登陆注册
20036100000075

第75章 CHAPTER XII.(8)

What he had done disinclined him to return to Cairnhope. He made a call or two first, and loitered about, and then at last back to Raby, gnawed with misgivings and incipient remorse.

Mr. Grotait sent immediately for Mr. Parkin, Mr. Jobson, and Mr. Potter, and told them the secret information he had just received.

They could hardly believe it at first; Jobson, especially, was incredulous. He said he had kept his eye on Little, and assured them the man had gone into woodcarving, and was to be seen in the town all day.

"Ay," said Parkin, "but this is at night; and, now I think of it, I met him t'other day, about dusk, galloping east, as hard as he could go."

"My information is from a sure source," said Grotait, stiffly.

Parkin.--"What is to be done?"

Jobson.--"Is he worth another strike?"

Potter.--"The time is unfavorable: here's a slap of dull trade."

The three then put their heads together, and various plans were suggested and discussed, and, as the parties were not now before the public, that horror of gunpowder, vitriol, and life-preservers, which figured in their notices and resolutions, did not appear in their conversation. Grotait alone was silent and doubtful. This Grotait was the greatest fanatic of the four, and, like all fanatics, capable of vast cruelty: but his cruelty lay in his head, rather than in his heart. Out of Trade questions, the man, though vain and arrogant, was of a genial and rather a kindly nature; and, even in Trade questions, being more intelligent than his fellows, he was sometimes infested with a gleam of humanity.

His bigotry was, at this moment, disturbed by a visitation of that kind.

"I'm perplexed," said he: "I don't often hesitate on a Trade question neither. But the men we have done were always low-lived blackguards, who would have destroyed us, if we had not disabled them. Now this Little is a decent young chap. He struck at the root of our Trades, so long as he wrought openly. But on the sly, and nobody knowing but ourselves, mightn't it be as well to shut our eyes a bit? My informant is not in trade."

The other three took a more personal view of the matter. Little was outwitting, and resisting them. They saw nothing for it but to stop him, by hook or by crook.

While they sat debating his case in whispers, and with their heads so close you might have covered them all with a tea-tray, a clear musical voice was heard to speak to the barmaid, and, by her direction, in walked into the council-chamber--Mr. Henry Little.

This visit greatly surprised Messrs. Parkin, Jobson, and Potter, and made them stare, and look at one another uneasily. But it did not surprise Grotait so much, and it came about in the simplest way.

That morning, at about eleven o'clock, Dr. Amboyne had called on Mrs. Little, and had asked Henry, rather stiffly, whether he was quite forgetting Life, Labor and Capital. Now the young man could not but feel that, for some time past, he had used the good doctor ill; had neglected and almost forgotten his benevolent hobby; so the doctor's gentle reproach went to his heart, and he said, "Give me a day or two, sir, and I'll show you how ashamed I am of my selfish behavior." True to his pledge, he collected all his notes together, and prepared a report, to be illustrated with drawings. He then went to Cheetham's, more as a matter of form than any thing, to see if the condemned grindstone had been changed. To his infinite surprise he found it had not, and Bayne told him the reason. Henry was angry, and went direct to Grotait about it.

But as soon as he saw Jobson, and Parkin, and Potter, he started, and they started. "Oh!" said he, "I didn't expect to find so much good company. Why, here's the whole quorum."

"We will retire, sir, if you wish it."

"Not at all. My orders are to convert you all to Life, Labor, and Capital (Grotait pricked up his ears directly); and, if I succeed, the Devil will be the next to come round, no doubt. Well, Mr. Grotait, Simmons is on that same grindstone you and I condemned.

And all for a matter of four shillings. I find that, in your trade, the master provides the stone, but the grinder hangs and races it, which, in one sense, is time lost. Well, Simmons declines the new stone, unless Cheetham will pay him by time for hanging and racing it; Cheetham refuses; and so, between them, that idiot works on a faulty stone. Will you use your influence with the grinder?"

"Well, Mr. Little, now, between ourselves don't you think it rather hard that the poor workman should have to hang and race the master's grindstone for nothing?"

"Why, they share the loss between them. The stone costs the master three pounds; and hanging it costs the workman only four or five shillings. Where's the grievance?"

"Hanging and racing a stone shortens the grinder's life; fills his lungs with grit. Is the workman to give Life and Labor for a forenoon, and is Capital to contribute nothing? Is that your view of Life, Labor, and Capital, young man?"

Henry was staggered a moment. "That is smart," said he. "But a rule of trade is a rule, till it is altered by consent of the parties that made it. Now, right or wrong, it is the rule of trade here that the small grinders find their own stones, and pay for power; but the saw-grinders are better off, for they have not to find stones, nor power, and their only drawback is that they must hang and race a new stone, which costs the master sixty shillings.

Cheetham is smarting under your rules, and you can't expect him to go against any rule, that saves him a shilling."

"What does the grinder think?"

"You might as well ask what the grindstone thinks."

"Well, what does the grinder say, then?"

"Says he'd rather run the stone out, than lose a forenoon."

"Well, sir, it is his business."

"It may be a man's business to hang himself; but it is the bystanders' to hinder him."

"You mistake me. I mean that the grinder is the only man who knows whether a stone is safe."

同类推荐
  • Honorine

    Honorine

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 太上北斗二十八章经

    太上北斗二十八章经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 中边分别论

    中边分别论

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Danny's Own Story

    Danny's Own Story

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 清代文学史简明年表

    清代文学史简明年表

    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。
热门推荐
  • 诱拐呆萌青梅:倒追男神100次

    诱拐呆萌青梅:倒追男神100次

    再次见到暗恋了六年的男神顾凌北,江小离激动的在朋友怂恿下要去验证对方到底身体有没有‘问题’,勾引没有成功怎么办?没关系,她有恋爱攻略,男神什么的,还不是手到擒来?“顾哥哥,我们来做吧。”江小离紧紧的抱着男神死不放手。“江小离,你究竟懂不懂这是什么意思?”男神眯着眼盯着她,随后把她狠狠压在身下。“唔,唔~”救命啊~
  • TFBOYS倒影少年

    TFBOYS倒影少年

    女主依旧神经大条,但是感情也很细腻,单纯的三只,遇上神经女,又会发生什么
  • 游戏小刺客超越之路

    游戏小刺客超越之路

    王侯将相宁有种乎?现实,莫非老老实实脚踏实地做人就永无出头之日?游戏,难道只有那些RMB玩家或者大公会培养的高手才能站在巅峰,恣意纵横?每个人心中都有热血,每个人都渴望超越。我们老实,我们平庸,只因没有机会点燃我们的那一腔热血。一旦热血沸腾,世界都能踩在脚下。无论是超越别人,站在万众景仰的巅峰,还是超越自己,突破一个又一个极限,都只为心中那一点不屈的信念。
  • 那不务正业的少年

    那不务正业的少年

    屌丝学生沈越,从进入大学的那一刻起,他便被打上了不务正业的称号,只是因为他喜欢玩游戏,老爸一天一个电话的催促他要好好学习,再玩游戏打断手,异地恋的女朋友在开学不到一个月的时候,便跟他分了手,理由是他因为游戏竟然不陪她,班级里面的导员,竟然提出要开除他,理由还是因为他玩游戏。玩游戏就是不务正业吗?看着那些年入百万千万的玩家,沈越一次次的问自己。
  • 痴王妃

    痴王妃

    我是外人眼中的“白痴”公主,癫傻可笑。十年地下冷宫的日子,让我愈加懂得耐,锋芒内敛。那传闻中性情暴戾的三王子,容貌尽毁,而他却是我将嫁的男子。这是一桩政治联姻,隐含着权力斗争的险恶。我和他,都只是棋子。但他却是我意料外的人。银色面具,如幽潭般深不可测的双眸,温柔的说话语气,令人轻易沦陷。我开始犹豫,是要继续装疯卖傻,还是对他说出真相。同时,诡谲的风云已暗涌,凌厉的危险一步步地逼近我们……
  • 极武神域

    极武神域

    “极武神域,乃是武神的大道本源——武神之心演化,只要你获取足够的‘元力’,就可以交给极武神域帮你具现一切的与‘武’有关的东西,包括武神的部分传承,无穷无尽的武经秘典、神兵利器,以及具化武道宗师来教导你!当然,‘元力’并非只此一项用处,更改空间之内时间流速,断肢重生、疗伤救命等等,只要有元力,极武神域都可以为你做到……”——当一个心中战火不息的异界来客,得到了这样一个传承,会发生多少波澜壮阔的故事呢?
  • 繁花落尽心逝十年

    繁花落尽心逝十年

    那一季的繁花开得灿烂,在清风中静静地摇曳着,散落了一地的哀伤。那时候的他们并不懂得什么是爱,只是她深深地落进了他的心里,他深深地跌入了她的心中。日月流逝间,她对爱情从怀疑变得不相信。于是,在她的心里,落下了一个十年,关于生死,关于自己。
  • EXO做你的妻子勋鹿

    EXO做你的妻子勋鹿

    本文搬至百度贴吧原创小说,勋鹿虐心兮。勋鹿不息,灿白不灭。后版。
  • 死神恋上Angel

    死神恋上Angel

    她——寒冰,刚开始只是一个普普通通的人类。一次偶然的相遇,死神接班人——冷寒,将她列入下一任的Angel候选名单。紧接着,善良、邪恶、Angel(天使)、Aphrodite(爱与美的女神)、Nemesis(复仇女神)、Medusa(美杜莎&丑陋的蛇女)、Apqllo(阿波罗)。。。都在她的生活中留下了足迹。她能否成为下一任Angel,在她的身上究竟会发生些什么?
  • 越过星空

    越过星空

    被父母抛弃的孩子,身后隐藏着什么秘密当身世隐秘,体质神奇的孩子被从来自另外一个世界大能神识占据时候,造就出了何等天才男儿生,做人杰仰天,不愧只需求长生之途,长万神之道,一步步越过星空,成就辉煌新人新书,如果有看过的朋友,轻轻点击下推荐,收藏,谢谢了qq群217054096