Certainly
he served me with enthusiastic zeal and fine loyalty. Throughout a long
period of railway management I have been most fortunate in securing the
goodwill and ready help of the staff, and in many instances their strong
personal attachment. There are men no doubt whose natures are proof
against kindness and consideration, but my experience is that they are
few and far between. I have found also that if one refrains from fault-
finding, gives praise where praise is due, and overlooks small or venial
faults, when reproof becomes necessary, if it be temperately
administered, it is always effective and productive of good. But even
such reproof may be carried too far as on one occasion I found to my
dismay. Pinion, one forenoon, came into my room to tell me he had
discovered that the man in charge of the cloak room was guilty of
peculation; had been tampering with the tickets, and appropriating small
sums. I sent for him, talked to him very severely, sent him home, and
told him he should hear what would be done. An hour later, I heard he
was _dead_: that on his way to his home he had purchased a bottle of
laudanum and swallowed the contents!
In Scotland a railway manager was rarely worried by outside interference
in the management of his men.
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