登陆注册
26330900000063

第63章 CHAPTER XLIX(2)

America has never had a famine. But we are not exempt from famine. In the year 1816, known as the year of "eighteen-hundred-and-froze-to-death," the crops failed throughout America because of freezing weather all summer long. Little or no food was raised and the Americans would have perished from famine had it not been for the wild meat in the woods. The people lived on deer and bear that winter. To-day if our food supply fails we can not live on venison. No country is by natural law exempt from famine. Our famine will come when we fill this country as thickly as men can stand; China and India have so filled themselves. Famine awaits us when we repeat their folly. That day will come soon unless we bar the unworthy from our gates.

But cold weather and crop failure are not the only things that could bring a famine in America. Slacking in production has the same effect as crop failure. A farmers' strike could bring a famine. A railroad strike could do the same. Many men advocate a combination farmers' strike and railroad strike to destroy capital (that is, to destroy the food supply). Don't get impatient, boys. You shall have your famine, if you will wait long enough. And the less work you do while you are waiting, the sooner it will come. Nature is never whipped. Nature will take a crack at you, if you leave an opening. The generation that went before you worked ten to fourteen hours a day; they battled face to face with a raw continent in their fight with Nature. And by their muscle they drove Nature back and she surrendered. She went down like crumpled Germany, and she signed a treaty. Hard were the treaty terms our fighting fathers made with Nature. They took an indemnity. She delivered to them more houses than her cyclones had destroyed, she furnished them millions of cattle in place of the wild deer and buffalo. She yielded up her coal regions to warm them in payment for the torture her winters had inflicted.

By this treaty she gave them everything she had and promised to be good.

We are the inheritors of the good things of that peace treaty.

We were born rich; we revel in the "reparations" that our fathers wrung from a conquered Nature. But Nature, like Germany, is not really whipped. If we relax, she will default on her payments. As long as Nature is not really whipped, her treaty is a scrap of paper. Nature, right now, is preparing for a come-back. She will not arm openly, for we would then arm to meet her. She is planning to attack us by a method that is new. She will weaken us by propaganda, and when we are helpless she will march over us at will.

Who then are the propagandists that Nature is using to undermine the race that conquered her? Communists, slackers, sick men and fools. The man who says let us "quit work and divide our cake and eat it" is opening the way for Nature to strike suddenly with a famine. The man who advocates "one big strike" to destroy our capital is the secret agent of starvation. Nature when up in arms can sweep men off like flies. She has always done it and she always will, unless man uses his intelligence and his cooperation to fight the evils in Nature and not to fight his fellow men.

"Capitalism," as the communists call it, is an imperfect system. But it is the only system that has banished famine. Under communism and feudalism there was hunger. Under capitalism the world has been able to feed twice as many mouths as could be fed before.

Capitalism found a world of wood and iron ore, and made it into a world of steel. How? It puddled the pig-iron until the dross was out, and the pure metal was bessemered into steel. Now the task is to purify men as we have purified metals. Men have dross in their nature. They break under civilization's load. A steel world is hopeless if men are pig-iron. There is greed and envy and malice in all of us. But also there is the real metal of brotherhood. Our task is to puddle out the impurities so that the true iron can be strong enough to hold our civilization up forever.

I have been a puddler of iron and I would be a puddler of men.

Out of the best part of the iron I helped build a stronger world.

Out of the best part of man's metal let us build a better society.

I have no new cure for the ills of humanity.

Life is a struggle, and rest is in the grave.

All nature is in commotion; there is wind and rain; and out of it comes seed harvest. The waters of the sea are poured in thunder wrack upon the hills and run in rivers back into the sea.

The winds make weather, and weather profits man. When will man's turmoil cease, when will he find calm? I do not know. I only know that toil and struggle are sweet, and that life well lived is victory. And that calm is death.

Man must face an iron world, but he is iron to subdue it.

The lessons of my life were learned at the forge and I am grateful for my schooling.

"Thanks, thanks to thee, my worthy friend, For the lesson thou hast taught!

Thus at the flaming forge of Life Our fortunes must be wrought, Thus on its sounding anvil shaped Each burning deed and thought".

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 轮回劫:情痴千年

    轮回劫:情痴千年

    为了找回在新婚之夜突然消失的新娘,久经沙场的小王爷,穿越而来。可是遇到的第一个人,却不是她……练峰是久经沙场的小王爷,穿越而来,是为纠回那个在他们新婚之夜莫名穿越的女人。哪知她不仅失去了记忆,还性情大变,胆子小得像白兔。不行,要把她揪回去,就得先哄住她,再骗来她的心。
  • 魔女消失的房间

    魔女消失的房间

    从前,我和妈妈、姥姥还有姐姐四个人一起生活。我们家经常来客人,姥姥告诉我那些人叫做妈妈的〔崇拜者〕。在一个春天,妈妈消失了。到现在为止我还经常会梦见那天所发生的事情。〔因为她是一个魔女。魔女注定是要受火刑的。〕听到了这个男子的声音,我突然又有了手里握着那只又冷又硬的武器的感觉……藏在记忆里的谜团若隐若现,小时候经历的一幕幕不时浮现眼前,到底母亲为什么而消失?为什么会对院子里的樱花树怀有特别的感觉?...
  • 勿扰青春韶华

    勿扰青春韶华

    盛夏的相见,盛夏的分离,一切美好尽在盛夏。几个人命运交错,而3年之后……片段一:“宿舍长,今天该谁值日啊!”“嗯,好像是1和2号”“什么?该我啦?”2号床的姑娘看了看地面,随即哀嚎一声。“啊!”片段二:“成绩出来了?”“嗯,外面都在看成绩。”前者也跑着去看了,然而当他看到自己的成绩。“靠”“怎么了呀?”“我好像少加一科答题卡分。”另一个女孩沉思了一会儿,“不行我就去买一个答题尺,可不能步你的后尘。”随即便走开了。而前者却一脸黑线的停留在原地。
  • 错嫁邪王:罪妃难驯

    错嫁邪王:罪妃难驯

    雷雨之夜,一场意外,让她抛弃和风的约定,转而投身邪王之府,倾城之貌赢得侧妃之名,却换不来恶魔之心。她把匕首刺入他心,只因五年前嗜血的仇恨;他一记耳光换来她贱奴命运,只因洞房花烛夜,没有没有落红的床幔。爱恨情仇,生生不息,当真相逐步浮出水面,她却要面对四个男人的爱情和挚爱妹妹的背叛。当命运逼迫她反抗,她又是如何倔强地争取真爱,成就自我,看落魄女子化身皇后,独步青云……
  • 即使如此——爱你

    即使如此——爱你

    我们总以为,我们会因为彼此的出现而互相改变,互相守护;我们总以为,时光唯美,岁月静好;我们总以为,可以假装逃避,假装不知道;……而事实上我们所以为的一切都在命运的计划之中,唯独爱你这件事变成了我生命里横生的枝节,让以后的人生布满了慌乱、仇恨;即使我们犹豫、挫折,即使命运要将我们的一切全都覆灭,唯独爱你这件事也变成了命运里横生的枝节,变成了我生存的唯一意义。我恨你,而我亦也爱着你。
  • 恶魔专属,甜心抱一抱

    恶魔专属,甜心抱一抱

    “十亿!”他一掷千金花了十亿买回的小老婆,却时刻想着要逃跑!“你,你不要动!”“嗯,主动的妞我喜欢!”“我不动,你自已动!”她所有的第一次,都被他强行夺走!她想尽办法逃离这里,却没有一次成功……“洛少,你老婆又跑了!”
  • 中华歇后语(第八卷)

    中华歇后语(第八卷)

    歇后语是俗语的一种,也称俏皮话。一般由两部分组成,前一部分是“引子”,是一种具体的描述,或为现实生活、自然界的现象,或为历史上、文学中的典型人物,或纯粹是一种离奇的想象;后一部分则是从前一部分引申而出的、作者要表达的对事物的看法。它运用比喻、想象、夸张、借代、转义、谐音等手法,构思巧妙,生动形象,幽默俏皮,运用得当,常常会产生强烈的喜剧效果。在平时的言谈或文学创作中,如果能够使用恰当的歇后语,就会有助于交流思想、传达感情,使语言充满生活情趣,产生很强的感染力。
  • 耽美之花城至宝

    耽美之花城至宝

    花城至宝,能换取天下的至宝究竟是何物?盗贼又会如何从花城城主手中夺得至宝,他又会不会成功呢。
  • 驱鬼师阴鬼因怨

    驱鬼师阴鬼因怨

    世界之大,无奇不有。我叫苏木,是一名驱鬼师。师傅要我出来人间历练,我便一路驱鬼而来。〔本文写一些奇鬼怪谈。〕
  • 赤炎

    赤炎

    大陆的巅峰,大陆的传说,能人所不能者是为夏炎。