登陆注册
37330600000056

第56章

"Have you no sympathy for the deserving poor?" she pleaded. "Besides, since you're a socialist, it isn't your apple any more than it is mine. Bring my half up to me, sir.""Your half is the half I've already eaten. And if you knew as much as you pretend to about socialism you'd know it isn't yours until you've earned it."Her eyes danced. He noticed that beneath each of them was a sprinkle of tiny powdered freckles. "But haven't I earned it? Didn't I blister my hands pulling you aboard?"He promptly shifted ground. "We're living under the capitalistic system. You earn it and I eat it," he argued. "The rest of this apple is my reward for having appropriated what didn't belong to me.""But that's not fair. It's no better than stealing.""Sh--h! It's high finance. Don't use that other word," he whispered. "And what's fair hasn't a thing to do with it. It's my apple because I've got it.""But--"

He waved her protest aside blandly. "Now try to be content with the lot a wise Providence has awarded you. I eat the apple. You see me eat it.

That's the usual division of profits. Don't be an agitator, or an anarchist.""Don't I get even the core?" she begged.

"I'd like to give it to you, but it wouldn't be best. You see I don't want to make you discontented with your position in life." He flung what was left of the apple into the sea and came up the steps to join her.

Laughter was in the eyes of both, but it died out of hers first.

"Mr. Farnum, is it really as bad as that?" Before he could find an answer she spoke again. "I've wanted for a long time to talk with some one who didn't look at things as we do. I mean as my father does and my uncle does and most of my friends. Tell me what you think of it--you and your friends.""That's a large order, Miss Frome. I hardly know where to begin." "Wait! Here comes Lieutenant Beauchamp to take me away. Ipromised to play ring toss with him, but I don't want to go now." She led a swift retreat to a spot on the upper deck shielded from the wind and warmed by the two huge smokestacks. Dropping breathless into a chair, she invited him with a gesture to take another. Little imps of mischiefflashed out at him from her eyes. In the adventure of the escape she had made him partner. A rush of warm blood danced through his veins.

"Now, sir, we're safe. Begin the propaganda. Isn't that the word you use? Tell me all about everything. You're the first real live socialist I ever caught, and I mean to make the most of you.""But I'm unfortunately not exactly a socialist." "An anarchist will do just as well.""Nor an anarchist. Sorry."

"Oh, well, you're something that's dreadful. You haven't the proper bump of respect for father and for Uncle Joe. Now why haven't you?"And before he knew it this young woman had drawn from him glimpses of what life meant to him. He talked to her of the pressure of the struggle for existence, of the poverty that lies like a blight over whole sections of cities, spreading disease and cruelty and disorder, crushing the souls of its victims, poisoning their hearts and bodies. He showed her a world at odds and ends, in which it was accepted as the natural thing that some should starve while others were waited upon by servants.

He made her see how the tendency of environment is to reduce all things to a question of selfinterest, and how the great triumphant fact of life is that love and kindness persist. Her interest was insatiable. She poured questions upon him, made him tell her stories of the things he had seen in that strange underworld that was farther from her than Asia. So she learned of Oscar Marchant, coughing all day over the shoes he half-soled and going out at night to give his waning life to the service of those who needed him. He told her--without giving names--the story of Sam Miller and his wife, of shop girls forced by grinding poverty to that easier way which leads to death, of little children driven by want into factories which crushed the youth out of them.

Her eyes with the star flash in them never left his face. She was absorbed, filled with a strange emotion that made her lashes moist. She saw not only the tragedy and waste of life, but a glorious glimpse of the way out. This man and his friends set the common good above their private gain. For them a new heart was being born into the world. They were no longer consumed with blind greed, with love of their petty selves.

They were no longer full of cowardice and distrust and enmity. Life was a thing beautiful to them. It was flushed with the color of hope, of fine enthusiasms. They might suffer. They might be defeated. But nothing could extinguish the joy in their souls. They walked like gods, immortals, these brothers to the spent and the maimed. For they had found spiritual values in it that made any material profit of small importance. Alice got a vision of the great truth that is back of all true reforms, all improvement, all progress.

"Love," she said almost in a whisper, "is forgetting self."Jeff lost his stride and pulled up. He thought he could not have heard aright. "I beg your pardon?""Nothing. I was just thinking out loud. Go on please."But she had broken the thread of his talk. He attempted to take it up again, but he was still trying for a lead when Alice saw Mrs. Van Tyle and Beauchamp coming toward them.

She rose. Her eyes were the brightest Jeff had ever seen. They were filled with an ardent tenderness. It was as if she were wrapped in a spiritual exaltation.

"Thank you. Thank you. I can't tell you what you've done for me."She turned and walked quickly away. To be dragged back to the commonplace at once was more than she could bear. First she must get alone with herself, must take stock of this new emotion that ran like wine through her blood. A pulse throbbed in her throat, for she was in a passionate glow of altruism.

"I'm glad of life--glad of it--glad of it!" she murmured through the veil she had lowered to screen her face from observation.

It had come to her as a revelation straight from Heaven that there can be no salvation without service. And the motive back of service must be love. Love! That was what Jesus had come to teach the world, and all these years it had warped and mystified his message.

She felt that life could never again be gray or colorless. For there was work waiting that she could do, service that she could give. And surely there could be no greater happiness than to find her work and do it gladly.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 扮老虎吃猪

    扮老虎吃猪

    一首《野狼disco》震惊全场,一旁观望的罗晔一脸震惊,不可思议地看着台上不断老年迪斯科的魏书。“心里的花我想要带你回家,在那深夜酒吧哪管它是真是假,请你尽情摇摆忘记钟意的他,你是最迷人噶你知道吗”于是,他们的故事开始了。
  • 糖果梦

    糖果梦

    “我不喜欢这世界,我只喜欢你。”音乐系才女VS禁欲系男神,他有多冷,情话就有多热。
  • 杀夜行

    杀夜行

    帝国之中,究竟有多少隐秘?尤莉安越是深入了解,越是胆战心惊。突然崛起的神树,消失的神话时代,古老的神明,缺失的历史,以及迷惘的自己…路,在何方?#####(稳定日更2k党)(新人写书不易您的任何点击/收藏/推荐/评论都是对我最大的鼓励)(请大力支持我吧!)
  • 盛唐女医

    盛唐女医

    最近名动京城的女贵上官霓裳是什么来头啊?她啊,她是上官驸马家的孩子。那可是皇室血脉啊!难怪华贵婉约,凤仪万千!不,不,他是驸马与侍婢的私生女。。。
  • 元素封神传

    元素封神传

    一个父母离奇去世的二星恶魔猎人,在一次偶然的机会激发了金木水火土五系魔法,从而开启了魔法修炼和元素融合的大门。金木水火土相生相克,隐息破魔功弑人弑神。征服与权利,兄弟与义气,修炼与成长,感情与欲望,西蒙该怎样一步步探明父母的死因,诛杀阴险的敌人,管理征服的土地,登上封神的王座!!!
  • 天地之城

    天地之城

    失忆男子倒在煤矿口上,身世迷离,随着记忆在一次次意外中丝丝恢复,越来越多的人出现,关系也更神秘。地下迷城露出端倪,土地之下的城市,天堂?地狱?还是异象?真相却难以想象……
  • 已无花逝

    已无花逝

    人类异常脆弱,在面临灭族危机,众志成城,但安逸的生活太过久远,他们忘却了自己本身的能力。生性脆弱的江海在异族降临的时代,该如何生存,而掌握着他的另外一个意念又是谁呢?
  • 忽然一篇杂文

    忽然一篇杂文

    有时会忽然生出一篇短文,之前没有收录,丢失了很多,现在专门收录一下,谨防丢失,哈哈。
  • 厌欢

    厌欢

    我们都是恶人,心怀不轨。“周欢,你凭什么认为我是好人?”但我们在向世界求救。“傅厌,我把命交给你了。要是没有人救你,我就来渡你。”恶贯满盈的少年啊,你是否,会抓住黑暗中的那一束光?【救赎文】
  • 唐人南山传

    唐人南山传

    大唐盛世下,李世民的得利干将南山,竟穿越到2000年的深圳。