登陆注册
26304400000089

第89章 CHAPTER XV THE VALUE OF SOCIAL CLUBS(1)

From the early days at Hull-House, social clubs composed of English speaking American born young people grew apace. So eager were they for social life that no mistakes in management could drive them away. I remember one enthusiastic leader who read aloud to a club a translation of "Antigone," which she had selected because she believed that the great themes of the Greek poets were best suited to young people. She came into the club room one evening in time to hear the president call the restive members to order with the statement, "You might just as well keep quiet for she is bound to finish it, and the quicker she gets to reading, the longer time we'll have for dancing." And yet the same club leader had the pleasure of lending four copies of the drama to four of the members, and one young man almost literally committed the entire play to memory.

On the whole we were much impressed by the great desire for self-improvement, for study and debate, exhibited by many of the young men. This very tendency, in fact, brought one of the most promising of our earlier clubs to an untimely end. The young men in the club, twenty in number, had grown much irritated by the frivolity of the girls during their long debates, and had finally proposed that three of the most "frivolous" be expelled. Pending a final vote, the three culprits appealed to certain of their friends who were members of the Hull-House Men's Club, between whom and the debating young men the incident became the cause of a quarrel so bitter that at length it led to a shooting. Fortunately the shot missed fire, or it may have been true that it was "only intended for a scare," but at any rate, we were all thoroughly frightened by this manifestation of the hot blood which the defense of woman has so often evoked. After many efforts to bring about a reconciliation, the debating club of twenty young men and the seventeen young women, who either were or pretended to be sober minded, rented a hall a mile west of Hull-House severing their connection with us because their ambitious and right-minded efforts had been unappreciated, basing this on the ground that we had not urged the expulsion of the so-called "tough" members of the Men's Club, who had been involved in the difficulty. The seceding club invited me to the first meeting in their new quarters that I might present to them my version of the situation and set forth the incident from the standpoint of Hull-House. The discussion I had with the young people that evening has always remained with me as one of the moments of illumination which life in a Settlement so often affords. In response to my position that a desire to avoid all that was "tough" meant to walk only in the paths of smug self-seeking and personal improvement leading straight into the pit of self-righteousness and petty achievement and was exactly what the Settlement did not stand for, they contended with much justice that ambitious young people were obliged for their own reputation, if not for their own morals, to avoid all connection with that which bordered on the tough, and that it was quite another matter for the Hull-House residents who could afford a more generous judgment. It was in vain I urged that life teaches us nothing more inevitably than that right and wrong are most confusingly confounded; that the blackest wrong may be within our own motives, and that at the best, right will not dazzle us by its radiant shining and can only be found by exerting patience and discrimination. They still maintained their wholesome bourgeois position, which I am now quite ready to admit was most reasonable.

Of course there were many disappointments connected with these clubs when the rewards of political and commercial life easily drew the members away from the principles advocated in club meetings. One of the young men who had been a shining light in the advocacy of municipal reform deserted in the middle of a reform campaign because he had been offered a lucrative office in the city hall; another even after a course of lectures on business morality, "worked" the club itself to secure orders for custom-made clothing from samples of cloth he displayed, although the orders were filled by ready-made suits slightly refitted and delivered at double their original price. But nevertheless, there was much to cheer us as we gradually became acquainted with the daily living of the vigorous young men and women who filled to overflowing all the social clubs.

We have been much impressed during our twenty years, by the ready adaptation of city young people to the prosperity arising from their own increased wages or from the commercial success of their families. This quick adaptability is the great gift of the city child, his one reward for the hurried changing life which he has always led. The working girl has a distinct advantage in the task of transforming her whole family into the ways and connections of the prosperous when she works down town and becomes conversant with the manners and conditions of a cosmopolitan community. Therefore having lived in a Settlement twenty years, I see scores of young people who have successfully established themselves in life, and in my travels in the city and outside, I am constantly cheered by greetings from the rising young lawyer, the scholarly rabbi, the successful teacher, the prosperous young matron buying clothes for blooming children.

"Don't you remember me? I used to belong to a Hull-House club."

I once asked one of these young people, a man who held a good position on a Chicago daily, what special thing Hull-House had meant to him, and he promptly replied, "It was the first house I had ever been in where books and magazines just lay around as if there were plenty of them in the world. Don't you remember how much I used to read at that little round table at the back of the library? To have people regard reading as a reasonable occupation changed the whole aspect of life to me and I began to have confidence in what I could do."

同类推荐
  • 圣妙吉祥真实名经

    圣妙吉祥真实名经

    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。
  • 大日经持诵次第仪轨

    大日经持诵次第仪轨

    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。
  • 伏魔经坛谢恩醮仪

    伏魔经坛谢恩醮仪

    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。
  • 周书

    周书

    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。
  • 古易考原

    古易考原

    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
  • 凌雪出云

    凌雪出云

    这是一个穿越小说!这是我同学的一本小说,请不要加我QQ!我同学的QQ是3361847589。
  • 林子大了

    林子大了

    青春难免理性与感性的锤炼,林容在校园中便尝遍了酸甜苦辣。帮派,武术,宗教,情感,创业等等元素,都将一一出现……
  • 总裁的萌萌哒妻子

    总裁的萌萌哒妻子

    夏沫有两个人格,主人格和副人格,主人格心疼副人格。而主人格淡雅从容,追她的人十分多,她的人生是随意的,想和谁在一起就和谁。而副人格善良可爱,但不傻白甜,她喜欢上了如夜一般的男子。他们,和她们又该如何抉择呢?
  • 勤劳节俭(中华美德)

    勤劳节俭(中华美德)

    从传统文化的角度,对美德和人格修养的各个方面作出了形象生动的阐释。中华传统美德和人格修养必将扎根于现实生活的沃土之中,开出更加绚烂的花朵,结出更加丰满的果实。本书收录了很多民间关于勤劳节俭的故事。让我们一起携手走进本书去温习下我们的传统文化吧。
  • 十七英里

    十七英里

    吴君,女,中国作协会员。曾获首届中国小说双年奖、广东新人新作奖。长篇小说《我们不是一个人类》被媒体评为2004年最值得记忆五部长篇之一。出版多本中篇小说集。根据其中篇小说《亲爱的深圳》改编的电影已在国内及北美地区发行放映。
  • 暮暮又朝朝

    暮暮又朝朝

    盛大的成人礼上18岁的她遇到21岁的他,去澳洲六年依然对他念念不忘。用利益把他绑在身边,她是否是真的快乐。家族阴谋使他步步为营,最后是否能为她改变。总会有不期而遇的温暖和生生不息的希望,她能做的只有一直等,暮暮又朝朝。
  • 狂妃逆天:邪王嗜宠妖孽妃

    狂妃逆天:邪王嗜宠妖孽妃

    聪明机智如她,狡诈腹黑如她,却被最爱的人背叛,一场蓄谋已久的阴谋夺去了她的生命。再次醒来,发现自己竟变成了晋风大陆护国公的废物女儿。前世被害,是她无用,今生,她即使是杀出一条血路,也要让那些害她的人生不如死。废物么?看她超快晋级,炼丹药,收神兽,闪瞎那些人的钛合金狗眼。强者之路,强者为尊,只不过,这个一直缠着她的妖孽是谁啊!
  • 中国·电视观众节纪实

    中国·电视观众节纪实

    在这本书里,讲述的是一个电视节庆活动,展示的是一群电视人组织创办的大众娱乐活动。我们汇编它,是因为这里记录了浙江广电集团举办中国电视观众节的生动历程和精彩瞬间以及他们对于推动和创新大众文化的全新认知和不懈追求。我们的电视,自诞生之日起就是被仰视的。它集国家政治、现代技术和精英文化于一体,登高远播,凌空独步,传入千家万户,引来万人空巷。作为一种新型文化,它的影响面、渗透力和关注度是以往任何媒体所无法企及的。在相当一个时期,我们置身于这种居高临下的精英文化之中,执着辛劳且乐此不疲,沉醉其间而陶然自得。
  • 定天之路

    定天之路

    这天下,小爷可以不要!但小爷也绝不会将天下交到你的手中!不要问为什么,因为小爷鄙视你……
  • 洪荒之建木封禅

    洪荒之建木封禅

    一个偷渡客穿越而来,带着萝莉闯荡洪荒。那一年,燧人国还没有建立!那一年,多宝还是还是一个没有道号的纨绔!那一年,洪荒的小千世界的大时代刚刚来临!那个时代,洪荒万界天尊一代缓过一代经历着金仙大劫的循环,建木封禅的大罗天尊仅仅是远古天皇氏、地皇氏、人皇氏的恩赐。那个时代是万法开创的高峰,无数的“极道”天才涌现,加入为后辈修士求得逍遥的潮流之中。这里没有毫无逻辑就诞生出来的妖魔鬼怪,这里是盘古族和先天魔族血脉演化的四大族群的碰撞,人类、妖族、巫族、神族;谷神、道术、建木洞天,组成世界的力量体系。