Who will ever forget that Labour Day
in Chicago? How they marched!— thousands
and thousands and more thousands! They filled
the streets. The cars stopped. Men trembled
with the import of the impending hour.
Here they come! How the ground
trembles! The chant chant chant of that song!
It must have been thus that Grant felt at the great
review of the veterans in Washington when all day
long they marched past him, the men of the Civil War,
the whites of their eyes showing in the tan of their
faces. McGregor stood on the stone curbing above
the tracks in Grant Park. As the men marched
they massed in there about him, thousands of them,
steel workers and iron workers and great red-necked
butchers and teamsters.
And in the air wailed the marching song of the workers.
All of the world that was not marching
jammed into the buildings facing Michigan Boulevard
and waited. Margaret Ormsby was there. She
sat with her father in a carriage near where Van Buren
Street ends at the Boulevard. As the men kept
crowding in about them she clutched nervously at the
sleeve of David Ormsby’s coat. “He
is going to speak,” she whispered and pointed.
Her tense air of expectancy expressed much of the
feeling of the crowd. “See, listen, he is
going to speak out.”
It must have been five in the afternoon
when the men got through marching. They were
massed in there clear down to the Twelfth Street Station
of the Illinois Central. McGregor lifted his hands.
In the hush his harsh voice carried far. “We
are at the beginning,” he shouted and silence
fell upon the people. In the stillness one standing
near her might have heard Margaret Ormsby weeping softly.
There was the gentle murmur that always prevails where
many people stand at attention. The weeping of
the woman was scarcely audible but it persisted like
the sound of little waves on a beach at the end of
the day.
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