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- Project Gutenberg's Mother Earth, Vol. 1 No. 4, June 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. 4, June 1906
- Monthly Magazine Devoted to Social Science and Literature
- Author: Various
- Editor: Emma Goldman
- Release Date: November 27, 2008 [EBook #27341]
- Language: English
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MOTHER EARTH, JUNE 1906 ***
- Produced by Fritz Ohrenschall, Martin Pettit and the Online
- Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
- +-------------------------------------------------+
- |Transcriber's note: |
- | |
- |Obvious typographical errors have been corrected |
- +-------------------------------------------------+
- Vol. I. JUNE, 1906 No. 4
- MOTHER EARTH
- [Illustration]
- CONTENTS
- PAGE
- Mrs. Grundy VIROQUA DANIELS 1
- A Greeting ALEXANDER BERKMAN 3
- Henrik Ibsen M. B. 6
- Observations and Comments 8
- A Letter EMMA GOLDMAN 13
- Libertarian Instruction EMILE JANVION 14
- The Antichrist FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE 15
- Brain Work and Manual Work PETER KROPOTKIN 21
- Motherhood and Marriage HENRIETTE FUERTH 30
- Object Lesson for Advocates of Governmental
- Control ARTHUR G. EVERETT, N--M. 33
- The Genius of War JOHN FRANCIS VALTER 36
- Dignity Speaks 36
- Paternalistic Government (CONTINUATION)
- THEODORE SCHROEDER 38
- Aim and Tactics of the Trade-Union Movement
- MAX BAGINSKI 44
- Refined Cruelty ANNA MERCY 50
- "The Jungle" VERITAS 53
- The Game is Up SADAKICHI HARTMANN 57
- 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.
- Entered as second-class matter April 9, 1906, at the post office
- at New York, N. Y., under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879.
- Vol. I JUNE, 1906 No. 4
- MRS. GRUNDY.
- By VIROQUA DANIELS.
- _Her will is law. She holds despotic sway.
- Her wont has been to show the narrow way
- Wherein must tread the world, the bright, the brave,
- From infancy to dotard's gloomy grave._
- _"Obey! Obey!" with sternness she commands
- The high, the low, in great or little lands.
- She folds us all within her ample gown.
- A forward act is met with angry frown._
- _The lisping babes are taught her local speech;
- Her gait to walk; her blessings to beseech.
- They laugh or cry, as Mistress says they may,--
- In everything the little tots obey._
- _The youth know naught save Mrs. Grundy's whims.
- They play her games. They sing her holy hymns.
- They question not; accept both truth and fiction,_
- _(The_ OLD _is right, within her jurisdiction!)._
- _Maid, matron, man unto her meekly bow.
- She with contempt or ridicule may cow.
- They dare not speak, or dress, or love, or hate,
- At variance with the program on her slate._
- _Her subtle smile, e'en men to thinkers grown,
- Are loath to lose; before its charm they're prone.
- With great ado, they publicly conform--
- Vain, cowards, vain; revolt_ MUST _raise a storm!_
- _The "indiscreet," when hidden from her sight,
- Attempt to live as they consider "right."
- Lo! Walls have ears! The loyal everywhere
- The searchlight turn, and loudly shout, "Beware!"_
- _In tyranny the Mistress is supreme.
- "Obedience," that is her endless theme.
- Al countries o'er, in city, town and glen,
- Her aid is sought by bosses over men._
- _Of Greed, her brain is cunningly devised.
- From Ignorance, her bulky body's sized.
- When at her ease, she acts as judge and jury.
- But she's the Mob when 'roused to fighting fury._
- _Dame Grundy is, by far, the fiercest foe
- To ev'ry kind of progress, that we know.
- So Freedom is, to her, a poison thing.
- Who heralds it, he must her death knell ring._
- [Illustration]
- A GREETING.
- By ALEXANDER BERKMAN.
- Dear Friends:--
- I am happy, inexpressibly happy to be in your midst again, after an
- absence of fourteen long years, passed amid the horrors and darkness of
- my Pennsylvania nightmare. * * * Methinks the days of miracles are not
- past. They say that nineteen hundred years ago a man was raised from the
- dead after having been buried for three days. They call it a great
- miracle. But I think the resurrection from the peaceful slumber of a
- three days' grave is not nearly so miraculous as the actual coming back
- to life from a living death of fourteen years duration;--'tis the
- twentieth century resurrection, not based on ignorant credulity, nor
- assisted by any Oriental jugglery. No travelers ever return, the poets
- say, from the Land of Shades beyond the river Styx--and may be it is a
- good thing for them that they don't--but you can see that there is an
- occasional exception even to that rule, for I have just returned from a
- hell, the like of which, for human brutality and fiendish barbarity, is
- not to be found even in the fire-and-brimstone creeds of our loving
- Christians.
- It was a moment of supreme joy when I felt the heavy chains, that had
- bound me so long, give way with the final clang of the iron doors behind
- me and I suddenly found myself transported, as it were, from the dreary
- night of my prison-existence into the warm sunshine of the living day;
- and then, as I breathed the free air of the beautiful May morning--my
- first breath of freedom in fourteen years--it seemed to me as if a
- beautiful nature had waved her magic wand and marshalled her most
- alluring charms to welcome me into the world again; the sun, bathed in a
- sea of sapphire, seemed to shed his golden-winged caresses upon me;
- beautiful birds were intoning a sweet paean of joyful welcome;
- green-clad trees on the banks of the Allegheny were stretching out to me
- a hundred emerald arms, and every little blade of grass seemed to lift
- its head and nod to me, and all Nature whispered sweetly "Welcome Home!"
- It was Nature's beautiful Springtime, the reawakening of Life, and Joy,
- and Hope, and the spirit of Springtime dwelt in my heart.
- I had been told before I left the prison that the world had changed so
- much during my long confinement that I would practically come back into
- a new and different world. I hoped it were true. For at the time when I
- retired from the world, or rather when I _was_ retired from the
- world--that was a hundred years ago, for it happened in the nineteenth
- century--at that time, I say, the footsteps of the world were faltering
- under the heavy cross of oppression, injustice and misery, and I could
- hear the anguish-cry of the suffering multitudes, even above the
- clanking of my own heavy chains. * * * But all that is different now--I
- thought as I left the prison--for have I not been told that the world
- had changed, changed so much that, as they put it, "its own mother
- wouldn't know it again." And that thought made me _doubly_ happy: happy
- at the recovery of my own liberty, and happy in the fond hope that I
- should find my own great joy mirrored in, and heightened by the
- happiness of my fellow-men.
- Then I began to look around, and indeed, I found the world changed; so
- changed, in fact, that I am now afraid to cross the street, lest
- lightning, in the shape of a horseless car, overtake me and strike me
- down; I also found a new race of beings, a race of red
- devils--automobiles you call them--and I have been told about the winged
- children of thought flying above our heads--talking through the air, you
- know, and sometimes also through the hat, perhaps--and here in New York
- you can ride on the ground, overground, above ground, underground, and
- without any ground at all.
- These and a thousand and one other inventions and discoveries have
- considerably changed the face of the world. But alas! its face _only_.
- For as I looked further, past the outer trappings, down into the heart
- of the world, I beheld the old, familiar, yet no less revolting sight of
- Mammon, enthroned upon a dais of bleeding hearts, and I saw the ruthless
- wheels of the social Juggernaut slowly crushing the beautiful form of
- liberty lying prostrate on the ground. * * * I saw men, women and
- children, without number, sacrificed on the altar of the capitalistic
- Moloch, and I beheld a race of pitiful creatures, stricken with the
- modern St. Vitus's dance at the shrine of the Golden Calf.
- With an aching heart I realized what I had been told in prison about
- the changed condition of the world was but a miserable myth, and my fond
- hope of returning into a new, regenerated world lay shattered at my
- feet....
- No, the world has not changed during my absence; I can find no
- improvement in the twentieth-century society over that of the
- nineteenth, and in truth, it is not capable of any real improvement, for
- this society is the product of a civilization so self-contradictory in
- its essential qualities, so stupendously absurd in its results, that the
- more we advance in this would-be civilization the less rational, the
- less human we become. Your twentieth-century civilization is fitly
- characterized by the fact that, paradoxical as it may seem, the more we
- produce, the less we have, and the richer we get, the poorer we are.
- Your pseudo-civilization is of that quality which defeats its own ends,
- so that notwithstanding the prodigious mechanical aids we possess in the
- production of all forms of wealth, the struggle for existence is more
- savage, more ferocious to-day than it has been ever since the dawn of
- our civilization.
- But what is the cause of all this, what is wrong with our society and
- our civilization?
- Simply this:--a lie can not prosper. Our whole social fabric, our
- boasted civilization rests on the foundations of a lie, a most gigantic
- lie--the religious, political and economic lie, a triune lie, from whose
- fertile womb has issued a world of corruption, evils, shams and
- unnameable crimes. There, denuded of its tinsel trappings, your
- civilization stands revealed in all the evil reality of its unadorned
- shame; and 'tis a ghastly sight, a mass of corruption, an ever-spreading
- cancer. Your false civilization is a disease, and capitalism is its most
- malignant form; 'tis the acute stage which is breeding into the world a
- race of cowards, weaklings and imbeciles; a race of mannikins, lacking
- the physical courage and mental initiative to think the thought and do
- the deed not inscribed in the book of practice; a race of pigmies,
- slaves to tradition and superstition, lacking all force of individuality
- and rushing, like wild maniacs, toward the treacherous eddies of that
- social cataclysm which has swallowed the far mightier and greater
- nations of the ancient world.
- It is because of these things that I address myself to you, fellow-men.
- Society has not changed during my absence, and yet, to be saved, it
- needs to be changed. It needs, above all, real men, men and women of
- originality and individuality; men and women, not afraid to brave the
- scornful contempt of the conventional mob, men and women brave enough to
- break from the ranks of custom and lead into new paths, men and women
- strong enough to smash the fatal social lock-step and lead us into new
- and happier ways.
- And because society has not changed, neither will I. Though the
- bloodthirsty hyena of the law has, in its wild revenge, despoiled me of
- the fourteen most precious blossoms in the garden of my life, yet I
- will, henceforth as heretofore, consecrate what days are left to me in
- the service of that grand ideal, the wonderful power of which has
- sustained me through those years of torture; and I will devote all my
- energies and whatever ability I may have to that noblest of all causes
- of a new, regenerated and free humanity; and it shall be more than my
- sufficient reward to know that I have added, if ever so little, in
- breaking the shackles of superstition, ignorance and tradition, and
- helped to turn the tide of society from the narrow lane of its blind
- selfishness and self-sufficient arrogance into the broad, open road
- leading toward a true civilization, to the new and brighter day of
- Freedom in Brotherhood.
- [Illustration]
- HENRIK IBSEN.
- M. B.
- I SHALL not attempt to confine him within the rigid lines of any
- literary circle; nor shall I press him into the narrow frame of school
- or party; nor stamp upon him the distinctive label of any particular
- ism. He would break such fetters; his free spirit, his great
- individuality would overflow the arbitrary confines of "the _sole_
- Truth," "the _only_ true principle." The waves of his soul would break
- down all artificial barriers and rush out to join the ever-moving
- currents of life.
- A seer has died.
- He carried the flaming torch of his art behind the scenes of society--he
- found there nothing but corruption. He tested the strength of our social
- foundations--its pillars shook: they were rotten.
- The rays of his genius penetrated the darkness of popular ideals; the
- hollow pretences of Philistinism filled his ardent soul with disgust,
- and pain. In this mood he wrote "The League of Youth," in which he
- exposed the pettiness of bourgeois aspirations and the poverty of their
- ideals.
- In "The Enemy of the People" Ibsen thunders his powerful protest against
- the democracy of stupidity, the tyrannous vulgarity of majority rule.
- Doctor Stockmann--that is Ibsen himself. How willing and eager the
- pigmies and yahoos would have been to stone him.
- "What shameless unconventionality, what shocking daring!" cried the
- Philistines when they beheld the characters portrayed in "Nora" (The
- Doll's House), "Wild Duck," and in "The Ghosts"--living pictures
- revealing all the evil hidden by the mask of "our sacred institutions,"
- "our holy hearthstone." In "Rosmersholm" Ibsen ignored even the
- inviolability of conscience; for there Ibsen showed how the sick
- conscience of Rosmer worked the ruin of Rebecca and himself, by robbing
- them of the joy of life.
- The moralists howled long and loud.
- "Has Ibsen no ideals? Does the accursed Midas-touch of his mind dissolve
- everything, one very Holy of Holies, into the ashes of nothing?"
- Thus spoke self-sufficient arrogance.
- But can one read "Brand" or "Peer Gynt" and ask such questions? No heart
- so overflowed with human yearning, no soul ever breathed grander, nobler
- ideals than Henrik Ibsen. True, he did not prostrate himself before the
- idols of the conventional mob, nor did his sacrificial fires burn on the
- altar of mediocrity and cretinism. He did not bow the proud head before
- the craven images that the State and Church have created for the
- subjugation of the masses. To Ibsen's free soul the morality of slaves
- was a nightmare.
- His ideal was Individuality, the development of character. He loved the
- man that was brave enough to be himself. He immeasurably hated all that
- was false; he abhorred all that was petty and small. He loved that true
- naturalness which, when most real, requires no effort.
- The most severe critic of Ibsen and his art was Ibsen himself. His
- attitude towards himself in his last work, "When We Dead Awaken," is
- that of the most unprejudiced judge.
- What is the result?
- We long for life; yet we are eternally chasing will-o'-the-wisps. We
- sacrifice ourselves for things which rob us of our Self. The castles we
- build prove houses made of cards, upon the first touch falling down.
- Instead of living, we philosophize. Our life is an esthetic counterfeit.
- A mind of great depth, a soul of prophetic vision has passed away; yet
- not without leaving its powerful impress--for Henrik Ibsen stood upon
- the heights, and from their loftiest peaks we beheld, with him, the
- heavy fogs of the present, and through the rifts we saw the bright rays
- of a new sun, the promise of the dawn of a freer, stronger Humanity.
- [Illustration]
- OBSERVATIONS AND COMMENTS.
- Schopenhauer's advice to ignore fools and knaves and not to speak to
- them, as the best method of keeping them at a distance, does not seem
- drastic enough in these days of the modern newspaper-reporter nuisance.
- One may throw them out of the house, nail all the doors and windows, and
- stuff up all key-holes; still he will come; he will slide down through
- the chimney, squeeze through the sewer-pipes--which, by the way, is the
- real field of activity of the journalistic profession.
- We Anarchists are usually poor business men, with a few "happy"
- exceptions, of course; still, we shall have to form an insurance company
- against the slugging system of the reporters.
- Alexander Berkman barely had a chance to breathe free air, when the
- newspaper scarecrows were let loose at his heels. Every
- suspicious-looking man, woman and child in New York was assailed as to
- Berkman's whereabouts, without avail. Finally these worthy gentlemen
- hit upon 210 East Thirteenth street--there the reporters made some
- miraculous discoveries. Two lonely hermits, utterly innocent of the ways
- of the world and the impertinence of reporters, were marked by the
- latter. They triumphed. Never before had they hit upon such simpletons,
- of whom they could so easily learn all the secrets of the fraternity of
- the Reds.
- "Is it not the custom of your clan to delegate every three days one of
- your members to take the life of some ruler?" they asked.
- One of the Reds smiled, knowingly. "Only one insignificant life in three
- days?! How little you know the Anarchists. I want you to understand,
- sirs, it is our wont to use just five minutes for each act, which means
- 864 lives in three days."
- This was more than the most hardened press detective could stand. They
- fled in terror.
- [Illustration]
- Carl Schurz, politician and career hunter by profession, died May 14th.
- He was met at the gate of Hell by the secretary of that institution with
- the following question, "Were you not one of the enthusiasts for the
- battle of freedom, in your young days?"
- "Yes," said Carl.
- "If the reports of my men are correct--and I am confident my men are
- more reliable than the majority of the newspaper men on your planet--you
- were even a Revolutionist?"
- Carl Schurz nodded.
- "And why have you thrown your ideals and convictions overboard?"
- "There was no money in them," Carl replied, sulkily.
- The Satanic Secretary nodded to one of his stokers, saying, "Add 5,000
- tons of hard coal to our fires. Here we have a man that sold his soul
- for money. He deserves to roast a thousand times more than the ordinary
- sinner."
- [Illustration]
- No one considers a thief the patron saint of honesty, nor is a liar
- expected to champion the truth. The hangman is not elected as president
- of a society for the preservation of human life; why, then, in the name
- of common sense, do people continue to see in the State the seat of
- justice and the patron saint of those whom it wrongs and outrages daily?
- If people would only look closer into the elements of the State, they
- would soon behold this trinity--the thief, the liar, and the hangman.
- [Illustration]
- Free love is condemned; prostitution flourishes. The moralist, who is
- the best patron of the dens of prostitution, loudly proclaims the
- sanctity and purity of monogamy. The free expression of life's greatest
- force--love--must never be tolerated. On the other hand, it is perfectly
- respectable to receive a large sum of money from a millionaire
- father-in-law for marrying his daughter.
- [Illustration]
- Rudolph von Jhering, one of the most distinguished theoreticians of
- jurisprudence in Europe, wrote, many years ago, "The way in which one
- utilizes his wealth is the best criterion of his character and degree of
- culture. The purpose that prompts the investment of his money is the
- safest characterization of him. The accounts of expenditures speak
- louder of a man's true nature than his diary." How well these words
- apply to the richest of the rich and to their methods of disposing of
- their capital!
- Take philanthropy, for instance, with its loud and common display. How
- it humiliates those that receive, and how it overestimates the
- importance of those that give.
- Philanthropy that steals in large quantities and returns of its bounty
- in medicine drops, that snatches the last bite from the mouth of the
- people and graciously gives them a few crumbs or a gnawed bone!
- Again, philanthropy as a money mania--in one instance it feeds the
- clergy on fat salaries, so that they might proclaim the virtue of
- self-denial, sobriety and prudence; in another instance it builds Sunday
- schools for young numbskulls and political aspirants who pretend to
- listen to the commonplace discourse about our Father in Heaven who gives
- every true Christian an opportunity to make money; rather would these
- milk-sops appreciate the advice of the young nabob as to how to turn a
- hundred-dollar bill into a thousand.
- Philanthropy, establishing scientific societies for the investigation of
- the mode of life of fleas, or philanthropy excremating libraries,
- maintaining missionaries in China or fostering the research of breeding
- sea horses.
- Mrs. Vanderbilt has the heels of her shoes set in diamonds, while
- another great philanthropist has established a pension for aged parrots.
- Indeed, the stupidity and sad lack of imagination of our philanthropists
- are pitiful. However, when one realizes that they are responsible for
- the distress, the poverty, and despair of the great masses of humanity,
- pity turns into anger and disgust with a society that will endure it
- all.
- [Illustration]
- The Chicago papers report a blood-curdling story, which has affected the
- Philistines like red affects a turkey. Knowing the keen sense of humor
- of our readers, we herewith reprint the story:
- "Treason and blasphemy as an outburst of Anarchism all but broke up a
- meeting held last night in the Masonic Temple under the auspices of the
- Spencer-Whitman Center, at which the subject of "Crime in Chicago" was
- discussed by various speakers. The Rev. John Roach Straton, pastor of
- the Second Baptist Church, was in the midst of the discourse detailing
- his theories with reference to the subject in hand when a voice from the
- doorway shouted out a blasphemous expression.
- The cry was greeted by hisses, but it was only a moment later that the
- same voice called:
- "Down with America! Up with Anarchy!"
- There was a rush for the door. A tall young man was the first to reach
- the offender, who is said to have been Carl Havel, associate editor of a
- German newspaper. There was a blow and the blasphemer reeled and fell
- against the wall. At the same moment a man, said to be Terence Carlin, a
- member of a prominent Chicago family, struck Havel's assailant. He in
- turn was seized by Parker H. Sercombe, chairman of the meeting, and a
- man who gave the name of Ben Bansig.
- The party struggled back and forth in the doorway, and the disturbers
- were forced back to an ante-room. Blows were struck in a lusty fashion
- and cries of "Police!" "They're murdering them!" "Help!" rang out.
- Finally the two disturbers made as if to get out, and the arrival of a
- watchman in uniform quieted them and their pursuers. It was, however,
- with ill grace that the disturbers of the meeting were allowed to leave,
- and as they passed through a door, cursing the law, the country, and
- God, a girl, still in her teens, broke through the crowd and turning to
- Havel, said:
- "That's all right, father."
- Ben Bansig saved Chicago,--there can be no dispute about that. As to
- Sercombe, the editor of _To-Morrow_, he deserves recognition. I suggest
- that he be awarded a tooth brush at the expense of City Hall.
- Our three friends, Terence Carlin, Havel, Mary Latter--who, as I can
- authentically prove, is not the daughter of Hyppolite Havel--can console
- themselves with the fact that their protest has done the names of
- Whitman and Spencer more honor than the gas of the Baptist preacher.
- [Illustration]
- That the suspiciously-red noses of the newspaper men should have smelt
- the "immoral conduct" of Maxim Gorky, was really very fortunate for the
- latter. He is now relieved from the impertinence of interviewers and
- prominent personages. He must feel as if he had recovered from some
- loathsome disease. Immorality has after all many desirable qualities.
- What if chickens gaggle, pharisaic goats piously turn up their eyes, and
- the dear little piggies grunt!
- [Illustration]
- Well-meaning people are horrified that justice is making use of such
- creatures as Orchard and McParland against Moyer, Haywood and Pettibone.
- There is nothing unusual in that. The record of the American government
- in its persecution against Socialists and Anarchists is by no means so
- clean that one need be astonished that it employs spies and perjurers as
- its helpmates.
- [Illustration]
- The Lord has developed from a good Christian into a good banker: He
- destroyed more churches than vaults in San Francisco.
- A LETTER.
- Chicago, June 2nd, 1906.
- Dear Editor:--I hope you have not been trying to relieve your feelings
- by using language dangerous to your soul's salvation. I can sympathize
- with you, though. However, it was impossible for me to send the promised
- article for "M. E." Who, indeed, could expect a bride of two weeks to
- waste time upon magazine articles?! I hope you have read the reports of
- my marriage, though your silence would indicate that you have either
- neglected to read the important news, or that your usual lack of faith
- in the truth and honesty of the press has not permitted you to credit
- the story.
- It is high time, dear friend, that you get rid of your German
- skepticism; you know, I esteem your judgment, but when it comes to
- doubting anything the newspapers say, I draw the line. What reporters do
- not know about Anarchists, and especially about your publisher, is not
- worth knowing. According to their great wisdom I not only incited men to
- remove the crowned heads of various countries, but I have done worse--I
- have incited them to marry me, and when they proved unwilling to love,
- honor and obey the order of our secret societies to blow up all sacred
- institutions, I sent them about their business.
- Much as I realize the importance of my articles for MOTHER EARTH, you
- cannot expect me to sacrifice my wifely duty to my lord and master for
- Earth's sake.
- I have always held to the opinion that there must be absolute confidence
- between publisher and editor on all matters except the receipts;
- therefore I have to confess that my newly-wedded husband, who has just
- graduated from the University of the Western Penitentiary--the
- curriculum of which is lots of liberty, leisure and enjoyment--objects
- to the drudgery of an agitator and publisher. In justice to him, I dare
- not do more than write letters all day, address meetings every evening,
- and enjoy the love and kindness of the comrades till early morning
- hours. Where, then, shall I find time to write articles for MOTHER
- EARTH?
- But to be in keeping with the serious and dignified tone of our valuable
- magazine, and especially with you dear Editor, I want to say that my
- meetings were very successful, and that MOTHER EARTH is being received
- with great favor in every city. Nearly 500 copies were sold here.
- After reading the brilliant reports in the Chicago papers and seeing the
- handsome, refined policemen at the various meetings, I am not surprised
- that our magazine is being appreciated. Apropos of the Chicago police,
- just fancy, I have actually forced them out of their uniforms. I hope
- this will not conjure up the horrible picture of Chicago's finest
- parading the city in Adam's costume. Not that! Only, Chief of Police
- Collins was so outraged over my gentle criticism of his dear little boys
- at one of the woodworkers' meetings, that he gave strict orders, "No
- officer should again appear at a public meeting in uniform where that
- awful Emma Goldman is humiliating and degrading the emblem of authority
- and law."
- After this, I hope you will never again doubt the importance of public
- meetings and the great and far-reaching influence of my speaking.
- I shall soon be with you, if I survive my tour, the police, and the
- press. I shall then try to make up for my sins, in the July number of
- MOTHER EARTH, provided you will let me recuperate in your editorial care
- and affection.
- EMMA GOLDMAN.
- [Illustration]
- LIBERTARIAN INSTRUCTION.
- By EMILE JANVION.
- AMONG the important duties of Anarchists libertarian instruction should
- occupy the first place. As revolutionary propaganda it is the most
- effective. Tolstoi in Yasnaia-Poliana, Reclus at Bruxelles, Paul Robin
- at Cempius, the group of the Free School at Paris have inaugurated
- attempts during the period of daring we have witnessed of late years.
- Far from mixing education with instruction, the former should be
- considered as the natural consequence of the latter.
- Our ideas should never be imposed by an education too specialized,
- narrow or sectarian, but by means of full and all-round instruction
- which opens the mind to criticism and makes it accessible to the power
- of truth which is our strength and which will complete the forming of
- the character.
- Our instruction should be _integral_, _rational_, and _mixed_.
- _Integral_--Because it will tend to develop the whole being and make a
- complete, free _ensemble_, equally progressive in all knowledge,
- intellectual, physical, manual and professional, and this from the
- earliest age.
- _Rational_--Because it will be based on reason and in conformity with
- actual science and not on faith; on the development of personal Freedom
- and independence and not on that of piety and obedience; on the
- abolition of the fiction _God_, the eternal and absolute cause of
- subjection.
- _Mixed_--Because it favors the coeducation of the sexes in a constant,
- fraternal, familiar company of children, boys and girls, which gives to
- the character of their manners a special earnestness.
- To the scientific instruction must be added manual apprenticeship,
- instruction with which it is in a constant connection of balance and
- reciprocity, and also esthetic instruction (music, art, etc.), which in
- point of view of an integral development has certainly not a small
- importance.
- To turn our attention towards the child, to encourage the development of
- its initiative, to impress it with a sentiment of its dignity, to
- preserve it from cowardice and falsehood, to make it observe the _pros_
- and _cons_ of all social conceptions, to educate it for the struggle,
- that is the great work, scarcely yet begun, which awaits us.
- That will be the task of the nearest future if we will act logically and
- firmly.
- [Illustration]
- THE ANTICHRIST.
- From "The Antichrist," by Friedrich Nietzsche. Edited by Alexander
- Tille, translated by Thomas Common. Publishers: Macmillan & Co. New
- York.
- I MAKE war against this theological instinct: I have found traces of it
- everywhere. Whoever has theological blood in his veins is from the very
- beginning ambiguous and disloyal with respect to everything. The pathos
- which develops therefrom calls itself belief: the closing of the eye
- once for all with respect to one's self, so as not to suffer from the
- sight--of incurable falsity. A person makes for himself a morality, a
- virtue, a sanctity out of this erroneous perspective towards all things,
- he unites the good conscience to the _false_ mode of seeing,--he demands
- that no _other_ mode of perspective be any longer of value, after he has
- made his own sacrosanct with the names of "God," "salvation," and
- "eternity." I have digged out the theologist-instinct everywhere; it is
- the most diffused, the most peculiarly _subterranean_ form of falsity
- that exists on earth. What a theologian feels as true, _must_ needs be
- false: one has therein almost a criterion of truth. It is his most
- fundamental self-preservative instinct which forbids reality to be held
- in honor, or even to find expression on any point. As far as
- theologist-influence extends, the _judgment of value_ is turned right
- about, the concepts of "true" and "false" are necessarily reversed: what
- is most injurious to life is here called "true," what raises, elevates,
- affirms, justifies, and makes it triumph is called "false."
- * * *
- Let us not underestimate this: _we ourselves_, we free spirits, are
- already a "Transvaluation of all Values," an incarnate declaration of
- war against and triumph over all old concepts of "true" and "untrue."
- The most precious discernments into things are the latest discovered:
- the most precious discernments, however, are the _methods_. _All_
- methods, _all_ presuppositions of our present-day science, have for
- millenniums been held in the most profound contempt: by reason of them a
- person was excluded from intercourse with "honest" men--he passed for an
- "enemy of God," a despiser of truth, a "possessed" person. As a
- scientific man, a person was a Chandala.... We have had the entire
- pathos of mankind against us--their concept of that which truth _ought_
- to be, which the service of truth _ought_ to be: every "thou shalt" has
- been hitherto directed _against_ us. Our objects, our practices, our
- quiet, prudent, mistrustful mode--all appeared to mankind as absolutely
- unworthy and contemptible.--In the end one might, with some
- reasonableness, ask one's self if it was not really an esthetic taste
- which kept mankind in such long blindness: they wanted a _picturesque_
- effect from truth, they wanted in like manner the knowing ones to
- operate strongly on their senses. Our _modesty_ was longest against the
- taste of mankind.... Oh how they made that out, these turkey-cocks of
- God----.
- * * *
- The Christian concept of God--God as God of the sick, God as
- cobweb-spinner, God as spirit--is one of the most corrupt concepts of
- God ever arrived at on earth; it represents perhaps the gauge of low
- water in the descending development of the God-type. God degenerated to
- the _contradiction of life_, instead of being its transfiguration and
- its eternal _yea_! In God, hostility announced to life, to nature, to
- the will to life! God as the formula for every calumny of "this world,"
- for every lie of "another world!" In God nothingness deified, the will
- to nothingness declared holy!
- * * *
- That the strong races of Northern Europe have not thrust from themselves
- the Christian God, is verily no honor to their religious talent, not to
- speak of their taste. They ought to have got the better of such a sickly
- and decrepit product of _décadence_. There lies a curse upon them,
- because they have not got the better of it: they have incorporated
- sickness, old age and contradiction into all their instincts--they have
- _created_ no God since! Two millenniums almost, and not a single new
- God! But still continuing, and as if persisting by right, as an
- _ultimatum_ and _maximum_ of the God-shaping force, of the _creator
- spiritus_ in man, this pitiable God of Christian monotono-theism! This
- hybrid image of ruin, derived from nullity, concept and contradiction in
- which all _décadence_ instincts, all cowardices and lassitudes of soul
- have their sanction!
- * * *
- Has the celebrated story been really understood which stands at the
- commencement of the Bible--the story of God's mortal terror of
- _science_? It has not been understood. This priest-book _par excellence_
- begins appropriately with the great inner difficulty of the priest: he
- has only one great danger, consequently "God" has only one great
- danger.--
- The old God, entire "spirit," entire high priest, entire perfection,
- promenades in his garden: he only wants pastime. Against tedium even
- Gods struggle in vain. What does he do? He contrives man--man is
- entertaining.... But behold, man also wants pastime. The pity of God for
- the only distress which belongs to all paradises has no bounds: he
- forthwith created other animals besides. The _first_ mistake of God: man
- did not find the animals entertaining--he ruled over them, but did not
- even want to be an "animal"--God consequently created woman. And, in
- fact, there was now an end of tedium--but of other things also! Woman
- was the _second_ mistake of God.--"Woman is in her essence a serpent,
- Hera"--every priest knows that: "from woman comes _all_ the mischief in
- the world"--every priest knows that likewise. _Consequently_, _science_
- also comes from her.... Only through woman did man learn to taste of the
- tree of knowledge.--What had happened? The old God was seized by a
- mortal terror. Man himself had become his _greatest_ mistake, he had
- created a rival, science makes _godlike_; it is at an end with priests
- and Gods, if man becomes scientific!--_Moral_: science is the thing
- forbidden in itself--it alone is forbidden. Science is the _first_ sin,
- the germ of all sin, _original_ sin. _This alone is morality._--"Thou
- shalt _not_ know:"--the rest follows therefrom.--By his mortal terror
- God was not prevented from being shrewd. How does one _defend_ one's
- self against science? That was for a long time his main problem. Answer:
- away with man, out of paradise! Happiness and leisure lead to
- thoughts,--all thoughts are bad thoughts.... Man _shall_ not think--and
- the "priest in himself" contrives distress, death, the danger of life in
- pregnancy, every kind of misery, old age, weariness, and above all
- _sickness_,--nothing but expedients in the struggle against science!
- Distress does not _permit_ man to think.... And nevertheless! frightful!
- the edifice of knowledge towers aloft, heaven-storming, dawning on the
- Gods,--what to do!--The old God contrives _war_, he separates the
- peoples, he brings it about that men mutually annihilate one another
- (the priests have always had need of war ...). War, among other things,
- a great disturber of science!--Incredible! Knowledge, the _emancipation
- from the priest_, augments even in spite of wars.--And a final
- resolution is arrived at by the old God: "man has become
- scientific,--_there is no help for it, he must be drowned!_" ...
- * * *
- --I have been understood. The beginning of the Bible contains the
- _entire_ psychology of the priest.--The priest knows only one great
- danger: that is science,--the sound concept of cause and effect. But
- science flourishes on the whole only under favorable circumstances,--one
- must have _superfluous_ time, one must have _superfluous_ intellect in
- order to "perceive" ... _Consequently_ man must be made
- unfortunate,--this has at all times been the logic of the priest.--One
- makes out _what_ has only thereby come into the world in accordance with
- this logic:--"sin".... The concepts of guilt and punishment, the whole
- "moral order of the world," have been devised _in opposition_ to
- science,--_in opposition_ to a severance of man from the priest.... Man
- is _not_ to look outwards, he is to look inwards into himself, he is
- _not_ to look prudently and cautiously into things like a learner, he is
- not to look at all, he is to _suffer_.... And he is so to suffer as to
- need the priest always. _A Saviour is needed._--The concepts of guilt
- and punishment, inclusive of the doctrines of "grace," of "salvation,"
- and of "forgiveness"--_lies_ through and through, and without any
- psychological reality--have been contrived to destroy the _causal sense_
- in man, they are an attack on the concepts of cause and effect!--And
- _not_ an attack with the fists, with the knife, with honesty in hate and
- love! But springing from the most cowardly, most deceitful, and most
- ignoble instincts! A _priest's_ attack! A _parasite's_ attack! A
- vampirism of pale, subterranean blood-suckers! When the natural
- consequences of a deed are no longer "natural," but are supposed to be
- brought about by the conceptual spectres of superstition, by "God," by
- "spirits," by "souls," as mere "moral" consequences, as reward,
- punishment, suggestion, or means of education, the pre-requisite of
- perception has been destroyed--_the greatest crime against mankind has
- been committed._ Sin, repeated once more, this form of human
- self-violation _par excellence_, has been invented for the purpose of
- making impossible science, culture, every kind of elevation and nobility
- of man; the priest _rules_ by the invention of sin.--
- * * *
- I _condemn_ Christianity, I bring against the Christian Church the most
- terrible of all accusations that ever an accuser has taken into his
- mouth. It is to me the greatest of all imaginable corruptions, it has
- had the will to the ultimate corruption that is at all possible. The
- Christian Church has left nothing untouched with its depravity, it has
- made a worthlessness out of every value, a lie out of every truth, a
- baseness of soul out of every straight-forwardness. Let a person still
- dare to speak to me of its "humanitarian" blessings! To _do away with_
- any state of distress whatsoever was counter to its profoundest
- expediency, it lived by states of distress, it _created_ states of
- distress in order to perpetuate _itself_ eternally.... The worm of sin
- for example; it is only the Church that has enriched mankind with this
- state of distress!-- ...."Humanitarian" blessings of Christianity! To
- breed out of _humanitas_ a self-contradiction, an art of self-violation,
- a will to the lie at any price, a repugnance, a contempt for all good
- and straight-forward instincts! Those are for me blessing of
- Christianity!--Parasitism as the _sole_ praxis of the Church; drinking
- out all blood, all love, all hope for life, with its anæmic ideal of
- holiness; the other world as the will to the negation of every reality;
- the cross as the rallying sign for the most subterranean conspiracy that
- has ever existed,--against healthiness, beauty, well-constitutedness,
- courage, intellect, _benevolence_ of soul, _against life itself_....
- This eternal accusation of Christianity I shall write on all walls,
- wherever there are walls,--I have letters for making even the blind
- see.... I call Christianity the one great curse, the one great intrinsic
- depravity, the one great instinct of revenge for which no expedient is
- sufficiently poisonous, secret, subterranean, _mean_,--I call it the one
- immortal blemish of mankind!
- BRAIN WORK AND MANUAL WORK.
- By PETER KROPOTKIN.
- IN olden times men of science, and especially those who have done most
- to forward the growth of natural philosophy, did not despise manual work
- and handicraft. Galileo made his telescopes with his own hands. Newton
- learned in his boyhood the art of managing tools; he exercised his young
- mind in contriving most ingenious machines, and when he began his
- researches in optics he was able himself to grind the lenses for his
- instruments, and himself to make the well-known telescope, which, for
- its time, was a fine piece of workmanship. Leibnitz was fond of
- inventing machines: windmills and carriages to be moved without horses
- preoccupied his mind as much as mathematical and philosophical
- speculations. Linnæus became a botanist while helping his father--a
- practical gardener--in his daily work. In short, with our great geniuses
- handicraft was no obstacle to abstract researches--it rather favored
- them. On the other hand, if the workers of old found but few
- opportunities for mastering science, many of them had, at least, their
- intelligences stimulated by the very variety of work which was performed
- in the then unspecialized workshops; and some of them had the benefit of
- familiar intercourse with men of science. Watt and Rennie were friends
- with Professor Robinson; Brindley, the road-maker, despite his
- fourteen-pence-a-day wages, enjoyed intercourse with educated men, and
- thus developed his remarkable engineering faculties; the son of a
- well-to-do family could "idle" at a wheelwright's shop, so as to become
- later on a Smeaton or a Stephenson.
- We have changed all that. Under the pretext of division of labor, we
- have sharply separated the brain worker from the manual worker. The
- masses of the workmen do not receive more scientific education than
- their grandfathers did; but they have been deprived of the education of
- even the small workshop, while their boys and girls are driven into a
- mine or a factory from the age of thirteen, and there they soon forget
- the little they may have learned at school. As to the men of science,
- they despise manual labor. How few of them would be able to make a
- telescope, or even a plainer instrument? Most of them are not capable
- of even designing a scientific instrument, and when they have given a
- vague suggestion to the instrument-maker they leave it with him to
- invent the apparatus they need. Nay, they have raised the contempt of
- manual labor to the height of a theory. "The man of science," they say,
- "must discover the laws of nature, the civil engineer must apply them,
- and the worker must execute in steel or wood, in iron or stone, the
- patterns devised by the engineer. He must work with machines invented
- for him, not by him. No matter if he does not understand them and cannot
- improve them: the scientific man and the scientific engineer will take
- care of the progress of science and industry."
- It may be objected that nevertheless there is a class of men who belong
- to none of the above three divisions. When young they have been manual
- workers, and some of them continue to be; but, owing to some happy
- circumstances, they have succeeded in acquiring some scientific
- knowledge, and thus they have combined science with handicraft. Surely
- there are such men; happily enough there is a nucleus of men who have
- escaped the so-much-advocated specialization of labor, and it is
- precisely to them that industry owes its chief recent inventions. But in
- old Europe at least, they are the exceptions; they are the
- irregulars--the Cossacks who have broken the ranks and pierced the
- screens so carefully erected between the classes. And they are so few,
- in comparison with the ever-growing requirements of industry--and of
- science as well, as I am about to prove--that all over the world we hear
- complaint about the scarcity of precisely such men.
- What is the meaning, in fact, of the outcry for technical education
- which has been raised at one and the same time in England, in France, in
- Germany, in the States, and in Russia, if it does not express a general
- dissatisfaction with the present division into scientists, scientific
- engineers, and workers? Listen to those who know industry, and you will
- see that the substance of their complaint is this: "The worker whose
- task has been specialized by the permanent division of labor has lost
- the intellectual interest in his labor, and it is especially so in the
- great industries: he has lost his inventive powers. Formerly, he
- invented very much. Manual workers--not men of science nor trained
- engineers--have invented, or brought to perfection, the prime motors and
- all that mass of machinery which has revolutionized industry for the
- last hundred years. But since the great factory has been enthroned, the
- worker, depressed by the monotony of his work, invents no more. What can
- a weaver invent who merely supervises four looms, without knowing
- anything either about their complicated movements or how the machines
- grew to be what they are? What can a man invent who is condemned for
- life to bind together the ends of two threads with the greatest
- celerity, and knows nothing beyond making a knot?
- "At the outset of modern industry, three generations of workers _have_
- invented; now they cease to do so. As to the inventions of the
- engineers, specially trained for devising machines, they are either
- devoid of genius or not practical enough. Those "nearly to nothings," of
- which Sir Frederick Bramwell spoke once at Bath, are missing in their
- inventions--those nothings which can be learned in the workshop only,
- and which permitted a Murdoch and the Soho workers to make a practical
- engine of Watt's schemes. None but he who knows the machine--not in its
- drawings and models only, but in its breathing and throbbings--who
- unconsciously thinks of it while standing by it, can really improve it.
- Smeaton and Newcomen surely were excellent engineers; but in their
- engines a boy had to open the steam valve at each stroke of the piston;
- and it was one of those boys who once managed to connect the valve with
- the remainder of the machine, so as to make it open automatically, while
- he ran away to play with other boys. But in the modern machinery there
- is no room left for naïve improvements of that kind. Scientific
- education on a wide scale has become necessary for further inventions,
- and that education is refused to the workers. So that there is no issue
- out of the difficulty unless scientific education and handicraft are
- combined together--unless integration of knowledge takes the place of
- the present divisions." Such is the real substance of the present
- movement in favor of technical education. But, instead of bringing to
- public consciousness the, perhaps, unconscious motives of the present
- discontent, instead of widening the views of the discontented and
- discussing the problem to its full extent, the mouth-pieces of the
- movement do not mostly rise above the shopkeeper's view of the question.
- Some of them indulge in jingo talk about crushing all foreign industries
- out of competition, while the others see in technical education nothing
- but a means of somewhat improving the flesh-machine of the factory and
- of transferring a few workers into the upper class of trained engineers.
- Such an ideal may satisfy them, but it cannot satisfy those who keep in
- view the combined interests of science and industry, and consider both
- as a means for raising humanity to a higher level. We maintain that in
- the interests of both science and industry, as well as of society as a
- whole, every human being, without distinction of birth, ought to receive
- such an education as would enable him, or her, to combine a thorough
- knowledge of science with a thorough knowledge of handicraft. We fully
- recognize the necessity of specialization of knowledge, but we maintain
- that specialization must follow general education, and that general
- education must be given in science and handicraft alike. To the division
- of society into brain-workers and manual workers we oppose the
- combination of both kinds of activities; and instead of "technical
- education," which means the maintenance of the present division between
- brain work and manual work, we advocate the _éducation intégrale_, or
- complete education, which means the disappearance of that pernicious
- distinction. Plainly stated, the aims of the school under this system
- ought to be the following: To give such an education that, on leaving
- school at the age of eighteen or twenty, each boy and each girl should
- be endowed with a thorough knowledge of science--such a knowledge as
- might enable them to be useful workers in science--and, at the same
- time, to give them a general knowledge of what constitutes the bases of
- technical training, and such a skill in some special trade as would
- enable each of them to take his or her place in the grand world of the
- manual production of wealth. I know that many will find that aim too
- large, or even impossible to attain, but I hope that if they have the
- patience to read the following pages, they will see that we require
- nothing beyond what can be easily attained. In fact, _it has been
- attained_; and what has been done on a small scale could be done on a
- wider scale, were it not for the economical and social causes which
- prevent any serious reform from being accomplished in our miserably
- organized society.
- The experiment has been made at the Moscow Technical School for twenty
- consecutive years with many hundreds of boys; and, according to the
- testimonies of the most competent judges at the exhibitions of Brussels,
- Philadelphia, Vienna and Paris, the experiment has been a success. The
- Moscow school admits boys not older than fifteen, and it requires from
- boys of that age nothing but a substantial knowledge of geometry and
- algebra, together with the usual knowledge of their mother tongue;
- younger pupils are received in the preparatory classes. The school is
- divided into two sections--the mechanical and the chemical; but as I
- personally know better the former, and as it is also the more important
- with reference to the question before us, so I shall limit my remarks to
- the education given in the mechanical section. After a five or six
- years' stay at the school, the students leave it with a thorough
- knowledge of higher mathematics, physics, mechanics, and connected
- sciences--so thorough, indeed, that it is not second to that acquired in
- the best mathematical faculties of the most eminent European
- universities. When myself a student of the mathematical faculty of the
- St. Petersburg University, I had the opportunity of comparing the
- knowledge of the students at the Moscow Technical School with our own. I
- saw the courses of higher geometry some of them had compiled for the use
- of their comrades; I admired the facility with which they applied the
- integral calculus to dynamical problems, and I came to the conclusion
- that while we, University students, had more knowledge of a general
- character, they, the students of the Technical School, were much more
- advanced in higher geometry, and especially in the applications of
- higher mathematics to the most intricate problems of dynamics, the
- theories of heat and elasticity. But while we, the students of the
- University, hardly knew the use of our hands, the students of the
- Technical School fabricated _with their own hands_, and without the help
- of professional workmen, fine steam-engines, from the heavy boiler to
- the last finely turned screw, agricultural machinery, and scientific
- apparatus--all for the trade--and they received the highest awards for
- the work of their hands at the international exhibitions. They were
- scientifically educated skilled workers--workers with university
- education--highly appreciated even by the Russian manufacturers who so
- much distrust science.
- Now, the methods by which these wonderful results were achieved were
- these: In science, learning from memory was not in honor, while
- independent research was favored by all means. Science was taught hand
- in hand with its applications, and what was learned in the schoolroom
- was applied in the workshop. Great attention was paid to the highest
- abstractions of geometry as a means for developing imagination and
- research. As to the teaching of handicraft, the methods were quite
- different from those which proved a failure at the Cornell University,
- and differed, in fact, from those used in most technical schools. The
- student was not sent to a workshop to learn some special handicraft and
- to earn his existence as soon as possible, but the teaching of technical
- skill was prosecuted--according to a scheme elaborated by the founder of
- the school, M. Dellavos, and now applied also at Chicago and Boston--in
- the same systematical way as laboratory work is taught in the
- universities. It is evident that drawing was considered as the first
- step in technical education. Then the student was brought, first, to the
- carpenter's workshop, or rather laboratory, and there he was thoroughly
- taught to execute all kinds of carpentry and joinery. No efforts were
- spared in order to bring the pupil to a certain perfection in that
- branch--the real basis of all trades. Later on, he was transferred to
- the turner's workshop, where he was taught to make in wood the patterns
- of those things which he would have to make in metal in the following
- workshops. The foundry followed, and there he was taught to cast those
- parts of machines which he had prepared in wood; and it was only after
- he had gone through the first three stages that he was admitted to the
- smith's and engineering workshops. As for the perfection of the
- mechanical work of the students I cannot do better than refer to the
- reports of the juries at the above-named exhibitions.
- In America the same system has been introduced, in its technical part,
- first, in the Chicago Manual Training School, and later on in the Boston
- Technical School--the best, I am told, of the sort; and in this
- country, or rather in Scotland, I found the system applied with full
- success, for some years, under the direction of Dr. Ogilvie at Gordon's
- College in Aberdeen. It is the Moscow or Chicago system on a limited
- scale. While receiving substantial scientific education, the pupils are
- also trained in the workshops--but not for one special trade, as it
- unhappily too often is the case. They pass through the carpenter's
- workshop, the casting in metals, and the engineering workshop; and in
- each of these they learn the foundations of each of the three trades
- sufficiently well for supplying the school itself with a number of
- useful things. Besides, as far as I could ascertain from what I saw in
- the geographical and physical classes, as also in the chemical
- laboratory, the system of "through the hand to the brain," and _vice
- versa_, is in full swing, and it is attended with the best success. The
- boys _work_ with the physical instruments, and they study geography in
- the field, instruments in hands, as well as in the class-room. Some of
- their surveys filled my heart, as an old geographer, with joy. It is
- evident that the Gordon's College industrial department is not a mere
- copy of any foreign school; on the contrary, I cannot help thinking that
- if Aberdeen has made that excellent move towards combining science with
- handicraft, the move was a natural outcome of what has been practised
- long since, on a smaller scale, in the Aberdeen daily schools.
- The Moscow Technical School surely is not an ideal school.[1] It totally
- neglects the humanitarian education of the young men. But we must
- recognize that the Moscow experiment--not to speak of hundreds of other
- partial experiments--has perfectly well proved the possibility of
- combining a scientific education of a very high standard with the
- education which is necessary for becoming an excellent skilled laborer.
- It has proved, moreover, that the best means for producing really good
- skilled laborers is to seize the bull by the horns, and to grasp the
- educational problem in its great features, instead of trying to give
- some special skill in some handicraft, together with a few scraps of
- knowledge in a certain branch of some science. And it has shown also
- what can be obtained, without over-pressure, if a rational economy of
- the scholar's time is always kept in view, and theory goes hand in hand
- with practice. Viewed in this light, the Moscow results do not seem
- extraordinary at all, and still better results may be expected if the
- same principles are applied from the earliest years of education. Waste
- of time is the leading feature of our present education. Not only are we
- taught a mass of rubbish, but what is not rubbish is taught so as to
- make us waste over it as much time as possible. Our present methods of
- teaching originate from a time when the accomplishments required from an
- educated person were extremely limited; and they have been maintained,
- notwithstanding the immense increase of knowledge which must be conveyed
- to the scholar's mind since science has so much widened its former
- limits. Hence the over-pressure in schools, and hence, also, the urgent
- necessity of totally revising both the subjects and the methods of
- teaching, according to the new wants and to the examples already given
- here and there, by separate schools and separate teachers.
- It is evident that the years of childhood ought not to be spent so
- uselessly as they are now. German teachers have shown how the very plays
- of children can be made instrumental in conveying to the childish mind
- some concrete knowledge in both geometry and mathematics. The children
- who have made the squares of the theorem of Pythagoras out of pieces of
- colored cardboard, will not look at the theorem, when it comes in
- geometry, as on a mere instrument of torture devised by the teachers;
- and the less so if they apply it as the carpenters do. Complicated
- problems of arithmetic, which so much harassed us in our boyhood, are
- easily solved by children seven and eight years old if they are put in
- the shape of interesting puzzles. And if the _Kindergarten_--German
- teachers often make of it a kind of barrack in which each movement of
- the child is regulated beforehand--has often become a small prison for
- the little ones, the idea which presided at its foundation is
- nevertheless true. In fact, it is almost impossible to imagine, without
- having tried it, how many sound notions of nature, habits of
- classification, and taste for natural sciences can be conveyed to the
- children's minds; and, if a series of concentric courses adapted to the
- various phases of development of the human being were generally accepted
- in education, the first series in all sciences, save sociology, could be
- taught before the age of ten or twelve, so as to give a general idea of
- the universe, the earth and its inhabitants, the chief physical,
- chemical, zoological, and botanical phenomena, leaving the discovery of
- the _laws_ of those phenomena to the next series of deeper and more
- specialised studies. On the other side, we all know how children like to
- make toys themselves, how they gladly imitate the work of full-grown
- people if they see them at work in the workshop or the building-yard.
- But the parents either stupidly paralyze that passion, or do not know
- how to utilize it. Most of them despise manual work and prefer sending
- their children to the study of Roman history, or of Franklin's teachings
- about saving money, to seeing them at a work which is good for the
- "lower classes only." They thus do their best to render subsequent
- learning the more difficult.
- * * * * * * * * *
- The so-called division of labor has grown under a system which condemned
- the masses to toil all the day long, and all the life long, at the same
- wearisome kind of labor. But if we take into account how few are the
- real producers of wealth in our present society, and how squandered is
- their labor, we must recognize that Franklin was right in saying that to
- work five hours a day would generally do for supplying each member of a
- civilized nation with the comfort now accessible for the few only,
- provided everybody took his due share in production. But we have made
- some progress since Franklin's times. More than one-half of the working
- day would thus remain to every one for the pursuit of art, science, or
- any hobby he might prefer; and his work in those fields would be the
- more profitable if he spent the other half of the day in productive
- work--if art and science were followed from mere inclination, not for
- mercantile purposes. Moreover, a community organized on the principles
- of all being workers would be rich enough to conclude that every man and
- woman, after having reached a certain age--say of forty or more--ought
- to be relieved from the moral obligation of taking a direct part in the
- performance of the necessary manual work, so as to be able entirely to
- devote himself or herself to whatever he or she chooses in the domain of
- art, or science, or any kind of work. Free pursuit in new branches of
- art and knowledge, free creation, and free development thus might be
- fully guaranteed. And such a community would not know misery amidst
- wealth. It would not know the duality of conscience which permeates our
- life and stifles every noble effort. It would freely take its flight
- towards the highest regions of progress compatible with human nature.
- FOOTNOTE:
- [1] What this school is now, I don't know. In the last years of
- Alexander II.'s reign it was wrecked, like so many other good
- institutions of the early part of his reign.
- [Illustration]
- MOTHERHOOD AND MARRIAGE
- By HENRIETTE FUERTH.
- (_Translated from the German for_ MOTHER EARTH by ANNY MALI HICKS.)
- Knowledge becomes understanding only when its scope includes the
- origin, the development and the conclusion of things.--Bachofen,
- "Right to Motherhood."
- "THE future will endeavor to extend its power through its own ideas of
- facts and appearances, however unfamiliar these may seem, rather than to
- be influenced by a past and submerged civilization with a spirit far
- removed from its own."
- There could hardly be a more appropriate introduction to our remarks on
- motherhood and marriage than these words of Bachofen's, for there are
- few human relations whose traditional stages, taking through outside
- causes and effects an established form, have become eternal law and
- sacrament, as is the case in the realm of sex relations. Motherhood and
- marriage! For most people these two conceptions are inseparably bound
- together, or, rather, are in ratio connected as their ideas of morality
- and religion are synonymous. Marriage in the Romish Church is a
- religious sacrament, and in the collective Christian and Jewish worlds
- the only sex relation acknowledged as customary and possible, is the one
- based on a monogamous union. To work out logically from this
- standpoint, the only condition of motherhood which is socially
- justified, is that one which is the result of marital relations. In
- consequence motherhood without the consent of the State or the benefit
- of the clergy is just as logically condemned. And they who thus sit in
- judgment, flatter themselves to be the prophets of an advanced and
- enlightened era,--ingrafting their personal feelings and rights on the
- religious and lawful order of the universe. Or, in common parlance, and
- as our introduction so aptly put it, these good people wish to intend
- the domination of the ideas of their own time over all the past and into
- all the future. Marriage seems to them an everlasting institution, a
- godly regulation, through which they can lend to their individual bias,
- the dignity of that which is humanly purest and highest. Consequently it
- also seems to them that the present form of marriage and its
- accompanying conditions for motherhood, resting as these do on the
- mutual consent of God and man, that these are to be in all eternity the
- permanent form of sex relation.
- But when we stop one moment only, to free ourselves from preconceived
- and obsolete ideas, and look at motherhood and marriage from the calm
- and unprejudiced standpoint of historical development and growth, how
- differently do these in reality appear. Many advanced thinkers have done
- this, and their views have here and there found adherents. Not so,
- however, with the average seeker for light and truth, who if he wish to
- succeed must stem the tide of prejudiced opinion.
- But the day has come when, if all signs do not fail, spring is here, and
- a thousand and one buds of promise are pushing toward the light, when a
- wider and saner understanding of motherhood and marriage is at hand. And
- it is not an untimely spring either, not one which the treacherous sun
- of January calls forth only to blight with later snow and frost. No, it
- is the real light and life-giving spring, which comes when the sap
- begins to run, when the sun calls up smoky mists from out the brown
- earth, ready to enclose the seed, which shall bring forth summer flowers
- and autumn fruits.
- And this same brown, misty earth, what a different aspect shall she
- present to her children, for whom conditions are so changed, with truer
- sex relations, encompassing the ethical and spiritual needs of the free
- individual. Then only will it be _possible_ to base these needs and
- demands on the surrounding world of realities filled with material and
- spiritual phenomena.
- But first it must be proven that the present form of marriage and its
- effect on motherhood is not necessarily permanent, but, like all else,
- subject to natural development and change. What indeed is the much
- talked of marriage bond of to-day,--which is considered the cornerstone
- of both Church and State? Is it something towards which the steps of
- development in nature and history all go? No seriously minded person
- could in truth make such a statement. In the plant and animal kingdoms,
- whose species evoke as do those of the human race, we find no examples
- of sex relations to which the term marriage would apply. And this is
- also true of the historical development of man and social conditions. It
- is not marriage but motherhood which has given permanence to sex
- relations wherever they appear. Motherhood standing at the source of
- life with its creative and ever recreative force.
- "Goddesses enthroned in solitude,
- Surrounded not by time or place,
- These are the mothers!
- About them formed and formless,
- Eternal stability and endless change
- In images of all created life."
- Thus does Goethe describe the depths of being which enclose the eternal
- mystery of motherhood, leading not into known, but unknown paths.
- And truly, how far have we strayed from the path of true and natural
- feeling when we seek to justify motherhood from the standpoint of
- expediency and custom! It is something in itself holy, and is its own
- reason for being. I ask all mothers, all real mothers, when their child
- comes to them, with eyes brimming with childlike love and affection,
- against which all else counts for naught, I ask them do they think
- whether that child is legitimate or what is called an illegitimate
- child? No! the joy of motherhood completely fills the heart, there is no
- room for other feelings, and truly the answer comes, Nature does not
- discriminate between the legitimate and illegitimate mothers, any more
- than she labels the children brought into the world as such. And this
- alone is the foundation to which we must hold fast. Nature acknowledges
- motherhood only, wisely providing for its needs. Not so marriage, which
- is a form men have given their sex relations, and established from the
- standpoint of social and economic exigencies and considerations, it is
- consequently subject to limitations and changes. Motherhood is an
- eternal force lying at the root of life, not subjected to time or
- change.
- [Illustration]
- OBJECT LESSON FOR ADVOCATES OF GOVERNMENTAL CONTROL.
- By ARTHUR G. EVERETT, N--M.
- THE best literary efforts possible have been exhausted in a vain effort
- to convey to those fortunately not in San Francisco on the morning of
- April 18, 1906, what terrible things resulted from the earthquake and
- the fire which left that city a complete ruin; likewise has the kodak
- and the camera--though busy at work while the flames roared around the
- operator driving him, from one vantage point to another, before its
- resistless power--failed to depict in its entirety the horrors, the
- tragedies that followed in the wake of the crumbling walls, the
- crackling flames that licked up alike palatial mansions and the squalid
- homes of the poor, not content to feast upon the products of the forests
- of California and the Eastern States alone, but, with the strategy of a
- warrior, surrounded and penned within four walls hundreds of human
- beings, stalwart men, delicate women, and babes at the breast, who were
- then slowly roasted to death upon the funeral pyre of San Francisco.
- Upon the minds and hearts of the survivors, alone, who walked between
- the walls of fire those days, who escaped the frightful holocaust but by
- a miracle while loved ones perished before their eyes, are written, are
- recorded, too complete, too vivid, those terrible scenes, and fain would
- they efface from their mind's negative those pictures of horrors which
- now turn their dreams of the night into such a frightful nightmare that
- they dread to close their eyes in slumber.
- While the horrors of the earthquake and fire were so terrible, yet there
- was something far worse, for the earthquake and fire were beyond human
- control, but the still worse acts of the soldiers into whose hands the
- control of the city were delegated could have been restrained by the
- authorities had they so chosen; now that the world is being made aware
- of the fact that the soldiers ruthlessly shot down men and women--yes,
- women as well as men; in one case a woman was shot down by a soldier
- because she dared to light a match to see where to lay her little sick
- baby down--and that without any justification other than the order of
- their superiors who likewise were so ordered by the authorities--a
- natural result of governmental control--hence they are doing all they
- can to controvert the facts regarding the brutal murders and worse of
- the soldiers. In one case they went so far as to threaten the
- confiscation of a printery if the editor did not call in and suppress an
- issue in which was printed an article by a marine telling of seeing the
- soldiers shoot down the inmates of a hotel so surrounded by fire it
- seemed they else must be burned up--the excuse the soldiers gave for
- shooting them--and so the soldiers shot them down to save (?) them. The
- marine in this article did not tell how many of those thus shot down by
- the soldiers were only wounded and writhed in agony on the increasing
- heated floor until the fiery fiend ended their misery from the gun shot
- wounds.
- Brevity precludes going into details of what is already a matter of
- history; of the soldiers shooting the inmates of an improvised hospital
- that were unable to be moved when the fire surrounded the building; of
- the soldiers shooting an old man for refusing to work, though so infirm
- with age that he had to walk with a cane; of the shooting of a Red Cross
- man while in his auto on a deed of mercy bent; of the man shot in the
- back for talking back to a soldier, and that after he had turned away
- from the drunken brute; of the shooting of a man for having whisky in
- his possession and refusing to give it up--that the soldiers had plenty
- is in evidence from the fact that a large per cent. were so drunk that
- they could walk with but difficulty--of their insulting women, and even
- far worse than mere insult also; of shooting persons for looting while
- they themselves did the same; all this and much more and worse are known
- to be true, and, in the language of another writer on this same subject,
- "Strive as they may the authorities will never be able to whitewash the
- military abominations inflicted upon San Francisco and vicinity." In
- this regard the same writer says most truly:
- "The rulers of the State furnished us an example of 'anarchy,'
- according to their own definition of the term."
- In times like these it brings out what is in the man, and these murders
- and lesser brutalities of the soldiers while policing San Francisco tell
- us that the soldier is but an infuriated thug, ready to do murder and
- rapine at the first opportunity; the civic authorities of Oakland
- recognized this as a fact when they finally allowed the reopening of the
- saloons, for the barkeepers were specially interdicted from selling or
- giving liquor to soldiers; they were already loaded too heavy with
- murderous instincts and propensities and it would not do to run the risk
- of touching off that magazine of murder with the match of whisky.
- These brutal butcheries and rapine by the soldiers while thus in control
- of San Francisco are the legitimate fruits of governmental control, and
- it would be well for those who are so strenuously advocating
- militarism--the true name for Governmental Control--to bear these things
- in mind, for such horrors would be the daily menu under such system, for
- there is lots of the savage in the most of us and it needs but to put a
- gun in the hands of some and decorate them with brass buttons with U. S.
- inscribed thereon to bring to the surface--like a plaster on a boil--all
- the native savagery there is in the man; personally, I would prefer to
- run my chances among the Head Hunters on the Isle of Borneo than among
- uniformed thugs protected and encouraged by martial law to carry out
- their natural murderous propensities as was the case in San Francisco,
- following the earthquake on the morning of April 18, 1906.
- THE GENIUS OF WAR
- By JOHN FRANCIS VALTER.
- _I am the Genius of War.
- My standard's the Skull and the Bones.
- I raise my voice--I stamp my foot,
- And legions rise out of the ground._
- _Armies advance and retreat,
- Poisoned, diseased and maimed:
- All that is left is a grewsome aspect
- To the moonlight, the ghouls and Me._
- _All this to a laudable end:--
- The general has his star;
- Shylock his four per cent;
- The contractor's wife a costly gem
- To enhance her vulgar charms;
- The mother a harvest of tears;
- The wife a broken heart;
- The unborn babe a prenatal curse;
- While I have my surfeit of blood_.
- [Illustration]
- DIGNITY SPEAKS.
- "Hark ye, millions, and tremble! I am more powerful than the Law.
- Together with my sister, Respectability, I reach far beyond the boundary
- of the authority of governments. I am supreme.
- Behold the miserable criminal, desperately resisting the brutal
- treatment of the police officer. I shall force him to his knees. I shall
- subdue him. Enthroned upon the seat of Justice, robed in the solemn
- black of my sacred office, I shall break the rebel's spirit.
- 'Tis in this that the highest refinement of tyranny manifests itself--it
- enters into the very innermost depths of the human mind and there it
- ravages, till its foul breath has withered the last resistance of the
- unfortunate soul, and the consciousness of self is destroyed; this
- accomplished, the man himself is dead.
- The Law! See how the timid masses cower at the mere mention of my name.
- See them tremble as I enter the arena of the Legislature.
- The Dignity of the Law!
- The Majesty of the Law!
- It must forever remain my great secret that the Law is the Cerberus that
- guards the portals of our earthly paradise against the common herd--we
- must not be disturbed in our orgies.
- The Law! 'Tis our beastly greediness, our bloodthirsty rapacity
- expressed in statutes. 'Tis the insatiety of the human beasts of prey
- immortalized in jurisprudence, and I, Dignity, sanctify all that.
- As a captain of industry, as a prince of commerce, or as a king of
- finance, I speak with solemn face of the heavy responsibilities that
- rest upon those to whose care God, in his infinite wisdom, has entrusted
- the wealth of the universe; I speak with zeal of the sacred duty of the
- rich to lend a helping hand to our less fortunate brothers; I never tire
- to emphasize the necessity of wise stewardship.
- In the meantime, I exploit the "poor brothers" and I appropriate the
- lion's share of the fruit of his labor; he is made to pay me an usurious
- profit on my investments.
- I fill my shops and factories with men, women and children, and I
- transmute the base metal of their bones into the noble coin of the
- realm; my coffers grow fat, my slaves grow lean, but I acquire the
- reputation of a public benefactor, a public-spirited citizen, a noble
- humanitarian.
- As military commander, as a great general, I eulogize the heroism and
- self-sacrifice of my blind slaves and hirelings that have returned from
- a successful campaign against a weaker nation. I speak of the great
- benefit that the success of our arms will confer upon the people, I
- emphasize its stimulating effect upon the progress of our country and
- upon our civilization.
- Yet while my anointed lips pour forth these solemn lies, my mind travels
- over the bloody fields of carnage; I behold the thousands of the slain,
- the mutilated bodies, the torn limbs, the streams of human blood....
- I stand in the pulpit and call the faithful to prayer. I thunder eternal
- curses upon the heads of the unbelievers; I threaten the people with the
- torments of hell and I try to bribe them by the promise of heaven.
- Believe, live and be saved, I cry. Or else you will die and be damned!
- For I am the visible representative on earth of those invisible,
- extra-mundane spirits whom man, in his fear and ignorance, created to
- his own continued mental enslavement.
- Terrified, sin lies prostrate at my feet. It does not know that a sick
- conscience is a characteristic trait of all slaves. It is the universal
- self-accuser. Were the people--individually and collectively--to sin on
- a grand scale, were they to refuse to be the puppets of the man-made
- idols--were that to happen, masters and slaves would cease to be.
- The tyrants of the world are under great obligations to me. They must
- not forget this. For if they should, I will unfold my solemn black robe,
- I will smooth the hypocritical lines on my face--then shall the world
- behold all the filth and corruption that I, Dignity, hide."
- [Illustration]
- PATERNALISTIC GOVERNMENT.
- By THEODORE SCHROEDER.
- (_Continuation._)
- HERE is paternal solicitude with a vengeance in a law I requote from
- Wordsworth Donisthorpe:
- "They shall have bows and arrows, and use the same of Sundays and
- holidays; and leave all playing at tennis or foot-ball and other games
- called quoits, dice, casting of stone, kailes, and other such importune
- games. Forasmuch as labourers and grooms keep greyhounds and other dogs,
- and on the holidays when good Christians be at church hearing divine
- service, they go hunting in parks, warrens, and connigries, it is
- ordained that no manner of layman which hath not lands to the value of
- forty shillings a year, shall from henceforth keep any greyhound or
- other dog to hunt, nor shall he use ferrets, nets, heys, harepipes nor
- cords, nor any engines for to take or destroy deer, hares, nor conies,
- nor other _gentlemen's game_, under pain of twelve months imprisonment.
- "For the great dearth that is in many places of the realm of poultry, it
- is ordained that the price of a young capon shall not pass threepence,
- and of an old fourpence, of a hen twopence, of a pullet a penny, of a
- goose fourpence.
- "Esquires and gentlemen under the estate of a knight shall not wear
- cloth of a higher price than four and a half marks, they shall wear no
- cloth of gold nor silk nor silver, nor no manner of clothing
- embroidered, ring button nor brooch of gold nor of silver, nor nothing
- of stone nor no manner of fur; and their wives and daughters shall be of
- the same condition as to their vesture and apparel, without any
- turning-up or purfle or apparel of gold, silver nor of stone.
- "Because that servants and labourers will not nor by long season would,
- serve and labour without outrageous and excessive hire, and much more
- than hath been given to such servants and labourers in any time past, so
- that for scarcity of the said servants and labourers the husbands and
- land-tenants may not pay their rent nor live upon their lands, to the
- great damage and loss as well of the Lords as of the Commons, it is
- accorded and assented that the bailiff for husbandry shall take by the
- years 13s. 3d. and his clothing once by the year at most; the master
- hind 10s., the carter 10s., the shepherd 10s., the oxherd 6s. 8d., the
- swineherd 6s., a woman labourer 6s., a dey 6s., a driver of the plough
- 7s. at the most, and every other labourer and servant according to his
- degree; and less in the country where less was wont to be given, without
- clothing, courtesy, or other reward by covenant. If any give or take by
- covenant more than is above specified, at the first that they shall be
- thereof attained, as well the givers as the takers, shall pay the value
- of the excess so taken, and at the second time of their attainer the
- double value of such excess, and at the third time the treble value of
- such excess, and if the taker so attained have nothing whereof to pay
- the said excess, he shall have forty days imprisonment."
- Our puritan fathers had the same paternal solicitude as all other
- tyrants. They made it a crime to disregard the Sabbath, or to deny
- Scripture, or the truth of Christianity or of the Trinity. In the
- records of the colony for September 1639 it is written: "For as much as
- it is evident unto this court that the common custom of drinking one to
- another, is a mere useless ceremony, and draweth on that abominable
- practice of drinking healths, and is also an occasion of much waste of
- the good creatures, and of many other sin," etc. Then it declares that
- such is a reproach to a Christian commonwealth, "wherein the least evils
- are not to be tolerated."
- In the instructions of the Massachusetts Company to Endicott and his
- Council, the trade in tobacco is only allowed to the "old planters," "if
- they conceive that they cannot otherwise provide for their livelihood."
- It is left to the discretion of Endicott and his Council "to give way
- for the present to their planting of it, in such manner and with such
- restrictions" as they may think fitting. "But," it is added, "we
- absolutely forbid the sale of it or the use of it by any of our own
- particular (private) men's servants, unless upon urgent occasion, for
- the benefit of health, and taken privately." In the Records of the
- Colony of Massachusetts for September 3, 1634, "it is ordered that
- victuallers or keepers of an ordinary shall not suffer any tobacco to be
- taken into their houses, under penalty of 5s. for every offence to be
- paid by the victualler, and 12d. by the party that takes it." "Further
- it is ordered that no person shall take tobacco publicly under the
- penalty of 2s. 6d., nor privately in his own house or in the house of
- another before strangers, and that two or more shall not take it
- together anywhere, under the aforesaid penalty for every offence."
- The laws which our Colonial fathers enacted against "excess and bravery
- in apparel" are fitted to excite a smile. But there is something more
- than ludicrous in the aspect of grave lawmakers passing judgment on all
- the minutiæ of dress, and finding matter of offence in an extra "slash,"
- or a needless garniture of "lace." Against this last-named article the
- zeal of our Puritan fathers seems to have been especially stirred up. In
- 1634 it was ordered "that no person, either man or woman, shall
- hereafter make or buy any apparel, either woolen, silk, or linen with
- any lace on it, silver, gold, silk, or thread, under the penalty of
- forfeiture of such clothes." In 1636 it was enacted "that no person,
- after one month, shall make or sell any bone-lace or other lace, to be
- worn upon any garment or linen, upon pain of 5s. the yard for every yard
- of such lace so made, or sold, or set on; neither shall any tailor set
- any lace upon any garment, upon pain of 10s. for every
- offence,--provided that binding or small edging laces may be used upon
- garments or linen." Again, three years later, a new edict was launched
- at this obnoxious material, because "there is much complaint of the
- excessive wearing of lace and other superfluities, tending to little use
- or benefit, but to the nourishing of pride and the exhausting of men's
- estates, and also of evil example to others." The law of 1634 was indeed
- repealed in 1644; but in 1651 the Court, to their great grief, are
- compelled to try their hand at the work again, though frankly confessing
- the impotence of all previous legislation, and evidently awakening to a
- sense of the inherent difficulties of the subject. "We acknowledge it,"
- say they, "to be a matter of much difficulty, in regard of the blindness
- of men's minds and the stubbornness of their wills, to set down exact
- rules to confine all sorts of persons"; and so, leaving the wealthier
- class to their own conscience of fancy, they undertake to prescribe for
- "people of mean condition." It was therefore ordered (in 1651) that no
- one whose estate is not of the value of £200 "shall wear any gold or
- silver lace, or gold or silver buttons, or any bone-lace above 2s. per
- yard or silk hoods or scarfs"; and moreover, the selectmen of the town
- are required to fine anybody whom "they shall judge to exceed their rank
- and ability in the costliness or fashion of their apparel, in any
- respect"! And finally, a law passed in 1662 forbids "children and
- servants" to wear any apparel "exceeding the quality and condition of
- their persons or estate," "the grand jury and country court of the
- shire" being judges of the offence.
- One provision of the law of 1634 against "new and immodest fashions" is
- too remarkable to be omitted. It reads as follows: "Moreover, it is
- agreed, if any man shall judge the wearing of any the forenamed
- particulars, new fashions, or long hair, or anything of the like nature,
- to be uncomely or prejudicial to the common good, and the party
- offending reform not the same, upon notice given him, that then the next
- Assistant, being informed thereof, shall have power to bind the party so
- offending to answer it at the next Court, if the case so requires;
- provided, and it is the meaning of the Court, that men and women shall
- have liberty to wear out such apparel as they are now provided of
- (except the immoderate great sleeves, slashed apparel, immoderate great
- veils, long wings, etc.)." What intolerable tyranny of private
- surveillance is indicated in the phrase, "what any man shall judge to be
- uncomely"!
- In the second letter of instructions (dated June, 1629) to Endicott and
- his Council, they are exhorted to prevent the sale of "strong waters" to
- the Indians, and to punish any of their own people who shall become
- drunk in the use of them. In the preamble to a law enacted in 1646, one
- is led to expect an enforcement of the modern principles of abstinence
- and prohibition; since, after declaring that "drunkenness is a vice to
- be abhorred of all nations, especially of those which hold out and
- profess the Gospel of Christ Jesus," it goes on to assert that "any
- strict laws against the sin will not prevail unless the cause be taken
- away." But it would seem that "the cause," in the eyes of our Puritan
- lawmakers, was an indiscriminate sale of spirituous drinks; for the law
- chiefly enacts that none but "vintners" shall have permission to retail
- wine and "strong water." It is also permitted to constables to search
- any tavern, or even any private house, "suspected to sell wine contrary
- to this order." Moreover, no person is "to drink or tipple at
- unseasonable times in houses of entertainment,"--the "unseasonable" time
- being declared to be after nine in the evening.
- But these laws were of small avail, for, in 1648, the Court is grieved
- to confess: "It is found by experience that a great quantity of wine is
- spent, and much thereof abused to excess of drinking and unto
- drunkenness itself, notwithstanding all the wholesome laws provided and
- published for the preventing thereof." It therefore orders, that those
- who are authorized to sell wine and beer shall not harbor a drunkard in
- their houses, but shall forthwith give him up to be dealt with by the
- proper officer, under penalty of five pounds for disobedience.
- In 1636 one "Peter Bussaker was censured for drunkenness to be whipped
- and to have twenty stripes sharply inflicted, and fined £5 for slighting
- the magistrates," etc. In March, 1634, it was ordered, "that Robert
- Coles, for drunkenness by him committed at Roxbury, shall be
- disfranchised, wear about his neck and so to hangg upon his outward
- garment a D made of red cloth and set upon white; to continue this for a
- year, and not to leave it off at any time when he comes amongst company,
- under penalty of 40s. for the first offence and £5 for the second." What
- was the efficacy of the whipping or the "scarlet letter," we are not
- informed.
- Of course, people capable of such legislation must frame fantastic
- definitions of Liberty. Here is an old one whose sentiments have been
- often parroted by unthinking humans of modern times. It reads: "True
- Liberty consists in a freedom of doing and receiving good under the
- protection of a government solicitous for the people's good." Such has
- always been the tyrant's conception of freedom, and, strange to say,
- finds many endorsements even to this day.
- It has recently been solemnly announced from the judicial bench that the
- only liberty an American has is the liberty to do the right thing, of
- course according to other people's conception of right. That is
- precisely the kind of tyranny or liberty that was enjoyed by the victims
- of the paternalistic laws above described.
- Persons afflicted with newspaper intelligence express their conception
- that the individual has no rights that government may not invade, by
- that hollow phrase, "Liberty under the Law." Liberty under the law is
- what the government-ridden peasants of Russia enjoy. Liberty under the
- law was the pleasure of those who expired with indescribable agony on
- the rack and amid the flames. Liberty under the law was meted out to the
- millions of victims of the witchcraft delusion. Liberty under the law
- was also the liberty of our Southern chattel slaves before as well as
- after the war. Liberty under the law is the same old idea of liberty
- which every tyrant has ever advanced. As for myself, I shouldn't object
- to a little liberty in spite of the law, when that does not conform to
- the rule of liberty as laid down by Herbert Spencer in these words:
- "Every man has freedom to do all that he wills, provided he infringes
- not the equal freedom of any other man."
- AIM AND TACTICS OF THE TRADE-UNION MOVEMENT.
- By MAX BAGINSKI.
- TRADE unionism represents to the working man the most natural form of
- association with his fellow-brother. This medium became a necessity to
- him when he was confronted by modern industrialism and the power of
- capitalism. It dawned on him that the individual producer had not a
- shadow of a chance with the owner of the means of production, who,
- together with the economic power, enjoyed the protection of the State
- with its various weapons of warfare and coercion. In the face of such a
- giant master all the appeals of the workingman to the love of justice
- and common humanity went up into smoke.
- The beginning of modern industry found the producer in abject slavery
- and without the understanding of an organized form of resistance.
- Exploitation reigned supreme, ever seeking to sap the last drop of
- strength of its victims. No mercy for the common man, nor any
- consideration shown for his life, his health, growth and development.
- Capitalism's only aim was the accumulation of profits, of wealth and
- power, and to this moloch everything else was ruthlessly sacrificed.
- This spirit of accumulation did not admit of the right of the masses to
- think, feel, or demand; it merely considered them a class of coolies,
- specially created, as it were, for their masters' use.
- This notion is still in vogue to-day, and if the conditions of the
- workers at this moment are somewhat better, somewhat more endurable, it
- is not thanks to the milk of human kindness of the money power.
- Whatsoever the workingmen have achieved in the way of better human
- conditions,--a higher standard of living, or a partial recognition of
- their rights,--they have wrenched from their enemies through a hard and
- bitter struggle that required great endurance, tremendous courage and
- many sacrifices.
- The tendency to treat the people as a herd of sheep the purpose of which
- is to serve as food for parasites is still very strong; but this
- tendency no longer goes unchallenged; it is being met with tremendous
- opposition; increased social knowledge and revolutionary ideas have
- taught the workingmen to unite their efforts against those who have been
- comfortably seated on their backs for centuries past.
- The first unskilled attempt on the part of the people to gain a clear
- conception of their position brought out blind hatred against the
- technical methods of exploitation instead of hatred against the latter.
- In England, for instance, the workingmen considered machinery their
- deadly foe, to be gotten rid of by all means. The simple axiom that
- machinery, factories, mines, land, together with every other means of
- production, if only in the hands of the entire community, would serve
- for the comfort and happiness of all, instead of being a curse, was a
- book of seven seals for the people in those days. And even at this late
- hour this simple truth is entertained by a comparative few, though more
- than one decade of socialistic and anarchistic enlightenment has passed.
- The first trade-unionistic attempts have met with the same ferocious
- persecution that Anarchism is being met with to-day. Even as to-day
- capital avails itself of the strongest weapons of government in its
- attack upon labor. The authorities were not slow in passing laws against
- trade unionism and every effort for organization was at that time
- considered high treason, organizers and all those who participated in
- strikes were considered aides and abettors of crime and conspiracy,
- punishable with long years of imprisonment and, in many cases, even with
- death.
- At the behest of Money, the State sent human bloodhounds on the trail of
- the man who in any way was suspected in participating in the trade-union
- movement. The most villainous and brutal methods were employed to
- counteract the growth and success of labor organizations. The powers
- that be recognized the great force that is contained in organized labor
- as the means of the regeneration of society much quicker than the
- workingmen themselves. They felt this force hanging like a Damocles
- sword over their heads, which danger made them dread the future, and
- nothing was left undone to nip this force in the bud.
- The fundamental principle of trade unionism is of a revolutionary
- character and, as such, it never was and never can be a mere palliative
- for the adjustment of Labor to Capital. Hence, it must aim at the social
- and economic reconstruction of society.
- Many labor leaders in this country, who consider their duty performed
- when they sit themselves at the table of wealth and authority, trying to
- bring about peace and harmony between Capital and Labor, might greatly
- profit by the history of trade-unionism and the various economic
- struggles it has fought.
- Only ignorance can account for the birth of such superficial stuff on
- the labor question as the book of John Mitchell that has been launched
- upon the market through loud and vulgar advertisement. Nothing could
- have disproved the fitness of Mr. Mitchell for a labor leader so
- drastically as this book.
- As already stated, the violent attempt to kill trade unionism or its
- organizations have proven futile. The swelling tide of the labor
- movement could not be stopped. The social and economic problem brought
- to light by modern industry demanded a hearing, produced various
- theories and an extensive literature on the subject--a literature that
- spoke with a tongue of fire of the awful existence of the oppressed
- millions, their trials, their tribulations, the uncertainty, the dangers
- surrounding them; it spoke of the terrible results of their conditions,
- of the lives crippled, of the hopes marred; a literature that demanded
- to know why it is that those who toil are condemned to want and poverty,
- while those who never produced were living in affluence and
- extravagance.
- Well-meaning people have even attempted to prove that Capital and Labor
- are twins, and that in order to maintain their common interests they
- ought to live in harmony; or, that if Sister Labor had a grievance
- against its big brother it ought to be settled in a calm and peaceful
- way. Meanwhile the dear sister was fleeced and bled by Brother Capital,
- and every time the abused and slaved and outraged creature would turn to
- her brother for justice the dear fellow would whip the rebellious child
- into submission.
- Along with the forcible subjection of organized labor, the minds of the
- people were confused and blurred by the sugar-coated promises of
- politicians who assured them that the trade unions ought to be organized
- by the law, and that all labor quarrels ought to be settled by political
- and legal means. Indeed, legislatures even discussed a few
- labor-protective laws that either never saw the light of day, or, if
- really enacted, were set aside or overridden by the possessing class as
- an obstacle to profit-making.
- Every government, no matter what political basis it rests upon, acts in
- unison with wealth, and therefore it never passed any legislation in
- behalf of the producing element of the country that would seriously
- benefit the great bulk of the people or in any way aim at any change of
- wage-slaving or economic subjugation.
- Every step of improvement the workingmen have made is due solely to
- their own economic efforts and not to any legal or political aid ever
- given them, and through their own endeavors only can ever come the
- reconstruction of the economic and social conditions of society. Just as
- little as the workingmen can expect from legislative methods can they
- gain from trade-unionistic efforts that attempt to better economic
- conditions along the basic lines of the present industrial system.
- The cardinal fault of the trade-union movement of this country lies in
- the fact that its hopes and ideals rest upon the present social status;
- these ideals ever rotate in the same circle and, therefore, cannot bear
- intellectual and material fruit. Condemned to pasture in the lean
- meadows of capitalistic economy, trade-unionism drags on a miserable
- existence, satisfied with the crumbs that fall from the heavily laden
- tables of their lordly masters.
- True social science has amply proved the futility of a reconciliation
- between the two opposing forces; the existence of the one force
- representing possession, wealth and power inevitably has a paralyzing
- effect upon its opposing force--Labor.
- Trade-unionistic tactics of to-day unfortunately still travel the path
- marked out for Labor by the powers that be, while the majority of the
- labor leaders waste the time paid for by their organizations in
- listening to or discussing with capitalists sweet nothings in the form
- of arbitration or reconciliation, and are apparently unaware of the
- fundamental difference between the body they represent and the powers
- they bow to. And thus it happens that labor organizations are being
- brutally attacked, that the militia and soldiers are maiming their
- brothers in the various strike regions while the leaders are being dined
- and wined. The American Federation of Labor is lobbying in Washington,
- begging for legal protection, and in return venal Justice sends
- Winchester rifles and drunken militiamen into the disturbed labor
- districts. Recently the American Federation of Labor made an alleged
- radical step in deciding to put up labor candidates for Congress--an old
- and threadbare political move--thereby sacrificing whatever honest men
- and clear heads they may have in their ranks. Such tactics are not worth
- a single drop of sweat of the workingmen, since they are not only
- contradictory to the basic principles of trade unionism, but even
- useless and impractical.
- Pity for and indignation against the workers fill one's soul at the
- spectacle of the ridiculous strike methods so often employed and that as
- often frustrate the possible success of every large labor war. Or is it
- not laughable, if it were not so deadly serious, that the producers
- publicly discuss for months in advance where and when they might strike,
- and therewith give the enemy a chance to prepare his means of combat.
- For months the papers of the money power bring long interviews with
- labor leaders, giving detailed descriptions of the ways and means of the
- proposed strikes, or the results of negotiations with this or that mine
- magnate. The more often these negotiations are reported, the more glory
- to the so-called leaders, for the more often their names appear in the
- papers; the more "reasonable" the utterances of these gentlemen (which
- means that they are neither fish nor flesh, neither warm nor cold), the
- surer they grow of the sympathy of the most reactionary element in the
- country or of an invitation to the White House to join the Chief
- Magistrate at dinner. Labor leaders of such caliber fail to consider
- that every strike is a labor event upon the success or failure of which
- thousands of lives depend; rather do they see in it an opportunity to
- push their own insignificant personalities into prominence. Instead of
- leading their organized hosts to victory, they disclose their
- superficiality in their zeal not to injure their reputation for
- "respectability."
- The workingmen? Be it victory or defeat, they must take up the reins of
- every strike themselves; as it is, they play the dupes of the shrewd
- attorneys on both sides, unaware of the price the trickery and cunning
- of these men cost them.
- As I said before, the unions negotiate strikes for days and weeks and
- months beforehand, even allowing their men to work overtime in order to
- produce all the commodities to continue business while the strike is
- going on.
- The printers, for instance, worked late into the night on magazines that
- were being got ready four months in advance, and the miners who
- discussed the strike so long until every remnant of enthusiasm was gone.
- What wonder, then, that strikes fail? As long as the employer is in a
- position to say, "Strike if you will; I do not need you; I can fill my
- orders; I know that hunger will drive _you_ back into the mine and
- factory, _I_ can wait," there is no hope for the success of the strike.
- Such have been the results of the legal trade union methods.
- The history of the labor struggle of this country shows an incident that
- warrants the hope for an energetic, revolutionary trade union agitation.
- That is the eight-hour movement of 1886 which culminated in the death of
- five labor leaders. That movement contained the true element of the
- proletarian and revolutionary spirit, the lack of which makes organized
- labor of to-day a ball in the hands of selfish aspirants, know-nothings
- and politicians.
- That which specifically characterized the event of 1886 as a
- revolutionary factor was the fact that the eight-hour workday could
- never be accomplished through lobbying with politicians, but through the
- direct and economic weapon, the general strike.
- The desire to demonstrate the efficacy of this weapon gave birth to the
- idea of celebrating the first of May as an appropriate day for Labor's
- festival. On that day the workingmen were to give the first practical
- demonstration of the power of the general strike as an at least one-day
- protest against oppression and tyranny, and which day were gradually to
- become the means for the final overthrow of economic and social
- dependence.
- One may suggest that the tragedy of the 11th of November of 1887 has
- stamped the general strike as a futile method, but this is not true. The
- battle of liberation cannot be put a stop to by the brutality and
- rascality of the ruling powers. The vicious anger and the wild hatred
- that strangled our brothers in Chicago are the safest guarantee that
- their activity struck a potentially fatal blow to government and
- capital.
- Neither Mr. Mitchell nor Mr. Gompers run the risk of dying upon the
- gallows of sacred capitalistic Justitia; her ladyship is not at all as
- blind as some suppose her to be; on the contrary, she has a very keen
- eye for all that may prove beneficial or dangerous to the society that
- draws its subsistence from the lives' blood of its people. She has quite
- made up her mind that the gentlemen in the ranks of Labor to-day lead
- the people about in a circle and never will urge them out into the open,
- towards liberation.
- (_To be continued._)
- [Illustration]
- REFINED CRUELTY.
- By ANNA MERCY.
- CIVILIZATION has eliminated none of the qualities that marked the age of
- savagery. The cruelties which especially characterized primitive man is
- exercised as much to-day as in the days of cannibalism.
- Civilization has been the refining agent of our qualities. Just as a
- number of chemicals put into a crucible are refined by a certain acid,
- while yet the original substances remain, though in different forms, so
- has civilization refined and remolded the crude elements of our nature,
- leaving the essence of our primitive qualities the same.
- The subtlety with which cruelty is exercised to-day makes of it a
- far-reaching and far more destructive force than formerly. Instead of
- attacking our neighbors with sticks and stones and tomahawks, and
- forcing them into captivity in order that they may work for us, we
- obtain the same or even better results by numerous subtle methods. We
- instill respect for law, wealth and morality. We withdraw the land and
- other natural resources from general use. With a show of generous
- sentiment, we allow the lambs we have shorn to assist us in the
- shearing of other lambs.
- Every morning and every evening we see a long procession of men and
- women going or coming from the work, at which they have given up their
- life force for the sake of a mere pittance. Look at these men and women!
- There they go, evidently free! No shackles are on their hands or feet,
- no overseer keeps them in check by club or gun. There they go
- voluntarily to their prison factories, offices, stores, in the morning;
- and in the evening, when the glorious sun is hidden from sight, they
- come out again, haggard and worn, to creep to their prison homes.
- When the savage desires to rob you, he may attempt to strangle and maim
- you. But the civilized man scorns such crude methods. He builds cheap
- tenements in which you may gradually and surely choke to death; and not
- satisfied with that, he, with a great show of kindness, prepares your
- foods for you, that they may slowly, very slowly, but surely, hasten
- your deliverance. Babies are not frankly murdered any more, but they are
- served with nice, adulterated milk, which accomplishes the same purpose
- in a quieter way.
- Under the name of law many atrocious crimes are committed. Imprisonment,
- capital punishment and war are yet crude in their methods. They are
- still susceptible of more refining. Here cruelty has rather a thin
- garment on and needs to be covered up a little more.
- Even in our every-day relations with each other, we use many and varied
- forms of refined cruelty. When displeased, we no longer beat each other,
- but we use the subtler forces of sarcasm, irony, slander, neglect. We
- regard directness a rudeness, when in reality it is the greatest
- kindness imaginable. Instead of being positive and direct in our
- dealings with each other, we constantly exercise a passive cruelty, in
- other words, the cruelty of refinement. We are evasive, delusive,
- subdued, falsified. But we deceive with dignity, tell falsehoods
- fluently, use words and cold behavior as daggers.
- To-day we do not turn away an unwelcome visitor, but we announce that we
- are not at home; or we slander him behind his back. When we love we
- pretend to be modest and indifferent, while, in an indirect way, we
- attempt to build walls around the person we love. There is nothing free
- in the expression of our emotions, for we are subdued, crushed; we are
- civilized!
- Everything is sham and hypocrisy, and hidden daggers are everywhere, in
- one form or another. These daggers are concealed under kindness,
- charity, benevolence, morality, law, and are, therefore, difficult to
- deal with. The blades are thrust into the back; you can feel them, but
- you cannot grapple with them.
- Our inherent cruelty is best illustrated in the treatment we give those
- who are absolutely in our power--little children and the dumb animals.
- With what authority do we elicit respect and obedience from our little
- people! With rod in hand and with venomous tongues we begin the process
- of subjugating and civilizing our little free, emotional people. In the
- name of "their highest good" do we mould them to be actors, that they
- may properly enact the tragedy of life as we had enacted it before them!
- The dumb animals receive the cream of our refined cruelty. In order to
- appear civilized, we drive in carriages pulled by horses whose spinal
- columns have been docked, whose necks are held stiff by tight check
- reins, whose eyes are blinded by "fashionable" devices.
- There used to be cannibalism and human sacrifices; there used to be
- religious prostitution and the murder of weak children and of girls;
- there used to be bloody revenge and the slaughter of whole populations,
- judicial tortures, quarterings, burnings at the stake, the lash, and
- slavery, which have disappeared. But if we have outlived these dreadful
- customs and institutions, this does not prove that there do not exist
- institutions and customs amongst us which have become as abhorrent to
- enlightened reason and conscience as those which have in their time been
- abolished and have become for us only a dreadful remembrance. The way of
- human perfecting is endless, and at every moment of historical life
- there are superstitions, deceits, pernicious and evil institutions
- already outlived by men and belonging to the past; there are others
- which appear to us in the far mists of the future; and there are some
- which we are now living through and whose over-living forms the object
- of our life. Such in our time is capital punishment and all punishment
- in general. Such is prostitution, such is the work of militarism, war,
- and such is the nearest and most obvious evil, private property in land.
- [Illustration]
- "THE JUNGLE."
- A Recension by VERITAS.
- "THE JUNGLE," a recent story by Upton Sinclair, is a nightmare of
- horrors, of which the worst horror is that it is not a phantom of the
- night, but claims to be true history of one phase of our
- twentieth-century civilization. Nothing but the book itself could
- represent its own tragic power. In my opinion it is the most terrible
- book ever written.
- It is for the most part a tale of the abattoirs, those unspeakable
- survivals in our Christendom in which man reeks his savage and sensual
- will on the lesser animals; and indirectly it is a story of the moral
- abattoirs of politics, economics, society, religion and the home, where
- the victims are of the species human, and where man's inhumanity to man
- is as selfish and relentless as his age-long cruelty to his brothers and
- sisters just behind him in the great procession.
- Possibly the title is inappropriate. There is a "law of the pack," which
- is observed in the genuine jungle, but these human beasts appear to have
- all of the jungle's vices and few of its virtues. The author might have
- called his history, "The Slaughter House," or, perhaps, plain "Hell."
- It is a common saying about a packing house, "We use all of the hog
- except the squeal." This author uses the squeal, or, rather, the wild
- death shrieks of agony of the ten millions of living creatures tortured
- to death every year in Chicago and the other tens of millions elsewhere,
- to pander to the old brutal, inhuman thirst of humanity for a diet of
- blood. The billions of the slain have found a voice at last, and if I
- mistake not this cry of anguish from the "killing-beds" shall not sound
- on until men, whose ancestors once were cannibals, shall cease to devour
- even the corpses of their murdered animal relatives. But while "The
- Jungle" will undoubtedly make more vegetarians, it would take more than
- the practice of universal vegetarianism to cause the book to fulfil its
- mission; for this is a story of Civilization's Inferno and of the crisis
- of the world, a recital of conditions for which, when once comprehended,
- there can be no remedy but the revolution of revolutions, the event
- toward which the ages ran, the establishment of a genuine political,
- industrial and social democracy.[2]
- If the story be dramatized and Mrs. Fiske take the part of Ona, her
- presentation will make Tess seem like a pastoral idyll in comparison.
- The book is great even from a political standpoint.
- But more than this, it is a great moral appeal. Not in Victor Hugo or
- Charles Dickens does the moral passion burn with purer or intenser light
- than in these pages.
- I should not advise children or very delicately constituted women to
- read it.
- I have said it is a book of horrors. I started to mark the passages of
- peculiar tragedy and found that I was marking every page, and yet it is
- a justifiable book and a necessary book.
- The author tells as facts the story of "diseased meat," and worse, the
- preparation in the night time of the bodies of the cattle which have
- died from known and unknown causes before reaching the slaughter pens,
- and the distribution of the effects, with the rest of the intentional
- killing of the day; he describes the preparation of "embalmed beef" from
- cattle covered with boils; he even narrates the story of "men who fell
- into the vats," and "sometimes they would be overlooked for days till
- all but the bones of them had gone out to the world as Durham's Pure
- Leaf Lard"; he writes of the making of smoked sausage out of waste
- potatoes by the use of chemicals and out of spoiled meat as well; and he
- further speaks of rats which were "nuisances, and the packers would put
- poisoned bread out for them; they would die, and then rats, bread and
- meat would go into the hoppers together. This is no fairy story and no
- joke; the meat would be shovelled into carts and the man who did the
- shovelling would not trouble to lift out a rat even when he saw
- one--there were things which went into the sausage in comparison with
- which a poisoned rat was a tidbit."
- But the worst of the story is a tale of the condition of the workers at
- Packingtown and elsewhere. It is the story of strong men who justly
- hated their work; of men, for no fault of their own, cast out in middle
- life to die; of weeping children driven with whips to their ignoble
- toil; of disease-producing conditions in winter, only surpassed by the
- deadly summer; of people working with their feet upon the ice and their
- heads enveloped in hot steam; of the perpetual stench which infests
- their nostrils, the sores which universally covered their bodies; of the
- terrible pace set by the continual "speeding up" of the pace makers,
- goaded to a pitch of frenzy; of accidents commonplace in every family;
- of the garbage pile of refuse from the tables of more fortunate
- citizens, from which many were forced to satisfy their hunger; of the
- terrors of the black list, the shut-down, the strike and the lockout;
- and of the universal swindle, whether a man bought a house, or doctored
- tea, coffee, sugar or flour.
- It is still further a story of the moral enormities and monstrosities of
- the almost universal graft, "the plants honeycombed with rottenness. The
- bosses grafted off the men and they grafted off each other, and some day
- the superintendent would find out about the boss, and then he would
- graft off the boss."
- When the men were set to perform some peculiarly immoral act, they would
- say, "Now we are working for the church," referring to the benefactions
- of the proprietors to religious institutions.
- It tells the story of the training of the children in vice, of girls
- forced into immorality, so that a girl without virtue would stand a
- better chance than a decent one. It is a tale of the terrible ending of
- old Antanas by saltpeter poisoning; of Jonas, no one knows how, possibly
- he fell into the vats; of little Kristoforas by convulsions; of little
- Antanas by falling into a pit before the door of his house; of Marija,
- in a house of shame; of Stanislovas, who was eaten by rats; and of
- beautiful little Ona, to the description of whose ending no other than
- the author's pen could do justice.
- The book shows how men graft everywhere, not only in the packing house,
- but how the slime of the serpent is over almost all of our modern
- commercial and political practises.
- No one can justly hold the meat kings responsible for all of this.
- Nothing less than a thorough reconstruction of our whole social organism
- will suffice. Palliative philanthropy is, as the author says, "like
- standing upon the brink of the pit of hell and throwing snow balls in to
- lower the temperature."
- "The Jungle" is the boiling over of our social volcano and shows us what
- is in it. It is a danger signal!
- We are all indicted and must stand our trial. There rests upon us the
- obligation to ascertain the facts. The author of "The Jungle" lived in
- Packingtown for months, and the eminently respectable publishers who are
- now issuing the book sent a shrewd lawyer to Chicago to report as to
- whether the statements in it were exaggerated, and his report confirmed
- the assertions of the author.
- This book is a call to immediate action.
- The Lithuanian hero found his solution of the problems suggested in
- Socialism. The solution lies either in that direction or in something
- better, and it behooves those who warn us against Socialistic
- experiments to tell us if they know of any other effective remedy.
- Surely all thoughtful men should study these theories of social
- redemption and learn why their advocates claim that putting them in
- practice would modify or abolish the evils of our modern conditions.
- "The masters, lords and rulers of all lands," the thinkers and workers
- of our time must speedily give themselves to the understanding and
- application of some adequate remedy, or there will be blood, woe and
- tears almost without end, "when this dumb terror shall reply to God,
- after the silence of the centuries."
- FOOTNOTE:
- [2] Genuine or not genuine: we live right now in a democracy. If, in
- spite of that, such diabolical crimes as Sinclair describes them are
- committed daily, then this only proves that democracy is no panacea for
- them. Why should it, if criminals of the Armour kind realize profits out
- of their wholesale poisoning of such dimensions that they can easily buy
- all the glory of the people's sovereignty.--Editor.
- THE GAME IS UP.
- By SADAKICHI HARTMANN.
- "HELLO, Morrison, may I come in?" The door stood slightly ajar.
- Morrison came to the door--the complexion of his face was sallow and his
- eyes had a peculiar look--he recognized his visitor, hesitated for a
- moment whether he should admit him, then opened the door and made a sort
- of mock courtesy.
- "Cleaning up?" the tall, lean man asked as he entered the little hall
- room.
- "Yes," and a wistful smile glided over Morrison's pale face; "cleaning
- up for good."
- The room had a peculiar appearance. There was no disorder and yet a lot
- of things were lying about; it looked as if the lodger intended to go
- away on a long journey and had tried to straighten up matters previous
- to his departure. The visitor gazed curiously about the room. He had a
- strange foreboding, but forced himself to ask in a jocular mood: "Going
- to Egypt again?"
- "Farther than that this time, but it won't take so long; the journey I
- am contemplating will be over by to-morrow evening, I hope."
- "What do you mean?"
- "The game is up."
- The tall, lean man made no immediate reply, he merely gazed steadily
- into the face of his friend. He had always suspected that it would come
- to this some day. He really wondered that Morrison had not done it long
- ago. If any man had a right to dispose of his life it was surely
- Morrison. He had endured more than most human beings. His case was
- absolutely hopeless.
- "Is there no way out of it?"
- Morrison shook his head. He wanted to say something, but his voice
- failed him. He stepped to the dresser near the window, looked into the
- mirror and arranged his faded, threadbare tie. It was pitiful to see how
- shabbily he was dressed. He no longer set the fashion as in his days of
- success, years ago in Boston.
- "Would money help you?" and the tall, lean visitor fumbled in his
- pockets. Although fairly well dressed, he was hard up most of the time
- and only ventured to broach the subject as he just happened to have a
- few dollars to spare that day.
- "No, what good would the little do that you could give me?" and he
- continued to adjust matters and tuck things away in his trunk.
- "There, you are right again, not much. But I won forty dollars on the
- track; I sometimes go out there," he added as a sort of excuse, "as it
- is impossible to live on literature alone. I could spare ten."
- "Can you really spare them? I won't be able to return them, you know. I
- would like to have them. I suppose you will refuse to let me buy a
- revolver with them. I have all sorts of poisons," he pointed to some
- little bottles, "but I would prefer not to use them, it wouldn't be
- esthetical, and then I want to go away to some place where nobody knows
- me. I don't want to be identified."
- The literary man slowly pulled a small roll out of his pocket. He
- thought of his wife and children who needed the money. It was really
- foolish to have made that offer. Well, it was probably the last service
- he could render his friend. Morrison was serious about his departure,
- there was no doubt about that. "Here!"
- "Thanks," Morrison answered, though he did not take the money right
- away. He looked about absentmindedly, as in a dream. This was friendship
- indeed. He had not believed that anybody could so completely enter
- another man's state of mind. Not a word of opposition. This was
- glorious! They had known each other for more than seventeen years. They
- had often drifted apart and, somehow, had always met again. They had
- never been very intimate, they had merely respected each other for the
- work they had accomplished, each in his profession; although they
- differed largely in ideas. Morrison was a sculptor, and almost an
- ancient Greek in his feelings for the beauty of lines. The tall, lean
- man, on the other hand, was a strange mixture of a visionary and brutal
- realist. They both were cynics, however, that found life rather futile.
- With the literary man this was merely a theoretical view point, while
- Morrison was really embittered with life. The incidents of this
- afternoon had surprised him. He was deeply moved and felt as if he
- should give utterance to his emotions. He remembered that his attitude
- towards his friend had been rather arrogant at times. He now felt sorry
- for it, but somehow could not form his sentiments and thoughts into
- coherent sentences.
- "Thanks," he simply repeated, "Has anybody seen you enter the house?"
- "No, the door was open and I walked right up. Why do you ask?"
- "I don't want anybody to be mixed up in this affair, as it only concerns
- me."
- The literary man smiled: "Could any man influence you one way or
- another? As far as I can make out you are beyond mortal influence."
- A pause ensued. Morrison threw the last thing into his trunk. "Well, I
- am ready. Everything is settled."
- "How about your statues?"
- "Pshaw!" Morrison shrugged his shoulders. "Nobody was interested in them
- while I lived. Why should I bother to think what might become of them
- after my death?"
- The author nodded and scowled at the same time. He was not satisfied
- with the answer. But there were still other things on his mind. He was
- used to analyze everything to shreds and tatters. "Are you not afraid
- that you might make a botch out of the whole job?"
- Morrison weighed the question in his mind, then shook his head and
- answered: "No, there is hardly a chance for it now. I have been tuned up
- to it, trained myself to it, so to speak. The fruit is ripe. It has to
- fall. It would be awful, though--" he added, with an after-thought. "Do
- you remember my emerald ring? I had to pawn it, but I kept the poison
- which was hidden under the stone. I will take that if anything goes
- wrong."
- "Would you object to my company?" asked the tall, lean man, "I mean
- until all is over. I, myself, am not quite ready yet for any such
- heroical performances."
- "Oh, don't think of it," the sculptor ejaculated; notwithstanding, the
- tone of his voice indicated that he would not object, that he would even
- prefer a traveling companion for the last few hours of his life.
- "Well, I'll go with you. Where are you going?"
- "To New Haven. It's a nice trip." Morrison carefully brushed his hair
- and clothes, there came a flush to his face as he realized how shabby
- his clothes really were. The tall, lean man was delicate enough to look
- away as if he had not noticed anything.
- A few moments later they left the room. Morrison locked the door and
- they went out into the street. They did not talk much, merely
- commonplace phrases that did not bear upon the subject. Both were
- occupied with their own thoughts, and strange thoughts they must have
- been. They leisurely strolled to a store of sporting outfits, bought a
- revolver and cartridges, had their shoes shined at the next corner, and
- slowly wended their way toward the depot. Their actions were almost
- mechanical. Suicide is an attack of insanity, a sort of mental plague.
- If one has caught the fever, one is doomed. There is no escape from it.
- At the same time it is contagious. The literary man was somewhat
- infected by it. All his interests in life seemed to be dulled,
- obliterated as it were. He could only think the one thought, "Morrison
- is going to kill himself. But who knows, he may, after all, turn up next
- week with the excuse that he had changed his mind. No, not he!--it was
- really too bad!" Morrison, on the other hand, grew quite cheerful. With
- him the idea that he would do it, had become so matter-of-fact, that he
- ceased to think of it. Nothing could influence him any more. Even if
- some vague current of soul activity should revolt at the very last
- moment, he was certain that his hand would mechanically perform the
- task.
- "Only one return ticket," he whispered as he approached the ticket
- office. "Oh, I almost forgot," replied his friend.
- During the trip they silently sat opposite each other, smoking. Now and
- then Morrison pointed out the beautiful sights. He seemed to be familiar
- with the scenery. At their arrival in New Haven, at dusk, they at once
- adjourned to a hotel and sat down at a table in the bar-room. They began
- to talk about art, they discussed commercialism, the lack of
- appreciation and the vanity of all serious work, at least as far as art
- is concerned. They began to relate reminiscences of their student
- years, and reviewed the hopes and ambitions of their youth. If they had
- been realized, what wonders they would have accomplished!
- "I gave the other side a chance. They never responded. I waited for ten
- long years, and now, it's all up. Let us have another drink, waiter, the
- last." They clinked glasses. "And now for a decent departure as in the
- good old times, when Hegesias, the Cyrenaic, preached suicide in
- Alexandria--"
- They arose. It had grown dark. They sauntered forth into the night.
- Morrison seemed to know where he was going. "I once spent very pleasant
- days out here," he explained, "years, I hardly remember how many years
- ago." After that they did not converse any more. They finally arrived at
- a beautiful avenue of old elms that extended far into the country. Its
- deep, dark vista was lit up only by the shimmer of a distant lake.
- Morrison stopped, seized his friend's hand, shook it, and said in a firm
- voice: "Good-bye."
- "Good-bye."
- And Morrison walked away. It was so dark that in a few moments his form
- became invisible. Only his footsteps could still be heard. They grew
- fainter and fainter. The tall, lean man stared after his friend into the
- blackness of the night. His eyes grew dim.
- A few rain drops fell on his face and hands. "I hope it won't rain," he
- murmured, "it might make dying more difficult, but no--the sky is
- clear." Then he slightly bent forward and listened eagerly. Everything
- was calm, motionless, as in suspense. Nobody passed through the avenue.
- Only in the adjoining side streets pedestrians flitted by like ghosts.
- So this was the end! After having struggled bravely for years, after
- living up to high ideals as well as one could, to go down a long, dark
- avenue--a falling star flashed across the tree tops.
- The tall, lean man pressed his hand to his heart, although he was not
- certain of having heard a report, he felt, that his friend had arrived
- at the goal of his life's journey. The game was up!
- * * * * *
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