登陆注册
5291200000028

第28章 CHAPTER XX

THE RED FLAG AND THE WATERMELONS

I have said that the labor problem has three parts. I call them (1) Wages, (2) Working Conditions and (3) Living Conditions. By living conditions I mean the home and its security. My father had reached the stage where this was the problem that worried him. He was growing old and must soon cease working. But his home was not yet secure and he was haunted with the fear that his old age might be shelterless. We told him not to worry; the Davis boys were many and we would repay him for the fatherly care he had given us. But he was a proud man (as all muscular men are), and he could find no comfort in the thought of being supported by his sons. I am glad he never had to be. Independence has made his old age happy and he has proved that a worker, if he keeps his health, can provide for his old age and bring up a big family too.

We older boys left home and hunted work elsewhere. I was young and not bothered about working conditions or living conditions. Iwas so vigorous that I could work under any conditions, and old age was so far away that I was not worried about a home for my declining years. Wages was my sole problem. I wanted steady wages, and of course I wanted the highest I could get. To find the place where wages were to be had I was always on the go. When a mill closed I did not wait for it to reopen, but took the first train for some other mill town. The first train usually was a freight. If not, I waited for a freight, for I could sleep better in a freight car than in a Pullman--it cost less. I could save money and send it to mother, then she would not have to sell her feather beds.

All of this sounds nobler than it was. In those days workers never traveled on passenger trains unless they could get a pass.

Judges and statesmen pursued the same policy. To pay for a ticket was money thrown away; so thought the upper classes and the lower classes. About the only people that paid car fare were the Knights of Pythias on their way to their annual convention.

Railroad workers could get all the passes they wanted, and any toiler whose sister had married a brakeman or whose second cousin was a conductor "bummed" the railroad for a pass and got it. None of my relatives was a railroad man, and so to obtain the free transportation which was every American's inalienable right, Ihad to let the passenger trains go by and take the freights.

Once I got ditched at a junction, and while waiting for the next freight I wandered down the track to where I had seen a small house and a big watermelon patch. The man who lived there was a chap named Frank Bannerman. I always remember him because he was a communist, the first one I ever saw, and he filled my pockets with about ten pounds of radical pamphlets which Ipromised to read. He made a bargain with me that if I would read and digest the Red literature he would give me all the watermelons I could eat.

"I'm a comrade already," I said, meaning it as a merry jest, that I would be anything for a watermelon. But he took it seriously and his eyes lit up like any fanatic's.

"I knew it," he said. "With a face like yours--look at the brow, look at the intellect, the intellect." I was flattered.

"Come here, wife," he called through the door. "Come here and look at the intellect."The wife, who was a barefooted, freckle-faced woman, came out on the porch and, smiling sweetly, sized up my intellect. I made up my mind that here were the two smartest people in America. For they saw I was bulging with intellect. Nobody else had ever discovered it, not even I myself. I thought I was a muscle-bound iron puddler, but they pronounced me an intellectual giant. It never occurred to me that they might have guessed wrong, while the wise old world had guessed right. If the world was in step, they were out of step, but I figured that the world was out of step and they had the right stride. I thought their judgment must be better than the judgment of the whole world because their judgment pleased me. I later learned that their judgment was just like the judgment of all Reds. That's what makes 'em Red.

"Are there many of us where you come from?" the man asked.

"Many what?" I asked.

"Communists, communists," he said excitedly.

I wanted to please him, because we were now cracking the melons and scooping out their luscious hearts. So I told him how many comrades there were in each of the rolling mills where I had worked. I had to invent the statistics out of my own head, but that head was full of intellect, so I jokingly gave him a fine array of figures. The fact was that there may have been an addle-pated Red among the mill hands of that time, but if there was I had never met him.

The figures that I furnished Comrade Bannerman surprised him. Icounted the seeds in each slice of watermelon and gave that as the number of comrades in each mill. The number was too high.

Comrade Bannerman knew how many Reds there were in the country, and it appeared that the few mills I had worked in contained practically the whole communist party. He got rather excited and said the numbers were growing faster than he had imagined. He had figured that it would take forty years to bring about the Red commonwealth, but with the new light I had thrown on the subject he concluded that the times were ripening faster than he had dared to hope, and that there was no doubt the revolution would be upon us within three years.

The comrade told me he was not popular in the village for two reasons. The capitalistic storekeepers called him a dead beat and the church people had rotten-egged him for a speech he had made denouncing religion. I saw by his hands that he didn't work much, and from the hands of his wife I learned who raised the watermelons he was feeding to me. I remember wondering why he didn't pay his grocery bill with the money he spent on pamphlets to stuff in the pockets of passers-by.

同类推荐
  • 西山群仙会真记

    西山群仙会真记

    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。
  • 仁王般若实相论

    仁王般若实相论

    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。
  • 金刚经新异录

    金刚经新异录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 阴符经玄解正义

    阴符经玄解正义

    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。
  • 佛说观普贤菩萨行法经

    佛说观普贤菩萨行法经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 冰之空间神

    冰之空间神

    破碎的世界,她集众人之力,开启时空隧道。在那些记忆被封印的情况下,在朋友的暗中帮助下,她能否,与众人一同,扭转这个世界毁灭的结局?重回过去,一切依旧,可是他与所有人,却成为了陌人。错误的时间,错误的地点,被迫提前的相遇,却是充满“阴谋”。“我记得你,只是,你忘了我。”“你究竟是谁?”而大陆之中,草木逐渐枯萎,败柳残花。占星长老预言之:“多年之后,吾等世界必将毁灭!冰之空间师,将伴随神风拯救世界。”毁灭,是天注定?是神注定?是“人”注定?人外有人,天外有天,界外有界。在这一场扭转结局的“戏”的背后,又隐藏着怎样的惊人秘密?
  • 种田宠妻:娘子,请深爱

    种田宠妻:娘子,请深爱

    重生穿越到了唐朝,家里一穷二白,破草屋,烂门窗,缸无米,地无粮,守着群山碧湖,愣是穷的家徒四壁,偏偏身边还有一个嗷嗷待哺的小包子等着她养,林雨蝶只得大喊女人当自强,这辈子一定要像穿越人士学习种田发家致富奔小康。
  • 谜一样的AT

    谜一样的AT

    在我们之间,发生了太多的故事,我从2017年12月31日,开始记录着。没有一刻停止过,虽然有时候放下了,但还是又捡起了。因为我们,不对,应该是我。这份感情来的太不容易了,我会倍加珍惜至于你……我不清楚你对我有没有一点点好感?
  • The Mob

    The Mob

    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。
  • 四分戒本疏食

    四分戒本疏食

    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。
  • 冷风拂面我拂你

    冷风拂面我拂你

    黎明的起始就是你的出现,落日的尽头就是你不再爱我。世间最毒的仇恨,是有缘却无份,可惜他们从不心疼自己的笨。高三弃他和自己的好兄弟和亲弟弟私奔米兰,多年后又卑微归来,成了他偌大的商业帝国里唯一的女艺人。他给她最好的资源,最好的一切,却始终拉不下脸来问她一句为什么。多年后的重逢,当她对他重燃爱火时,她却发现他已经有了一个儿子,不是她生的。她好不容易在他的威逼利诱下与他隐婚,孩子的母亲却意外归来,那是一个高不可攀的女人。她退了,她不敢在正视他们之间脆弱的感情。当全世界都与她站在对立面时,她的前男友们都与她站在了一起,可他心里眼里却都只有那个女人。她失去了自己的孩子,在毫不知情的情况下被一次又一次的当枪使着。父亲不是她的父亲,母亲一直在四处逃亡且杀了她最敬爱的哥哥的母亲。当她改姓归来时,他却跪在她面前祈求原谅,希望在他生命的最后三年里得到她的陪伴,她又心软了。他双腿瘫痪,公司面临破产,绝色美人的出现,她再次犹豫了。徘徊犹豫,犹豫徘徊,他们到底该不该在一起?手上沾满了血腥的他还配拥有爱情吗?他是她高不可攀的神,她是他倾尽所有的魔。泠泠处女座《冷风拂面,我拂你》
  • 警句

    警句

    刘浪,生于70年代,中国作家协会会员,黑龙江省作家协会签约作家,鲁迅文学院第十五期高研班学员。若干诗歌、中短篇小说发表于《飞天》《文学界》《山花》《作品》等数十家期刊,多篇小说被《小说选刊》等报刊转载。
  • 妖媚金陵

    妖媚金陵

    白玉为堂金作马,珍珠如土金如铁。东海缺少白玉床,龙王来请金陵王。传说金陵王是史上最富有的帝王,拥天下数之不尽的金银,可是生性冷傲,手段残忍,有九九八十一妃嫔,却无子嗣。传说后背处有花形胎记的女子,是金陵王的皇后,可以孕育出金陵王唯一的子嗣。一个偶然的机会,潇湘女作家风云小妖(云朵儿)恰逢九星连珠,因为一个古老的神秘银镯掉进了时光隧道,来到了历史上没有记载的金陵王朝。“什么?让我做你的八十二妃?”做人家的二奶都没有勇气,何况是八十二奶!云朵儿彻底疯狂,眼前这个褐发蓝眼的帅哥,怕是精神有些问题。十箱的金银堆积在面前,嗜钱如命的云朵儿忘记了骂人,八十二奶就八十二奶,只要有钱,嫁谁不是嫁!更何况对方是位人世间少见的帅哥。侍寝?别傻了,这种事情怎么可以发生在自己的身上,云朵儿是八十二奶,就算那个威武健壮的金陵王不休息,那也要三个月才轮一次!三个月?云朵儿早已经打包将满贯的金银运回现代!****************风云小妖的最新作品《情挑首席总裁》正在更新中推荐小妖的新文《滥情总裁》正在更新中哦,非常的好看,欢迎大家捧场另外推荐小妖的其他两部作品《天外飞仙》已经完结《美女保镖》刚刚完结推荐小妖的完结新文《调教太子妃》非常的精彩哦!《PK杨玉环》正在更新中哈,同样的精彩另外推荐好友醉恋的《冥王的小妖后》非常好看的说!!!!这是潇湘的七位作者合力所著恶魔之吻系列女作家穿越系列文紫云曦<火爆王爷冰美人>柳少白<绝恋海陵王>如雪《俏皮王妃酷王爷》冥月流水《情断兰陵》山上草的《乱红》非常经典的说
  • 弑魔

    弑魔

    问世间何为魔。为所欲为者为魔。为仇,杀!杀千人,杀万人,杀到到尸山骨海,血雨腥风为情,杀!神挡杀神,佛挡灭佛,魔挡屠魔,为心爱之人可以杀遍天下人为义,杀!欲杀吾。
  • 明星爹地请认账

    明星爹地请认账

    她是爹娘不疼,丈夫不爱的童养媳。丈夫为了离婚,设计将她卖予他人。一夜迷情,本应各自天涯,却不想数年后,当他与小包子再相遇,一切才刚刚开始。他是红遍亚州的超级明星,却偏偏对她情有独钟,原以为那夜之后不会再见,可是当缩小版的他在他面前出现,他便再不能淡定了。原来转身不是天涯,结局也只是开始。