登陆注册
37736800000020

第20章

"The competition among the women-folk grew keener every day, and at last the old man began to give himself airs, and to make the place hard for them. He made them clean his cottage out, and cook his meals, and when he was tired of having them about the house, he set them to work in the garden.

"They grumbled a good deal, and there was a talk at one time of a sort of a strike, but what could they do? He was the only pauper for miles round, and knew it. He had the monopoly, and, like all monopolises, he abused his position.

"He made them run errands. He sent them out to buy his 'baccy,' at their own expense. On one occasion he sent Miss Simmonds out with a jug to get his supper beer. She indignantly refused at first, but he told her that if she gave him any of her stuck-up airs out she would go, and never come into his house again. If she wouldn't do it there were plenty of others who would. She knew it and went.

"They had been in the habit of reading to him--good books with an elevating tendency. But now he put his foot down upon that sort of thing. He said he didn't want Sunday-school rubbish at his time of life. What he liked was something spicy. And he made them read him French novels and sea-faring tales, containing realistic language.

And they didn't have to skip anything either, or he'd know the reason why.

"He said he liked music, so a few of them clubbed together and bought him a harmonium. Their idea was that they would sing hymns and play high-class melodies, but it wasn't his. His idea was--'Keeping up the old girl's birthday' and 'She winked the other eye,'

with chorus and skirt dance, and that's what they sang.

"To what lengths his tyranny would have gone it is difficult to say, had not an event happened that brought his power to a premature collapse. This was the curate's sudden and somewhat unexpected marriage with a very beautiful burlesque actress who had lately been performing in a neighbouring town. He gave up the Church on his engagement, in consequence of his fiancee's objection to becoming a minister's wife. She said she could never 'tumble to' the district visiting.

"With the curate's wedding the old pauper's brief career of prosperity ended. They packed him off to the workhouse after that, and made him break stones."At the end of the telling of his tale, MacShaughnassy lifted his feet off the mantelpiece, and set to work to wake up his legs; and Jephson took a hand, and began to spin us stories.

But none of us felt inclined to laugh at Jephson's stories, for they dealt not with the goodness of the rich to the poor, which is a virtue yielding quick and highly satisfactory returns, but with the goodness of the poor to the poor, a somewhat less remunerative investment and a different matter altogether.

For the poor themselves--I do not mean the noisy professional poor, but the silent, fighting poor--one is bound to feel a genuine respect. One honours them, as one honours a wounded soldier.

In the perpetual warfare between Humanity and Nature, the poor stand always in the van. They die in the ditches, and we march over their bodies with the flags flying and the drums playing.

One cannot think of them without an uncomfortable feeling that one ought to be a little bit ashamed of living in security and ease, leaving them to take all the hard blows. It is as if one were always skulking in the tents, while one's comrades were fighting and dying in the front.

They bleed and fall in silence there. Nature with her terrible club, "Survival of the Fittest"; and Civilisation with her cruel sword, "Supply and Demand," beat them back, and they give way inch by inch, fighting to the end. But it is in a dumb, sullen way, that is not sufficiently picturesque to be heroic.

I remember seeing an old bull-dog, one Saturday night, lying on the doorstep of a small shop in the New Cut. He lay there very quiet, and seemed a bit sleepy; and, as he looked savage, nobody disturbed him. People stepped in and out over him, and occasionally in doing so, one would accidentally kick him, and then he would breathe a little harder and quicker.

At last a passer-by, feeling something wet beneath his feet, looked down, and found that he was standing in a pool of blood, and, looking to see where it came from, found that it flowed in a thick, dark stream from the step on which the dog was lying.

Then he stooped down and examined the dog, and the dog opened its eyes sleepily and looked at him, gave a grin which may have implied pleasure, or may have implied irritation at being disturbed, and died.

同类推荐
  • 三洞法服科戒文

    三洞法服科戒文

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 香谱

    香谱

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 蜗触蛮三国争地记

    蜗触蛮三国争地记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Cambridge Pieces

    Cambridge Pieces

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 六十种曲金莲记

    六十种曲金莲记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 恋上最初恋上你

    恋上最初恋上你

    文恋只想安安静静的做个美少女,忘记从前的是非。当众多马甲被一层层揭开,所谓的生父找上门来,往日平静的生活早已不在,她是否还能保持初心?——玩世不恭,桀骜不驯,情场浪子,京城一霸……几乎每个词都能和陆之初挂上钩。可谁又知,陆之初戴上所谓渣男的面具,只是为了忘记从前的自己……***PS:本文专注扒马,女主文恋,男主陆之初
  • 飓风战魂之凌风传奇

    飓风战魂之凌风传奇

    多年前一阵飓风袭击风轮镇,意外的打开了一条时空裂缝,使得一个婴儿穿越至此,长大后的他重新来到风轮镇,会发生什么呢?
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 战神狂婿

    战神狂婿

    一代战神全家惨死,于是他决定回家守孝三年。三年期满,开始复仇,现在他要将自己心爱的人保护好,为她撑起一片天。
  • 魔尊别卖萌

    魔尊别卖萌

    凰羽殿下平生有两个志愿,第一个志愿是能将天君那金灿灿的宫殿搬到无忧谷……还有就是把紫陌那只臭乌鸦变成自己的座骑!只可惜第一个志愿比登天还难,第二个志愿比第一个志愿还要难。在某只臭乌鸦惨无人道的欺压虐待之下,凰羽殿下脚底抹油逃到了人间,屁颠屁颠的跟着漂亮的小狐狸陌子陵携手并肩闯天下了……遇到了千年冰山苏浅止和上天制造出来专门恶心她的年幼无知小师妹,处处打架,次次受伤。直到那只臭乌鸦穷追猛打的一路追杀过来……--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 红薇染露:落薇纷飞

    红薇染露:落薇纷飞

    飘雪,她一柄六十四骨节纸伞,眉目如画。他伸出手,想要留住那清冷的女子:“你可以拒绝你的感情,但你拒绝不了我对你的感情。”她反手,道:“你错了,我于你,无半分感情可言。”她微顿,“请你放过我,也放过你自己。”
  • 一场爱情,一场梦

    一场爱情,一场梦

    那些过往的回忆,就像是闪烁的玻璃碎片,在昏暗的角落里闪烁着光芒,用其独有的魅力吸引着我,让我不能舍弃。可我何尝不想把爱放开,可是就是过了那么久,梦看见的那个人依然是你……总以为对你的感情已经走远,但始终停留在原点!
  • 赴我一场欢喜

    赴我一场欢喜

    沈吟絮丢下那个她视作珍宝的少年逃回城里安安分分长大念书去了向往的大都市可是有人能不能告诉她LED显示屏上的当红炸子鸡为啥长得这么像她抛弃的那个人???写作随意,如有雷同,纯属巧合
  • 做人就做你自己

    做人就做你自己

    本书由多个发人深省的哲理故事、心灵美文及感悟组成,是送给自己和朋友最温馨的礼物。生活是自己创造的。每个人都会时常面临来自生活、工作和社会的各种各样的问题。我们的处世方法、工作态度、努力程度、思维方式和心态信念等等决定了我们一生的成败。不论干什么,我们都希望自己能够成功,都试图尽量避免失败或走弯路。
  • 我的最后1万分钟

    我的最后1万分钟

    在得知自己只能活7天后,李天那如一潭死水般的生命起了波澜。身上多了七朵“生命之花”,算命的给了块黑石头,随着大限的临近,他将何去何从?