Comrade Yetta. Edwards Albert

Comrade Yetta - Edwards Albert


Скачать книгу
It was several minutes before Yetta fully awoke to the situation. And when she did, a strange transformation had taken place within her; she was no longer afraid of the sorry couple.

      "Yes," she said, sitting up in bed, drawing the blanket about her shoulders, "I went to a ball. If you don't like it, I'll find some other place to live."

      The garrulous old couple fell silent. Goldstein's resentment against his daughter Rachel was fully as much because she had stopped bringing him money to get drunk on as because she had "gone wrong." After a minute's amazement at Yetta's sudden display of independence, they began a sing-song duet about ingratitude. Had they not done everything for her? Taken her in when she was a penniless orphan? Clothed and fed and sheltered her?

      "And haven't I paid you all my wages for four years?" she replied. "Go away. I want to get dressed."

      At the shop Yetta found that the story of her speech had been spread by one of the girls at the second table who had been at the ball. Fortunately this girl had not witnessed the scene with Harry Klein. Yetta found the women at her table discussing the matter in whispers when she arrived. In the moment before the motor started the day's work, the bovine Mrs. Levy told her that she was a fool.

      "You've got a good job," she said. "You'll make trouble with your bread and butter. You're a fool."

      "Better be careful," the cheerful Mrs. Weinstein advised. "Don't I know? My husband's a union man. Of course the unions are right, but they make trouble."

      "It ain't no use," the sad and worn Mrs. Cohen coughed from the foot of the table. "There ain't nothing that'll do any good. Women ain't got no chance."

      The motor began with a roar.

      It is a strange fact of life, how sometimes a sudden light will be turned on a familiar environment, making it all seem new and entirely different from what we are accustomed to. Four years Yetta had worked in that shop. She had accepted it all as an inevitability, which no more admitted change or "reform" than the courses of the stars. The speeches to which she had listened made it suddenly appear in its true human aspect. It was no longer a thing unalterable, it was an invention of human greed. It was a laboratory where, instead of base metals, the blood of women and young girls was transmuted into gold. The alchemists had failed to find the Philosopher's Stone. The sweat-shop was a modern substitute. It was a contrivance by which such priceless things as youth and health and the hope of the next generation could be coined into good and lawful money of the realm.

      Her nimble fingers flying subconsciously at the terrible speed through the accustomed motions, Yetta saw all the grim reality of the shop as never before. She saw the broken door to the shamefully filthy toilet, saw the closed, unwashed windows, which meant vitiated, tuberculosis-laden air, saw the backs of the women bent into unhealthy attitudes, saw the strained look in their eyes. More vaguely she saw a vision of the might-be life of these women, – clean homes and happy children. And behind her she felt the existence of the "office", where Jake Goldfogle sat and watched them through his spying window, and contrived new fines. And even more clearly than when she had made her speech, she saw her own function in this infernal scheme of greed, saw herself a lieutenant of the slave-driver behind her. She wondered if the other women hated her as she deserved to be hated. But habit is a hard thing to break, and her fingers sped on as of old.

      Конец ознакомительного фрагмента.

      Текст предоставлен ООО «ЛитРес».

      Прочитайте эту книгу целиком, купив полную легальную версию на ЛитРес.

      Безопасно оплатить книгу можно банковской картой Visa, MasterCard, Maestro, со счета мобильного телефона, с платежного терминала, в салоне МТС или Связной, через PayPal, WebMoney, Яндекс.Деньги, QIWI Кошелек, бонусными картами или другим удобным Вам способом.

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

Скачать книгу