登陆注册
19881900000079

第79章 A Race of Slaves (2)

The idea that cars and boats exist for the convenience of the public was exploded long ago.We are made, dozens of times a day, to feel that this is no longer the case.It is, on the contrary, brought vividly home to us that such conveyances are money making machines in the possession of powerful corporations (to whom we, in our debasement, have handed over the freedom of our streets and rivers), and are run in the interest and at the discretion of their owners.

It is not only before the great and the powerful that we bow in submission.The shop-girl is another tyrant who has planted her foot firmly on the neck of the nation.She respects neither sex nor age.Ensconced behind the bulwark of her counter, she scorns to notice humble aspirants until they have performed a preliminary penance; a time she fills up in cheerful conversation addressed to other young tyrants, only deciding to notice customers when she sees their last grain of patience is exhausted.She is often of a merry mood, and if anything about your appearance or manner strikes her critical sense as amusing, will laugh gayly with her companions at your expense.

A French gentleman who speaks our language correctly but with some accent, told me that he found it impossible to get served in our stores, the shop-girls bursting with laughter before he could make his wants known.

Not long ago I was at the Compagnie Lyonnaise in Paris with a stout American lady, who insisted on tipping her chair forward on its front legs as she selected some laces.Suddenly the chair flew from under her, and she sat violently on the polished floor in an attitude so supremely comic that the rest of her party were inwardly convulsed.Not a muscle moved in the faces of the well-trained clerks.The proprietor assisted her to rise as gravely as if he were bowing us to our carriage.

In restaurants American citizens are treated even worse than in the shops.You will see cowed customers who are anxious to get away to their business or pleasure sitting mutely patient, until a waiter happens to remember their orders.I do not know a single establishment in this city where the waiters take any notice of their customers' arrival, or where the proprietor comes, toward the end of the meal, to inquire if the dishes have been cooked to their taste.The interest so general on the Continent or in England is replaced here by the same air of being disturbed from more important occupations, that characterizes the shop-girl and elevator boy.

Numbers of our people live apparently in awe of their servants and the opinion of the tradespeople.One middle-aged lady whom Ioccasionally take to the theatre, insists when we arrive at her door on my accompanying her to the elevator, in order that the youth who presides therein may see that she has an escort, the opinion of this subordinate apparently being of supreme importance to her.One of our "gilded youths" recently told me of a thrilling adventure in which he had figured.At the moment he was passing under an awning on his way to a reception, a gust of wind sent his hat gambolling down the block."Think what a situation," he exclaimed."There stood a group of my friends' footmen watching me.But I was equal to the situation and entered the house as if nothing had happened!" Sir Walter Raleigh sacrificed a cloak to please a queen.This youth abandoned a new hat, fearing the laughter of a half-dozen servants.

One of the reasons why we have become so weak in the presence of our paid masters is that nowhere is the individual allowed to protest.The other night a friend who was with me at a theatre considered the acting inferior, and expressed his opinion by hissing.He was promptly ejected by a policeman.The man next me was, on the contrary, so pleased with the piece that he encored every song.I had paid to see the piece once, and rebelled at being obliged to see it twice to suit my neighbor.On referring the matter to the box-office, the caliph in charge informed me that the slaves he allowed to enter his establishment (like those who in other days formed the court of Louis XIV.) were permitted to praise, but were suppressed if they murmured dissent.In his MEMOIRES, Dumas, PERE, tells of a "first night" when three thousand people applauded a play of his and one spectator hissed."He was the only one I respected," said Dumas, "for the piece was bad, and that criticism spurred me on to improve it."How can we hope for any improvement in the standard of our entertainments, the manners of our servants or the ways of corporations when no one complains? We are too much in a hurry to follow up a grievance and have it righted."It doesn't pay," "Ihaven't got the time," are phrases with which all such subjects are dismissed.We will sit in over-heated cars, eat vilely cooked food, put up with insolence from subordinates, because it is too much trouble to assert our rights.Is the spirit that prompted the first shots on Lexington Common becoming extinct? Have the floods of emigration so diluted our Anglo-Saxon blood that we no longer care to fight for liberty? Will no patriot arise and lead a revolt against our tyrants?

I am prepared to follow such a leader, and have already marked my prey.First, I will slay a certain miscreant who sits at the receipt of customs in the box-office of an up-town theatre.For years I have tried to propitiate that satrap with modest politeness and feeble little jokes.He has never been softened by either, but continues to "chuck" the worst places out to me (no matter how early I arrive, the best have always been given to the speculators), and to frown down my attempts at self-assertion.

When I have seen this enemy at my feet, I shall start down town (stopping on the way to brain the teller at my bank, who is perennially paring his nails, and refuses to see me until that operation is performed), to the office of a night-boat line, where the clerk has so often forced me, with hundreds of other weary victims, to stand in line like convicts, while he chats with a "lady friend," his back turned to us and his leg comfortably thrown over the arm of his chair.Then I will take my blood-stained way -but, no! It is better not to put my victims on their guard, but to abide my time in silence! Courage, fellow-slaves, our day will come!

同类推荐
  • 慈湖遗书

    慈湖遗书

    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。
  • 观世音菩萨救苦经

    观世音菩萨救苦经

    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。
  • 菩萨五法忏悔文

    菩萨五法忏悔文

    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。
  • 三家医案合刻

    三家医案合刻

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 杭州志

    杭州志

    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
  • 风华如歌:魔君别乱来

    风华如歌:魔君别乱来

    她和他是青梅竹马,他为了救她,自愿出卖灵魂与终身自由,却换来整整七十年的分离……一场无期徒刑的爱,一对为爱拼杀的金童玉女。错的究竟是爱,还是命运?
  • 狐缘记

    狐缘记

    身负天命,却不自知,九尾狐来人间,助他成仙,不料情愫横生,斩群魔,夺法宝,看一玩世不恭少年如何救天庭,历劫难,修成仙。
  • 怪物猎人之無雙獵人

    怪物猎人之無雙獵人

    少年名为厄拿托,是村里新一批猎人中最优秀的,单杀青熊兽最快的记录确实是他所创下的,这也让他成为了村子里比较重视的人才
  • 魔法奥萝

    魔法奥萝

    这是一个剑与魔法的时代!兽人蠢蠢欲动,妄图拉开大陆之战的序幕;精灵浅唱低吟,手执长弓护卫着生命之树;龙族潜伏龙岛,吞吐龙息黄金瞳威不可侵;人类剑指苍穹,斗气魔法交相扬撒于天际。当诸神的黄昏降临,大陆陷入无边黑夜,谁能再次唤醒天明?
  • 庶女高嫁

    庶女高嫁

    当朝正二品大员是她的外祖父,她又出身丞相府,从小被养在外祖母身边,光环围绕在她的头上,归根结底,却也只是一个为贵妾的娘生下来的庶女。面上仁慈暗下却阴毒的嫡母,又有自私为了博得父亲一句夸赞而帮嫡母陷害自己的生母,沈银秋淡淡一笑,任别人怎么下套使计,她安份的做着庶女,就不信还能成为她们刀下的鱼肉。明枪易躲暗箭难防,外祖母安排的婚事,也在嫡母的安排下被姐妹抢走,让她成为府里的笑柄,生母为了能多与父亲亲近,竟与嫡母联手让她嫁给那因爱妻死后而病入膏肓的侯爷做填房,好在她看得开,想着嫁过去过个一年半载,一个人守寡也不错,起码是安安静静的生活,却不想这门婚事把她的平静的一生都搅乱了。
  • 军婚:先婚后爱欢喜冤家

    军婚:先婚后爱欢喜冤家

    “什么?”袁晓晓双手捂着自己的嘴,不敢相信自己听到的事实。“我要去问问舅舅,这是怎么一回儿事儿!”“不用你去问了,我这不是来了吗!”袁晓晓的舅舅,坐在袁晓晓身边的沙发上,并且示意袁晓晓坐下说话。“舅舅,这都什么年代了,婚姻哪儿有包办的?”袁晓晓挽着舅舅的胳膊撒娇。“晓晓,我的决定咱们家里人可都是通过了的呀!”“什么?”“再说了你的性格,总是容易被人骗,你说说,哪个男生喜欢你,是为了你这个人的?不都是因为咱们家吗?所以,你要嫁的这个人呐,他是一名军人,是我战友家的孩子,为人我是了解的,所以你就放一百个心,嫁了吧!明天一早的飞机,东西我都命人收拾好了,做好准备,明天一早我来接你,送你去机场!”
  • 噬金风暴

    噬金风暴

    荒无人烟的垃圾星,自主思考的机械人,遗落孤星的婴儿。十年孤星无人问,一朝出世天下惊,拥有了怪兽一般强悍身手和BUG一般的修炼能力,上天都不允许他继续默默无闻。当科学走到终点,当魔幻变为现实,我将用我的机甲,轰开仙界大门!
  • 永远的太师

    永远的太师

    教育大计,师范为本。太师一路走来,培养人师数万,辉煌与成就已载入史册。在新的历史时期,太师人勇攀高峰,力争上游,实现了建校、迁校、并校三大历史使命。太师又站在新的起点上,我相信新太师明天会更好!
  • 职场实用口才

    职场实用口才

    本书共九个项目,内容包括:走近口才、社交口才、演讲口才、求职口才、论辩口才、谈判口才、推销口才等。
  • 我是镇魂师

    我是镇魂师

    这个世界就是我们看到的样子么?有没有一种可能,有另一个世界和我们的世界完全重合,只是处于不同的时空维度,偶尔的,我们能在一些薄弱的接触地带,看到一些另一个世界的景象,那……,就是灵异么?一钱捉鬼,二钱收妖,三钱镇魂,我是镇魂师,我将要闯入另一个世界!