Capitolo 28
However, the visitor of charity sees this, and she also sees that the
the other men that were in the strike are returned to work. You further
he/she knows from investigation and a small experience that the man is not skilled.
However, she cannot call him/it lazy and good-for-nothing and report
him as unworthy as it is probable that his/her grandmother would have done, because of certain
intellectual conceptions which she has reached. You see other
workers come to him for aware suggestion; she knows that he spends many of it
more times in the public library that he/she reads the good books that the average
worker has time to do. He has not formed bad habits and you/he/she has only produced
to those thin temptations toward a life of ease to which the comes
intellectual man. The qualifications miss him that would incite his
union to hock him/it as a secretary or organizer, but he is a constant
orator to the reunions of workingmen, and it assumes a moral and tall attitude the
questions discussed there. He offers a certain intellectuality to
his/her friends, and he has social and sure value. The near women
you confide to the visitor of charity their understanding with his/her wife, because
she has to work so very hard, and because his/her husband doesn't provide."
Their comments are sharpened by a certain resentment toward the
the superiority of the education of his/her/their husband and kind manners. The charity
visitor is ashamed to take this point of view, for her he knows that you/he/she is
not together correctly. You is remembered to of a friend of university of his that
it told her that she was not about to allow his/her literary husband to write
unworthy potboilers in the interest of earning a living. "I insist that us
he/she will live inside my his/her own income; what he won't publish until him it is
hello, and you/he/she can give his/her genuine communication." The calls of visitor of charity
what she has felt of another knowledge to that it exhorted his/her husband
you decline a lucrative position as a lawyer of railroad, because she desired