登陆注册
15482300000040

第40章 CHAPTER IX. THE MAN POSSESSED(2)

So many men in this world are going nowhere in particular that when one comes along--even though he be amusing and insignificant--who is really (and passionately) going somewhere, what a stir he communicates to a dull world! We catch sparks of electricity from the very friction of his passage.

It was so with this odd stranger. Though at one moment I could not help smiling at him, at the next I was following him.

"It may be," said I to myself, "that this is really the sign man!"

I felt like Captain Kidd under full sail to capture a treasure ship; and as I approached I was much agitated as to the best method of grappling and boarding. I finally decided, being a lover of bold methods, to let go my largest gun first--for moral effect.

"So," said I, as I ran alongside,--"you are the man who puts up the signs."

He stopped and looked at me.

"What signs?"

"Why the sign 'Rest' along this road."

He paused for some seconds with a perplexed expression on his face.

"Then you are not the sign man?" I said.

"No," he replied, "I ain't any sign man."

I was not a little disappointed, but having made my attack, I determined to see if there was any treasure aboard--which, I suppose, should be the procedure of any well-regulated pirate.

"I'm going this way myself," I said, "and if you have no objections--"

He stood looking at me curiously, indeed suspiciously, through his round spectacles.

"Have you got the passport?" he asked finally.

"The passport!" I exclaimed, mystified in my turn.

"Yes," said he, "the passport. Let me see your hand."

When I held out my hand he looked at it closely for a moment, and then took it with a quick warm pressure in one of his, and gave it a little shake, in a way not quite American.

"You are one of us," said he, "you work."

I thought at first that it was a bit of pleasantry, and I was about to return it in kind when I saw plainly in his face a look of solemn intent.

"So," he said, "we shall travel like comrades."

He thrust his scarred hand through my arm, and we walked up the road side by side, his bulging pockets beating first against his legs and then against mine, quite impartially.

"I think," said the stranger, "that we shall be arrested at Kilburn."

"We shall!" I exclaimed with something, I admit, of a shock.

"Yes," he said, "but it is all in the day's work."

"How is that?"

He stopped in the road and faced me. Throwing back his overcoat he pointed to a small red button on his coat lapel.

"They don't want me in Kilburn," said he, "the mill men are strikin' there, and the bosses have got armed men on every corner. Oh, the capitalists are watchin' for me, all right."

I cannot convey the strange excitement I felt. It seemed as though these words suddenly opened a whole new world around me--a world I had heard about for years, but never entered. And the tone in which he had used the word "capitalist!" I had almost to glance around to make sure that there were no ravening capitalists hiding behind the trees.

"So you are a Socialist," I said.

"Yes," he answered. "I'm one of those dangerous persons."

First and last I have read much of Socialism, and thought about it, too, from the quiet angle of my farm among the hills, but this was the first time I had ever had a live Socialist on my arm. I could not have been more surprised if the stranger had said, "Yes, I am Theodore Roosevelt."

One of the discoveries we keep making all our life long (provided we remain humble) is the humorous discovery of the ordinariness of the extraordinary. Here was this disrupter of society, this man of the red flag--here he was with his mild spectacled eyes and his furry ears wagging as he walked. It was unbelievable!--and the sun shining on him quite as impartially as it shone on me.

Coming at last to a pleasant bit of woodland, where a stream ran under the roadway, I said:

"Stranger, let's sit down and have a bite of luncheon."

He began to expostulate, said he was expected in Kilburn.

"Oh, I've plenty for two," I said, "and I can say, at least, that I am a firm believer in cooperation.

Without more urging he followed me into the woods, where we sat down comfortably under a tree.

Now, when I take a fine thick sandwich out of my bag, I always feel like making it a polite bow, and before I bite into a big brown doughnut, I am tempted to say, "By your leave, madam," and as for MINCE PIE----Beau Brummel himself could not outdo me in respectful consideration. But Bill Hahn neither saw, nor smelled, nor, I think, tasted Mrs. Ransome's cookery. As soon as we sat down he began talking. From time to time he would reach out for another sandwich or doughnut or pickle (without knowing in the least which he was getting), and when that was gone some reflex impulse caused him to reach out for some more. When the last crumb of our lunch had disappeared Bill Hahn still reached out.

His hand groped absently about, and coming in contact with no more doughnuts or pickles he withdrew it--and did not know, I think, that the meal was finished. (Confidentially, I have speculated on what might have happened if the supply had been unlimited!)

But that was Bill Hahn. Once started on his talk, he never thought of food or clothing or shelter; but his eyes glowed, his face lighted up with a strange effulgence, and he quite lost himself upon the tide of his own oratory. I saw him afterward by a flare-light at the centre of a great crowd of men and women--but that is getting ahead of my story.

His talk bristled with such words as "capitalism," "proletariat,"

"class-consciousness"--and he spoke with fluency of "economic determinism" and "syndicalism." It was quite wonderful! And from time to time, he would bring in a smashing quotation from Aristotle, Napoleon, Karl Marx, or Eugene V. Debs, giving them all equal value, and he cited statistics!--oh, marvellous statistics, that never were on sea or land.

Once he was so swept away by his own eloquence that he sprang to his feet and, raising one hand high above his head (quite unconscious that he was holding up a dill pickle), he worked through one of his most thrilling periods.

同类推荐
  • Beyond

    Beyond

    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。
  • 大洞经吉祥神咒法

    大洞经吉祥神咒法

    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。
  • 寤言

    寤言

    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。
  • 佛说弥勒下生经

    佛说弥勒下生经

    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。
  • 阿毗昙心论

    阿毗昙心论

    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。
热门推荐
  • 历史的光点

    历史的光点

    本书中的大部分文章,或被中央有关部门收藏,或被有关纪念馆收藏,或在有关报纸、刊物、专辑中刊登发表过。文集中的主要文章,记述了重要历史过程、事件和人物 。
  • 堕落天使误撞爱

    堕落天使误撞爱

    她们,是公主,却因为爸爸的出轨而流离失所,六年后,她们成为了真正人人仰慕的完美公主,她们变得冷血,成为了恶魔,她们要回国复仇。他们,则是从小就生活在家族呵护下的少年,他们拥有这天使般的容颜,不同的性格,却都喜欢上了公主。可皇埔羽诺(诺)因为父亲烦背叛变得花心,将男生玩于股掌中,而冷沐怡(怡)则是冰如冰山,任何男生都很难走进怡的心里,他们在一起又会有怎样的结局呢?
  • 穿梭空间维度

    穿梭空间维度

    霍金提出人不可能穿梭到过去,我们所处的平行空间时间无法倒流,倘若平行宇宙成立,我们能穿梭到其他平行空间吗?也许有人要问,倘若真可以穿梭,为何我们从没遇见过未来人。四维生物在一定意义上可以穿梭于平行宇宙那么为何我们看不到呢?(诸如鬼魂与高灵)
  • 黑白判官

    黑白判官

    为了保持故事的神秘性,不能写简介。整部小说的内容可以用书名概括。
  • 笑傲苍穹天

    笑傲苍穹天

    这片拥有着神迹的大陆名叫落迦,天咒师是这片大陆所有人类的梦想。十六岁的少年幽荧零炎在一次意外之后,踏上了天咒师这无尽的旅途。
  • 双面教父3传奇总裁

    双面教父3传奇总裁

    男主角:严少邦,严帮接班人,人称北少主,个性冷静、不近人情。女主角:郑花絮,郑氏千金,亦是八卦节目的主持人,个性迷糊、胆小。大纲:郑花絮在节目中对严少邦呛声要采访到他,之后却意外与他相撞,不过一见到他那种不怒而威的气势,她怕都怕死了。岂知,还不小心被他撞上第二次,这下她惨了啦……
  • 继续,我们的明天

    继续,我们的明天

    这大概是一个女神经病碰到了一只男鬼的故事。
  • 复仇之娱乐天后归来

    复仇之娱乐天后归来

    想不想,从小白兔晋升大灰狼。想不想,从单纯变成有心机,想不想,不被暗算,来来来,我教你晋升。
  • 冰雪帝君

    冰雪帝君

    请大家支持我的新书《变身太监小说拯救者》这本书不是我想太监,而是一直无法签约才断更的。另外这本书不会太久,等我什么时候这本书能签约了,我的新书完本了,我会捡起来重新写的。
  • 魔力的奇遇

    魔力的奇遇

    继承者阻止一位要毁灭世界来重建魔法王国的继承者