The Gibson Upright by Booth Tarkington
page 49 of 105 (46%)
page 49 of 105 (46%)
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CARTER: No! She spends all her days at the factory; you might think she
was running the whole place! What's worse'n that, you know they elected me chairman o' the governing committee, and she's all the time trying to 'lectioneer me out. What she wants is to git Simpson in for chairman; that'd be jest same's her bein' chairman herself, the way she runs Simpson! That's the only thing that worries me. Everything else is just splendid, splendid! GIBSON: I understand you don't blow the whistle any more. What hours are you working now? CARTER: Well, first we thought we ought to work about six; but we got on such a good basis a good many of them are talkin' how they think that's too much. It'd suit me either way. _That_ ain't the trouble over at that factory, Mr. Gibson. GIBSON: What is the trouble over at that factory? CARTER [_with feeling_]: Mr. Gibson, it's the inequality. Look at me now, and look at Simpson. Simpson and his wife haven't got a child, and I got seven, every one of 'em to support, and my married daughter lost her husband and got a shock, and I got her and her three little ones pretty much on my hands. And Simpson draws down every cent as much as what I do; just exactly the same. And if the truth was told he don't work as much as what I do. Then, look at them bachelors; they ain't got _nobody_ to support! Well, that's got to be settled! GIBSON: How are you going to settle it? CARTER [_cheerfully_]: Oh, the committee meetin' settles everything by |
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