically on the curtain. The entire audience sat expectant.
There was flashed upon the screen the interior of a Canadian "cabin." The family were at supper; the whole interior, simple and homely, was indicative of warmth and cheerful family life.
The Canucks in the audience lost their heads. The clapping was frantic. Father Honoré smiled. He tapped the portrayed wall with the end of his pointer.
"This is comfort--no cold can penetrate these walls; they are double plastered. Credit limestone with that!"
The audience showed its appreciation in no uncertain way.
"The crystal--can any one see that--find that in this interior?"
The men were silent. Father Honoré was pointing to the mother and her child; the father was holding out his arms to the little one who, with loving impatience, was reaching away from his mother over the table to his father. They comprehended the priest's thought in the lesson of the limestone:--the love and trust of the human. No words were needed. An emotional silence made itself felt.
The picture shifted. There was thrown upon the screen the marble Cathedral of Milan. A murmur of delight ran through the house.
"Here we have the limestone in the form of marble. Its beauty is the price of unremitting toil. This, too, belongs in the brotherhoods of labor, kin, and equality.--Do you find the crystal?"
His pointer swept the hierarchy of statues on the roof, upwards to the cross on the pinnacle, where it rested.
"This crystal is the symbol of what inspires and glorifies humanity. The crystal is yours, men, if with believing hearts you are willing to say 'Our Father' in the face of His works."
He paused a moment. It was an understood thing in the semi-monthly talks, that the men were free to ask questions and to express an opinion, even, at times, to argue a point. The men's eyes were fixed with keen appreciation on the marble beauty before them, when a voice broke the silence.