Read Strife Online

Authors: John Galsworthy

Strife (2 page)

WILDER. There we are! This strike's been going on now since October, and as far as I can see it may last another six months. Pretty mess we shall be in by then. The only comfort is, the men'll be in a worse!

 

EDGAR. [To UNDERWOOD.] What sort of state are they really in, Frank?

 

UNDERWOOD. [Without expression.] Damnable!

 

WILDER. Well, who on earth would have thought they'd have held on like this without support!

 

UNDERWOOD. Those who know them.

 

WILDER. I defy anyone to know them! And what about tin? Price going up daily. When we do get started we shall have to work off our contracts at the top of the market.

 

WANKLIN. What do you say to that, Chairman?

 

ANTHONY. Can't be helped!

 

WILDER. Shan't pay a dividend till goodness knows when!

 

SCANTLEBURY. [With emphasis.] We ought to think of the shareholders. [Turning heavily.] Chairman, I say we ought to think of the shareholders. [ANTHONY mutters.]

 

SCANTLEBURY. What's that?

 

TENCH. The Chairman says he is thinking of you, sir.

 

SCANTLEBURY. [Sinking back into torpor.] Cynic!

 

WILDER. It's past a joke. I don't want to go without a dividend for years if the Chairman does. We can't go on playing ducks and drakes with the Company's prosperity.

 

EDGAR. [Rather ashamedly.] I think we ought to consider the men.

 

[All but ANTHONY fidget in their seats.]

 

SCANTLEBURY. [With a sigh.] We mustn't think of our private feelings, young man. That'll never do.

 

EDGAR. [Ironically.] I'm not thinking of our feelings. I'm thinking of the men's.

 

WILDER. As to that—we're men of business.

 

WANKLIN. That is the little trouble.

 

EDGAR. There's no necessity for pushing things so far in the face of all this suffering—it's—it's cruel.

 

[No one speaks, as though EDGAR had uncovered something whose existence no man prizing his self-respect could afford to recognise.]

 

WANKLIN. [With an ironical smile.] I'm afraid we mustn't base our policy on luxuries like sentiment.

 

EDGAR. I detest this state of things.

 

ANTHONY. We didn't seek the quarrel.

 

EDGAR. I know that sir, but surely we've gone far enough.

 

ANTHONY. No. [All look at one another.]

 

WANKLIN. Luxuries apart, Chairman, we must look out what we're doing.

 

ANTHONY. Give way to the men once and there'll be no end to it.

 

WANKLIN. I quite agree, but—

 

[ANTHONY Shakes his head]

 

You make it a question of bedrock principle?

 

[ANTHONY nods.]

 

Luxuries again, Chairman! The shares are below par.

 

WILDER. Yes, and they'll drop to a half when we pass the next dividend.

 

SCANTLEBURY. [With alarm.] Come, come! Not so bad as that.

 

WILDER. [Grimly.] You'll see! [Craning forward to catch ANTHONY'S speech.] I didn't catch—

 

TENCH. [Hesitating.] The Chairman says, sir, "Fais que—que—devra."

 

EDGAR. [Sharply.] My father says: "Do what we ought—and let things rip."

 

WILDER. Tcha!

 

SCANTLEBURY. [Throwing up his hands.] The Chairman's a Stoic—I always said the Chairman was a Stoic.

 

WILDER. Much good that'll do us.

 

WANKLIN. [Suavely.] Seriously, Chairman, are you going to let the ship sink under you, for the sake of a principle?

 

ANTHONY. She won't sink.

 

SCANTLEBURY. [With alarm.] Not while I'm on the Board I hope.

 

ANTHONY. [With a twinkle.] Better rat, Scantlebury.

 

SCANTLEBURY. What a man!

 

ANTHONY. I've always fought them; I've never been beaten yet.

 

WANKLIN. We're with you in theory, Chairman. But we're not all made of cast-iron.

 

ANTHONY. We've only to hold on.

 

WILDER. [Rising and going to the fire.] And go to the devil as fast as we can!

 

ANTHONY. Better go to the devil than give in!

 

WILDER. [Fretfully.] That may suit you, sir, but it doesn't suit me, or anyone else I should think.

 

[ANTHONY looks him in the face-a silence.]

 

EDGAR. I don't see how we can get over it that to go on like this means starvation to the men's wives and families.

 

[WILDER turns abruptly to the fire, and SCANTLEBURY puts out a hand to push the idea away.]

 

WANKLIN. I'm afraid again that sounds a little sentimental.

 

EDGAR. Men of business are excused from decency, you think?

 

WILDER. Nobody's more sorry for the men than I am, but if they [lashing himself] choose to be such a pig-headed lot, it's nothing to do with us; we've quite enough on our hands to think of ourselves and the shareholders.

 

EDGAR. [Irritably.] It won't kill the shareholders to miss a dividend or two; I don't see that that's reason enough for knuckling under.

 

SCANTLEBURY. [With grave discomfort.] You talk very lightly of your dividends, young man; I don't know where we are.

 

WILDER. There's only one sound way of looking at it. We can't go on ruining ourselves with this strike.

 

ANTHONY. No caving in!

 

SCANTLEBURY. [With a gesture of despair.] Look at him!

 

[ANTHONY'S leaning back in his chair. They do look at him.]

 

WILDER. [Returning to his seat.] Well, all I can say is, if that's the Chairman's view, I don't know what we've come down here for.

 

ANTHONY. To tell the men that we've got nothing for them  [Grimly.] They won't believe it till they hear it spoken in plain English.

 

WILDER. H'm! Shouldn't be a bit surprised if that brute Roberts hadn't got us down here with the very same idea. I hate a man with a grievance.

 

EDGAR. [Resentfully.] We didn't pay him enough for his discovery. I always said that at the time.

 

WILDER. We paid him five hundred and a bonus of two hundred three years later. If that's not enough! What does he want, for goodness' sake?

 

TENCH. [Complainingly.] Company made a hundred thousand out of his brains, and paid him seven hundred—that's the way he goes on, sir.

 

WILDER. The man's a rank agitator! Look here, I hate the Unions. But now we've got Harness here let's get him to settle the whole thing.

 

ANTHONY. No! [Again they look at him.]

 

UNDERWOOD. Roberts won't let the men assent to that.

 

SCANTLEBURY. Fanatic! Fanatic!

 

WILDER. [Looking at ANTHONY.] And not the only one! [FROST enters from the hall.]

 

FROST. [To ANTHONY.] Mr. Harness from the Union, waiting, sir. The men are here too, sir.

 

[ANTHONY nods. UNDERWOOD goes to the door, returning with HARNESS, a pale, clean-shaven man with hollow cheeks, quick eyes, and lantern jaw—FROST has retired.]

 

UNDERWOOD. [Pointing to TENCH'S chair.] Sit there next the Chairman, Harness, won't you?

 

[At HARNESS'S appearance, the Board have drawn together, as it were, and turned a little to him, like cattle at a dog.]

 

HARNESS. [With a sharp look round, and a bow.] Thanks! [He sits, his accent is slightly nasal.] Well, gentlemen, we're going to do business at last, I hope.

 

WILDER. Depends on what you call business, Harness. Why don't you make the men come in?

 

HARNESS. [Sardonically.] The men are far more in the right than you are. The question with us is whether we shan't begin to support them again.

 

[He ignores them all, except ANTHONY, to whom he turns in speaking.]

 

ANTHONY. Support them if you like; we'll put in free labour and have done with it.

 

HARNESS. That won't do, Mr. Anthony. You can't get free labour, and you know it.

 

ANTHONY. We shall see that.

 

HARNESS. I'm quite frank with you. We were forced to withhold our support from your men because some of their demands are in excess of current rates. I expect to make them withdraw those demands to-day: if they do, take it straight from me, gentlemen, we shall back them again at once. Now, I want to see something fixed upon before I go back to-night. Can't we have done with this old-fashioned tug-of-war business? What good's it doing you? Why don't you recognise once for all that these people are men like yourselves, and want what's good for them just as you want what's good for you [Bitterly.] Your motor-cars, and champagne, and eight-course dinners.

 

ANTHONY. If the men will come in, we'll do something for them.

 

HARNESS. [Ironically.] Is that your opinion too, sir—and yours— and yours? [The Directors do not answer.] Well, all I can say is: It's a kind of high and mighty aristocratic tone I thought we'd grown out of—seems I was mistaken.

 

ANTHONY. It's the tone the men use. Remains to be seen which can hold out longest; they without us, or we without them.

 

HARNESS. As business men, I wonder you're not ashamed of this waste of force, gentlemen. You know what it'll all end in.

 

ANTHONY. What?

 

HARNESS. Compromise—it always does.

 

SCANTLEBURY. Can't you persuade the men that their interests are the same as ours?

 

HARNESS. [Turning, ironically.] I could persuade them of that, sir, if they were.

 

WILDER. Come, Harness, you're a clever man, you don't believe all the Socialistic claptrap that's talked nowadays. There 's no real difference between their interests and ours.

 

HARNESS. There's just one very simple question I'd like to put to you. Will you pay your men one penny more than they force you to pay them?

 

[WILDER is silent.]

 

WANKLIN. [Chiming in.] I humbly thought that not to pay more than was necessary was the A B C of commerce.

 

HARNESS. [With irony.] Yes, that seems to be the A B C of commerce, sir; and the A B C of commerce is between your interests and the men's.

 

SCANTLEBURY. [Whispering.] We ought to arrange something.

 

HARNESS. [Drily.] Am I to understand then, gentlemen, that your Board is going to make no concessions?

 

[WANKLIN and WILDER bend forward as if to speak, but stop.]

 

ANTHONY. [Nodding.] None.

 

[WANKLIN and WILDER again bend forward, and SCANTLEBURY gives an unexpected grunt.]

 

HARNESS. You were about to say something, I believe?

 

[But SCANTLEBURY says nothing.]

 

EDGAR. [Looking up suddenly.] We're sorry for the state of the men.

 

HARNESS. [Icily.] The men have no use for your pity, sir. What they want is justice.

 

ANTHONY. Then let them be just.

 

HARNESS. For that word "just" read "humble," Mr. Anthony. Why should they be humble? Barring the accident of money, aren't they as good men as you?

 

ANTHONY. Cant!

 

HARNESS. Well, I've been five years in America. It colours a man's notions.

 

SCANTLEBURY. [Suddenly, as though avenging his uncompleted grunt.] Let's have the men in and hear what they've got to say!

 

[ANTHONY nods, and UNDERWOOD goes out by the single door.]

 

HARNESS. [Drily.] As I'm to have an interview with them this afternoon, gentlemen, I 'll ask you to postpone your final decision till that's over.

 

[Again ANTHONY nods, and taking up his glass drinks.] [UNDERWOOD comes in again, followed by ROBERTS, GREEN, BULGIN, THOMAS, ROUS. They file in, hat in hand, and stand silent in a row. ROBERTS is lean, of middle height, with a slight stoop. He has a little rat-gnawn, brown-grey beard, moustaches, high cheek-bones, hollow cheeks, small fiery eyes. He wears an old and grease-stained blue serge suit, and carries an old bowler hat. He stands nearest the Chairman. GREEN, next to him, has a clean, worn face, with a small grey goatee beard and drooping moustaches, iron spectacles, and mild, straightforward eyes. He wears an overcoat, green with age, and a linen collar. Next to him is BULGIN, a tall, strong man, with a dark moustache, and fighting jaw, wearing a red muffler, who keeps changing his cap from one hand to the other. Next to him is THOMAS, an old man with a grey moustache, full beard, and weatherbeaten, bony face, whose overcoat discloses a lean, plucked-looking neck. On his right, ROUS, the youngest of the five, looks like a soldier; he has a glitter in his eyes.]

 

UNDERWOOD. [Pointing.] There are some chairs there against the wall, Roberts; won't you draw them up and sit down?

 

ROBERTS. Thank you, Mr. Underwood—we'll stand in the presence of the Board. [He speaks in a biting and staccato voice, rolling his r's, pronouncing his a's like an Italian a, and his consonants short and crisp.] How are you, Mr. Harness? Did n't expect t' have the pleasure of seeing you till this afternoon.

 

HARNESS. [Steadily.] We shall meet again then, Roberts.

 

ROBERTS. Glad to hear that; we shall have some news for you to take to your people.

 

ANTHONY. What do the men want?

 

ROBERTS. [Acidly.] Beg pardon, I don't quite catch the Chairman's remark.

 

TENCH. [From behind the Chairman's chair.] The Chairman wishes to know what the men have to say.

 

ROBERTS. It's what the Board has to say we've come to hear. It's for the Board to speak first.

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