The LOA Edition
Dawn Powell The Library of America Her Life Her Work Commentary
Bibliography Revival Excerpts
Angels on Toast
Dance Night
The Golden Spur
My Home is Far Away
The Locusts Have No King
A Time to be Born
The Magic Wheel
The Wicked Pavilion

Lamptown hummed from dawn to dusk with the mysterious humming of the Works, the monotonous switching of engines and coupling of cars at the Yard. The freight cars rumbled back and forth across the heart of town. They slid out past the factory windows and brakemen swinging lanterns on top the cars would shout to whatever girls they saw working at the windows. Later, in the factory washroom one girl might whisper to another, "Kelly's in the Yard to-day. Said be sure and be at Fischer's Thursday night."

"Who was firing?" the other would ask, mindful of a beau of her own.

"Fritz was in the cab but I couldn't see who was firing. Looked like that Swede of Ella's used to be on Number 10."

The humming of this town was jagged from time to time by the shriek of an engine whistle or the bellow of a factory siren or the clang-clang of a red street car on its way from one village to the next. The car jangled through the town flapping doors open and shut, admitting and discharging old ladies on their way to a D.A.R. picnic in Norwalk, section workers or linesmen in overalls, giggling girls on their way to the Street Carnival in Chicago Junction. As if hunting for something very important the car rattled past the long row of Lamptown's factory boarding houses, past the Lots, then on into long stretches of low, level hay-fields where farm girls pitched hay, stopping to wave their huge straw hats at the gay world passing by in a street car.

There was grey train smoke over the town most days, it smelled of travel, of transcontinental trains about to flash by, of important things about to happen. The train smell sounded the 'A' for Lamptown and then a treble chord of frying hamburger and onions and boiling coffee was struck by Hermann Bauer's kitchen, with a sostenuto of stale beer from Delaney's back door. These were all busy smells and seemed a 6 to 6 smell, a working town's smell, to be exchanged at the last factory whistle for the festival night odors of popcorn, Spearmint chewing gum, barbershop pomades, and the faint smell of far-off damp cloverfields. Mornings the cloverfields retreated when the first Columbus local roared through the town. Bauer's coffee pot boiled over again, and the factory's night watchmen filed into Delaney's for their morning beer.

 

Covers: The Tenth Moon, A Man's Affair, Dance Night

 

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