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- Project Gutenberg's Mother Earth, Vol. 1 No. 3, May 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. 3, May 1906
- Monthly Magazine Devoted to Social Science and Literature
- Author: Various
- Editor: Emma Goldman
- Release Date: November 14, 2008 [EBook #27262]
- Language: English
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MOTHER EARTH, VOL. 1 NO. 3 ***
- 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. MAY, 1906 No. 3
- MOTHER EARTH
- [Illustration]
- P. O. Box 217 EMMA GOLDMAN, Publisher 10c. a Copy
- CONTENTS
- PAGE
- Tidings of May 1
- Envy WALT WHITMAN 2
- Observations and Comments 3
- "This Man Gorky" MARGARET GRANT 8
- Comrade MAXIM GORKY 17
- Alexander Berkman E. G. 22
- Poem VOLTAIRINE DE CLEYRE 25
- The White Terror 25
- Paternalistic Government THEODORE SCHROEDER 27
- Liberty in Common Life BOLTON HALL 34
- Statistics H. KELLY 35
- Gerhart Hauptmann with the Weavers of Silesia MAX BAGINSKI 38
- Disappointed Economists 47
- Vital Art ANNY MALI HICKS 48
- Kristofer Hansteen VOLTAIRINE DE CLEYRE 52
- Fifty Years of Bad Luck SADAKICHI HARTMANN 56
- 10c. A COPY $1 A YEAR
- MOTHER EARTH
- Monthly Magazine Devoted to Social Science and Literature
- Published Every 15th of the Month
- EMMA GOLDMAN, Publisher, P. O. Box 217, Madison Square Station,
- New York, N. Y.
- Vol. I MAY, 1906 No. 3
- TIDINGS OF MAY.
- The month of May is a grinning satire on the mode of living of human
- beings of the present day.
- The May sun, with its magic warmth, gives life to so much beauty, so
- much value.
- The dead, grayish brown of the forest and woods is transformed into a
- rich, intoxicating, delicate, fragrant green.
- Golden sun-rays lure flowers and grass from the soil, and kiss branch
- and tree into blossom and bloom.
- Tillers of the soil are beginning their activity with plough, shovel,
- rake, breaking the firm grip of grim winter upon the Earth, so that the
- mild spring warmth may penetrate her breast and coax into growth and
- maturity the seeds lying in her womb.
- A great festival seems at hand for which Mother Earth has adorned
- herself with garments of the richest and most beautiful hues.
- What does civilized humanity do with all this splendor? It speculates
- with it. Usurers, who gamble with the necessities of life, will take
- possession of Nature's gifts, of wheat and corn, fruit and flowers, and
- will carry on a shameless trade with them, while millions of toilers,
- both in country and city, will be permitted to partake of the earth's
- riches only in medicinal doses and at exorbitant prices.
- May's generous promise to mankind, that they were to receive in
- abundance, is being broken and undone by the existing arrangements of
- society.
- The Spring sends its glad tidings to man through the jubilant songs
- that stream from the throats of her feathered messengers. "Behold," they
- sing, "I have such wealth to give away, but you know not how to take.
- You count and bargain and weigh and measure, rather than feast at my
- heavily laden tables. You crawl about on the ground, bent by worry and
- dread, rather than drink in the free balmy air!"
- The irony of May is neither cold nor hard. It contains a mild yet
- convincing appeal to mankind to finally break the power of the Winter
- not only in Nature, but in our social life,--to free itself from the
- hard and fixed traditions of a dead past.
- [Illustration]
- ENVY.
- By WALT WHITMAN.
- _When I peruse the conquered fame of heroes, and the victories of
- mighty generals, I do not envy the generals,
- Nor the President in his Presidency, nor the rich in his great
- house;
- But when I hear of the brotherhood of lovers, how it was with them,
- How through life, through dangers, odium, unchanging, long and long
- Through youth, and through middle and old age, how unfaltering, how
- affectionate and faithful they were,
- Then I am pensive--I hastily walk away, filled with the bitterest
- envy._
- OBSERVATIONS AND COMMENTS.
- A young man had an Ideal which he cherished as the most beautiful and
- greatest treasure he had on earth. He promised himself never to part
- with it, come what might.
- His surroundings, however, repeated from morn till night that one can
- not feed on Ideals, and that one must become practical if he wishes to
- get on in life.
- When he attempted the practical, he realized that his Ideal could never
- become reconciled to it. This, at first, caused him deep suffering, but
- he soon conceived a pleasant thought: "Why should I expose my precious
- jewel to the vulgarity, coarseness and filth of a practical life? I will
- put it into a jewel case and hide it in a secluded spot."
- From time to time, especially when business was bad, he stole over to
- the case containing his Ideal, to delight in its splendor. Indeed, the
- world was shabby compared with that!
- Meanwhile he married and his business began to improve. The members of
- his party had already begun to discuss the possibility of putting him up
- as a candidate for Alderman.
- He visited his Ideal at longer intervals now. He had made a very
- unpleasant discovery,--his Ideal had lessened in size and weight in
- proportion to the practical opulence of his mind. It grew old and full
- of wrinkles, which aroused his suspicions. After all, the practical
- people were right in making light of Ideals. Did he not observe with his
- own eyes how his Ideal had faded?
- It had been overlooked for a long time. Once more he stole over to the
- safety vault containing his Ideal. It was at a time when he had suffered
- a severe business loss. With great yearning in his breast, he lifted the
- cover of the case. He was worn from practical life and his heart and
- head felt heavy. He found the case empty. His Ideal had vanished,
- evaporated!--It dawned upon him that he had proven false to the Ideal,
- and not the Ideal to him.
- [Illustration]
- Pity and sympathy have been celebrating a great feast within the last
- few weeks. When they look into the mirror of public opinion they find
- their own reflex touchingly beautiful, big, very human. Want was about
- to commit self-destruction in abolishing poverty, tears and the despair
- of suffering humanity forever.
- The "heart" of New York, the "heart" of the country, the "heart" of the
- entire world throbs for San Francisco. The press says so, at least.
- No doubt a large amount in checks and banknotes was sent to the city of
- the Golden Gate. Money, in these days, is the criterion of emotions and
- sentiments; so that the pity of one who gives $10,000 must appear
- incomparably greater than the pity of one who contributes a small sum
- which was perhaps intended to buy shoes for the children, or to pay the
- grocery bill. A large sum is always loud and boastful in the way it
- appears in the newspapers. The delicate tact and fine taste of the
- various editors see to it that the names of the donors of large sums be
- printed in heavy type.
- After all, can not one every day and in every large city observe the
- same phenomenon that has followed the disaster in San Francisco? Surely
- there were homeless, starved, despaired, wretched beings in San
- Francisco before the earthquake and the fire, yet the public's pity and
- sympathy haughtily passed them by; and official sympathy and compassion
- had nothing but the police station and the workhouse to give them.
- And now,--what is really being done now? Humanitarianism is exhibiting
- itself in a low and vulgar manner, and superficiality and bad taste are
- stalking about in peacock fashion.
- The newspapers are full of praise for the bravery of the militia in
- their defense of property. A man was instantly shot as he walked out of
- a saloon with his arms full of champagne bottles, and another was shot
- for carrying off a sack of coffee, etc. How strange that the "brave
- boys" of the militia,--who, by the way, had to be severely disciplined
- because of their beastly drunkenness,--showed so much noble indignation
- against a few clumsy thieves! During the strikes and labor conflicts it
- is usually their mission to protect the property of skillful
- thieves,--legal thieves, of course.
- Finally what is going to be the end of the great display of superficial
- sentimentality for the stricken city? An all-around good deal: Moneyed
- people, contractors, real estate speculators will make large sums of
- money. Indeed it is not at all unlikely that within a few months good
- Christian capitalists will secretly thank their Lord that he sent the
- earthquake.
- [Illustration]
- As an employer, the United States Government is certainly tolerant and
- liberal, especially so far as the highly remunerative offices are
- concerned.
- The President, for instance, loves to deliver himself of moral sermons.
- Recently he spoke of the people who criticise government and society and
- breed discontent. He considers them dangerous and entertains little
- regard for them. He ought not be blamed for that, since, as the first
- clerk of the State, it is his duty to represent its interests and
- dignity.
- The most ordinary business agent, though he may be convinced of the
- corruption of his firm, will take good care to keep this fact from the
- public. Business morals demand it.
- Besides, no one will expect or desire that the President should become a
- Revolutionist. This would certainly be no gain of ours, nor would the
- State suffer harm. Surely there are enough professional politicians who
- do not lack talent for the calling of doorkeepers on a large scale.
- As to the moral sermons against the undesirable and obnoxious element,
- all that can be said, from a practical standpoint, is, that their
- originality and wisdom are in no proportion to the salary the sermonizer
- receives. Competition among preachers of penitence and servility is
- almost as great as among patent medicine quacks. Four or five thousand a
- year can easily buy the services of a corpulent, reverend gentleman of
- some prominence.
- [Illustration]
- The dangers of the first of May, when France was to be ruined by the
- "mob" of socialists and anarchists, was very fantastically described by
- the Paris correspondents of the American newspapers. These gentlemen
- seem to have known everything. They discovered that the cause of the
- threatened revolution was to be found in the irresponsible good nature
- and kindness of the French government.
- Just show "Satan" Anarchy a finger, and straightway he will seize the
- entire arm. Especially M. Clemenceau was severely censured as being
- altogether too good a fellow to make a reliable minister. There he is
- with France near the abyss of a social revolution! That is the manner in
- which history is being manufactured for boarding-school young ladies.
- The social revolution may come, but surely not because of the kindness
- or good nature of the government. France needed a newspaper boom for her
- elections: "The republic is in danger; for goodness' sake give us your
- vote on election day!"
- In order that the citizens might feel the proper horror, trade-union
- leaders, anarchists and even a few royalistic scare-crows were arrested;
- at the same time the sympathy and devotion of the government for its
- people manifested itself in the reign of the military terror in the
- strike regions.
- The real seriousness of the situation, the correspondents failed to
- grasp. How could they? since they got their wisdom in the ante-chamber
- of the ministry.
- The revolutionary labor organizations care little for the good will or
- the Jesuit kindness of the authorities. They continue with their work,
- propagate the idea of direct action, and strengthen the anti-military
- movement, the result of which is already being felt among the soldiers
- and officers.
- The officer who jumped upon the platform at the Bourse du Travail,
- expressing his solidarity with the workers and declaring that he would
- not fire on them, was immediately arrested; but this will only influence
- others to follow the good example.
- [Illustration]
- In the old fables the lion is described as supreme judge and not the
- mule or the wether.
- In Cleveland things are different. Several weeks ago Olga Nethersole
- gave a performance of Sappho there. Whereupon the police felt moved to
- perform an operation on the play, for moral reasons, of course. The
- staircase scene was ordered to be left out altogether.
- Ye poor, depraved artists, how low ye might sink, were the police and
- Comstock not here to watch over the moral qualities of your productions!
- If one observes one of these prosaic fellows on the corner, terribly
- bored, and with his entire intellect concentrated on his club, and how
- out of pure ennui he is constantly recapitulating the number of his
- brass buttons, one can hardly realize that such an individual has been
- entrusted with the power to decide the fate of an artistic production.
- [Illustration]
- 1792 the French people marched through the streets singing:
- O, what is it the people cry?
- They ask for all equality.
- The poor no more shall be
- In slavish misery;
- The idle rich shall flee.
- O, what is it the people need?
- They ask for bread and iron and lead.
- The iron to win our pay,
- The lead our foes to slay,
- The bread our friends to feed.
- The soldiers at Mount Carmel, Pennsylvania, who were ordered by their
- superiors to fire into a crowd of strikers and wounded and killed
- innocent men and women, do not sing the Carmagnole; they sing:
- "My country, 'tis of thee,
- Sweet land of Liberty!"
- If the ruling powers continue to maintain peace and order with iron and
- blood it may happen that the meaningless national hymn may be drowned by
- the Carmagnole, pealing forth like thunder from the throats of the
- masses.
- [Illustration]
- To the credit of human nature be it said, it is not altogether hopeless.
- Since tyranny has existed, human nature has ever rebelled against it.
- Real slavery exists only when the oppressed consider their fate as
- something normal, something self-evident.
- There is greater security for tyranny in slavish thoughts, indifference
- and pettiness than in cannons and swords.
- [Illustration]
- "THIS MAN GORKY."
- By MARGARET GRANT.
- THE women of America are aroused as never before. They always are
- aroused to the defense of their firesides. Even those women who live in
- flats are awake to the need for defending their radiators or their gas
- stoves; it is inherent in the nature of woman, it seems.
- Most of the women's societies and clubs have spoken in no uncertain
- terms concerning the outrage that has been put upon the civilization of
- this great country by the conduct of this man Gorky. And, in fact, it is
- a thing not to be borne.
- As for me, I belong to the Woman's Association for the Regulation of the
- Morals of Others, a society which is second to none in its activity and
- usefulness, but which has seen fit to defer its own discussion of this
- man Gorky's conduct until most of the other women's societies have
- spoken.
- We have just had our meeting, and I think that if this man Gorky should
- read an account of our proceedings, he would certainly get out of this
- outraged country with all the celerity of which he is capable. But, of
- course, he is only a foreigner after all and probably will not
- comprehend the exquisite purity of our morals.
- I want to say that in our meetings we do not slavishly follow those
- parliamentary rules which men have made for their guidance, but allow
- ourselves some latitude in discussion. And we do not invite some man to
- come and do all the talking, as is the case in some women's clubs.
- Mrs. Blanderocks was in the chair. We began with an informal discussion
- of the best way of preventing the common people from dressing so as not
- to be distinguished from the upper classes, but there was no heart in
- the talk, for we all felt that it was only preliminary. It was my friend
- Sarah Warner who changed the subject.
- "The Woman's State Republican Association held its annual meeting at
- Delmonico's yesterday," she said, quietly drawing a newspaper clipping
- from her pocket-book.
- "And had some men there to amuse them and to tell them what to do," said
- Mrs. Blanderocks with cutting irony.
- We all laughed heartily. We meet at Mrs. Blanderocks' house, and she
- always provides a beautiful luncheon.
- "But Mrs. Flint said some things that I would like to read to you," said
- Sarah. "It won't take long. I cut this out of the 'Times' this morning."
- "What is it about?" some one asked.
- "Gorky," Sarah answered, closing her eyes in a way to express volumes.
- You could hear all the members catch their breath. This was what they
- had come for. I broke the oppressive silence.
- "I foresee," I said, "that in the discussion of this subject there will
- be said things likely to bring a blush to the cheek of innocence, and I
- move that all unmarried women under the age of twenty-five be excluded
- from the meeting for as long as this man is under discussion."
- A fierce cry of rage rose from all parts of the crowded room. I did not
- understand. I could see no one who would be affected by the rule. Mrs.
- Blanderocks raised her hand to command silence and said coldly:
- "The motion is out of order. By a special provision of our constitution
- it is the inalienable right of all unmarried women to be under
- twenty-five. We will be as careful in our language as the subject will
- permit. Mrs. Warner will please read the words of Mrs. Flint."
- I was shocked to think I had made such a mistake. Sarah rose and read in
- a clear, sharp voice from the clipping:
- "Should not we as women take some action against this man? People of
- such character should not be allowed in this country. Of course when he
- arrived it was not known how he was living, but he came here and
- expected to be received; and I think he should be deported. Gorky is the
- embodiment of Socialism."
- Everybody applauded violently. I was puzzled and asked a question as
- soon as I could make myself heard.
- "Suppose Gorky is a Socialist," I said; "what has that to do with his
- morals?"
- "Everything," replied Mrs. Blanderocks, haughtily.
- "Socialists don't believe in marriage," said Sarah Warner, taking
- another clipping from her pocket-book and reading: "'Mrs. Cornelia
- Robinson said: When the question of uniform divorce law is taken up, we
- shall find that the Socialists are against it as a body. It is not that
- they are opposed to divorce, but they do not believe in marriage.'"
- "And does she know?" I asked.
- "Would she say it publicly if it were not true?" demanded Mrs.
- Blanderocks, glaring disapprovingly at me.
- I rose to my feet. I will say for myself that my desire for knowledge is
- greater even than my shyness, and usually overcomes it.
- "I want to make a motion," I said, "that this man Gorky be deported--"
- (loud applause)--"but before doing so I would like some one to explain
- in as plain words as the nature of the subject will permit, just what he
- has been guilty of." Dead silence broken by a voice saying: "He's a
- foreigner."
- "I'll tell you what he has done," cried Sarah Warner; "he came into this
- country pretending that the woman who was with him was his wife; he
- allowed her to be registered at the hotel as his wife; he permitted her
- to sleep under the same roof with pure men and women--"
- "I would like to ask Mrs. Warner," said a lady in a remote corner of the
- room, "if she will vouch for the purity of the men?"
- "Perhaps," said Mrs. Blanderocks, gravely, "it will be better if the
- word men be stricken from the record. Do you object, Mrs. Warner?"
- "It was a slip of the tongue," Sarah answered, "and I am grateful to the
- member who called attention to it; though I will say that I think there
- are some pure men."
- "We are discussing Gorky now," said Mrs. Blanderocks with an indulgent
- smile.
- "True," answered Sarah, beaming back at the chairwoman; "and I was
- saying that he had subjected the pure women of the hotel to the
- unspeakable indignity of having to sleep under the same roof with the
- woman he called his wife."
- "I would like to ask," I interposed timidly, "if it is right for a
- woman to sleep under the same roof with an impure man, or is it only an
- impure woman who is injurious?"
- "A woman has to sleep under some roof," came in the voice of the woman
- in the corner.
- "I think Mrs. Grant would show better taste if she did not press such a
- question," said another voice. "Will Mrs. Warner be good enough to
- describe the exact status--I think status is right--of the woman he
- tried to pass as his wife?"
- "She was his----" Sarah had a fit of coughing, "she was not his wife. I
- do not care to be more explicit."
- "Perhaps," I said, groping for light, "it would be better if I made my
- motion read that she should be deported from the country, since it is
- her immorality that counts."
- "And let those Republican Association women stand for more morality than
- we do?" cried Mrs. Blanderocks. "No, you cannot make your motion too
- strong."
- "Oh, then," I said, with a sigh of relief, "I will move that Gorky and
- all other men, immoral in the same way, shall be deported from the
- country."
- "Then who is to take care of us women?" demanded the voice in the
- corner.
- "Do be reasonable, Margaret," said Sarah Warner, "we can't drive all the
- men out of the country, and don't want to, but we can fix a standard of
- morals to astonish the world, and there could be no better way than by
- making an example of this man Gorky. Don't you see that he is a
- foreigner and can't very well know that our men are just as bad as he
- is? Besides, isn't he a Socialist? We would have been willing to condone
- his relations with that woman if only he'd hid them respectably as our
- men do, but to come here with his free ideas---- Well, I'm willing to
- let the Russians have all the freedom they want, and I would have given
- my mite toward stirring up trouble over there, but we have all the
- freedom we want over here, and a little more, too, if I know anything
- about it."
- "Very well," I replied, "I will withdraw the motion and make one to have
- a committee appointed to investigate the matter and find out the whole
- truth about it."
- "What is there to find out?" demanded Sarah, aghast.
- "Well, you know he insists that she is his wife. Maybe she is by
- Russian law or custom."
- "Perfectly absurd! His own wife and he separated because they couldn't
- be happy together. Was ever anything more ridiculous?"
- "As if happiness had anything to do with marriage!" said the voice from
- the corner.
- Everybody laughed and applauded as if something very funny had been
- said.
- "Well, anyhow," I insisted, for I can be obstinate when a thing isn't
- clear to me, "if they both thought they were justified in calling
- themselves man and wife, and if the people in Russia thought so, too,
- why should we make any fuss about it?"
- "Pardon me, Mrs. Grant," said Mrs. Blanderocks, suavely, "if I say that
- your words are very silly. In the first place, the Russians are
- barbarians, as we all know; and, in the next place, the law is the law,
- and the law says that a man may not have two wives. A man who does is a
- bigamist. A man who has a wife and yet lives with another woman is an
- adulterer. Pardon me for using such a word, but it was forced from me.
- Now, this man Gorky, who may be a very great genius for all I know--I
- never read any of his stuff--but he isn't above the law: not above the
- moral law anyhow, and the moral law is the same all over the world. He
- says he and his wife parted because they were unhappy together, which is
- a very flimsy excuse for immorality. Then he says that his wife is
- living now with a man she loves and is happy with."
- "Which makes a bad matter worse," interposed Sarah Warner. "No one has
- any business to be happy in immorality."
- "What is morality for," demanded the voice from the corner, "if it isn't
- to make people unhappy?"
- Everybody screamed with laughter over that, and Mrs. Blanderocks went so
- far as to raise her eyebrows at Sarah Warner, who bit her lip to keep
- from smiling.
- "But," said I, for I had been reading the papers, too, "he says the
- reason they were not divorced was because the Church would not permit
- it."
- "If the laws of his country were opposed to this divorce," said Mrs.
- Blanderocks, triumphantly, "all the more reason why he should be
- ashamed of living with this actress in such an open, defiant way."
- "The Church has nothing to do with divorces in this country," I said,
- "yet many of our best people are divorced."
- "The law permits it," said Mrs. Blanderocks curtly.
- "Who makes the law?" I asked, determined to get at the bottom of the
- thing if I could.
- "The people through the Legislature," was the prompt answer.
- "Well," I said, very timidly, not knowing but I was quite in the wrong,
- "it seems that the people of Russia not being able to make laws
- nevertheless recognize the separation of a man and his wife as proper,
- and permit them to take other husbands and wives without loss of
- standing."
- "A law's a law," said Sarah, sternly; "and a law should be sacred. The
- very idea of anybody pretending to be above the law like this man Gorky!
- I would like to know what would become of the holy institution of
- matrimony if it could be trifled with in such a fashion?"
- "You want Russia to be free from the rule of the Tsar, don't you?" I
- asked.
- "Certainly, he is a tyrant and an irresponsible weakling, unfit to
- govern a great people. Of course, we want Russia to be free. The people
- of Russia are entitled to be free, to govern themselves."
- "Do you think they ought to be allowed to make their own laws?" I asked.
- "Of course."
- "Then, why do you say that Gorky is not properly divorced from his first
- wife and married to his second? The people of Russia approve."
- "Margaret Grant!" cried Sarah, outraged and voicing the horror of the
- other members, "I sometimes wonder if you have any respect at all for
- the law. How can you speak as you do? If men and women could dispense
- with the law in that way what would become of society?"
- "But this state used to permit men and women to live together without
- any ceremony and so become man and wife," I said.
- "Well, we don't permit it now," retorted Sarah, grimly.
- "If they want to live together now," cried the voice from the corner,
- "they must pretend they don't, even if everybody knows they do."
- Some of the members laughed at that, but Mrs. Blanderocks thought that
- was going too far and said so in her coldest manner.
- "I see nothing funny in that. We cannot change the natures of men, but
- we can insist upon their hiding their baser conduct and the degraded
- portions of their lives from our view."
- "But," said I, "Gorky evidently considers this woman his wife, and had
- no idea that anybody would think otherwise."
- "The point is," said Sarah Warner, in exasperation, "and I think I voice
- the sentiments of this organization, that he was not legally divorced
- from his first wife and that, therefore, he cannot be legally married to
- this woman. A law is a law, no matter who makes it. The law is sacred
- and must not be tampered with."
- "How about the Supreme Court on divorces in Dakota?" demanded the voice
- from the corner.
- A dead silence fell on the meeting. Some of the members looked at each
- other and showed signs of hysterics. Mrs. Blanderocks flashed a
- withering glance at the corner, but rose to the occasion.
- "Ladies," she said in a solemn tone, "I deeply regret that this subject
- has been touched upon in a spirit of levity. It was my intention, at the
- proper time, to introduce a resolution of sympathy for those ladies who
- have been so summarily and I may say brutally unmarried by the unfeeling
- wretches who sit upon the bench of the Supreme Court. It is awful to
- think that our highly respected sisters, whose wealth alone should have
- protected them, have been told by the highest court in the land that
- they have been living in shame all this time, and that their children
- are not legitimate. Ladies, I call your attention to the fact that many
- of our own members are thus branded by those judges. It is infamous. It
- is more than infamous--it is a reason why women should sit on the
- judicial bench."
- "Yes," I said, "it seems impossible for men to comprehend the mental or
- emotional processes of women."
- "True, too true," murmured our President, giving me a look of gratitude.
- "I remember how the men of this country cried out against us a few
- years ago because they could not understand why we send flowers and
- tender letters to a poor, handsome negro who had first outraged and then
- murdered a woman."
- "Yes," I said, "and no doubt they will pretend not to understand our
- indignation against this man Gorky, who thinks the customs of his own
- country justify him his terrible conduct. But we must be careful how we
- word our condemnation of this man lest he should somehow learn of what
- our Supreme Court has so wickedly done and retort on us that these, our
- wealthiest and most respected citizens, not being legally divorced and
- hence not being legally married again, are no better than he and his
- so-called wife."
- The ladies looked at each other in consternation. Evidently the thought
- had not suggested itself to them. Mrs. X. Y. Z. Asterbilt (née Clewbel)
- rose and in a voice choked with emotion said:
- "Speaking for myself as well as for some of the other ladies, members of
- this organization, who are temporarily déclassée, so to speak, by this
- decree of the Supreme Court, I beg that you will do nothing to call
- undue attention to us, until we have arranged matters so that our wealth
- will enable us to have that legislation which is necessary to make us
- respectable women again."
- "Is it true," I asked, "that you have sent an invitation to Madame
- Andreieva to meet you to discuss the steps to be taken to reinstate
- yourselves?"
- "It is true, but the extraordinary creature returned word that as a lady
- of good standing in her own country she did not feel that she could
- afford to associate with women whom the courts of this country held to
- be living in shame."
- "Did you ever!" cried Mrs. Blanderocks. "But it shows us that we must be
- careful. Mrs. Grant, you have had experience in such matters, suppose
- you retire and draw up a set of resolutions that will not expose us to
- the ribald and unseemly comments of the light-minded."
- Of course I accepted the task, fully realizing its gravity, and
- following is the resolution I brought back with me:
- "_Whereas_, Maxim Gorky, recognized in the world of letters as a man of
- genius, and in the world at large as a man of great soul, high purpose
- and pure nature, having come to this country accompanied by a lady whom
- he considers and treats as his wife; and
- "_Whereas_, The wealthy, and therefore the better classes, tumbled all
- over themselves in order to exploit him as a lion; and
- "_Whereas_, He had not the wisdom and craft and sense of puritanical
- respectability to pretend that he did not know the lady he believed his
- wife, and to whom he believes himself united by a law higher than that
- of man; and
- "_Whereas_, He was guileless enough to believe he had come to a free
- country where purity of motive and of conduct would take precedence of
- hollow and rotten forms; and
- "_Whereas_, He did not know that the American people practise polygamy
- secretly, while condemning it in words, and that the United States
- Senate has been nearly two years in pretending to try to find a
- polygamist in their midst; and
- "_Whereas_, He was so injudicious as to come here with a defective
- divorce just at a time when our Supreme Court was making the divorce of
- some of us, the gilded favorites of fortune, defective; and
- "_Whereas_, He had the audacity to proclaim himself a Socialist, which
- is the same thing as saying that he is opposed to special privilege, and
- is in favor of the abolition of property in land and in the tools of
- labor--in other and plainer words, is against Us; and
- "_Whereas_, He is only a foreigner, anyhow, and no longer available as a
- toy and plaything for us; therefore be it
- "_Resolved_, That this man, Gorky, be used as a means of proclaiming our
- extraordinary virtue to the world at large, as a robber cries stop thief
- in order to direct attention from himself; that accordingly he be
- treated with the utmost outrageous discourtesy and hounded from hotel to
- hotel on the ground that such places by no chance harbor men and women
- unless they have passed through the matrimonial mill; that we withdraw
- our patronage from the revolution in Russia--not being seriously
- interested in it anyhow--and that we will show our contempt for
- revolutionary patriots by entertaining the rottenest grand duke in
- Russia if only he will come over to us, bringing his whole harem if he
- wish; that he is a reproach to us while he remains in this country, and
- that it is the sense of this great organization that he and the lady who
- is his wife in the highest sense shall be deported."
- The resolution was not passed.
- I have been expelled from the association.
- [Illustration]
- COMRADE.
- By MAXIM GORKY.
- Translated from the French translation by S. PERSKY, published in
- "L'Aurore," Paris.
- ALL in that city was strange, incomprehensible. Churches in great number
- pointed their many-tinted steeples toward the sky, in gleaming colors;
- but the walls and the chimneys of the factories rose still higher, and
- the temples were crushed between the massive façades of commercial
- houses, like marvelous flowers sprung up among the ruins, out of the
- dust. And when the bells called the faithful to prayer, their brazen
- sounds, sliding along the iron roofs, vanished, leaving no traces in the
- narrow gaps which separated the houses.
- They were always large, and sometimes beautiful, these dwellings.
- Deformed people, ciphers, ran about like gray mice in the tortuous
- streets from morning till evening; and their eyes, full of covetousness,
- looked for bread or for some distraction; other men placed at the
- crossways watched with a vigilant and ferocious air, that the weak
- should, without murmuring, submit themselves to the strong. The strong
- were the rich: everyone believed that money alone gives power and
- liberty. All wanted power because all were slaves. The luxury of the
- rich begot the envy and hate of the poor; no one knew any finer music
- than the ring of gold; that is why each was the enemy of his neighbor,
- and cruelty reigned mistress.
- Sometimes the sun shone over the city, but life therein was always wan,
- and the people like shadows. At night they lit a mass of joyous lights;
- and then famishing women went out into the streets to sell their
- caresses to the highest bidder. Everywhere floated an odor of victuals,
- and the sullen and voracious look of the people grew. Over the city
- hovered a groan of misery, stifled, without strength to make itself
- heard.
- Every one led an irksome, unquiet life; a general hostility was the
- rule. A few citizens only considered themselves just, but these were the
- most cruel, and their ferocity provoked that of the herd. All wanted to
- live; and no one knew or could follow freely the pathway of his desires;
- like an insatiable monster, the Present enveloped in its powerful and
- vigorous arms the man who marched toward the future, and in that slimy
- embrace sapped away his strength. Full of anguish and perplexity, the
- man paused, powerless before the hideous aspect of this life: with its
- thousands of eyes, infinitely sad in their expression, it looked into
- his heart, asking him for it knew not what,--and then the radiant images
- of the future died in his soul; a groan out of the powerlessness of the
- man mingled in the discordant chorus of lamentations and tears from poor
- human creatures tormented by life.
- Tedium and inquietude reigned everywhere, and sometimes terror. And the
- dull and somber city, the stone buildings atrociously lined one against
- the other, shutting in the temples, were for men a prison, rebuffing the
- rays of the sun. And the music of life was smothered by the cry of
- suffering and rage, by the whisper of dissimulated hate, by the
- threatening bark of cruelty, by the voluptuous cry of violence.
- In the sullen agitation caused by trial and suffering, in the feverish
- struggle of misery, in the vile slime of egoism, in the subsoils of the
- houses wherein vegetated Poverty, the creator of Riches, solitary
- dreamers full of faith in Man, strangers to all, prophets of seditions,
- moved about like sparks issued from some far-off hearthstone of justice.
- Secretly they brought into these wretched holes tiny fertile seeds of a
- doctrine simple and grand;--and sometimes rudely, with lightnings in
- their eyes, and sometimes mild and tender, they sowed this clear and
- burning truth in the sombre hearts of these slaves, transformed into
- mute, blind instruments by the strength of the rapacious, by the will of
- the cruel. And these sullen beings, these oppressed ones, listened
- without much belief to the music of the new words,--the music for which
- their hearts had long been waiting. Little by little they lifted up
- their heads, and tore the meshes of the web of lies wherewith their
- oppressors had enwound them. In their existence, made up of silent and
- contained rage, in their hearts envenomed by numberless wrongs, in their
- consciences encumbered by the dupings of the wisdom of the strong, in
- this dark and laborious life, all penetrated with the bitterness of
- humiliation, had resounded a simple word:
- Comrade.
- It was not a new word; they had heard it and pronounced it themselves;
- but until then it had seemed to them void of sense, like all other words
- dulled by usage, and which one may forget without losing anything. But
- now this word, strong and clear, had another sound; a soul was singing
- in it,--the facets of it shone brilliant as a diamond. The wretched
- accepted this word, and at first uttered it gently, cradling it in their
- hearts like a mother rocking her new-born child and admiring it. And the
- more they searched the luminous soul of the word, the more fascinating
- it seemed to them.
- "Comrade," said they.
- And they felt that this word had come to unite the whole world, to lift
- all men up to the summits of liberty and bind them with new ties, the
- strong ties of mutual respect, respect for the liberties of others in
- the name of one's own liberty.
- When this word had engraved itself upon the hearts of the slaves, they
- ceased to be slaves; and one day they announced their transformation to
- the city in this great human formula:
- I WILL NOT.
- Then life was suspended, for it is they who are the motor force of life,
- they and no other. The water supply stopped, the fire went out, the city
- was plunged in darkness. The masters began to tremble like children.
- Fear invaded the hearts of the oppressors. Suffocating in the fumes of
- their own dejection, disconcerted and terrified by the strength of the
- revolt, they dissimulated the rage which they felt against it.
- The phantom of Famine rose up before them, and their children wailed
- plaintively in the darkness. The houses and the temples, enveloped in
- shadow, melted into an inanimate chaos of iron and stone; a menacing
- silence filled the streets with a clamminess as of death; life ceased,
- for the force which created it had become conscious of itself; and
- enslaved humanity had found the magic and invincible word to express its
- will; it had enfranchised itself from the yoke; with its own eyes it had
- seen its might,--the might of the creator.
- These days were days of anguish to the rulers, to those who considered
- themselves the masters of life; each night was as long as thousands of
- nights, so thick was the gloom, so timidly shone the few fires scattered
- through the city. And then the monster city, created by the centuries,
- gorged with human blood, showed itself in all its shameful weakness; it
- was but a pitiable mass of stone and wood. The blind windows of the
- houses looked upon the street with a cold and sullen air, and out on the
- highway marched with valiant step the real masters of life. They, too,
- were hungry, more than the others perhaps; but they were used to it, and
- the suffering of their bodies was not so sharp as the suffering of the
- old masters of life; it did not extinguish the fire in their souls. They
- glowed with the consciousness of their own strength, the presentiment of
- victory sparkled in their eyes. They went about in the streets of the
- city which had been their narrow and sombre prison, wherein they had
- been overwhelmed with contempt, wherein their souls had been loaded with
- abuse, and they saw the great importance of their work, and thus was
- unveiled to them the sacred right they had to become the masters of
- life, its creators and its lawgivers.
- And the lifegiving word of union presented itself to them with a new
- face, with a blinding clearness:
- "Comrade."
- There among lying words it rang out boldly, as the joyous harbinger of
- the time to come, of a new life open to all in the future;--far or near?
- They felt that it depended upon them whether they advanced towards
- liberty or themselves deferred its coming.
- The prostitute who, but the evening before, was but a hungry beast,
- sadly waiting on the muddy pavement to be accosted by some one who would
- buy her caresses, the prostitute, too, heard this word, but was
- undecided whether to repeat it. A man the like of whom she had never
- seen till then approached her, laid his hand upon her shoulder and said
- to her in an affectionate tone, "Comrade." And she gave a little
- embarrassed smile, ready to cry with the joy her wounded heart
- experienced for the first time. Tears of pure gaiety shone in her eyes,
- which, the night before, had looked at the world with a stupid and
- insolent expression of a starving animal. In all the streets of the city
- the outcasts celebrated the triumph of their reunion with the great
- family of workers of the entire world; and the dead eyes of the houses
- looked on with an air more and more cold and menacing.
- The beggar to whom but the night before an obol was thrown, price of the
- compassion of the well-fed, the beggar also heard this word; and it was
- the first alms which aroused a feeling of gratitude in his poor heart,
- gnawed by misery.
- A coachman, a great big fellow whose patrons struck him that their blows
- might be transmitted to his thin-flanked, weary horse, this man imbruted
- by the noise of wheels upon the pavement, said, smiling, to a passer-by:
- "Well, Comrade!" He was frightened at his own words. He took the reins
- in his hands, ready to start, and looked at the passer-by, the joyous
- smile not yet effaced from his big face. The other cast a friendly
- glance at him and answered, shaking his head: "Thanks, comrade; I will
- go on foot; I am not going far."
- "Ah, the fine fellow!" exclaimed the coachman enthusiastically; he
- stirred in his seat, winking his eyes gaily, and started off somewhere
- with a great clatter.
- The people went in groups crowded together on the pavements, and the
- great word destined to unite the world burst out more and more often
- among them, like a spark: "Comrade." A policeman, bearded, fierce, and
- filled with the consciousness of his own importance, approached the
- crowd surrounding an old orator at the corner of a street, and, after
- having listened to the discourse, he said slowly: "Assemblages are
- interdicted ... disperse...." And after a moment's silence, lowering his
- eyes, he added, in a lower tone, "Comrades."
- The pride of young combatants was depicted in the faces of those who
- carried the word in their hearts, who had given it flesh and blood and
- the appeal to union; one felt that the strength they so generously
- poured into this living word was indestructible, inexhaustible.
- Here and there blind troops of armed men, dressed in gray, gathered and
- formed ranks in silence; it was the fury of the oppressors preparing to
- repulse the wave of justice.
- And in the narrow streets of the immense city, between the cold and
- silent walls raised by the hands of ignored creators, the noble belief
- in Man and in Fraternity grew and ripened.
- "Comrade."--Sometimes in one corner, sometimes in another, the fire
- burst out. Soon this fire would become the conflagration destined to
- enkindle the earth with the ardent sentiment of kinship, uniting all its
- peoples; destined to consume and reduce to ashes the rage, hate and
- cruelty by which we are mutilated; the conflagration which will embrace
- all hearts, melt them into one,--the heart of the world, the heart of
- beings noble and just;--into one united family of workers.
- In the streets of the dead city, created by slaves, in the streets of
- the city where cruelty reigned, faith in humanity and in victory over
- self and over the evil of the world grew and ripened. And in the vague
- chaos of a dull and troubled existence, a simple word, profound as the
- heart, shone like a star, like a light guiding toward the future:
- COMRADE.
- [Illustration]
- ALEXANDER BERKMAN.
- By E. G.
- ON the 18th of this month the workhouse at Hoboken, Pa., will open its
- iron gates for Alexander Berkman. One buried alive for fourteen years
- will emerge from his tomb. That was not the intention of those who
- indicted Berkman. In the kindness of their Christian hearts they saw to
- it that he be sentenced to twenty-one years in the penitentiary and one
- year in the workhouse, hoping that that would equal a death penalty,
- only with a slow, refined execution. To achieve the feat of sending a
- man to a gradual death, the authorities of Pittsburg at the command of
- Mammon trampled upon their much-beloved laws and the legality of court
- proceedings. These laws in Pennsylvania called for seven years
- imprisonment for the attempt to kill, but that did not satisfy the
- law-abiding citizen H. C. Frick. He saw to it that one indictment was
- multiplied into six. He knew full well that he would meet with no
- opposition from petrified injustice and the servile stupidity of the
- judge and jury before whom Alexander Berkman was tried.
- In looking over the events of 1892 and the causes that led up to the act
- of Alexander Berkman, one beholds Mammon seated upon a throne built of
- human bodies, without a trace of sympathy on its Gorgon brow for the
- creatures it controls. These victims, bent and worn, with the reflex of
- the glow of the steel and iron furnaces in their haggard faces, carry
- their sacrificial offerings to the ever-insatiable monster, capitalism.
- In its greed, however, it reaches out for more; it neither sees the
- gleam of hate in the sunken eyes of its slaves, nor can it hear the
- murmurs of discontent and rebellion coming forth from their heaving
- breasts. Yet, discontent continues until one day it raises its mighty
- voice and demands to be heard:
- Human conditions! higher pay! fewer hours in the inferno at Homestead,
- the stronghold of the "philanthropist" Carnegie!
- He was far away, however, enjoying a much needed rest from hard labor,
- in Scotland, his native country. Besides he knew he had left a worthy
- representative in H. C. Frick, who could take care that the voice of
- discontent was strangled in a fitting manner,--and Mr. Carnegie had
- judged rightly.
- Frick, who was quite experienced in the art of disposing of rebellious
- spirits (he had had a number of them shot in the coke regions in 1890),
- immediately issued an order for Pinkerton men, the vilest creatures in
- the human family, who are engaged in the trade of murder for $2 per day.
- The strikers declared that they would not permit these men to land, but
- money and power walk shrewd and cunning paths. The Pinkerton
- blood-hounds were packed into a boat and were to be smuggled into
- Homestead by way of water in the stillness of night. The amalgamated
- steel workers learned of this contemptible trick and prepared to meet
- the foe. They gathered by the shores of the Monongahela River armed with
- sticks and stones, but ere they had time for an attack a violent fire
- was opened from the boat that neared the shore, and within an hour
- eleven strikers lay dead from the bullets of Frick's hirelings.
- Every beast is satisfied when it has devoured its prey,--not so the
- human beast. After the killing of the strikers H. C. Frick had the
- families of the dead evicted from their homes, which had been sold to
- the workingmen on the instalment plan and at the exorbitant prices usual
- in such cases.
- Out of these homes the wives and children of the men struggling for a
- living wage were thrown into the street and left without shelter. There
- was one exception only. A woman who had given birth to a baby two days
- previous and who, regardless of her delicate condition, defended her
- home and succeeded in driving the sheriff from the house with a poker.
- Everyone stood aghast at such brutality, at such inhumanity to man, in
- this great free republic of ours. It seemed as if the cup of human
- endurance had been filled to the brim, as if out of the ranks of the
- outraged masses some one would rise to call those to account who had
- caused it all.
- And some one rose in mighty indignation against the horrors of wealth
- and power. It was Alexander Berkman!
- A youth with a vision of a grand and beautiful world based upon freedom
- and harmony, and with boundless sympathy for the suffering of the
- masses. One whose deep, sensitive nature could not endure the barbarisms
- of our times. Such was the personality of the man who staked his life as
- a protest against tyranny and iniquity; and such has Alexander Berkman
- remained all these long, dreary fourteen years.
- Nothing was left undone to crush the body and spirit of this man; but
- sorrow and suffering make for sacred force, and those who have never
- felt it will fail to realize how it is that Alexander Berkman will
- return to those who loved and esteemed him, to those whom he loved so
- well, and still loves so well,--the oppressed and down-trodden
- millions--with the same intense, sweet spirit and with a clearer and
- grander vision of a world of human justice and equality.
- UT SEMENTEM FECERIS, ITA METES.
- By VOLTAIRINE DE CLEYRE
- (To the Czar, on a woman, a political prisoner, being flogged to death
- in Siberia.)
- _How many drops must gather to the skies
- Before the cloud-burst comes, we may not know;
- How hot the fires in under hells must glow
- Ere the volcano's scalding lavas rise,
- Can none say; but all wot the hour is sure!
- Who dreams of vengeance has but to endure!
- He may not say how many blows must fall,
- How many lives be broken on the wheel,
- How many corpses stiffen 'neath the pall,
- How many martyrs fix the blood-red seal;
- But certain is the harvest time of Hate!
- And when weak moans, by an indignant world
- Re-echoed, to a throne are backward hurled,
- Who listens hears the mutterings of Fate!_
- [Illustration]
- THE WHITE TERROR.
- _I.--The Flogging of a Student._
- (BY AN EYE-WITNESS--M. KIRILOV, OF THE "RUSS.")
- December 18th. Near the Gorbaty Bridge, Moscow. A group of soldiers of
- various arms and an officer. Great animation, jokes, cries,
- gesticulation, contented faces. A student has fallen into their hands.
- "Well, boys, make room," says the officer. "The performance begins!"
- "Take off your trousers," says the officer, turning to the student. The
- latter is pale, silent, and does not move.
- "Trousers off!" cries the officer, in rage; but the student, without a
- drop of blood in his face, whiter than the snow, does not move, but only
- looks around in silence with horrified eyes and meets everywhere the
- triumphant faces of his tormentors. He drops his head and remains silent
- as before.
- "Well, then, boys, we must assist our dear student; his hands, poor
- thing, are frost bitten and do not obey."
- The voice of the officer changes; it becomes sweet and smooth. He looks
- at the student with pleasure.
- "Take off his dear little trousers!" he orders his soldiers. The latter
- unbutton and tear down his trousers. The student does not resist. Then
- he is thrown on the ground.
- "Give him beans, boys!"
- Two powerfully-built soldiers step forward, holding whips in their
- hands.
- The flogging begins. It lasts a long time, accompanied by loud laughter,
- jokes and noise. The student is silent all the time and lies with his
- face buried in the snow. He is constantly being asked whether he feels
- allright, and is kicked with the boots on his head.
- "Halt!" cries the officer at last, when the whole body of the student
- has been covered with blood. The excited soldiers do not leave off at
- once, but continue for some time. At last they stop.
- "Please, sir, won't you allow us, too, to have a little game?" smilingly
- ask a couple of artillery soldiers, saluting the officer.
- "Well, have a go at him," says the officer kindly.
- The second shift gets to work, and turning up their sleeves, takes over
- the bloody whips and resumes the flogging of the student, who still, as
- before, is lying in the snow without uttering a word. Only his body
- still thrills instinctively as the soldiers get more and more excited
- and the blows become more and more frequent.
- "Sir, we, too, want some of the lark," impatiently interfered some of
- the dragoons, and having received the permission of the officer,
- substituted themselves for the artillery men and with new force and zeal
- began to flog the student, who still lay strictly as before, only his
- body scarcely moving.
- "Well, here you are, you got your higher education--all the three
- faculties!" somebody joked as the flogging at last stopped and the
- student lay motionless in the snow.
- But he was not flogged to death. He was taken to the other side of the
- river and there shot.
- _II.--Lieutenant Schmidt, of the Sevastopol Mutiny, after being
- captured._
- (From a letter received by Prof. Miliukov from a lady correspondent who
- saw Schmidt in the Fortress and had the tale from his own lips.)
- ....He only remembers how the officers of the "Rostislavl" posted him
- naked, with a broken leg, between two sentries in their mess-room and
- approached him in turns, shaking their fists in his face and abusing him
- in the vilest terms. Schmidt's son, who, for some unaccountable reason,
- had been kept in fortress for two months, said to me: "I cannot tell you
- how they abused my father, the terms are unpronounceable." Schmidt
- himself spoke to me sobbingly of the painful treatment meted out to him
- by the officers.... For twenty-four hours the two of them, father and
- son, were kept stark naked and without food, under a fierce electric
- light, on the open deck. They lay together, pressing against each other
- so as to warm themselves, and everyone who passed looked at them, and
- those who wanted, abused them. When Schmidt, being wounded, asked for a
- drop of water, the senior officer shouted at him: "Silence, or I'll stop
- your gullet with my fist."
- [Illustration]
- PATERNALISTIC GOVERNMENT.
- By THEODORE SCHROEDER.
- HISTORY serves no purpose to those who cannot, or do not avail
- themselves of it as a means of learning helpful lessons, for present
- use. From a few sources not readily accessible to the masses, I have
- copied a partial summary of paternalistic legislation which even the
- most devout devotees to mass or ruling class wisdom would now decline to
- defend.
- It is helpful, perhaps, to look back to the persistent fallacious
- assumption that men can be made frugal and useful members of society by
- laws and edicts. Every thoughtful student feels sure that future
- generations will look upon our present efforts to regulate the
- self-regarding activities of humans with the same cynical leer as that
- which now flits over our faces as we read the following:--
- The earliest sumptuary law was passed 215 B. C., enacted that no woman
- should own more than half an ounce of gold or wear a dress of different
- colors, or ride in a carriage in the city or in any town or within a
- mile of it, unless on occasion of public sacrifices. This law was
- repealed in twenty years. In 181 B. C. a law was passed limiting the
- number of guests at entertainments. In 161 B. C. it was provided that at
- certain festivals named the expense of entertainments should not exceed
- 100 asses, and on ten other days of each month should not exceed 10
- asses. Later on it was allowed that 200 asses, valued at about $300, be
- spent upon marriage days.
- A statute under Julian extended the privileges of extravagance on
- certain occasions to the equivalent of $10, and $50 upon marriage
- feasts. Under Tiberius, $100 was made the limit of expense for
- entertainments. Julius Cæsar proposed another law by which actual
- magistrates, or magistrates elect, should not dine abroad except at
- certain prescribed places.
- Sumptuary laws, that is to say, laws which profess to regulate minutely
- what people shall eat and drink, what guests they shall entertain, what
- clothes they shall wear, what armor they shall possess, what limit shall
- be put to their property, what expense they shall incur at their
- funerals, were considered by the Early and Middle Ages as absolutely
- necessary for the proper government of mankind.
- Tiberius issued an edict against people kissing each other when they met
- and against tavern keepers selling pastry. Lycurgus even prohibited
- finely decorated ceilings and doors. In England the statutes of
- laborers, reciting the pestilence and scarcity of servants, made it
- compulsory on every person who had no merchandise, craft or land on
- which to live, to serve at fixed wages, otherwise to be committed to
- gaol till he found sureties. At a latter day, all men between twelve and
- sixty not employed were compelled to hire themselves as servants in
- husbandry; and unmarried women between twelve and forty were also liable
- to be hired, otherwise to be imprisoned. All this, of course, was to
- compel people of modest wealth to remain among the laboring class purely
- for their own good. (?) But they were quite impartial in enforcing
- benefits, since the Star Chamber also assumed to fine persons for not
- accepting knighthood.
- Compulsion was also used at the time of the Reformation, to uphold the
- Protestant faith and keep people in the right way. Refusing to confess
- or receive the sacrament was first made subject to fine or imprisonment,
- and a second offense was a felony punishable by death, and involved
- forfeiture of land and goods. Those who, having no lawful excuse, failed
- to attend the parish church, in the time of Elizabeth, were fined twelve
- pence--at that time a considerable sum. This penalty was afterwards
- altered to twenty pounds a month, but those were exempted who did not
- obstinately refuse. The penalty on all above sixteen who neglected to go
- for a month was abjuration of the realm; and to return to the realm
- thereafter was felony. And two-thirds of the rent of the offender's
- lands might also be seized till he conformed.
- An ordinance of Edward III., in 1336, prohibited any man having more
- than two courses at any meal. Each mess was to have only two sorts of
- victuals, and it was prescribed how far one could mix sauce with his
- pottage, except on feast days, when three courses, at most, were
- allowable.
- The Licinian law limited the quantity of meat to be used. The Orcian law
- limited the expense of a private entertainment and the number of guests.
- And for like reasons, the censors degraded a senator because ten pounds
- weight of silver plate was found in his house. Julius Cæsar was almost
- as good a reformer as our modern Puritans. He restrained certain classes
- from using litters, embroidered robes and jewels; limited the extent of
- feasts; enabled bailiffs to break into the houses of rich citizens and
- snatch the forbidden meats from off the tables. And we are told that the
- markets swarmed with informers, who profited by proving the guilt of all
- who bought and sold there. So in Carthage a law was passed to restrain
- the exorbitant expenses of marriage feasts, it having been found that
- the great Hanno took occasion of his daughter's marriage to feast and
- corrupt the Senate and the populace, and gained them over to his
- designs.
- The Vhennic Court established by Charlemagne in Westphalia put every
- Saxon to death who broke his fast during Lent. James II. of Arragon, in
- 1234, ordained that his subjects should not have more than two dishes,
- and each dressed in one way only, unless it was game of his own killing.
- The Statute of Diet of 1363 enjoined that servants of lords should have
- once a day flesh or fish, and remnants of milk, butter and cheese; and
- above all, ploughmen were to eat moderately. And the proclamations of
- Edward IV. and Henry VIII. used to restrain excess in eating and
- drinking. All previous statutes as to abstaining from meat and fasting
- were repealed in the time of Edward VI. by new enactments, and in order
- that fishermen might live, all persons were bound under penalty to eat
- fish on Fridays or Saturdays, or in Lent, the old and the sick excepted.
- The penalty in Queen Elizabeth's time was no less than three pounds or
- three months' imprisonment, but at the same time added that whoever
- preached or taught that eating of fish was necessary for the saving of
- the soul of man, or was the service of God, was to be punished as a
- spreader of false news. And care was taken to announce that the eating
- of fish was enforced not out of superstition, but solely out of respect
- to the increase of fishermen and mariners. The exemption of the sick
- from these penalties was abolished by James I., and justices were
- authorized to enter victualing houses and search and forfeit the meat
- found there. All these preposterous enactments were swept away in the
- reign of Victoria.
- Of all the petty subjects threatening the cognizance of the law, none
- seems to have given more trouble to the ancient and mediæval
- legislatures than that of dress. * * * Yet views of morality, of
- repressing luxury and vice, of benefiting manufacturers, of keeping all
- degrees of mankind in their proper places, have induced the legislature
- to interfere, where interference, in order to be thorough, would require
- to be as endless as it would be objectless.
- Solon prohibited women from going out of the town with more than three
- dresses. Zaleucus is said to have invented an ingenious method of
- circuitously putting down what he thought bad habits, namely, by
- prohibiting things with an exception, so that the exception should, in
- the guise of an exemption, really carry out the sting and operate as a
- deterrent. Thus he forbade a woman to have more than one maid, unless
- she was drunk; he forbade her to wear jewels or embroidered robes, or go
- abroad at night, except she was a prostitute; he forbade all but panders
- to wear gold rings or fine cloth. And it was said that he succeeded
- admirably in his legislation. The Spartans had such a contempt for
- cowards that those who fled in battle were compelled to wear a low
- dress of patches and shape, and, moreover, to wear a long beard half
- shaved, so that any one meeting them might give them a stroke. The
- Oppian law of Rome restricted women in their dress and extravagance, and
- the Roman knights had the privilege of wearing a gold ring. The ancient
- Babylonians held it to be indecent to wear a walking stick without an
- apple, a rose, or an eagle engraved on the top of it. The first Inca of
- Peru is said to have made himself popular by allowing his people to wear
- ear-rings--a distinction formerly confined to the royal family. By the
- code of China, the dress of the people was subject to minute regulation,
- and any transgression was punished by fifty blows of the bamboo. And he
- who omitted to go into mourning on the death of a relation, or laid it
- aside too soon, was similarly punished. Don Edward of Portugal, in 1434,
- passed a law to suppress luxury in dress and diet, and with his nobles
- set an example. In Florence a like law was passed in 1471. And in
- Venice, laws regulating nearly all the expenses of families, in table,
- clothes, gaming and traveling. A law of the Muscovites obliged the
- people to crop their beards and shorten their clothes. In Zurich a law
- prohibited all except strangers to use carriages, and in Basle no
- citizen or inhabitant was allowed to have a servant behind his carriage.
- About 1292, Philip the Fair, of France, by edict, ordered how many suits
- of clothes, and at what price, and how many dishes at table should be
- allowed, and that no woman should keep a cur.
- The Irish laws regulated the dress, and even its colors, according to
- the rank and station of the wearer. And the Brehon laws forbade men to
- wear brooches so long as to project and be dangerous to those passing
- near. In Scotland, a statute enacted that women should not come to Kirk
- or market with their faces covered, and that they should dress according
- to their estate. In the City of London, in the thirteenth century, women
- were not allowed to wear, in the highway or the market, a hood furred
- with other than lamb-skin or rabbit-skin. In the Middle Ages, it was not
- infrequent to compel prostitutes to wear a particular dress, so that
- they might not be mistaken for other women. And this was the law in the
- City of London, as appears from records of 1351 and 1382.
- The views and objects of English legislators as to the general subject
- of dress, however preposterous in our eyes, were grave and serious
- enough. They were so confident of their ground that it was recited that
- "wearing inordinate and excessive apparel was a displeasure to God, was
- an impoverishing of the realm and enriching other strange realms and
- countries, to the final destruction of the husbandry of the realm, and
- leading to robberies."
- The Statute of Diet and Apparel in 1363, and the later statutes,
- minutely fixed the proper dress for all classes according to their
- estate, and the price they were to pay; handicraftsmen were not to wear
- clothes above forty shillings, and their families were not to wear silk
- or velvet. And so with gentlemen and esquires, merchants, knights and
- clergy, according to graduations. Ploughmen were to wear a blanket and a
- linen girdle. No female belonging to the family of a servant in
- husbandry was to wear a girdle garnished with silver. Every person
- beneath a lord was to wear a jacket reaching to his knees, and none but
- a lord was to wear pikes to his shoes exceeding two inches. (1463.)
- Nobody but a member of the royal family was to wear cloth of gold or
- purple silk, and none under a knight to wear velvet, damask or satin, or
- foreign wool, or fur of sable. It is true, notwithstanding all these
- restrictions, that a license of the king enabled the licensee to wear
- anything. For one whose income was under twenty pounds, to wear silk in
- his night-cap was to incur three months' imprisonment or a fine of ten
- pounds a day. And all above the age of six, except ladies and gentlemen,
- were bound to wear on the Sabbath day a cap of knitted wool. These
- statutes of apparel were not repealed till the reign of James I.
- Sometimes, though rarely, a legislature has gone the length of suddenly
- compelling an entire change of dress among a people, for reasons at the
- time thought urgent.
- In China a law was passed to compel the Tartars to wear Chinese clothes,
- and to compel the Chinese to cut their hair, with a view to unite the
- two races. And it was said there were many who preferred martyrdom to
- obedience.
- So late as 1746, a statute was passed to punish with six months'
- imprisonment, and on a second offense with seven years' transportation,
- the Scottish Highlanders, men or boys, who wore their national costume
- or a tartan plaid, it being conceived to be closely associated with a
- rebellious disposition. After thirty-six years the statute was repealed.
- While the act was in force it was evaded by people carrying their
- clothes in a bag over their shoulders. The prohibition was hateful to
- all, as impeding their agility in scaling the craggy steeps of their
- native fastnesses. In 1748 the punishment assigned by the act of 1746
- was changed into compulsory service in the army.
- Plato says it is one of the unwritten laws of nature that a man shall
- not go naked into the market-place or wear woman's clothes. The Mosaic
- law forbade men to wear women's clothes, which was thought to be a mode
- of discountenancing the Assyrian rites of Venus. The early Christians,
- following a passage of St. Paul (1 Cor. xi.), treated the practice of
- men and women wearing each other's clothes as confounding the order of
- nature, and as liable to heavy censure of anathema.
- There was formerly rigorous punishment of persons poaching game with
- blackened faces. Those who hunted in forests with faces disguised were
- declared to be felons. And as disguises led to crime, and mummers often
- were pretenders, all who assumed disguise or visors as mummers, and
- attempted to enter houses or committed assaults in highways, were liable
- to be arrested and committed to prison for three months, without bail.
- The Mosaic law prohibited the practice of using alhenna, or putting an
- indelible color on the skin, as was done on occasions of mourning, or in
- resemblance of the dead, or in honor of some idol. And two fashions of
- wearing the beard and hair were prohibited, as has been supposed, on
- account of idolatrous association. Even Bacon said he wondered there was
- no penal law against painting the face.
- (_To be Continued._)
- LIBERTY IN COMMON LIFE.
- By BOLTON HALL.
- IT seems to me that none of us see how far-reaching freedom will be.
- The Socialists have abundantly shown that if only the wastes of
- production and distribution were saved, two or three hours' labor per
- day would produce all that we produce now. If, in addition to this
- saving, the land, including all the resources of nature, were opened to
- labor, so that all workers would use the best parts of the earth to the
- best advantage, wealth would be so abundant that interest would
- disappear.
- Even now, with increased production, and notwithstanding the
- restrictions on the issue of money and our crazy banking system,
- interest is decreasing so that we find it hard to get 4 per cent. here.
- Suppose to-day the mortgages and railroad bonds, which are forms of
- ownership of land, were taken out of the market, what interest could we
- get? Certainly not one per cent.
- Were the restrictions on production of the tariff, taxes on products of
- labor, patent monopolies, hindrances to the making of money through
- franchise privileges done away with, and above all were private
- appropriation of rent abolished, wealth would not be so abundant and so
- easy to obtain that it would not be worth anyone's while to keep account
- of what he had "lent" to another. With the disappearance, at once, of
- interest and of the fear of poverty the motive for accumulations of more
- than would be sufficient to provide against disability or old age will
- disappear, while such small but universal accumulations made available
- by a system of mutual banking will provide ample capital for all needed
- enterprises.
- Co-operation will spring up as a labor-saving device, and the great
- abilities of the trust managers will be turned to public service instead
- of public plunder.
- Henry George is wrong in thinking that the increased demand for capital
- due to free opportunities for labor would increase interest. If it did,
- it would perpetuate a form of slavery. He omits to notice that the very
- use of the capital would reproduce wealth and capital so much more
- abundantly that it would destroy the motive for accumulation.
- The time will come--it is even now at hand--when dollars and meals and
- goods will be given to those who ask these as freely as candies or water
- or cigars are offered to visitors. If I am wrong in this, then I am
- wasting my efforts, as far as sincere efforts can be wasted.
- If Socialism or Anarchism is needed to insure voluntary communism of
- goods, then it is for Socialism or Anarchism that we should work; and
- for me, if I could see, I would turn from single tax to either of them
- as readily as I would turn down hill if I found that up hill was the
- wrong road.
- At present, hardly any one favors these views--of course, not
- plutocrats, because the doctrine is dangerous; not Socialists, because
- they think that its words turn Socialists into land reformers; nor
- Anarchists, because they regard compulsory payment of a fair price for
- the land one uses as a form of tax; not even single taxers, as yet,
- because they are wedded to the theory of Henry George.
- My only fear, if there be room for fear, is that the new liberty and
- leisure will come too soon for the sordid people to make a wise use of
- it. Yet such a fear is like that of a man who should fear that his jaw
- would grind so hard as to destroy his teeth.
- The world is moved by one Spirit, which everlastingly adjusts action
- against reaction, so that all is and always must be well.
- Do not shy at truth for fear of its logical consequence.
- [Illustration]
- STATISTICS.
- By H. KELLY.
- (_Special Cable Despatch to "The Sun."_)
- "LONDON.--The result of the first organized census of the British Empire
- is issued in a Blue Book. It shows that the empire consists of an
- approximate area of 11,908,378 square miles, or more than one-fifth of
- the entire land area of the world.
- "The population is about 400,000,000, of whom 54,000,000 are whites. The
- population is roughly distributed as follows: In Asia, 300,000,000;
- Africa, 43,000,000; Europe, 42,000,000; America, 7,500,000, and
- Australasia, 5,000,000.
- "The most populous city after London is Calcutta. The highest
- proportion of married persons is in India, Natal, Cyprus and Canada. The
- lowest is in the West Indies. Depression in the birth rate is general
- almost everywhere, but is most remarkable in Australasia. The proportion
- of insane persons in the colonies is much below that in the United
- Kingdom. Insanity is markedly decreasing in India, despite
- consanguineous marriages. Indeed, the theory that such marriages produce
- mental unsoundness is little supported by these statistics."
- To those who read without preconceived notions, the figures given above
- show how history repeats itself. The British Empire is decaying at the
- centre, and the census just taken proves it conclusively. The proportion
- of insane in the colonies, even in poor famine-stricken India, is "much
- below" that in the United Kingdom. Striking as these figures on insanity
- are, they convey but a part of the truth as to the real condition of the
- people of England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales, as all reference to
- their material well-being (if we were Christians we would add and
- spiritual, for over one million people in these countries never heard of
- God) is carefully omitted. Charles Booth, author of that truly great
- work, "Life and Labor in London," seventeen volumes, estimates that 30
- per cent. of the population of the United Kingdom live in a state of
- poverty, and Seebohm Rowntree, author of "Poverty, A Study of Town
- Life," puts it at 27.84 per cent. Mr. Rowntree also states that an
- average of one person in five, or 20 per cent. of the population, die in
- some public institution, i. e., prison, poor-house, hospital or insane
- asylum. These statements are depressing enough as they are, but they
- become worse when we learn that the standard of living upon which they
- are based are those enjoyed--we use the word advisedly--by poor-house
- inmates. Think of this, ye Pharisees, Christian and otherwise, 30 per
- cent. of the population of the British Isles living under such
- conditions! These are not the idle statements of long-haired reformers
- or yellow journalists, but of two very estimable Christian gentlemen,
- both of them manufacturers and successful business men. They are
- different from the ordinary exploiter only in the sense of being honest
- and humane enough to recognize that something is radically wrong with
- modern civilization and make an earnest attempt to remedy it.
- In this connection it is worthy of note that when the proprietors of the
- London "Daily News" had a systematic canvas and investigation made into
- the housing conditions in London, some six or seven years ago, it was
- found that 900,000 people, one-fifth of the population, were living in
- violation of the law. This was the case notwithstanding that the law
- says 400 cubic feet of air space for each adult and 200 cubic feet for
- each child must be provided, whereas Professor Huxley, who at one time
- was a physician in the East End of London, said at least 800 cubic feet
- for an adult and 400 cubic feet for a child was absolutely necessary to
- keep the air in a fair state of purity.
- It was and is the proud boast of millions of people that they are
- co-inheritors of this glorious empire, an empire the greatest the world
- has ever seen: 400,000,000 souls and an area so vast that the sun never
- sets on all its parts at one time. Pete Curran, the Trade Unionist and
- Socialist, once remarked he knew parts of the empire upon which the sun
- never shone, and Pete knew.
- Glory and aggrandizement based upon injustice brings its own reward, and
- when a people subjugate and exploit another, they must inevitably pay
- the price of their own brutality and injustice. The handwriting is on
- the wall in the shape of the present census report. Decaying at the
- centre, the British Empire is rapidly going the way of the Persian,
- Greek and Roman Empires, and her name will be synonymous with injustice
- as theirs are. Nations no more than individuals can thrive, expand and
- develop their best faculties unless their lives are based upon freedom
- and justice. Not freedom to exploit a weaker person or people, not
- justice before the law which is a mockery and a sham, but freedom for
- each to live his own life in his own way, and justice to all in the
- shape of equal opportunity to the earth and all it may contain.
- This lesson applies equally to America, and if any of my countrymen are
- so blind as not to see it, they deserve pity rather than censure, and it
- is to be hoped their awakening will not long be delayed.
- GERHART HAUPTMANN WITH THE WEAVERS OF SILESIA.
- By MAX BAGINSKI.
- WHEN I look at the last engraving in the illustrated edition of
- "Hannele," at the Angel of Death with the impenetrable brow, over whom
- Hannele passes into the region of beauty, I have the consciousness, that
- that is Gerhart Hauptmann, such is the inexhaustible wealth of his inner
- world.
- The stress of the life effort and the certainty of death, groping forth
- from delicate intimacies, ripened the fineness and sweetness of this
- man's soul. The picture contains transitoriness, finiteness, yet also a
- vista of new formation, new land.
- Of Gerhart Hauptmann one can say, his art has given meaning to the idea
- of human love, which in this period is looked upon with suspicious eyes
- as a bad coin, a new impetus, the reality and symbolic depth of which
- grips the heart. Out of his books one can draw life more than
- literature. A strong soul-similarity with Tolstoi might be observed, I
- think, if Hauptmann were a fighting spirit.
- I met the poet among the weavers of the Eulengebirge, Silesia, in the
- districts of greatest human misery, February, 1891, in Langenbielau, the
- large Silesian weaving village. One evening, on my return from a
- journey, I was informed that a tall gentleman in black had inquired for
- me. The name of the stranger was Gerhart Hauptmann, who came to study
- the conditions of the weaving districts. The visitor had taken lodgings
- in the "Preussischen Hof," where I called on him the same evening, with
- joyous expectation. The name of Gerhart Hauptmann in those days seemed
- to contain a watchword, a battle call: not only against the unimportant
- thrones of literature at that time but also against social oppression,
- prejudices and moral crippling. Hauptmann's first drama, "Vor
- Sonnenaufgang," had just appeared and been produced by the Free Stage in
- Berlin; and had operated like an explosive. It was followed by a flood
- of vicious and vile criticism. The literary clique little imagined that
- the future held great success for such "stuff" both in book form and on
- the stage.
- This lamentable lack of judgment misled the various pot-boiler writers
- to attack the new tendency with the most repulsive arguments. One
- leading paper of those days wrote of Hauptmann as an individual of a
- pronounced criminal physiognomy, of whom one could expect nothing else
- but dirty, appalling things.
- Such literary highway assaults made one feel doubly happy over the fact,
- that together with Hauptmann were a few splendidly armed fighters, like
- the aged Fontane, with his great poise and fine exactness.
- The first impression of Hauptmann was that he was not a man of easy
- social carriage, rather discreet, almost shy, and uncommunicative. An
- absorbed, deep dreamer, yet a keen observer of the human all too human,
- not easily led astray, not Goethe, rather Hoelderlin.
- The guest room of the "Preussischen Hof" contained many empty benches.
- The keeper thereof had ample time to meditate over the mission of the
- strange gentleman, in the weaving districts. I learned the next morning
- that he had quite decided that Hauptmann was some government emissary,
- intrusted with examining the prevailing distress of the weavers. One
- thing, however, appeared suspicious, the man associated with the "Reds,"
- who, according to the government newspaper, only exaggerated the need
- and poverty to incite the people for their own political ends.
- Whether or not the misery of the weavers that winter had reached such a
- point as to warrant an official investigation, had been the topic of
- discussion for weeks. The State Attorney, too, had taken an active part
- in the matter. The criticism in the labor paper, "The Proletarian," of
- which I was the editor, that the exorbitant profit-making methods of the
- manufacturers, which left the workers nothing to live on, were met with
- a number of indictments against the paper on the following grounds: "It
- was indictable to incite the public at the moment when the prevailing
- poverty was in itself sufficient to arouse the people and cause danger;
- that this was criminal, and therefore punishable. The distress was
- thereby officially acknowledged; was that not sufficient? Why then hold
- the conditions up before the special attention of the people?"
- We mapped out a tour through the home-weaving settlements. At
- Langenbielau, the textile industry had to a large extent been carried on
- in mills and factories and at a higher wage. Misery was not so appalling
- and hopeless there, as in the huts of the home weavers.
- The following days unrolled a horrible picture before the eyes of the
- poet. The figures of Baumann and Ansorge from his play "The Weavers"
- became real.
- With mute accusation on their lips, they moved before the human eye in
- tangible shape; yet one longed to believe they were only phantoms. They
- lived, but how they lived was a burning shame to civilization. Huts,
- standing deep in the snow, like whitened sepulchres, and despair staring
- from every nook, in these days of paternal care, just as at the time of
- the famine that swept across the district in 1844.
- Strewn among the hills and valleys lay bits of industry that had been
- passed by technical progress, as so many damned, spooklike spots; and
- yet those, who vegetated, worked and gradually perished here, were
- compelled to compete with the great productive giants of steel and iron
- machinery.
- The poet entered these homes not with the spirit of a cool observer, nor
- as a samaritan,--he came as man to man, with no appearance of one
- stooping to poor Lazarus. Indeed, it seemed as though Hauptmann walked
- with a much steadier gait in the path of human misery, than on the road
- of conventionality.
- Steinseifersdorf, situated beyond Peterswaldau. A bare snow field,
- spread about huts of clay, shingles and branches, without a sign of
- life. Neither a cat, dog nor sparrow, not even chimney smoke, to
- indicate the activity of the inhabitants. Heated dwellings in this
- stretch of land are luxuries, difficult of achievement; and how is one
- to prepare a warm meal out of nothing?
- We attempted to enter one of the huts to the right; there was no path
- leading to it, so that we were compelled to work our way through the
- deep snow. Was it possible that human beings breathed within? The old
- weather-worn shanty looked as if the slightest breeze would tumble it
- over. The few wooden steps, leading to the entrance, creaked underneath
- our steps, and our knock was met with dead silence. We knocked again,
- and this time heard a faint step slowly moving toward the door; a heavy
- wooden bolt was moved aside, and we perceived a human face, with the
- expression of a wounded, frightened animal. Like a delinquent, caught at
- the offense, the human being at the door stared at the invaders. Not a
- ray of hope enlivened the dead expression. No doubt the man had long
- ceased to expect amelioration of his needs from his fellow beings. The
- figure was covered with rags, and what rags! Not the kind of rags, that
- tramps wear and which they throw off when luck strikes them, but eternal
- rags, that seemed to have grown to the skin, to have mingled with it so
- long that they had become part of it,--disgustingly filthy, but the only
- cover he had and that he could not throw away.
- The man, about fifty years of age, was silent and led us through a
- dirty, cold gray entry into a room. In front of the loom we observed the
- drooping figure of a woman, a cold oven, four dirty, wet walls, at one
- of them a wooden bunk also covered with rags that served as bedding;
- nothing else. The man murmured something to the woman, she rose; both
- had inflamed eyes, water dripping from them with the same monotony as
- from the walls.
- Hauptmann began to speak hesitatingly, depressed by the sight of such
- misery. He received a few harsh replies. The last piece of cloth had
- been delivered some time since; there was neither bread, flour,
- potatoes, coal nor wood in the house; in fact, no food or fuel of any
- sort. This was said in a subdued, fearful voice, as if they expected
- severe censure or punishment. Hauptmann gave the woman some money. The
- thought of going without leaving sufficient for a supply of food at
- least for the next few days, was agony.
- On the widening of the road stood the village inn. The guest room showed
- little comfort, the innkeeper looked worn and in bad spirits. No trade.
- Innkeepers of factory towns are better off. They can afford guest rooms
- of a higher order, since they enjoy the patronage of bookkeepers, clerks
- and teachers. In Steinseifersdorf one had to depend on the weavers, and
- that did not bring enough for a square meal, especially in the winter.
- The wife of the innkeeper assured us that the misery in Kaschbach, a
- neighboring village, was even greater, even more awful. It was getting
- late, so we decided to go there the following day.
- Our conversation on our ride homeward dwelt on the fate of these
- unfortunates, condemned by modern industrialism to a life of the
- Inferno. I asked Hauptmann what an effect an artistic, dramatic
- representation of such a fate could possibly have. He replied that his
- inclinations were more for summernight's dreams toward sunny vistas, but
- that an impelling inner force urged him to use this appalling want as an
- object of his art. As for the hoped-for effect, human beings are not
- insensible; even the most satisfied, the most comfortable or rich must
- be gripped in his innermost depths when pictures of such terrible human
- wretchedness are being unrolled before him. Every human being is related
- to another.
- My remark that the right of possession has the tendency to blind those
- who are part of it, Hauptmann would not accept as generally true. He was
- anxious to bring the sympathies of the wealthy into energetic activity;
- sympathies that would, of course, bring to the poor real relief from
- their hideous conditions. He added that the poverty of the masses had at
- times tortured him to such an extent that he was unable to partake of
- his meals, which were meager enough, especially during his student life
- in Zurich; yet he had felt ashamed of partaking of such a luxury as a
- cup of coffee even. I had to admit that I could not share his hopes of
- the influence of an artistic portrayal of the sufferings of the weavers
- upon the people of wealth. Self-satisfied virtue is hard to move. Rather
- did I believe that a great work of art, treating of the life of the
- masses, was bound to rouse their consciousness to their own conditions.
- At that time, I believe, Hauptmann had already completed his "Weavers."
- His journey into the weaving district was not to collect material for
- the structure of that tremendous play, rather than it was devoted to
- details, localities and landscapes. He had already drawn up the outline
- for his other play, "College Crampton," portraying a genial and joyous
- man, of whom narrowness and miserableness of surroundings make a
- caricature and who is finally wrecked.
- Langenbielau, after our journey through the Golgatha of poverty, seemed
- a place of relief. The mills, with the increasing noise of machines that
- dulls the ears and racks the nerves, are by no means an elevating sight,
- but they bring the workingmen together and awaken their feeling and
- understanding of solidarity and the necessity for concerted action.
- Here, in spite of sunken chests, great fatigue, poor nourishment, one
- felt the breeze of the struggling proletarian mind that indicated a new
- land of regeneration, beyond the misery of our times.
- For one of the evenings a gathering of the older weavers was arranged.
- Hauptmann had a plate set for each one. During the meal a lively
- discussion developed. There was one weaver, Mathias, very bony, and with
- a skin like parchment, very poor, but blessed with many children. He
- related of a bet he had won. The owner of the tavern where we were
- having our feast had expressed doubt as to the ability of Mathias to
- consume three pounds of pork at once. He volunteered to do it, if the
- meat would be paid for and a quantity of beer added to it. A neighbor
- was intrusted with the preparation of the roast. At the appointed hour
- Mathias appeared, together with two other men as witnesses of the
- contest. The prize eating began, when Mathias was confronted by an
- obstacle: Five children belonging to the neighbor surrounded the table,
- with their eyes widely opened at the unusual sight of a roast. Their
- little faces expressed great desire and their mouths began to water. The
- prize eater felt very uncomfortable before the longing look of the
- children. He imagined himself a hard-hearted guzzler, only concerned
- about his own stomach. He forgot the bet, cut up some of the meat and
- was about to place it before the children, when a howl of protest arose.
- This was not permitted, if he wanted to win he would have to eat the
- entire roast himself. Mathias submitted, but dropped his eyes in shame
- before the children. Time and again he involuntarily passed portions of
- meat to them, but his attempts were frustrated by renewed protests. He
- could not continue, however, until the little ones were taken out into
- the cold. There was no other place, since the only room was taken up by
- the parties concerned in the contest. They might have been put into the
- cold, dark garret, but that would have been too cruel and would have
- made Mathias unable to carry out the feat. The undertaking was
- finished, but the winner felt quite wretched; he was conscious of having
- committed a great sin against the simplest of human demands.
- The conversation turned to the uprising of the weavers in 1844. Many
- incidents of those days were related. Various legend-like and fantastic
- stories told. Also names of people of the neighborhood who had
- participated in that historic event.
- The entire affair was very informal and simple, and not an atom of the
- oppressive atmosphere one feels in the relations between the members of
- the upper and lower stations of life.
- The next morning we started for Kaschbach. The place looked even more
- dismal than the one we had visited the day previous. In one of the huts
- a weaver, with a swollen arm in a sling, led us into a corner of the
- room. On a bunk covered with straw and rags lay a woman with a little
- baby near her. Its body was covered with a terrible rash, perfectly
- bare, almost hidden within the floor rags. The shy father, himself in
- pain, stood near, the personification of helplessness. If only there
- were food in the house! The district physician? He would have been
- compelled to prescribe food, light, warmth and sanitation for every hut
- he visited, if he did not wish his science to prove a mockery. He could
- not do that, so he came but rarely. Humanitarianism, thus far your name
- is impotency! All that could be done was to leave money and hurry out
- into the air.
- The next abode might be considered pleasant compared with the previous
- one. Two elderly people, not so worn and wan, and not so ragged. The man
- was weaving, still having some work at times; his wife, very pleasant
- and amiable, was almost ready to praise the good fortune of their home.
- "We are better off than our neighbors," she said with some pride. She
- pointed to a freshly cut loaf of bread, to the fire in the oven, to a
- table and a real bed--a great fortune, indeed. The walls were covered
- with some colored prints, representing virtue, patience, endurance to
- the end. One picture showed the return of the prodigal son, one the
- ejection of Hagar from the house of Abraham. Our hostess could boast of
- the luxury of a coffee mill even, and, after she had ground and brewed
- the coffee, we were invited to partake of it, which we gratefully did.
- Local and general affairs were talked over; the man, quite talkative,
- but careful and reticent in his remarks, especially when religious and
- political questions were approached. His remarks were kept within
- careful lines so as not to offend. Hauptmann said afterwards that he had
- noticed such cautiousness in all weavers. No doubt it had grown out of
- the great poverty that often brought out diffidence and reticence toward
- strangers.
- Hauptmann sat on a low stool, and, while we were sipping our coffee, the
- woman petted him tenderly on the brow. "Yes, yes, young man, Want, the
- awfulness of Want, but we cannot complain." At our departure, she
- pointed to a hut nearby and said: "The people in there are nearly
- starved." It was not exaggerated. When we entered, we saw a woman in the
- dismal gray of the room, surrounded by a number of crying children. Two
- or three of the maturer girls, thin and pale and drawn out by the
- Procrustean bed of poverty, secretly wiped the last drops of tears from
- their suffering faces. Hunger reigned supreme within these walls. The
- woman, in the last stage of pregnancy, suffered the keenest under the
- lamentations of the younger children, to whom she could give no food.
- The husband had been gone two days on a begging tramp. He would surely
- bring home something, though it was very difficult to get anything in
- this neighborhood. One must tramp a long distance for a piece of bread.
- Yesterday they could still obtain a few potatoes, but to-day she had
- nothing more to give, nor did she know what to tell the children. She
- had implored the minister to let her have something to eat, if only a
- few morsels, but he had nothing himself, he said. The tightly pressed
- lips of the older girls trembled violently, every breath of the family
- was despair. Our presence had silenced the cries of the children with
- the frost-bitten faces, but when we left, they again would tear the
- heart of their mother, their weak little voices calling for bread.
- No one could expect such fatalism from these starving little ones, that
- they should coolly and philosophically analyse the "economic necessity"
- that condemned their parents to a desperate battle with hunger. The only
- thing that could perform miracles here was a coin. The poor woman did
- not dare to believe that she actually held one in her hand. That which
- was to secure these unfortunates relief from death, at the same moment
- fostered elsewhere conceit, corruption and extravagance, and is being
- used for the conversion of heathen to brotherly love. The terrible sight
- of this mother and her little ones conjured up the heartlessness and
- emptiness of all philanthropy and charity for dumb misery. Greatest of
- all social crimes, that makes the possibility of stilling the hunger of
- the little children dependent on money.
- One morning Hauptmann and I went on foot to Reichenbach, where I
- introduced him to an old weaver, a Socialist, who had participated in
- the co-operative scheme proposed by Bismarck. The old man had much of
- interest to relate of this venture, that had been very meagerly assisted
- by the government. He said that the association could have survived, had
- it not been for the conspiracy of the manufacturers, who had a large
- capital at their disposal. The result of this, for the co-operative
- movement, was the closing of the market. At one time all the weaving
- products sent to the Leipzig Fair had to be transported back; a
- clandestine but effective boycott had made the sale thereof impossible.
- With much more gusto he related the days of Lassalle's agitation--that
- had brought life into the still limbs of the masses, a great change had
- seemed to be at hand. The wife of our old friend, too, had hoped for the
- change; but now, she remarked somewhat resigned, "we old people would
- rejoice if we were confident that the young generation would live to
- bring about the change."
- In this house we met a widow with a thirteen-year-old daughter.
- Hauptmann found the child very striking. She had beautiful, soft,
- golden-blond hair, deep-set eyes and a very delicate, pale complexion. I
- learned later that he sent her occasional gifts. And when I read
- "Hannele" I could not rid myself of the thought that the vision of this
- child from Reichenbach must have haunted him when he created this drama.
- That was my last outing with Hauptmann in the textile regions. A few
- months later I visited him at his home, located in the woods, close to
- the edge of a mountain.
- Still later, when I was serving a term of imprisonment at the
- Schweidnitzer prison for my sins in exercising too much freedom of the
- press, I was overjoyed one morning by the news that Hauptmann had sent
- me a box of books. Through his kindness, Gottfried Keller, Konrad
- Ferdinand Meyer and other authors have illumined many dreary days of my
- cell life.
- All the books reached me safely but the "Weavers," which had just been
- published at that time, and that I could not get hold of, in spite of
- every effort. The inspector had strict orders to consider that book as
- contraband.
- Every time I went into the office to change one book for another, I saw
- the "Weavers" on the table. The temptation to shove the book under my
- jacket at an opportune moment was very great and trying, but
- unfortunately the State Attorney had instilled the idea into the head of
- the inspector that it was a very dangerous work; he never took his eyes
- from it.
- Gerhart Hauptmann remained to the Schweidnitzer prison administration
- the most dangerous, prohibited author.
- [Illustration]
- DISAPPOINTED ECONOMISTS.
- Teachers and economists represent the bees as models of diligence.
- Behold how these little hard workers gather the honey together! Not a
- sign of obstinacy. They never insist on a certain number of hours for
- their workday, nor do they crave time for leisure, meditation or rest.
- Indeed, they employ all their energies, so that the owner of the beehive
- shall gain high profits.
- No matter if they gather a thousandfold as much honey as they can
- consume, they never seek iniquity. Man takes all their wealth from them,
- and in the spring, in the beautiful month of May, when the flower cups
- begin to fill, the little hustlers resume their work again without
- complaint and without murmur.
- Probably some economists regret that workmen are not endowed by nature
- with such an instinct for work as would let them feel nothing else but
- the desire to accumulate wealth for others.
- It is too bad, indeed, that house builders, railroad workers, miners,
- garment workers and farmers are creatures with thinking faculties. That
- they should be able to analyze, to compare, to draw conclusions is
- really very unfortunate for the "Captains of Industry."
- Next to the bee, the Asiatic coolie is the favorite ideal of the
- every-day economist. In one respect he surpasses the bee--he does not
- destroy drones.
- How smoothly everything might run along in this world of material
- supremacy, if only the workers were made up of such a desirable mixture
- as the bees and coolies.
- Fortunately, Fate hath not willed it so.
- [Illustration]
- VITAL ART.
- ANNY MALI HICKS.
- IN order to estimate the value of any movement, whether social,
- economic, ethical or esthetic, it must be studied in its relation and
- attitude to general progress. Its effectiveness should be judged by what
- it contributes to the growth of the universal conscience. That "no man
- liveth unto himself alone" is never so true as now, because now it is
- more generally realized. Therefore, any expression which concerns itself
- solely with its own special field of action finds itself soon set aside,
- and presently becoming divorced from reality, ends as a sporadic type.
- Any expression, however, which responds to the larger life gains a
- vitality which insures its continuance.
- Thus, the effort to apply certain truths not new in themselves, is a
- tendency to work in harmony with progress. The effort to apply
- principle, however imperfectly expressed, is important, not because of
- its results, but because of the desire to relate theory and action in a
- conduct of life. Almost every type of expression is undergoing its phase
- of application. Esthetics have somewhat aligned themselves to the
- others, but at last there is a movement, known as the arts and crafts
- movement, more properly called applied esthetics, which is the effort to
- relate art to life. The old banality, "Art for Art's sake," is obsolete,
- and the vital meaning of art is in a more rational and beautiful
- expression of life, as it were, the continent art of living well.
- This is the ideal and educational aspect of applied esthetics. Within
- the limits of its exclusive circle and within the radius of its special
- activities there is a trend to contentment with the production of
- objects of "worth and virtue." The object of luxury, which in fact has
- no vital meaning to either the producer or consumer. Were the production
- of such things to be its only aim, it would soon defeat its own end. But
- this movement has in reality wider and more democratic ideals. Because
- of its power to stimulate self-expression and the creative impulses, its
- greatest and most vital influence is more social than artistic. It
- principally concerns itself with the desire of the worker to express in
- his work whatever impulse for beauty may be his. There is no surer way
- of feeling the pressure of present economic conditions. The value of
- applied esthetics is as a medicine to stir up social unrest and
- discontent. Its keynote is self-expression, and it is when men and women
- begin to think and act for themselves that they most keenly feel social
- and economic restrictions, and are made to suffer under them. But if
- suffering is necessary to growth, let us have it and have it over with
- by all means. No sane being will stand much of it without making an
- effort to get at its cause. It has been said that the most important
- part of progress is to make people think; it is vastly more important
- that they should feel. The average individual is not discontented with
- his surroundings, else he would go to work to change them. As a product
- of them he is benumbed by their mechanical influence, and consequently
- expresses himself within their limits. He is the mouthpiece of existing
- conditions, and, accordingly, acts in law-abiding fashion.
- The larger emotional life, or inner social impulse emanates from those
- pioneers who, living beyond existing conditions, are the dynamics of
- society. Through them life pushes onward. The inner impulse becomes
- public opinion, public opinion becomes custom, custom crystallizes into
- law. Now the fresh impulse is needed for new growth; where shall it be
- sought if not in the expression of the emotional life? What form shall
- the expression take unless it be the purest and most spontaneous form of
- art, which is without purpose other than the expression of an impulse?
- This alone fosters the growth of the emotions.
- Art, like justice, has many crimes committed in its name, and much
- called so that is merely a methodical and imitative performance. It is
- in no wise that spontaneous expression of life which, coming simply and
- directly as an impulse, takes a decorative or applied form. All the
- beginnings of art grew up in this way. In primitive peoples it is the
- first expression of emotional life, which comes after the material need
- is satisfied. The savage makes his spade or fish spear from the
- necessity of physical preservation. Thus from the joy of living he
- applies to it his feeling for beauty.
- The earliest forms of art were all applied. Stone carving was applied to
- architecture, thus colored stones, called mosaics, as wall decorations;
- from these to the fresco; from the fresco to the pictorial form of
- painting. To-day the final degeneration of art is in the easel picture,
- which as an object detached and disassociated from its surroundings,
- takes refuge in the story-telling phase to justify its _raison d'être_.
- But, alas for the easel picture! alas, also, for the usual illustration,
- without which most literature would be so difficult to understand. In
- each case the one is there to help out the other's deficiency. Two
- important expressions of art, in a state of insubordination. It is the
- opera over again, where music and drama keep up an undignified race for
- prominence. Supposing an illustration were decorative in character
- echoing in a minor manner the suggested theme, would that not be a
- fitting background for the story-telling art? The Greeks knew very well
- what they were about when they introduced the relatively subordinate but
- decoratively important chorus into their dramas. This as well expresses
- their sense of relative proportion as does their sculpture and
- architecture.
- What is decorative art, if not a sense of beauty applied to objects of
- use? That these need the emotional element as well as their element of
- service is as essential as the life breath in the body. It is the spark
- of divine fire which relates the actual to the ideal, resulting in the
- reality. It removes from our surroundings any influence which is solely
- mechanical. Applied art is alike because of its association with that
- which is necessary to life.
- The test is necessity, not alone the physical, but likewise the
- emotional necessity, for all sides of our nature must be developed if
- life is to have full meaning and come to its maturity. The influence of
- applied esthetics is more vital because it is unconsciously absorbed
- through constant association. Imagine surroundings where everything
- which did not have a distinct use were eliminated and where everything
- else was distinctly fitted to its use. If this were put into practice in
- the usual household, a certain simplicity would be the result, to say
- the least. Most things with which we surround ourselves are neither
- useful nor beautiful. They are either so absurdly over-ornamented as to
- have their usefulness completely impaired, or else they are the usual
- mechanical device equally complicated and hideous. Ornament is usually
- an anomaly, added to cover structural defect. If the relation of the
- parts to the whole is perfect, beauty is there. But being accustomed to
- the over-ornamented and wholly mechanical, we do not resent their
- presence. For what, indeed, is habit not responsible? Even such innocent
- objects as pictures hang on our walls until they are scarcely noticed by
- us. Why not change them to suit our moods? Why not, indeed? There are so
- many of them, in the first place--and one remembers the time and
- trouble, even the family dissension which it took to hang them. But no
- one cares much, no one is alive enough to care much--the economic
- struggle which deadens our other senses is responsible for this also.
- No unit of the social body can disentangle itself from existing
- conditions. Each is affected by all its influences. Some are more, some
- less, some are so much a part that they are not conscious. These last
- also suffer, but without knowing why. Vital education would show them.
- But the factory system pervades the school and art school as well as the
- factory.
- What if the underlying force of education were spontaneous expression,
- instead of the limited method or system? The cry of the teacher is
- always, "It is very well to be spontaneous, but we must deal with the
- child _en masse_." The remedy for that is simple, because there is no
- real necessity to deal with children _en masse_. It is so much easier to
- apply the same system to each varied unit of a mass than to discover and
- help the individual expression of each. The basis of vital art, of vital
- education, is self-expression; from it and through it comes
- self-control. Self-repression is as socially uneconomic as jails and
- standing armies. If, instead of building prisons where human life is
- entombed, libraries where literature moulds, museums where art becomes
- archaic, why not establish centers of education, where spontaneous
- expression is encouraged, and where the soul, mind, and hand are
- simultaneously developed.
- Think of a state where each individual working out from its own
- standpoint, truly without hypocrisy, would contribute his quota of
- individual life to the life of the whole. Pleasing himself in his work
- without fear. Then would come the true democracy, possible only under
- just economic conditions, where each has equal opportunity for
- self-expression. Then can the higher emotional life develop necessary to
- all human growth.
- [Illustration]
- KRISTOFER HANSTEEN.
- By VOLTAIRINE DE CLEYRE.
- "OF the earth, unearthly--"
- The sentence remained unfinished as I had written it two years and a
- half ago when Disease laid its hand on me, and all my MSS. ended in a
- dash. It was a description of Kristofer Hansteen, an explanation of his
- work in Norway. And now that I am ready to pick up the thread of life
- again, I read that he is dead--of the earth no more, he who hardly ever
- belonged to it. At this moment the most insistent memory I have of that
- delicate, half-aërial personality are the words: "When the doctors told
- me that I might perhaps not live longer than spring, I thought: 'If I
- die, what will become of Anarchism in Norway?'" He had no other idea of
- his meaning in life than this.
- Somewhere fluctuant in my memory runs broken music--you have heard
- it?--"an ineffectual angel, beating his luminous wings within the
- void,"--something like that,--words descriptive of Shelley--they haunt
- me whenever I would recall Kristofer Hansteen. Perhaps to those who had
- known him in his youth, before his body was consumed like a half-spent
- taper, he might have seemed less spirit-like; but when I met him, three
- years ago this coming August, his eyes were already burning with
- ethereal fires, the pallor of waste was on the high, fine forehead, the
- cough racked him constantly, and there was upon the whole being the
- unnameable evanescence of the autumn leaf; only--his autumn came in
- summer.
- The utter incapacity of the man before the common, practical
- requirements of life would have been irritating to ordinary individuals.
- The getting of a meal or the clothing of the body with reference to the
- weather, were things that he thought of vaguely, uncomfortably, only
- with forced attention. What he saw clearly, entranced by the vision, was
- the future--the free future. He had been touched by the wan wizard of
- Olive Schreiner's Dream of Wild Bees, and "the ideal was real to him."
- The things about him, other people's realities, were shadows--oppressive
- shadows, indeed, but they did not concern him deeply. It was the great
- currents of life he saw as real things, and among all the confusion of
- world-movements he could trace the shining stream that ran towards
- liberty; and with his hectic face and burning eyes he followed it, torn
- by the cough and parched by the fever.
- The Hansteens are a well-known family in Norway, clever and often
- eccentric, Kristofer's aunt, Aosta Hansteen, at the time of my visit an
- old lady over eighty, having fought many a battle for the equality of
- woman both in Norway and America. Artist, linguist, and literary woman
- of marked ability, but, after the manner of her cotemporaries, rather
- outlandish and even outrageous in her attacks on masculine prerogative,
- she is a target for satirists and wits, few of whom, however, approach
- her virility of intellect. Her father, Kristofer's grandfather, was an
- astronomer and mathematician. In his youth Kristofer had gone afoot
- through the "dals" of Norway, and when he took me through the art
- galleries of Kristiania he was a most interesting guide, through his
- actual acquaintance with the scenes and the characters of the dalesmen
- depicted. He knew the lights upon the snow and rocks, just what time of
- the year shone on the leaves, where the wood-paths wound, the dim
- glories of the mist upon the fjords, the mountain stairways in their
- craggy walls, and the veiled colors of the summer midnight. And he knew
- the development of Norwegian art life and literary life, as one who
- wanders always in those paths, mysteriously lit.
- Our hours of fraternization were few but memorable. He was a frequent
- visitor at the house of Olav Kringen, the editor of the daily Social
- Democrat, a big, kindly Norseman, who had remembered me from America,
- and who had defended me in his paper against the ridiculous charge in
- the ordinary press that I had come there to assassinate Kaiser Wilhelm.
- Through the efforts of Hansteen and the kindliness and largemindedness
- of Kringen and his Socialistic comrades, I spoke before the Socialistic
- League of Youth in their hall in Kristiania. The hall was crowded, over
- eight hundred being present, and there was some little money in excess
- of expenses, which was given to me. I shared it with Hansteen, and he
- looked up with a bright flash in his dark eyes: "Now," said he, "'Til
- Frihet' will come out one month sooner." "Til Frihet" (Towards Freedom)
- was his paper; and would you know how it came out? He set it up in his
- free moments, he did the mechanical work; and then, being too poor to
- pay for its delivery through the post, except the few copies that were
- sent abroad, he took it from house to house himself, over the hills of
- Kristiania!--he, a consumptive, the cough rending him!
- There was a driving rain the night I left the city; he wore no rubbers
- or gum-coat. I was in hopes that he might think the propaganda deserved
- that its one active worker should get a pair of rubbers, since he must
- carry papers through the rain. I reminded him that he should keep his
- feet dry; he only glanced at them as if they were no concern of his,
- and--"'Til Frihet' will come out one month sooner."
- It was in "Til Frihet" that he had been guilty of high treason. It
- happened once that King Oscar, in temporary retirement from public
- king-business, had left over to the Crown Prince the execution of
- certain matters, which according to the "Ground Law" of Norway could not
- be so left; whereupon Comrade Hansteen printed an editorial saying,
- "Oscar has broken the ground-law, and there is no more a King in
- Norway." For this he was charged with high treason, and to escape
- imprisonment he went to England, where he remained about a year among
- the London comrades. On his return, there was some threat of carrying
- out the prosecution, but, probably to avoid wider publication of the
- king's "treason," the matter was dropped. Previous to that Comrade
- Hansteen had had experience of prison life. In a May-day procession,
- ostensibly to include all labor reform or revolutionary parties, he,
- declaring that Anarchists should be given place too, marched, carrying a
- red flag. The chief of police directed a subordinate to take the flag
- away from him. Easily enough done, but not, as an evidence of unwilling
- submission, before he had struck the official in the face with his hand.
- That little hand, weak and delicate as a woman's! An ordinary man would
- have pushed it aside like a feather and thought no more of it; but the
- official paid tribute to the big will behind the puny flesh by
- sentencing him to seven months in prison.
- My ignorance of Norwegian prevents my giving any adequate idea of his
- work. I know he was the author of a little pamphlet, "Det frie samfund"
- (Free Society), and that he had translated and published one of
- Krapotkin's works (whether "The State" or "The Conquest of Bread," I do
- not now remember), which he had issued in a series of instalments,
- intended ultimately to be bound together. As I recall the deep
- earnestness of his face in speaking of the difficulties he had had in
- getting it out, and the unsolved difficulties still facing its
- completion, I find myself wanting to pray that he saw that precious
- labor finished. It was so much to him. And I prophecy that the time will
- come when young Norwegians will treasure up those sacrificial fragments
- as dearer than any richer and fuller literature. They are the heart's
- blood of a dying man--the harbinger of the anarchistic movement in
- Norway.
- I cannot say good-bye to him forever without a word concerning his
- personal existence, as incomprehensible to the practical as his social
- dreams perhaps. He had strong love of home and children; and once he
- said, the tone touched with melancholy: "It used to pain me to think
- that I should die and have no son; but now I am contented that I have no
- son." One knew it was the wrenching cough that made him "contented." A
- practical man would have rejoiced to be guiltless of transmitting the
- inheritance, but one could see the dreamer grieved. His eyes would grow
- humid looking at his little daughters; and indeed they were bright,
- beautiful children, though not like him. In his early wanderings he had
- met and loved a simple peasant woman, unlettered, but with sound and
- serviceable common sense, and with the beauty of perfect honesty shining
- in her big Norse-blue eyes. It was then and it is now a wonder to me how
- in that mystical brain of his, replete with abstractions,
- generalizations, idealizations, he placed his love for wife and
- children; strong and tender as it was, one could appreciate at once that
- he had no sense of the burden of practical life which his wife seemed to
- have taken up as naturally hers. The whole world of the imagination
- wherein he so constantly moved seemed entirely without her ken, yet this
- did not seem to trouble either. Nor did the fact that his unworldliness
- doubled her portion of responsibility seem to cause him to reflect that
- she was kept too busy, like Martha of old, to "choose that good part"
- which he had chosen. Thinking of it now, still with some sense of
- puzzlement, I believe his love for human creatures, and especially
- within the family relation, were of that deep, still, yearning kind we
- feel towards the woods and hills of home; the silent, unobtrusive
- presence fills us with rest and certainty, and we are all unease when we
- miss it; yet we take it for granted, and seldom dwell upon it in our
- active thoughts, or realize the part it plays in us; it belongs to the
- dark wells of being.
- Dear, falling star of the northland,--so you have gone out, and--it was
- not yet morning.
- [Illustration]
- FIFTY YEARS OF BAD LUCK.
- By SADAKICHI HARTMANN.
- EVERY occupant of the ramshackle, old-fashioned studio building on
- Broadway knew old Melville, the landscape painter, who had roughed life
- within its dilapidated walls for more than a score of years. In former
- years the studio building had been quite fashionable and respectable;
- there is hardly a painter of reputation in New York to-day who has not,
- once in his life, occupied a room on the top floor. But in these days of
- "modern improvements," of running water and steam heat, of elevators and
- electric lights, it has lost its standing and is inhabited by a rather
- precarious and suspicious clan of pseudo artists, mountebanks who
- vegetate on the outskirts of art; "buckeye painters," who turn out a
- dozen 20x30 canvases a day for the export trade to Africa and Australia;
- unscrupulous fabricators of Corots and Daubignys, picture drummers who
- make such rascality profitable, illustrators of advertising pamphlets,
- and so-called frescoe painters, who ornament ceilings with sentimental
- clouds, with two or three cupids thrown in according to the price they
- extort from ignorant parvenues.
- And yet, no matter on what by-roads these soldiers of fortune wandered
- to earn their dubious livelihood, they all respected the white-bearded
- tenant, in his shabby gray suit, a suit which he wore at all seasons,
- and which time seemed to have treated just as unkindly as the bent and
- emaciated form of its wearer. Old Melville gave offense to nobody, and
- always had a pleasant word for everybody, but, as he was not talkative,
- and the other tenants were too busy to bother an old man painting,
- nobody knew much about his mode of living, the standard of his art, or
- his past history.
- Very few had ever entered his studio--he had neither patrons nor
- intimate friends--and very likely they would not have enjoyed their
- visit. A peculiar gloomy atmosphere pervaded the room, almost sickening
- in its frugality, and as its skylight lay north, the sun never touched
- it. It had something chilly and uncanny about it even in summer. The
- floor was bare, furniture there was none, except an old worn-out kitchen
- table and chair, an easel and an old box which served as a bookcase for
- a few ragged unbound volumes. The comfort of a bed was an unknown luxury
- to him; he slept on the floor, on a mattress which in daytime was hidden
- with his scant wardrobe and cooking utensils in a corner, behind a gray
- faded curtain. His pictures, simple pieces of canvas with tattered
- edges, nailed to the four walls, leaving hardly an inch uncovered, were
- the only decoration and furnished a most peculiar wall paper, which
- heightened the dreariness of the room.
- There was after all a good deal of merit to old Melville's landscapes;
- on an average they were much better than many of those hung "on the
- line"; the only disagreeable quality was their sombreness of tone. He
- invariably got them hopelessly muddy in color, despite their resembling
- the color dreams of a young impressionist painter at the start. He
- worked at them so long until they became blurred and blotchy, dark like
- his life, a sad reflection of his unprofitable career.
- It was nearly thirty years ago that he had left his native town and had
- come to New York as a boy of sixteen. He already knew something of life
- then; at an early age he had been obliged to help to support his family,
- and had served an apprenticeship as printer and sign painter. In New
- York he determined to become an artist: a landscape painter, who would
- paint sunshine as had never been done before; but many years elapsed
- before he could pursue his ambition. Any amount of obstacles were put in
- his way. He had married and had children, and could only paint in
- leisure hours, all his other time being taken up in the endeavor to
- provide for his family, by inferior work, inferior decoration, etc. Not
- before years of incessant vicissitudes, heart-rending domestic troubles
- and sorrow, not before his poor wife had died of consumption--that awful
- day when he had to run about all day in the rain to borrow money enough
- to bury her!--and his children had been put in a charitable institution,
- he took up painting as a profession. Then the hard times, which are
- proverbial with struggling artists without means, began; only they were
- easier to bear, as he was suffering alone. In days of dispossess and
- starvation he had at least his art to console him, and he remained true
- to her in all those years of misery, and never degraded himself again to
- "pot boiling." In hours of despair, he also tried his hand at it, but
- simply "couldn't do it." Now and then he had a stroke of luck, a
- moderate success, but popularity and fame would not come. His pictures
- were steadily refused by the Academy. Every year he made a new effort,
- but in vain.
- One day, when one of his large pictures was exhibited in the show window
- of a fashionable art store, a rich collector stepped out of his carriage
- and, entering the store, asked, "How much do you want for the Inness you
- have in the window?" The picture dealer answered, "It is no Inness, but
- just as good a piece of work." "No Inness!" ejaculated the man who
- wanted to buy a name, "then I don't want it," and abruptly left the
- store. This event, trifling as it was, threw a pale halo over old
- Melville's whole life and gave him strength to overcome many a severe
- trial. He hoped on, persevering in his grim fight for existence, despite
- failures and humiliation.
- But the years passed by, and he still sat there in his studio, and in
- its emptiness, its walls covered with his dark and unsold pictures,
- whose tone seemed to grow darker with every year. He was one of those
- sensitive beings who continually suffer from the harsh realities of
- life, who are as naive as children, and therefore as easily
- disillusionized, and nevertheless cannot renounce their belief in the
- ideal. Not a day passed that he did not sit several hours before his
- easel, trying to paint sunshine as it really is. Nobody in this busy
- world, however, took notice of his efforts or comprehended the pathos of
- old Melville's life, those fifty years of bad luck. And yet such
- martyr-like devotion to art, such a glorious lifelong struggle against
- fate and circumstances, is so rare in modern times that one might expect
- the whole world to talk about it in astonished admiration.
- And how did he manage to get along all this time, these twenty-five
- years or more, since "pot boiling" had become an unpardonable crime to
- him? Now and then he borrowed a dollar or so, that lasted him for quite
- a while, as his wants were almost reduced to nothing. Of course he was
- always behind in the rent, but as he sometimes sold a sketch, he managed
- somehow to keep his studio. He did not eat more than once a day. "Too
- much eating is of no use," he consoled himself, and in this respect he
- had many colleagues in the fraternity of art, as more than one-half of
- our artists do not manage to get enough to eat, which fact may explain
- why many paint so insipidly.
- A few days before his sudden death, an old gentleman, a chance
- acquaintance, was talking with him about the muddy coloring of the
- pictures. Old Melville's eyes wandered over the four walls representing
- a life's work; at first he ardently argued in their favor, but finally
- gave in that they, perhaps, were a little bit too dark. "Why do you not
- take a studio where you can see real sunlight; there is one empty now
- with Southern exposure, right in this building." Old Melville shook his
- head, murmuring some excuses of "can't afford it," of "being used so
- long to this one," but his visitor insisted, "he would pay the rent and
- fix matters with the landlord." The good soul did not understand much
- about painting, about tones and values, but merely wanted to get the old
- man into a more cheerful room.
- It was difficult for old Melville to take leave of his studio, in which
- he had seen a quarter of a century roll by, which he had entered as a
- man in the best years of his life, and now left as an old man; but when
- he had moved into the new room, the walls of which were an agreeable
- gray, he exclaimed, "How nice and light!" After arranging his few
- earthly possessions, he brought out a new canvas, opened a side window,
- sat down once more before his easel, and gazed intently at the sunshine
- streaming in and playing on the newly painted and varnished floor.
- For years he had wielded the brush every day, but on this day he somehow
- could not paint; he could not find the right harmony. He at first
- attributed it to a cold which he had contracted, but later on, irritated
- and somewhat frightened, he mumbled to himself, "I fear I can't paint in
- this room." And thus he sat musing at his easel with the blank canvas
- before him, blank as once his youth had been, full of possibilities of a
- successful career, when suddenly an inspiration came upon him. He saw
- before him the orchard of his father's little Canadian farm, with the
- old apple trees in bloom, bathed in the sweet and subtle sunlight of
- spring, a scene that for years had lain hidden among the faint, almost
- forgotten memories of his childhood days, but now by some trick of
- memory was conjured up with appalling distinctiveness. This he wished to
- realize in paint, and should he perish in the effort!
- Feverishly he seized his palette and brushes, for hours and hours he
- painted--the sunlight had long vanished from his studio floor, a chill
- wind blew through the open window and played with his gray locks--and
- when the brush at last glided from his hand he had accomplished his
- lifelong aim--he had painted sunshine.
- Slowly he sank back in his chair, the arms hanging limp at his sides,
- and his chin falling on his chest, an attitude a painter might adopt
- gazing at a masterpiece he had just accomplished--in this case old
- Melville's painting hours were over for evermore, his eyes could no
- longer see the colors of this world. Like a soldier he had died at his
- post of duty, and serene happiness over this final victory lay on his
- features. In every life some ideal happiness is hidden, which may be
- found, and for which we should prospect all our days. Old Melville had
- attained his little bit of sunshine rather late in life, but he had
- called it his own, at least for however short a moment, while most of us
- others, whom life treats less scurvily, blinded by foolish and selfish
- desire, cannot even succeed in grasping material happiness, which
- crosses our roads quite often enough and stands at times right near us,
- without being recognized.
- And the fate of old Melville's pictures? Who knows if they may not some
- day, when their colors have mellowed, be discovered in some garret, and
- re-enter the art world in a more dignified manner? True enough, they
- will not set the world on fire, yet they may be at least appreciated as
- the sincere efforts of a man who loved his art above all else, and,
- despite deficiencies, had a keen understanding for nature and
- considerable ability to express it. Whatever their future may be, his
- work has not been in vain. It is the cruel law of human life that
- hundreds of men must drudge their whole lives away in order that one may
- succeed, not a bit better than they; in the same way in art, hundreds of
- talents must struggle and suffer in vain that one may reach the
- cloud-wrapped summit of popularity and fame. And that road is sure to
- lead over many corpses, and many of the nobler altruistic qualities of
- man have to be left far behind in the valley of unknown names.
- Life was brutal to you, old Melville! But this way or that way, what is
- the difference?
- [Illustration]
- There was a time when in the name of God and of true faith in Him men
- were destroyed, tortured, executed, beaten in scores and hundreds of
- thousands. We, from the height of our attainments, now look down upon
- the men who did these things.
- But we are wrong. Amongst us there are many such people, the difference
- lies only here--that those men of old did these things then in the name
- of God, and of His true service, whilst now those who commit the same
- evil amongst us do so in the name of "the people," "for the true service
- of the people."--_Leo Tolstoy._
- * * * * *
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- +History of the French Revolution.+ (An excellent work for students. It
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