登陆注册
19631500000125

第125章 CHAPTER XXVII(2)

The Duke did not go about in society, in the ordinary sense of the word, and he would not have come to High Thorpe to meet a large party. He was here as a kinsman and friend of his hostess for a quiet week; and the few other guests fitted readily enough into the picture of a family gathering.

The spirit of domesticity had indeed so obviously descended upon the little group in the drawing-room, an hour or so after dinner, that Thorpe felt it quite the natural thing to put his arm through that of the Duke and lead him off to his personal smoking-room. He even published his intention by audibly bidding the Hon. Balder Plowden to remain with the ladies.

When the two had seated themselves in soft, low easy-chairs, and the host had noted with pleasure that his guest had no effeminate qualms in the matter of large rich cigars, a brief silence ensued.

"I am very anxious to get your views on a certain subject,"Thorpe was inspired to begin, bluntly pushing preliminaries aside. "If a man of fortune wishes to do genuine good with his money, here in England, how should he best go about it?"The Duke looked up at his questioner, with a sudden flash of surprise on his dark, mobile face. He hesitated a moment, and smiled a little. "You ask of me the sum of human wisdom," he said. "It is the hardest of all problems;no one solves it."

Thorpe nodded his big head comprehendingly. "That's all the more reason why it ought to be solved," he declared, with slow emphasis.

The other expressed by look and tone an augmented consciousness of the unexpected. "I did not know,"he remarked cautiously, "that this was a matter in which you were specially concerned. It pleases me very much to hear it.

Even if the solution does not come, it is well to have as many as possible turning the problem over in their minds.""Oh, but I'm going to solve it!" Thorpe told him, with round confidence.

The Duke pulled contemplatively at his cigar for a little.

"Do not think me a cynic," he began at last.

"You are a man of affairs; you have made your own way;you should be even more free from illusions than I am.

If you tell me that these good things can be done, I am the last one to dispute you. But I have seen near at hand experiments of exceptional importance, on a very grand scale, and the result does not encourage me.

I come to doubt indeed if money has any such power in these affairs as we think it has--for that matter, if it has any power at all. The shifting of money can always disorganize what is going on at the moment--change it about and alter it in many ways--but its effect is only temporary. As soon as the pressure is released, the human atoms rearrange themselves as they were before, and the old conditions return. I think the only force which really makes any permanent difference is character--and yet about even that I am not sure. The best man I have ever known--and in many respects the ablest--devoted untold energy and labour, and much money, too, to the service of a few thousand people in Somerset, on land of his own, upon a theory wonderfully elaborated and worked out.

Perhaps you have heard of Emanuel Torr and his colony, his System?"Thorpe shook his head.

"He had worked tremendously for years at it. He fell ill and went away--and in a day all the results of his labours and outlay were flat on the ground. The property is mine now, and it is farmed and managed again in the ordinary way, and really the people there seem already to have forgotten that they had a prophet among them.

The marvelous character of the man--you look in vain for any sign of an impress that it left upon them.

I never go there. I cannot bear those people. I have sometimes the feeling that if it were feasible I should like to oppress them in some way--to hurt them.""Oh! 'the people' are hogs, right enough," Thorpe commented genially, "but they ARE 'the people,' and they're the only tools we've got to work with to make the world go round.""But if you leave the world alone," objected the Duke, "it goes round of itself. And if you don't leave it alone, it goes round just the same, without any reference whatever to your exertions. Some few men are always cleverer or noisier or more restless than the others, and their activity produces certain deviations and peculiarities in their generation. The record of these--generally a very faulty and foolish record--we call history.

We say of these movements in the past that some of them were good and some were bad. Our sons very likely will differ totally from us about which were good and which were bad;quite possibly, in turn, their sons may agree with us.

I do not see that it matters. We cannot treat anything as final--except that the world goes round. We appear out of the darkness at one edge of it; we are carried across and pitched off into the darkness at the other edge of it.

We are certain about nothing else."

"Except that some of us have to pay for our ride, and others don't," put in Thorpe. The tone in which he spoke made his meaning so clear that his Grace sat up.

"Ah, you think we do not pay?" he queried, his countenance brightening with the animation of debate. "My dear sir, we pay more than anyone else. Our fares are graduated, just as our death-duties are. No doubt there are some idle and stupid, thick-skinned rich fellows, who escape the ticket-collector. But for each of them there are a thousand idle poor fellows who do the same. You, for example, are a man of large wealth. I, for my sins, carry upon my back the burden of a prodigious fortune. Could we not go out now, and walk down the road to your nearest village, and find in the pub. there a dozen day-labourers happier than we are? Why--it is Saturday night. Then I will not say a dozen, but as many as the tap will hold. It is not the beer alone that makes them happy. Do not think that.

It is the ability to rest untroubled, the sense that till Monday they have no more responsibility than a tree-toad.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 都市之逆战

    都市之逆战

    我,林钺,一个孤儿。一个纯屌丝级人物。没有梦想,没有目标,活一天算一天。我的人生哲理就是没有目标更容易到达目的地,不过至今,我不知道目的地在哪。我么有值得纪念的童年,直到有一天,我的命运变了,变得有些怪异,特么的身边一下子蹦出来一群奇葩。这群奇葩有一个共同的名字,兄弟。我没有想过扬名立万,我也没有奢望过成为天下至强者,挥一挥衣袖覆盖半个天下。我只有一个目标,做自己的王,没有人可以决定我要做什么,我就是王,我说了算。
  • 始丰稿

    始丰稿

    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。
  • 剽悍郡王妃

    剽悍郡王妃

    一个手无搏鸡之力的高极白领,一朝穿越成为了将军之女莫苒不懂武的她该怎么办呢。大姐继母连连陷害自已,幸好有疼爱自已的爹与哥哥。兵来将挡,水来土掩。就算不懂哉自已好歹也是个什么也知道些的女子,用自已聪明的头脑,击对敌人。但再聪明,那为啥总斗不过腹黑的群王呢?但莫苒绝不会任天由命,群王接招吧!
  • 三位冷公主的复仇计划

    三位冷公主的复仇计划

    她(们)冷酷无情,她们是杀人连眼睛都眨都不眨的人。她们被仇恨蒙蔽了双眼。这时,命中注定的他(们)出现了,他们会发生什么呢?在她们的心中爱情的悸动在悄悄绽放。
  • 无双丐王

    无双丐王

    无敌小乞丐,喜欢美女姐姐,专治各种任性。
  • 瞿秋白传

    瞿秋白传

    想为大家辟出一条光明的路,却因为多余的话一度被误为多余的人。五四风云人物书系《瞿秋白传》,36年悲剧人生说历史误会,从容就义是书生,74载烟云过尽见个人性情,细节还原真秋白。
  • 太古帝君

    太古帝君

    普通少年偶然得到上古枪灵,从此丹药珍宝源源不绝,更是打破规则逆天改命,开始了横扫九天十地,成就一代强者的太古之路!
  • 影响千万人一生的枕边书

    影响千万人一生的枕边书

    每个人都是岁月长河中的一个过客。我们的一生将如何度过?随着时代的进步,人们的生活节奏加快了,面对日益激烈的竞争,太多的人已不堪重压。如何面对生活的现状?短小的故事,带给你的是无穷的知识和无尽的智慧;它能使你在轻松地阅读中得到有益的启迪,更深刻地理解和把握人生;它能使你的意志更加坚强,使你的人格更加高尚;它既是你迷失时的灯塔,也是你春风得意时的镇静剂。
  • Boss来袭:前妻请留步

    Boss来袭:前妻请留步

    一夜之间,她失去所有,更被渣男害进监狱。三年监狱生涯,她从青涩变成妖娆。那些欠她的,这一次,她统统都要拿回来。赶上隐婚潮流,她嫁给洛城顶尖权少。爱钱?虚荣?有心计?这是洛城人对她的评论,可是,她不在乎。开得了公司,打得了小三,睡得了总裁,她是洛城人人喊打,却又无比羡慕的女人。“我们离婚吧,协议到此结束。”一纸离婚协议,她与他各不相干。只是……这位大总裁,说好的离婚,你这是要干嘛?“离婚协议没生效,我们还是夫妻!”从此,高大上的陆总裁和乔暖过上了没羞没躁的生活……情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 真无限之魂

    真无限之魂

    文字即为魔术。故事即为世界。编织魔术(文字)而创造故事(世界)。这并不只限于魔术师。人人都从属于自己的世界观而生存。故事赐予人们世界。有着与人数相同的世界存在着,没有故事(世界)的话人是无法生存的。我创造出我的世界。以我的文字编织着世界。以我的思念建筑着世界。只要我仍是我不管是谁都无法阻止我的故事。来吧,世界。接受我的故事(世界)吧。『PS:本书可以当成无限之魂的平行世界看~』