第 33 节
作者:博搏      更新:2022-04-08 21:02      字数:9322
  imperative common sense of the position seems to be that the
  European governments should set themselves straight away to out…
  Ford Ford; and provide their own people with cheap road
  transport。
  But here comes in the question whether this common…sense course
  is inevitable。  Suppose the mental energy left in Europe after
  the war is insufficient for such a constructive feat as this。
  There will certainly be the obstruction of official pedantry; the
  hold…up of this vested interest and that; the greedy desire of
  〃private enterprise〃 to exploit the occasion upon rather more
  costly and less productive lines; the general distrust felt by
  ignorant and unimaginative people of a new way of doing things。
  The process after all may not get done in the obviously wise way。
  This will not mean that Europe will buy American cars。  It will
  be quite unable to buy American cars。  It will be unable to make
  anything that America will not be able to make more cheaply for
  itself。  But it will mean that Europe will go on without cheap
  cars; that is to say it will go on a more sluggishly and clumsily
  and wastefully at a lower economic level。  Hampered transport
  means hampered production of other things; and in increasing
  inability to buy abroad。  And so we go down and down。
  It does not follow that because a course is the manifestly right
  and advantageous course for the community that it will be taken。
  I am reminded of this by a special basket in my study here; into
  which I pitch letters; circulars; pamphlets and so forth as they
  come to hand from a gentleman named Gattie; and his friends Mr。
  Adrian Ross; Mr。 Roy Horniman; Mr。 Henry Murray and others。  His
  particular project is the construction of a Railway Clearing
  House for London。  It is an absolutely admirable scheme。  It
  would cut down the heavy traffic in the streets of London to
  about one…third; it would enable us to run the goods traffic of
  England with less than half the number of railway trucks we now
  employ; it would turn over enormous areas of valuable land from
  their present use as railway goods yards and sidings; it would
  save time in the transit of goods and labour in their handling。
  It is a quite beautifully worked out scheme。  For the last eight
  or ten years this group of devoted fanatics has been pressing
  this undertaking upon an indifferent country with increasing
  vehemence and astonishment at that indifference。  The point is
  that its adoption; though it would be of general benefit; would
  be of no particular benefit to any leading man or highly placed
  official。  On the other hand it would upset all sorts of
  individuals who are in a position to obstruct it quietlyand
  they do so。  Meaning no evil。  I dip my hand in the accumulation
  and extract a leaflet by the all too zealous Mr。 Murray。  In it
  he denounces various public officials by name as he cheats and
  scoundrels; and invites a prosecution for libel。
  In that fashion nothing will ever get done。  There is no
  prosecution; but for all that I do not agree with Mr。 Murray
  about the men he names。  These gentlemen are just comfortable
  gentlemen; own brothers to these old generals of ours who will
  not take off their spurs。  They are probably quite charming
  people except that they know nothing of that Fear of God which
  searches by heart。  Why should they bother?
  So many of these after…the…war problems bring one back to the
  question of how far the war has put the Fear of God into the
  hearts of responsible men。  There is really no other reason in
  existence that I can imagine why they should ask themselves the
  question; 〃Have I done my best?〃  and that still more important
  question; 〃Am I doing my best now?〃  And so while I hear plenty
  of talk about the great reorganisations that are to come after
  the war; while there is the stir of doubt among the
  /rentiers/ whether; after all; they will get paid; while the
  unavoidable stresses and sacrifices of the war are making many
  people question the rightfulness of much that they did as a
  matter of course; and of much that they took for granted; I
  perceive there is also something dull and not very articulate in
  this European world; something resistant and inert; that is like
  the obstinate rolling over of a heavy sleeper after he has been
  called upon to get up。  〃Just a little longer。。。。  Just for
  /my/ time。〃
  One thought alone seems to make these more intractable people
  anxious。  I thrust it in as my last stimulant when everything
  else has failed。  〃There will be /frightful/ trouble with
  labour after the war;〃 I say。
  They try to persuade themselves that military discipline is
  breaking in labour。。。。
  2
  What does British labour think of the outlook after the war?
  As a distinctive thing British labour does not think。  〃Class…
  conscious labour;〃 as the Marxists put it; scarcely exists in
  Britain。  The only convincing case I ever met was a bath…chairman
  of literary habits Eastbourne。  The only people who are; as a
  class; class…conscious in the British community are the Anglican
  gentry and their fringe of the genteel。  Everybody else is
  〃respectable。〃  The mass of British workers find their thinking
  in the ordinary halfpenny papers or in /John Bull。/  The so…
  called labour papers are perhaps less representative of British
  Labour than any other section of the press; the /Labour
  Leader/; for example; is the organ of such people as Bertrand
  Russell; Vernon Lee; Morel; academic /rentiers/ who know
  about as much as of the labour side of industrialism as they do
  of cock…fighting。  All the British peoples are racially willing
  and good…tempered people; quite ready to be led by those they
  imagine to be abler than themselves。  They make the most cheerful
  and generous soldiers in the whole world; without insisting upon
  that democratic respect which the Frenchman exacts。  They do not
  criticise and they do not trouble themselves much about the
  general plan of operations; so long as they have confidence in
  the quality and good will of their leading。  But British soldiers
  will of their loading。  But British soldiers will hiss a general
  when they think he is selfish; unfeeling; or a muff。  And the
  socialist propaganda has imported ideas of public service into
  private employment。  Labour in Britain has been growing
  increasingly impatient of bad or selfish industrial leadership。
  Labour trouble in Great Britain turns wholly upon the idea
  crystallised in the one word 〃profiteer。〃  Legislation and
  regulation of hours of labour; high wages; nothing will keep
  labour quiet in Great Britain if labour thinks it is being
  exploited for private gain。
  Labour feels very suspicious of private gain。  For that suspicion
  a certain rather common type of employer is mainly to blame。
  Labour believes that employers is mainly to blame。  Labour
  believes that employers as a class cheat workmen as a class; plan
  to cheat them of their full share in the common output; and drive
  hard bargains。  It believes that private employers are equally
  ready to sacrifice the welfare of the nation and the welfare of
  the workers for mere personal advantage。  It has a traditional
  experience to support these suspicions。
  In no department of morals have ideas changed so completely
  during the last eight years as in relation to 〃profits〃。  Eighty
  years ago everyone believed in the divine right of property to do
  what it pleased its advantages; a doctrine more disastrous
  socially than the divine right of kings。  There was no such sense
  of the immorality of 〃holding up〃 as pervades the public
  conscience to…day。  The worker was expected not only to work; but
  to be grateful for employment。  The property owner held his
  property and handed it out for use and development or not; just
  as he thought fit。  These ideas are not altogether extinct today。
  Only a few days ago I met a magnificent old lady of seventy nine
  or eighty; who discoursed upon the wickedness of her gardener in
  demanding another shilling a week because of war prices。
  She was a valiant and handsome personage。  A face that had still
  a healthy natural pinkness looked out from under blond curls; and
  an elegant and carefully tended hand tossed back some fine old
  lace to gesticulate more freely。  She had previously charmed her
  hearers by sweeping aside certain rumours that were drifting
  about。
  〃Germans invade /Us!/〃 she cried。  〃Who'd /let/ 'em;
  I'd like to know?  Who'd /let/ 'em?〃
  And then she reverted to her grievance about the gardener。
  〃I told him that after the war he'd be glad enough to get
  anything。  Grateful!  They'll all be coming back after the war
  all of 'em; glad enough to get anything。  Asking for another
  shilling indeed!〃
  Everyone who heard her looked shocked。  But that was the tone of
  everyone of importance in the dark years that followed the
  Napoleonic wars。  That is just one survivor of the old tradition。
  Another is Blight the solicitor; who goes about bewailing the
  fact that we writers are 〃holding out false hopes of higher
  agricultural wages after the war。〃  But these are both
  exceptions。  They are held to be remarkable people even by their
  own class。  The mass of property owners and influential people in
  Europe to…day no more believe in th