[An Unsocial Socialist by George Bernard Shaw]@TWC D-Link book
An Unsocial Socialist

CHAPTER XII
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"It was an opportunity of doing some practical good." "I did not," said Trefusis, grinning at the sarcasm.

"This Transcanadian Railway Company, having got a great deal of spare land from the Canadian government for nothing, thought it would be a good idea to settle British workmen on it and screw rent out of them.

Plenty of British workmen, supplanted in their employment by machinery, or cheap foreign labor, or one thing or another, were quite willing to go; but as they couldn't afford to pay their passages to Canada, the Company appealed to the benevolent to pay for them by subscription, as the change would improve their miserable condition.

I did not see why I should pay to provide a rich company with tenant farmers, and I told Jansenius so.
He remarked that when money and not talk was required, the workmen of England soon found out who were their real friends." "I know nothing about these questions," said Sir Charles, with an air of conclusiveness; "but I see no objection to emigration." "The fact is," said Trefusis, "the idea of emigration is a dangerous one for us.
Familiarize the workman with it, and some day he may come to see what a capital thing it would be to pack off me, and you, with the peerage, and the whole tribe of unprofitable proprietors such as we are, to St.
Helena; making us a handsome present of the island by way of indemnity! We are such a restless, unhappy lot, that I doubt whether it would not prove a good thing for us too.

The workmen would lose nothing but the contemplation of our elegant persons, exquisite manners, and refined tastes.


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