The end of the six day work week blessedly arrived for the weary seamstresses.
The thought alone returned dexterity to fingers numbed by the monotony of repetitive motion and eased the incessant ache of lower backs and stiffened shoulders.
The exhausted women would soon deposit their subsistence wages for piece meal work into worn knit purses, mentally noting items to purchase at the market on the way home.
At the head of the line stood the bumptious paymaster barking at the compliant women "to keep in line and keep in mind" any honorariums due him.
The workers, youngest to the oldest counted the tokens in hand to discern the weeks approximate payout.
Lack of math skills, the uncertainty of unjust deductions and poor command of English made net pay calculations impossible to deduce.
Passing time in the pay line the swelling sound of trilling voices rolled along the queue.
Wise Yiddish axioms and Italianate passions joined to bespeak the ecstasies of the human condition.
The strange hybrid dialect filling the room busily hailed the coming day of rest, blessed the faces of kissed children, imagined the warmth given from a lump of coal, explored the bumpy feel of hardened scabs, sounded hope for a cloudless Sunday, expressed remorse over calloused hands and the hope that they could become soft and youthful again.
One woman with a swollen jaw mouthed an anguished dread of rejoining a violent husband.
A buoyant Rose, with glittering eye, whispered the joys potential courtship with a distant cousin; while the ***** laughs of a randy group of union maids imagined the luxury of a Saturday night bath and amorous encounters with broad shouldered lovers.
One thick legged woman hummed happily as she imagined picking up a ham-bone for the soup kettle.
A freckled faced girl and a mid-aged German woman each tearfully fretted over the ritual turnover of their wages to a disabled father and drunkard husband.
The hope of a speedy and safe delivery of a child was prayed for by a late term, big busted mother of four, while another worried that the infection of a cut finger would heal and her home bound children afflicted with terminal hunger will have some bread tonight and porridge tomorrow.
The outbreak of the fire changed all their day dreams and concerns into frightful screams, nightmarish death leaps and eternal rest for 146 workers of the Triangle Waist Company on March 25, 1911.
May their small knit purses be filled with the pleasant dreams they wished for themselves and others as divine compensation for their earthy labors and may they find a restful peace in an eternity of Sundays enjoyed in the company of family, lovers and friends.
Selah
Today marks the 100th Anniversary of the Triangle Waist Company fire in New York City. It killed 146 people the vast majority immigrant woman who worked at the company. The Triangle Fire is a seminal event in the US labor movement that lead to the recognition of labor unions as vehicles for workers rights and social justice. More on the Triangle Fire can found here on this wonderful sight from Cornell University.