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Equality
Chapter 29. I Receive An Ovation
Edward Bellamy
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       _ CHAPTER XXIX. I RECEIVE AN OVATION
       "And now," the teacher went on, glancing at the gallery where the doctor and I had been sitting unseen, "I have a great surprise for you. Among those who have listened to your recitation to-day, both in the forenoon and afternoon, has been a certain personage whose identity you ought to be able to infer when I say that, of all persons now on earth, he is absolutely the one best able, and the only one fully able, to judge how accurate your portrayal of nineteenth-century conditions has been. Lest the knowledge should disturb your equanimity, I have refrained from telling you, until the present moment, that we have present with us this afternoon a no less distinguished visitor than Julian West, and that with great kindness he has consented to permit me to present you to him."
       I had assented, rather reluctantly, to the teacher's request, not being desirous of exposing myself unnecessarily to curious staring. But I had yet to make the acquaintance of twentieth-century boys and girls. When they came around me it was easy to see in the wistful eyes of the girls and the moved faces of the boys how deeply their imaginations were stirred by the suggestions of my presence among them, and how far their sentiment was from one of common or frivolous curiosity. The interest they showed in me was so wholly and delicately sympathetic that it could not have offended the most sensitive temperament.
       This had indeed been the attitude of all the persons of mature years whom I had met, but I had scarcely expected the same considerateness from school children. I had not, it seemed, sufficiently allowed for the influence upon manners of the atmosphere of refinement which surrounds the child of to-day from the cradle. These young people had never seen coarseness, rudeness, or brusqueness on the part of any one. Their confidence had never been abused, their sympathy wounded, or their suspicion excited. Having never imagined such a thing as a person socially superior or inferior to themselves, they had never learned but one sort of manners. Having never had any occasion to create a false or deceitful impression or to accomplish anything by indirection, it was natural that they should not know what affectation was.
       Truly, it is these secondary consequences, these moral and social reactions of economic equality to create a noble atmosphere of human intercourse, that, after all, have been the greatest contribution which the principle has made to human happiness.
       At once I found myself talking and jesting with the young people as easily as if I had always known them, and what with their interest in what I told them of the old-time schools, and my delight in their naive comments, an hour slipped away unnoticed. Youth is always inspiring, and the atmosphere of these fresh, beautiful, ingenuous lives was like a wine bath.
       Florence! Esther! Helen! Marion! Margaret! George! Robert! Harold! Paul!--Never shall I forget that group of star-eyed girls and splendid lads, in whom I first made acquaintance with the boys and girls of the twentieth century. Can it be that God sends sweeter souls to earth now that the world is so much fitter for them? _
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本书目录

Preface
Chapter 1. A Sharp Cross-Examiner
Chapter 2. Why The Revolution Did Not Come Earlier
Chapter 3. I Acquire a Stake in the Country
Chapter 4. A Twentieth-Century Bank Parlor
Chapter 5. I Experience a New Sensation
Chapter 6. Honi Soit Qui Mal Y Pense
Chapter 7. A String of Surprises
Chapter 8. The Greatest Wonder Yet Fashion Dethroned
Chapter 9. Something That Had Not Changed
Chapter 10. A Midnight Plunge
Chapter 11. Life the Basis of the Right of Property
Chapter 12. How Inequality Of Wealth Destroys Liberty
Chapter 13. Private Capital Stolen From The Social Fund
Chapter 14. We Look Over My Collection Of Harnesses
Chapter 15. What We Were Coming to But for The Revolution
Chapter 16. An Excuse That Condemned
Chapter 17. The Revolution Saves Private Property From Monopoly
Chapter 18. An Echo Of the Past
Chapter 19. "Can a maid forget her ornaments?"
Chapter 20. What the Revolution did for Women
Chapter 21. At the Gymnasium
Chapter 22. Economic Suicide Of The Profit System
Chapter 23. "The Parable of the Water-Tank"
Chapter 24. I Am Shown All The Kingdoms Of The Earth
Chapter 25. The Strikers
Chapter 26. Foreign Commerce Under Profits...
Chapter 27. Hostility Of A System Of Vested Interests To Improvement
Chapter 28. How The Profit System Nullified The Benefit Of Inventions
Chapter 29. I Receive An Ovation
Chapter 30. What Universal Culture Means
Chapter 31. "Neither In This Mountain Nor At Jerusalem"
Chapter 32. Eritis Sicut Deus
Chapter 33. Several Important Matters Overlooked
Chapter 34. What Started The Revolution
Chapter 35. Why The Revolution Went Slow At First But Fast At Last
Chapter 36. Theater-Going In The Twentieth Century
Chapter 37. The Transition Period
Chapter 38. The Book Of The Blind