登陆注册
26295500000051

第51章 CHAPTER XI. I COME TO GRAPPLE WITH THE CITY(3)

But I couldn't keep the conversation in these delightful channels. Evidently the strike and all that it meant lay heavy upon Mr. Vedder's consciousness, for he pushed back his coffee and began talking about it, almost in a tone of apology. He told me how kind he had tried to make the mill management in its dealings with its men.

"I would not speak of it save in explanation of our true attitude of helpfulness; but we have really given our men many advantages"--and he told me of the reading-room the company had established, of the visiting nurse they had employed, and of several other excellent enterprises, which gave only another proof of what I knew already of Mr. Vedder's sincere kindness of heart.

"But," he said, "we find they don't appreciate what we try to do for them."

I laughed outright.

"Why," I exclaimed, "you are having the same trouble I have had!"

"How's that?" he inquired, I thought a little sharply. Men don't like to have their seriousness trifled with.

"No longer ago than this morning," I said, "I had exactly that idea of giving them advantages; but I found that the difficulty lies not with the ability to give, but with the inability or unwillingness to take. You see I have a great deal of surplus wealth myself--"

Mr. Vedder's eyes flickered up at me.

"Yes," I said. "I've got immense accumulations of the wealth of the ages--ingots of Emerson and Whitman, for example, gems of Voltaire, and I can't tell what other superfluous coinage!" (And I waved my hand in the most grandiloquent manner.) "I've also quite a store of knowledge of corn and calves and cucumbers, and I've a boundless domain of exceedingly valuable landscapes. I am prepared to give bountifully of all these varied riches (for I shall still have plenty remaining), but the fact is that this generation of vipers doesn't appreciate what I am trying to do for them. I'm really getting frightened, lest they permit me to perish from undistributed riches!"

Mr. Vedder was still smiling.

"Oh," I said, warming up to my idea, "I'm a regular multimillionaire. I've got so much wealth that I'm afraid I shall not be as fortunate as jolly Andy Carnegie, for I don't see how I can possibly die poor!"

"Why not found a university or so?" asked Mr. Vedder.

"Well, I had thought of that. It's a good idea. Let's join our forces and establish a university where truly serious people can take courses in laughter."

"Fine idea!" exclaimed Mr. Vedder; "but wouldn't it require an enormous endowment to accommodate all the applicants? You must remember that this is a very benighted and illiterate world, laughingly speaking."

"It is, indeed," I said, "but you must remember that many people, for a long time, will be too serious to apply. I wonder sometimes if any one ever learns to laugh really laugh much before he is forty."

"But," said Mr. Vedder anxiously, "do you think such an institution would be accepted by the proletariat of the serious-minded?"

"Ah, that's the trouble," said I, "that's the trouble. The proletariat doesn't appreciate what we are trying to do for them!

They don't want your reading-rooms nor my Emerson and cucumbers.

The seat of the difficulty seems to be that what seems wealth to us isn't necessarily wealth for the other fellow."

I cannot tell with what delight we fenced our way through this foolery (which was not all foolery, either). I never met a man more quickly responsive than Mr. Vedder. But he now paused for some moments, evidently ruminating.

"Well, David," he said seriously, "what are we going to do about this obstreperous other fellow?"

"Why not try the experiment," I suggested, "of giving him what he considers wealth, instead of what you consider wealth?"

"But what does he consider wealth?"

"Equality," said I.

Mr. Vedder threw up his hands.

"So you're a Socialist, too!"

"That," I said, "is another story."

"Well, supposing we did or could give him this equality you speak of--what would become of us? What would we get out of it?"

"Why, equality, too!" I said.

Mr. Vedder threw up his hands up with a gesture of mock resignation.

"Come," said he, "let's get down out of Utopia!"

We had some further good-humoured fencing and then returned to the inevitable problem of the strike. While we were discussing the meeting of the night before which, I learned, had been luridly reported in the morning papers, Mr. Vedder suddenly turned to me and asked earnestly:

"Are you really a Socialist?"

"Well," said I, "I'm sure of one thing. I'm not ALL Socialist, Bill Hahn believes with his whole soul (and his faith has made him a remarkable man) that if only another class of people--his class--could come into tile control of material property, that all the ills that man is heir to would be speedily cured. But I wonder if when men own property collectively--as they are going to one of these days--they will quarrel and hate one another any less than they do now. It is not the ownership of material property that interests me so much as the independence of it.

When I started out from my farm on this pilgrimage it seemed to me the most blessed thing in the world to get away from property and possession."

"What are you then, anyway?" asked Mr. Vedder, smiling.

"Well, I've thought of a name I would like to have applied to me sometimes," I said. "You see I'm tremendously fond of this world exactly as it is now. Mr. Vedder, it's a wonderful and beautiful place! I've never seen a better one. I confess I could not possibly live in the rarefied atmosphere of a final solution. I want to live right here and now for all I'm worth. The other day a man asked me what I thought was the best time of life. 'Why,' I answered without a thought, 'Now.' It has always seemed to me that if a man can't make a go of it, yes, and be happy at this moment, he can't be at the next moment. But most of all, it seems to me, I want to get close to people, to look into their hearts, and be friendly with them. Mr. Vedder, do you know what I'd like to be called?"

"I cannot imagine," said he.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 校园物语之珍贵回忆

    校园物语之珍贵回忆

    这里是所有校园作品的集合,好看就来这里吧![推倒邪恶校草][致我们终将逝去的青春]
  • 御世图景

    御世图景

    如果有选择,我不愿生在这乱世,我不愿离开这仙境,我不愿背负这使命,我宁愿不要遇到你。乱世之中,立身御世作圣人,从来不是我追求。
  • 天域默示录

    天域默示录

    那一年,我看着他们的身影,在血红的世界哭泣着睡去。那一夜,我声音嘶哑的质问,那个地方是否有他们的足迹。那一日,我攥紧双拳抬首以盼,是否能带着希望、带着期望寻找方向。站在两界之交,站在兄弟身旁,战到最后、只为找寻那一年的那双人影,渐渐世界在我面前拉开帷幕,风云在手、兄弟在旁,我还有何畏惧。
  • 东海渔歌

    东海渔歌

    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。
  • 焚天争仙

    焚天争仙

    打碎世界,只为成仙!!!来到这个强者为尊的世界,我李江当有恩报恩,有仇报仇!在这个世界,我李江当站着死,也不可低头弯腰生!我李江有自己的骄傲!有自己的自尊,我要活出自我的精彩!!!
  • 我曾在那一角落患过伤风

    我曾在那一角落患过伤风

    你问在我心中是否还苦恼?那次受伤否决了爱的好。谢谢你的关照我一切都好,一个人不算困扰。那次流过的泪让我学习到,如何祝福如何转身不要。在眼泪体会到与自己拥抱,爱不是一种需要是一种对照。她受过的伤,他是否可以治好?我们拭目以待
  • 九天狂女

    九天狂女

    穿越后发现竟然穿成女的,而且还在狼群,未知的身世,离奇的遭遇。
  • 当约会大作战遇上了天降之物

    当约会大作战遇上了天降之物

    司令,精灵已经引起了空间震,请让士道赶紧出击吧!士宏呢,关紧变身成为伊卡洛斯帮助士道啊……开始我们的Date-A-Live吧
  • 纨绔学生

    纨绔学生

    天降奇遇,吊丝少年获得三个愿望,预知未来,赌石鉴宝有木有?英雄救美有木有?绝世神医的记忆,可治百病,治疗癌症有木有?超能力宠物,勾引萝莉少妇有木有?
  • 你好我的小猫咪

    你好我的小猫咪

    张凡,人如其名,平平凡凡;小猫,迷之宠物,来历神秘。偶然的相遇,一句我养你,张凡的人生从此发生了天翻地覆的变化。