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PinkMonkey Digital Library-Sister Carrie by Theodore Dreiser


The car ran back more quietly-hooted, watched, flung at, but not
attacked. Hurstwood breathed freely when he saw the barns.

"Well," he observed to himself, "I came out of that all right."

The car was turned in and he was allowed to loaf a while, but later
he was again called. This time a new team of officers was aboard.
Slightly more confident, he sped the car along the commonplace
streets and felt somewhat less fearful. On one side, however, he
suffered intensely. The day was raw, with a sprinkling of snow
and a gusty wind, made all the more intolerable by the speed of
the car. His clothing was not intended for this sort of work. He
shivered, stamped his feet, and beat his arms as he had seen other
motormen do in the past, but said nothing. The novelty and danger
of the situation modified in a way his disgust and distress at being
compelled to be here, but not enough to prevent him from feeling
grim and sour. This was a dog’s life, he thought. It was a tough
thing to have to come to.

The one thought that strengthened him was the insult offered by
Carrie. He was not down so low as to take all that, he thought. He
could do something-this, even-for a while. It would get better. He
would save a little.

A boy threw a clod of mud while he was thus reflecting and hit
him upon the arm. It hurt sharply and angered him more than he
had been any time since morning.

"The little cur!" he muttered.

"Hurt you?" asked one of the policemen.

"No," he answered.

At one of the corners, where the car slowed up because of a turn,
an ex-motor-man, standing on the sidewalk, called to him:

"Won’t you come out, pardner, and be a man? Remember we’re
fighting for decent day’s wages, that’s all. We’ve got families to
support." The man seemed most peaceably inclined.

Hurstwood pretended not to see him. He kept his eyes straight on
before and opened the lever wide. The voice had something
appealing in it.

All morning this went on and long into the afternoon. He made
three such trips. The dinner he had was no stay for such work and
the cold was telling on him. At each end of the line he stopped to
thaw out, but he could have groaned at the anguish of it. One of
the barnmen, out of pity, loaned him a heavy cap and a pair of
sheepskin gloves, and for once he was extremely thankful.

On the second trip of the afternoon he ran into a crowd about half
way along the line, that had blocked the car’s progress with an old
telegraph pole.

"Get that thing off the track," shouted the two policemen.

"Yah, yah, yah!" yelled the crowd. "Get it off yourself."

The two policemen got down and Hurstwood started to follow.

"You stay there," one called. "Some one will run away with your
car."

Amid the babel of voices, Hurstwood heard one close beside him.

"Come down, pardner, and be a man. Don’t fight the poor. Leave
that to the corporations."

He saw the same fellow who had called to him from the corner.
Now, as before, he pretended not to hear him.

"Come down," the man repeated gently. "You don’t want to fight
poor men. Don’t fight at all." It was a most philosophic and
jesuitical motorman.

A third policeman joined the other two from somewhere and some
one ran to telephone for more officers. Hurstwood gazed about,
determined but fearful.

A man grabbed him by the coat.

"Come off of that," he exclaimed, jerking at him and trying to pull
him over the railing.

"Let go," said Hurstwood, savagely.

"I’ll show you-you scab!" cried a young Irishman, jumping up on
the car and aiming a blow at Hurstwood. The latter ducked and
caught it on the shoulder instead of the jaw.

"Away from here," shouted an officer, hastening to the rescue,
and adding, of course, the usual oaths.
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PinkMonkey Digital Library-Sister Carrie by Theodore Dreiser



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