My Financial Career(我的理财之道)
(2008-10-20 19:00:27)
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大学玍活华夏脚步情感故事秋天谈天说地文化校园生活众志學 |
分类: 侃 |
My Financial Career
When I go into a bank I get rattled. The clerks rattle me; the wickets rattle me; the sight of the money rattle me; everything rattle me.
The moment I cross the threshold of a bank and attempt to transact business there, I become an irresponsible idiot.
I knew this beforehand, but my salary had been raised to fifty dollars a month and I felt that the bank was the only place for it.
So I shambled in and looked timidly round at the clerks. I had an idea that a person about to open an account must needs consult the manager.
'Certainly,' said the accountant, and fetched him.
The manager was a grave, calm man. I held my fifty-six dollars clutched in a crumpled ball in my pocket.
'Yes,' he said.
The manager looked at me in some alarm. He felt that I had an awful secret to reveal.
'Come in here,' he said, and led the way to a private room He turned the key in the lock.
'You are one of Pinkerton's men, I presume,' he said.
'No, not from Pinkerton's,' I said, seeming to imply that I came from a rival agency.
The manager got up and opened the door. He called to the accountant.
'Good morning,' I said, and stepped into the safe.
'Come out,' said the manager coldly, and showed me the other way.
My face was ghastly pale.
'Here,' I said, 'deposit it.' The tone of the words seemed to mean, 'Let us do this painful thing while the fit is on us.'
He made me write the sum on a slip and sign my name in a book. I no longer knew what I was doing. The bank swam before my eyes.
'Is it deposited?' I asked in a hollow, vibrating voice.
'It is,' said the accountant.
My idea was to draw out six dollars of it for present use. Someone gave me a chequebook through a wicket and someone else began telling me how to write it out. The people in the bank had the impression that I was an invalid millionaire. I wrote something on the cheque and thrust it in at the clerk. He looked at it.
'What! are you drawing it all out again?' he asked in surprise. Then I realized that I had written fifty-six instead of six. I was too far gone to reason now. I had a feeling that it was impossible to explain the thing. All the clerks had stopped writing to look at me.
Reckless with misery, I made a plunge.
'Yes the whole thing.'
'You withdraw your money from the bank?'
'Every cent of it.'
'Are you not going to deposit any more?' said the clerk, astonished.
An idiot hope struck me that they might think something had insulted me while I was writing the cheque and that I had changed my mind. I made a wretched attempt to look like a man with a fearfully quick temper.
The clerk prepared to pay the money
'How will you have it? he said.
'What?'
'How will you have it?
'Oh' -- I caught his meaning and answered without even trying to think -- 'in fifties.'
He gave me a fifty-dollar bill
'And the six?' he asked dryly.
'In sixes,' I said.
He gave it to me and I rushed out.
As the big door swung behind me I caught the echo of a roar of laughter that went up to the ceiling of the bank. Since then I bank no more. I keep my money in cash in my trousers pocket and my savings in silver dollars in a sock.