"You have placed armed men in your shops without a justifiable cause."
"The men are mechanics, sworn in for their own self-protection."
Donnelly saw that he was making no impression.
"These men, then, are to tear down your shops?" not without admiration.
"Well, they are there to dismantle it."
"That building must not go down, Mr. Bennington."
""Must not"? Do I understand you to say "must not"?"
"Those words exactly."
"It is private property, Mr. Donnelly; it was not organized under corporation laws."
"You can not destroy even private property, in a city, without a legal permit."
"I have that."
"And I shall call a special meeting of the Common Council to rescind your permit."
"Do so. I shall tear it down, nevertheless. I shall do what I please with what is my own." Bennington balanced on his heels.
"The law is there."
"I shall break it, if need says must," urbanely.
Donnelly surveyed the end of his dead cigar.
"The men will become violent."
"Their violence will in no wise hinder me, so long as they confine it to the shops. Even then I shall call upon you for police protection."
"And if I should not give it?"
"Just now I am sure you will. For the mayor of Herculaneum to refuse me my rights would be a nice morsel for the Republican party."
Donnelly pa.s.sed over this.
"I wish to protect the rights of the workman, just as you wish to protect yours."
"What are the workman"s rights?"
Donnelly did not reply.
"Well, I"ll reply for you, then. His right is to sell his labor to the highest bidder; his right is to work where he pleases; for what hours he desires; his right is to reject abusive employers and to find those congenial; his right is to produce as little or as much as he thinks best; his right is to think for himself, to act for himself, to live for himself."
"You admit all this, then?" asked Donnelly in astonishment.
"I have never so much as denied a single right that belongs to the workman."
"Then what the devil is all this row about?"
"If the workman has his rights, shall not the employer have his?"
Donnelly mused. He would not be able to do anything with this plain-spoken man.
"But the workman steps beyond. He has no right to dictate to his employer as to what HIS rights shall be. Where there is no amity between capital and labor there is never any justice; one or the other becomes a despot. The workman has his rights, but these end where the other man"s rights begin. He shall not say that another man shall not seek work, shall not sell his labor for what he can get; he has no right to forbid another man"s choosing freedom; he has no right to say that a manufacturer shall produce only so much."
"Well, I"ve only to say," said Donnelly, hedging before this clear argument, "I"ve only to say, if the men become violent, look out for yourself."
"I shall appeal to you for civic or military protection; if you refuse it, to the governor; if politics there interferes, I shall appeal to Washington, where neither your arm nor McQuade"s can reach. I understand the causes back of this strike; they are personal, and I"m man enough to look out for myself. But if politics starts to work, there will be a trouble to settle in the courts. You may not know the true cause of this strike, Mr. Donnelly, but I do. The poor deluded men believe it to be the English inventor, but he is only a blind. Had you really wished to do me a favor, you would have spoken to the men before they went out on this silly strike. But I am master of what is mine, and I shall tear down that building. I shall tolerate no interference from any man. The workman has his rights; this is one of my rights, and I intend to use it."
"It"s your business. If you are fool enough to kill a golden goose, it"s no affair of mine. But I shall rescind your permit, however. I believe it to be my duty."
"Call your Council together, Mr. Donnelly. You can not get a quorum together earlier than to-morrow night; and by that time I shall have the work done. You say you will not afford me protection. Very well; if the men become violent and burn the shops, I shall be relieved of the expense of tearing them down. Good afternoon."
Donnelly sat in his chair for a quarter of an hour, silent and thoughtful. Suddenly he slapped his thigh.
"I don"t know what McQuade has against that man, but, by the Lord! he IS a man!"
That night the strikers received several bottles of whisky and a keg of beer. The source of these gifts was unknown. Some of the more thoughtful were for smashing the stuff, but the turbulent majority overruled them. They began to drink and jest. They did so with impunity. For some reason the police had been withdrawn. The hammering inside the shops puzzled them, but they still clung to the idea that all this clamor was only a ruse to frighten them into surrendering.
From the interior the pounding gradually approached as far as the walls of the courtyard. At midnight one of these walls went thundering to the ground. A few minutes later another fell. The strikers grouped together, dismayed.
"By G.o.d, boys," one of them yelled, "he"s tearing it down!"
In that moment, and only then, did they realize that they had been dealing with a man whose will and word were immutable. They saw all their dreams of triumph vanish in the dust that rose from the crumbling brick and plaster. And dismay gave way to insensate rage. It would only be helping Bennington to riot and burn the shops, so now to maim and kill the men who, at hire, were tearing down these walls.
"Come on, boys! We"ll help the scabs finish the work! Come on!"
There was now a great breach in the wall. Men moving to and fro could be seen. The strikers s.n.a.t.c.hed up bricks and clubs and dashed toward this. But ere they had set foot on the rubbish they stopped. Half a dozen resolute men faced them. They were armed.
"That"s far enough, boys," warned a powerful voice. "I told you we have all been sworn in as deputy police, with all the laws of the state back of us. The first man that steps across that pile of bricks will go to the hospital, the second man to the undertaker."
Chapter XVII
Ah, the vanity of Dawn! Like a Venus she rises from her bath of opalescent mists and dons a gown of pearl. But this does not please the coquette. Her fancy turns from pearl to green, to amber, to pink, to blue and gold and rose, an inexhaustible wardrobe. She blushes, she frowns, she hesitates; she is like a woman in love. She casts abroad her dewy jewels on the leaves, the blades of gra.s.s, the tangled laces of the spiders, the drab cold stones. She ruffles the clouds on the face of the sleeping waters; she sweeps through the forests with a low whispering sound, taking a t.i.the of the resinous perfumes. Always and always she decks herself for the coming of Phoebus, but, woman-like, at first sight of him turns and flies.
Dawn is the most beautiful of all the atmospheric changes, but the vision is a rarity to the majority of us.
Warrington was up and away on his hunter before Phoebus sent his warning flashing over the hills. He took the now familiar road, and urged his animal vigorously. Fine! Not a bit of dust rose from the road, dew-wet and brown. The rime of the slight frost shone from the fences and gra.s.ses and stacked corn, like old age that strikes in a single night. Here and there a farmer could be seen pottering about the yards, or there was a pale curl of smoke rising from the chimney.
The horse, loving these chill, exhilarating October mornings, went drumming along the road. Occasionally Warrington would rise in the stirrups and gaze forward over this elevation or that, and sometimes behind him. No. For three mornings he had ridden out this old familiar way, but alone. The hunger in his eyes remained unsatisfied.