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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64972 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64972)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of A lecture by Victoria Claflin Woodhull, by
-Victoria Claflin Woodhull
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: A lecture by Victoria Claflin Woodhull
- In the Boston Theater, Boston, U.S.A. October 22, 1876, before
- 3,000 people. The review of a century; or, the fruit of five
- thousand years
-
-Author: Victoria Claflin Woodhull
-
-Release Date: March 31, 2021 [eBook #64972]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
- at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A LECTURE BY VICTORIA CLAFLIN
-WOODHULL ***
-
-
-
-
- A LECTURE
-
-
- BY
-
- VICTORIA CLAFLIN WOODHULL,
- (MRS. JOHN BIDDULPH MARTIN.)
-
- IN
-
- THE BOSTON THEATRE, BOSTON, U.S.A.
-
- _October 22nd, 1876_,
-
- BEFORE 3,000 PEOPLE.
-
-
- THE REVIEW OF A CENTURY;
-
- OR,
-
- THE FRUIT OF FIVE THOUSAND YEARS.
-
-
- _Reprinted from the “Boston Times” of October 22nd, 1876._
-
-
- WOMEN’S CO-OPERATIVE PRINTING UNION,
- LONDON, ENGLAND.
-
- 1893.
-
-
-
-
- THE REVIEW OF A CENTURY;
- OR,
- THE FRUIT OF FIVE THOUSAND YEARS.
-
-Victoria C. Woodhull leaves this country shortly for Europe, and has
-prepared a lecture, which will be her farewell utterance. Those who
-heard Mrs. Woodhull recently at Paine Hall bear unanimous testimony to
-the humanitarian character of her address; she is the advocate of
-peculiar, because novel and original, views. A _Times_ reporter has
-obtained a full report of her farewell address, and it is so full of
-instruction, and presents new social ideas in so fresh and thoroughly
-effective a manner, that no apology is needed for submitting it, _in
-extenso_, to the public. It is entitled “The Review of a Century; or,
-The Fruit of Five Thousand Years,” and is as follows:—
-
-
-A hundred years ago, in an upper room in Philadelphia, five men were
-gathered—men of noble bearing, of brilliant intellects, of undoubted
-character. Their faces wore a look of stern determination, as if the
-theme of their consideration was of matters of grave import; was of
-matters destined to be the beginning of the most important era that had
-ever dawned upon the earth. A century and eighty years before, a single
-ship-load of men, women and children, had landed on this virgin soil at
-Jamestown in Virginia; and a few years later, another one at
-Plymouth-Rock in Massachusetts. To these, additions had been made until
-the thirteen States then numbered fully three million souls, upon whom
-“the king” had imposed onerous taxation, and over whom he had placed
-obnoxious rulers. The tea had been destroyed in Boston harbour, and the
-people were wrought up to the intensest pitch by their oppressions. They
-had come from their native lands to escape from tyranny, and were not
-disposed to brook it here. In this wild, free land, they had become
-pregnant of liberty, and were even then struggling in the throes of
-travail. These five men had met to find a way in which the delivery
-might be safely made, so that both the mother and the child should live
-to bless the world.
-
-
- THE EARLY FATHERS.
-
-Washington, Adams, Franklin, Rush, Paine—every one of them immortal
-names—struggled with the task with which God had entrusted them. They
-felt the great responsibility, and their faces, as they looked into each
-other’s eyes, spoke their anxiety. Each knew that every other as well as
-self had something in his heart that he dared not utter. They looked
-inquiringly again and again for some yielding in some face. But they
-hesitated all. And well they might; for it was not the fate of three
-million people merely that was in their hands, but the future destinies
-of the world. One of these men had said but little; but the set features
-of his face showed a stern resolve; showed that he was waiting for the
-proper time in which to speak. He knew that it would fall to him to
-break the way; to say the words which each one felt but dared not speak;
-and speak at last he did; and they were the words of mighty import that
-came forth from him; words that were to deliver the people who had come
-to their full time—a birth that should herald a new race of people to
-the world; and they came forth from him as if all his powers were
-concentrated in the effort; as if that effort were the last struggle of
-the mother to bring forth her child; and the “four” caught up the child
-and became god-father to it, and they bore it to the people. The people
-recognised it as their own; took it to their hearts, and at once adopted
-it. Its name was—Revolution—Independence; and the words rang up and down
-the wave-washed shores, and fired the people with their
-inspiration—revolution as the means, independence as the end.
-
-One hundred years have come and gone since that eventful day, great with
-the future’s destinies. Its hundredth anniversary has passed, and forty
-million people have commemorated the work of those five men, of those
-three million people:—commemorated it by reaffirming the truths that
-then were uttered for the first time in the new world; commemorated them
-by brilliant flights of oratory, by firing cannons and profuse displays
-of “stars and stripes” harmoniously blended with the flags of almost
-every other nation of the globe, whose sons and daughters were
-participating in the glory of the day; with feasting, fireworks; with
-general rejoicing everywhere. As if with a universal assent, these
-swarming millions re-echoed with a will the words that that stern man
-had uttered on that never-to-be-forgotten day a hundred years ago.
-
-
- OUR COMMERCIAL GREATNESS.
-
-But those three million people have expanded into forty-four million;
-and the thirteen States to thirty-eight, besides ten territories and one
-district. The country now, excepting the stretch from the west shore of
-Lake Superior, and from the south-west point of Texas westward to the
-ocean, has available for commercial purposes, a continuous water-front
-of not less than fifteen thousand miles, equal to that of the whole of
-Europe. It is five thousand miles from east to west, and four thousand
-from north to south. It contains vast ranges of mountains, the longest
-river in the world, and the most fertile plains. Its climate is so
-varied and extensive that it produces almost everything that is grown
-anywhere in the world—the fruits of the tropics as well as of the
-latitudes north and south; and it will be the granary from which the
-world must ultimately draw its bread. It has all the different forms of
-mineral wealth—gold, silver, copper, iron, lead, besides coal, oil and
-salt. No other country on the globe can begin to compare with it in the
-variety of its products; it combines the utility of them all. It is as
-if all others had contributed their choicest seeds, as they have their
-peoples, to fill up the variety with which this should be blessed. In
-whatever sense it may be regarded, it is the great country of the world.
-No other can for a moment enter into comparison with it save in some
-single sense—while this combines the greatnesses of them all. Blessed
-with such a country—with a land such as God promised to His chosen
-people—“a land flowing with milk and honey,” how ought the people to
-have returned their gratitude to Him Who gave it? Or rather, how have
-they done so?
-
-Having already entered upon a second century, there can be no more
-appropriate a time in which to see what use there has been made of the
-“ten talents” with which the Great Husbandman has entrusted us; to see
-how we have shown our love for Him by that which we have given to our
-brethren; to see whether from His bounteous gifts to all, a part has
-stolen the inheritance from others, and when His servants have been sent
-whether they have been beaten away empty; whether some, having an
-abundance, have “shut up their bowels of compassion” though seeing their
-brothers had need; whether they have “fought the good fight,” whether
-they have “kept the faith” and whether they are entitled to the crown
-which St. Paul bespoke for them that love God.
-
-
- WHAT ARE OUR CENTENNIAL FRUITS?
-
-In other words, what is the condition politically, industrially,
-socially, religiously? Is it such as will make us rejoice in its review?
-Are our centennial fruits such as He would pronounce good, so that we
-may rest upon the seventh day from all our labours?
-
-In the first place, what have we done politically? It is to government
-that people largely owe their prosperity or adversity—a good government
-meaning continuous prosperity; a bad one continuous adversity, or else
-alternate seasons of each, in which the latter consume the fruits of the
-former; in which the people see-saw, up and down each decade; in which,
-like the Israelites, the people journey in the wilderness “forty years”
-in search of the promised land, to which God would bring them suddenly,
-if they would keep all His commandments, and neither worship nor
-sacrifice to the “Golden Calf.”
-
-The last estimates are, that there are forty-four million people now in
-the United States. It is by no means, however, to be inferred that these
-are all citizens who constitute the “sovereignty;” from whom the
-Government has its source, and upon whom it sheds its benignant rays.
-For, although the constitution declares that “all persons born or
-naturalised in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction
-thereof, are citizens;” and although there are unreversed decisions of
-the Supreme Court, which declare that every person in the country
-“constitutes a part of the political sovereignty,” and that every such
-person is entitled to every right, civil and political, enjoyed by
-anyone in the State,—notwithstanding all this authority and law upon the
-subject, only a minority of the 44,000,000 are really citizens. For, in
-the Dred Scott decision, the law of citizenship was declared to be this:
-“To be a citizen is to have the actual possession and enjoyment, or the
-perfect right to the acquisition and enjoyment, of an entire equality of
-privileges, civil and political.” Dred Scott did not possess or enjoy
-these rights; therefore the court held that he was not a citizen. As
-this is the law of citizenship now, we must conclude that only those are
-citizens who have “the actual possession and enjoyment, or the perfect
-right of acquisition and enjoyment, of an entire equality of privileges,
-civil and political,” the Constitution to the contrary notwithstanding.
-The Constitution in the hands of “the few” is a mere toy with the plain
-language of which they play, making it to mean anything or nothing as it
-suits them now and then. Later we shall see that this was what it was
-intended to be; that it was a fraud, a cheat, from the beginning, into
-which neither the letter nor spirit of the Declaration of Independence
-ever entered.
-
-
- WHO ARE CITIZENS?
-
-But who are citizens? Why, those who possess and enjoy, or who have the
-right to acquire and enjoy, an equality of political and civil
-privileges. Only certain classes of men possess these rights. These
-certain classes having possessed themselves of the machinery of the
-Government, tread upon the Constitution and spit upon the declarations
-of the Supreme Court. They have stolen the birthright of the “many,”
-and, putting their thumbs to their noses, say “Help yourselves if you
-can.” The despoiled people are not able to help themselves now, but let
-these usurpers be warned that the judgments of God are upon this nation,
-and that He will come to help those who cannot help themselves against
-such tyranny; come to deliver His people out of the hands of the
-“Egyptians,” who have imposed tasks upon them grievous to be borne; come
-to send them some “Moses,” who shall cause “Pharaoh” to let the people
-go, and who shall bring down from “Sinai’s Mount” a new and better code
-of laws.
-
-But who are not citizens, who neither possess or enjoy, nor have the
-right to acquire or enjoy, an equality of privileges, civil and
-political? There are three classes of these people: Indians, Chinese,
-and women, and these constitute by a million more than one-half of all
-the people. The political lords have selected nice company for the women
-to keep politically, and yet they put on such monstrous airs if they are
-told that in this matter they show no respect for their mothers, wives
-and daughters. Here is a subject for some Raphael, who should have
-reduced it to canvas and exhibited it at the Centennial, in honour of
-the mothers and daughters of the land. Upon the one hand there should
-have been grouped the women of the country, flanked upon the right and
-left by Indians and Chinese, and the subject named—Political Slaves;
-while upon the other the citizens should have been grouped, and labelled
-Political Sovereigns.
-
-
- THE PRINCIPLES OF OUR GOVERNMENT.
-
-The principles under the inspiration of which this government had its
-birth, are set forth in the Declaration of Independence. They were when
-realized by the people, when incorporated into the organic law, to give
-them independence; and they were thought to be of so much importance
-that the people fought a long and bloody war to acquire a right to their
-possession and enjoyment. Who can think of Bunker Hill, of Brandy-wine,
-of Princeton, of Valley Forge, of Yorktown, think of those long eight
-years of alternate hope and despair, and not feel that the price paid
-for independence was too great to have it limited to a mere minority of
-the people, when it was purchased for the whole; was too great a price
-to pay for principles that were to be restricted to fewer than half of
-the descendants of those who paid it. Our fathers would have never
-fought for the liberty to have a King or an aristocratic ruler of their
-own. They endured the hardships and privations of that war for
-independence for themselves and their posterity. Nothing less than this
-was the inspiration of those years of suffering, nothing less than this
-could have given them inspiration to gain their independence.
-
-But this was scarcely more than won, before those from whom this
-inspiration came were doomed to see their work robbed of half its value.
-At the convention that met to frame a government, there were men whose
-minds were too narrow to grasp the significance of the truths which had
-been the inspiration of the people; and which had sustained them through
-the war. They were men bred and born in English customs. They were not
-willing to make a complete departure from the established legal forms of
-the mother country, and make the Declaration, the inspiration of the
-Constitution, as it had been of the revolution. That inspiration came
-from these truths, and they were declared to be self-evident, “that all
-men are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with
-certain inalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the
-pursuit of happiness; that to secure these rights, governments are
-instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the
-governed.” No trace of any single one of these truths is to be found in
-the Constitution as then adopted; nor in any of the Amendments that have
-since been added, save in Sec. I., Art. XIV., which the self-constituted
-citizens have rendered nugatory.
-
-
- OUR COPYING OF ENGLAND.
-
-Our constitution and laws have nothing specifically American about them.
-They are copies from the English, modified in some particulars, which
-have been the inducement “to gather the spoils while we may.” The
-President is an English king under another name, selected by the
-“caucus,” the worst element in politics, and elected by the people,
-because, under the vicious methods that are in vogue they have no way to
-vote save for one of the two at whom ten thousand papers vie with each
-other in throwing mud during the campaign. Many who have come to know
-how Presidents are made have abandoned the polls in disgust. The Senate
-is a badly abridged edition of the House of Lords, while the House of
-Representatives is the same of the House of Commons. In the law of
-primogeniture only do our laws differ materially from those of England,
-this good feature having been borrowed from another source. Nor have we
-any political literature save the Declaration of Independence which has
-a distinct national character about it that is purely American, and it
-is this that we celebrate year after year; it is this and this only that
-calls out the patriotism of the people.
-
-As far as the Constitution is concerned it is Dead Sea fruit. It is an
-old and musty English sermon to which we have prefixed a new and vital
-text, the text and sermon having no common ground or meaning. The
-condition of the people and the country could scarcely have been worse
-had we had Kings and Parliaments, instead of Presidents and Congresses.
-A tree, let it be called by whatever name, is known by the fruit it
-bears. If we are to judge the political tree in this country in this
-way, shall we not be forced to say that we have gathered thorns from
-grapes and thistles from figs? In purity in the administration of
-justice, our Government can stand no comparison with that of England.
-Money here is king, and judge and jury also. Then must there not be
-something radically wrong somewhere, and what can this be, except the
-engrafting of a new political idea into an old political system? This is
-what is the matter, and cringe as we may, there can never be a change
-greatly for the better until the institutions of the country are
-remodelled by the inspiration of that which led to their establishment.
-
-
- OUR LACK OF GREAT STATESMEN.
-
-Had there been any really great men among our statesmen they would have
-discovered the cause of the alternate “ups and downs” in the prosperity
-of the country, and, at least, have attempted some remedy. But we may
-look in vain through the whole list of those who have, one after
-another, prominently occupied public attention, for a great mind in the
-sense of instituting reforms in government; in replacing vicious by
-beneficent legislation. Washington, who will always be deservedly
-revered, was in no sense a great man save in goodness. As a general or
-statesman he has been excelled by dozens since his time, not one of whom
-has left anything behind him that will make his name immortal. To be
-immortal in history requires that there shall be some basis for it
-living in the Government, or in the industrial habits of the people, or
-in their religious faiths or rites. Buddha in India, Confucius in China,
-Zoroaster in Persia, Mahomet among Mahomedans, and Jesus amongst
-Christians, have immortality. But the religious element, _per se_, never
-would have civilized the world. Indeed the nations most under the
-influence of religious sentiments have done the least to spread
-civilization into unknown countries. It is the warlike and intellectual,
-in contradistinction to the religious and æsthetic, nations to whom we
-owe the almost world-wide enlightenment of the present, while the latter
-have remained shut up within themselves, and are nothing but what their
-religion makes them. The contrast between Egypt and India or China is,
-in this respect, most striking. Egypt, becoming great at home, pushed
-out into the surrounding world. With its immense armies under Sesostris
-and its no less potent power emanating from the wise men who made the
-Alexandrian library a possibility, it left its impress so fixed upon the
-world that, even to this day, there are many things in the habits and
-customs of the nations, especially in their literature and philosophies,
-that are Egyptian. It was an Egyptian colony which laid the foundation
-in Greece at Athens for the splendid civilization that was there
-developed; for the glory, the military renown and the arts and sciences
-that afterwards made Greece at once the admiration and wonder of the
-world.
-
-
- GREAT MINDS THE FOUNTAIN OF ALL GOOD.
-
-The Egyptians were also a maritime people who made voyages for
-discovery. It was under the instructions of one of its kings—Nechos—that
-some skilful Phœnician sailors first sailed round the coast of Africa.
-Six hundred years B.C. an attempt was also made to do what the French
-engineer Lesseps has since done—to cut a canal across the Isthmus of
-Suez. I mention these facts to show how all the really great things that
-have done the world most good have had their origin in some one great
-mind, who still lives in the immortality of his creations, having
-impressed himself inexpungibly upon the descent of the race and on
-civilization; and by this showing to call attention to the further fact
-that the number of the great who live in the present is extremely small,
-and finally to show that this country has not produced even one such
-mind outside the purely intellectual plane. The names of Fulton and
-Field will live until steam, as a motor power, shall be superseded by
-some more potent agent, and until the telegraphic wires shall be no
-longer required to transmit the thoughts of one to another at the
-antipodes of the earth; but in government the list is blank.
-
-Our basis must, however, be made still broader. Greece was founded upon
-principles brought from Egypt; but in that small country a new era was
-born. Egyptian achievements were the culmination of an era of
-civilization of which Greece was fruit, and became the seed for the
-next. Not only did Greece dim the splendour of Egyptian warfare, but she
-also surpassed her in intellectual attainment. The names of Plato,
-Socrates, Aristotle, Archimedes, Xenophon, will live in philosophy as
-long as there is a literature; while Marathon, Thermopylae, Salamis,
-Platea and Mycale will stand for ever unapproachable in military and
-naval glory, conclusive evidence of the power of order and organization
-over mere numbers and brute force.
-
-
- THE POWER OF ELOQUENCE.
-
-There was, however, another power behind this one of order which made it
-invulnerable, irresistible. Philip of Macedon, the father of Alexander
-the Great, testified of this power in these words: “The eloquence of
-Demosthenes did me more harm than all the armies and fleets of the
-Athenians. His harangues are like machines of war, and batteries raised
-at a long distance, by which all my projects and enterprises are ruined.
-Had I been present and heard that vehement orator declaim, I should have
-been the first to conclude that it was necessary to declare war against
-me. Nor could I reach him with gold, for in this respect, by which I had
-gained so many cities, I found him invulnerable.” Antipater also said of
-the same power: “I value not the galleys nor armies of the Athenians.
-Demosthenes alone I fear. Without him the Athenians are no better than
-the meanest Greeks. It is he who rouses them from their lethargy and
-puts arms into their hands almost against their wills. Incessantly
-representing the battles of Marathon and Salamis, he transforms them
-into new men. Nothing escapes his penetrating eye, nor his consummate
-prudence. He foresees all our designs; he countermines all our projects
-and disconcerts us in everything. Did the Athenians confide in him and
-follow his advice we should be irredeemably undone.”
-
-’Tis true that this was in the days of the declining Grecian glory; but
-it is none the less true that it was the same power in others previously
-that lifted a whole people to sublime achievements and into grand and
-noble character. It was here, also, that patriotism had birth; here that
-men devoted their lives to their country for the country’s sake rather
-than for private gain or glory. In this respect the character of Grecian
-generals and statesmen has never been approached by any other nation. It
-was this character that gave the Greeks as a nation, and to the world as
-an example, the first code of laws; gave a Constitution as a
-conservatory of the people’s rights, and made a Lycurgus possible, the
-principles of whose Spartan code are only now beginning to be
-appreciated. It is to this code that we must look as the prime source of
-political economy, and it has been the inspiration of all the
-modifications of laws ever made in the interests of the people. In this
-respect, Lycurgus will be known in the future ages as the Spartan
-law-giver of the world.
-
-
- LESSONS FROM ROMAN HISTORY.
-
-Roman history is a second edition of Grecian, enlarged in its sphere of
-operations, and in its influence over the world. Rome, however, would
-never have been possible, had Greece not first been a fact. But Rome was
-vitiated in the character of her public men, as compared with those of
-Greece, in about the same ratio that she was greater in other respects.
-Greece was the admiration of the world, but Rome was its astonishment.
-All that she was, sank with her as she went down into the dark ages. The
-best of what made Greece, still lives in the people of the world. Greece
-was the garden of modern civilization and will remain its inspiration
-until three elements of character—the religious, the intellectual and
-the social—shall join their powers to construct the future government of
-the world.
-
-Charlemagne was the basis of the first great national character that
-evolved after the dark ages, and Otho the Great laid the foundation for
-the present dominance of Bismarck and Von Moltke in Central Europe.
-Cromwell, more than any other, is the inspiration of English character,
-modified by its respect for the political rights of women by the
-influence of Queen Elizabeth, under whom England reached the acme of its
-power and glory. But in French history is to be found the most distinct
-evidence of a communication to a whole people of the character of a
-single individual that there is to be found anywhere. The French
-character, both as a nation and as an individual, may be summed up in
-one word—Bonaparte. With the advent of this giant mind came a crisis
-over all modern Europe. Under his influence not only did the national
-character of the French people change, but the individual character also
-underwent many modifications. Nor was this confined to France, for this
-man’s genius was felt in every capital in the world. He conquered the
-nations and compelled them to change their laws, while to France he gave
-an entire new code, to which, more than to anything else, France owes
-her position among nations. It was the result of these laws that gave to
-France the capacity to rise from the disaster inflicted upon her by
-Prussia. Her immense loans came in small sums from the peasantry, and
-when paid will remain in France, which will not suffer the double
-impoverishment that most nations suffer from a public debt. The
-possibility of this was due to the far-reaching statesmanship of
-Napoleon Bonaparte, when he changed the laws regarding the inheritance
-of property, taking the estate from the deceased and dividing it equally
-among all the children—the greatest innovation that had ever been made
-upon the old feudal system, and together with other reforms, fixing
-France in a position to become more prosperous internally than any other
-European nation. Bonaparte also broke down the barriers that divided the
-nations and races of Europe, and opened up the way for closer commercial
-and literary relations, and performed, during the twenty years that he
-was in France, a greater service for the advancement of civilization
-than was ever performed by any other person who ever lived. In a sense,
-and in a good sense, too, it may be said that he dictated to the world,
-because the changes that he instituted and compelled have produced a
-modifying influence over the whole world. Taken as a whole, Bonaparte
-was the greatest man who ever lived. Certainly he equalled the greatest
-generals, and his campaigns, with those of Hannibal and
-Scipio-Africanus, will be the textbooks for military students as long as
-the art of war remains a study; while as a statesman he stands at the
-head of the greatest. He was Lycurgus, Alexander, Hannibal, Talleyrand,
-Bismarck combined. He represented, if he did not excel, the greatest of
-all ages, save Confucius and Jesus, save Demosthenes and Cicero. He
-never taught morality, _per se_, but he believed that a well-governed
-and industrially-thrifty people would necessarily be also moral, and he
-never made a speech except to point out the enemy to his soldiers. The
-treachery of a single man—Grouchy—who permitted Blucher to hurl the
-Prussian army unopposed upon his wearied troops after they had defeated
-Wellington at Waterloo, changed the whole future destiny of Europe, and
-prevented Bonaparte from becoming the beneficent law-giver of the world
-as he had been of France. For behind all his ambition in which only he
-is known to the world, and, therefore, not known at all, he had an
-unalterably fixed purpose to raise the common people of Europe to their
-proper position; but this he could do only by first conquering the
-rulers who stood in his way.
-
-
- LYCURGUS AND BONAPARTE.
-
-It is, therefore, to Lycurgus and to Bonaparte, more than to any others,
-to whom we must look as the master-minds in government; as those who
-instituted sweeping changes in the political institutions of the world,
-and in this sense they are the greatest of all the great who live in
-profane history. Many slight reforms have been effected; but they alone
-conceived and reduced to a system the changes that revolutionized and
-replaced the old beneficently to the people.
-
-Bonaparte himself recognized that his greatness consisted in this, for,
-when he asked his friends to which of his achievements he would owe his
-life in history, and they replied, naming some campaign or battle, he
-corrected them and said; “I shall go down in history with my _Code
-Napoleon_ in my hands.” So it was not Marengo, not Wagram, not
-Austerlitz, not Dresden, not any nor all his great victories to which he
-looked as his best achievement; but it was the code of laws by which he
-made France the happiest country in Europe. It is not to be wondered at
-that his name lives in the hearts of the French and moves them as no
-other name ever moved a people.
-
-Great as Bismarck may be, he is not great in the true sense of
-greatness, for he is building up a power that the next fifty years will
-have to overthrow. True greatness works in the direction of and not
-against progress, and its works live. Compared with him, Disraeli may
-after all, should his intentions toward India have a humanitarian
-tendency, turn out to be the greater man.
-
-In this view of greatness, to whom shall we look among our statesmen for
-any of its evidences? Beyond the legislation that the abolition of
-slavery forced upon us, the homestead act and one recently introduced by
-Gen. Banks, enlarging its scope in the interests of the settler, and
-some concessions to the people, like the eight hour law, we may search
-the legislation of the country through in vain for any evidence of
-humanitarian tendencies in our legislators. On the contrary, the
-inspiration of the privileged classes, the power and use of wealth will
-be found everywhere; ’tis true that we have a Republican Government in
-name and form, but it is also true that money rules, that it elects the
-officers and controls the legislation. The people who are outside of the
-privileged classes, outside of the offices and the press, are powerless
-to help themselves. The machinery of the government is in the hands of
-those who want things to continue as they are, while the few in power
-who are devoted to the public welfare, beat the air in vain attempts to
-strike either the causes of, or the remedy for existing evils.
-
-
- NEED OF A NEW CODE OF LAWS.
-
-But they may be summed up in a few words. The causes lie in the
-fruitless attempt to run a Republican Government upon an aristocratic
-code of laws, and the remedy is to remodel the code by the principles of
-the declaration, which should be made the inspiration of every
-provision, as well as the key to its construction. I might enumerate the
-special evils that have grown out of the error made in the
-Constitution—the vicious legislation for which this error laid the
-foundation—that the rule of the majority is not a Republican idea; that
-“the majority” is another name for the despot; that minorities are
-entitled to, and can be represented; I might show that the United States
-is, after all, nothing but a confederation of equal and antagonistic
-powers, and not a Federal Union; that Washington is more a place in
-which representatives from the several States assemble to quarrel over
-the spoils of office and to lay the ropes for the succession, than it is
-the capital of a free and mighty people; that there is such a
-contrariety of laws in the several States upon any given subject, that
-it puzzles a Philadelphia lawyer to tell whether a given act is a crime,
-a misdemeanour, or whether actionable at all in the different States; if
-people be married in one State, whether they are so legally in any
-other, or if divorced the same. I might show that taxation is unequal
-and oppressive, and the revenue unjust; and if there were need of it,
-which there is not, that official patronage is a polite name for public
-plunder, and that the public service is a vast system of organized
-corruption. Had the original error not been made, had the fountain been
-kept pure, none of these baneful things could have been engrafted into
-the system. But they have now obtained a root so deep that they can
-never be exterminated save by uprooting the system. They are the Canada
-thistles in the fertile meadow, that spread themselves until they absorb
-the whole vitality of the soil and thrust out the useful harvest. These
-thistles have spread and seeded in the government until they have thrust
-out every honest servant of the people, and until one who has any care
-for his reputation cannot afford to meddle with the government.
-
-
- MUST WE HAVE A REVOLUTION?
-
-How can such a state of things be remedied save by a revolution? The
-people may listen to the “outs” who pretend to tell them that it may;
-but should they come to the “ins” they would follow in the footsteps of
-their predecessors. The machine is running down hill too fast to be now
-stopped; the tide of power has set too strongly toward corruption to be
-reversed; the political body is too thoroughly impregnated with the
-poison to make its purging possible by any change of medicine. The
-disease is incurable because it is in the system more than in the
-individual men who run it. It has had its youth, its manhood, and is now
-in its old and decaying age. No power can save it; and those who think
-they can, who think that they can patch it up with tonics for a time,
-are only preparing for a worse ruin when the crash shall come.
-
-But the people would not care so much about the government; they would
-be willing to let the politicians run it as they please, and enjoy its
-spoils as they have for a century; they would even endure, as they have,
-uncomplainingly, any extortion that their earnings would permit without
-reducing them to the starvation point; but when in addition to the
-absorption of all their earnings to pay the debts of official
-extravagance and vicious legislation it is threatened to foreclose the
-mortgages on the industries and sell them out, and thus take away their
-means of livelihood, they have a right, indeed it is their duty, to
-object, and they are beginning to do it in real earnest.
-
-
- A WORD TO NON-PRODUCERS.
-
-I do not say this in the interest of the workmen, but speak in appeal to
-the non-productive classes, those who live without labour, to show them
-that through their servants, the Congress and the administrators of the
-laws, they are repeating the folly of the Southern slave-holders, who
-could not have found a more effectual way to rid themselves of slavery
-than that which they adopted. Looking upon it now, it seems that they
-could not have been satisfied with the progress of abolitionism in the
-North, under the lead of Garrison, Phillips and Douglass, and therefore
-they stirred up the war at home to precipitate the end, and succeeded
-admirably. The heartiness with which the Southern members of the St.
-Louis Convention recently accepted “the results” is evidence that this
-is a proper view to take of it. It is only a wonder that, going so far
-as they did, they did not fall into the arms of the Cincinnati
-Convention and thank its party for the services rendered them. But this
-aside. Had they been content to keep the power they had, they might have
-retained their slaves for years to come; but they wanted more! more!
-more! Nothing less than the whole country as slave territory would
-satisfy their morbidness upon the subject. Perhaps they did not know
-what they were doing; but they must have been blind indeed if there were
-not among them one sagacious mind who understood it.
-
-But when, through promises from northern doughfaces, they had brought on
-the war, then those who had been gradually getting rich, quietly
-extending their mortgages, through railroad and other speculative
-schemes and exorbitant rates of interest, saw an opportunity to extend,
-at a single effort, their grasp over the whole property of the country,
-and reduce the masses to servitude for all time to come, as they are
-reduced in England. The classes to whom I speak knew that the government
-would have to have money; and that it would have to come to them to get
-it; and they also knew that the longer the war continued the more money
-would be required. So, while the copper-headed bankers of the North gave
-the rebels all the encouragement they dared, their English brethren
-furnished them with arms and ammunition, and thus the war was prolonged
-and made a costly one. The plan was well conceived and nicely executed;
-the productive classes were saddled with a debt of $3,000,000,000, for
-which the government received little more than half that sum.
-
-
- SOME TELLING FIGURES.
-
-But they who were engaged in this scheme over-reached themselves as the
-South had done before them. They over-estimated the vitality and
-endurance of the industries, already carrying a debt of $4,000,000,000
-in railroad, State, county and municipal bonds, besides paying interest
-on individual loans to a still larger amount. They could not bear the
-added burden. With gold at par with which the interest was paid on this
-enormous debt before the war, they managed to get along; but when the
-war had raised the price of gold and had added $3,000,000,000 to the
-debt, it was more than they could stand. On this $11,000,000,000 debt,
-with the interest on some parts of it at 8, 9, 10 and even 12 and 15 per
-cent. per annum, and allowing for the large discounts that were
-frequently extorted, and adding to this the premiums paid for gold and
-including the dividends on stocks, the industries of the country were,
-and still are, taxed $1,300,000,000 every year to pay interest! Think of
-it, you who take this interest! Think of the toiling millions who,
-beneath the broiling sun, or in the murky mines, or dismal shops, or in
-the frozen forests, give up their lives to toil! Think of it! Taxed
-$1,300,000,000 annually for interest, part of which goes to enrich
-European bankers, and the remainder to those who, in luxurious ease,
-idle their lives away at home. Think of it, I repeat again, and then
-wonder, if you can, that industry is prostrate beneath the heel of
-capital! Say, if you can, whether the wonder is not rather, that there
-is a wheel in motion in the country, or that there is a plough moving in
-the soil.
-
-The total products amount to but $5,000,000,000 annually. Out of this,
-there is first to come the subsistence of the 44,000,000 population. On
-an average it cannot be said that it costs less than $100 a year per
-capita to support this mass. Some people spend more than that for cigars
-in a single month, and others double for wines and other liquors, to say
-nothing about establishments costing thousands upon thousands to
-maintain; and yet there are so many who live upon less than $100 a year,
-that the average cost of subsistence may be placed at that sum. This
-would consume $4,400,000,000 of the $5,000,000,000 products, and leave
-but $600,000,000 with which to pay the $1,300,000,000 interest. Hence it
-is plainly to be seen that the productive interests of the country are
-running into debt to the capitalists at the rate of $700,000,000 every
-year; that their mortgages on the property of the country are increasing
-yearly by that amount. This is a frightful showing, but it is a true
-one; it is one that the labouring classes are beginning to understand;
-it is one that you who are oppressing them should also understand, for,
-by ignoring it, you are challenging swift destruction. The only question
-is, how long can these things go on, with the wealth of the country
-increasing at the rate of two and a half per cent. per annum; it is a
-simple thing to calculate how long it will require for money, increasing
-at the rate of 6, 8, 10, and even 15 and 20 per cent. per annum, to
-consume the wealth.
-
-
- THE ROOT OF THE TROUBLE.
-
-We come now in logical order to the grand and fundamental error that has
-been made which lies at the back of all political fallacies, and to
-which are to be primarily attributed all industrial and financial ills
-from which we suffer, both as a nation and as individuals, since, let
-the Government be as good as it may, with this error lying between it
-and the industries, it were impossible that evil should not come upon
-the people. Hence, let the Government and the public service be as bad
-as they may; let the people suffer from bad legislation as much as they
-have; the fault is, after all, more to be charged against the system
-than against the individuals who, for the time, are its administrators.
-No matter how skilful the engineer may be, nor how watchful the fireman;
-if the engine itself be faulty in construction, it will explode; or if
-the engine be perfect in itself, but connected with other machinery that
-is not fitted to run at the same speed as the engine, then the machinery
-will fly in pieces. The same is true of the relations between the
-Government—the political organisations of the people—and the wealth
-producers—the industrial organisation of the people, as we shall see,
-for the Government is a machine constructed after the highest known
-principles of political mechanism, while intimately connected with it is
-the industrial organisation, running upon the very lowest—the
-rudimental—industrial mechanism. Consequently, when the political
-machinery runs at a high rate of speed, requiring an extra amount of
-fuel and water, the industrial machinery, in its efforts to supply this
-demand, and urged on by its connection to keep pace with the rapid
-motion, flies in pieces; becomes prostrated and useless, as we see it
-everywhere in the country now, when to keep the political machinery
-running at the present high rate of speed, it has to draw upon its
-accumulated stock of fuel, as it is doing now to the amount of
-$700,000,000 annually.
-
-If we go back and examine the evolution of government and industry, all
-this will be made clear; so clear that all may understand it. Certain
-fixed laws direct and regulate the growth of everything, and they are
-the same for all departments in the universe. The statement of the laws
-by which the sidereal and solar systems have evolved, will also describe
-those which the earth has obeyed, and are the laws of all material,
-governmental, industrial, intellectual, social, moral and religious
-change. This law as applied to government and industry may be stated in
-philosophic terms, thus: The progress of government and industry is a
-continuous establishment of physical relations within the community, in
-conformity with physical relations arising within the environment,
-during which the government, industry and the environment pass from a
-state of incoherent homogeneity to a state of coherent heterogeneity;
-and, during which, the constitutional units of the government and
-industry become ever more distinctly individualized.
-
-If we examine the growth of industry and government, and the relations
-that exist between them now, in this country, we shall discover how far
-they have advanced from incoherent homogeneity toward coherent
-heterogeneity. Looking through the dim vistas of the past into the
-pre-historic time, we find a time when there were no aggregations of
-individuals larger than the family; that the family was the only
-government and the only organization for industry; that its head ruled
-with arbitrary sway, having no one to whom he was accountable, each
-family having to depend wholly upon itself for subsistence. The people
-then were in the same state politically and industrially, and this was
-the homogeneous or original state. Afterwards we find that, for
-protection or for conquest, two or more families combined in a political
-sense and formed tribes, having an absolute head, but remaining in the
-rudimentary state industrially; next, tribes came together and built
-cities, and cities then coalesced and constituted nations (the rulers of
-which still using arbitrary power), until single rulers aspired to the
-dominion of the world; and in a sense succeeded. But all this time,
-industrially, the people remained in the original state. There had been
-no coalescing for the purpose of subsistence as there had been for
-government. While politically the people had evolved through several
-stages of progression, industrially they were still in the rudimentary
-state.
-
-Having arrived at the culmination of growth in the line of absolute
-power, one man having controlled the destinies of the world (thus
-typifying the future yet to be when the world shall be united under a
-humanitarian, in place of a despotic government; under the rule of all
-instead of that of one), a new departure was set up in the direction of
-this future condition, and the power to which one man aspired began to
-redistribute itself in limited and constitutional monarchies, down
-through kings and queens, nobility and republics, to the people
-generally, in this country advancing so far as to be divided practically
-among nearly one-half of the people, and theoretically among the whole.
-Evolution on this line will go on till every person in the world shall
-form a part of the government. Then the great human family will be a
-possibility.
-
-
- SOCIAL EXPERIMENTS.
-
-But up to the present time, what have the people done industrially?
-Almost nothing, save to subsist themselves on the rudimental plane!
-Nothing, save to make a few experiments at coalescing. There are a few
-illustrations of the first step in progress in this respect, which
-correspond to the coming together of families politically. But there are
-no industrial cities, to say nothing about nations. There were Brook
-Farm, New Harmony, and several other attempts at industrial tribes, and
-there are Oneida and a dozen lesser attempts still in existence, besides
-numerous cooperative movements. There are the railroad, the telegraph,
-insurance companies, banks and other corporations, all evidences that a
-real departure is about to be made in industrial organization; that is,
-that the people are preparing to depart from the homogeneous state
-industrially. The grange movement is the most positive evidence of the
-moving of the people generally in this direction, in which to protect
-themselves against the rapacity of merchants and railroads, they combine
-to purchase from first hands and realize a saving of from twenty to
-fifty per cent. This is an illustration of coalescing for protection.
-Most of the other illustrations, such as railroads, banks, etc., are for
-aggressive purposes; are means by which the people, while being
-seemingly accommodated, are really being robbed. Nevertheless, they are
-all evidences of progress in the industrial sense, those for aggression
-in the end compelling others for protection. That there are so many
-forms of coalescings for aggressive purposes, is conclusive evidence
-that the time is near when the people will be driven into organizing
-themselves into industrial communities, cities and nations, and
-eventually into one nation for the whole world. The first departure
-having been made, nothing can prevent industry from passing through the
-same stages of progress through which government has passed, and
-eventually becoming “at one” with government.
-
-Has the evolution of government proved a blessing to the people? Are we,
-as a people, in a better condition politically? Are we nearer the
-ultimate condition than they were of ancient time, when the family was
-the highest form of government? If we are, then we should be equally
-improved, industrially, if we were upon the same plane in this respect.
-There are no contradictions in natural growth. Like degrees of evolution
-bring equal good in all; the same to government, to industry, to
-intellect, to morals, to religion. But this development does not mean
-for the rich what it is inferred by them to mean, unless, indeed, they
-attempt to resist its progress, which if they do, the same fate will
-overtake them that came upon those who attempted to stay the tide of
-political growth. It means for them just what the development of
-government meant for those who held and exercised its power. The
-political relations of the monarch and nobility are repeated in the
-industrial relations of the capitalists and working men. The “levelling”
-politically has not been down but up. Instead of the rulers having been
-degraded into serfdom, the serfs have been elevated to the plane of
-rulers in this country. In the place of one man ruling over others, all
-men rule themselves, at least in theory. In this transformation no one
-has been deprived of anything that of right belonged to him; but the
-masses have received their natural rights from those who held them from
-them by the right of might. When the industries shall rise to the stage
-of growth which the government occupies, a like “levelling up” will take
-place; a like relinquishment of industrial power will be made in favour
-of the toiling masses. None who are independent now will be made
-dependent then; but the dependent will rise to independence. Hence the
-alarm of the rich is wholly without foundation. Such a move does not
-mean the slightest harm for them; it means equal good for all. It does
-not mean the taking away of any comfort or luxury from anybody; but the
-extension of every comfort and luxury that any have to all—to those who
-suffer, be it from hunger, from nakedness, from want of shelter, or
-other cause.
-
-
- OUR NATIONAL DEBT.
-
-If this analysis be applied to the present situation we shall see what
-is the matter with the industries. When the South rebelled, the North
-was compelled to resist, or else permit the national unity to be
-destroyed. Let it be borne in mind what stress was put upon the
-necessity of preserving the oneness of the people politically. To do
-this an army was required. When volunteers ceased to offer in sufficient
-numbers to keep the army to its necessary strength, the government,
-acting upon the right of a representative of a politically united
-people, resorted to drafting to determine which of the members of this
-unity should go into the army and jeopardize their lives for its
-preservation. This was in perfect harmony with the principles of
-government upon which this order rests, and was fully endorsed by the
-people. But what did the government do to subsist these men, and to
-provide the munitions of war? Did it proceed the same way that it did to
-secure the men? Not at all! It borrowed the money from the bankers of
-New York, Hamburg and London, and agreed to pay them a rate of interest
-double that demanded of any other first class nation, parting with its
-bonds to them at “60.” In other words, it borrowed $1,800,000,000, at 10
-per cent., and gave $1,200,000,000 in bonds as bonus for making the
-loan.
-
-Now this was the error that was committed, for, although the people were
-industrially upon a lower order of development than they were
-politically, nevertheless, since necessity knows no law save that of its
-own conditions, the government should have proceeded as if we were upon
-the same plane in both respects. When it called for volunteers to raise
-an army, and the ranks of industry responded liberally, it should at the
-same time have also called for volunteer assistance from the ranks of
-wealth, to subsist that army; and as it resorted to drafting to maintain
-the necessary number of fighting men when volunteering failed to do it,
-so should it have resorted to drafting the means with which to pay their
-expenses when volunteer assistance should have failed to do it. Had the
-people been one industrially as they were politically; had the
-industrial organization of the people been upon the same plane as their
-political organization, this would have been done naturally, and there
-would have been no bonded debt incurred.
-
-What does this show? This clearly; that, while the government can
-command the lives of the working men and put them in jeopardy, even
-sacrifice them without stint to maintain itself, it has no power over
-the property of the rich to compel them to assist in that maintenance.
-Had it been so that the government could not have borrowed any money, it
-would have fallen from this disparity between the political and
-industrial development. Is not this clear? And if it is, does it not
-show a very great and grave defect in the wisdom of our institutions?
-
-But what has been the effect of this error in this instance? The present
-prostration of industry, necessarily: and it has come about in this way:
-The armies were made up from the ranks of industry; the “rank and file”
-were so many men taken away from producing, and, therefore, from adding
-to the accumulated wealth; but the maintenance of the army was borrowed
-at an exorbitant rate of interest from the accumulated wealth, which was
-wholly in the hands of those who never fired a shot in defence of the
-country, nor added a dollar to its aggregate wealth by labour. While the
-war continued, the men who were left in the ranks of industry were
-called upon to pay this interest; and when it was over, those who had
-survived the war and returned to productive toil were included with
-them. And it is expected that the industrial classes will continue to
-pay this interest until the bonds mature, and then the bonds themselves,
-as I shall show you that they do hereafter; or what is more to the
-point, for the $1,800,000,000 that the government borrowed from the
-money-lenders it would compel the people to return them as bonus,
-interest and principal, the enormous sum of $5,000,000,000.
-
-
- INDUSTRY OVER-BURDENED.
-
-Hence by this error, made possible by the false relations of government
-and industry, the government has not only compelled industry to furnish
-the men to fight its battles, win its victories, and maintain its
-integrity, but it also compels it to pay all the expenses of the war,
-besides to continue adding to the wealth of the rich. The gentlemen in
-whose interests it was principally fought, who have sat quietly at home
-in luxury, and drawn the life-blood from the poor, now go out of all the
-effects of the war with their fortunes trebled by having merely loaned
-the government the money it needed to maintain itself in the struggle.
-
-This is a true picture, moderately drawn, of the real facts. While I do
-not desire to stir up the wrongs that industry has suffered in this
-matter, and drive the weary toilers to seek redress, it is nevertheless
-time, when thousands of families are suffering the pangs of hunger as a
-consequence of this wrong, to lay it open before the people who have
-been its cause and who have profited by it; it is time that the
-government should be shown the errors that it has committed and be told
-that the people are coming to an understanding of them; time that the
-bond-holders should know that the people are aware of the tenure by
-which they hold these mortgages on the industries. Let the one protest
-as it may and the other plead innocence under the revelations as they
-will, I intend to do everything in my power to rouse them to a sense of
-the danger in which they stand from the still sleeping masses, who, when
-they shall come to a full realization of the impositions that have been
-practised upon them, will not hesitate at any means of redress;
-especially will they not hesitate when the modern Shylocks, having
-relentlessly demanded not only the last “pound of flesh” but their very
-life’s blood also, demand likewise the payment of the bonds! The people
-already begin to learn that the government has no sympathy for their
-sufferings, and that it declares that it has no power to alleviate them,
-which they will think is strange enough since it had the power to bring
-these evils upon them.
-
-
- WHAT LABOUR WILL SAY.
-
-Under these conditions they will soon come to argue like this:—Was it
-not enough to demand of industry that it should fight the battles for
-the government? Was it not enough that the working-classes should lay
-down their lives by thousands upon a hundred fields of battle? Was it
-not enough that mothers and wives should give their sons and husbands to
-fill the soldier’s grave that the wealth of the country might remain
-inviolate? Was it not enough that we did all this without now being
-forced to give our toil year after year to return these rich, who did
-nothing, these loans? Is it too much to ask of wealth that it pay the
-expenses of the war? Should we not rather demand, in tones of thunder if
-lesser ones are insufficient to rouse its holders to a sense of their
-duty, that it shall bear its part of the burden? We have looked on
-quietly and seen the sufferings to which this people are reduced by the
-rapacity of the usurers, until we can no longer hold our peace; and if
-it be in our power, we intend that wealth and not industry shall yet be
-made to pay what it should have been made to pay at first; that it shall
-return to the government the bonds which the toiling masses have
-redeemed by the rivers of blood that they have shed, and that the
-government shall return the $2,000,000,000 of interest that it has
-already filched from industry for interest on this most unjust debt. In
-other words, since we gave the lives that it was necessary to sacrifice
-to conquer the rebellion from our ranks, we intend that the rich shall
-give from what they had when the rebellion broke out, to pay all the
-expenses of the war, and we will never rest until this be done.
-
-These, I say, are the arguments to which the suffering labourers will
-resort if you permit them to is driven to desperation by hunger from
-want of employment. If the rich were wise, they would forestall all
-opportunity for such arguments to be used, by coming forward voluntarily
-to do them justice. If what I have suggested will be their arguments, is
-true, as you know that it is, then wealth should pay the expenses of the
-war without any further delay, because it is a gross injustice, not to
-say an unwarrantable imposition on good nature, to make the men who did
-the fighting also pay this debt, while those for whom it was mostly
-fought have done nothing but to speculate out of it. Perhaps you have
-never looked at it in this light; but if you have not, then I pray you
-look at it so now, before your attention shall be called to it in an
-unpleasant way; for, unless relief come soon to those who are suffering
-the pangs of hunger, by reason of your blindness, there will be an
-imperious demand made of you.
-
-
- THE SILVER QUESTION.
-
-As if they were not yet satisfied with the oppressions already in
-operation, some of those whom you have sent to Washington to conduct
-your business, and who have got you into all this difficulty, think that
-silver is not good enough money in which to pay interest, because it is
-not now worth proportionally quite so much as gold. Where has the wisdom
-and prudence of this people fled? Have they no care for what _may_ come
-upon their families, that they sit by and see indignity after indignity
-piled mountain-high upon the people? The lives, the labour, the all of
-the poor may be taken for the public good; but your bonds, your money,
-your usury must not be touched. They are considered to be of more
-consequence than life and toil and everything else that the poor have
-got to be taken!—your revenue must be sacred, and the Shylocks must take
-their “pound of flesh” from the daily labourer, let it cost whatever
-blood it may in the cutting of it; and no wise Portia comes to stay the
-hand already dripping with the life of the toilers, for is not the
-interest wrenched from their toil, their life! Look at the poor of the
-country; millions of them without work and their families either
-starving or else on the verge of starvation. Let me read you extracts
-from two articles from the _New York Sun_ of the 20th of July, so that
-you may see that I am not overdrawing the picture: “Starvation in New
-York. The sufferings among the poor are fearful. The sufferers are
-chiefly widows and young children, who, for lack of nourishment, are
-unable to withstand the intense heat. Instances of actual starvation are
-mentioned. A widow and her young daughter and son, who are unable to
-find work, had been for some time living on $2 a week. In a garret,
-without any other furniture than an old dry goods box for a table and a
-broken chair, live a widow and her five young children. In a closet are
-a mattress and a blanket, which at night make a bed for the whole
-family. An aged woman, who was once in affluent circumstances, was some
-time ago found nearly dead with hunger; it was only by careful nursing
-that she was saved. A young man, whose family were gradually starving,
-was driven to despair and intent on suicide. The child of another died,
-and not only was the father unable to bury it, but he was unable to
-provide food for the living.” These are only a few of the cases that
-come under the observation of a single church relief society. What shall
-we say of the great city? The other was entitled “Widespread Destitution
-in Brooklyn. At the meeting of the King’s County Charity Commissioners
-yesterday, Mr. Bogan said that there was almost as much destitution in
-the city now as at midwinter. The families of unemployed men who up to
-this time have never asked for a cent of charity, were daily besieging
-his office. The system of outdoor relief had been abandoned, and there
-was no way to provide for the needy except out of his private purse. The
-heads of families were forced into idleness by the hard times, and,
-having exhausted all their means were face to face with starvation.” Is
-not this a fearful picture of those who have helped to make the wealth
-with which the storehouses of the country are loaded? African slavery
-was a blessing compared with the condition of thousands of the poor. Let
-its evils have been as great as we know that they were, the negroes
-never suffered for food; the women and children never died of
-starvation; never suffered from cold or went naked. Oh, that some master
-mind, some master spirit, might be sent of God to show you the way out
-of this desolation and the necessity of deliverance. But I fear you will
-not be wise enough to avoid the penalty for neglecting to keep your
-industrial institutions on the same plane with your political
-organization, which is the only possible remedy for the present evils.
-The people must be made as much one industrially as they are
-politically. Then there would be harmony and consequent peace and
-prosperity.
-
-
- IS CASTE A NECESSITY?
-
-But to this the common objection is raised, that it is impossible to
-make industrial interests common, on account of the necessary
-differences in labour: that there must be caste in industry. This was
-the reply that the king made to the people who wanted a political
-republic; of course it will be the reply that the privileged classes
-will make to those who want an industrial republic. You know how
-fallacious the objection has been politically. The king deprived of his
-crown has not been compelled to sleep with the scavenger. It will prove
-equally as fallacious industrially. The money and railroad kings will
-not have to live with the men who do the rough work of the industrial
-public, unless they choose to do so, any more than they do now. The
-foundation stones of a house always remain at the bottom, covered up in
-the dirt; nevertheless, they are even more important to the safety of
-the house than any upper part. So it will be in the industrial structure
-when it shall be erected. There will always be Vanderbilts, Stewarts,
-Fields and Fultons—the agents of the people industrially, as there are
-now presidents, governors and mayors—agents of the people politically.
-And do you not see how perfectly this corresponds to the teachings of
-Jesus when He said: “Let him who would be greatest among you be the
-servant of all,” and with this falls the objection of the aristocrat to
-the industrial republic, as utterly untenable.
-
-The real inspiration of this objection, however, springs from quite
-another source. Those who make it know that with the coming of
-industrial organisation, the power which money has to increase will
-fall, and make it impossible for anybody to live without labour. Money
-has no rightful power to increase. Its origin and sphere distinctly
-forbid the power, as can be clearly shown. The theory that money is
-wealth is false. It came to be accepted from the fact that valuable
-things have been used as money.
-
-Wealth is the product of labour; is anything that labour produces or
-gathers. But the functions of money are representative wholly. Money
-takes the place of wealth for the time—stands for it. Here is the
-fallacy of a specie basis for money: specie is wealth, and can be made a
-basis for the issue of money, but the error consists in making a
-distinction against other kinds of wealth which would be equally as
-good. Anything that has value may properly be made a basis for the issue
-of a currency.
-
-If we trace the origin of money, all this will be made plain. At the
-basis of all questions relating to wealth and money, lie the
-elements—the land, the water, the air—and these are the free gifts of
-God to man. None have the right to dispossess others of their natural
-inheritance in these elements. The right to life carries along with it
-the right to the use of so much of each of these elements as is
-necessary to support it. No one has a natural right to more than this.
-Hence, men have no more right to seize upon the land and deprive others
-of its use, or part with it to others for a consideration, than they
-have to bottle the air for the same purpose. There can be no ownership
-of the elements; no ownership of the land any more than of the air or
-water. Pretended ownership is another name for a usurpation. But the
-elements, unused, are valueless. Labour applied to them yields results,
-and these are valuable, consequently wealth; the net results after
-subsisting the people are the accumulated wealth of the world, and there
-is no other wealth.
-
-
- MONEY THE ROOT OF ALL EVIL.
-
-If every person were to produce all the different things he needs or
-wants, there would be no use for money, and the people would escape the
-curses that follow in its trail, but experience taught labourers that it
-was an economy for each to labour in some special way, and to exchange
-his surplus products for those of others labouring in different ways.
-Besides, the different climates produce different commodities, of each
-of which all other climates require a share. Out of these facts came
-agencies for effecting exchanges—money, the merchant and commerce. In
-their origin and normal functions they are the agents, the servants of
-labour; but when from exchanging the products of labour they grew into
-speculating in these products, then they assumed abnormal functions, and
-became the masters of labour. It must be seen, therefore, that the only
-legitimate method by which wealth can increase, is by adding to itself
-the net results of labour; indeed that is the only way in which it can
-increase. It must also be clear that these results belong _in toto_ to
-their producers, since, if nothing were exchanged save equivalents,
-these results could never pass from the hands of their producers. But by
-permitting the representatives of wealth—money—to have the power to
-increase, the makers of money have been able to filch all the net
-earnings from labour, and as a result of this, most of the accumulated
-wealth of the world is in the hands of the makers of money instead of in
-those of the makers of wealth. This may be legal, but can never be made
-just. Had the labourers been let alone they would have continued to
-produce and exchange their commodities among themselves without any
-trouble, and they could have always maintained themselves comfortably.
-But the “middlemen”—their agents—conceived, constructed and thrust upon
-them a vicious system of money, by which they are forced to pay tribute
-on everything that passes from, or is received by them, which tribute
-amounts to the total net products of all the industries.
-
-
- THE PRIVATE BANKING SYSTEM.
-
-The system of private or corporate banking is an example in point. Why
-do individuals want a gold basis upon which to issue currency? To get
-the privilege to levy interest on many times as much currency as they
-have capital invested. A bank with an actual capital of $100,000 in gold
-could issue $300,000 in currency, all which it could loan out together
-with nearly all the deposits that it could secure, which, in some
-instances, have been known to amount to ten times the capital. Why
-should not a class of men, if the people are blind enough to let them do
-it, speculate upon the credulity of the public through the idea that
-they are rendering a public service? Why should they not desire to
-“bank,” when by banking they can receive interest on $1,000,000, when
-otherwise they could collect it upon $100,000 only? The same idea is the
-inspiration of national banking, and of those who oppose a national
-currency. The banks bought, say $100,000 of United States bonds from the
-Government for $60,000. These bonds they deposited with the treasurer,
-and the people were required to pay $6000 a year interest on them, while
-the banks received from the Government $100,000 in national bank
-currency with which they were set afloat. These notes were loaned to the
-people, who again paid an interest on the same capital of $6000, or 20
-per cent. per annum—$12,000 on $60,000; and yet the bank men have made
-the people think that they are offering them great accommodations. “Oh,”
-says the National Bank legislator, “we must get rid of these abominable,
-depreciated, irredeemable greenbacks, and make room for more national
-banknotes.” Do you know for what that legislation is bidding? He wants,
-if he has not already got it,—from some national bank man in his
-district, or else he has an interest in some bank. What is the security
-of national bank notes? United States bonds deposited in the Treasury.
-What is the security of the bonds? The public faith of the United
-States. What is the security of the greenbacks? The public faith of the
-United States. What difference in this respect, then, is there between
-national bank notes and greenbacks? None. Then as a currency there is
-this difference between the bank notes and greenbacks: If greenbacks
-were to take the place of the bank notes, the bank men would not get 20
-per cent. interest on their capital, and the privilege of receiving and
-loaning the deposits of the people.
-
-But look at it in another light. Suppose the security of the national
-bank notes were their own capital instead of the bonds, who would not
-prefer to trust the faith of the United States, rather than that of any
-individual in these times of Credit Mobilers, Tweed and whiskey rings?
-Then, again, why should individuals furnish the circulating medium of
-the people, when the people can furnish it themselves and save the
-expense? $1,000,000,000 is as small an amount of currency of all kinds
-as will transact the business of the country properly. Why should not
-the $60,000,000, which the people would have to pay the banks for
-interest on this, be paid to the Government for greenbacks? And more!
-Why should not all the interest that is now paid to individuals and
-banks for private loans, be paid to the Government? It is estimated that
-the average amount of private loans for the whole country is not less
-than $5,000,000,000 upon which, at even 6 per cent. interest, the people
-are taxed $300,000,000. Is there any valid reason why the Government
-should not loan this money and receive this interest? Yes, for if it
-did, the rich could not live in luxurious idleness, while the poor are
-obliged to labour twice the natural time to subsist the world.
-
-
- WHY DO THE PEOPLE PAY INTEREST?
-
-Or still again: why should the people pay any interest at all on loans
-from themselves? Why should not their agent—the Government—when amply
-secured, freely loan the people all the money that they want for use?
-Suppose that the farmers and the manufacturers did not have to pay
-interest on the money that they are compelled to have to produce their
-crops and goods? Don’t you see that they could compete successfully with
-the people of any country in the world, in the production of anything?
-Institute free money and there would be no necessity for a tariff for
-protection to keep out the cheaper goods of other nations. But on the
-contrary, this country would shortly be supplying other nations with the
-very things with which they are now supplying us and thereby crippling
-our manufactures and productions. Besides, all the people would be
-constantly employed, prices would be low, every comfort and even luxury
-abundant and in the reach of all, and thrift would replace stagnation
-everywhere. Plenty of money, plenty of work and plenty of everything
-that the ingenuity and strength of man can make, are the most favourable
-conditions for the masses; while just the reverse is true for the
-privileged classes. But why, since the former class outnumbers the
-latter, as five to one, do not the former have all things their own way
-in this country where the majority rule? Ask the masses this, and they
-can make no reply. But it is because the superior intelligence and tact
-of the minority enable them to concoct schemes by which, without seeming
-to do so, they reduce the majority to actual, though mostly unconscious
-servitude; making them pay, first, all the interest on the public and
-private debts; next, all the expenses of the national, state, county and
-municipal governments; and next, obtain their own support and the
-increase of their wealth from them. Do you think that I overstate this?
-I think I can make it so clear that you cannot doubt it; and if I do,
-will you not think differently of the toiling masses than you have
-thought of them heretofore? At the beginning of any year take the amount
-of real wealth in the hands of the non-producers. During the year the
-governments continue, the taxes are gathered and the expenses are paid:
-your debts, your expenses and all; the producers have continued to
-labour as usual, and at the end of the year find themselves just where
-they were at its beginning; but the property of the wealthy classes has
-increased about three per cent. for the whole country. And while the
-latter class has become fewer in numbers and richer individually, the
-former has increased in numbers and become poorer individually. Now
-these are the facts, and with them before them who will pretend to say
-that the class who have not produced anything have added to the
-aggregate wealth? Whence has come this increase of wealth? From the
-wealth producers, from the labouring classes and from no other source.
-Industry being the sole source of wealth, it could have come from no
-other source. Hence let the non-producer get his increase by whatever
-strategy, it comes in some channel directly from the producer. This may
-be done by interest, by speculation, by sharp trades, by profits; but
-let it be by which it may, the producer has to pay the bill. In other
-words, every addition that is made to the wealth of non-producers is so
-made at the expense of the producers, the former having so much more
-than they had which they did not produce, and the latter having so much
-less than they did produce. This is self-evident, and all the
-sophistical argumentation that can ever be made cannot make it
-otherwise. The minority may attempt to explain it away; to show that
-this and that are so and so; but here are the facts staring them in the
-face, and they will no more down than would Banquo’s ghost for the
-guilty Thane. There they stand, an everlasting condemnation of the rule
-of the minority and the servitude of the majority. Nothing can be
-clearer; nothing truer. And is it not a shame that it is true?
-
-
- A PLEA FOR JUSTICE.
-
-You must not mistake me. I would not take a single comfort; nay, not a
-single luxury from those who have the most. I would not deprive anybody
-of anything they have or want; but I would so distribute the proceeds of
-labour that those who produce the comforts and luxuries should have
-their share of them; that they should have everything that the most
-favoured now enjoy. In this land of fruitfulness and plenty, if all the
-labour there is were constantly employed every man’s home might be a
-palace, and want and sorrow be banished from the country. Am I asking
-too much for those who have endured long years of toil and suffering to
-bring this beautiful country to its present condition? Am I asking what
-you are not willing that they shall have? Am I asking anything more than
-justice? If you grant them less than justice God Almighty will come some
-day, visit you and set the matter right, as he visited the South and
-liberated the downtrodden blacks. So if you do not heed my warning,
-remember that there is One whom you cannot ignore.
-
-But there is still another way by which the industries are taxed in
-favour of the non-producers. The railroads, which ought to be, and
-which, managed properly, would be, a great advantage to the industries,
-are now at once their blessing and their curse. There are now 75,000
-miles of railways in the country, built at a cost of $4,658,208,630:
-their earnings are $404,000,000 annually. But here is where the people
-are hoodwinked. This sum does not begin to represent the actual amount
-paid by the people for fare and freights. Almost the whole of the
-freighting is done by “lines”—the Red Line, the Blue Line, the White
-Star Line, and a hundred others, all which have special contracts with
-the railroads to carry freights at just a living rate, while the lines
-charge the people all that they can stand to pay, the difference in
-these two sums going into the pockets of the owners of the lines. And
-who are they? The owners, managers and officers of the railroads who
-resort to this to blind the people’s eyes about the profits of
-railroading, which they could not otherwise conceal, because they are
-obliged to make annual exhibits. But the lines carry off the profits,
-while the operating expenses of the roads, their interests and dividends
-are left for the exhibits. If the companies made 20, 30 or 50 per cent.
-dividends, the people would not stand it: but the managers play upon
-them with their lines and blind their eyes while they pocket the
-profits.
-
-
- THE RAILROAD SYSTEM.
-
-Then again, there is the system by which the railroads are built, which
-is little less than a gigantic swindle. Shrewd persons discover places
-where railroads may be built. They obtain charters and the rights of
-way, and get the towns along the lines either to issue or endorse bonds
-and give them stock in the roads for this. They sell the bonds to
-themselves at tremendous discounts and build the roads, themselves
-taking the contracts at extravagant prices, and when done begin to
-operate them. Of course the earnings are not sufficient to pay the
-operating expenses and the interest, to say nothing about dividends to
-the stockholders. They were never intended to be. So after a few
-defalcations of the interest on the bonds, they come in and foreclose
-under the mortgages and sell out the stockholders and buy in the roads
-and thus come into their possession built free of cost to themselves.
-Can such processes be rightly called anything less than swindles? They
-may be called by some other name, but they still have the odour of a
-swindle about them. And yet our best men engage in such schemes and call
-them honourable. To speak vulgarly, this is one of Uncle Sammy Tilden’s
-best holds. Is it any wonder that there is so much knavery and trickery
-among the common classes upon a small scale, when they have such
-examples set them by the upper classes on gigantic scales? or is it any
-wonder that the public morals are at so low an ebb? So, examine where we
-may into the schemes for the accommodation of the public, we find them
-to be vampires sucking its life.
-
-How long do the railroad men imagine that the people will endure their
-exactions? Should they not know that their scheming will have to come to
-an end soon? Then why do they not act the part of wise men, and
-anticipate its coming in time to save themselves? If they do not, the
-people will sooner or later take the roads from them. It may be said
-that there is no constitutional or legal way in which this can be done,
-and they may rest upon this as secure protection. But I would recall the
-words of Charles Sumner, “Anything that is for the public good is
-constitutional,” and warn them not to rely upon so slim protection. This
-was the argument of King George and of slavery; but it failed them both,
-as it will fail every wrong that relies upon it. The people and the
-public welfare always triumph in the end; and the longer the triumph is
-delayed, the more fearful is the recompense for those who stand in its
-way.
-
-
- THE FEAR OF COMMUNISM.
-
-But it may be objected that all this tends towards communism. Only
-bigots and the unthinking are frightened by a name or a shadow from an
-examination into anything. Perhaps at first it will create surprise when
-I tell you that the only really good institutions that we have are
-purely communistic. The public highways are a perfect illustration of
-communism. They are constructed and maintained at the public expense for
-the public benefit. All grades of people meet upon them on an equality,
-and yet no one either loses his identity in the mass or is deprived of
-any of his private rights, or of any of his personalities. But the
-principles upon which the industries are conducted and that govern their
-relations to wealth, the poor man who owns no property, would have no
-right to use the highways. The same is true of the public schools. The
-children of the rich, who, it is falsely pretended, pay the taxes to
-support the schools, and the children of the poor there meet upon an
-equality. The schools are not a public necessity, they are only a public
-good. Who will pretend to say that they are not an improvement on the
-old system, of every family conducting its own education, or of a few
-families combining to do so? Everybody recognises the public advantage
-of a communal basis for the education of all the children; recognises
-that the public good demands that the community shall not only provide
-school privileges, but shall insist on every child having the benefit of
-them, not for the good of the child so much, as for the community’s own
-good. Now this is communism. Why are you not frightened at the
-communistic tendencies of the public schools? Because, without thinking
-them to be communistic, you have adopted them and found them to be good.
-
-Next is the post-office—a still better illustration in an industrial
-sense. Here the Government conducts the business of the people. If the
-system were maintained wholly instead of partially from the public
-treasury, it would be purely communistic. Is there anyone who is
-prepared to say that the postal system is not an improvement on the
-transmission of letters by private enterprise? And yet nobody is
-affrighted at the communistic character of the modern post-office.
-Suppose that this system were extended to the transportation of
-everything that is interchanged among the people, have we not a right to
-assume that the same beneficent results that have followed the
-development of the public mails would also follow there? We have not
-only the right to assume, but we have the reason to know that it would,
-and that the railroad question and railroad wars would be for ever
-settled by such an advance towards communism, and an immense stride be
-made towards the organization of the industries as a whole; and this is
-what we have done industrially.
-
-
- THE ELEMENTS OF OUR POPULATION.
-
-It is an instructive lesson to analyse the population of the country, to
-resolve it into the several classes. First, from the 44,000,000, there
-are to be taken the classes that count for nothing—the Indians, the
-Chinese, and the women, for though they are permitted to live in the
-country, they form no part of the sovereignty. “They are,” as Justice
-Carter asserted when endeavouring to prove that women are not entitled
-to the ballot, “citizens in whom citizenship is dormant.” In round
-numbers these classes are 23,000,000. Of the remaining 21,000,000,
-11,000,000 are adults, who are the sovereignty, and who conduct the
-Government. Of these 3,000,000 are farmers; 2,000,000 are manufacturers,
-mechanics, miners, and lumbermen; 1,000,000 are unskilled labourers;
-1,000,000 are merchants of all kinds, including dispensers of leaf and
-liquid damnation; 1,000,000 are gentlemen of ease who live by their
-wits—their sharpness and shrewdness—bond-holders, money-lenders,
-landlords, gamblers, confidence men, etc., etc.; 500,000 are clerks;
-250,000 are permanent invalids; 200,000, criminals; 100,000, paupers;
-100,000, insane; 100,000, weakminded; 100,000, professional teachers;
-100,000, employes of the national Government; 100,000, of the State,
-county and municipal Governments; 90,000, physicians; 60,000, ministers;
-50,000, lawyers, and 50,000, editors and professional writers and
-actors. A large part of the property of the farmers is mortgaged to the
-money-lenders, and the same is true of the manufacturers, while the
-liabilities of the merchants exceed their assets. So, really, the 5th
-class—the gentlemen of ease—either own or else hold mortgages on the
-whole property of the country. It is said that the curse of England is
-that 3 4ths of its property is owned by forty families. How much less is
-true of this country? Can such a state of injustice as this continue?
-And if it cannot, what shall take its place? It is time that those who
-hold the wealth, should, for their own sake, be asking this question
-seriously, unless they would incur the risk of having it answered for
-them, as the same was answered in France in ’93. Public injustice,
-unless remedied peaceably, always has terminated in revolution; and it
-will continue so to terminate as long as it is not remedied in a wiser
-way by those who have the power to do it.
-
-
- WHAT SHOULD BE DONE?
-
-If it were to be asked what should be done at once to remedy the present
-exigencies of suffering labour, I will answer what I would do had I the
-power. I would first abolish legal interest and make it a crime as the
-Bible does to take usury in any form. I would stop the payment of
-interest of the public debt and use the money to set the unemployed and
-starving labourers at work on internal improvements, and should be
-justified by the people for doing so; because it would be right to
-prevent widespread suffering and revolution at the expense of such a
-step; I would build the Pacific railroads north and south for the people
-and not give them to individuals, as was the case with those already
-built; I would construct immense workshops in every State in which the
-skilled labour of both sexes might be utilised when otherwise
-unemployed, because every day that any labourer is idle is a loss to the
-prospective wealth of the country; which fact is the condemnation of the
-policy of throwing men out of employment whenever business is depressed.
-Every labourer thus made idle adds to the general distress, because from
-being a producer he becomes a consumer; I would abolish pauperism and
-crime by giving everybody a chance to work at his chosen occupation; but
-if he preferred to starve rather than to work I would let him starve; I
-would purge the country of rascals by removing the inducements to
-rascality; I would make it impossible for a dishonourable person to live
-in a community, by placing everybody upon his honour, and in this way
-abolish jails and penitentiaries, criminals and courts and lawyers; I
-would remove the protection of the law from debts, and leave them to
-stand or fall upon the honour or want of it in the contracting parties,
-the result of which would be that a failure to pay once would discredit
-one for all future time, and compel honesty as a necessity for
-existence, making it to the interests of the people to be honourable in
-all things; and this, in turn, would abolish all civil courts and
-lawyers with all their _attachés_ and expenses. I would restore to the
-public the gold, silver, copper, iron, lead, coal, oil and salt lands
-and mines and work them for its benefit, and I would send everybody who
-should be found tampering with the public funds to the Dry Tortugus for
-life. Yes; had I the power, I would make both compulsory and voluntary
-idleness impossible, and wipe out the stain of millions starving idle in
-a land of plenty, capable of sustaining a thousand million people; and
-hush the wail of suffering that floats upon the winds from every section
-of this God-favoured land, but now reeling under the effects of vicious
-legislation; I would snatch the people from being pushed headlong into
-revolution, and restore to them the equal use of God’s free gifts to all
-His children.
-
-
- A LAW-GIVER NEEDED.
-
-This country having fallen into the errors to which I have referred;
-into the hands of mediocre and incompetent legislators, without even a
-single statesman among them all; into the times of small minds and
-smaller measures that do not look beyond the day in which they are
-proposed; into industrial, financial and commercial ruin, with one half
-the wealth-producing power starving in idleness and no one seeming even
-to think what the end of this must be; having fallen into all these
-ills, this country needs that a giant mind shall spring into its
-councils, or else among its legislators, a captain which shall be able
-to grasp the helm of the ship of state now floundering hopelessly in the
-trough of the industrial sea, and put her before the wind again; a mind
-that shall have the wisdom and the courage to show the puerility of
-those who occupy the posts of honour, and, by the mere force of will,
-lift them into the right path; show them that beneath the surface of
-that which they seem to think is peaceable enough, there is a raging,
-seething volcano ready at the slightest occasion to burst forth and
-overwhelm everything in its path; a master mind which shall compel
-Congress by active measures to guide its powers rather than by inaction
-to provoke an eruption. This country needs that God shall send a
-law-giver; one who shall understand what has led to the present
-situation; what the exigencies of the people demand, and who shall have
-the ability to propose and the power to enforce the needed remedies—a
-Lycurgus to give a new code of laws that shall be the incarnation of the
-principles of the Declaration of Independence, which alone of all
-principles have any influence to mould the people, and from which they
-draw the characteristics which distinguish them from the other nations
-of the earth; and a Bonaparte to sweep out of the way the accumulating
-_débris_ of years of vicious legislation and in its place inaugurate
-that code; needs a Lycurgus with his code of laws; a Bonaparte with his
-genius to command, and, combined with these, the vehement power of a
-Demosthenes to rouse the people to a sense of the danger in which they
-stand and, whether they will or not, lead them through a peaceable,
-rather than permit them to plunge into a bloody, revolution. Let this be
-done, no matter in what form this power may come, and a change of
-greater magnitude for good to this people than that proposed by Lycurgus
-for the Spartans, or that instituted in France by Bonaparte, will be
-inaugurated here.
-
-But what has been done socially? Much of which I have not the time to
-speak, but this, as to what I would have for the social condition:—
-
-
- WORDS TO WOMEN.
-
-If the evils of industry were removed a great many social ills would
-cease. For instance, if women were independent, industrial members of
-the community, they would never be forced into distasteful, ill-assorted
-or convenient marriages, which are the most fruitful of all the sources
-of vice and crime in children, and consequently in the community. But
-beyond the industrial and dependent relations of the sexes there are
-many purely social ills that as much as those of industry require a
-remedy. Marriage is regarded as a too frivolous matter; is rushed into
-and out of in a haste that shows utter ignorance or else a total
-disregard for its responsibilities, and as if it were an institution
-specially designed for the benefit of the selfish wishes and passions of
-the sexes. But to look at marriage in this light is to not see it at all
-in that of the public good, or ultimately, in that of individual
-happiness. Marriages that are based upon selfishness or passion can
-never result in anything save misery to all concerned. Men and women who
-cannot look above these interests, who do not recognize that these
-interests should be secondary; who, after finding that their personal
-feelings would lead them to marry, cannot coolly ask themselves, are we
-prepared to become God’s architects to create His images, and be
-governed by the truthful reply, are not fit to marry. Many have the idea
-that I am opposed to marriage, but nothing could be further from the
-truth. I am opposed to improper marriages only; to marriages that bring
-unhappiness to the married, and misery to their fruits; and such as do
-this, had I the power, I would prohibit. I would guard the door by which
-this state is entered with all the vigilance with which the young mother
-watches her first-born darling babe; I would have no one enter its
-precincts save on bended knee and with prayerful heart, as if
-approaching the throne of God; as if to enter there were to more than in
-any other way to give one’s self to the service of God. So strictly
-would I guard it that none who should once enter could ever wish to
-retrace their steps. I would make divorces an unknown thing by
-abolishing imprudent and ill-assorted marriages. I would make the stigma
-so great that woman should find it impossible to confront the world in a
-marriage for a home, for position, or for any reason save love alone;
-and I would have her who should sell her person to be degraded in
-marriage, as culpable, as guilty, as impure at heart, as she is held to
-be who sells it otherwise. I would put every influence of the community
-against impure relations and selfish purposes, in whatever form they
-might exist, and encourage honour, purity, virtue and chastity. I would
-take away from marriage the idea that it legally conveys the control of
-the person of the wife to the husband, and I would make her as much its
-guardian against improper use as she is supposed to be in maidenhood. It
-should be her own, sacredly, never to be desecrated by an unwelcome
-touch. I would make enforced commerce as much a crime in marriage as it
-is now out of it, and unwilling child-bearing a double crime. As the
-architects of humanity, I would hold mothers responsible for the
-character and perfection of their works; make them realize that they can
-make their children what they ought to be, every one of them God’s image
-in equality. I would have them come to know that their bodies are the
-temples of God, and that within their inner sanctuaries, within “the
-holy of holies” God performs his most marvellous creations; that it is
-there that God Himself dwells, there that He will make Himself manifest
-to man, and that every act that He does not inspire is sacrilege, is
-worship of the Evil One, while every other, is an offering of sweet
-incense to the Heavenly Father. I would have man so honour woman that an
-impure or improper thought, or a self desire other than a wish to bless
-her, could never enter in his heart, would have him hold her to be the
-holy temple to which God has appointed him to be High Priest, as
-elaborately set forth by St. Paul in Hebrews, as the Garden of Eden into
-which the Lord God put him, “to dress it and to keep it,” forbidding him
-to eat of the fruit of the tree that stands in the midst of the garden;
-would have him awake to the consciousness that, by not so regarding her,
-he is repeating the sin of Adam, and by not compelling him to so regard
-her, she is repeating the sin of Eve; and that by these sins they are
-thrust out of the garden, and prevented from eating of the fruit of the
-tree of life and living forever; more than this, I would enlarge the
-sphere of parental responsibility so that they should be held
-accountable for the instruction of their children in all of the
-mysteries of sex, so that none could go into marriage in ignorance of
-the laws and uses of the reproductive functions. I would rob the subject
-of the mawkish sentimentality in which it is submerged, and make it a
-common and proper matter for earnest consideration and complete
-understanding. Indeed, I would make it a crime to enter marriage in
-ignorance of any of its possible duties and responsibilities; and twice
-a crime to bear improper children, for they who, to satisfy their own
-propensities, bring children into the world marked with the brand of
-Cain or Judas, are the worst kind of criminals. I would frown upon
-prostitution in every form; and make promiscuousness an abomination in
-the sight of man as it is in the sight of God; and I would drive out of
-the race the morbid passions that are consuming it. I would stop
-marrying until it should be no longer done in ignorance; and
-child-bearing until it could be done intelligently, so that every child
-might be a son or else a daughter of the living God. And I would have
-every woman remember the injunction of St. Paul, “Wives, submit
-yourselves unto your own husband as it is fit in the Lord,” but in no
-other way; and men, “Husbands, love your wives and be not bitter against
-them.” And if there be any other things let St. Paul also speak for me
-of them. “Whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest,
-whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report, if
-there be any virtue, if there be any praise, think on these things.”
-
-
-
-
- NOTES.
-
-
-LYCURGUS—“considering education to be the most important and the noblest
-work of a law-giver, he began at the very beginning and regulated
-marriages and the birth of children.... He strengthened the bodies of
-the girls by exercise in running, wrestling, and hurling quoits or
-javelins, in order that their children might spring from a healthy
-source and so grow up strong, and that they themselves might have
-strength, so as easily to endure the pains of childbirth. He did away
-with all affectation of seclusion and retirement among the women, and
-ordained that the girls, no less than the boys, should go naked in
-processions, and dance and sing at festivals in the presence of the
-young men. The jokes which they made upon each man were sometimes of
-great value as reproofs for ill-conduct; while on the other hand, by
-reciting verses written in praise of the deserving, they kindled a
-wonderful emulation and thirst for distinction in the young men: for he
-who had been praised by the maidens for his valour went away
-congratulated by his friends; while on the other hand, the raillery
-which they used in sport or jest had as keen an edge as a serious
-reproof; because the kings and elders were present at these festivals as
-well as all the other citizens. This nakedness of the maidens had in it
-nothing disgraceful, as it was done modestly, not licentiously (as in
-ballet dances and music halls and ball-rooms of the present day),
-producing simplicity, and _teaching_ the women to _value good health_,
-and to love honour and courage no less than the men. This it was that
-made them speak and think as we are told Gorgo, the wife of Leonidas,
-did. Some foreign lady, it seems, said to her, ‘You Laconian women are
-the only ones that rule men....’ She answered, ‘Yes; for we alone bring
-forth men....’ They considered that if a child did not start in
-possession of health and strength, it was better for itself and for the
-State that it should not live at all.”—_Plutarch’s Life of Lycurgus,
-Bohn’s Standard Library._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Lycurgus did not view children as belonging to their parents, but above
-all to the state; and therefore he wished his citizens to be born of the
-best possible parents; besides the inconsistency and folly which he
-noticed in the customs of the rest of mankind, who are willing to pay
-money, or use their influence with the owners of well-bred stock, to
-obtain a good breed of horses or dogs, while they lock up their women in
-seclusion and permit them to have children by none but themselves, even
-though they be mad, decrepit, or diseased; just as if the good or bad
-qualities of children did not depend entirely upon their parents, and
-did not affect their parents more than anyone else.... Adultery was
-regarded amongst them as an impossible crime.... The training of the
-Spartan youth continued till their manhood. No one was permitted to live
-according to his own pleasure, but they lived in the city as if in a
-camp, with a fixed diet and public duties, thinking themselves to belong
-not to themselves but to their country.... Lycurgus would not entrust
-Spartan boys to any _bought_ or _hired servants_ nor was each man
-allowed to bring up and educate his son as he chose, but as soon as they
-were seven years of age he himself received them from their parents, and
-enrolled them in companies. A superintendent of the boys was appointed,
-one of the best born and bravest of the state.... The boys were taught
-to compress much thought in few words; though Lycurgus made the
-iron-money of little value he made their speech have great value. One of
-his great reforms was the common dining-table.... In Sparta, as was
-natural, lawsuits became extinct, together with money, as the people had
-neither excess nor deficiency, but were all equally well off, and
-enjoyed abundant leisure by reason of their simple habits.
-
-
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of A lecture by Victoria Claflin Woodhull, by Victoria Claflin Woodhull</div>
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-<table style='min-width:0; padding:0; margin-left:0; border-collapse:collapse'>
- <tr><td>Title:</td><td>A lecture by Victoria Claflin Woodhull</td></tr>
- <tr><td></td><td>In the Boston Theater, Boston, U.S.A. October 22, 1876, before 3,000 people. The review of a century; or, the fruit of five thousand years</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Victoria Claflin Woodhull</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: March 31, 2021 [eBook #64972]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A LECTURE BY VICTORIA CLAFLIN WOODHULL ***</div>
-
-<div class='tnotes covernote'>
-
-<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber’s Note:</strong></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='titlepage'>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c001'>A LECTURE</h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='small'>BY</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='large'>VICTORIA CLAFLIN WOODHULL,</span></div>
- <div>(<span class='sc'>Mrs. John Biddulph Martin</span>.)</div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='small'>IN</span></div>
- <div class='c003'>THE BOSTON THEATRE, BOSTON, U.S.A.</div>
- <div class='c003'><i>October 22nd, 1876</i>,</div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='small'>BEFORE 3,000 PEOPLE.</span></div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='xlarge'>THE REVIEW OF A CENTURY;</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='small'>OR,</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='xlarge'>THE FRUIT OF FIVE THOUSAND YEARS.</span></div>
- <div class='c002'><i>Reprinted from the “Boston Times” of October 22nd, 1876.</i></div>
- <div class='c002'>WOMEN’S CO-OPERATIVE PRINTING UNION,</div>
- <div><span class='sc'>London, England</span>.</div>
- <div class='c003'>1893.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>THE REVIEW OF A CENTURY;<br /> <span class='small'>OR,</span><br /> THE FRUIT OF FIVE THOUSAND YEARS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'>Victoria C. Woodhull leaves this country shortly for
-Europe, and has prepared a lecture, which will be her
-farewell utterance. Those who heard Mrs. Woodhull
-recently at Paine Hall bear unanimous testimony to the
-humanitarian character of her address; she is the advocate
-of peculiar, because novel and original, views. A
-<cite>Times</cite> reporter has obtained a full report of her farewell
-address, and it is so full of instruction, and presents
-new social ideas in so fresh and thoroughly effective a
-manner, that no apology is needed for submitting it, <i>in
-extenso</i>, to the public. It is entitled “The Review of
-a Century; or, The Fruit of Five Thousand Years,”
-and is as follows:—</p>
-<p class='c006'>A hundred years ago, in an upper room in Philadelphia, five men
-were gathered—men of noble bearing, of brilliant intellects, of
-undoubted character. Their faces wore a look of stern determination,
-as if the theme of their consideration was of matters of grave
-import; was of matters destined to be the beginning of the most
-important era that had ever dawned upon the earth. A century
-and eighty years before, a single ship-load of men, women and
-children, had landed on this virgin soil at Jamestown in Virginia;
-and a few years later, another one at Plymouth-Rock in Massachusetts.
-To these, additions had been made until the thirteen
-States then numbered fully three million souls, upon whom “the
-king” had imposed onerous taxation, and over whom he had
-placed obnoxious rulers. The tea had been destroyed in Boston
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>harbour, and the people were wrought up to the intensest pitch by
-their oppressions. They had come from their native lands to
-escape from tyranny, and were not disposed to brook it here. In
-this wild, free land, they had become pregnant of liberty, and were
-even then struggling in the throes of travail. These five men had
-met to find a way in which the delivery might be safely made, so
-that both the mother and the child should live to bless the world.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>THE EARLY FATHERS.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>Washington, Adams, Franklin, Rush, Paine—every one of them
-immortal names—struggled with the task with which God had
-entrusted them. They felt the great responsibility, and their faces,
-as they looked into each other’s eyes, spoke their anxiety. Each
-knew that every other as well as self had something in his heart
-that he dared not utter. They looked inquiringly again and again
-for some yielding in some face. But they hesitated all. And well
-they might; for it was not the fate of three million people merely
-that was in their hands, but the future destinies of the world. One
-of these men had said but little; but the set features of his face
-showed a stern resolve; showed that he was waiting for the proper
-time in which to speak. He knew that it would fall to him to break
-the way; to say the words which each one felt but dared not speak;
-and speak at last he did; and they were the words of mighty import
-that came forth from him; words that were to deliver the people
-who had come to their full time—a birth that should herald a new
-race of people to the world; and they came forth from him as if all
-his powers were concentrated in the effort; as if that effort were
-the last struggle of the mother to bring forth her child; and the
-“four” caught up the child and became god-father to it, and they
-bore it to the people. The people recognised it as their own; took
-it to their hearts, and at once adopted it. Its name was—Revolution—Independence;
-and the words rang up and down the wave-washed
-shores, and fired the people with their inspiration—revolution
-as the means, independence as the end.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>One hundred years have come and gone since that eventful day,
-great with the future’s destinies. Its hundredth anniversary has
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>passed, and forty million people have commemorated the work of
-those five men, of those three million people:—commemorated it
-by reaffirming the truths that then were uttered for the first time in
-the new world; commemorated them by brilliant flights of oratory, by
-firing cannons and profuse displays of “stars and stripes” harmoniously
-blended with the flags of almost every other nation of the globe,
-whose sons and daughters were participating in the glory of the
-day; with feasting, fireworks; with general rejoicing everywhere.
-As if with a universal assent, these swarming millions re-echoed
-with a will the words that that stern man had uttered on that
-never-to-be-forgotten day a hundred years ago.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>OUR COMMERCIAL GREATNESS.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>But those three million people have expanded into forty-four
-million; and the thirteen States to thirty-eight, besides ten territories
-and one district. The country now, excepting the stretch from the
-west shore of Lake Superior, and from the south-west point of Texas
-westward to the ocean, has available for commercial purposes, a
-continuous water-front of not less than fifteen thousand miles,
-equal to that of the whole of Europe. It is five thousand miles from
-east to west, and four thousand from north to south. It contains
-vast ranges of mountains, the longest river in the world, and the
-most fertile plains. Its climate is so varied and extensive that it
-produces almost everything that is grown anywhere in the world—the
-fruits of the tropics as well as of the latitudes north and south;
-and it will be the granary from which the world must ultimately
-draw its bread. It has all the different forms of mineral wealth—gold,
-silver, copper, iron, lead, besides coal, oil and salt. No
-other country on the globe can begin to compare with it in the
-variety of its products; it combines the utility of them all. It is
-as if all others had contributed their choicest seeds, as they have
-their peoples, to fill up the variety with which this should be
-blessed. In whatever sense it may be regarded, it is the
-great country of the world. No other can for a moment enter into
-comparison with it save in some single sense—while this combines
-the greatnesses of them all. Blessed with such a country—with a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>land such as God promised to His chosen people—“a land flowing
-with milk and honey,” how ought the people to have returned their
-gratitude to Him Who gave it? Or rather, how have they done
-so?</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Having already entered upon a second century, there can be
-no more appropriate a time in which to see what use there has been
-made of the “ten talents” with which the Great Husbandman has
-entrusted us; to see how we have shown our love for Him by that
-which we have given to our brethren; to see whether from His bounteous
-gifts to all, a part has stolen the inheritance from others, and
-when His servants have been sent whether they have been beaten
-away empty; whether some, having an abundance, have “shut up
-their bowels of compassion” though seeing their brothers had need;
-whether they have “fought the good fight,” whether they have
-“kept the faith” and whether they are entitled to the crown
-which St. Paul bespoke for them that love God.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>WHAT ARE OUR CENTENNIAL FRUITS?</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>In other words, what is the condition politically, industrially,
-socially, religiously? Is it such as will make us rejoice in its
-review? Are our centennial fruits such as He would pronounce
-good, so that we may rest upon the seventh day from all our
-labours?</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>In the first place, what have we done politically? It is to
-government that people largely owe their prosperity or adversity—a
-good government meaning continuous prosperity; a bad one
-continuous adversity, or else alternate seasons of each, in which
-the latter consume the fruits of the former; in which the people
-see-saw, up and down each decade; in which, like the Israelites,
-the people journey in the wilderness “forty years” in search of the
-promised land, to which God would bring them suddenly, if they
-would keep all His commandments, and neither worship nor sacrifice
-to the “Golden Calf.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The last estimates are, that there are forty-four million people
-now in the United States. It is by no means, however, to be
-inferred that these are all citizens who constitute the “sovereignty;”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>from whom the Government has its source, and upon whom it
-sheds its benignant rays. For, although the constitution declares
-that “all persons born or naturalised in the United States, and
-subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens;” and although
-there are unreversed decisions of the Supreme Court, which declare
-that every person in the country “constitutes a part of the political
-sovereignty,” and that every such person is entitled to every right,
-civil and political, enjoyed by anyone in the State,—notwithstanding
-all this authority and law upon the subject, only a minority of
-the 44,000,000 are really citizens. For, in the Dred Scott decision,
-the law of citizenship was declared to be this: “To be a citizen is
-to have the actual possession and enjoyment, or the perfect right
-to the acquisition and enjoyment, of an entire equality of privileges,
-civil and political.” Dred Scott did not possess or enjoy these
-rights; therefore the court held that he was not a citizen. As
-this is the law of citizenship now, we must conclude that only
-those are citizens who have “the actual possession and enjoyment,
-or the perfect right of acquisition and enjoyment, of an entire
-equality of privileges, civil and political,” the Constitution to the
-contrary notwithstanding. The Constitution in the hands of “the
-few” is a mere toy with the plain language of which they play,
-making it to mean anything or nothing as it suits them now and
-then. Later we shall see that this was what it was intended to be;
-that it was a fraud, a cheat, from the beginning, into which
-neither the letter nor spirit of the Declaration of Independence ever
-entered.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>WHO ARE CITIZENS?</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>But who are citizens? Why, those who possess and enjoy, or
-who have the right to acquire and enjoy, an equality of political and
-civil privileges. Only certain classes of men possess these rights.
-These certain classes having possessed themselves of the machinery
-of the Government, tread upon the Constitution and spit upon the
-declarations of the Supreme Court. They have stolen the birthright
-of the “many,” and, putting their thumbs to their noses, say
-“Help yourselves if you can.” The despoiled people are not able
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>to help themselves now, but let these usurpers be warned that the
-judgments of God are upon this nation, and that He will come to
-help those who cannot help themselves against such tyranny;
-come to deliver His people out of the hands of the “Egyptians,”
-who have imposed tasks upon them grievous to be borne; come to
-send them some “Moses,” who shall cause “Pharaoh” to let the
-people go, and who shall bring down from “Sinai’s Mount”
-a new and better code of laws.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But who are not citizens, who neither possess or enjoy, nor have
-the right to acquire or enjoy, an equality of privileges, civil and
-political? There are three classes of these people: Indians,
-Chinese, and women, and these constitute by a million more than
-one-half of all the people. The political lords have selected nice
-company for the women to keep politically, and yet they put on
-such monstrous airs if they are told that in this matter they show
-no respect for their mothers, wives and daughters. Here is a subject
-for some Raphael, who should have reduced it to canvas and exhibited
-it at the Centennial, in honour of the mothers and daughters
-of the land. Upon the one hand there should have been grouped
-the women of the country, flanked upon the right and left by
-Indians and Chinese, and the subject named—Political Slaves;
-while upon the other the citizens should have been grouped, and
-labelled Political Sovereigns.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>THE PRINCIPLES OF OUR GOVERNMENT.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>The principles under the inspiration of which this government
-had its birth, are set forth in the Declaration of Independence.
-They were when realized by the people, when incorporated into
-the organic law, to give them independence; and they were
-thought to be of so much importance that the people fought a long
-and bloody war to acquire a right to their possession and enjoyment.
-Who can think of Bunker Hill, of Brandy-wine, of Princeton,
-of Valley Forge, of Yorktown, think of those long eight years
-of alternate hope and despair, and not feel that the price paid for
-independence was too great to have it limited to a mere minority
-of the people, when it was purchased for the whole; was too great
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>a price to pay for principles that were to be restricted to fewer than
-half of the descendants of those who paid it. Our fathers
-would have never fought for the liberty to have a King or an
-aristocratic ruler of their own. They endured the hardships and
-privations of that war for independence for themselves and their
-posterity. Nothing less than this was the inspiration of those
-years of suffering, nothing less than this could have given them
-inspiration to gain their independence.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But this was scarcely more than won, before those from whom
-this inspiration came were doomed to see their work robbed of
-half its value. At the convention that met to frame a government,
-there were men whose minds were too narrow to grasp the
-significance of the truths which had been the inspiration of the
-people; and which had sustained them through the war. They were
-men bred and born in English customs. They were not willing
-to make a complete departure from the established legal forms of
-the mother country, and make the Declaration, the inspiration of
-the Constitution, as it had been of the revolution. That inspiration
-came from these truths, and they were declared to be self-evident,
-“that all men are created equal; that they are endowed
-by their Creator with certain inalienable rights; that among these
-are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness; that to secure these
-rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just
-powers from the consent of the governed.” No trace of any
-single one of these truths is to be found in the Constitution as then
-adopted; nor in any of the Amendments that have since been
-added, save in Sec. I., Art. XIV., which the self-constituted
-citizens have rendered nugatory.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>OUR COPYING OF ENGLAND.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>Our constitution and laws have nothing specifically American
-about them. They are copies from the English, modified in some
-particulars, which have been the inducement “to gather the spoils
-while we may.” The President is an English king under another
-name, selected by the “caucus,” the worst element in politics, and
-elected by the people, because, under the vicious methods that are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>in vogue they have no way to vote save for one of the two at whom
-ten thousand papers vie with each other in throwing mud during
-the campaign. Many who have come to know how Presidents are
-made have abandoned the polls in disgust. The Senate is a badly
-abridged edition of the House of Lords, while the House of
-Representatives is the same of the House of Commons. In the law
-of primogeniture only do our laws differ materially from those of
-England, this good feature having been borrowed from another
-source. Nor have we any political literature save the Declaration
-of Independence which has a distinct national character about it
-that is purely American, and it is this that we celebrate year
-after year; it is this and this only that calls out the patriotism of
-the people.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>As far as the Constitution is concerned it is Dead Sea fruit. It
-is an old and musty English sermon to which we have prefixed a
-new and vital text, the text and sermon having no common ground
-or meaning. The condition of the people and the country could
-scarcely have been worse had we had Kings and Parliaments,
-instead of Presidents and Congresses. A tree, let it be called by
-whatever name, is known by the fruit it bears. If we are to judge
-the political tree in this country in this way, shall we not be forced
-to say that we have gathered thorns from grapes and thistles from
-figs? In purity in the administration of justice, our Government
-can stand no comparison with that of England. Money here is
-king, and judge and jury also. Then must there not be something
-radically wrong somewhere, and what can this be, except the
-engrafting of a new political idea into an old political system?
-This is what is the matter, and cringe as we may, there can never
-be a change greatly for the better until the institutions of the
-country are remodelled by the inspiration of that which led to
-their establishment.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>OUR LACK OF GREAT STATESMEN.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>Had there been any really great men among our statesmen they
-would have discovered the cause of the alternate “ups and downs”
-in the prosperity of the country, and, at least, have attempted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>some remedy. But we may look in vain through the whole list of
-those who have, one after another, prominently occupied public
-attention, for a great mind in the sense of instituting reforms in
-government; in replacing vicious by beneficent legislation. Washington,
-who will always be deservedly revered, was in no sense a
-great man save in goodness. As a general or statesman he has been
-excelled by dozens since his time, not one of whom has left anything
-behind him that will make his name immortal. To be immortal in
-history requires that there shall be some basis for it living in the
-Government, or in the industrial habits of the people, or in their
-religious faiths or rites. Buddha in India, Confucius in China,
-Zoroaster in Persia, Mahomet among Mahomedans, and Jesus
-amongst Christians, have immortality. But the religious element,
-<i>per se</i>, never would have civilized the world. Indeed the nations most
-under the influence of religious sentiments have done the least to
-spread civilization into unknown countries. It is the warlike and
-intellectual, in contradistinction to the religious and æsthetic,
-nations to whom we owe the almost world-wide enlightenment of the
-present, while the latter have remained shut up within themselves,
-and are nothing but what their religion makes them. The contrast
-between Egypt and India or China is, in this respect, most striking.
-Egypt, becoming great at home, pushed out into the surrounding
-world. With its immense armies under Sesostris and its no less
-potent power emanating from the wise men who made the Alexandrian
-library a possibility, it left its impress so fixed upon the world
-that, even to this day, there are many things in the habits and
-customs of the nations, especially in their literature and philosophies,
-that are Egyptian. It was an Egyptian colony which laid the
-foundation in Greece at Athens for the splendid civilization that
-was there developed; for the glory, the military renown and the
-arts and sciences that afterwards made Greece at once the admiration
-and wonder of the world.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>GREAT MINDS THE FOUNTAIN OF ALL GOOD.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Egyptians were also a maritime people who made voyages
-for discovery. It was under the instructions of one of its kings—Nechos—that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>some skilful Phœnician sailors first sailed round the
-coast of Africa. Six hundred years B.C. an attempt was also made
-to do what the French engineer Lesseps has since done—to cut a
-canal across the Isthmus of Suez. I mention these facts to show
-how all the really great things that have done the world most
-good have had their origin in some one great mind, who still lives
-in the immortality of his creations, having impressed himself
-inexpungibly upon the descent of the race and on civilization;
-and by this showing to call attention to the further fact that the
-number of the great who live in the present is extremely small,
-and finally to show that this country has not produced even one
-such mind outside the purely intellectual plane. The names of
-Fulton and Field will live until steam, as a motor power, shall be
-superseded by some more potent agent, and until the telegraphic
-wires shall be no longer required to transmit the thoughts of one
-to another at the antipodes of the earth; but in government the
-list is blank.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Our basis must, however, be made still broader. Greece was
-founded upon principles brought from Egypt; but in that small
-country a new era was born. Egyptian achievements were the
-culmination of an era of civilization of which Greece was fruit,
-and became the seed for the next. Not only did Greece dim the
-splendour of Egyptian warfare, but she also surpassed her in
-intellectual attainment. The names of Plato, Socrates, Aristotle,
-Archimedes, Xenophon, will live in philosophy as long as there is
-a literature; while Marathon, Thermopylae, Salamis, Platea and
-Mycale will stand for ever unapproachable in military and naval
-glory, conclusive evidence of the power of order and organization
-over mere numbers and brute force.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>THE POWER OF ELOQUENCE.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>There was, however, another power behind this one of order
-which made it invulnerable, irresistible. Philip of Macedon, the
-father of Alexander the Great, testified of this power in these
-words: “The eloquence of Demosthenes did me more harm than
-all the armies and fleets of the Athenians. His harangues are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>like machines of war, and batteries raised at a long distance, by
-which all my projects and enterprises are ruined. Had I been
-present and heard that vehement orator declaim, I should have
-been the first to conclude that it was necessary to declare war
-against me. Nor could I reach him with gold, for in this respect,
-by which I had gained so many cities, I found him invulnerable.”
-Antipater also said of the same power: “I value not the galleys
-nor armies of the Athenians. Demosthenes alone I fear. Without
-him the Athenians are no better than the meanest Greeks. It is
-he who rouses them from their lethargy and puts arms into their
-hands almost against their wills. Incessantly representing the
-battles of Marathon and Salamis, he transforms them into new
-men. Nothing escapes his penetrating eye, nor his consummate
-prudence. He foresees all our designs; he countermines all our
-projects and disconcerts us in everything. Did the Athenians
-confide in him and follow his advice we should be irredeemably
-undone.”</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>’Tis true that this was in the days of the declining Grecian
-glory; but it is none the less true that it was the same power in
-others previously that lifted a whole people to sublime achievements
-and into grand and noble character. It was here, also, that
-patriotism had birth; here that men devoted their lives to their
-country for the country’s sake rather than for private gain or
-glory. In this respect the character of Grecian generals and
-statesmen has never been approached by any other nation. It
-was this character that gave the Greeks as a nation, and to the
-world as an example, the first code of laws; gave a Constitution
-as a conservatory of the people’s rights, and made a Lycurgus
-possible, the principles of whose Spartan code are only now beginning
-to be appreciated. It is to this code that we must look as
-the prime source of political economy, and it has been the inspiration
-of all the modifications of laws ever made in the interests of
-the people. In this respect, Lycurgus will be known in the
-future ages as the Spartan law-giver of the world.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>
- <h3 class='c007'>LESSONS FROM ROMAN HISTORY.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Roman history is a second edition of Grecian, enlarged in its
-sphere of operations, and in its influence over the world. Rome,
-however, would never have been possible, had Greece not first
-been a fact. But Rome was vitiated in the character of her
-public men, as compared with those of Greece, in about the same
-ratio that she was greater in other respects. Greece was the admiration
-of the world, but Rome was its astonishment. All that
-she was, sank with her as she went down into the dark ages. The
-best of what made Greece, still lives in the people of the world.
-Greece was the garden of modern civilization and will remain its
-inspiration until three elements of character—the religious, the intellectual
-and the social—shall join their powers to construct the
-future government of the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Charlemagne was the basis of the first great national character
-that evolved after the dark ages, and Otho the Great laid the
-foundation for the present dominance of Bismarck and Von Moltke
-in Central Europe. Cromwell, more than any other, is the inspiration
-of English character, modified by its respect for the political
-rights of women by the influence of Queen Elizabeth, under whom
-England reached the acme of its power and glory. But in French
-history is to be found the most distinct evidence of a communication
-to a whole people of the character of a single individual that
-there is to be found anywhere. The French character, both as a
-nation and as an individual, may be summed up in one word—Bonaparte.
-With the advent of this giant mind came a crisis over
-all modern Europe. Under his influence not only did the national
-character of the French people change, but the individual
-character also underwent many modifications. Nor was this confined
-to France, for this man’s genius was felt in every capital in
-the world. He conquered the nations and compelled them to
-change their laws, while to France he gave an entire new code, to
-which, more than to anything else, France owes her position among
-nations. It was the result of these laws that gave to France the
-capacity to rise from the disaster inflicted upon her by Prussia.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>Her immense loans came in small sums from the peasantry, and
-when paid will remain in France, which will not suffer the double
-impoverishment that most nations suffer from a public debt. The
-possibility of this was due to the far-reaching statesmanship of
-Napoleon Bonaparte, when he changed the laws regarding the
-inheritance of property, taking the estate from the deceased and
-dividing it equally among all the children—the greatest innovation
-that had ever been made upon the old feudal system, and together
-with other reforms, fixing France in a position to become more
-prosperous internally than any other European nation. Bonaparte
-also broke down the barriers that divided the nations and races of
-Europe, and opened up the way for closer commercial and literary
-relations, and performed, during the twenty years that he was in
-France, a greater service for the advancement of civilization than
-was ever performed by any other person who ever lived. In a
-sense, and in a good sense, too, it may be said that he dictated to
-the world, because the changes that he instituted and compelled
-have produced a modifying influence over the whole world. Taken
-as a whole, Bonaparte was the greatest man who ever lived.
-Certainly he equalled the greatest generals, and his campaigns,
-with those of Hannibal and Scipio-Africanus, will be the textbooks
-for military students as long as the art of war remains a
-study; while as a statesman he stands at the head of the greatest.
-He was Lycurgus, Alexander, Hannibal, Talleyrand, Bismarck
-combined. He represented, if he did not excel, the greatest of all
-ages, save Confucius and Jesus, save Demosthenes and Cicero.
-He never taught morality, <i>per se</i>, but he believed that a well-governed
-and industrially-thrifty people would necessarily be also
-moral, and he never made a speech except to point out the enemy
-to his soldiers. The treachery of a single man—Grouchy—who
-permitted Blucher to hurl the Prussian army unopposed upon his
-wearied troops after they had defeated Wellington at Waterloo,
-changed the whole future destiny of Europe, and prevented
-Bonaparte from becoming the beneficent law-giver of the world as
-he had been of France. For behind all his ambition in which only
-he is known to the world, and, therefore, not known at all, he had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>an unalterably fixed purpose to raise the common people of Europe
-to their proper position; but this he could do only by first
-conquering the rulers who stood in his way.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>LYCURGUS AND BONAPARTE.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is, therefore, to Lycurgus and to Bonaparte, more than to
-any others, to whom we must look as the master-minds in government;
-as those who instituted sweeping changes in the political
-institutions of the world, and in this sense they are the greatest of
-all the great who live in profane history. Many slight reforms
-have been effected; but they alone conceived and reduced to a
-system the changes that revolutionized and replaced the old
-beneficently to the people.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Bonaparte himself recognized that his greatness consisted in
-this, for, when he asked his friends to which of his achievements
-he would owe his life in history, and they replied, naming some
-campaign or battle, he corrected them and said; “I shall go down
-in history with my <cite>Code Napoleon</cite> in my hands.” So it was not
-Marengo, not Wagram, not Austerlitz, not Dresden, not any nor
-all his great victories to which he looked as his best achievement;
-but it was the code of laws by which he made France the happiest
-country in Europe. It is not to be wondered at that his name
-lives in the hearts of the French and moves them as no other
-name ever moved a people.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Great as Bismarck may be, he is not great in the true sense of
-greatness, for he is building up a power that the next fifty years
-will have to overthrow. True greatness works in the direction of
-and not against progress, and its works live. Compared with him,
-Disraeli may after all, should his intentions toward India have a
-humanitarian tendency, turn out to be the greater man.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>In this view of greatness, to whom shall we look among our
-statesmen for any of its evidences? Beyond the legislation that
-the abolition of slavery forced upon us, the homestead act and one
-recently introduced by Gen. Banks, enlarging its scope in the
-interests of the settler, and some concessions to the people, like the
-eight hour law, we may search the legislation of the country
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>through in vain for any evidence of humanitarian tendencies in
-our legislators. On the contrary, the inspiration of the privileged
-classes, the power and use of wealth will be found everywhere;
-’tis true that we have a Republican Government in name and
-form, but it is also true that money rules, that it elects the officers
-and controls the legislation. The people who are outside of the
-privileged classes, outside of the offices and the press, are powerless
-to help themselves. The machinery of the government is in the
-hands of those who want things to continue as they are, while the
-few in power who are devoted to the public welfare, beat the air in
-vain attempts to strike either the causes of, or the remedy for
-existing evils.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>NEED OF A NEW CODE OF LAWS.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>But they may be summed up in a few words. The causes lie in
-the fruitless attempt to run a Republican Government upon an
-aristocratic code of laws, and the remedy is to remodel the code by
-the principles of the declaration, which should be made the
-inspiration of every provision, as well as the key to its construction.
-I might enumerate the special evils that have grown out of the
-error made in the Constitution—the vicious legislation for which
-this error laid the foundation—that the rule of the majority is not
-a Republican idea; that “the majority” is another name for the
-despot; that minorities are entitled to, and can be represented; I
-might show that the United States is, after all, nothing but a confederation
-of equal and antagonistic powers, and not a Federal
-Union; that Washington is more a place in which representatives
-from the several States assemble to quarrel over the spoils of office
-and to lay the ropes for the succession, than it is the capital of a
-free and mighty people; that there is such a contrariety of laws in
-the several States upon any given subject, that it puzzles a Philadelphia
-lawyer to tell whether a given act is a crime, a misdemeanour,
-or whether actionable at all in the different States; if people
-be married in one State, whether they are so legally in any other,
-or if divorced the same. I might show that taxation is unequal
-and oppressive, and the revenue unjust; and if there were need of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>it, which there is not, that official patronage is a polite name for
-public plunder, and that the public service is a vast system of
-organized corruption. Had the original error not been made, had
-the fountain been kept pure, none of these baneful things could
-have been engrafted into the system. But they have now
-obtained a root so deep that they can never be exterminated save
-by uprooting the system. They are the Canada thistles in the
-fertile meadow, that spread themselves until they absorb the whole
-vitality of the soil and thrust out the useful harvest. These thistles
-have spread and seeded in the government until they have thrust
-out every honest servant of the people, and until one who has any
-care for his reputation cannot afford to meddle with the government.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>MUST WE HAVE A REVOLUTION?</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>How can such a state of things be remedied save by a revolution?
-The people may listen to the “outs” who pretend to tell
-them that it may; but should they come to the “ins” they would
-follow in the footsteps of their predecessors. The machine is
-running down hill too fast to be now stopped; the tide of power
-has set too strongly toward corruption to be reversed; the political
-body is too thoroughly impregnated with the poison to make its
-purging possible by any change of medicine. The disease is incurable
-because it is in the system more than in the individual men
-who run it. It has had its youth, its manhood, and is now in its
-old and decaying age. No power can save it; and those who think
-they can, who think that they can patch it up with tonics for a
-time, are only preparing for a worse ruin when the crash shall
-come.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But the people would not care so much about the government;
-they would be willing to let the politicians run it as they please,
-and enjoy its spoils as they have for a century; they would even
-endure, as they have, uncomplainingly, any extortion that their
-earnings would permit without reducing them to the starvation
-point; but when in addition to the absorption of all their earnings
-to pay the debts of official extravagance and vicious legislation it is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>threatened to foreclose the mortgages on the industries and sell
-them out, and thus take away their means of livelihood, they have
-a right, indeed it is their duty, to object, and they are beginning
-to do it in real earnest.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>A WORD TO NON-PRODUCERS.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>I do not say this in the interest of the workmen, but speak in
-appeal to the non-productive classes, those who live without
-labour, to show them that through their servants, the Congress
-and the administrators of the laws, they are repeating the
-folly of the Southern slave-holders, who could not have found a
-more effectual way to rid themselves of slavery than that which
-they adopted. Looking upon it now, it seems that they could not
-have been satisfied with the progress of abolitionism in the North,
-under the lead of Garrison, Phillips and Douglass, and therefore
-they stirred up the war at home to precipitate the end, and succeeded
-admirably. The heartiness with which the Southern
-members of the St. Louis Convention recently accepted “the results”
-is evidence that this is a proper view to take of it. It is
-only a wonder that, going so far as they did, they did not fall into
-the arms of the Cincinnati Convention and thank its party
-for the services rendered them. But this aside. Had they been
-content to keep the power they had, they might have retained
-their slaves for years to come; but they wanted more! more!
-more! Nothing less than the whole country as slave territory
-would satisfy their morbidness upon the subject. Perhaps they
-did not know what they were doing; but they must have been blind
-indeed if there were not among them one sagacious mind who
-understood it.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But when, through promises from northern doughfaces, they had
-brought on the war, then those who had been gradually getting
-rich, quietly extending their mortgages, through railroad and other
-speculative schemes and exorbitant rates of interest, saw an opportunity
-to extend, at a single effort, their grasp over the whole
-property of the country, and reduce the masses to servitude for all
-time to come, as they are reduced in England. The classes to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>whom I speak knew that the government would have to have
-money; and that it would have to come to them to get
-it; and they also knew that the longer the war continued
-the more money would be required. So, while the copper-headed
-bankers of the North gave the rebels all the encouragement
-they dared, their English brethren furnished them with arms and
-ammunition, and thus the war was prolonged and made a costly
-one. The plan was well conceived and nicely executed; the productive
-classes were saddled with a debt of $3,000,000,000, for
-which the government received little more than half that sum.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>SOME TELLING FIGURES.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>But they who were engaged in this scheme over-reached themselves
-as the South had done before them. They over-estimated
-the vitality and endurance of the industries, already carrying a
-debt of $4,000,000,000 in railroad, State, county and municipal
-bonds, besides paying interest on individual loans to a still larger
-amount. They could not bear the added burden. With gold at
-par with which the interest was paid on this enormous debt before
-the war, they managed to get along; but when the war had raised
-the price of gold and had added $3,000,000,000 to the debt, it was
-more than they could stand. On this $11,000,000,000 debt, with
-the interest on some parts of it at 8, 9, 10 and even 12 and 15 per
-cent. per annum, and allowing for the large discounts that were
-frequently extorted, and adding to this the premiums paid for gold
-and including the dividends on stocks, the industries of the
-country were, and still are, taxed $1,300,000,000 every year
-to pay interest! Think of it, you who take this interest!
-Think of the toiling millions who, beneath the broiling sun, or in
-the murky mines, or dismal shops, or in the frozen forests, give up
-their lives to toil! Think of it! Taxed $1,300,000,000 annually
-for interest, part of which goes to enrich European bankers, and
-the remainder to those who, in luxurious ease, idle their lives
-away at home. Think of it, I repeat again, and then wonder, if
-you can, that industry is prostrate beneath the heel of capital!
-Say, if you can, whether the wonder is not rather, that there is a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>wheel in motion in the country, or that there is a plough moving in
-the soil.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The total products amount to but $5,000,000,000 annually.
-Out of this, there is first to come the subsistence of the 44,000,000
-population. On an average it cannot be said that it costs less than
-$100 a year per capita to support this mass. Some people spend
-more than that for cigars in a single month, and others double for
-wines and other liquors, to say nothing about establishments costing
-thousands upon thousands to maintain; and yet there are so many
-who live upon less than $100 a year, that the average cost of
-subsistence may be placed at that sum. This would consume
-$4,400,000,000 of the $5,000,000,000 products, and leave but
-$600,000,000 with which to pay the $1,300,000,000 interest.
-Hence it is plainly to be seen that the productive interests of the
-country are running into debt to the capitalists at the rate of
-$700,000,000 every year; that their mortgages on the property of
-the country are increasing yearly by that amount. This is a
-frightful showing, but it is a true one; it is one that the labouring
-classes are beginning to understand; it is one that you who are
-oppressing them should also understand, for, by ignoring it, you
-are challenging swift destruction. The only question is, how long
-can these things go on, with the wealth of the country increasing
-at the rate of two and a half per cent. per annum; it is a simple
-thing to calculate how long it will require for money, increasing at
-the rate of 6, 8, 10, and even 15 and 20 per cent. per annum, to
-consume the wealth.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>THE ROOT OF THE TROUBLE.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>We come now in logical order to the grand and fundamental error
-that has been made which lies at the back of all political fallacies,
-and to which are to be primarily attributed all industrial and
-financial ills from which we suffer, both as a nation and as
-individuals, since, let the Government be as good as it may, with
-this error lying between it and the industries, it were impossible
-that evil should not come upon the people. Hence, let the
-Government and the public service be as bad as they may; let the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>people suffer from bad legislation as much as they have; the fault
-is, after all, more to be charged against the system than against
-the individuals who, for the time, are its administrators. No
-matter how skilful the engineer may be, nor how watchful the
-fireman; if the engine itself be faulty in construction, it will explode;
-or if the engine be perfect in itself, but connected with
-other machinery that is not fitted to run at the same speed as the
-engine, then the machinery will fly in pieces. The same is true of
-the relations between the Government—the political organisations
-of the people—and the wealth producers—the industrial organisation
-of the people, as we shall see, for the Government is a machine
-constructed after the highest known principles of political mechanism,
-while intimately connected with it is the industrial
-organisation, running upon the very lowest—the rudimental—industrial
-mechanism. Consequently, when the political machinery
-runs at a high rate of speed, requiring an extra amount of fuel and
-water, the industrial machinery, in its efforts to supply this demand,
-and urged on by its connection to keep pace with the rapid
-motion, flies in pieces; becomes prostrated and useless, as we see
-it everywhere in the country now, when to keep the political
-machinery running at the present high rate of speed, it has to
-draw upon its accumulated stock of fuel, as it is doing now to the
-amount of $700,000,000 annually.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>If we go back and examine the evolution of government and
-industry, all this will be made clear; so clear that all may understand
-it. Certain fixed laws direct and regulate the growth of
-everything, and they are the same for all departments in the
-universe. The statement of the laws by which the sidereal and
-solar systems have evolved, will also describe those which the
-earth has obeyed, and are the laws of all material, governmental,
-industrial, intellectual, social, moral and religious change. This
-law as applied to government and industry may be stated in
-philosophic terms, thus: The progress of government and industry
-is a continuous establishment of physical relations within the community,
-in conformity with physical relations arising within the environment,
-during which the government, industry and the environment
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>pass from a state of incoherent homogeneity to a state of coherent
-heterogeneity; and, during which, the constitutional units of
-the government and industry become ever more distinctly
-individualized.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>If we examine the growth of industry and government, and the
-relations that exist between them now, in this country, we shall
-discover how far they have advanced from incoherent homogeneity
-toward coherent heterogeneity. Looking through the dim vistas of
-the past into the pre-historic time, we find a time when there were
-no aggregations of individuals larger than the family; that the
-family was the only government and the only organization for
-industry; that its head ruled with arbitrary sway, having no one
-to whom he was accountable, each family having to depend wholly
-upon itself for subsistence. The people then were in the same state
-politically and industrially, and this was the homogeneous or
-original state. Afterwards we find that, for protection or for conquest,
-two or more families combined in a political sense and
-formed tribes, having an absolute head, but remaining in the
-rudimentary state industrially; next, tribes came together and
-built cities, and cities then coalesced and constituted nations (the
-rulers of which still using arbitrary power), until single rulers
-aspired to the dominion of the world; and in a sense succeeded.
-But all this time, industrially, the people remained in the original
-state. There had been no coalescing for the purpose of subsistence
-as there had been for government. While politically the people
-had evolved through several stages of progression, industrially
-they were still in the rudimentary state.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Having arrived at the culmination of growth in the line of
-absolute power, one man having controlled the destinies of the
-world (thus typifying the future yet to be when the world shall be
-united under a humanitarian, in place of a despotic government;
-under the rule of all instead of that of one), a new departure was
-set up in the direction of this future condition, and the power to
-which one man aspired began to redistribute itself in limited and
-constitutional monarchies, down through kings and queens,
-nobility and republics, to the people generally, in this country
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>advancing so far as to be divided practically among nearly one-half
-of the people, and theoretically among the whole. Evolution on
-this line will go on till every person in the world shall form a part
-of the government. Then the great human family will be a
-possibility.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>SOCIAL EXPERIMENTS.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>But up to the present time, what have the people done industrially?
-Almost nothing, save to subsist themselves on the rudimental
-plane! Nothing, save to make a few experiments at
-coalescing. There are a few illustrations of the first step in
-progress in this respect, which correspond to the coming together
-of families politically. But there are no industrial cities, to say
-nothing about nations. There were Brook Farm, New Harmony, and
-several other attempts at industrial tribes, and there are Oneida
-and a dozen lesser attempts still in existence, besides numerous cooperative
-movements. There are the railroad, the telegraph,
-insurance companies, banks and other corporations, all evidences
-that a real departure is about to be made in industrial organization;
-that is, that the people are preparing to depart from the homogeneous
-state industrially. The grange movement is the most
-positive evidence of the moving of the people generally in this
-direction, in which to protect themselves against the rapacity of
-merchants and railroads, they combine to purchase from first
-hands and realize a saving of from twenty to fifty per cent. This
-is an illustration of coalescing for protection. Most of the other
-illustrations, such as railroads, banks, etc., are for aggressive
-purposes; are means by which the people, while being seemingly
-accommodated, are really being robbed. Nevertheless, they are
-all evidences of progress in the industrial sense, those for aggression
-in the end compelling others for protection. That there are
-so many forms of coalescings for aggressive purposes, is conclusive
-evidence that the time is near when the people will be driven into
-organizing themselves into industrial communities, cities and
-nations, and eventually into one nation for the whole world. The
-first departure having been made, nothing can prevent industry
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>from passing through the same stages of progress through which
-government has passed, and eventually becoming “at one” with
-government.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Has the evolution of government proved a blessing to the
-people? Are we, as a people, in a better condition politically?
-Are we nearer the ultimate condition than they were of
-ancient time, when the family was the highest form of government?
-If we are, then we should be equally improved, industrially, if we
-were upon the same plane in this respect. There are no contradictions
-in natural growth. Like degrees of evolution bring equal
-good in all; the same to government, to industry, to intellect, to
-morals, to religion. But this development does not mean for the
-rich what it is inferred by them to mean, unless, indeed, they
-attempt to resist its progress, which if they do, the same fate will
-overtake them that came upon those who attempted to stay the
-tide of political growth. It means for them just what the development
-of government meant for those who held and exercised its
-power. The political relations of the monarch and nobility
-are repeated in the industrial relations of the capitalists
-and working men. The “levelling” politically has not been
-down but up. Instead of the rulers having been degraded
-into serfdom, the serfs have been elevated to the plane
-of rulers in this country. In the place of one man ruling
-over others, all men rule themselves, at least in theory.
-In this transformation no one has been deprived of anything that
-of right belonged to him; but the masses have received their
-natural rights from those who held them from them by the right
-of might. When the industries shall rise to the stage of growth
-which the government occupies, a like “levelling up” will take
-place; a like relinquishment of industrial power will be made
-in favour of the toiling masses. None who are independent now
-will be made dependent then; but the dependent will rise to independence.
-Hence the alarm of the rich is wholly without foundation.
-Such a move does not mean the slightest harm for them;
-it means equal good for all. It does not mean the taking away
-of any comfort or luxury from anybody; but the extension of every
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>comfort and luxury that any have to all—to those who suffer, be
-it from hunger, from nakedness, from want of shelter, or
-other cause.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>OUR NATIONAL DEBT.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>If this analysis be applied to the present situation we shall see
-what is the matter with the industries. When the South rebelled,
-the North was compelled to resist, or else permit the national
-unity to be destroyed. Let it be borne in mind what stress was
-put upon the necessity of preserving the oneness of the people
-politically. To do this an army was required. When volunteers
-ceased to offer in sufficient numbers to keep the army to its necessary
-strength, the government, acting upon the right of a representative
-of a politically united people, resorted to drafting to
-determine which of the members of this unity should go into the
-army and jeopardize their lives for its preservation. This was in
-perfect harmony with the principles of government upon which
-this order rests, and was fully endorsed by the people. But what
-did the government do to subsist these men, and to provide the
-munitions of war? Did it proceed the same way that it did to
-secure the men? Not at all! It borrowed the money from the
-bankers of New York, Hamburg and London, and agreed to pay
-them a rate of interest double that demanded of any other first
-class nation, parting with its bonds to them at “60.” In other
-words, it borrowed $1,800,000,000, at 10 per cent., and gave
-$1,200,000,000 in bonds as bonus for making the loan.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Now this was the error that was committed, for, although the
-people were industrially upon a lower order of development than
-they were politically, nevertheless, since necessity knows no law save
-that of its own conditions, the government should have proceeded
-as if we were upon the same plane in both respects. When
-it called for volunteers to raise an army, and the ranks of industry
-responded liberally, it should at the same time have also called for
-volunteer assistance from the ranks of wealth, to subsist that
-army; and as it resorted to drafting to maintain the necessary
-number of fighting men when volunteering failed to do it, so should
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>it have resorted to drafting the means with which to pay their expenses
-when volunteer assistance should have failed to do it. Had
-the people been one industrially as they were politically; had the
-industrial organization of the people been upon the same plane
-as their political organization, this would have been done
-naturally, and there would have been no bonded debt incurred.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>What does this show? This clearly; that, while the government
-can command the lives of the working men and put them in
-jeopardy, even sacrifice them without stint to maintain itself, it
-has no power over the property of the rich to compel them to
-assist in that maintenance. Had it been so that the government
-could not have borrowed any money, it would have fallen from
-this disparity between the political and industrial development.
-Is not this clear? And if it is, does it not show a very great and
-grave defect in the wisdom of our institutions?</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But what has been the effect of this error in this instance? The
-present prostration of industry, necessarily: and it has come
-about in this way: The armies were made up from the ranks of
-industry; the “rank and file” were so many men taken away from
-producing, and, therefore, from adding to the accumulated wealth;
-but the maintenance of the army was borrowed at an exorbitant rate
-of interest from the accumulated wealth, which was wholly
-in the hands of those who never fired a shot in defence of the
-country, nor added a dollar to its aggregate wealth by labour.
-While the war continued, the men who were left in the ranks of
-industry were called upon to pay this interest; and when it was
-over, those who had survived the war and returned to productive
-toil were included with them. And it is expected that the industrial
-classes will continue to pay this interest until the bonds
-mature, and then the bonds themselves, as I shall show you that
-they do hereafter; or what is more to the point, for the
-$1,800,000,000 that the government borrowed from the money-lenders
-it would compel the people to return them as bonus,
-interest and principal, the enormous sum of $5,000,000,000.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>
- <h3 class='c007'>INDUSTRY OVER-BURDENED.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Hence by this error, made possible by the false relations of
-government and industry, the government has not only compelled
-industry to furnish the men to fight its battles, win its victories,
-and maintain its integrity, but it also compels it to pay all the
-expenses of the war, besides to continue adding to the wealth of
-the rich. The gentlemen in whose interests it was principally
-fought, who have sat quietly at home in luxury, and drawn the
-life-blood from the poor, now go out of all the effects of the war
-with their fortunes trebled by having merely loaned the government
-the money it needed to maintain itself in the struggle.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>This is a true picture, moderately drawn, of the real facts.
-While I do not desire to stir up the wrongs that industry has
-suffered in this matter, and drive the weary toilers to seek redress,
-it is nevertheless time, when thousands of families are suffering the
-pangs of hunger as a consequence of this wrong, to lay it open
-before the people who have been its cause and who have profited
-by it; it is time that the government should be shown the errors
-that it has committed and be told that the people are coming to an
-understanding of them; time that the bond-holders should know
-that the people are aware of the tenure by which they hold these
-mortgages on the industries. Let the one protest as it may and
-the other plead innocence under the revelations as they will, I
-intend to do everything in my power to rouse them to a sense of
-the danger in which they stand from the still sleeping masses, who,
-when they shall come to a full realization of the impositions that
-have been practised upon them, will not hesitate at any means of
-redress; especially will they not hesitate when the modern Shylocks,
-having relentlessly demanded not only the last “pound of
-flesh” but their very life’s blood also, demand likewise the payment
-of the bonds! The people already begin to learn that the government
-has no sympathy for their sufferings, and that it declares
-that it has no power to alleviate them, which they will think is
-strange enough since it had the power to bring these evils upon
-them.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>
- <h3 class='c007'>WHAT LABOUR WILL SAY.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Under these conditions they will soon come to argue like this:—Was
-it not enough to demand of industry that it should fight the
-battles for the government? Was it not enough that the working-classes
-should lay down their lives by thousands upon a hundred
-fields of battle? Was it not enough that mothers and wives should
-give their sons and husbands to fill the soldier’s grave that the
-wealth of the country might remain inviolate? Was it not enough
-that we did all this without now being forced to give our toil year
-after year to return these rich, who did nothing, these loans? Is
-it too much to ask of wealth that it pay the expenses of the
-war? Should we not rather demand, in tones of thunder if
-lesser ones are insufficient to rouse its holders to a sense of
-their duty, that it shall bear its part of the burden? We have
-looked on quietly and seen the sufferings to which this people
-are reduced by the rapacity of the usurers, until we can no longer
-hold our peace; and if it be in our power, we intend that wealth
-and not industry shall yet be made to pay what it should have been
-made to pay at first; that it shall return to the government the
-bonds which the toiling masses have redeemed by the rivers of
-blood that they have shed, and that the government shall return the
-$2,000,000,000 of interest that it has already filched from industry
-for interest on this most unjust debt. In other words, since we
-gave the lives that it was necessary to sacrifice to conquer the
-rebellion from our ranks, we intend that the rich shall give from
-what they had when the rebellion broke out, to pay all the expenses
-of the war, and we will never rest until this be done.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>These, I say, are the arguments to which the suffering labourers
-will resort if you permit them to is driven to desperation by hunger
-from want of employment. If the rich were wise, they would forestall
-all opportunity for such arguments to be used, by coming
-forward voluntarily to do them justice. If what I have suggested
-will be their arguments, is true, as you know that it is, then
-wealth should pay the expenses of the war without any further
-delay, because it is a gross injustice, not to say an unwarrantable
-imposition on good nature, to make the men who did the fighting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>also pay this debt, while those for whom it was mostly fought have
-done nothing but to speculate out of it. Perhaps you have never
-looked at it in this light; but if you have not, then I pray you look
-at it so now, before your attention shall be called to it in an
-unpleasant way; for, unless relief come soon to those who are
-suffering the pangs of hunger, by reason of your blindness, there
-will be an imperious demand made of you.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>THE SILVER QUESTION.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>As if they were not yet satisfied with the oppressions already in
-operation, some of those whom you have sent to Washington to
-conduct your business, and who have got you into all this difficulty,
-think that silver is not good enough money in which to pay interest,
-because it is not now worth proportionally quite so much as gold.
-Where has the wisdom and prudence of this people fled? Have they
-no care for what <i>may</i> come upon their families, that they sit by and see
-indignity after indignity piled mountain-high upon the people?
-The lives, the labour, the all of the poor may be taken for the
-public good; but your bonds, your money, your usury must not be
-touched. They are considered to be of more consequence than life
-and toil and everything else that the poor have got to be taken!—your
-revenue must be sacred, and the Shylocks must take their
-“pound of flesh” from the daily labourer, let it cost whatever blood it
-may in the cutting of it; and no wise Portia comes to stay the hand
-already dripping with the life of the toilers, for is not the interest
-wrenched from their toil, their life! Look at the poor of the
-country; millions of them without work and their families either
-starving or else on the verge of starvation. Let me read you extracts
-from two articles from the <cite>New York Sun</cite> of the 20th of July, so that
-you may see that I am not overdrawing the picture: “Starvation in
-New York. The sufferings among the poor are fearful. The
-sufferers are chiefly widows and young children, who, for lack of
-nourishment, are unable to withstand the intense heat. Instances
-of actual starvation are mentioned. A widow and her young
-daughter and son, who are unable to find work, had been for some
-time living on $2 a week. In a garret, without any other furniture
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>than an old dry goods box for a table and a broken chair, live a
-widow and her five young children. In a closet are a mattress and
-a blanket, which at night make a bed for the whole family. An
-aged woman, who was once in affluent circumstances, was some
-time ago found nearly dead with hunger; it was only by careful
-nursing that she was saved. A young man, whose family were
-gradually starving, was driven to despair and intent on suicide.
-The child of another died, and not only was the father unable to
-bury it, but he was unable to provide food for the living.” These
-are only a few of the cases that come under the observation of a
-single church relief society. What shall we say of the great city?
-The other was entitled “Widespread Destitution in Brooklyn. At
-the meeting of the King’s County Charity Commissioners yesterday,
-Mr. Bogan said that there was almost as much destitution in the
-city now as at midwinter. The families of unemployed men who
-up to this time have never asked for a cent of charity, were daily
-besieging his office. The system of outdoor relief had been abandoned,
-and there was no way to provide for the needy except out
-of his private purse. The heads of families were forced into idleness
-by the hard times, and, having exhausted all their means
-were face to face with starvation.” Is not this a fearful picture of
-those who have helped to make the wealth with which the storehouses
-of the country are loaded? African slavery was a blessing
-compared with the condition of thousands of the poor. Let its
-evils have been as great as we know that they were, the negroes
-never suffered for food; the women and children never died of
-starvation; never suffered from cold or went naked. Oh, that
-some master mind, some master spirit, might be sent of God to
-show you the way out of this desolation and the necessity of
-deliverance. But I fear you will not be wise enough to avoid the
-penalty for neglecting to keep your industrial institutions on the
-same plane with your political organization, which is the only
-possible remedy for the present evils. The people must be made
-as much one industrially as they are politically. Then there would
-be harmony and consequent peace and prosperity.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>
- <h3 class='c007'>IS CASTE A NECESSITY?</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>But to this the common objection is raised, that it is impossible
-to make industrial interests common, on account of the necessary
-differences in labour: that there must be caste in industry. This
-was the reply that the king made to the people who wanted a
-political republic; of course it will be the reply that the privileged
-classes will make to those who want an industrial republic. You
-know how fallacious the objection has been politically. The king
-deprived of his crown has not been compelled to sleep with the
-scavenger. It will prove equally as fallacious industrially. The
-money and railroad kings will not have to live with the men who
-do the rough work of the industrial public, unless they choose to
-do so, any more than they do now. The foundation stones of a
-house always remain at the bottom, covered up in the dirt; nevertheless,
-they are even more important to the safety of the house
-than any upper part. So it will be in the industrial structure
-when it shall be erected. There will always be Vanderbilts,
-Stewarts, Fields and Fultons—the agents of the people industrially,
-as there are now presidents, governors and mayors—agents of the
-people politically. And do you not see how perfectly this corresponds
-to the teachings of Jesus when He said: “Let him who
-would be greatest among you be the servant of all,” and with this
-falls the objection of the aristocrat to the industrial republic, as
-utterly untenable.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>The real inspiration of this objection, however, springs from
-quite another source. Those who make it know that with the
-coming of industrial organisation, the power which money has
-to increase will fall, and make it impossible for anybody to live
-without labour. Money has no rightful power to increase. Its
-origin and sphere distinctly forbid the power, as can be clearly
-shown. The theory that money is wealth is false. It came to
-be accepted from the fact that valuable things have been used as
-money.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Wealth is the product of labour; is anything that labour produces
-or gathers. But the functions of money are representative
-wholly. Money takes the place of wealth for the time—stands for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>it. Here is the fallacy of a specie basis for money: specie is
-wealth, and can be made a basis for the issue of money, but the
-error consists in making a distinction against other kinds of wealth
-which would be equally as good. Anything that has value may
-properly be made a basis for the issue of a currency.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>If we trace the origin of money, all this will be made plain. At
-the basis of all questions relating to wealth and money, lie the
-elements—the land, the water, the air—and these are the free gifts
-of God to man. None have the right to dispossess others of their
-natural inheritance in these elements. The right to life carries
-along with it the right to the use of so much of each of these
-elements as is necessary to support it. No one has a natural right
-to more than this. Hence, men have no more right to seize upon
-the land and deprive others of its use, or part with it to others for
-a consideration, than they have to bottle the air for the same purpose.
-There can be no ownership of the elements; no ownership of
-the land any more than of the air or water. Pretended ownership
-is another name for a usurpation. But the elements, unused, are
-valueless. Labour applied to them yields results, and these are
-valuable, consequently wealth; the net results after subsisting the
-people are the accumulated wealth of the world, and there is no
-other wealth.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>MONEY THE ROOT OF ALL EVIL.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>If every person were to produce all the different things he needs
-or wants, there would be no use for money, and the people would
-escape the curses that follow in its trail, but experience taught
-labourers that it was an economy for each to labour in some
-special way, and to exchange his surplus products for those of others
-labouring in different ways. Besides, the different climates produce
-different commodities, of each of which all other climates require a
-share. Out of these facts came agencies for effecting exchanges—money,
-the merchant and commerce. In their origin and normal
-functions they are the agents, the servants of labour; but when
-from exchanging the products of labour they grew into speculating
-in these products, then they assumed abnormal functions, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>became the masters of labour. It must be seen, therefore, that
-the only legitimate method by which wealth can increase, is by
-adding to itself the net results of labour; indeed that is the only
-way in which it can increase. It must also be clear that these results
-belong <i>in toto</i> to their producers, since, if nothing were
-exchanged save equivalents, these results could never pass from
-the hands of their producers. But by permitting the representatives
-of wealth—money—to have the power to increase, the makers
-of money have been able to filch all the net earnings from labour,
-and as a result of this, most of the accumulated wealth of the
-world is in the hands of the makers of money instead of in those
-of the makers of wealth. This may be legal, but can never be
-made just. Had the labourers been let alone they would have
-continued to produce and exchange their commodities among
-themselves without any trouble, and they could have always maintained
-themselves comfortably. But the “middlemen”—their
-agents—conceived, constructed and thrust upon them a vicious
-system of money, by which they are forced to pay tribute on everything
-that passes from, or is received by them, which tribute
-amounts to the total net products of all the industries.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>THE PRIVATE BANKING SYSTEM.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>The system of private or corporate banking is an example in
-point. Why do individuals want a gold basis upon which to issue
-currency? To get the privilege to levy interest on many times as
-much currency as they have capital invested. A bank with an
-actual capital of $100,000 in gold could issue $300,000 in currency,
-all which it could loan out together with nearly all the
-deposits that it could secure, which, in some instances, have been
-known to amount to ten times the capital. Why should not a class
-of men, if the people are blind enough to let them do it, speculate
-upon the credulity of the public through the idea that they are
-rendering a public service? Why should they not desire to
-“bank,” when by banking they can receive interest on $1,000,000,
-when otherwise they could collect it upon $100,000 only? The
-same idea is the inspiration of national banking, and of those who
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>oppose a national currency. The banks bought, say $100,000 of
-United States bonds from the Government for $60,000. These
-bonds they deposited with the treasurer, and the people were required
-to pay $6000 a year interest on them, while the banks
-received from the Government $100,000 in national bank currency
-with which they were set afloat. These notes were loaned to the
-people, who again paid an interest on the same capital of $6000,
-or 20 per cent. per annum—$12,000 on $60,000; and yet the bank
-men have made the people think that they are offering them great
-accommodations. “Oh,” says the National Bank legislator, “we
-must get rid of these abominable, depreciated, irredeemable greenbacks,
-and make room for more national banknotes.” Do you
-know for what that legislation is bidding? He wants, if he has
-not already got it,—from some national bank man in his district,
-or else he has an interest in some bank. What is the security of
-national bank notes? United States bonds deposited in the
-Treasury. What is the security of the bonds? The public faith
-of the United States. What is the security of the greenbacks?
-The public faith of the United States. What difference in this respect,
-then, is there between national bank notes and greenbacks?
-None. Then as a currency there is this difference between the
-bank notes and greenbacks: If greenbacks were to take the place
-of the bank notes, the bank men would not get 20 per cent. interest
-on their capital, and the privilege of receiving and loaning the
-deposits of the people.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But look at it in another light. Suppose the security of the
-national bank notes were their own capital instead of the bonds,
-who would not prefer to trust the faith of the United States, rather
-than that of any individual in these times of Credit Mobilers,
-Tweed and whiskey rings? Then, again, why should individuals
-furnish the circulating medium of the people, when the people can
-furnish it themselves and save the expense? $1,000,000,000 is as
-small an amount of currency of all kinds as will transact the business
-of the country properly. Why should not the $60,000,000,
-which the people would have to pay the banks for interest on this,
-be paid to the Government for greenbacks? And more! Why
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>should not all the interest that is now paid to individuals and
-banks for private loans, be paid to the Government? It is estimated
-that the average amount of private loans for the whole
-country is not less than $5,000,000,000 upon which, at even 6 per
-cent. interest, the people are taxed $300,000,000. Is there any valid
-reason why the Government should not loan this money and receive
-this interest? Yes, for if it did, the rich could not live in
-luxurious idleness, while the poor are obliged to labour twice the
-natural time to subsist the world.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>WHY DO THE PEOPLE PAY INTEREST?</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>Or still again: why should the people pay any interest at all on
-loans from themselves? Why should not their agent—the Government—when
-amply secured, freely loan the people all the money that
-they want for use? Suppose that the farmers and the manufacturers
-did not have to pay interest on the money that they are compelled
-to have to produce their crops and goods? Don’t you see that
-they could compete successfully with the people of any country in
-the world, in the production of anything? Institute free money
-and there would be no necessity for a tariff for protection to keep
-out the cheaper goods of other nations. But on the contrary, this
-country would shortly be supplying other nations with the very
-things with which they are now supplying us and thereby crippling
-our manufactures and productions. Besides, all the people would
-be constantly employed, prices would be low, every comfort and
-even luxury abundant and in the reach of all, and thrift would
-replace stagnation everywhere. Plenty of money, plenty of work
-and plenty of everything that the ingenuity and strength of man
-can make, are the most favourable conditions for the masses; while
-just the reverse is true for the privileged classes. But why, since
-the former class outnumbers the latter, as five to one, do not the
-former have all things their own way in this country where the
-majority rule? Ask the masses this, and they can make no reply.
-But it is because the superior intelligence and tact of the minority
-enable them to concoct schemes by which, without seeming to do
-so, they reduce the majority to actual, though mostly unconscious
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>servitude; making them pay, first, all the interest on the public
-and private debts; next, all the expenses of the national, state,
-county and municipal governments; and next, obtain their own
-support and the increase of their wealth from them. Do you think
-that I overstate this? I think I can make it so clear that you
-cannot doubt it; and if I do, will you not think differently of the
-toiling masses than you have thought of them heretofore? At the
-beginning of any year take the amount of real wealth in the hands
-of the non-producers. During the year the governments continue,
-the taxes are gathered and the expenses are paid: your debts,
-your expenses and all; the producers have continued to labour as
-usual, and at the end of the year find themselves just where they
-were at its beginning; but the property of the wealthy classes has
-increased about three per cent. for the whole country. And while
-the latter class has become fewer in numbers and richer individually,
-the former has increased in numbers and become poorer individually.
-Now these are the facts, and with them before them who
-will pretend to say that the class who have not produced anything
-have added to the aggregate wealth? Whence has come
-this increase of wealth? From the wealth producers, from the
-labouring classes and from no other source. Industry being the
-sole source of wealth, it could have come from no other source.
-Hence let the non-producer get his increase by whatever strategy,
-it comes in some channel directly from the producer. This may
-be done by interest, by speculation, by sharp trades, by profits;
-but let it be by which it may, the producer has to pay the bill.
-In other words, every addition that is made to the wealth of non-producers
-is so made at the expense of the producers, the former
-having so much more than they had which they did not produce,
-and the latter having so much less than they did produce. This is
-self-evident, and all the sophistical argumentation that can ever be
-made cannot make it otherwise. The minority may attempt to
-explain it away; to show that this and that are so and so; but
-here are the facts staring them in the face, and they will no more
-down than would Banquo’s ghost for the guilty Thane. There
-they stand, an everlasting condemnation of the rule of the minority
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>and the servitude of the majority. Nothing can be clearer; nothing
-truer. And is it not a shame that it is true?</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>A PLEA FOR JUSTICE.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>You must not mistake me. I would not take a single comfort;
-nay, not a single luxury from those who have the most. I would
-not deprive anybody of anything they have or want; but I would
-so distribute the proceeds of labour that those who produce the
-comforts and luxuries should have their share of them; that they
-should have everything that the most favoured now enjoy. In
-this land of fruitfulness and plenty, if all the labour there is were
-constantly employed every man’s home might be a palace, and
-want and sorrow be banished from the country. Am I asking too
-much for those who have endured long years of toil and suffering
-to bring this beautiful country to its present condition? Am I
-asking what you are not willing that they shall have? Am I
-asking anything more than justice? If you grant them less than
-justice God Almighty will come some day, visit you and set the
-matter right, as he visited the South and liberated the downtrodden
-blacks. So if you do not heed my warning, remember
-that there is One whom you cannot ignore.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But there is still another way by which the industries are taxed
-in favour of the non-producers. The railroads, which ought to be,
-and which, managed properly, would be, a great advantage to the
-industries, are now at once their blessing and their curse. There
-are now 75,000 miles of railways in the country, built at a cost of
-$4,658,208,630: their earnings are $404,000,000 annually. But
-here is where the people are hoodwinked. This sum does
-not begin to represent the actual amount paid by the people for
-fare and freights. Almost the whole of the freighting is done by
-“lines”—the Red Line, the Blue Line, the White Star Line, and
-a hundred others, all which have special contracts with the railroads
-to carry freights at just a living rate, while the lines charge
-the people all that they can stand to pay, the difference in these
-two sums going into the pockets of the owners of the lines. And
-who are they? The owners, managers and officers of the railroads
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>who resort to this to blind the people’s eyes about the profits of
-railroading, which they could not otherwise conceal, because they
-are obliged to make annual exhibits. But the lines carry off the
-profits, while the operating expenses of the roads, their interests
-and dividends are left for the exhibits. If the companies made 20,
-30 or 50 per cent. dividends, the people would not stand it:
-but the managers play upon them with their lines and blind their
-eyes while they pocket the profits.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>THE RAILROAD SYSTEM.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>Then again, there is the system by which the railroads are built,
-which is little less than a gigantic swindle. Shrewd persons discover
-places where railroads may be built. They obtain charters
-and the rights of way, and get the towns along the lines either to
-issue or endorse bonds and give them stock in the roads for this.
-They sell the bonds to themselves at tremendous discounts and
-build the roads, themselves taking the contracts at extravagant
-prices, and when done begin to operate them. Of course the
-earnings are not sufficient to pay the operating expenses and the
-interest, to say nothing about dividends to the stockholders. They
-were never intended to be. So after a few defalcations of the
-interest on the bonds, they come in and foreclose under the
-mortgages and sell out the stockholders and buy in the roads and
-thus come into their possession built free of cost to themselves.
-Can such processes be rightly called anything less than swindles?
-They may be called by some other name, but they still have the
-odour of a swindle about them. And yet our best men engage in
-such schemes and call them honourable. To speak vulgarly, this
-is one of Uncle Sammy Tilden’s best holds. Is it any wonder that
-there is so much knavery and trickery among the common classes
-upon a small scale, when they have such examples set them by the
-upper classes on gigantic scales? or is it any wonder that the
-public morals are at so low an ebb? So, examine where we may
-into the schemes for the accommodation of the public, we find
-them to be vampires sucking its life.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>How long do the railroad men imagine that the people will endure
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>their exactions? Should they not know that their scheming will
-have to come to an end soon? Then why do they not act the
-part of wise men, and anticipate its coming in time to save themselves?
-If they do not, the people will sooner or later take the
-roads from them. It may be said that there is no constitutional
-or legal way in which this can be done, and they may rest upon
-this as secure protection. But I would recall the words of Charles
-Sumner, “Anything that is for the public good is constitutional,”
-and warn them not to rely upon so slim protection. This was the
-argument of King George and of slavery; but it failed them both,
-as it will fail every wrong that relies upon it. The people and the
-public welfare always triumph in the end; and the longer the
-triumph is delayed, the more fearful is the recompense for those
-who stand in its way.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>THE FEAR OF COMMUNISM.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>But it may be objected that all this tends towards communism.
-Only bigots and the unthinking are frightened by a name or a
-shadow from an examination into anything. Perhaps at first
-it will create surprise when I tell you that the only really good
-institutions that we have are purely communistic. The public
-highways are a perfect illustration of communism. They are constructed
-and maintained at the public expense for the public benefit.
-All grades of people meet upon them on an equality, and yet
-no one either loses his identity in the mass or is deprived of any of
-his private rights, or of any of his personalities. But the principles
-upon which the industries are conducted and that govern their relations
-to wealth, the poor man who owns no property, would have
-no right to use the highways. The same is true of the public
-schools. The children of the rich, who, it is falsely pretended, pay
-the taxes to support the schools, and the children of the poor there
-meet upon an equality. The schools are not a public necessity,
-they are only a public good. Who will pretend to say that they
-are not an improvement on the old system, of every family conducting
-its own education, or of a few families combining to do so?
-Everybody recognises the public advantage of a communal basis
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>for the education of all the children; recognises that the public
-good demands that the community shall not only provide school
-privileges, but shall insist on every child having the benefit of them,
-not for the good of the child so much, as for the community’s own
-good. Now this is communism. Why are you not frightened at the
-communistic tendencies of the public schools? Because, without
-thinking them to be communistic, you have adopted them and
-found them to be good.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Next is the post-office—a still better illustration in an industrial
-sense. Here the Government conducts the business of the people.
-If the system were maintained wholly instead of partially from the
-public treasury, it would be purely communistic. Is there anyone
-who is prepared to say that the postal system is not an improvement
-on the transmission of letters by private enterprise? And
-yet nobody is affrighted at the communistic character of the
-modern post-office. Suppose that this system were extended to the
-transportation of everything that is interchanged among the people,
-have we not a right to assume that the same beneficent results
-that have followed the development of the public mails would also
-follow there? We have not only the right to assume, but we have
-the reason to know that it would, and that the railroad question
-and railroad wars would be for ever settled by such an advance
-towards communism, and an immense stride be made towards the
-organization of the industries as a whole; and this is what we have
-done industrially.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>THE ELEMENTS OF OUR POPULATION.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is an instructive lesson to analyse the population of the
-country, to resolve it into the several classes. First, from the
-44,000,000, there are to be taken the classes that count for nothing—the
-Indians, the Chinese, and the women, for though they are
-permitted to live in the country, they form no part of the sovereignty.
-“They are,” as Justice Carter asserted when endeavouring
-to prove that women are not entitled to the ballot, “citizens in
-whom citizenship is dormant.” In round numbers these classes
-are 23,000,000. Of the remaining 21,000,000, 11,000,000 are
-adults, who are the sovereignty, and who conduct the Government.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>Of these 3,000,000 are farmers; 2,000,000 are manufacturers,
-mechanics, miners, and lumbermen; 1,000,000 are unskilled
-labourers; 1,000,000 are merchants of all kinds, including
-dispensers of leaf and liquid damnation; 1,000,000 are gentlemen
-of ease who live by their wits—their sharpness and shrewdness—bond-holders,
-money-lenders, landlords, gamblers, confidence men,
-etc., etc.; 500,000 are clerks; 250,000 are permanent invalids;
-200,000, criminals; 100,000, paupers; 100,000, insane; 100,000,
-weakminded; 100,000, professional teachers; 100,000, employes of
-the national Government; 100,000, of the State, county and municipal
-Governments; 90,000, physicians; 60,000, ministers; 50,000,
-lawyers, and 50,000, editors and professional writers and actors. A
-large part of the property of the farmers is mortgaged to the
-money-lenders, and the same is true of the manufacturers, while
-the liabilities of the merchants exceed their assets. So, really, the
-5th class—the gentlemen of ease—either own or else hold mortgages
-on the whole property of the country. It is said that the
-curse of England is that 3&thinsp;4ths of its property is owned by forty
-families. How much less is true of this country? Can such a
-state of injustice as this continue? And if it cannot, what shall take
-its place? It is time that those who hold the wealth, should, for
-their own sake, be asking this question seriously, unless they would
-incur the risk of having it answered for them, as the same was
-answered in France in ’93. Public injustice, unless remedied
-peaceably, always has terminated in revolution; and it will continue
-so to terminate as long as it is not remedied in a wiser way
-by those who have the power to do it.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>WHAT SHOULD BE DONE?</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>If it were to be asked what should be done at once to remedy
-the present exigencies of suffering labour, I will answer what I
-would do had I the power. I would first abolish legal interest and
-make it a crime as the Bible does to take usury in any form. I
-would stop the payment of interest of the public debt and use the
-money to set the unemployed and starving labourers at work on
-internal improvements, and should be justified by the people for
-doing so; because it would be right to prevent widespread suffering
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>and revolution at the expense of such a step; I would build the
-Pacific railroads north and south for the people and not give them
-to individuals, as was the case with those already built; I would
-construct immense workshops in every State in which the skilled
-labour of both sexes might be utilised when otherwise unemployed,
-because every day that any labourer is idle is a loss to the prospective
-wealth of the country; which fact is the condemnation of
-the policy of throwing men out of employment whenever business
-is depressed. Every labourer thus made idle adds to the general
-distress, because from being a producer he becomes a consumer; I
-would abolish pauperism and crime by giving everybody a chance
-to work at his chosen occupation; but if he preferred to starve
-rather than to work I would let him starve; I would purge the
-country of rascals by removing the inducements to rascality; I
-would make it impossible for a dishonourable person to live in a
-community, by placing everybody upon his honour, and in this
-way abolish jails and penitentiaries, criminals and courts and
-lawyers; I would remove the protection of the law from debts, and
-leave them to stand or fall upon the honour or want of it in the
-contracting parties, the result of which would be that a failure to
-pay once would discredit one for all future time, and compel
-honesty as a necessity for existence, making it to the interests of
-the people to be honourable in all things; and this, in turn, would
-abolish all civil courts and lawyers with all their <i>attachés</i> and
-expenses. I would restore to the public the gold, silver, copper,
-iron, lead, coal, oil and salt lands and mines and work them for
-its benefit, and I would send everybody who should be found tampering
-with the public funds to the Dry Tortugus for life.
-Yes; had I the power, I would make both compulsory and voluntary
-idleness impossible, and wipe out the stain of millions starving
-idle in a land of plenty, capable of sustaining a thousand million
-people; and hush the wail of suffering that floats upon the winds
-from every section of this God-favoured land, but now reeling
-under the effects of vicious legislation; I would snatch the people
-from being pushed headlong into revolution, and restore to them
-the equal use of God’s free gifts to all His children.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>
- <h3 class='c007'>A LAW-GIVER NEEDED.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>This country having fallen into the errors to which I have referred;
-into the hands of mediocre and incompetent legislators, without even
-a single statesman among them all; into the times of small minds
-and smaller measures that do not look beyond the day in which
-they are proposed; into industrial, financial and commercial ruin,
-with one half the wealth-producing power starving in idleness and
-no one seeming even to think what the end of this must be; having
-fallen into all these ills, this country needs that a giant mind shall
-spring into its councils, or else among its legislators, a captain which
-shall be able to grasp the helm of the ship of state now floundering
-hopelessly in the trough of the industrial sea, and put her
-before the wind again; a mind that shall have the wisdom and the
-courage to show the puerility of those who occupy the posts of
-honour, and, by the mere force of will, lift them into the right
-path; show them that beneath the surface of that which they
-seem to think is peaceable enough, there is a raging, seething
-volcano ready at the slightest occasion to burst forth and
-overwhelm everything in its path; a master mind which shall compel
-Congress by active measures to guide its powers rather than by
-inaction to provoke an eruption. This country needs that God
-shall send a law-giver; one who shall understand what has
-led to the present situation; what the exigencies of the people
-demand, and who shall have the ability to propose and the power
-to enforce the needed remedies—a Lycurgus to give a new code of
-laws that shall be the incarnation of the principles of the Declaration
-of Independence, which alone of all principles have any
-influence to mould the people, and from which they draw the
-characteristics which distinguish them from the other nations of
-the earth; and a Bonaparte to sweep out of the way the accumulating
-<i>débris</i> of years of vicious legislation and in its place
-inaugurate that code; needs a Lycurgus with his code of laws; a
-Bonaparte with his genius to command, and, combined with these,
-the vehement power of a Demosthenes to rouse the people to a
-sense of the danger in which they stand and, whether they will or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>not, lead them through a peaceable, rather than permit them to
-plunge into a bloody, revolution. Let this be done, no matter in
-what form this power may come, and a change of greater magnitude
-for good to this people than that proposed by Lycurgus for
-the Spartans, or that instituted in France by Bonaparte, will be
-inaugurated here.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>But what has been done socially? Much of which I have not
-the time to speak, but this, as to what I would have for the social
-condition:—</p>
-
-<h3 class='c007'>WORDS TO WOMEN.</h3>
-
-<p class='c008'>If the evils of industry were removed a great many social ills
-would cease. For instance, if women were independent, industrial
-members of the community, they would never be forced into distasteful,
-ill-assorted or convenient marriages, which are the most
-fruitful of all the sources of vice and crime in children, and consequently
-in the community. But beyond the industrial and dependent
-relations of the sexes there are many purely social ills that as
-much as those of industry require a remedy. Marriage is regarded
-as a too frivolous matter; is rushed into and out of in a haste that
-shows utter ignorance or else a total disregard for its responsibilities,
-and as if it were an institution specially designed for the
-benefit of the selfish wishes and passions of the sexes. But to
-look at marriage in this light is to not see it at all in that of the
-public good, or ultimately, in that of individual happiness.
-Marriages that are based upon selfishness or passion can never
-result in anything save misery to all concerned. Men and women
-who cannot look above these interests, who do not recognize that
-these interests should be secondary; who, after finding that their
-personal feelings would lead them to marry, cannot coolly ask
-themselves, are we prepared to become God’s architects to create
-His images, and be governed by the truthful reply, are not fit to
-marry. Many have the idea that I am opposed to marriage, but
-nothing could be further from the truth. I am opposed to improper
-marriages only; to marriages that bring unhappiness to the
-married, and misery to their fruits; and such as do this, had I the
-power, I would prohibit. I would guard the door by which this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>state is entered with all the vigilance with which the young mother
-watches her first-born darling babe; I would have no one enter
-its precincts save on bended knee and with prayerful heart, as if
-approaching the throne of God; as if to enter there were to more
-than in any other way to give one’s self to the service of God. So
-strictly would I guard it that none who should once enter could
-ever wish to retrace their steps. I would make divorces an unknown
-thing by abolishing imprudent and ill-assorted marriages.
-I would make the stigma so great that woman should find it impossible
-to confront the world in a marriage for a home, for position,
-or for any reason save love alone; and I would have her who
-should sell her person to be degraded in marriage, as culpable, as
-guilty, as impure at heart, as she is held to be who sells it otherwise.
-I would put every influence of the community against impure
-relations and selfish purposes, in whatever form they might
-exist, and encourage honour, purity, virtue and chastity. I would
-take away from marriage the idea that it legally conveys the
-control of the person of the wife to the husband, and I would make
-her as much its guardian against improper use as she is supposed
-to be in maidenhood. It should be her own, sacredly, never to be
-desecrated by an unwelcome touch. I would make enforced commerce
-as much a crime in marriage as it is now out of it, and
-unwilling child-bearing a double crime. As the architects of
-humanity, I would hold mothers responsible for the character and
-perfection of their works; make them realize that they can make
-their children what they ought to be, every one of them God’s
-image in equality. I would have them come to know that their bodies
-are the temples of God, and that within their inner sanctuaries,
-within “the holy of holies” God performs his most marvellous
-creations; that it is there that God Himself dwells, there that He
-will make Himself manifest to man, and that every act that He
-does not inspire is sacrilege, is worship of the Evil One, while
-every other, is an offering of sweet incense to the Heavenly
-Father. I would have man so honour woman that an impure or
-improper thought, or a self desire other than a wish to bless her,
-could never enter in his heart, would have him hold her to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>the holy temple to which God has appointed him to be High
-Priest, as elaborately set forth by St. Paul in Hebrews, as the
-Garden of Eden into which the Lord God put him, “to dress it
-and to keep it,” forbidding him to eat of the fruit of the tree that
-stands in the midst of the garden; would have him awake to the
-consciousness that, by not so regarding her, he is repeating the sin
-of Adam, and by not compelling him to so regard her, she is
-repeating the sin of Eve; and that by these sins they are thrust
-out of the garden, and prevented from eating of the fruit of the
-tree of life and living forever; more than this, I would enlarge the
-sphere of parental responsibility so that they should be held
-accountable for the instruction of their children in all of the
-mysteries of sex, so that none could go into marriage in ignorance
-of the laws and uses of the reproductive functions. I would rob
-the subject of the mawkish sentimentality in which it is submerged,
-and make it a common and proper matter for earnest consideration
-and complete understanding. Indeed, I would make it a crime to
-enter marriage in ignorance of any of its possible duties and
-responsibilities; and twice a crime to bear improper children, for
-they who, to satisfy their own propensities, bring children into the
-world marked with the brand of Cain or Judas, are the worst kind
-of criminals. I would frown upon prostitution in every form; and
-make promiscuousness an abomination in the sight of man as it is
-in the sight of God; and I would drive out of the race the morbid
-passions that are consuming it. I would stop marrying until it
-should be no longer done in ignorance; and child-bearing until it
-could be done intelligently, so that every child might be a son or
-else a daughter of the living God. And I would have every
-woman remember the injunction of St. Paul, “Wives, submit
-yourselves unto your own husband as it is fit in the Lord,” but in
-no other way; and men, “Husbands, love your wives and be not
-bitter against them.” And if there be any other things let St.
-Paul also speak for me of them. “Whatsoever things are true,
-whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever
-things are of good report, if there be any virtue, if there be
-any praise, think on these things.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>
- <h2 class='c004'>NOTES.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>Lycurgus</span>—“considering education to be the most important and the noblest
-work of a law-giver, he began at the very beginning and regulated marriages and
-the birth of children.... He strengthened the bodies of the girls by
-exercise in running, wrestling, and hurling quoits or javelins, in order that their
-children might spring from a healthy source and so grow up strong, and that
-they themselves might have strength, so as easily to endure the pains of childbirth.
-He did away with all affectation of seclusion and retirement among the
-women, and ordained that the girls, no less than the boys, should go naked in processions,
-and dance and sing at festivals in the presence of the young men. The
-jokes which they made upon each man were sometimes of great value as reproofs
-for ill-conduct; while on the other hand, by reciting verses written in praise of
-the deserving, they kindled a wonderful emulation and thirst for distinction in
-the young men: for he who had been praised by the maidens for his valour went
-away congratulated by his friends; while on the other hand, the raillery which
-they used in sport or jest had as keen an edge as a serious reproof; because the
-kings and elders were present at these festivals as well as all the other citizens.
-This nakedness of the maidens had in it nothing disgraceful, as it was done
-modestly, not licentiously (as in ballet dances and music halls and ball-rooms of
-the present day), producing simplicity, and <i>teaching</i> the women to <i>value good health</i>,
-and to love honour and courage no less than the men. This it was that made
-them speak and think as we are told Gorgo, the wife of Leonidas, did. Some
-foreign lady, it seems, said to her, ‘You Laconian women are the only ones that
-rule men....’ She answered, ‘Yes; for we alone bring forth men....’
-They considered that if a child did not start in possession of health and strength,
-it was better for itself and for the State that it should not live at all.”—<cite>Plutarch’s
-Life of Lycurgus, Bohn’s Standard Library.</cite></p>
-
-<hr class='c010' />
-
-<p class='c009'>Lycurgus did not view children as belonging to their parents, but above all
-to the state; and therefore he wished his citizens to be born of the best possible
-parents; besides the inconsistency and folly which he noticed in the customs of
-the rest of mankind, who are willing to pay money, or use their influence with
-the owners of well-bred stock, to obtain a good breed of horses or dogs, while
-they lock up their women in seclusion and permit them to have children by none
-but themselves, even though they be mad, decrepit, or diseased; just as if the
-good or bad qualities of children did not depend entirely upon their parents, and
-did not affect their parents more than anyone else.... Adultery
-was regarded amongst them as an impossible crime.... The training
-of the Spartan youth continued till their manhood. No one was permitted to
-live according to his own pleasure, but they lived in the city as if in a camp,
-with a fixed diet and public duties, thinking themselves to belong not to themselves
-but to their country.... Lycurgus would not entrust Spartan
-boys to any <i>bought</i> or <i>hired servants</i> nor was each man allowed to bring up and
-educate his son as he chose, but as soon as they were seven years of age he
-himself received them from their parents, and enrolled them in companies. A
-superintendent of the boys was appointed, one of the best born and bravest of
-the state.... The boys were taught to compress much thought in few
-words; though Lycurgus made the iron-money of little value he made their
-speech have great value. One of his great reforms was the common dining-table....
-In Sparta, as was natural, lawsuits became extinct, together with
-money, as the people had neither excess nor deficiency, but were all equally well
-off, and enjoyed abundant leisure by reason of their simple habits.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
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-<div class='section ph2'>
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-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c011'>
- <div>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</div>
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