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The Young Soap-Boiler
by
“You want work, do you, young man? I s’pose you want to keep books or suthin’ o’ that sort. I never saw such a lot o’ fellers askin’ for work and afraid to dirty their fingers.”
“I’ll do any honest work by which I can earn my bread, without being dependent on friends.”
“Any honest work, will you? I’ll make you back out of that air. I’ll bet you won’t begin where I did.”
“Try me, sir, and see.”
“Well, then, I’ll give you good wages to go into my soap factory next Monday morning. Ha! ha! that’s honest work; but fellers of your cloth don’t do that sort of honest work.”
“I will, sir.”
Mr. Bluff was utterly surprised, but he gave Dudley the situation, saying that he reckoned the smell of soap-grease would send him out.
Dudley hardly knew what to make of his own boldness. But he only told his mother that he had a situation with Mr. Bluff, and that he did not know the precise nature of his duties. He was not ashamed of his work, but afraid of giving her pain.
Monday morning he went early to the soap factory, stopping at the tailor’s on the way, and getting a pair of blue overalls that he had ordered. It must be confessed that the smell of the factory disgusted him at first, but he soon became interested. He saw that brains were used in soap-making. He became more and more interested as he saw how accurate some of the chemical processes were. He soon learned to cut the great blocks of hard soap with wires; he watched with eager interest the use of coloring matters in making the mottled soaps, and he soon became so skilful that surly Mr. Bluff promoted him to some of the less unpleasant parts of the work.
But there was much talk about it at first. Some of the young ladies who had been useless all their lives, and who had come to think that uselessness was necessary to respectability, were “surprised that Dudley Crawford should follow so low a trade.” But those very people never once thought it disgraceful in Walter Whittaker to be a genteel loafer, living off his father’s hard-earned salary, and pretending that he was looking for a situation. And I will not be too hard on Whittaker. I think if he could have had a situation in which he could do nothing, and be paid well for it, he would have been delighted. But he shunned Dudley. Partly because he was afraid of compromising his own respectability, and partly because he had sense enough to see that Dudley’s honest eyes looked through him, and saw what a humbug he was.
After a year Dudley’s father’s estate was settled, and owing to an unexpected rise in some of the property, it was found that the debts would all be paid, and a small balance be left for the family. It was but a small amount, but it enabled Dudley to lay aside his blue overalls, and return to the old school again. Dr. Parmlee, the principal, was delighted to have such a good pupil back again. Whittaker came back about the same time, and the very first day he whispered to some of the boys that Dudley smelled of soap-grease. The boys laughed thoughtlessly, as boys are apt to do, and passed the poor joke round. Dudley maintained the respect of the school in general, but there was a small clique, who never knew their lessons, but who prided themselves on being genteel dunces. These folks used to talk about the soap-grease, even in Dr. Parmlee’s presence; but the Doctor quietly retorted that if Crawford’s hands smelled of soap-grease, that was better than to have soap-grease inside his head and pomatum on the outside. They were a little more modest after this, but they could not forbear allusions that kept Dudley under fire. His mother, who was very proud of her son’s independence, could not but feel sorry that he was subject to such persecutions. “Ah, mother,” he would say, “the thing that I am proudest of in my life is, that I spent a year in Bluff’s soap factory. Don’t think that I am annoyed at the barkings of lap-dogs.”
At last came the day of graduation. Dudley led the class. There was a great crowd of fine people. The last speech of all on the programme was “Honest Work Honorable–Dudley Crawford.” With a characteristic manliness he stood up bravely for work. So fine were his arguments, so undaunted his bearing, that the audience were carried away. Dr. Parmlee took off his spectacles to wipe his eyes. Dudley’s mother could not conceal her pleasure. “Franklin’s hands had printers’ ink on them,” he said, “but they were shaken by princes and savans–the lightning did not despise them. Garibaldi’s fingers were soiled with candle-grease, but they have moulded a free nation. Stephenson’s fingers were black with coal, and soiled with machine oil of a fireman’s work, but they pointed out highways to commerce and revolutionized civilization. There are those” (Whittaker and his set looked crestfallen here) “who will gladly take the hand of worthless loafers, or of genteel villains” (here certain ladies looked down), “but who would not have dared shake hands with Franklin, the printer, with Garibaldi, the tallow-chandler, with Stephenson, the stoker. But before God and right-thinking men there are no soiled hands but guilty hands or idle ones.”
When he sat down, others beside his mother shed tears, and good Dr. Parmlee shook his pupil’s hand in sight of the audience, but the applause was so great that nobody could hear what he said. And the next day a note came from the chief editor of a leading paper, saying that one who believed enough in labor to carry out his principles in his life, would make an earnest advocate of them. He therefore tendered Mr. Crawford a place on the editorial staff of his paper.
“P-pretty well done, Dominie,” stammered Will Sampson.