[John Barleycorn by Jack London]@TWC D-Link bookJohn Barleycorn CHAPTER I 15/16
And when they come to vote, they will vote for prohibition. And the best of it is that there will be no hardship worked on the coming generation.
Not having access to alcohol, not being predisposed toward alcohol, it will never miss alcohol.
It will mean life more abundant for the manhood of the young boys born and growing up--ay, and life more abundant for the young girls born and growing up to share the lives of the young men." "Why not write all this up for the sake of the men and women coming ?" Charmian asked.
"Why not write it so as to help the wives and sisters and mothers to the way they should vote ?" "The 'Memoirs of an Alcoholic,'" I sneered--or, rather, John Barleycorn sneered; for he sat with me there at table in my pleasant, philanthropic jingle, and it is a trick of John Barleycorn to turn the smile to a sneer without an instant's warning. "No," said Charmian, ignoring John Barleycorn's roughness, as so many women have learned to do.
"You have shown yourself no alcoholic, no dipsomaniac, but merely an habitual drinker, one who has made John Barleycorn's acquaintance through long years of rubbing shoulders with him.
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