GERMINAL
PART VII
CHAPTER VI
IT was four o'clock in the morning, and the fresh
April night was growing warm at the approach of
day. In the limpid sky the stars were twinkling
out, while the east grew purple with dawn. And a
slight shudder passed over the drowsy black
country, the vague rumour which precedes
awakening.
Étienne, with long strides, was following
the Vandame road. He had just passed six weeks
at Montsou, in bed at the hospital. Though very
thin and yellow, he felt strength to go, and he
went. The Company, still trembling for its pits,
was constantly sending men away, and had given him
notice that he could not be kept on. He was
offered the sum of one hundred francs, with the
paternal advice to leave off working in mines, as
it would now be too severe for him. But he
refused the hundred francs. He had already
received a letter from Pluchart, calling him to
Paris, and enclosing money for the journey. His
old dream would be realized. The night before, on
leaving the hospital, he had slept at the
Bon-Joyeux, Widow Désir's. And he rose
early; only one desire was left, to bid his mates
farewell before taking the eight o'clock train at
Marchiennes.
For a moment Étienne stopped on the road,
which was now becoming rose-coloured. It was good
to breathe that pure air of the precocious spring.
It would turn out a superb day. The sun was
slowly rising, and the life of the earth was
rising with it. And he set out walking again,
vigorously striking with his dogwood stick,
watching the plain afar, as it rose from the
vapours of the night. He had seen no one; Maheude
had come once to the hospital, and, probably, had
not been able to come again. But he knew that the
whole settlement of the Deux-Cent-Quarante was now
going down at Jean-Bart, and that she too had
taken work there. Little by little the deserted
roads were peopled, and colliers constantly passed
Étienne with pallid, silent faces. The
Company, people said, was abusing its victory.
After two and a half months of strike, when they
had returned to the pits, conquered by hunger,
they had been obliged to accept the timbering
tariff, that disguised decrease in wages, now the
more hateful because stained with the blood of
their mates. They were being robbed of an hour's
work, they were being made false to their oath
never to submit; and this imposed perjury stuck in
their throats like gall. Work was beginning again
everywhere, at Mirou, at Madeleine, at
Crévecoeur, at the Victoire. Everywhere,
in the morning haze, along the roads lost in
darkness, the flock was tramping on, rows of men
trotting with faces bent towards the earth, like
cattle led to the slaughter-house. They shivered
beneath their thin garments, folding their arms,
rolling their hips, expanding their backs with the
humps formed by the brick between the shirt and
the jacket. And in this wholesale return to work,
in these mute shadows, all black, without a laugh,
without a look aside, one felt the teeth clenched
with rage, the hearts swollen with hatred, a
simple resignation to the necessity of the belly.
The nearer Étienne approached the pit the
more their number increased. They nearly all
walked alone; those who came in groups were in
single file, already exhausted, tired of one
another and of themselves. He noticed one who was
very old, with eyes that shone like hot coals
beneath his livid forehead. Another, a young man,
was panting with the restrained fury of a storm.
Many had their sabots in their hands; one could
scarcely hear the soft sound of their coarse
woollen stockings on the ground. It was an
endless rustling, a general downfall, the forced
march of a beaten army, moving on with lowered
heads, sullenly absorbed in the desire to renew
the struggle and achieve revenge.
When Étienne arrived, Jean-Bart was
emerging from the shade; the lanterns, hooked on
to the platform, were still burning in the growing
dawn. Above the obscure buildings a trail of
steam arose like a white plume delicately tinted
with carmine. He passed up the sifting-staircase
to go to the receiving-room.
The descent was beginning, and the men were coming
from the shed. For a moment he stood by,
motionless amid the noise and movement. The
rolling of the trams shook the metal floor, the
drums were turning, unrolling the cables in the
midst of cries from the trumpet, the ringing of
bells, blows of the mallet on the signal block; he
found the monster again swallowing his daily
ration of human flesh, the cages rising and
plunging, engulfing their burden of men, without
ceasing, with the facile gulp of a voracious
giant. Since his accident he had a nervous horror
of the mine. The cages, as they sank down, tore
his bowels. He had to turn away his head; the pit
exasperated him.
But in the vast and still sombre hall, feebly
lighted up by the exhausted lanterns, he could
perceive no friendly face. The miners, who were
waiting there with bare feet and their lamps in
their hands, looked at him with large restless
eyes, and then lowered their faces, drawing back
with an air of shame. No doubt they knew him and
no longer had any spite against him; they seemed,
on the contrary, to fear him, blushing at the
thought that he would reproach them with
cowardice. This attitude made his heart swell; he
forgot that these wretches had stoned him, he
again began to dream or changing them into heroes,
of directing a whole people, this force of nature
which was devouring itself. A cage was embarking
its men, and the batch disappeared; as others
arrived he saw at last one of his lieutenants in
the strike, a worthy fellow who had sworn to die.
"You too!" he murmured, with aching
heart.
The other turned pale and his lips trembled; then,
with a movement of excuse:
"What would you have? I've got a wife."
Now in the new crowd coming from the shed he
recognized them all.
"You too!--you too!--you too!"
And all shrank back, stammering in choked voices:
"I have a mother."--"I have
children."--"One must get bread."
The cage did not reappear; they waited for it
mournfully, with such sorrow at their defeat that
they avoided meeting each other's eyes,
obstinately gazing at the shaft.
"And Maheude?" Étienne asked.
They made no reply. One made a sign that she was
coming. Others raised their arms, trembling with
pity. Ah, poor woman! what wretchedness! The
silence continued, and when Étienne
stretched out his hand to bid them farewell, they
all pressed it vigorously, putting into that mute
squeeze their rage at having yielded, their
feverish hope of revenge. The cage was there;
they got into it and sank, devoured by the gulf.
Pierron had appeared with his naked captain's lamp
fixed into the leather of his cap. For the past
week he had been chief of the gang at the pit-eye,
and the men moved away, for promotion had rendered
him bossy. The sight of Étienne annoyed
him; he came up, however, and was at last
reassured when the young man announced his
departure. They talked. His wife now kept the
Estaminet du Progrés, thanks to the support
of all those gentlemen, who had been so good to
her. But he interrupted himself and turned
furiously on to Father Mouque, whom he accused of
not sending up the dung-heap from his stable at
the regulation hour. The old man listened with
bent shoulders. Then, before going down,
suffering from this reprimand, he, too, gave his
hand to Étienne, with the same long
pressure as the others, warm with restrained anger
and quivering with future rebellion. And this old
hand which trembled in his, this old man who was
forgiving him for the loss of his dead children,
affected Étienne to such a degree that he
watched him disappear without saying a word.
"Then Maheude is not coming this
morning?" he asked Pierron after a time.
At first the latter pretended not to understand,
for there was ill luck even in speaking of her.
Then, as he moved away, under the pretext of
giving an order, he said at last:
"Eh! Maheude? There she is."
In fact, Maheude had reached the shed with her
lamp in her hand, dressed in trousers and jacket,
with her head confined in the cap. It was by a
charitable exception that the Company, pitying the
fate of this unhappy woman, so cruelly afflicted,
had allowed her to go down again at the age of
forty; and as it seemed difficult to set her again
at haulage work, she was employed to manipulate a
small ventilator which had been installed in the
north gallery, in those infernal regions beneath
Tartaret, where there was no movement of air. For
ten hours, with aching back, she turned her wheel
at the bottom of a burning tube, baked by forty
degrees of heat. She earned thirty sous.
When Étienne saw her, a pitiful sight in
her male garments--her breast and belly seeming to
be swollen by the dampness of the cuttings--he
stammered with surprise, trying to find words to
explain that he was going away and that he wished
to say good-bye to her.
She looked at him without listening, and said at
last, speaking familiarly:
"Eh? it surprises you to see me. It's true
enough that I threatened to wring the neck of the
first of my children who went down again; and now
that I'm going down I ought to wring my own, ought
I not? Ah, well! I should have done it by now if
it hadn't been for the old man and the little ones
at the house."
And she went on in her low, fatigued voice. She
did not excuse herself, she simply narrated
things--that they. had been nearly starved, and
that she had made up her mind to it, so that they
might not be sent away from the settlement.
"How is the old man?" asked
Étienne.
"He is always very gentle and very clean.
But he is quite off his nut. He was not brought
up for that affair, you know. There was talk of
shutting him up with the madmen, but I was not
willing; they would have done for him in his soup.
His story has, all the same, been very bad for us,
for he'll never get his pension; one of those
gentlemen told me that it would be immoral to give
him one."
"Is Jeanlin working?"
"Yes, those gentlemen found something for him
to do at the top. He gets twenty sous. Oh! I
don't complain; the bosses have been very good, as
they told me themselves. The brat's twenty sous
and my thirty, that makes fifty. If there were
not six of us we should get enough to eat.
Estelle devours now, and the worst is that it will
be four or five years before Lénore and
Henri are old enough to come to the pit."
Étienne could not restrain a movement of
pain.
"They, too!"
Maheude's pale cheeks turned red, and her eyes
flamed. But her shoulders sank as if beneath the
weight of destiny.
"What would you have? They after the others.
They have all been done for there; now it's their
turn."
She was silent; some landers, who were rolling
trains, disturbed them. Through the large dusty
windows the early sun was entering, drowning the
lanterns in grey light; and the engine moved every
three minutes, the cables unrolled, the cages
continued to swallow down men.
"Come along, you loungers, look sharp!"
shouted Pierron. "Get in; we shall never
have done with it today." Maheude, whom he
was looking at, did not stir. She had already
allowed three cages to pass, and she said, as
though arousing herself and remembering
Étienne's first words:
"Then you're going away?"
"Yes, this morning."
"You're right; better be somewhere else if
one can. And I'm glad to have seen you, because
you can know now, anyhow, that I've nothing on my
mind against you. For a moment I could have
killed you, after all that slaughter. But one
thinks, doesn't one? One sees that when all's
reckoned up it's nobody's fault. No, no! it's
not your fault; it's the fault of everybody."
Now she talked with tranquillity of her dead, of
her man, of Zacharie, of Catherine; and tears only
came into her eyes when she uttered Alzire's name.
She had resumed her calm reasonableness, and
judged things sensibly. It would bring no luck to
the middle class to have killed so many poor
people. Sure enough, they would be punished for
it one day, for everything has to be paid for.
There would even be no need to interfere; the
whole thing would explode by itself. The soldiers
would fire on the masters just as they had fired
on the men. And in her everlasting resignation,
in that hereditary discipline under which she was
again bowing, a conviction had established itself,
the certainty that injustice could not last
longer, and that, if there were no good God left,
another would spring up to avenge the wretched.
She spoke in a low voice, with suspicious glances
round. Then, as Pierron was coming up, she added,
aloud:
"Well, if you're going, you must take your
things from our house. There are still two
shirts, three handkerchiefs, and an old pair of
trousers."
Étienne, with a gesture, refused these few
things saved from the dealers.
"No, it's not worth while; they can be for
the children. At Paris I can arrange for
myself."
Two more cages had gone down, and Pierron decided
to speak straight to Maheude.
"I say now, over there, they are waiting for
you! Is that little chat nearly done?"
But she turned her back. Why should he be so
zealous, this man who had sold himself? The
descent didn't concern him. His men hated him
enough already on his level. And she persisted,
with her lamp in her hand, frozen amid the
draughts in spite of the mildness of the season.
Neither Étienne nor she found anything more
to say. They remained facing each other with
hearts so full that they would have liked to speak
once more.
At last she spoke for the sake of speaking.
"The Levaque is in the family way. Levaque
is still in prison; Bouteloup is taking his place
meanwhile."
"Ah, yes! Bouteloup."
"And, listen! did I tell you?
Philoméne has gone away."
"What! gone away?"
"Yes, gone away with a Pas-de-Calais miner.
I was afraid she would leave the two brats on me.
But no, she took them with her. Eh? A woman who
spits blood and always looks as if she were on the
point of death!"
She mused for a moment, and then went on in a slow
voice:
"There's been talk on my account. You
remember they said I slept with you. Lord! After
my man's death that might very well have happened
if I had been younger. But now I'm glad it wasn't
so, for we should have regretted it, sure
enough."
"Yes, we should have regretted it,"
Étienne repeated, simply.
That was all; they spoke no more. A cage was
waiting for her; she was being called angrily,
threatened with a fine. Then she made up her
mind, and pressed his hand. Deeply moved, he
still looked at her, so worn and worked out, with
her livid face, her discoloured hair escaping from
the blue cap, her body as of a good over-fruitful
beast, deformed beneath the jacket and trousers.
And in this last pressure of the hands he felt
again the long, silent pressure of his mates,
giving him a rendezvous for the day when they
would begin again. He understood perfectly.
There was a tranquil faith in the depths of her
eyes. It would be soon, and this time it would be
the final blow.
"What a damned shammer!" exclaimed
Pierron.
Pushed and hustled, Maheude squeezed into a tram
with four others. The signal-cord was drawn to
strike for meat, the cage was unhooked and fell
into the night, and there was nothing more but the
rapid flight of the cable.
Then Étienne left the pit. Below, beneath
the screening-shed, he noticed a creature seated
on the earth, with legs stretched out, in the
midst of a thick pile of coal. It was Jeanlin,
who was employed there to clean the large coal.
He held a block of coal between his thighs, and
freed it with a hammer from the fragments of
slate. A fine powder drowned him in such a flood
of soot that the young man would never have
recognized him if the child had not lifted his
ape-like face, with the protruding ears and small
greenish eyes. He laughed, with a joking air,
and, giving a final blow to the block, disappeared
in the black dust which arose.
Outside, Étienne followed the road for a
while, absorbed in his thoughts. All sorts of
ideas were buzzing in his head. But he felt the
open air, the free sky, and he breathed deeply.
The sun was appearing in glory at the horizon,
there was a reawakening of gladness over the whole
country. A flood of gold rolled from the east to
the west on the immense plain. This heat of life
was expanding and extending in a tremor of youth,
in which vibrated the sighs of the earth, the song
of birds, all the murmuring sounds of the waters
and the woods. It was good to live, and the old
world wanted to live through one more spring.
And penetrated by that hope, Étienne
slackened his walk, his eyes wandering to right
and to left amid the gaiety of the new season. He
thought about himself, he felt himself strong,
seasoned by his hard experiences at the bottom of
the mine. His education was complete, he was
going away armed, a rational soldier of the
revolution, having declared war against society as
he saw it and as he condemned it. The joy of
rejoining Pluchart and of being, like Pluchart, a
leader who was listened to, inspired him with
speeches, and he began to arrange the phrases. He
was meditating an enlarged programme; that
middle-class refinement, which had raised him
above his class, had deepened his hatred of the
middle class. He felt the need of glorifying
these workers, whose odour of wretchedness was now
unpleasant to him; he would show that they alone
were great and stainless, the only nobility and
the only strength in which humanity could be
dipped afresh. He already saw himself in the
tribune, triumphing with the people, if the people
did not devour him.
The loud song of a lark made him look up towards
the sky. Little red clouds, the last vapours of
the night, were melting in the limpid blue; and
the vague faces of Souvarine and Rasseneur came to
his memory. Decidedly, all was spoilt when each
man tried to get power for himself. Thus that
famous International which was to have renewed the
world had impotently miscarried, and its
formidable army had been cut up and crumbled away
from internal dissensions. Was Darwin right,
then, and the world only a battlefield, where the
strong ate the weak for the sake of the beauty and
continuance of the race? This question troubled
him, although he settled it like a man who is
satisfied with his knowledge. But one idea
dissipated his doubts and enchanted him--that of
taking up his old explanation of the theory the
first time that he should speak. If any class
must be devoured, would not the people, still new
and full of life, devour the middle class,
exhausted by enjoyment? The new society would
arise from new blood. And in this expectation of
an invasion of barbarians, regenerating the old
decayed nations, reappeared his absolute faith in
an approaching revolution, the real one--that of
the workers--the fire of which would inflame this
century's end with that purple of the rising sun
which he saw like blood on the sky. He still
walked, dreaming, striking his dog-wood stick
against the flints on the road, and when he
glanced around him he recognized the various
places. Just there, at the Fourche-aux-Boeufs, he
remembered that he had taken command of the band
that morning when the pits were sacked. Today the
brutish, deathly, ill-paid work was beginning over
again. Beneath the earth, down there at seven
hundred metres, it seemed to him he heard low,
regular, continuous blows; it was the men he had
just seen go down, the black workers, who were
hammering in their silent rage. No doubt they
were beaten. They had left their dead and their
money on the field; but Paris would not forget the
volleys fired at the Voreux, and the blood of the
empire, too, would flow from that incurable wound.
And if the industrial crisis was drawing to an
end, if the workshops were opening again one by
one, a state of war was no less declared, and
peace was henceforth impossible. The colliers had
reckoned up their men; they had tried their
strength, with their cry for justice arousing the
workers all over France. Their defeat, therefore,
reassured no one. The Montsou bourgeois, in their
victory, felt the vague uneasiness that arses on
the morrow of a strike, looking behind them to see
if their end did not lie inevitably over there, in
spite of all beyond that great silence. They
understood that the revolution would be born again
unceasingly, perhaps tomorrow, with a general
strike--the common understanding of all workers
having general funds, and so able to hold out for
months, eating their own bread. This time push
only had been given to a ruinous society, but they
had heard the rumbling beneath their feet, and
they felt more shocks arising, and still more,
until the old edifice would be crushed, fallen in
and swallowed, going down like the Voreux to the
abyss.
Étienne took the Joiselle road, to the
left. He remembered that he had prevented the
band from rushing on to Gaston-Marie. Afar, in
the clear sky he saw the steeples of several
pits--Mirou to the right, Madeleine and
Crévecoeur side by side. Work was going on
everywhere; he seemed to be able to catch the
blows of the pick at the bottom of the earth,
striking now from one end of the plain to the
other, one blow, and another blow, and yet more
blows, beneath the fields and roads and villages
which were laughing in the light, all the obscure
labour of the underground prison, so crushed by
the enormous mass of the rocks that one had to
know it was underneath there to distinguish its
great painful sigh. And he now thought that,
perhaps, violence would not hasten things.
Cutting cables, tearing up rails, breaking lamps.
what a useless task it was! It was not worth
while for three thousand men to rush about in a
devastating band doing that. He vaguely divined
that lawful methods might one day be more
terrible. His reason was ripening, he had sown
the wild oats of his spite. Yes, Maheude had well
said, with her good sense, that that would be the
great blow--to organize quietly, to know one
another, to unite in associations when the laws
would permit it; then, on the morning when they
felt their strength, and millions of workers would
be face to face with a few thousand idlers, to
take the power into their own hands and become the
masters. Ah! what a reawakening of truth and
justice! The sated and crouching god would at
once get his death-blow, the monstrous idol hidden
in the depths of his sanctuary, in that unknown
distance where poor wretches fed him with their
flesh without ever having seen him.
But Étienne, leaving the Vandame road, now
came on to the paved street. On the right he saw
Montsou, which was lost in the valley. Opposite
were the ruins of the Voreux, the accursed hole
where three pumps worked unceasingly. Then there
were the other pits at the horizon, the Victoire,
Saint-Thomas, Feutry-Cantel; while, towards the
north, the tall chimneys of the blast furnaces,
and the batteries of coke ovens, were smoking in
the transparent morning air. If he was not to
lose the eight o'clock train he must hasten, for
he had still six kilometres before him.
And beneath his feet, the deep blows, those
obstinate blows of the pick, continued. The mates
were all there; he heard them following him at
every stride. Was not that Maheude beneath the
beetroots. with bent back and hoarse respiration
accompanying the rumble of the ventilator? To
left, to right, farther on, he seemed to recognize
others beneath the wheatfields, the hedges, the
young trees. Now the April sun, in the open sky,
was shining in his glory, and warming the pregnant
earth. From its fertile flanks life was leaping
out, buds were bursting into green leaves, and the
fields were quivering with the growth of the
grass. On every side seeds were swelling,
stretching out, cracking the plain, filled by the
need of heat and light. An overflow of sap was
mixed with whispering voices, the sound of the
germs expanding in a great kiss. Again and again,
more and more distinctly, as though they were
approaching the soil, the mates were hammering.
In the fiery rays of the sun on this youthful
morning the country seemed full of that sound.
Men were springing forth, a black avenging army,
germinating slowly in the furrows, growing towards
the harvests of the next century, and their
germination would soon overturn the earth.