登陆注册
19902800000125

第125章 CHAPTER XVII.(5)

The tenants are answerable for improper conduct. The doors are to be closed at ten o'clock. Any boarders who do not attend divine worship are to be reported to the managers. The yards and walks are to be kept clean, and snow removed at once; and the inmates must be vaccinated, etc. etc. etc. It is expressly stated by the Hamilton Company--and I believe by all the companies--that no one shall be employed who is habitually absent from public worship on Sunday, or who is known to be guilty of immorality, it is stated that the average wages of the women are two dollars, or eight shillings, a week, besides their board. I found when I was there that from three dollars to three and a half a week were paid to the women, of which they paid one dollar and twenty-five cents for their board. As this would not fully cover the expense of their keep, twenty-five cents a week for each was also paid to the boarding-house keepers by the mill agents. This substantially came to the same thing, as it left the two dollars a week, or eight shillings, with the girls over and above their cost of living. The board included washing, lights, food, bed, and attendance--leaving a surplus of eight shillings a week for clothes and saving. Now let me ask any one acquainted with Manchester and its operatives, whether that is not Utopia realized. Factory girls, for whom every comfort of life is secured, with 21l. a year over for saving and dress! One sees the failing, however, at a moment. It is Utopia.

Any Lady Bountiful can tutor three or four peasants and make them luxuriously comfortable. But no Lady Bountiful can give luxurious comfort to half a dozen parishes. Lowell is now nearly forty years old, and contains but 40,000 inhabitants. From the very nature of its corporations it cannot spread itself. Chicago, which has grown out of nothing in a much shorter period, and which has no factories, has now 120,000 inhabitants. Lowell is a very wonderful place and shows what philanthropy can do; but I fear it also shows what philanthropy cannot do.

There are, however, other establishments, conducted on the same principle as those at Lowell, which have had the same amount, or rather the same sort of success. Lawrence is now a town of about 15,000 inhabitants, and Manchester of about 24,000, if I remember rightly; and at those places the mills are also owned by corporations and conducted as are those at Lowell. But it seems to me that as New England takes her place in the world as a great mannfacturing country--which place she undoubtedly will take sooner or later--she must abandon the hot-house method of providing for her operatives with which she has commenced her work. In the first place, Lowell is not open as a manufacturing town to the capitalists even of New England at large. Stock may, I presume, be bought in the corporations, but no interloper can establish a mill there. It is a close manufacturing community, bolstered up on all sides, and has none of that capacity for providing employment for a thickly growing population which belongs to such places as Manchester and Leeds. That it should under its present system have been made in any degree profitable reflects great credit on the managers; but the profit does reach an amount which in America can be considered as remunerative. The total capital invested by the twelve corporations is thirteen million and a half of dollars, or about two million seven hundred thousand pounds. In only one of the corporations, that of the Merrimack Company, does the profit amount to twelve per cent. In one, that of the Booth Company, it falls below seven per cent. The average profit of the various establishments is something below nine per cent. I am of course speaking of Lowell as it was previous to the war. American capitalists are not, as a rule, contented with so low a rate of interest as this.

The States in these matters have had a great advantage over England. They have been able to begin at the beginning.

Manufactories have grown up among us as our cities grew--from the necessities and chances of the times. When labor was wanted it was obtained in the ordinary way; and so when houses were built they were built in the ordinary way. We had not the experience, and the results either for good or bad, of other nations to guide us. The Americans, in seeing and resolving to adopt our commercial successes, have resolved also, if possible, to avoid the evils which have attended those successes. It would be very desirable that all our factory girls should read and write, wear clean clothes, have decent beds, and eat hot meat every day. But that is now impossible. Gradually, with very up-hill work, but still Itrust with sure work, much will be done to improve their position and render their life respectable; but in England we can have no Lowells. In our thickly populated island any commercial Utopia is out of the question. Nor can, as I think, Lowell be taken as a type of the future manufacturing towns of New England. When New England employs millions in her factories instead of thousands--the hands employed at Lowell, when the mills are at full work, are about 11,000--she must cease to provide for them their beds and meals, their church-going proprieties and orderly modes of life.

同类推荐
  • The Purcell Papers

    The Purcell Papers

    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。
  • 天枢院都司须知令

    天枢院都司须知令

    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。
  • 白云守端禅师语录

    白云守端禅师语录

    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。
  • 阅世编

    阅世编

    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。
  • 长阿含经

    长阿含经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 唐语林

    唐语林

    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。
  • 爱,转了一圈

    爱,转了一圈

    当他出现顾辰的一切都乱了,如果说每个人一生中都有一个太阳,那在他回眸一笑的瞬间顾辰就知道这个男人是自己一生的太阳,温暖自己的整个世界。你就是一束阳光驱散了所有阴霾,带给我万丈光芒。可以假装不爱你,可以假装不认识你,可以假装看不见你,但是擦肩而过的那一瞬心还是好痛,亦如三年前放手的那一刻。-------------顾辰遇见你,爱上你,我输的那么彻底。不是除了你我没人要,只是除了你我谁都不想要。有些爱经过多久都不会淡化,爱上你的那一刻我就没打算放手,我欧阳干甘愿为你沦陷一生。--------------欧阳干要么一生,要么陌生当愛回到原点
  • 史上99个生活的经验大全集

    史上99个生活的经验大全集

    优秀的历史故事能为我们提供一种特有的训练方式,我们从一些看似枯燥艰涩的东西开始,逐渐去领会一种学术的境界,去掌握一种求真的技能,去积累一种贯通古今的智慧、去培养一种对人类命运的关怀。本书旨在让读者不仅能徜徉在丰富多彩、妙趣横生的历史故事中,而且还能有深刻的领悟和启迪,从而在现实生活中,做出更富有智慧的决断
  • 雪球专刊第019期:旅行的意义

    雪球专刊第019期:旅行的意义

    日本,是离我们最近的发达国家。从中国沿海地区坐飞机去日本的时间跟国内航班不会相差太多。但大多数中国人对日本的了解远远不如远在大洋彼岸的美国。随着中国国力的增强,导致中日之间在贸易、能源、领土问题上产生各种摩擦。中国国内也随之弥漫着仇日情绪。仇恨对中国自身的实力增强没有任何帮助,反而在数次抗日游行活动中,让世人看到了对私有财产保护的缺陷。如果愤怒就可以打砸属于别人的日本产品,那么同样暴力活动也可以针对美国产品、英国产品、韩国产品以至中国产品。
  • 普庵印肃禅师语录

    普庵印肃禅师语录

    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。
  • 终极案件(福尔摩斯探案全集)

    终极案件(福尔摩斯探案全集)

    在世界文学宝库中,柯南道尔的《福尔摩斯探案》系列,是侦探小说的顶级经典名著,是侦探小说中一座不可逾越的文学丰碑。神秘、刺激、曲折、惊恐的故事情节,神奇、智慧、缜密、正义的“神探”形象,使许多读者从喜欢福尔摩斯开始到喜欢侦探小说,使许多作者从喜欢福尔摩斯到走上了侦探小说的创作之路。以至于文学中的名侦探福尔摩斯,与动漫中的米老鼠和宗教故事中的圣诞老人一起,成了世界知名的“三大名人”。这就是文学经典的魅力,这就是文学经典的力量。
  • 度大庾岭

    度大庾岭

    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。
  • 校园超级太子

    校园超级太子

    匪气少年回归校园展开了一段轰轰烈烈,热血沸腾的校园生活。
  • 极品藏仙邪少

    极品藏仙邪少

    十岁的一次在藏地的奇遇让华升成为了地藏王的亲传弟子,虽然这个师傅不怎么露面不过却给了他一本史上最强修真诀,从此开启了花样把妹虐渣渣的修真路……不过有一点很让他头痛华升:“为啥每一次突破都要死一次啊!”师傅:“谁让你练的是世上最难修真诀呢,先死而后生嘛……”华升:“……”
  • 钱眼里的历史风云

    钱眼里的历史风云

    本书以事实为据,以事件为轴,讲述二十世纪前半叶的中国历史色彩斑驳,频繁交换的城头王旗下,涌动着无数次不动声色的挣钱与花钱行动。