登陆注册
5452400000020

第20章

"You are all old-fashioned-and stiff with prejudice," Furley declared. "Even Orden," he went on, turning to Catherine, "only tolerates me because we ate dinners off the same board when we were' both making up our minds to be Lord High Chancellor."

"Our friend Furley," Julian confided, as he leaned across the table and took a cigarette, "has no tact and many prejudices. He does write such rubbish about the aristocracy. I remember an article of his not very long ago, entitled `Out with our Peers!'

It's all very well for a younger son like me to take it lying down, but you could scarcely expect my father to approve.

Besides, I believe the fellow's a renegade. I have an idea that he was born in the narrower circles himself."

"That's where you're wrong, then," Furley grunted with satisfaction. "My father was a boot manufacturer in a country village of Leicestershire. I went in for the Bar because he left me pots of money, most of which, by the bye, I seem to have dissipated."

"Chiefly in Utopian schemes for the betterment of his betters,"

Julian observed drily.

"I certainly had an idea," Furley confessed, "of an asylum for incapable younger sons."

"I call a truce," Julian proposed. "It isn't polite to spar before Miss Abbeway."

"To me," Mr. Stenson declared, "this is a veritable temple of peace. I arrived here literally on all fours. Miss Abbeway has proved to me quite conclusively that as a democratic leader I have missed my vocation."

She looked at him reproachfully. Nevertheless, his words seemed to have brought back to her mind the thrill of their brief but stimulating conversation. A flash of genuine earnestness transformed her face, just as a gleam of wintry sunshine, which had found its way in through the open window, seemed to discover threads of gold in her tightly braided and luxuriant brown hair.

Her eyes filled with an almost inspired light:

"Mr. Stenson is scarcely fair to me," she complained. "I did not presume to criticise his statesmanship, only there are some things here which seem pitiful. England should be the ideal democracy of the world. Your laws admit of it, your Government admits of it.

Neither birth nor money are indispensable to success. The way is open for the working man to pass even to the Cabinet. And you are nothing of the sort. The cause of the people is not in any country so shamefully and badly represented. You have a bourgeoisie which maintains itself in almost feudal luxury by means of the labour which it employs, and that labour is content to squeak and open its mouth for worms, when it should have the finest fruits of the world. And all this is for want of leadership. Up you come you David Sands, you Phineas Crosses, you Nicholas Fenns, you Thomas Evanses. You each think that you represent Labour, but you don't. You represent trade - the workers at one trade. How they laugh at you, the men who like to keep the government of this country in their own possession! They stretch down a hand to the one who has climbed the highest, they pull him up into the Government, and after that Labour is well quit of him. He has found his place with the gods. Perhaps they will make him a `Sir' and his wife a `Lady,' but for him it is all over with the Cause. And so another ten years is wasted, while another man grows up to take his place."

"She's right enough," Furley confessed gloomily. "There is something about the atmosphere of the inner life of politics which has proved fatal to every Labour man who has ever climbed. Paul Fiske wrote the same thing only a few weeks ago. He thought that it was the social atmosphere which we still preserve around our politics. We no sooner catch a clever man, born of the people, than we dress him up like a mummy and put him down at dinner parties and garden parties, to do things he's not accustomed to, and expect him to hold his own amongst people who are not his people. There is something poisonous about it."

"Aren't you all rather assuming," Stenson suggested drily, "that the Labour Party is the only party in politics worth considering?"

"If they knew their own strength," Catherine declared, "they would be the predominant party. Should you like to go to the polls to-day and fight for your seats against them?"

"Heaven forbid!" Mr. Stenson exclaimed. "But then we've made up our mind to one thing - no general election during the war.

Afterwards, I shouldn't be at all surprised if Unionists and Liberals and even Radicals didn't amalgamate and make one party."

"To fight Labour," Furley said grimly.

"To keep England great," Mr. Stenson replied. "You must remember that so far as any scheme or program which the Labour Party has yet disclosed, in this country or any other, they are preeminently selfish. England has mighty interests across the seas. A parish-council form of government would very soon bring disaster."

Julian glanced at the clock and rose to his feet.

"I don't want to hurry any one," he said, "but my father is rather a martinet about luncheon."

They all rose. Mr. Stenson turned to Julian.

"Will you go on with Miss Abbeway?" he begged. "I will catch up with you on the marshes. I want to have just a word with Furley."

Julian and his companion crossed the country road and passed through the gate opposite on to the rude track which led down almost to the sea.

"You are very interested in English labour questions, Miss Abbeway," he remarked, "considering that you are only half an Englishwoman."

"It isn't only the English labouring classes in whom I am interested," she replied impatiently. "It is the cause of the people throughout the whole of the world which in my small way I preach."

"Your own country," he continued, a little diffidently, "is scarcely a good advertisement for the cause of social reform."

Her tone trembled with indignation as she answered him.

同类推荐
  • 筠谷诗

    筠谷诗

    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。
  • 金刚三昧经

    金刚三昧经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 鳳城瑣錄

    鳳城瑣錄

    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。
  • 学行

    学行

    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。
  • 诚求集

    诚求集

    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。
热门推荐
  • 快穿之姐不玩攻略

    快穿之姐不玩攻略

    大抵,知安最大的梦想就是自己创造一个世界。因为这个梦想,她在时空长河历尽沧桑,兜兜转转,便是万年。在生命与魔力竭尽之际,她遇到了一个非常不靠谱的系统……
  • 春晚与诸同舍出城迎

    春晚与诸同舍出城迎

    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。
  • 最亮的一颗星

    最亮的一颗星

    每一个星星都要努力地发着光,要成为别人的渴望不可及
  • 铁路边的孩子们:THE RAILWAY CHILDREN(英文朗读版)

    铁路边的孩子们:THE RAILWAY CHILDREN(英文朗读版)

    《铁路边的孩子们》讲述的是一家人在困境中的生活故事,爸爸因被人陷害而被关进了监狱,妈妈独立支撑起整个家庭。但是整个故事让我们感受到的不是艰难困苦,而是妈妈努力维护的温馨生活,还有孩子们健康快乐的成长。就在这个铁路边,孩子们机智地避免了一场可怕的铁路灾难,救助了另一位在隧道中摔伤的少年,还扑灭了运河轮船上的火情,和妈妈一起收留了一位流亡的俄罗斯作家。他们高尚的行为赢得了所有人的尊重,最后又在好心人的帮助下为爸爸洗清了冤屈。
  • 炮灰别乱来

    炮灰别乱来

    三千小世界出现了问题,使得各个大千世界灵气枯竭。因为部分大能们都消失了,因此各个大千世界剩余的大能神算以自身修为算出这是魔族的阴谋,可能会使所有世界变成绝灵之地,因为他们修为太高,会使得小世界崩溃,但又不能眼睁睁看着自己的界面灭亡。所以为了生存,所有大千世界联合起来,制造了一种妖灵,可以带着不受限制的小辈们前往三千小世界,找出隐藏在此界的魔族和吸灵虫,释放此界灵气,恢复被毁的世界通道,使所有世界得以循环,灵气再生。(更新会慢,因为高三可能没空,新手上路,请不要骂人,作者是一个因为别人一句话就能想半天的人,如果不喜欢,可以退出去,谢谢大家配合)
  • 宋狸殿下

    宋狸殿下

    一个少年穿越回了宋朝,却意外经历着狸猫换太子的过往,成为宋朝狸猫太子,练剑习武样样精通。与包公一起破迷案,成为一代帝王,少年是否会经历历史的潮流,还是会逆转宋朝历史?却没有想到,也经历了一番爱恨离愁,狸猫转世成人,成为一位窈窕淑女,守护狸猫太子,与其相恋一生。这一切开始了……
  • 心理奇境

    心理奇境

    屠格涅夫说:“人的心灵是一座幽暗的森林。”本书的这些小故事,带领您走进神奇的心灵小径,让您轻松认识种种心理现象,从这些哲思般的故事中得到精彩且经典的启示,跟着本书的内容走进您的内心深处,让您更清晰地认识自己。请在一个个故事中涤荡您的心灵,保持心理的健康,发掘内心的潜能,为成功做好充分的准备。
  • 早安,悠大人

    早安,悠大人

    从高高在上的玖公主沦落为容颜尽毁,人人鄙视的孤女,看着未婚夫另娶他人,受尽讥讽嘲笑,钟离玖发誓势报此仇此辱,然而脑海中永远是他立在玉兰树下抬眸那一瞬的风华。当仇恨已成本能,渐渐忽视掉的记忆也随之破土而出,只是他始终陪在她身旁,无论美丑或富贵,她恨过,怀疑过,无法释怀过,一切尘埃落定,或许才是他与她的开始。
  • 乱世猎人(8)

    乱世猎人(8)

    他来自山野林间,他是一个普通的猎人,但却有着一位极具传奇性的父亲!他无意名扬天下,他不爱江山只爱美人,但时势却将他造就成一段武林的神话!他无意争霸天下,但他为了拯救天下苍生于水火,而成为乱世中最可怕的战士!他就是——蔡风!北魏末年,一位自幼与兽为伍的少年,凭着武功与智慧崛起于江湖,他虽无志于天下,却被乱世的激流一次次推向生死的边缘,从而也使他深明乱世的真谛——狩猎与被猎。
  • 在异世界中的前世科技

    在异世界中的前世科技

    一个异色双瞳的幼年,他结合着机械与生命体。他为了拯救自己的亲人被卷入时空乱流中。在异世界中他觉醒了自己的异能,在这世界中成长与自己的前世的亲人再次重逢。利用自己的力量守护自己的信仰和自己重要的人。