you a question; answer me as a man of sense.
Which makes the best general--the man who leads the charge straight up to
the intrenchments, yellin': 'Come on, boys!'--or the one who says, very
likely shaking a revolver in their faces: 'Get in there, ye damn low-down
privates, and take that fort, and report to me when I've finished my
breakfast'? Which one of those two men will the soldiers do the most for?
For the one they like best, Mr. Peterson, and don't forget it. And which
one of these are they going to like best, do you suppose--the brave leader
who scorns to ask his men to go where he wouldn't go himself, who isn't
ashamed to do honest work with honest hands, whose fists are good enough
to defend him against his enemies; or the man who is afraid to go out
among the men without a revolver in his hip pocket? Answer me as a man of
sense, Mr. Peterson."
Peterson was manifestly disturbed by the last part of the harangue. Now he
said: "Oh, I guess Bannon wasn't scared when he drawed that gun on Reilly.
He ain't that kind."
"Would you draw a gun on an unarmed, defenceless man?" Grady asked
earnestly.
"No, I wouldn't. I don't like that way of doing."
"The men don't like it either, Mr. Peterson. No more than you do. They
like you. They'll do anything you ask them to. They know that you can do
anything that they can. But, Mr. Peterson, I'll be frank with you. They
don't like the man who crowded you out. That's putting it mild. I won't
say they hate him for an uncivil, hard-tongued, sneaking weasel of a
spy--"
"I never knew Bannon to do anything like that," said Peterson, slowly.
"I did. Didn't he come sneaking up and hear what I was saying--up on top
of the elevator the other day? I guess he won't try that again. I told him
that when I was ready to talk to him, I'd come down to the office to do
it."
Grady was going almost too far; Pete would not stand very much more;
already he was trying to get on his feet to put an end to the
conversation. "I ask your pardon, Mr. Peterson. I forgot he was a friend
of yours. But the point is right here. The men don't like him. They've
been wanting to strike these three days, just because they don't want to
work for that ruffian. I soothed them all I can, but they won't hold in
much longer. Mark my words, there'll be a strike on your hands before the
week's out unless you do something pretty soon."
"What have they got to strike about? Don't we treat them all right? What
do
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