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PinkMonkey Digital Library-Sister Carrie by Theodore Dreiser


It began with the approach of two or three, who hung about the
closed wooden doors and beat their feet to keep them warm. They
had on faded derby hats with dents in them. Their misfit coats
were heavy with melted snow and turned up at the collars. Their
trousers were mere bags, frayed at the bottom and wobbling over
big, soppy shoes, torn at the sides and worn almost to shreds.
They made no effort to go in, but shifted ruefully about, digging
their hands deep in their pockets and leering at the crowd and the
increasing lamps. With the minutes, increased the number. Three
were old men with grizzled beards and sunken eyes, men who
were comparatively young but shrunken by diseases, men who
were middle-aged. None were fat. There was a face in the thick of
the collection which was as white as drained veal. There was
another red as brick. Some came with thin, rounded shoulders,
others with wooden legs, still others with frames so lean that
clothes only flapped about them. There were great ears, swollen
noses, thick lips, and, above all, red, blood-shot eyes. Not a
normal, healthy face in the whole mass; not a straight figure; not a
straightforward, steady glance.

In the drive of the wind and sleet they pushed in on one another.
There were wrists, unprotected by coat or pocket, which were red
with cold. There were ears, half covered by every conceivable
semblance of a hat, which still looked stiff and bitten. In the snow
they shifted, now one foot, now another, almost rocking in unison.

With the growth of the crowd about the door came a murmur. It
was not conversation, but a running comment directed at any one
in general. It contained oaths and slang phrases.

"By damn, I wish they’d hurry up."

"Look at the copper watchin’."

"Maybe it ain’t winter, nuther!"

"I wisht I was in Sing Sing."

Now a sharper lash of wind cut down and they huddled closer. It
was an edging, shifting, pushing throng. There was no anger, no
pleading, no threatening words. It was all sullen endurance,
unlightened by either wit or good fellowship.

A carriage went jingling by with some reclining figure in it. One
of the men nearest the door saw it.

"Look at the bloke ridin’."

"He ain’t so cold."

"Eh, eh, eh!" yelled another, the carriage having long since passed
out of hearing.

Little by little the night crept on. Along the walk a crowd turned
out on its way home. Men and shop-girls went by with quick
steps. The cross-town cars began to be crowded. The gas lamps
were blazing, and every window bloomed ruddy with a steady
flame. Still the crowd hung about the door, unwavering.

"Ain’t they ever goin’ to open up?" queried a hoarse voice,
suggestively.

This seemed to renew the general interest in the closed door, and
many gazed in that direction. They looked at it as dumb brutes
look, as dogs paw and whine and study the knob. They shifted and
blinked and muttered, now a curse, now a comment. Still they
waited and still the snow whirled and cut them with biting

flakes. On the old hats and peaked shoulders it was piling. It
gathered in little heaps and curves and no one brushed it off. In
the centre of the crowd the warmth and steam melted it, and water
trickled off hat rims and down noses, which the owners could not
reach to scratch. On the outer rim the piles remained unmelted.
Hurstwood, who could not get in the centre, stood with head
lowered to the weather and bent his form.

A light appeared through the transom overhead. It sent a thrill of
possibility through the watchers. There was a murmur of
recognition. At last the bars grated inside and the crowd pricked
up its ears. Footsteps shuffled within and it murmured again.
Some one called: "Slow up there, now," and then the door opened.
It was push and jam for a minute, with grim, beast silence to
prove its quality, and then it melted inward, like logs floating, and
disappeared. There were wet hats and wet shoulders, a cold,
shrunken, disgruntled mass, pouring in between bleak walls. It
was just six o’clock and there was supper in every hurrying
pedestrian’s face. And yet no supper was provided here-nothing
but beds.

Hurstwood laid down his fifteen cents and crept off with weary
steps to his allotted room. It was a dingy affair-wooden, dusty,
hard. A small gas-jet furnished sufficient light for so rueful a
corner.

"Hm!" he said, clearing his throat and locking the door.
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PinkMonkey Digital Library-Sister Carrie by Theodore Dreiser



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