Mother Earth, Vol. 1 No. 4, June 1906.txt 157 KB

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  1. Project Gutenberg's Mother Earth, Vol. 1 No. 4, June 1906, by Various
  2. This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
  3. almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
  4. re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
  5. with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net
  6. Title: Mother Earth, Vol. 1 No. 4, June 1906
  7. Monthly Magazine Devoted to Social Science and Literature
  8. Author: Various
  9. Editor: Emma Goldman
  10. Release Date: November 27, 2008 [EBook #27341]
  11. Language: English
  12. *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MOTHER EARTH, JUNE 1906 ***
  13. Produced by Fritz Ohrenschall, Martin Pettit and the Online
  14. Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
  15. +-------------------------------------------------+
  16. |Transcriber's note: |
  17. | |
  18. |Obvious typographical errors have been corrected |
  19. +-------------------------------------------------+
  20. Vol. I. JUNE, 1906 No. 4
  21. MOTHER EARTH
  22. [Illustration]
  23. CONTENTS
  24. PAGE
  25. Mrs. Grundy VIROQUA DANIELS 1
  26. A Greeting ALEXANDER BERKMAN 3
  27. Henrik Ibsen M. B. 6
  28. Observations and Comments 8
  29. A Letter EMMA GOLDMAN 13
  30. Libertarian Instruction EMILE JANVION 14
  31. The Antichrist FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE 15
  32. Brain Work and Manual Work PETER KROPOTKIN 21
  33. Motherhood and Marriage HENRIETTE FUERTH 30
  34. Object Lesson for Advocates of Governmental
  35. Control ARTHUR G. EVERETT, N--M. 33
  36. The Genius of War JOHN FRANCIS VALTER 36
  37. Dignity Speaks 36
  38. Paternalistic Government (CONTINUATION)
  39. THEODORE SCHROEDER 38
  40. Aim and Tactics of the Trade-Union Movement
  41. MAX BAGINSKI 44
  42. Refined Cruelty ANNA MERCY 50
  43. "The Jungle" VERITAS 53
  44. The Game is Up SADAKICHI HARTMANN 57
  45. 10c. A COPY $1 A YEAR
  46. MOTHER EARTH
  47. Monthly Magazine Devoted to Social Science and Literature
  48. Published Every 15th of the Month
  49. EMMA GOLDMAN, Publisher, P. O. Box 217, Madison Square Station,
  50. New York, N. Y.
  51. Entered as second-class matter April 9, 1906, at the post office
  52. at New York, N. Y., under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1879.
  53. Vol. I JUNE, 1906 No. 4
  54. MRS. GRUNDY.
  55. By VIROQUA DANIELS.
  56. _Her will is law. She holds despotic sway.
  57. Her wont has been to show the narrow way
  58. Wherein must tread the world, the bright, the brave,
  59. From infancy to dotard's gloomy grave._
  60. _"Obey! Obey!" with sternness she commands
  61. The high, the low, in great or little lands.
  62. She folds us all within her ample gown.
  63. A forward act is met with angry frown._
  64. _The lisping babes are taught her local speech;
  65. Her gait to walk; her blessings to beseech.
  66. They laugh or cry, as Mistress says they may,--
  67. In everything the little tots obey._
  68. _The youth know naught save Mrs. Grundy's whims.
  69. They play her games. They sing her holy hymns.
  70. They question not; accept both truth and fiction,_
  71. _(The_ OLD _is right, within her jurisdiction!)._
  72. _Maid, matron, man unto her meekly bow.
  73. She with contempt or ridicule may cow.
  74. They dare not speak, or dress, or love, or hate,
  75. At variance with the program on her slate._
  76. _Her subtle smile, e'en men to thinkers grown,
  77. Are loath to lose; before its charm they're prone.
  78. With great ado, they publicly conform--
  79. Vain, cowards, vain; revolt_ MUST _raise a storm!_
  80. _The "indiscreet," when hidden from her sight,
  81. Attempt to live as they consider "right."
  82. Lo! Walls have ears! The loyal everywhere
  83. The searchlight turn, and loudly shout, "Beware!"_
  84. _In tyranny the Mistress is supreme.
  85. "Obedience," that is her endless theme.
  86. Al countries o'er, in city, town and glen,
  87. Her aid is sought by bosses over men._
  88. _Of Greed, her brain is cunningly devised.
  89. From Ignorance, her bulky body's sized.
  90. When at her ease, she acts as judge and jury.
  91. But she's the Mob when 'roused to fighting fury._
  92. _Dame Grundy is, by far, the fiercest foe
  93. To ev'ry kind of progress, that we know.
  94. So Freedom is, to her, a poison thing.
  95. Who heralds it, he must her death knell ring._
  96. [Illustration]
  97. A GREETING.
  98. By ALEXANDER BERKMAN.
  99. Dear Friends:--
  100. I am happy, inexpressibly happy to be in your midst again, after an
  101. absence of fourteen long years, passed amid the horrors and darkness of
  102. my Pennsylvania nightmare. * * * Methinks the days of miracles are not
  103. past. They say that nineteen hundred years ago a man was raised from the
  104. dead after having been buried for three days. They call it a great
  105. miracle. But I think the resurrection from the peaceful slumber of a
  106. three days' grave is not nearly so miraculous as the actual coming back
  107. to life from a living death of fourteen years duration;--'tis the
  108. twentieth century resurrection, not based on ignorant credulity, nor
  109. assisted by any Oriental jugglery. No travelers ever return, the poets
  110. say, from the Land of Shades beyond the river Styx--and may be it is a
  111. good thing for them that they don't--but you can see that there is an
  112. occasional exception even to that rule, for I have just returned from a
  113. hell, the like of which, for human brutality and fiendish barbarity, is
  114. not to be found even in the fire-and-brimstone creeds of our loving
  115. Christians.
  116. It was a moment of supreme joy when I felt the heavy chains, that had
  117. bound me so long, give way with the final clang of the iron doors behind
  118. me and I suddenly found myself transported, as it were, from the dreary
  119. night of my prison-existence into the warm sunshine of the living day;
  120. and then, as I breathed the free air of the beautiful May morning--my
  121. first breath of freedom in fourteen years--it seemed to me as if a
  122. beautiful nature had waved her magic wand and marshalled her most
  123. alluring charms to welcome me into the world again; the sun, bathed in a
  124. sea of sapphire, seemed to shed his golden-winged caresses upon me;
  125. beautiful birds were intoning a sweet paean of joyful welcome;
  126. green-clad trees on the banks of the Allegheny were stretching out to me
  127. a hundred emerald arms, and every little blade of grass seemed to lift
  128. its head and nod to me, and all Nature whispered sweetly "Welcome Home!"
  129. It was Nature's beautiful Springtime, the reawakening of Life, and Joy,
  130. and Hope, and the spirit of Springtime dwelt in my heart.
  131. I had been told before I left the prison that the world had changed so
  132. much during my long confinement that I would practically come back into
  133. a new and different world. I hoped it were true. For at the time when I
  134. retired from the world, or rather when I _was_ retired from the
  135. world--that was a hundred years ago, for it happened in the nineteenth
  136. century--at that time, I say, the footsteps of the world were faltering
  137. under the heavy cross of oppression, injustice and misery, and I could
  138. hear the anguish-cry of the suffering multitudes, even above the
  139. clanking of my own heavy chains. * * * But all that is different now--I
  140. thought as I left the prison--for have I not been told that the world
  141. had changed, changed so much that, as they put it, "its own mother
  142. wouldn't know it again." And that thought made me _doubly_ happy: happy
  143. at the recovery of my own liberty, and happy in the fond hope that I
  144. should find my own great joy mirrored in, and heightened by the
  145. happiness of my fellow-men.
  146. Then I began to look around, and indeed, I found the world changed; so
  147. changed, in fact, that I am now afraid to cross the street, lest
  148. lightning, in the shape of a horseless car, overtake me and strike me
  149. down; I also found a new race of beings, a race of red
  150. devils--automobiles you call them--and I have been told about the winged
  151. children of thought flying above our heads--talking through the air, you
  152. know, and sometimes also through the hat, perhaps--and here in New York
  153. you can ride on the ground, overground, above ground, underground, and
  154. without any ground at all.
  155. These and a thousand and one other inventions and discoveries have
  156. considerably changed the face of the world. But alas! its face _only_.
  157. For as I looked further, past the outer trappings, down into the heart
  158. of the world, I beheld the old, familiar, yet no less revolting sight of
  159. Mammon, enthroned upon a dais of bleeding hearts, and I saw the ruthless
  160. wheels of the social Juggernaut slowly crushing the beautiful form of
  161. liberty lying prostrate on the ground. * * * I saw men, women and
  162. children, without number, sacrificed on the altar of the capitalistic
  163. Moloch, and I beheld a race of pitiful creatures, stricken with the
  164. modern St. Vitus's dance at the shrine of the Golden Calf.
  165. With an aching heart I realized what I had been told in prison about
  166. the changed condition of the world was but a miserable myth, and my fond
  167. hope of returning into a new, regenerated world lay shattered at my
  168. feet....
  169. No, the world has not changed during my absence; I can find no
  170. improvement in the twentieth-century society over that of the
  171. nineteenth, and in truth, it is not capable of any real improvement, for
  172. this society is the product of a civilization so self-contradictory in
  173. its essential qualities, so stupendously absurd in its results, that the
  174. more we advance in this would-be civilization the less rational, the
  175. less human we become. Your twentieth-century civilization is fitly
  176. characterized by the fact that, paradoxical as it may seem, the more we
  177. produce, the less we have, and the richer we get, the poorer we are.
  178. Your pseudo-civilization is of that quality which defeats its own ends,
  179. so that notwithstanding the prodigious mechanical aids we possess in the
  180. production of all forms of wealth, the struggle for existence is more
  181. savage, more ferocious to-day than it has been ever since the dawn of
  182. our civilization.
  183. But what is the cause of all this, what is wrong with our society and
  184. our civilization?
  185. Simply this:--a lie can not prosper. Our whole social fabric, our
  186. boasted civilization rests on the foundations of a lie, a most gigantic
  187. lie--the religious, political and economic lie, a triune lie, from whose
  188. fertile womb has issued a world of corruption, evils, shams and
  189. unnameable crimes. There, denuded of its tinsel trappings, your
  190. civilization stands revealed in all the evil reality of its unadorned
  191. shame; and 'tis a ghastly sight, a mass of corruption, an ever-spreading
  192. cancer. Your false civilization is a disease, and capitalism is its most
  193. malignant form; 'tis the acute stage which is breeding into the world a
  194. race of cowards, weaklings and imbeciles; a race of mannikins, lacking
  195. the physical courage and mental initiative to think the thought and do
  196. the deed not inscribed in the book of practice; a race of pigmies,
  197. slaves to tradition and superstition, lacking all force of individuality
  198. and rushing, like wild maniacs, toward the treacherous eddies of that
  199. social cataclysm which has swallowed the far mightier and greater
  200. nations of the ancient world.
  201. It is because of these things that I address myself to you, fellow-men.
  202. Society has not changed during my absence, and yet, to be saved, it
  203. needs to be changed. It needs, above all, real men, men and women of
  204. originality and individuality; men and women, not afraid to brave the
  205. scornful contempt of the conventional mob, men and women brave enough to
  206. break from the ranks of custom and lead into new paths, men and women
  207. strong enough to smash the fatal social lock-step and lead us into new
  208. and happier ways.
  209. And because society has not changed, neither will I. Though the
  210. bloodthirsty hyena of the law has, in its wild revenge, despoiled me of
  211. the fourteen most precious blossoms in the garden of my life, yet I
  212. will, henceforth as heretofore, consecrate what days are left to me in
  213. the service of that grand ideal, the wonderful power of which has
  214. sustained me through those years of torture; and I will devote all my
  215. energies and whatever ability I may have to that noblest of all causes
  216. of a new, regenerated and free humanity; and it shall be more than my
  217. sufficient reward to know that I have added, if ever so little, in
  218. breaking the shackles of superstition, ignorance and tradition, and
  219. helped to turn the tide of society from the narrow lane of its blind
  220. selfishness and self-sufficient arrogance into the broad, open road
  221. leading toward a true civilization, to the new and brighter day of
  222. Freedom in Brotherhood.
  223. [Illustration]
  224. HENRIK IBSEN.
  225. M. B.
  226. I SHALL not attempt to confine him within the rigid lines of any
  227. literary circle; nor shall I press him into the narrow frame of school
  228. or party; nor stamp upon him the distinctive label of any particular
  229. ism. He would break such fetters; his free spirit, his great
  230. individuality would overflow the arbitrary confines of "the _sole_
  231. Truth," "the _only_ true principle." The waves of his soul would break
  232. down all artificial barriers and rush out to join the ever-moving
  233. currents of life.
  234. A seer has died.
  235. He carried the flaming torch of his art behind the scenes of society--he
  236. found there nothing but corruption. He tested the strength of our social
  237. foundations--its pillars shook: they were rotten.
  238. The rays of his genius penetrated the darkness of popular ideals; the
  239. hollow pretences of Philistinism filled his ardent soul with disgust,
  240. and pain. In this mood he wrote "The League of Youth," in which he
  241. exposed the pettiness of bourgeois aspirations and the poverty of their
  242. ideals.
  243. In "The Enemy of the People" Ibsen thunders his powerful protest against
  244. the democracy of stupidity, the tyrannous vulgarity of majority rule.
  245. Doctor Stockmann--that is Ibsen himself. How willing and eager the
  246. pigmies and yahoos would have been to stone him.
  247. "What shameless unconventionality, what shocking daring!" cried the
  248. Philistines when they beheld the characters portrayed in "Nora" (The
  249. Doll's House), "Wild Duck," and in "The Ghosts"--living pictures
  250. revealing all the evil hidden by the mask of "our sacred institutions,"
  251. "our holy hearthstone." In "Rosmersholm" Ibsen ignored even the
  252. inviolability of conscience; for there Ibsen showed how the sick
  253. conscience of Rosmer worked the ruin of Rebecca and himself, by robbing
  254. them of the joy of life.
  255. The moralists howled long and loud.
  256. "Has Ibsen no ideals? Does the accursed Midas-touch of his mind dissolve
  257. everything, one very Holy of Holies, into the ashes of nothing?"
  258. Thus spoke self-sufficient arrogance.
  259. But can one read "Brand" or "Peer Gynt" and ask such questions? No heart
  260. so overflowed with human yearning, no soul ever breathed grander, nobler
  261. ideals than Henrik Ibsen. True, he did not prostrate himself before the
  262. idols of the conventional mob, nor did his sacrificial fires burn on the
  263. altar of mediocrity and cretinism. He did not bow the proud head before
  264. the craven images that the State and Church have created for the
  265. subjugation of the masses. To Ibsen's free soul the morality of slaves
  266. was a nightmare.
  267. His ideal was Individuality, the development of character. He loved the
  268. man that was brave enough to be himself. He immeasurably hated all that
  269. was false; he abhorred all that was petty and small. He loved that true
  270. naturalness which, when most real, requires no effort.
  271. The most severe critic of Ibsen and his art was Ibsen himself. His
  272. attitude towards himself in his last work, "When We Dead Awaken," is
  273. that of the most unprejudiced judge.
  274. What is the result?
  275. We long for life; yet we are eternally chasing will-o'-the-wisps. We
  276. sacrifice ourselves for things which rob us of our Self. The castles we
  277. build prove houses made of cards, upon the first touch falling down.
  278. Instead of living, we philosophize. Our life is an esthetic counterfeit.
  279. A mind of great depth, a soul of prophetic vision has passed away; yet
  280. not without leaving its powerful impress--for Henrik Ibsen stood upon
  281. the heights, and from their loftiest peaks we beheld, with him, the
  282. heavy fogs of the present, and through the rifts we saw the bright rays
  283. of a new sun, the promise of the dawn of a freer, stronger Humanity.
  284. [Illustration]
  285. OBSERVATIONS AND COMMENTS.
  286. Schopenhauer's advice to ignore fools and knaves and not to speak to
  287. them, as the best method of keeping them at a distance, does not seem
  288. drastic enough in these days of the modern newspaper-reporter nuisance.
  289. One may throw them out of the house, nail all the doors and windows, and
  290. stuff up all key-holes; still he will come; he will slide down through
  291. the chimney, squeeze through the sewer-pipes--which, by the way, is the
  292. real field of activity of the journalistic profession.
  293. We Anarchists are usually poor business men, with a few "happy"
  294. exceptions, of course; still, we shall have to form an insurance company
  295. against the slugging system of the reporters.
  296. Alexander Berkman barely had a chance to breathe free air, when the
  297. newspaper scarecrows were let loose at his heels. Every
  298. suspicious-looking man, woman and child in New York was assailed as to
  299. Berkman's whereabouts, without avail. Finally these worthy gentlemen
  300. hit upon 210 East Thirteenth street--there the reporters made some
  301. miraculous discoveries. Two lonely hermits, utterly innocent of the ways
  302. of the world and the impertinence of reporters, were marked by the
  303. latter. They triumphed. Never before had they hit upon such simpletons,
  304. of whom they could so easily learn all the secrets of the fraternity of
  305. the Reds.
  306. "Is it not the custom of your clan to delegate every three days one of
  307. your members to take the life of some ruler?" they asked.
  308. One of the Reds smiled, knowingly. "Only one insignificant life in three
  309. days?! How little you know the Anarchists. I want you to understand,
  310. sirs, it is our wont to use just five minutes for each act, which means
  311. 864 lives in three days."
  312. This was more than the most hardened press detective could stand. They
  313. fled in terror.
  314. [Illustration]
  315. Carl Schurz, politician and career hunter by profession, died May 14th.
  316. He was met at the gate of Hell by the secretary of that institution with
  317. the following question, "Were you not one of the enthusiasts for the
  318. battle of freedom, in your young days?"
  319. "Yes," said Carl.
  320. "If the reports of my men are correct--and I am confident my men are
  321. more reliable than the majority of the newspaper men on your planet--you
  322. were even a Revolutionist?"
  323. Carl Schurz nodded.
  324. "And why have you thrown your ideals and convictions overboard?"
  325. "There was no money in them," Carl replied, sulkily.
  326. The Satanic Secretary nodded to one of his stokers, saying, "Add 5,000
  327. tons of hard coal to our fires. Here we have a man that sold his soul
  328. for money. He deserves to roast a thousand times more than the ordinary
  329. sinner."
  330. [Illustration]
  331. No one considers a thief the patron saint of honesty, nor is a liar
  332. expected to champion the truth. The hangman is not elected as president
  333. of a society for the preservation of human life; why, then, in the name
  334. of common sense, do people continue to see in the State the seat of
  335. justice and the patron saint of those whom it wrongs and outrages daily?
  336. If people would only look closer into the elements of the State, they
  337. would soon behold this trinity--the thief, the liar, and the hangman.
  338. [Illustration]
  339. Free love is condemned; prostitution flourishes. The moralist, who is
  340. the best patron of the dens of prostitution, loudly proclaims the
  341. sanctity and purity of monogamy. The free expression of life's greatest
  342. force--love--must never be tolerated. On the other hand, it is perfectly
  343. respectable to receive a large sum of money from a millionaire
  344. father-in-law for marrying his daughter.
  345. [Illustration]
  346. Rudolph von Jhering, one of the most distinguished theoreticians of
  347. jurisprudence in Europe, wrote, many years ago, "The way in which one
  348. utilizes his wealth is the best criterion of his character and degree of
  349. culture. The purpose that prompts the investment of his money is the
  350. safest characterization of him. The accounts of expenditures speak
  351. louder of a man's true nature than his diary." How well these words
  352. apply to the richest of the rich and to their methods of disposing of
  353. their capital!
  354. Take philanthropy, for instance, with its loud and common display. How
  355. it humiliates those that receive, and how it overestimates the
  356. importance of those that give.
  357. Philanthropy that steals in large quantities and returns of its bounty
  358. in medicine drops, that snatches the last bite from the mouth of the
  359. people and graciously gives them a few crumbs or a gnawed bone!
  360. Again, philanthropy as a money mania--in one instance it feeds the
  361. clergy on fat salaries, so that they might proclaim the virtue of
  362. self-denial, sobriety and prudence; in another instance it builds Sunday
  363. schools for young numbskulls and political aspirants who pretend to
  364. listen to the commonplace discourse about our Father in Heaven who gives
  365. every true Christian an opportunity to make money; rather would these
  366. milk-sops appreciate the advice of the young nabob as to how to turn a
  367. hundred-dollar bill into a thousand.
  368. Philanthropy, establishing scientific societies for the investigation of
  369. the mode of life of fleas, or philanthropy excremating libraries,
  370. maintaining missionaries in China or fostering the research of breeding
  371. sea horses.
  372. Mrs. Vanderbilt has the heels of her shoes set in diamonds, while
  373. another great philanthropist has established a pension for aged parrots.
  374. Indeed, the stupidity and sad lack of imagination of our philanthropists
  375. are pitiful. However, when one realizes that they are responsible for
  376. the distress, the poverty, and despair of the great masses of humanity,
  377. pity turns into anger and disgust with a society that will endure it
  378. all.
  379. [Illustration]
  380. The Chicago papers report a blood-curdling story, which has affected the
  381. Philistines like red affects a turkey. Knowing the keen sense of humor
  382. of our readers, we herewith reprint the story:
  383. "Treason and blasphemy as an outburst of Anarchism all but broke up a
  384. meeting held last night in the Masonic Temple under the auspices of the
  385. Spencer-Whitman Center, at which the subject of "Crime in Chicago" was
  386. discussed by various speakers. The Rev. John Roach Straton, pastor of
  387. the Second Baptist Church, was in the midst of the discourse detailing
  388. his theories with reference to the subject in hand when a voice from the
  389. doorway shouted out a blasphemous expression.
  390. The cry was greeted by hisses, but it was only a moment later that the
  391. same voice called:
  392. "Down with America! Up with Anarchy!"
  393. There was a rush for the door. A tall young man was the first to reach
  394. the offender, who is said to have been Carl Havel, associate editor of a
  395. German newspaper. There was a blow and the blasphemer reeled and fell
  396. against the wall. At the same moment a man, said to be Terence Carlin, a
  397. member of a prominent Chicago family, struck Havel's assailant. He in
  398. turn was seized by Parker H. Sercombe, chairman of the meeting, and a
  399. man who gave the name of Ben Bansig.
  400. The party struggled back and forth in the doorway, and the disturbers
  401. were forced back to an ante-room. Blows were struck in a lusty fashion
  402. and cries of "Police!" "They're murdering them!" "Help!" rang out.
  403. Finally the two disturbers made as if to get out, and the arrival of a
  404. watchman in uniform quieted them and their pursuers. It was, however,
  405. with ill grace that the disturbers of the meeting were allowed to leave,
  406. and as they passed through a door, cursing the law, the country, and
  407. God, a girl, still in her teens, broke through the crowd and turning to
  408. Havel, said:
  409. "That's all right, father."
  410. Ben Bansig saved Chicago,--there can be no dispute about that. As to
  411. Sercombe, the editor of _To-Morrow_, he deserves recognition. I suggest
  412. that he be awarded a tooth brush at the expense of City Hall.
  413. Our three friends, Terence Carlin, Havel, Mary Latter--who, as I can
  414. authentically prove, is not the daughter of Hyppolite Havel--can console
  415. themselves with the fact that their protest has done the names of
  416. Whitman and Spencer more honor than the gas of the Baptist preacher.
  417. [Illustration]
  418. That the suspiciously-red noses of the newspaper men should have smelt
  419. the "immoral conduct" of Maxim Gorky, was really very fortunate for the
  420. latter. He is now relieved from the impertinence of interviewers and
  421. prominent personages. He must feel as if he had recovered from some
  422. loathsome disease. Immorality has after all many desirable qualities.
  423. What if chickens gaggle, pharisaic goats piously turn up their eyes, and
  424. the dear little piggies grunt!
  425. [Illustration]
  426. Well-meaning people are horrified that justice is making use of such
  427. creatures as Orchard and McParland against Moyer, Haywood and Pettibone.
  428. There is nothing unusual in that. The record of the American government
  429. in its persecution against Socialists and Anarchists is by no means so
  430. clean that one need be astonished that it employs spies and perjurers as
  431. its helpmates.
  432. [Illustration]
  433. The Lord has developed from a good Christian into a good banker: He
  434. destroyed more churches than vaults in San Francisco.
  435. A LETTER.
  436. Chicago, June 2nd, 1906.
  437. Dear Editor:--I hope you have not been trying to relieve your feelings
  438. by using language dangerous to your soul's salvation. I can sympathize
  439. with you, though. However, it was impossible for me to send the promised
  440. article for "M. E." Who, indeed, could expect a bride of two weeks to
  441. waste time upon magazine articles?! I hope you have read the reports of
  442. my marriage, though your silence would indicate that you have either
  443. neglected to read the important news, or that your usual lack of faith
  444. in the truth and honesty of the press has not permitted you to credit
  445. the story.
  446. It is high time, dear friend, that you get rid of your German
  447. skepticism; you know, I esteem your judgment, but when it comes to
  448. doubting anything the newspapers say, I draw the line. What reporters do
  449. not know about Anarchists, and especially about your publisher, is not
  450. worth knowing. According to their great wisdom I not only incited men to
  451. remove the crowned heads of various countries, but I have done worse--I
  452. have incited them to marry me, and when they proved unwilling to love,
  453. honor and obey the order of our secret societies to blow up all sacred
  454. institutions, I sent them about their business.
  455. Much as I realize the importance of my articles for MOTHER EARTH, you
  456. cannot expect me to sacrifice my wifely duty to my lord and master for
  457. Earth's sake.
  458. I have always held to the opinion that there must be absolute confidence
  459. between publisher and editor on all matters except the receipts;
  460. therefore I have to confess that my newly-wedded husband, who has just
  461. graduated from the University of the Western Penitentiary--the
  462. curriculum of which is lots of liberty, leisure and enjoyment--objects
  463. to the drudgery of an agitator and publisher. In justice to him, I dare
  464. not do more than write letters all day, address meetings every evening,
  465. and enjoy the love and kindness of the comrades till early morning
  466. hours. Where, then, shall I find time to write articles for MOTHER
  467. EARTH?
  468. But to be in keeping with the serious and dignified tone of our valuable
  469. magazine, and especially with you dear Editor, I want to say that my
  470. meetings were very successful, and that MOTHER EARTH is being received
  471. with great favor in every city. Nearly 500 copies were sold here.
  472. After reading the brilliant reports in the Chicago papers and seeing the
  473. handsome, refined policemen at the various meetings, I am not surprised
  474. that our magazine is being appreciated. Apropos of the Chicago police,
  475. just fancy, I have actually forced them out of their uniforms. I hope
  476. this will not conjure up the horrible picture of Chicago's finest
  477. parading the city in Adam's costume. Not that! Only, Chief of Police
  478. Collins was so outraged over my gentle criticism of his dear little boys
  479. at one of the woodworkers' meetings, that he gave strict orders, "No
  480. officer should again appear at a public meeting in uniform where that
  481. awful Emma Goldman is humiliating and degrading the emblem of authority
  482. and law."
  483. After this, I hope you will never again doubt the importance of public
  484. meetings and the great and far-reaching influence of my speaking.
  485. I shall soon be with you, if I survive my tour, the police, and the
  486. press. I shall then try to make up for my sins, in the July number of
  487. MOTHER EARTH, provided you will let me recuperate in your editorial care
  488. and affection.
  489. EMMA GOLDMAN.
  490. [Illustration]
  491. LIBERTARIAN INSTRUCTION.
  492. By EMILE JANVION.
  493. AMONG the important duties of Anarchists libertarian instruction should
  494. occupy the first place. As revolutionary propaganda it is the most
  495. effective. Tolstoi in Yasnaia-Poliana, Reclus at Bruxelles, Paul Robin
  496. at Cempius, the group of the Free School at Paris have inaugurated
  497. attempts during the period of daring we have witnessed of late years.
  498. Far from mixing education with instruction, the former should be
  499. considered as the natural consequence of the latter.
  500. Our ideas should never be imposed by an education too specialized,
  501. narrow or sectarian, but by means of full and all-round instruction
  502. which opens the mind to criticism and makes it accessible to the power
  503. of truth which is our strength and which will complete the forming of
  504. the character.
  505. Our instruction should be _integral_, _rational_, and _mixed_.
  506. _Integral_--Because it will tend to develop the whole being and make a
  507. complete, free _ensemble_, equally progressive in all knowledge,
  508. intellectual, physical, manual and professional, and this from the
  509. earliest age.
  510. _Rational_--Because it will be based on reason and in conformity with
  511. actual science and not on faith; on the development of personal Freedom
  512. and independence and not on that of piety and obedience; on the
  513. abolition of the fiction _God_, the eternal and absolute cause of
  514. subjection.
  515. _Mixed_--Because it favors the coeducation of the sexes in a constant,
  516. fraternal, familiar company of children, boys and girls, which gives to
  517. the character of their manners a special earnestness.
  518. To the scientific instruction must be added manual apprenticeship,
  519. instruction with which it is in a constant connection of balance and
  520. reciprocity, and also esthetic instruction (music, art, etc.), which in
  521. point of view of an integral development has certainly not a small
  522. importance.
  523. To turn our attention towards the child, to encourage the development of
  524. its initiative, to impress it with a sentiment of its dignity, to
  525. preserve it from cowardice and falsehood, to make it observe the _pros_
  526. and _cons_ of all social conceptions, to educate it for the struggle,
  527. that is the great work, scarcely yet begun, which awaits us.
  528. That will be the task of the nearest future if we will act logically and
  529. firmly.
  530. [Illustration]
  531. THE ANTICHRIST.
  532. From "The Antichrist," by Friedrich Nietzsche. Edited by Alexander
  533. Tille, translated by Thomas Common. Publishers: Macmillan & Co. New
  534. York.
  535. I MAKE war against this theological instinct: I have found traces of it
  536. everywhere. Whoever has theological blood in his veins is from the very
  537. beginning ambiguous and disloyal with respect to everything. The pathos
  538. which develops therefrom calls itself belief: the closing of the eye
  539. once for all with respect to one's self, so as not to suffer from the
  540. sight--of incurable falsity. A person makes for himself a morality, a
  541. virtue, a sanctity out of this erroneous perspective towards all things,
  542. he unites the good conscience to the _false_ mode of seeing,--he demands
  543. that no _other_ mode of perspective be any longer of value, after he has
  544. made his own sacrosanct with the names of "God," "salvation," and
  545. "eternity." I have digged out the theologist-instinct everywhere; it is
  546. the most diffused, the most peculiarly _subterranean_ form of falsity
  547. that exists on earth. What a theologian feels as true, _must_ needs be
  548. false: one has therein almost a criterion of truth. It is his most
  549. fundamental self-preservative instinct which forbids reality to be held
  550. in honor, or even to find expression on any point. As far as
  551. theologist-influence extends, the _judgment of value_ is turned right
  552. about, the concepts of "true" and "false" are necessarily reversed: what
  553. is most injurious to life is here called "true," what raises, elevates,
  554. affirms, justifies, and makes it triumph is called "false."
  555. * * *
  556. Let us not underestimate this: _we ourselves_, we free spirits, are
  557. already a "Transvaluation of all Values," an incarnate declaration of
  558. war against and triumph over all old concepts of "true" and "untrue."
  559. The most precious discernments into things are the latest discovered:
  560. the most precious discernments, however, are the _methods_. _All_
  561. methods, _all_ presuppositions of our present-day science, have for
  562. millenniums been held in the most profound contempt: by reason of them a
  563. person was excluded from intercourse with "honest" men--he passed for an
  564. "enemy of God," a despiser of truth, a "possessed" person. As a
  565. scientific man, a person was a Chandala.... We have had the entire
  566. pathos of mankind against us--their concept of that which truth _ought_
  567. to be, which the service of truth _ought_ to be: every "thou shalt" has
  568. been hitherto directed _against_ us. Our objects, our practices, our
  569. quiet, prudent, mistrustful mode--all appeared to mankind as absolutely
  570. unworthy and contemptible.--In the end one might, with some
  571. reasonableness, ask one's self if it was not really an esthetic taste
  572. which kept mankind in such long blindness: they wanted a _picturesque_
  573. effect from truth, they wanted in like manner the knowing ones to
  574. operate strongly on their senses. Our _modesty_ was longest against the
  575. taste of mankind.... Oh how they made that out, these turkey-cocks of
  576. God----.
  577. * * *
  578. The Christian concept of God--God as God of the sick, God as
  579. cobweb-spinner, God as spirit--is one of the most corrupt concepts of
  580. God ever arrived at on earth; it represents perhaps the gauge of low
  581. water in the descending development of the God-type. God degenerated to
  582. the _contradiction of life_, instead of being its transfiguration and
  583. its eternal _yea_! In God, hostility announced to life, to nature, to
  584. the will to life! God as the formula for every calumny of "this world,"
  585. for every lie of "another world!" In God nothingness deified, the will
  586. to nothingness declared holy!
  587. * * *
  588. That the strong races of Northern Europe have not thrust from themselves
  589. the Christian God, is verily no honor to their religious talent, not to
  590. speak of their taste. They ought to have got the better of such a sickly
  591. and decrepit product of _décadence_. There lies a curse upon them,
  592. because they have not got the better of it: they have incorporated
  593. sickness, old age and contradiction into all their instincts--they have
  594. _created_ no God since! Two millenniums almost, and not a single new
  595. God! But still continuing, and as if persisting by right, as an
  596. _ultimatum_ and _maximum_ of the God-shaping force, of the _creator
  597. spiritus_ in man, this pitiable God of Christian monotono-theism! This
  598. hybrid image of ruin, derived from nullity, concept and contradiction in
  599. which all _décadence_ instincts, all cowardices and lassitudes of soul
  600. have their sanction!
  601. * * *
  602. Has the celebrated story been really understood which stands at the
  603. commencement of the Bible--the story of God's mortal terror of
  604. _science_? It has not been understood. This priest-book _par excellence_
  605. begins appropriately with the great inner difficulty of the priest: he
  606. has only one great danger, consequently "God" has only one great
  607. danger.--
  608. The old God, entire "spirit," entire high priest, entire perfection,
  609. promenades in his garden: he only wants pastime. Against tedium even
  610. Gods struggle in vain. What does he do? He contrives man--man is
  611. entertaining.... But behold, man also wants pastime. The pity of God for
  612. the only distress which belongs to all paradises has no bounds: he
  613. forthwith created other animals besides. The _first_ mistake of God: man
  614. did not find the animals entertaining--he ruled over them, but did not
  615. even want to be an "animal"--God consequently created woman. And, in
  616. fact, there was now an end of tedium--but of other things also! Woman
  617. was the _second_ mistake of God.--"Woman is in her essence a serpent,
  618. Hera"--every priest knows that: "from woman comes _all_ the mischief in
  619. the world"--every priest knows that likewise. _Consequently_, _science_
  620. also comes from her.... Only through woman did man learn to taste of the
  621. tree of knowledge.--What had happened? The old God was seized by a
  622. mortal terror. Man himself had become his _greatest_ mistake, he had
  623. created a rival, science makes _godlike_; it is at an end with priests
  624. and Gods, if man becomes scientific!--_Moral_: science is the thing
  625. forbidden in itself--it alone is forbidden. Science is the _first_ sin,
  626. the germ of all sin, _original_ sin. _This alone is morality._--"Thou
  627. shalt _not_ know:"--the rest follows therefrom.--By his mortal terror
  628. God was not prevented from being shrewd. How does one _defend_ one's
  629. self against science? That was for a long time his main problem. Answer:
  630. away with man, out of paradise! Happiness and leisure lead to
  631. thoughts,--all thoughts are bad thoughts.... Man _shall_ not think--and
  632. the "priest in himself" contrives distress, death, the danger of life in
  633. pregnancy, every kind of misery, old age, weariness, and above all
  634. _sickness_,--nothing but expedients in the struggle against science!
  635. Distress does not _permit_ man to think.... And nevertheless! frightful!
  636. the edifice of knowledge towers aloft, heaven-storming, dawning on the
  637. Gods,--what to do!--The old God contrives _war_, he separates the
  638. peoples, he brings it about that men mutually annihilate one another
  639. (the priests have always had need of war ...). War, among other things,
  640. a great disturber of science!--Incredible! Knowledge, the _emancipation
  641. from the priest_, augments even in spite of wars.--And a final
  642. resolution is arrived at by the old God: "man has become
  643. scientific,--_there is no help for it, he must be drowned!_" ...
  644. * * *
  645. --I have been understood. The beginning of the Bible contains the
  646. _entire_ psychology of the priest.--The priest knows only one great
  647. danger: that is science,--the sound concept of cause and effect. But
  648. science flourishes on the whole only under favorable circumstances,--one
  649. must have _superfluous_ time, one must have _superfluous_ intellect in
  650. order to "perceive" ... _Consequently_ man must be made
  651. unfortunate,--this has at all times been the logic of the priest.--One
  652. makes out _what_ has only thereby come into the world in accordance with
  653. this logic:--"sin".... The concepts of guilt and punishment, the whole
  654. "moral order of the world," have been devised _in opposition_ to
  655. science,--_in opposition_ to a severance of man from the priest.... Man
  656. is _not_ to look outwards, he is to look inwards into himself, he is
  657. _not_ to look prudently and cautiously into things like a learner, he is
  658. not to look at all, he is to _suffer_.... And he is so to suffer as to
  659. need the priest always. _A Saviour is needed._--The concepts of guilt
  660. and punishment, inclusive of the doctrines of "grace," of "salvation,"
  661. and of "forgiveness"--_lies_ through and through, and without any
  662. psychological reality--have been contrived to destroy the _causal sense_
  663. in man, they are an attack on the concepts of cause and effect!--And
  664. _not_ an attack with the fists, with the knife, with honesty in hate and
  665. love! But springing from the most cowardly, most deceitful, and most
  666. ignoble instincts! A _priest's_ attack! A _parasite's_ attack! A
  667. vampirism of pale, subterranean blood-suckers! When the natural
  668. consequences of a deed are no longer "natural," but are supposed to be
  669. brought about by the conceptual spectres of superstition, by "God," by
  670. "spirits," by "souls," as mere "moral" consequences, as reward,
  671. punishment, suggestion, or means of education, the pre-requisite of
  672. perception has been destroyed--_the greatest crime against mankind has
  673. been committed._ Sin, repeated once more, this form of human
  674. self-violation _par excellence_, has been invented for the purpose of
  675. making impossible science, culture, every kind of elevation and nobility
  676. of man; the priest _rules_ by the invention of sin.--
  677. * * *
  678. I _condemn_ Christianity, I bring against the Christian Church the most
  679. terrible of all accusations that ever an accuser has taken into his
  680. mouth. It is to me the greatest of all imaginable corruptions, it has
  681. had the will to the ultimate corruption that is at all possible. The
  682. Christian Church has left nothing untouched with its depravity, it has
  683. made a worthlessness out of every value, a lie out of every truth, a
  684. baseness of soul out of every straight-forwardness. Let a person still
  685. dare to speak to me of its "humanitarian" blessings! To _do away with_
  686. any state of distress whatsoever was counter to its profoundest
  687. expediency, it lived by states of distress, it _created_ states of
  688. distress in order to perpetuate _itself_ eternally.... The worm of sin
  689. for example; it is only the Church that has enriched mankind with this
  690. state of distress!-- ...."Humanitarian" blessings of Christianity! To
  691. breed out of _humanitas_ a self-contradiction, an art of self-violation,
  692. a will to the lie at any price, a repugnance, a contempt for all good
  693. and straight-forward instincts! Those are for me blessing of
  694. Christianity!--Parasitism as the _sole_ praxis of the Church; drinking
  695. out all blood, all love, all hope for life, with its anæmic ideal of
  696. holiness; the other world as the will to the negation of every reality;
  697. the cross as the rallying sign for the most subterranean conspiracy that
  698. has ever existed,--against healthiness, beauty, well-constitutedness,
  699. courage, intellect, _benevolence_ of soul, _against life itself_....
  700. This eternal accusation of Christianity I shall write on all walls,
  701. wherever there are walls,--I have letters for making even the blind
  702. see.... I call Christianity the one great curse, the one great intrinsic
  703. depravity, the one great instinct of revenge for which no expedient is
  704. sufficiently poisonous, secret, subterranean, _mean_,--I call it the one
  705. immortal blemish of mankind!
  706. BRAIN WORK AND MANUAL WORK.
  707. By PETER KROPOTKIN.
  708. IN olden times men of science, and especially those who have done most
  709. to forward the growth of natural philosophy, did not despise manual work
  710. and handicraft. Galileo made his telescopes with his own hands. Newton
  711. learned in his boyhood the art of managing tools; he exercised his young
  712. mind in contriving most ingenious machines, and when he began his
  713. researches in optics he was able himself to grind the lenses for his
  714. instruments, and himself to make the well-known telescope, which, for
  715. its time, was a fine piece of workmanship. Leibnitz was fond of
  716. inventing machines: windmills and carriages to be moved without horses
  717. preoccupied his mind as much as mathematical and philosophical
  718. speculations. Linnæus became a botanist while helping his father--a
  719. practical gardener--in his daily work. In short, with our great geniuses
  720. handicraft was no obstacle to abstract researches--it rather favored
  721. them. On the other hand, if the workers of old found but few
  722. opportunities for mastering science, many of them had, at least, their
  723. intelligences stimulated by the very variety of work which was performed
  724. in the then unspecialized workshops; and some of them had the benefit of
  725. familiar intercourse with men of science. Watt and Rennie were friends
  726. with Professor Robinson; Brindley, the road-maker, despite his
  727. fourteen-pence-a-day wages, enjoyed intercourse with educated men, and
  728. thus developed his remarkable engineering faculties; the son of a
  729. well-to-do family could "idle" at a wheelwright's shop, so as to become
  730. later on a Smeaton or a Stephenson.
  731. We have changed all that. Under the pretext of division of labor, we
  732. have sharply separated the brain worker from the manual worker. The
  733. masses of the workmen do not receive more scientific education than
  734. their grandfathers did; but they have been deprived of the education of
  735. even the small workshop, while their boys and girls are driven into a
  736. mine or a factory from the age of thirteen, and there they soon forget
  737. the little they may have learned at school. As to the men of science,
  738. they despise manual labor. How few of them would be able to make a
  739. telescope, or even a plainer instrument? Most of them are not capable
  740. of even designing a scientific instrument, and when they have given a
  741. vague suggestion to the instrument-maker they leave it with him to
  742. invent the apparatus they need. Nay, they have raised the contempt of
  743. manual labor to the height of a theory. "The man of science," they say,
  744. "must discover the laws of nature, the civil engineer must apply them,
  745. and the worker must execute in steel or wood, in iron or stone, the
  746. patterns devised by the engineer. He must work with machines invented
  747. for him, not by him. No matter if he does not understand them and cannot
  748. improve them: the scientific man and the scientific engineer will take
  749. care of the progress of science and industry."
  750. It may be objected that nevertheless there is a class of men who belong
  751. to none of the above three divisions. When young they have been manual
  752. workers, and some of them continue to be; but, owing to some happy
  753. circumstances, they have succeeded in acquiring some scientific
  754. knowledge, and thus they have combined science with handicraft. Surely
  755. there are such men; happily enough there is a nucleus of men who have
  756. escaped the so-much-advocated specialization of labor, and it is
  757. precisely to them that industry owes its chief recent inventions. But in
  758. old Europe at least, they are the exceptions; they are the
  759. irregulars--the Cossacks who have broken the ranks and pierced the
  760. screens so carefully erected between the classes. And they are so few,
  761. in comparison with the ever-growing requirements of industry--and of
  762. science as well, as I am about to prove--that all over the world we hear
  763. complaint about the scarcity of precisely such men.
  764. What is the meaning, in fact, of the outcry for technical education
  765. which has been raised at one and the same time in England, in France, in
  766. Germany, in the States, and in Russia, if it does not express a general
  767. dissatisfaction with the present division into scientists, scientific
  768. engineers, and workers? Listen to those who know industry, and you will
  769. see that the substance of their complaint is this: "The worker whose
  770. task has been specialized by the permanent division of labor has lost
  771. the intellectual interest in his labor, and it is especially so in the
  772. great industries: he has lost his inventive powers. Formerly, he
  773. invented very much. Manual workers--not men of science nor trained
  774. engineers--have invented, or brought to perfection, the prime motors and
  775. all that mass of machinery which has revolutionized industry for the
  776. last hundred years. But since the great factory has been enthroned, the
  777. worker, depressed by the monotony of his work, invents no more. What can
  778. a weaver invent who merely supervises four looms, without knowing
  779. anything either about their complicated movements or how the machines
  780. grew to be what they are? What can a man invent who is condemned for
  781. life to bind together the ends of two threads with the greatest
  782. celerity, and knows nothing beyond making a knot?
  783. "At the outset of modern industry, three generations of workers _have_
  784. invented; now they cease to do so. As to the inventions of the
  785. engineers, specially trained for devising machines, they are either
  786. devoid of genius or not practical enough. Those "nearly to nothings," of
  787. which Sir Frederick Bramwell spoke once at Bath, are missing in their
  788. inventions--those nothings which can be learned in the workshop only,
  789. and which permitted a Murdoch and the Soho workers to make a practical
  790. engine of Watt's schemes. None but he who knows the machine--not in its
  791. drawings and models only, but in its breathing and throbbings--who
  792. unconsciously thinks of it while standing by it, can really improve it.
  793. Smeaton and Newcomen surely were excellent engineers; but in their
  794. engines a boy had to open the steam valve at each stroke of the piston;
  795. and it was one of those boys who once managed to connect the valve with
  796. the remainder of the machine, so as to make it open automatically, while
  797. he ran away to play with other boys. But in the modern machinery there
  798. is no room left for naïve improvements of that kind. Scientific
  799. education on a wide scale has become necessary for further inventions,
  800. and that education is refused to the workers. So that there is no issue
  801. out of the difficulty unless scientific education and handicraft are
  802. combined together--unless integration of knowledge takes the place of
  803. the present divisions." Such is the real substance of the present
  804. movement in favor of technical education. But, instead of bringing to
  805. public consciousness the, perhaps, unconscious motives of the present
  806. discontent, instead of widening the views of the discontented and
  807. discussing the problem to its full extent, the mouth-pieces of the
  808. movement do not mostly rise above the shopkeeper's view of the question.
  809. Some of them indulge in jingo talk about crushing all foreign industries
  810. out of competition, while the others see in technical education nothing
  811. but a means of somewhat improving the flesh-machine of the factory and
  812. of transferring a few workers into the upper class of trained engineers.
  813. Such an ideal may satisfy them, but it cannot satisfy those who keep in
  814. view the combined interests of science and industry, and consider both
  815. as a means for raising humanity to a higher level. We maintain that in
  816. the interests of both science and industry, as well as of society as a
  817. whole, every human being, without distinction of birth, ought to receive
  818. such an education as would enable him, or her, to combine a thorough
  819. knowledge of science with a thorough knowledge of handicraft. We fully
  820. recognize the necessity of specialization of knowledge, but we maintain
  821. that specialization must follow general education, and that general
  822. education must be given in science and handicraft alike. To the division
  823. of society into brain-workers and manual workers we oppose the
  824. combination of both kinds of activities; and instead of "technical
  825. education," which means the maintenance of the present division between
  826. brain work and manual work, we advocate the _éducation intégrale_, or
  827. complete education, which means the disappearance of that pernicious
  828. distinction. Plainly stated, the aims of the school under this system
  829. ought to be the following: To give such an education that, on leaving
  830. school at the age of eighteen or twenty, each boy and each girl should
  831. be endowed with a thorough knowledge of science--such a knowledge as
  832. might enable them to be useful workers in science--and, at the same
  833. time, to give them a general knowledge of what constitutes the bases of
  834. technical training, and such a skill in some special trade as would
  835. enable each of them to take his or her place in the grand world of the
  836. manual production of wealth. I know that many will find that aim too
  837. large, or even impossible to attain, but I hope that if they have the
  838. patience to read the following pages, they will see that we require
  839. nothing beyond what can be easily attained. In fact, _it has been
  840. attained_; and what has been done on a small scale could be done on a
  841. wider scale, were it not for the economical and social causes which
  842. prevent any serious reform from being accomplished in our miserably
  843. organized society.
  844. The experiment has been made at the Moscow Technical School for twenty
  845. consecutive years with many hundreds of boys; and, according to the
  846. testimonies of the most competent judges at the exhibitions of Brussels,
  847. Philadelphia, Vienna and Paris, the experiment has been a success. The
  848. Moscow school admits boys not older than fifteen, and it requires from
  849. boys of that age nothing but a substantial knowledge of geometry and
  850. algebra, together with the usual knowledge of their mother tongue;
  851. younger pupils are received in the preparatory classes. The school is
  852. divided into two sections--the mechanical and the chemical; but as I
  853. personally know better the former, and as it is also the more important
  854. with reference to the question before us, so I shall limit my remarks to
  855. the education given in the mechanical section. After a five or six
  856. years' stay at the school, the students leave it with a thorough
  857. knowledge of higher mathematics, physics, mechanics, and connected
  858. sciences--so thorough, indeed, that it is not second to that acquired in
  859. the best mathematical faculties of the most eminent European
  860. universities. When myself a student of the mathematical faculty of the
  861. St. Petersburg University, I had the opportunity of comparing the
  862. knowledge of the students at the Moscow Technical School with our own. I
  863. saw the courses of higher geometry some of them had compiled for the use
  864. of their comrades; I admired the facility with which they applied the
  865. integral calculus to dynamical problems, and I came to the conclusion
  866. that while we, University students, had more knowledge of a general
  867. character, they, the students of the Technical School, were much more
  868. advanced in higher geometry, and especially in the applications of
  869. higher mathematics to the most intricate problems of dynamics, the
  870. theories of heat and elasticity. But while we, the students of the
  871. University, hardly knew the use of our hands, the students of the
  872. Technical School fabricated _with their own hands_, and without the help
  873. of professional workmen, fine steam-engines, from the heavy boiler to
  874. the last finely turned screw, agricultural machinery, and scientific
  875. apparatus--all for the trade--and they received the highest awards for
  876. the work of their hands at the international exhibitions. They were
  877. scientifically educated skilled workers--workers with university
  878. education--highly appreciated even by the Russian manufacturers who so
  879. much distrust science.
  880. Now, the methods by which these wonderful results were achieved were
  881. these: In science, learning from memory was not in honor, while
  882. independent research was favored by all means. Science was taught hand
  883. in hand with its applications, and what was learned in the schoolroom
  884. was applied in the workshop. Great attention was paid to the highest
  885. abstractions of geometry as a means for developing imagination and
  886. research. As to the teaching of handicraft, the methods were quite
  887. different from those which proved a failure at the Cornell University,
  888. and differed, in fact, from those used in most technical schools. The
  889. student was not sent to a workshop to learn some special handicraft and
  890. to earn his existence as soon as possible, but the teaching of technical
  891. skill was prosecuted--according to a scheme elaborated by the founder of
  892. the school, M. Dellavos, and now applied also at Chicago and Boston--in
  893. the same systematical way as laboratory work is taught in the
  894. universities. It is evident that drawing was considered as the first
  895. step in technical education. Then the student was brought, first, to the
  896. carpenter's workshop, or rather laboratory, and there he was thoroughly
  897. taught to execute all kinds of carpentry and joinery. No efforts were
  898. spared in order to bring the pupil to a certain perfection in that
  899. branch--the real basis of all trades. Later on, he was transferred to
  900. the turner's workshop, where he was taught to make in wood the patterns
  901. of those things which he would have to make in metal in the following
  902. workshops. The foundry followed, and there he was taught to cast those
  903. parts of machines which he had prepared in wood; and it was only after
  904. he had gone through the first three stages that he was admitted to the
  905. smith's and engineering workshops. As for the perfection of the
  906. mechanical work of the students I cannot do better than refer to the
  907. reports of the juries at the above-named exhibitions.
  908. In America the same system has been introduced, in its technical part,
  909. first, in the Chicago Manual Training School, and later on in the Boston
  910. Technical School--the best, I am told, of the sort; and in this
  911. country, or rather in Scotland, I found the system applied with full
  912. success, for some years, under the direction of Dr. Ogilvie at Gordon's
  913. College in Aberdeen. It is the Moscow or Chicago system on a limited
  914. scale. While receiving substantial scientific education, the pupils are
  915. also trained in the workshops--but not for one special trade, as it
  916. unhappily too often is the case. They pass through the carpenter's
  917. workshop, the casting in metals, and the engineering workshop; and in
  918. each of these they learn the foundations of each of the three trades
  919. sufficiently well for supplying the school itself with a number of
  920. useful things. Besides, as far as I could ascertain from what I saw in
  921. the geographical and physical classes, as also in the chemical
  922. laboratory, the system of "through the hand to the brain," and _vice
  923. versa_, is in full swing, and it is attended with the best success. The
  924. boys _work_ with the physical instruments, and they study geography in
  925. the field, instruments in hands, as well as in the class-room. Some of
  926. their surveys filled my heart, as an old geographer, with joy. It is
  927. evident that the Gordon's College industrial department is not a mere
  928. copy of any foreign school; on the contrary, I cannot help thinking that
  929. if Aberdeen has made that excellent move towards combining science with
  930. handicraft, the move was a natural outcome of what has been practised
  931. long since, on a smaller scale, in the Aberdeen daily schools.
  932. The Moscow Technical School surely is not an ideal school.[1] It totally
  933. neglects the humanitarian education of the young men. But we must
  934. recognize that the Moscow experiment--not to speak of hundreds of other
  935. partial experiments--has perfectly well proved the possibility of
  936. combining a scientific education of a very high standard with the
  937. education which is necessary for becoming an excellent skilled laborer.
  938. It has proved, moreover, that the best means for producing really good
  939. skilled laborers is to seize the bull by the horns, and to grasp the
  940. educational problem in its great features, instead of trying to give
  941. some special skill in some handicraft, together with a few scraps of
  942. knowledge in a certain branch of some science. And it has shown also
  943. what can be obtained, without over-pressure, if a rational economy of
  944. the scholar's time is always kept in view, and theory goes hand in hand
  945. with practice. Viewed in this light, the Moscow results do not seem
  946. extraordinary at all, and still better results may be expected if the
  947. same principles are applied from the earliest years of education. Waste
  948. of time is the leading feature of our present education. Not only are we
  949. taught a mass of rubbish, but what is not rubbish is taught so as to
  950. make us waste over it as much time as possible. Our present methods of
  951. teaching originate from a time when the accomplishments required from an
  952. educated person were extremely limited; and they have been maintained,
  953. notwithstanding the immense increase of knowledge which must be conveyed
  954. to the scholar's mind since science has so much widened its former
  955. limits. Hence the over-pressure in schools, and hence, also, the urgent
  956. necessity of totally revising both the subjects and the methods of
  957. teaching, according to the new wants and to the examples already given
  958. here and there, by separate schools and separate teachers.
  959. It is evident that the years of childhood ought not to be spent so
  960. uselessly as they are now. German teachers have shown how the very plays
  961. of children can be made instrumental in conveying to the childish mind
  962. some concrete knowledge in both geometry and mathematics. The children
  963. who have made the squares of the theorem of Pythagoras out of pieces of
  964. colored cardboard, will not look at the theorem, when it comes in
  965. geometry, as on a mere instrument of torture devised by the teachers;
  966. and the less so if they apply it as the carpenters do. Complicated
  967. problems of arithmetic, which so much harassed us in our boyhood, are
  968. easily solved by children seven and eight years old if they are put in
  969. the shape of interesting puzzles. And if the _Kindergarten_--German
  970. teachers often make of it a kind of barrack in which each movement of
  971. the child is regulated beforehand--has often become a small prison for
  972. the little ones, the idea which presided at its foundation is
  973. nevertheless true. In fact, it is almost impossible to imagine, without
  974. having tried it, how many sound notions of nature, habits of
  975. classification, and taste for natural sciences can be conveyed to the
  976. children's minds; and, if a series of concentric courses adapted to the
  977. various phases of development of the human being were generally accepted
  978. in education, the first series in all sciences, save sociology, could be
  979. taught before the age of ten or twelve, so as to give a general idea of
  980. the universe, the earth and its inhabitants, the chief physical,
  981. chemical, zoological, and botanical phenomena, leaving the discovery of
  982. the _laws_ of those phenomena to the next series of deeper and more
  983. specialised studies. On the other side, we all know how children like to
  984. make toys themselves, how they gladly imitate the work of full-grown
  985. people if they see them at work in the workshop or the building-yard.
  986. But the parents either stupidly paralyze that passion, or do not know
  987. how to utilize it. Most of them despise manual work and prefer sending
  988. their children to the study of Roman history, or of Franklin's teachings
  989. about saving money, to seeing them at a work which is good for the
  990. "lower classes only." They thus do their best to render subsequent
  991. learning the more difficult.
  992. * * * * * * * * *
  993. The so-called division of labor has grown under a system which condemned
  994. the masses to toil all the day long, and all the life long, at the same
  995. wearisome kind of labor. But if we take into account how few are the
  996. real producers of wealth in our present society, and how squandered is
  997. their labor, we must recognize that Franklin was right in saying that to
  998. work five hours a day would generally do for supplying each member of a
  999. civilized nation with the comfort now accessible for the few only,
  1000. provided everybody took his due share in production. But we have made
  1001. some progress since Franklin's times. More than one-half of the working
  1002. day would thus remain to every one for the pursuit of art, science, or
  1003. any hobby he might prefer; and his work in those fields would be the
  1004. more profitable if he spent the other half of the day in productive
  1005. work--if art and science were followed from mere inclination, not for
  1006. mercantile purposes. Moreover, a community organized on the principles
  1007. of all being workers would be rich enough to conclude that every man and
  1008. woman, after having reached a certain age--say of forty or more--ought
  1009. to be relieved from the moral obligation of taking a direct part in the
  1010. performance of the necessary manual work, so as to be able entirely to
  1011. devote himself or herself to whatever he or she chooses in the domain of
  1012. art, or science, or any kind of work. Free pursuit in new branches of
  1013. art and knowledge, free creation, and free development thus might be
  1014. fully guaranteed. And such a community would not know misery amidst
  1015. wealth. It would not know the duality of conscience which permeates our
  1016. life and stifles every noble effort. It would freely take its flight
  1017. towards the highest regions of progress compatible with human nature.
  1018. FOOTNOTE:
  1019. [1] What this school is now, I don't know. In the last years of
  1020. Alexander II.'s reign it was wrecked, like so many other good
  1021. institutions of the early part of his reign.
  1022. [Illustration]
  1023. MOTHERHOOD AND MARRIAGE
  1024. By HENRIETTE FUERTH.
  1025. (_Translated from the German for_ MOTHER EARTH by ANNY MALI HICKS.)
  1026. Knowledge becomes understanding only when its scope includes the
  1027. origin, the development and the conclusion of things.--Bachofen,
  1028. "Right to Motherhood."
  1029. "THE future will endeavor to extend its power through its own ideas of
  1030. facts and appearances, however unfamiliar these may seem, rather than to
  1031. be influenced by a past and submerged civilization with a spirit far
  1032. removed from its own."
  1033. There could hardly be a more appropriate introduction to our remarks on
  1034. motherhood and marriage than these words of Bachofen's, for there are
  1035. few human relations whose traditional stages, taking through outside
  1036. causes and effects an established form, have become eternal law and
  1037. sacrament, as is the case in the realm of sex relations. Motherhood and
  1038. marriage! For most people these two conceptions are inseparably bound
  1039. together, or, rather, are in ratio connected as their ideas of morality
  1040. and religion are synonymous. Marriage in the Romish Church is a
  1041. religious sacrament, and in the collective Christian and Jewish worlds
  1042. the only sex relation acknowledged as customary and possible, is the one
  1043. based on a monogamous union. To work out logically from this
  1044. standpoint, the only condition of motherhood which is socially
  1045. justified, is that one which is the result of marital relations. In
  1046. consequence motherhood without the consent of the State or the benefit
  1047. of the clergy is just as logically condemned. And they who thus sit in
  1048. judgment, flatter themselves to be the prophets of an advanced and
  1049. enlightened era,--ingrafting their personal feelings and rights on the
  1050. religious and lawful order of the universe. Or, in common parlance, and
  1051. as our introduction so aptly put it, these good people wish to intend
  1052. the domination of the ideas of their own time over all the past and into
  1053. all the future. Marriage seems to them an everlasting institution, a
  1054. godly regulation, through which they can lend to their individual bias,
  1055. the dignity of that which is humanly purest and highest. Consequently it
  1056. also seems to them that the present form of marriage and its
  1057. accompanying conditions for motherhood, resting as these do on the
  1058. mutual consent of God and man, that these are to be in all eternity the
  1059. permanent form of sex relation.
  1060. But when we stop one moment only, to free ourselves from preconceived
  1061. and obsolete ideas, and look at motherhood and marriage from the calm
  1062. and unprejudiced standpoint of historical development and growth, how
  1063. differently do these in reality appear. Many advanced thinkers have done
  1064. this, and their views have here and there found adherents. Not so,
  1065. however, with the average seeker for light and truth, who if he wish to
  1066. succeed must stem the tide of prejudiced opinion.
  1067. But the day has come when, if all signs do not fail, spring is here, and
  1068. a thousand and one buds of promise are pushing toward the light, when a
  1069. wider and saner understanding of motherhood and marriage is at hand. And
  1070. it is not an untimely spring either, not one which the treacherous sun
  1071. of January calls forth only to blight with later snow and frost. No, it
  1072. is the real light and life-giving spring, which comes when the sap
  1073. begins to run, when the sun calls up smoky mists from out the brown
  1074. earth, ready to enclose the seed, which shall bring forth summer flowers
  1075. and autumn fruits.
  1076. And this same brown, misty earth, what a different aspect shall she
  1077. present to her children, for whom conditions are so changed, with truer
  1078. sex relations, encompassing the ethical and spiritual needs of the free
  1079. individual. Then only will it be _possible_ to base these needs and
  1080. demands on the surrounding world of realities filled with material and
  1081. spiritual phenomena.
  1082. But first it must be proven that the present form of marriage and its
  1083. effect on motherhood is not necessarily permanent, but, like all else,
  1084. subject to natural development and change. What indeed is the much
  1085. talked of marriage bond of to-day,--which is considered the cornerstone
  1086. of both Church and State? Is it something towards which the steps of
  1087. development in nature and history all go? No seriously minded person
  1088. could in truth make such a statement. In the plant and animal kingdoms,
  1089. whose species evoke as do those of the human race, we find no examples
  1090. of sex relations to which the term marriage would apply. And this is
  1091. also true of the historical development of man and social conditions. It
  1092. is not marriage but motherhood which has given permanence to sex
  1093. relations wherever they appear. Motherhood standing at the source of
  1094. life with its creative and ever recreative force.
  1095. "Goddesses enthroned in solitude,
  1096. Surrounded not by time or place,
  1097. These are the mothers!
  1098. About them formed and formless,
  1099. Eternal stability and endless change
  1100. In images of all created life."
  1101. Thus does Goethe describe the depths of being which enclose the eternal
  1102. mystery of motherhood, leading not into known, but unknown paths.
  1103. And truly, how far have we strayed from the path of true and natural
  1104. feeling when we seek to justify motherhood from the standpoint of
  1105. expediency and custom! It is something in itself holy, and is its own
  1106. reason for being. I ask all mothers, all real mothers, when their child
  1107. comes to them, with eyes brimming with childlike love and affection,
  1108. against which all else counts for naught, I ask them do they think
  1109. whether that child is legitimate or what is called an illegitimate
  1110. child? No! the joy of motherhood completely fills the heart, there is no
  1111. room for other feelings, and truly the answer comes, Nature does not
  1112. discriminate between the legitimate and illegitimate mothers, any more
  1113. than she labels the children brought into the world as such. And this
  1114. alone is the foundation to which we must hold fast. Nature acknowledges
  1115. motherhood only, wisely providing for its needs. Not so marriage, which
  1116. is a form men have given their sex relations, and established from the
  1117. standpoint of social and economic exigencies and considerations, it is
  1118. consequently subject to limitations and changes. Motherhood is an
  1119. eternal force lying at the root of life, not subjected to time or
  1120. change.
  1121. [Illustration]
  1122. OBJECT LESSON FOR ADVOCATES OF GOVERNMENTAL CONTROL.
  1123. By ARTHUR G. EVERETT, N--M.
  1124. THE best literary efforts possible have been exhausted in a vain effort
  1125. to convey to those fortunately not in San Francisco on the morning of
  1126. April 18, 1906, what terrible things resulted from the earthquake and
  1127. the fire which left that city a complete ruin; likewise has the kodak
  1128. and the camera--though busy at work while the flames roared around the
  1129. operator driving him, from one vantage point to another, before its
  1130. resistless power--failed to depict in its entirety the horrors, the
  1131. tragedies that followed in the wake of the crumbling walls, the
  1132. crackling flames that licked up alike palatial mansions and the squalid
  1133. homes of the poor, not content to feast upon the products of the forests
  1134. of California and the Eastern States alone, but, with the strategy of a
  1135. warrior, surrounded and penned within four walls hundreds of human
  1136. beings, stalwart men, delicate women, and babes at the breast, who were
  1137. then slowly roasted to death upon the funeral pyre of San Francisco.
  1138. Upon the minds and hearts of the survivors, alone, who walked between
  1139. the walls of fire those days, who escaped the frightful holocaust but by
  1140. a miracle while loved ones perished before their eyes, are written, are
  1141. recorded, too complete, too vivid, those terrible scenes, and fain would
  1142. they efface from their mind's negative those pictures of horrors which
  1143. now turn their dreams of the night into such a frightful nightmare that
  1144. they dread to close their eyes in slumber.
  1145. While the horrors of the earthquake and fire were so terrible, yet there
  1146. was something far worse, for the earthquake and fire were beyond human
  1147. control, but the still worse acts of the soldiers into whose hands the
  1148. control of the city were delegated could have been restrained by the
  1149. authorities had they so chosen; now that the world is being made aware
  1150. of the fact that the soldiers ruthlessly shot down men and women--yes,
  1151. women as well as men; in one case a woman was shot down by a soldier
  1152. because she dared to light a match to see where to lay her little sick
  1153. baby down--and that without any justification other than the order of
  1154. their superiors who likewise were so ordered by the authorities--a
  1155. natural result of governmental control--hence they are doing all they
  1156. can to controvert the facts regarding the brutal murders and worse of
  1157. the soldiers. In one case they went so far as to threaten the
  1158. confiscation of a printery if the editor did not call in and suppress an
  1159. issue in which was printed an article by a marine telling of seeing the
  1160. soldiers shoot down the inmates of a hotel so surrounded by fire it
  1161. seemed they else must be burned up--the excuse the soldiers gave for
  1162. shooting them--and so the soldiers shot them down to save (?) them. The
  1163. marine in this article did not tell how many of those thus shot down by
  1164. the soldiers were only wounded and writhed in agony on the increasing
  1165. heated floor until the fiery fiend ended their misery from the gun shot
  1166. wounds.
  1167. Brevity precludes going into details of what is already a matter of
  1168. history; of the soldiers shooting the inmates of an improvised hospital
  1169. that were unable to be moved when the fire surrounded the building; of
  1170. the soldiers shooting an old man for refusing to work, though so infirm
  1171. with age that he had to walk with a cane; of the shooting of a Red Cross
  1172. man while in his auto on a deed of mercy bent; of the man shot in the
  1173. back for talking back to a soldier, and that after he had turned away
  1174. from the drunken brute; of the shooting of a man for having whisky in
  1175. his possession and refusing to give it up--that the soldiers had plenty
  1176. is in evidence from the fact that a large per cent. were so drunk that
  1177. they could walk with but difficulty--of their insulting women, and even
  1178. far worse than mere insult also; of shooting persons for looting while
  1179. they themselves did the same; all this and much more and worse are known
  1180. to be true, and, in the language of another writer on this same subject,
  1181. "Strive as they may the authorities will never be able to whitewash the
  1182. military abominations inflicted upon San Francisco and vicinity." In
  1183. this regard the same writer says most truly:
  1184. "The rulers of the State furnished us an example of 'anarchy,'
  1185. according to their own definition of the term."
  1186. In times like these it brings out what is in the man, and these murders
  1187. and lesser brutalities of the soldiers while policing San Francisco tell
  1188. us that the soldier is but an infuriated thug, ready to do murder and
  1189. rapine at the first opportunity; the civic authorities of Oakland
  1190. recognized this as a fact when they finally allowed the reopening of the
  1191. saloons, for the barkeepers were specially interdicted from selling or
  1192. giving liquor to soldiers; they were already loaded too heavy with
  1193. murderous instincts and propensities and it would not do to run the risk
  1194. of touching off that magazine of murder with the match of whisky.
  1195. These brutal butcheries and rapine by the soldiers while thus in control
  1196. of San Francisco are the legitimate fruits of governmental control, and
  1197. it would be well for those who are so strenuously advocating
  1198. militarism--the true name for Governmental Control--to bear these things
  1199. in mind, for such horrors would be the daily menu under such system, for
  1200. there is lots of the savage in the most of us and it needs but to put a
  1201. gun in the hands of some and decorate them with brass buttons with U. S.
  1202. inscribed thereon to bring to the surface--like a plaster on a boil--all
  1203. the native savagery there is in the man; personally, I would prefer to
  1204. run my chances among the Head Hunters on the Isle of Borneo than among
  1205. uniformed thugs protected and encouraged by martial law to carry out
  1206. their natural murderous propensities as was the case in San Francisco,
  1207. following the earthquake on the morning of April 18, 1906.
  1208. THE GENIUS OF WAR
  1209. By JOHN FRANCIS VALTER.
  1210. _I am the Genius of War.
  1211. My standard's the Skull and the Bones.
  1212. I raise my voice--I stamp my foot,
  1213. And legions rise out of the ground._
  1214. _Armies advance and retreat,
  1215. Poisoned, diseased and maimed:
  1216. All that is left is a grewsome aspect
  1217. To the moonlight, the ghouls and Me._
  1218. _All this to a laudable end:--
  1219. The general has his star;
  1220. Shylock his four per cent;
  1221. The contractor's wife a costly gem
  1222. To enhance her vulgar charms;
  1223. The mother a harvest of tears;
  1224. The wife a broken heart;
  1225. The unborn babe a prenatal curse;
  1226. While I have my surfeit of blood_.
  1227. [Illustration]
  1228. DIGNITY SPEAKS.
  1229. "Hark ye, millions, and tremble! I am more powerful than the Law.
  1230. Together with my sister, Respectability, I reach far beyond the boundary
  1231. of the authority of governments. I am supreme.
  1232. Behold the miserable criminal, desperately resisting the brutal
  1233. treatment of the police officer. I shall force him to his knees. I shall
  1234. subdue him. Enthroned upon the seat of Justice, robed in the solemn
  1235. black of my sacred office, I shall break the rebel's spirit.
  1236. 'Tis in this that the highest refinement of tyranny manifests itself--it
  1237. enters into the very innermost depths of the human mind and there it
  1238. ravages, till its foul breath has withered the last resistance of the
  1239. unfortunate soul, and the consciousness of self is destroyed; this
  1240. accomplished, the man himself is dead.
  1241. The Law! See how the timid masses cower at the mere mention of my name.
  1242. See them tremble as I enter the arena of the Legislature.
  1243. The Dignity of the Law!
  1244. The Majesty of the Law!
  1245. It must forever remain my great secret that the Law is the Cerberus that
  1246. guards the portals of our earthly paradise against the common herd--we
  1247. must not be disturbed in our orgies.
  1248. The Law! 'Tis our beastly greediness, our bloodthirsty rapacity
  1249. expressed in statutes. 'Tis the insatiety of the human beasts of prey
  1250. immortalized in jurisprudence, and I, Dignity, sanctify all that.
  1251. As a captain of industry, as a prince of commerce, or as a king of
  1252. finance, I speak with solemn face of the heavy responsibilities that
  1253. rest upon those to whose care God, in his infinite wisdom, has entrusted
  1254. the wealth of the universe; I speak with zeal of the sacred duty of the
  1255. rich to lend a helping hand to our less fortunate brothers; I never tire
  1256. to emphasize the necessity of wise stewardship.
  1257. In the meantime, I exploit the "poor brothers" and I appropriate the
  1258. lion's share of the fruit of his labor; he is made to pay me an usurious
  1259. profit on my investments.
  1260. I fill my shops and factories with men, women and children, and I
  1261. transmute the base metal of their bones into the noble coin of the
  1262. realm; my coffers grow fat, my slaves grow lean, but I acquire the
  1263. reputation of a public benefactor, a public-spirited citizen, a noble
  1264. humanitarian.
  1265. As military commander, as a great general, I eulogize the heroism and
  1266. self-sacrifice of my blind slaves and hirelings that have returned from
  1267. a successful campaign against a weaker nation. I speak of the great
  1268. benefit that the success of our arms will confer upon the people, I
  1269. emphasize its stimulating effect upon the progress of our country and
  1270. upon our civilization.
  1271. Yet while my anointed lips pour forth these solemn lies, my mind travels
  1272. over the bloody fields of carnage; I behold the thousands of the slain,
  1273. the mutilated bodies, the torn limbs, the streams of human blood....
  1274. I stand in the pulpit and call the faithful to prayer. I thunder eternal
  1275. curses upon the heads of the unbelievers; I threaten the people with the
  1276. torments of hell and I try to bribe them by the promise of heaven.
  1277. Believe, live and be saved, I cry. Or else you will die and be damned!
  1278. For I am the visible representative on earth of those invisible,
  1279. extra-mundane spirits whom man, in his fear and ignorance, created to
  1280. his own continued mental enslavement.
  1281. Terrified, sin lies prostrate at my feet. It does not know that a sick
  1282. conscience is a characteristic trait of all slaves. It is the universal
  1283. self-accuser. Were the people--individually and collectively--to sin on
  1284. a grand scale, were they to refuse to be the puppets of the man-made
  1285. idols--were that to happen, masters and slaves would cease to be.
  1286. The tyrants of the world are under great obligations to me. They must
  1287. not forget this. For if they should, I will unfold my solemn black robe,
  1288. I will smooth the hypocritical lines on my face--then shall the world
  1289. behold all the filth and corruption that I, Dignity, hide."
  1290. [Illustration]
  1291. PATERNALISTIC GOVERNMENT.
  1292. By THEODORE SCHROEDER.
  1293. (_Continuation._)
  1294. HERE is paternal solicitude with a vengeance in a law I requote from
  1295. Wordsworth Donisthorpe:
  1296. "They shall have bows and arrows, and use the same of Sundays and
  1297. holidays; and leave all playing at tennis or foot-ball and other games
  1298. called quoits, dice, casting of stone, kailes, and other such importune
  1299. games. Forasmuch as labourers and grooms keep greyhounds and other dogs,
  1300. and on the holidays when good Christians be at church hearing divine
  1301. service, they go hunting in parks, warrens, and connigries, it is
  1302. ordained that no manner of layman which hath not lands to the value of
  1303. forty shillings a year, shall from henceforth keep any greyhound or
  1304. other dog to hunt, nor shall he use ferrets, nets, heys, harepipes nor
  1305. cords, nor any engines for to take or destroy deer, hares, nor conies,
  1306. nor other _gentlemen's game_, under pain of twelve months imprisonment.
  1307. "For the great dearth that is in many places of the realm of poultry, it
  1308. is ordained that the price of a young capon shall not pass threepence,
  1309. and of an old fourpence, of a hen twopence, of a pullet a penny, of a
  1310. goose fourpence.
  1311. "Esquires and gentlemen under the estate of a knight shall not wear
  1312. cloth of a higher price than four and a half marks, they shall wear no
  1313. cloth of gold nor silk nor silver, nor no manner of clothing
  1314. embroidered, ring button nor brooch of gold nor of silver, nor nothing
  1315. of stone nor no manner of fur; and their wives and daughters shall be of
  1316. the same condition as to their vesture and apparel, without any
  1317. turning-up or purfle or apparel of gold, silver nor of stone.
  1318. "Because that servants and labourers will not nor by long season would,
  1319. serve and labour without outrageous and excessive hire, and much more
  1320. than hath been given to such servants and labourers in any time past, so
  1321. that for scarcity of the said servants and labourers the husbands and
  1322. land-tenants may not pay their rent nor live upon their lands, to the
  1323. great damage and loss as well of the Lords as of the Commons, it is
  1324. accorded and assented that the bailiff for husbandry shall take by the
  1325. years 13s. 3d. and his clothing once by the year at most; the master
  1326. hind 10s., the carter 10s., the shepherd 10s., the oxherd 6s. 8d., the
  1327. swineherd 6s., a woman labourer 6s., a dey 6s., a driver of the plough
  1328. 7s. at the most, and every other labourer and servant according to his
  1329. degree; and less in the country where less was wont to be given, without
  1330. clothing, courtesy, or other reward by covenant. If any give or take by
  1331. covenant more than is above specified, at the first that they shall be
  1332. thereof attained, as well the givers as the takers, shall pay the value
  1333. of the excess so taken, and at the second time of their attainer the
  1334. double value of such excess, and at the third time the treble value of
  1335. such excess, and if the taker so attained have nothing whereof to pay
  1336. the said excess, he shall have forty days imprisonment."
  1337. Our puritan fathers had the same paternal solicitude as all other
  1338. tyrants. They made it a crime to disregard the Sabbath, or to deny
  1339. Scripture, or the truth of Christianity or of the Trinity. In the
  1340. records of the colony for September 1639 it is written: "For as much as
  1341. it is evident unto this court that the common custom of drinking one to
  1342. another, is a mere useless ceremony, and draweth on that abominable
  1343. practice of drinking healths, and is also an occasion of much waste of
  1344. the good creatures, and of many other sin," etc. Then it declares that
  1345. such is a reproach to a Christian commonwealth, "wherein the least evils
  1346. are not to be tolerated."
  1347. In the instructions of the Massachusetts Company to Endicott and his
  1348. Council, the trade in tobacco is only allowed to the "old planters," "if
  1349. they conceive that they cannot otherwise provide for their livelihood."
  1350. It is left to the discretion of Endicott and his Council "to give way
  1351. for the present to their planting of it, in such manner and with such
  1352. restrictions" as they may think fitting. "But," it is added, "we
  1353. absolutely forbid the sale of it or the use of it by any of our own
  1354. particular (private) men's servants, unless upon urgent occasion, for
  1355. the benefit of health, and taken privately." In the Records of the
  1356. Colony of Massachusetts for September 3, 1634, "it is ordered that
  1357. victuallers or keepers of an ordinary shall not suffer any tobacco to be
  1358. taken into their houses, under penalty of 5s. for every offence to be
  1359. paid by the victualler, and 12d. by the party that takes it." "Further
  1360. it is ordered that no person shall take tobacco publicly under the
  1361. penalty of 2s. 6d., nor privately in his own house or in the house of
  1362. another before strangers, and that two or more shall not take it
  1363. together anywhere, under the aforesaid penalty for every offence."
  1364. The laws which our Colonial fathers enacted against "excess and bravery
  1365. in apparel" are fitted to excite a smile. But there is something more
  1366. than ludicrous in the aspect of grave lawmakers passing judgment on all
  1367. the minutiæ of dress, and finding matter of offence in an extra "slash,"
  1368. or a needless garniture of "lace." Against this last-named article the
  1369. zeal of our Puritan fathers seems to have been especially stirred up. In
  1370. 1634 it was ordered "that no person, either man or woman, shall
  1371. hereafter make or buy any apparel, either woolen, silk, or linen with
  1372. any lace on it, silver, gold, silk, or thread, under the penalty of
  1373. forfeiture of such clothes." In 1636 it was enacted "that no person,
  1374. after one month, shall make or sell any bone-lace or other lace, to be
  1375. worn upon any garment or linen, upon pain of 5s. the yard for every yard
  1376. of such lace so made, or sold, or set on; neither shall any tailor set
  1377. any lace upon any garment, upon pain of 10s. for every
  1378. offence,--provided that binding or small edging laces may be used upon
  1379. garments or linen." Again, three years later, a new edict was launched
  1380. at this obnoxious material, because "there is much complaint of the
  1381. excessive wearing of lace and other superfluities, tending to little use
  1382. or benefit, but to the nourishing of pride and the exhausting of men's
  1383. estates, and also of evil example to others." The law of 1634 was indeed
  1384. repealed in 1644; but in 1651 the Court, to their great grief, are
  1385. compelled to try their hand at the work again, though frankly confessing
  1386. the impotence of all previous legislation, and evidently awakening to a
  1387. sense of the inherent difficulties of the subject. "We acknowledge it,"
  1388. say they, "to be a matter of much difficulty, in regard of the blindness
  1389. of men's minds and the stubbornness of their wills, to set down exact
  1390. rules to confine all sorts of persons"; and so, leaving the wealthier
  1391. class to their own conscience of fancy, they undertake to prescribe for
  1392. "people of mean condition." It was therefore ordered (in 1651) that no
  1393. one whose estate is not of the value of £200 "shall wear any gold or
  1394. silver lace, or gold or silver buttons, or any bone-lace above 2s. per
  1395. yard or silk hoods or scarfs"; and moreover, the selectmen of the town
  1396. are required to fine anybody whom "they shall judge to exceed their rank
  1397. and ability in the costliness or fashion of their apparel, in any
  1398. respect"! And finally, a law passed in 1662 forbids "children and
  1399. servants" to wear any apparel "exceeding the quality and condition of
  1400. their persons or estate," "the grand jury and country court of the
  1401. shire" being judges of the offence.
  1402. One provision of the law of 1634 against "new and immodest fashions" is
  1403. too remarkable to be omitted. It reads as follows: "Moreover, it is
  1404. agreed, if any man shall judge the wearing of any the forenamed
  1405. particulars, new fashions, or long hair, or anything of the like nature,
  1406. to be uncomely or prejudicial to the common good, and the party
  1407. offending reform not the same, upon notice given him, that then the next
  1408. Assistant, being informed thereof, shall have power to bind the party so
  1409. offending to answer it at the next Court, if the case so requires;
  1410. provided, and it is the meaning of the Court, that men and women shall
  1411. have liberty to wear out such apparel as they are now provided of
  1412. (except the immoderate great sleeves, slashed apparel, immoderate great
  1413. veils, long wings, etc.)." What intolerable tyranny of private
  1414. surveillance is indicated in the phrase, "what any man shall judge to be
  1415. uncomely"!
  1416. In the second letter of instructions (dated June, 1629) to Endicott and
  1417. his Council, they are exhorted to prevent the sale of "strong waters" to
  1418. the Indians, and to punish any of their own people who shall become
  1419. drunk in the use of them. In the preamble to a law enacted in 1646, one
  1420. is led to expect an enforcement of the modern principles of abstinence
  1421. and prohibition; since, after declaring that "drunkenness is a vice to
  1422. be abhorred of all nations, especially of those which hold out and
  1423. profess the Gospel of Christ Jesus," it goes on to assert that "any
  1424. strict laws against the sin will not prevail unless the cause be taken
  1425. away." But it would seem that "the cause," in the eyes of our Puritan
  1426. lawmakers, was an indiscriminate sale of spirituous drinks; for the law
  1427. chiefly enacts that none but "vintners" shall have permission to retail
  1428. wine and "strong water." It is also permitted to constables to search
  1429. any tavern, or even any private house, "suspected to sell wine contrary
  1430. to this order." Moreover, no person is "to drink or tipple at
  1431. unseasonable times in houses of entertainment,"--the "unseasonable" time
  1432. being declared to be after nine in the evening.
  1433. But these laws were of small avail, for, in 1648, the Court is grieved
  1434. to confess: "It is found by experience that a great quantity of wine is
  1435. spent, and much thereof abused to excess of drinking and unto
  1436. drunkenness itself, notwithstanding all the wholesome laws provided and
  1437. published for the preventing thereof." It therefore orders, that those
  1438. who are authorized to sell wine and beer shall not harbor a drunkard in
  1439. their houses, but shall forthwith give him up to be dealt with by the
  1440. proper officer, under penalty of five pounds for disobedience.
  1441. In 1636 one "Peter Bussaker was censured for drunkenness to be whipped
  1442. and to have twenty stripes sharply inflicted, and fined £5 for slighting
  1443. the magistrates," etc. In March, 1634, it was ordered, "that Robert
  1444. Coles, for drunkenness by him committed at Roxbury, shall be
  1445. disfranchised, wear about his neck and so to hangg upon his outward
  1446. garment a D made of red cloth and set upon white; to continue this for a
  1447. year, and not to leave it off at any time when he comes amongst company,
  1448. under penalty of 40s. for the first offence and £5 for the second." What
  1449. was the efficacy of the whipping or the "scarlet letter," we are not
  1450. informed.
  1451. Of course, people capable of such legislation must frame fantastic
  1452. definitions of Liberty. Here is an old one whose sentiments have been
  1453. often parroted by unthinking humans of modern times. It reads: "True
  1454. Liberty consists in a freedom of doing and receiving good under the
  1455. protection of a government solicitous for the people's good." Such has
  1456. always been the tyrant's conception of freedom, and, strange to say,
  1457. finds many endorsements even to this day.
  1458. It has recently been solemnly announced from the judicial bench that the
  1459. only liberty an American has is the liberty to do the right thing, of
  1460. course according to other people's conception of right. That is
  1461. precisely the kind of tyranny or liberty that was enjoyed by the victims
  1462. of the paternalistic laws above described.
  1463. Persons afflicted with newspaper intelligence express their conception
  1464. that the individual has no rights that government may not invade, by
  1465. that hollow phrase, "Liberty under the Law." Liberty under the law is
  1466. what the government-ridden peasants of Russia enjoy. Liberty under the
  1467. law was the pleasure of those who expired with indescribable agony on
  1468. the rack and amid the flames. Liberty under the law was meted out to the
  1469. millions of victims of the witchcraft delusion. Liberty under the law
  1470. was also the liberty of our Southern chattel slaves before as well as
  1471. after the war. Liberty under the law is the same old idea of liberty
  1472. which every tyrant has ever advanced. As for myself, I shouldn't object
  1473. to a little liberty in spite of the law, when that does not conform to
  1474. the rule of liberty as laid down by Herbert Spencer in these words:
  1475. "Every man has freedom to do all that he wills, provided he infringes
  1476. not the equal freedom of any other man."
  1477. AIM AND TACTICS OF THE TRADE-UNION MOVEMENT.
  1478. By MAX BAGINSKI.
  1479. TRADE unionism represents to the working man the most natural form of
  1480. association with his fellow-brother. This medium became a necessity to
  1481. him when he was confronted by modern industrialism and the power of
  1482. capitalism. It dawned on him that the individual producer had not a
  1483. shadow of a chance with the owner of the means of production, who,
  1484. together with the economic power, enjoyed the protection of the State
  1485. with its various weapons of warfare and coercion. In the face of such a
  1486. giant master all the appeals of the workingman to the love of justice
  1487. and common humanity went up into smoke.
  1488. The beginning of modern industry found the producer in abject slavery
  1489. and without the understanding of an organized form of resistance.
  1490. Exploitation reigned supreme, ever seeking to sap the last drop of
  1491. strength of its victims. No mercy for the common man, nor any
  1492. consideration shown for his life, his health, growth and development.
  1493. Capitalism's only aim was the accumulation of profits, of wealth and
  1494. power, and to this moloch everything else was ruthlessly sacrificed.
  1495. This spirit of accumulation did not admit of the right of the masses to
  1496. think, feel, or demand; it merely considered them a class of coolies,
  1497. specially created, as it were, for their masters' use.
  1498. This notion is still in vogue to-day, and if the conditions of the
  1499. workers at this moment are somewhat better, somewhat more endurable, it
  1500. is not thanks to the milk of human kindness of the money power.
  1501. Whatsoever the workingmen have achieved in the way of better human
  1502. conditions,--a higher standard of living, or a partial recognition of
  1503. their rights,--they have wrenched from their enemies through a hard and
  1504. bitter struggle that required great endurance, tremendous courage and
  1505. many sacrifices.
  1506. The tendency to treat the people as a herd of sheep the purpose of which
  1507. is to serve as food for parasites is still very strong; but this
  1508. tendency no longer goes unchallenged; it is being met with tremendous
  1509. opposition; increased social knowledge and revolutionary ideas have
  1510. taught the workingmen to unite their efforts against those who have been
  1511. comfortably seated on their backs for centuries past.
  1512. The first unskilled attempt on the part of the people to gain a clear
  1513. conception of their position brought out blind hatred against the
  1514. technical methods of exploitation instead of hatred against the latter.
  1515. In England, for instance, the workingmen considered machinery their
  1516. deadly foe, to be gotten rid of by all means. The simple axiom that
  1517. machinery, factories, mines, land, together with every other means of
  1518. production, if only in the hands of the entire community, would serve
  1519. for the comfort and happiness of all, instead of being a curse, was a
  1520. book of seven seals for the people in those days. And even at this late
  1521. hour this simple truth is entertained by a comparative few, though more
  1522. than one decade of socialistic and anarchistic enlightenment has passed.
  1523. The first trade-unionistic attempts have met with the same ferocious
  1524. persecution that Anarchism is being met with to-day. Even as to-day
  1525. capital avails itself of the strongest weapons of government in its
  1526. attack upon labor. The authorities were not slow in passing laws against
  1527. trade unionism and every effort for organization was at that time
  1528. considered high treason, organizers and all those who participated in
  1529. strikes were considered aides and abettors of crime and conspiracy,
  1530. punishable with long years of imprisonment and, in many cases, even with
  1531. death.
  1532. At the behest of Money, the State sent human bloodhounds on the trail of
  1533. the man who in any way was suspected in participating in the trade-union
  1534. movement. The most villainous and brutal methods were employed to
  1535. counteract the growth and success of labor organizations. The powers
  1536. that be recognized the great force that is contained in organized labor
  1537. as the means of the regeneration of society much quicker than the
  1538. workingmen themselves. They felt this force hanging like a Damocles
  1539. sword over their heads, which danger made them dread the future, and
  1540. nothing was left undone to nip this force in the bud.
  1541. The fundamental principle of trade unionism is of a revolutionary
  1542. character and, as such, it never was and never can be a mere palliative
  1543. for the adjustment of Labor to Capital. Hence, it must aim at the social
  1544. and economic reconstruction of society.
  1545. Many labor leaders in this country, who consider their duty performed
  1546. when they sit themselves at the table of wealth and authority, trying to
  1547. bring about peace and harmony between Capital and Labor, might greatly
  1548. profit by the history of trade-unionism and the various economic
  1549. struggles it has fought.
  1550. Only ignorance can account for the birth of such superficial stuff on
  1551. the labor question as the book of John Mitchell that has been launched
  1552. upon the market through loud and vulgar advertisement. Nothing could
  1553. have disproved the fitness of Mr. Mitchell for a labor leader so
  1554. drastically as this book.
  1555. As already stated, the violent attempt to kill trade unionism or its
  1556. organizations have proven futile. The swelling tide of the labor
  1557. movement could not be stopped. The social and economic problem brought
  1558. to light by modern industry demanded a hearing, produced various
  1559. theories and an extensive literature on the subject--a literature that
  1560. spoke with a tongue of fire of the awful existence of the oppressed
  1561. millions, their trials, their tribulations, the uncertainty, the dangers
  1562. surrounding them; it spoke of the terrible results of their conditions,
  1563. of the lives crippled, of the hopes marred; a literature that demanded
  1564. to know why it is that those who toil are condemned to want and poverty,
  1565. while those who never produced were living in affluence and
  1566. extravagance.
  1567. Well-meaning people have even attempted to prove that Capital and Labor
  1568. are twins, and that in order to maintain their common interests they
  1569. ought to live in harmony; or, that if Sister Labor had a grievance
  1570. against its big brother it ought to be settled in a calm and peaceful
  1571. way. Meanwhile the dear sister was fleeced and bled by Brother Capital,
  1572. and every time the abused and slaved and outraged creature would turn to
  1573. her brother for justice the dear fellow would whip the rebellious child
  1574. into submission.
  1575. Along with the forcible subjection of organized labor, the minds of the
  1576. people were confused and blurred by the sugar-coated promises of
  1577. politicians who assured them that the trade unions ought to be organized
  1578. by the law, and that all labor quarrels ought to be settled by political
  1579. and legal means. Indeed, legislatures even discussed a few
  1580. labor-protective laws that either never saw the light of day, or, if
  1581. really enacted, were set aside or overridden by the possessing class as
  1582. an obstacle to profit-making.
  1583. Every government, no matter what political basis it rests upon, acts in
  1584. unison with wealth, and therefore it never passed any legislation in
  1585. behalf of the producing element of the country that would seriously
  1586. benefit the great bulk of the people or in any way aim at any change of
  1587. wage-slaving or economic subjugation.
  1588. Every step of improvement the workingmen have made is due solely to
  1589. their own economic efforts and not to any legal or political aid ever
  1590. given them, and through their own endeavors only can ever come the
  1591. reconstruction of the economic and social conditions of society. Just as
  1592. little as the workingmen can expect from legislative methods can they
  1593. gain from trade-unionistic efforts that attempt to better economic
  1594. conditions along the basic lines of the present industrial system.
  1595. The cardinal fault of the trade-union movement of this country lies in
  1596. the fact that its hopes and ideals rest upon the present social status;
  1597. these ideals ever rotate in the same circle and, therefore, cannot bear
  1598. intellectual and material fruit. Condemned to pasture in the lean
  1599. meadows of capitalistic economy, trade-unionism drags on a miserable
  1600. existence, satisfied with the crumbs that fall from the heavily laden
  1601. tables of their lordly masters.
  1602. True social science has amply proved the futility of a reconciliation
  1603. between the two opposing forces; the existence of the one force
  1604. representing possession, wealth and power inevitably has a paralyzing
  1605. effect upon its opposing force--Labor.
  1606. Trade-unionistic tactics of to-day unfortunately still travel the path
  1607. marked out for Labor by the powers that be, while the majority of the
  1608. labor leaders waste the time paid for by their organizations in
  1609. listening to or discussing with capitalists sweet nothings in the form
  1610. of arbitration or reconciliation, and are apparently unaware of the
  1611. fundamental difference between the body they represent and the powers
  1612. they bow to. And thus it happens that labor organizations are being
  1613. brutally attacked, that the militia and soldiers are maiming their
  1614. brothers in the various strike regions while the leaders are being dined
  1615. and wined. The American Federation of Labor is lobbying in Washington,
  1616. begging for legal protection, and in return venal Justice sends
  1617. Winchester rifles and drunken militiamen into the disturbed labor
  1618. districts. Recently the American Federation of Labor made an alleged
  1619. radical step in deciding to put up labor candidates for Congress--an old
  1620. and threadbare political move--thereby sacrificing whatever honest men
  1621. and clear heads they may have in their ranks. Such tactics are not worth
  1622. a single drop of sweat of the workingmen, since they are not only
  1623. contradictory to the basic principles of trade unionism, but even
  1624. useless and impractical.
  1625. Pity for and indignation against the workers fill one's soul at the
  1626. spectacle of the ridiculous strike methods so often employed and that as
  1627. often frustrate the possible success of every large labor war. Or is it
  1628. not laughable, if it were not so deadly serious, that the producers
  1629. publicly discuss for months in advance where and when they might strike,
  1630. and therewith give the enemy a chance to prepare his means of combat.
  1631. For months the papers of the money power bring long interviews with
  1632. labor leaders, giving detailed descriptions of the ways and means of the
  1633. proposed strikes, or the results of negotiations with this or that mine
  1634. magnate. The more often these negotiations are reported, the more glory
  1635. to the so-called leaders, for the more often their names appear in the
  1636. papers; the more "reasonable" the utterances of these gentlemen (which
  1637. means that they are neither fish nor flesh, neither warm nor cold), the
  1638. surer they grow of the sympathy of the most reactionary element in the
  1639. country or of an invitation to the White House to join the Chief
  1640. Magistrate at dinner. Labor leaders of such caliber fail to consider
  1641. that every strike is a labor event upon the success or failure of which
  1642. thousands of lives depend; rather do they see in it an opportunity to
  1643. push their own insignificant personalities into prominence. Instead of
  1644. leading their organized hosts to victory, they disclose their
  1645. superficiality in their zeal not to injure their reputation for
  1646. "respectability."
  1647. The workingmen? Be it victory or defeat, they must take up the reins of
  1648. every strike themselves; as it is, they play the dupes of the shrewd
  1649. attorneys on both sides, unaware of the price the trickery and cunning
  1650. of these men cost them.
  1651. As I said before, the unions negotiate strikes for days and weeks and
  1652. months beforehand, even allowing their men to work overtime in order to
  1653. produce all the commodities to continue business while the strike is
  1654. going on.
  1655. The printers, for instance, worked late into the night on magazines that
  1656. were being got ready four months in advance, and the miners who
  1657. discussed the strike so long until every remnant of enthusiasm was gone.
  1658. What wonder, then, that strikes fail? As long as the employer is in a
  1659. position to say, "Strike if you will; I do not need you; I can fill my
  1660. orders; I know that hunger will drive _you_ back into the mine and
  1661. factory, _I_ can wait," there is no hope for the success of the strike.
  1662. Such have been the results of the legal trade union methods.
  1663. The history of the labor struggle of this country shows an incident that
  1664. warrants the hope for an energetic, revolutionary trade union agitation.
  1665. That is the eight-hour movement of 1886 which culminated in the death of
  1666. five labor leaders. That movement contained the true element of the
  1667. proletarian and revolutionary spirit, the lack of which makes organized
  1668. labor of to-day a ball in the hands of selfish aspirants, know-nothings
  1669. and politicians.
  1670. That which specifically characterized the event of 1886 as a
  1671. revolutionary factor was the fact that the eight-hour workday could
  1672. never be accomplished through lobbying with politicians, but through the
  1673. direct and economic weapon, the general strike.
  1674. The desire to demonstrate the efficacy of this weapon gave birth to the
  1675. idea of celebrating the first of May as an appropriate day for Labor's
  1676. festival. On that day the workingmen were to give the first practical
  1677. demonstration of the power of the general strike as an at least one-day
  1678. protest against oppression and tyranny, and which day were gradually to
  1679. become the means for the final overthrow of economic and social
  1680. dependence.
  1681. One may suggest that the tragedy of the 11th of November of 1887 has
  1682. stamped the general strike as a futile method, but this is not true. The
  1683. battle of liberation cannot be put a stop to by the brutality and
  1684. rascality of the ruling powers. The vicious anger and the wild hatred
  1685. that strangled our brothers in Chicago are the safest guarantee that
  1686. their activity struck a potentially fatal blow to government and
  1687. capital.
  1688. Neither Mr. Mitchell nor Mr. Gompers run the risk of dying upon the
  1689. gallows of sacred capitalistic Justitia; her ladyship is not at all as
  1690. blind as some suppose her to be; on the contrary, she has a very keen
  1691. eye for all that may prove beneficial or dangerous to the society that
  1692. draws its subsistence from the lives' blood of its people. She has quite
  1693. made up her mind that the gentlemen in the ranks of Labor to-day lead
  1694. the people about in a circle and never will urge them out into the open,
  1695. towards liberation.
  1696. (_To be continued._)
  1697. [Illustration]
  1698. REFINED CRUELTY.
  1699. By ANNA MERCY.
  1700. CIVILIZATION has eliminated none of the qualities that marked the age of
  1701. savagery. The cruelties which especially characterized primitive man is
  1702. exercised as much to-day as in the days of cannibalism.
  1703. Civilization has been the refining agent of our qualities. Just as a
  1704. number of chemicals put into a crucible are refined by a certain acid,
  1705. while yet the original substances remain, though in different forms, so
  1706. has civilization refined and remolded the crude elements of our nature,
  1707. leaving the essence of our primitive qualities the same.
  1708. The subtlety with which cruelty is exercised to-day makes of it a
  1709. far-reaching and far more destructive force than formerly. Instead of
  1710. attacking our neighbors with sticks and stones and tomahawks, and
  1711. forcing them into captivity in order that they may work for us, we
  1712. obtain the same or even better results by numerous subtle methods. We
  1713. instill respect for law, wealth and morality. We withdraw the land and
  1714. other natural resources from general use. With a show of generous
  1715. sentiment, we allow the lambs we have shorn to assist us in the
  1716. shearing of other lambs.
  1717. Every morning and every evening we see a long procession of men and
  1718. women going or coming from the work, at which they have given up their
  1719. life force for the sake of a mere pittance. Look at these men and women!
  1720. There they go, evidently free! No shackles are on their hands or feet,
  1721. no overseer keeps them in check by club or gun. There they go
  1722. voluntarily to their prison factories, offices, stores, in the morning;
  1723. and in the evening, when the glorious sun is hidden from sight, they
  1724. come out again, haggard and worn, to creep to their prison homes.
  1725. When the savage desires to rob you, he may attempt to strangle and maim
  1726. you. But the civilized man scorns such crude methods. He builds cheap
  1727. tenements in which you may gradually and surely choke to death; and not
  1728. satisfied with that, he, with a great show of kindness, prepares your
  1729. foods for you, that they may slowly, very slowly, but surely, hasten
  1730. your deliverance. Babies are not frankly murdered any more, but they are
  1731. served with nice, adulterated milk, which accomplishes the same purpose
  1732. in a quieter way.
  1733. Under the name of law many atrocious crimes are committed. Imprisonment,
  1734. capital punishment and war are yet crude in their methods. They are
  1735. still susceptible of more refining. Here cruelty has rather a thin
  1736. garment on and needs to be covered up a little more.
  1737. Even in our every-day relations with each other, we use many and varied
  1738. forms of refined cruelty. When displeased, we no longer beat each other,
  1739. but we use the subtler forces of sarcasm, irony, slander, neglect. We
  1740. regard directness a rudeness, when in reality it is the greatest
  1741. kindness imaginable. Instead of being positive and direct in our
  1742. dealings with each other, we constantly exercise a passive cruelty, in
  1743. other words, the cruelty of refinement. We are evasive, delusive,
  1744. subdued, falsified. But we deceive with dignity, tell falsehoods
  1745. fluently, use words and cold behavior as daggers.
  1746. To-day we do not turn away an unwelcome visitor, but we announce that we
  1747. are not at home; or we slander him behind his back. When we love we
  1748. pretend to be modest and indifferent, while, in an indirect way, we
  1749. attempt to build walls around the person we love. There is nothing free
  1750. in the expression of our emotions, for we are subdued, crushed; we are
  1751. civilized!
  1752. Everything is sham and hypocrisy, and hidden daggers are everywhere, in
  1753. one form or another. These daggers are concealed under kindness,
  1754. charity, benevolence, morality, law, and are, therefore, difficult to
  1755. deal with. The blades are thrust into the back; you can feel them, but
  1756. you cannot grapple with them.
  1757. Our inherent cruelty is best illustrated in the treatment we give those
  1758. who are absolutely in our power--little children and the dumb animals.
  1759. With what authority do we elicit respect and obedience from our little
  1760. people! With rod in hand and with venomous tongues we begin the process
  1761. of subjugating and civilizing our little free, emotional people. In the
  1762. name of "their highest good" do we mould them to be actors, that they
  1763. may properly enact the tragedy of life as we had enacted it before them!
  1764. The dumb animals receive the cream of our refined cruelty. In order to
  1765. appear civilized, we drive in carriages pulled by horses whose spinal
  1766. columns have been docked, whose necks are held stiff by tight check
  1767. reins, whose eyes are blinded by "fashionable" devices.
  1768. There used to be cannibalism and human sacrifices; there used to be
  1769. religious prostitution and the murder of weak children and of girls;
  1770. there used to be bloody revenge and the slaughter of whole populations,
  1771. judicial tortures, quarterings, burnings at the stake, the lash, and
  1772. slavery, which have disappeared. But if we have outlived these dreadful
  1773. customs and institutions, this does not prove that there do not exist
  1774. institutions and customs amongst us which have become as abhorrent to
  1775. enlightened reason and conscience as those which have in their time been
  1776. abolished and have become for us only a dreadful remembrance. The way of
  1777. human perfecting is endless, and at every moment of historical life
  1778. there are superstitions, deceits, pernicious and evil institutions
  1779. already outlived by men and belonging to the past; there are others
  1780. which appear to us in the far mists of the future; and there are some
  1781. which we are now living through and whose over-living forms the object
  1782. of our life. Such in our time is capital punishment and all punishment
  1783. in general. Such is prostitution, such is the work of militarism, war,
  1784. and such is the nearest and most obvious evil, private property in land.
  1785. [Illustration]
  1786. "THE JUNGLE."
  1787. A Recension by VERITAS.
  1788. "THE JUNGLE," a recent story by Upton Sinclair, is a nightmare of
  1789. horrors, of which the worst horror is that it is not a phantom of the
  1790. night, but claims to be true history of one phase of our
  1791. twentieth-century civilization. Nothing but the book itself could
  1792. represent its own tragic power. In my opinion it is the most terrible
  1793. book ever written.
  1794. It is for the most part a tale of the abattoirs, those unspeakable
  1795. survivals in our Christendom in which man reeks his savage and sensual
  1796. will on the lesser animals; and indirectly it is a story of the moral
  1797. abattoirs of politics, economics, society, religion and the home, where
  1798. the victims are of the species human, and where man's inhumanity to man
  1799. is as selfish and relentless as his age-long cruelty to his brothers and
  1800. sisters just behind him in the great procession.
  1801. Possibly the title is inappropriate. There is a "law of the pack," which
  1802. is observed in the genuine jungle, but these human beasts appear to have
  1803. all of the jungle's vices and few of its virtues. The author might have
  1804. called his history, "The Slaughter House," or, perhaps, plain "Hell."
  1805. It is a common saying about a packing house, "We use all of the hog
  1806. except the squeal." This author uses the squeal, or, rather, the wild
  1807. death shrieks of agony of the ten millions of living creatures tortured
  1808. to death every year in Chicago and the other tens of millions elsewhere,
  1809. to pander to the old brutal, inhuman thirst of humanity for a diet of
  1810. blood. The billions of the slain have found a voice at last, and if I
  1811. mistake not this cry of anguish from the "killing-beds" shall not sound
  1812. on until men, whose ancestors once were cannibals, shall cease to devour
  1813. even the corpses of their murdered animal relatives. But while "The
  1814. Jungle" will undoubtedly make more vegetarians, it would take more than
  1815. the practice of universal vegetarianism to cause the book to fulfil its
  1816. mission; for this is a story of Civilization's Inferno and of the crisis
  1817. of the world, a recital of conditions for which, when once comprehended,
  1818. there can be no remedy but the revolution of revolutions, the event
  1819. toward which the ages ran, the establishment of a genuine political,
  1820. industrial and social democracy.[2]
  1821. If the story be dramatized and Mrs. Fiske take the part of Ona, her
  1822. presentation will make Tess seem like a pastoral idyll in comparison.
  1823. The book is great even from a political standpoint.
  1824. But more than this, it is a great moral appeal. Not in Victor Hugo or
  1825. Charles Dickens does the moral passion burn with purer or intenser light
  1826. than in these pages.
  1827. I should not advise children or very delicately constituted women to
  1828. read it.
  1829. I have said it is a book of horrors. I started to mark the passages of
  1830. peculiar tragedy and found that I was marking every page, and yet it is
  1831. a justifiable book and a necessary book.
  1832. The author tells as facts the story of "diseased meat," and worse, the
  1833. preparation in the night time of the bodies of the cattle which have
  1834. died from known and unknown causes before reaching the slaughter pens,
  1835. and the distribution of the effects, with the rest of the intentional
  1836. killing of the day; he describes the preparation of "embalmed beef" from
  1837. cattle covered with boils; he even narrates the story of "men who fell
  1838. into the vats," and "sometimes they would be overlooked for days till
  1839. all but the bones of them had gone out to the world as Durham's Pure
  1840. Leaf Lard"; he writes of the making of smoked sausage out of waste
  1841. potatoes by the use of chemicals and out of spoiled meat as well; and he
  1842. further speaks of rats which were "nuisances, and the packers would put
  1843. poisoned bread out for them; they would die, and then rats, bread and
  1844. meat would go into the hoppers together. This is no fairy story and no
  1845. joke; the meat would be shovelled into carts and the man who did the
  1846. shovelling would not trouble to lift out a rat even when he saw
  1847. one--there were things which went into the sausage in comparison with
  1848. which a poisoned rat was a tidbit."
  1849. But the worst of the story is a tale of the condition of the workers at
  1850. Packingtown and elsewhere. It is the story of strong men who justly
  1851. hated their work; of men, for no fault of their own, cast out in middle
  1852. life to die; of weeping children driven with whips to their ignoble
  1853. toil; of disease-producing conditions in winter, only surpassed by the
  1854. deadly summer; of people working with their feet upon the ice and their
  1855. heads enveloped in hot steam; of the perpetual stench which infests
  1856. their nostrils, the sores which universally covered their bodies; of the
  1857. terrible pace set by the continual "speeding up" of the pace makers,
  1858. goaded to a pitch of frenzy; of accidents commonplace in every family;
  1859. of the garbage pile of refuse from the tables of more fortunate
  1860. citizens, from which many were forced to satisfy their hunger; of the
  1861. terrors of the black list, the shut-down, the strike and the lockout;
  1862. and of the universal swindle, whether a man bought a house, or doctored
  1863. tea, coffee, sugar or flour.
  1864. It is still further a story of the moral enormities and monstrosities of
  1865. the almost universal graft, "the plants honeycombed with rottenness. The
  1866. bosses grafted off the men and they grafted off each other, and some day
  1867. the superintendent would find out about the boss, and then he would
  1868. graft off the boss."
  1869. When the men were set to perform some peculiarly immoral act, they would
  1870. say, "Now we are working for the church," referring to the benefactions
  1871. of the proprietors to religious institutions.
  1872. It tells the story of the training of the children in vice, of girls
  1873. forced into immorality, so that a girl without virtue would stand a
  1874. better chance than a decent one. It is a tale of the terrible ending of
  1875. old Antanas by saltpeter poisoning; of Jonas, no one knows how, possibly
  1876. he fell into the vats; of little Kristoforas by convulsions; of little
  1877. Antanas by falling into a pit before the door of his house; of Marija,
  1878. in a house of shame; of Stanislovas, who was eaten by rats; and of
  1879. beautiful little Ona, to the description of whose ending no other than
  1880. the author's pen could do justice.
  1881. The book shows how men graft everywhere, not only in the packing house,
  1882. but how the slime of the serpent is over almost all of our modern
  1883. commercial and political practises.
  1884. No one can justly hold the meat kings responsible for all of this.
  1885. Nothing less than a thorough reconstruction of our whole social organism
  1886. will suffice. Palliative philanthropy is, as the author says, "like
  1887. standing upon the brink of the pit of hell and throwing snow balls in to
  1888. lower the temperature."
  1889. "The Jungle" is the boiling over of our social volcano and shows us what
  1890. is in it. It is a danger signal!
  1891. We are all indicted and must stand our trial. There rests upon us the
  1892. obligation to ascertain the facts. The author of "The Jungle" lived in
  1893. Packingtown for months, and the eminently respectable publishers who are
  1894. now issuing the book sent a shrewd lawyer to Chicago to report as to
  1895. whether the statements in it were exaggerated, and his report confirmed
  1896. the assertions of the author.
  1897. This book is a call to immediate action.
  1898. The Lithuanian hero found his solution of the problems suggested in
  1899. Socialism. The solution lies either in that direction or in something
  1900. better, and it behooves those who warn us against Socialistic
  1901. experiments to tell us if they know of any other effective remedy.
  1902. Surely all thoughtful men should study these theories of social
  1903. redemption and learn why their advocates claim that putting them in
  1904. practice would modify or abolish the evils of our modern conditions.
  1905. "The masters, lords and rulers of all lands," the thinkers and workers
  1906. of our time must speedily give themselves to the understanding and
  1907. application of some adequate remedy, or there will be blood, woe and
  1908. tears almost without end, "when this dumb terror shall reply to God,
  1909. after the silence of the centuries."
  1910. FOOTNOTE:
  1911. [2] Genuine or not genuine: we live right now in a democracy. If, in
  1912. spite of that, such diabolical crimes as Sinclair describes them are
  1913. committed daily, then this only proves that democracy is no panacea for
  1914. them. Why should it, if criminals of the Armour kind realize profits out
  1915. of their wholesale poisoning of such dimensions that they can easily buy
  1916. all the glory of the people's sovereignty.--Editor.
  1917. THE GAME IS UP.
  1918. By SADAKICHI HARTMANN.
  1919. "HELLO, Morrison, may I come in?" The door stood slightly ajar.
  1920. Morrison came to the door--the complexion of his face was sallow and his
  1921. eyes had a peculiar look--he recognized his visitor, hesitated for a
  1922. moment whether he should admit him, then opened the door and made a sort
  1923. of mock courtesy.
  1924. "Cleaning up?" the tall, lean man asked as he entered the little hall
  1925. room.
  1926. "Yes," and a wistful smile glided over Morrison's pale face; "cleaning
  1927. up for good."
  1928. The room had a peculiar appearance. There was no disorder and yet a lot
  1929. of things were lying about; it looked as if the lodger intended to go
  1930. away on a long journey and had tried to straighten up matters previous
  1931. to his departure. The visitor gazed curiously about the room. He had a
  1932. strange foreboding, but forced himself to ask in a jocular mood: "Going
  1933. to Egypt again?"
  1934. "Farther than that this time, but it won't take so long; the journey I
  1935. am contemplating will be over by to-morrow evening, I hope."
  1936. "What do you mean?"
  1937. "The game is up."
  1938. The tall, lean man made no immediate reply, he merely gazed steadily
  1939. into the face of his friend. He had always suspected that it would come
  1940. to this some day. He really wondered that Morrison had not done it long
  1941. ago. If any man had a right to dispose of his life it was surely
  1942. Morrison. He had endured more than most human beings. His case was
  1943. absolutely hopeless.
  1944. "Is there no way out of it?"
  1945. Morrison shook his head. He wanted to say something, but his voice
  1946. failed him. He stepped to the dresser near the window, looked into the
  1947. mirror and arranged his faded, threadbare tie. It was pitiful to see how
  1948. shabbily he was dressed. He no longer set the fashion as in his days of
  1949. success, years ago in Boston.
  1950. "Would money help you?" and the tall, lean visitor fumbled in his
  1951. pockets. Although fairly well dressed, he was hard up most of the time
  1952. and only ventured to broach the subject as he just happened to have a
  1953. few dollars to spare that day.
  1954. "No, what good would the little do that you could give me?" and he
  1955. continued to adjust matters and tuck things away in his trunk.
  1956. "There, you are right again, not much. But I won forty dollars on the
  1957. track; I sometimes go out there," he added as a sort of excuse, "as it
  1958. is impossible to live on literature alone. I could spare ten."
  1959. "Can you really spare them? I won't be able to return them, you know. I
  1960. would like to have them. I suppose you will refuse to let me buy a
  1961. revolver with them. I have all sorts of poisons," he pointed to some
  1962. little bottles, "but I would prefer not to use them, it wouldn't be
  1963. esthetical, and then I want to go away to some place where nobody knows
  1964. me. I don't want to be identified."
  1965. The literary man slowly pulled a small roll out of his pocket. He
  1966. thought of his wife and children who needed the money. It was really
  1967. foolish to have made that offer. Well, it was probably the last service
  1968. he could render his friend. Morrison was serious about his departure,
  1969. there was no doubt about that. "Here!"
  1970. "Thanks," Morrison answered, though he did not take the money right
  1971. away. He looked about absentmindedly, as in a dream. This was friendship
  1972. indeed. He had not believed that anybody could so completely enter
  1973. another man's state of mind. Not a word of opposition. This was
  1974. glorious! They had known each other for more than seventeen years. They
  1975. had often drifted apart and, somehow, had always met again. They had
  1976. never been very intimate, they had merely respected each other for the
  1977. work they had accomplished, each in his profession; although they
  1978. differed largely in ideas. Morrison was a sculptor, and almost an
  1979. ancient Greek in his feelings for the beauty of lines. The tall, lean
  1980. man, on the other hand, was a strange mixture of a visionary and brutal
  1981. realist. They both were cynics, however, that found life rather futile.
  1982. With the literary man this was merely a theoretical view point, while
  1983. Morrison was really embittered with life. The incidents of this
  1984. afternoon had surprised him. He was deeply moved and felt as if he
  1985. should give utterance to his emotions. He remembered that his attitude
  1986. towards his friend had been rather arrogant at times. He now felt sorry
  1987. for it, but somehow could not form his sentiments and thoughts into
  1988. coherent sentences.
  1989. "Thanks," he simply repeated, "Has anybody seen you enter the house?"
  1990. "No, the door was open and I walked right up. Why do you ask?"
  1991. "I don't want anybody to be mixed up in this affair, as it only concerns
  1992. me."
  1993. The literary man smiled: "Could any man influence you one way or
  1994. another? As far as I can make out you are beyond mortal influence."
  1995. A pause ensued. Morrison threw the last thing into his trunk. "Well, I
  1996. am ready. Everything is settled."
  1997. "How about your statues?"
  1998. "Pshaw!" Morrison shrugged his shoulders. "Nobody was interested in them
  1999. while I lived. Why should I bother to think what might become of them
  2000. after my death?"
  2001. The author nodded and scowled at the same time. He was not satisfied
  2002. with the answer. But there were still other things on his mind. He was
  2003. used to analyze everything to shreds and tatters. "Are you not afraid
  2004. that you might make a botch out of the whole job?"
  2005. Morrison weighed the question in his mind, then shook his head and
  2006. answered: "No, there is hardly a chance for it now. I have been tuned up
  2007. to it, trained myself to it, so to speak. The fruit is ripe. It has to
  2008. fall. It would be awful, though--" he added, with an after-thought. "Do
  2009. you remember my emerald ring? I had to pawn it, but I kept the poison
  2010. which was hidden under the stone. I will take that if anything goes
  2011. wrong."
  2012. "Would you object to my company?" asked the tall, lean man, "I mean
  2013. until all is over. I, myself, am not quite ready yet for any such
  2014. heroical performances."
  2015. "Oh, don't think of it," the sculptor ejaculated; notwithstanding, the
  2016. tone of his voice indicated that he would not object, that he would even
  2017. prefer a traveling companion for the last few hours of his life.
  2018. "Well, I'll go with you. Where are you going?"
  2019. "To New Haven. It's a nice trip." Morrison carefully brushed his hair
  2020. and clothes, there came a flush to his face as he realized how shabby
  2021. his clothes really were. The tall, lean man was delicate enough to look
  2022. away as if he had not noticed anything.
  2023. A few moments later they left the room. Morrison locked the door and
  2024. they went out into the street. They did not talk much, merely
  2025. commonplace phrases that did not bear upon the subject. Both were
  2026. occupied with their own thoughts, and strange thoughts they must have
  2027. been. They leisurely strolled to a store of sporting outfits, bought a
  2028. revolver and cartridges, had their shoes shined at the next corner, and
  2029. slowly wended their way toward the depot. Their actions were almost
  2030. mechanical. Suicide is an attack of insanity, a sort of mental plague.
  2031. If one has caught the fever, one is doomed. There is no escape from it.
  2032. At the same time it is contagious. The literary man was somewhat
  2033. infected by it. All his interests in life seemed to be dulled,
  2034. obliterated as it were. He could only think the one thought, "Morrison
  2035. is going to kill himself. But who knows, he may, after all, turn up next
  2036. week with the excuse that he had changed his mind. No, not he!--it was
  2037. really too bad!" Morrison, on the other hand, grew quite cheerful. With
  2038. him the idea that he would do it, had become so matter-of-fact, that he
  2039. ceased to think of it. Nothing could influence him any more. Even if
  2040. some vague current of soul activity should revolt at the very last
  2041. moment, he was certain that his hand would mechanically perform the
  2042. task.
  2043. "Only one return ticket," he whispered as he approached the ticket
  2044. office. "Oh, I almost forgot," replied his friend.
  2045. During the trip they silently sat opposite each other, smoking. Now and
  2046. then Morrison pointed out the beautiful sights. He seemed to be familiar
  2047. with the scenery. At their arrival in New Haven, at dusk, they at once
  2048. adjourned to a hotel and sat down at a table in the bar-room. They began
  2049. to talk about art, they discussed commercialism, the lack of
  2050. appreciation and the vanity of all serious work, at least as far as art
  2051. is concerned. They began to relate reminiscences of their student
  2052. years, and reviewed the hopes and ambitions of their youth. If they had
  2053. been realized, what wonders they would have accomplished!
  2054. "I gave the other side a chance. They never responded. I waited for ten
  2055. long years, and now, it's all up. Let us have another drink, waiter, the
  2056. last." They clinked glasses. "And now for a decent departure as in the
  2057. good old times, when Hegesias, the Cyrenaic, preached suicide in
  2058. Alexandria--"
  2059. They arose. It had grown dark. They sauntered forth into the night.
  2060. Morrison seemed to know where he was going. "I once spent very pleasant
  2061. days out here," he explained, "years, I hardly remember how many years
  2062. ago." After that they did not converse any more. They finally arrived at
  2063. a beautiful avenue of old elms that extended far into the country. Its
  2064. deep, dark vista was lit up only by the shimmer of a distant lake.
  2065. Morrison stopped, seized his friend's hand, shook it, and said in a firm
  2066. voice: "Good-bye."
  2067. "Good-bye."
  2068. And Morrison walked away. It was so dark that in a few moments his form
  2069. became invisible. Only his footsteps could still be heard. They grew
  2070. fainter and fainter. The tall, lean man stared after his friend into the
  2071. blackness of the night. His eyes grew dim.
  2072. A few rain drops fell on his face and hands. "I hope it won't rain," he
  2073. murmured, "it might make dying more difficult, but no--the sky is
  2074. clear." Then he slightly bent forward and listened eagerly. Everything
  2075. was calm, motionless, as in suspense. Nobody passed through the avenue.
  2076. Only in the adjoining side streets pedestrians flitted by like ghosts.
  2077. So this was the end! After having struggled bravely for years, after
  2078. living up to high ideals as well as one could, to go down a long, dark
  2079. avenue--a falling star flashed across the tree tops.
  2080. The tall, lean man pressed his hand to his heart, although he was not
  2081. certain of having heard a report, he felt, that his friend had arrived
  2082. at the goal of his life's journey. The game was up!
  2083. * * * * *
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  2100. +Origin of Anarchism.+ By C. L. James +5c.+
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  2200. End of Project Gutenberg's Mother Earth, Vol. 1 No. 4, June 1906, by Various
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