登陆注册
26330900000047

第47章 CHAPTER XXXVI

GROWLING FOR THE BOSSES' BLOOD

I thought I made a number of enemies among the men while I was head of the mill committee. When a man dissipated and afterward came back to work, trembling and weak, the boss would refuse to let him take up his tools, but would lay the man off for a few days.

The man usually thought this a useless and cruel punishment;and to lose a few days' wages would make him all the poorer.

The man thus laid off would come to me and ask that I get him reinstated.

"Tell 'em you'll call a strike," the man would say. "Tell 'em that if they don't let me work, nobody will work."I always refused to take such complaints to the office. I never approached the boss with a demand that I did not think was right.

Some of the men thought we ought to be vindictive and take every opportunity to put a crimp in the business for the owners. Ienvied the owners (we've all got a touch of that in our system), because they were rich and were ****** profits. I knew what their profits averaged. By calling fussy little strikes often enough Icould have kept the profits close to the zero mark. Thus the men would be ****** wages out of the business and the owners would be ****** nothing. But I declined to let my actions be governed by envy. The Ten Commandments forbid covetousness. The Golden Rule also forbade my practicing sabotage. And I have never tried to find a better guide than the Ten Commandments and the Golden Rule. The test of my misconduct would have come when, having cleverly destroyed their profits, I found them quitting in discouragement, closing up the business and throwing us all out of our jobs for keeps.

I tried to point out these things to the men. Some of them felt as I did about it. Others couldn't see it. So I learned darn early in life that you can't reform 'em all.

I used to say to the complaining man:

"Look here, Bill; you're in no shape to work. Go home and lie down for a couple of days. You wouldn't last here two hours in your present shaky condition. You'd pinch the rolls with your tongs and probably get your neck broke. That's why they won't let you work. You can't work. So back to your bed, Bill, we will not call them out to-day."Bill usually went away cursing me as the friend of the "plutes"and the enemy of labor. "I'll get you yet," he'd say, "you black-headed buzzard."

And so while I was ****** enemies among many of the men who thought I wasn't standing up for their rights, I was ****** myself even more unpopular with the owners by sticking up too firmly for the rights of the men. They told me they believed Iknew as much about the tin plate business as any man in the trade. This knowledge would enable me to do better in the distributing end of the business, while as a worker I could only make the union wages that all the fellows were getting. This gave me an idea that has since become the dominating purpose of my life. Handicraft is the basis of the best schooling. By working with my hands as well as with my head I learned the actual cost of production of every kind of plate they put out. This was something that I could not have learned from books. Without such knowledge the business would have to be run partly on guesswork.

With a thorough knowledge of the production end of the business Ibecame a valuable man. The way was open for me to get out of the labor field and into the field of management.

But here is where my natural feeling of fraternity stepped in.

I liked to be among the men. I felt at home there. I was only twenty-two, and salesmanship was a field I had never tried, except for a season when I sold Mark Twain's book, Following the Equator. There were plenty of men who had the knack of selling.

My natural gift, if I had any, was to smooth the path for working men and help them solve their problems. I had learned that labor was the first step on the road to knowledge. It was the foundation of all true knowledge. I wanted to help the fellows take the next step. That step would be to learn how labor can enrich itself and do away with strikes and unemployment. That is a question that still fascinates me. I did not care to dodge it and become a manufacturer. I am the kind of fellow who, when he takes hold of a question, never lets go. The picture of Comrade Bannerman shaking his fist at the trainload of "plutes" lingered with me. I still heard the voice of the knock-kneed reformer who envied my husky limbs. The cry for bloody revolution was already in the air. When would the mob be started and what would it do?

When Comrade Bannerman had robbed the rich and piled their corpses in a Caesar's column, would not the knock-kneed uplifter break my legs in ****** all men equal? These men were moved by envy and they lusted for blood. I faced the problem with a thirst for accurate knowledge, and my passion was not for bloodshed but for brotherhood.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 告白军师

    告白军师

    如果要成神,什么神才是最佳选择?天神太孤单,夜游神怕黑,门神就是个看门的.山神长的丑,河神还不会水,瘟神讨人厌.财神太财迷,还是月老最风流,美女我的,恐龙你的。
  • 殿下,我来驯养你啦3

    殿下,我来驯养你啦3

    受无良长辈和现实生活的双重压迫,冒充男生来到这所贵族学校,明里是学生,暗中是保镖。对于这么一份工作晓安没有任何憧憬,但面对这个表面天使内心恶魔的变态雇主兼室友,生活开始向无法预料的状况发展……“我好像有点喜欢你……”“对不起我是男生。”“我知道,”他轻轻碰了碰晓安的发梢,“我喜欢的就是男生。”
  • 大修真纪

    大修真纪

    自古落花有意,怎奈大道无情。这苦苦修道之路,长生又如何。空有绝世天赋,无上机缘,逆天神通,却依旧只能眼睁睁看着身边一个个重要的人,在时间的长河中消散。那些故事,那些情谊,那些誓言,如今又有谁会记得。不!我们不要这样的长生,我们追求的不是这样充满遗憾的道!让我们一起修炼,一起变强,一起克服种种艰难,一起追寻相同或不同的梦想,共同抒写属于我们的大修真纪!
  • 重生之玄灵妖皇

    重生之玄灵妖皇

    三流大学生,挖开家乡佛寺地基想天降金饼。历练空间,小小火鸦坐井观天,欲执掌乾坤。圣不仁,心无道,愿凭铿锵铁骨,息三江不平潮!每天更新的时间,早上的六点二十,晚上的八点半左右,谢谢大家支持!
  • 天启绝路

    天启绝路

    历史滚滚几度真假?过去未来,哪里是尽头!?我们真的是这个宇宙的唯一!?神!?
  • 向大庆精神学习

    向大庆精神学习

    本书包括:美丽的宝岛、成长印记、音符旅程、天凉好个秀、罗李罗嗦、现象、纽约、京城夜等文章。
  • 许你长安:谁主沉浮

    许你长安:谁主沉浮

    穿越异世,在展风云。强者之路,王者之巅。是王者终会归来!!
  • 心动南太铉

    心动南太铉

    南太铉,这个名字执着了她的一生。金韩彬,成为了她一生的守候。权志龙,永远是她最坚实的靠山。可是,人生的路,只能她一个人走。
  • 不爱帅哥爱流氓

    不爱帅哥爱流氓

    那些写不尽的故事,道不明的青春年华,每每忆起都热泪满盈。走过的路,如滚滚的一江春水,东流而逝不再重头。心里藏着的人,那些隐蔽起来的谎言,都要被时间捅破原形毕露。他有着一段别人不一定走过的路,他走得逍遥自在,他也在路上哭泣落泪伤痕累累。他有过的青春年华,浸泡过酒味的人生,如一席黄粱美梦。与他萍水相逢的姑娘,与他称兄道弟的朋友,是离开了?还是一直都在守候着?走到了这条路的尽头,会不会柳暗花明又一村?
  • HP之重生波特世界

    HP之重生波特世界

    暂无简介,作者重新开书,只因不能删书。。。