登陆注册
19623300000075

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
  • The Pit

    The Pit

    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。
  • 三槐书屋诗钞

    三槐书屋诗钞

    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。
  • 北征后录

    北征后录

    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。
  • 六十种曲绣襦记

    六十种曲绣襦记

    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。
  • 武则天外史

    武则天外史

    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。
热门推荐
  • 阴狩至尊

    阴狩至尊

    百足虫车、阴狩建筑、兽魄石怪、罗刹异雕究竟是什么东西?管理着数十万人口城市的鬼闪天刀一族,为何被一夜灭族?一个商人,为何会让天眼窥杀定为机密?一介书生为何被活剐而死,死后还要将其养成恶鬼,困于刀内?一阁二秘三家四门十大巨头为何紧张备战?千年不出的那些唯我独尊的强者们为何竞先出世?看至尊阴狩洛天一,如何征阴兵,收阴差,招鬼役,修驻站,建狩府,战武圣,斗道尊,查灭族惨案,破惊天阴谋!一切尽在《阴狩至尊》
  • 大小姐的妖孽保镖

    大小姐的妖孽保镖

    特种兵王回归都市,意外成为大小姐的贴身保镖.依靠着自己强大的能力,混迹在都市中,各路权贵、诸多势力,富可敌国的财富,祸国殃民的美人……为了守护,为了变强,步步为营,重新打造自己的豪门。
  • 丞相大人碗里来:夫人好霸气

    丞相大人碗里来:夫人好霸气

    她,龙清清,天之骄女。意外穿越异世,自己混了个便宜相公。他,天龙国相爷,宠溺妻子到人神共愤!老婆逛街要跟从,老婆暖床要服从,老婆说话要服从,老婆说教要听从。相爷大人很腹黑,情敌一个一个,他要把她的桃花统统掐掉!
  • 大棺人

    大棺人

    为了揭开棺材里的秘密,我在一个个的诡异事件中艰难跋涉着......
  • 中华人民共和国城乡规划法

    中华人民共和国城乡规划法

    为了加强城乡规划管理,协调城乡空间布局,改善人居环境,促进城乡经济社会全面协调可持续发展,制定本法。
  • 野蛮合租

    野蛮合租

    为寻找家族遗失的龙图,秦浩被逼潜入都市,身怀高超古武,横扫华夏四大家族,只身潜入神秘血族,邂逅神秘血族女皇……又凭借那张迷死人不偿命的脸蛋儿,迷倒众多女土豪,可却在烂醉如泥的警花的石榴裙下栽了跟头,结果“英雄”变成“流氓”,还被逼签下了不平等条约……
  • 血色抗日

    血色抗日

    抗日战争是中国人最重要的战斗,在血色血性的中国人斗争中,我们怎样获得胜利?
  • 花千骨之六上仙

    花千骨之六上仙

    网络爆红大剧《花千骨》同人,这个世界再多一位上仙会发生什么,又会有怎样的爱恨情仇
  • 农园似锦

    农园似锦

    穿成渔村小萝莉,爹爹老实愚孝,娘亲病弱无力,兄姐弟弟年幼。爹重伤濒死时,一家人被狠心的爷奶大伯赶出来,饥寒交迫,家徒四壁……不怕!她有催生植物的五彩神石在手,前世卤味技能在握。看她八岁小萝莉,如何挑战古人味蕾,改良高产作物,成为名扬天下的育种小能手!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 心向共产党

    心向共产党

    2012年全市财税工作的指导思想是:全面贯彻党的十七大和十七届五中、六中全会和市第六次党代会精神,以科学发展观为统领,紧紧围绕市委、市政府发展战略,充分发挥财政职能,促进经济发展方式转变和产业结构调整,做大做强财政“蛋糕”,优化支出结构,加大民生投入,加强财政监管,为加快推进“五个鄂州”建设、实现鄂州科学发展跨越发展提供必要的财力支撑。