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- Project Gutenberg's Mother Earth, Vol. 1 No. 1, March 1906, by Various
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
- almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
- re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
- with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net
- Title: Mother Earth, Vol. 1 No. 1, March 1906
- Author: Various
- Editor: Emma Goldman
- Release Date: September 12, 2008 [EBook #26600]
- Language: English
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MOTHER EARTH, MARCH 1906 ***
- Produced by Fritz Ohrenschall, Martin Pettit and the Online
- Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
- +-------------------------------------------------+
- |Transcriber's note: |
- | |
- |Obvious typographical errors have been corrected |
- +-------------------------------------------------+
- Vol. I. MARCH, 1906 No. 1
- MOTHER EARTH
- [Illustration]
- P. O. Box EMMA GOLDMAN, Publisher 10c. a Copy
- Madison Sq. Station, N. Y.
- CONTENTS.
- PAGE
- Mother Earth E. GOLDMAN and M. BAGINSKI 1
- The Song of the Storm-Finch MAXIM GORKY 4
- Observations and Comments 5
- The Tragedy of Women's Emancipation E. GOLDMAN 9
- Try Love GRACE POTTER 18
- Without Government MAX BAGINSKI 20
- Vive Le Roi FRANCES WAULS BJORKMAN 27
- Reflections of a Rich Man 28
- Comstockery JOHN R. CORYELL 30
- Don Quixote and Hamlet TURGENIEFF 40
- On the Banks of Acheron EDWIN BJORKMAN 42
- The British Elections and the Labor Parties H. KELLY 44
- And You? BOLTON HALL 48
- National Atavism INTERNATIONALIST 49
- Mine Owners' Revenge M. B. 56
- International Review 58
- Literary Notes 61
- Advertisements 63
- 10c. A COPY $1.00 PER YEAR
- Mother Earth
- EMMA GOLDMAN, PUBLISHER
- P. O. BOX MADISON SQ. STATION, N. Y. CITY
- Vol. I MARCH, 1906 No. 1
- [Illustration]
- MOTHER EARTH
- There was a time when men imagined the Earth as the center of the
- universe. The stars, large and small, they believed were created merely
- for their delectation. It was their vain conception that a supreme
- being, weary of solitude, had manufactured a giant toy and put them into
- possession of it.
- When, however, the human mind was illumined by the torch-light of
- science, it came to understand that the Earth was but one of a myriad of
- stars floating in infinite space, a mere speck of dust.
- Man issued from the womb of Mother Earth, but he knew it not, nor
- recognized her, to whom he owed his life. In his egotism he sought an
- explanation of himself in the infinite, and out of his efforts there
- arose the dreary doctrine that he was not related to the Earth, that she
- was but a temporary resting place for his scornful feet and that she
- held nothing for him but temptation to degrade himself. Interpreters and
- prophets of the infinite sprang into being, creating the "Great Beyond"
- and proclaiming Heaven and Hell, between which stood the poor, trembling
- human being, tormented by that priest-born monster, Conscience.
- In this frightful scheme, gods and devils waged eternal war against
- each other with wretched man as the prize of victory; and the priest,
- self-constituted interpreter of the will of the gods, stood in front of
- the only refuge from harm and demanded as the price of entrance that
- ignorance, that asceticism, that self-abnegation which could but end in
- the complete subjugation of man to superstition. He was taught that
- Heaven, the refuge, was the very antithesis of Earth, which was the
- source of sin. To gain for himself a seat in Heaven, man devastated the
- Earth. Yet she renewed herself, the good mother, and came again each
- Spring, radiant with youthful beauty, beckoning her children to come to
- her bosom and partake of her bounty. But ever the air grew thick with
- mephitic darkness, ever a hollow voice was heard calling: "Touch not the
- beautiful form of the sorceress; she leads to sin!"
- But if the priests decried the Earth, there were others who found in it
- a source of power and who took possession of it. Then it happened that
- the autocrats at the gates of Heaven joined forces with the powers that
- had taken possession of the Earth; and humanity began its aimless,
- monotonous march. But the good mother sees the bleeding feet of her
- children, she hears their moans, and she is ever calling to them that
- she is theirs.
- To the contemporaries of George Washington, Thomas Paine and Thomas
- Jefferson, America appeared vast, boundless, full of promise. Mother
- Earth, with the sources of vast wealth hidden within the folds of her
- ample bosom, extended her inviting and hospitable arms to all those who
- came to her from arbitrary and despotic lands--Mother Earth ready to
- give herself alike to all her children. But soon she was seized by the
- few, stripped of her freedom, fenced in, a prey to those who were
- endowed with cunning and unscrupulous shrewdness. They, who had fought
- for independence from the British yoke, soon became dependent among
- themselves; dependent on possessions, on wealth, on power. Liberty
- escaped into the wilderness, and the old battle between the patrician
- and the plebeian broke out in the new world, with greater bitterness and
- vehemence. A period of but a hundred years had sufficed to turn a great
- republic, once gloriously established, into an arbitrary state which
- subdued a vast number of its people into material and intellectual
- slavery, while enabling the privileged few to monopolize every material
- and mental resource.
- During the last few years, American journalists have had much to say
- about the terrible conditions in Russia and the supremacy of the Russian
- censor. Have they forgotten the censor here? a censor far more powerful
- than him of Russia. Have they forgotten that every line they write is
- dictated by the political color of the paper they write for; by the
- advertising firms; by the money power; by the power of respectability;
- by Comstock? Have they forgotten that the literary taste and critical
- judgment of the mass of the people have been successfully moulded to
- suit the will of these dictators, and to serve as a good business basis
- for shrewd literary speculators? The number of Rip Van Winkles in life,
- science, morality, art, and literature is very large. Innumerable
- ghosts, such as Ibsen saw when he analyzed the moral and social
- conditions of our life, still keep the majority of the human race in
- awe.
- MOTHER EARTH will endeavor to attract and appeal to all those who
- oppose encroachment on public and individual life. It will appeal to
- those who strive for something higher, weary of the commonplace; to
- those who feel that stagnation is a deadweight on the firm and elastic
- step of progress; to those who breathe freely only in limitless space;
- to those who long for the tender shade of a new dawn for a humanity free
- from the dread of want, the dread of starvation in the face of mountains
- of riches. The Earth free for the free individual!
- EMMA GOLDMAN,
- MAX BAGINSKI.
- [Illustration]
- The Song of the Storm-Finch[A]
- By MAXIM GORKY
- The strong wind is gathering the storm-clouds together
- Above the gray plain of the ocean so wide.
- The storm-finch, the bird that resembles dark lightning,
- Between clouds and ocean is soaring in pride.
- Now skimming the waves with his wings, and now shooting
- Up, arrow-like, into the dark clouds on high,
- The storm-finch is clamoring loudly and shrilly;
- The clouds can hear joy in the bird's fearless cry.
- In that cry is the yearning, the thirst for the tempest,
- And anger's hot might in its wild notes is heard;
- The keen fire of passion, the faith in sure triumph--
- All these the clouds hear in the voice of the bird....
- The storm-wind is howling, the thunder is roaring;
- With flame blue and lambent the cloud-masses glow
- O'er the fathomless ocean; it catches the lightnings,
- And quenches them deep in its whirlpool below.
- Like serpents of fire in the dark ocean writhing,
- The lightnings reflected there quiver and shake
- As into the blackness they vanish forever.
- The tempest! Now quickly the tempest will break!
- The storm-finch soars fearless and proud 'mid the lightnings,
- Above the wild waves that the roaring winds fret;
- And what is the prophet of victory saying?
- "Oh, let the storm burst! Fiercer yet--fiercer yet!"
- FOOTNOTE:
- [A] From "Songs of Russia," rendered into English by ALICE
- STONE BLACKWELL
- [Illustration]
- To the Readers
- The name "Open Road" had to be abandoned, owing to the existence of a
- magazine by that name.
- Observations and Comments
- +The importance+ of written history for the people can easily be compared
- with the importance of a diary for the individual. It furnishes data for
- recollections, points of comparison between the Past and Present. But as
- most diaries and auto-biographies show a lack of straight-forward, big,
- simple, sincere self-analyses, so does history seldom prove a
- representation of facts, of the truth, of reality.
- The way history is written will depend altogether on whatever purpose
- the writers have in view, and what they hope to achieve thereby. It will
- altogether depend upon the sincerity or lack thereof, upon the broad or
- narrow horizon of the historian. That which passes as history in our
- schools, or governmentally fabricated books on history, is a forgery, a
- misrepresentation of events. Like the old drama centering upon the
- impossible figure of the hero, with a gesticulating crowd in the
- background. Quacks of history speak only of "great men" like Bonapartes,
- Bismarcks, Deweys, or Rough Riders as leaders of the people, while the
- latter serve as a setting, a chorus, howling the praise of the heroes,
- and also furnishing their blood money for the whims and extravagances of
- their masters. Such history only tends to produce conceit, national
- impudence, superciliousness and patriotic stupidity, all of which is in
- full bloom in our great Republic.
- Our aim is to teach a different conception of historical events. To
- define them as an ever-recurring struggle for Freedom against every form
- of Might. A struggle resultant from an innate yearning for
- self-expression, and the recognition of one's own possibilities and
- their attitude toward other human beings. History to us means a
- compilation of experiences, out of which the individual, as well as the
- race, will gain the right understanding how to shape and organize a mode
- of life best suited to bring out the finest and strongest qualities of
- the human race.
- * * * * *
- +The American Brutus+ is, of course, a business man and has no time to
- overthrow Cæsar. Recently, however, the imperialistic stew became hot
- and too much for him. The marriage of Miss Alice Roosevelt produced such
- a bad odor of court gossip, as to make the poor American Brutus ill with
- nausea. He grew indignant, draped his sleeve in mourning, and with
- gloomy mien and clenched fists, went about prophesying the downfall of
- the Republic.
- Between ourselves, the number of those who still believe in the American
- Republic can be counted on one's fingers. One has either pierced through
- the lie, all for the people and by the people--in that case one must
- become a Revolutionist; or, one has succeeded in putting one's bounty
- in safety--then he is a conservative. "No disturbances, please. We are
- about to close a profitable contract." Modern bourgeoisie is absolutely
- indifferent as to who is to be their political boss, just so they are
- given opportunity to store their profits, and accumulate great wealth.
- Besides, the cry about the decline of the great Republic is really
- meaningless. As far as it ever stood for liberty and well-being of the
- people, it has long ceased to be. Therefore lamentations come too late.
- True, the American Republic has not given birth to an aristocracy. It
- has produced the power of the parvenu, not less brutal than European
- aristocracy, only narrower in vision and not less vulgar in taste.
- Instead of mourning one ought to rejoice that the latest display of
- disgusting servility has completely thrown off the mantle of liberty and
- independence of Dame Columbia, now exposed before the civilized world in
- all her slavish submissiveness.
- * * * * *
- +The storm in Russia+ has frightened many out of their warm bed-clothes.
- A real Revolution in these police-regulated times. More than one voice
- was raised against the possibility of a Revolution, and they who dared
- to predict it were considered fit for the lunatic asylum.
- The workingmen, peasants and students of Russia, however, have proven
- that the calculations of the "wise" contained a hitch somewhere. A
- Revolution swept across the country and did not even stop to ask
- permission of those in authority.
- Authority and Power are now taking revenge on their daring sons and
- daughters. The Cossacks, at the command of the "good Czar" are
- celebrating a bloody feast--knouting, shooting, clubbing people to
- death, dragging great masses to prisons and into exile, and it is not
- the fault of that vicious idiot on the throne, nor that of his advisors,
- Witte and the others, if the Revolution still marches on, head erect.
- Were it in their power, they would break her proud neck with one
- stroke, but they cannot put the heads of a hundred million people on the
- block, they cannot deport eighty millions of Peasants to Siberia, nor
- can they order all the workingmen in the industrial districts shot. Were
- the working bees to be killed, the drones would perish of
- starvation--that is why the Czar of the Peace Treaty still suffers some
- of his people to live?----
- * * * * *
- +In Mayville, Wis.+, a transvaluation society has been formed, the purpose
- of which is, to bring about the transvaluation of all values in matters
- of love and the relations of the sexes. The members of this society are
- to contribute by word and deed towards the breaking of all barriers that
- prevent an ideal and healthy conception of love.
- The president of this society, Emil Ruedebusch, known in this country
- through his work, "The Old and New Ideal," which, by the way, was
- confiscated upon the grounds of obscenity and the author put on trial.
- It is an undisputed fact that robust, graft-greedy Columbia abhors every
- free expression on love or marriage. Emil Ruedebusch, like many others
- who have dared to lift the veil of hypocrisy, was condemned to a heavy
- fine. A second work of the author, "Die Eigenen," was published in
- Germany.
- His idea, that the relation of the sexes must be freed from the
- oppressing fetters of a lame morality that degrades every human emotion
- to the plane of utility and purpose, I heartily endorse. His method of
- achieving the ideal seems to me too full of red tape. However, I welcome
- every effort against the conspiracy of ignorance, hypocrisy and stupid
- prudery, against the simplest manifestation of nature.
- [Illustration]
- The Tragedy of Woman's Emancipation
- By EMMA GOLDMAN
- I begin my article with an admission: Regardless of all political and
- economic theories, treating of the fundamental differences between the
- various groups within the human race, regardless of class and race
- distinctions, regardless of all artificial boundary lines between
- woman's rights and man's rights, I hold that there is a point where
- these differentiations may meet and grow into one perfect whole.
- With this I do not mean to propose a peace treaty. The general social
- antagonism which has taken hold of our entire public life to-day,
- brought about through the force of opposing and contradictory interests,
- will crumble to pieces when the reorganization of our social life, based
- upon the principles of economic justice, shall have become a reality.
- Peace and harmony between the sexes and individuals does not necessarily
- depend on a superficial equalization of human beings; nor does it call
- for the elimination of individual traits or peculiarities. The problem
- that confronts us to-day, and which the nearest future is to solve, is
- how to be oneself, and yet in oneness with others, to feel deeply with
- all human beings and still retain one's own innate qualities. This seems
- to me the basis upon which the mass and the individual, the true
- democrat and the true individuality, man and woman can meet without
- antagonism and opposition. The motto should not be forgive one another;
- it should be, understand one another. The oft-quoted sentence of Mme. de
- Stael: "To understand everything means to forgive everything," has never
- particularly appealed to me; it has the odor of the confessional; to
- forgive one's fellow being conveys the idea of pharisaical superiority.
- To understand one's fellow being suffices. This admission partly
- represents the fundamental aspect of my views on the emancipation of
- woman and its effect upon the entire sex.
- Emancipation should make it possible for her to be human in the truest
- sense. Everything within her that craves assertion and activity should
- reach its fullest expression; and all artificial barriers should be
- broken and the road towards greater freedom cleared of every trace of
- centuries of submission and slavery.
- This was the original aim of the movement for woman's emancipation. But
- the results so far achieved have isolated woman and have robbed her of
- the fountain springs of that happiness which is so essential to her.
- Merely external emancipation has made of the modern woman an artificial
- being who reminds one of the products of French arboriculture with its
- arabesque trees and shrubs--pyramids, wheels and wreaths; anything
- except the forms which would be reached by the expression of their own
- inner qualities. Such artificially grown plants of the female sex are to
- be found in large numbers, especially in the so-called intellectual
- sphere of our life.
- Liberty and equality for woman! What hopes and aspirations these words
- awakened when they were first uttered by some of the noblest and bravest
- souls of those days. The sun in all its light and glory was to rise upon
- a new world; in this world woman was to be free to direct her own
- destiny, an aim certainly worthy of the great enthusiasm, courage,
- perseverance and ceaseless effort of the tremendous host of pioneer men
- and women, who staked everything against a world of prejudice and
- ignorance.
- My hopes also move towards that goal, but I insist that the emancipation
- of woman, as interpreted and practically applied to-day, has failed to
- reach that great end. Now, woman is confronted with the necessity of
- emancipating herself from emancipation, if she really desires to be
- free. This may sound paradoxical, but is, nevertheless, only too true.
- What has she achieved through her emancipation? Equal suffrage in a few
- states. Has that purified our political life, as many well-meaning
- advocates have predicted? Certainly not. Incidentally it is really time
- that persons with plain, sound judgment should cease to talk about
- corruption in politics in a boarding-school tone. Corruption of politics
- has nothing to do with the morals or the laxity of morals of various
- political personalities. Its cause is altogether a material one.
- Politics is the reflex of the business and industrial world, the mottoes
- of which are: "to take is more blessed than to give"; "buy cheap and
- sell dear"; "one soiled hand washes the other." There is no hope that
- even woman, with her right to vote, will ever purify politics.
- Emancipation has brought woman economic equality with man; that is, she
- can choose her own profession and trade, but as her past and present
- physical training have not equipped her with the necessary strength to
- compete with man, she is often compelled to exhaust all her energy, use
- up her vitality and strain every nerve in order to reach the market
- value. Very few ever succeed, for it is a fact that women doctors,
- lawyers, architects and engineers are neither met with the same
- confidence, nor do they receive the same remuneration. And those that do
- reach that enticing equality generally do so at the expense of their
- physical and psychical well-being. As to the great mass of working girls
- and women, how much independence is gained if the narrowness and lack of
- freedom of the home is exchanged for the narrowness and lack of freedom
- of the factory, sweat-shop, department store, or office? In addition is
- the burden which is laid on many women of looking after a "home, sweet
- home"--cold, dreary, disorderly, uninviting--after a day's hard work.
- Glorious independence! No wonder that hundreds of girls are so willing
- to accept the first offer of marriage, sick and tired of their
- independence behind the counter, or at the sewing or typewriting
- machine. They are just as ready to marry as girls of middle class people
- who long to throw off the yoke of parental dependence. A so-called
- independence which leads only to earning the merest subsistence is not
- so enticing, not so ideal that one can expect woman to sacrifice
- everything for it. Our highly praised independence is, after all, but a
- slow process of dulling and stifling woman's nature, her love instinct
- and her mother instinct.
- Nevertheless, the position of the working girl is far more natural and
- human than that of her seemingly more fortunate sister in the more
- cultured professional walk of life. Teachers, physicians, lawyers,
- engineers, etc., who have to make a dignified, straightened and proper
- appearance, while the inner life is growing empty and dead.
- The narrowness of the existing conception of woman's independence and
- emancipation; the dread of love for a man who is not her social equal;
- the fear that love will rob her of her freedom and independence; the
- horror that love or the joy of motherhood will only hinder her in the
- full exercise of her profession--all these together make of the
- emancipated modern woman a compulsory vestal, before whom life, with its
- great clarifying sorrows and its deep, entrancing joys, rolls on without
- touching or gripping her soul.
- Emancipation as understood by the majority of its adherents and
- exponents, is of too narrow a scope to permit the boundless joy and
- ecstasy contained in the deep emotion of the true woman, sweetheart,
- mother, in freedom.
- The tragic fate of the self-supporting or economically free woman does
- not consist of too many, but of too few experiences. True, she surpasses
- her sister of past generations in knowledge of the world and human
- nature; and it is because of that that she feels deeply the lack of
- life's essence, which alone can enrich the human soul and without which
- the majority of women have become mere professional automatons.
- That such a state of affairs was bound to come was foreseen by those who
- realized that in the domain of ethics, there still remained many
- decaying ruins of the time of the undisputed superiority of man; ruins
- that are still considered useful. And, which is more important, a goodly
- number of the emancipated are unable to get along without them. Every
- movement that aims at the destruction of existing institutions and the
- replacement thereof with such as are more advanced, more perfect, has
- followers, who in theory stand for the most extreme radical ideas, and
- who, nevertheless, in their every-day practice, are like the next best
- Philistine, feigning respectability and clamoring for the good opinion
- of their opponents. There are, for example, Socialists, and even
- Anarchists, who stand for the idea that property is robbery, yet who
- will grow indignant if anyone owe them the value of a half-dozen pins.
- The same Philistine can be found in the movement for woman's
- emancipation. Yellow journalists and milk and water literateurs have
- painted pictures of the emancipated woman that make the hair of the good
- citizen and his dull companion stand up on end. Every member of the
- women's rights movement was pictured as a George Sand in her absolute
- disregard of morality. Nothing was sacred to her. She had no respect for
- the ideal relation between man and woman. In short, emancipation stood
- only for a reckless life of lust and sin; regardless of society,
- religion and morality. The exponents of woman's rights were highly
- indignant at such a misrepresentation, and, lacking in humor, they
- exerted all their energy to prove that they were not at all as bad as
- they were painted, but the very reverse. Of course, as long as woman was
- the slave of man, she could not be good and pure, but now that she was
- free and independent she would prove how good she could be and how her
- influence would have a purifying effect on all institutions in society.
- True, the movement for woman's rights has broken many old fetters, but
- it has also established new ones. The great movement of true
- emancipation has not met with a great race of women, who could look
- liberty in the face. Their narrow puritanical vision banished man as a
- disturber and doubtful character out of their emotional life. Man was
- not to be tolerated at any price, except perhaps as the father of a
- child, since a child could not very well come to life without a father.
- Fortunately, the most rigid puritanism never will be strong enough to
- kill the innate craving for motherhood. But woman's freedom is closely
- allied to man's freedom, and many of my so-called emancipated sisters
- seem to overlook the fact that a child born in freedom needs the love
- and devotion of each human being about him, man as well as woman.
- Unfortunately, it is this narrow conception of human relations that has
- brought about a great tragedy in the lives of the modern man and woman.
- About fifteen years ago appeared a work from the pen of the brilliant
- Norwegian writer, Laura Marholm, called "Woman, a Character Study." She
- was one of the first to call attention to the emptiness and narrowness
- of the existing conception of woman's emancipation and its tragic effect
- upon the inner life of woman. In her work she speaks of the fate of
- several gifted women of international fame: The genius, Eleanora Duse;
- the great mathematician and writer, Sanja Kovalevskaja; the artist and
- poet nature, Marie Bashkirzeff, who died so young. Through each
- description of the lives of these women of such extraordinary mentality,
- runs a marked trail of unsatisfied craving for a full, rounded, complete
- and beautiful life, and the unrest and loneliness resulting from the
- lack of it. Through these masterly psychological sketches, one cannot
- help but see that the higher the mental development of woman, the less
- possible it is for her to meet a congenial mate, who will see in her,
- not only sex, but also the human being, the friend, comrade and strong
- individuality, who cannot and ought not lose a single trait of her
- character.
- The average man with his self-sufficiency, his ridiculously superior
- airs of patronage towards the female sex, is an impossibility for woman,
- as depicted in the "Character Study" by Laura Marholm. Equally
- impossible for her is the man who can see in her nothing more than her
- mentality and genius, and who fails to awaken her woman nature.
- A rich intellect and a fine soul are usually considered necessary
- attributes of a deep and beautiful personality. In the case of the
- modern woman, these attributes serve as a hindrance to the complete
- assertion of her being. For over a hundred years, the old form of
- marriage, based on the Bible, "till death us do part" has been denounced
- as an institution that stands for the sovereignty of the man over the
- woman, of her complete submission to his whims and commands and the
- absolute dependence upon his name and support. Time and again it has
- been conclusively proven that the old matrimonial relation restricted
- woman to the function of man's servant and the bearer of his children.
- And yet we find many emancipated women who prefer marriage with all its
- deficiencies to the narrowness of an unmarried life; narrow and
- unendurable because of the chains of moral and social prejudice that
- cramp and bind her nature.
- The cause for such inconsistency on the part of many advanced women is
- to be found in the fact that they never truly understood the meaning of
- emancipation. They thought that all that was needed was independence
- from external tyrannies; the internal tyrants, far more harmful to life
- and growth, such as ethical and social conventions, were left to take
- care of themselves; and they have taken care of themselves. They seem to
- get along beautifully in the heads and hearts of the most active
- exponents of woman's emancipation, as in the heads and hearts of our
- grandmothers.
- These internal tyrants, whether they be in the form of public opinion or
- what will mother say, or brother, father, aunt or relative of any sort;
- what will Mrs. Grundy, Mr. Comstock, the employer, the Board of
- Education say? All these busybodies, moral detectives, jailers of the
- human spirit, what will they say? Until woman has learned to defy them
- all, to stand firmly on her own ground and to insist upon her own
- unrestricted freedom, to listen to the voice of her nature, whether it
- call for life's greatest treasure, love for a man, or her most glorious
- privilege, the right to give birth to a child, she cannot call herself
- emancipated. How many emancipated women are brave enough to acknowledge
- that the voice of love is calling, wildly beating against their breasts
- demanding to be heard, to be satisfied.
- The French novelist, Jean Reibrach, in one of his novels, "New Beauty,"
- attempts to picture the ideal, beautiful, emancipated woman. This ideal
- is embodied in a young girl, a physician. She talks very clearly and
- wisely of how to feed infants, she is kind and administers medicines
- free to poor mothers. She converses with a young man of her acquaintance
- about the sanitary conditions of the future and how various bacilli and
- germs shall be exterminated by the use of stone walls and floors, and
- the doing away of rugs and hangings. She is, of course, very plainly and
- practically dressed, mostly in black. The young man, who, at their first
- meeting was overawed by the wisdom of his emancipated friend, gradually
- learns to understand her, and recognizes one fine day that he loves her.
- They are young and she is kind and beautiful, and though always in rigid
- attire, her appearance is softened by spotlessly clean white collar and
- cuffs. One would expect that he would tell her of his love, but he is
- not one to commit romantic absurdities. Poetry and the enthusiasm of
- love cover their blushing faces before the pure beauty of the lady. He
- silences the voice of his nature and remains correct. She, too, is
- always exact, always rational, always well behaved. I fear if they had
- formed a union, the young man would have risked freezing to death. I
- must confess that I can see nothing beautiful in this new beauty, who is
- as cold as the stone walls and floors she dreams of. Rather would I have
- the love songs of romantic ages, rather Don Juan and Madame Venus,
- rather an elopement by ladder and rope on a moonlight night, followed by
- a father's curse, mother's moans, and the moral comments of neighbors,
- than correctness and propriety measured by yardsticks. If love does not
- know how to give and take without restriction it is not love, but a
- transaction that never fails to lay stress on a plus and a minus.
- The greatest shortcoming of the emancipation of the present day lies in
- its artificial stiffness and its narrow respectabilities which produce
- an emptiness in woman's soul that will not let her drink from the
- fountain of life. I once remarked that there seemed to be a deeper
- relationship between the old-fashioned mother and hostess, ever on the
- alert for the happiness of her little ones and the comfort of those she
- loved and the truly new woman, than between the latter and her average
- emancipated sister. The disciples of emancipation pure and simple
- declared me heathen, merely fit for the stake. Their blind zeal did not
- let them see that my comparison between the old and the new was merely
- to prove that a goodly number of our grandmothers had more blood in
- their veins, far more humor and wit, and certainly a greater amount of
- naturalness, kind-heartedness and simplicity than the majority of our
- emancipated professional women who fill our colleges, halls of learning,
- and various offices. This does not mean a wish to return to the past,
- nor does it condemn woman to her old sphere, the kitchen and the
- nursery.
- Salvation lies in an energetic march onward towards a brighter and
- clearer future. We are in need of unhampered growth out of old
- traditions and habits. The movement for woman's emancipation has so far
- made but the first step in that direction. It is to be hoped that it
- will gather strength to make another. The right to vote, equal civil
- rights, are all very good demands, but true emancipation begins neither
- at the polls nor in courts. It begins in woman's soul. History tells us
- that every oppressed class gained its true liberation from its masters
- through its own efforts. It is necessary that woman learn that lesson,
- that she realize that her freedom will reach as far as her power to
- achieve her freedom reaches. It is therefore far more important for her
- to begin with her inner regeneration, to cut loose from the weight of
- prejudices, traditions, and customs. The demand for various equal rights
- in every vocation in life is just and fair, but, after all, the most
- vital right is the right to love and be loved. Indeed if the partial
- emancipation is to become a complete and true emancipation of woman, it
- will have to do away with the ridiculous notion that to be loved, to be
- sweetheart and mother, is synonomous with being slave or subordinate.
- It will have to do away with the absurd notion of the dualism of the
- sexes, or that man and woman represent two antagonistic worlds.
- Pettiness separates, breadth unites. Let us be broad and big. Let us not
- overlook vital things, because of the bulk of trifles confronting us. A
- true conception of the relation of the sexes will not admit of conqueror
- and conquered; it knows of but one great thing: to give of one's self
- boundlessly in order to find oneself richer, deeper, better. That alone
- can fill the emptiness and replace the tragedy of woman's emancipation
- with joy, limitless joy.
- [Illustration]
- TRY LOVE
- By GRACE POTTER
- In the human heart it lies. The key to happiness Men call the key love.
- In the sweet time of youth, every man and every maid knows where lies
- the key that will unlock happiness. Sometimes, they, laughing, hold the
- key in eager, willing hands and will not put it in the door for very
- bliss and waiting. Just outside they laugh and play and blow wild kisses
- to the world. The whole world of men and women, who in their youth found
- happiness in just that way, is gathered round to see it found again.
- When at last the man and maid unlock the door and go in joy to find
- their happiness, the men and women who have been watching them bury
- their faces in their hands and weep. Why do they weep? Because they are
- thinking that soon other doors in life will be met by this man and maid
- and that there will be no keys to unlock them. They, themselves, could
- find no key.
- They never thought of trying the key of love in all the doors of life.
- Long and wearily, eyes searching wide, hands eagerly groping, they have
- spent their time trying to find other keys. They have looked for and
- found knowledge. And tried that. Looked for and found fame. And tried
- that. Looked for and found wealth. And tried that. Looked for and found
- many, many other keys. And tried them all. And when at last they have
- lain down on their deathbeds, they have turned gray hopeless faces to
- the world and died saying, "We could not find the right key."
- Some few, some very few, there are, who try the key of love in all
- life's doors. Radiant, they turn to the men and women about and cry,
- "Try love! It unlocks all other doors as surely as it does the first in
- life. Try love!"
- And though their fellow beings see that these are the only ones in all
- the world who find happiness, they turn doubting from them. "It cannot
- be," they say, "that the key we used in youth should be used again in
- all the other doors of life." And so they keep on trying the keys that
- every disappointed, dying man calls out in warning voice will fail.
- Only a few there are who learn--a very few--that love unlocks all other
- doors in life as surely as it does the first. Try love!
- [Illustration]
- +Japan.+--A new civilization. The land of a new culture! was the cry of
- every penny-a-liner at the time when she began to display her
- battleships, cannon, and her accomplished method of drilling her
- soldiers. They were mocking themselves and did not know how. They talk
- of culture and civilization and their criterion thereof is the
- development of the technique of murder. Again, Japan a modern state. She
- can take her place in the ranks of other civilized countries. Rejoice!
- and then learn that victorious Japan is on the threshold of a famine.
- Nearly a million people, it is laconically reported, are in danger of
- dying of starvation. Surely, no one will possibly doubt now that Japan
- is a civilized country.
- WITHOUT GOVERNMENT
- By MAX BAGINSKI
- The gist of the anarchistic idea is this, that there are qualities
- present in man, which permit the possibilities of social life,
- organization, and co-operative work without the application of force.
- Such qualities are solidarity, common action, and love of justice.
- To-day they are either crippled or made ineffective through the
- influence of compulsion; they can hardly be fully unfolded in a society
- in which groups, classes, and individuals are placed in hostile,
- irreconcilable opposition to one another. In human nature to-day such
- traits are fostered and developed which separate instead of combining,
- call forth hatred instead of a common feeling, destroy the humane
- instead of building it up. The cultivation of these traits could not be
- so successful if it did not find the best nourishment in the foundations
- and institutions of the present social order.
- On close inspection of these institutions, which are based upon the
- power of the State that maintains them, mankind shows itself as a huge
- menagerie, in which the captive beasts seek to tear the morsels from
- each other's greedy jaws. The sharpest teeth, the strongest claws and
- paws vanquish the weaker competitors. Malice and underhand dealing are
- victorious over frankness and confidence. The struggle for the means of
- existence and for the maintenance of achieved power fill the entire
- space of the menagerie with an infernal noise. Among the methods which
- are used to secure this organized bestiality the most prominent ones are
- the hangman, the judge with his mechanical: "In the name of the king,"
- or his more hypocritical: "In the name of the people I pass sentence";
- the soldier with his training for murder, and the priest with his:
- "Authority comes from God."
- The exteriors of prisons, armories, and churches show that they are
- institutions in which the body and soul are subdued. He whose thoughts
- reach beyond this philosophy of the menagerie sees in them the
- strongest expression of the view, that it is not possible to make life
- worth living the more with the help of reason, love, justice,
- solidarity. The family and school take care to prepare man for these
- institutions. They deliver him up to the state, so to speak, blindfolded
- and with fettered limbs. Force, force. It echoes through all history.
- The first law which subjected man to man was based upon force. The
- private right of the individual to land was built up by force; force
- took way the claims upon homesteads from the majority and made them
- unsettled and transitory. It was force that spoke to mankind thus: "Come
- to me, humble yourself before me, serve me, bring the treasures and
- riches of the earth under MY roof. You are destined by Providence to
- always be in want. You shall be allowed just enough to maintain strength
- with which to enrich me infinitely by your exertions and to load me down
- with superfluity and luxury."
- What maintains the material and intellectual slavery of the masses and
- the insanity of the autocracy of the few? Force. Workingmen produce in
- the factories and workshops the most varied things for the use of man.
- What is it that drives them to yield up these products for speculation's
- sake to those who produce nothing, and to content themselves with only a
- fractional part of the values which they produce? It is force.
- What is it that makes the brain-worker just as dependent in the
- intellectual realm as the artisan in the material world? Force. The
- artist and the writer being compelled to gain a livelihood dare not
- dream of giving the best of their individuality. No, they must scan the
- market in order to find out what is demanded just then. Not any
- different than the dealer in clothes who must study the style of the
- season before he places his merchandise before the public. Thus art and
- literature sink to the level of bad taste and speculation. The artistic
- individuality shrinks before the calculating reckoner. Not that which
- moves the artist or the writer most receives expression; the
- vacillating demands of mediocrity of every-day people must be satisfied.
- The artist becomes the helper of the dealer and the average men, who
- trot along in the tracks of dull habit.
- The State Socialists love to assert that at present we live in the age
- of individualism; the truth, however, is that individuality was never
- valued at so low a rate as to-day. Individual thinking and feeling are
- incumbrances and not recommendations on the paths of life. Wherever they
- are found on the market they meet with the word "adaptation." Adapt
- yourself to the demands of the reigning social powers, act the obedient
- servant before them, and if you produce something be sure that it does
- not run against the grain of your "superiors," or say adieu to success,
- reputation and recompense. Amuse the people, be their clown, give them
- platitudes about which they can laugh, prejudices which they hold as
- righteousness and falsehoods which they hold as truths. Paint the whole,
- crown it with regard for good manners, for society does not like to hear
- the truth about itself. Praise the men in power as fathers of the
- people, have the devourers of the common wealth parade along as
- benefactors of mankind.
- Of course, the force which humbles humanity in this manner is far from
- openly declaring itself as force. It is masked, and in the course of
- time it has learned to step forward with the least possible noise. That
- diminishes the danger of being recognized.
- The modern republic is a good example. In it tyranny is veiled so
- correctly, that there are really great numbers of people who are
- deceived by this masquerade, and who maintain that what they perceive is
- a true face with honest eyes.
- No czar, no king. But right in line with these are the landowners, the
- merchants, manufacturers, landlords, monopolists. They all are in
- possession, which is as strong a guarantee for the continuance of their
- power, as a castle surrounded by thick walls. Whoever possesses can rob
- him who possesses nothing of his independence. If I am dependent for a
- living on work, for which I need contrivances and machines, which I my
- self cannot procure, because I am without means, I must sacrifice my
- independence to him who possesses these contrivances and machines. You
- may work here, he will tell me, but only under the condition that you
- will deliver up the products of your labor to me, that I may trade with
- and make profit on them.
- The one without possessions has no choice. He may appeal to the
- declaration of human rights; he may point to his political rights, the
- equality before the law, before God and the archangels--if he wants to
- eat, drink, dress and have a home he must choose such work as the
- conditions of the industrial mercantile or agricultural plants impose
- upon him.
- Through organized opposition the workingmen can somewhat improve this
- condition; by the help of trade unions they can regulate the hours of
- work and hinder the reduction of wages to a level too low for mere
- living. The trade unions are a necessity for the workingmen, a bulwark
- against which the most unbearable demands of the class of possessors
- rebound; but a complete freeing of labor--be it of an intellectual or of
- a physical nature--can be brought about only through the abolition of
- wage work and the right of private ownership of land and the sources of
- maintenance and nourishment of mankind. There are heart-rending cries
- over the blasphemous opinion that property is not as holy a thing as its
- possessors would like to make it. They declare that possessions must not
- be less protected than human life, for they are necessary foundations of
- society. The case is represented as though everybody were highly
- interested in the maintenance of the right of private property, whereas
- conditions are such that non-possession is the normal condition of most
- people.
- Because few possess everything, therefore the many possess nothing. So
- far as possession can be considered as an oppressive measure in the
- hands of a few, it is a monopoly. Set in a paradox it would read: The
- abolition of property will free the people from homelessness and
- non-possession. In fact, this will happen when the earth with its
- treasures shall cease to be an object of trade for usurers; when it
- shall vouchsafe to all a home and a livelihood. Then not only the bent
- bodies will straighten; the intellect free itself as might the bound
- Prometheus rid himself of his fetters and leave the rock to which he is
- chained, but we shall look back on the institutions of force, the state,
- the hangman, et al, as ghosts of an anxious fantasy.
- In free unions the trades will organize themselves and will produce the
- means of livelihood. Things will not be produced for profit's sake, but
- for the sake of need. The profit-grabber has grown superfluous just as
- his patron, the state, which at present serves by means of its taxes and
- revenues, his anti-humanitarian purposes and hinders the reasonable
- consumption of goods. From the governing mania the foundation will be
- withdrawn; for those strata in society will be lacking which therefore
- had grown rich and fat by monopolizing the earth and its production.
- They alone needed legislatures to make laws against the disinherited.
- They needed courts of justice to condemn; they needed the police to
- carry out practically the terrible social injustice, the cause of which
- lay in their existence and manner of living. And now the political
- corruptionists are lacking who served the above-mentioned classes as
- helpers, and therefore had to be supported as smaller drones.
- What a pleasant surprise! We see now that the production and
- distribution of means of livelihood are a much simpler matter without
- government than with government. And people now realize that the
- governments never promoted their welfare, but rather made it impossible,
- since with the help of force they only allowed the right of possession
- to the minority.
- Life is really worth living now. It ceases to be an endless, mad
- drudgery, a repugnant struggle for a mere existence.
- Truth and beauty are enthroned upon the necessity of procuring the means
- of existence in a co-operative organized manner. The social motives
- which to-day make man ambitious, hypocritical, stealthy, are
- ineffective. One need not sell his individuality for a mess of pottage,
- as Esau sold his primogeniture.
- At last the individuality of man has struck a solid social foundation on
- which it can prosper. The individual originality in man is valued; it
- fructifies art, literature, science, which now, in so far as they are
- dependent upon the state and ownership--which is far-reaching--must take
- the direction of prescribed models that are acknowledged, and must not
- be directed against the continuance of the leisure classes.
- Love will be free. Love's favor is a free granting, a giving and taking
- without speculation. No prostitution; for the economic and social power
- of one person over another exists no longer, and with the falling off of
- external oppression many an internal serfdom of feeling will be done
- away with, which often is only the reflex of hard external compulsion.
- Then the longing of large hearts may take tangible shape. Utopias are
- arrows aimed into the future, harbingers of a new reality.
- Rabelais, in his description of life in the "Thelemite Abbey," wrote:
- "All their life was spent not in laws, statutes, or rules, but according
- to their own free will and pleasure. They rose out of their beds when
- they thought good; they did eat, drink, labor, sleep, when they had a
- mind to it, and were disposed for it. None did awake them, none did
- offer to constrain them to eat, drink, nor do any other thing. In all
- their rule and strictest tie of their order, there was but this one
- clause to be observed: 'Do What Thou Wilt.'
- "Because men that are free, well-born, well-bred, and conversant in
- honest companies, have naturally an instinct and spur that prompteth
- them unto virtuous actions, and withdraws them from vice, which is
- called honor. Those same men, when by base subjection and constraint
- they are brought under and kept down, turn aside from that noble
- disposition, by which they formerly were inclined to virtue, to shake
- off that bond of servitude, wherein they are so tyrannously enslaved;
- for it is agreeable to the nature of man to long after things forbidden,
- and to desire what is denied us. By this liberty they entered into a
- very laudable emulation, to do all of them what they saw did please one.
- If any of the gallants or ladies should say, 'Let us drink,' they would
- all drink. If any one of them said, 'Let us play,' they all played. If
- one said, 'Let us go a walking into the fields,' they went all. If it
- were to go a hawking, or a hunting, the ladies mounted upon dainty
- well-paced nags, seated in a stately palfrey saddle, carried on their
- lovely fists either a sparhawk, or a lanneret, or a marlin, and the young
- gallants carried the other kinds of hawks. So nobly were they taught,
- that there was neither he nor she amongst them, but could read, write,
- sing, play upon several musical instruments, speak five or six several
- languages, and compose in them all very quaintly, both in verse and
- prose. Never were seen so valiant knights, so noble and worthy, so
- dexterous and skilful both on foot and horseback, more brisk and lively,
- more nimble and quick, or better handling all manner of weapons, than
- were there. Never were seen ladies so proper and handsome, so miniard
- and dainty, less forward, or more ready with their hand, and with their
- needle, in every honest and free action belonging to that sex, than were
- there."
- [Illustration]
- +A few days ago+ the red ghost of revolution showed itself in the White
- House. The President saw it and threatened it with his boxing fists:
- "What are you looking for here, be off to Russia." "You are comical in
- your excitement," answered Revolution. "You must know, I am not only
- Russian, I am international, at home here as well as on the other side
- of the great water."
- +A Proposition.+--Would it not be wiser to explain theories out of life
- and not life out of theories?
- VIVE LE ROI
- BY FRANCES MAULE BJORKMAN
- Aye, vive le roi. The King is dead--
- So move our lives from day to day.
- The triumph of to-morrow's lord
- Meets for our former chief's decay.
- Then love and live and laugh and sing--
- The world is good and life is free--
- There's not a single care I know
- That's worth a single tear from me.
- What's love or fame or place or power?
- What's wealth when we shall come to die?
- What matters anything on earth
- So long as only I am I?
- The Joy or grief or love or shame
- That holds its little hour of sway
- Is only worth its destined time--
- What use to try to make it stay?
- Aye, let it go. The monarch dead,
- A better king our shouts may hail
- And if a worse--well, still be glad;
- He too will pass behind the vail.
- They all must pass--fame, joy and love,
- The sting of grief, the blot of shame;
- The only thing that really counts
- Is how we bear the praise or blame.
- I'll take the good the while it lasts
- And when it goes I'll learn to sing,
- All eager for the coming joy--
- "The king is dead, long live the king."
- Reflections of A Rich Man
- +If God were not in existence+ we would have to order one from the
- Professors of Theology.
- The fear, instilled in the majority of the poor, with the God, Devil,
- Heaven and Hell idea, is greater than their dread of a hundred thousand
- policemen. Had we not given God the place of Chief Gendarme of the
- Universe, we would need twice as many soldiers and police as we have
- to-day.
- * * * * *
- +A poor devil+ who owns but one million dollars said to me the other day:
- "I, in your place, would rather contribute money towards art and
- literature than to donate it to the Baptist Church." What an
- impracticable fellow! Art and literature, among the common people, only
- tends to cause mischief. They are to remain our privilege. We know the
- demands of good taste and we can afford to pay for the æsthetic
- pleasures of life. The majority is unable to do that; besides, to teach
- them the beauty of art only means to make them discontented and
- rebellious against our authority.
- * * * * *
- +I frankly admit+ I never had a great admiration for Jesus of Nazareth. A
- man of disordered circumstances arouses my disgust. Jesus was neither
- engaged in any kind of a business, nor did he possess as much as a bank
- account, nor even a steady home. He preached to the poor. What for? The
- poor should work and not philosophize. The Scriptures tell nowhere that
- Jesus returned the mule, upon which he made his entry into Jerusalem, to
- the owner, or that he paid him for it. I strongly suspect he did not do
- it. One thing is certain, I never would have taken this dreamer of the
- abolition of profits as my business partner.
- * * * * *
- +It was very hot+ yesterday. I walked through my park, intending to betake
- myself to my favorite place for rest and reverie. Suddenly I stood
- still, arrested by the sight of a man lying under a tree. In my park?
- And how the fellow looked! In rags and dirty! I have been told I was
- kind-hearted, and I realized this myself at the moment. I walked over to
- the man and inquired interestedly: "Are you ill?" He grunted in reply.
- The wretch must have thought, in his sleep, that I was one of his kind.
- My generosity did not cease. "If you need money, do not feel shy about
- telling me. How much do you need. I am the rich X Y Z, who has a
- fabulous fortune, as you have undoubtedly heard." At this remark the
- scoundrel turned on the other side, with his back toward me, and said,
- while yawning: "What I want? I want to sleep. Will you be good enough to
- keep the mosquitoes away for two hours?" Within five minutes I had my
- servant kick this impertinent and ungrateful wretch out of my park. If
- all of the low class think as this fellow, I fear our charitable efforts
- in their behalf will accomplish little.
- [Illustration]
- +Eleven million+, nine hundred and seventeen thousand, nine hundred and
- forty-six dollars and fifty-eight cents is what the gallant Gen. Bingham
- asks us for protecting us from each other for the ensuing year. With a
- population of four million and 4.50 members to a family, we pay a
- fraction less than $3 per head, and about $13.50 for a family, a year
- for police protection in this enlightened Christian (750,000 of us are
- Jews, but ours is a Christian city) city of ours. I'd give that silver
- watch of mine away and mind my own business if I thought it would come
- cheaper, but it won't do. H. H. Rogers is my brother and keeper, and he
- insists he needs protection, and I must pay for it, so what can I do?
- I've told him I'm a peaceful, propertyless man with no higher ambition
- than to love my fellow-man--and woman, and mind my own business; but his
- reply has invariably been, "I'm Dr. Tarr, and my system prevails in this
- lunatic asylum!" I recognize the logic of his argument all right and
- continue to pay for his protection and feel grateful for the privilege
- of grumbling a little now and again.
- COMSTOCKERY
- By JOHN R. CORYELL
- Be it understood that the shocking thing which we know as Comstockery,
- goes back into the centuries for its origin; being, indeed, the perfect
- flower of that asceticism, which was engrafted on the degraded
- Christianity which took its name from Christ without in the least
- comprehending the spirit of his lofty conception.
- The man Comstock, who has the shameful distinction of having lent his
- name to the idea of which he is the willing and probably the fit
- exponent, may be dismissed without further consideration, since he is,
- after all, only the inevitable as he is the deplorable result of that
- for which he stands; seemingly without any sense of the shame and the
- awfulness of it.
- It may be said, too, in dismissing him, that it is of no consequence
- whether the very unpleasant stories current concerning him are true or
- not. It is altogether probable that a man who stands for what he does
- and who glories in proclaiming the things he does, will also do things
- for which he does not stand and which he does not proclaim. That is a
- characteristic of most of us and only proves that, after all, he is not
- less than human.
- The only point that need be made in regard to the man who is proud of
- representing Comstockery is, that if he had not done so, some other lost
- soul would. In that sad stage of our social growth when death was the
- penalty for most infractions of the law, an executioner could always be
- found who took pride in his work and who seemed to be beyond the reach
- of the scorn, the abhorrence and the contempt of his fellows.
- Comstockery, as we know it, is apparently an organized effort to
- regulate the morals of the people. If it were nothing more than this, it
- would be absurd and negligible, because futile; for what we call morals
- are only the observances which the conditions of life impose upon a
- people; and an act depends, for its moral status, upon its relation to
- those conditions. As, for example, horse-stealing in a closely settled
- community, which has its railroads and other means of communication, is
- a crime to be punished by a brief period of imprisonment; while in the
- sparsely settled sections of a country, where the horse is an imperative
- necessity of life, its theft becomes a hanging matter, whatever the
- written law for that section of the country may be as to the punishment
- of the crime. And men, brought up in law-abiding communities in the
- deepest respect for the law, will, under the changed conditions of life,
- not merely condone the infliction of a penalty in excess of that
- provided by law, but will themselves assist, virtuously satisfied with
- their conduct because the society of which they form a part has decided
- that horse-stealing shall be so punished. On the other hand, there are
- numerous laws on the statute books, still unrepealed and unenforceable
- because the acts treated of are no longer held to be offences against
- morality. In other words, the morals of a people can be regulated only
- by themselves.
- What Comstockery does is bad enough, but its real awfulness lies in the
- fact that it seems to fairly enough represent us in our attitude toward
- a certain class of ideas and things. It is the expression of our
- essential immorality--using that word in its conventional sense--having
- its roots deep down in pruriency, hypocrisy and ignorance. Like the
- blush on the cheek of the courtesan, it deceives no one, but is none the
- less a truthful expression, not of the thing it simulates, but of the
- character of the simulator.
- Comstockery was probably brought to this country by the first
- Anglo-Saxon, whether pirate or minister of the gospel, who set foot on
- this soil; certainly it was a finely blooming plant on the Mayflower,
- and was soon blossoming here as never elsewhere in the world, giving out
- such a fragrance that the peculiar odor of it has become a
- characteristic of this land of liberty.
- When the so-called Comstock laws were passed there was a real disease to
- be treated: The symptoms of the disease were obscene books and pictures
- which were being freely circulated among the children of the land,
- boarding-schools, whether for girls or boys, being fairly flooded with
- the pernicious literature. The work of confiscation, suppression and of
- imprisonment was done thoroughly and conscientiously, so that in the
- course of a comparatively short time it was difficult to find books or
- pictures of the kind in question. It is said that the effectiveness of
- the work done is best shown by the one or more libraries of obscene
- books which the society, or some of its officers, have collected.
- The value of the work done and the efficiency of the workers were
- recognized in the passage from time to time of laws giving extraordinary
- powers not alone to the popularly so-called "Comstock Society," but to
- officers of the government. A perfect fury of purity took possession of
- our legislators; they were determined to stamp out impurity. And perhaps
- they were establishing reputations for themselves. It is recorded that
- in the days of the Inquisition men established their orthodoxy by the
- loudness of their cries against heresy; that in the times of the French
- Revolution, men proved their patriotism by making charges of treason
- against their neighbors; that practicing polygamists have purified
- themselves by hounding a theoretical polygamist out of their legislative
- body. Anyhow, the laws were passed, the thing was done.
- And what was the thing that was done? A moral Inquisition had been
- established. Arguing from a wrong premise a hideous conclusion had been
- reached. It was voiced only a few weeks ago by an official of the
- postoffice in Chicago, when confiscating a publication. He said in
- substance, if not literally: "Any discussion of sex is obscene."
- There it is in a few words--a complete and perfect treatise on
- Comstockery! In the early days in some parts of New England, a man might
- not kiss his wife on a Sunday. On common days, the filthy act was
- permissible, but the Sabbath must not be so defiled. And now, any
- discussion of sex is obscenity!
- Pause a while and consider what this means and whither it will lead,
- where it has already led. Discussion of sex is obscene; then sex,
- itself, must be obscene; life and all that pertains to it must be
- filthy. That is, providing it be the life of Man. The sex of flowers may
- be discussed frankly and freely either for the pleasure of knowledge, or
- in order to use knowledge for the purpose of improving the flower. The
- sex of animals may be discussed; it is discussed in government
- publications and in the many farm journals published throughout the
- country, because it is necessary to improve the breed of our domestic
- animals, because these animals are valuable. But discussion of the sex
- of man is obscene!
- There have been some changes in public sentiment, some changes, perhaps,
- in the grey matter on the judicial bench, since the early days in New
- York when Comstockery was most rampant: for what was tolerated then is
- not tolerated now; some things that were judicially wrong then are
- judicially right now. And in this change there is hope and the promise
- of greater change.
- In those early days a confectioner on Fulton street sought to attract
- customers by exhibiting in his window a painting by a great artist. If
- memory serves, it was "The Triumph of Charles V." by Hans Makart.
- Figures of nude females were in the picture, and Comstockery established
- in its censorship of art and solemnly unconscious of its appalling
- ignorance, but true to its fundamental pruriency, ordered the picture
- removed from the window. And it was removed. Just as Boston, finding its
- bronze bacchante immodest, rejected the brazen hussey. And now she
- stands on her pedestal in the Metropolitan Museum in New York, giving
- joy to the beholder, and--not ordered down by Comstockery. Why? And why
- is not the whole museum purged of its nude figures? It is a puzzle not
- even to be solved by the theory of change in public sentiment; for it is
- only a few months ago that the art censor in chief of Comstockery saw in
- the window of an art dealer on Fifth Avenue a landscape in which
- figured several nude children discreetly wandering away from the
- beholder. The picture was ordered out of the window forthwith. And went.
- A few blocks below, on Broadway, there were then and are now exhibited
- in a window, numerous photographs of nude children, not all of them
- discreet as to way of their going. Why? Has the art censor decided that
- the photographs are innocuous, or that they are art?
- But these instances and the amazing expeditions made by the censor into
- the realm of literature are hardly more than ludicrous; and they can and
- will correct themselves. But the frightful results of Comstockery, as
- applied to life and to real purity, cannot be so lightly passed over.
- And let it not be forgotten that an indictment of Comstockery is an
- indictment of ourselves, for the prurient, hypocritical, degrading thing
- can exist not one instant after we have declared that it shall perish.
- It is no exaggeration to say that Comstockery is the arch enemy of
- society. It seeks to make hypocrisy respectable; it would convert
- impurity into a basic virtue; it labels ignorance, innocence; it has
- legislated knowledge into a crime; and it seeks its perpetuation in the
- degradation of an enfeebled human race. And that these are not
- over-statements can easily be established to the satisfaction of any
- reasonable mind.
- The most creditable work ever done by Comstockery was the practical
- suppression and elimination of the obscene book; but when that is said,
- all is said. How worse than fatuous, how absolutely fiendish that
- physician would be deemed who hid the signs of small-pox with paint and
- powder and permitted his patient to roam at will among his fellows,
- unwarned even of the nature of the fell disease that was devouring his
- life. Nay, worse! What if the physician should have himself clothed with
- plenary powers and should compel the poor wretch to refrain from making
- his case known after he had discovered its nature? But this is precisely
- what Comstockery does.
- The obscene book was removed from circulation. In other words, the
- symptom of the disease was hidden. But was anything done to eliminate
- the disease, or to remove its cause? On the contrary, everything
- possible was done to perpetuate the disease; everything possible was
- done to prevent anyone who had suffered from the disease or who knew
- anything about it, from imparting his knowledge. For the disease was
- ignorance; ignorance of self, of life, of sex. And not only does
- Comstockery strive to perpetuate ignorance, not only does it glorify
- ignorance and miscall it innocence, not only does it elevate it into a
- virtue, but it has legislated knowledge into a crime. The offence of the
- book it had eliminated was not its vicious misinformation, but its use
- of sex as a subject. The postoffice has said that any discussion of sex
- is obscene and the courts have put one noble old man of over seventy
- years into prison at hard labor, and have punished an aged woman
- physician in some other way because they sought, in all purity and
- right-mindedness, to help their brothers and sisters to a knowledge of
- themselves.
- It is true that, at last, there is a rift within the lute; or would it
- better be called a leak in the sewer? Comstockery has not quite the
- standing that it once had. When it was made generally known that a
- postoffice official had said that any discussion of sex was obscene,
- there followed such a rattling fire of reprobation and condemnation even
- from many startled conventionalists, who could support the thing but
- could not look it in the face, that the maker of the now historic phrase
- was moved to deny that he had said it officially. In fact, there are
- many signs, most of them still small, on the distant horizon, it is
- true, which indicate that we are becoming alive to the fact that it is
- imperative that sex should be discussed.
- This is an age of radical ideas. Radicalism in politics, in religion, in
- ethics is ripe; which is only another way of saying that we are
- beginning to dare to think. Probably the most apparent, if not the most
- significant, sign of the general radicalism, is the tendency to exalt
- the science of life to an even higher plane than that which it occupied
- in the days of Hellenic supremacy. We are beginning to understand that
- right living is a purely physical matter, and that morals are only laws
- of health; and if there are yet but few who dare take so radical a view
- of morals as that, still there are quite as few who will not admit
- freely that nothing can be immoral which is beneficial to the human
- body.
- Of course, it is unthinkable, even from the point of view of the most
- conventional of orthodox Christians, that there can be any immorality in
- sex, for sex in itself is absolutely a work of the deity, hence of the
- highest morality, if it can have any such attribute at all. As well
- might one give digestion a moral quality. Morality is surely a matter of
- personal conduct. One may say that it is immoral to eat so much as to
- injure one's health, but it is not a matter of record that any
- considerable body of persons declares the stomach to be an immoral
- organ, or the digestive function to be an immoral one, or any discussion
- of digestion immoral. Then why sex or sex functions?
- It is true that Comstockery has us to designate our legs, limbs, though
- not at the present time with any legal penalty for not doing so; it
- prescribes the word stomach for polite usage in describing that part of
- the body which lies subjacent to the actual stomach, anterior to the
- spinal column and posterior to the abdominal wall; it forbids a visible
- bifurcated garment for the "limbs" of a female; and it does a variety of
- other absurd things, all going to show that in some singular fashion it
- has confounded acts with things; as one might call all knives immoral
- because a few knives had been used to do murder with.
- By what extraordinary process does Comstockery conjure decency into the
- stomach and indecency into the bowels? But how rejoiced we should be
- that it is no worse than indecent to speak of the receptacle of the
- intestines by its common name. By some hocus pocus of which Comstockery
- is easily capable it might have been obscene to speak of the digestive
- process or of any of the digestive organs. We might easily have been
- taught that digestion was a moral matter, not to be talked of, not to be
- studied; ignorance of which was a virtue, knowledge of which a crime.
- And then, under those conditions, if a person, possessed of a little
- knowledge such as might have crept stealthily down the ages, were in a
- fine humanitarian spirit to dare to publish some of the things he knew
- in order to help dyspeptic humanity, he would have been robbed of his
- worldly goods and clapped forthwith into jail. Fancy that under such
- circumstances a man who had lived his three score and ten years and had
- learned something from his own suffering and experience, something from
- the secretly imparted information of others, might not say a word to
- help his fellows. Is it not too absurd to contemplate without both tears
- and laughter that that man who should plead with his fellow men to
- abstain from habitually living on butter cakes and coffee, should be
- charged with obscenity and imprisoned in consequence? And imagine some
- sapient postoffice official solemnly declaring that any discussion of
- digestion is obscene! Consider how the land would be flooded with
- literature describing the pleasures of gluttony and depicting impossible
- gastronomic feats! Consider, too, trying to cure indigestion and to
- suppress the orgies of our children in pies, crullers, fritters and
- butter cakes by the naïve device of forbidding all knowledge of the
- digestive function and making the utterance of the name of a digestive
- organ an obscenity punishable by fine and imprisonment!
- Digestion is a matter to be considered in the light of hygiene. So is
- sex. Digestion is not in itself either moral or immoral. Neither is sex.
- But there is the most hideous immorality in the ascription of obscenity
- to sex, sex function or any phase of sex life. And this is the crime of
- Comstockery. It has reared an awful idol to which have been sacrificed
- the best of our youth; with hypocrisy the high-priest, ignorance the
- creed, and pruriency the detective.
- Comstockery strikes at the very root of life. It forbids that we shall
- know how to live our best; it forbids that we shall know how to save our
- children from the perils we have so discreditably passed through; it
- raises barriers of false modesty between parents and children by
- branding the very science of life an obscenity. Owing to the shocking
- suggestions of Comstockery all that relates to life is degraded into the
- gutter; and that which would be pure and sweet and wholesome in the home
- or in the school, becomes filthy Comstockery on the snickering lips of
- ignorant play-fellows.
- The wonder is that we have endured the nasty thing for so long a time.
- We have been boys and girls and have gone from our parents to our
- school-mates and play-fellows for the information to which we are
- entitled by very reason of living, but, more than all; because of our
- need to live right. We all know the hideous untruths we were told
- because of Comstockery; we all know how much we had to unlearn, and how
- great the suffering mentally, how great the deterioration physically in
- the unlearning; we all know our unfitness for parentage at the time we
- entered it; every man knows how the brothels kept open doors and
- beckoning inmates by the thousand for his undoing. And yet we endure
- it--Comstockery.
- It is such a subtly pervasive thing, this Comstockery, it steals in
- wherever it can and puts the taint of its own uncleanness on whatever it
- touches. Clothing becomes a matter of Comstockery. We do not always see
- it, but such is the fact. We do not wear clothing for convenience, but
- to cover our nakedness. You see nakedness is obscene. Not in itself, but
- only in man. You may take a naked dog on the street, but not a naked
- human being. The summer previous to the last one was a very hot one in
- New York, and a poor wretch of a boy of fourteen years of age, being on
- the top floor of a crowded tenement was half crazed by the heat and the
- lack of fresh air, of which there was absolutely none in the closet in
- which he was trying to sleep. He ran down into the street nude at two
- o'clock in the morning in the hope of finding a surcease of his
- distress. A policeman saw him, remembered his blushing Comstockery in
- time and haled the poor lad off to a cell. The next morning the
- magistrate in tones of grimmest virtue sent the boy to the reformatory,
- remarking with appropriate jest that the young scoundrel might have
- seven years in which to learn to keep his clothes on.
- Theodore Roosevelt, who is at once the greatest President and the wisest
- man of whom we have any record, tells us that we must breed more
- children. But how shall our women bear more children, or presently bear
- any, if they are to be continually made more and more unfit for
- motherhood by the pitfalls into which their ignorance of the science of
- life leads them? Because of the Comstockery which has its felt grip upon
- our throats we may not instruct the little child in the way of health;
- or if it be said that there is nothing to prevent the parent from
- instructing the child, yet it must be insisted that the parent has no
- means of knowing since Comstockery prescribes ignorance as the only way
- to innocence; and innocent our girls must be at any cost. Besides, the
- average mother, if she will but admit the truth, is ashamed to talk with
- her daughter about Comstockery things. We all know that this is so. Our
- parents treated us in such fashion, and we are so treating our children.
- The knowledge which each generation acquires at the cost of health, yes,
- at the cost of life even, dies with it, for the most part. The one thing
- we most need to know is how to live; the science of life begins with
- sex, goes on with sex, ends with sex; but sex we may not discuss; thus
- we go on in ignorance of life. Shall it remain so? Is Comstockery to be
- our best expression of the most vital matter of existence? Life, sex,
- should be and is when we recognize it, the purest, sweetest, simplest
- subject of discussion; and we make of it a filthy jest. We will not tell
- our sons the things we have learned through bitter experience, because
- we cannot bear the shame of discussing sex subjects with them, because
- of the accursed Comstockery that is within us; but we will go to the
- club and the bar room, or anywhere behind locked doors in the select
- company of our fellows, and there pour out the real essence of our
- Comstockery in stories which make a filthy jest of sex. Every man knows
- this is the truth. Perhaps women, in their Comstockery, know it too. As
- has been already said, treat digestion as sex is treated, and it will be
- sniggered over behind locked doors in precisely the same way.
- Let us rid ourselves of the fatal, prurient restrictions on sex
- discussion and in a marvellously short time we shall have a store of
- sweet knowledge on the subject that will enable us to live well
- ourselves and fit us to bring into the world such children as will amaze
- us with their health of body and purity of mind. No alteration of the
- facts of life is necessary, but only a change of attitude. Why, when
- Trilby brought the bare foot into prominence, it was gravely debated
- whether or not such an indecency should be permitted. It was assumed
- that a naked foot was indecent. Why a foot more than a hand? Why any one
- part of the body more than another? Comstockery! Comstockery!
- [Illustration]
- DON QUIXOTE AND HAMLET
- In Peter Kropotkin's Book: "Russian Literature" (published by McClure,
- Phillips & Company), there is a quotation from Turgenieff's works, which
- shows the Russian poet's genius and psychological insight in all its
- wonderful depth. Here it is:
- "Don Quixote is imbued with devotion towards his ideal, for which he is
- ready to suffer all possible privations, to sacrifice his life; life
- itself he values only so far as it can serve for the incarnation of the
- ideal, for the promotion of truth, of justice on earth.... He lives for
- his brothers, for opposing the forces hostile to mankind: the witches,
- the giants--that is, the oppressors.... Therefore he is fearless,
- patient; he is satisfied with the most modest food, the poorest cloth:
- he has other things to think of. Humble in his heart, he is great and
- daring in his mind.... And who is Hamlet? Analysis, first of all, and
- egotism, and therefore no faith. He lives entirely for himself, he is
- an egotist; but to believe in one' self--even an egotist cannot do that:
- we can believe only in something which is outside us and above us.... As
- he has doubts of everything, Hamlet evidently does not spare himself;
- his intellect is too developed to remain satisfied with what he finds in
- himself; he feels his weakness, but each self-consciousness is a force
- where-from results his irony, the opposite of the enthusiasm of Don
- Quixote.... Don Quixote, a poor man, almost a beggar, without means and
- relations, old, isolated--undertakes to redress all the evils and to
- protect oppressed strangers over the whole world. What does it matter to
- him that his first attempt at freeing the innocent from his oppressor
- falls twice as heavy upon the head of the innocent himself?... What does
- it matter that, thinking that he has to deal with noxious giants, Don
- Quixote attacks useful windmills?... Nothing of the sort can ever happen
- with Hamlet: how could he, with his perspicacious, refined, sceptical
- mind, ever commit such a mistake! No, he will not fight with windmills,
- he does not believe in giants ... but he would not have attacked them
- even if they did exist.... And he does not believe in evil. Evil and
- deceit are his inveterate enemies. His scepticism is not
- indifferentism.... But in negation, as in fire, there is a destructive
- power, and how to keep it in bounds, how to tell it where to stop, when
- that which it must destroy, and that which it must spare are often
- inseparably welded together? Here it is that the often-noticed tragical
- aspect of human life comes in: for action we require will, and for
- action we require thought; but thought and will have parted from each
- other, and separate every day more and more....
- "And thus the native hue of resolution
- Is sickled o'er by the pale cast of thought...."
- [Illustration]
- ON THE BANKS OF ACHERON
- By EDWIN BJORKMAN
- The air was still and full of a gray melancholy light, yet the waters of
- the river boiled angrily as if touched by a raging tempest. The billows
- rose foaming above its surface, all white with the whiteness of fear.
- When they sank back again, they were black--black as despair that knows
- of no hope.
- Steep hills mounted abruptly on either side of the river until they
- touched the sullen, colorless cloud-banks overhead. Their sides were
- seamed with numberless paths, running on narrow ledges, one above the
- other, from the river's edge to the crest of the hill. Men were moving
- along those paths: they swarmed like ants across the hillside, but I
- could not see whence they were coming nor whither they were going. All
- were pushing and jostling and scratching and howling and fighting. Every
- one's object seemed to be to raise himself to the path above his own and
- to prevent all others from doing the same.
- Down at the water's edge, they moved in a solid mass, arms pinned down,
- shoulder to shoulder and chest to back. At times a man got an arm out of
- the press and began to claw the up-turned, tear-stained faces of his
- neighbors in wild endeavors to lift his whole body. But soon his madness
- subsided, the writhing arm sank back, and the man vanished out of sight.
- The mass once more moved stolidly, solidly onward. Once in a great while
- its surface of heads would begin to boil like the waters of the river
- near by, and a man would be spouted into the air, landing on one of the
- paths above. Then each face would be turned toward him for a breathless
- moment, at the end of which the mass glided slowly onward as before.
- The crush on the paths higher up on the hillside was not so great, but
- the fighting of man against man was incessant and bitter. I could see
- them clambering up the steep sides of the ledges, with bleeding nails,
- distorted features and locked teeth. Waving arms and clutching fingers
- pursued them from below; ironshod heels trampled them from above.
- Ninety-nine out of the hundred ended their struggles with a fall, and in
- their rapid descent they swept others with them. But rising or falling,
- they all pushed onward, onward--from nowhere to nowhere, as it seemed to
- me. I watched them for hours, for days, for years--always the same
- wandering, the same scrambling, the same tumbling, without apparent
- purpose or result. Then my blood rose hotly to my heart and head. A
- scarlet mist floated before my eyes and my soul swelled within me almost
- unto bursting.
- "Why?" I cried, and the word rolled back and forth between the hillsides
- until its last echo was swallowed by the murmur that hovered over the
- wrathful river. The strugglers on the hillside paths, each and all,
- turned toward me. On every face I read astonishment.
- "Why?" I yelled at them again, and the sound of my voice lingered above
- the waters like a distant thunder. Gradually the expression on all those
- staring faces changed from wonder to scorn. A man on one of the paths
- near the crest of the hill laughed aloud. Two more joined him. It became
- contagious and spread like wildfire. All those millions were laughing
- into my face, laughing like demons rather than men.
- My frown only increased the mirth of that grinning multitude. I shook my
- clenched, up-stretched fists against them. And when at last their
- ghastly merriment ceased, I raised my voice once more in defiance.
- "Why?"
- As when on a bleak winter day the black snow clouds suddenly begin to
- darken the sky, so hatred and rage spread over their faces. Crooked,
- bony fingers were pointed at me. Men leaned recklessly from their narrow
- ledges to shout abuse at me. Stones and mud were flung at me. A hundred
- arms seized me and tossed my body in a wide curve from the hillside out
- over the river. For one long minute I struggled to keep myself above the
- yawning waters. Then I sank. All grew dark about me. A strange fullness
- in my chest seemed to rise up toward my head. There was a last moment
- of consciousness in which I heard a single word uttered by a ringing,
- bell-like voice that came from within myself. That last word was:
- "Why?"
- [Illustration]
- The British Elections and the Labor Parties
- By H. KELLY
- "We are a left-center country; we live by compromise."
- The above statement was made by an aged member of Parliament to
- Kropotkin some years ago, and the present elections testify strongly to
- the truth of that remark. For a country which produced the father of
- political economy, Adam Smith--for Scotland is included in our
- generalization--Robert Owen, the father of libertarian Socialism, which
- in the forties stood almost at the head of the Socialist movement in
- Europe, which has been the scene of so many Socialist and workingmen's
- congresses and has furnished a refuge for so many distinguished exiles,
- it is passing strange, to say the least, that up to the present no one
- has been elected to Parliament on a purely Socialist platform; this
- notwithstanding that, in the elections just past, of forty-three labor
- members elected nineteen are members of the Independent Labor Party and
- one of the Social Democratic Federation. John Burns was elected to
- Parliament just after the great Dock Strike on his trade-union record
- and has been elected regularly ever since, although he has long since
- ceased to be a Socialist. Keir Hardie was elected for West Ham as a
- Radical, and when he stood for re-election as a Socialist was defeated.
- In 1900 he was elected again as member for Merthyr Tydfill, a radical
- mining district in Wales, on a trade union-Socialist platform, and
- undoubtedly received a large number of votes on the ground of having
- been a miner once himself. R. B. Cunningham-Graham, probably the ablest
- Socialist who has yet sat in the British Parliament, was elected as a
- Radical, announcing himself a Socialist some time after his election.
- The British workman, true to his traditions, has consistently demanded
- compromise before electing anyone, and where that has been refused, the
- candidates have gone down to defeat. Hyndman, founder of the Social
- Democratic Federation and the ablest Socialist in public life; Quelch,
- editor of "Justice," the official organ of that party, for more than a
- decade, and Geo. Lansbury, one of their oldest, ablest and most
- respected members, refused to compromise in the recent election, and
- paid the inevitable penalty. Hyndman's case was really remarkable, he is
- a man of exceptional ability, has devoted himself for twenty-five years
- to the Socialist and labor movement, was endorsed by all the labor
- bodies of Burnley, and Mr. Phillip Stanhope, recently created a lord and
- one of the ablest Liberal politicians in the country, did him the honor
- of declining to stand against him. Still he was defeated--while
- politicians of an inferior stamp like John Burns, Keir Hardie, J. R.
- MacDonald and two score of others were triumphantly elected on a labor
- platform. Therein lies the secret, they were elected on a "Labor
- Platform!" Eight-hour day, trade-union rate of wages, better factory
- legislation, secular education, annual sessions of Parliament, paid
- members, one man, one vote, etc. All excellent things in themselves, but
- not Socialism and in no way disputing the right of one man to exploit
- another and leaving untouched the basic principle of Socialism, real
- Socialism, the right of labor to the fruits of its toil.
- Under conditions such as those described, is it to be wondered at that
- many Anarchists are frankly cynical as to the benefits labor will derive
- from the labor parties? There will be at least two, that have suddenly
- forced the gilded doors of the "Mother of Parliaments" and about which
- the guilty middle class grew nervous. We know that men like T. Burt, H.
- Broadhurst, W. Abraham, F. Madison and a score of others are but
- nominal labor men not having worked at their various trades for years
- and are middle class by training and income, that others like Keir
- Hardie, J. R. MacDonald, John Ward and many more are at best labor
- politicians so steeped in political bargaining and compromising that the
- net results to labor from them will be very small indeed. It is not
- necessary nor would it be just to question the honesty or well-meaning
- of many of the forty-three labor members, to prove that a distinct
- disappointment awaits those who elected them. Past history foretells the
- future clearly enough. We have seen John Burns, hero of the Dock Strike,
- who entered Parliament as a Revolutionary Socialist, becoming in a few
- short years as docile as a lamb to those above him in power and as
- autocratic as a Russian provincial governor to those who needed his
- assistance, finally enter a Liberal Cabinet with the "hero of
- Featherstone," H. H. Asquith, by whose orders striking miners were shot
- down in real American fashion, Sir Edward Grey, and other Jingo
- Imperialists--and the end is not yet. There are our other friends (?).
- H. Broadhurst, special favorite of the King; W. Abraham, ex-coal miner,
- who so endeared himself to the coal operators of Wales in his capacity
- as official of the Miners' Union and Scale Committee that when his
- daughter was married several years ago she received a cheque for £100
- from one of the aforesaid operators, and others whom space forbids
- mentioning. Such is the material of which the labor parties now in the
- House of Commons is formed, and it requires a violent stretch of
- imagination to see any real, lasting benefit can accrue from the
- forty-three men now sitting there as representatives of the oppressed
- masses. An inability to see this, however, by no means implies a lack of
- inherent good in the formation of the Labor Representation Committee and
- the Miners' Federation, their fraternization with the Socialists and the
- forces which impelled that organization and fraternization. It is the
- agitation which preceded it, and we hope will continue, and the growing
- desire on the part of the workers for a larger share of the product of
- their toil and a part in the management of industry that we see hope.
- The form that movement has taken or the beneficial results from the
- efforts of the elected are details. It is scarcely five years since the
- Labor Representation Committee sprang into existence, and it says much
- for the solidarity of labor that over a million trade unionists,
- thirteen thousand members of the Independent Labor Party and eight
- hundred Fabians could be got together on a political program in so short
- a time.
- For good or ill the British workingman has gone in for political action
- and will have a try at that before he listens to the Anarchists. Slow of
- thought and used to compromise, he is a stern taskmaker and will exact a
- rigid account of the stewardship entrusted to those who sought his
- suffrage. When the disillusionment comes, as it surely will, real
- progress may come. The process of disillusionment does not come with
- geometrical precision. To some it comes over night, to others it is a
- process of years, and to some it is denied altogether. For years the
- Anarchists have been scoffed at as impossible dreamers for advocating
- the General Strike as the only effective means of overthrowing the
- present system. The glorious fight of the Russian people for freedom has
- changed all this, and we find even Bebel threatening the German
- Government with a general strike if they attempt to withdraw the
- franchise; and Hyndman, who opposed it for years, has finally admitted
- its effectiveness. The effect has been felt in Great Britain in the
- shape of the unemployed agitations and demonstrations, and although
- temporarily allayed by the elections, it will blossom forth again.
- If the advent of the Liberal party to power, backed by the Home Rule and
- Labor parties, causes an undoing of the harm of the Balfour-Chamberlain
- government, it will be more than can reasonably be expected. The trade
- unions can never be restored to quite the same legal immunity they had
- previously. The forty thousand Chinese imported into South Africa to
- take the places of white miners will remain even if no more are brought
- in. The Education Act, passed with the assistance of the Irish
- Archbishops and attacking secular education, will be amended and not
- repealed. The endowment of the brewers will continue, and my Lords Bass,
- Burton and the rest will merely await future opportunities to plunder
- the British public. In short, little constructive legislation, even of
- that mild and tentative character one might expect from a Liberal party,
- made up of capitalistic units can be expected after the ten years of
- corrupt and extravagant rule of this band of modern pirates.
- They who advocate the complete reconstruction of society are under no
- illusions as to the time and trouble required to overcome the
- superstitions of the past. Being imbued, however, with the belief in
- what Christians call "the eternal righteousness of their cause," they
- meet the future with smiling face; and far from being downcast over the
- turn of events in Great Britain, see hope in the formation of the Labor
- Parties.
- [Illustration]
- AND YOU?
- BOLTON HALL
- "What would you do," asked the Idealist, "if you were Czar of Russia?"
- "I would first abolish monopoly of land, for that is fundamental," said
- the Reformer, "and then resign. What would you do?"
- "I would first resign, and then teach the people to abolish monopoly of
- land, the same as now," answered the Idealist. "But what would you do,
- Teacher?"
- "I would teach the people from the throne that they were oppressed by
- their system of monopoly--and by their Czar."
- NATIONAL ATAVISM
- BY INTERNATIONALIST
- The Jewish circles in New York, Boston, Philadelphia and other cities of
- America are aroused over the visit of a spectre called Nationalism,
- alias Territorialism. Like all spectres, it is doing a lot of mischief
- and causing much confusion in the heads of the Jewish population.
- The spirit of our ancestor, Abraham, has come to life again. Like
- Abraham, when Jehovah commanded him to go in quest of the promised land,
- the Jewish Nationalists make themselves and others believe that they
- long for the moment, when with wife and child and all possessions, they
- will migrate to that spot on earth, which will represent the Jewish
- State, where Jewish traits will have a chance to develop in idyllic
- peace.
- Natural science calls retrogression of species, which shows signs of a
- former state already overcome, atavism. The same term may be applied to
- the advanced section of the Jewish population, which has listened to the
- call of the Nationalists. They have retrogressed from a universal view
- of things to a philosophy fenced in by boundary lines; from the glorious
- conception that "the world is my country" to the conception of
- exclusiveness. They have abridged their wide vision and have made it
- narrow and superficial.
- The Zionism of Max Nordau and his followers never was more than a
- sentimental sport for the well-to-do in the ranks of the Jews. The
- latter-day Nationalists, however, are bent on reaching those circles of
- the Jewish race that have so far followed the banner of Internationalism
- and Revolution; and this at a moment when revolutionists of all
- nationalities and races are most in need of unity and solidarity.
- Nothing could be more injurious to the Russian revolution, nothing prove
- a lack of confidence in its success, so much as the present
- nationalistic agitation.
- The most encouraging and glorious feature of revolutions is that they
- purify the atmosphere from the thick, poisonous vapors of prejudices and
- superstition.
- From time immemorial revolutions have been the only hope and refuge of
- all the oppressed from national and social yokes. The radical
- nationalistic elements seem to have forgotten that all their enthusiasm,
- their faith and hope in the power of a great social change, now falters
- before the question: Will it give us our own territory where we can
- surround ourselves with walls and watch-towers? Yes, the very people,
- who once spoke with a divine fire of the beauty of the solidarity of all
- individuals and all peoples, now indulge in the shallow phrases that the
- Jew is powerless, that he is nowhere at home, and that he owns no place
- on earth, where he can do justice to his nature, and that he must first
- obtain national rights, like all nations, ere he can go further.
- These lamentations contain more fiction than truth, more sentimentality
- than logic.
- The Poles have their own territory; still this fact does not hinder
- Russia from brutalizing Poland or from flogging and killing her
- children; neither does it hinder the Prussian government from
- maltreating her Polish subjects and forcibly obliterating the Polish
- language. And of what avail is native territory to the small nations of
- the Balkans, with Russian, Turkish and Austrian influences keeping them
- in a helpless and dependent condition. Various raids and expeditions by
- the powerful neighboring states forced on them, have proven what little
- protection their territorial independence has given them against brutal
- coercion. The independent existence of small peoples has ever served
- powerful states as a pretext for venomous attacks, pillage and attempts
- at annexation. Nothing is left them but to bow before the superior
- powers, or to be ever prepared for bitter wars that might, in a measure,
- temporarily loosen the tyrannical hold, but never end in a complete
- overthrow of the powerful enemy.
- Switzerland is often cited as an example of a united nation which is
- able to maintain itself in peace and neutrality. It might be advisable
- to consider what circumstances have made this possible.
- It is an indisputable fact that Switzerland acts as the executive agent
- of European powers, who consider her a foreign detective bureau which
- watches over, annoys and persecutes refugees and the dissatisfied
- elements.
- Italian, Russian and German spies look upon Switzerland as a hunting
- ground, and the Swiss police are never so happy, as when they can render
- constable service to the governments of surrounding states. It is
- nothing unusual for the Swiss police to carry out the order of Germany
- or Italy to arrest political refugees and forcibly take them across the
- frontier, where they are given over into the hands of the German or
- Italian gendarmes. A very enticing national independence, is it not?
- Is it possible that former revolutionists and enthusiastic fighters for
- freedom, who are now in the nationalistic field, should long for similar
- conditions? Those who refuse to be carried away by nationalistic phrases
- and who would rather follow the broad path of Internationalism, are
- accused of indifference to and lack of sympathy with the sufferings of
- the Jewish race. Rather is it far more likely that those who stand for
- the establishment of a Jewish nation show a serious lack of judgment.
- Especially the radicals among the Nationalists seem to be altogether
- lost in the thicket of phrases. They are ashamed of the label
- "nationalist" because it stands for so much retrogression, for so many
- memories of hatred, of savage wars and wild persecutions, that it is
- difficult for one who claims to be advanced and modern to adorn himself
- with the name. And who does not wish to appear advanced and modern?
- Therefore the name of Nationalist is rejected, and the name of
- territorialist taken instead, as if that were not the same thing. True,
- the territorialists will have nothing to do with an organized Jewish
- state; they aim for a free commune. But, if it is certain that small
- states are subordinated to great powers and merely endured by them, it
- is still more certain that free communes within powerful states, built
- on coercion and land robbery, have even less chance for a free
- existence. Such cuckoos' eggs the ruling powers will not have in their
- nests. A community, in which exploitation and slavery do not reign,
- would have the same effect on these powers, as a red rag to a bull. It
- would stand an everlasting reproach, a nagging accusation, which would
- have to be destroyed as quickly as possible. Or is the national glory of
- the Jews to begin after the social revolution?
- If we are to throw into the dust heap our hope that humanity will some
- day reach a height from which difference of nationality and ancestry
- will appear but an insignificant speck on earth, well and good! Then let
- us be patriots and continue to nurse national characteristics; but we
- ought, at least, not to clothe ourselves in the mantel of Faust, in our
- pretentious sweep through space. We ought at least declare openly that
- the life of all peoples is never to be anything else but an outrageous
- mixture of stupid patriotism, national vanities, everlasting antagonism,
- and a ravenous greed for wealth and supremacy.
- Might it not be advisable to consider how the idea of a national unity
- of the Jews can live in the face of the deep social abysses that exist
- between the various ranks within the Jewish race?
- It is not at all a mere accident that the Bund, the strongest
- organization of the Jewish proletariat, will have nothing to do with the
- nationalistic agitation. The social and economic motives for concerted
- action or separation are of far more vital influence than the national.
- The feeling of solidarity of the working-people is bound to prove
- stronger than the nationalistic glue. As to the remainder of the
- adherents of the nationalistic movement, they are recruited from the
- ranks of the middle Jewish class.
- The Jewish banker, for instance, feels much more drawn to the Christian
- or Mohammedan banker than to his Jewish factory worker, or tenement
- house dweller. Equally so will the Jewish workingman, conscious of the
- revolutionizing effect of the daily struggle between labor and money
- power, find his brother in a fellow worker, and not in a Jewish banker.
- True, the Jewish worker suffers twofold: he is exploited, oppressed and
- robbed as one of suffering humanity, and despised, hated, trampled upon,
- because he is a Jew; but he would look in vain toward the wealthy Jews
- for his friends and saviors. The latter have just as great an interest
- in the maintenance of a system that stands for wage slavery, social
- subordination, and the economic dependence of the great mass of mankind,
- as the Christian employer and owner of wealth.
- The Jewish population of the East Side has little in common with the
- dweller of a Fifth Avenue mansion. He has much more in common with the
- workingmen of other nationalities of the country--he has sorrows,
- struggles, indignation and longings for freedom in common with them. His
- hope is the social reconstruction of society and not nationalistic scene
- shifting. His conditions can be ameliorated only through a union with
- his fellow sufferers, through human brotherhood, and not by means of
- separation and barriers. In his struggles against humiliating demands,
- inhuman treatment, economic pressure, he can depend on help from his
- non-Jewish comrades, and not on the assistance of Jewish manufacturers
- and speculators. How then can he be expected to co-operate with them in
- the building of a Jewish commonwealth?
- Certain it is that the battle which is to bring liberty, peace and
- well-being to humanity is of a mental, social, economic nature and not
- of a nationalistic one. The former brightens and widens the horizon, the
- latter stupefies the reasoning faculties, cripples and stifles the
- emotions, and sows hatred and strife instead of love and tenderness in
- the human soul. All that is big and beautiful in the world has been
- created by thinkers and artists, whose vision was far beyond the
- Lilliputian sphere of Nationalism. Only that which contains the life's
- pulse of mankind expands and liberates. That is why every attempt to
- establish a national art, a patriotic literature, a life's philosophy
- with the seal of the government attached thereto is bound to fall flat
- and to be insignificant.
- It were well and wholesome if all works dealing with national glory and
- victory, with national courage and patriotic songs could be used for
- bonfires. In their place we could have the poems of Shelley and Whitman,
- essays of Emerson or Thoreau, the Book of the Bees, by Maeterlink, the
- music of Wagner, Beethoven and Tschaikovsky, the wonderful art of
- Eleanore Duse.
- I can deeply sympathize with the dread of massacres and persecutions of
- the Jewish people; and I consider it just and fair that they should
- strain every effort to put a stop to such atrocities as have been
- witnessed by the civilized world within a few years. But it must be
- borne in mind that it is the Russian government, the Russian reactionary
- party, including the Russian Church, and not the Russian people, that
- are responsible for the slaughter of the Jews.
- Jewish Socialists and Anarchists, however, who have joined the ranks of
- the Nationalists and who have forgotten to emphasize the fundamental
- distinction between the people of Russia and the reactionary forces of
- that country, who have fought and are still fighting so bravely for
- their freedom and for the liberation of all who are oppressed, deserve
- severe censure. They have thrown the responsibility of the massacres
- upon the Russian people and have even blamed the Revolutionists for
- them, whereas it is an undisputed fact that the agitation against the
- Jews has been inaugurated and paid for by the ruling clique, in the hope
- that the hatred and discontent of the Russian people would turn from
- them, the real criminals, to the Jews. It is said, "we have no rights in
- Russia, we are being robbed, hounded, killed, let the Russian people
- take care of themselves, we will turn our backs on them."
- Would it not show deeper insight into the condition of affairs if my
- Jewish brethren were to say, "Our people are being abused, insulted,
- ill-treated and killed by the hirelings of Russian despotism. Let us
- strengthen our union with the Intellectuals, the peasants, the
- rebellious elements of the people for the overthrow of the abominable
- tyranny; and when we have accomplished that let us co-operate in the
- great work of building a social structure upon which neither the nation
- nor the race but Humanity can live and grow in beauty."
- Prejudices are never overcome by one who shows himself equally narrow
- and bigoted. To confront one brutal outbreak of national sentiment with
- the demand for another form of national sentiment means only to lay the
- foundation for a new persecution that is bound to come sooner or later.
- Were the retrogressive ideas of the Jewish Nationalists ever to
- materialize, the world would witness, after a few years, that one Jew is
- being persecuted by another.
- In one respect the Jews are really a "chosen people." Not chosen by the
- grace of God, nor by their national peculiarities, which with every
- people, as well as with the Jews, merely prove national narrowness. They
- are "chosen" by a necessity, which has relieved them of many prejudices,
- a necessity which has prevented the development of many of those
- stupidities which have caused other nations great efforts to overcome.
- Repeated persecution has put the stamp of sorrow on the Jews; they have
- grown big in their endurance, in their comprehension of human suffering,
- and in their sympathy with the struggles and longings of the human soul.
- Driven from country to country, they avenged themselves by producing
- great thinkers, able theoreticians, heroic leaders of progress. All
- governments lament the fact that the Jewish people have contributed the
- bravest fighters to the armies for every liberating war of mankind.
- Owing to the lack of a country of their own, they developed,
- crystallized and idealized their cosmopolitan reasoning faculty. True,
- they have not their own empire, but many of them are working for the
- great moment when the earth will become the home for all, without
- distinction of ancestry or race. That is certainly a greater, nobler and
- sounder ideal to strive for than a petty nationality.
- It is this ideal that is daily attracting larger numbers of Jews, as
- well as Gentiles; and all attempts to hinder the realization thereof,
- like the present nationalistic movement, will be swept away by the storm
- that precedes the birth of the new era--mankind clasped in universal
- brotherhood.
- [Illustration]
- Mine Owners' Revenge
- BY M. B.
- +Charles H. Moyer+, President of the Western Federation of Miners, William
- D. Haywood, Secretary of that organization, and G. A. Pettibone, former
- member of the same, were arrested in Denver, February 17th.
- They are accused of having participated in the murder of the ex-Governor
- of Idaho, Mr. Steunenberg. Various other arrests have taken place in
- Cripple Creek and Haines, Oregon.
- The events during and after the arrest leave no doubt that the
- authorities of Colorado and Idaho are in the most beautiful accord in
- their attempt to kill the Miners' Union. This accord and harmony is so
- apparent that thoughtful citizens cannot fail to see that the
- governments of Colorado and Idaho are aiding in the conspiracy of the
- mine owners against the miners.
- Requisition papers and a special train seem to have been prepared in
- advance, for immediately after the arrest they were expelled and taken
- to Boise City, Idaho, and within a few moments the whole matter was
- settled by the authorities of Colorado, not even pretending to show the
- slightest fairness. Nor did they display the least desire to investigate
- the grounds upon which requisition papers were granted. This process
- usually takes several days. In the case of Moyer, Haywood and Pettibone
- a few moments sufficed to close the whole proceedings.
- Since the papers were issued before the arrest, it is not at all
- unlikely that the death sentence has already been decided upon.
- Optimists in the labor movement maintain that a repetition of the legal
- murder of 1887, that has caused shame and horror even in the ranks of
- the upper ten thousand, is impossible--that the authorities would shrink
- from such an outrage, such an awful crime. That which has happened in
- Colorado and Idaho warrants no such hope.
- The evidence against the leaders of the Western Federation of Miners
- consists largely of one individual, who is supposed to have known and
- witnessed everything. The gentleman seems to fairly long for the moment
- when he can take the witness stand and furnish the material that the
- District Attorney needs to prove the guilt of the accused. An expert
- perjurer, it seems.
- The Governor of Idaho, Mr. Gooding, has already given him a good
- character. The man acknowledged his firm belief in the existence of a
- Supreme Being, which touched the governor's heart deeply. Does he not
- know that it has ever been the mission of the Supreme Being to serve as
- Impresario to Falsehood and Wretchedness?
- The accusation against the three prisoners is the best affidavit of the
- miner magnates of the courageous stand of the Western Federation of
- Miners during the reign of terror of the money powers. For years
- everything was done to disrupt them, but without results. The latest
- outrage is a renewed and desperate attack on that labor organization.
- Are the working people of America going to look on coolly at a
- repetition of the Black Friday in Chicago? Perhaps there will also be a
- labor leader, á la Powderly, who will be willing to carry faggots to the
- stake? Or are they going to awaken from their lethargy, ere America
- becomes thoroughly Russified?
- INTERNATIONAL REVIEW
- +A painting+ from the "good old times" represents two peasants wrangling
- about a cow. One holds on to the horns of the animal, the other tightly
- clutches its tail, a third figure is in a crouched position underneath.
- It is the lawyer milking the cow, while the other two are quarreling.
- Here we have the beauty of the representative system. While groups are
- bargaining about their rights, their official advisers and lawmakers are
- skimming the cream off the milk. Not justice, but social injustice is
- the incentive of these worthy gentlemen.
- Human justice, and legal representation thereof, are two different
- things. One who seeks for a representation places his rights in the
- hands of another. He does not struggle for them himself, he must wait
- for a decision thereupon from such quarters as are never inspired by
- love for justice, but by personal gain and profit.
- The working people are beginning to recognize this. It is also beginning
- to dawn upon them that they will have to be their own liberators. They
- have the power to refuse their material support to a society that
- degrades them into a state of slavery. This power was already recognized
- in 1789, when, at the French National Convention, Mirabeau thundered:
- "Look out! Do not enrage the common people, who produce everything, who
- only need to fold their arms to terrify you!"
- The General Strike is still at the beginning of its activity. It has
- gone through the fire in Russia. In Spain and Italy it has helped to
- demolish the belief in the sovereignity of Property and the State.
- Altogether the General Strike idea, though relatively young, has made a
- deeper impression on friend and foe than several million votes of the
- working people could have achieved. Indeed, it is no joke for the
- pillars of society. What, if the workers, conscious of their economic
- power, cease to store up great wealth in the warehouses of the
- privileged? It was not difficult to get along with the would-be labor
- leaders in the legislative bodies, these worthy ones, experienced
- through the practice of manufacturing laws to maintain law and disorder,
- rapidly develop into good supporters of the existing conditions.
- Now, however, the workingmen have entered upon the battlefield
- themselves, refusing their labor, which has always been the foundation
- of the golden existence of the haute volée. They demand the possibility
- to so organize production and distribution as to make it impossible for
- the minority to accumulate outrageous wealth, and to guarantee to each
- economic well-being.
- The expropriateurs are in danger of expropriation. Capitalism has
- expropriated the human race, the General Strike aims to expropriate
- capitalism.
- A new and invigorating breath of life is also felt in this country,
- through the formation of the "Industrial Workers of the World." It
- awakens the hope of a transformation of the present trade-union methods.
- In their present form they serve the money powers more than the working
- class.
- * * * * *
- +Robert Koch+, the world-renowned scientist, who was awarded the Nobel
- prize in recognition of his work in the direction of exterminating
- tuberculosis, delivered a lecture at Stockholm at the time of receiving
- the mark of distinction. In the course of his speech he said: "We may
- not conceal the fact, that the struggle against tuberculosis requires
- considerable sums of money. It is really only a question of money. The
- greater the number of free places for consumptives in well-equipped and
- well-conducted hospitals, the better the families of these are
- supported, so that the sick are not prevented from going to these
- hospitals on account of the care of their relations; and the oftener
- such places are established, the more rapidly tuberculosis will cease to
- be a common disease."
- Where are the governments which are supposed to serve as benefactors of
- suffering mankind? They have milliards at their disposal, but use most
- of it for the maintenance of armies, bureaucracies, police forces. With
- these vast sums, which they extort from the people, they increase
- instead of diminish suffering.
- * * * * *
- +On the 27th of January+ it was 150 years since Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
- was born. A grandmaster of music, a magician who leads the soul from the
- depths of life to its sunary heights. Mozart transposed life into music,
- Wagner and his pupils transposed problems of life. Wagner questions and
- receives no answer. Mozart affirms life. His "Don Juan" liberates,
- "Tannhäuser" leads into the labyrinth of bothersome renunciation.
- The study of Mozart's biography may be recommended to those who believe
- that the artistic individuality has freer scope to-day than it would
- have with communism. Mozart was always forced to look about for patrons
- of his art, for he lacked the means to put his works before the public.
- A biographer says of him: "Mozart's life makes us feel the tragedy of an
- artist's life most painfully. In his youth he was fondled and idealized
- as a wonder child, but his circumstances deteriorated as he matured in
- his art and the more accomplished the works of his fantasy grew. When he
- died he left a wife and children behind in great poverty. There was not
- enough money on hand to bury him. The corpse was placed in the potters'
- field. When his wife, who had been sick at the time of the burial,
- wanted to look up the grave, it could not be exactly designated." The
- genius of the artist, however, permeates the world on waves of light.
- * * * * *
- +The Czar knows+ his mission. He addressed a deputation of peasants from
- the Province of Kursk thus:
- "My brothers, I am most glad to see you. You must know very well that
- every right of property is sacred to the State. The owner has the same
- right to his land as you peasants have to yours. Communicate this to
- your fellows in the villages. In my solicitude for the country I do not
- forget the peasants, whose needs are dear to me, and I will look after
- them continually as did my late father. The National Assembly will soon
- assemble and in co-operation with me discuss the best measures for your
- relief. Have confidence in me, I will assist you. But I repeat, remember
- always that right of property is holy and inviolable."
- The commentaries to this fatherly address are furnished by the czaristic
- Cossacks who hasten to the peasants' aid with the knout, sword and
- incendiarism.
- [Illustration]
- LITERARY NOTES
- "Letters of Henrik Ibsen," published by Fox Duffield & Co., New
- York. Price, $2.50.
- These letters do not belong among those of great men which prove to be
- disappointments. In reading them one is not inclined to ask as of
- Schopenhauer's letters, why a philosophic genius of such depth should be
- laden with thousands of philistine trivialities.
- Ibsen reaches far beyond his surroundings in his letters. What he writes
- is a continual protest against shallowness and mediocrity. The misery of
- petty state affairs, of patriotism with a board on the forehead bothered
- him greatly. This is shown on every page. Whatever he expresses, he
- always aims at expanding the horizon; as he himself once remarked: the
- revolutionizing of brains. His sentiments are European, and he must
- often hear that even the wish for combining the Scandinavian countries
- borders on treason. Thus he becomes a "solitary soul." He has even
- nothing in common with the radicals; he not only hates the state, the
- enemy of individuality, but he is averse to all attempts which aim at
- the drilling of the masses. He loves Björnson as a poet, but he wants to
- have nothing to do with him as a politician. In a letter to Brandes he
- writes:
- "Björnson says: 'The majority is always right.' And as a practical
- politician he is bound, I suppose, to say so. I, on the contrary, must
- of necessity say: 'The minority is always right.' Naturally, I am not
- thinking of that minority of stagnationists who are left behind by the
- great middle party, but I mean that minority which leads the van, and
- urges on to points which the majority has not yet reached. I mean that
- man is right who has allied himself most closely with the future."
- * * * * *
- +"Under the Wheel"+ is the title of a German story by Hermann Hesse, in
- which he severely criticizes the incompetency of the present school
- system to fully develop the youth. The characterization of the teachers'
- profession as Hesse puts it, does not only serve for Germany, but for
- all modern states in which governments strive to train the young for the
- purpose of making patient subjects and hurrah-screaming patriots of
- them. The author says with fine irony of the teacher: "It is his duty
- and vocation, entrusted to him by the state, to hinder and exterminate
- the rough forces and passions of nature in the young people and to put
- in place of them quiet moderation and ideals recognized by the state.
- Many a one who at present is a contented citizen or an ambitious
- official, would have become without these endeavors of the school an
- unmanageable innovator or a hopeless dreamer. There was something in
- him, something wild, lawless, which first had to be broken, a flame
- which had to be extinguished. The school must break and forcibly
- restrict the natural being; it is its duty to make a useful member of
- society out of him, according to principles approved by the state's
- authority. The wonderful work is crowned with the careful training in
- the barracks."
- * * * * *
- We regret that several of the contributions, while having merits, were
- not of the form to be used for a magazine.
- * * * * *
- Benj. R. Tucker
- Publisher and Bookseller
- has opened a Book Store at
- 225 Fourth Ave., Room 13, New York City
- Here will be carried, ultimately, the most complete line of advanced
- literature to be found anywhere in the world. More than one thousand
- titles in the English language already in stock. A still larger stock,
- in foreign languages, will be put in gradually. A full catalogue will be
- ready soon of the greatest interest to all those in search of the
- literature.
- Which, in morals, leads away from superstition,
- Which, in politics, leads away from government, and
- Which, in art, leads away from Tradition.
- * * * * *
- LIBERTY
- BENJ. R. TUCKER, Editor
- An Anarchistic journal, expounding the doctrine that in Equal Liberty is
- to be found the most satisfactory solution of social questions, and that
- majority rule, or democracy, equally with monarchical rule, is a denial
- of Equal Liberty.
- * * * * *
- APPRECIATIONS
- G. BERNARD SHAW, author of "Man and Superman": "Liberty is a lively
- paper, in which the usual proportions of a half-pennyworth of
- discussion to an intolerable deal of balderdash are reversed."
- WILLIAM DOUGLAS O'CONNOR, author of "The Good Gray Poet": "The
- editor of Liberty would be the Gavroche of the Revolution, If he
- were not its Enjolras."
- FRANK STEPHENS, well-known Single-Tax champion, Philadelphia:
- "Liberty is a paper which reforms reformers."
- BOLTON HALL, author of "Even As You and I": "Liberty shows us the
- profit of Anarchy, and is the prophet of Anarchy."
- ALLEN KELLY, formerly chief editorial writer on the Philadelphia
- "North American": "Liberty is my philosophical Polaris. I ascertain
- the variations of my economic compass by taking a sight at her
- whenever she is visible."
- SAMUEL W. COOPER, counsellor at law, Philadelphia: "Liberty is a
- journal that Thomas Jefferson would have loved."
- EDWARD OSGOOD BROWN, Judge of the Illinois Circuit Court: "I have
- seen much in Liberty that I agreed with, and much that I disagreed
- with, but I never saw any cant, hypocrisy, or insincerity in it,
- which makes it an almost unique publication."
- * * * * *
- Published Bimonthly. Twelve Issues, $1.00
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- Address: BENJ. R. TUCKER, P. O. Box 1312, New York City
- * * * * *
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- Vegetable Mould, 1 vol.; Life and Letters of Charles Darwin, 2 vols. 10
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- I have only a few series of these sets and will not be able to supply at
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- * * * * *
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- Ave. (near 42nd Street.)
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- +Brooklyn Philosophical Association.+ Meets every Sunday, 3 P. M., at Long
- Island Business College, 143 S. 8th Street.
- * * * * *
- +Sunrise Club.+ Meets every other Monday for dinner and after discussion
- at some place designated by the President.
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- +Manhattan Liberal Club.+ Meets every Friday, 8 P. M., at German Masonic
- Hall, 220 East 15th Street.
- * * * * *
- +Harlem Liberal Alliance.+ Every Friday, 8 P. M., in Madison Hall, 1666
- Madison Avenue.
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- +Liberal Art Society.+ Meets every Friday, 8.30 P. M., at Terrace Lyceum,
- 206 East Broadway.
- * * * * *
- "Mother Earth"
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