The Blind Brother (Illustrated)
The Dryden Mine, in the Susquehanna coal-fields of Pennsylvania, was worked out and abandoned long ago. To-day its headings and airways and chambers echo only to the occasional fall of loosened slate, or to the drip of water from the roof. Its pillars, robbed by retreating workmen, are crumbling and rusty, and those of its props which are still standing have become mouldy and rotten. The rats that once scampered through its galleries deserted it along with human kind, and its very name, from long disuse, has acquired an unaccustomed sound.
But twenty years ago there was no[12] busier mine than the Dryden from Carbondale to Nanticoke. Two hundred and thirty men and boys went by the slope into it every morning, and came out from it every night. They were simple and unlearned, these men and boys, rugged and rude, rough and reckless at times, but manly, heroic, and kindhearted.
Up in the Lackawanna region a strike had been in progress for nearly two weeks. Efforts had been made by the strikers to persuade the miners down the valley to join them, but at first without success.
Then a committee of one hundred came down to appeal and to intimidate. In squads of ten or more they visited the mines in the region, and, in the course of their journeyings, had come to the Dryden Slope. They had induced the miners to go out at all the workings they had thus far entered, and were no less successful here. It required persuasion, sometimes threats, sometimes, indeed, even blows, for the miners in Dryden Slope had no cause of complaint against their employers; they earned good wages, and were content.
[13]
But, twenty years ago, miners who kept at work against the wishes of their fellows while a strike was in progress, were called �black-legs,� were treated with contempt, waylaid and beaten, and sometimes killed.
So the men in the Dryden Mine yielded; and soon, down the chambers and along the headings, toward the foot of the slope, came little groups, with dinner-pails and tools, discussing earnestly, often bitterly, the situation and the prospect.
The members of a party of fifteen or twenty, that came down the airway from the tier of chambers on the new north heading, were holding an especially animated conversation. Fully one-half of the men were visiting strikers. They were all walking, in single file, along the route by which the mine-cars went.
For some distance from the new chambers the car-track was laid in the airway; then it turned down through an entrance into the heading, and from that point followed the heading to the foot of the slope. Where the route crossed from the airway to the heading, the space between the[14] pillars had been carefully boarded across, so that the air current should not be turned aside; and a door had been placed in the boarding, to be opened whenever the cars approached, and shut as soon as they had passed by.
That door was attended by a boy.
To this point the party had now come, and one by one filed through the opening, while Bennie, the door-boy, stood holding back the door to let them pass.
�Ho, Jack, tak� the door-boy wi� ye!� shouted some one in the rear.
The great, broad-shouldered, rough-bearded man who led the procession turned back to where Bennie, apparently lost in astonishment at this unusual occurrence, still stood, with his hand on the door.
�Come along, lad!� he said; �come along! Ye�ll have a gret play-spell noo.�
�I can�t leave the door, sir,� answered Bennie. �The cars�ll be comin� soon.�
�Ye need na min� the cars. Come along wi� ye, I say!�
�But I can�t go till Tom comes, anyway, you know.�
[15]
The man came a step closer. He had the frame of a giant. The others who passed by were like children beside him. Then one of the men who worked in the mine, and who knew Bennie, came through the doorway, the last in the group, and said,�
�Don�t hurt the boy; let him alone. His brother�ll take him out; he always does.�
All this time Bennie stood quite still, with his hand on the door, never turning his head.
It was a strange thing for a boy to stand motionless like that, and look neither to the right nor the left, while an excited group of men passed by, one of whom had stopped and approached him, as if he meant him harm. It roused the curiosity of �Jack the Giant,� as the miners called him, and, plucking his lamp from his cap, he flashed the light of it up into Bennie�s face.
The boy did not stir; no muscle of his face moved; even his eyes remained open and fixed.
[16]
�Why, lad! lad! What�s the matter wi� ye?� There was tenderness in the giant�s voice as he spoke, and tenderness in his bearded face as Bennie answered,�
�Don�t you know? I�m blind.�
�Blind! An� a-workin� i� the mines?�
�Oh, a body don�t have to see to �tend door, you know. All I�ve to do is to open it when I hear the cars a-comin�, an� to shut it when they get by.�
1012322591
The Blind Brother (Illustrated)
The Dryden Mine, in the Susquehanna coal-fields of Pennsylvania, was worked out and abandoned long ago. To-day its headings and airways and chambers echo only to the occasional fall of loosened slate, or to the drip of water from the roof. Its pillars, robbed by retreating workmen, are crumbling and rusty, and those of its props which are still standing have become mouldy and rotten. The rats that once scampered through its galleries deserted it along with human kind, and its very name, from long disuse, has acquired an unaccustomed sound.
But twenty years ago there was no[12] busier mine than the Dryden from Carbondale to Nanticoke. Two hundred and thirty men and boys went by the slope into it every morning, and came out from it every night. They were simple and unlearned, these men and boys, rugged and rude, rough and reckless at times, but manly, heroic, and kindhearted.
Up in the Lackawanna region a strike had been in progress for nearly two weeks. Efforts had been made by the strikers to persuade the miners down the valley to join them, but at first without success.
Then a committee of one hundred came down to appeal and to intimidate. In squads of ten or more they visited the mines in the region, and, in the course of their journeyings, had come to the Dryden Slope. They had induced the miners to go out at all the workings they had thus far entered, and were no less successful here. It required persuasion, sometimes threats, sometimes, indeed, even blows, for the miners in Dryden Slope had no cause of complaint against their employers; they earned good wages, and were content.
[13]
But, twenty years ago, miners who kept at work against the wishes of their fellows while a strike was in progress, were called �black-legs,� were treated with contempt, waylaid and beaten, and sometimes killed.
So the men in the Dryden Mine yielded; and soon, down the chambers and along the headings, toward the foot of the slope, came little groups, with dinner-pails and tools, discussing earnestly, often bitterly, the situation and the prospect.
The members of a party of fifteen or twenty, that came down the airway from the tier of chambers on the new north heading, were holding an especially animated conversation. Fully one-half of the men were visiting strikers. They were all walking, in single file, along the route by which the mine-cars went.
For some distance from the new chambers the car-track was laid in the airway; then it turned down through an entrance into the heading, and from that point followed the heading to the foot of the slope. Where the route crossed from the airway to the heading, the space between the[14] pillars had been carefully boarded across, so that the air current should not be turned aside; and a door had been placed in the boarding, to be opened whenever the cars approached, and shut as soon as they had passed by.
That door was attended by a boy.
To this point the party had now come, and one by one filed through the opening, while Bennie, the door-boy, stood holding back the door to let them pass.
�Ho, Jack, tak� the door-boy wi� ye!� shouted some one in the rear.
The great, broad-shouldered, rough-bearded man who led the procession turned back to where Bennie, apparently lost in astonishment at this unusual occurrence, still stood, with his hand on the door.
�Come along, lad!� he said; �come along! Ye�ll have a gret play-spell noo.�
�I can�t leave the door, sir,� answered Bennie. �The cars�ll be comin� soon.�
�Ye need na min� the cars. Come along wi� ye, I say!�
�But I can�t go till Tom comes, anyway, you know.�
[15]
The man came a step closer. He had the frame of a giant. The others who passed by were like children beside him. Then one of the men who worked in the mine, and who knew Bennie, came through the doorway, the last in the group, and said,�
�Don�t hurt the boy; let him alone. His brother�ll take him out; he always does.�
All this time Bennie stood quite still, with his hand on the door, never turning his head.
It was a strange thing for a boy to stand motionless like that, and look neither to the right nor the left, while an excited group of men passed by, one of whom had stopped and approached him, as if he meant him harm. It roused the curiosity of �Jack the Giant,� as the miners called him, and, plucking his lamp from his cap, he flashed the light of it up into Bennie�s face.
The boy did not stir; no muscle of his face moved; even his eyes remained open and fixed.
[16]
�Why, lad! lad! What�s the matter wi� ye?� There was tenderness in the giant�s voice as he spoke, and tenderness in his bearded face as Bennie answered,�
�Don�t you know? I�m blind.�
�Blind! An� a-workin� i� the mines?�
�Oh, a body don�t have to see to �tend door, you know. All I�ve to do is to open it when I hear the cars a-comin�, an� to shut it when they get by.�
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The Blind Brother (Illustrated)

The Blind Brother (Illustrated)

by Homer Greene
The Blind Brother (Illustrated)

The Blind Brother (Illustrated)

by Homer Greene

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Overview

The Dryden Mine, in the Susquehanna coal-fields of Pennsylvania, was worked out and abandoned long ago. To-day its headings and airways and chambers echo only to the occasional fall of loosened slate, or to the drip of water from the roof. Its pillars, robbed by retreating workmen, are crumbling and rusty, and those of its props which are still standing have become mouldy and rotten. The rats that once scampered through its galleries deserted it along with human kind, and its very name, from long disuse, has acquired an unaccustomed sound.
But twenty years ago there was no[12] busier mine than the Dryden from Carbondale to Nanticoke. Two hundred and thirty men and boys went by the slope into it every morning, and came out from it every night. They were simple and unlearned, these men and boys, rugged and rude, rough and reckless at times, but manly, heroic, and kindhearted.
Up in the Lackawanna region a strike had been in progress for nearly two weeks. Efforts had been made by the strikers to persuade the miners down the valley to join them, but at first without success.
Then a committee of one hundred came down to appeal and to intimidate. In squads of ten or more they visited the mines in the region, and, in the course of their journeyings, had come to the Dryden Slope. They had induced the miners to go out at all the workings they had thus far entered, and were no less successful here. It required persuasion, sometimes threats, sometimes, indeed, even blows, for the miners in Dryden Slope had no cause of complaint against their employers; they earned good wages, and were content.
[13]
But, twenty years ago, miners who kept at work against the wishes of their fellows while a strike was in progress, were called �black-legs,� were treated with contempt, waylaid and beaten, and sometimes killed.
So the men in the Dryden Mine yielded; and soon, down the chambers and along the headings, toward the foot of the slope, came little groups, with dinner-pails and tools, discussing earnestly, often bitterly, the situation and the prospect.
The members of a party of fifteen or twenty, that came down the airway from the tier of chambers on the new north heading, were holding an especially animated conversation. Fully one-half of the men were visiting strikers. They were all walking, in single file, along the route by which the mine-cars went.
For some distance from the new chambers the car-track was laid in the airway; then it turned down through an entrance into the heading, and from that point followed the heading to the foot of the slope. Where the route crossed from the airway to the heading, the space between the[14] pillars had been carefully boarded across, so that the air current should not be turned aside; and a door had been placed in the boarding, to be opened whenever the cars approached, and shut as soon as they had passed by.
That door was attended by a boy.
To this point the party had now come, and one by one filed through the opening, while Bennie, the door-boy, stood holding back the door to let them pass.
�Ho, Jack, tak� the door-boy wi� ye!� shouted some one in the rear.
The great, broad-shouldered, rough-bearded man who led the procession turned back to where Bennie, apparently lost in astonishment at this unusual occurrence, still stood, with his hand on the door.
�Come along, lad!� he said; �come along! Ye�ll have a gret play-spell noo.�
�I can�t leave the door, sir,� answered Bennie. �The cars�ll be comin� soon.�
�Ye need na min� the cars. Come along wi� ye, I say!�
�But I can�t go till Tom comes, anyway, you know.�
[15]
The man came a step closer. He had the frame of a giant. The others who passed by were like children beside him. Then one of the men who worked in the mine, and who knew Bennie, came through the doorway, the last in the group, and said,�
�Don�t hurt the boy; let him alone. His brother�ll take him out; he always does.�
All this time Bennie stood quite still, with his hand on the door, never turning his head.
It was a strange thing for a boy to stand motionless like that, and look neither to the right nor the left, while an excited group of men passed by, one of whom had stopped and approached him, as if he meant him harm. It roused the curiosity of �Jack the Giant,� as the miners called him, and, plucking his lamp from his cap, he flashed the light of it up into Bennie�s face.
The boy did not stir; no muscle of his face moved; even his eyes remained open and fixed.
[16]
�Why, lad! lad! What�s the matter wi� ye?� There was tenderness in the giant�s voice as he spoke, and tenderness in his bearded face as Bennie answered,�
�Don�t you know? I�m blind.�
�Blind! An� a-workin� i� the mines?�
�Oh, a body don�t have to see to �tend door, you know. All I�ve to do is to open it when I hear the cars a-comin�, an� to shut it when they get by.�

Product Details

BN ID: 2940149223589
Publisher: Lost Leaf Publications
Publication date: 03/27/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 369 KB
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