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    Chapter 50 - Page 2

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    the power, which he believed that commerce
    gave to every brave, honest, and persevering man, to raise
    himself to a level from which he might see and read the great
    game of worldly success, and honestly, by such far-sightedness,
    command more power and influence than in any other mode of life.
    Far away, in the East and in the West, where his person would
    never be known, his name was to be regarded, and his wishes to be
    fulfilled, and his word pass like gold. That was the idea of
    merchant-life with which Mr. Thornton had started. 'Her merchants
    be like princes,' said his mother, reading the text aloud, as if
    it were a trumpet-call to invite her boy to the struggle. He was
    but like many others--men, women, and children--alive to distant,
    and dead to near things. He sought to possess the influence of a
    name in foreign countries and far-away seas,--to become the head
    of a firm that should be known for generations; and it had taken
    him long silent years to come even to a glimmering of what he
    might be now, to-day, here in his own town, his own factory,
    among his own people. He and they had led parallel lives--very
    close, but never touching--till the accident (or so it seemed) of
    his acquaintance with Higgins. Once brought face to face, man to
    man, with an individual of the masses around him, and (take
    notice) out of the character of master and workman, in the first
    instance, they had each begun to recognise that 'we have all of
    us one human heart.' It was the fine point of the wedge; and
    until now, when the apprehension of losing his connection with
    two or three of the workmen whom he had so lately begun to know
    as men,--of having a plan or two, which were experiments lying
    very close to his heart, roughly nipped off without trial,--gave
    a new poignancy to the subtle fear that came over him from time
    to time; until now, he had never recognised how much and how deep
    was the interest he had grown of late to feel in his position as
    manufacturer, simply because it led him into such close contact,
    and gave him the opportunity of so much power, among a race of
    people strange, shrewd, ignorant; but, above all, full of
    character and strong human feeling.

    He reviewed his position as a Milton manufacturer. The strike a

    year and a half ago,--or more, for it was now untimely wintry
    weather, in a late spring,--that strike, when he was young, and
    he now was old--had prevented his completing some of the large
    orders he had then on hand. He had locked up a good deal of his
    capital in new and expensive machinery, and he had also bought
    cotton largely, for the fulfilment of these orders, taken under
    contract. That he had not been able to complete them, was owing
    in some degree to the utter want of skill on the
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