Martin Eden eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 523 pages of information about Martin Eden.

Martin Eden eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 523 pages of information about Martin Eden.

It was exhausting work, carried on, hour after hour, at top speed.  Out on the broad verandas of the hotel, men and women, in cool white, sipped iced drinks and kept their circulation down.  But in the laundry the air was sizzling.  The huge stove roared red hot and white hot, while the irons, moving over the damp cloth, sent up clouds of steam.  The heat of these irons was different from that used by housewives.  An iron that stood the ordinary test of a wet finger was too cold for Joe and Martin, and such test was useless.  They went wholly by holding the irons close to their cheeks, gauging the heat by some secret mental process that Martin admired but could not understand.  When the fresh irons proved too hot, they hooked them on iron rods and dipped them into cold water.  This again required a precise and subtle judgment.  A fraction of a second too long in the water and the fine and silken edge of the proper heat was lost, and Martin found time to marvel at the accuracy he developed—­an automatic accuracy, founded upon criteria that were machine-like and unerring.

But there was little time in which to marvel.  All Martin’s consciousness was concentrated in the work.  Ceaselessly active, head and hand, an intelligent machine, all that constituted him a man was devoted to furnishing that intelligence.  There was no room in his brain for the universe and its mighty problems.  All the broad and spacious corridors of his mind were closed and hermetically sealed.  The echoing chamber of his soul was a narrow room, a conning tower, whence were directed his arm and shoulder muscles, his ten nimble fingers, and the swift-moving iron along its steaming path in broad, sweeping strokes, just so many strokes and no more, just so far with each stroke and not a fraction of an inch farther, rushing along interminable sleeves, sides, backs, and tails, and tossing the finished shirts, without rumpling, upon the receiving frame.  And even as his hurrying soul tossed, it was reaching for another shirt.  This went on, hour after hour, while outside all the world swooned under the overhead California sun.  But there was no swooning in that superheated room.  The cool guests on the verandas needed clean linen.

The sweat poured from Martin.  He drank enormous quantities of water, but so great was the heat of the day and of his exertions, that the water sluiced through the interstices of his flesh and out at all his pores.  Always, at sea, except at rare intervals, the work he performed had given him ample opportunity to commune with himself.  The master of the ship had been lord of Martin’s time; but here the manager of the hotel was lord of Martin’s thoughts as well.  He had no thoughts save for the nerve-racking, body-destroying toil.  Outside of that it was impossible to think.  He did not know that he loved Ruth.  She did not even exist, for his driven soul had no time to remember her.  It was only when he crawled to bed at night, or to breakfast in the morning, that she asserted herself to him in fleeting memories.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Martin Eden from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.