s they played baseball in the street or in
the corner lots might be heard shouting out derisively the cry of the
section hands so familiar in mill cities, "Doff, you beggars you, doff!"
Occasionally the two girls strayed into that wide thoroughfare not
far from the canal, known by the classic name of Hawthorne, which the
Italians had appropriated to themselves. This street, too, in spite of
the telegraph poles flaunting crude arms in front of its windows, in
spite of the trolley running down its middle, had acquired a character,
a unity all its own, a warmth and picturesqueness that in the lingering
light of summer evenings assumed an indefinable significance. It was not
Italy, but it was something--something proclaimed in the ornate, leaning
lines of the pillared balconies of the yellow tenement on the second
block, in the stone-vaulted entrance of the low house next door, in
fantastically coloured walls, in curtained windows out of which leaned
swarthy, earringed women. Blocking the end of the street, in stern
contrast, was the huge Clarendon Mill with its sinister brick pillars
running up the six stories between the glass. Here likewise the
sidewalks overflowed with children, large-headed, with great, lustrous
eyes, mute, appealing, the eyes of cattle. Unlike American children,
they never seemed to be playing. Among the groups of elders gathered for
gossip were piratical Calabrians in sombre clothes, descended from Greek
ancestors, once the terrors of the Adriatic Sea. The women, lingering in
the doorways, hemmed in by more children, were for the most part squat
and plump, but once in a while Janet's glance was caught and held by a
strange, sharp beauty worthy of a cameo.
Opposite the Clarendon Mill on the corner of East Street was a provision
store with stands of fruit and vegetables encroaching on the pavement.
Janet's eye was attracted by a box of olives.
"Oh Eda," she cried, "do you remember, we saw them being picked--in the
movies? All those old trees on the side of a hill?"
"Why, that's so," said Eda. "You never would have thought anything'd
grow on those trees."
The young Italian who kept the store gave them a friendly grin.
"You lika the olives?" he asked, putting some of the shining black fruit
into their hands. Eda bit one dubiously with her long, white teeth, and
giggled.
"Don't they taste funny!" she exclaimed.
"Good--very good," he asserted gravely, and it was to Janet he turned,
as thou
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