登陆注册
26265200000208

第208章 CHAPTER XLVIII.(5)

One foggy night, the house of a non-Union fender-grinder was blown up with gunpowder, and not the workman only--the mildest and most inoffensive man I ever talked with--but certain harmless women and innocent children, who had done nothing to offend the Union, were all but destroyed. The same barbarous act had been committed more than once before, and with more bloody results, but had led to no large consequences--carebat quai vate sacro; but this time there happened to be a vates in the place, to wit, an honest, intrepid journalist, with a mind in advance of his age. He came, he looked, he spoke to the poor shaken creatures--one of them shaken for life, and doomed now to start from sleep at every little sound till she sleeps forever--and the blood in his heart boiled. The felony was publicly reprobated, and with horror, by the Union, which had, nevertheless, hired the assassins; but this well-worn lie did not impose on the vates, or chronicler ahead of his time. He went round to all the manufacturers, and asked them to speak out. They durst not, for their lives; but closed all doors, and then, with bated breath, and all the mien of slaves well trodden down, hinted where information might be had. Thereupon the vates aforesaid--Holdfast yclept--went from scent to scent, till he dropped on a discontented grinder, with fish-like eyes, who had been in "many a night job."

This man agreed to split, on two conditions; he was to receive a sum of money, and to be sent into another hemisphere, since his life would not be worth a straw, if he told the truth about the Trades in this one. His terms were accepted, and then he made some tremendous revelations and, with these in his possession, Holdfast wrote leader upon leader, to prove that the Unions must have been guilty of every Trade outrage that had taken place for years in the district; but adroitly concealing that he had positive information.

Grotait replied incautiously, and got worsted before the public.

The ablest men, if not writers, are unwise to fence writers.

Holdfast received phonetic letters threatening his life: he acknowledged them in his journal and invited the writers to call.

He loaded a revolver and went on writing the leaders with a finger on the trigger. CALIFORNIA! Oh, dear, no: the very center of England.

Ransome co-operated with him and collected further evidence, and then Holdfast communicated privately with a portion of the London press, and begged them to assist him to obtain a Royal commission of inquiry, in which case he pledged himself to prove that a whole string of murders and outrages had been ordered and paid for by the very Unions which had publicly repudiated them in eloquent terms, and been believed.

The London press took this up; two or three members of the House of Commons, wild, eccentric men, who would not betray their country to secure their re-election to some dirty borough, sided with outraged law; and by these united efforts a Commission was obtained. The Commission sat, and, being conducted with rare skill and determination, squeezed out of an incredible mass of perjury some terrible truths, whose discovery drew eloquent leaders from the journals; these filled ****** men, who love their country, with a hope that the Government of this nation would shake off its lethargy, and take stringent measures to defend the liberty of the subject against so cruel and cowardly a conspiracy, and to deprive the workmen, in their differences with the masters, of an unfair and sanguinary weapon, which the masters could use, but never have as YET; and, by using which, the workmen do themselves no lasting good, and, indeed, have driven whole trades and much capital out of the oppressed districts, to their own great loss.

That hope, though not extinct, is fainter now than it was. Matters seem going all the other way. An honest, independent man, who did honor to the senate, has lost his seat solely for not conniving at these Trades outrages, which the hypocrites, who have voted him out, pretend to denounce. Foul play is still rampant and triumphant.

Its victims were sympathized with for one short day, when they bared their wounds to the Royal Commissioners; but that sympathy has deserted them; they are now hidden in holes and corners from their oppressors, and have to go by false names, and are kept out of work; for odisse quem loeseris is the fundamental maxim of their oppressors. Not so the assassins: they flourish. I have seen with these eyes one savage murderer employed at high wages, while a man he all but destroyed is refused work on all hands, and was separated by dire poverty from another scarred victim, his wife, till I brought them together. Again, I have seen a wholesale murderer employed on the very machine he had been concerned in blowing up, employed on it at the wages of three innoxious curates. And I find this is the rule, not the exception. "No punishment but for already punished innocence; no safety but for triumphant crime."

The Executive is fast asleep in the matter--or it would long ago have planted the Manchester district with a hundred thousand special constables--and the globule of LEGISLATION now prescribed to Parliament, though excellent in certain respects, is null in others, would, if passed into law, rather encourage the intimidation of one man by twenty, and make him starve his family to save his skin--cruel alternative--and would not seriously check the darker and more bloody outrages, nor prevent their spreading from their present populous centers all over the land. Seeing these things, I have drawn my pen against cowardly assassination and sordid tyranny; I have taken a few undeniable truths, out of many, and have labored to make my readers realize those appalling facts of the day which most men know, but not one in a thousand comprehends, and not one in a hundred thousand REALIZES, until Fiction--which, whatever you may have been told to the contrary, is the highest, widest, noblest, and greatest of all the arts--comes to his aid, studies, penetrates, digests the hard facts of chronicles and blue-books, and makes their dry bones live.

同类推荐
  • 论书

    论书

    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。
  • 百论疏

    百论疏

    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。
  • 思文大纪

    思文大纪

    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。
  • 六十种曲双烈记

    六十种曲双烈记

    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。
热门推荐
  • 玛丽苏的春天

    玛丽苏的春天

    严倾失败感情一号线:男友懒散在家,全靠她养活,忍无可忍踹出大门发誓要找个事业有成的男盆友!严倾失败感情二号线:男友事业有成,有房有车,她却莫名其妙被小三?!忍无可忍泼渣男一头面汤,发誓找个坦诚不撒谎的男盆友!想要在对的时间遇到的对人,就这么难?直到严伯母将她的照片和信息直接挂上了相亲网站。严倾:“……妈!!为什么要用这么丑的照片啊!!”某相亲网站CEO(无意中翻到了新入会人员照片)(真,男一号):“……现在的女人脑子里都在想什么?”
  • 至尊邪龙

    至尊邪龙

    一个苹果,砸出了著名的万有引力定理,谁又能想到,一个小小的黑板刷,竟然砸醒了一个绝世杀神。顺我者昌,逆我着亡,段天涯,因为得到末世强者的灵魂相助,由一个懦弱低迷的高中生,渐渐成长为一方王者。刀斩纨绔大少,剑劈四方枭雄,剑锋所指,所向披靡,冲冠一怒为红颜,两肋插刀为兄弟,华夏邪龙,为您讲述一个不一样的江湖。
  • 我家古宅连着异界战场

    我家古宅连着异界战场

    无意中发现自家古宅居然连着异界战场,那里还散落着许许多多的神秘装备,于是萧如风开始了“清理战场”的工作……
  • 八月散落的蒲公英

    八月散落的蒲公英

    医学生李昂在毕业之后,与朋友徐晓北和魏馨在一起经历工作、生活和情感方面的各种压力,在经历失业、失恋和背叛,最后三人又将何去何从?
  • 丢失的友情

    丢失的友情

    一段深不可测的友情,开始很美,过程很累,结局很悲,清醒很难。
  • 我的江湖师父

    我的江湖师父

    一个江湖小白游历江湖的故事,一个魔教教主培养徒弟的故事。
  • 学霸与考神

    学霸与考神

    “江辰希,我听说两条平行的线最终可以相交于一点。”她睁着圆圆的大眼睛看着他。“哦?那你把这个写到卷子上看看老师会不会骂你。”男孩挑了挑眉看着她。她认真地回应道:“其实我就是想看看,我们两个的平行世界最终会不会相交在一起...”女孩静静地看着男孩,男孩盯着女孩,两个人就这么相视...
  • 寒叶石楠

    寒叶石楠

    欧石楠,孤独的花。她,是不幸运的人,失去了记忆,失去了母亲,只留下了她自己一个人在这个世上……或许,天命注定她最终不会是一个人。因为她有最爱他和她……
  • 瑶瑶驾到

    瑶瑶驾到

    机缘巧合下,她认识了他,不知不觉中她爱上了他。在这段奇缘中,他们的爱情是怎样的呢?让我们拭目以待!
  • 调教明朝

    调教明朝

    大明沉浮,谈笑间不过尺半妖刀。妖异艳血,妩媚抵不过笑靥如花。身临其境,大明朝不过画卷一副。暗藏杀机,江山零落岂盛衰难料。参破玄机,调教日月尽在股掌中。