登陆注册
15685600000003

第3章

SCANTLEBURY.[Throwing up his hands.] The Chairman's a Stoic--Ialways said the Chairman was a Stoic.

WILDER.Much good that'll do us.

WANKLIN.[Suavely.] Seriously, Chairman, are you going to let the ship sink under you, for the sake of--a principle?

ANTHONY.She won't sink.

SCANTLEBURY.[With alarm.] Not while I'm on the Board I hope.

ANTHONY.[With a twinkle.] Better rat, Scantlebury.

SCANTLEBURY.What a man!

ANTHONY.I've always fought them; I've never been beaten yet.

WANKLIN.We're with you in theory, Chairman.But we're not all made of cast-iron.

ANTHONY.We've only to hold on.

WILDER.[Rising and going to the fire.] And go to the devil as fast as we can!

ANTHONY.Better go to the devil than give in!

WILDER.[Fretfully.] That may suit you, sir, but it does n't suit me, or any one else I should think.

[ANTHONY looks him in the face-a silence.]

EDGAR.I don't see how we can get over it that to go on like this means starvation to the men's wives and families.

[WILDER turns abruptly to the fire, and SCANTLEBURY puts out a hand to push the idea away.]

WANKLIN.I'm afraid again that sounds a little sentimental.

EDGAR.Men of business are excused from decency, you think?

WILDER.Nobody's more sorry for the men than I am, but if they [lashing himself] choose to be such a pig-headed lot, it's nothing to do with us; we've quite enough on our hands to think of ourselves and the shareholders.

EDGAR.[Irritably.] It won't kill the shareholders to miss a dividend or two; I don't see that that's reason enough for knuckling under.

SCANTLEBURY.[With grave discomfort.] You talk very lightly of your dividends, young man; I don't know where we are.

WILDER.There's only one sound way of looking at it.We can't go on ruining ourselves with this strike.

ANTHONY.No caving in!

SCANTLEBURY.[With a gesture of despair.] Look at him!

[ANTHONY'S leaning back in his chair.They do look at him.]

WILDER.[Returning to his seat.] Well, all I can say is, if that's the Chairman's view, I don't know what we've come down here for.

ANTHONY.To tell the men that we've got nothing for them----[Grimly.] They won't believe it till they hear it spoken in plain English.

WILDER.H'm! Shouldn't be a bit surprised if that brute Roberts had n't got us down here with the very same idea.I hate a man with a grievance.

EDGAR.[Resentfully.] We didn't pay him enough for his discovery.

I always said that at the time.

WILDER.We paid him five hundred and a bonus of two hundred three years later.If that's not enough! What does he want, for goodness'

sake?

TENCH.[Complainingly.] Company made a hundred thousand out of his brains, and paid him seven hundred--that's the way he goes on, sir.

WILDER.The man's a rank agitator! Look here, I hate the Unions.

But now we've got Harness here let's get him to settle the whole thing.

ANTHONY.No! [Again they look at him.]

UNDERWOOD.Roberts won't let the men assent to that.

SCANTLEBURY.Fanatic! Fanatic!

WILDER.[Looking at ANTHONY.] And not the only one! [FROST enters from the hall.]

FROST.[To ANTHONY.] Mr.Harness from the Union, waiting, sir.The men are here too, sir.

[ANTHONY nods.UNDERWOOD goes to the door, returning with HARNESS, a pale, clean-shaven man with hollow cheeks, quick eyes, and lantern jaw--FROST has retired.]

UNDERWOOD.[Pointing to TENCH'S chair.] Sit there next the Chairman, Harness, won't you?

[At HARNESS'S appearance, the Board have drawn together, as it were, and turned a little to him, like cattle at a dog.]

HARNESS.[With a sharp look round, and a bow.] Thanks! [He sits---his accent is slightly nasal.] Well, gentlemen, we're going to do business at last, I hope.

WILDER.Depends on what you call business, Harness.Why don't you make the men come in?

HARNESS.[Sardonically.] The men are far more in the right than you are.The question with us is whether we shan't begin to support them again.

[He ignores them all, except ANTHONY, to whom he turns in speaking.]

ANTHONY.Support them if you like; we'll put in free labour and have done with it.

HARNESS.That won't do, Mr.Anthony.You can't get free labour, and you know it.

ANTHONY.We shall see that.

HARNESS.I'm quite frank with you.We were forced to withhold our support from your men because some of their demands are in excess of current rates.I expect to make them withdraw those demands to-day:

if they do, take it straight from me, gentlemen, we shall back them again at once.Now, I want to see something fixed upon before I go back to-night.Can't we have done with this old-fashioned tug-of-war business? What good's it doing you? Why don't you recognise once for all that these people are men like yourselves, and want what's good for them just as you want what's good for you [Bitterly.] Your motor-cars, and champagne, and eight-course dinners.

ANTHONY.If the men will come in, we'll do something for them.

HARNESS.[Ironically.] Is that your opinion too, sir--and yours--and yours? [The Directors do not answer.] Well, all I can say is:

It's a kind of high and mighty aristocratic tone I thought we'd grown out of--seems I was mistaken.

ANTHONY.It's the tone the men use.Remains to be seen which can hold out longest--they without us, or we without them.

HARNESS.As business men, I wonder you're not ashamed of this waste of force, gentlemen.You know what it'll all end in.

ANTHONY.What?

HARNESS.Compromise--it always does.

SCANTLEBURY.Can't you persuade the men that their interests are the same as ours?

HARNESS.[Turning, ironically.] I could persuade them of that, sir, if they were.

WILDER.Come, Harness, you're a clever man, you don't believe all the Socialistic claptrap that's talked nowadays.There 's no real difference between their interests and ours.

HARNESS.There's just one very simple question I'd like to put to you.Will you pay your men one penny more than they force you to pay them?

[WILDER is silent.]

WANKLIN.[Chiming in.] I humbly thought that not to pay more than was necessary was the A B C of commerce.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 苍岚武逆

    苍岚武逆

    一片未知的大陆,妖兽横行,百鬼肆虐。人族顽强的屹立在众族巅峰。修玄魂,练体魄,伏鬼擒妖,一位少年从零开始,踏神殿,碎天地,书写人族传奇。
  • 不良宠婚:老婆V5

    不良宠婚:老婆V5

    裴君卿这辈子觉得自己娶一个安静、乖巧的小女人就可以了,然某女只符合了小女人三个字,慕云歌打算嫁一个跟父亲一样正直、严肃、负责、不苟言笑的军人,然而某爷只符合军人两个字。“裴君卿,慕朝阳欺负我,你管不管?“慕云歌挑着眉问道。某爷“把慕朝阳拖过来,看老子不打断他一条腿,敢欺负我媳妇,不过在收拾你哥之前,媳妇能不能把解剖刀放下,很危险的。”对于战斗力十足的媳妇,裴君卿哭着也要宠到底,不然呢!脖子上用来解剖死人的手术刀哭死开玩笑的啊!看大灰狼与萌狐狸的日常生活,到底是谁要翻身奴隶把歌唱。还有就是星仔的公共群建成了,敲门砖本书任意角色名字,群号:522924385
  • 青春纪末

    青春纪末

    本书描写了一群年轻充满朝气的90一代的亲情,友情,爱情。我们或许可以从中找到自己的影子……写作本书是为了给自己的青春留个纪念,那些我们不断提及的青春,那些我们共同经历的青春,那些属于你也属于我的梦幻般的青春,也许有一天当我们共同怀念起来的时候可以从故事中回到那些阳光明媚的日子,回到那段被我们一再提及,一再想念的时光。写给那些热爱青春的人,在未来的日子里我们总会长大……欢迎大家支持《青春纪末》,下面是链接http://novel.hongxiu.com/a/118878/如果喜欢,一定要记住这个地址哦O(∩_∩)O~
  • 我怀念的过去

    我怀念的过去

    我怀念的是什么样的生活,印象里它已经模糊了许多,如果再不做点什么,我真的害怕我会忘了最初美好的一切,那紫丁香盛开的季节,还有那年匆匆游走的时光。“汝非鱼,不明鱼之所思,汝非吾,不解吾之所想。”没有两个相同的人,更没有两条无差的生活轨迹,你说我们很像,可如今物是人非事事休,何来相似?我们在各自的人生中走了太久,久到忘了曾经彼此相依,所谓不离不弃。船行了太久,艄公也倦了,默默的走回舱内,拿出烟袋,顺手在舱沿的木头上磕了磕,便俯下身去点燃一根火柴,烟锅上很快腾起烟圈,火光忽明忽灭,似近似远,慢慢的模糊了周围的一切,只在这一点火光中,我慢慢的回到了那段我最怀念的时光。
  • 玄天大帝

    玄天大帝

    从前有一个孤儿叫林炎开始了他的逆天生活他有极端的天赋
  • 剑傲九魔

    剑傲九魔

    武学一途,仙魄为尊,千古一人,吾为神尊,天地山河,唯我独尊,缘起缘灭,任我掌握。一人一剑,破苍穹。一啸一吼,镇乾坤。掌山河,入天地。逍遥自在
  • 盛世绝宠:谋倾天下

    盛世绝宠:谋倾天下

    为将心上人送上王位,她不惜出卖美色。妖女,祸水,骂名接踵而至,她全不在乎。当她踏遍荆棘,倾尽一切,将王位捧到他面前时,他却拥着另一个女人坐享其成,将她弃之如敝履。只见新人笑,不见旧人哭。她一夜心思成灰。她爱他,他爱的是什么?帝业?那个女人?她偏要颠覆了他的江山,毁了他的霸业!
  • 七曜虚空

    七曜虚空

    少年白风是白家千年不遇的奇才。在一次探险中被大千界煞神寄宿,又机缘巧合解开麒麟封印。一人体内共存三种元神,少年白风不得不寻找共生之法,为此,踏上了一条通向至尊强者的道路……
  • 群鸦盛宴

    群鸦盛宴

    财富,名声,权力,世人所追求的一切虚妄的成就,让整个亚特兰蒂斯大陆的人们,趋之若鹜的沉沦其中,在一场场阴谋与背叛中揭露的人性阴暗。我欲为王!像所有人一样,趋之如骛的投身其中,让这个世界迎来了“暗黑时代”。
  • 帝之宠爱

    帝之宠爱

    她是千金小姐,,为了拯救父亲的公司和他住在一起。他是帝国的帝王,冷酷、无情却在她面前像个孩子。“老婆,喂我吃饭。”某男无赖的抓住女子的手。“你自己有手为什么不自己吃啊?”女子扶额“因为老婆喂得好吃啊。”某男低头用他那双好看的眼睛盯着女子。“夜祁皓,你几岁了,还要我喂?”夜大总裁伸出两个手指头“两岁。”