His meditations5 carried him far into the night. The lights were put out and still he sat with his feet in the window, musing6, reflecting, dreaming, with a relaxed and receptive mind. An idea came to him. It will be important to consider what that idea was for it became afterward7 a classic pattern. It had the audacity8 of great simplicity9. He would combine the whole nail making industry in his North American Manufacturing Company, Ltd. Then production could be[212] suited to demand and the price of nails could be advanced to a paying level.
He took stock of his capital. It was fifteen thousand dollars. Maybe it could be stretched to twenty. In his work with Gib, selling rails, he had acquired a miscellaneous lot of very cheap and highly speculative10 railroad shares, some of which were beginning to have value. But twenty thousand dollars would be the outside measurement, and to think of setting out with that amount of capital to acquire control of the nail making industry, worth perhaps half a million dollars, was at a glance fantastic. But one’s capital may exist in the idea. John already understood the art of finance.
Leaving the Twenty-ninth Street plant in Thane’s hands, with funds for overhauling11 it, he consulted with Jubal Awns and set out the next morning on his errand.
The nail makers12 were responsive for an obvious reason. They were all losing money. In a short time John laid before Awns a sheaf of papers.
“There’s the child,” he said. “Examine it.”
He had got options in writing on every important nail mill in the country save one. The owners agreed to sell out to the North American Manufacturing Co., Ltd., taking in payment either cash or preferred shares at their pleasure. The inducement to take preferred shares was that if they did they would receive a bonus of fifty per cent. in common stock.
“But they will take cash in every case,” said Awns, “and where will you find it?”
“They won’t,” said John. “I’ll see to that. What have you done with Gib?”
[213]
Awns had been to see Enoch. The New Damascus mill produced in its nail department a fifth of all the nails then made. There was no probability of buying him out. John well knew that. Yet his nail output had to be controlled in some way, else the combine would fail. So he had sent Awns to him with alternative propositions. The first was to buy him out of the nail making business. And when he had declined to sell, as of course he would, Awns was to negotiate for his entire output under a long term contract.
“He wouldn’t sell his nail business,” said Awns.
“I knew that,” said John.
“But I’ve got a contract for all his nails,” said Awns, handing over the paper. “The price is stiff,—fifty cents a keg more than nails are worth. It was the best I could do.”
“That’s all right,” said John reading the agreement. “We are going to add a dollar a keg to nails. This phrase—‘unless the party of the second part,’ (that’s Gib), ‘wishes to sell nails at a lower price to the trade’—who put that in?”
“He did,” said Awns. “I couldn’t see any point in objecting to it. No man is going to undersell his own contract.”
John handed the agreement back and sat for several minutes musing.
“There’s a loose wheel in your scheme, if I’m not mistaken,” said Awns. “If you add a dollar a keg to nails won’t you bring in a lot of new competition? Anybody can make nails if it pays. These same people[214] who sell out to you may turn around and begin again. You’ll be holding the umbrella for everybody else.”
“Anybody can’t make nails,” said John. “I’ve looked at that.”
“Why not?”
“Nail making machines are covered by patents. There are only four firms that make them. I’ve made air tight contracts with them. We take all their machines at an advance of twenty-five per cent. over present prices and they bind13 themselves to sell machines to nobody else during the life of the contract. So we’ve got the bag sewed up top and bottom. They were glad to do it because there isn’t any profit in machines either with the nail makers all going busted14.”
“Well, that is showing them something,” he said. “If you go far with that kind of thing laws will be passed to stop it.”
“It’s legal, isn’t it?”
“There’s no law against it,” said Awns.
“We’re not obliged to be more legal than the law,” said John. “Tell me, what do you know about bankers in Pittsburgh? I’ve got to do some business in that quarter.”
Pittsburgh at this time was not a place prepared. It was a sign, a pregnant smudge, a state of phenomena17. The great mother was undergoing a C?sarian operation. An event was bringing itself to pass. The steel age was about to be delivered.
Men performed the office of obstetrics without[215] knowing what they did. They could neither see nor understand it. They struggled blindly, falling down and getting up. Forces possessed18 them. Their psychic19 condition was that of men to whom fabulous20 despair and extravagant21 expectation were the two ends of one ecstasy22. They were hard, shrewd, sentimental23, superstitious24, romantic in friendship and conscienceless in trade. They named their blast furnaces after their wives and sweethearts, stole each other’s secrets, fell out with their partners, knew no law of business but to lay on what the traffic would bear, read Swedenborg and dreamed of Heaven as a thoroughfare resembling Wood Street, Pittsburgh, lined with banks and in the door of each bank a grovelling25 president, pleading: “Here’s money for your payrolls26. Please borrow it here. Very fine quality of money. Pay it back when you like.”
They were always begging money at the banks. When they made money they used it to build more mills and to fill the mills with automatic monsters that grew stranger and more fantastic. Many of these monsters, like things in nature’s own history of trial and error, appeared for a short time and became extinct. When they were not making money they were bankrupt. That was about half the time. Then they came to the banks in Wood Street to implore27, beg, wheedle28 money to meet their payrolls.
There is the legend of a man, afterward one of the great millionaires, who drove one mare29 so often to Wood Street and from one bank to another in a zigzag30 course that the animal came to know the stops by[216] heart, made them automatically, and could not be made to go in a straight line through this lane of money doors.
The bankers were a tough minded group. They had to be. Nobody was quite safe. A man with a record for sanity31 would suddenly lose his balance and cast away the substance of certainty to pursue a vision. The effort to adapt the Bessemer steel process to American conditions was an irresistible32 road to ruin. That process was producing amazing results in Europe but in this country it was bewitched with perversity33 and it looked as if the English and German manufacturers would walk away with the steel age. Fortunes were still being swallowed up in snail34 shaped vessels35 called converters, not unlike the one Aaron had built at New Damascus twenty-five years before.
Of all the bankers in Wood Street the toughest minded was Lemuel Slaymaker.
“All the same,” said Awns, “I should try him first. His name would put it through and he loves a profit.”
Awns knew him. They went together to see him. Slaymaker saluted36 Awns and acknowledged his introduction of Mr. John Breakspeare not otherwise nor more than by turning slowly in his chair and staring at them. He had a large white face, pale blue eyes and red, close-cropped hair. The impression he made was one of total sphericity. There was no way to take hold of him. No thought or feeling projected.
John laid out his plan, producing the papers as exhibits, A, B, C, in the appropriate places. Lastly he produced data on the nail trade, showing the amount[217] of nails consumed in the country and the normal rate of annual increase with the growth of population, together with a carefully developed estimate of the combine’s profits at various prices per keg. When he had finished the idea was lucid37, complete in every part and self-evident. Therein lay the secret of his extraordinary power of persuasion38. He seemed never to argue his case. He expressed no opinion of his own to be combatted. He merely laid down a state of facts with an air of looking at them from the other man’s point of view.
“And what you want is a bank to guarantee this scheme,” said Slaymaker. “You want a bank to guarantee that if these people want cash instead of stock the cash will be forthcoming.”
This was the first word he had spoken. The papers he had not even glanced at. They lay on his desk as John had placed them there.
“That’s it,” said John. “Guarantee it. Very little cash will be required.”
“How do you say that?”
“To make them want stock instead of cash,” said John, “you have only to engage brokers39 to make advance quotations40 for the stock, here and in Philadelphia at, say, par3 for the preferred and fifty for the common. If you do not know brokers who can do that I will find them. The scheme is sound. The stock will pay dividends41 from the start. A bank that had guaranteed it might very well speak a good word for it here and there. The public will want some of the stock.”
[218]
Slaymaker gazed at a corner of the ceiling and twiggled his foot. Then he turned his back on them.
“Leave the papers,” he said, “and see me at this time tomorrow.”
When they were in the street again Awns said: “You got him.”
And so the infant trust was born,—first of its kind, first of a giant brood. Biologically they were all alike, but with evolution their size increased prodigiously42. The swaddling cloths of this one would not have patched the eye of a twentieth century specimen43 delivered in Wall Street.
Slaymaker’s lawyers and Jubal Awns together verified all the agreements. The stock of the N. A. M. Co., Ltd., was increased enough to make sure there would be plenty to go around. Slaymaker took a large amount for banker’s fees, John took a block for promoter’s services and another block for the Twenty-ninth Street mill, the lawyers took some, and a certain amount was set aside for Thane,—for Agnes really. John was elected president and the combine was launched. Before the day came on which the options of purchase were to be exercised the preferred stock was publicly quoted at 105 and the common stock at 55, and there were symptoms of public interest in its possibilities. As John predicted, nearly all the nail manufacturers elected to take stock in the new company, with Slaymaker’s name behind it.
Everyone at length was more enthusiastic than John. He kept thinking of that phrase in the contract with Gib—“unless the party of the second part wishes to[219] sell nails to the trade at a lower price.” No one else had noticed it, not even Slaymaker. Nobody else would have had any misgivings44 about it. Who could imagine, as Awns said, that a man would undersell his own contract? There is a law of self interest one takes for granted.
点击收听单词发音
1 gnawing | |
a.痛苦的,折磨人的 | |
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2 parlous | |
adj.危险的,不确定的,难对付的 | |
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3 par | |
n.标准,票面价值,平均数量;adj.票面的,平常的,标准的 | |
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4 nil | |
n.无,全无,零 | |
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5 meditations | |
默想( meditation的名词复数 ); 默念; 沉思; 冥想 | |
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6 musing | |
n. 沉思,冥想 adj. 沉思的, 冥想的 动词muse的现在分词形式 | |
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7 afterward | |
adv.后来;以后 | |
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8 audacity | |
n.大胆,卤莽,无礼 | |
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9 simplicity | |
n.简单,简易;朴素;直率,单纯 | |
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10 speculative | |
adj.思索性的,暝想性的,推理的 | |
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11 overhauling | |
n.大修;拆修;卸修;翻修v.彻底检查( overhaul的现在分词 );大修;赶上;超越 | |
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12 makers | |
n.制造者,制造商(maker的复数形式) | |
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13 bind | |
vt.捆,包扎;装订;约束;使凝固;vi.变硬 | |
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14 busted | |
adj. 破产了的,失败了的,被降级的,被逮捕的,被抓到的 动词bust的过去式和过去分词 | |
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15 admiration | |
n.钦佩,赞美,羡慕 | |
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16 mingled | |
混合,混入( mingle的过去式和过去分词 ); 混进,与…交往[联系] | |
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17 phenomena | |
n.现象 | |
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18 possessed | |
adj.疯狂的;拥有的,占有的 | |
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19 psychic | |
n.对超自然力敏感的人;adj.有超自然力的 | |
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20 fabulous | |
adj.极好的;极为巨大的;寓言中的,传说中的 | |
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21 extravagant | |
adj.奢侈的;过分的;(言行等)放肆的 | |
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22 ecstasy | |
n.狂喜,心醉神怡,入迷 | |
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23 sentimental | |
adj.多愁善感的,感伤的 | |
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24 superstitious | |
adj.迷信的 | |
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25 grovelling | |
adj.卑下的,奴颜婢膝的v.卑躬屈节,奴颜婢膝( grovel的现在分词 );趴 | |
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26 payrolls | |
n.(公司员工的)工资名单( payroll的名词复数 );(公司的)工资总支出,工薪总额 | |
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27 implore | |
vt.乞求,恳求,哀求 | |
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28 wheedle | |
v.劝诱,哄骗 | |
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29 mare | |
n.母马,母驴 | |
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30 zigzag | |
n.曲折,之字形;adj.曲折的,锯齿形的;adv.曲折地,成锯齿形地;vt.使曲折;vi.曲折前行 | |
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31 sanity | |
n.心智健全,神智正常,判断正确 | |
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32 irresistible | |
adj.非常诱人的,无法拒绝的,无法抗拒的 | |
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33 perversity | |
n.任性;刚愎自用 | |
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34 snail | |
n.蜗牛 | |
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35 vessels | |
n.血管( vessel的名词复数 );船;容器;(具有特殊品质或接受特殊品质的)人 | |
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36 saluted | |
v.欢迎,致敬( salute的过去式和过去分词 );赞扬,赞颂 | |
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37 lucid | |
adj.明白易懂的,清晰的,头脑清楚的 | |
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38 persuasion | |
n.劝说;说服;持有某种信仰的宗派 | |
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39 brokers | |
n.(股票、外币等)经纪人( broker的名词复数 );中间人;代理商;(订合同的)中人v.做掮客(或中人等)( broker的第三人称单数 );作为权力经纪人进行谈判;以中间人等身份安排… | |
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40 quotations | |
n.引用( quotation的名词复数 );[商业]行情(报告);(货物或股票的)市价;时价 | |
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41 dividends | |
红利( dividend的名词复数 ); 股息; 被除数; (足球彩票的)彩金 | |
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42 prodigiously | |
adv.异常地,惊人地,巨大地 | |
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43 specimen | |
n.样本,标本 | |
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44 misgivings | |
n.疑虑,担忧,害怕;疑虑,担心,恐惧( misgiving的名词复数 );疑惧 | |
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