登陆注册
15481200000079

第79章 CHAPTER XXVII(1)

On the 13th of June Sir Gerald Malloring, returning home to dinner from the House of Commons, found on his hall table, enclosed in a letter from his agent, the following paper:

"We, the undersigned laborers on Sir Gerald Malloring's estate, beg respectfully to inform him that we consider it unjust that any laborer should be evicted from his cottage for any reason connected with private life, or social or political convictions. And we respectfully demand that, before a laborer receives notice to quit for any such reason, the case shall be submitted to all his fellow laborers on the estate; and that in the future he shall only receive such notice if a majority of his fellow laborers record their votes in favor of the notice being given. In the event of this demand being refused, we regretfully decline to take any hand in getting in the hay on Sir Gerald Malloring's estate."

Then followed ninety-three signatures, or signs of the cross with names printed after them.

The agent's letter which enclosed this document mentioned that the hay was already ripe for cutting; that everything had been done to induce the men to withdraw the demand, without success, and that the farmers were very much upset. The thing had been sprung on them, the agent having no notion that anything of the sort was on foot. It had been very secretly, very cleverly, managed; and, in the agent's opinion, was due to Mr. Freeland's family. He awaited Sir Gerald's instructions. Working double tides, with luck and good weather, the farmers and their families might perhaps save half of the hay.

Malloring read this letter twice, and the enclosure three times, and crammed them deep down into his pocket.

It was pre-eminently one of those moments which bring out the qualities of Norman blood. And the first thing he did was to look at the barometer. It was going slowly down. After a month of first-class weather it would not do that without some sinister intention. An old glass, he believed in it implicitly. He tapped, and it sank further. He stood there frowning. Should he consult his wife? General friendliness said: Yes! A Norman instinct of chivalry, and perhaps the deeper Norman instinct, that, when it came to the point, women were too violent, said, No! He went up-stairs three at a time, and came down two. And all through dinner he sat thinking it over, and talking as if nothing had happened; so that he hardly spoke. Three-quarters of the hay at stake, if it rained soon! A big loss to the farmers, a further reduction in rents already far too low. Should he grin and bear it, and by doing nothing show these fellows that he could afford to despise their cowardly device? For it WAS cowardly to let his grass get ripe and play it this low trick! But if he left things unfought this time, they would try it on again with the corn--not that there was much of that on the estate of a man who only believed in corn as a policy.

Should he make the farmers sack the lot and get in other labor?

But where? Agricultural laborers were made, not born. And it took a deuce of a lot of making, at that! Should he suspend wages till they withdrew their demand? That might do--but he would still lose the hay. The hay! After all, anybody, pretty well, could make hay; it was the least skilled of all farm work, so long as the farmers were there to drive the machines and direct. Why not act vigorously? And his jaws set so suddenly on a piece of salmon that he bit his tongue. The action served to harden a growing purpose.

So do small events influence great! Suspend those fellows' wages, get down strike-breakers, save the hay! And if there were a row--well, let there be a row! The constabulary would have to act. It was characteristic of his really Norman spirit that the notion of agreeing to the demand, or even considering whether it were just, never once came into his mind. He was one of those, comprising nowadays nearly all his class, together with their press, who habitually referred to his country as a democratic power, a champion of democracy--but did not at present suspect the meaning of the word; nor, to say truth, was it likely they ever would.

Nothing, however, made him more miserable than indecision. And so, now that he was on the point of deciding, and the decision promised vigorous consequences, he felt almost elated. Closing his jaws once more too firmly, this time on lamb, he bit his tongue again.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 无限奔跑

    无限奔跑

    无限,奔跑。这就是一本无限+奔跑的小说。
  • 佛说一切如来金刚寿命陀罗尼经

    佛说一切如来金刚寿命陀罗尼经

    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。
  • 妃要逆天:百变王妃驭夫记

    妃要逆天:百变王妃驭夫记

    她是跨国集团的标准白富美,可却被相恋十年青梅竹马的恋人谋财害命。重活一世,她立志要纵情享乐潇洒肆意绝不被感情牵绊。她醉生梦死纵横黑白两道,她挥金如土杀人于弹指之间。然而不管怎样目空一切,却逃脱不了她命中的克星。男人嚣张一笑,颠倒众生,“女人,这个世上,除了我没人能降得住你!”女人嚣张一笑,倾世绝艳。“男人,我怕你降得住,却养不起!”
  • 游戏人生之我的主播系统

    游戏人生之我的主播系统

    本书已完结!读者入学,考试条件:1,必须懂LOL,也就是英雄联盟!2,必须知“直播”“主播”“直播平台”三者为何物!3,适当YY有利于身心,本书:游戏,都市,人生三者结合!4,本书最好在创世中文网和起点中文网观看,QQ阅读,起点APP亦可!
  • 国民首席宠妻上瘾

    国民首席宠妻上瘾

    无限好书尽在阅文。
  • 一生的规划:决定自己一生命运的81项方案

    一生的规划:决定自己一生命运的81项方案

    本书包括天生我才必有用,人生的价值是由自己决定的,行动是通向成功的惟一道路,让工作成为你可以终生信赖的朋友,机遇垂青于那些懂得如何追求的人等内容。
  • 武林少尊

    武林少尊

    从小就被父母遗弃的李少少被少林寺的水木方丈收养,在少林寺他学得一身好武艺。为了寻找自己的亲生父母,他不得不在武林中闯下一片天地,历经数难的他能否成功?
  • 谢谢你,我的天使

    谢谢你,我的天使

    本作品,不含任何比较污的情节:她是一个豪门贵族,可她并不希望这样,因此她变的任性、高冷。她13岁的时候和父母出了国。五年之后,她回来了,认识了他们。她和他们成为了好朋友,之后的事却让谁也想不到。
  • 伊洛传芳

    伊洛传芳

    青梅竹马,一生挚爱,杀父仇人,嗜血君王……都是她生命里的同一个人她对他说过最残忍的三句话“我一直在等一个人,但那个人,永远不会是你。”“现在你爱我,就跟过去我爱你一样。”“你杀了你的父亲,我杀了你的孩子,我们扯平了。”为了爱你我可以出卖一切,为了恨你我同样可以背叛一切……别忘了,牡丹,乃亡国之花……
  • 欢喜情侣:我们都会好好爱

    欢喜情侣:我们都会好好爱

    她等了四年,等来他的一句:我们分手吧!他一个电话,终是负了她!爸爸一句:你26岁前不结婚,就只能到32岁才能遇到合适的。她吃定了这颗:定心丸。遇见了,不管距离多远,你捏造不出缘分,我编造不出情感,一切发生的自然而然……“老婆……”大清早,她第一次被这样叫,心里暖暖的,那种暖,让她说不出口的沦陷。“现在,你是我的,你的一切都是我的。”他说的霸道,笑的嘻皮笑脸,眼神里总流露着逗她的味道!“你变了,真的跟结婚前不一样了,呜呜……”