登陆注册
19593500000052

第52章

For nearly a dozen years there had not been a word of truth upon any subject important to the people of Remsen City in the columns of any of the three.During wars between rival groups of capitalists a half-truth was now and then timidly uttered, but never a word of ``loose talk,'' of ``anarchy,'' of anything but the entirely ``safe, sane and conservative.''

Thus, any one who might have witnessed the scenes in Market Square on Thursday evening would have been not a little astonished to read the accounts presented the next day by the three newspapers.According to all three the Workingmen's League, long a menace to the public peace, had at last brought upon Remsen City the shame of a riot in which two men, a woman and four children had lost their lives and more than a hundred, ``including the notorious Victor Dorn,'' had been injured.And after the riot the part of the mob that was hostile to ``the Dorn gang'' had swept down upon the office of the New Day, had wrecked it, and had set fire to the building, with the result that five houses were burned before the flames could be put out.The Free Press published, as a mere rumor, that the immediate cause of the outbreak had been an impending ``scurrilous attack'' in the New Day upon one of the political gangs of the slums and its leader.The Associated Press, sending forth an account of the riot to the entire country, represented it as a fight between rival gangs of workmen precipitated by the insults and menaces of a ``socialistic party led by a young operator named Dorn.''

Dorn's faction had aroused in the mass of the workingmen a fear that this spread of ``socialistic and anarchistic ideas'' would cause a general shut down of factories and a flight of the capital that was ``giving employment to labor.''

A version of the causes and the events, somewhat nearer the truth, was talked about Remsen City.But all the respectable classes were well content with what their newspapers printed.

And, while some broad- minded respectabilities spoke of the affair as an outrage, none of them was disposed to think that any real wrong had been done.Victor Dorn and his crowd of revolutionists had got, after all, only their deserts.

After forty-eight hours of careful study of public opinion, Dick Kelly decided that Remsen City was taking the dose as he had anticipated.He felt emboldened to proceed to his final move in the campaign against ``anarchy'' in his beloved city.On the second morning after the riot, all three newspapers published double- headed editorials calling upon the authorities to safeguard the community against another such degrading and dangerous upheaval.``It is time that the distinction between liberty and license be sharply drawn.'' After editorials in this vein had been repeated for several days, after sundry bodies of eminently respectable citizens--the Merchants' Association, the Taxpayers' League, the Chamber of Commerce--had passed indignant and appealing resolutions, after two priests, a clergyman and four preachers had sermonized against ``the leniency of constituted authority with criminal anarchy,'' Mr.Kelly had the City Attorney go before Judge Lansing and ask for an injunction.

Judge Lansing promptly granted the injunction.The New Day was enjoined from appearing.The Workingmen's League was enjoined from holding meetings.

Then the County Prosecutor, also a henchman of Kelly's, secured from the Grand Jury--composed of farmers, merchants and owners of factories--indictments against Thomas Colman and Victor Dorn for inciting a riot.

Meanwhile Victor Dorn was rapidly recovering.With rare restraint young Dr.Charlton did not fuss and fret and meddle, did not hamper nature with his blundering efforts to assist, did not stuff ``nourishment'' into his patient to decay and to produce poisonous blood.He let the young man's superb vitality work the inevitable and speedy cure.Thus, wounds and shocks, that have often been mistreated by doctors into mortal, passed so quickly that only Selma Gordon and the doctor himself realized how grave Victor's case had been.The day he was indicted--just a week from the riot--he was sitting up and was talking freely.

``Won't it set him back if I tell him all that has occurred?''

said Selma.

``Talk to him as you would to me,'' replied Charlton.``He is a sensible man.I've already told him pretty much everything.It has kept him from fretting, to be able to lie there quietly and make his plans.''

Had you looked in upon Victor and Selma, in Colman's little transformed parlor, you would rather have thought Selma the invalid.The man in the bed was pale and thin of face, but his eyes had the expression of health and of hope.Selma had great circles under her eyes and her expression was despair struggling to conceal itself.Those indictments, those injunctions-- how powerful the enemy were! How could such an enemy, aroused new and inflexibly resolved, be combatted?--especially when one had no money, no way of reaching the people, no chance to organize.

``Dr.Charlton has told you?'' said Selma.

``Day before yesterday,'' replied Victor.``Why do you look so down-in-the-mouth, Selma?''

``It isn't easy to be cheerful, with you ill and the paper destroyed,'' replied she.

``But I'm not ill, and the paper isn't destroyed,'' said Victor.

``Never were either I or it doing such good work as now.'' His eyes were dancing.``What more could one ask than to have such stupid enemies as we've got?''

Selma did not lift her eyes.To her those enemies seemed anything but stupid.Had they not ruined the League?

``I see you don't understand,'' pursued Victor.``No matter.

You'll wear a very different face two weeks from now.''

``But,'' said Selma, ``exactly what you said you were afraid of has occurred.And now you say you're glad of it.''

``I told you I was afraid Dick Kelly would make the one move that could destroy us.''

``But he has!'' cried Selma.

Victor smiled.``No, indeed!'' replied he.

``What worse could he have done?''

同类推荐
  • 春冰室野乘

    春冰室野乘

    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。
  • The Copy-Cat

    The Copy-Cat

    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。
  • Told After Supper

    Told After Supper

    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。
  • 支动

    支动

    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。
  • 洞真太上八素真经精耀三景妙诀

    洞真太上八素真经精耀三景妙诀

    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
  • 八字不合

    八字不合

    冉小灿说:“遇到一个飞行器设计的教授就嫁了吧!”宋教授满意的点点头。茫茫人海中,你总会遇到生命中,那个对的人。
  • 婚姻无期,秦先生晚上见

    婚姻无期,秦先生晚上见

    本是千金大小姐却遭遇连重打击,父亲的重病在床,继母和继妹的联合打击,未婚夫的背叛,让她重重从天堂跌落地狱,不甘心被如此戏耍,婚宴的男主角一下子换成了那个本已离开的男人,重拾被遗忘的婚约,男人将证书推到她的面前,哄骗她签字“从今天开始,你是我秦冽的女人。”--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 家庭理财全攻略

    家庭理财全攻略

    本书根据中国家庭的实际情况,完全从实用的角度出发,介绍了家庭投资理财的各种方法,对居家节俭、子女教育、银行储蓄、购买保险、谨慎炒股、投资基金、打理房产、选购债券、买卖房产及珍品收藏等理财方式进行了有针对性的剖析。书中没有高深莫测的空谈,也没有晦涩难懂的理论,是资深理财专家根据多年实践经验编写而成,可以说是一本通俗易懂、操作性强的家庭理财指南。相信通过阅读本书,您能轻松掌握家庭理财的新知识和小窍门,从而尽快踏上家财的增值之旅。
  • 听说相爱有白头

    听说相爱有白头

    唐宝笙寄住顾家,一不小心被傲娇蠢萌的顾连大少爷喜欢上了。不是没想过以身相许的,但考虑到颜值爆表、家底丰厚的顾连被太多别有用心的人惦记着,她总有一天会疲于应对万千扑面而来的恶毒女配。于是在某个月黑风高的晚上,唐宝笙悄悄卷铺盖走人。紧接着,N年过去了……PS:1.HE,中间虐。2.初次写文,请多指教。
  • 时空的约定:冷酷校草的时空甜心

    时空的约定:冷酷校草的时空甜心

    超越时空,只是一个传说么?真的能成真吗?读大学三年级的女主辰沫雨,得知自己身世之后,感觉自己从一个千金大小跌落到孤儿。谁知,天意弄人,自己居然因为一次偶然的车祸而穿越了!穿越就算了,辰沫雨却回想不起自己是来自三年后的人,却进入了“诺”的身体里。更可怕的是当天要伤害他的那个少年居然是“诺”的……父母的失踪之谜,还有自己真正的爱情,一步步的靠近她。如果,自己回到未来,他还会和她一起吗?
  • 轻浮

    轻浮

    席凉白,席家小女儿,被父亲遗弃。被名叫祈愿的少年救起,他说让她叫他哥哥,然而谁又知道他真的就是她的哥哥,而他这个哥哥却是抛开道德束缚,义无反顾的爱着她。尽管她爱着别人。
  • 一千多个小时,人间蒸发

    一千多个小时,人间蒸发

    谢聪被自己的高中同学叫过去玩,之后便消失了,谢聪一直在经历些什么呢?洗脑,暗算,折磨,控制……经历了一千多个小时的追寻,谢聪终于被成功解救。一个月之后,在大街小巷中,谢聪他们终于再也看不到传销的踪影了,她看到了一段新的生活即将开启……
  • 无情女梦星辰

    无情女梦星辰

    她,二十一世纪人人畏惧的“蓝影”创始人——慕天吻。那面具下如天神之笔精心描绘的绝世容颜,透着让人无法亲近的冰冷。人人都说她冷血无情,殊不知她的狠毒只是一层伪装。而在那一层伪装下,掩盖的是一个十九岁少女,早已被伤透的心。
  • 首席追妻不容易

    首席追妻不容易

    俗话说,男追女隔座山,女追男隔层纱,然而王轩毅这个多金首席倒追凌依涵,却仍然没得到美人心,不行,革命尚在努力,追妻之路,坎坷不易,且行且珍惜……——“涵涵,如果有男人娶你,怎么办?”“不理他。”“我娶你呢?”“咬死你。”“你敢!”她眉开颜笑,指着旁边一条凶狗道:“它敢。”“……”他汗颜,难道连狗都要阻拦他们在一起?
  • 混沌道途

    混沌道途

    人世沉浮,唯情不灭。古传成神者需抛却七情六欲方能成其大道,兄弟情深怎能抛却?兄弟齐心划破虚空终成大道,不一样的成神道路,无法割舍的兄弟情深。