登陆注册
24288600000095

第95章 CHAPTER III COMFORT IN SORROW (6)

"Remember, papa," said she in a very low voice, "what he said one day-aboutgovernments, you know." She was unwilling to make any clearerallusion to the conversation they had held on the mode of governingwork-people--by giving men intelligence enough to rule themselves, orby a wise despotism on the part of the master--for she saw that Higginshad caught Mr. Thornton s name, if not the whole of the speech: indeed,he began to speak of him.

"Thornton! He"s the chap as wrote off at once for these Irishers; and ledto th" riot that ruined th" strike. Even Hamper wi" all his bullying, wouldha" waited a while--but it"s a word and a blow wi" Thornton. And, now,when th" Union would ha" thanked him for following up th" chase afterBoucher, and them chaps as went right again our commands, it"sThornton who steps forrard and coolly says that, as th" strike"s at an end,he, as party injured, doesn"t want to press the charge again the rioters. Ithought he"d had more pluck. I thought he"d ha" carried his point, andhad his revenge in an open way; but says he (one in court telled me hisvery words) "they are well known; they will find the natural punishmentof their conduct, in the difficulty they will meet wi" in gettingemployment. That will be severe enough." I only wish they"d cotchedBoucher, and had him up before Hamper. I see th" oud tiger setting onhim! would he ha" let him off? Not he!"

"Mr. Thornton was right," said Margaret. You are angry against Boucher,Nicholas; or else you would be the first to see, that where the naturalpunishment would be severe enough for the offence, any fartherpunishment would be something like revenge.

"My daughter is no great friend of Mr. Thornton"s," said Mr. Hale,smiling at Margaret; while she, as red as any carnation, began to workwith double diligence, "but I believe what she says is the truth. I likehim for it."

"Well, sir, this strike has been a weary piece o" business to me; and yo"llnot wonder if I"m a bit put out wi" seeing it fail, just for a few men whowould na suffer in silence, and hou"d out, brave and firm."

"You forget!" said Margaret. "I don"t know much of Boucher; but theonly time I saw him it was not his own sufferings he spoke of, but thoseof his sick wife--his little children."

"True! but he were not made of iron himsel". He"d ha" cried out for hisown sorrows, next. He were not one to bear."

"How came he into the Union?" asked Margaret innocently. "You don"tseem to have much respect for him; nor gained much good from havinghim in."

Higgins"s brow clouded. He was silent for a minute or two.Then he said,shortly enough:

"It"s not for me to speak o" th" Union. What they does, they does. Themthat is of a trade mun hang together; and if they"re not willing to taketheir chance along wi" th" rest, th" Union has ways and means."

Mr. Hale saw that Higgins was vexed at the turn the conversation hadtaken, and was silent. Not so Margaret, though she saw Higgins"sfeeling as clearly as he did. By instinct she felt, that if he could but bebrought to express himself in plain words, something clear would begained on which to argue for the right and the just.

"And what are the Union"s ways and means?"

He looked up at her, as if on" the point of dogged resistance to her wishfor information. But her calm face, fixed on his, patient and trustful,compelled him to answer.

"Well! If a man doesn"t belong to th" Union, them as works next loomshas orders not to speak to him--if he"s sorry or ill it"s a" the same; he"sout o" bounds; he"s none o" us; he comes among us, he works among us,but he"s none o" us. I" some places them"s fined who speaks to him. Yo"

try that, miss; try living a year or two among them as looks away if yo"

look at "em; try working within two yards o" crowds o" men, who, yo"

know, have a grinding grudge at yo" in their hearts--to whom if yo" sayyo"r glad, not an eye brightens, nor a lip moves,--to whom if yourheart"s heavy, yo" can never say nought, because they"ll ne"er take noticeon your sighs or sad looks (and a man "s no man who"ll groan out loud"bout folk asking him what "s the matter?)--just yo" try that, miss--tenhours for three hundred days, and yo"ll know a bit what th" Union is."

"Why!" said Margaret, "what tyranny this is! Nay, Higgins, I don"t careone straw for your anger. I know you can"t be angry with me if youwould, and I must tell you the truth: that I never read, in all the history Ihave read, of a more slow, lingering torture than this. And you belongto the Union! And you talk of the tyranny of the masters!"

"Nay," said Higgins, "yo" may say what yo" like! The dead stand betweenyo and every angry word o" mine. D" ye think I forget who"s lying there,and how hoo loved yo"? And it"s th" masters as has made us sin, if th"

Union is a sin. Not this generation maybe, but their fathers. Theirfathers ground our fathers to the very dust; ground us to powder!

Parson! I reckon, I"ve heerd my mother read out a text, "The fathershave eaten sour grapes and th" children"s teeth are set on edge." It"s sowi" them. In those days of sore oppression th" Unions began; it were anecessity. It"s a necessity now, according to me. It"s a withstanding ofinjustice, past, present, or to come. It may be like war; along wi" it comecrimes; but I think it were a greater crime to let it alone. Our onlychance is binding men together in one common interest; and if some arecowards and some are fools, they mun come along and join the greatmarch, whose only strength is in numbers."

"Oh!" said Mr. Hale, sighing, "your Union in itself would be beautiful,glorious,--it would be Christianity itself--if it were but for an end whichaffected the good of all, instead of that of merely one class as opposedto another."

"I reckon it"s time for me to be going, sir," said Higgins, as the clockstruck ten.

"Home?" said Margaret very softly. He understood her, and took heroffered hand. "Home, miss. Yo" may trust me, tho" I am one o" th" Union."

"I do trust you most thoroughly, Nicholas."

"Stay!" said Mr. Hale, hurrying to the book-shelves. "Mr. Higgins! I"msure you"ll join us in family prayer?"

Higgins looked at Margaret, doubtfully. Hey grave sweet eyes met his;there was no compulsion, only deep interest in them. He did not speak,but he kept his place.

Margaret the Churchwoman, her father the Dissenter, Higgins theInfidel, knelt down together. It did them no harm.

同类推荐
  • 搜神记

    搜神记

    《搜神记》是东晋初年史学家干宝所撰,现存二十卷,故事有四百多个,故事内容主要以鬼怪神仙为主,取材于西汉流传下来的历史神话传说和魏晋时期的民间故事。书中搜集的故事涉及神仙术士、精灵物怪、因果报应以及人神、人鬼之间的报恩、恋爱等,也包括一些琐闻杂记和不少民间传说,大多篇幅短小,情节简单,设想奇幻,极富浪漫主义色彩,深受人们喜爱。
  • 苏东坡的创业秘笈

    苏东坡的创业秘笈

    一向清贫的苏洵既喜且忧起来。喜的是娃儿们有了出息,忧的是两娃儿上大学的学费尚没着落。于是,苏洵开始四处借钱。可怜他在一帮穷亲戚中忙活了三五天,也不过借到千儿八百块而已——杯水车薪啊!苏东坡思索良久,为了减轻家里的负担,就不去上学了。这是一部充满清新气息的书。它们笑嘻嘻的,仿佛从一群深沉、稳重的老者丛中钻了出来,带着轻松的表情和明媚的格调,穿着很青春的服饰,很阳光、很灿烂地向我们走来。依据以往的经验,我判定它们很浮浅、很肥皂剧。
  • 真实揭秘巫蛊传奇:苗疆蛊事

    真实揭秘巫蛊传奇:苗疆蛊事

    巫蛊之祸,自西汉起延续几千年,屡禁不止,直至如今,国学凋零,民智渐开,在大中国,唯乡野之民谈及,许多“缘来身在此山中”的人都不知不晓不闻。而巫蛊降头茅山之术,偏偏在东南亚各地盛行,连香港、台湾之地,也繁荣昌盛,流派纷起。
  • 时光向左,幸福向右

    时光向左,幸福向右

    《时光向左,幸福向右》主要讲的是音符是音乐家的灵魂,每一首自创的乐曲背后,都有一段常人难以理解的故事;每一个艺术家的成功里,都包含着很多人的支持与付出,甚至亲人的眼泪与生命。华人小提琴演奏家杨志经历了失去亲爱的弟弟,失去名牌大学的毕业证,失去爱情,失去生活的信心……种种生活磨难,加上对弟弟杨宇之死的愧疚,“疯了”。怎样唤醒一个艺术家的灵魂,怎样救赎一个闪耀的小提琴天才——杨志的母亲用自己泣血的母爱得到了儿子什么样的回报?视杨志为亲兄弟的徐子昂联合丁晴睛、陶子烟与杨志的父亲怎么唤醒杨志迷夹的灵魂?杨志的磨难如何滋养他的音乐素养,故事从维也纳金色大厅内的悠扬琴声开始穿越。
  • 股海别梦

    股海别梦

    本书以中国证券基金业为背景,描写了中国证券市场因业务内容不同而呈现出的不同经营管理模式,揭示了制度的规范与黑洞、管理与疏漏,人性的贪婪与正直、复杂与单纯、渴望与无奈。书中对证券基金业内幕、权钱交易黑幕等的深入剖析,不仅对广大股民是难得的警示,而且也具有经验指导的作用。
热门推荐
  • 奉子逃婚

    奉子逃婚

    喝了酒!上了床,醒来之后原还原!怀了弟弟的孩子逃了哥哥的婚,事情就是这么简单她以为,她会永远的珍藏起这一夜绽放美丽的回忆,成为她心中永远的秘密,却不知道天意弄人,她扑到的竟然是即将成婚的夫家小叔子……
  • 贪恋红尘三千尺

    贪恋红尘三千尺

    本是青灯不归客,却因浊酒恋红尘。人有生老三千疾,唯有相思不可医。佛曰:缘来缘去,皆是天意;缘深缘浅,皆是宿命。她本是出家女,一心只想着远离凡尘逍遥自在。不曾想有朝一日唯一的一次下山随手救下一人竟是改变自己的一生。而她与他的相识,不过是为了印证,相识只是孽缘一场。
  • 觅道之行

    觅道之行

    一老一少牵着一匹瘦小的骆驼,走在狂风飞舞的沙漠之中。“有些人想得到强大的力量,有些人想得到无尽的财富,有些人想得到至高的权力,还有一些人,他用尽一生去寻觅,去冒险,只为了一种叫做‘道’的东西。“那个老人眯着眼说。“‘道’是什么?可以吃吗?”小孩好奇地问。老人脸上的皱纹像八爪鱼一样舒展了开来,笑着说:“我也不知道,但好像是可以吃的。”“那一定非常非常好吃。”小孩肯定地点了点头。
  • 噬欲游戏

    噬欲游戏

    浑浑噩噩的走出那家店,原本应该在自己身边的她却不见了踪影!竭力与失忆对抗,胜出者的奖励竟然是去往以欲望为食的游戏世界!
  • 倾夙天下:庶女三小姐

    倾夙天下:庶女三小姐

    她,为了救一个跟她毫不相关的小孩,被车撞死,灵魂穿越到一个花痴,草包三小姐身上。而本尊竟然是因为调戏一个美男,而被人失手打死。他,是大夜国最受宠的王爷,全大夜国所有女子的梦中情人,当她嫁给他为妃时,他冷漠如冰的对她说:“苏衍倾,不要以为你是本王的妃就可以掌管我整个王府,你,只是我王府最卑贱的奴,我心中最爱的人不是你,你只是有一个王妃的名号而已。”她却无所谓的说,”你走你的阳关道,我过我的独木桥。“但他却……为了她喝下致命的毒,并说道:“我中的毒,是你的……情毒。”(本文虐`宠二合一,欢迎跳坑)
  • 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!
  • 曾经那个弱小女孩

    曾经那个弱小女孩

    说曾经的小女孩多么弱,讲她长大以后多么学会坚强独立,也成为一个非常出色的女孩
  • 再争大世

    再争大世

    隋炀异世重生,再走巅峰路,一步一回首,一步一攀登企鹅交流群1071855191
  • 一夫一妻帝后:倾我一生一世恋

    一夫一妻帝后:倾我一生一世恋

    文案:这是古代唯一一位一夫一妻一辈子的皇上明孝宗的故事。现代的一个穿越项目,让张妍阴差阳错救下了即将被溺死的明孝宗朱祐樘,现代古代时光的不平等,再次回到古代,面对已经成人的英俊太子,张妍的心,也发生了变化。张妍:朱祐樘,你能否许我一辈子?一生一世,不纳妃嫔,一辈子,只有我们两个人。朱祐樘:我许你三年。三年后……朱祐樘:我许你一辈子,这一辈子,我的后宫,除了我的皇后,再无她人。一辈子的恋情,一生一世的爱恋,历史上,唯一的一对一夫一妻的帝后。
  • 无限之恐怖不恐怖

    无限之恐怖不恐怖

    林可雪一直以为这是个科学的唯物世界,起码在十七岁前她都如此认为。十七岁的某一天,在她被某个不可名状的存在带入了一个无比刺激的游戏世界后,她的人生就在十七岁这个节点上拐了一个大弯,通往了一条鬼影重重的不归路。#有人曾将它誉为旧世的荣光,也有人认为它是高维的产物,但对于我们而言,它是一座恶魔的通天塔。活下去,用尽一切办法都要活下去。活下去,就能得到一切#*本文涉及部分克苏鲁设定,某些克氏神明可能会友情参演*本文有部分由scp基金会友情提供,感兴趣的小可爱可以移步scp基金会官网*本文部分故事原创,部分由电影及都市传说改编*本文为无限升级流,女主成长型,男主中期出现,感情线超甜,不喜者慎点【尊敬的内测玩家,“恐怖不恐怖”内测1.0版即将启动,祝您有一段愉快的游戏之旅,3,2,1———】