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PAGE 2

The Gray Mills Of Farley
by [?]

“Mis’ Kilpatrick, ma’am,” she said one morning. “Faix, they ain’t folks at all, ’tis but a pack of images they do be, with all their chatter like birds in a hedge.”

“Sure then, the holy Saint Francis himself was after saying that the little birds was his sisters,” answered Mrs. Kilpatrick, a godly old woman who made the stations every morning, and was often seen reading a much-handled book of devotion. She was moreover always ready with a friendly joke.

“They ain’t the same at all was in them innocent times, when there was plenty saints living in the world,” insisted Mary Cassidy. “Look at them thrash, now!”

The old sweeping-women were going downstairs with their brooms. It was almost twelve o’clock, and like the old dray-horses in the mill yard they slackened work in good season for the noonday bell. Three gay young French girls ran downstairs past them; they were let out for the afternoon and were hurrying home to dress and catch the 12:40 train to the next large town.

“That little one is Meshell’s daughter; she’s a nice child too, very quiet, and has got more Christian tark than most,” said Mrs. Kilpatrick. “They live overhead o’ me. There’s nine o’ themselves in the two rooms; two does be boarders.”

“Those upper rooms bees very large entirely at Fitzgibbon’s,” said Mary Cassidy with unusual indulgence.

“‘Tis all the company cares about is to get a good rent out of the pay. They’re asked every little while by honest folks ‘on’t they build a trifle o’ small houses beyond the church up there, but no, they’d rather the money and kape us like bees in them old hives. Sure in winter we’re better for having the more fires, but summer is the pinance!”

“They all says ‘why don’t folks build their own houses’; they does always be talking about Mike Callahan and how well he saved up and owns a pritty place for himself convanient to his work. You might tell them he’d money left him by a brother in California till you’d be black in the face, they’d stick to it ’twas in the picker he earnt it from themselves,” grumbled Mary Cassidy.

“Them French spinds all their money on their backs, don’t they?” suggested Mrs. Kilpatrick, as if to divert the conversation from dangerous channels. “Look at them three girls now, off to Spincer with their fortnight’s pay in their pocket!”

“A couple o’ onions and a bag o’ crackers is all they want and a pinch o’ lard to their butter,” pronounced Mary Cassidy with scorn. “The whole town of ’em ‘on’t be the worse of a dollar for steak the week round. They all go back and buy land in Canada, they spend no money here. See how well they forget their pocketbooks every Sunday for the collection. They do be very light too, they’ve more laugh than ourselves. ‘Tis myself’s getting old anyway, I don’t laugh much now.”

“I like to see a pritty girl look fine,” said Mrs. Kilpatrick. “No, they don’t be young but once–“

The mill bell rang, and there was a moment’s hush of the jarring, racketing machinery and a sudden noise of many feet trampling across the dry, hard pine floors. First came an early flight of boys bursting out of the different doors, and chasing one another down the winding stairs two steps at a time. The old sweepers, who had not quite reached the bottom, stood back against the wall for safety’s sake until all these had passed, then they kept on their careful way, the crowd passing them by as if they were caught in an eddy of the stream. Last of all they kept sober company with two or three lame persons and a cheerful delayed little group of new doffers, the children who minded bobbins in the weave-room and who were young enough to be tired and even timid. One of these doffers, a pale, pleasant-looking child, was all fluffy with cotton that had clung to her little dark plaid dress. When Mrs. Kilpatrick spoke to her she answered in a hoarse voice that appealed to one’s sympathy. You felt that the hot room and dry cotton were to blame for such hoarseness; it had nothing to do with the weather.