登陆注册
38045800000028

第28章 CHAPTER XX

THE RED FLAG AND THE WATERMELONS

I have said that the labor problem has three parts. I call them (1) Wages, (2) Working Conditions and (3) Living Conditions. By living conditions I mean the home and its security. My father had reached the stage where this was the problem that worried him. He was growing old and must soon cease working. But his home was not yet secure and he was haunted with the fear that his old age might be shelterless. We told him not to worry; the Davis boys were many and we would repay him for the fatherly care he had given us. But he was a proud man (as all muscular men are), and he could find no comfort in the thought of being supported by his sons. I am glad he never had to be. Independence has made his old age happy and he has proved that a worker, if he keeps his health, can provide for his old age and bring up a big family too.

We older boys left home and hunted work elsewhere. I was young and not bothered about working conditions or living conditions. Iwas so vigorous that I could work under any conditions, and old age was so far away that I was not worried about a home for my declining years. Wages was my sole problem. I wanted steady wages, and of course I wanted the highest I could get. To find the place where wages were to be had I was always on the go. When a mill closed I did not wait for it to reopen, but took the first train for some other mill town. The first train usually was a freight. If not, I waited for a freight, for I could sleep better in a freight car than in a Pullman--it cost less. I could save money and send it to mother, then she would not have to sell her feather beds.

All of this sounds nobler than it was. In those days workers never traveled on passenger trains unless they could get a pass.

Judges and statesmen pursued the same policy. To pay for a ticket was money thrown away; so thought the upper classes and the lower classes. About the only people that paid car fare were the Knights of Pythias on their way to their annual convention.

Railroad workers could get all the passes they wanted, and any toiler whose sister had married a brakeman or whose second cousin was a conductor "bummed" the railroad for a pass and got it. None of my relatives was a railroad man, and so to obtain the free transportation which was every American's inalienable right, Ihad to let the passenger trains go by and take the freights.

Once I got ditched at a junction, and while waiting for the next freight I wandered down the track to where I had seen a small house and a big watermelon patch. The man who lived there was a chap named Frank Bannerman. I always remember him because he was a communist, the first one I ever saw, and he filled my pockets with about ten pounds of radical pamphlets which Ipromised to read. He made a bargain with me that if I would read and digest the Red literature he would give me all the watermelons I could eat.

"I'm a comrade already," I said, meaning it as a merry jest, that I would be anything for a watermelon. But he took it seriously and his eyes lit up like any fanatic's.

"I knew it," he said. "With a face like yours--look at the brow, look at the intellect, the intellect." I was flattered.

"Come here, wife," he called through the door. "Come here and look at the intellect."The wife, who was a barefooted, freckle-faced woman, came out on the porch and, smiling sweetly, sized up my intellect. I made up my mind that here were the two smartest people in America. For they saw I was bulging with intellect. Nobody else had ever discovered it, not even I myself. I thought I was a muscle-bound iron puddler, but they pronounced me an intellectual giant. It never occurred to me that they might have guessed wrong, while the wise old world had guessed right. If the world was in step, they were out of step, but I figured that the world was out of step and they had the right stride. I thought their judgment must be better than the judgment of the whole world because their judgment pleased me. I later learned that their judgment was just like the judgment of all Reds. That's what makes 'em Red.

"Are there many of us where you come from?" the man asked.

"Many what?" I asked.

"Communists, communists," he said excitedly.

I wanted to please him, because we were now cracking the melons and scooping out their luscious hearts. So I told him how many comrades there were in each of the rolling mills where I had worked. I had to invent the statistics out of my own head, but that head was full of intellect, so I jokingly gave him a fine array of figures. The fact was that there may have been an addle-pated Red among the mill hands of that time, but if there was I had never met him.

The figures that I furnished Comrade Bannerman surprised him. Icounted the seeds in each slice of watermelon and gave that as the number of comrades in each mill. The number was too high.

Comrade Bannerman knew how many Reds there were in the country, and it appeared that the few mills I had worked in contained practically the whole communist party. He got rather excited and said the numbers were growing faster than he had imagined. He had figured that it would take forty years to bring about the Red commonwealth, but with the new light I had thrown on the subject he concluded that the times were ripening faster than he had dared to hope, and that there was no doubt the revolution would be upon us within three years.

The comrade told me he was not popular in the village for two reasons. The capitalistic storekeepers called him a dead beat and the church people had rotten-egged him for a speech he had made denouncing religion. I saw by his hands that he didn't work much, and from the hands of his wife I learned who raised the watermelons he was feeding to me. I remember wondering why he didn't pay his grocery bill with the money he spent on pamphlets to stuff in the pockets of passers-by.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 美女战队

    美女战队

    他是杀戮的象征,他是死亡的代名词,他是敌人的噩梦,他就是“张冲”几年前的王者天下,曾流传着这样一句话“宁见阎罗哭,莫见冥王怒”,在他的带领下,修罗军团所向披靡,即将登顶这片奇异大陆的顶峰……
  • 星门:伟大的毁灭

    星门:伟大的毁灭

    有多少人能够想起,我们曾经的祖先是来自太阳系的文明?来自本星系群的文明?来自盖亚宇宙的文明?属于那遥远过去的回忆,正在被一代又一代的人们所忘记,唯一能够存于脑海之中的,就只有400多年前在盖亚宇宙爆发的那一场让整个本星系群文明所恐惧的战争……
  • 归来乃少年曦

    归来乃少年曦

    只要我一息犹存,定会为你创造一个世界——曦
  • 重生之夏日香气

    重生之夏日香气

    夏宁睿在步入中年的时候便觉得人生了无生趣,太监在一旁提醒他,“陛下,该上朝了。”然后他懒懒的从龙榻上起身,回想当初,二哥想要皇位应该给他。年幼的时候和老管家单独住在小风筝家隔壁那时候每天都很快乐,可惜那丫头太疯后来听说因为逃婚把自己玩儿死了,害得他下旨杀了一大堆人,好可惜,有点想她。手握天下大权的皇帝陛下每天都在想,什么刺激都受过了,哪天我真应该去死一死。然后,他重生了。
  • 若爱不曾悲伤

    若爱不曾悲伤

    陈琦茹一直以为只要真心爱一个人,必定会得到相应的爱。可惜激流勇进,到头来终究比不过细水长流。
  • 穿越古代之王妃请留步

    穿越古代之王妃请留步

    赵慕幽只是个法医,无意中穿越而来,她的房子跟她的车没了也就算了,可是为什么要帮这些人做菜?某王爷表示他很喜欢吃她亲手做的菜。
  • 前夫又来复合啦

    前夫又来复合啦

    结婚三年,他未曾碰过她,他对她说“顾妍,我不爱你,我们离婚吧!”“老婆”“陆先生,我们已经离婚了!”从此陆谨寒走上了漫漫追妻路
  • 梦中也爱你

    梦中也爱你

    在梦中,我爱过你,但在现实中却找不到你……我选择了错的开始,我以为那是对的选择……后来才发现原来那也并不是错的选择,只是我没有遇见你……
  • 快穿之我是你一生所求

    快穿之我是你一生所求

    拥有的一切都是假象,记忆里充满了谎言,所以我是谁?我忘了谁?我爱的人到底是谁?而我,又应该相信谁呢。呵,哪句是谎言哪句又是真的......原来是梦啊,真的只是梦吗?
  • 古战世纪

    古战世纪

    一个给称为廖神的学生玩家,因为一个声音的呼唤,穿越到上古世纪的游戏世界。是什么人呼喊他呢?他能找到那个声音的主人么?来到“陌生”的世界,他将会如何走下去呢?希望大家能与我一起见证他的命运。。。。