CANS in Classic Quotes

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Quotes from The Jungle by Upton Sinclair
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1  It was not fit work for a woman, handling fourteen-pound cans all day.
The Jungle By Upton Sinclair
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 5
2  She wears a white shirtwaist, which represents, perhaps, half a week's labor painting cans.
The Jungle By Upton Sinclair
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 1
3  She works in a canning factory, and all day long she handles cans of beef that weigh fourteen pounds.
The Jungle By Upton Sinclair
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 1
4  They put these up in several grades, and sold them at several prices; but the contents of the cans all came out of the same hopper.
The Jungle By Upton Sinclair
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 9
5  However that might be, the known facts were that a few weeks before the factory closed, Marija had been cheated out of her pay for three hundred cans.
The Jungle By Upton Sinclair
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 10
6  In summer the stench of the warm lard would be nauseating, and in winter the cans would all but freeze to his naked little fingers in the unheated cellar.
The Jungle By Upton Sinclair
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 6
7  Jadvyga likewise paints cans, but then she has an invalid mother and three little sisters to support by it, and so she does not spend her wages for shirtwaists.
The Jungle By Upton Sinclair
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 1
8  There was a building to which the grease was piped, and made into soap and lard; and then there was a factory for making lard cans, and another for making soap boxes.
The Jungle By Upton Sinclair
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 3
9  Marija was working for one of the independent packers, and was quite beside herself and outrageous with triumph over the sums of money she was making as a painter of cans.
The Jungle By Upton Sinclair
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 5
10  He used to carry cans on a long pole; and he'd drink a little out of each can, and one day he drank too much, and fell asleep in a corner, and got locked up in the place all night.
The Jungle By Upton Sinclair
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 27
11  These bare places were grown up with dingy, yellow weeds, hiding innumerable tomato cans; innumerable children played upon them, chasing one another here and there, screaming and fighting.
The Jungle By Upton Sinclair
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 2
12  And so Stanislovas went down a long stone corridor, and up a flight of stairs, which took him into a room lighted by electricity, with the new machines for filling lard cans at work in it.
The Jungle By Upton Sinclair
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 6
13  The prospects were bad at present, for truckmen who worked in the storerooms said that these were piled up to the ceilings, so that the firm could not have found room for another week's output of cans.
The Jungle By Upton Sinclair
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 8
14  The painting of cans being skilled piecework, and paying as much as two dollars a day, Marija burst in upon the family with the yell of a Comanche Indian, and fell to capering about the room so as to frighten the baby almost into convulsions.
The Jungle By Upton Sinclair
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 4
15  Hour after hour, day after day, year after year, it was fated that he should stand upon a certain square foot of floor from seven in the morning until noon, and again from half-past twelve till half-past five, making never a motion and thinking never a thought, save for the setting of lard cans.
The Jungle By Upton Sinclair
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 6
16  To attend to all this and fill several hundred cans of lard per hour, there were necessary two human creatures, one of whom knew how to place an empty lard can on a certain spot every few seconds, and the other of whom knew how to take a full lard can off a certain spot every few seconds and set it upon a tray.
The Jungle By Upton Sinclair
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 6
17  Marija did not understand then, as she was destined to understand later, what there was attractive to a "forelady" about the combination of a face full of boundless good nature and the muscles of a dray horse; but the woman had told her to come the next day and she would perhaps give her a chance to learn the trade of painting cans.
The Jungle By Upton Sinclair
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 4
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