登陆注册
26330900000011

第11章 CHAPTER VII

HARD SLEDDING IN AMERICA

It had been our plan to go from New York to Pittsburgh, but the mill that father was working in had shut down. And so he had sent us tickets to Hubbard, Ohio, where his brother had a job as a muck roller--the man who takes the bloom from the squeezer and throws it into the rollers. That's all I can tell you now. In later chapters I shall take you into a rolling mill, and show you how we worked. I believe I am the first puddler that ever described his job, for I have found no book by a puddler in any American library. But I wanted to explain here that a muck roller is not a muck raker, but a worker in raw iron.

When we boarded the train for Ohio, mother had nothing to look after except the six children. When the porter asked her where her baggage was, she smiled sadly and said that was a question for a wiser head than hers to answer. She was glad enough to have all her babies safe. Everything we owned was on our backs. Our patient father had toiled for months in Pittsburgh and had sent us nearly every cent to pay our transportation from the Old World. Now he was out of a job, and we were coming to him without as much as a bag of buns in our hands.

Before leaving New York, I want to tell what kind of city it was in those days.

In a recent magazine article a writer picturing our arrival at Castle Garden said that we "climbed the hill into Broadway and gazed around at the highest buildings we had ever seen." But there were no tall buildings in New York at that time. The spires of Trinity Church and St. Paul's towered above everything. And we had seen such churches in the Old Country. Brooklyn Bridge had just been built and it overtopped the town like a syrup pitcher over a plate of pancakes. The tallest business blocks were five or six stories high, and back in Wales old Lord Tredegar, the chief man of our shire, lived in a great castle that was as fine as any of them.

The steel that made New York a city in the sky was wrought in my own time. My father and his sons helped puddle the iron that has braced this city's rising towers. A town that crawled now stands erect. And we whose backs were bent above the puddling hearths know how it got its spine. A mossy town of wood and stone changed in my generation to a towering city of glittering glass and steel. "All of which"--I can say in the words of the poet--"all of which I saw and part of which I was."The train that was taking us to Ohio was an Erie local, and the stops were so numerous that we thought we should never get there.

A man on the train bought ginger bread and pop and gave us kids a treat. It has been my practice ever since to do likewise for alien youngsters that I meet on trains.

When we reached Hubbard, father met us and took us to an uncle's. We did not stop to wash the grime of travel from our faces until after we had filled our stomachs. Once refreshed with food, our religion returned to us, in the desire to be clean and to establish a household. I learned then that food is the first thing in the world. Cleanliness may be next to godliness, but food is ahead of them all, and without food man loses his cleanliness, godliness and everything else worth having. When Iwish to sound out a man, I ask him if he has ever been hungry. If I find he has never missed a meal in his life, I know his education has been neglected. For I believe that experience is the foremost teacher. I have learned something from every experience I ever had, and I hold that Providence has been kind to me in favoring me with a lot of rather tough adventures.

Our hardships on entering America taught me sympathy and filled me with a desire to help others. I have heard aliens say that America had not treated them with hospitality, and that this had made them bitter, and now these aliens would take revenge by tearing down America. This is a lie that can not fool me. My hardships did not turn me bitter. And I know a thousand others who had harder struggles than I. And none of them showed the yellow streak. The Pilgrim Fathers landed in the winter when there were no houses. Half of them perished from hardship in a single year. Did they turn anarchists?

The man who says that hard sledding in America made a yellow cur out of him fools no one. He was born a yellow cur. Hard sledding in America produced the man who said: "With malice toward none; with charity for all."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 剑影无双

    剑影无双

    这个天下,是永远都不会平静的,每逢乱世,都会这个时代的王者仗剑而出,开创属于自己的时代,成就属于自己的传说。这个时代,是属于徐晨风的!在这个乱世之中,他要用自己手中的剑安这一世太平。一柄剑,一段情,亦是一段传说!
  • 极夜至尊

    极夜至尊

    一个自穿越而来的少年,身体流淌着人类与魔裔的血液,拿着枪械,带着老婆,行走在破晓与黄昏之间。感谢腾讯文学书评团提供书评支持
  • 云之缈

    云之缈

    在罗云镇的云村,被遗弃的孩子的崛起之路,最终一飞冲天。
  • 煮酒论史--史记中的哲学与智慧

    煮酒论史--史记中的哲学与智慧

    承载着三千年华夏历史的《史记》,全面地展现了帝国的治乱兴亡、朝代更替、庙堂权术、江湖生存的原始形态,贯穿其中的则是智谋、心力、情感、品质等人性文化的潜规则。知源流,明因果,识人性,观成败,历史的经验正可以用来弥补人性的弱点,让我们游走于世情的边缘,寻找属于自己的心路历程。
  • 沙棘林中长大的女人

    沙棘林中长大的女人

    本文讲述了一个在北部偏远地区长大的女人,通过考学,上了大学,在人性的贪婪和欲望中,又觉得难以脱身,应付着各种角色,最后在自己的努力下,一步一步的在大城市里面站稳脚跟......
  • 永远的九二班

    永远的九二班

    永远的校园,永远的班级,永远的九二班,永远的同学。青春校园小说,记录那时的美好、疼痛与欢乐。【推荐鸟鸟另一部连载小说《田园农女憨相公》】
  • 科学大王:梦境万花筒

    科学大王:梦境万花筒

    《小学生快乐学习大王?科学大王:梦境万花筒(美绘本)》写的是我们身边的科学常识,解答了小朋友们在日常生话中经常会遇到并感到困惑的科学同题,包括我们日常生活中衣、食、住、行、学、玩的各个方面,内容丰富,资料详实,图文并茂,生动有趣,行文流畅,通俗易懂,并加注了汉语拼音。
  • 缠绵腹黑魔神妃

    缠绵腹黑魔神妃

    他,是背景神秘的魔神;她,是刚满二十的现代杀手。当她重回那个世界,一条手链,讲她与他的生命羁绊在了一起,两人究竟能擦出怎样的火花呢?(无虐情,水到渠成版,不喜勿喷)
  • 一世桃花:千凰

    一世桃花:千凰

    镜头一:“师父,书上说男女授受不亲。“”嘘,师父是在教你怎么长大呢,别乱动。”镜头二:“千儿,不要睡,相信师父,师傅一定会带你回家。”“师父,若有来生,我愿为树,静静的守候你。”
  • 血色雄关:太原会战纪实

    血色雄关:太原会战纪实

    抗日战争初期,在我国北方,中日两军曾进行过一场抗战初期规模最大的战役——太原会战。这场会战虽已过去了数十年,然而许多鲜为人知的内幕直到今天才随着《血色雄关:太原会战纪实》作者的笔被披露:一向闭关自守的土皇帝阎锡山举起抗日的大旗;毛泽东看好山西;平型关下林彪让世人大吃一惊;最高当局首次下令处决“作战不利”的中将军长;郝梦龄忻口战死,成为中日交战后第一个血洒疆场的军长;南口之战,平型关之战、忻口之战、娘子关之战、太原守城战,每一仗都洒尽了英雄血。作者亲临旧战场,听数十位亲历者畅谈,以纪实文学的形式第一次描述了这场宏大而壮丽会战的全程全景。