As thoughts of Pete came to Maggie’s
mind, she began to have an intense dislike for all
of her dresses.
“What deh hell ails yeh?
What makes yeh be allus fixin’ and fussin’?
Good Gawd,” her mother would frequently roar
at her.
She began to note, with more interest,
the well-dressed women she met on the avenues.
She envied elegance and soft palms. She craved
those adornments of person which she saw every day
on the street, conceiving them to be allies of vast
importance to women.
Studying faces, she thought many of
the women and girls she chanced to meet, smiled with
serenity as though forever cherished and watched over
by those they loved.
The air in the collar and cuff establishment
strangled her. She knew she was gradually and
surely shrivelling in the hot, stuffy room. The
begrimed windows rattled incessantly from the passing
of elevated trains. The place was filled with
a whirl of noises and odors.
She wondered as she regarded some
of the grizzled women in the room, mere mechanical
contrivances sewing seams and grinding out, with heads
bended over their work, tales of imagined or real girlhood
happiness, past drunks, the baby at home, and unpaid
wages. She speculated how long her youth would
endure. She began to see the bloom upon her
cheeks as valuable.
She imagined herself, in an exasperating
future, as a scrawny woman with an eternal grievance.
Too, she thought Pete to be a very fastidious person
concerning the appearance of women.
She felt she would love to see somebody
entangle their fingers in the oily beard of the fat
foreigner who owned the establishment. He was
a detestable creature. He wore white socks with
low shoes. When he tired of this amusement he
would go to the mummies and moralize over them.
Usually he submitted with silent dignity
to all which he had to go through, but, at times,
he was goaded into comment.
“What deh hell,”
he demanded once. “Look at all dese little
jugs! Hundred jugs in a row! Ten rows in
a case an’ ’bout a t’ousand cases!
What deh blazes use is dem?”
Evenings during the week he took her
to see plays in which the brain-clutching heroine
was rescued from the palatial home of her guardian,
who is cruelly after her bonds, by the hero with the
beautiful sentiments. The latter spent most of
his time out at soak in pale-green snow storms, busy
with a nickel-plated revolver, rescuing aged strangers
from villains.
Maggie lost herself in sympathy with
the wanderers swooning in snow storms beneath happy-hued
church windows. And a choir within singing “Joy
to the World.” To Maggie and the rest of
the audience this was transcendental realism.
Joy always within, and they, like the actor, inevitably
without. Viewing it, they hugged themselves in
ecstatic pity of their imagined or real condition.
The girl thought the arrogance and
granite-heartedness of the magnate of the play was
very accurately drawn. She echoed the malédictions
that the occupants of the gallery showered on this
individual when his lines compelled him to expose
his extreme selfishness.
Shady persons in the audience revolted
from the pictured villainy of the drama. With
untiring zeal they hissed vice and applauded virtue.
Unmistakably bad men evinced an apparently sincere
admiration for virtue.
The loud gallery was overwhelmingly
with the unfortunate and the oppressed. They
encouraged the struggling hero with cries, and jeered
the villain, hooting and calling attention to his whiskers.
When anybody died in the pale-green snow storms,
the gallery mourned. They sought out the painted
misery and hugged it as akin.
In the hero’s erratic march
from poverty in the first act, to wealth and triumph
in the final one, in which he forgives all the enemies
that he has left, he was assisted by the gallery,
which applauded his generous and noble sentiments
and confounded the speeches of his opponents by making
irrelevant but very sharp remarks. Those actors
who were cursed with villainy parts were confronted
at every turn by the gallery. If one of them
rendered lines containing the most subtile distinctions
between right and wrong, the gallery was immediately
aware if the actor meant wickedness, and denounced
him accordingly.
The last act was a triumph for the
hero, poor and of the masses, the representative of
the audience, over the villain and the rich man, his
pockets stuffed with bonds, his heart packed with tyrannical
purposes, imperturbable amid suffering.
Maggie always departed with raised
spirits from the showing places of the melodrama.
She rejoiced at the way in which the poor and virtuous
eventually surmounted the wealthy and wicked.
The theatre made her think. She wondered if
the culture and refinement she had seen imitated,
perhaps grotesquely, by the heroine on the stage, could
be acquired by a girl who lived in a tenement house
and worked in a shirt factory.