登陆注册
5349900000020

第20章 CHUN AH CHUN(1)

There was nothing striking in the appearance of Chun Ah Chun.He was rather undersized, as Chinese go, and the Chinese narrow shoulders and spareness of flesh were his.The average tourist, casually glimpsing him on the streets of Honolulu, would have concluded that he was a good-natured little Chinese, probably the proprietor of a prosperous laundry or tailorshop.In so far as good nature and prosperity went, the judgment would be correct, though beneath the mark; for Ah Chun was as good-natured as he was prosperous, and of the latter no man knew a tithe the tale.It was well known that he was enormously wealthy, but in his case "enormous" was merely the symbol for the unknown.

Ah Chun had shrewd little eyes, black and beady and so very little that they were like gimlet-holes.But they were wide apart, and they sheltered under a forehead that was patently the forehead of a thinker.For Ah Chun had his problems, and had had them all his life.Not that he ever worried over them.He was essentially a philosopher, and whether as coolie, or multi-millionaire and master of many men, his poise of soul was the same.He lived always in the high equanimity of spiritual repose, undeterred by good fortune, unruffled by ill fortune.All things went well with him, whether they were blows from the overseer in the cane field or a slump in the price of sugar when he owned those cane fields himself.Thus, from the steadfast rock of his sure content he mastered problems such as are given to few men to consider, much less to a Chinesepeasant.

He was precisely that--a Chinese peasant, born to labour in the fields all his days like a beast, but fated to escape from the fields like the prince in a fairy tale.Ah Chun did not remember his father, a small farmer in a district not far from Canton; nor did he remember much of his mother, who had died when he was six.But he did remember his respected uncle, Ah Kow, for him had heserved as a slave from his sixthyear to his twenty-fourth.It was then that he escaped by contracting himself as a coolie to labour for three years on the sugar plantations of Hawaii for fifty cents aday.

Ah Chun was observant.He perceived little details that not one man in a thousand ever noticed.Three years he worked in the field, at the end of which time he knew more about cane-growing than the overseers or even the superintendent, while the superintendent would have been astounded at the knowledge the weazened little coolie possessed of the reduction processes in the mill.But Ah Chun did not study only sugar processes.He studied to find out how men came to be owners of sugar mills and plantations.One judgment he achieved early, namely, that men did not become rich from the labour of their own hands.He knew, for he had laboured for a score of years himself.The men who grew rich did so from the labour of the hands of others.That man was richest who had the greatest number of his fellow creatures toiling for him.

So, when his term of contract was up, Ah Chun invested his savings in a small importing store, going into partnership with one, Ah Yung.The firm ultimately became the great one of "Ah Chun and Ah Yung," which handled anything from India silks and ginseng to guano islands and blackbird brigs.In the meantime, Ah Chun hired out as cook.He was a good cook, and in three years he was the highest- paid chef in Honolulu.His career was assured, and he was a fool to abandon it, as Dantin, his employer, told him; but Ah Chun knew his own mind best, and for knowing it was called a triple-fool and given a present of fifty dollars over and above the wages due him.

The firm of Ah Chun and Ah Yung was prospering.There was no need for Ah Chun longer to be a cook.There were boom times in Hawaii.Sugar was being extensively planted, and labour was needed.Ah Chun saw the chance, and went into the labour-importing business.He brought thousands of Cantonese coolies into Hawaii, and his wealth began to grow.He made investments.His beady black eyes saw bargains where other men saw bankruptcy.He bought a fish-pond for a song, which later paid five hundred per cent and was the openingwedgeby which he monopolized the fish market of Honolulu.He didnot talk for publication, nor figure in politics, nor play at revolutions, but he forecast events more clearly and farther ahead than did the men who engineered them.In his mind's eye he saw Honolulu a modern, electric-lighted city at a time when it straggled, unkempt and sand- tormented, over a barren reef of uplifted coral rock.So he bought land.He bought land from merchants who needed ready cash, from impecunious natives, from riotous traders' sons, from widows and orphans and the lepers deported to Molokai; and, somehow, as the years went by, the pieces of land he had bought proved to be needed for warehouses, or coffee buildings, or hotels.He leased, and rented, sold and bought, andresold again.

But there were other things as well.He put his confidence and his money into Parkinson, the renegade captain whom nobody would trust.And Parkinson sailed away on mysterious voyages in the little Vega.Parkinson was taken care of until he died, and years afterward Honolulu was astonished when the news leaked out that the Drake and Acorn guano islands had been sold to the British Phosphate Trust for three- quarters of a million.Then there were the fat, lush days of King Kalakaua, when Ah Chun paid three hundred thousand dollars for the opium licence.If he paid a third of a million for the drug monopoly, the investment was nevertheless a good one, for the dividends bought him the Kalalau Plantation, which, in turn, paid him thirty per cent for seventeen years and was ultimately sold byhim for a million and a half.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 王阳明佛教观研究:“同异”与“是非”之辨

    王阳明佛教观研究:“同异”与“是非”之辨

    王学不是“阳儒阴释”,而是儒学的一种新形态;它与佛教禅宗相似或相同是因为两者都把“道”内在化了。同时,它也不是“儒体佛用”,确切地说,它是“儒因佛缘”,即它是在“成为圣人”这一儒学的动因中生发出来的,佛教因素在其形成过程中只是起了助缘的作用;经过改造的佛教因素成为王学的有机成分,但不是核心要素。
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 随想记壹之有朋自远方来

    随想记壹之有朋自远方来

    我是楚志木,一个好奇心爆棚的新闻天才。我要给你讲的,是我的学长,和他青春里的故事。
  • 我的气运槽又炸了

    我的气运槽又炸了

    你睡了个舒服的懒觉,醒来觉得神清气爽,你的精神得到了提升。你吃了顿美味的食物,吃完觉得唇齿留香,你的修为取得了突破。你看了本有趣的书,看完觉得略有所得,你从中领悟了绝世神通。你觉得眼前的敌人有些棘手,忍不住皱了下眉头,你的敌人被天雷劈死了......雷坑里好像有一件与天雷一同降临的宝物。你抬头看了眼天空,距离超脱只差最后一步了,而刚刚你的气运槽又炸了。你忍不住迷茫了一下,好好的,天道……怎么突然辞职了?
  • 沉迷现实无法自拔

    沉迷现实无法自拔

    怎么回事?玩游戏居然玩到沉迷现实!是主角飘了,还是游戏不够好玩。全浸入式网游《天堑》正式开服,请到游戏里,享受现实的魅力吧。
  • 侯府毒妻

    侯府毒妻

    只不过因为温文尔雅的相公为了利益将自己送到别的男人塌上,她就打死怀孕小妾,自焚之前一封告密信让夫家满门抄斩。N多条命换她一条命,值!一觉醒来,她却穿到了京城第一贤妇身上。三从四德,上孝顺婆母,下善待小妾,在侯府忍辱负重,心甘情愿奉上自己大笔嫁妆?想得太美了点!青梅竹马表哥上门恩赐可娶她为妾?一把笤帚挥出门外,癞蛤蟆想吃天鹅肉,找死!当黑寡妇穿成包子女,侧室小妾靠边站。----小妾们纷纷抱怨,夫人最近抢了她们饭碗,耍狐媚子勾得侯爷在她院子里天天不肯走。某侯爷面色镇定内心抓狂,靠!谁知道他每天只跟对方纯下棋聊天,连床边都摸不到。美人在前,却不知道何时才能吃拆入腹。某侯爷仰天长啸,憋死爷了!
  • 决战王妃1

    决战王妃1

    看到信箱里的那封通知书时,妈妈开心得简直要晕过去了。那一刻,她认为我们所有的难题都迎刃而解,并且再也不会出现了,而我就是这所有改变的关键。我不认为自己是一个喜欢跟父母对着干的女儿,但我也是有底限的,而这件事就是我最后的底限。
  • 如果清风不自来

    如果清风不自来

    原来人与人之间,相遇,相知,相爱,相离,一切都那么容易发生。不同的只是,一种分离,有两种解释……
  • 少年青春成长之路

    少年青春成长之路

    青春有拼劲,有奋斗,有正能量的。但青春也是会犯错的,也是会躲在一个角落独自流泪。几个少年身上都着青春的样子
  • 闯关东前传

    闯关东前传

    十九世纪七十年代中后期,中国大地发生了百年一遇的灾荒,史称“丁戊奇荒”,山东两千多万灾民汇入闯关东的滚滚洪流……天灾不断,人祸频频,百姓在八国联军入侵北京、义和团运动、日俄战争等灾祸中艰难度日。山东掖县老管家藏着一面神秘的黑旗,它决定着成百上千人的身家性命。管家老大管粮、老二管水失手杀人,遭到官府通缉,无奈踏上闯关东之路。管粮流落矿山,肩负民族兴亡的重任,为国捐躯;管水加入义和团,在哈尔滨火烧与洋人相关的商铺,妹妹管缨开的酒坊也在劫难逃。三兄妹时而同仇敌忾,时而兄弟阋墙,时而携手并肩,在大义和亲情面前,他们轰轰烈烈、几死几生地开创了闯关东的民族大业。