书城外语人性的弱点全集(英文朗读版)
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第28章 PART 3How to Win People to Your Way of Thinking(5)

“This is a red-letter day in my life,It is the first time I have ever had the good fortune to meet the representatives of the employees of this great company,its officers and superintendents,together,and I can assure you that I am proud to be here,and that I shall remember this gathering as long as I live.Had this meeting been held two weeks ago,I should have stood here a stranger to most of you,recognizing a few faces.Having had the opportunity last week of visiting all the camps in the southerncoal field and of talking individually with practically all of the representatives,except those who were away;having visited in your homes,met many of your wives and children,we meet here not as strangers,but as friends,and it is in that spirit of mutual friendship that I am glad to have this opportunity to discuss with you our common interests.

“Since this is a meeting of the officers of the company and the representatives of the employees,it is only by your courtesy that I am here,for I am not so fortunate as to be either one or the other;and yet I feel that I am intimately associated with you men,for,in a sense,I represent both the stockholders and the directors.”

Suppose Rockefeller had taken a different tack.Suppose he had argued with those miners and hurled devastating facts in their faces.Suppose he had told them by his tones and insinuations that they were wrong Suppose that,by all the rules of logic,he had proved that they were wrong.What would have happened?More anger would have been stirred up,more hatred,more revolt.

If a man’s heart is rankling with discord and ill feeling toward you,you can’t win him to your way of thinking with all the logic in Christendom.Scolding parents and domineering bosses and husbands and nagging wives ought to realize that people don’t want to change their minds.They can’t he forced or driven to agree with you or me.But they may possibly be led to,if we are gentle and friendly,ever so gentle and ever so friendly.

Lincoln said that,in effect,over a hundred years ago.Here are his words:

It is an old and true maxim that “a drop of honey catches more flies than a gallon of gall.”So with men,if you would win a man to you cause,first convince him that you are his sincere friend.Therein is a drop of honey that catches his heart;which,say what you will,is the great high road to his reason.

Business executives have learned that it pays to be friendly to strikers.For example,when 2,500employees in the White Motor Company’s plant struck for higher wages and a union shop,Robert F.Black,then president of the company,didn’t lose his temper and condemn and threaten and talk of tryanny and Communists.He actually praised the strikers.He published an advertisement in the Cleveland papers,complimenting them on “the peaceful way in which they laid down their tools.”Finding the strike pickets idle,he bought them a couple of dozen baseball bats and gloves and invited them to play ball on vacant lots.For those who preferred bowling,he rented a bowling alley.

This friendliness on Mr.Black’s part did what friendliness always does:it begot friendliness.So the strikers borrowed brooms,shovels,and rubbish carts,and began picking up matches,papers,cigarette stubs,and cigar butts around the factory.Imagine it!Imagine strikers tidying up the factory grounds while battling for higher wages and recognition of the union.Such an event had never been heard of before in the long,tempestuous history of American labor wars.That strike ended with a compromise settlement within a week—ended without any ill feeling or rancor.

Daniel Webster,who looked like a god and talked like Jehovah,was one of the most successful advocates who ever pleaded a case;yet he ushered in his most powerful arguments with such friendly remarks as:“It will be for the jury to consider,”“This may perhaps be worth thinking of,”“Here are some facts that I trust you will not lose sight of,”or “You,with your knowledge of human nature,will easily see the significance of these facts.”No bulldozing.No high-pressure methods.No attempt to force his opinions on others.Webster used the soft-spoken,quiet,friendly approach,and it helped to make him famous.

You may never be called upon to settle a strike or address ajury,but you may want to get your rent reduced.Will the friendly approach help you then?Let’s see.

O.L.Straub,an engineer,wanted to get his rent reduced.And he knew his landlord was hard-boiled.“I wrote him,”Mr.Straub said in a speech before the class,“notifying him that I was vacating my apartment as soon as my lease expired.The truth was,I didn’t want to move.I wanted to stay if I could get my rent reduced.But the situation seemed hopeless.Other tenants had tried—and failed.Everyone told me that the landlord was extremely difficult to deal with.But I said to myself,‘I am studying a course in how to deal with people,so I’ll try it on him—and see how it works.’

“He and his secretary came to see me as soon as he got my letter.I met him at the door with a friendly greeting.I fairly bubbled with good will and enthusiasm.I didn’t begin talking about how high the rent was.I began talking about how much I liked his apartment house.Believe me,I was ‘hearty in my approbation and lavish in my praise.’I complimented him on the way he ran the building and told him I should like so much to stay for another year but I couldn’t afford it.

“He had evidently never had such a reception from a tenant.He hardly knew what to make of it.

“Then he started to tell me his troubles.Complaining tenants.One had written him fourteen letters,some of them positively insulting.Another threatened to break his lease unless the landlord kept the man on the floor above from snoring.‘What a relief it is,’he said,‘to have a satisfied tenant like you.’And then,without my even asking him to do it,he offered to reduce my rent a little.I wanted more,so I named the figure I could afford to pay,and he accepted without a word.