"Oh, father!" With a gasp she burst into tears and threw herself in her father's arms.
"That is the work of Canter and his partner, McSheen," said Mr. Leigh grimly.
It was not the only house in which the sending back of her baskets caused tears. In many a poor little tenement there was sore weeping because of the order--in not a few a turkey had not been known for years. Yet mainly the order was obeyed.
Next day Mr. Leigh received in his office a notification that a deputation of the operatives on his road demanded to see him immediately. He knew that they were coming; but he had not expected them quite so soon. However, he was quite prepared for them and they were immediately admitted. They were a deputation of five men, two of them elderly men, one hardly more than a youth, the other two of middle age.
At their head was a large, surly man with a new black hat and a new overcoat. He was the first man to enter the room and was manifestly the leader of the party. Mr. Leigh invited them to take seats and the two older men sat down. Two of the others shuffled a little in their places and turned their eyes on their leader.
"Well, what can I do for you?" inquired Mr. Leigh quietly. His good-humored face had suddenly taken on a cold, self-contained expression, as of a man who had pa.s.sed the worst.
Again there was a slight shuffle on the part of the others and one of the older men, rising from his seat and taking a step forward, said gravely: "We have come to submit to you----"
His speech, however, was instantly interrupted by the large man in the overcoat. "Not by a d----d sight!" he began. "We have come to demand two things----"
Mr. Leigh nodded.
"Only two? What may they be, please?"
"First, that you discharge a man named Kenneth McNeil, who is a non-union man----"
Mr. Leigh's eyes contracted slightly.
"--and secondly, that you give a raise of wages of fifteen per cent. to every man in your employ--and every woman, too."
"And what is the alternative, pray?"
"A strike."
"By whom?"
"By every soul in your employ, and, if necessary, by every man and woman who works in this city--and if that is not enough, by a tie-up that will paralyze you, and all like you."
Mr. Leigh nodded. "I understand."
A slight spark came into his eyes and his lips tightened just a shade, but when he spoke his voice was level and almost impersonal.
"Will nothing less satisfy you?" he inquired.
"Not a cent," said the leader and two of the others looked at him with admiration. "We want justice."
Mr. Leigh, with his eye steadily on him, shook his head and a smile came into his eyes. "No, you don't want justice," he said to the leader, "you want money."
"Yes, our money."
Again Mr. Leigh shook his head slowly with his eyes on him. "No, not your money--mine. Who are you?" he demanded. "Are you one of the employees of this road?"
"My name is Wringman and I am the head of this delegation."
"Are you an employee of this Company?"
"I am the head of this delegation, the representative of the a.s.sociated Unions of this city, of which the Union on this road const.i.tutes a part."
"I will not deal with you," said Mr. Leigh, "but I will deal with you,"
he turned to the other men. "I will not discharge the man you speak of.
He is an exceptionally good man. I happen to know this of my own personal knowledge, and I know the reason he is not a Union man. It is because you kept him out of the Union, hoping to destroy him as you have destroyed other honest men who have opposed you." He turned back to the leader.
Wringman started to speak, but Mr. Leigh cut him short.
"Not a word from you. I am dealing now with my own men. I know you. I know who your employer is and what you have been paid. You sold out your people in the East whom you pretended to represent, and now you have come to sell out these poor people here, on whose ignorance and innocence you trade and fatten. You have been against McNeil because he denounced you in the East. Your demand is preposterous," he said, turning to the others. "It is an absolute violation of the agreement which you entered into with me not three months ago. I have that agreement here on my desk. You know what that says, that the scale adopted was to stand for so long, and if by any chance, any question should arise, it was to be arbitrated by the tribunal a.s.sented to by yourselves and myself. I am willing to submit to that tribunal the question whether any question has arisen, and if it has, to submit it for adjudication by them."
"We did not come here to be put off with any such hyp--" began the leader, but before he had gotten his word out, Mr. Leigh was on his feet.
"Stop," he said. And his voice had the sharp crack of a rifle shot. "Not a word from you. Out of this office." He pointed to the door and at the same moment touched the bell. "Show that man the door," he said, "instantly, and never admit him inside of it again."
"Ah, I'm going," sneered Wringman, putting on his hat, "but not because you ordered me."
"Yes, you are--because I ordered you, and if you don't go instantly I will kick you out personally."
He stepped around the desk and, with his eyes blazing, walked quickly across the floor, but Wringman had backed out of the door.
"For the rest of you," he said, "you have my answer. I warn you that if you strike you will close the factories that now give employment to thousands of men and young women. You men may be able to take care of yourselves; but you should think of those girls. Who will take care of them when they are turned out on the street? I have done it heretofore--unless you are prepared to do it now, you had better consider. Go down to my box-factory and walk through it and see them, self-supporting and self-respecting. Do you know what will become of them if they are turned out? Go to Gallagin's Gallery and see. Go back to your work if you are men of sense. If not, I have nothing further to say to you."
They walked out and Mr. Leigh shut the door behind them. When he took his seat a deep gravity had settled on him which made him look older by years.
The following day an order for a general strike on the lines operated by Mr. Leigh was issued, and the next morning after that not a wheel turned on his lines or in his factories. It was imagined and reported as only a question of wages between an employer and his men. But deep down underneath lay the secret motives of McSheen and Canter and their set who had been plotting in secret, weaving their webs in the dark--gambling in the lives of men and sad-eyed women and hungry children. The effect on the population of that section of the city was curious. Of all sad things on earth a strike is the saddest. And like other battles, next to a defeat the saddest scene is the field of victory.
The shadow had settled down on us; the sunshine was gone. The temper of every one appeared to have been strained. The principle of Unionism as a system of protection and defence had suddenly taken form as a system of aggression and active hostility. Cla.s.s-feeling suddenly sprang up in open and armed array, and next came division within cla.s.ses. The talk was all of force; the feeling all one of enmity and strife. The entire population appeared infected by it. Houses were divided against themselves; neighbors who had lived in friendliness and hourly intercourse and exchanged continual acts of kindness, discussed, contended, quarrelled, threatened, and fought or pa.s.sed by on the other side scowling and embittered. Sweetness gave place to rancor and good-will to hate.
Among those affected by the strike was the family of my old drummer. The change was as apparent in this little home, where hitherto peace and content had reigned supreme with Music to fill in the intervals and make joy, as in the immediate field of the strike.
The whole atmosphere of happiness underwent a change, as though a deadly damp had crept in from the outside, mildewing with its baleful presence all within, and turning the very sunlight into gloom. Elsa had lost her place. The box-factory was closed. The house was filled with contention.
The musicians who came around to smoke their big pipes and drink beer with old Loewen were like the rest, infected. Nothing appeared to please any longer. The director was a tyrant; the first violin a charlatan; the rest of the performers mostly fools or worse; and the whole orchestra "a fake."
This was the talk I heard in the home when I stopped by sometimes of an evening on my way to my room, and found some of his friends arguing with him over their steins and pipes, and urging a stand against the director and a demand that he accede to their wishes. The old drummer himself stood out stoutly. The director had always been kind to him and to them, he insisted. He was a good man and took pride in the orchestra, as much pride as he himself did. But I could see that he was growing soured. He drank more beer and practised less. Moreover, he talked more of money, which once he had scarcely ever mentioned. But the atmosphere was telling; the mildew was appearing. And in this haunt of peace, peace was gone.
I learned from Loewen one evening that in the event of the strike not being settled soon, there was a chance of a sympathetic strike of all trades, and that even the musicians might join in it, for they had "grievances also."
"But I thought Music was not a trade, but a profession, an art?" I said, quoting a phrase I had overheard him use. He raised his shoulders and threw out his hands palm upward.
"Ach! it vas vonce."
"Then why is it not now?"
"Ach! Who knows? Because they vill not haf it so. Ze music iss dead--ze harmony iss all gone--in ze people--in ze heart! Zere iss no more music in ze souls of ze people. It iss monee--monee--monee--fight, fight, fight, all ze time! Who can gife ze divine strain ven ze heart is set on monee always?"
Who, indeed? I thought, and the more I thought of it the more clearly I felt that he had touched the central truth.