summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 05:28:49 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 05:28:49 -0700
commitb640ef9887c271a5348828ec1a03dbce3f1127c0 (patch)
tree4f43cba9c5e62a89f9ca47dfff40d79b35ceb624
initial commit of ebook 7066HEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--7066-h.zipbin0 -> 206069 bytes
-rw-r--r--7066-h/7066-h.htm9982
-rw-r--r--7066.txt9195
-rw-r--r--7066.zipbin0 -> 199668 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/pruta10.txt9248
-rw-r--r--old/pruta10.zipbin0 -> 203201 bytes
9 files changed, 28441 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/7066-h.zip b/7066-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9a08471
--- /dev/null
+++ b/7066-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/7066-h/7066-h.htm b/7066-h/7066-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..fac9c1e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/7066-h/7066-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,9982 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="us-ascii"?>
+
+<!DOCTYPE html
+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Under the Prophet in Utah, by Frank J. Cannon
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Under the Prophet in Utah, by
+Frank J. Cannon and Harvey J. O'Higgins
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Under the Prophet in Utah
+ The National Menace of a Political Priestcraft
+
+Author: Frank J. Cannon and Harvey J. O'Higgins
+
+Release Date: May 30, 2009 [EBook #7066]
+Last Updated: January 26, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK UNDER THE PROPHET IN UTAH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Schwan, Monique Cameron, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ UNDER THE PROPHET IN UTAH
+ </h1>
+ <h1>
+ The National Menace of a Political Priestcraft
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Frank J. Cannon
+ </h2>
+ <h4>
+ Formerly United States Senator from Utah
+ </h4>
+ <h3>
+ and
+ </h3>
+ <h2>
+ Harvey J. O'Higgins
+ </h2>
+ <h4>
+ Author "The Smoke-Eaters," "Don-a-Dreams," etc.
+ </h4>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> Note </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_INTR"> Introduction </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> Forward </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0001"> Chapter I. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;In
+ the Days of the Raid <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0002"> Chapter II.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;On A Mission to Washington <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0003"> Chapter III. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;Without A Country
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0004"> Chapter IV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;The
+ Manifesto <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0005"> Chapter V. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;On
+ the Road to Freedom <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0006"> Chapter VI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;The
+ Goal&mdash;And After <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0007"> Chapter VII.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;The First Betrayals <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0008">
+ Chapter VIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;The Church and the Interests <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0009"> Chapter IX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;At the Crossways <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> Chapter X. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;On the Downward Path
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0011"> Chapter XI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;The Will
+ of the Lord <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0012"> Chapter XII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;The
+ Conspiracy Completed <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0013"> Chapter XIII.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;The Smoot Exposure <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0014">
+ Chapter XIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;Treason Triumphant <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0015"> Chapter XV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;The Struggle For
+ Liberty <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0016"> Chapter XVI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;The
+ Price of Protest <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0017"> Chapter XVII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;The
+ New Polygamy <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0018"> Chapter XVIII. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;The
+ Prophet of Mammon <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0019"> Chapter XIX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;The
+ Subjects of the Kingdom <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0020"> Chapter XX.
+ </a>&nbsp;&nbsp; Conclusion <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ Note
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When Harvey J. O'Higgins was in Denver, in the spring of 1910, working
+ with Judge Ben B. Lindsey on the manuscript of "The Beast and the Jungle,"
+ for Everybody's Magazine, he met the Hon. Frank J. Cannon, formerly United
+ States Senator from Utah, and heard from him the story of the betrayal of
+ Utah by the present leaders of the Mormon Church. This story the editor of
+ Everybody's Magazine commissioned Messrs. Cannon and O'Higgins to write.
+ They worked on it for a year, verifying every detail of it from government
+ reports, controversial pamphlets, Mormon books of propaganda, and the
+ newspaper files of current record. It ran through nine numbers of the
+ magazine, and not so much as a successful contradiction was ever made of
+ one of the innumerable incidents or accusations that it contains. It is
+ here published in book form at somewhat greater length than the magazine
+ could print it. It is a joint work, but the autobiographic "I" has been
+ used throughout, because it is Mr. Cannon's personal narrative of his
+ personal experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_INTR" id="link2H_INTR">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Introduction
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ This is the story of what has been called "the great American despotism."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is the story of the establishment of an absolute throne and dynasty by
+ one American citizen over a half-million others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it is the story of the amazing reign of this one man, Joseph F. Smith,
+ the Mormon Prophet, a religious fanatic of bitter mind, who claims that he
+ has been divinely ordained to exercise the awful authority of God on earth
+ over all the affairs of all mankind, and who plays the anointed despot in
+ Utah and the surrounding states as cruelly as a Sultan and more securely
+ than any Czar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To him the Mormon people pay a yearly tribute of more than two million
+ dollars in tithes; and he uses that income, to his own ends, without an
+ accounting. He is president of the Utah branch of the sugar trust, and of
+ the local incorporation's of the salt trust; and he supports the
+ exaction's of monopoly by his financial absolutism, while he defends them
+ from competition by his religious power of interdict and excommunication.
+ He is president of a system of "company stores," from which the faithful
+ buy their merchandise; of a wagon and machine company from which the
+ Mormon farmers purchase their vehicles and implements; of life-insurance
+ and fire-insurance companies, of banking institutions, of a railroad, of a
+ knitting company, of newspapers, which the Mormon people are required by
+ their Church to patronize, and through which they are exploited,
+ commercially and financially, for the sole profit of the sovereign of Utah
+ and his religious court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He is the political Boss of the state, delivering the votes of his people
+ by revelation of the Will of God, practically appointing the United States
+ Senators from Utah&mdash;as he practically appoints the marshals, district
+ attorneys, judges, legislators, officers and administrators of law
+ throughout his "Kingdom of God on Earth"&mdash;and ruling the non-Mormons
+ of Utah, as he rules his own people, by virtue of his political and
+ financial partnership with the great "business interests" that govern and
+ exploit this nation, and his Kingdom, for their own gain, and his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He lives, like the Grand Turk, openly with five wives, against the
+ temporal law of the state, against the spiritual law of his Kingdom, and
+ in violation of his own solemn covenant to the country&mdash;which he gave
+ in 1890, in order to obtain amnesty for himself from criminal prosecution
+ and to help Utah obtain the powers of statehood which he has since
+ usurped. He secretly preaches a proscribed doctrine of polygamy as
+ necessary to salvation; he publicly denies his own teaching, so that he
+ may escape responsibility for the sufferings of the "plural wives" and
+ their unfortunate children, who have been betrayed by the authority of his
+ dogma. And these women, by the hundreds, seduced into clandestine marriage
+ relations with polygamous elders of the Church, unable to claim their
+ husbands&mdash;even in some cases disowning their children and teaching
+ these children to deny their parents&mdash;are suffering a pitiful
+ self-immolation as martyrs to the religious barbarism of his rule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Demanding unquestioning obedience in all things, as the "mouthpiece of the
+ Lord," and "sole vice-regent of God on Earth," he enforces his demands by
+ his religious, political and financial control of the faith, the votes and
+ the property of his fellow-citizens. He is at once&mdash;as the details of
+ this story show&mdash;"the modern 'money king,' the absolute political
+ Czar, the social despot and the infallible Pope of his Kingdom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ex-Senator Cannon not only exposes but accounts for and explains the
+ conditions that have made the Church-controlled government of Utah less
+ free, less of a democracy, a greater tyranny and more of a disgrace to the
+ nation than ever the corporation rule of Colorado was in the darkest
+ period of the Cripple Creek labor war. He shows the enemies of the
+ republic encouraging and profiting by the shame of Utah as they supported
+ and made gain of Colorado's past disgrace. He shows the piratical
+ "Interests," at Washington, sustaining, and sustained by, the
+ misgovernment of Utah, in their campaign of national pillage. He shows
+ that the condition of Utah today is not merely a local problem; that it
+ affects and concerns the people of the whole country; that it can only be
+ cured with their aid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The outside world has waited many years to hear the truth about the
+ Mormons; here it is&mdash;told with sympathy, with affection, by a man who
+ steadfastly defended and fought for the Mormon people when their present
+ leaders were keeping themselves carefully inconspicuous. The Mormon system
+ of religious communism has long been known as one of the most interesting
+ social experiments of modern civilization; here is an intimate study of
+ it, not only in its success but in the failure that has come upon it from
+ the selfish ambitions of its leaders. The power of the Mormon hierarchy
+ has been the theme of much imaginative fiction; but here is a story of
+ church tyranny and misgovernment in the name of God, that outrages the
+ credibilities of art. That such a story could come out of modern America&mdash;that
+ such conditions could be possible in the democracy today&mdash;is an
+ amazement that staggers belief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ II
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hon. Frank J. Cannon is the son of George Q. Cannon of Utah, who was First
+ Councillor of the Mormon Church from 1880 to 1901. After the death of
+ Brigham Young, George Q. Cannon's diplomacy saved the Mormon communism
+ from destruction by the United States government. It was his influence
+ that lifted the curse of polygamy from the Mormon faith. Under his
+ leadership Utah obtained the right of statehood; and his financial
+ policies were establishing the Mormon people in industrial prosperity when
+ he died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all these achievements the son shared with his father, and in some of
+ them&mdash;notably in the obtaining of Utah's statehood&mdash;he had even
+ a larger part than George Q. Cannon himself. When the Mormon communities,
+ in 1888, were being crushed by proscription and confiscation and the
+ righteous bigotries of Federal officials, Frank J. Cannon went to
+ Washington, alone&mdash;almost from the doors of a Federal prison&mdash;and,
+ by the eloquence of his plea for his people, obtained from President
+ Cleveland a mercy for the Mormons that all the diplomacies of the Church's
+ politicians had been unable to procure. Again, in 1890, when the Mormons
+ were threatened with a general disfranchisement by means of a test oath,
+ he returned to Washington and saved them, with the aid of James G. Blame,
+ on the promise that the doctrine and practice of polygamy were to be
+ abandoned by the Mormon Church; and he assisted in the promulgation and
+ acceptance of the famous "manifesto" of 1890, by which the Mormon Prophet,
+ as the result of a "divine revelation," withdrew the doctrine of polygamy
+ from the practice of the faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He organized the Republican party in Utah, and led it in the first
+ campaigns that divided the people of the territory on the lines of
+ national issues and freed them from the factions of a religious dispute.
+ He delivered to Washington the pledges of the Mormon leaders, by which the
+ emancipation of their people from hierarchical domination was promised and
+ the right of statehood finally obtained. He was elected the first United
+ States Senator from Utah, against the unwilling candidacy of his own
+ father, when the intrigues of the Mormon priests pitted the father against
+ the son and violated the Church's promise of non-interference in politics
+ almost as soon as it had been given.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was his voice, in the Senate, that helped to reawaken the national
+ conscience to the crimes of Spanish rule in Cuba, when the "financial
+ interests" of this country were holding the government back from any
+ interference in Cuban affairs. He was one of the leaders in Washington of
+ the first ill-fated "Insurgent Republican" movement against the control of
+ the Republican party by these same piratical "interests;" and he was the
+ only Republican Senator who stood to oppose them by voting against the
+ iniquitous Dingley tariff bill of 1897. He delivered the speech of
+ defiance at the Republican national convention of 1896, when four "Silver
+ Republican" Senators led their delegations out of that convention in
+ revolt. And by all these acts of independence he put himself in opposition
+ to the politicians of the Mormon Church, who were allying themselves with
+ Hanna and Aldrich, the sugar trust, the railroad lobby, and the whole
+ financial and commercial Plunderbund in politics that has since come to be
+ called "The System."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He returned to Utah to prevent the sale of a United States Senatorship by
+ the Mormon Church; and, though he was himself defeated for re-election, he
+ helped to hold the Utah legislature in a deadlock that prevented the
+ selection of a successor to his seat. He fought to compel the leaders of
+ the Church to fulfill the pledges which they had authorized him to give in
+ Washington when statehood was being obtained. After his father's death,
+ when these pledges began to be openly violated, he directed his attack
+ particularly against Joseph F. Smith, the new President of the Church, who
+ was principally responsible for the Church's breach of public faith.
+ Through the columns of the Salt Lake Tribune he exposed the treasonable
+ return to the practice of polygamy which Joseph F. Smith had secretly
+ authorized and encouraged. He opposed the election of Apostle Reed Smoot
+ to the United States Senate, as a violation of the statehood pledges. He
+ criticized the financial absolutism of the Mormon Prophet, which Smith was
+ establishing in partnership with "the Plunderbund." He was finally
+ excommunicated and ostracized, by his father's successors in power, for
+ championing the political and social liberties of the Mormon people whom
+ he had helped to save from destruction and whose statehood sovereignty he
+ had so largely obtained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the partnership of the Church and "the Interests" prevented the
+ expulsion of Apostle Smoot from the Senate, Senator Cannon withdrew from
+ Utah, convinced that nothing could be done for the Mormons so long as the
+ national administration sustained the sovereignty of the Mormon kingdom as
+ a co-ordinate power in this Republic. For the last few years he has been a
+ newspaper editor in Denver, Colorado&mdash;on the Denver Times and the
+ Rocky Mountain News&mdash;helping the reform movement in Colorado against
+ the corporation control of that state, and waiting for the opportunity to
+ renew his long fight for the Mormon people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the following narrative he returns to that fight. In fulfillment of a
+ promise made before he left Utah&mdash;and seeing now, in the new
+ "insurgency," the hope of freeing Utah from slavery to "the System"&mdash;he
+ here addresses himself to the task of exposing the treasons and tyrannies
+ of the Mormon Prophet and the consequent miseries among his people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the course of his exposition, he gives a most remarkable picture of the
+ Mormon people, patient, meek, and virtuous, "as gentle as the Quakers, as
+ staunch as the Jews." He introduces the world for the first time to the
+ conclaves of the Mormon ecclesiasts, explains the simplicity of some of
+ them, the bitterness of others, the sincerity of almost all&mdash;illuminating
+ the dark places of Church control with the understanding of a sympathetic
+ experience, and bringing out the virtues of the Mormon system as
+ impartially as he exposes its faults. He traces the degradation of its
+ communism, step by step and incident by incident, from its success as a
+ sort of religious socialism administered for the common good to its
+ present failure as a hierarchical capitalism governed for the benefit of
+ its modern "Prophet of Mammon" at the expense of the liberty, the
+ happiness, and even the prosperity, of its victims.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the first time in the history of the Mormon Church, there has arrived
+ a man who has the knowledge and the inclination to explain it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He does this fearlessly, as a duty, and without any apologies, as a public
+ right. "He is not, and never has been an official member of the Church, in
+ any sense or form," Joseph F. Smith, as President of the Church, testified
+ concerning him, at Washington in 1904; and though this statement is one of
+ the inspired Prophet's characteristic perversions of the truth, it covers
+ the fact that Senator Cannon has always opposed the official tyrannies of
+ the hierarchs. The present Mormon leaders accepted his aid in freeing
+ Utah, well aware of his independence. They profited by his success with a
+ more or less doubtful gratitude. They betrayed him promptly&mdash;as they
+ betrayed the nation and their own followers&mdash;as soon as they found
+ themselves in a position safely to betray. In this book he merely
+ continues an independence which he has always maintained, and replies to
+ secret and personal treason with a public criticism, to which he has never
+ hesitated to resort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He begins his story with the year 1888, and devotes the first chapters to
+ a depiction of the miseries of the Mormon people in the unhappy days of
+ persecution. He continues with the private details of the confidential
+ negotiations in Washington and the secret conferences in Salt Lake City by
+ which the Mormons were saved. He gives the truth about the political
+ intrigues that accompanied the grant of Utah's statehood, and he relates,
+ pledge by pledge, the covenants then given by the Mormon leaders to the
+ nation and since treasonably violated and repudiated by them. He explains
+ the progress of this repudiation with an intimate "inside" knowledge of
+ facts which the Mormon leaders now deny. And he exposes the horror of
+ conditions in Utah today as no other man in America could expose them&mdash;for
+ his life has been spent in combating the influences of which these
+ conditions are the result; and he understands the present situation as a
+ doctor understands the last stages of a disease which he has been for
+ years vainly endeavoring to check.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But aside from all this&mdash;aside from his exposure of the Mormon
+ despotism, his study of the degradation of a modern community, or his
+ secret history of the Church's dark policies in "sacred places"&mdash;he
+ relates a story that is full of the most astonishing curiosities of human
+ character and of dramatic situations that are almost mediaeval in their
+ religious aspects. He goes from interviews with Cleveland or Blame to
+ discuss American politics with men who believe themselves in direct
+ communication with God&mdash;who talk and act like the patriarchs of the
+ Old Testament&mdash;who accept their own thoughts as the inspiration of
+ the Holy Ghost, and deliver their personal decisions, reverently, as the
+ Will of the Lord. He shows men and women ready to suffer any martyrdom in
+ defense of a doctrine of polygamy that is a continual unhappiness and
+ cross upon them. He depicts the social life of the most peculiar sect that
+ has ever lived in a Western civilization. He writes&mdash;unconsciously,
+ and for the first time that it has ever been written&mdash;the naive,
+ colossal drama of modern Mormonism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ H. J. O'H. <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Forward
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ On the fourth day of January, 1896, the territory of Utah was admitted to
+ statehood, and the proscribed among its people were freed to the liberties
+ of American citizenship, upon the solemn covenant of the leaders of the
+ Mormon Church that they and their followers would live, thereafter,
+ according to the laws and institutions of the nation of which they were
+ allowed to become a part. And that gracious settlement of upwards of forty
+ years of conflict was negotiated through responsible mediators, was
+ endorsed by the good faith of the non-Mormons of Utah, and was sealed by a
+ treaty convention in which the high contracting parties were the American
+ Republic and the "Kingdom of God on Earth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I propose, in this narrative, to show that the leaders of the Mormon
+ Church have broken their covenant to the nation; that they have abused the
+ confidence of the Gentiles of Utah and betrayed the trust of the people
+ under their power, by using that power to prevent the state of Utah from
+ becoming what it had engaged to become. I propose to show that the people
+ of Utah, upraised to freedom by the magnanimity of the nation, are being
+ made to appear traitorous to the generosity that saved them; that the
+ Mormons of Utah are being falsely misled into the peculiar dangers from
+ which they thought they had forever escaped; that the unity, the
+ solidarity, the loyalty of these fervent people is being turned as a
+ weapon of offense against the whole country, for the greater profit of the
+ leaders and the aggrandizement of their power. I undertake, in fact, in
+ this narrative, to expose and to demonstrate what I do believe to be one
+ of the most direful conspiracies of treachery in the history of the United
+ States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not that I have anything in my heart against the Mormon people! Heaven
+ forbid! I know them to be great in their virtues, wholesome in their
+ relations, capable of an heroic fortitude, living by the tenderest
+ sentiments of fraternity, as gentle as the Quakers, as staunch as the
+ Jews. I think of them as a man among strangers thinks of the dearness of
+ his home. I am bound to them in affection by all the ties of life. The
+ smiles of neighborliness, the greetings of friends, all the familiar
+ devotion of brothers and sisters, the love of the parents who held me in
+ their arms by these I know them as my own people, and by these I love them
+ as a good people, as a strong people, as a people worthy to be strong and
+ fit to be loved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it is even through their virtue and by their very strength that they
+ are being betrayed. A human devotion&mdash;the like of which has rarely
+ lived among the citizens of any modern state&mdash;is being directed as an
+ instrument of subjugation against others and held as a means of oppression
+ upon the Mormons themselves. Noble when they were weak, they are being led
+ to ignoble purpose now that they have become strong. Praying for justice
+ when they had no power, now that they have gained power it is being abused
+ to ends of injustice. Their leaders, reaching for the fleshpots for which
+ these simple-hearted devotees have never sighed, have allied themselves
+ with all the predaceous "interests" of the country and now use the
+ superhuman power of a religious tyranny to increase the dividends of a
+ national plunder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the long years of misery when the Mormons of Utah were proscribed and
+ hunted, because they refused to abandon what was to them, at that, time, a
+ divine revelation and a confirmed article of faith, I sat many times in
+ the gallery of the Senate in Washington, and heard discussed new measures
+ of destruction against these victims of their own fidelity, and felt the
+ dome above me impending like a brazen weight of national resentment upon
+ all our heads. When, a few years later, I stood before the President's
+ desk in the Senate chamber, to take my oath of office as the
+ representative of the freed people of Utah in the councils of the nation,
+ I raised my eyes to my old seat of terror in the gallery, and pledged
+ myself, in that remembrance, never to vote nor speak for anything but the
+ largest measure of justice that my soul was big enough to comprehend. By
+ such engagement I write now, bound in a double debt of obligation to the
+ nation whose magnanimity then saved us and to the people whom I humbly
+ helped to save.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frank J. Cannon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ UNDER THE PROPHET IN UTAH
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter I. In the Days of the Raid
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ About ten o'clock one night in the spring of 1888, I set out secretly,
+ from Salt Lake City, on a nine-mile drive to Bountiful, to meet my father,
+ who was concealed "on the underground," among friends; and that night
+ drive, with its haste and its apprehension, was so of a piece with the
+ times, that I can hardly separate it from them in my memory. We were all
+ being carried along in an uncontrollable sweep of tragic events. In a sort
+ of blindness, like the night, unable to see the nearest fork of the road
+ ahead of us, we were being driven to a future that held we knew not what.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was with my brother Abraham (soon to become an apostle of the Mormon
+ Church), who had himself been in prison and was still in danger of arrest.
+ And there is something typical of those days in the recollection I have of
+ him in the carriage: silent, self-contained, and&mdash;when he talked&mdash;discussing
+ trivialities in the most calm way in the world. The whole district was
+ picketed with deputy marshals; we did not know that we were not being
+ followed; we had always the sense of evading patrols in an enemy's
+ country. But this feeling was so old with us that it had become a thing of
+ no regard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was something even more typical in the personality of our driver&mdash;a
+ giant of a man named Charles Wilcken&mdash;a veteran of the German army
+ who had been decorated with the Iron Cross for bravery on the field of
+ battle. He had come to Utah with General Johnston's forces in 1858, and
+ had left the military service to attach himself to Brigham Young. After
+ Young's death, my father had succeeded to the first place in his
+ affections. He was an elder of the Church; he had been an aristocrat in
+ his own country; but he forgot his every personal interest in his loyalty
+ to his leaders, and he stood at all times ready to defend them with his
+ life&mdash;as a hundred thousand others did!&mdash;for, though the Mormons
+ did not resist the processes of law for themselves, except by evasion,
+ they were prepared to protect their leaders, if necessary, by force of
+ arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With Wilcken holding the reins on a pair of fast horses at full speed, we
+ whirled past the old adobe wall (which the Mormons had built to defend
+ their city from the Indians) and came out into the purple night of Utah,
+ with its frosty starlight and its black hills&mdash;a desert night, a
+ mountain night, a night so vast in its height of space and breadth of
+ distance that it seemed natural it should inspire the people that breathed
+ it with freedom's ideals of freedom and all the sublimities of an eternal
+ faith. And those people&mdash;!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A more despairing situation than theirs, at that hour, has never been
+ faced by an American community. Practically every Mormon man of any
+ distinction was in prison, or had just served his term, or had escaped
+ into exile. Hundreds of Mormon women had left their homes and their
+ children to flee from the officers of law; many had been behind prison
+ bars for refusing to answer the questions put to them in court; more were
+ concealed, like outlaws, in the houses of friends. Husbands and wives,
+ separated by the necessities of flight, had died apart, miserably. Old men
+ were coming out of prison, broken in health. A young plural wife whom I
+ knew&mdash;a mere girl, of good breeding, of gentle life&mdash;seeking
+ refuge in the mountains to save her husband from a charge of "unlawful
+ cohabitation," had had her infant die in her arms on the road; and she had
+ been compelled to bury the child, wrapped in her shawl, under a rock, in a
+ grave that she scratched in the soil with a stick. In our day! In a
+ civilized state!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By Act of Congress, all the church property in excess of $50,000 had been
+ seized by the United States marshal, and the community faced the total
+ loss of its common fund. Because of some evasions that had been attempted
+ by the Church authorities&mdash;and the suspicion of more such&mdash;the
+ marshal had taken everything that he could in any way assume to belong to
+ the Church. Among the Mormons, there was an unconquerable spirit of
+ sanctified lawlessness, and, among the non-Mormons, an equally indomitable
+ determination to vindicate the law. Both were, for the most part, sincere.
+ Both were resolute. And both were standing in fear of a fatal conflict,
+ which any act of violence might begin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, the Mormons were being slowly but surely deprived of all civil
+ rights. All polygamists had been disfranchised by the bill of 1882, and
+ all the women of Utah by the bill of 1887. The Governor of the territory
+ was appointed by Federal authority, so was the marshal, so were the
+ judges, so were the United States Commissioners who had co-ordinate
+ jurisdiction with magistrates and justices of the peace, so were the
+ Election Commissioners. But the Mormons still controlled the legislature,
+ and though the Governor could veto all legislation he could initiate none.
+ For this reason it had been frequently proposed that the President should
+ appoint a Legislative Council to take the place of the elected
+ legislature; and bills were being talked of in Congress to effect a
+ complete disfranchisement of the whole body of the Mormon people by means
+ of a test oath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I did not then believe, and I do not now, that the practice of polygamy
+ was a thing which the American nation could condone. But I knew that our
+ people believed in it as a practice ordained, by a revelation from God,
+ for the salvation of the world. It was to them an article of faith as
+ sacred as any for which the martyrs of any religion ever died; and it
+ seemed that the nation, in its resolve to vindicate the supremacy of civil
+ government, was determined to put them to the point of martyrdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was with this prospect before us that we drove, that night, up the Salt
+ Lake valley, across a corner of the desert, to the little town of
+ Bountiful; and as soon as we arrived among the houses of the settlement, a
+ man stepped out into the road, from the shadows, and stopped us. Wilcken
+ spoke to him. He recognized us, and let us pass. As we turned into the
+ farm where my father was concealed, I saw men lurking here and there, on
+ guard, about the grounds. The house was an old-fashioned adobe farm-house;
+ the windows were all dark; we entered through the kitchen. And I entered,
+ let me say, with the sense that I was about to come before one of the most
+ able among men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To those who knew George Q. Cannon I do not need to justify that feeling.
+ He was the man in the hands of whose sagacity the fate of the Mormons at
+ that moment lay. He was the First Councillor of the Church, and had been
+ so for years. For ten years in Congress, he had fought and defeated the
+ proscriptive legislation that had been attempted against his people; and
+ Senator Hoar had said of him, "No man in Congress ever served a territory
+ more ably." He had been the intimate friend of Randall and Blame. As a
+ missionary in England he had impressed Dickens, who wrote of him in "An
+ Uncommercial Traveller." The Hon. James Bryce had said of him: "He was one
+ of the ablest Americans I ever met."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An Englishman, well-educated, a linguist, an impressive orator, a
+ persuasive writer, he had lived a life that was one long incredible
+ adventure of romance and almost miraculous achievement. As a youth he had
+ been sent by the Mormon leaders to California to wash out gold for the
+ struggling community; and he had sent back to Utah all the proceeds of his
+ labor, living himself upon the crudest necessaries of life. As a young man
+ he had gone as a Mormon missionary to the Hawaiian Islands, and finding
+ himself unable to convert the whites he had gone among the natives&mdash;starving,
+ a ragged wanderer&mdash;and by simple force of personality he had made
+ himself a power among them; so that in later years Napella, the famous
+ native leader, journeyed to Utah to consult with him upon the affairs of
+ that distressed state, and Queen Liluokalani, deposed and in exile,
+ appealed to him for advice. He had edited and published a Mormon newspaper
+ in San Francisco; and he had long successfully directed the affairs of the
+ publishing house in Salt Lake City which he owned. He was a railroad
+ builder, a banker, a developer of mines, a financier of a score of
+ interests. He combined the activities of a statesman, a missionary, and a
+ man of business, and seemed equally successful in all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But none of these things&mdash;nor all of them&mdash;contained the total
+ of the man himself. He was greater than his work. He achieved by the force
+ of a personality that was more impressive than its achievements. If he had
+ been royalty, he could not have been surrounded with a greater deference
+ than he commanded among our people. A feeling of responsibility for those
+ dependent on him, such as a king might feel, added to a sense of divine
+ guidance that gave him the dignity of inspiration, had made him majestical
+ in his simple presence; and even among those who laughed at divine
+ inspiration and scorned Mormonism as the *Uitlander scorned the faith of
+ the Boer, his sagacity and his diplomacy and his power to read and handle
+ men made him as fearfully admired as any Oom Paul in the Transvaal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I entered the low-ceilinged, lamplit room in which he sat, he rose to
+ meet me, and all rose with him, like a court. He embraced me without
+ effusion, looking at me silently with his wise blue eyes that always
+ seemed to read in my face&mdash;and to check up in his valuation of me&mdash;whatever
+ I had become in my absence from his regard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had a countenance that at no time bore any of the marks of the passions
+ of men; and it showed, now, no shadow of the tribulations of that troubled
+ day. His forehead was unworried. His eyes betrayed none of the anxieties
+ with which his mind must have been busied. His expression was one of
+ resolute stern contentment with all things&mdash;carrying the composure of
+ spirit which he wished his people to have. If I had been agitated by the
+ urgency of his summons to me, and he had wished to allay my anxiety at
+ once, the sight of his face, as he looked at me, would have been
+ reassurance enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At a characteristic motion of the hand from him, the others left us. We
+ sat down in the "horsehair" chairs of a well-to-do farmer's parlor&mdash;furnished
+ in black walnut, with the usual organ against one wall, and the usual
+ marble-topped bureau against the other. I remember the "store" carpet, the
+ mortuary hair-wreaths on the walls, the walnut-framed lithographs of the
+ Church authorities and of the angel Moroni with "the gold plates;" and
+ none of these seem ludicrous to me to remember. They express, to me, in
+ the recollection, some of the homely and devout simplicity of the people
+ whose community life this man was to save.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He talked a few minutes, affectionately, about family matters, and then&mdash;straightening
+ his shoulders to the burden of more gravity&mdash;he said: "I have sent
+ for you, my son, to see if you cannot find some way to help us in our
+ difficulties. I have made it a matter of prayer, and I have been led to
+ urge you to activity. You have never performed a Mission for the Church,
+ and I have sometimes wondered if you cared anything about your religion.
+ You have never obeyed the celestial covenant, and you have kept yourself
+ aloof from the duties of the priesthood, but it may have been a
+ providential overruling. I have talked with some of the brethren, and we
+ feel that if relief does not soon appear, our community will be scattered
+ and the great work crushed. The Lord can rescue us, but we must put forth
+ our own efforts. Can you see any light?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I replied that I had already been in Washington twice, on my own
+ initiative, conferring with some of his Congressional friends. "I am
+ still," I said, "of the opinion I expressed to you and President Taylor
+ four years ago. Plural marriage must be abandoned or our friends in
+ Washington will not defend us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four years before, when I had offered that opinion, President Taylor had
+ cried out: "No! Plural marriage is the will of God! It's apostasy to
+ question it!" And I paused now with the expectation that my father would
+ say something of this sort. But, as I was afterwards to observe, it was
+ part of his diplomacy, in conference, to pass the obvious opportunity of
+ replying, and to remain silent when he was expected to speak, so that he
+ might not be in the position of following the lead of his opponent's
+ argument, but rather, by waiting his own time, be able to direct the
+ conversation to his own purposes. He listened to me, silently, his eyes
+ fixed on my face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Senator Vest of Missouri," I went on, "has always been a strong opponent
+ of what he considered unconstitutional legislation against us, but he
+ tells me he'll no longer oppose proscription if we continue in an attitude
+ of defiance. He says you're putting yourselves beyond assistance, by
+ organized rebellion against the administration of the statutes." And I
+ continued with instances of others among his friends who had spoken to the
+ same purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I had done, he took what I had said with a gesture that at once
+ accepted and for the moment dismissed it; and he proceeded to a larger
+ consideration of the situation, in words which I cannot pretend to recall,
+ but to an effect which I wish to outline&mdash;because it not only
+ accounts for the preservation of the Mormon people from all their dangers,
+ but contains a reason why the world might have wished to see them
+ preserved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mormons at this time had never written a line on social reform&mdash;except
+ as the so-called "revelations" established a new social order&mdash;but
+ they had practiced whole volumes. Their community was founded on the three
+ principles of co-operation, contribution, and arbitration. By co-operation
+ of effort they had realized that dream of the Socialists, "equality of
+ opportunity"&mdash;not equality of individual capacity, which the
+ accidents of nature prevent, but an equal opportunity for each individual
+ to develop himself to the last reach of his power. By contribution by
+ requiring each man to give one-tenth of his income to a common fund&mdash;they
+ had attained the desired end of modern civilization, the abolition of
+ poverty, and had adjusted the straps of the community burden to the
+ strength of the individual to bear it. By arbitration, they had effected
+ the settlement of every dispute of every kind without litigation; for
+ their High Councils decided all sorts of personal or neighborhood disputes
+ without expense of money to the disputants. The "storehouse of the Lord"
+ had been kept open to fill every need of the poor among "God's people,"
+ and opportunities for self help had been created out of the common fund,
+ so that neither unwilling idleness nor privation might mar the growth of
+ the community or the progress of the individual.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Joseph Smith had gone further. Daring to believe himself the earthly
+ representative of Omnipotence, whose duty it was to see that all had the
+ rights to which he thought them entitled, and assuming that a woman's
+ chief right was that of wifehood and maternity, he had instituted the
+ practice of plural marriage, as a "Prophet of God," on the authority of a
+ direct revelation from the Almighty. It was upon this rock that the whole
+ enterprise, the whole experiment in religious communism, now threatened to
+ split. Not that polygamy was so large an incident in the life of the
+ community&mdash;for only a small proportion of the Mormons were living in
+ plural marriage. And not that this practice was the cardinal sin of
+ Mormonism&mdash;for among intelligent men, then as now, the great
+ objection to the Church was its assumption of a divine authority to hold
+ the "temporal power," to dictate in politics, to command action and to
+ acquit of responsibility. But polygamy was the offense against
+ civilization which the opponents of Mormonism could always cite in order
+ to direct against the Church the concentrated antagonism of the
+ governments of the Western world. And my father, in authorizing me to
+ proceed to Washington as a sort of ambassador of the Church, evidently
+ wished to impress upon me the larger importance of the value of the social
+ experiment which the Mormons had, to this time, so successfully advanced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It would be a cruel waste of human effort," he said, "if, after having
+ attained comfort in these valleys&mdash;established our schools of art and
+ science&mdash;developed our country and founded our industries&mdash;we
+ should now be destroyed as a community, and the value of our experience
+ lost to the world. We have a right to survive. We have a duty to survive.
+ It would be to the profit of the nation that we should survive."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in order to survive, it was necessary to obtain some immediate
+ mitigation of the enforcement of the laws against us. The manner in which
+ they were being enforced was making compromise impossible, and the men who
+ administered them stood in the way of getting a favorable hearing from the
+ powers of government that alone could authorize a compromise. It was
+ necessary to break this circle; and my father went over the names of the
+ men in Washington who might help us. I could marvel at his understanding
+ of these men and their motives, but we came to no plan of action until I
+ spoke of what had been with me a sort of forlorn hope that I might appeal
+ to President Cleveland himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My father said thoughtfully: "What influence could you, a Republican, have
+ with him? It's true that your youth may make an appeal&mdash;and the fact
+ that you're pleading for your relatives, while not yourself a polygamist.
+ But he would immediately ask us to abandon plural marriage, and that is
+ established by a revelation from God which we cannot disregard. Even if
+ the Prophet directed us, as a revelation from God, to abandon polygamy,
+ still the nation would have further cause for quarrel because of the
+ Church's temporal rule. No. I can make no promise. I can authorize no
+ pledge. It must be for the Prophet of God to say what is the will of the
+ Lord. You must see President Woodruff, and after he has asked for the will
+ of the Lord I shall be content with his instruction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, I do not wish to say&mdash;though I did then believe it&mdash;that
+ the First Councillor of the Mormon Church was prepared to have the
+ doctrine of plural marriage abandoned in order to have the people saved.
+ It is impossible to predicate the thoughts of a man so diplomatic, so
+ astute, and at the same time so deeply religious and so credulous of all
+ the miracles of faith. He did believe in Divine guidance. He was sincere
+ in his submission to the "revelations" of the Prophet. But, in the
+ complexity of the mind of man, even such a faith may be complicated with
+ the strategies of foresight, and the priest who bows devoutly to the
+ oracle may yet, even unconsciously, direct the oracle to the utterance of
+ his desire. And if my father was&mdash;as I suspected&mdash;considering a
+ recession from plural marriage, he had as justification the basic
+ "revelation," given through "Joseph the Prophet," commanding that the
+ people should hold themselves in subjection to the government under which
+ they lived, "until He shall come Whose right it is to rule."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We talked till midnight, in the quiet glow of the farmer's lamp-light,
+ discussing possibilities, considering policies, weighing men; and then we
+ parted&mdash;he to betake himself to whatever secure place of hiding he
+ had found, and I to return to Ogden where I was then editing a newspaper.
+ I was only twenty-nine years old, and the responsibility of the
+ undertaking that had been entrusted to me weighed on my mind. I waited for
+ a summons to confer with President Woodruff, but none came. Instead, my
+ brother brought me word from the President that I must be "guided by the
+ spirit of the Lord;" and, finally, my father sent me orders to consult the
+ Second Councillor, Joseph F. Smith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joseph F. Smith! Since the death of the founder of the Mormon Church,
+ there have been three men pre-eminent in its history: Brigham Young, who
+ led the people across the desert into the Salt Lake Valley and established
+ them in prosperity there; George Q. Cannon, who directed their policies
+ and secured their national rights; and Joseph F. Smith, who today rules
+ over that prosperity and markets that political right, like a Sultan. Of
+ all these, Smith is, to the nation now, of most importance&mdash;and
+ sinisterly so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No Mormon in those years, I think, had more hate than Smith for the United
+ States government; and surely none had better reasons to give himself for
+ hate. He had the bitter recollection of the assassination of his father
+ and his uncle in the jail of Carthage, Illinois; he could remember the
+ journey that he had made with his widowed mother across the Mississippi,
+ across Iowa, across the Missouri, and across the unknown and desert West,
+ in ox teams, half starved, unarmed, persecuted by civilization and at the
+ mercy of savages; he could remember all the toils and hardships of pioneer
+ days "in the Valley;" he had seen the army of '58 arrive to complete, as
+ he believed, the final destruction of our people; he had suffered from all
+ the proscriptive legislation of "the raid," been outlawed, been in exile,
+ been in hiding, hunted like a thief. He had been taught, and he firmly
+ believed, that the Smiths had been divinely appointed to rule, in the name
+ of God, over all mankind. He believed that he&mdash;ordained a ruler over
+ this world before ever the world was&mdash;had been persecuted by the hate
+ and wickedness of men. He believed it literally; he preached it literally;
+ he still believes and still preaches it. I did not then sympathize with
+ this point of view, any more than I do now; but I did sympathize with him
+ in the hardships that he had already endured and in the trials that he was
+ still enduring&mdash;in common with the rest of us. The bond of community
+ persecution intensified my loyalty. I felt for him almost as I felt for my
+ own father. I went to him with the young man's trust in age made wise by
+ suffering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had been directed to call on him in the President's offices, in Salt
+ Lake City, where he was concealed, for the moment, under the name of
+ "Mack"&mdash;the name that he used "on the underground"&mdash;and I went
+ with my brother, late at night, to see him there. The President's offices
+ were at that time in a little one-story plastered house that had been
+ built by Brigham Young between two of his famous residences, the "Beehive
+ House" and the "Lion House" (in which some twelve or fourteen of his wives
+ had lived). The three houses were within the enclosure of a high
+ cobblestone wall built by Brigham Young; and at night the great gate of
+ the wall was shut and locked. We hammered discreetly on its panels of
+ mountain pine, until a guard answered our knocking, recognized our voices
+ and admitted us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He's in there," he said, pointing to the darkened windows of the offices&mdash;toward
+ which he led us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He unlocked the front door&mdash;having evidently locked it when he went
+ to the gate&mdash;and he explained to a waiting attendant: "These brethren
+ have an appointment. They wish to see Brother Mack."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The attendant led us down a dimly-lighted hall, through the public offices
+ of the President into a rear room, a sort of retiring room, carpeted,
+ furnished with bookcases, chairs, a table. The window blinds had all been
+ carefully drawn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joseph F. Smith was waiting for us&mdash;a tall, lean, long-bearded man of
+ a commanding figure standing as if our arrival had stopped him in some
+ anxious pacing of the carpet. His overcoat and his hat had been thrown on
+ a chair. He greeted us with the air of one who is hurried, and sat down
+ tentatively; and as soon as we came to the question of my trip to
+ Washington, he broke out:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "These scoundrels here must be removed&mdash;if there's any way to do it.
+ They're trying to repeat the persecutions of Missouri and Illinois. They
+ want to despoil us of our heritage&mdash;of our families. I'm sick of
+ being hunted like a wild beast. I've done no harm to them or theirs. Why
+ can't they leave us alone to live our religion and obey the commandments
+ of God and build up Zion?" He had begun to stride up and down the floor
+ again, in a sort of driven and angry helplessness. "I thought Cleveland
+ would stop this damnable raid and make them leave us in peace&mdash;but
+ he's as bad as the rest. Can't they see that these carpet baggers are only
+ trying to rob us? Make them see that. The hounds! Sometimes it seems to me
+ that the Lord is letting these iniquities go on so that the nation may
+ perish in its sins all the sooner!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sneered at John W. Young who had gone to Washington for the Church. (I
+ had met Smith himself there, earlier in the year.) "I thought he'd
+ accomplish something," he said, "with his fashionable home and his&mdash;[**missing
+ text?**] He's using money enough! He's down there, taking things easy,
+ while the rest of us are driven from pillar to post." He attacked the
+ Federal authorities, Governor West, the "whole gang." He cried: "I love my
+ wives and my children&mdash;whom the Lord gave me. I love them more than
+ my life&mdash;more than anything in the world&mdash;except my religion!
+ And here I am, fleeing from place to place, from the wrath of the wicked&mdash;and
+ they're left in sorrow and suffering."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His face was pallid with emotion, and his voice came now hard with
+ exasperation against his enemies and now husky with a passionate affection
+ for his family&mdash;a man of fifty, graybearded, quivering in a nervous
+ transport of excitement that jerked him up and down the room,
+ gesticulating.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he had worn out his first anger of revolt, I brought the conversation
+ round to the question of polygamy, by asking him about a provisional
+ constitution for statehood which the non-polygamous Mormons had recently
+ adopted. It contained a clause making polygamy a misdemeanor. "I would
+ have seen them all damned," he said, "before I would have yielded it, but
+ I'm willing to try the experiment, if any good can come."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had, I gathered, no aversion to "deceiving the wicked," but he was
+ opposed to leading his people away from their loyalty to the doctrine of
+ plural marriage, by conceding anything that might weaken their faith in
+ it. And yet this impression may misrepresent him. He was too agitated, too
+ exasperated, for any serious reflection on the situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My brother had gone&mdash;to keep some other engagement&mdash;and I stayed
+ late, talking as long as Smith seemed to wish to talk. He rose at last and
+ "blessed" me, his hands on my head, in a return to some larger trust in
+ his religious authority; and I left him&mdash;with very doubtful and mixed
+ emotions. His natural violence and his lack of discipline had been matters
+ of common gossip among our people, and I had heard of them from childhood;
+ but I had supposed that tribulations would, by this time, have matured
+ him. There was something compelling in his unsoftened turbulence, but
+ nothing encouraging for me as a messenger of conciliation. I felt that
+ there would be no help come from him in my task, and I dropped him from my
+ reckoning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had made up my mind to a plan that was almost as desperate as the
+ conditions it sought to cure&mdash;a plan that was in some ways so absurd
+ that I felt like keeping it concealed for fear of ridicule&mdash;and I
+ went about my preparations for departure in a sort of hopeless hope. As
+ the train drew out from Ogden, I looked back at the mountains from my car
+ window, and saw again, in the spectacle of their power, the pathos of our
+ people&mdash;as if it were the nation of my worship that bulked there so
+ huge above the people of my love&mdash;and I, puny in my little efforts,
+ going out to plot an intercession, to appeal for a truce! It was almost as
+ if I were the son of a Confederate leader journeying to Washington, on the
+ eve of the Civil War, to attempt to stand between North and South and hold
+ back their opposing armies, single-handed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These are the things a man does when he is young.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter II. On A Mission to Washington
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I went discredited, as an envoy, by an incident of personal conflict with
+ the Federal authorities; and I wish to relate that incident before I
+ proceed any farther. I must relate it soon, because it came up for
+ explanation in one of my first interviews with President Cleveland; and I
+ wish to relate it now, because it was so typical of the day and the
+ condition from which we had to save ourselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the winter of 1885-6, the United States Marshals had been pursuing my
+ father from place to place with such determined persistence that it was
+ evident his capture was only a matter of time. We believed that if he were
+ arrested and tried before Chief Justice Zane&mdash;with District Attorney
+ Dickson and Assistant District Attorney Varian prosecuting&mdash;he would
+ be convicted on so many counts that he would be held in prison
+ indefinitely&mdash;that he might, in fact, end his days there. There was
+ the rumor of a boast, to this effect, made by Federal officers; and we
+ misunderstood them and their motives, in those days, sufficiently to
+ accept the unjust report as well-founded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My father, as First Councillor of the Church, had proposed to President
+ Taylor that every man who was living in plural marriage should surrender
+ himself voluntarily to the court and plead: "I entered into this covenant
+ of celestial marriage with a personal conviction that it was an order
+ revealed by our Father in Heaven for the salvation of mankind. I have kept
+ my covenant in purity. I believed that no constitutional law of the
+ country could forbid this practice of a religious faith. As the laws of
+ Congress conflict with my sense of submission to the will of the Lord, I
+ now offer myself, here, for whatever judgment the courts of my country may
+ impose." He believed that such a course would vindicate the sincerity of
+ the men who had engaged in polygamy and defied the law in an assumption of
+ religious immunity; and he believed that the world would pause to
+ reconsider its judgment upon us, if it saw thousands of men&mdash;the
+ bankers, the farmers, the merchants, and all the religious leaders of a
+ civilized community&mdash;marching in a mass to perform such an act of
+ faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But President Taylor was not prepared for a movement that would have
+ recommended itself better to the daring genius of Brigham Young. Taylor
+ had given himself into the custody of the officers of the law once&mdash;in
+ Carthage, Illinois&mdash;with Joseph Smith and his brother, Hyrum Smith;
+ and Taylor had been wounded by the mob that broke into the jail and shot
+ the Smiths to death. This, perhaps, had cured him of any faith in the
+ protecting power of innocency. He decided against voluntary surrender; and
+ now that my father's liberty was so seriously threatened, he ordered him
+ to go either to Mexico or to the Sandwich Islands&mdash;his old mission
+ field&mdash;where he would be beyond the reach of the United States
+ authorities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My father believed that if he left Utah, his recession might tend to
+ placate the government and soften the severity of the prosecutions of the
+ Mormons; and accordingly, on the night of February 12, 1886, he boarded a
+ west-bound Central Pacific train at Willard. The Federal officers in some
+ way learned of it; he was arrested, on the train, at Humboldt Wells,
+ Nevada, and brought back to Utah. Near Promontory he fell from the steps
+ of the moving car, at night, in the midst of an alkali desert, and hurt
+ himself seriously. He was recaptured and brought to Salt Lake City on a
+ stretcher, in a special car, guarded by a squad of soldiers from Fort
+ Douglas, with loaded muskets, and a captain with a conspicuous sword. He
+ was taken to Judge Zane's chambers and placed under bonds of $25,000.
+ Immediately two bench warrants were issued by a United States
+ Commissioner, and these were served upon him while he lay on a mattress on
+ the floor of Zane's office. Two more bonds of $10,000 each were given. He
+ was then taken to his home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Later&mdash;(President Taylor still insisting that he must not stand
+ trial)&mdash;he disappeared again, "on the underground," and his bonds
+ were declared forfeited. But in the meantime, while the grand jury was
+ hearing testimony against him, one of the beloved women of his family was
+ called for examination, and District Attorney Dickson asked her some
+ questions that deeply wounded her. She returned home weeping. My brothers
+ and I felt that the questions had been needlessly offensive, and after an
+ indignant discussion of the matter, I undertook to remonstrate personally
+ with Mr. Dickson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If I had been as wise, then, as I sometimes think I am now, I should have
+ realized that a meeting between us was dangerous; that the feeling, on our
+ side at least, was too warm for calm remonstrances. And I should not have
+ taken with me a younger brother, about sixteen years old, with all the
+ hot-headedness of youth. Fortunately we did not go armed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We sought Dickson in the evening, at the Continental Hotel&mdash;the old,
+ adobe Continental with its wide porches and its lawn trees&mdash;and we
+ found him in the lobby. I asked him to step out on the porch, where I
+ might speak with him in private. He came without a moment's hesitation. He
+ was a big, handsome, black-bearded man in the prime of his strength.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We had scarcely exchanged more than a few sentences formally, when my
+ brother drew back and struck him a smashing blow in the face. Dickson
+ grappled with me, a little blinded, and I called to the boy to run&mdash;which
+ he very wisely did. Dickson and I were at once surrounded, and I was
+ arrested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ordinarily the incident would have been trivial enough, but in the alarmed
+ state of the public mind it was magnified into an attempt on the part of
+ George Q. Cannon's sons to take the life of the United States District
+ Attorney. Indictments were found against my brother and myself, and
+ against a cousin who happened to be in another part of the hotel at the
+ time of the attack. Some weeks later, when the excitement had rather died
+ down, I went to the District Attorney's office and arranged with his
+ assistant, Mr. Varian, that the indictments against my brother (who had
+ escaped from Utah) and my cousin (who was wholly innocent) should be
+ quashed, and that I should plead guilty to a charge of assault and
+ battery. On this understanding, I appeared in court before Chief Justice
+ Zane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Mr. Varian, having consulted with Mr. Dickson, had learned that I had
+ not struck the blow&mdash;though, as the elder brother, I was morally
+ responsible for it&mdash;and he suggested to the court that sentence be
+ suspended. This, Justice Zane seemed prepared to do, but I objected. I was
+ a newspaper writer (as I explained), and I felt that if I criticized the
+ court thereafter for what I believed to be a harshness that amounted to
+ persecution, I could be silenced by the imposition of the suspended
+ sentence; and if I failed to criticize, I should be false to what I
+ considered my duty. I did not wish to be put in any such position; and I
+ said so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Justice Zane had a respect for the constitution and the statutes that
+ amounted to a creed of infallibility. He was the most superbly rigid
+ pontiff of legal justice that I ever knew. A man of unspotted character, a
+ Puritan, of a sincerity that was afterwards accepted and admired from end
+ to end of Utah, he was determined to vindicate the essential supremacy of
+ the civil law over the ecclesiastical domination in the territory; and
+ every act of insubordination against that law was resented and punished by
+ him, unforgivingly. He promptly sentenced me to three months in the County
+ jail and a fine of $150.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My imprisonment was, of course, a farce. I was merely confined, most of
+ the time, in a room in the County Court House, where I lived and worked as
+ if I were in my home. But the sentence remained on my record as a
+ sufficient mark of my recalcitrance; and I knew that it would not aid me
+ in my appeal to Washington, where I intended to argue&mdash;as the first
+ wise concession needed of the Federal authorities&mdash;that Chief Justice
+ Zane should no longer be retained on the bench in Utah, but should be
+ succeeded by a man more gentle. He was the great figure among our
+ prosecutors; the others were District Attorney Dickson and the two
+ assistants, Mr. Varian and Mr. Riles. The square had only seemed to be
+ broken by the recent retirement of Mr. Dickson; the strength of his
+ purpose remained still in power, in the person of Judge Zane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And let me say that whatever my opinion was of these men, at that time, I
+ recognize now that they were justified as officers of the law in enforcing
+ the law. If it had not been for them, the Mormon Church would never have
+ been brought to the point of abating one jot of its pretensions. All four
+ men, as their records have since proved, were much superior to their
+ positions as territorial officers. Utah's admiration for Judge Zane was
+ shown, upon the composition of our differences with the nation, by the
+ Mormon vote that placed him on the Supreme Court bench. Indeed, it is one
+ of the strange psychologies of this reconciliation, that, as soon as peace
+ was made, the strongest men of both parties came into the warmest
+ friendship; our fear and hatred of our prosecutors changed to respect; and
+ their opposition to our indissoluble solidarity changed to regard when
+ they saw us devoting our strength to purposes of which they could approve.
+ But now, in the midst of our contentions, the aspect of splendor in their
+ legal authority had something baleful in it, for us; and we saw our own
+ defiance set with a halo of martyrdom and illumined by the radiance of a
+ Church oppressed!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was more than a glimmer of that radiance in my thoughts as I made
+ the railroad journey from Utah to the East. The Union Pacific Railway, on
+ which I rode, followed the route that the Mormons had taken in their long
+ trek from the Missouri; and I could look from my car window and imagine
+ them toiling across those endless plains&mdash;in their creaking wagons,
+ drawn by their oxen and lean farm cows&mdash;choked with dust, burned by
+ the sun of the prairies, their faces to the unknown dangers of an unknown
+ wilderness, and behind them the cool-roomed houses, the moist fields, the
+ tree-shaded streets, all the quiet and comfort of the settled life of
+ homekeeping happiness that they had left. My own mother had come that
+ road, a little girl of eight; and my mind was full of pictures of her, at
+ school in a wagon-box, singing hymns with her elders around the camp fires
+ at night, or kneeling with the mourners beside the grave of an infant
+ relative buried by the roadside. Our train crossed the Loup Fork of the
+ Platte almost within sight of the place where my father, a lad of twenty,
+ had led across the river at nightfall, had been lost to his party, and had
+ nearly perished, naked to the cold, before he struggled back to the camp.
+ I could see their little circle of wagons drawn up at sunset against the
+ menace of the Indians who snaked through the long grass to kill. I could
+ feel some of their despair, and my heart lifted to their heroism. Never
+ had such a migration been made by any people with fewer of the
+ concomitants of their civilization. Their arms had been taken from them at
+ Nauvoo; they had bartered their goods for wagons and cattle to carry them;
+ even the grain that they brought, for food, had to be saved for seed. They
+ felt themselves devoted to destruction by the people with whose laws and
+ institutions they had come in conflict, and they went forth bravely,
+ trusting in the power of the God whom they were determined to worship
+ according to their despised belief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now they had built themselves new homes and meeting-houses in the fertile
+ "Valley;" and the civilization that they had left, having covered the
+ distance of their exile, was punishing them again for their law-breaking
+ fidelity to their faith. Surely they had suffered enough! Surely it was
+ evident that suffering only made them strong to resist! Surely there must
+ be somebody in power in Washington who could be persuaded to see that,
+ where force had always failed, there might be some profit in employing
+ gentleness!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This, at least, was the appeal which I had planned to make. And I had
+ decided to make it through Mr. Abraham S. Hewitt, then mayor of New York
+ City, who had been a friend of my father in Congress. He was not in favor
+ with the administration at Washington. He was personally unfriendly to
+ President Cleveland. I was a stranger to him. But I had seen enough of him
+ to know that he had the heart to hear a plea on behalf of the Mormons, and
+ the brain to help me carry that plea diplomatically to President
+ Cleveland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I arrived in New York I set about finding him without the aid of any
+ common friend. I did not try to reach him at his home, being aware that he
+ might resent an intrusion of public matters upon his private leisure, and
+ fearing to impair my own confidence by beginning with a rebuff. I decided
+ to see him in his office hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I cannot recall why I did not find him in the municipal buildings, but I
+ well remember going to and fro in the streets in search of him, feeling at
+ every step the huge city's absorption in its own press and hurry of
+ affairs, and seeing the troubles of Utah as distant as a foreign war. It
+ was with a very keen sense of discouragement that I took my place, at
+ last, in the long line of applicants waiting for a word with the man who
+ directed the municipal activities of this tremendous hive of eager energy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was in the old Stewart building, on Broadway, near Park Place; and he
+ had his desk in what was, I think, a temporary office&mdash;an empty shop
+ used as an office&mdash;on the ground floor. There must have been fifty
+ men ahead of me, and they were the unemployed, as I remember it, besieging
+ him for work. They came to his desk, spoke, and passed with a rapidity
+ that was ominous. As I drew nearer, I watched him anxiously, and saw the
+ incessant, nervous, querulous activity of eyes, lips, hands, as he
+ dismissed each with a word or a scratch of the pen, and looked up sharply
+ at the next one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, young man," he greeted me, "what do you want?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I replied: "I want a half hour of your time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good God," he said, in a sort of reproachful indignation, "I couldn't
+ give it to the President of the United States."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I felt the crowd of applicants pressing behind me. I knew the man's
+ prodigious humanity. I knew that if I could only hold them back long
+ enough&mdash;"Mr. Hewitt," I said, "it's more important even than that.
+ It's to save a whole people from suffering&mdash;from destruction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He may have thought me a maniac; or it may be that the desperation of the
+ moment sounded in my voice. He frowned intently up at me. "Who are you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm the son of your old friend in Congress, George Q. Cannon of Utah," I
+ said. "My father's in exile. He and his people are threatened with endless
+ proscriptions. I want time to tell you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His impatience had vanished. His eyes were steadily kind and interested.
+ "Can you come to the Board of Health, in an hour? As soon as I open the
+ meeting, I'll retire and listen to you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I asked him for a card, to admit me to the meeting, having been stopped
+ that morning at many doors. He gave it, nodded, and flashed his attention
+ on the man behind me. I went out with the heady assurance that my first
+ move had succeeded; but I went, too, with the restrained pulse of
+ realizing that I had yet to join issue with the decisive event and do it
+ warily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not remember where I found the Board of Health in session. I recall
+ only the dark, official board-room, the members at the table, and&mdash;as
+ the one small spot of light and interest to me&mdash;Mr. Hewitt's
+ white-bearded face, as an attendant opened the door to me, and the Mayor,
+ looking up alertly, nodded across the room, and waved his hand to a chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as he had opened the meeting, we withdrew together to a settee in
+ some remote corner, and I began to tell him, as quickly as I could, the
+ desperateness of the Mormon situation. "Yes," he said, "but why can't your
+ people obey the law?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I explained what I have been trying to explain in this narrative&mdash;that
+ these people, following a Church which they believed to be guided by God,
+ and regarding themselves as objects of a religious persecution, could not
+ be brought by means of force to obey a law against conscience. I explained
+ that I was not pleading to save their pride but to spare them useless
+ suffering; their history showed that no proscription, short of
+ extermination outright, could overcome their resistance; but what force
+ could not accomplish, a little sensible diplomacy might hope to effect. No
+ first step could be made, by them, towards a composition of their
+ differences with the law so long as the law was administered with a
+ hostility that provoked hostility. But if we could obtain some mitigation
+ of the law's severity, the leaders of the Church were willing to surrender
+ themselves to the court&mdash;such of them as had not already died of
+ their privations or served their terms of imprisonment&mdash;and a sense
+ of gratitude for leniency would prepare the way for a recession from their
+ present attitude of unconquerable antagonism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He listened gravely, knowing the situation from his own experience in
+ Congress, and checking off the items of my argument with a nod of
+ acceptance that came, often, before I had completed what I had to say. He
+ asked: "Do you know President Cleveland?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told him that I had seen the President several times but was not known
+ to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," he said, "I may be able to help you indirectly. I don't care for
+ Cleveland, and I wouldn't ask him for a favor if I were sinking. But tell
+ me what plan you have in your mind, and I'll see if I can't aid you&mdash;through
+ friends."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I replied that I hoped to have some man appointed as Chief Justice in Utah
+ who should adopt a less rigorous way of adjudicating upon the cases of
+ polygamists; but that before he was selected&mdash;or at least before he
+ knew of his appointment&mdash;I wished to talk with him and convert him to
+ the idea that he could begin the solution of "the Mormon question" by
+ having the leaders of the community come into his court and accept
+ sentences that should not be inconsistent with the sovereignty of the law
+ but not unmerciful to the subjects of that sovereignty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The man you want," Mr. Hewitt said, "is here in New York&mdash;Elliot F.
+ Sandford. He's a referee of the Supreme Court of this state&mdash;a fine
+ man, great legal ability, courageous, of undoubted integrity. Come to me,
+ tomorrow. I'll introduce you to him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the first time that I had even heard the name of Elliot F.
+ Sandford; and I had not the faintest notion of how best to approach him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I did not find him in Mr. Hewitt's office, on the morrow; but the Mayor
+ had communicated with him, and now gave me a letter of introduction to
+ him; and I went alone to present it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He received me in his outer office, with a manner full of kindliness but
+ non-committal. He glanced through my letter of introduction, and I tried
+ to read him while he did it. He was not on the surface. He was a tall,
+ dignified man, his hair turning gray&mdash;thoughtful, judicial&mdash;evidently
+ a man who was not quick to decide. He led me into his private room, and
+ sat down with the air of a lawyer who has been asked to take a case and
+ who wishes first to hear all the details of the action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I began by describing the Mormon situation as I saw it in those days: that
+ the Mormons were growing more desperately determined in their opposition,
+ because they believed their prosecutors were persecuting them; that the
+ District Attorney and his assistants were harsh to the point of
+ heartlessness, and that Judge Zane (to us, then) acted like a religious
+ fanatic in his judicial office; that nearly every Federal official in Utah
+ had taken a tone of bigoted opposition to the people; and that the law was
+ detested and the government despised because of the actions of Federal
+ "carpet-baggers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was prejudiced, no doubt, and partisan in my account of the state of
+ affairs, but I did not exaggerate the facts as I saw them; I believed what
+ I said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I did not really reach his sympathy until I spoke of the court system in
+ Utah&mdash;the open venire, the employment of "professional jurors"&mdash;the
+ legal doctrine of "segregation," under which a man might be separately
+ indicted for every day of his living in plural marriage&mdash;and the
+ result of all this: that the pursuit of defendants and the confiscation of
+ property had become less an enforcement of law than a profitable legal
+ industry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After two hours of argument and examination, I ended with an appeal to him
+ to accept the opportunity to undertake a merciful assuagement of our
+ misery. After so many years of failure on the part of the Federal
+ authorities, he might have the distinction of calling into his court the
+ Mormon leaders who had been most long and vainly sought by the law; and by
+ sentencing them to a supportable punishment, he could begin the
+ composition of a conflict that had gone on for half a century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He replied with reasons that expressed a kindly unwillingness to undertake
+ the work. It would mean the sacrifice of his professional career in New
+ York. He would be putting himself entirely outside the progression of
+ advancement. His friends, here, would never understand why he had done it.
+ The affairs of Utah had little interest for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I saw that he was not convinced. His wife had been waiting some minutes in
+ the outer office; he proposed that he should bring her in; and I gathered
+ from his manner, that he expected her to pronounce against his accepting
+ my solicitation, and so terminate our interview pleasantly, with the aid
+ of the feminine social grace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Sandford, when she entered, certainly looked the very lady to do the
+ thing with gentle skill. She was handsome, with an animated expression,
+ dark-eyed, dark-haired, charming in her costume, a woman of the smiling
+ world, but maturely sincere and unaffected. I took a somewhat distracted
+ impression of her greeting, and heard him begin to explain my proposal to
+ her, as one hears a "silent partner" formally consulted by a man who has
+ already made up his mind. But when I glanced at her, seated, her manner
+ had changed. She was listening as if she were used to being consulted and
+ knew the responsibilities of decision. She had the abstracted eye of
+ impersonal consideration&mdash;silent&mdash;with now and then a slow,
+ meditative glance at me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her first question seemed merely femininely curious as to the domestic
+ aspects of polygamy. How did the women endure it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I repeated a conversation I had once had with Frances Willard, who had
+ said: "The woman's heart must ache in polygamy." To which I had made the
+ obvious reply: "Don't women's hearts ache all over the world? Is there any
+ condition of society in which women do not bear more than an equal share
+ of the suffering?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Sandford asked me pointedly whether I was living in polygamy?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No, I was not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did I believe in it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I believed that those did who practiced it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why didn't I practice it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those who practiced it believed that it had been authorized by a divine
+ revelation. I had not received such a revelation. I did not expect to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our talk warmed into a very intimate discussion of the lives of the Mormon
+ people, but I supposed that she was moved only by a curiosity to which I
+ was accustomed&mdash;a curiosity that was not necessarily sympathetic&mdash;the
+ curiosity one might have about the domestic life of a Mohammedan. I took
+ advantage of her curiosity to lead up to an explanation of how the
+ proscription of polygamy was driving young Mormons into the practice,
+ instead of frightening them from it. And so I arrived at another recountal
+ of the miserable condition of persecution and suffering which I had come
+ to ask her husband help us relieve; and I made my appeal again, to them
+ both, with something of despair, because of my failure with him, and
+ perhaps with greater effect because of my despair. She listened
+ thoughtfully, her hands clasped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It did not seem that I had reached her&mdash;until she turned to him, and
+ said unexpectedly "It seems to me that this is an opportunity&mdash;a
+ larger opportunity than any I see here&mdash;to do a great deal of good."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not appear as surprised as I was. He made some joking reference to
+ his income and asked her if she would be willing to live on a salary of&mdash;How
+ much was the salary of the Chief Justice of Utah?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I thought it was about $3,000 a year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Two hundred and fifty dollars a month," he said. "How many bonnets will
+ that buy?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," she retorted, "you can't put the blame on my millinery bill. If
+ that's been the cause of your hesitation, I'll agree to dress as becomes
+ the wife of a poor but upright judge."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In such a happy spirit of good-natured raillery, my petition was
+ provisionally entertained, till I could see the President; and it is one
+ of the curiosities of experience, as I look back upon it now, that a
+ decision so momentous in the history of Utah owed its induction to the
+ wisdom of a woman and was confirmed with a domestic pleasantry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I left them after we had arrived at the tacit understanding that if
+ President Cleveland should make the appointment, Mr. Sandford would accept
+ it with the end in view that I had proposed. I went to report my progress,
+ in a cipher telegram, to Salt Lake City, and I recall the peculiarly mixed
+ satisfaction with which I regarded my work, as I walked the streets of New
+ York after this interview. In all that city of millions, I knew, there
+ were few if any men who were the equal of my father in the essentials of
+ manhood; and yet, before he could enjoy the liberties of which they were
+ so lightly unconscious, he must endure the shame of a prison. I was
+ rejoicing because I was succeeding in getting for him a sentence that
+ should not be ruinous! I was pleased because a prospective judge had been
+ persuaded to be not too harsh to him!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It did not make me bitter. I realized that the peculiar faith which we had
+ accepted was responsible for our peculiar suffering. I saw that we were
+ working out our human destiny; and if that destiny was not of God, but
+ merely the issue of human impulsion, still our only prospect of success
+ would come of our bearing with experience patiently to make us strong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I went back to Mr. Hewitt, to tell him of my success, I consulted
+ with him upon the best way of approaching Mr. Cleveland. And he was not
+ encouraging. In his opinion of the President, he had, as I could see, the
+ impatient resentment which a quick-minded, nervous, small-bodied man has
+ for the big, slow one whose mental operations are stubbornly deliberate
+ and leisurely. And he was obviously irritated by the President's continual
+ assumption that he was better than his party. "He's honest," he said, "by
+ right of original discovery of what honesty is. No one can question his
+ honesty. But as soon as he discovers a better thing than he knew
+ previously, he announces it as if it were the discovery of a new planet.
+ It may have been a commonplace for a generation. That doesn't signify. He
+ announces it with such ponderosity that the world believes it's as
+ prodigious as his sentences!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for my own mission: I would have to be persistent, patient, and&mdash;lucky.
+ "You'll have to be lucky, if you intend to persuade him to acquire any
+ information. He's been so successful in instructing mankind that it's hard
+ to get him to see he doesn't know all he ought to know about a public
+ question. But he's honest and he's courageous. If you can convince him
+ that your view is right, he'll carry but the conviction in spite of
+ everything. In fact he'll be all the better pleased if it requires
+ fearlessness and defiance of general sentimentality to carry it out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gave me a letter to Mr. William C. Whitney, then Secretary of the Navy,
+ explaining my purpose in coming to Washington, and asking him to obtain
+ for me an interview with President Cleveland without using Mr. Hewitt's
+ name. Then he shook hands with me, and wished me success. "I have the
+ faith," he said, "that is without hope."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That expressed my own feeling. The faith that was without hope!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter III. Without A Country
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ So I came to Washington. So I entered the capital of the government that
+ commanded my allegiance and inspired my fear. I wonder whether another
+ American ever saw that city with such eyes of envy, of aspiration, of
+ wistful pride, of daunted admiration. Here were all the consecrations of a
+ nation's memories, and they thrilled me, even while they pierced me with
+ the sense that I was not, and might well despair of ever being, a citizen
+ of their glory. Here were the monuments of patriotism in Statuary Hall,
+ erected to the men whose histories had been the inspiration of my boyhood;
+ and I remember how I stood before them, conscious that I was now almost an
+ outlaw from their communion of splendor. I remember how I saw, with an
+ indescribable conflict of feelings, the ranked graves of the soldiers in
+ the cemetery at Arlington, and recollected that this very ground had been
+ taken from General Lee, that heroic opponent of Federal authority&mdash;and
+ read the tablet, "How sleep the brave who sink to rest by all their
+ country's wishes bless'd,"&mdash;and bowed in spirit to the nation's
+ benediction upon the men who had upheld its power. I was awed by a
+ prodigious sense of the majesty of that power. I saw with fear its
+ immovability to the struggles of our handful of people. And at night,
+ walking under the trees of Lafayette Park, with all the odors of the
+ southern Spring among the leaves, I looked at the lighted front of the
+ White House and realized that behind the curtains of those quiet windows
+ sat the ruler who held the almost absolute right of life and death over
+ our community&mdash;as if it were the palace of a Czar that I must soon
+ enter, with a petition for clemency, which he might refuse to entertain!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I had been in Washington, four years before, as secretary to Delegate
+ John T. Caine of Utah, I had felt a younger assurance that our resistance
+ would slowly wear out the Federal authority and carry us through to
+ statehood. Four years of disaster had starved out that hope. The
+ proposition had been established that Congress had supreme control over
+ the territories; and there was no virtue either in our religious
+ assumption of warrant to speak for God, or in our plea of inherent
+ constitutional right to manage our own affairs. Thirty years earlier, my
+ father had been elected Senator from the proposed state of Utah, and he
+ had been rejected. In thirty years so little progress had been made! The
+ way that was yet to travel seemed very long and very dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out of this mood of despondence I had to lift myself by an act of will.
+ There, Washington itself helped me against itself. I made a pilgrimage of
+ courage to its commemorations of courage, and drew an inspiration of hope
+ from its monuments to the achievements of its past. And particularly I
+ went to the house in which my father had lived when he had had his part in
+ the statesman life of the capital, and animated my resolution with the
+ thought that I must succeed in order that he might be restored in public
+ honor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I narrate all this personal incident of emotion in the hope that it may
+ help to explain a success that might otherwise seem inexplicable. The
+ Mormon Church had, for years, employed every art of intrigue and diplomacy
+ to protect itself in Washington. I wish to make plain that it was not by
+ any superior cunning of negotiation that my mission succeeded. I undertook
+ the task almost without instruction; I performed it without falsehood; I
+ had nothing in my mind but an honest loyalty for my own people, a desire
+ to be a citizen of my native country, and a filial devotion to the one man
+ in the world, whom I most admired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I delivered my letter of introduction from Mr. Hewitt to Mr. William
+ C. Whitney, Secretary of the Navy, I found him very busy with his work in
+ his department&mdash;carrying out the plans that established the modern
+ American navy and entitled him to be called the "father" of it. He
+ withdrew from the men who were discussing designs and figures at a table
+ in his room, and sat with me before a window that looked out upon the
+ White House and its grounds; and he listened to me, interestedly,
+ genially, but with a thought still (as I could see) for the affairs that
+ my arrival had interrupted. He struck me as a man who was used to having
+ many weighty matters together on his mind, without finding his attention
+ crowded by them all, and without being impatient in his consideration of
+ any.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I developed with him an idea which I had been considering: that the
+ President might not only help the Mormons by taking up their case, but
+ might gain political prestige for the coming campaign for re-election, by
+ adjusting the dissentions in Utah. He heard me with a twinkle. He thought
+ an interview might be arranged. He made an appointment to see me in the
+ afternoon and to have with him Colonel Daniel S. Lamont, the President's
+ secretary, who was then Mr. Cleveland's political "trainer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My meeting with Colonel Lamont, in the afternoon, began jocularly. "This,"
+ Mr. Whitney introduced me, "is the young man who has a plan to use that
+ mooted&mdash;and booted&mdash;Mormon question to re-elect the President."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hardly that, Mr. Secretary," I said. "I have a plan to help my father and
+ his colleagues to regain their citizenship. If President Cleveland's
+ re-election is essential to it, I suppose I must submit. You know I'm a
+ Republican."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They laughed. We sat down. And I found at once that Colonel Lamont
+ understood the situation in Utah, thoroughly. He had often discussed it,
+ he said, with the Church's agents in Washington. I went over the situation
+ with him, as I had gone over it with Mr. Sandford, in careful detail. He
+ seemed surprised at my assurance that my father and the other proscribed
+ leaders of the Church would submit themselves to the courts if they could
+ do so on the conditions that I proposed; I convinced him of the
+ possibility by referring him to Mr. Richards, the Church's attorney in
+ Washington, for a confirmation of it. I pointed out that if these leaders
+ surrendered, President Cleveland could be made the direct beneficiary,
+ politically, of their composition with the law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Colonel Lamont was a small, alert man with a conciseness of speech and
+ manner that is associated in my memory with the bristle of his red
+ mustache cut short and hard across a decisive mouth. He radiated nervous
+ vitality; and I understood, as I studied him, how President Cleveland,
+ with his infinite patience for [** missing text?**] survived so well in
+ the multitudinous duties of his office&mdash;having as his secretary a man
+ born with the ability to cut away the non-essentials, and to pass on to
+ Mr. Cleveland only the affairs worthy of his careful deliberation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was doubtful whether I should tell Colonel Lamont and Mr. Whitney of my
+ conversation with Mr. Sandford. I decided that their considerateness
+ entitled them to my full confidence, and I told them all&mdash;begging
+ them, if I was indiscreet or undiplomatic, to charge the offense to my
+ lack of experience rather than to debit it against my cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They passed it off with banter. It was understood that the President
+ should not be told&mdash;and that I should not tell him&mdash;of my talk
+ with Mr. Sandford. Colonel Lamont undertook to arrange an audience with
+ Mr. Cleveland for me. "You had better wait," he said, "until I can
+ approach him with the suggestion that there's a young man here, from Utah,
+ whom he ought to see."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I knew, then, that I was at least well started on the open road to
+ success. I knew that if Colonel Lamont said he would help me, there would
+ be no difficulties in my way except those that were large in the person of
+ the President himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days later I received the expected word from Colonel Lamont, and I
+ went to the White House as a man might go to face his own trial. I met the
+ secretary in one of the eastern upstairs rooms of the official apartments;
+ and after the usual crowd had passed out, he led me into the President's
+ office&mdash;which then overlooked the Washington monument, the Potomac
+ and the Virginia shore. Mr. Cleveland was working at his desk. Colonel
+ Lamont introduced me by name, and added, "the young man from Utah, of whom
+ I spoke."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The President did not look up. He was signing some papers, bending heavily
+ over his work. It took him a moment or two to finish; then he dropped his
+ pen, pushed aside the papers, turned awkwardly in his swivel chair and
+ held out his hand to me. It was a cool, firm hand, and its grasp surprised
+ me, as much as the expression of his eyes&mdash;the steady eyes of
+ complete self-control, composure, intentness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had come with a prejudice against him; I was a partisan of Mr. Blame,
+ whom he had defeated for the Presidency; I believed Mr. Blame to be the
+ abler man. But there was something in Mr. Cleveland's hand and eyes to
+ warn me that however slow-moving and even dull he might appear, the energy
+ of a firm will compelled and controlled him. It stiffened me into instant
+ attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He made some remark to Colonel Lamont to indicate that our conversation
+ was to occupy about half an hour. He asked me to be seated in a chair at
+ the right-hand side of his desk. He said almost challengingly: "You're the
+ young man they want I should talk to about the Utah question."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tone was not exactly unkind, but it was not inviting. I said, "Yes,
+ sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at me, as a judge might eye the suspect of circumstantial
+ evidence. "You're the son of one of the Mormon leaders."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I admitted it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then he began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He began with an account of what he had done to compose the differences in
+ Utah. He explained and justified the appointments he had made there&mdash;appointments
+ that had been recommended by Southern senators and representatives who,
+ because they were Southerners, were opposed to the undue extension and
+ arbitrary use of Federal power. He had made Caleb W. West of Kentucky
+ governor of Utah on the recommendation of Senator Blackburn of Kentucky,
+ my father's friend. He had made Frank H. Dyer, originally of Mississippi,
+ United States Marshal. He had appointed a District Attorney in whom he had
+ every confidence. He had a right to believe that these men, recommended by
+ the statesmen of the South, would execute and adjudicate the laws in Utah
+ according to the most lenient Southern construction of Federal rights. He
+ dwelt upon Governor West's charitable intentions towards the Mormon
+ leaders, went over West's efforts at pacification in accurate detail, and
+ told of West's chagrin at his failure&mdash;with an irritation that showed
+ how disappointed he himself was with the continued recurrence of the
+ Mormon troubles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had to tell him that the situation had not improved, and his face
+ flushed with an anger that he made no attempt to conceal. He declared that
+ the fault must lie in our obstinate determination to hold ourselves
+ superior to the law. He could not sympathize with our sufferings, he said,
+ since they were self-inflicted. He admitted that he had once been opposed
+ to the Edmunds-Tucker bill, but felt now that it was justified by the
+ immovability of the Mormons. All palliatives had failed. The patience of
+ Congress had been exhausted. There was no recourse, except to make
+ statutes cutting enough to destroy the illegal practices and unlawful
+ leadership in the Mormon community.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. President," I pleaded, "I've lived in Utah all my life. I know these
+ people from both points of view. You know of the situation only from
+ Federal office holders who consider it solely with regard to their
+ official responsibility to you and to the country. Why not learn what the
+ Mormons think?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He replied that it was not within the province of the President&mdash;his
+ power or his duty&mdash;to consider the mental attitude of men who were
+ opposing the enforcement of the law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was an inexcusable offense against the general welfare that one
+ community should be rising continually against the Federal authority and
+ occupying the time and attention of Congress with a determined
+ recalcitrance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For an hour, he continued, with vigor and dignity, to describe the
+ situation as he saw it; and he chilled me to the heart with his
+ determination to concede nothing more to a community that had refused to
+ be placated by what he had already conceded. I listened without trying,
+ without even wishing, to interrupt him; for I had been warned by Mr.
+ Whitney and Colonel Lamont that it would be wise to let him deliver
+ himself of his opinion before attempting to influence him to a milder one;
+ and I could not contradict anything that he said, for he made no
+ misstatements of fact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Colonel Lamont had entered once, and had withdrawn again when he saw that
+ Mr. Cleveland was still talking. At the end of about an hour, the
+ President rose. "Mr. Cannon," he said, "I don't see what more I can do
+ than has already been done. Tell your people to obey the law, as all other
+ citizens are required to obey it, and they'll find that their
+ fellow-citizens of this country will do full justice to their heroism and
+ their other good qualities. If the law seems harsh, tell them that there's
+ an easy way to avoid its cruelty by simply getting out from under its
+ condemnation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His manner indicated that the conference was at an end. He reached out his
+ hand as if to drop the subject then and forever, as far as I was
+ concerned. "Mr. President," I asked, with the composure of desperation,
+ "do you really want to settle the Mormon question?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at me with the first gleam of humor that had shown in his eyes&mdash;and
+ it was a humor of peculiar richness and unction. "Young man," he asked,
+ "what have I been saying to you all this time? What have I been working
+ for, ever since I first took up the consideration of this subject at the
+ beginning of my term?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. President," I replied, "if you were traveling in the West, and came
+ to an unbridged stream with your wagon train, and saw tracks leading down
+ into the water where you thought there was a ford, you would naturally
+ expect to cross there, assuming that others had done so before you. But
+ suppose that some man on the bank should say to you: 'I've watched wagon
+ trains go in here for more than twenty years, and I've never yet seen one
+ come out on the other side. Look over at that opposite bank. You see there
+ are no wagon tracks there. Now, down the river a piece, is a place where I
+ think there's a ford. I've never got anybody to try it yet, but certainly
+ it's as good a chance as this one!' Mr. President, what would you do?
+ Would you attempt a crossing where there had been twenty years of failure,
+ or would you try the other place&mdash;on the chance that it might take
+ you over?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had been regarding me with slowly fading amusement that gave way to an
+ expression of grave attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I've been watching this situation for several years," I went on, "and it
+ seems to me that there's the possibility of a just, a humane, and a final
+ settlement of it, by getting the Mormon leaders to come voluntarily into
+ court&mdash;and it can be done!&mdash;with the assurance that the object
+ of the administration is to correct the community evil&mdash;not to
+ exterminate the Mormon Church or to persecute its 'prophets,' but to
+ secure obedience to the law and respect for the law, and to lead Utah into
+ a worthy statehood."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I paused. He thought a moment. Then he said: "I can't talk any longer,
+ now. Make another appointment with Lamont. I want to hear what you have to
+ say." And he dismissed me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Colonel Lamont told me to come back on the following afternoon; and I went
+ away with the dubious relief of feeling that if I had not yet won my case
+ I had, at least, succeeded in having judgment reserved. I went to work to
+ arrange my arguments for the morrow, to make them as concise as possible
+ and to divide them into brief chapters in case I should have as little
+ opportunity for extended explanations as the President had been giving me.
+ I saw that the whole matter was gloomy and oppressive to him&mdash;that
+ his responsibility was as dark on his mind as our sufferings&mdash;and I
+ took the hint of his amused interest, in order to work out ways of
+ brightening the subject with anecdote and illustration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I saw Colonel Lamont on the morrow, and he beamed a congratulation on me.
+ "You've aroused his curiosity," he said. "You've interested him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had made an appointment some days ahead; and when I entered the
+ President's office to keep that appointment, I found Mr. Cleveland at his
+ desk, as if he had not moved in the interval, laboriously reading and
+ signing papers as before. It gave me an impression of immovability, of
+ patient and methodical relentlessness that was disheartening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But as soon as he turned to me, I found him another man. He was
+ interested, receptive, almost genial. He gave me an opportunity to cover
+ the whole ground of my case, and I went over it step by step. He showed no
+ emotion when I recited some of the incidents of pathetic suffering among
+ our people; and at first he seemed doubtful whether he should be amused by
+ the humorous episodes that I narrated. But I did not wish merely to amuse
+ him; I was trying to convey to his mind (without saying so) that so long
+ as a people could suffer and laugh too, they could never be overcome by
+ the mere reduplication of their sufferings. He looked squarely at me, with
+ a most determined front, when I told him that the Mormons would be ground
+ to powder before they would yield. "They can't yield," I warned him.
+ "They're like the passengers on a train going with a mad speed down a
+ dangerous grade. For any of them to attempt to jump is simple destruction.
+ They can only pray to Providence to help them. But if that train were to
+ be brought to a stop at some station where they could alight with anything
+ like self-respect, there would be many of them glad to get off&mdash;even
+ though the train had not arrived at its 'revealed' destination."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not remember&mdash;and if I did, it would be tedious to relate&mdash;the
+ exact sequence and progression of argument in this interview and the dozen
+ others that succeeded it. Mr. Cleveland became more and more interested in
+ the Mormon people, their family life, their religion, and their politics.
+ He was as painstaking in acquiring information about them as he was in
+ performing all the other duties of his office. I might have been
+ discouraged by the number and apparent ineffectiveness of my interviews
+ with him, had not Colonel Lamont kept me informed of the growth of the
+ President's good feeling and of his genuinely paternal interest in the
+ people of Utah. It became more than a personal desire with Mr. Cleveland
+ to benefit politically by a settlement of the Mormon troubles, if indeed
+ he had ever had such a desire. His humanity was enlisted, his conscience
+ appealed to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He asked me, once, if I knew anything of Mr. Sandford, and I replied that
+ I knew him and believed in him. He told me, at last, that he was going to
+ appoint Mr. Sandford Chief Justice of Utah, and added significantly, "I
+ suppose he will get in touch with the situation." I accepted this remark
+ as a permission to confer with Mr. Sandford, and I journeyed to New York
+ to see him and to renew the understanding I had with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was appointed Chief justice on the 9th day of July, 1888, and&mdash;as
+ the Mormon people expressed it&mdash;"the backbone of the raid was
+ broken." On August 26, 1888, he arrived in Salt Lake City. On September
+ 17, my father came before him in court and pleaded guilty to two
+ indictments charging him with "unlawful cohabitation." He was fined $450
+ and sentenced to the penitentiary for one hundred and seventy-five days.
+ His example was followed by a number of prominent Mormons, including
+ Francis Marion Lyman, who is today the President of the Quorum of the
+ twelve Apostles and next in rank for the Presidency. It is true that not
+ many cases, relatively speaking, came to Justice Sandford; but the leader
+ whom the authorities were most eager to subjugate under Federal power was
+ judged and sentenced; and the effect, both on the country and on the
+ Mormon people, was all that we had expected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are memories in a man's life that have a peculiar value. One such,
+ to me, is the picture I have in mind of my father undergoing his
+ penitentiary sentence, wearing his prison clothes with an unconsciousness
+ that makes me still feel a pride in the power of the human soul to rise
+ superior to the deformities of circumstance. Charles Wilcken (whom I have
+ described driving us to Bountiful) was visiting him one day in the prison
+ office, when a guard entered with his hat on. Wilcken snatched it from his
+ head. "Never enter his presence," he said, "without taking it off." And
+ the guard never did again.... I salute the memory. I come to it with my
+ head bare and my back stiffened. I see in that calm face the possibilities
+ of the human spirit. He was a man!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He spent his time, there, as he would have spent it elsewhere, writing,
+ conferring with the agents of his authority, planning for his people. I
+ saw he was aware that he would emerge from his imprisonment a free man,
+ personally, but still enslaved by the conditions of the community; and I
+ knew that he would use his freedom to free the others. I knew that he had
+ accepted his sentence with this end in view. In plain words, I knew now&mdash;though
+ he never said so&mdash;that he was looking toward the necessary recession
+ from the doctrine of polygamy, and that he may have counted on the
+ spectacle of his imprisonment to help prepare his people for a general
+ submission to the law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the entry of these leaders into prison, the Mormons felt for them a
+ warmer admiration, a deeper reverence; but it was mingled with a gratitude
+ to the nation for the leniency of the court and an awed sense, too, of the
+ power of the civil law. President Woodruff secretly and tentatively
+ withdrew his necessary permission, as head of the Church, to the
+ solemnization of any more plural marriages; and he ordered the demolition
+ of the Endowment House in which such marriages had been chiefly
+ celebrated. Many of the non-Mormons, who had despaired of any solution of
+ the troubles in Utah, now began to hope. The country had been
+ impoverished; the Mormons had been deprived of much of their substance and
+ financial vigor; and reasons of business prudence among the Gentiles
+ weighed against a continuance of proscription. Some of them distrusted the
+ motives of their own leaders more than they did the Mormon people. Some
+ were weary of the quarrel. For humane reasons, for business reasons, for
+ the sake of young Utah, it was argued that the persecution should end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in the years 1888 and 1889, thousands of newcomers arrived in Utah
+ with a strong antagonism to the religion and the political authority of
+ the Mormon Church; and, with the growth of Gentile population, there came
+ a natural determination on their part to obtain control of the local
+ governments of cities and counties. In opposing this movement, the power
+ of the Church was again solidified. By 1889, the Gentiles had taken the
+ city governments of Ogden and Salt Lake City, had elected members of the
+ legislature in Salt Lake County, and had carried the passage of a Public
+ School Bill, against the timid and secret opposition of the Church.
+ President Cleveland had been defeated and succeeded by President Harrison;
+ and Chief Justice Sandford had been removed and Chief Justice Zane
+ reinstated. (He did not adjudicate with his previous rigor, however,
+ because of the success of Justice Sandford's policy of leniency.) The
+ Church made no move publicly to repudiate polygamy, and its silent
+ attitude of defiance, in this regard, gave a battle cry to all its
+ enemies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crisis was precipitated by a movement that had begun in the territory
+ of Idaho, where the Mormons had been disfranchised by means of a test oath&mdash;(a
+ provision still remaining in the Idaho state constitution, but now
+ nullified by the political power of the Mormon leaders in Salt Lake City.)
+ A bill, known as the Cullom-Struble bill, was introduced at Washington, to
+ do in Utah what had been done in Idaho.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Church was then directed by President Woodruff and his two
+ Councillor's, George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith. But President Woodruff
+ was as helpless in the political world as a nun. He was a gentle, earnest
+ old man, patiently ingenuous and simple-minded, with a faith in the
+ guidance of Heaven that was only greater than my father's because it was
+ unmixed with any earthly sagacity. He had the mind, and the appearance, of
+ a country preacher, and even when he was "on the underground" he used to
+ do his daily "stint" of farm labor, secretly, either at night or in the
+ very early morning. He was a successful farmer (born in Connecticut), of a
+ Yankee shrewdness and industry. He recognized that in order to get a crop
+ of wheat, it was necessary to do something more than trust in the Lord.
+ But in administering the affairs of the Church, he seemed to have no such
+ sophistication.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I can see him yet, at the meetings of the Presidency, opening his mild
+ blue eyes in surprised horror at a report of some new danger threatening
+ us. "My conscience! My conscience!" he would cry. "Is that so, brother!"
+ When he was assured that it was so, he would say, resignedly: "The Lord
+ will look after us!" And then, after a silence, turning to his First
+ Councillor, he would ask: "What do you think we ought to do, Brother
+ George Q.?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Second Councillor, Joseph F. Smith, sat at these meetings, in a
+ saturnine reserve and silence, either nursing his concealed thought or
+ having none. When a decision had been suggested, he was appealed to and
+ added his assent. It always seemed to me that he was sulkily sleepy; but
+ this impression may have come from the contrast of the First Councillor's
+ mental alertness and the bright cheerfulness of the President&mdash;who
+ never, to my knowledge, showed the slightest bitterness against anybody.
+ President Woodruff believed that all the persecutions of the Mormons were
+ due to the Devil's envy of the Lord's power as it showed itself in the
+ establishment of the Mormon Church: and he assumed that the Gentiles did
+ the work they were tempted to do against us, because the Holy Spirit had
+ not yet ousted the evil from their souls. He had no fear of the ultimate
+ triumph of the Church, because he had no fear of the ultimate triumph of
+ God. Whenever he could escape for a day from the worldly duties of his
+ office, he went fishing!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the progress of the Cullom-Struble bill began to make its threatening
+ advance, my father went secretly to Washington; and a short time
+ afterwards, word came to me in Ogden, through the Presidency, that he
+ wished me to arrange my business affairs for a long absence from Utah, and
+ follow him to the capital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I found him there, in the office of Delegate John T. Caine of Utah&mdash;the
+ cluttered office of a busy man&mdash;and he explained, composedly, why he
+ had sent for me. The Cullom-Struble bill had been favorably considered by
+ the Senate Committee on Territories, and the disfranchisement of all the
+ Mormons of Utah seemed imminent. Every argument, political or legal, had
+ been used against the measure, in vain. Since I, a non-polygamous Mormon,
+ would be disfranchised if the bill became law, he thought I might be a
+ good advocate against it. He said: "I have not appeared in the matter.
+ None of our friends know that I am here. If it were known, it might only
+ increase our difficulties. Say nothing of it. We have been at a
+ disadvantage with a Republican administration because most of our
+ prominent men are Democrats. You were so effective with the Democrats, let
+ us see what you can do now with your own party friends."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After taking his advice, I went to see Senator Henry M. Teller, of
+ Colorado, who was a friend of my father and of the Mormon people. He
+ admitted that the situation was desperate. He proposed that I should speak
+ before the committees of both houses; they might listen to me as a
+ Republican who had no official rank in the Church and no political
+ authority. He offered to introduce me to any of the Senators and members
+ of Congress, but advised that I should rather go unintroduced, without
+ influence, and make my appeal as a private citizen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This sounded to me depressingly like the call to lead a "forlorn hope." I
+ reported to my father again, and was not altogether reassured by a
+ tranquility which he seemed to be able to maintain in the face of any
+ desperation. Other agencies of the Church had reached the end of their
+ resources. There was no help in sight. And I went, at last, to throw our
+ case upon the mercy of the Secretary of State, Mr. James G. Blaine, my
+ father's friend, the friend of our people, the statesman whom I&mdash;in
+ common with millions of other Americans&mdash;regarded with a reverence
+ that approached idolatry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He received me in the long room of the Secretary's apartments, standing, a
+ striking figure in black, against the rich and heavy background of the
+ official furnishing. He was very pale&mdash;unhealthily so&mdash;perhaps
+ with the progress of the disease of which he was to die in so short a
+ time. In contrast with his usual brilliancy of mind, he seemed to me, at
+ first, depressed and quiet&mdash;with a kindly serenity of manner, at once
+ gracious, and intimate, but masterful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was instantly and deeply interested in what I had to say; he seated
+ himself&mdash;on a sofa, near the embrasure of a window&mdash;motioned me
+ to bring a chair to his side, and heard me in an erect attitude of
+ thoughtful attention, re-assuring me now and then by reaching out to lay a
+ hand on my knee when he saw from my hesitancy that I feared I might be too
+ candid in my confidences; and the look of his eye and the touch of his
+ hand were as if he said: "I'm your friend. Anything you may say is
+ perfectly safe with me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told him of my father's imprisonment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is dreadful," he said. "You shock me to the soul." He spoke of their
+ friendship, of his admiration for my father's work in Congress, of his
+ personal regard for the man himself. "Of course," he said, "I have no
+ sympathy with your peculiar marriage system, and I'll never be able to
+ understand how a man like your father could enter it." I reminded him that
+ my father believed it a system revealed and ordained by God. "I know," he
+ replied. "That is what they say. And I suppose they have scriptural
+ warrant for polygamy. But it is a thing that would be 'more honored in the
+ breach than the observance.' Tell me, is the rule of the Church absolute
+ over you younger men?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told him that it was, in respect of political control; that the
+ situation in Utah had placed us where there was no possibility of
+ compromise; that we must be of, with, and for our own people, or against
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He asked me whether I intended to address myself to the President. I
+ replied, "Not yet"&mdash;since the bills were still pending in Congress
+ and were not being urged from the White House. He seemed pleased. As I
+ afterwards learned, there was a strong rivalry between the President and
+ the Secretary of State; and though I knew that Mr. Blaine's interest in
+ Utah was almost wholly one of responsible statesmanship, warmed by a
+ personal kindliness for our people, still it remains a fact that he
+ expected the support of the Utah Republican delegation in the convention
+ of 1892, and that it had been promised him by national Republicans who
+ were now laboring at Washington in our behalf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He encouraged me with an almost intimate emotion of pity and friendliness;
+ and I felt the largeness of the man as much in the warmth of his humanity
+ as in the breadth of his view. He approved, of my appearing before the
+ committees. "Go and tell them your own story, yourself," he said. "Make
+ your plea independently of all the formal and official arguments that have
+ been used. These have been exhausted. They have been ineffective. We must
+ use the personal and"&mdash;he added it significantly&mdash;"the political
+ appeal. If you find difficulty, let me know. I shall not be idle in your
+ behalf. If you meet any insuperable obstacle, I'll see if I can't help you
+ run over it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He rose to terminate the interview. He looked at me with a smile. "'The
+ Lord giveth,'" he said, "'and the Lord taketh away.' Wouldn't it be
+ possible for your people to find some way&mdash;without disobedience to
+ the commands of God&mdash;to bring yourselves into harmony with the law
+ and institutions of this country? Believe me, it's not possible for any
+ people as weak in numbers as yours, to set themselves up as superior to
+ the majesty of a nation like this. We may succeed, this time, in
+ preventing your disfranchisement; but nothing permanent can be done until
+ you 'get into line.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He accompanied me toward the door, giving me friendly messages of regard
+ to deliver to my father. He put his arm around my shoulders, at last, and
+ said: "You may tell your father for me&mdash;as I tell you, young man&mdash;you
+ shall not be harmed, this time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I parted from him with an almost speechless relief and gratitude, and
+ hurried to my father with the news of hope. I had not told Mr. Blaine that
+ he was in Washington; for, without feeling that he saw himself marked by
+ his imprisonment, I was aware that his friends might pity him for it, if
+ they did not condemn him; and neither sentiment (I knew) was he of the
+ personal temper to encounter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told him every detail of my talk with the Secretary of State; he heard
+ me, silently, meditatively. When I concluded with Mr. Blaine's assurance
+ that we should not be harmed "this time," but must "get into line," he
+ looked up at me with a significant steadiness of eye. "President
+ Woodruff," he said, "has been praying.... He thinks he sees some light....
+ You are authorized to say that something will be done."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I asked no question. His gaze conveyed assurance, but forbade inquiry. I
+ had to understand, without being told, that the Church was preparing to
+ concede a recession from the doctrine of polygamy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this assurance to aid me, I began the work of reaching the committees&mdash;warm
+ work in a Washington summer, but hopeful in the new prospect of a lasting
+ success. The bill for disfranchisement had been reported out by the
+ committees and was on the calendar for passage. It was necessary to have
+ the question reopened before the committees for argument. In soliciting
+ the opportunity of a re-hearing, from the Chairman of the Senate
+ Committee, Senator Orville H. Platt, of Connecticut, I made my argument in
+ a private conversation with him in his rooms in the Arlington Hotel. When
+ I had done, he chewed his cigar a moment, looked at me quizzically, and
+ asked: "Do you know Abbot R. Heywood, of Ogden?"&mdash;and, as he asked
+ it, he drew a letter from his pocket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I replied that I knew Mr. Heywood well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have a letter here from him, on this same subject," he said. "Tell me.
+ What kind of man is he? And to what extent do you think I ought to depend
+ on his views?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was never more tempted in my life to tell a lie. I knew Mr. Heywood to
+ be a man of truth and high ideals; but he had been Chairman of the
+ Anti-Church party in Weber County, and he had been one of the Gentile
+ leaders for several years. I knew the intensity of his feelings against
+ the rule of the Church in politics and the Mormon attitude of defiance to
+ the law. I was sure that he would be strong in his demand for the passage
+ of the disfranchisement act.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I hesitated a moment. Senator Platt was watching me. Then, with a resolve
+ that our cause must stand or fall by the truth, I said: "Mr. Heywood is a
+ man of integrity. I think he would write exactly what he believed to be
+ true. But you know, Senator, intense feeling in politics sometimes sways a
+ man's judgment. In view of Mr. Heywood's long controversy, I hope that if
+ he has taken a view adverse to mine, his antagonism may be mitigated in
+ your mind by your own knowledge of human feelings."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Senator Platt held out the letter to me. "You've won your motion for a
+ re-hearing," he said. "I think we may be able to get the truth out of you.
+ We have not always had it in this Utah question. Read that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I read it. It was Mr. Heywood's solemn protest, as an American citizen&mdash;on
+ behalf of himself and the other members of the perfunctory Republican
+ Committee of his County&mdash;against the wholesale disfranchisement of
+ the Mormons, on the ground that it would only delay a progressive American
+ settlement of the territory!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then I went to the other members of the Senate committee privately, and
+ told them that the Mormon Church was about to make a concession concerning
+ its doctrine of polygamy. I told them so in confidence, pointing out the
+ necessity of secrecy, since to make public the news of such a recession,
+ in advance, would be to prevent the Church from authorizing it. Not one of
+ the Senators betrayed the trust. I was less confidential with the members
+ of the House Committee, because I realized that nothing could be done
+ against us unless the bill passed the Senate. But I gave the news of the
+ Church's reconsideration of its attitude to Colonel G. W. R. Dorsey, the
+ member from Nebraska, and he used his influence to get me a rehearing from
+ the House Committee. Finally I appeared once before each committee, and
+ argued our case at length. The bills did not become law. Aided by Mr.
+ Blaine's powerful friendship, we were saved "for the time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It remained to make our safety permanent, and I took train for Utah, on my
+ father's counsel, to see President Woodruff. I had given my word that
+ "something was to be done." I went to plead that it should be done&mdash;and
+ done speedily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter IV. The Manifesto
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I found him in the office of the Presidency&mdash;in the little one-story
+ house that I have described in my early interview with Joseph F Smith&mdash;and
+ he received me with the gracious affectionateness of a fatherly old man.
+ He asked me, almost at once: "What are they going to do to us in
+ Washington?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "President Woodruff," I replied, "we've been spared&mdash;temporarily. The
+ axe will not fall for a few moments. It depends on ourselves, now, whether
+ it shall fall or not."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come into the other room," he said, under his voice, in an eager
+ confidentiality, like a child with a secret. And pattering along ahead of
+ me, quick on his feet, he signed to me to follow him&mdash;with little
+ nods and beckonings&mdash;into the retiring room where I had talked with
+ Smith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There he sat down, on the edge of his chair, his elbows supported on the
+ broad arms, leaning forward, partly bowed with his age, and partly with an
+ intentness of curiosity that glittered innocently in his guileless eyes. A
+ dear old character! Sweet in his sentiments, sweet in his language, sweet
+ in the expression of his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told him, in detail, of the events in Washington, and of the men who had
+ helped us in them&mdash;particularly of Mr. Blaine, who was apparently a
+ new character in his experience, and of Senator Orville H. Platt, in whom
+ he discovered an almost neighborly interest when I told him that the
+ Senator came from Connecticut, his native state. I warned him that the
+ passage of the measure of disfranchisement had been no more than retarded.
+ I pointed out the fatal consequences for the community if the bill should
+ ever become law&mdash;the fatal consequences for the leaders of the Church
+ if the non-polygamous Mormons, deprived of their votes, were ever left
+ unable to control the administration of local government. I repeated the
+ promise that my father had authorized me to carry to the Senators and
+ Congressmen who still had the Cullom-Struble bill in hand; and I
+ emphasized the fact that because of this promise the bill had been held
+ back&mdash;with the certainty that it would never become law if we met the
+ nation half way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was watching him to see if he sensed the point I wished him to get. When
+ I touched the matter of my father's promise, his face became softly
+ reverent; and when I had done&mdash;looking at me without a trace of
+ cunning in his benignity, with an expression, rather, of exalted innocence
+ and faith,&mdash;he said: "Brother Frank, I have been making it a matter
+ of prayer. I have wrestled mightily with the Lord. And I think I see some
+ light."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order that there might be no misunderstanding, I put into plainer words
+ what I meant and what the prominent men in Washington had been led to look
+ for: since, by a "revelation" of the Church we were ordered to give
+ obedience to the government of the nation, and since we had exhausted all
+ our legal defenses, it was hoped that the Prophet, Seer, and Revelator of
+ the Church would find a way, under the guidance of God, to bring our
+ people into conformity with the law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he accepted this calmly, I added: "To be very plain with you, President
+ Woodruff, our friends expect, and the country will insist, that the Church
+ shall yield the practice of plural marriage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His eyelids quivered a little, but he showed no other sign of flinching. I
+ saw that the counsels of his advisers and the comfort that he had derived
+ from his prayers had prepared him for an immolation that was more serious
+ to him than any personal sacrifice that he could make. He said sadly: "I
+ had hoped we wouldn't have to meet this trouble this way. You know what it
+ means to our people. I had hoped that the Lord might open the minds of the
+ people of this nation to the truth, so that they might be converted to the
+ everlasting covenant. Our prophets have suffered like those of old, and I
+ thought that the persecutions of Zion were enough&mdash;that they would
+ bring some other reward than this." If I had been the bearer of a new
+ edict of proscription, I think he could not have been more profoundly
+ oppressed by the sense of his responsibility. "Did your father tell you,"
+ he asked, "that I had been seeking the mind of the Lord?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I replied that he had.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He reflected silently. "I shall talk with you again about it," he said, at
+ last. "I hope the Lord will make the way plain for his people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not wish to idealize the polygamous relation&mdash;but in monogamy a
+ man is not persecuted for his marriage, and sometimes he does not
+ appreciate the tie. In polygamy, the men and women alike had been
+ compelled to suffer on its account by the grim trials of the life itself
+ and by the hatred of all civilization arrayed against it. They had grown
+ to value their marriage system by what it had cost them. They had been
+ driven by the contempt of the world to argue for its sanctity, to live up
+ to their declarations, and to raise it in their esteem to what it
+ professed to be, the celestial order that prevailed in the Heavens! I
+ knew, as well as President Woodruff did, the wrench it would give their
+ hearts to have to abandon, at last, what they had so long suffered for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the days of anxious waiting that followed, I saw Joseph F. Smith and
+ sounded him for any hint of progress. He said: "I'm sure I don't know what
+ can be done. Your father talked with President Woodruff and me before he
+ went to Washington, but I'm sure I can't see how we can do anything." When
+ my father returned home, I went to him many times&mdash;without however
+ learning anything definite. I knew that the men in Washington would demand
+ some tangible evidence of our good faith before Congress should reconvene;
+ and I repeatedly urged the necessity of action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length he sent me word, in Ogden, that President Woodruff wished to
+ confer with me, and he suggested that it would be permissible for me to
+ speak my opinions freely. I hastened to Salt Lake City, to the offices of
+ the Presidency. President Woodruff took me into a private room and read me
+ his "manifesto."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the same that was issued on September 24, 1890, and ratified by a
+ General Conference of the Mormon Church on October 6, following. It was
+ the proclamation that freed the oppressed of Utah; for, by the subsequent
+ "covenant"&mdash;and its acceptance by the Federal government&mdash;the
+ nation did but confirm their freedom and accord them their constitutional
+ rights. Here, shaking in the hand of age, was a sheet of paper by which
+ the future of a half million people was to be directed; and that simple
+ old man was to speak through it, to them, with the awful authority of the
+ voice of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He told me he had written it himself, and it certainly appeared to me to
+ be in his handwriting. Its authorship has since been variously attributed.
+ Some of the present-day polygamists say that it was I who wrote it. Chas.
+ W. Penrose and George Reynolds have claimed that they edited it. I presume
+ that as Mormons, "in good standing," believing in the inspiration of the
+ Prophet, they appreciate the blasphemy of their claim!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I found it disappointingly mild. It denied that the Church had been
+ solemnizing any plural marriages of late, and advised the faithful "to
+ refrain from contracting any marriages forbidden by the law of the land."
+ In spite of this mildness, President Woodruff asked me whether I thought
+ the Mormons would support the revelation&mdash;whether they would accept
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I replied that there could be no proper anxiety on that point. The
+ majority of the Mormon people were ready for such a message. It might be
+ very much stronger without arousing resistance. With the exception of the
+ comparatively few men and women who were living in polygamy, the community
+ would accept it gratefully. Rather, I made bold to say, my anxiety was as
+ to whether the nation would believe that such an equivocally-worded
+ document meant an absolute recession from the practice of plural marriage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was plain that his advisers had not pointed out this danger to him. He
+ asked me how I thought the nation would take it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I asked him, point blank, whether it meant an absolute recession from
+ polygamy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He answered that it did.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then (I said) with such an interpretation of it, and a formal and public
+ acceptance of it by the Church authorities, I did not doubt that we could
+ convince the nation of its sufficiency. I reminded him&mdash;as I am now
+ glad to remember&mdash;that the word of the Mormon people had passed
+ current in the political and commercial circles of the country; that I had
+ several times been the bearer of messages from them to prominent men; that
+ we had been taken on faith and the faith had been always vindicated.
+ Finally, in order that I might carry away no misapprehension, nor convey
+ any, I asked him if it was the intention of the manifesto to inhibit any
+ further plural marriage living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He answered, quaintly: "Why, of course, Frank&mdash;because that's what
+ they've been persecuting us for." There was not even a shrewdness in his
+ voice when he added: "You know they didn't get our brethren in prison for
+ polygamy, but for living with their plural wives."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps no other man in Utah could have said such a thing without sarcasm.
+ The fact was that the United States authorities had been practically
+ unable to prove a case of polygamy (which was a felony) because the
+ marriage records were concealed by the Church; but they could prove plural
+ marriage living (a mere misdemeanor) by repute and circumstance. It was
+ part of President Woodruff's unworldliness that he did not see the satire
+ of his words; and I was the more convinced of his good faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was convinced also, by several of his remarks, that he had consulted
+ with the Church's attorney, Mr. Franklin S. Richards; and while I trusted
+ the President's unworldly faith, I trusted more the sagacity of his more
+ worldly advisers. I began to see, with a sure hope, the beginning of the
+ end of all our miseries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some days later I was summoned to attend a meeting of the Church
+ authorities in the President's offices; and I knew that the test had come.
+ The Church was governed by the Presidency, composed of President Woodruff
+ and his two Councillor's, with the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, the
+ Presidents of Seventies, and the presiding Bishopric, composed of three
+ members. These quorums aggregate twenty-five men; and to their number may
+ be added the Chief Patriarch of the Church, making a body of twenty-six
+ general authorities&mdash;the Hierarchy. It was from these latter men,
+ polygamists and (I feared) parochial in their ignorance of the nation and
+ their trust in the protection of their followers&mdash;it was from them
+ (and the other practicers of polygamy) that any opposition would come to
+ the acceptance and publication of the manifesto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They met&mdash;something less than a score of them, with two or three of
+ their most trusted advisers&mdash;in one of the general offices of the
+ Presidency, sitting in leather chairs along its walls, with a sort of
+ central skylight illuminating subduedly the anxiety of their silent faces.
+ President Woodruff and his two Councillor's entered to them; and this
+ insignificant-looking apartment&mdash;of such tremendous community
+ significance, because of the memories of its past&mdash;seemed to take on
+ the gravity of another momentous crisis in the destiny of its people. The
+ portraits in oils of the dead presidents, martyrs, and prophets of the
+ Church, looked down on us from the facade of a little gallery, and caught
+ my eyes almost hypnotically with the imperturbability of their gaze. No
+ word from them! In the midst of the broken utterance of emotion&mdash;when
+ the tears were wet on faces to whose manliness tears were the very sweat
+ of martyrdom&mdash;I saw those immovable countenances as placid as the
+ features of the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President Woodruff stood under them, so old and other-worldly, that he
+ seemed already of their circle rather than ours; and he spoke in a voice
+ of feeling for us, but with a simple and courageous finality that sounded
+ the very note of fate. He had called the brethren together (he said) to
+ submit a decision to their consideration, and he desired from them an
+ expression of their willingness to accept and abide by it. He knew what a
+ trial it would be to the "whole household of Israel." "We have sought," he
+ said, "to live our religion&mdash;to harm no one&mdash;to perform our
+ mission in this world for the salvation of the living and the dead. We
+ have obeyed the principle of celestial marriage because it came to us from
+ God. We have suffered under the rage of the wicked; we were driven from
+ our homes into the desert; our prophets have been slain, our holy ones
+ persecuted&mdash;and it did seem to me that we were entitled to the
+ constitutional protection of the courts in the practice of our religion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the courts had decided "against us." The great men of the nation were
+ determined to show us no mercy. Legislation was impending that would put
+ us "in the power of the wicked." Brother George Q. Cannon, Brother John T.
+ Caine, and the other brethren who had been in Washington, had found that
+ the situation of the Church was critical. Brother Franklin S. Richards had
+ advised him that our last legal defense had fallen. "In broken and
+ contrite spirit" he had sought the will of the Lord, and the Holy Spirit
+ had revealed to him that it was necessary for the Church to relinquish the
+ practice of that principle for which the brethren had been willing to lay
+ down their lives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sort of ghastly stillness accepted what he said as a confirmation of the
+ worst fears of the men who had evidently come there with some knowledge of
+ what they were to hear. I glanced at the faces of those opposite me. A set
+ and staring pallor held them motionless. I was conscious of a chill of
+ heart that seemed communicated to me from them. My brother Abraham was
+ sitting beside me; I knew his deep affection for his family; I knew with
+ what a clutch of misery this edict of separation was crushing his hope; I
+ felt myself growing as pale and tense as he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The silence was broken by President Woodruff asking one of the brethren to
+ read the manifesto. When it was concluded, he said: "The matter is now
+ before you. I want you to speak as the Spirit moves you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no reply, except a sort of general gasp of low-voiced
+ interjections and a little buzz of whisperings that sounded like emotion
+ taking its breath. He called on my father to speak. The First Councillor
+ rose to make a statesmanlike review of the crisis; and I understood that
+ with his usual diplomacy he was putting aside from him the authority of
+ leadership until he could see whether an opposition was to develop that
+ should make it necessary for him to front it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That opposition made a rustle of stirring in the pause that followed. I
+ saw it in the changed expressions of some of the faces. Several of the men&mdash;including
+ my brother Abraham, and Joseph F. Smith&mdash;asked whether the manifesto
+ meant a cessation of plural marriages: whether no more such marriages were
+ to be allowed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President Woodruff answered that it did; that the Lord had taken back the
+ principle from the children of men and that we would have no power to
+ restore it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they asked whether it meant a cessation of plural marriage living&mdash;whether
+ they would be required to separate from the wives whom they had taken in
+ the holy covenant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He answered, firmly, that it did; that the brethren in Washington found it
+ imperative; that it was the will of the Lord; that we must submit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I saw their faces flush and then slowly pale again&mdash;and the storm
+ broke. One after another they rose and protested, hoarsely, in the voice
+ of tears, that they were willing to suffer "persecution unto death" rather
+ than to violate the covenants which they had made "in holy places" with
+ the women who had trusted them. One after another they offered themselves
+ for any sacrifice but this betrayal of the women and children to whom they
+ owed an everlasting faith. And a manlier lot of men never spoke in a
+ manlier way. Not a petty word was uttered. Their thought was not for
+ themselves. Their grief was not selfish. Their protests had a dignity in
+ pathos that shook me in spite of myself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they had done, my father rose again with a face that seemed to bear
+ the marks of their grief while it repressed his own. He dwelt anew on the
+ long efforts of our attorney and our friends in Congress to resist what we
+ believed to be unconstitutional measures to repress our practice of a
+ religious faith. But we were citizens of a nation. We were required to
+ obey its laws. And when we found, by the highest judicial interpretation
+ of statute and constitution, that we were without grounds for our plea of
+ religious immunity, we had but the alternative either of defying the power
+ of the whole nation or of submitting ourselves to its authority. For his
+ part he was willing to do the will of the Lord. And since the Prophet of
+ God, after a long season of prayer, had submitted this revelation as the
+ will of the Lord, he was ready for the sacrifice. The leaders of the
+ Church had no right to think of themselves. They must remember how loyally
+ the people had sacrificed their substance and risked their safety to guard
+ their brethren who were living in plural marriage. Those brethren must not
+ be ungrateful now. They must not now refuse to make their sacrifice, in
+ answer to the sacrifices that had been made for them so often. The people
+ had long protected them. Now they must protect the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under the commanding persuasion of his voice I saw the determination of
+ their resistance begin to falter and relax. President Woodruff called on
+ me to speak, and I felt that it was my duty to represent the needs, the
+ hopes, and the opportunities of the hundreds of thousands of the
+ undistinguished mass who would make no decision for themselves, but whose
+ fate was trembling on the event. I rose to speak for them, with my hand on
+ my brother's shoulder, knowing that my every word would be a stab at his
+ heart, and hoping that my grasp might be a touch of sympathy to him&mdash;knowing
+ that I must urge these elders to sacrifice themselves and their families
+ for a redemption of which I was to share the benefits&mdash;but sustained
+ by the remembrance of the solemn pledge which I had been authorized to
+ give in Washington to honorable men who had trusted in our honor&mdash;and
+ strengthened by the thought of all those dear, to me, whose sufferings
+ would be multiplied, with no hope of relief, if the few would not now
+ yield to save the many.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I described the situation as I had seen it in Washington and as I knew it
+ in Utah from a more intimate personal experience than these leaders could
+ have of the sufferings of the people. I told them how cheerfully and
+ bravely the non-polygamists had borne the brunt of protecting them in the
+ practice of their faith, and yet how patient a hope had been always with
+ us that the final demand might not be made upon us for the sacrifice of a
+ citizenship which we valued more because it shielded them than because it
+ armed us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Encouraged by the face of President Woodruff, I reminded them that the
+ sorrow and the parting, at which they rebelled, could only be for a little
+ breath of time, according to their faith; that by the celestial covenant,
+ into which they had entered, they were assured that they should have their
+ wives and children with them throughout the endless ages of eternity. The
+ people had given much to them. Surely they could yield the domestic
+ happinesses of the little remaining day of life in this world, in order to
+ save and prosper those who were not to enjoy their supreme exaltation of
+ beatitude in the world to come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had felt my brother strong under my hand. He rose, when I concluded. And
+ with a manful brevity he replied that he submitted because it was the will
+ of the Lord, and because he had no right to interpose his selfish love and
+ yearnings between the people of God and their worldly opportunity. The
+ others followed. Not one referred to the equivocal language of the
+ manifesto or questioned it. They accepted it&mdash;as it was then and
+ afterwards interpreted&mdash;as a revelation from God made through the
+ Prophet of the Church; and they subscribed to it as a solemn covenant,
+ before God, with the people of the nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joseph F. Smith was one of the last to speak. With a face like wax, his
+ hands outstretched, in an intensity of passion that seemed as if it must
+ sweep the assembly, he declared that he had covenanted, at the altar of
+ God's house, in the presence of his Father, to cherish the wives and
+ children whom the Lord had given him. They were more to him than life.
+ They were dearer to him than happiness. He would rather choose to stand,
+ with them, alone&mdash;persecuted&mdash;proscribed&mdash;outlawed&mdash;to
+ wait until God in His anger should break the nation with His avenging
+ stroke. But&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He dropped his arms. He seemed to shrink in his commanding stature like a
+ man stricken with a paralysis of despair. The tears came to the pained
+ constriction of his eyelids.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have never disobeyed a revelation from God," he said. "I cannot&mdash;I
+ dare not&mdash;now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He announced&mdash;with his head up, though his body swayed&mdash;that he
+ would accept and abide by the revelation. When he sank in his chair and
+ covered his face with his hands, there was a gasp of sympathy and relief,
+ as if we had been hearing the pain of a man in agony. And my heart gave a
+ great leap; for, in these supreme moments of feeling, things come to us
+ that are larger than our knowledge, more splendid than our hopes; and I
+ saw, as if in the blinding glisten of the tears in my eyes, a radiant
+ vision of our future, an unselfish people freed from a burden of
+ persecution, a nation's forgiveness born, a grateful state created. I saw
+ it&mdash;and I looked at Smith and loved him for it. I knew then, as I
+ know now, that he and those others were at this moment sincere. I knew
+ that they had relinquished what was more dear to them than the breath of
+ life. I knew the appalling significance, to them, of the promise which
+ they were making to the nation. And in all the degraded after-years, when
+ so many of them were guilty of breach of covenant and base violation of
+ trust, I tried never to forget that in the hour of their greatest trial,
+ they had sacrificed themselves for their people; they had suffered for the
+ happiness of others; they had said, sincerely: "Not my will, O Lord, but
+ Thine, be done!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter V. On the Road to Freedom
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In any discussion of the public affairs that make the subject matter of
+ this narrative, a line of discrimination must be drawn at the year 1890.
+ In that year the Church began a progressive course of submission to the
+ civil law, and the nation received each act of surrender with forgiveness.
+ The previous defiance's of the Mormon people ceased to give grounds for a
+ complaint against them. The old harshnesses of the Federal government were
+ canceled by the new generosity of a placated nation. And neither party to
+ the present strife in Utah should go back, beyond the period of this
+ composition, to dig up, from the past, its buried wrongs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In relating, here, some of the events of 1888 and 1889, I have tried
+ neither to justify the Mormons nor to defend their prosecutors. I have
+ wished merely to make clear the situation in Utah, and to introduce to
+ you, in advance, some of the leaders of the distracted community, so that
+ you might understand the conditions from which the Mormons escaped by
+ giving their covenant to the nation and be able to judge of the
+ obligations and responsibilities of the men who gave it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I, have described the promulgation and acceptance of "the manifesto" with
+ such circumstance and detail, because of what has since occurred in Utah.
+ Let me add that some two weeks later the General Conference of the Church
+ endorsed the President's pronouncement as "authoritative and binding." And
+ let me point out that it was the first and only law of the Mormon Church
+ ever so sustained by triple sanctities&mdash;"revealed" as a command from
+ God, accepted by the prophets in solemn fraternity assembled, and ratified
+ by the vote of the entire "congregation of Israel" before it was declared
+ to be binding upon men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first, because of the somewhat indefinite promise of the message
+ itself, many of the non-Mormons of Utah remained suspicious and in doubt
+ of it. But it was recognized by Judge Zane, in court&mdash;on the day
+ following the close of the Conference&mdash;as an official declaration,
+ "honest and sincere." The newspapers throughout the whole country so
+ received it. The Church authorities sent assurances to Washington that
+ convinced the statesmen, there, of the completeness and finality of the
+ submission. And the good faith of the covenant was at last admitted by the
+ non-Mormons of Utah and endorsed by their trust. I do not know of any
+ change in human affairs dependent on human will&mdash;more speedy,
+ effective and comprehensive than this recession. Within the space of a few
+ days a revolution was completed that had been sought by the power of our
+ nation and of the civilized world, for a generation, with stripes and
+ imprisonment, death, confiscation and the ostracism of the country's
+ public contempt. It had been obtained, I knew, chiefly by the sagacity of
+ the First Councillor using the pressure of circumstances to enforce the
+ persuasions of diplomacy. I felt that a miracle of change had been brought
+ to pass. He had placed us on the road to freedom; and I trusted his
+ guidance to lead us to our goal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That goal, to me personally, was the honor of American citizenship&mdash;an
+ ambition that had been an obsession with me from my earliest youth. I had
+ never heard a man on a railroad train talk of how he was going to vote in
+ a national election, without feeling a pang of shamed envy; for my lack of
+ citizenship seemed a mark of inferiority. The patriotic reading of my
+ boyhood had made the American republic, to me, the noblest administration
+ of freemen in the history of government and the exercise of its franchise
+ literally the highest dignity of human privilege. I would have been as
+ proud&mdash;I was as proud when the day came&mdash;to vote for the
+ President of the United States as he could have been to take his oath of
+ office. I do not believe that any poor serf, escaped from the tyranny of
+ Russia, ever saw the American shore with a more grateful eye than I looked
+ to the prospect of being admitted, with the citizens of Utah, into the
+ enfranchisement of the Republic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was evident that the Church's recession from polygamy would not be
+ enough to free us, so long as its control of politics remained. Its other
+ practices had flourished and been sheltered under its political power; and
+ now that the Church had ceased to be a lawbreaker, our friends in
+ Washington were properly expecting that it would cease to interfere with
+ its members in the exercise of their citizenship. For this reason, when I
+ was notified that I had been selected as a member of the advisory
+ committee of the People's Party (the Church party), I went at once to my
+ father and told him that I would not take the place; that I intended to
+ work, personally, and through my newspaper, for the political division of
+ Utah on the lines of the national parties. He held that until Gentile
+ solidarity was dissolved, it would be dangerous to divide the allegiance
+ of the Mormons; but he did not stand against my protest; he contented
+ himself&mdash;diplomatically&mdash;with sending me to consult with
+ President Woodruff and Joseph F. Smith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To them, I argued that the political emancipation of the Mormon people
+ from ecclesiastical direction was as necessary as the recession from
+ polygamy had been. We must be set free to perform our duty to the country
+ solely as citizens of the country, before we could expect to be given the
+ right to perform it at all. And, for my part, the only action I would
+ consent to take as a member of the advisory committee of the People's
+ Party would be to vote for the dissolution of the party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President Woodruff referred me to my father, and advised me to be guided
+ by him. Joseph F. Smith urged that a division of the Mormon people on
+ national party lines would enable the Liberal (the Gentile) party to march
+ in between. I argued in reply that we must divide at some time, and the
+ sooner the better, since every year was increasing the Gentile population.
+ They would never split as long as we remained solid. And if we were ever
+ to be permitted to nationalize ourselves, it would not be until we had
+ dissolved the party organizations whose very names were a proof of the
+ continued rule of the Church in politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he had no more arguments to advance, he gave a reluctant assent to
+ mine. I reported back to my father and he approved of my plans. He asked
+ me humorously with whom I expected to affiliate, since he knew of no one
+ who was likely to go with me; but I could see that he was pleased with my
+ independence and hoped I might succeed in doing something to break the
+ deadlock-grapple of Mormon and Gentile that held Utah apart from the rest
+ of the country in politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His humorous idea of my undertaking gave its color to my beginnings. It
+ was rather a spirited adventure, as I look back upon it now. When we
+ organized a Republican Club at Ogden, my intimate friend, Ben E. Rich, and
+ another friend named Joseph Belnap, were the only Mormons, so far as I
+ know, who joined me in becoming members. Outside of us three, I did not
+ know of another Mormon Republican in the whole territory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, the status of the Mormon people, in their fancied relation to the
+ two great parties of the country, was almost identical with that of the
+ people of the South after the Civil War. Practically every Mormon believed
+ himself to be a Democrat. Among the young men of the Church there had been
+ occasional attempts to form Democratic Clubs. Mr. John T. Caine, delegate
+ in Congress from the territory, was a Democrat. My father had sat on the
+ Democratic side of the House. Almost all the men who had braved the
+ sentiments of their own states, to speak for us in Congress, had been
+ Democrats. And, of course, the administration of the laws that had been so
+ cruel to the feelings of the Mormons had been in Republican hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two years earlier, in Ogden, I had spoken in a meeting of Republicans that
+ had been called to rejoice over the election of Benjamin Harrison to the
+ Presidency; and I was still being taunted by my Mormon friends with having
+ clasped hands with "the persecutors of the Prophets." When I came out,
+ now, as an advocate of Republicanism, I was met everywhere with this
+ charge&mdash;that I had joined the enemies of the Church, that I was
+ assisting the persecutors of my father. The fact that my father approved
+ of what I was doing, relieved the seriousness of the situation for me; and
+ the humorous assistance of Ben Rich in our political evangelism gave a
+ secret chuckle to many of the incidents of our campaign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We went from town to town, from district to district, up the mountain
+ valleys, across the plains, into mining camps and farming communities&mdash;using
+ the meeting-houses, the school-rooms, the town halls&mdash;taking the
+ afternoon to coax the tired workers of the fields or of the mines to come
+ and hear us in the evening, and watching them fall asleep in the light of
+ our borrowed kerosene lamps while we talked. They came eagerly. Indeed, my
+ own ambition for citizenship&mdash;for a right to participate in the
+ affairs of the nation&mdash;was probably no keener than theirs; and they
+ had an innocent curiosity about the questions of national politics, of
+ which they had never before been invited to know anything. They listened
+ almost devoutly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Brethren and sisters," a bishop exhorted them at a meeting in which one
+ of our party was to speak, "we have come to listen to this man, and I hope
+ we will be guided in all our reflections by the Spirit of God and that we
+ will do nothing to offend that Spirit. Let there be no commotion, no
+ whispering, and, above all, no hand clapping."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a life that had as few diversions as theirs, a political meeting was an
+ exciting event. The whole family came, and the mothers brought their
+ babies. Surely in no other American community did politics ever have such
+ a homely and serious consideration. Certainly no other community would
+ have so quickly understood the theories of the two parties or accepted
+ them so implicitly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was all theory! I recognize, now, that I preached a Republicanism
+ that was an ideal of what it should be, rather than any modern faith of
+ the "practical politician." I had gathered it from my reading, from
+ hearing the speeches in Congress, from sympathetic conferences with the
+ great men who were responsible for the dogmas of the party; and every
+ assurance of grace that their ability could give and my credulity accept,
+ I proclaimed religiously as a political salvation to our people. I built
+ up an ideal, and then judged the party thereafter according to the measure
+ of that ideal. When I found that some of the charges against the
+ Republican party were true&mdash;charges which I had indignantly repelled&mdash;I
+ was as shocked as any pious worshipper who ever found that his idol had
+ feet of clay. Our people, having accepted the faith with as simple a hope
+ as it was offered, were as easily turned from it when they found that it
+ was false. The political moods of Utah, for its first few years of
+ statehood, were a puzzle to the "practical" leaders of the parties; but to
+ us who understood the impulses of honesty that moved the changes, things
+ were as clear as they were encouraging.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the previous summer in Washington, I had met General James S.
+ Clarkson, then president of the National League of Republican Clubs; and
+ now, on his invitation, in the Spring of 1891, Rich and I went to
+ Louisville to speak before the national convention of the league. Through
+ the kindness of General Clarkson, I was given the official recognition of
+ a perfunctory place on the executive committee of the league's national
+ committee, and came into touch with many of the party leaders. It was
+ about this time, I imagine, that they conceived the idea of using the
+ gratitude of the Mormons in order to carry Utah and the surrounding states
+ in which the Mormon vote might constitute a balance of political power. I
+ know that the idea was old and established when I came upon it, in 1894,
+ during the campaign for statehood. As I also found, still later, the
+ Republican leaders and the business interests with which they were in
+ relation, had their eyes on a distant prospect of fabulous financial
+ schemes in which the secret funds of the Church were to help in the
+ building of railroads and the promoting of other enterprises of associated
+ capital. But at the time of which I am writing, I had not had sufficient
+ experience to suspect the motives of the men who encouraged our work in
+ Utah; and I accepted in good faith their public declarations that the sole
+ aim of the party was to serve the needs of the people of the United States&mdash;and
+ therefore of the people of Utah!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed to me that such a noble principle should win the support of
+ Mormon and Gentile alike, and it was on this principle that I appealed for
+ the support of both. I was so sure of winning with it that I resented and
+ fought against the aid of the Church that came to us as our campaign
+ succeeded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The People's Party (the Church Party) had been dissolved (June, 1891) by
+ the formal action of the executive committee, under the direct instruction
+ of the leaders of the Church. The tendency was for its members to organize
+ themselves immediately as a Democratic party. They were led by such
+ brilliant and trusted defenders of the Church as Franklin S. Richards,
+ Chas. C. Richards, Wm. H. King, James H. Moyle, Brigham H. Roberts and
+ Apostle Moses Thatcher; and a group of abler advocates could not have been
+ found in any state in the Union. It was against the sentiment of the
+ Mormon people, vivified by such inspiring Democracy as these men taught,
+ that our little organization of Republicans had to make headway; and an
+ anxiety began to show itself among the Church authorities for a less
+ unequal division, and consequently a greater appearance of political
+ independence, among the faithful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apostle John Henry Smith came out as a Republican stump speaker in rivalry
+ with Moses Thatcher, the Democratic Prophet. Joseph F. Smith announced
+ himself a Republican descendant of Whigs. Apostle Francis Marion Lyman, in
+ his religious ministrations, counselled leading brethren to withhold
+ themselves from the Democratic party unless they had gone too far to
+ retreat. Men of ecclesiastical office in various parts of the territory&mdash;who
+ were regarded as being safe in their wisdom and fidelity&mdash;were urged
+ to hold themselves and their influence in reserve for such use on either
+ side of politics as the future might demand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Against this ecclesiastical direction of the people's choice, I objected
+ again and again to the Presidency, and my objections seemed to meet with
+ acquiescence. It required no prescience on my part to foresee that the
+ growing dislike and distrust of Moses Thatcher at Church headquarters
+ would lead to a strife in the Church that might be carried into our
+ politics; and I knew how small would be the hope of preserving any
+ political independence, if once it were involved in the intrigues of
+ priests and their rivalries for a supremacy of influence among the people.
+ I was resolved that not even a Church, ruling by "divine right," should
+ interpose between my country and my franchise; and an encroachment that I
+ would not permit upon my own freedom, I would not help to inflict upon
+ others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men with whom I had been working proposed me as the candidate for
+ Congress of the new Utah Republicans; and I was supported by a strong
+ delegation from my own country and from other parts of the territory; but
+ I found that I was not "satisfactory" to some of the Mormon leaders, and
+ in the convention (1892) Apostle John Henry Smith and my cousin George M.
+ Cannon led in an attempt to nominate Judge Chas. Bennett, a Gentile
+ lawyer. After a bitter fight of two days and nights, we carried the
+ convention against them, and I was nominated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Democrats selected, as their candidate, one of the strongest
+ characters in the territory, Joseph L. Rawlins. He was the son of a Mormon
+ bishop, but he had left the Church immediately upon reaching manhood. He
+ was a great lawyer, a staunch Democrat, and wonderfully popular. There
+ followed one of the swiftest and most exciting campaigns ever seen in
+ Utah. The whole people rose to it with enthusiasm. Our party chairman,
+ Chas. Crane, had a genius for organization; our speakers drew crowded
+ meetings; and though charges of Church influence were made by both sides,
+ the question of religion was no longer the one that divided Utah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were getting on famously, when an incident occurred that was at once
+ disastrous and salutary. While I was away from headquarters, stumping the
+ districts, Chairman Crane (who was a Gentile), Ben Rich and Joseph F.
+ Smith, issued a pamphlet in Republican behalf called "Nuggets of Truth."
+ It gave a picture of Joseph Smith, the original Prophet, on the first page
+ and a picture of me on the last one. (They issued also a certificate,
+ obtained by Joseph F. Smith and given out by him, that I was a Mormon "in
+ good standing.") As soon as I heard of the matter, I wired Chairman Crane
+ that unless the pamphlet were immediately withdrawn, I should return to
+ Salt Lake City and publicly denounce such methods. It was withdrawn, but
+ the damage was done, I was defeated, as I deserved to be&mdash;though I
+ was the innocent victim of the atrocity&mdash;and Mr. Rawlins was elected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The campaign proved, however, that if the Church leaders would only keep
+ their hands off, there was ample strength in either party to make a
+ presentation of national issues of sufficient appeal to divide the people
+ on party lines; and it was evident that the people would choose the party
+ that made the best showing of principles and candidates. "Nuggets of
+ Truth" left us with a nasty sense that at no hour were we assured of
+ safety from ecclesiastical interference&mdash;or the nefarious attempt to
+ make an appearance of such interference&mdash;in our political affairs.
+ But the disaster that followed, in this instance, was so prompt that we
+ could hope it would prove a lesson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most important of all, the campaign had made it evident that there was now
+ no political mission in Utah for the Liberal (the Gentile) party&mdash;assuming
+ that the retirement of the Mormon priests from politics was sincere and
+ permanent. Accordingly, the organization formally met some months later,
+ and formally dissolved; and, by that act, the last great obstacle to
+ united progress was removed from our road to statehood, and the men who
+ removed it acted with a generosity that makes one of the noblest records
+ of self-sacrifice in the history of the state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They could foresee that their dissolution as a separate force meant
+ statehood for Utah&mdash;a sovereignty in itself that would leave the
+ Gentiles in the minority and without any appeal to the nation. Under
+ territorial conditions, although the non-Mormons were less than one-third
+ of the population, they had two-thirds of the political power. They held
+ all the Federal offices, including executive and judicial positions. They
+ had the Governor, with an absolute veto over the acts of the Mormon
+ legislature. They had the President and Congress who could annul any
+ statute of the territory; and they had with them almost the entire
+ sentiment of the nation. It was in their power to have protracted the
+ Mormon controversy, and to have withstood the appeal for statehood, to
+ this day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They yielded everything; they accepted, in return, only the good faith of
+ the Mormons. Was it within the capacity of any human mind to foresee that
+ in return for such generosity the Church would ever give over its
+ tabernacles to teaching its people to hold in detestation the very, names
+ of these men who saved us? Was it to be suspected that the political power
+ surrendered by them would ever be used as a persecution upon them?&mdash;that
+ the liberty, given by them to us, would ever afterward be denied them by
+ us? It was inconceivable. Neither in the magnanimity of their minds nor in
+ the gratitude of ours was there a suspicion of such a catastrophe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During 1891, President Woodruff's manifesto had been ratified in local
+ Church conferences in every "stake of Zion;" and a second General
+ Conference had endorsed it in October of that year. President Woodruff,
+ Councillor Joseph F. Smith and Apostle Lorenzo Snow went before the
+ Federal Master in Chancery&mdash;in a proceeding to regain possession of
+ escheated Church property&mdash;and swore that the manifesto had
+ prohibited plural marriages, that it required a cessation of all plural
+ marriage living, and that it was being obeyed by the Mormon people. These
+ facts were recited in a petition for amnesty forwarded to President
+ Harrison in December, 1891, accompanied by signed statements from Chief
+ Justice Zane, Governor Thomas and other non-Mormons who pledged themselves
+ that the petitioners were sincere and that if amnesty were granted good
+ faith would be kept. "Our people are scattered," President Woodruff and
+ his apostles declared in their petition. "Homes are made desolate. Many
+ are still imprisoned; others are banished and in hiding. Our hearts bleed
+ for these. In the past they followed our counsels, and while they are
+ still afflicted our souls are in sackcloth and ashes.... As shepherds of a
+ patient and suffering people we ask amnesty for them and pledge our faith
+ and honor for their future."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Washington, the Church's attorney, Mr. Franklin S. Richards, and
+ delegate John T. Caine supported the petition with their avowals of the
+ sincerity of the Church leaders, the genuineness of our political
+ division, and the sanctity with which we regarded the promise to obey the
+ laws. The Utah Commission, a non-Mormon body, favored amnesty in an
+ official report of September, 1892. And when I went to Washington, in the
+ winter of 1892-3, the changed attitude of the Federal authorities toward
+ us was strikingly evident.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President Harrison issued his amnesty proclamation, early in January,
+ 1893, to all persons liable to the penalties of the Edmunds-Tucker Act,
+ but "on the express condition that they shall in the future faithfully
+ obey the laws of the United States... and not otherwise." The proclamation
+ concluded: "Those who fail to avail themselves of the clemency hereby
+ offered will be vigorously prosecuted." Not a polygamist in Utah, to my
+ knowledge, declined to take advantage of the mercy, by refusing the
+ expressly implied pledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the campaign had been continued for the return of the escheated
+ Church property and for the passage of an Enabling Act that should permit
+ the territory to organize for statehood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [FOOTNOTE: Statehood seemed still very faraway. There was a
+ Trans-Mississippi Congress held at Ogden in 1892, and though the delegates&mdash;coming
+ from all the states and territories "west of the river," were the guests
+ of the people of Utah, so hopeless was our status in the consideration of
+ mankind that the delegates from the territories of New Mexico and Arizona
+ would not let our names be joined to theirs in a resolution for statehood
+ which we wished the committee on resolutions to propose to the Congress.
+ Governor Prince of New Mexico replied, to our plea for a share in the
+ resolution, that he did not intend to damn New Mexico by having her mixed
+ up with Utah. We appealed to the Congress, and we were saved by a speech
+ made by Thos. M. Patterson of Colorado, subsequently senator from
+ Colorado, who carried the day for us. At a recent Trans-Mississippi
+ Congress held in Denver, I sat with ex-Senator Patterson to hear Mr.
+ Prince still proposing resolutions in support of statehood for New Mexico.
+ Twenty years later!] Joseph L. Rawlins, Democratic delegate from Utah,
+ worked valiantly among the Democrats, and he was assisted by the influence
+ of Mr. Franklin S. Richards and John T. Caine and others among their old
+ associates in that party. But, in the very midst of the fight, we were
+ advised that, unless the Republican leaders would let the Enabling Act go
+ through, the Democratic leaders would falter in our advocacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had been urged to go to Washington by the Presidency to do what I might
+ to allay Republican antagonism, and I found that a number of
+ self-appointed lobbyists (who expected political preferment's and other
+ rewards from the Church in the event of statehood) had been using the most
+ amazing arguments in our behalf. For example, they told some of the
+ "financial Senators" that the Church had fourteen million dollars in
+ secret funds with which to help build a railroad to the coast as soon as
+ statehood should be granted. They cited the number of the Church's
+ adherents in all the states and territories of the Pacific Coast and as
+ far east as Iowa and Missouri, and predicted that the gratitude of these
+ people to the Republicans who were helping to free Utah would enable the
+ Republican party to control a balance of political power in the several
+ states. They declared positively that plural marriages and plural marriage
+ living had utterly ceased among the Mormons for all time. And they made
+ such statements with great particularity to Senator Orville H. Platt, of
+ Connecticut, who was too wise a man to credit them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as I returned to Washington, he summoned me to a private meeting,
+ in his parlor in the Arlington Hotel, and confronted me with one of the
+ Republican lobbyists who had been soliciting his personal favor and his
+ almost controlling influence. "Now, Mr. Cannon," he said, in his dry way,
+ "have the Mormons stopped living with their plural wives? And will there
+ never be another case of plural marriage among them?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I remembered the lesson of my interview with him at the time of the
+ campaign against the disfranchisement bill, and I answered: "No. Not all
+ the men of the Church have complied fully with the law. So far as I know,
+ all the general authorities of the Church&mdash;with two or three
+ exceptions&mdash;are fulfilling the covenant they gave; and so far as I
+ can judge there will never be another plural marriage ceremony with the
+ consent or connivance of the leaders of the Church. But human nature is
+ very much the same in Utah as it is in Connecticut. Here and there, no
+ doubt, a man feels that he's under an obligation to keep his covenant with
+ his plural wives in preference to the covenant of his accepted amnesty;
+ and there and here, possibly, in the future, some man will break the law
+ and defy the orders of the Church and take a plural wife. But the leaders
+ of the Church do not countenance either proceeding, and any man who
+ violates the law, in either respect, offends against the revelations of
+ the Church and, I believe, will be dealt with as an apostate. I come
+ direct from the Presidency of the Church, and I am authorized to pledge
+ their word of honor that they will themselves obey the law and do all in
+ their power as men and leaders to bring their people into harmony with the
+ institutions of this country as rapidly as possible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Senator Platt had slowly unwrapped himself, rising from his chair to his
+ full height of more than six feet, in a lank and alarming indignation.
+ "There," he said, striding up and down the room. "That's it! That's just
+ it. These people have been telling us that you were obeying the law&mdash;all
+ of you&mdash;in every instance&mdash;and would always obey it. And now you
+ come here and admit, openly, that some of you, to whom we have granted
+ amnesty, are breaking your word&mdash;and that 'possibly' others, in the
+ future, will do the same thing!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Senator," I pleaded, "what confidence could you have in me if I were to
+ tell you the Mormons were so superhuman that in a single day they could
+ eliminate all their human characteristics? I'm asking you to recognize
+ that the tendency imparted to a whole community is more important than any
+ one man's breach of the law. Believe me, if you grant us our statehood,
+ there will never be any lawbreaking sanctioned or protected by the Church
+ leaders, and just as speedily as possible the entire system will be
+ brought into harmony with the institutions of the nation. I'm telling you
+ the truth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned on me to ask, abruptly, how the polygamists had adjusted their
+ family affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I answered that in nearly all cases within my personal knowledge, the
+ polygamist had relinquished conjugal relations with his plural wives with
+ the full acquiescence of them and their children. He supported them, cared
+ for the children, and in all other ways acted as the guardian and
+ protector of the household. In a few cases men had gone, to an extreme.
+ For instance, my uncle, Angus M. Cannon&mdash;president of the Salt Lake
+ "stake of Zion," a man of most decided character&mdash;had declared that
+ he had entered into his marriage relations with his wives under a covenant
+ that gave them equality in his regards; and in order that he might not
+ wound the sensibilities of any, he had separated himself from all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I reminded Senator Platt that with such examples on the part of the
+ leaders, there could be no general law-breaking among the Mormons, and
+ that gradually the polygamous element would accommodate itself to the
+ demands of law and the commands of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He waved us away with a curt announcement that he would have to think the
+ matter over. If I had not known the essential justice and common sense
+ under his dry and irascible exterior, I might have been alarmed. The
+ lobbyist's concern was almost comic. As soon as we were out of hearing of
+ the Senator's apartment, shaking both fists frantically at me, he cried:
+ "You've ruined everything! We had him. We had him&mdash;all right&mdash;until
+ you came down here and let the cat out of the bag! You knew what we'd been
+ telling him. Why didn't you stick to it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I replied with equal warmth: "You may lie all you please; but if we have
+ to win Utah's statehood with lies I don't want it. Senator Platt has been
+ generous to us in our time of need, and I don't intend to deceive him&mdash;or
+ any other man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a matter of fact, this was not only common honesty; it was also the
+ best policy. Senator Platt was, from that time to the day of his death, a
+ good friend and wise counselor of the people of Utah. And I wish to lay
+ particular stress upon this conversation with him, because it was a type
+ of many had with such men as he. Fred T. Dubois, delegate in Congress from
+ the territory of Idaho and subsequently Senator from that state, had been
+ perhaps the strongest single opponent, in Washington, of the Mormon
+ Church; he took our promises of honor, as Senator Platt did, and he
+ pacified Senator Cullom, Senator Pettigrew and many others among our
+ antagonists, who afterwards told me that they had accepted the pledges
+ given by Senator Dubois in our behalf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They recognized that the Church and the community ought not to be held
+ responsible for a few possible cases of individual resistance or offense,
+ so long as there should be a strict adherence by the Church and its
+ leaders to their personal and community covenant. I emphasize the nature
+ of this generous appreciation of our difficulties, because the present-day
+ polygamists in Utah claim that there was a "tacit understanding," between
+ the statesmen in Washington and the agents of the Church, to the effect
+ that the polygamists of that time might continue to live with their plural
+ wives. This is not true. There never was any such understanding, to my
+ knowledge. And there could not have been one, in the circumstances,
+ without my knowledge. For though I did not know what delegate Rawlins, and
+ former delegate Caine, and our attorney, Mr. Richards, were saying in
+ their private interviews with senators and congressmen, I know that in all
+ the frequent conversations I had with them I never heard an intimation of
+ any "tacit understanding" beyond the one which I have defined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For my part I was more than eager to have all our political disabilities
+ removed, the Church property restored, and the right of statehood accorded&mdash;believing
+ implicitly in the sincerity of the Mormon leaders. I knew President
+ Woodruff too well to doubt the pellacid character of his mind and purpose.
+ I knew from my father's personal assurance&mdash;and from his constant
+ practice from that time to the day of his death&mdash;that he was acting
+ in good faith. I knew that the community was gladly following where these
+ men led. I saw no slightest indication that any reactionary policy was
+ likely to be entered upon in Utah, or that our people would accept it if
+ it were.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Church's personal property was restored by an Act of Congress approved
+ October 25, 1893, but it was stipulated in the Act that the money was not
+ to be used for the support of any church buildings in which "the
+ rightfulness of the practice of polygamy" should be taught. Similarly,
+ when the Enabling Act was approved, in July 16, 1894, it, too, provided
+ that "polygamous or plural marriage" was forever prohibited. A
+ constitutional convention was held at Salt Lake City under the provisions
+ of that act, and a constitution was adopted in which it was provided that
+ "polygamous or plural marriages" were forever prohibited, that the
+ territorial laws against polygamy were to be continued in force, that
+ there should be "no union of church and state," and that no church should
+ "dominate the state or interfere with its functions." Upon no other basis
+ would the nation have granted us our statehood; and we accepted the grant,
+ knowing the expressed condition involved in that acceptance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there was one other gift that came to us from the nation&mdash;by
+ Congressional enactment and later by Utah statute as a consequence of
+ statehood; and that gift was the legitimizing of every child born of
+ plural marriage before January, 1896. The solemn benignity of the
+ concession touched me, as it must have touched many, to the very heart of
+ gratitude. By it, ten thousand children were taken from the outer darkness
+ of this world's conventional exclusion and placed within the honored
+ relations of mankind. It was a tribute to the purity and sincerity of the
+ Mormon women who had borne the cross of plural marriage, believing that
+ God had commanded their suffering. It recognized the holy nature and
+ honorable intent of the marriages of these women, by according their
+ children every right of legal inheritance from their fathers. If all other
+ covenants could be forgotten and their proof obliterated, this should
+ remain as Utah's pledge of honor&mdash;sacred for the sake of the Mormon
+ mothers, holy in the name of the uplifted child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter VI. The Goal&mdash;And After
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Here we were then (as I saw the situation) assured of our statehood, rid
+ of polygamy, relieved of religious control in politics, and free to devote
+ our energies to the development of the land and the industries and the
+ business of the community. The persecutions that our people had borne had
+ schooled them to co-operation. They were ready, helping one another, to
+ advance together to a common prosperity. They were under the leadership
+ chiefly of the man who had guided them out of a most desperate condition
+ of oppression toward the freedom of sovereign self-government. In that
+ progress he had saved everything that was worthy in the Mormon communism;
+ he had discarded much that was a curse. I knew that he had no thought but
+ for the welfare of the people; and with such a man, leading such a
+ following, we seemed certain of a future that should be an example to the
+ world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But both the Church and the people had been involved in debt by
+ confiscation and proscription; and it was necessary now to free ourselves
+ financially. This work my father undertook in behalf of the Presidency&mdash;for
+ the President of the Mormon Church is not only the Prophet, Seer and
+ Revelator of God to the faithful; he is also "the trustee in trust" of all
+ the Church's material property. He is the controller, almost the owner, of
+ everything it owns. He is as sacred in his financial as in his religious
+ absolutism. He is accountable to no one, The Church auditors, whom he
+ appoints, concern themselves merely with the details of bookkeeping. The
+ millions of dollars that are paid to him, by the people in tithes, are
+ used by him as he sees fit to use them; and the annual contributors to
+ this "common fund" would no more question his administration of it than
+ they would question the ways of divinity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the early days there had been a strongly animating idea that among the
+ divinely-authorized duties of leadership was the obligation to develop the
+ natural resources of the country in order to meet the people's needs. As
+ the immigrants poured into Utah, these needs increased; and the Church
+ leaders used the Church funds to develop coal and iron mines, support salt
+ gardens, build a railway, establish a sugar factory (for which the people,
+ through the legislature, voted a bounty), conduct a beach resort, and aid
+ a hundred other enterprises that promised to be for the public good. These
+ undertakings were not financed for profit. They were semi-socialistic in
+ their establishment and half-benevolent in their administration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But during "the days of the raid" they were neglected, because the Church
+ was involved in debt. And now it became pressingly necessary to obtain
+ money to restore the moribund industries and to meet the payments that
+ were continually falling due upon loans made to the Presidency. President
+ Woodruff called on me to aid in the work. So I came into touch with a
+ development of events that did not seem to me, then, of any great
+ importance; yet it drew as its consequence a connection between the Mormon
+ Church and the great financial "interests" of the East&mdash;a connection
+ that is one of the strong determining causes of the perversion of
+ government and denial of political liberty in Utah today.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I wish, here, simply to foreshadow, this connection. It will reappear in
+ the story again and again; and it is necessary to have the significance of
+ the recurrence understood in advance. But, at the time of which I write,
+ there was no more than an innocent approach on our part to Eastern
+ financiers to obtain money for the Church and to concentrate our debts in
+ the hands of two or three New York banks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For example, the Church had loaned to, or endorsed for, the Utah Sugar
+ Company to the amount of $325,000; and my father had personally endorsed
+ the general obligations for this and other sums, although he owned only
+ $5,000 of the company's stock. He supported the factory with his personal
+ credit and assumed the risk of loss (without any corresponding possibility
+ of gain) in order to benefit the whole people by encouraging the beet
+ sugar industry. A vain attempt had been made to sell the bonds in New
+ York. Finally, the Church bought all the bonds of the company for $325,000
+ (of a face value of $400,000), and we sold them, for the Church, to Mr.
+ Joseph Bannigan, the "rubber king," of Providence, Rhode Island, for
+ $360,000, with the guarantee of the First Presidency, the trustee of the
+ Church, and myself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Similarly, the First Presidency led in building an electric power plant in
+ Ogden, after Chas. K. Bannister, a great engineer, and myself had
+ persuaded the members of the Presidency that the work would benefit the
+ community. The bonds of this company, too, were bought by Mr. Bannigan,
+ with the guarantee of the trustee of the Church, the Presidency and
+ myself. Both the power plant and the sugar factory were financially
+ successful. They performed a large public service beneficently. The fact
+ that Mr. Bannigan held their bonds was no detriment to their work and
+ wrought no injury to the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I single out these two enterprises because Joseph F. Smith has since sold
+ the power plant to the "Harriman interests," and the control of the sugar
+ factory to the sugar trust; and he has explained that in making the sales
+ he merely followed my father's example and mine in selling the bonds to
+ Mr. Bannigan. The power plant is now a part of the merger called the Utah
+ Light and Railway Company, which has a monopoly right in all the streets
+ of Salt Lake City and its suburbs, besides owning the electric power and
+ light plants of Salt Lake City and Ogden, the gas plants of both these
+ cities, and the natural gas wells and pipe lines supplying them. The
+ Mormon people whose tithes aided these properties&mdash;whose good-will
+ maintained them&mdash;whose leaders designed them as a community work for
+ a community benefit&mdash;these people are now being mercilessly exploited
+ by the Eastern "interests" to whom the Prophet of the Church has sold them
+ bodily. The difference between selling the bonds of the sugar company to
+ Bannigan, in order to raise money to support the factory, and selling half
+ the stock to the sugar trust, in order to make a monopoly profit out of
+ the Mormon consumers of sugar, has either not occurred to Smith or has
+ been divinely waived by him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, this is by the way and in advance of my story. In 1894 we had no
+ more fear of the Eastern money power than we had of the return of the
+ Church to politics or to polygamy. Throughout 1893 and 1894 I was engaged
+ in the work of re-establishing the Church's business affairs with my
+ father and a sort of finance committee of which the other two members were
+ Colonel N. W. Clayton, of Salt Lake City, and Mr. James Jack, the cashier
+ of the Church. In the summer of 1894 I heard various rumors that when Utah
+ should gain its statehood, my father would probably be a candidate for the
+ United States Senate. Since this would be a palpable breach of the
+ Church's agreement to keep out of politics, I took occasion&mdash;one day,
+ on a railroad journey&mdash;to ask him if he intended to be a candidate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He told me that he was being urged to stand for the Senatorship, but that
+ for his part he had no desire to do so; and he asked me what I thought
+ about it. I replied that if I had felt it was right for him to take the
+ office and he desired it, I would walk barefoot across the continent to
+ aid him. But I reminded him of the pledges which he and I had made
+ repeatedly&mdash;on our own behalf, in the name of his associates in
+ leadership, and on the honor of the Mormon people&mdash;to subdue
+ thereafter the causes of the controversy that had divided Mormon and
+ Gentile in Utah. He replied with an emphatic assurance of his purpose to
+ keep those pledges, and dismissed the subject with a finality that left no
+ doubt in my mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I know that he might have desired the Senatorship as a public vindication,
+ since, in the old days of quarrel, he had been legislated out of his place
+ in the House of Representatives; and, for the first and only time in my
+ life, I undertook to philosophize some comfort for him&mdash;out of the
+ fact that to the position of authority which he held in Utah a Senatorship
+ was a descent. He replied dryly: "I understand, my son&mdash;perfectly."
+ The fact was that he needed no comfort from me or any other human being.
+ He seemed all&mdash;sufficient to himself, because of the abiding sense he
+ had of the constant presence of God and his habit of communing with that
+ Spirit, instead of seeking human intercourse or earthly counsel. He did
+ not need my affection. He did not need, much less seek, the approbation of
+ any man. In the events to which this conversation was a prelude, he acted
+ without explaining himself to me or to anyone else, and apparently without
+ caring in the slightest what my opinion or any other man's might be of his
+ course or of the motives that prompted it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some months later, in the office of the Presidency (at a business meeting
+ with him, Colonel Clayton and Joseph F. Smith), I excused myself from
+ attending any further sittings of the committee for that day, because I
+ had to go to Provo to receive the Republican nomination for Congress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My father said: "I am sorry to hear it. I thought Judge Zane&mdash;or
+ someone else would be nominated. I wished you to be free to help with
+ these business matters. Why have you not consulted us?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I reminded him that I had told him, some weeks before, that I expected to
+ be nominated for Congress this year&mdash;and that I was practically
+ certain, if elected, of going to the Senate when we were granted
+ statehood. "I talked with you, then, as my father," I said. "But I'm sure
+ you'll remember that I have not consulted you as a leader of the Church,
+ or any of your colleagues as leaders of the Church, on the subject of
+ partisan politics since the People's Party was dissolved."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He accepted this mild declaration of political independence without
+ protest, and I went to Provo, happily, a free man. The Republicans
+ nominated me by acclamation, and the chairman of the committee that came
+ to offer me the nomination was Colonel Wm. Nelson, then managing editor of
+ the Salt Lake Tribune, a Gentile, a former leader of the Liberal Party, an
+ opponent of Mormonism as practiced, who had fought the Church hierarchy
+ for years. Here was a new evidence that we were now beyond the old
+ quarrels&mdash;a further guarantee that we were prepared to take our place
+ among the states of the Union, free of parochialism and its sectarian
+ enmities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The campaign gave every proof of such political emancipation. The people
+ divided, on national party lines, as completely as any American community
+ in my experience. The Democrats, having nominated Joseph L. Rawlins, had
+ the prestige that he had gained in helping to pass the Enabling Act; a
+ Democratic administration was in power in Washington; Apostle Moses
+ Thatcher, Brigham H. Roberts, and other members of the Church inspired the
+ old loyalty of the Mormons for the Democracy. But the Republicans had been
+ re-enforced by the dissolution of the Liberal Party, whose last preceding
+ candidate (Mr. Clarence E. Allen) went on the stump for us. The Smith
+ jealousy of Moses Thatcher divided the Church influence; and though
+ charges of ecclesiastical interference were made on both sides, such
+ interference was personal rather than official. Mr. Rawlins was defeated,
+ and I was elected delegate in Congress from the territory&mdash;with the
+ United States Senatorship practically assured to me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the spring of 1895 the constitutional convention at Salt Lake City
+ formulated a provisional constitution for the new Utah; and, in the Fall
+ of the year, a general election was held to adopt this constitution and to
+ elect officers who should enter upon their duties as soon as Utah became a
+ state. The election was marked by a most significant and important
+ incident.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Democrats, in their convention, nominated for Congress, Brigham H.
+ Roberts, one of the first seven "presidents of the seventy," and for the
+ United States Senate, Joseph L. Rawlins and Apostle Moses Thatcher.
+ Immediately, at a priesthood meeting of the hierarchy, Joseph F. Smith
+ denounced the candidacies of Roberts and Thatcher; and the grounds for the
+ denunciation were subsequently stated in the "political manifesto" of
+ April, 1896, in which the First Presidency announced, as a rule of the
+ Church, that no official of the Church should accept a political
+ nomination until he had obtained the permission of the Church authorities
+ and had learned from them whether he could "consistently with the
+ obligations already entered into with the Church, take upon himself the
+ added duties and labors and responsibilities of the new position."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This action, I knew, was the result of the old jealousy of Thatcher which
+ the Smiths had so long nursed. But it was also in line with the Church's
+ pledge, to keep its leaders out of politics. By it, the hierarchy bound
+ themselves and set the people free. The leaders, thereafter, according to
+ their own "manifesto," could not enter politics without the consent of
+ their quorums; and, therefore, by any American doctrine, they could not
+ enter politics at all. Thatcher and Roberts revolted against the
+ inhibition as an infringement of their rights as citizens, and it was so
+ construed by the whole Democratic party; but everyone knew that a Mormon
+ apostle had no rights as a citizen that were not second to his Church
+ allegiance, and the political manifesto simply made public the fact of
+ such subservience, authoritatively. We Republicans welcomed it, with our
+ eyes on the future freedom of politics in Utah; Thatcher and Roberts
+ refused to accept the dictation of their quorums, and what was practically
+ an "edict of apostasy" went out against them. They were defeated. The
+ Republican candidates (Heber M. Wells, as governor, and Clarence B. Allen,
+ as member of Congress) were elected. Thatcher, subsequently refusing to
+ accept the "political manifesto," was deposed from his apostolic
+ authority, and deprived of all priesthood in the Church. Roberts recanted
+ and was reconciled with the hierarchy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [FOOTNOTE: He was afterwards elected to the House of Representatives and
+ was refused his seat as a polygamist.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Republicans elected forty-three out of sixty-three members of the
+ legislature, and everyone of these had been pledged to support me, for the
+ United States Senate, either by his convention, or by letter to me, or by
+ a promise conveyed to me by friends; and none of these pledges had I
+ solicited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rumors of my father's candidacy now became more general&mdash;although
+ he was a Democrat, although the new "political manifesto" bound him,
+ although it was doubtful whether the Senate would allow him to be seated.
+ Two influences were urging his election. One was the desire of the Smith
+ faction to have the First Councillor break the ice at Washington for
+ Apostle John Henry Smith, who was ambitious to be a Senator and was
+ disqualified by the fact that he was a Church leader and a polygamist. The
+ other was the desire of some Eastern capitalists to have my father's vote
+ in the Senate to aid them in the promotion of a railroad from Salt Lake
+ City to Los Angeles. A preliminary agreement for the construction of the
+ road had already been signed by men who represented that they had close
+ affiliations with large steel interests in the East, as one party, and my
+ father as business representative of a group of associates, including the
+ Presidency of the Church. The Church's interest in the project was
+ communistic, and so was my father's. But his vote and influence in the
+ Senate would be valuable to the promotion of the undertaking, and he had
+ received written assurances from Republican leaders, senators and
+ politicians, that if he were elected he would be allowed his seat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a result of our Republican success in the two political campaigns that
+ had just ended, I felt that I represented the independent votes of both
+ Mormons and Gentiles; and I decided to confront the First Presidency (as
+ such a representative) and try to make them declare themselves in the
+ matter of my father's candidacy. Not that I thought his candidacy would be
+ so vitally important for I did not then believe the Church authorities had
+ power to sway the legislature away from its pledges. But every day, at
+ home or abroad, I was being asked: "Are you sure that the Church's
+ retirement from politics is sincere?" My friends were accepting my word,
+ and I wished to add certainty to assurance that the Church leaders
+ intended to fulfill the covenant of their personal honor and respect the
+ constitution of the state by keeping out of politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without letting them know why I wished to see them, I procured an
+ appointment for the interview. When we were all seated at the table I
+ explained: "I'm going to Washington to attend to my duties as delegate in
+ Congress. Before I return, Utah will be admitted to statehood, and the
+ legislature will have to elect two United States Senators. As you all
+ know, I've been a candidate for one of these places. It has been assured
+ to me by the probably unanimous vote of the Republican caucus when it
+ shall convene." I laid my clenched hand on the table, knuckles down, with
+ a calculated abruptness. "The first senatorship from Utah is there," I
+ said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If it's to be disturbed by any ecclesiastical direction, I want to know
+ it now, so that the men who are supporting me may be aware of what they
+ must encounter if they persist in their support. I ask you, as the
+ Presidency of the Church: what are you going to do about the Senatorship?"
+ And I opened my hand and left it lying open before them, for their
+ decision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was evident enough, from their expressions, that this was a degree of
+ boldness to which they were unaccustomed. It was, evident also that they
+ were unprepared to reply to me. My father remained silent, with his usual
+ placidity, waiting for the others to fail to take the initiative.
+ President Woodruff blinked, somewhat bewildered, looking at my hand as if
+ the sight of its emptiness and the assumption of what it held, confused
+ him. Joseph F. Smith, frowning, eyed it askance with a darting glance,
+ apparently annoyed by the mute insolence of its demand for a decision
+ which he was not prepared to make.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My father, at length, looking at me imperturbably, asked: "Are you
+ inquiring of our personal view in this matter, Frank?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The question contained, of course, a tacit allusion to my refusal to
+ consult the Church leaders about politics. I answered: "No, sir. I already
+ have your personal view. That is the only personal view I have ever asked
+ concerning the Senatorship. And I have purposely refrained from any
+ allusions to it of late, with you, because I wished to lay it before the
+ Presidency, as a body, formally, in order that there might be no possible
+ misunderstanding."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In that case," he said, "the matter rests with President Woodruff."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The President, thus forced to an explanation, made a very characteristic
+ one. Several of the Church's friends in the East, he said, had urged
+ father's name for the Senatorship, but it was impossible to see how he
+ could be spared from the affairs of the priesthood. Zion needed him&mdash;and
+ so forth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apparently, to President Woodruff, the question of the Senatorship was
+ resolvable wholly upon Church considerations. His mind was so filled with
+ zealous hope for the advancement of "the Kingdom of God on Earth," that he
+ seemed quite unaware of the political aspects of the case, the violation
+ of the Church's pledge, and the difficulties in the Senate that would
+ surely attend upon my father's election.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the general discussion that ensued, both Joseph F. Smith and my father
+ spoke of the appeal that had been made to them on behalf of the business
+ interests of the community, with which the financial interests of the East
+ were now eager to co-operate. But both followed the President's example in
+ dismissing the possibility of the First Councillor's candidacy as
+ infringing upon his duties in the Church. I pointed out to them that such
+ a candidacy would be considered a breach of faith, that it would raise a
+ storm of protest. They accepted the warning without comment, as if, having
+ decided against the candidacy, they did not need to consider such aspects
+ of it. I kept my hand open before them until my father said, with some
+ trace of amusement: "You'd better take up that senatorship, Frank. I think
+ you're entitled to it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I took it up, satisfied that there would be no more Church interference in
+ the matter. The decision seemed to me final and momentous. I felt that the
+ new Utah had faced the old and had been assured of independence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About this same time (although I cannot place it accurately in my
+ recollection), President Woodruff, speaking from the pulpit, declared that
+ it was the right of the priesthood of God to rule in all things on earth,
+ and that they had in no wise relinquished any of their authority. The
+ sermon raised a dangerous alarm in Salt Lake City, and I was immediately
+ summoned from Ogden (by a messenger from Church headquarters) to see the
+ proprietor and the editor of the Salt Lake Tribune&mdash;which paper, it
+ was feared, might oppose Utah's admission to statehood, construing
+ President Woodruff's remarks to mean that the Church's political covenants
+ were to be broken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I found Mr. P. H. Lannan, the proprietor of the paper, anxious, indignant
+ and ready to denounce the Church and fight against the admission to
+ statehood. "When I heard of that sermon," he said, "my heart went into my
+ boots. We Gentiles have trusted everything to the promises that have been
+ made by the leaders of the Church. If the Tribune had not supported the
+ movement for statehood, the Gentiles would never have taken the risk. I
+ feel like a man who has sold his brethren into slavery."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I assured him (as I was authorized to do) that President Woodruff was not
+ speaking for our generation of the Mormon people nor for his associates in
+ the leadership of the Church. I pleaded that it was the privilege of an
+ old man (and President Woodruff was nearly ninety) to dream again the
+ visions of his youth; his early life had been spent in the belief that a
+ Kingdom of God was to be set up in the valleys of the mountains, governed
+ by the priesthood and destined to rule all the nations of the earth; he
+ had planted the first flag of the country over the Salt Lake Valley; he
+ was still living in days that had passed for all but him, and cherishing
+ hopes that he alone had not abandoned. But if the Tribune and the Gentiles
+ would be magnanimous in this matter, they would add to the gratitude that
+ already bound the younger generations of the Church to the fulfillment of
+ its political promises.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Lannan responded instantly to the appeal to his generosity, and after
+ consultation with the editor-in-chief (Judge C. C. Goodwin) and the
+ managing editor (Colonel Wm. Nelson) the Tribune continued to trust in
+ Mormon good faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I reported the result of my conference to Church headquarters. The news
+ was received with relief and gratitude. And, in a long conversation with
+ the authorities, I was told that it would be incumbent on us of the
+ younger generation to see that all the Church's covenants to the nation
+ should be scrupulously observed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I accepted my part of the charge with a light heart, and late in November,
+ 1895, I took train for Washington for convening of Congress. Of the
+ incidents of my brief services as delegate I shall write nothing here,
+ since those incidents were merely introductory to matters which I shall
+ have to consider later. But I was greeted with a great deal of cordiality
+ by the Republicans who credited me with having brought a state and its
+ national representation into the Republican party, and they assured me
+ that my own political future would be as bright as that of my native
+ state!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President Cleveland, on January 4, 1896, proclaimed Utah a sovereign state
+ of the Union, and its admission to statehood ended, of course, my service
+ as a territorial delegate. I stood beside his desk in the White House to
+ see him sign the proclamation&mdash;the same desk at which he had received
+ me, some eight years before, when I came beseeching him to be merciful to
+ the proscribed people whose freedom he was now announcing. Perhaps the
+ manumission that he was granting, gave a benignity to his face. Perhaps
+ the emotion in my own mind transfigured him to me. But I saw smiles and
+ pathos in the ruggedness of his expression of congratulation as he said a
+ few words of hope that Utah would fulfill every promise made, on her
+ behalf, by her own people, and every happy expectation that had been
+ entertained for her by her friends. His enormous rigid bulk, a little
+ bowed now by years of service, seemed softened, as his face was, to the
+ graciousness of clement power. He gave me the pen with which he had signed
+ the paper, and dismissed me to some of the happiest hours of my life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I walked out of the White House dispossessed of office, but now, at last,
+ a citizen of the Republic. I stood on the steps of the White House, to
+ look at the city through whose streets I had so many times wandered in a
+ worried despair, and I saw them with an emotion I would not dare
+ transcribe. I do not know that the sun was really shining, but in my
+ memory the scene has taken on all the accumulated brightnesses of all the
+ radiant days I ever knew in Washington. And I remember that I saw the
+ Washington Monument and the Capitol with a sense of almost affectionate
+ personal possession!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In an excited exultation I went to thank the men who had helped us in the
+ House and the Senate&mdash;to wire jubilant messages home&mdash;to send
+ Governor Wells the pen with which the President had signed his
+ proclamation, and to procure from friends in the War Department the first
+ two flags that had been made with forty-five stars&mdash;the star of Utah
+ the forty-fifth. Wherever I went, some sinister aspect seemed to have gone
+ out of things; and I remember that I enjoyed so much the sense of their
+ new inhostility, that I planned to delay my return to Utah until I had
+ made a pilgrimage to every spot in Washington where I had despaired of our
+ future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this may seem almost sentimental to you, who perhaps accept your
+ citizenship as an unregarded commonplace of natural right. But, for me,
+ the freeing of our people was an emancipation to be compared only to the
+ enfranchisement of the Southern slaves and greater even than that, for we
+ had come from citizenship in the older states, and we could appreciate our
+ deprivation, smart under our ostracism, and resent the rejection that set
+ us apart from the rest of the nation as an inferior people unfit for equal
+ rights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I sat down to my dinner, that evening, with the appetite that comes from a
+ day of fasting and emotional excitement; and I recall that I was planning
+ a visit of self-congratulation to Arlington, for the morrow, when one of
+ the hotel bell-boys brought me a telegram. I opened it eagerly&mdash;to
+ enjoy the expected message of felicitation from home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in cipher, and that fact gave me a pause of doubt, since the days
+ of political mysteries and their cipher telegrams were over for us, thank
+ God! It was signed with President Woodruff's cipher name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I went to my room to translate it, and I did not return to my dinner. The
+ message read: "It is the will of the Lord that your father shall be
+ elected Senator from Utah."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not need to explain all the treacherous implications of that
+ announcement. As soon as I had recovered my breath, I wired back, for such
+ interpretation as they should choose to give: "God bless Utah. I am coming
+ home,"&mdash;and packed my trunk, for trouble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter VII. The First Betrayals
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Before I reached Utah, my friends, Ben Rich and James Devine, met me, on
+ the train. The news of President Woodruff's "revelation" had percolated
+ through the whole community. The Gentiles were alarmed for themselves. My
+ friends were anxious for me. All the old enmities that had so long divided
+ Utah were arranging themselves for a new conflict. And Rich and Devine had
+ come to urge me to remember my promise that I would hold to my candidacy
+ no matter who should appear in the field against me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of my father's stand in the crisis Rich could give me only one indication:
+ after a conference in the offices of the Presidency, Rich had said to
+ President Woodruff: "Then I suppose I may as well close up Frank's rooms
+ at the Templeton"&mdash;the hotel in which my friends had opened political
+ headquarters for me&mdash;and my father, accompanying him to an anteroom,
+ had hinted significantly: "I think you should not close Frank's rooms just
+ yet. He may need them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rich brought me word, too, that the Church authorities were expecting to
+ see me; and soon as I arrived in Salt Lake City, I hastened to the little
+ plastered house in which the Presidency had its offices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President Woodruff, my father, and Joseph F. Smith were there, in the
+ large room of their official apartments. We withdrew, for private
+ conference, into the small retiring room in which I had consulted with
+ "Brother Joseph Mack" when he was on the underground&mdash;in 1888&mdash;and
+ had consulted with President Woodruff about his "manifesto," in 1890. The
+ change in their circumstances, since those unhappy days, was in my mind as
+ I sat down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President Woodruff sat at the head of a bare walnut table in a chair so
+ large that it rather dwarfed him; and he sank down in it, to an attitude
+ of nervous reluctance to speak, occupied with his hands. Smith took his
+ place at the opposite end of the board, with dropped eyes, his chair
+ tilted back, silent, but (as I soon saw) unusually alert and attentive. My
+ father assumed his inevitable composure&mdash;firmly and almost unmovingly
+ seated&mdash;and looked at me squarely with a not unkind premonition of a
+ smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President Woodruff continued silent. Ordinarily, anything that came from
+ the Lord was quite convincing to him and needed no argument (in his mind)
+ to make it convincing to others. I could not suppose that the look of
+ determination on my face troubled him. It was more likely that something
+ unusual in the mental attitudes of his councillors was the cause of his
+ hesitation; and with this suspicion to arouse me I became increasingly
+ aware (as the conference proceeded) of two rival watchfulnesses upon me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well?" I said. "What was it you wanted of me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Smith looked up at the President. And Smith had always, hitherto, seemed
+ so unseeing of consequences, and, therefore, unappreciative of means, that
+ his betrayal of interest was indicative of purpose. I thought I could
+ detect, in the communication which his manner made, the plan of my
+ father's ecclesiastical rivals to remove him from the scene of his supreme
+ influence over the President, and the plan of ambitious church politicians
+ to remove me from their path by the invocation of God's word appointing
+ father to the Senate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Frank," the President announced, "it is the will of the Lord that your
+ father should go to the Senate from Utah."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he hesitated, I said: "Well, President Woodruff?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He added, with less decision: "And we want you to tell us how to bring it
+ about?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was evident that getting the revelation was easy to his spiritualized
+ mind, but that fulfilling it was difficult to his unworldliness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "President Woodruff," I replied, "you have received the revelation on the
+ wrong point. You do not need a voice from heaven to convince anyone that
+ my father is worthy to go to the Senate, but you will need a revelation to
+ tell how he is to get there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He seemed to raise himself to the inspiration of divine authority. "The
+ only difficulty that we have encountered," he said, "is the fact that the
+ legislators are pledged to you. Will you not release them from their
+ promises and tell them to vote for your father?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," I said. "And my father would not permit me to do it, even if I
+ could. He knows that I gave my word of honor to my supporters to stand as
+ a candidate, no matter who might enter against me. He knows that he and I
+ have given our pledges at Washington that political dictation in Utah by
+ the heads of the Mormon Church shall cease. Of all men in Utah we cannot
+ be amenable to such dictation. If you can get my supporters away from me&mdash;very
+ well. I shall have no personal regrets. But you cannot get me away from my
+ supporters."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This inclusion of my father in my refusal evidently disconcerted President
+ Woodruff; and, as evidently, it had its significance to Joseph F. Smith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I went on: "Before I was elected to the House of Representatives, I asked
+ my father if he intended to be a candidate for the Senate. I knew that
+ some prominent Gentiles, desiring to curry favor at Church headquarters
+ had solicited his candidacy. I had been told that General Clarkson and
+ others had assured him by letter that his election would be accepted at
+ Washington, and elsewhere. I discussed the matter with him fully. He
+ agreed with me that his election would be a violation of the understanding
+ had with the country; and he declared that he did not care to become again
+ the storm center of strife to his people, nor did he feel that he could
+ honorably break our covenant to the country. With this clear understanding
+ between us, I made my pledges to men who, in supporting me, cast aside
+ equally advantageous relations which they might have established with
+ another. I can't withdraw now without dishonor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My father said: "Don't let us have any misunderstandings. As President
+ Woodruff stated the matter to me, I understood that it would be pleasing
+ to the Lord, if the people desired my election to the Senate and it
+ wouldn't antagonize the country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, yes," the President put in. "That's what I mean."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Smith said, rather sourly: "The people are always willing to do what the
+ Lord desires&mdash;if no one gives them bad counsel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both he and my father emphasized the fact that the business interests of
+ the East were making strong representations to the Presidency in support
+ of my father's election; and I suspected (what I afterwards found to be
+ the case) that both Joseph F. Smith and Apostle John Henry Smith, were by
+ this time, in close communication with Republican politicians. There was a
+ calm assumption, everywhere, that the Church had power to decide the
+ election, if it could be induced to act; and this assumption was a
+ deplorable evidence, to me, of the willingness of some of our former
+ allies to drag us swiftly to the shame of a broken covenant, if only they
+ could profit in purse or politics by our dishonor. I would not be an agent
+ in any such betrayal, but I had to refuse without offending my father's
+ trust in the divine inspiration of President Woodruff's decision and
+ without aiding the Smiths in their conspiracy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Either at this conference or one of the later ones, two or three apostles
+ came into the room; and among them was Apostle Brigham Young, son of the
+ Prophet Brigham who had led the Mormons to the Salt Lake Valley. When he
+ understood my refusal to abandon my candidacy, he said angrily: "This is a
+ serious filial disrespect. I know my father never would have brooked such
+ treatment from me." And I retorted: "I don't know who invited you into
+ this conference, but I deny your right to instruct me in my filial duty.
+ If my father doesn't understand that the senatorship has lost its value
+ for me&mdash;that it's a cross now&mdash;then my whole lifetime of
+ devotion to him has been in vain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My father rose and put his arm around my shoulders. "This boy," he said,
+ "is acting honorably. I want him to know&mdash;and you to know&mdash;that
+ I respect the position he has taken. If he is elected, he shall have my
+ blessing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was the only understanding I had with him&mdash;but it was enough. I
+ could know that I was not to lose his trust and affection by holding to
+ our obligations of honor; and&mdash;an assurance almost as precious&mdash;I
+ could know that he would not consciously permit legislators to be crushed
+ by the vengeance of the Church if they refused to yield to its pressure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days after my arrival in Utah, and while this controversy was at its
+ height, my father's birthday was celebrated (January 11, 1896), with all
+ the patriarchal pomp of a Mormon family gathering, in his big country
+ house outside Salt Lake City. All his descendants and collateral relatives
+ were there, as well as the members of the Presidency and many friends.
+ After dinner, the usual exercises of the occasion were held in the large
+ reception hall of the house, with President Woodruff and my father and two
+ or three other Church leaders seated in semi-state at one end of the hall,
+ and the others of the company deferentially withdrawn to face them.
+ Towards the end of the program President Woodruff rose from his easy
+ chair, and made a sort of informal address of congratulation; and in the
+ course of it, with his hand on my father's shoulder, he said benignly:
+ "Abraham was the friend of God. He had only one son on whom all his hopes
+ were set. But the voice of the Lord commanded him to sacrifice Isaac upon
+ an altar; and Abraham trusted the Lord and laid his son upon the altar, in
+ obedience to God's commands. Now here is another servant of the Most High
+ and a friend of God. I refer to President Cannon, whose birthday we are
+ celebrating. He has twenty-one sons; and if it shall be the will of the
+ Lord that he must sacrifice one of them he ought to be as willing as
+ Abraham was, for he will have twenty left. And the son should be as
+ willing as Isaac. We can all safely trust in the Lord. He will require no
+ sacrifice at our hands without purpose."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I remarked to a relative beside me that the altar was evidently ready for
+ me, but that I feared I should have to "get out and rustle my own ram in
+ the thicket." I received no reply. I heard no word of comment from anyone
+ upon the President's speech. It was accepted devoutly, with no feeling
+ that he had abused the privileges of a guest. Everyone understood (as I
+ did) that President Woodruff was the gentlest of men; that he had often
+ professed and always shown a kindly affection for me; but that the will of
+ the Lord being now known, he thought I should be proud to be sacrificed to
+ it!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the legislators pledged to me were Mormon Bishops and other
+ ecclesiasts who had promised their constituents to vote for me and who now
+ stood between a betrayal of their people and a rebellion against the power
+ of the hierarchy. I released one of them from his pledge, because of his
+ pathetic fear that he would be eternally damned if he did not obey "the
+ will of the Lord." The others went to the Presidency to admit that if they
+ betrayed their people they would have to confess what pressure had been
+ put upon them to force them to the betrayal. I went to notify my father
+ (as I had notified the representatives of every other candidate) that we
+ were going to call a caucus of the Republican majority of the legislature,
+ and later I was advised that President Woodruff and his Councillor's had
+ appointed a committee to investigate and report to them how many members
+ could be counted upon to support my father's candidacy. The committee
+ (composed of my uncle Angus, my brother Abraham, and Apostle John Henry
+ Smith) brought back word that even among the men who had professed a
+ willingness to vote for my father there was great reluctance and
+ apprehension, and that in all probability his election could not be
+ carried. With President Woodruff's consent, my father then announced that
+ he was not a candidate. I was nominated by acclamation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I called upon my father at the President's offices after the
+ election, he said to me before his colleagues: "I wish to congratulate you
+ on having acted honorably and fearlessly. You have my blessing." He turned
+ to the President. "You see, President Woodruff," he added, "it was not the
+ will of the Lord, after all, since the people did not desire my election!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have dwelt so largely upon the religious aspects of this affair because
+ they are as true of the Prophet in politics today as they were then. At
+ the time, the personal complication of the situation most distressed me&mdash;the
+ fact that I was opposing my father in order to fulfill the word of honor
+ that we had given on behalf of the Mormon leaders. But there was another
+ view of the matter; and it is the one that is most important to the
+ purposes of this narrative. In the course of the various discussions and
+ conferences upon the Senatorship, I learned that the inspiration of the
+ whole attempted betrayal had come from certain Republican politicians and
+ lobbyists (like Colonel Isaac Trumbo), who claimed to represent a
+ political combination of business interests in Washington. Joseph F. Smith
+ admitted as much to me in more than one conversation. (I had offended
+ these interests by opposing a monetary and a tariff bill during my service
+ as delegate in Congress&mdash;a matter which I have still to recount).
+ They had chosen my father and Colonel Trumbo as Utah's two Senators. I
+ made it my particular business to see that Trumbo's name was not even
+ mentioned in the caucus. The man selected as the other senator was Arthur
+ Brown, a prominent Gentile lawyer who was known as a "jack-Mormon"
+ (meaning a Gentile adherent to Church power), although I then believed,
+ and do now, that Judge Chas. C. Goodwin was the Gentile most entitled to
+ the place, because of his ability and the love of his people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was, however, content with the victory we had won by resisting the
+ influence of the business interests that had been willing to sell our
+ honor for their profit, and I set out for Washington with a determination
+ to continue the resistance. I was in a good position to continue it. The
+ election of two Republican Senators from Utah had given the Republicans a
+ scant majority of the members of the Upper House, and the bills that I had
+ fought in the Lower House were now before the Senate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These bills had been introduced in the House of Representatives,
+ immediately upon its convening in December, 1895, by the committee on
+ rules, before Speaker Reed had even appointed the general committees. One
+ was a bill to authorize the issuance of interest-bearing securities of the
+ United States at such times and in such sums as the Executive might
+ determine. The other was a general tariff bill that proposed increases
+ upon the then existing Wilson-Gorman bill. The first would put into the
+ hands of the President a power that was not enjoyed by any ruler in
+ Christendom; the second would add to the unfair and discriminatory tariff
+ rates then in force, by making ad valorem increases in them. Many new
+ members of Congress had been elected on the two issues thus created: the
+ arbitrary increase of the bonded indebtedness by President Cleveland to
+ maintain a gold reserve; and the unjust benefits afforded those industries
+ that were least in need of aid, by duties increased in exact proportion to
+ the strength of the industrial combination that was to be protected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The presentation of the two bills by the Committee on Rules&mdash;with a
+ coacher to each proposing to prevent amendment and limit discussion&mdash;raised
+ a revolt in the House. A caucus of the insurgent Republican members was
+ held at the Ebbitt Hotel, and I was elected temporary chairman. We
+ appointed a committee to demand from Speaker Reed a division of the
+ questions and time for opposition to be heard. We had seventy-five
+ insurgents when our committee waited on. Reed; and most of us were new
+ men, elected to oppose such measures as these bills advocated. He received
+ us with sarcasm, put us off with a promise to consider our demands, and
+ then set his lieutenants at work among us. Under the threat of the
+ Speaker's displeasure if we continued to "insurge" and the promise of his
+ favor if we "got into line," forty-one (I think) of our seventy-five
+ deserted us. We were gloriously beaten in the House on both measures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the older Republican members of the House came to ask me how I had
+ been "misled"; and they received with the raised eyebrow and the silent
+ shrug my explanation that I had been merely following my convictions and
+ living up to the promises I had made my constituents. I had supposed that
+ I was upholding an orthodox Republican doctrine in helping to defend the
+ country from exploitation by the financial interests, in the matter of the
+ bond issue, and from the greed of the business interests in the attempt to
+ increase horizontally the tariff rates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not need, in this day of tariff reform agitation, to argue the
+ injustice of the latter measure. But the bond issue&mdash;looking back
+ upon it now&mdash;seems the more cruelly absurd of the two. Here we were,
+ in times of peace, with ample funds in the national treasury, proposing to
+ permit the unlimited issuance of interest-bearing government bonds in
+ order to procure gold, for that national treasury, out of the hoards of
+ the banks, so that these same banks might be able to obtain the gold again
+ from the treasury in return for paper money. The extent to which this sort
+ of absurdity might be carried would depend solely upon the desire of the
+ confederation of finance to have interest-bearing government bonds on
+ which they might issue national bank notes, since the Executive was
+ apparently willing to yield interminably to their greed, in the belief
+ that he was protecting the public credit by encouraging the financiers to
+ attack that credit with their raids on the government gold reserve. The
+ whole difficulty had arisen, of course, out of the agitation upon the
+ money question. The banks were drawing upon the government gold reserve;
+ and the government was issuing bonds to recover the gold again from the
+ banks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had been, for some years, interested in the problem of our monetary
+ system and had studied and discussed it among our Eastern bankers and
+ abroad. The very fact that I was from a "silver state" had put me on my
+ guard, lest a local influence should lead me, into economic error. I had
+ grown into the belief that our system was wrong. It seemed to me that some
+ remedy was imperative. I saw in bimetallism a part of the remedy, and I
+ supported bimetallism not as a partisan of free coinage but as an advocate
+ of monetary reform.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The arrival of Utah's two representatives in the Senate (January 27, 1896)
+ gave the bimetallists a majority, and when the bond-issue bill came before
+ us we made it into a bill to permit the free coinage of silver. (February
+ 1). A few days later, the Finance Committee turned the tariff bill into a
+ free-coinage bill also. On both measures, five Republican Senators voted
+ against their party&mdash;Henry M. Teller, of Colorado; Fred T. Dubois, of
+ Idaho; Thos. H. Carter, of Montana; Lee Mantle, of Montana; and myself. We
+ were subsequently joined by Richard F. Pettigrew of South Dakota. Within
+ two weeks of my taking the oath in the Senate we were read out of the
+ party by Republican leaders and Republican organs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this happened so swiftly that there was no time for any remonstrances
+ to come to me from Salt Lake City, even if the Church authorities had
+ wished to remonstrate. The fact was that the people of Utah were with us
+ in our insurgency, and when the financial interests subsequently appealed
+ to the hierarchy, they found the Church powerless to aid them in support
+ of a gold platform. But they obtained that aid, at last, in support of a
+ tariff that was as unjust to the people as it was favorable to the trusts,
+ and my continued "insurgency" led me again into a revolt against Church
+ interference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thread of connection that ran through these incidents is clear enough
+ to me now: they were all incidents in the progress of a partnership
+ between the Church and the predatory business interests that have since so
+ successfully exploited the country. But, at the time, I saw no such
+ connection clearly. I supposed that the partnership was merely a political
+ friendship between the Smith faction in the Church and the Republican
+ politicians who wished to use the Church; and I had sufficient contempt
+ for the political abilities of the Smiths to regard their conspiracy
+ rather lightly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Believing still in the good faith of the Mormon people and their real
+ leaders in authority, I introduced a joint resolution in the Senate
+ restoring to the Church its escheated real estate, which was still in the
+ hands of a receiver, although its personal property had been already
+ restored. In conference with Senators Hoar and Allison,&mdash;of the
+ committee to which the resolution was referred&mdash;I urged an
+ unconditional restoration of the property, arguing that to place
+ conditions upon the restoration would be to insult the people who had
+ given so many proofs of their willingness to obey the law and keep their
+ pledges. The property was restored without conditions by a joint
+ resolution that passed the Senate on March 18, 1896, passed the House a
+ week later, and was approved by the President on March 26. The Church was
+ now free of the last measure of proscription. Its people were in the
+ enjoyment of every political liberty of American citizenship; and I joined
+ in the Presidential campaign of 1896 with no thought of any danger
+ threatening us that was not common to the other communities of the
+ country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But before I continue further with these political events, I must relate a
+ private incident in the secret betrayal of Utah&mdash;an incident that
+ must be related, if this narrative is to remain true to the ideals of
+ public duty that have thus far assumed to inspire it&mdash;an incident of
+ which a false account was given before a Senate Committee in Washington
+ during the Smoot investigation of 1904, accompanied by a denial of
+ responsibility by Joseph F. Smith, the man whose authority alone
+ encouraged and accomplished the tragedy&mdash;for it was a tragedy, as
+ dark in its import to the Mormon community as it was terrible in its
+ immediate consequences to all our family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By his denial of responsibility and by secret whisper within the Church,
+ Smith has placed the disgrace of the betrayal upon my father, who was
+ guiltless of it, and blackened the memory of my dead brother by a
+ misrepresentation of his motives. I feel that it is incumbent upon me,
+ therefore, at whatever pain to myself, to relate the whole unhappy truth
+ of the affair, as much to defend the memory of the dead as to denounce the
+ betrayal of the living, to expose a public treason against the community
+ not less than to correct a private wrong done to the good name of those
+ whom it is my right to defend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Late in July, 1896, when I was in New York on business for the Presidency,
+ I received a telegram announcing the death of my brother, Apostle Abraham
+ H. Cannon. We had been companions all our lives; he had been the nearest
+ to me of our family, the dearest of my friends but even in the first shock
+ of my grief I realized that my father would have a greater stroke of
+ sorrow to bear than I; and in hurrying back to Salt Lake City I nerved
+ myself with the hope that I might console him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I found him and Joseph F. Smith in the office of the Presidency, sitting
+ at their desks. My father turned as I entered, and his face was unusually
+ pale in spite of its composure; but the moment he recognized me, his
+ expression changed to a look of pain that alarmed me. He rose and put his
+ hand on my shoulder with a tenderness that it was his habit to conceal. "I
+ know how you feel his loss," he said hoarsely, "but when I think what he
+ would have had to pass through if he had lived I cannot regret his death."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The almost agonized expression of his face, as much as the terrible
+ implication of his words, startled me with I cannot say what horrible fear
+ about my brother. I asked, "Why! Why&mdash;what has happened?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a sweep of his hand toward Smith at his desk&mdash;a gesture and a
+ look the most unkind I ever saw him use&mdash;he answered: "A few weeks
+ ago, Abraham took a plural wife, Lillian Hamlin. It became known. He would
+ have had to face a prosecution in Court. His death has saved us from a
+ calamity that would have been dreadful for the Church&mdash;and for the
+ state."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Father!" I cried. "Has this thing come back again! And the ink hardly dry
+ on the bill that restored your church property on the pledge of honor that
+ there would never be another case&mdash;" I had caught the look on Smith's
+ face, and it was a look of sullen defiance. "How did it happen?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My father replied: "I know&mdash;it's awful. I would have prevented it if
+ I could. I was asked for my consent, and I refused it. President Smith
+ obtained the acquiescence of President Woodruff, on the plea that it
+ wasn't an ordinary case of polygamy but merely a fulfillment of the
+ biblical instruction that a man should take his dead brother's wife.
+ Lillian was betrothed to David, and had been sealed to him in eternity
+ after his death. I understand that President Woodruff told Abraham he
+ would leave the matter with them if he wished to take the responsibility&mdash;and
+ President Smith performed the ceremony."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Smith could hear every word that was said. My father had included him in
+ the conversation, and he was listening. He not only did not deny his
+ guilt; he accepted it in silence, with an expression of sulky disrespect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not deny it later, when the whole community had learned of it. He
+ went with Apostle John Henry Smith to see Mr. P. H. Lannan, proprietor of
+ the Salt Lake Tribune, to ask him not to attack the Church for this new
+ and shocking violation of its covenant. Mr. Lannan had been intimately
+ friendly with my brother, and he was distressed between his regard for his
+ dead friend and his obligation to do his public duty. I do not know all
+ that the Smiths said to him; but I know that the conversation assumed that
+ Joseph F. Smith had performed the marriage ceremony; I know that neither
+ of the Smiths made any attempt to deny the assumption; and I know that
+ Joseph F. Smith sought to placate Mr. Lannan by promising "it shall not
+ occur again." And this interview was sought by the Smiths, palpably
+ because wherever the marriage of Abraham H. Cannon and Lillian Hamlin was
+ talked of, Joseph F. Smith was named as the priest who had solemnized the
+ offending relation. If it had not been for Smith's consciousness of his
+ own guilt and his knowledge that the whole community was aware of that
+ guilt, he would never have gone to the Tribune office to make such a
+ promise to Mr. Lannan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All of which did not prevent Joseph F. Smith from testifying&mdash;in the
+ Smoot investigation at Washington in 1904&mdash;that he did not marry
+ Abraham Cannon and Lillian Hamlin, that he did not have any conversation
+ with my father about the marriage, that he did not know Lillian Hamlin had
+ been betrothed to Abraham's dead brother, that the first time he heard of
+ the charge that he had married them was when he saw it printed in the
+ newspapers!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [FOOTNOTE: See Proceedings before Senate Committee on Privileges and
+ Elections, 1904, Vol. 1, pages 110, 126, 177, etc.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If this first polygamous marriage had been the last&mdash;if it were an
+ isolated and peculiar incident as the Smiths then claimed it was and
+ promised it should be&mdash;it might be forgiven as generously now as Mr.
+ Lannan then forgave it. But, about the same time there became public
+ another case&mdash;that of Apostle Teasdale&mdash;and as this narrative
+ shall prove, here was the beginning of a policy of treachery which the
+ present Church leaders, under Joseph F. Smith, have since consistently
+ practiced, in defiance of the laws of the state and the "revelation of
+ God," with lies and evasions, with perjury and its subornation, in
+ violation of the most solemn pledges to the country, and through the
+ agency of a political tyranny that makes serious prosecution impossible
+ and immunity a public boast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The world understands that polygamy is an enslavement of women. The
+ ecclesiastical authorities in Utah today have discovered that it is more
+ powerful as an enslaver of men. Once a man is bound in a polygamous
+ relation, there is no place for him in the civilized world outside of a
+ Mormon community. He must remain there, shielded by the Church, or suffer
+ elsewhere social ostracism and the prosecution of bigamous relations.
+ Since 1890, the date of the manifesto (and it is to the period since 1890
+ that my criticism solely applies) the polygamist must be abjectly
+ subservient to the prophets who protect him; he must obey their orders and
+ do their work, or endure the punishment which they can inflict upon him
+ and his wives and his children. Inveigled into a plural marriage by the
+ authority of a clandestine religious dogma&mdash;encouraged by his elders,
+ seduced by the prospect of their favor, and impelled perhaps by a daring
+ impulse to take the covenant and bond that shall swear him into the
+ dangerous fellowship of the lawlessly faithful&mdash;he finds himself, at
+ once, a law breaker who must pay the Church hierarchy for his protection
+ by yielding to them every political right, every personal independence,
+ every freedom of opinion, every liberty of act.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not believe that Smith fully foresaw the policy which he has since
+ undoubtedly pursued. I believe now, as I did then, that in betraying my
+ brother into polygamy Smith was actuated by his anger against my father
+ for having inspired the recession from the doctrine; that he desired to
+ impair the success of the recession by having my brother dignify the
+ recrudescence of polygamy by the apostolic sanction of his participation;
+ and that this participation was jealously designed by Smith to avenge
+ himself upon the First Councillor by having the son be one of the first to
+ break the law, and violate the covenant. I saw that my brother's death had
+ thwarted the conspiracy. Smith was so obviously frightened&mdash;despite
+ his pretense of defiance&mdash;that I believed he had learned his needed
+ lesson. And I accepted the incident as a private tragedy on which the
+ final curtain had now fallen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter VIII. The Church and the Interests
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, I had been taking part in the Presidential campaign of 1896,
+ and I had been one of the four "insurgent" Republican Senators (Teller of
+ Colorado, Dubois of Idaho, Pettigrew of South Dakota and myself) who
+ withdrew from the national Republican convention at St. Louis, in
+ fulfillment of our obligations to our constituents, when we found that the
+ convention was dominated by that confederation of finance in politics
+ which has since come to be called "the System." I was a member of the
+ committee on resolutions, and our actions in the committee had indicated
+ that we would probably withdraw from the convention if it adopted the
+ single gold platform as dictated by Senator Lodge of Massachusetts acting
+ for a group of Republican leaders headed by Platt of New York, and Aldrich
+ of Rhode Island. At the most critical point of our controversy I received
+ a message from Church headquarters warning me that "we" had made powerful
+ friends among the leading men of the nation and that we ought not to
+ jeopardize their friendship by an inconsiderate insurgency. Accordingly,
+ in bolting the convention, I was guilty of a new defiance of
+ ecclesiastical authority and a new provocation of ecclesiastical
+ vengeance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President Woodruff spoke to me of the matter after I returned to Utah, and
+ I explained to him that I thought the Republican party, under the
+ leadership of Mark Hanna and the flag of the "interests," had forgotten
+ its duty to the people of the nation. I argued, to the President, that of
+ all people in the world we, who had suffered so much ourselves, were most
+ bound to bow to no unfairness ourselves and to oppose the imposition of
+ unfairness upon others. And I talked in this strain to him not because I
+ wished his approval of my action but because I wished to fortify him
+ against the approach of the emissaries of the new Republicanism, who were
+ sure to come to him to seek the support of the Church in the campaign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some days later, while I was talking with my father in the offices of the
+ Presidency, the secretary ushered in Senator Redfield Proctor of Vermont.
+ I withdrew, understanding that he wished to speak in private with
+ President Woodruff and his councillors. But I learned subsequently that he
+ had come to Salt Lake to persuade the leaders of the Church to use their
+ power in favor of the Republican party throughout the intermountain
+ states.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Senator Proctor asked me personally what chance I thought the party had in
+ the West. I pointed out that the Republican platform of 1892 had
+ reproached Grover Cleveland for his antagonism to bimetallism&mdash;"a
+ doctrine favored by the American people from tradition and interest," to
+ quote the language of that platform&mdash;and the Republicans of the
+ intermountain states still held true to the doctrine. It had been
+ repudiated by the St. Louis platform of June, 1896, and the intermountain
+ states would probably refuse their electoral votes to the Republican party
+ because of the repudiation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Senator Proctor thought that the leaders of the Church were powerful
+ enough to control the votes of their followers; and he argued that
+ gratitude to the Republican party for freeing Utah ought to be stronger
+ than the opinions of the people in a merely economic question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I reminded him that one of our covenants had been that the Church was to
+ refrain from dictating to its followers in politics; that we had been
+ steadily growing away from the absolutism of earlier times; and that for
+ the sake of the peace and progress of Utah I hoped that the leaders would
+ keep their hands off. I did not, of course, convince him. Nor was it
+ necessary. I was sure that no power that the Church would dare to use
+ would be sufficient at this time to influence the people against their
+ convictions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joseph F. Smith, soon afterward, notified me that there was to be a
+ meeting of the Church authorities in the Temple, and he asked me to attend
+ it. Since I had never before been invited to one of these conferences in
+ the "holy of holies," I inquired the purposes of the conclave. He replied
+ that they desired to consider the situation in which our people had been
+ placed by my action in the St. Louis convention, and to discuss the
+ perceptible trend of public opinion in the state. I saw, then, that
+ Senator Proctor's visit had not been without avail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the appointed afternoon, I went to the sacred inner room of the temple,
+ where the members of the Presidency and several of the apostles were
+ waiting. I shall not describe the room or any of the religious ceremonies
+ with which the conference was opened. I shall confine myself to the
+ discussion&mdash;which was begun mildly by President Woodruff and Lorenzo
+ Snow, then president of the quorum of apostles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To my great surprise, Joseph F. Smith made a violent Republican speech,
+ declaring that I had humiliated the Church and alienated its political
+ friends by withdrawing from the St. Louis convention. He was followed by
+ Heber J. Grant, an apostle, who had always posed as a Democrat; and he was
+ as Republican and denunciatory as Smith had been. He declaimed against our
+ alienation of the great business interests of the country, whose
+ friendship he and other prominent Mormons had done so much to cultivate,
+ and from whom we might now procure such advantageous co-operation if we
+ stood by them in politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President Woodruff tried to defend me by saying that he was sure I had
+ acted conscientiously; but by this time I desired no intervention of
+ prophetic mercy and no mitigation of judgment that might come of such
+ intervention. As soon as the President announced that they were prepared
+ to hear from me, I rose and walked to the farther side of the solemn
+ chamber, withdrawn from the assembled prophets and confronting them.
+ Having first disavowed any recognition of their right as an ecclesiastical
+ body to direct me in my political actions, I rehearsed the events of the
+ two campaigns in which I had been elected on pledges that I had fulfilled
+ by my course in Congress, in the Senate, and finally in the St. Louis
+ convention. That course had been approved by the people. They had trusted
+ me to carry out the policies on which they had elected me to Congress.
+ They had reiterated the trust by electing me to the Senate after I had
+ revolted against the Republican bond and tariff measures in the lower
+ House. I could not and would not violate their trust now. And there was no
+ authority on earth which I would recognize as empowered to come between
+ the people's will and the people's elected servants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The prophets received this defiance in silence. Their expressions implied
+ condemnation, but none was spoken&mdash;at least not while I was there.
+ President Woodruff indicated that the conference was at an end, so far as
+ I was concerned; and I withdrew. Some attempts were subsequently made to
+ influence the people during the campaign, but in a half-hearted way and
+ vainly. The Democrats carried Utah overwhelmingly; only three Republican
+ members of the legislature were elected out of sixty-three.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was this conference in the Temple which gave me my first realization
+ that most of the Prophets had not, and never would have, any feeling of
+ citizenship in state or nation; that they considered, and would continue
+ to consider, every public issue solely in its possible effect upon the
+ fortunes of their Church. My father alone seemed to have a larger view;
+ but he was a statesman of full worldly knowledge; and his experience in
+ Congress, during a part of the "reconstruction period," and throughout the
+ Tilden-Hayes controversy, had taught him how effectively the national
+ power could assert itself. The others, blind to such dangers, seemed to
+ feel that under Utah's sovereignty the literal "kingdom of God" (as they
+ regard their Church) was to exercise an undisputed authority. Unable,
+ myself, to take their viewpoint, I was conscious of a sense of
+ transgression against the orthodoxy of their religion. I was aware, for
+ the first time, that in gaining the fraternity of American citizenship I
+ had in some way lost the fraternity of the faith in which I had been
+ reared. I accepted this as a necessary consequence of our new freedom&mdash;a
+ freedom that left us less close and unyielding in our religious loyalty by
+ withdrawing the pressure that had produced our compactness. And I hoped
+ that, in time, the Prophets themselves&mdash;or, at least, their
+ successors&mdash;would grow into a more liberal sense of citizenship as
+ their people grew. I knew that our progress must be a process of
+ evolution. I was content to wait upon the slow amendments of time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My hope carried me through the disheartening incidents of the Senatorial
+ campaign that followed upon the election of the legislature&mdash;a
+ campaign in which the power of the hierarchy was used publicly to defeat
+ the deposed apostle, Moses Thatcher, in his second candidacy for the
+ United States Senate. But the Church only succeeded in defeating him by
+ throwing its influence to Joseph L. Rawlins, whom the Prophets loved as
+ little as they loved Thatcher; and I felt that in Rawlins' election the
+ state at least gained a representative who was worthy of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What was quite as sinister a use of Church influence occurred among the
+ Mormons of Idaho, where I went to help Senator Fred. T. Dubois in his
+ campaign for re-election. He had aided us in obtaining Utah's statehood as
+ much as any man in Washington. He had accepted all the promises of the
+ Mormon leaders in good faith&mdash;particularly their promise that no
+ Church influence should intrude upon the politics of Idaho. Yet in his
+ campaign I was followed through the Mormon settlements by Charles W.
+ Penrose, a polygamist, since an apostle of the Church, and at that time
+ editor of the Church's official organ, the Deseret News.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I supposed that he was lying in his claim to represent the Presidency; and
+ as soon as I returned to Salt Lake, I went to Church headquarters and
+ asked whether Penrose had been authorized to say (as he had been saying)
+ that he was sent out to prevent my making any misrepresentations of the
+ political attitude of the Presidency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joseph F. Smith replied, "Yes,"&mdash;speaking for himself and apparently
+ for President Woodruff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And when"&mdash;I demanded&mdash;"when did I ever claim to represent or
+ misrepresent you in politics? Haven't I always said that I don't recognize
+ you as politicians&mdash;and always denied that you have any right to
+ dictate the politics of our people?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President Woodruff interposed gently:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, you know, Frank, we have no criticism to pass on you, but we were
+ advised that you might tell the voters of Idaho we were friendly to
+ Senator Dubois, and so we sent Brother Penrose, at the request of
+ President Budge" (a Mormon stake president in Idaho) "to counsel our
+ people. And Brother Penrose says you attacked him in one of your meetings,
+ and said he was not a trustworthy political guide."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President Woodruff's mildness was always irresistible. "If that's all he
+ told you I said about him," I replied, "he didn't do justice to my
+ remarks." And I explained that I had described Penrose as "a lying, oily
+ hypocrite," come to advise the Idaho Mormons that the Presidency wished
+ them to vote a certain political ticket although the Presidency had no
+ interest in the question and although I myself had taken to Washington the
+ Presidency's covenant of honor that the Church would never attempt to
+ interfere in Idaho's political affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Smith sprang to his feet angrily. "I don't care what has been promised to
+ Dubois or anyone else," he said. "He was the bitterest enemy our people
+ had in the old days, and I'll never give my countenance to him in politics
+ while the world stands. He sent many a one of our brethren to prison when
+ he was marshal of the territory, and I can't forget his devilish
+ persecutions&mdash;even if you can."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I closed the conversation by remarking that not one among us would have
+ had a vote as a citizen either of Utah or of Idaho if Dubois and men of
+ his kind had not accepted our pledges of honor; and if we were determined
+ to remember the persecutions and not the mercy, we ought to go back to the
+ conditions from which mercy had rescued us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I left for Washington, soon after, with an unhappy apprehension that there
+ were evil influences at work in Utah which might prove powerful enough to
+ involve the whole community in the worst miseries of reaction. I saw those
+ influences embodied in Joseph F. Smith; and because he was explosive where
+ others were reflective, he had now more influence than previously&mdash;there
+ being no longer any set resistance to him. The reverence of the Mormon
+ people for the name of Smith was (as it had always been) his chief asset
+ of popularity. He had a superlative physical impressiveness and a passion
+ that seemed to take the place of magnetism in public address. But he never
+ said anything memorable; he never showed any compelling ability of mind;
+ he had a personal cunning without any large intelligence, and he was so
+ many removes from the First Presidency that it seemed unlikely he would
+ soon attain to that position of which the power is so great that it only
+ makes the blundering more dangerous than the astute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was going to Washington, before Congress reconvened, to confer with
+ Senator Redfield Proctor. He wished to see me about the new protective
+ tariff bill that was proposed by the Republican leaders. I wished to ask
+ him not to use his political influence in Idaho against Senator Fred. T.
+ Dubois, who had been Senator Proctor's political protege. I knew that
+ Senator Proctor had once been given a semi-official promise that the
+ Mormon Church leaders would not interfere in Idaho against Dubois. I
+ wished to tell Proctor that this promise was not being kept, and to plead
+ with him to give Dubois fair play&mdash;although I knew that Senator
+ Dubois' "insurgency" had offended Senator Proctor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He received me, in his home in Washington, with an almost paternal
+ kindliness that became sometimes more dictatorial than persuasive&mdash;as
+ the manner of an older Senator is so apt to be when he wishes to correct
+ the independence of a younger colleague. He explained that the House was
+ Republican by a considerable majority; a good protective tariff bill would
+ come from that body; and a careful canvass of the Senate had proved that
+ the bill would pass there, if I would vote for it. "We have within one
+ vote of a majority," he said. "As you're a devoted protectionist in your
+ views&mdash;as your state is for protection&mdash;as your father and your
+ people feel grateful to the Republican party for leading you out of the
+ wilderness&mdash;I have felt that it was proper to appeal to you and learn
+ your views definitely. If you'll pledge your support to the bill, we shall
+ not look elsewhere for a vote&mdash;but it's essential that we should be
+ secure of a majority."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I replied that I could not promise to vote for the measure until I should
+ see it. It was true that I had been a devoted advocate of protection and
+ still believed in the principle; but I had learned something of the way in
+ which tariff bills were framed, and something of the influences that
+ controlled the party councils in support of them. I could not be sure that
+ the new measure would be any more just than the original Dingley bill,
+ which I had helped to defeat in the Senate; and the way in which this bill
+ had been driven through the House was a sufficient warning to me not to
+ harness myself in a pledge that might be misused in legislation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Senator Proctor did me the honor to say that he did not suppose any
+ improper suggestion of personal advantage could influence me, and he hoped
+ I knew him too well to suppose that he would use such an argument; "but,"
+ he added, "anything that it's within the 'political' power of the party to
+ bestow, you may expect; I'm authorized to say that we will take care of
+ you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I still refused to bind myself blindly, he said, with regret: "We had
+ great hopes of you. It seems that we must look elsewhere. I will leave the
+ question open. If you conclude to assure us of your vote for the bill, I
+ shall see that you are restored to a place in Republican councils. If I do
+ not hear anything from you, it will be necessary to address ourselves to
+ one or two other Senators who are probably available."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is, of course, a doctrine of present-day Republicanism that the will of
+ the majority must rule within the party. An insurgent is therefore an
+ apostate. The decision of the caucus is the infallible declaration of the
+ creed. In setting myself up as a judge of what it was right for me to do,
+ as the sworn representative of the people who had elected me, I was
+ offending against party orthodoxy, as that orthodoxy was then, and is now,
+ enforced in Washington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was given an opportunity to return to conformity. I was sent a written
+ invitation to attend the caucus of Republican Senators after the
+ assembling of Congress; and, with the other "insurgents," I ignored the
+ invitation. It was finally decided by the party leaders to let the tariff
+ bill rest until after the inauguration of the President-elect, William
+ McKinley, with the understanding that he would call a special session to
+ consider it; and, in the interval, the Republican machine, under Mark
+ Hanna, was set to work to produce a Republican majority in the Senate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hanna was elected Senator, at this time, to succeed John Sherman, who had
+ been removed to the office of Secretary of State, in order to make a seat
+ for Hanna. The Republican majority was produced. (Senator Dubois had been
+ defeated). And when the special session was called, in the spring of 1897,
+ my vote was no longer so urgently needed. I was invited to a Republican
+ caucus, but I was unwilling to return to political affiliations which I
+ might have to renounce again; for I saw the power of the business
+ interests in dictating the policy of the party and I did not propose to
+ bow to that dictation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the tariff bill came before the Senate, I could not in conscience
+ support it. The beneficiaries of the bill seemed to be dictating their own
+ schedules, and this was notably the case with the sugar trust, which had
+ obtained a differential between raw and refined sugar several times
+ greater than the entire cost of refining. I denounced the injustice of the
+ sugar schedule particularly. A Mr. Oxnard came to remonstrate with me on
+ behalf of the beet sugar industry of the West. "You know," he said, "what
+ a hard time we're having with our sugar companies. Unless this schedule's
+ adopted I greatly fear for our future."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I replied that I was not opposing any protection of the struggling
+ industries of the country, or of the sugar growers, but I was set against
+ the extortionate differential that the sugar trust was demanding.
+ Everybody knew that the trust had built its tremendous industrial power
+ upon such criminally high protection as this differential afforded, and
+ that its power now affected public councils, obtained improper favors, and
+ terrorized the small competing beet sugar companies of the West. I argued
+ that it was time to rally for the protection of the people as well as of
+ the beet sugar industry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He predicted that if the differential was reduced the protection on beet
+ sugar would fail. I laughed at him. "You don't know the temper of the
+ Senate," I said. "Why, even some of the Democrats are in favor of
+ protecting the beet sugar industry. That part of the bill is safe,
+ whatever happens to the rest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Senator Cannon," he replied, with all the scorn of superior knowledge,
+ "you're somewhat new to this matter. Permit me to inform you that if we
+ don't do our part in supporting the sugar schedule, including the
+ differential, the friends of the schedule in the Senate will prevent us
+ from obtaining our protection."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That," I retorted angrily, "is equivalent to saying that the sugar trust
+ is writing the sugar schedule. I can't listen with patience to any such
+ insult. The Senate of the United States cannot be dictated to, in a matter
+ of such importance, by the trust. I will not vote for the differential. I
+ will continue to oppose it to the end. If you're right&mdash;if the trust
+ has such power&mdash;better that our struggling sugar industry should
+ perish, so that we may arouse the people to the iniquitous manipulation
+ that destroyed it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I continued to oppose the schedule. Soon after, I received a message from
+ the Church authorities asking me to go to New York to attend to some of
+ their financial affairs. I entered the lobby of the Plaza Hotel on Fifth
+ Avenue about nine o'clock at night; I was met, unexpectedly, by Thomas R.
+ Cutler, manager of the Utah Sugar Company, who was a Bishop of the Mormon
+ Church; and he asked, almost at once, how the tariff bill was progressing
+ at Washington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had known Bishop Cutler for years. I knew that he had labored with
+ extraordinary zeal and intelligence to establish the sugar industry in
+ Utah. I understood that he had risked his own property, unselfishly, to
+ save the enterprise when it was in peril. And I had every reason to expect
+ that he would be as indignant as I was, at the proposal to use the support
+ of the beet sugar states in behalf of their old tyrant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told him of my conversation with Oxnard. "I'm glad," I said, "that we're
+ independent enough to refuse such an alliance with the men who are robbing
+ the country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A peculiar, pale smile curled Bishop Cutler's thin lips. "Well, Frank," he
+ replied, "that's just what I want to see you about. We"&mdash;with the
+ intonation that is used among prominent Mormons when the "we" are voicing
+ the conclusions of the hierarchy&mdash;"wouldn't like to do anything to
+ hurt the sugar interests of the country. I've looked into this
+ differential, and I don't see that it is particularly exorbitant. As a
+ matter of fact, the American Sugar Refining Company is doing all it can to
+ help us get our needed protection, and we have promised to do what we can
+ for it, in return. I hope you can see your way clear to vote for the bill.
+ I know that the brethren"&mdash;meaning the Church authorities&mdash;"will
+ not approve of your opposition to it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I understand what his quiet warning meant, and when we had parted I went
+ to my room to face the situation. Already I had been told, by a
+ representative of the Union Pacific Railway, that the company intended to
+ make Utah the legal home of the corporation, and to enter into a close
+ affiliation with the prominent men of the Church. I had been asked to
+ participate, and I had refused because I did not feel free, as a Senator,
+ to become interested in a company whose relations with the government were
+ of such a character. But I had not foreseen what this affiliation meant.
+ Bishop Cutler's warning opened my eyes. The Church was protecting itself,
+ in its commercial undertakings, by an alliance with the strongest and most
+ unscrupulous of the national enemies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I saw that this was natural. The Mormon leaders had been for years
+ struggling to save their community from poverty. Proscribed by the Federal
+ laws, their home industries suffering for want of finances, fighting
+ against the allied influences of business in politics, these leaders had
+ been taught to feel a fearful respect for the power that had oppressed
+ them. They were now being offered the aid and countenance of their old
+ opponents. Our community, so long the object of the world's disdain, was
+ to advance to favor and prosperity along the easy road of association with
+ the most influential interests of the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I remembered the long hard struggle of our people. I remembered the days
+ and nights of anxiety that I myself had known when we were friendless and
+ proscribed. Here was an open door for us, now, to power and wealth and all
+ the comfort and consideration that would come of these. Other men better
+ than I in personal character, more experienced in legislation than I, and
+ wiser by natural gift, were willing to vote for the bill; and Bishop
+ Cutler, a man whom I had always esteemed, the representative of the men
+ whom I most revered, had urged me, for them, to support the bill, under
+ suggestion of their anger if I refused to be guided by their leadership.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I saw why the "interests" were eager to have our friendship; we could give
+ them more than any other community of our size in the whole country. In
+ the final analysis, the laws of our state and the administration of its
+ government would be in the hands of the church authorities. Moses Thatcher
+ might lead a rebellion for a time, but it would be brief. Brigham H.
+ Roberts might avow his independence in some wonderful burst of campaign
+ oratory, but he would be forced to fast and pray and see visions until he
+ yielded. I might rebel and be successful for a moment, but the inexorable
+ power of church control would crush me at last. Yet, if I surrendered in
+ this matter of the tariff, I should be doing exactly what I had criticized
+ so many of my colleagues for doing&mdash;for more than one man in the
+ House and the Senate had given me the specious excuse that it was
+ necessary to go against his conscience, here, in order to hold his
+ influence and his power to do good in other instances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I did not sleep that night. On the day following, I transacted the
+ financial affairs that I had been asked to undertake, and then I returned
+ to Washington. My wife met me at the railway station, and&mdash;if you
+ will bear with the intimacy of such psychology&mdash;the moment I saw her
+ I knew how I would vote. I knew that neither the plea of community
+ ambition, nor the equally invalid argument of an industrial need at home,
+ nor the financial jeopardy of my friends who had invested in our home
+ industries, nor the fear of church antagonism, could justify me in what
+ would be, for me, an act of perfidy. When I had taken my oath of office I
+ had pledged myself, in the memory of old days of injustice, never to vote
+ as a Senator for an act of injustice. The test had come. By all the
+ sanctities of that old suffering and the promise that I had made in its
+ spirit, I would keep the faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the tariff bill came to its final vote in the Senate, I had the
+ unhappy distinction of being the only Republican Senator who voted against
+ it. A useless sacrifice! And yet if it had been my one act of public life,
+ I should still be glad of it. The "interests" that forced the passage of
+ that bill are those that have since exploited the country so shamefully.
+ It is their control of Republican party councils that has since caused the
+ loss of popular faith in Republicanism and the split in the party which
+ threatens to disrupt it. It is their control of politics in Utah that has
+ destroyed the whole value of the Mormon experiment in communism and made
+ the Mormon Church an instrument of political oppression for commercial
+ gain. They are the most dangerous domestic enemy that the nation has known
+ since the close of the Civil War. My opposition was as doomed as such
+ single independence must always be&mdash;but at least it was an
+ opposition. There is a consolation in having been right, though you may
+ have been futile!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My father, visiting Washington soon afterwards, took occasion to criticize
+ my vote publicly, in a newspaper interview; but he was content, by that
+ criticism, to clear himself and his colleagues of any responsibility for
+ my act. "You made a great mistake," he told me privately. "You are
+ alienating the friends who have done so much for us." He added as if
+ casually&mdash;with an air of off-handedness that was significant to me&mdash;"You
+ lay yourself open to attack from your political enemies. When a man's head
+ is high, it is easily hit." I was afterwards to understand how serious a
+ danger he then foresaw and thus predicted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many reports soon reached me of attacks that were being made upon me by
+ the ecclesiastical authorities, particularly by Joseph F. Smith and
+ Apostle Heber J. Grant. The formal criticism passed upon me by my father
+ was magnified to make my tariff vote appear an inexcusable party and
+ community defection. A vigorous and determined opposition was raised
+ against me. And in this, Smith and his followers were aided by the perfect
+ system of Church control in Utah&mdash;a system of complete ecclesiastical
+ tyranny under the guise of democracy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Practically every Mormon man is in the priesthood. Nearly every Mormon man
+ has some concrete authority to exercise in addition to holding his
+ ordination as an elder. Obedience to his superiors is essential to his
+ ambition to rise to higher dignity in the church; and obedience to his
+ superiors is necessary in order to attract obedience to himself from his
+ subordinates. There can be no lay jealousy of priestly interference in
+ politics, because there are no laymen in the proper sense of the word. A
+ man's worldly success in life is largely involved in his success as a
+ churchman, since the church commands the opportunities of enterprise, and
+ the leaders of the Church are the state's most powerful men of affairs. It
+ is not uncommon, in any of our American communities, for men to use their
+ church membership to support their business; but in Utah the Mormons
+ practically must do so, and even the Gentiles find it wise to be
+ subservient.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Add to this temporal power of the Church the fact that it was establishing
+ a policy of seeking material success for its people, and you have the
+ explanation of its eagerness to accept an alliance with the "interests"
+ and of its hostility to anyone who opposed that alliance. The Mormons,
+ dispossessed of their means by the migration from Illinois, had been
+ taught the difficulty of obtaining wealth and the value of it when once
+ obtained. They fancied themselves set apart, in the mountains, by the
+ world's exclusion. They were ambitious to make themselves as financially
+ powerful in proportion to their numbers as the Jews were; and it was a
+ common argument among them that the world's respect had turned to the Jews
+ because of the dependence of Christian governments upon the Jewish
+ financiers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The exploitation of this solid mass of industry and thrift could not long
+ be obscured from the eyes of the East. The honest desire of the Mormon
+ leaders to benefit their people by an alliance with financial power made
+ them the easy victims of such an alliance. With the death of the older men
+ of the hierarchy, the Church administration lost its tradition of
+ religious leadership for the good of the community solely, and the new
+ leaders became eager for financial aggrandizement for the sake, of power.
+ Like every other church that has added a temporal scepter to its spiritual
+ authority, its pontiffs have become kings of a civil government instead of
+ primates of a religious faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter IX. At the Crossways
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In 1897, the Church, freed of proscription, with its people enjoying the
+ sovereignty of their state rights, had&mdash;as I have already said&mdash;only
+ one further enfranchisement to desire: and that was its freedom from debt.
+ The informal "finance committee" of which I was a member, had succeeded in
+ concentrating the bulk of the indebtedness in the East, on short term
+ loans, and had brought a certain order out of the confusion of the older
+ methods of administration. But, in 1897, my father proposed a
+ comprehensive plan of Church finance that included the issuance of Church
+ bonds and the formation of responsible committees to regulate and manage
+ the business affairs of the Church, so that the bonds might be made a
+ normal investment for Eastern capital by having a normal business method
+ of administration to back them. The idea was tentatively approved by the
+ Presidency, and I was asked to draw up the plan in detail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this end there were placed in my hands sheets showing the assets,
+ liabilities, revenues and disbursements of the Church. They gave a total
+ cash indebtedness of $1,200,000, approximately. The revenues from tithes
+ for the year 1897 were estimated at a trifle more than a million dollars&mdash;the
+ total being low because of the financial depression from which the country
+ was just recovering. The available property holdings&mdash;exclusive of
+ premises used for religious worship, for educational and benevolent work,
+ and such kindred purposes&mdash;were valued at several millions (from four
+ to six), although there was no definite appraisal or means of obtaining
+ appraisal, since the values would largely attach only when the properties
+ were brought into business use. I was advised that the incomes of the
+ Church would probably increase at the rate of ten per cent per annum, but
+ I do not know by what calculations this ratio was reached.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The disbursements were chiefly for interest on debt, for the maintenance
+ of the temples and tabernacles, for educational and charitable work, for
+ missionary headquarters in other countries, and for the return of released
+ missionaries. The missionaries themselves received no compensation; they
+ were supposed to travel "without purse or scrip;" their expenses were
+ defrayed by their relatives, and they had to pay out of their own pockets
+ for the printed tracts which they distributed. Neither the President nor
+ any of the general authorities received salaries. There was an order that
+ each apostle should be paid $2,000 a year, but this rule had been
+ suspended, except, perhaps, in the cases of men who had to give their
+ whole time to religious work and who had no independent incomes. Some
+ occasional appropriations had been made for meeting houses in communities
+ that had been unable to erect their own chapels of worship, but for the
+ most part there were few calls made upon the Church revenues to support
+ its religious activities, its priests or its propaganda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our proposed committees, therefore, were a committee on missionary work,
+ one on publication, one on colonization, one on political protective work
+ for the Mormons in foreign countries, and most important&mdash;a finance
+ committee selected from the body of apostles, with the addition of some
+ able men connected with financial institutions. As a basis for the work of
+ the finance committee, we proposed the establishment of an interest fund,
+ a sinking fund, and a scale of percentage disbursements for the various
+ community purposes. These committees were to be appointed by the
+ Conferences of the people, and the committee reports were to be public.
+ President Woodruff eagerly accepted the plan as relieving the Presidency
+ of administrative cares that were becoming too great for the quorum to
+ carry. Joseph F. Smith did not at once awake to the real meaning of the
+ proposal; but when the scheme was submitted in its matured details, he
+ spoke of the danger of allowing power to pass from the hands of the
+ "trustee in trust" in business matters. His idea was sufficiently clear in
+ its resistance to any diffusion of authority, but it was correspondingly
+ void of any suggestion of substitute. For the time being he was pacified
+ by the assurance that the "Kingdom of God" and the rule of its prophets
+ would not be endangered by the organization of committees and the
+ submission of financial plans to the general knowledge, and even to the
+ consent, of the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was, of course, evident to the First Councillor that this scheme of
+ Church administration would give the Mormon people a measure of
+ responsible government, and the proposal was a part of his wisdom as a
+ community leader seeking the common welfare. While we had been a people on
+ whom the whole world seemed to be making war, a dictatorship had been
+ necessary; but now that we had arrived at peace and liberty, a
+ concentration of irresponsible power would surely become dangerous to
+ progress. Without, therefore, impairing the religious authority of the
+ Prophet, the First Councillor was willing to divide the temporal power of
+ the Church among its members.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was as silent, about these aims, with me as with all others; but I had
+ learned to understand him in his silences; and, in joining with him in his
+ work of reform, I was as sure of his purpose as I have since been sure of
+ the disaster to the Mormon people that has come of the failure to effect
+ the reform.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Presidency had approved of the flotation of bonds, I went with my
+ father to New York to aid him in interesting Eastern capitalists in the
+ investment. We interviewed Judge John F. Dillon and Mr. Winslow Pierce, of
+ the law firm of Dillon and Pierce, attorneys for some of the Union Pacific
+ interests; and through them we met Mr. Edward H. Harriman, Mr. George J.
+ Gould and members of the firm of Kuhn Loeb and Company. It was interesting
+ to watch the encounters between the Mormon prophet and some of these
+ astutest of the nation's financiers; for it was as if one of the ancient
+ patriarchs had stepped down from the days of early Israel to discuss the
+ financial problems of his people with a modern "captain of industry." He
+ described a condition of society that was, to Wall Street, archaic. He
+ spoke with a serene assurance that the order of affairs in Utah was
+ constituted in the wisdom of the word of God. He was listened to, with the
+ interest of curiosity, as the chief living exponent of the Mormon
+ movement, its processes and its aims; and I was impressed by the fact that
+ these men of the world had a large and splendid sympathy for any wholesome
+ social effort designed to abolish poverty and establish a quicker justice
+ in the practical affairs of the race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was of the abolition of poverty and the justice of the social order
+ among the Mormons, that the First Councillor chiefly spoke. "Your
+ clients," he said to Judge Dillon, "make their investments frequently in
+ railroad stocks and bonds. What are the underlying bases of the values of
+ railroad securities? Largely the industry and stability of the communities
+ through which the railroad lines shall operate. Then, in reality, the
+ security is valuable in proportion to the value of the community in its
+ steadfastness, its prosperity and the safety of its productive labor. In
+ your railroad investments you are obliged to take such considerations as a
+ secondary security. In negotiating this Church loan with your clients, you
+ can offer the same great values as a primary security. Probably no where
+ else in the world is there a people at once so industrious and so stable
+ as ours."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the boast of the Mormons that there had not been an almshouse or an
+ almstaker in any of their settlements, up to the time of the escheat
+ proceedings by the Federal officials; and this was literally true. Every
+ man had been helped to the employment for which he was best fitted. If an
+ immigrant, in his former estate, had been a silk-weaver, efforts were made
+ to establish his industry and give it public support. If he had been a
+ musician of talent, a little conservatory was founded, and patronage
+ obtained for him. When the growth of population made it necessary to open
+ new valleys for agriculture, the Church, out of its community fund,
+ rendered the initial aid; in many instances the original irrigation
+ enterprises of small settlements were thus financed; and the investments
+ were repaid not only directly, by the return of the loan, but indirectly,
+ many times over, by the increased productiveness and larger contributions
+ of the people. Co-operation, in mercantile, industrial and stock-raising
+ undertakings, assured the support and patronage of each community for its
+ own particular enterprise, prevented destructive competition and checked
+ the greed of the individual&mdash;for the more he toiled for himself, the
+ larger the share of the general burden he had to carry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the First Councillor's theory that when people contributed to a
+ common fund they became interested in one another's material welfare. The
+ man who paid less in tithes this year than last was counselled with as to
+ why his business had been unsuccessful, and the wise men of his little
+ circle aided him with advice and material help. The man who contributed
+ largely was glad of a prosperity from which he yielded a part&mdash;in
+ recognition of what the community had done for him and in a reverent
+ gratitude to God for making him "a steward of mighty possessions"&mdash;but
+ he was anxious that his neighbor also should be a larger contributor each
+ year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole system of tithe-paying was built upon a series of purported
+ "revelations" received by Joseph Smith, the original Prophet. It was
+ declared to be the will of God that all men, as stewards of their
+ possessions, should give of their increase annually into "the storehouse
+ of the Lord," which should always be open for the relief of the poor.
+ Inasmuch as the man who received help&mdash;or whose widow and children
+ did so&mdash;had been a tithe-payer during all his productive years, there
+ was none of the feeling of personal humiliation on the part of the
+ recipient, nor any of the feeling of condescending charity on the part of
+ the giver, in the distribution of funds to the needy. And it was
+ astonishing how few the needy were&mdash;because of the abstemious lives,
+ the industry, and the thrift of the workers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Church tribunals heard and settled all disputes over property or
+ personal rights not involving the criminal law. Expensive litigation was
+ thus avoided. Society was saved the cost of innumerable courts. There were
+ many counties in which no lawyer could be found; and everywhere, among the
+ Mormons, it was considered an act of evil fellowship, amounting almost to
+ apostasy, for a man to bring suit against his brother in the civil
+ tribunals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In short&mdash;as my father pointed out&mdash;Utah, at that time,
+ expressed the only full-bodied social proposition in the United States.
+ There never had been in America another community whose future, in the
+ economic aspects, offered so clear a solution of problems which still
+ remain generally unsettled. It was as if a segment of the great circle of
+ modern humanity had been transported to another world, otherwise
+ unpopulated, and there with the experience gained through centuries of
+ human travail&mdash;had attempted the establishment of a just, beneficent
+ and satisfying social order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am here repeating this argument&mdash;this exposition&mdash;because the
+ financial absolutism of the Prophets of the Church has since ruined the
+ whole Mormon experiment in communism, put the Mormon paupers into the
+ public poor houses, used the tithes to support the large financial
+ ventures of the Prophet's favorites, and turned the Church's "community
+ enterprises" into monopolistic exploitations of the Mormon people. And
+ this change began even while our negotiations were pending in New York&mdash;for
+ they were prolonged, for various reasons, into the summer of 1898, and
+ they were interrupted finally by the death of President Woodruff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as I received word of his illness I took train for Utah. The news
+ of his death met me on the journey home. Since I derived my authority
+ solely from him, upon my arrival in Salt Lake I went to the Cashier of the
+ Church, gave him the keys and the password to the safety deposit box in
+ New York, and withdrew from any further participation in the Church's
+ financial affairs. When I came to the office of the Presidency I found
+ that my father had removed his desk; and this was an indication to me of
+ what was happening in the inner circles of Church intrigue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The president of the quorum of apostles invariably succeeds to the
+ Presidency of the Church, although it is left to the apostles to decide,
+ and their choice is supposed to be directed by inspiration. His election
+ is subsequently ratified by the General Conference; but this ratification
+ is a mere form, because the conference must either accept the choice of
+ the apostles or rebel against "the revelation of God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apostle Lorenzo Snow was president of the quorum of apostles, and
+ therefore in line for the Presidency. But usually, after the death of a
+ President, a considerable period was allowed to elapse before the
+ selection of his successor, with the government resting in the quorum of
+ apostles meanwhile, even for a term of years. As soon as I arrived in Salt
+ Lake, Apostle Snow asked me to a private interview (in the same small back
+ room of the President's offices), inquired about the financial
+ negotiations that I had been conducting, and asked me whether it was not
+ essential to the success of our business affairs that as soon as possible
+ the Church should elect a President, empowered as "trustee in trust." I
+ replied that it was. He invited me to attend a conference of the apostles
+ and give my views upon the situation to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This seemed to me an act of rather shallow cunning, for I knew I was too
+ unimportant a person to be so consulted unless he thought my report would
+ aid his intrigue. Such intriguing was offensive to the religious
+ traditions of the Church; and it outraged my feeling for President
+ Woodruff, who was hardly cold in death before this personal and worldly
+ ambition caught at the reins of his office. Snow had been a man of small
+ weight in the government of the Church. He had known none of the
+ responsibilities of great leadership. He was eighty-four years old.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, it was impossible for us to maintain the Church's credit in the
+ East unless our community were represented by some choate authority, since
+ our credit rested on the belief that the Mormon people were ready to
+ consecrate all their possessions at any time to the service of the Church
+ at the command of the President. I advised the apostles of this fact. Snow
+ was elected President on September 13, 1898, eleven days after Woodruff's
+ death. He followed the usual precedent in choosing my father and Joseph F.
+ Smith as his Councillor's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he took possession of his new authority with the manner of an heir
+ entering upon the ownership of a personal estate for which he had long
+ waited&mdash;and which he proposed to enjoy to the full for his remaining
+ years. In a most literal sense he held that all the property of the people
+ of the Church was subject to his direction, as chief earthly steward of
+ "the Divine Monarch," and he proceeded to exercise his assumed
+ prerogatives with an autocracy that made even Joseph F. Smith complain
+ because the Councillor's were never asked for counsel. As resident apostle
+ of Box Elder County and president of the Box Elder "stake of Zion," Snow
+ had already shown his ambition as a financier, disastrously; and it was as
+ the financial head of the Church that he was chiefly to rule during his
+ term of absolutism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all the Church leaders whom I had known he was the only man who showed
+ none of the robustness of the Western experience. Tall, stately,
+ white-bearded, elegant and courtly, he prided himself most obviously on
+ his manners and his culture. He rarely spoke in any but the most subdued
+ and silken tones of suavity. He walked with a step that was almost
+ affected in its gentility. If he had any passions, he held them in such
+ smooth concealment that the public credited him with neither force nor
+ unkindness. He had been a great traveler (as a missionary); he had written
+ his autobiography, somewhat egotistically; he was devoted to the forms of
+ his religion, like a mediaeval Prince of the Church and an elegante. But
+ under all the artificialities of personal vanity and exterior grace, he
+ proved to have a cold determination that seemed more selfishly ambitious
+ than religiously zealous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At once, upon his accession to power, he notified us that he did not
+ intend to carry out any such plan as we had suggested for the
+ administration of the Church's finances. It meant a diffusion of
+ authority; and he held that the best results had been obtained by keeping
+ all power in the hands of the Prophet, Seer and Revelator, and of those
+ whom he might appoint to work with him. Joseph F. Smith, at a meeting of
+ the Presidency, was even more positive. No good, he said, could come of
+ publishing the affairs of the community to the people of it; those affairs
+ were purely the concern of the Prophets; the Lord revealed His will to the
+ Prophets and they were responsible only to Him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My father necessarily bowed to the President's decision. "It is within the
+ authority of the Prophet of the Lord," he counselled me, "to determine how
+ he will conduct the business of the Church. President Snow has his own
+ ideas."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By that decision, as I see it now, an autocracy of financial power was
+ confirmed to the President of the Mormon Church at a time when a renewal
+ of prosperity among its people was about to make such power fatal to their
+ liberties. It was confirmed to a man who proved himself eager for it,
+ ambitious to increase it and secretly unscrupulous in his use of it. He
+ proceeded at once to preach the doctrine of contribution with unexampled
+ zeal, but he administered the "common fund," so collected, with none of
+ the old feeling of responsibility to the people who contributed it He
+ became the first of the new financial pontiffs of the Church who have used
+ the "money power" as an aid to hierarchical domination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, in his desire to fill the coffers of the Church, he engaged in
+ "practical politics" and made a profit out of Church influence, both in
+ business enterprises and in political campaigns. He proved himself
+ peculiarly qualified by nature to construct and direct a secret political
+ machine&mdash;a machine whose operations were never to be observable
+ except to the close student of Utah's ecclesiasticism&mdash;a machine that
+ was to be all the more effective because of its silent certainty. As the
+ succeeding chapters of this narrative will show, although he affected a
+ fine superiority to unclean political work and always publicly professed
+ that the Church of Christ was holding itself aloof from the strife of
+ partisanship, there was no political event on which he did not fix the
+ calculating eye of his ambitious clericalism and no candidacy that he did
+ not reach with those slender but powerful fingers that controlled the
+ destiny of a state and trifled with the honor of a people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His accession marked the change from the old to the new regime in Utah.
+ Leadership was no longer a dangerous honor. Proscription no longer made
+ the authorities of the Church strong by persecution&mdash;hardy chiefs of
+ a poverty-stricken people&mdash;leaders as sensible of the obligations of
+ power as their followers were faithful in their allegiance of duty.
+ Political freedom and worldly prosperity made the office of President a
+ luxurious sovereignty, easily tyrannical, fortified in its religious
+ absolutism by its irresponsible power of finance, and protected in its
+ social abuses, from the interference of the nation, by an alliance with
+ the commercial rulers of the nation and by a duplicity that worldliness
+ has learned to dignify with the respectability of material success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter X. On the Downward Path
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ During the last years of President Woodruff's life there had been a slow
+ decline of the feeling that it was necessary for self-protection that the
+ hierarchy should preserve a political control over the people. I cannot
+ say that the feeling had wholly passed. It had continued to show itself,
+ here and there, whenever a candidate was so pertinacious in his
+ independence that words of disfavor were sent out from Church headquarters
+ in one of those whispers that carry to the confines of the kingdom of the
+ priests. But the progress was apparent. The tendency was clear. And in
+ 1898 there was neither internal revolt nor external threat to provoke a
+ renewal of the exercise of that force which is necessarily despotic if it
+ be used at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet, in September, 1898, President Snow, if he did not instigate, at least
+ authorized the candidacy of Brigham H. Roberts for Congress&mdash;a
+ polygamist who had been threatened with excommunication for his opposition
+ to the "political manifesto" of 1896 and who had recanted and made his
+ peace with the hierarchy. His election, now, would be a proof that the
+ Church could punish a brilliant orator and courageous citizen in the time
+ of his independence and then reward him in the day of his submission; and
+ the authorities would thus demonstrate to all the people that the one way
+ to political preferment lay through the annihilation of self-will and the
+ submergence of national loyalty in priestly devotion. Such a candidacy was
+ a sufficient shame to the state; but there was also a United States
+ Senatorship to be bestowed; and it was deliberately bargained for, between
+ the Church authorities and a man who deserved better than the alliance
+ into which he entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alfred W. McCune was a citizen of Utah who had gone out from the territory
+ in the days of its poverty (and his own), had made a fortune in British
+ Columbia and Montana, and had returned to his home state to enrich it with
+ his generosities. He was not a Mormon, but he had wide Mormon connections.
+ He spent his millions in public enterprises and benefactions; and the
+ Church had benefited in the sum of many thousands by his subscriptions to
+ its funds and institutions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apostle Heber J. Grant, a Republican by sentiment but a Democrat by
+ pretension, was selected by President Snow to barter the Senatorship to
+ McCune. There can be no doubt of it. Everyone immediately suspected it.
+ Letters from Grant, published in the newspapers of January, 1899,
+ subsequently confirmed it. And President Snow's actions, toward the end of
+ the campaign, proved it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other candidates were Judge O. W. Powers, a prominent Democrat;
+ William H. King, also a Democrat, a former member of Congress and at one
+ time a Federal judge; and myself as an independent Silver Republican. I
+ had not allied myself with the Democrats after withdrawing from the
+ Republican convention of 1896, and the Republican machine in Utah (thanks
+ to the power of the "interests") had repudiated me, in September, 1898, by
+ adopting a platform that refused to support as Senator any man who had
+ opposed the Dingley Tariff Bill. But I had the votes of my own county of
+ Weber, and some other votes that had been pledged to me before the
+ election of members of the legislature; and though my return to the Senate
+ seemed plainly impossible, I went into the fight in fulfillment of
+ understandings which I had with progressive elements in Utah and with the
+ "insurgents," of that day, in Washington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the campaign to elect members of the Legislature, I supported the
+ Democratic State and Congressional ticket. Brigham H. Roberts had been
+ nominated for Congress on this ticket despite the protests of my father
+ and many others who foresaw the evil results of electing a polygamist. I
+ accepted Roberts' nomination as proof that this question must be settled
+ anew at Washington; and I contented myself with predicting, throughout the
+ campaign, that the House of Representatives would determine whether it
+ would admit a polygamist and a member of the hierarchy as a lawmaker, and
+ would so forever dispose of these ecclesiastical candidacies of which Utah
+ refused to dispose for itself. (And it is a fact that since the prompt
+ exclusion of Roberts from the House of Representatives no known polygamist
+ has been elected to either House of Congress.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Democratic legislature was elected, and A. W. McCune was put forward
+ prominently as a candidate for the United States senatorship. He was
+ assisted by his own newspaper, the Salt Lake Herald, by numberless
+ business interests, cleverly by the Deseret News (the organ of the
+ hierarchy) flagrantly and for financial reasons by Apostle Heber J. Grant,
+ and incidentally by the Smiths on behalf of the Church. Also a Republican
+ assistance was given him by my former colleague in the Senate, Arthur
+ Brown, who specialized as an opponent to my candidacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My old campaign manager, Ben Rich, had been withdrawn from me by a Church
+ order appointing him in control of the Eastern missions. I was without the
+ support of either the Democratic or Republican organizations: my following
+ was a personal one: and consequently the attack upon me chiefly took the
+ form of stories of personal immorality, privately circulated. These
+ stories culminated in a motion before the Woman's Republican Club,
+ demanding my withdrawal from the Senatorial contest on the ground of
+ "gross misconduct"&mdash;a motion introduced by a Mrs. Anna M. Bradley, a
+ woman politician (who was a stranger to me), with the assistance of Mrs.
+ Arthur Brown, wife of the former Senator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If I ever had any resentment against these unfortunate women for allowing
+ themselves to be used as the agents of slander, it passed in the miseries
+ that overtook them later; for Mrs. Brown died of the scandal of her
+ husband's intimacy with Mrs. Bradley, and Mrs. Bradley shot and killed
+ ex-Senator Brown, in a Washington hotel, because he refused to marry her
+ and recognize her child after her divorce from her husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My anger then, and since, was not against the women, but against the men
+ who hid behind them&mdash;against Apostle Heber J. Grant and Apostle John
+ Henry Smith and their tool, ex-Senator Brown. In my anger I decided to
+ take an action that looked as desperate as it proved successful. I hired
+ the Salt Lake Theatre&mdash;for a night (February 9, 1899), and announced
+ that I would speak on "Senatorial Candidates and Pharisees"&mdash;intending
+ to use the opportunity of self-defense in order to attack the "financial
+ apostles" who were selling Church influence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In taking that step I understood, of course, that it meant the death for
+ me of any political ambition in Utah. It meant offending my father, who
+ besought me not to raise my hand against "the Lord's anointed," but to
+ leave my enemies "to God's justice"&mdash;as he had always done with his.
+ It meant a breach with many of my friends in the Church who would blindly
+ resent my criticism of the political apostles as an encouragement to the
+ enemies of the faith. But the part that I had taken in helping Utah to
+ gain its statehood made it impossible for me to stand aside, now, and see
+ all our pledges broken, all our promises betrayed. I had to offer myself
+ as a sacrifice to hierarchical resentment in the hope that my destruction
+ might give at least a momentary pause to the reactionaries in their
+ career.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is needless that I should relate all the incidents of that wild night.
+ The theatre was packed with people who joined me for the moment in a
+ sympathetic protest against the disgrace of Utah. President Lorenzo Snow,
+ his two councillors and several apostles were present, and I spoke without
+ any reservations on account of personal relationship, my own candidacy or
+ the possible effect upon my own affairs. I appealed to the people to
+ prevent the sale of Utah's senatorship to McCune by Apostle Grant and the
+ Church reactionaries; and by turning the light of publicity upon the
+ methods that were being employed in the legislature, I made it impossible
+ for the hierarchy to sway enough votes to elect McCune. The men who had
+ pledged themselves to the other candidates could not be shaken from their
+ support without a national scandal. The election settled for the time into
+ a deadlock, in which no candidate could obtain enough votes to elect him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apostle Heber J. Grant started to write letters that should counteract the
+ effect of my speech, but President Snow forbade him to continue the
+ controversy and sent word to me that he had forbidden Grant to continue
+ it. I did not know why President Snow wished me to feel that he was
+ friendly to me, but I was soon to learn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The deadlock in the legislature continued, in spite of all the efforts of
+ the Church authorities to break it. Our political workers, summoned one by
+ one by messengers from Church headquarters, had gone to interviews from
+ which they did not return to us&mdash;until I had left only Judge Ed. F.
+ Colborn (a famous character in Kansas, Colorado and Utah), and an old
+ friend, Jesse W. Fox. One night, about a week after the meeting in the
+ theatre, we three were sitting alone in my rooms, when the door opened and
+ someone beckoned to Fox. He went out. Judge Colborn opened a window to see
+ Fox getting into a carriage with a man from Church headquarters&mdash;and
+ we knew that our last worker was gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He returned only to tell me that President Snow wished to see me&mdash;that
+ if I were willing, the President would like to have me call upon him, at
+ half past nine the following evening, in his residence. And I understood
+ the significance of such an invitation for such an hour. I had been too
+ often in contact with the power of the Prophets to doubt what was required
+ of me. I was curious merely to know what form the ultimatum would take.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President Snow was then living with his youngest wife in a house a few
+ blocks from the offices of the Presidency. I drove there in a carriage and
+ ordered the driver to wait for me. President Snow opened the door to me
+ himself, received me with his usual engaging smile, and ushered me into a
+ reception room that was shut off, by portieres, from a larger parlor.
+ There, when he had invited me to be seated, he said, winningly: "I was not
+ sure you would come in answer to my message."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I assured him that I had not so far lost my regard for the men with whom
+ my father was associated. "And besides," I said, "if there were no other
+ reason, it is my place, as the younger of the two, to attend on your
+ convenience."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did not know," he replied, "but that you thought me one of the
+ 'Pharisees' of whom you spoke."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I did not accept this invitation to reply that I did not consider him one
+ of the Pharisees. I explained merely that I had identified the Pharisees
+ in my speech by name and deed and accusation. "Unless something there said
+ is applicable to you, I have no charge to make against you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He excused himself a moment to go to an infant whom we could hear crying
+ in an inner room; and, when he returned, he had the child in his arms&mdash;a
+ little girl, in a night gown. He sat down, petting her, stroking her hair
+ with his supple lean hand, affectionately, and smiling with a sort of
+ absentminded tenderness as he took up the conversation again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This memory of him sticks in my mind as one of the most extraordinary
+ pictures of my experience. I knew that I had come there to hear my own or
+ some other person's political death sentence. I knew that he would not
+ have invited me at such an hour, with such secrecy, unless the issue of
+ our conference was to be something dark and fatal. And in the soft
+ radiance of the lamp he sat smiling&mdash;fragile of build, almost
+ spiritual, white-haired, delicately cultured&mdash;soothing the child who
+ played with his long silvery beard and blinked sleepily. He inquired
+ whether my carriage was waiting for me, and I replied that it was. He
+ asked me to dismiss it. When I returned to the room, the little girl was
+ resting quiet, and he excused himself to take her to her cot. I heard him
+ closing the doors behind him as he came back. "We may now talk with
+ perfect freedom," he announced. "There's no one else in this part of the
+ house."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sat down in his chair, composing himself with an air that might have
+ distinguished one of the ancient kings. "I have sent for you to talk about
+ the Senatorial situation. May I speak plainly to you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I replied that he might. He was watching me, under his gray eyebrows, with
+ his soft eyes, in which there was a glitter of blackness but none of the
+ rheum of old age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It would be most unfortunate," he said, "for us, as a people, if we
+ failed to elect a Senator. I've had many business and other anxieties for
+ the Church, and I want this question settled. If we act wisely&mdash;with
+ the power and influence at our command&mdash;aid will come to me. I think
+ you would not willingly permit our situation to become more difficult."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He must have seen a change in my expression&mdash;a change that indicated
+ how well I understood the significance of this guarded introduction.
+ Suddenly, his manner broke into animation, and holding out both hands to
+ me, palms up, he said, smiling: "You must know, Brother Frank, that I had
+ nothing to do with Mr. McCune's candidacy for the Senate, do you not? I
+ was not responsible for what Brother Grant did. Before we go on, I want
+ you to acquit me of responsibility for that project."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "President Snow," I replied, "I can't admit so much. I, too, wish to talk
+ plainly&mdash;with your permission. Your responsibility is evident even to
+ the casual observer&mdash;to say nothing of one reared as I've been. Every
+ man in this community knows that when you point your finger your apostles
+ go, and when you crook your finger your apostles return&mdash;and Heber J.
+ Grant has only done what you permitted him to do with your full
+ knowledge."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He drew himself up, coldly. "What I have done," he retorted, "has been
+ done with the knowledge of my Councillor's."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thrust was obvious. I replied: "If my father desires to discuss with
+ me his responsibility for this indignity to the state, he knows I'm at his
+ command. And if I have any charge to make, involving his good faith toward
+ the country, I'll seek him alone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well," he said, with a frigid suavity. "We will leave that part of
+ the question." He paused. "Last night," he continued, "lying on my bed, I
+ had a vision. I saw this work of God injured by the political strife of
+ the brethren. And the voice of the Lord came to me, directing me to see
+ that your father was elected to the Senate." He studied me a moment before
+ he added: "What have you to say?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I answered: "It seems to me impossible. This legislature is strongly
+ Democratic. My father's a Republican. It seems to me not only
+ impracticable but very unwise&mdash;if it could be done."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never mind that," he said. "The Lord will take care of the event. I want
+ you to withdraw from the race and throw your strength to your father. It
+ is the will of the Lord that you do so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have you a revelation to that effect also?" I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He answered, pontifically, "Yes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You'll publish it to the world, then, the same as other revelations?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," he replied. "No."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then I'll not obey it," I said, "because if God is ashamed of it, I am."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His air of prophetic authority changed to one of combative resolution. He
+ explained that one of the other candidates, a strong Democrat, had agreed
+ to accept the revelation if I would; that the two of us could give our
+ strength to the church candidate; that the Church would turn to my father
+ the votes that it had already in command for McCune, and my father's
+ election would be carried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I felt that the thumb-screws were being put on me again. For the second
+ time I was being forced to the point of denying the Senatorship to my
+ father by refusing him my support. And there could not have been, for me,
+ a more vivid and instantaneous illumination of the hidden depths in this
+ Church system&mdash;or in the individual Prophet of the cult&mdash;than
+ was made by Snow's determined insistence that I should break my word of
+ honor to the people of the state and of the nation, pledge that broken
+ faith to him, induce all my supporters in the legislature to violate their
+ covenants&mdash;Mormon and Gentile alike!&mdash;and upon his mere
+ assumption of divine authority, direct Mormon and Gentile to stultify and
+ disgrace themselves forever as men and public officials. There was
+ something appalling in the calculating cruelty with which he proposed to
+ devote us all to destruction and dishonor. There was something inhumanly
+ malignant in the plan to use my known affection for my father in order to
+ make me guilty of the very betrayal of the people which I had publicly
+ denounced. I looked at him&mdash;and heard him, now, placidly,
+ confidently, with a renewed suavity, urging me to do the thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "President Snow," I interrupted, "does my father know of this?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He answered: "No."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm glad of it," I said. (And I was!) "This is not the way to work out
+ either the destiny of 'God's people' or the destiny of this state. It
+ would place my father in a most humiliating position to be elected&mdash;at
+ the orders of the Church&mdash;under the assumption that God Almighty had
+ directed men to break their solemn promises to their constituents. I have
+ as high an admiration for my father's wisdom and ability as you or the
+ Democratic candidate who has offered to withdraw at the will of the
+ Church, but I should be paying no honor to my father by dishonoring my
+ pledge to my constituents and asking other men to dishonor theirs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He dismissed me with an air of benignant sorrow!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The deadlock in the legislature continued unbroken. Among my supporters
+ was Lewis W. Shurtliff, the President of the "Stake of Zion" in which I
+ lived; he was one of the highest Church dignitaries in the legislature and
+ was regarded as my foremost champion in the Senatorial contest. On the
+ last day of the legislative session, at President Snow's instruction, my
+ father, known as a Republican, was offered as a senatorial candidate to
+ this Democratic legislature, and all the power of the Church influence was
+ thrown to him. President Shurtliff's wife came to our headquarters, that
+ night, and knelt, with a number of other ladies, to pray that her husband
+ might be spared the humiliation of breaking his repeated promise not to
+ desert me! We all knew that if he broke his promise, it would cause him
+ more mental anguish than anyone else; but we knew, too, that if the
+ command came from Church headquarters, he would have to obey it. Men broke
+ their political pledges to their people and outraged their own feelings of
+ personal independence or partisan loyalty, rather than offend against "the
+ will of the Lord." The forces of the other candidates went to pieces, and
+ on the last night of the session my father's vote reached twenty-three.
+ (It required thirty-two votes to elect.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The situation was saved by the action of a number of Democrats who got
+ together and obtained a recess; when the recess was ended, a final ballot
+ was taken, and, since no candidate had enough votes to elect him, the
+ presiding officer, by pre-concertment, declared the joint assembly
+ adjourned sine die, by operation of law. No Senator was elected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was the last time that the Church authorities were to be balked.
+ Since that day, they have dictated the nominations and carried the
+ elections of the United States Senators from Utah as if these were
+ candidates for a church office. The present Senator, Reed Smoot, is an
+ apostle of the Church; he obtained the Mormon President's "permission" to
+ become a candidate, as he admitted to an investigating committee of the
+ Senate; and when the recent tariff bill was being attacked by insurgent
+ Republicans and carried by Senator Aldrich, Senator Smoot acted as
+ Aldrich's lieutenant in debate, and remained to watch the defense of the
+ "interests" when his chief was absent from the Senate chamber. (Not
+ because Smoot was such an able defender of those "interests"! Not because
+ his constituents would uphold his course! But because he has no
+ constituents, and is responsible to no one but the hierarchical partners
+ of those "interests.")
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every pledge of the Mormon leaders that the Church would not interfere in
+ politics has been broken at every election in Utah since President Snow
+ that night pleaded to me that he had had many business anxieties for the
+ Church and that if we elected the Church candidate "aid" would come to
+ him. The covenants by which Utah obtained its statehood have been violated
+ again and again. The provisions of the state constitution have been
+ nullified. The trust of the Mormon people has been abused; their political
+ liberties have been denied them; their Gentile brethren have been
+ betrayed. And all this has been done not for the protection of the people,
+ who were threatened with no proscription&mdash;and not for the advancement
+ of the faith, which has been free to work out its own future. It has been
+ done as a part of the alliance between the "financial" prophets of the
+ Church and the financial "interests" of the country&mdash;which have been
+ exploiting the people of Utah as they have exploited the whole nation with
+ the aid of the ecclesiastical authorities in Utah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XI. The Will of the Lord
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Mormon leaders were now hurried down their chosen path of dishonor
+ with a fateful rapidity. A reform movement was demanding of Washington the
+ adoption of a constitutional amendment that should give Congress power to
+ regulate the marriage and divorce laws of all the states in the Union. And
+ this proposed amendment&mdash;partly inspired by a growing doubt of the
+ good faith of the Mormon leaders&mdash;gave the politicians in Washington
+ something to trade for Mormon votes, in the presidential campaign of 1900.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Republicans had lost the electoral votes of Utah and the surrounding
+ states, in 1896.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Utah was now Democratic, and its one United States Senator (who was still
+ in office) was a Democrat. Senator Hanna's lieutenant, Perry S. Heath,
+ came to Salt Lake City in the summer of 1900, to confer with the heads of
+ the Mormon Church. His authority (as representative of the ruler of the
+ Republican party) had been authenticated by correspondence; and he was
+ received by President Snow as royalty receives the envoy of royalty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heath negotiated with his usual directness. In the phrase of the time, "he
+ laid down his cards on the table, face up, and asked Snow to play to that
+ hand." If the Mormon Church would pledge its support to the Republican
+ party, the Republican leaders would avert the threatened constitutional
+ amendment that was to give Congress the power to interfere in the domestic
+ affairs of the Mormon people. But if the Church denied its support to the
+ Republican party, the constitutional amendment would be carried, and the
+ Mormons, in their marriage relations, would be returned to the Federal
+ jurisdiction from which they had escaped when the territory was admitted
+ to statehood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sentiment of the country was known to be in favor of giving Congress
+ such power. A strong body of reformers was urging the amendment, and the
+ Church leaders had sent Apostle John Henry Smith and Bishop H. B. Clawson
+ to lobby against it. After consulting with my father, I had written to
+ President Snow pointing out the danger to the Mormons of having a lobby
+ opposing such an amendment&mdash;for I was not then aware of the secret
+ return to the practice of polygamy, after 1896. President Snow replied to
+ me (in a message of guarded prudence) that although the Church inhibited
+ plural marriage and did not intend to allow the practice, he was opposed
+ to the interference of Congress in the domestic concerns of the other
+ states of the Union!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He made his "deal" with Perry Heath. Church messengers were sent out
+ secretly to the Mormons in Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, Nevada, Montana,
+ Washington, Oregon, California and the territories, with the whispered
+ announcement that it was "the will of the Lord" that the Republicans
+ should be aided. Utah went Republican; the Mormons in the surrounding
+ states either openly supported, or secretly voted for McKinley; and the
+ constitutional amendment was "side tracked" and forgotten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Utah elected a Republican legislature. Apostle Reed Smoot applied to
+ President Snow for permission to become a candidate for the United States
+ Senatorship, and obtained a promise that if he stood aside, for the time,
+ he should receive his reward later. President Snow had decided that Thomas
+ Kearns, already an active candidate, was the man whom the Church would
+ support&mdash;since Mr. Kearns' ability, his wealth and his business
+ connection promised greater advantages for the state and (under cunning
+ manipulation by the priests) greater advantages for the Church than the
+ election of any other candidate. And all this may be fairly said without
+ assuming that there was any definite arrangement between he Church and any
+ friends of Mr. Kearns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kearns was associated with Senator Clark of Montana and R. C. Kerens of
+ St. Louis in building a railroad from Salt Lake to Los Angeles, and the
+ Church owned some fifteen miles of track that had been laid from Salt Lake
+ City, as the beginning of a Los Angeles line. It was apparently assumed by
+ President Snow that Kearns' election to the Senate would facilitate the
+ sale of this Church railroad to the Clark-Kearns syndicate. The Church had
+ a direct interest in numerous iron and coal properties in Southern Utah,
+ and many members of the Church also had private properties there, which
+ the Los Angeles line would develop. Some of Kearns' friends were
+ negotiating for the purchase of Church properties, and one of his partners
+ was proposing to buy (and subsequently bought) the Church's "Amelia
+ Palace," a useless and expensive property which Brigham Young had built
+ for his favorite wife, and which the Church had long been eager to sell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My father had been in ill-health for some months and he was away from Utah
+ a large part of the time. President Snow took counsel of his Second
+ Councillor, Joseph F. Smith, and of Apostle John Henry Smith; and to the
+ Smiths, he indicated Thos. Kearns as the one whose election to the United
+ States Senate might do most to advance Snow's concealed purpose. But the
+ Smiths had other plans, that were equally advantageous to the Church and
+ more advantageous to the Smiths; they rebelled against President Snow's
+ dictation, and he ordered them both away on temporary "missions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Joseph F. Smith was leaving the President's offices, in a rage, he met
+ an old friend, Joseph Howell, who (at this writing) is a member of
+ Congress from Utah, and was then a member of the Utah legislature. He told
+ Smith that President Snow had sent for him, and Smith, controlling himself&mdash;without
+ betraying any knowledge of the probable purpose of Snow's summons to
+ Howell&mdash;said affectionately: "Brother Howell, I want you to make a
+ promise to me on your honor as an elder in Israel. I want you to pledge
+ yourself never to vote in this legislature for Thomas Kearns as Senator. I
+ ask it as your friend, and as a Prophet to the people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Howell gave his promise, and proceeded to his interview with President
+ Snow. There he received the announcement that it was "the will of the
+ Lord" that he should vote for Kearns, and he had to reply that he had
+ already received an inspired instruction, on this point, from a Prophet of
+ the Lord, and had given his pledge against Kearns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The incident became one of the jokes of the campaign, for Howell held to
+ his promise to Smith (and was subsequently rewarded by Smith with a seat
+ in Congress), and President Snow was compelled to waive the question of
+ conflicting "revelations."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kearns was elected. But he had had a powerful political machine of his
+ own, and he had been supported by a strong Gentile vote. He immediately
+ showed his independence by refusing to take orders from the political
+ Church leaders. He declined, further, for himself and his financial
+ confreres, to engage with the Church in business affairs. Many charges
+ were made that he was breaking his agreement of cooperation with the
+ authorities, but there never has been produced any evidence of such an
+ agreement, and I do not believe (from my knowledge of Senator Kearns) that
+ the agreement was ever made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The railroad into Southern Utah was later built by the Harriman interests
+ in combination with Clark and Kearns; but there, too, Snow was
+ disappointed. The expected development of the Church properties proved far
+ less profitable than had been supposed, and the financial prophecies of
+ the Seer and Revelator were not fulfilled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time it was abundantly evident that some of the Church leaders
+ intended to rule their people in politics with an absolutism as supreme as
+ any that Utah had ever known in the old days. And for these leaders to
+ maintain their authority&mdash;despite the covenant of their amnesty, the
+ terms of Utah's statehood and the provisions of the constitution&mdash;and
+ to maintain that authority against the robust American sentiment that
+ would be sure to assert itself&mdash;it was necessary that they should
+ have the most effective political protection afforded by any organization
+ in the whole country. The ideal arrangement of evil was offered to them by
+ the men then in temporary leadership of the Republican party. The Prophets
+ were able to make the Republican party a guilty partner of their perfidy
+ by making it a recipient of the proceeds of that perfidy, and to assure
+ themselves protection in every religious tyranny so long as they did not
+ run counter to Republican purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the moment, the Church took more benefit from the partnership than it
+ conferred. The result of the presidential elections of 1900 showed that
+ the Republicans could have elected their ticket without any help from the
+ Prophets. But without the help of the dominant party the Prophets could
+ not have renewed the rule of the state by the Church could not have
+ prevented the passage of a constitutional amendment punishing polygamy by
+ Federal statute&mdash;and could not have obtained such intimate relation
+ and commanding influence with the great "interests" of the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Throughout all these miserable incidents, I had a vague hope that they
+ would prove merely temporary and peculiar to the term of Snow's
+ presidency. He was now in his eighty-sixth year. My father was next in
+ succession for the Presidency, and he was seventy-three. He had remained
+ personally faithful to every pledge that he had made to the nation, and
+ though he had been powerless to prevent the breaches of covenant that had
+ followed the sovereignty of statehood, I knew that he had opposed some of
+ them and been a willing party to none. It is true that he had become a
+ director of the Union Pacific Railway and was close to the leading
+ financiers of the East; but his Union Pacific connection had come from the
+ fact that he had been one of the builders of the road that had afterward
+ merged in the Oregon Short Line; and his financial relations had been
+ those of a financier and not a politician. In all the years that I had
+ been working with him, I had never known him to have any purpose that was
+ not communistic in its final aspect and designed for the good of his
+ people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up to his seventieth year, he had shown no ill result of his early
+ hardships. Living the abstemious life of the orthodox Mormon, to whom
+ wine, tobacco and even tea and coffee are prohibited, he had seemed
+ inexhaustibly robust and untiring. But almost from the day of President's
+ Snow accession to office&mdash;deprived of the sustaining consciousness of
+ the responsibilities of leadership&mdash;his physical strength gave signs
+ of breaking. In the fall of 1900 he made a trip to the Sandwich Islands,
+ to recuperate, and to assist at the fiftieth anniversary of the Mormon
+ mission that he had founded there; but the Utah winter proved too rigorous
+ for him on his return, and in March, 1901, he was taken to California&mdash;to
+ Monterey. In April the word came to me in New York that he was sinking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I found him in a cottage overlooking the beautiful Bay of Monterey and its
+ wooded slope; and the doctors in attendance told me that he had been kept
+ alive only by the determination to see me before he died. There was no
+ hope. He had still a clear mind, but with ominous lapses of
+ unconsciousness that foreboded the end; and in these intervals of coma, as
+ we wheeled him to and fro on the veranda in an invalid chair&mdash;in an
+ attempt to refresh him with the motion of the sea air&mdash;he would swing
+ his right hand upward, with an old pulpit gesture, and say "Priesthood!
+ Priesthood!" as if in that word he expressed the ruling thought of his
+ life, the inspiration that had sustained his power, the obligation that
+ had governed him in his direction of his people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the afternoon of the 11th of April, he was lying in a stupor on a couch
+ before an open window, with the sound of the surf in the quiet room. One
+ of the doctors entered, looked at him intently, and said to me: "I can do
+ nothing more here&mdash;and my patients need me in San Francisco. He can't
+ last long. He'll probably never recover consciousness. If there's anything
+ imperative&mdash;anything you must say to him&mdash;any word you wish to
+ have from him&mdash;you could perhaps rouse him"&mdash;I said "No." We had
+ never intruded upon any mood of his silence during his masterful life; and
+ I felt a jealous rebellion against the idea that we should intrude now
+ upon this last, helpless silence of unconsciousness. The doctor left us. I
+ summoned the other members of the family from the veranda to the bedside.
+ He lay motionless and placid, scarcely breathing, his eyes closed, his
+ hands folded. In accordance with the rites of the Church, we laid our
+ hands on his head, while my eldest brother said the prayer of filial
+ blessing that "sealed" the dying man to eternity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the silence that followed the last "Amen" of the prayer, he opened his
+ eyes, and said in a steady, strong voice: "You thought I was passing
+ away?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We replied that we had seen he was very weak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a glance at the door through which the physician had departed, he
+ said resolutely: "I shall go when my Father calls me&mdash;and not till
+ then. I shall know the moment, and I will not struggle against His
+ command. Lift me up. Carry me out on the balcony I want to see the water
+ once more. And I want to talk with you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To me, it was the last struggle of the unconquerable will that had
+ silently, composedly, cheerfully fought and overcome every obstacle that
+ had opposed the purposes of his manhood for half a century. He would not
+ yield even to death at the dictation of man. He would go when he was ready&mdash;when
+ his mind had accepted the inevitable as the decree of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We sat around his couch on the veranda, and for two hours he talked to us
+ as clearly and as forcibly as ever. He spoke of the Church and of its
+ mission in the world, with all the hope of a religious altruist. From the
+ humblest beginnings, it had grown to the greatest power. From the depths
+ of persecution, it had risen to win favor from the wisest among men. It
+ had abolished poverty for hundreds of thousands, by its sound communal
+ system. In its religious solidarity, it had become a guardian and
+ administrator of equal justice within all the sphere of its influence. It
+ was full of the most splendid possibilities of good for mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With his eyes fixed on the sea&mdash;facing eternity as calmly as he faced
+ that great symbol of eternity&mdash;he voiced the sincerity of his life
+ and the hope that had animated his statesmanship. In an exaltation of
+ spirituality that made the moment one of the sublime experiences of my
+ life, he adjured us all to hold true to our covenants. I do not write of
+ his personal words of love and admonition to the members of his family. I
+ wish to express only the aspects that may be of public interest, in his
+ last aspirations&mdash;for these were the aspirations of the Mormon
+ leaders of the older generation, whom he represented&mdash;and they are
+ the aspirations of all the wise among the Mormons today, whatever may be
+ the folly and the treachery of their Prophets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten hours later, he was dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I cannot pretend that I had any true apprehension, then, of what his loss
+ meant to the community. I had no clearer vision of events than others. I
+ felt that I had no longer any tie to connect me closely with the
+ government of the Church, and I was willing to stand aside from its
+ affairs, believing that the momentum of progress imparted to it would
+ carry it forward. The nation had cleared the path for it. Its faith, put
+ into practice as a social gospel, had been freed of the offensive things
+ that had antagonized the world. My father's last messages of hope remained
+ with me as a cheering prophecy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At his funeral in the great tabernacle, President Snow put forward a
+ favorite son, Leroy, to read an official statement in which the President
+ took occasion to deny that my father had dictated the recent policies of
+ the Church: those policies, he said, had been solely the President's. (He
+ is welcome to the credit of them!) Joseph F. Smith showed more generosity
+ of emotion, now that his path of succession was clear of the superior in
+ authority whom he had so long regarded enviously; and he spoke of my
+ father, both privately and in public, in a way that won me to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shock of grief had perhaps "mellowed" me. I felt more tolerant of
+ these men, since I was no longer necessarily engaged in opposing them.
+ When President Snow died (October, 1901), I shared only the general
+ interest in the way Joseph F. Smith set about asserting his family's title
+ to rulership of the "Kingdom of God on Earth;" for, in effect, he notified
+ the world that his branch of the Smith family had been designated by
+ Divine revelation to rule in the affairs of all men, by an appointment
+ that had never been revoked. He has since made his cousin, John Henry
+ Smith, his First Councillor; and he has inducted his son Hyrum into the
+ apostolate by "revelation." This latter act roused the jealousy of the
+ mother of his son Joseph F. Smith, Jr., and the amused gossip of the
+ Mormons predicted another revelation that should give Joseph Jr. a similar
+ promotion. The revelation came. So many others have also come that the
+ Smith family is today represented in the hierarchy by Joseph F. Smith,
+ President, "Prophet, Seer and Revelator to all the world;" John Smith (a
+ brother) presiding Patriarch over the whole human race; John Henry Smith
+ (a cousin) Apostle and First Councillor to the President; Hyrum Smith and
+ Joseph F. Smith (sons) Apostles; George A. Smith (son of John Henry)
+ apostle; David S. Smith (son of Joseph F.) Councillor to the presiding
+ Bishop of the Church and in line of succession to the bishopric; and
+ Bathseba W. Smith, President of the Relief Societies. [FOOTNOTE:
+ She has died since this was written.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Joseph F. Smith has still thirty other sons&mdash;and at least four
+ wives who are not represented in the apostolate&mdash;there may yet be a
+ quorum of Smiths to succeed endlessly to the Presidency and make the Smith
+ family a perpetual dynasty in Utah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is one of the fascinating contradictions of Mormonism that many of the
+ sincere people&mdash;who smilingly predicted the Divine interposition by
+ which this family succession was founded&mdash;accept its rule devoutly.
+ "The Lord," they will tell you, "will look after the Church. If these men
+ are good enough for God, they are good enough for me. I do not have to
+ save the Kingdom." And they continue paying their devotion (and their
+ tithes) to a family autocracy whose imposition would have provoked a
+ rebellion in any other community in the civilized world!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is "the will of the Lord!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XII. The Conspiracy Completed
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Smiths were no sooner firm in power than rumors began to circulate of
+ a recrudescence of plural marriage, and I heard reports of political plots
+ by which the Prophets were to reestablish their autocracy in worldly
+ affairs in the name of God. I sought to close my mind against such
+ accusations, for I remembered how often my father had been misjudged, and
+ I felt that nothing but the most direct evidence should be permitted to
+ convince me of a recession by the Church authorities from the miraculous
+ opportunity of progress that was now open to their leadership. Such direct
+ evidence came, in part, in the state elections of 1902.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Utah Democrats re-nominated Wm. H. King for Congress; Senator Joseph
+ L. Rawlins was their candidate to succeed himself in the United States
+ Senate. The Republicans nominated President Smith's friend, Joseph Howell,
+ for Congress; and there began to spread a rumor that Apostle Reed Smoot
+ was to become a Republican candidate for the Senatorship under an old
+ promise given him by President Snow and now endorsed by President Smith. I
+ had been made state chairman of the Democratic party; and with the growing
+ report of Apostle Smoot's candidacy, I observed a gradual cessation of
+ political activity on the part of those prominent Democrats who were close
+ to the Church leaders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, our party was not making war on the Church nor on any of its proper
+ missions in the world. Our candidates were capable and popular men against
+ whom no just ecclesiastical antagonism could be raised. We were asking no
+ favors from the Church. And we were determined to have no opposition from
+ the Church without a protest and an understanding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For this reason&mdash;after consulting confidentially with the leaders of
+ our party&mdash;undertook to make a personal visit to President Smith's
+ office to demand that the Church authorities should keep their hands out
+ of politics. But even while I discussed the matter with our party leaders,
+ I was afraid that some of them might betray our concerted purpose to
+ Church headquarters. And my fear was well grounded. When I went to the
+ offices of the Presidency, the authorities&mdash;for the first, last and
+ only time&mdash;refused to see me; and the secretary betrayed a knowledge
+ of my mission by telling me that I should hear from some one of the
+ hierarchy, later.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two or three days afterward, Apostle M. F. Cowley came to me with word
+ that my call had been considered and that he had been deputed to talk with
+ me. We appointed a time for conference in my rooms at Democratic
+ headquarters, where we spent the large part of a day in consultation. And
+ since the argument between us covered the whole ground of Apostle Smoot's
+ candidacy, I wish to give an account of that interview, as a brief
+ exposition of some of the present-day aspects of the Church's interference
+ in politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apostle Cowley and I had been boyhood friends. He had been one of the
+ older students at the school that I had attended as a child; and I knew
+ the integrity and directness of his character. He was a stocky, strong
+ man, with a wholesome sort of face, brown with the sunburn of his
+ missionary travels in Canada and in Mexico. (He had been, in fact,
+ solemnizing plural marriages in these polygamous refuges&mdash;as we found
+ out later.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as it was clearly understood between us that I represented the
+ Democratic state committee and he represented the Church authorities, I
+ asked for an explanation of Apostle Smoot's candidacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cowley began by admitting the candidacy, which President Smith had
+ endorsed (he said) in spite of the opposition of some of the apostles. He
+ argued that Apostle Smoot was only exercising his right of American
+ citizenship in aspiring to the Senatorship; and he explained that the
+ Church authorities did not see why the Church should be drawn into the
+ campaign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, as I pointed out to him, the Church had already drawn itself in. It
+ had held a solemn conclave of its hierarchy to authorize an apostle's
+ candidacy. The opponents of Church rule would circulate the fact; in any
+ close campaign, the apostle's friends would use the fact upon the
+ faithful; and the Church would be compelled to support its apostle in an
+ assumed necessity of defending itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps I was objectionably forceful in my reply to him. With his
+ characteristic gentleness, he rebuked me by recalling that President
+ Woodruff had once taken him into "sacred places," assured him that "Frank
+ Cannon, like David, was a man after God's own heart," and asked him to
+ "labor" for me in politics. If it had been right for the Prophet of God to
+ favor me, why was it not right for the Prophet now to favor some one else?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My personal regard for Apostle Cowley kept me from showing the amusement I
+ felt at finding myself in this new scriptural role remembering how
+ President Woodruff had once devoted me to destruction like another Isaac
+ on the altar of Church control. I replied to Cowley, as soberly as I
+ could, that I had never consciously received the aid of any Church
+ influence; that I had always objected to its use, either for or against
+ either party; that I could oppose it now with free hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He retreated upon the favorite argument of the ecclesiasts: that an
+ apostle did not relinquish his citizenship because of his Church rank;
+ that the very political freedom which we demanded, to be effective, must
+ apply to all men, in or out of the Church. He asked naively: "What did we
+ get statehood for&mdash;and amnesty&mdash;and our political rights&mdash;if
+ we're not to enjoy them?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The answer to that was obvious: The Mormon Church is so constructed that
+ the apostle carries with him the power of the Church wherever he appears.
+ The whole people recognize in him the personified authority of the Church;
+ and if an apostle were allowed to make a political campaign without a
+ denunciation from the other Church authorities, it would be known that he
+ had been selected for political office by "the mouthpiece of the
+ Almighty." I cited the case of Apostle Moses Thatcher as proof that the
+ Church did exercise power openly to negative an apostle's ambition. If it
+ failed now to rebuke Smoot, this very failure would be an affirmative use
+ of its power in his behalf; all Mormons who did not wish to raise their
+ hands "against the Lord's anointed," would have to support Smoot's
+ legislative ticket, regardless of their political convictions; and all
+ Gentiles and independent Mormons would have to fight the intrusion of the
+ Church into open political activities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cowley replied that "the brethren"&mdash;meaning the hierarchy&mdash;believed
+ that a Mormon should have as many political rights, as a Catholic; and he
+ asked me if I would object to seeing a Catholic in the Senate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course not. There are, and have been, many such. "But suppose," I
+ argued, "that the Pope were to select one of his Italian cardinals to come
+ to this country and be naturalized in some state of this Union that was
+ under the sole rule of the Roman Catholic Church; and suppose that still
+ holding his princedom in the Catholic Church and exercising the plenary
+ authority conferred on him by the Pope&mdash;suppose he were to appear
+ before the Senate in his robes of office, with his credentials as a
+ Senator from his Church-ruled state&mdash;all of this being a matter of
+ public knowledge&mdash;do you think the Senate would seat him? Certainly
+ not. Yet the cases are exactly analogous. We were but lately alien and
+ proscribed. We were admitted into the Union on a covenant that forbade
+ Church interference in politics. It is the whole teaching of the Church
+ that a Prophet wears his prophetic authority constantly as a robe of
+ office. The case of Moses Thatcher is proof to the world that the Church
+ appoints and disappoints at its pleasure. I don't believe that Smoot, if
+ elected, will be allowed to hold his seat, and&mdash;if he is allowed to
+ hold it&mdash;a greater trouble than his exclusion will surely follow.
+ For, with the princes of the Mormon Church holding high place in the
+ national councils&mdash;and using the power of the Church to maintain
+ themselves there&mdash;we are assuring for ourselves an indefinite future
+ of the most bitter controversy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Cowley had no more arguments to offer, he said: "Well, the Prophet
+ has spoken. That's enough for me. I submit cheerfully when the will of the
+ Lord comes to me through his appointed servants. The matter has been
+ decided, and it does not lie in your power&mdash;or anyone else's&mdash;to
+ withstand the purposes of the Almighty." He rose and put his hand on my
+ shoulder, affectionately. "Your father is gone, Frank. I loved him very
+ dearly. I hope that you are not going to be found warring against the
+ Lord's anointed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mat," I replied, "you have already pointed out that Apostle Smoot appears
+ in politics only as an American citizen. For the purposes of this fight&mdash;and
+ to avoid the consequences that you fear I'll regard him as a politician
+ merely, and fight him as such."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, you know, Frank," he remonstrated, "he has been consecrated to the
+ apostleship, and I'm afraid that you'll overstep the bounds."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mat," I assured him, "I'll watch carefully, and unless he makes his
+ lightning changes too fast, I'll aim my shots only when he's in his
+ political clothes. If the change is too indefinite, blame yourselves and
+ not us. The whole teaching of the Church is that an apostle must be
+ regarded as an apostle at all times; but the whole teaching of politics is
+ that all men should appear upon equal terms&mdash;in this country. That's
+ why we insist that no apostle should become a candidate for public
+ office."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cowley took his departure with evident relief. He had discharged his
+ ambassadorial duty&mdash;and given me the warning which he had been
+ authorized to deliver&mdash;without a rupture of our personal friendship.
+ And I saw him go, for my part, in a sorrowful certainty that the Church
+ had thrown off all disguise and proposed to show the world, by the
+ election of an apostle to the United States Senate, that the "Kingdom of
+ God" was established in Utah to rule in all the affairs of men. I knew
+ that if Smoot were excluded from the Senate, his exclusion would be argued
+ a proof that the wicked and unregenerate nation was still devilishly
+ persecuting God's anointed servants, to its own destruction; and, if he
+ were permitted to take his seat, that this fact would be cited to the
+ faithful as proof that the Prophets had been called to save the nation
+ from the destruction that threatened it!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, throughout the campaign that followed, the Church's newspapers
+ and many of its political workers kept protesting publicly that the
+ election of the Republican legislative ticket did not mean the election of
+ Apostle Smoot to the Senate. But by means of the authoritative whisper of
+ ecclesiasts&mdash;carried by visiting apostles to Presidents of Stakes,
+ from them to the bishops, and from the bishops to the presiding officers
+ of subsidiary organizations&mdash;the inspired order was given to the
+ faithful that they must vote for the legislators who could be relied upon
+ to do the will of the Lord by voting for the Lord's anointed prophet,
+ Apostle Reed Smoot. This message was delivered to the sacred Sunday prayer
+ circles. Even Senator Rawlins' mother received it, from one of the
+ ecclesiastical authorities of her ward, who instructed her to vote against
+ the election of her own son; and it was "at the peril of her immortal
+ soul" that she disobeyed the injunction. Long before election day, every
+ Mormon knew that he had been called upon by the Almighty to sacrifice his
+ individual conviction in politics to protect his "assailed Church."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The profound effectiveness of that appeal needs no further proof than the
+ issue of the election. King and Rawlins, the popular leaders of the
+ Democracy in a state that had but recently been overwhelmingly Democratic&mdash;after
+ a campaign in which they studiously avoided an attack upon the Church&mdash;were
+ overwhelmingly defeated. The Republican legislative ticket was carried.
+ Apostle Smoot was elected to the United States Senate; and on January 21,
+ 1903, Governor Wells issued to him a certificate of election.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Five days later, a number of prominent citizens signed a protest, to
+ President Roosevelt and the Senate, against allowing Apostle Smoot to take
+ his seat. And the grounds of the protest, briefly stated, were these: The
+ Mormon priesthood claimed supreme authority in politics, and such
+ authority was exercised by the first presidency and the twelve apostles,
+ of whom Smoot was one. They had not only not abandoned the practice of
+ political dictation, but they had not abandoned the belief in polygamy and
+ polygamous cohabitation; they connived at and encouraged its practice,
+ sought to pass laws that should nullify the statutes against the practice,
+ and protected and honored the violators of those statutes. And they had
+ done all these things despite the public sentiment of the civilized world,
+ in violation of the pledges given in procuring amnesty and in obtaining
+ the return of the escheated Church property, contrary to the promises
+ given by the representatives of the Church and of the territory in their
+ plea for statehood, contrary to the pledges required by the Enabling Act
+ and given in the State constitution, and contrary to the laws of the State
+ itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These charges were supported by innumerable citations from the published
+ doctrines of the Church, and from the published speeches and sermons of
+ the Prophets. Evidence was offered of the continuance of polygamous
+ cohabitation (since 1890) by President Smith, all but three or four of the
+ apostles, the entire Presidency of the Salt Lake Stake of Zion, and many
+ others. New polygamy was specifically charged against three apostles, and
+ against the son of a fourth. A second protest, signed by John L. Leilich,
+ repeated these grounds of objection to Apostle Smoot, and charged further
+ that Apostle Smoot was himself a polygamist; but no attempt was made to
+ prove this latter charge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon the filing of the protest, there was a storm of anger at Church
+ headquarters; and the ecclesiastical newspapers railed with the bitterness
+ of anxious apprehension. Throughout Utah it seemed to be the popular
+ belief that Apostle Smoot would be excluded&mdash;on the issue of whether
+ a responsible representative of a Church that was protecting and
+ encouraging law-breaking should be allowed a seat in the highest body of
+ the nation's law-makers. But the issue against him was not to be heard
+ until twelve months after his election, and every agent and influence of
+ the Church was set to work at once to nullify the effect of the protest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every financial institution, East or West, to which the Church could
+ appeal, was solicited to demand a favorable hearing of the Smoot case from
+ the Senators of its state. Every political and business interest that
+ could be reached was moved to protect the threatened Apostle. The sugar
+ trust magnates and their Senators were enlisted. The mercantile
+ correspondents of the Church were urged to write letters to their
+ Congressmen and to their Senators, and to use their power at home to check
+ the anti-Mormon newspapers. The Utah representative of a powerful
+ mercantile institution, that had vital business relations with the Church,
+ confessed to me that he had been called East to consult with the head of
+ his company, who had been asked to use his influence for Smoot. "I could
+ not advise our president," he said, "to send the letter that was demanded
+ of him. And yet I couldn't take the responsibility of injuring the company
+ by advising him to refuse the Church request. You know, if we had refused
+ it, point-blank, they would have destroyed every interest we had within
+ the domain of their power. I should have been ruined financially. All our
+ stockholders would have suffered. They would never have forgiven me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The president of the company failed to send the letter. His failure became
+ known, through Church espionage and the report of the Church's friends in
+ the Senate. Pressure was brought to bear upon him; and, with the aid of
+ his Utah representative, he compromised on a letter that did partial
+ violence to his conscience and partially endangered his business relations
+ with the Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both these men were aware that the Church had broken its covenants to the
+ country, and that Apostle Smoot could not be either a loyal citizen of the
+ nation or a free representative of the people of his state. "I did not
+ like the compromise we made," my friend told me. "I feel humiliated
+ whenever I think of it. But I tried to do the best I could under the
+ circumstances."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The results of this pressure of political and business interests upon
+ Washington showed gradually in the tone of the political newspapers
+ throughout the whole country. It showed in the growing confidence
+ expressed by the organs of the Church authorities in Utah. It showed in
+ the cheerful predictions of the Prophets that the Lord would overrule in
+ Apostle Smoot's behalf. It showed in Smoot's exercise of an autocratic
+ leadership in the political affairs of the State.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was allowed to take his oath of office as Senator on March 5, 1903; the
+ protests against him were referred to the Senate Committee on Privileges
+ and Elections for a hearing (January 27, 1904); and a contest began that
+ lasted from January, 1904, to February, 1907. During those years was
+ completed the business and political conspiracy between financial
+ "privilege" and religious absolutism, of which conspiracy this narrative
+ has described the beginning and the growth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is almost impossible to expose the progression of incident by which the
+ end of that conspiracy was approached&mdash;since it was necessarily
+ approached in the darkest secrecy. But several indications of the method
+ and the progress did show, here and there, on the surface of events; and
+ these indications are powerfully significant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As early as 1901 it had become known that Apostle Smoot was negotiating a
+ sale, to the sugar trust, of the Church's sugar holdings. On May 13, 1902,
+ the president of the trust reported to the trust's executive committee&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [FOOTNOTE: See a synopsis of the minutes of the trust's executive
+ committee, published in Hampton's Magazine, in January, 1910.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ that he had agreed to buy a one-half interest in the consolidation of the
+ Mormon factories of La Grande, Logan and Ogden. (The following day, May
+ 14, 1902, is given by Apostle Smoot as the day on which he obtained
+ President Joseph F. Smith's permission to become a candidate for the
+ Senatorship.) On June 24, 1902 the sugar trust's executive committee was
+ informed of the trust's purchase of one-half of the capital stock of these
+ three Church-owned sugar companies. On July 5, 1902 the three companies
+ were consolidated under the name of the Amalgamated Sugar Company, with
+ David Eccles, polygamist, trustee of Church bonds, and protege of Joseph
+ F. Smith, as President; and the sugar trust took half the stock, in
+ exchange for its holdings in the three original companies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Similarly, in this same year, the old Church-owned Utah Sugar Company
+ increased its stock in order to buy the Garland sugar factory, and the
+ sugar trust, it is understood, was concerned in the purchase In 1903, 1904
+ and 1905, the Idaho Sugar Company, the Freemont Sugar Company, and West
+ Idaho Sugar Company were incorporated; and in 1906 all these companies
+ were amalgamated in the present Utah-Idaho Sugar Company, of which Joseph
+ F. Smith is president, T. R. Cutler, a Mormon, is vice-president, Horace
+ G. Whitney, the general manager of the Church's Deseret News, is secretary
+ and treasurer, and other Church officials are directors. Of the stock of
+ this company the sugar trust holds fifty-one per cent. So that between
+ 1902 and 1906 a partnership in the manufacture of beet sugar was effected
+ between the Church and the trust; and Apostle Smoot became a Sugar trust
+ Senator, and argued and voted as such.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Furthermore, it was at this same period that the Church sold the street
+ railway of Salt Lake City and its electric power company to the "Harriman
+ interests" under peculiar circumstances&mdash;a matter of which I have
+ written in an earlier chapter. The Church owners of this Utah Light and
+ Railway Company, through the Church's control of the City Council, had
+ attempted to obtain a hundred-year franchise from the city on terms that
+ were outrageously unjust to the citizens; and finally, on June 5, 1905, a
+ franchise was obtained for fifty years, for the company of which Joseph F.
+ Smith was the president. On August 3, 1905, another city ordinance was
+ passed, consolidating all former franchises, then held by the Utah Light
+ and Power Company, but originally granted to D. F. Walker, the Salt Lake
+ and Ogden Gas and Electric Light Company, the Pioneer Power Company and
+ the Utah Power Company; and this ordinance extended the franchises to July
+ 1, 1955. The properties were bonded for $6,300,000, but it was understood
+ that they were worth not more than $4,000,000. They were sold to "the
+ Harriman interests" for $10,000,000. The equipment of the Salt Lake City
+ street railway was worse than valueless, and the new company had to remove
+ the rails and discard the rolling stock. But the ten millions were well
+ invested in this public-utility trust, for the company had a monopoly of
+ the street railway service and electric power and gas supply of Salt Lake
+ City; and its franchises left it free to extort whatever it could from the
+ people of the whole country side, by virtue of a partnership with the
+ Church authorities whereby extortion was given the protection of "God's
+ anointed Prophets."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joseph F. Smith, of course, was already a director of Harriman's Union
+ Pacific Railroad, a position to which he had been elected after his
+ accession to the First Presidency. And he was so elected not because of
+ his railroad holdings&mdash;for he came to the Presidency a poor man&mdash;and
+ not because of his ability or experience as a financier or a railroad
+ builder, for he had not had any such experience and he had not shown any
+ such ability. He was elected because of the partnership between the Church
+ leaders and the Union Pacific Railroad&mdash;a partnership that was
+ doubtlessly used in defense of Apostle Smoot's seat in the Senate, just as
+ the power of the Sugar Trust was used and the influence of the whole
+ financial confederation in politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XIII. The Smoot Exposure
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Just before the subpoenas were issued in the Smoot investigation, I met
+ John R. Winder (then First Councillor to President Smith) on the street in
+ Salt Lake City, and he expressed the hope that when I went "to Washington
+ on the Smoot case," I would not "betray" my "brethren." I assured him that
+ I was not going to Washington as a witness in the Smoot case; that the men
+ whom he should warn, were at Church headquarters. He replied, with
+ indignant alarm, "I don't see what 'the brethren' have to do with this!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when the subpoenas arrived for Smith and the hierarchy, alarm and
+ indignation assumed a new complexion. The authorities, for themselves, and
+ through the mouths of such men as Brigham H. Roberts, began to boast of
+ how they were about to "carry the gospel to the benighted nation" and
+ preach it from the witness stand in Washington. The Mormon communities
+ resounded with fervent praises to God that He had, through His servant,
+ Apostle Smoot, given the opportunity to His living oracles to speak to an
+ unrighteous people! And when the Senators decided that they would not
+ summon polygamous wives and their children en bloc to Washington to
+ testify (because it was not desired to "make war on women and children")
+ some of Joseph F. Smith's several wives even complained feelingly that
+ they "were not allowed to testify for Papa."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first oracular disclosure made by the Prophets, on the witness stand,
+ came as a shock even to Utah. They testified that they had resumed
+ polygamous cohabitation to an extent unsuspected by either Gentiles or
+ Mormons. President Joseph F. Smith admitted that he had had eleven
+ children borne to him by his five wives, since pledging himself to obey
+ the "revealed" manifesto of 1890 forbidding polygamous relations. Apostle
+ Francis Marion Lyman, who was next in succession to the Presidency, made a
+ similar admission of guilt, though in a lesser degree. So did John Henry
+ Smith and Charles W. Penrose, apostles. So did Brigham H. Roberts and
+ George Reynolds, Presidents of Seventies. So did a score of others among
+ the lesser authorities. And they confessed that they were living in
+ polygamy in violation of their pledges to the nation and the terms of
+ their amnesty, against the laws and the constitution of the state, and
+ contrary to the "revelation of God" by which the doctrine of polygamy had
+ been withdrawn from practice in the Church!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President Joseph F. Smith admitted that he was violating the law of the
+ State. He was asked: "Is there not a revelation that you shall abide by
+ the law of the State and of the land?" He answered, "Yes, sir." He was
+ asked: "And if that is a revelation, are you not violating the laws of
+ God?" He answered: "I have admitted that, Mr. Senator, a great many times
+ here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apostle Francis Marion Lyman was asked: "You say that you, an apostle of
+ your Church, expecting to succeed (if you survive Mr. Smith) to the office
+ in which you will be the person to be the medium of Divine revelations,
+ are living, and are known to your people to live, in disobedience of the
+ law of the land and the law of God?" Apostle Lyman answered: "Yes, sir."
+ The others pleaded guilty to the same charge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this was not the worst. There had been new polygamous marriages.
+ Bishop Chas. E. Merrill, the son of an apostle, testified that his father
+ had married him to a plural wife in 1891, and that he had been living with
+ both wives ever since. A Mrs. Clara Kennedy testified that she had been
+ married to a polygamist in 1896, in Juarez, Mexico, by Apostle Brigham
+ Young, Jr., in the home of the president of the stake. There was testimony
+ to show that Apostle George Teasdale had taken a plural wife six years
+ after the "manifesto" forbidding polygamy, and that Benjamin Cluff, Jr.,
+ president of the Church university, had taken a plural wife in 1899. Some
+ ten other less notorious cases were exposed&mdash;including those of M. W.
+ Merrill, an apostle, and J. M. Tanner, superintendent of Church schools.
+ It was testified that Apostle John W. Taylor had taken two plural wives
+ within four years, and that Apostle M. F. Cowley had taken one; and both
+ these men had fled from the country in order to escape a summons to appear
+ before the Senate committee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President Joseph F. Smith, in his attempts to justify his own polygamy,
+ gave some very involved and contradictory testimony. He said that he
+ adhered to both the divine revelation commanding polygamy and the divine
+ revelation "suspending" the command. He said he believed that the
+ principle of plural marriage was still as "correct a principle" as when
+ first revealed, but that the "law commanding it" had been suspended by
+ President Woodruff's manifesto. He said that he accepted President
+ Woodruff's manifesto as a revelation from God, but he objected to having
+ it called "a law of the Church;" he insisted that it was only "a rule of
+ the Church." He admitted that the manifesto forbidding polygamy had never
+ been printed among the other revelations in the Church's book of "Doctrine
+ and Covenants," in which the original revelation commanding polygamy was
+ still printed without note or qualification of any kind. He admitted that
+ this anti-polygamy manifesto was not printed in any of the other doctrinal
+ works which the Mormon missionaries took with them when they were sent out
+ to preach the Mormon faith. He claimed that the manifesto was circulated
+ in pamphlet form, but he subsequently admitted that the pamphlet did not
+ "state in terms" that the manifesto was a "revelation." He finally pleaded
+ that the manifesto had been omitted from the book of "Doctrine and
+ Covenants" by an "oversight," and he promised to have it included in the
+ next edition!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [FOOTNOTE: He did not keep his promise. The manifesto was not added to the
+ book of revelations until some time later, after considerable protest in
+ Utah.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In short, it was shown, by the testimony given and the evidence
+ introduced, not only that the Church authorities persisted in living in
+ polygamy, not only that polygamous marriages were being contracted, but
+ that the Church still adhered to the doctrine of polygamy and taught it as
+ a law of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President Joseph F. Smith denied the right of Congress to regulate his
+ "private conduct" as a polygamist. "It is the law of my state to which I
+ am amenable," he said, "and if the officers of the law have not done their
+ duty toward me I can not blame them. I think they have some respect for
+ me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A mass of testimony showed why the officers of the law did not do their
+ duty. During the anti-polygamy agitation of 1899 (which ended in the
+ refusal of Congress to seat Brigham H. Roberts) a number of prosecutions
+ of polygamists had been attempted. In many instances the county attorney
+ had refused to prosecute even upon sworn information. Wherever
+ prosecutions were had, the fines imposed were nominal; these were in some
+ cases never paid, and in other cases paid by popular subscription. It was
+ testified that in Box Elder County subscription lists had been circulated
+ to collect money for the fines, but that the fines were never paid, though
+ the subscriptions had been collected. All the prosecutions had been
+ dropped, at last. It was pleaded that there was a strong Gentile sentiment
+ against these prosecutions, because of the hope that no new polygamous
+ marriages were being contracted; but it was shown also, that the Church
+ authorities controlled the enforcement of the law by their influence in
+ the election of the agents of the law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Church controlled, too, the making of the law. For example, testimony
+ was given to show that in 1896 the Church authorities had appointed a
+ committee of six elders to examine all bills introduced into the Utah
+ legislature and decide which were "proper" to be passed. In the
+ neighboring state of Idaho, the legislature, in 1904, unanimously and
+ without discussion passed a resolution for a new state constitution that
+ should omit the anti-polygamy test oath clauses objectionable to the
+ Mormons; and in this connection it was testified that the state chairman
+ of both political parties in Idaho always went to Salt Lake City, before a
+ campaign, to consult with the Church authorities; that every request of
+ the authorities made to the Idaho political leaders was granted; that six
+ of the twenty-one countries in Idaho were "absolutely controlled" by
+ Mormons, and the "balance of power" in six counties more was held by
+ Mormons; and that it was "impossible for any man or party to go against
+ the Mormon Church in Idaho." Apostle John Henry Smith testified that
+ one-third of the population of Idaho was Mormon and one-fourth of the
+ population of Wyoming, and that there were large settlements in Nevada,
+ Colorado, California, Arizona and the surrounding states and territories.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A striking example of the power of the Church as against the power of the
+ nation was given to the Senate committee by John Nicholson, chief recorder
+ of the temple in Salt Lake City. He had failed to produce some of the
+ temple marriage records for which the committee had called. He was asked
+ whether he would bring the books, on the order of the Senate of the United
+ States, if the First Presidency of the Church forbade him to bring them.
+ He answered: "I would not." He was asked: "And if the Senate should send
+ the Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate and arrest you and order you to bring
+ them" (the records) "with you, you would still refuse to bring them,
+ unless the First Presidency asked you to?" He answered, "Yes, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was shown that classes of instruction in the Mormon religion had been
+ forced upon teachers in a number of public schools in Utah by the orders
+ of the First Presidency. (These orders were withdrawn after the exposure
+ before the committee.) Church control had gone so far in Brigham City, Box
+ Elder County, Utah, that in a dispute between the City Council and the
+ electric lighting company of the city, the local ecclesiastical council
+ interfered. In the same city, two young men built a dancing pavilion that
+ competed with the Church-owned Opera House; the ecclesiastical council
+ "counselled" them to remove the pavilion and dispose of "the material in
+ its construction;" they were threatened that they would be "dropped" if
+ they did not obey this "counsel;" and they compromised by agreeing to pay
+ twenty-five percent of the net earnings of their pavilion into the
+ Church's "stake treasury." In Monroe ward, Sevier County, Utah, in 1901, a
+ Mormon woman named Cora Birdsall had a dispute with a man named James E.
+ Leavitt about a title to land. Leavitt went into the bishop's court and
+ got a decision against her. She wrote to President Joseph F. Smith for
+ permission either to appeal the case direct to him or "to go to law" in
+ the matter; and Smith advised her "to follow the order provided of the
+ Lord to govern in your case." The dispute was taken through the
+ ecclesiastical courts and decided against her. She refused to deed the
+ land to Leavitt and she was excommunicated by order of the High Council of
+ the Sevier Stake of Zion. She became insane as a result of this
+ punishment, and her mother appealed to the stake president to grant her
+ some mitigation. He wrote, in reply: "Her only relief will be in complying
+ with President Smith's wishes. You say she has never broken a rule of the
+ Church. You forget that she has done so by failing to abide by the
+ decision of the mouthpiece of God." She finally gave up a deed to the
+ disputed land and was rebaptized in 1904. (Letters of the First Presidency
+ were, however, introduced to show that it had been the policy of the
+ presidency&mdash;particularly in President Woodruff's day&mdash;not to
+ interfere in disputes involving titles to land.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was testified that a Mormon merchant was expelled from the Church,
+ ostensibly for apostasy, but really because he engaged in the manufacture
+ of salt "against the interests of the President of the Church and some of
+ his associates;" that a Mormon Church official was deposed "for
+ distributing, at a school election, a ticket different from that
+ prescribed by the Church authorities"&mdash;and so on, interminably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Witness after witness swore to the incidents of Church interference in
+ politics which this narrative has already related in detail. But no
+ attempt was made to show the Church's partnership with the "interests;"
+ and the power of the Church in business circles was left to be inferred
+ from President Smith's testimony that he was then president of the Zion's
+ Cooperative Mercantile Institution, the State Bank of Utah, the Zion's
+ Savings Bank and Trust Company, the Utah Sugar Company, the Consolidated
+ Wagon and Machine Company, the Utah Light and Power Company, the Salt Lake
+ and Los Angeles Railroad Company, the Saltair Beach Company, the Idaho
+ Sugar Company, the Inland Crystal Salt Company, the Salt Lake Knitting
+ Company, and the Salt Lake Dramatic Association; and that he was a
+ director of the Union Pacific Railway Company, vice-president of the
+ Bullion-Beck and Champion Mining Company, and editor of the Improvement
+ Era and the Juvenile Instructor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was shown that Utah had not been admitted to statehood until the
+ Federal government had exacted, from the Church authorities and the
+ representatives of the people of Utah, every sort of pledge that polygamy
+ had been forever abandoned and polygamous relations discontinued by
+ "revelation from God"; that statehood had not been granted until solemn
+ promise had been given and provision made that there should be "no union
+ of church and state," and no church should "dominate the state or
+ interfere with its functions;" and that the Church's escheated property
+ had been restored upon condition that such property should be used only
+ for the relief of the poor of the Church, for the education of its
+ children and for the building and repair of houses of worship "in which
+ the rightfulness of the practice of polygamy" should not be "inculcated."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore the testimony given before the Senate committee by these members
+ of the Mormon hierarchy, showed that they had not only broken. their
+ covenants and violated their oaths, but that they had been guilty of
+ treason. What was the remedy? Jeremiah M. Wilson, a lawyer employed by the
+ Church authorities in 1888 to argue, before a Congressional committee, in
+ behalf of the admission of Utah to statehood, had pointed out the remedy
+ in these words:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is idle to say that such a compact may be made, and then, when the
+ considerations have been mutually received&mdash;statehood on the one side
+ and the pledge not to do a particular thing on the other&mdash;either
+ party can violate it without remedy to the other. But you ask me what is
+ the remedy, and I answer that there are plenty of remedies in your own
+ hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Suppose they violate this compact; suppose that after they put this into
+ the constitution, and thereby induce you to grant them the high privilege
+ and political right of statehood, they should turn right around and
+ exercise the bad faith which is attributed to them here&mdash;what would
+ you do? You could shut the doors of the Senate and House of
+ Representatives against them; you could deny them a voice in the councils
+ of this nation, because they have acted in bad faith and violated their
+ solemn agreement by which they succeeded in getting themselves into the
+ condition of statehood. You could deny them the Federal judiciary; you
+ could deny them the right to use the mails&mdash;that indispensable thing
+ in the matter of trade and commerce of this country. There are many ways
+ in which peaceably, but all powerfully, you could compel the performance
+ of that compact."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This argument by Mr. Wilson in 1888 was recalled by the counsel for the
+ protestants in the investigation. It was recalled with the qualification
+ that though Congress might not have the power to undo the sovereignty of
+ the state of Utah it could deal with Senator Smoot. And it was further
+ argued: "The chief charge against Senator Smoot is that he encourages,
+ countenances, and connives at the defiant violation of law. He is an
+ integral part of a hierarchy; he is an integral part of a quorum of
+ twelve, who constitute the backbone of the Church.... He, as one of that
+ quorum of twelve apostles, encourages, connives at, and countenances
+ defiance of law."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On June 11, 1906, a majority of the committee made a report to the Senate
+ recommending that Apostle Smoot was not entitled to his seat in the
+ Senate. They found that he was one of a "self-perpetuating body of fifteen
+ men, uniting in themselves authority in both Church and state," who "so
+ exercise this authority as to encourage a belief in polygamy as a divine
+ institution, and by both precept and example encourage among their
+ followers the practice of polygamy and polygamous cohabitation;" that the
+ Church authorities had "endeavored to suppress, and succeed in
+ suppressing, a great deal of testimony by which the fact of plural
+ marriages contracted by those who were high in the councils of the Church
+ might have been established beyond the shadow of a doubt;" and that "aside
+ from this it was shown by the testimony that a majority of those who give
+ law to the Mormon Church are now, and have been for years, living in open,
+ notorious and shameless polygamous cohabitation." Concerning President
+ Woodruff's anti-polygamy manifesto of 1890, the majority of the committee
+ reported that "this manifesto in no way declares the principle of polygamy
+ to be wrong or abrogates it as a doctrine of the Mormon Church, but simply
+ suspends the practice of polygamy to be resumed at some more convenient
+ season, either with or without another revelation." They found that
+ Apostle Smoot was responsible for the conduct of the organization to which
+ he belonged; that he had countenanced and encouraged polygamy "by repeated
+ acts and in a number of instances, as a member of the quorum of the twelve
+ apostles;" and that he was "no more entitled to a seat in the Senate than
+ he would be if he were associating in polygamous cohabitation with a
+ plurality of wives."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The report continued: "The First Presidency and the twelve apostles
+ exercise a controlling influence over the action of the members of the
+ Church in secular affairs as well as in spiritual matters;" and "contrary
+ to the principles of the common law under which we live, and the
+ constitution of the State of Utah, the First Presidency and twelve
+ apostles dominate the affairs of the State and constantly interfere in the
+ performance of its functions.... But it is in political affairs that the
+ domination of the First Presidency and the twelve apostles is most
+ efficacious and most injurious to the interests of the State....
+ Notwithstanding the plain provision of the constitution of Utah, the proof
+ offered on the investigation demonstrates beyond the possibility of doubt
+ that the hierarchy at the head of the Mormon Church has, for years past,
+ formed a perfect union between the Mormon Church and the State of Utah,
+ and that the Church, through its head, dominates the affairs of the State
+ in things both great and small." And the report concluded: "The said Reed
+ Smoot comes here, not as the accredited representative of the State of
+ Utah in the Senate of the United States, but as the choice of the
+ hierarchy which controls the Church and has usurped the functions of the
+ State in Utah. It follows, as a necessary conclusion from these facts,
+ that Mr. Smoot is not entitled to a seat in the Senate as a Senator from
+ the State of Utah."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the same day a minority report was presented by Senators J. B. Foraker,
+ Albert J. Beveridge, Wm. P. Dillingbam, A. J. Hopkins and P. C. Knox. They
+ found that Reed Smoot possessed "all the qualifications prescribed by the
+ Constitution to make him eligible to a seat in the Senate;" that "the
+ regularity of his election" by the Utah legislature had not been
+ questioned; that his private character was "irreproachable;" and that "so
+ far as mere belief and membership in the Mormon Church are concerned, he
+ is fully within his rights and privileges under the guaranty of religious
+ freedom given by the Constitution of the United States." Having thus
+ summarily excluded all the large and troublesome points of the
+ investigation, these Senators decided that there remained "but two grounds
+ on which the right or title of Reed Smoot to his seat in the Senate" was
+ contested. The first was whether he had taken a certain "endowment oath"
+ by which "he obligated himself to make his allegiance to the Church
+ paramount to his allegiance to the United States;" and the second was
+ whether "by reason of his official relation to the Church" he was
+ "responsible for polygamous cohabitation" among the Mormons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the first charge, the minority found that the testimony upon the
+ point was "limited in amount, vague and indefinite in character and
+ utterly unreliable, because of the disreputable character of the
+ witnesses"&mdash;oddly overlooking the fact that one of these witnesses
+ had been called for Apostle Smoot; that no attempt had been made to
+ impeach the character of this witness; that the other witnesses had been
+ denounced, by a Mormon bishop, named Daniel Connolly, as "traitors who had
+ broken their oaths to the Church" by betraying the secrets of the
+ "endowment oath;" and that all the Smoot witnesses who denied the
+ anti-patriotic obligation of the oath refused, suspiciously enough, to
+ tell what obligation was imposed on those who took part in the ceremony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The charge that Smoot, as an apostle of the Church, had been responsible
+ for polygamous cohabitation was as easily disposed of, by the minority
+ report. He had himself, on oath, "positively denied" that he had "ever
+ advised any person to violate the law either against polygamy or against
+ polygamous cohabitation," and no witness had been produced to testify that
+ Apostle Smoot had ever given "any such advice" or defended "such acts."
+ True, it was admitted that he had "silently acquiesced" in the continuance
+ of polygamous cohabitation by polygamists who had married before 1890; but
+ it was contended that to understand this acquiescence it was "necessary to
+ recall some historical facts, among which are some that indicate that the
+ United States government is not free from responsibility for these
+ violations of the law."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In short, although Reed Smoot was one of a confessed band of law-breaking
+ traitors, he was of "irreproachable" private character. Although the band
+ had been guilty of every treachery, none of the band had admitted that
+ Smoot had encouraged them in their villainies. Smoot had only "silently
+ acquiesced"&mdash;and in this he had been no guiltier than the intimidated
+ bystanders and the gagged victims of the outrages. Although the gang had
+ stolen the machinery of elections and used it to print a Senatorial
+ certificate for Smoot, there was nothing to show that the form of the
+ certificate was not correct. Moreover, the band operated in politics as a
+ religious organization, and the constitution of the United States protects
+ a man in his right of religious freedom!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XIV. Treason Triumphant
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ While these disclosures of the Smoot investigation were shocking the
+ sentiment of the whole nation, the Prophets carried on the conspiracy of
+ their defense with all the boldness of defiant guilt. In Salt Lake City,
+ the office of the United States Marshal and even the post-office were
+ watched for the arrival of subpoenas from Washington; men were posted in
+ the streets to give the alarm whenever the Marshal should attempt to serve
+ papers; and before he entered the front door of a Mormon's house, the
+ Church sentry had entered by the back door to warn the inmates. If the
+ Federal power had been moving in a foreign land, it could not have been
+ more determinedly opposed by local authority. Notorious polygamists,
+ wanted as witnesses before the Senate committee, made a public flight
+ through Utah, couriered, flanked and rear-guarded by the power of the
+ hierarchy. One of these law-breakers (who, it was known, had been
+ subpoenaed) went from Salt Lake City to take secret employment in one of
+ the Church's sugar factories in Idaho. When he was discovered there and
+ served with the Senate requisition, he gave his word that he would appear
+ at Washington, and then he fled with his new polygamous wife to a
+ polygamous Mormon settlement in Alberta, Canada&mdash;a fugitive, honored
+ because he was a fugitive, and officially sustained as a ward of the
+ Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apostles John W. Taylor and Mathias F. Cowley left the country, to escape
+ a summons to Washington; and President Smith pleaded that he had no
+ control over their movements, and promised that he would, if possible,
+ bring them back to comply with the Senate subpoenas. He knew, as every
+ Mormon and every well-informed Gentile knew, that the slightest expression
+ of a wish from him would be the word of God to those two men. They would
+ have gloried in going to Washington to show the courage of their
+ fanaticism. They would never have left the country without instructions
+ from their President. But they could not have married plural wives after
+ the manifesto, and solemnized plural marriages for other polygamists,
+ without Smith's knowledge and consent; their testimony would have placed
+ the responsibility for these unlawful practices upon the Prophet; and the
+ penalty would have fallen on the Prophet's Senator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They not only fled, but they allowed themselves in their absence to be
+ made the scapegoats of the hierarchy. They were proven guilty of "new
+ polygamy" before the Senate committee; and, for the sake of the effect
+ upon the country, they were ostensibly deposed from the apostolate by
+ order of the President, who, by their dismissal from the quorum, advanced
+ his son Hyrum in seniority. But their apparent degradation involved none
+ of the consequences that Moses Thatcher had suffered. They continued their
+ ministrations in the Church. They remained high in favor with the
+ hierarchy. They claimed and received from the faithful the right to be
+ regarded as holily "the Lord's' anointed" as they had ever been. They
+ still held their Melchisedec priesthood. One of them afterward took a new
+ plural wife. It seems to be well authenticated that the other continued to
+ perform plural marriages; and every Mormon looked upon them both&mdash;and
+ still looks upon them&mdash;as zealous priests who endured the appearance
+ of shame in order to preserve the power of the Prophet in governing the
+ nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another crucial point in President Smith's responsibility was his
+ solemnization of the plural marriage between Apostle Abraham H. Cannon and
+ Lillian Hamlin, of which I have already written. One of the women of the
+ dead apostle's family was subpoenaed to give her testimony in the matter.
+ She thrice telephoned to me that she wished to consult me; but she was
+ surrounded by such a system of espionage that again and again she failed
+ to keep her appointment. At last, late at night, she arrived at my office&mdash;the
+ editorial office of the Salt Lake Tribune&mdash;having escaped, as she
+ explained, in her maid's clothes. The agents of the hierarchy had been
+ subtly and ingeniously suggesting to her that she was perhaps mistaken in
+ her recollection of the facts to which she would have to testify, and she
+ was distressed with the doubt and fear which they had instilled into her
+ mind. I could only adjure her to tell the truth as she remembered it. But
+ on her journey to Washington she was constantly surrounded by Church
+ "advisers;" and the effect of their "advice" showed in the testimony that
+ she gave&mdash;a testimony that failed to prove the known guilt of the
+ Prophet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the Gentiles, there had begun a sort of "reign of terror," which can
+ be best summed up by an account of a private conference of twelve
+ prominent non-Mormons held as late as 1905. That conference was called to
+ consider the situation, and to devise means of acquainting the nation with
+ the desperate state of affairs in Utah. It was independent of the
+ political movement that had already begun; it aimed rather to organize a
+ social rebellion, so that we might not be dependent for all our opposition
+ upon the annual or semi-annual campaigns of politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The meeting first agreed upon the following statement of facts:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Utah's statehood, as now administered, is but a protection of the Mormon
+ hierarchy in its establishment of a theocratic kingdom under the flag of
+ the republic. This hierarchy holds itself superior to the Constitution and
+ to the law. It is spreading polygamy throughout the ranks of its
+ followers. Through its agents, it dominates the politics of the state, and
+ its power is spreading to other common-wealths. It exerts such sway over
+ the officers of the law that the hierarchy and its favorites cannot be
+ reached by the hand of justice. It is master of the State Legislature and
+ of the Governor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By means of its immense collection of tithes and its large investments in
+ commercial and financial enterprises, it dominates every line of business
+ in Utah except mines and railroads; and these latter it influences by
+ means of its control over Mormon labor and by its control of legislation
+ and franchises. It holds nearly every Gentile merchant and professional
+ man at its vengeance, by its influence over the patronage which he must
+ have in order to be successful. It corrupts every Gentile who is affected
+ by either fear or venality, and makes of him a part of its power to play
+ the autocrat in Utah and to deceive the country as to its purposes and its
+ operations. Every Gentile who refuses to testify at its request and in its
+ behalf becomes a marked and endangered man. It rewards and it punishes
+ according to its will; and those Gentiles who have gone to Washington to
+ testify for Smoot are well aware of this fact. Unless the Gentiles of Utah
+ shall soon be protected by the power of the United States they will suffer
+ either ruin or exile at the hands of the hierarchy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When this declaration had been accepted, by all present, as truly
+ expressing their views of the situation, it was decided that they should
+ confer with other leading Gentiles, hold a mass meeting, adopt a set of
+ resolutions embodying the declaration on which they had agreed, and then
+ dispatch the resolutions to the Senate committee, as a protest against the
+ testimony of some of the Gentiles in the Smoot case, and as an appeal to
+ the nation for help.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But although all approved of the declaration and all approved of the
+ method by which it was to be sent to the nation, no man there dared to
+ stand out publicly in support of such a protest, to offer the resolutions,
+ or to speak for them. The merchant knew that his trade would vanish in a
+ night, leaving him unable to meet his obligations and certain of financial
+ destruction. The lawyer knew not only that the hierarchy would deprive him
+ of all his Mormon clients, but that it would make him so unpopular with
+ courts and juries that no Gentile litigant would dare employ him. The
+ mining man knew that the hierarchy could direct legislation against him,
+ might possibly influence courts and could assuredly influence jurors to
+ destroy him. And so with all the others at the conference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were not cowards. They had shown themselves, in the past, of more
+ than average human courage, loyalty and ability. All recognized that if
+ the power of the hierarchy were not soon met and broken it would grow too
+ great to be resisted&mdash;that another generation would find itself
+ hopelessly enslaved. Every father felt that the liberties of his children
+ were at stake; that they would be bond or free by the issue of the
+ conflict then in course at Washington. And yet not one dared to throw down
+ the gauntlet to tyranny&mdash;to devote himself to certain ruin. They had
+ to prefer simple slavery to beggary and slavery combined. They had to hope
+ silently that the power of the nation would intervene. They could work
+ only secretly for the fulfillment of that hope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first, in President Roosevelt they saw the promise of their salvation.
+ He had opposed the election of Apostle Smoot. When the report of the
+ apostle's candidacy had first reached Washington, the President had
+ summoned to the White House Senator Thomas Kearns of Utah and Senator Mark
+ Hanna, who was chairman of the National Republican committee; and to these
+ two men he had declared his opposition to the candidacy of a Mormon
+ apostle as a Republican aspirant for a Senatorship. At his request Senator
+ Hanna, as chairman of the party, signed a letter of remonstrance to the
+ party chiefs in Utah, and President Roosevelt, at a later conference, gave
+ this letter to Senator Kearns to be communicated to the state leaders.
+ Senator Kearns transmitted the message, and by so doing he "dug his
+ political grave" as the Mormon stake president, Lewis W. Shurtliff,
+ expressed it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Colonel C. B. Loose of Provo went to Washington on behalf of the Church
+ authorities. He was a Gentile, a partner of Apostle Smoot and of some of
+ the other Mormon leaders in business undertakings, a wealthy mining man, a
+ prominent Republican. It was reported in Utah that his arguments for Smoot
+ carried some weight in Washington. President Roosevelt was to be a
+ candidate for election; and the old guard of the Republican party,
+ distrustful of the Roosevelt progressive policies, was gathering for a
+ grim stand around Senator Mark Hanna. Both factions were playing for votes
+ in the approaching national convention. I have it on the authority of a
+ Mormon ecclesiast, who was in the political confidence of the Church
+ leaders, that President Roosevelt was promised the votes of the Utah
+ delegation and such other convention votes as the Church politicians could
+ control. The death of Senator Hanna made this promise unnecessary, if
+ there ever was an explicit promise. But this much is certain. President
+ Roosevelt's opposition to Apostle Smoot, for whatever reason, changed to
+ favor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The character and impulses of the President were of a sort to make him
+ peculiarly susceptible to an appeal for help on the part of the Mormons.
+ He had lived in the West. He knew something of the hardships attendant
+ upon conquering the waste places. He sympathized with those who dared, for
+ their own opinions, to oppose the opinions of the rest of the world. He
+ had received the most adulating assurances of support for his candidacies
+ and his policies. It would have required a man of the calmest
+ discrimination and coolest judgment to find the line between any just
+ claim for mercy presented by the Mormon advocates of "religious liberty"
+ and the willful offenses which they were committing against the national
+ integrity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have received it personally, from the lips of more than one member of
+ the Senate committee, that never in all their experience with public
+ questions was such executive pressure brought to bear upon them as was
+ urged from the White House, at this time, for the protection of Apostle
+ Smoot's seat in the Senate. The President's most intimate friends on the
+ committee voted with the minority to seat Smoot. One of the President's
+ closest adherents, Senator Dolliver, after having signed a majority report
+ to exclude Smoot and having been re-elected, in the meantime, by his own
+ State legislature, to another term in the Senate&mdash;afterwards spoke
+ and voted against the report which he had signed. Senator A. J. Hopkins of
+ Illinois, who had supported Smoot consistently, found himself bitterly
+ attacked, in his campaign for reelection, because of his record in the
+ Smoot case, and he published in his defense a letter from President
+ Roosevelt that read: "Just a line to congratulate you upon the Smoot case.
+ It is not my business, but it is a pleasure to see a public servant show,
+ under trying circumstances, the courage, ability and sense of right that
+ you have shown."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the outrageous exposures of the violations of law, the treason and
+ the criminal indifference to human rights shown by the rulers of the
+ Church, if an early vote had been taken by the committee and by the Senate
+ itself, the antagonism of the nation would have forced the exclusion of
+ the Apostle from the upper House. Delay was his salvation. More to the
+ President's influence than to any other cause is the delay attributable
+ that prolonged the case through a term of three years. During that time
+ the unfortunate Gentiles of Utah learned that, instead of receiving help
+ from the President, they were to have only the most insuperable
+ opposition. They believed that the President was being grossly misled;
+ that it was, of course, impossible for him to read all the testimony given
+ before the Senate committee, and that the matters that reached him were
+ being tinged with other purpose than the vindication of truth and justice.
+ But it was impossible to obtain the opportunity of setting him right. Even
+ the women who were leading the national protest against the polygamous
+ teaching and practices of Smoot's fellow apostles were told that the
+ President had made up his mind and could not be re-convinced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mormon appeal to his generosity was not confined to Washington. On his
+ travels he met President Smith more than once&mdash;the Prophet being
+ accompanied by a different wife each time&mdash;and naturally Smith made
+ every effort to impress President Roosevelt with his earnestness, the
+ purity of his life, and the high motives that actuated the exercise of his
+ authority. And at this sort of pretense the Lord's anointed are expert.
+ They themselves may be crude in ideas and coarse in method, but their
+ diplomacy is a growth of eighty years of applied devotion and energy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The American people are used to meeting prominent Mormons who are models
+ of demeanor who are hearty of manner; who carry a kindly light in their
+ eyes; who have a spontaneity that precludes hypocrisy or even deep
+ purpose. These are not the men who make the Church diplomacy&mdash;they
+ simply obey it. It is part of that diplomacy to send out such men for
+ contact with the world. But the ablest minds of the Church, whether they
+ are of the hierarchy or not, construct its policies. And given a system
+ whose human units move instantly and unquestioningly at command; given a
+ system whose worldly power is available at any point at any moment; given
+ a system whose movement may be as secret as the grave until result is
+ attained&mdash;and the clumsiest of politicians or the crudest of
+ diplomats has a force to effect his ends that is as powerful for its size
+ as any that Christendom has ever known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the emissaries of the Church who were deputed to "reach" President
+ Roosevelt, was our old friend Ben Rich, the gay, the engaging, the
+ apparently irresponsible agent of hierarchical diplomacy. And I should
+ like to relate the story of his "approach," as it is still related in the
+ inner circle of Church confidences. Not that I expect it to be wholly
+ credited&mdash;not that I doubt but it will be denied on all sides&mdash;but
+ because it is so characteristic of Church gossip and so typical (even if
+ it were untrue) of the humorous cynicism of Church diplomacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When President Roosevelt was making his "swing around the circle," Rich
+ was appointed to join him, found the opportunity to do so, and (so the
+ story is told) delighted the President by the spirit and candor of his
+ good fellowship. When they were about to part, the President is reported
+ to have said, "Why don't you run for Congress from your state? You're just
+ the kind of man I'd like to have in the House to support my policies." And
+ here (as the Mormons are told) is the dialogue that ensued:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rich: "I have no ambition that way, Mr. President. For many reasons it's
+ out of the question although I'm grateful for the flattering suggestion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The President: "Then let me appoint you to some good office. You're the
+ kind of man I'd like to have in my official family."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rich (impressively and in a low tone): "Mr. President, I'd count it the
+ greatest honor of my life to have a commission from you to any office. I'd
+ hand that commission down to my children as the most precious heritage.
+ But&mdash;I love you too much, Mr. President, to put you in any such hole.
+ I'm a polygamist. It would injure you before the whole country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The President (leaning forward eagerly): "No! Are you a polygamist? Tell
+ me all about it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rich. "The Lord has bestowed that blessing on me. I wish you could go into
+ my home and see how my wives are living together like sisters&mdash;how
+ tender they are to each other&mdash;how they bear each other's burdens and
+ share each other's sorrows&mdash;and how fond all my children are of
+ Mother and Auntie."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The President: "Well&mdash;but how can women agree to share a husband?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rich: "They do it in obedience to a revelation from the Lord&mdash;a
+ revelation that proclaimed the doctrine of the eternity and the plurality
+ of the marriage covenant. We believe that men and women, sealed in this
+ life under proper authority, are united in the conjugal relation
+ throughout eternity. We believe that the husband is tied to his wives, and
+ they to him; that their children and all the generations of their children
+ will belong to him hereafter. We believe in eternal progression; that as
+ man is, God was; and as God is, man shall be. We believe that by obedience
+ to this revealed covenant, we will be exalted in the celestial realm of
+ our Father, with power in ourselves to create and people worlds. It is a
+ never ending and constantly increasing intelligence and labor. If I keep
+ my covenants to my wives and they to me, in this world, all the powers and
+ rights of our marriage relation will be continued and amplified to us in
+ the life to come; and we, in our turn, will be rulers over worlds and
+ universes of worlds."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then&mdash;according to the unctuous gossip of the devout&mdash;President
+ Roosevelt saw the true answer to his own desire to know what was to become
+ of his mighty personality after this world should have fallen away from
+ him! He saw, in this faith, a possible continuation throughout eternity of
+ the tremendous energies of his being! He was to continue to rule not
+ merely a nation but a world, a system of worlds, a universe of worlds! And
+ it is told&mdash;sometimes solemnly, sometimes with a grin&mdash;that, in
+ the Temple at Salt Lake, a proxy has stood for him and he has been
+ baptized into the Mormon Church; that proxies have stood for the members
+ of his family and that they have been sealed to him; and finally that
+ proxies have stood for some of the great queens of the past (who had not
+ already been sealed to Mormon leaders) and that they have been sealed to
+ the President for eternity!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [FOOTNOTE: It is a not uncommon practice in the Mormon Church thus to "do
+ a work" for a Gentile who has befriended the people or otherwise won the
+ gratitude of the Church authorities.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This may sound blasphemous toward Theodore Roosevelt&mdash;if not toward
+ the Almighty&mdash;but it is told, and it is believed, by hundreds and
+ thousands of the faithful among the Mormon people. It is given to them as
+ the secret explanation of President Roosevelt's protection of the Mormon
+ tyranny&mdash;a protection of which Apostle Hyrum Smith boasted in a
+ sermon in the Salt Lake tabernacle (April 5, 1905) in these equivocal
+ words: "We believe&mdash;and I want to say this&mdash;that in President
+ Roosevelt we have a friend, and we believe that in the Latter-Day Saints
+ President Roosevelt has the greatest friendship among them; and there are
+ no people in the world who are more friendly to him, and will remain
+ friendly unto him just so long as he remains true, as he has been, to the
+ cause of humanity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Smiths have their own idea of what "the cause of humanity" is.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XV. The Struggle For Liberty
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As early as 1903, before the Smoot investigation began, the Utah State
+ journal (of which I became editor) was founded as a Democratic daily
+ newspaper, to attempt a restoration of political freedom in Utah and to
+ remonstrate against the new polygamy, of which rumors were already
+ insistent. I was at once warned by Judge Henry H. Rolapp (a prominent
+ Democrat on the District bench, and secretary of the Amalgamated Sugar
+ Company) that we need not look for aid from the political or business
+ interests of the community, inasmuch as our avowed purpose had already
+ antagonized the Church. He delivered this message in a friendly spirit
+ from a number of Democrats whose support we had been expecting. And the
+ warning proved to be well-inspired. Although a number of courageous
+ Gentiles, like Colonel E. A. Wall of Salt Lake City, gave us material aid&mdash;and
+ although there was no other Democratic daily paper in Utah (unless it was
+ the Salt Lake Herald, owned by Senator Clark of Montana)&mdash;the most
+ powerful Church Democratic interests stood against us, and we found it
+ impossible to make any effective headway with the paper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the Prophets began to give their awful testimony at Washington, the
+ Democratic National Convention of 1904 (which I attended as a delegate
+ from Utah) considered a resolution in opposition to polygamy and the
+ Church's rule of the state. This resolution was as vigorously fought by
+ some Utah Gentiles as by the Mormon delegates, on the grounds that it
+ would defeat the Democratic party in Utah. It carried in the convention.
+ Upon returning to Salt Lake City I called a meeting of the Democratic
+ state committee (of which I was chairman) and urged that we make our state
+ campaign on the issue of ecclesiastical domination, in consonance with the
+ party's national platform. Of the whole committee only the secretary, Mr.
+ P. J. Daly, supported the proposal. The others considered it "an attempt
+ to establish a quarantine against Democratic success." Some of them had
+ been promised by members of the hierarchy that the party was to have "a
+ square deal this time." Others had fatuously accepted the assurances of
+ ecclesiasts that "it looked like a Democratic year." In short, the
+ Democratic party in Utah, like the Republican party, proved to be then, as
+ it is now, less a political organization than the tool of a Church cabal.
+ We found that we could no more hope to move the Democratic machine against
+ the hierarchy than to move the Smoot-Republican machine itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when Joseph F. Smith, before the Senate committee, admitted that he
+ was violating "the laws of God and man" and tried to extenuate his guilt
+ with the plea that the Gentiles of Utah condoned it, he issued a challenge
+ that no American citizen could ignore. The Gentiles of Utah had been
+ silent, theretofore, partly because they were ignorant of the extent of
+ the polygamous offenses of the hierarchy, and partly because they were
+ hoping for better things. Smith's boast made their silence the
+ acquiescence of sympathy. A meeting was called in Salt Lake City, in May,
+ 1904, and under the direction of Colonel William Nelson, editor of the
+ Salt Lake Tribune, the principles of the present "American party" were
+ enunciated as a protest against the lawbreaking tyranny of the Church
+ leaders. Later, as it became clear that the opponents of the Smith misrule
+ must organize their own party of progress, committees were formed and a
+ convention was held (in September, 1904) at which a full state and county
+ ticket was put in the field, in the name of the American Party of Utah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We agreed that no war should be made on the Mormon religion as such; that
+ no war should be made on the Mormon people because of their being Mormons;
+ that we would draw a deadline at the year 1890, when the Church had
+ effected a composition of its differences with the national government,
+ and all the citizens of Utah, Mormon and Gentile alike, had accepted the
+ conditions of settlement; that we would find our cause of quarrel in the
+ hierarchy's violation of the statehood pledges; and that when we had
+ corrected these evil practices we should dissolve, because (to quote the
+ language used at the time) we did not wish "to raise a tyrant merely to
+ slay a tyrant."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the idea that we would fight upon living issues&mdash;that we would not
+ open the graves of the past to dig up a dead quarrel and parade it in its
+ cerements&mdash;the American party movement began. Its first enlistment
+ included practically all the Gentiles in Salt Lake City who resented the
+ claim of the Prophet that they acquiesced in his crimes and his treasons.
+ But the most promising sign for the party was its attraction of hundreds
+ of independent Mormons of the younger generation. As one Mormon of that
+ hopeful time expressed it: "The flag represents the political power. The
+ golden angel Moroni, at the top of the Temple, represents the
+ ecclesiastical authority. I will not pay to either one a deference which
+ belongs to the other. I know how to keep them apart in my personal
+ devotion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was exactly what the Church authorities would not permit. It would
+ have destroyed all the special and selfish prerogatives of the Mormon
+ hierarchs. It would have subverted their claim of absolute temporal power.
+ It would have set up the nation and the state as the objects of civic
+ devotion&mdash;instead of the Kingdom of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although we of the American party disavowed and abstained from any attack
+ upon the Mormon Church as such&mdash;and confined ourselves to a war upon
+ the treasons, the violations of law, the breaches of covenant and the
+ other offenses of the Church leaders, as the practices of individuals&mdash;these
+ leaders dragged the whole body of the Church as a wall of defense around
+ them, and in countless sermons and printed articles declared that the
+ Church and its faith were the objects of our assault. In other words,
+ though Smith claimed in Washington&mdash;and Smoot continues to claim
+ before the nation&mdash;that the Church is not responsible for the crimes
+ of its Prophets, whenever a criticism or a prosecution is directed against
+ any of these men, they all unite in declaring that the Church is being
+ persecuted; and the members of the hierarchy rouse all their followers,
+ and use all their agencies, in a successful resistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no blithesomeness in the campaign. It was not lightened by any
+ humor. It was a hopeless assault on the one side and a grim overpowering
+ resistance on the other. The American party, being organized as a protest,
+ had at first little regard for offices. It sought to promulgate the
+ principles of its cause for the enlightenment of the citizens of Utah and
+ for the preservation of their rights. Some of the Gentiles who did not
+ join us felt, perhaps, as strong an indignation as those who did, but they
+ were entangled in politics with the hierarchs, or had business connections
+ that would be destroyed. These men, in course of time, became the most
+ dangerous opponents of our progress. (The average Mormon is obedient and
+ supine enough in the presence of his Prophets, but he is a man of personal
+ independence compared with the sycophantic Gentile who accepts political
+ or commercial favors from the Church chiefs and yet continues to deny the
+ existence of the very power to which he bends the knee.) Of the rebellious
+ but discreet Mormons many came to the leaders of our party to say: "I
+ think you're quite right. I, myself, have suffered under these tyrannies.
+ I have no sympathy with new polygamy. But, as you know, I'm attorney for
+ some of the Church interests"&mdash;or "I'm in business with high
+ ecclesiasts"&mdash;or "I'm heavily in debt to the Church bank"&mdash;or
+ "I'm closely connected by marriage with one of the Prophets"&mdash;"and I
+ can do you more good by my quiet efforts than by coming out into the open.
+ I'd be treated as an apostate. All my influence would be gone." And in
+ most cases he preserved his influence, and we lost him. The Church had
+ effective ways of recovering his support.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For many reasons the American party looked for its recruits chiefly among
+ Republicans, the Democracy being almost entirely Mormon. And in the first
+ flush of enthusiasm some of our leaders laughed at the boast of the
+ Republican state chairman that, for every Republican he lost, he would get
+ two Mormon Democrats to vote the Republican ticket. (This was Hon. William
+ Spry, a Mormon, since made Governor of Utah, for services rendered the
+ hierarchy.) But the claim proved anything but laughable. He got probably
+ four Mormon Democrats for every Republican he lost. As usual the hierarchy
+ "delivered the goods" to the national organization in power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to our best calculations we got from fifteen hundred to eighteen
+ hundred Mormon votes. And, during this campaign and those that followed, I
+ was approached by hundreds of Mormons who commended our work and gave
+ private voice to the hope that we might succeed in freeing Utah so that
+ they themselves might be free. After I joined the staff of the Salt Lake
+ Tribune, as chief editor, these came to my office by stealth and in
+ obvious fear. I could not blame them then, nor do I now. The cost of open
+ defiance was too great.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One woman, the first wife of a prominent Mormon physician, came to me to
+ enlist in the work of the party. (Her husband was living with a young
+ plural wife.) We accepted her aid. Her husband cut off her monthly
+ allowance, and she had to take employment as a book canvasser, so that she
+ might be able to earn her living. One Mormon who came out openly for us,
+ was superintendent of a business owned by Gentiles. He was somewhat
+ prominent as an ecclesiast, and he was a Sunday School worker in his ward.
+ He reconciled his wife and daughters to his revolt against the
+ recrudescence of polygamy and the tyranny of the Church's political
+ control. He carried with him the sympathy of his brother, who was a
+ newspaper editor. He won over some of his personal friends to pledge their
+ support to our cause. He seemed too sturdy ever to retreat, too
+ independent in his circumstances to be driven, and with too clear a vision
+ to be led astray by the threats, the power, or the persuasions of the
+ hierarchy. Yet, before long he came to confess that he could not continue
+ to help us openly. His employers&mdash;his Gentile employers&mdash;had
+ notified him that his work in the American party would be dangerously
+ injurious to their business. They were in hearty accord with his views;
+ they recognized his right as a citizen to act according to his
+ convictions; but&mdash;they dared not provoke a war of business reprisals
+ with the commercial and financial institutions of the Church. He must
+ either cease his active opposition to the Church leaders, or lose his
+ place of employment.... He retired from the fight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another Mormon who joined us was Don. C. Musser, a son of one of the
+ Church historians. He had been a missionary in Germany and in Palestine.
+ He had been a soldier in the Philippines, and he had edited the first
+ American newspaper there. His contact with the world and his experience in
+ the military service of the United States had given him a high ideal of
+ his country; and a feeling of loyalty to the nation had superseded his
+ earlier devotion to the Prophets. His family was wealthy, but he was
+ supporting himself and his young wife by his own efforts in business. As
+ soon as he came out openly with the American party, his father's home was
+ closed against him. His business connections were withdrawn from him. He
+ found himself unable to provide for his wife, who was in delicate health.
+ After a losing struggle, he came to tell us that he could no longer earn a
+ living in Utah; that he had obtained means to emigrate; that he must say
+ good-bye. And we lost him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two other young men&mdash;the son and the son-in-law of an apostle&mdash;came
+ to me and asked helplessly for advice. They admitted that the practices of
+ the hierarchy were, to them, a violation of the covenant with the nation,
+ a transgression of the revelation from God given to Wilford Woodruff, and
+ destructive of all the securities of community association. But would I
+ advise them to sacrifice their influence in the Church by joining the
+ "American movement" publicly? Or had they better retain their influence
+ and use it within the Church to correct the evils that we were attacking?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With awful sincerity they spoke of conditions that had come under their
+ own eyes, and related instances to show how mercilessly the polygamous
+ favorites of the Church were permitted to prey on the young women teachers
+ in Church schools. They spoke of J. M. Tanner, who was at that time head
+ of the Church schools, a member of the general Board of Education, and one
+ of the Sunday School superintendents. According to these young men&mdash;and
+ according to general report&mdash;Tanner was marrying right and left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I knew of a young Mormon of Brigham City, who had been a suitor for the
+ hand of L&mdash;&mdash;, a teacher at the Logan College. He had been away
+ from Utah for some time, and he had returned hoping to make her his wife.
+ Stopping over night in Salt Lake, on his way home, he saw Tanner and L&mdash;&mdash;
+ enter the lobby of the hotel in which he sat. They registered as man and
+ wife and went upstairs together. He followed&mdash;to walk the floor of
+ his room all night, struggling against the impulse to break in, and kill
+ Tanner, and damn his own soul by meddling with the man who had been
+ ordained by the Prophets to a wholesale polygamous prerogative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had kept his hands clean of blood, but he had been living ever since
+ with murder in his heart. Could these two sons of the Church do more to
+ remedy such horrors by using their influence to have Tanner deposed, or by
+ sacrificing that influence in an open revolt against the conditions that
+ made Tanner possible? I could only advise them to act according to their
+ own best sense of what was right. They did use their influence to help
+ force Tanner's deposition, but we lost the public example of their
+ opposition to the crimes of the hierarchy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I relate these incidents as typical of the different kinds of pressure
+ that were brought to bear upon the independent Mormons who wished to aid
+ us, and of the local difficulties against which we had to contend.
+ Washington, of course, gave us no recognition. And we did not succeed in
+ reaching the ear of the nation. Here and there a newspaper noted our
+ effort and paid some small heed to our protest, but the overwhelming
+ success of the Republican party&mdash;and the dumb-driven acquiescence of
+ the Democracy&mdash;in Utah and the neighboring Church-ruled states, left
+ the agitation with little of political interest for the country at large.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet the struggle went on. Animated by the spirit of the Salt Lake
+ Tribune, the leading newspaper of the community, the American party
+ entered the city elections in the fall of 1905 and carried them against
+ the hierarchy's Democratic ticket, with the help of the independent
+ Mormons, under cover of the secret ballot. Emboldened by this success we
+ proposed to move on the state and county offices, with the hope of gaining
+ some members of the legislature and some of the judicial and executive
+ offices, through which to enforce the laws that the Church leaders were
+ defying. But here we failed. Outside of Salt Lake the rule of the Prophets
+ was still absolute and unquestioned. The people bowed reverently to Joseph
+ F. Smith's dictum: "When a man says 'You may direct me spiritually but not
+ temporally,' he lies in the presence of God&mdash;that is, if he has got
+ intelligence enough to know what he is talking about." The state
+ politicians knew that they would destroy themselves by joining an
+ organization opposed by the all-powerful-Church; and sufficient warning of
+ this doom appeared to them in the fact that no member of the American
+ party could obtain any recognition in Federal appointments. The Church had
+ meanwhile dictated the election of another United States Senator (George
+ Sutherland) to join Apostle Smoot, and Senator Kearns was retired for his
+ opposition to the hierarchy. [FOOTNOTE: When Senator Aldrich was carrying
+ the tariff bill of 1910 through the Senate, for the greater profit of the
+ "Interests," Smoot and Sutherland did not once vote against him. Smoot
+ supported him on every one of the one hundred and twenty-nine votes and
+ missed none. Sutherland voted with him one hundred and seventeen times and
+ was recorded as not voting on the remaining twelve. Only two other
+ senators made anything like such a despicable record.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It began to be more and more apparent that whatever success we might
+ achieve locally, the power of the financial and political allies of the
+ Prophets in Washington, aided by the executive "Big Stick" of the
+ President, would beat us back from any attempt to rouse the state or the
+ nation to our support.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Smoot was in a happy position: all the senators who represented the
+ "Interests" were for him, and all the senators who represented the
+ supposed progressive sentiment of Theodore Roosevelt were also for him.
+ The women of the nation had sent a protest with a million signatures to
+ the Senate; but they had not votes; they received, in reply, a public
+ scolding. Long before the Senate voted on its committee's report, many of
+ the notorious "new" polygamists of the Church returned from their exile in
+ foreign missions and began to walk the streets of Salt Lake with their old
+ swagger of self-confident authority. We foresaw the end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in December, 1906, Senator J. C. Burrows of Michigan, chairman of
+ the committee that had investigated Smoot, called up the committee's
+ report and spoke upon it in a denunciation of Smoot. Senator Dubois of
+ Idaho followed, two days later, with a supplementary attack, and censured
+ President Roosevelt for "allowing his name and office" to be used in
+ defense of the Mormons. After an interval of a month, Senator Albert J.
+ Hopkins, of Illinois, undertook to reply with a defense of Smoot that
+ reduced the Apostle's excuses to the absurd. Smoot, he declared, had
+ opposed polygamy, "even from his infancy;" there was "nothing in the
+ constitution" prohibiting "a State from having an established Church;" the
+ old practices of Mormonism were dying out; and Smoot, as an exponent of
+ the newer Mormonism, was largely responsible for the improvement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This bold falsehood was received with laughter by the members who had
+ heard the testimony before the Senate committee or read the record of its
+ sittings; but it was wired to all newspapers; and the contradictions that
+ followed it failed (for reasons) to get the same publicity. It was
+ repeated by Senator Sutherland (January 22, 1907); and he had the audacity
+ to add that the Mormon Church, as well as Smoot, was opposed to polygamy;
+ that the "sporadic cases" of new polygamy were "reprehended by Mormon and
+ Gentile alike;" that polygamous marriages in Utah had been forbidden by
+ the Enabling Act, but that polygamous cohabitation had been left to the
+ state; and that the latter was rapidly dying out. And Sutherland knew, as
+ every public man in Utah knew, that almost every word of this statement
+ was untrue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Senator Philander C. Knox, of Pennsylvania (February 14, 1907) took up the
+ lie that Smoot had been "from his youth against polygamy," and he added to
+ it a legal argument that the Senate could only expel a member, by a
+ two-thirds vote, if he were guilty of crime, offensive immorality,
+ disloyalty or gross impropriety during his term of service. Senator
+ Tillman (February 15) accused President Roosevelt of protecting Smoot in
+ return for a pledge of Mormon support given previous to the last campaign.
+ Apostle Smoot (February 19) declared that cases of "new" polygamy were
+ rare; that they were not sanctioned by the Church; that every case since
+ 1890 "has the express condemnation of the Church;" and that he himself had
+ always opposed polygamy. On February 20, the question was forced to a vote
+ after a debate that repeated these falsehoods, in spite of all disproof's
+ of them. And Apostle Smoot was retained in his seat by a vote of fifty-one
+ to thirty-seven, counting pairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this event, no growth of organization was immediately possible to
+ the American party. Having gained political control of Salt Lake City and
+ given it good municipal government, we were able to hold a local
+ adherency; but hundreds of Mormons, who still vote the American city
+ ticket, vote for the Church in state elections, because, though they want
+ reform, they are not willing to risk the punishment of their relatives and
+ the leaders of the Church to attain that reform. And when the national
+ government granted its patent of approval to the hierarchy&mdash;by
+ holding the hierarchy's appointed representative in the Senate as its
+ prophetic monitor&mdash;nearly all the people of the intermountain country
+ lost heart in the fight. Thousands of Gentiles, who knew the truth and had
+ fought for it for years, argued despairingly: "If the nation likes this
+ sort of thing&mdash;I guess it's the sort of thing it likes. I'm not going
+ to ruin myself financially and politically by keeping up a losing struggle
+ with these neighbors of mine, and fight the government at Washington
+ besides. If the administration wants to be bossed by the Prophet, Seer and
+ Revelator, I can stand it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nation, having accepted responsibility for past polygamy, now, by
+ accepting Senator Smoot, gave its responsible approval to the new polygamy
+ and to the commercial and political tyrannies of the Church. In the old
+ days the Mormons had claimed immunity for their practice of polygamy on
+ the ground that the constitution of the United States protected them in
+ the exercises of their faith. The Supreme Court of the country determined
+ that the free-religion clause of the constitution did not cover violations
+ of law; and the Church deliberately abandoned its claim of religious
+ immunity. But now a majority of the Senate, supported by President
+ Roosevelt, took the old ground&mdash;which the Supreme Court had made
+ untenable and the Mormons themselves had vacated&mdash;and practically
+ declared that violations of law were a part of the constitutional
+ guaranty!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XVI. The Price of Protest
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The members of the Mormon hierarchy continually boast that they are
+ sustained in their power&mdash;and in their abuses of that power&mdash;"by
+ the free vote of the freest people under the sun." By an amazing self
+ deception the Mormon people assume that their government is one of "common
+ consent;" and nothing angers them more than the expression of any
+ suspicion that they are not the freest community in the world. They live
+ under an absolutism. They have no more right of judgment than a dead body.
+ Yet the diffusion of authority is so clever that nearly every man seems to
+ share in its operation upon some subordinate, and feels himself in some
+ degree a master without observing that he is also a slave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The male members of the ward&mdash;who would be called "laymen" in any
+ other Church&mdash;all hold the priesthood. Each is in possession of, or
+ on the road to, some priestly office; and yet all are under the absolutism
+ of the bishop of the ward. Of the hundreds of bishops, with their
+ councillors, each seems to be exercising some independent authority, but
+ all are obedient to the presidents of stakes. The presidents apparently
+ direct the ecclesiastical destinies of their districts, but they are, in
+ fact, supine and servile under the commands of the apostles; and these, in
+ turn, render implicit obedience to the Prophet, Seer and Revelator. No
+ policy ever arises from the people. All direction, all command, comes from
+ the man at the top. It is not a government by common consent, but a
+ government of common consent&mdash;of universal, absolute and
+ unquestioning obedience&mdash;under penalty of eternal condemnation
+ threatened and earthly punishment sure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twice a year, with a fine show of democracy, the people assemble in the
+ Tabernacle at Salt Lake, and there vote for the general authorities who
+ are presented to them by the voice of revelation. If there were no
+ tragedy, there would be farce in the solemnity with which this pretense of
+ free government is staged and managed. Some ecclesiast rises in the pulpit
+ and reads from his list: "It is moved and seconded that we sustain Joseph
+ F. Smith as Prophet, Seer and Revelator to all the world. All who favor
+ this make it manifest by raising the right hand." No motion has been made.
+ No second has been offered. Very often, no adverse vote is asked. And, if
+ it were, who would dare to offer it? These leaders represent the power of
+ God to their people; and against them is arrayed "the power of the Devil
+ and his cohorts among mankind." Three generations of tutelage and
+ suppression restrain the members of the conference in a silent
+ acquiescence. If there is any rebel among them, he must stand alone; for
+ he has scarcely dared to voice his objections, lest he be betrayed, and
+ any attempt to raise a concerted revolt would have been frustrated before
+ this opportunity of concerted revolt presented itself. Being a member of
+ the Church, he must combat the fear that he may condemn himself eternally
+ if he raise his voice against the will of God. He must face the penalty of
+ becoming an outcast or an exile from the people and the life that he has
+ loved. He knows that the religious zealots will feel that he has gone
+ wilfully "into outer darkness" through some deep and secret sin of his
+ own; and that the prudent members of the community will tell him that he
+ should have "kept his mouth shut." If there were a majority of the
+ conference inclined to protest against the re-election of any of its
+ rulers, the lack of communication, the pressure of training and the weight
+ of fear would keep them silent. And in this manner, from Prophet down to
+ "Choyer leader" (choir leader) the names are offered and "sustained by the
+ free vote of the freest people under the sun."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the days just before the American party's political agitation, a
+ young Mormon, named Samuel Russell, returned from a foreign mission for
+ the Church and found that the girl whom he had been courting when he went
+ away was married as a plural wife to Henry S. Tanner, brother of the other
+ notorious polygamist, J. M. Tanner. The discovery that his sweetheart was
+ a member of the Tanner household drove Russell almost frantic. She was the
+ daughter of an eminent and wealthy family, of remarkable beauty,
+ well-educated and rarely accomplished. Young Russell was a college student&mdash;a
+ youth of intellect and high mind&mdash;and he suffered all the torments of
+ a horrifying shock. Unless he should choose to commit an act of violence
+ there was only one possible way for him to protest. At the next
+ conference, when the name of Henry S. Tanner was read from the list to be
+ "sustained"&mdash;as a member of the general Sunday School Board&mdash;Russell
+ rose and objected that Tanner was unworthy and a "new" polygamist. He was
+ silenced by remonstrances from the pulpit and from the people. He was told
+ to take his complaint to the President of his Stake. He was denied the
+ opportunity to present it to the assemblage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Almost immediately afterward, Tanner, for the first time in his life, was
+ honored with a seat in the highest pulpit of the Church among the general
+ authorities. And Russell was pursued by the ridicule of the Mormon
+ community, the persecution of the Church that he had served, the contempt
+ of the man who had wronged him, and the anger of the woman whom he had
+ loved. One of the reporters of the Deseret News, the Church's newspaper,
+ subsequently stated that he had been detailed, with others, to pursue
+ Russell day and night, soliciting interviews, plaguing him with questions,
+ and demanding the legal proofs of Tanner's marriage&mdash;which, of
+ course, it was known that Russell could not give&mdash;until Russell's
+ friends, fearing that he might be driven to violence, persuaded him to
+ leave the state. Tanner is now reputed to have six plural wives (all
+ married to him since the manifesto of 1890) of whom this young woman is
+ one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Similarly, at the General Conference of April, 1905, Don C. Musser (of
+ whom I have already written) attempted to protest against the sustaining
+ of Apostles Taylor and Cowley; but Joseph F. Smith promptly called upon
+ the choir to sing, and Musser's voice was drowned in harmony. In more
+ recent years Charles J. Bowen rose at a General Conference to object to
+ the sustaining of some of the polygamous authorities, and he was hustled
+ from the building by the ushers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the most notable case of individual revolt of this period was Charles
+ A. Smurthwaite's. He had joined the Church, alone, when a boy in England,
+ and the sufferings he had endured, for allying himself with an ostracized
+ sect, had made him a very ardent Mormon. He had become a "teacher" in his
+ ward of Ogden City, had succeeded in business as a commission merchant and
+ was a great favorite with his bishop and his people, because of his
+ charities and a certain gentle tolerance of disposition and kindly
+ brightness of mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Smurthwaite, in partnership with Richard J. Taylor (son of a former
+ President of the Church, John Taylor) engaged in the manufacture of salt,
+ with the financial backing of a leading Church banker. Along the shores of
+ Salt Lake, salt is obtained, by evaporation, at the cost of about sixty
+ cents a ton; its selling price, at the neighboring smelting centers,
+ ranges from three dollars to fourteen dollars a ton; and the industry has
+ always been one of the most profitable in the community. In the early
+ days, the Church (as I have already related) encouraged the establishment
+ of "salt gardens," financed the companies, protected them in their
+ leasehold rights along the lake shores, and finally, through the Inland
+ Crystal Salt Company, came to control a practical monopoly of the salt
+ industry of the intermountain country. (This Inland Crystal Company, with
+ Joseph F. Smith as its president, is now a part of the national salt
+ trust.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Smurthwaite and Taylor had invested heavily in the land and plant of
+ their salt factory, the Church banker who had been helping them notified
+ them that they had better see President Smith before they went any
+ further. They called on Smith in his office, and there&mdash;according to
+ Smurthwaite's sworn testimony before the Senate committee&mdash;the
+ Prophet gave them notice that they must not compete with his Inland
+ Crystal Salt Company by manufacturing salt, and that if they tried to, he
+ would "ruin" them. This proceeding convinced Smurthwaite that Smith had
+ "so violent a disregard and non-understanding of the rights of his
+ fellow-man and his duty to God, as to render him morally unqualified for
+ the high office which he holds." For expressing such an opinion of Smith
+ to elders and teachers&mdash;and adding that Smith was not fit to act as
+ Prophet, Seer and Revelator, since, according to his own confession to the
+ Senate Committee he was "living in sin"&mdash;for expressing these
+ opinions, charges were preferred against Smurthwaite by an elder named
+ Goddard of Ogden City, and excommunication proceedings were begun against
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Smurthwaite replied by making a charge of polygamous cohabitation against
+ Goddard; and after the April Conference of 1905, Don Musser and
+ Smurthwaite joined in filing a complaint in the District Court of Salt
+ Lake City demanding an accounting from Joseph F. Smith of the tithes which
+ the Church was collecting. Meanwhile Smurthwaite had been
+ "disfellowshipped" at a secret session of the bishop's court, on March 22,
+ without an opportunity of appearing in his own defense or having counsel
+ or witnesses heard in support of his case; and on April 4, after a
+ similarly secret and ex-parte proceeding, he was excommunicated by the
+ High Council of his Stake, for "apostasy and un-Christianlike conduct."
+ His charges against Goddard were ignored, and his suit for an accounting
+ of the tithes was dismissed for want of jurisdiction!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the moment of his first public protest against Smith, all
+ Smurthwaite's former associates fell away from him, and by many of the
+ more devout he was shunned as if he were infected. Benevolent as he had
+ been, he could find no further fellowship even among those whom he had
+ benefited by his service and his means. I know of no more blameless life
+ than his had been in his home community&mdash;and, to this, every one of
+ his acquaintances can bear testimony&mdash;yet after the brutally unjust
+ proceedings of excommunication against him the Deseret News, the Church's
+ daily paper, referred to "recent cases of apostasy and excommunication" as
+ having been made necessary by the "gross immorality" of the victims. When
+ a man like Chas. A. Smurthwaite could not remonstrate against the
+ individual offenses of Joseph F. Smith, without being overwhelmed by
+ financial disaster, and social ostracism, and personal slander, it must be
+ evident how impossible is such single revolt to the average Mormon.
+ Nothing can be accomplished by individual protest except the ruin of the
+ protestant and his family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the case of my own excommunication, the issues were perhaps less
+ clearly defined than in Smurthwaite's. I had not been for many years a
+ formal member of the Church; and yet in the sense that Mormonism is a
+ community system (as much as a religion) I had been an active and loyal
+ member of it. In my childhood&mdash;when I was seven or eight years of age&mdash;I
+ began to doubt the faith of my people; and I used to go into the orchard
+ alone and thrust sticks lightly into the soft mould and pray that God
+ would let them fall over if the Prophets had not been appointed by Him to
+ do His work. And sometimes they fell and sometimes they stood! Later, when
+ I was appalled by some of the things that had occurred in the early
+ history of the Church, I silenced myself with the argument that one should
+ not judge any religion by the crudities and intolerance's of its past. I
+ felt that if I were not hypocritical&mdash;if I were myself guided by the
+ truth as I saw it myself&mdash;and if I aided to the utmost of my power in
+ advancing the community out of its errors, I should be doing all that
+ could be asked of me. In the days of Mormon misery and proscription, I
+ chose to stand with my own people, suffering in their sufferings and
+ rejoicing with them in their triumphs. Their tendency was plainly upward;
+ and I felt that no matter what had been the origin of the Church&mdash;whether
+ in the egotism of a man or in an alleged revelation from God&mdash;if the
+ tendencies were toward higher things, toward a more even justice among
+ men, toward a more zealous patriotism for the country, no man of the
+ community could do better than abide with the community.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Church authorities accepted my aid with that understanding of my
+ position toward the Mormon religion; and, though Joseph F. Smith, in 1892,
+ for his own political purposes, circulated a procured statement that I was
+ "a Mormon in good standing," later, when he was on the witness stand in
+ the Smoot investigation, he testified concerning me: "He is not and never
+ has been an official member of the Church, in any sense or form." I made
+ no pretenses and none were asked of me. I was glad to give my services to
+ a people whom I loved, and trusted, and admired; and the leaders were as
+ eager to use me as I was eager to be used in the proper service of my
+ fellows. (Even Joseph F. Smith, in those days, was glad to give me his
+ "power of attorney" and to trust me with the care of the community's
+ financial affairs.) But when all the hierarchy's covenants to the nation
+ were being broken; when the tyranny of the Prophet's absolutism had been
+ re-established with a fierceness that I had never seen even in the days of
+ Brigham Young; when polygamy had been restored in its most offensive
+ aspect, as a breach of the Church's own revelation; when hopelessly
+ outlawed children were being born of cohabitation that was clandestine and
+ criminal under the "laws both of God and of man"&mdash;it was impossible
+ for me to be silent either before the leaders of the Church or in the
+ public places among the people. I had spoken for the Mormons at a time
+ when few spoke for them&mdash;when many of the men who were now so
+ valiantly loyal to the hierarchy had been discreetly silent. I had helped
+ defend the Mormon religion when it had few defenders. I did not propose to
+ criticize it now; for to me, any sincere belief of the human soul is too
+ sacred to be so assailed&mdash;if not out of respect, surely in pity&mdash;and
+ the Mormon faith was the faith of my parents. But I was determined to make
+ the strongest assault in my power on the treason and the tyranny which
+ Smith and his associates in guilt were trying to cover with the sanctities
+ of religion; and I had to make that assault, as a public man, for a public
+ purpose, without any consideration of private consequences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After I began criticizing the Church leaders, in the editorial columns of
+ the Salt Lake Tribune, my friend Ben Rich, then president of the Southern
+ States Missions, and J. Golden Kimball, one of the seven presidents of the
+ seventies, came to me repeatedly to suggest that if I wished to attack the
+ leaders of the Church I should formally withdraw from the Church. This I
+ declined to do: because I was in no different position toward the
+ teachings of the Church than I had been in previous years&mdash;because I
+ was not criticizing the Church or its religious teachings, but attacking
+ the civil offenses of its leaders as citizens guilty against the state&mdash;and
+ because I saw that my attack had more power as coming from a man who stood
+ within the community, even though he had no standing in the Church. I
+ continued as I had begun. After the publication of an editorial (January
+ 22, 1905), in which I charged President Smith with being all that the
+ testimony then before the Senate committee had proven him to be, Ben Rich
+ advised me that I must either withdraw from the Church or Smith would
+ proceed against me in the Church tribunals and make my family suffer. I
+ replied that I would not withdraw and that I would fight all cases against
+ me on the issue of free speech. On February 1, 1905, I published,
+ editorially, "An address to the Earthly King of the Kingdom of God," in
+ which I charged Smith with having violated the laws (revelations) of his
+ predecessors; with having made and violated treaties upon which the safety
+ of his "subjects" depended; with having taken the bodies of the daughters
+ of his subjects and bestowed them upon his favorites; with having
+ impoverished his subjects by a system of elaborate exaction's (tithes) in
+ order to enrich "the crown" and so forth. All of which, burlesquely
+ written as if to a Czar by a constitutionalist, was accepted by the Mormon
+ people as in no way absurd in its tone as coming from one American citizen
+ to another!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Because of these two editorials I was charged (February 21, 1905) before a
+ ward bishop's court in Ogden with "un-Christianlike conduct and apostasy,"
+ after two minor Church officials had called upon me at my home and
+ received my acknowledgment of the authorship of the editorials, my refusal
+ to retract them, and my statement that I did not "sustain" Joseph F. Smith
+ as head of the Church, since he was "leaving the worship of God for the
+ worship of Mammon and leading the people astray." On the night of February
+ 24, I appeared in my own defense before the bishop's court, at the hour
+ appointed, without witnesses or counsel, because I had been notified that
+ no one would be permitted to attend with me. And, of course, the defense I
+ made was that the articles were true and that I was prepared to prove them
+ true.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such a court usually consists of a bishop and his two councillors, but in
+ this case the place of the second councillor had been taken by a high
+ priest named Elder George W. Larkin, a man reputed to be "richly endowed
+ with the Spirit." I had a peculiar psychological experience with Larkin.
+ After I had spoken at some length in my own defense, Larkin rose to work
+ himself up into one of the rhapsodies for which he was noted. "Brother
+ Frank," he began, "I want to bear my testimony to you that this is the
+ work of God&mdash;and nothing can stay its progress&mdash;and all who
+ interfere will be swept away as chaff"&mdash;rising to those transports of
+ auto-hypnotic exaltation which such as he accept as the effect of the
+ spirit of God speaking through them. "You were born in the covenant, and
+ the condemnation is more severe upon one who has the birthright than upon
+ one not of the faith who fights against the authority of God's servants."
+ I had concluded to try the effect of a resistant mental force, and while I
+ stared at him I was saying to myself: "This is a mere vapor of words. You
+ shall not continue in this tirade. Stop!" He began to have difficulty in
+ finding his phrases. The expected afflatus did not seem to have arrived to
+ lift him. He faltered, hesitated, and finally, with an explanation that he
+ had not been feeling well, he resumed his seat, apologetically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That left me free to "bear testimony" somewhat myself. I warned the
+ members of the "court" that no work of righteousness could succeed except
+ by keeping faith with the Almighty&mdash;which meant keeping faith with
+ his children upon earth. I reminded them of the dark days, which all of
+ them could recall, when we had repeatedly covenanted to God and to the
+ nation that if we could be relieved of what we deemed the world's
+ oppression we would fulfill every obligation of our promises. I pointed
+ out to them that the Church was passing into the ways of the world; that
+ our people were being pauperized; that some of them were in the poorhouses
+ in their old age after having paid tithes all their active lives; that by
+ our practices we were bearing testimony against the revelations which
+ Mormons proclaimed to the world for the salvation of the bodies and souls
+ of men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They listened to me with the same friendly spirit that had marked all
+ their proceedings for these men had no animosity against me; they were
+ merely obeying the orders of their superiors. And when we arose to
+ disperse, the bishop put his hand on my shoulder and said, in the usual
+ form of words: "Brother Frank, we will consider your case, and if we find
+ you ought to do anything to make matters right, we will let you know what
+ it is."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I returned to my home, where I had left my wife and children chatting at
+ the dinner table. They had known where I was going. They knew what the
+ issue of my "trial" would be for them and for me. Yet when I came back to
+ them, none asked me any questions and none seemed perturbed. And this is
+ typical of the Mormon family. I think the experiences through which the
+ people have passed have given them a quality of cheerful patience. They
+ have been schooled to bear persecution with quiet fortitude. Tragedy
+ sweeps by them in the daily current of life. A young man goes on a
+ mission, and dies in a foreign land; and his parents accept their
+ bereavement like Spartans, almost without mourning, sustained by the
+ religious belief that he has ended his career gloriously. Taught to devote
+ themselves and their children and their worldly goods to the service of
+ their Church, they accept even the impositions and injustices of the
+ Church leaders with a powerful forbearance that is at once a strength and
+ a weakness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days later I was met on the street by a young Dutch elder, who could
+ scarcely speak English, and he gave me the official document from the
+ bishop's court notifying me that I had been "disfellowshipped for
+ un-Christianlike conduct and apostasy." I was then summoned to appear
+ before the High Council of the Stake in excommunication proceedings, and
+ after filing a defense which it is unnecessary to give here&mdash;and
+ after refusing to appear before the Council for reasons that it is equally
+ unnecessary to repeat I was excommunicated on March 14, 1905. No denial
+ was made by the Church authorities of any of the charges which I had made
+ against Smith. No trial was made of the truth of those charges. As a free
+ citizen of "one of the freest communities under the sun," I was officially
+ ostracized by order of the religious despot of the community for daring to
+ utter what everyone knew to be the truth about him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For myself, of course, no edict of excommunication had any terrors; but
+ the aim of the authorities was to make me suffer through the sufferings of
+ my family; and, in that, they succeeded. I shall not write of it. It has
+ little place in such a public record as this, and I do not wish to present
+ myself, in any record, as a martyr. It was not I who was ostracized from
+ the Mormon Church by my excommunication; it was the right of free speech.
+ The Mormon Church deprived me of nothing; it deprived itself of the
+ helpful criticism of its members. No anathema of bigotry could take from
+ me the affection of my family or the respect of any friends whose respect
+ was worth the coveting. In that regard I suffered only in my pity for
+ those of my neighbors who were so blindly servile to the decrees of
+ religious tyranny that they turned their backs on the voice of their own
+ liberty raised, in protest, for their own defense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it was not by the individual protestants but by the entire community
+ that the heaviest price was paid in this whole conflict. It divided the
+ state again into the old factions and involved it in the old war from
+ which it had been rescued. The Mormons instituted a determined boycott
+ against all Gentiles, and "Thou shalt not support God's enemies" became a
+ renewed commandment of the Prophet. Wherever a Gentile was employed in any
+ Mormon institution, he was discharged, almost without exception, whether
+ or not he had been an active member of the American party. Teachers in the
+ Church would exclaim with horror if they heard that a Mormon family was
+ employing a Gentile physician; and more than one Mormon litigant was
+ advised that he not only "sinned against the work of God," but endangered
+ the success of his law suit, by retaining a Gentile lawyer. Politicians
+ were told that if they aided the American party, they need never hope for
+ advancement in this world, or expect anything but eternal condemnation in
+ the world to come; and though few of them counted on the "spoils" of the
+ hereafter, they understood and appreciated the power of the hierarchy to
+ reward in the present day. The Gentiles did not attempt any boycott in
+ retaliation; they had not the solidarity necessary to such an attempt; and
+ many Gentile business men, in order to get any Mormon patronage whatever,
+ were compelled to employ none but Mormon clerks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Gentiles had been largely attracted to Utah by its mines; they were
+ heavily interested in the smelting industry. Colonel B. A. Wall, one of
+ the strongest supporters of the American party, owned copper properties,
+ was an inventor of methods of reduction, and had large smelting
+ industries. Ex-Senator Thomas Kearns, and his partner David Keith, owners
+ of the Salt Lake Tribune, and many of their associates, had their fortunes
+ in mines and smelters; they were leaders of the American party and they
+ were attempting to enlist with them such men as W. S. McCornick, a Gentile
+ banker and mine owner, and D. C. Jackling, president of the Utah Copper
+ Company, who is now one of the heads of the national "copper combine" and
+ one of the ablest men of the West.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1904, in the midst of the political crisis, the Church newspapers
+ served editorial notice on these men that, on account of the smelter fumes
+ and their destructive effect upon the vegetation of the valley, the
+ smelters must go; and that if the present laws were not sufficient, new
+ laws would be enacted to drive them out. Men like Wall and Keith and
+ Kearns and Walker were not terrorized; but McCornick and Jackling and the
+ representatives of the American Smelting and Refining Company either
+ surrendered to a discreet silence or openly joined the Church in the
+ campaign. They were rewarded with the assurance that the Church would
+ protect them against any labor trouble and that no adverse legislation
+ would be attempted against them. Today Jackling, of the copper combine, is
+ a newspaper partner of Apostle Smoot, and he is mentioned for the United
+ States Senate as the Church's selection to succeed George Sutherland. The
+ Church has large mining interests; Smoot and Smith are in close
+ affiliation with the smelting trust; and this is another powerful
+ partnership in Washington that protected Smoot in his seat and has been
+ rewarded by the Church's assistance in looting the nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XVII. The New Polygamy
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the old days of Mormonism&mdash;and as late as the anti-polygamous
+ manifesto of 1890&mdash;the whole aim and effort of the Church was to
+ exalt and sanctify and make pure the practice of plural marriage by means
+ of the community's respect and the reverences of religion. The doctrine of
+ polygamy was taught as a revealed mystery of faith. It was accepted as a
+ sacrament ordained by God for the salvation of mankind. The most important
+ families in the Church dignified it by their participation, and were in
+ turn dignified by the Church's approval and by the wealth and power that
+ followed approval. The inevitable mental sufferings of the plural wives
+ were endured by them as part of an earthly self-immolation required by
+ God, for which they should be rewarded in eternity. The very necessities
+ of their situation compelled them to exact and cherish a super reverence
+ for the doctrine of plural marriage&mdash;since the only way a mother
+ could justify herself to her children was by teaching, as she believed,
+ that she had been selected by God for the exaltation of this sacrifice,
+ and by inculcating in her children a scrupulous respect for sexual purity.
+ There was no pretense of denial of the polygamous relation. Plural wives
+ held the place of honor in the community. Their marriages were considered
+ the most sanctified. They and their progeny were called "the wives and
+ children of the holy covenant," and they were esteemed accordingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But as the history of the Church shows, plural marriage was always a heavy
+ cross to the Mormon women; many had refused to bear it, in the face of the
+ frequent pulpit scoldings of the Prophets; and few did not sometime weep
+ under it in the secrecy of their family life. In the days immediately
+ preceding the manifesto of 1890, there was a general hope and longing
+ among the Mormon mothers that God would permit a relief before their
+ daughters and their sons should become of an age to be drafted into the
+ ranks of polygamy. The great majority of the young men were monogamists.
+ It required the strong persuasions of personal affection as well as the
+ authority of Divine command to make the young women accept a polygamist in
+ marriage. And when the Church received President Woodruff's
+ anti-polygamous revelation, every profound human emotion of the people
+ coincided with the promise to abstain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only among a few of the polygamous leaders themselves was there any
+ inclination to break the Church's pledge&mdash;an inclination that was
+ strengthened by resentment against the Federal power that had compelled
+ the giving of the pledge. Almost immediately upon obtaining the freedom of
+ statehood, some of these leaders returned to the practice of polygamous
+ cohabitation&mdash;although they had accepted the revelation, had bound
+ themselves by their covenant to the nation and had solemnly subscribed to
+ the terms of their amnesty. To justify themselves, they found it necessary
+ to teach that polygamy was still approved by the law of God&mdash;that the
+ practice of plural marriage had only been abandoned because it was
+ forbidden by the laws of man. Joseph F. Smith continued to live with his
+ five wives and to rear children by all of them. Those of the apostles who
+ were not assured of that attainment to the principality of Heaven which
+ was promised the man of five wives and proportionate progeny, were
+ naturally tempted (if, indeed, they were not actually encouraged) to take
+ Joseph F. Smith as their examplar. It was scarcely worse to break the
+ covenant by taking a new polygamous wife than by continuing polygamous
+ relations with former plural wives; and when an apostle took a new
+ polygamous wife, his inevitable and necessary course was to justify
+ himself by the authority of God. He could not then deny the same authority
+ to the minor ecclesiasts, even if he had wished to. And, finally, when the
+ evil circle spread to the man on the fringe of the Church&mdash;who could
+ not obtain even such poor authorization for his perfidy he found a way to
+ perpetrate a pretended plural marriage with his victim, and the Church
+ authorities did not dare but protect him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was polygamy without the great saving grace that had previously
+ defended the Mormon women from the cruelties and abuses of the practice.
+ It was polygamy without honor&mdash;polygamy against an assumed revelation
+ of God instead of by virtue of one&mdash;polygamy worse than that of the
+ Mohammedans, since it was necessarily clandestine, could claim no social
+ respect or acceptance, and was forbidden "by the laws of God and man"
+ alike.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the "new polygamy" of Mormonism. The Church leaders dare not
+ acknowledge it for fear of the national consequences. They dare not even
+ secretly issue certificates of plural marriage, lest the record should be
+ betrayed. They protect the polygamist by a conspiracy of falsehood that is
+ almost as shameful as the shame it seeks to cover; and the infection of
+ the duplicity spreads like a plague to corrupt the whole social life of
+ the people. The wife of a new polygamist cannot claim a husband; she has
+ no social status; she cannot, even to her parents, prove the religious
+ sanction for her marital relations. Her children are taught that they must
+ not use a father's name. They are hopelessly outside the law&mdash;without
+ the possibility that any further statutes of legitimization will be
+ enacted for their relief. They are born in falsehood and bred to the
+ living of a lie. Their father cannot claim the authority of the Church for
+ their parentage, for he must protect his Prophet. He cannot even publicly
+ acknowledge them&mdash;any more than he can publicly acknowledge their
+ mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out of these terrible conditions comes such an instance as the notorious
+ case of one of Henry S. Tanner's wives, who went on a visit to one of her
+ relatives, with her children, and denied that they were her children, and
+ denied that she was married&mdash;and was supported by her children's
+ denial that she was their mother. Similarly, a plural wife of a wealthy
+ Mormon, whose fortune is estimated at $25,000,000&mdash;a partner of the
+ sugar trust, a community leader, a favorite of the Church went before the
+ Senate Committee in December, 1904, and swore that her first husband had
+ died thirteen years before, that she had had a child within six years, and
+ that she had no second husband. And by doing so she not only marked the
+ child as illegitimate beyond the relief of any future statutes&mdash;legitimizing
+ the offspring of polygamous marriages, but she left herself and the child
+ without any claim upon the estate of its father and publicly swore herself
+ a social outcast before a committee of the United States Senate, and
+ perjured herself&mdash;to the knowledge of all her friends and
+ acquaintances in Utah&mdash;for the protection of her husband and her
+ Church. What can one say of a man who will permit a woman to commit such
+ an act of social suicide for him&mdash;or of a Church that will command
+ it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here is a condition of society unparalleled anywhere else in civilization&mdash;unparalleled
+ even in barbarous countries, for wherever else polygamy is practiced it at
+ least has the sanction of local convention. And the consequent suffering
+ that falls upon the women and the children is a heart-break to see. During
+ the days when I was in the editorial office of the Salt Lake Tribune,
+ scores of miserable cases came to my knowledge by letter, by the report of
+ friends, and by the visits of the agonized wives themselves. I shall never
+ forget one young woman, in her twenties, who came to ask my help in
+ forcing her husband to obtain a marriage certificate for her from the
+ Church, so that her boy might have the right to claim a father. She wept,
+ with her head on my desk, sobbing out her story, and appealing to me for
+ aid with a convulsed and tear-drenched face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four years earlier, she had become friendly with a man twice her age, whom
+ she admired and respected. He had taken two wives before the manifesto of
+ 1890, but that did not prevent him from coveting the youth and beauty of
+ this young woman. He first approached her mother for permission to marry
+ the girl, and when the mother-who was herself a plural wife replied that
+ it was impossible under the law, he brought an apostle to persuade her
+ that the practice of plural marriage was still as meet, just and available
+ to salvation as it had been when she married. Then he went to the
+ daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was terrified," she said, "when he proposed to me. And yet&mdash;he
+ asked me if I thought my mother had done wrong when she married my
+ father.... There was no one else I liked as much. He was good. He was
+ rich. He told me I'd never want for anything. He said I would be
+ fulfilling the command of God against the wickedness of a persecuting
+ world.... I don't know what devil of fanaticism entered into me. I thought
+ it would be smart to defy the United States."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Late one night, by appointment, he called for her with a carriage, driven
+ by a man unknown to her, and took her to a darkened house that had a dim
+ light only in the hallway. They entered alone and turned into a parlor
+ that was dark, except for the reflection from the hall. He led her up to
+ the portieres that hung across an inner door, and through the opening
+ between the curtains she saw the indistinct figure of a man. They stood
+ before him, hand in hand, while he mumbled over the words of a ceremony
+ that sounded to her like the ceremonies she had heard in the Temple. She
+ caught little of it clearly; she remembered practically nothing. She was
+ not given anything to show that a ceremony had been performed, and she did
+ not ask for anything. The elderly bridegroom kissed her when the mumbling
+ ceased, led her out to the carriage, took her back to her mother's house,
+ and that night became her husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She bore him a son. No one except her mother, her father and a few trusted
+ friends knew that she was married. In the early months of 1905 she read in
+ the Tribune the testimony given before the Senate committee by Professor
+ James E. Talmage, for the Church, to the effect that since the manifesto
+ of 1890 neither the President of the Church nor anybody else in the Church
+ had power to authorize a plural marriage, and that any woman who had
+ become a plural wife, since the manifesto, was "no more a wife by the law
+ of the Church, than she is by the law of the land."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She asked her husband about it. He replied that an apostle had married
+ them. "I asked my husband," she said, "to get a certificate of marriage
+ from the apostle. He told me I needed none&mdash;that it was recorded in
+ the books here and recorded in heaven&mdash;that it would put the apostle
+ in danger if he were to sign such a paper. I said that that was nothing to
+ me&mdash;that I wanted to protect my good name. Finally, he said it was
+ not an apostle. Then we had a bitter scene. And he did not come back for a
+ long time. And he didn't write as long as he stayed away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When he came back he was more loving than ever. I was afraid of having
+ more children. I said to him: 'You cannot hold me as a wife any longer
+ unless you write a paper certifying that I'm your wife and this boy is
+ your child. You may place that paper anywhere you like, so long as I know
+ I can get it in case you die. Suppose you were to die and all your folks
+ were to deny that I was your wife&mdash;say that I was an imposter&mdash;that
+ I was trying to foist my boy on the estate of a dead man&mdash;in the name
+ of God, then what could I do?' He went away; and he hasn't come back; and
+ he hasn't written. I don't know who married us. I don't even know the
+ house where it happened. I don't know who the driver was. I don't even
+ know who the apostle was that told mother it would be all right. He made
+ her promise under a covenant not to tell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know where to go. A friend of mine told me you would advise me.
+ He said perhaps you could make them give me a certificate. I don't want to
+ expose my husband. I only want something so that my boy, when he grows up,
+ won't be"&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What could I do? What could anyone do for this unfortunate girl, seduced
+ in the name of religion, with the aid of a Church that repudiated her for
+ its own protection? She had to suffer, and see her boy suffer, the
+ penalties of a social outcast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her case was typical of many that came to my personal knowledge. At the
+ Sunday Schools, in the choirs, in the joint meetings of mutual improvement
+ associations, young girls&mdash;taught to believe that plural marriage was
+ sacred, and reverencing the polygamous prophets as the anointed of the
+ Lord&mdash;were being seduced into clandestine marriage relations with
+ polygamous elders who persuaded their victims that the anti-polygamous
+ manifesto had been given out to save a persecuted people from the
+ cruelties of an unjust government; that it was never intended it should be
+ obeyed; that all the celestial blessings promised by revelation to the
+ polygamist and his wives were still waiting for those who would dare to
+ enjoy them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the tempted girl turned to one of her women friends, and besought her
+ to say, on her honor, whether she thought that plural marriage was right,
+ the other was likely enough to answer: "Yes, yes. Indeed it is. Promise me
+ you won't tell a living soul. Tell me you'll die first.... I'm married to
+ Brother I,&mdash;&mdash;, the leader of the ward choir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If she asked her mother: "Tell me. Is plural marriage wrong?" the mother
+ could only reply: "Oh&mdash;I don't know&mdash;I don't know. Your father
+ said it was right, and I accepted it&mdash;and we practiced it&mdash;and
+ you have always loved your other brothers and sisters, and it seems to me
+ it can't be wrong, since we have lived it. But&mdash;Oh, I don't know,
+ daughter. I don't know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man who is tempting her knows. He has the word of an apostle, the
+ example of the Prophet, the secret teaching of the Church. He courts her
+ as any other religious young girl might be courted&mdash;with little
+ attentions, at the meetings, over the music books&mdash;and he has, to aid
+ him, a religious exaltation in her, induced by his plea that she is to
+ enter into the mystery of the holy covenant, to become one of the most
+ faithful of a persecuted Church, to defy the wicked laws of its enemies.
+ She is just as happy in her betrothal as any other innocent girl of her
+ age. Even the secrecy is sweet to her. And then, some evening, they
+ saunter down a side street to a strange house&mdash;or even to a back
+ orchard where a man is waiting in a cowl under a tree (perhaps vulgarly
+ disguised as a woman with a veil over his face)&mdash;and they are married
+ in a mutter of which she hears nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such a case was related to me by a horrified mother who had discovered
+ that the marriage ceremony had been performed by an accomplice of the
+ libertine who had seduced her daughter and since confessed his crime. But
+ whether the ceremony be performed by a priest of the Church or by a more
+ unauthorized scoundrel, the girl is equally at the mercy of her "husband"
+ and equally betrayed in the world. Even in this case of the pretended
+ marriage, the elders of the ward hushed up the threatened prosecution
+ because the authorities of the Church objected to a proceeding that might
+ expose other plural marriages more orthodox.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hundreds of Mormon men and women personally thanked me by letter or in
+ interviews at the Tribune office, for our editorial attacks upon the
+ hierarchy for encouraging these horrors. Strangers spoke to me on railroad
+ trains, thanking me and telling me of cases. Three Mormon physicians,
+ themselves priests of the Church, told me of innumerable instances that
+ had come to them in their practice, and said that they did not know what
+ was to become of the community. One Mormon woman wrote me from Mexico to
+ say that she had exiled herself there with her husband and his two plural
+ wives, and that she felt she had worked out sufficient atonement for all
+ her descendants; yet she saw girls of the family on the verge of entering
+ into plural marriage&mdash;if they had not already done so&mdash;and she
+ begged us to continue our newspaper exposures, so that others might be
+ saved from the bitter experiences of her life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President Winder met me on the street in 1905, towards the close of the
+ year, and said: "Frank, you need not continue your fight against plural
+ marriage. President Smith has stopped it." "Then," I replied, "two things
+ are evident: I have been telling the truth when I said that plural
+ marriage had been renewed&mdash;in spite of the authorized denials&mdash;and
+ if President Smith has stopped it now, he has had authority over it all
+ the time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To me, or to any other well-informed citizen of Utah, President Winder's
+ admission was not necessary to prove Smith's responsibility. In the April
+ conference of 1904, Smith had read an "official statement," signed by him,
+ prohibiting plural marriages and threatening to excommunicate any officer
+ or member of the Church who should solemnize one; and this official
+ statement was carried to the Senate committee by Professor James E.
+ Talmage, and offered in proof that the Church was keeping its covenant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For us, in Utah, the declaration served merely to illuminate the dark
+ places of ecclesiastical bad faith. We knew that from the year 1900 down,
+ there had never been a sermon preached in any Mormon tabernacle, by any of
+ the general authorities of the Church, against the practice of plural
+ marriage, or against the propriety of the practice, or against the
+ sanctity of the doctrine. We knew, on the contrary, that upon numerous
+ occasions, at funerals and in public assemblages, Joseph F. Smith and John
+ Henry Smith and others of the hierarchy, had proclaimed the doctrine as
+ sacred. We knew that it was still being taught in the secret prayer
+ meetings. Practically all the leading authorities of the Church were
+ living in plural marriage. Some of them had taken new wives since the
+ manifesto. None of them had been actually punished. All were in high
+ favor. And though Joseph F. Smith denied his responsibility, every one
+ knew that none of these things could be, except with his active approval.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps, for a brief time, while Smoot's case was still before the Senate,
+ some check was put upon the renewal of polygamy. But, even then, there
+ were undoubtedly, occasional marriages allowed, where the parties were so
+ situated as to make concealment perfect. And all checks were withdrawn
+ when Smoot's case was favorably disposed of, and the Church found itself
+ protected by the political power of the administration at Washington and
+ by a political and financial alliance with "the Interests."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Today, in spite of the difficulty of discovering plural marriages, because
+ of the concealments by which they are protected, the Salt Lake Tribune is
+ publishing a list of more than two hundred "new" polygamists with the
+ dates and circumstances of their marriages; and these are probably not one
+ tenth of all the cases. During President Taft's visit to Salt Lake City,
+ in 1909, Senator Thomas Kearns, one of the proprietors of the Tribune,
+ offered to prove to one of the President's confidants hundreds of cases of
+ new polygamy, if the President would designate two secret service men to
+ investigate. I believe, from my own observation, that there are more
+ plural wives among the Mormons today than there were before 1890. Then the
+ young men married early, and were chiefly monogamists. Now the change in
+ economic conditions has raised the age at which men marry; it has made
+ more bachelors than there were when simpler modes of life prevailed. The
+ young women have fewer offers of marriage, and more of these come from
+ well-to-do polygamists. The girls are still taught, as they have always
+ been, that marriage is necessary to salvation; and they are betrayed into
+ plural marriage by natural conditions as well as by the persuasions of the
+ Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A perfect "underground" system has been put in operation for the
+ protection of the lawbreakers. If they reside in Utah, they frequently go
+ to Canada or to Mexico to be married; and the whole polygamous
+ paraphernalia can be transported with ease and comfort&mdash;the priest
+ who performs the ceremony, the husband, sometimes the legal wife to give
+ her consent so that she may not be damned, and the young woman whose soul
+ is to be saved. And this "underground" is maintained against the
+ reluctance of the Mormon people. They aid in it from a kindly feeling
+ toward their fellow-believers&mdash;and with some faint thought that
+ perhaps these wayfarers are being "persecuted" but all the time with no
+ personal sympathy for polygamy. By one sincere word of reprehension from
+ Joseph F. Smith every "underground" station could be abolished, the route
+ could be destroyed, and an end could be put to the protection that is, of
+ itself, an encouragement to polygamous practice. He has never spoken that
+ word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Recently, the way in which the new polygamy is perpetrated in Utah has
+ been almost officially revealed. A patriarch of the Church, resident in
+ Davis County, less than fifteen miles from Salt Lake City, had been
+ solemnizing these unlawful unions at wholesale. The situation became so
+ notorious that the authorities of the Church felt themselves impelled
+ about September, 1910, to put restrictions upon his activity. In the
+ course of their investigations they discovered that he did not know the
+ persons whom he married. They would come to his house, in the evening,
+ wearing handkerchiefs over their faces; he sat hidden behind a screen in
+ his parlor; and under these circumstances the two were declared man and
+ wife, and were sealed up to everlasting bliss to rule over principalities
+ and kingdoms, with power of endless increase and progression. He refused
+ to tell the hierarchy from which one of the authorities he had received
+ his endowment to perpetrate these crimes. He refused to give the names of
+ any of the victims, claiming that he did not know them!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is probable that for a long time plural marriage ceremonies were not
+ solemnized within the Salt Lake temple. Now, we know that there have
+ lately been such marriages in it, and at Manti, and at Logan, and perhaps
+ also in the temple at St. George. There are cases on record where a man
+ has a wife on one side of the Utah-Colorado line and another wife across
+ the border. No prosecutions are possible in Utah; for, as Joseph F. Smith
+ told the Senate committee, the officers of the law have too much "respect"
+ for the ecclesiastical rulers of the state. Similarly, in the surrounding
+ states, the officers show exactly the same sort of "respect" and for the
+ same reason. They not only know the Church's power in local politics, but
+ they see the national administration allowing the polygamists and priests
+ of the Church to select the Federal officials, and they are not eager to
+ rouse a resentment against themselves, at Washington as well as at home,
+ by prosecuting polygamous Mormons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some few years ago, Irving Sayford, then representing the Los Angeles
+ Times, asked Mr. P. H. Lannan, of the Salt Lake Tribune, why someone did
+ not swear out warrants against President Smith for his offenses against
+ the law. Mr. Lannan said: "You mean why don't I do it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, no," Mr. Sayford explained, "I don't mean you particularly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, yes, you do," Mr. Lannan said. "You mean me if you mean anybody. If
+ it's not my duty, it's no one's duty.... Well, I'll tell you why.... I
+ don't make a complaint, because neither the district attorney nor the
+ prosecuting attorney would entertain it. If he did entertain it and issued
+ a warrant, the sheriff would refuse to serve the warrant. If the sheriff
+ served the warrant, there would be no witnesses unless I got them. If I
+ could get the witnesses, they wouldn't testify to the facts on the stand.
+ If they did testify to the facts, the jury wouldn't bring in a verdict of
+ guilty. If the jury did bring in a verdict of guilty, the judge would
+ suspend sentence. If the judge did not suspend sentence, he would merely
+ fine President Smith, three hundred dollars. And within twenty-four hours
+ there would be a procession of Mormons and Gentiles crawling on their
+ hands and knees to Church headquarters to offer to pay that three hundred
+ dollar fine at a dime apiece."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Lannan's statement of the case was later substantiated by an action of
+ the Salt Lake District Court. Upon the birth of the twelfth child that has
+ been borne to President Smith in plural marriage since the manifesto of
+ 1890, Charles Mostyn Owen made complaint in the District Court at Salt
+ Lake, charging Mr. Smith with a statutory offense. The District Attorney
+ reduced the charge to "unlawful cohabitation" (a misdemeanor), without the
+ complainant's consent or knowledge. All the preliminaries were then
+ graciously arranged and President Smith appeared in the District Court by
+ appointment. He pleaded guilty. The judge in sentencing him remarked that
+ as this was the first time he had appeared before the court, he would be
+ fined three hundred dollars, but that should he again appear, the penalty
+ might be different. Smith had already testified in Washington, before the
+ Senate Committee, to the birth of eleven children in plural marriage since
+ he had given his covenant to the country to cease living in polygamy; he
+ had practically defied the Senate and the United States to punish him; he
+ had said that he would "stand" his "chances" before the law and courts of
+ his own state. All of this was well known to the judge who fined him three
+ hundred dollars&mdash;a sum of money scarcely equal to the amount of
+ Smith's official income for the time he was in court!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A leader of the Church, not long ago, asked me, in private conference,
+ what was the policy of the American party with regard to the new plural
+ wives and their children. I replied that as far as I knew it, the policy
+ was to have the Church accept its responsibility in the matter and give
+ the wives and children whatever recognition could be given them by their
+ religion. The Church was guilty before God and man of having encouraged
+ the awful condition. It was unspeakably cowardly and unfair for the Church
+ leaders to put the whole burden of suffering on the helpless women and
+ children; and, moreover, this course was a justification to polygamists in
+ deserting their wives, on the ground that the Church had never sanctioned
+ the relation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Church leader, himself a new polygamist, answered miserably: "The
+ Church will not let itself be put in such a light before the country. That
+ would be to admit that it has been responsible all the time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I asked: "Has the Church not been responsible?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He replied&mdash;equivocating&mdash;: "Well, not the Church. The Church
+ has never taken a vote on it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That," I said, "answers why you have never got redress and never will get
+ it because you are all liars, from top to bottom. You know you would never
+ have entered the polygamous relation&mdash;nor could you have induced your
+ wife to enter it&mdash;except with full knowledge that the Church did
+ authorize it. The Church is one man, and you know it. The whole theory of
+ your theology collapses if you deny that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He shook his head blankly. "I don't know what is to become of us. I don't
+ see any way out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I could only advise him that he should join with other new polygamists in
+ demanding that the Church authorities make all possible reparation to the
+ women and children who were being crushed under the penalties of the
+ Church's crime. But I knew that such advice was vain. He could not make
+ such a demand, any more than any other slave could demand his freedom. And
+ if the non-polygamists demanded it, the Prophets would deny that polygamy
+ was being practiced. The children could not be legitimized&mdash;for the
+ Church cannot obtain legitimizing statutes without avowing its
+ responsibility for the need of them; and the Gentiles can not pass such
+ statutes without encouraging the continuance of polygamy by removing the
+ social penalty against it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the burden of all this guilt, this shame, this deception, falls upon
+ the unfortunate plural wife and her innocent offspring. She is bound by
+ the most sacred obligations never to reveal the name of the officiating
+ priest&mdash;even if she knew it&mdash;nor to disclose the circumstances
+ of the ceremony. She has justified her degradation by the assumption that
+ God has commanded it; that her husband has received a revelation
+ authorizing him to take her into his household; that her children will be
+ legitimate in the sight of God, and that eventually the civilized world
+ will come to a joyous acceptance of the practice of polygamy. When the
+ trials of her life afflict her and she finds no relentment in the world's
+ disdain, she sees no avenue of retreat. To break the relation is to imply
+ at once that it was not ordained of God, and to cast a darker ignominy
+ upon her unfortunate children. Her only hope lies in her continued
+ submission to her husband and his Church, even after she has mentally and
+ morally rejected the doctrine that betrayed her. A more pitiably helpless
+ band of self-immolants than these Mormon women has never suffered
+ martyrdom in the history of the world. Heaven help them. There is no help
+ for them on earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XVIII. The Prophet of Mammon
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In an earlier day among the Mormons, the ecclesiastical authorities
+ collected one-tenth of the "annual increase" of the faithful into "the
+ storehouse of the Lord;" and this was practically the entire assessment
+ made by the Church; although, by the same law of tithing, every Mormon was
+ held obliged to consecrate all his earthly possessions to "God's work" on
+ the demand of the Prophet. The common fund was used, then, to promote
+ community enterprises and to relieve the poor. The tithe-payer saw the
+ good result of the administration of the Church's moneys, and was
+ generally satisfied. He was promised eternal happiness if he paid an
+ honest tithe, but he was also given an earthly reward&mdash;for the Church
+ admitted him to many opportunities and enterprises from which the
+ niggardly were adroitly excluded. He was spiritually elevated and enlarged
+ by giving for a purpose that he considered worthy&mdash;the fulfillment of
+ a commandment of God and the relief of his fellow-creatures&mdash;and the
+ community benefited by having a part of its yearly surplus administered
+ for the common good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But by the time the Church had reached its third generation of
+ tithe-payers, the "financial Prophets" had made a change. On the theory
+ that since the Mormons were paying the bulk of the taxes, they should
+ share in the distribution of the public relief funds, the Mormon poor were
+ denied assistance from "the storehouse of the Lord," and were compelled to
+ enter the poorhouses, to seek shelter on the "county farms," or to take
+ charity from their neighbors. The resulting degradation of a sublime
+ principle of human helpfulness is strikingly shown in the fact that in
+ some cases, where the county relief funds are distributed through a Mormon
+ clerk of paupers for out-door relief, the Mormon bishop even collects
+ one-tenth of this money, from the wretched recipients, as their
+ contribution to God Almighty!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor is the greed of the present hierarchy satisfied with one-tenth of a
+ Mormon's income. Said Joseph F. Smith, at the April Conference of 1899
+ (according to the Church's official report): "If a farmer raises two
+ thousand bushels of wheat, as the result of his year's labor, how many
+ bushels should he pay for tithing? Well, some go straightway to dickering
+ with the Lord. They will say that they hired a man so and so, and his
+ wages must be taken out; that they had to pay such and such expenses, and
+ this cost and that cost; and they reckon out all their expenses and tithe
+ the balance." To Smith's inspired financial genius this was "dickering
+ with the Lord." He wished to collect ten per cent of the farmer's entire
+ yield&mdash;a tithe that would have bankrupted the farmer in three years!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor is the tithe any longer the only exaction demanded by the Prophet. A
+ score of "donations" have been added. There is the Stake Tabernacle
+ Donation, which is a fund collected from the Mormons of each "Stake"
+ (corresponding usually to a county) for the building of a house in which
+ to hold Stake Conferences. There is the Ward Meeting-House Donation, which
+ is a fund collected from the Mormons of every "ward" for the erection of a
+ local chapel. There is the Fast Day Donation, made up of contributions
+ gathered on the afternoon of the first Sunday of each month, at what is
+ called "a fast meeting," for the support of the local poor; and this is
+ supplemented by the Relief Society Donation, solicited by the members of
+ the Ladies Relief Society, in a house-to-house canvass, from Mormons and
+ Gentiles alike. A Light and Heat Donation is collected by the deacons of
+ the ward, under direction of the bishop, to pay for the lighting and
+ heating of the ward meeting house; a Missionary Donation is collected at a
+ "Missionary benefit entertainment," to help defray the expenses of a
+ member of a ward sent on a mission; and since a missionary must
+ necessarily be an elder, a Quorum Missionary Donation is also taken from
+ his fellow members of the quorum, to assist him. So far as the Church is
+ concerned, he travels "without purse or scrip," by order of "revelation;"
+ but this inhibition does not extend to the use of his own money&mdash;if
+ he has any left after paying the other exaction's&mdash;nor does it
+ prevent him either from receiving contributions from his impoverished
+ fellows or accepting charity from "the enemies of God's people," whom he
+ labors to redeem. And on these terms about ninety per cent. of the adult
+ male Mormons perform missionary services for the Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All priesthood quorums have monthly Quorum Dues collected from their
+ members. On one Sunday of each month, called Nickel Sunday, the Sunday
+ School members pay in five cents each for the purchase of new books, etc.
+ On Dime Tuesday, once a month, the members of the Young Men's and the
+ Young Women's Mutual Improvement Associations pay in ten cents each for
+ the purchase of books, etc. On Nickel Friday, once a month, the infant
+ members of the Primary Association pay in five cents each to the
+ association. Religious Class Donations are paid once a month by the Mormon
+ public-school pupils for the support of the week-day religious classes.
+ Amusement Hall Donations are collected from the members of a ward whose
+ bishop finds them able to build a place of amusement. When a temple is to
+ be erected, Temple Donations are collected, continuously, until the work
+ is finished and paid for; and when members of the Church "go through the
+ Temple," they are required to pay another form of Temple Donation in any
+ sum that they can afford. Should a need arise, not provided for by the
+ specific donations given above, a Special Donation is collected to meet
+ it. Yet in the face of all these exaction's of tithes and donations, the
+ ecclesiast still boasts: "We are not like the 'preachers for hire and
+ diviners for money.' We never pass the plate at our sacred services. Our
+ clergy labor, without pay, to give free salvation to a sinful world!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In addition to doing missionary service, paying tithes, and contributing
+ donations, the latter-day Mormon, if he be obedient to the counsel of the
+ Church's anointed financiers, must support the commercial and financial
+ undertakings of the hierarchy. These are officially designated "the
+ Church's institutions" by the authorities; but they are in no way the
+ property of the Church. They are advertised as community enterprises, but
+ they are such only in the sense that the community is commanded by "the
+ voice of God" to sustain them. There is no voice of God to command a
+ distribution of their profits. And they are no longer conducted for the
+ benefit of the community but to exploit it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The good Mormon must purchase his sugar from "the Church's" sugar company
+ (Joseph F. Smith, president), which is controlled by the national sugar
+ trust and charges trust prices. He must buy salt from "the Church's" salt
+ monopoly (Joseph F. Smith, president), which is a part of, and pays
+ dividends to, the national salt trust. He is taught to go for his
+ merchandise to the Zion's Co-operative Mercantile Institution (Joseph F.
+ Smith, president), where even whiskey is sold under the symbol of the
+ All-seeing Eye and the words "Holiness to the Lord" in gilt letters; and
+ Joseph F. Smith, at the April Conference, of 1898 (according to the
+ Church's official report), scolded those "pretendedly pious" Mormons who
+ "were shocked and horrified" to find "liquid poison" sold under these
+ auspices&mdash;for, as Smith argued, with characteristic greed, if the
+ Mormon who wanted whiskey could not get it in the Church store, "he would
+ not patronize Z.C.M.I. at all, but would go elsewhere to deal!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The farmers are "counselled" to buy their vehicles from "the Church's"
+ firm, the Consolidated Wagon and Machine Company (Joseph F. Smith,
+ president); to take out their fire insurance with the Church's "Home Fire
+ Insurance Company" (Joseph F. Smith, controller); and to insure their
+ lives with the Church's "Beneficial Life Insurance Company" (Joseph F.
+ Smith, president). The Salt Lake Knitting Company (of which Joseph F.
+ Smith is president) makes, among other things, the sacred knitted garments
+ that are prescribed for every Mormon who takes the "Endowment Oaths," to
+ be worn by him forever after as a shield "against the Adversary;" and
+ these garments bear the label: "Approved by the Presidency. No knitted
+ garment approved which does not bear this label." By which ingenious bit
+ of religious commercialism, the sacred marks on the garments (accepted as
+ a sort of passport to Heaven) have been increased by the sacred Smith
+ trademark that admits the wearer to the Smith Heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Church's banking institutions, of which Joseph F. Smith is president,
+ are recommended as safer than others because the money goes into the hands
+ of "the brethren." Church newspapers must be subscribed for, because all
+ others are "unreliable"&mdash;although the Church's Deseret News (Joseph
+ F. Smith, president) is one of the most dishonest, unjust and mendacious
+ organs that ever poisoned the public mind. And so on, through the whole
+ list of business concerns by which the Church authorities are to profit.
+ The Mormons, having learned of old the value of a solid, community support
+ for community enterprises established in the interests of the community,
+ are still kept solidly supporting ecclesiastical enterprises administered
+ for the benefit of the hierarchy or its favorites, at the community's
+ expense!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Utah Light and Railway Company (Joseph F. Smith, president), which was
+ supported by the tithes of the Mormon people, was charging $1.25 per
+ thousand cubic feet for fuel gas and $1.75 for illuminating gas, just
+ before the company was sold to the "Harriman interests." (The Supreme
+ Court of the United States has fixed a rate of 80 cents a thousand as a
+ fair price for gas in New York City.) The Salt Lake Street Railway
+ (operating under a fifty-year franchise, obtained from the City Council
+ by, the power of the Church while Joseph F. Smith was president of the
+ company) charges a five-cent fare, gives but one transfer, allows no half
+ fares for children, and pays the city nothing for the use of its streets.
+ Before the transfer of the Church's sugar stocks to the trust, the sugar
+ factories paid the farmer $4.50 a ton for his beets and sold him sugar for
+ $4.50 a hundred pounds; today beets are bought for $4.50 a ton, and sugar
+ sold at $6.00 a hundred. The price asked for salt in Utah, where it should
+ be "dirt cheap," is the same as everywhere under the salt trust. And so on&mdash;through
+ the rest of the list.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To maintain this system of sanctified gain Joseph F. Smith invokes all the
+ power of his "divine" authority as "the mouthpiece of the Lord." He
+ protects the sugar trust by preventing the establishment of independent
+ sugar factories (as for example in Sanpete and Sevier counties in 1905),
+ just as he protects the salt trust by preventing the competition of
+ independent salt gardens (as in the case of Smurthwaite and Taylor.) He
+ issues his edict of protection as "the vicegerent of God on Earth" to the
+ Mormons; and he excommunicates and ostracizes, in this world and the next,
+ the Mormon protestant who dares rebel against commercial monopoly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He receives between two and three million dollars a year in tithes, gives
+ no accounting of them, and has no responsibility for them, except to God
+ and his own conscience. He is able to use this sum, in bulk, at any given
+ point, with a weight of financial pressure that would overbalance any
+ other such single power in the community. As "trustee in trust" for the
+ Church, he has the added income from stocks and previous investments; and
+ he has practical control of the wealth of all the leading men of the
+ Church to assist him, if he should call upon them for assistance. He uses
+ his financial dictatorship to support monopoly against the assault of
+ Gentile opposition, and he compels the Gentile to pay tribute as the
+ Mormon does.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He backs his financial power with his control of legislation. He can not
+ only prevent the passage of any laws against his favored monopolies, but
+ (as in the case of the smelters) he can reduce independents to submission
+ by threatening them with procured laws to penalize them. He largely
+ controls the "labor troubles" of the State by controlling the obedience of
+ the Mormon laboring men. He can influence judges, officers of the law and
+ all the agents of local government by his power as political "Boss," and
+ the same influence extends, through his representatives at Washington, to
+ the local activities of Federal authority. He can check and govern public
+ opinion among his subjects by announcing "the will of God" to them through
+ the officers of the Church in every department of religious
+ administration. He is, therefore, at once the modern "money king," the
+ absolute political Czar the social despot and the infallible Pope of his
+ "Kingdom!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as men fight for the retention of a throne and the maintenance of a
+ dynasty, so he and his courtiers defend his rule and maintain his
+ autocracy with every weapon of absolutism. And just as royalty, while
+ possessed of unlimited wealth, has never lacked mercenaries, press
+ bureaus, and all the sycophantic defenders of a crown, so Smith is able to
+ command an array of service as great as any ever brought to the defense of
+ a social system. This singular and enormous power stands solidly against
+ any movement of domestic reform; and, by its alliance with the national
+ rulers in finance and politics, it is saved from the danger of "foreign"
+ intervention. Like every other such absolutism, it is crushing out the
+ life of its subjects; for, in spite of the industry, the thrift, and the
+ abstemiousness of the Mormon people, they are sinking under the burden of
+ imposed exaction's. Although Utah became a territory in 1853, and had its
+ well-settled towns at that time, and was organized in a compact social
+ body for the upbuilding of its material prosperity before any of the
+ surrounding states had received an organic act as a territory, Utah has
+ now lost its leadership, and the individual initiative and enterprise of
+ the typical Western community have been relatively lost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this process of degeneration, one of the most promising modern
+ experiments in communism has been frustrated and brought to ruin. In the
+ early nineties, Dr. Josiah Strong, of New York City, viewed the Mormon
+ system with an interested admiration. He saw that by contribution, and
+ co-operation, and arbitration, the energies of the people were conserved
+ and the products of their prosperity more equally distributed than under
+ the conditions of economic war then prevalent elsewhere. He thought he saw
+ in Utah a possible solution of some of the social problems of our
+ civilization. But, a few years ago, he confessed that the Mormon system
+ was no longer worthy of study. It had been destroyed by the greed of its
+ rulers. Community contributions were being used for individual
+ commercialism and the aggrandizement of leaders. The aged and infirm poor,
+ who had contributed through all the working period of their lives, were
+ being thrust into poor houses. The ambition of the earlier Prophets, to
+ make the people great in their community prosperity and happiness, has
+ been lost in the new desire of the head of the Church to exhibit that
+ greatness only in his own person. The Mormon people had become the working
+ slaves of a financial and political and religious autocracy, and Mormonism
+ was no longer anything but a hopeless failure as a social experiment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is difficult to say how much of this failure was due to the character
+ of the present Prophet, and how much to the national conditions that are
+ threatening the success of democracy in every state of the Union. It would
+ seem that the conditions were ideal for the production of just such a man
+ as Smith, and that Smith was by nature fitted for the greatest growth
+ under just such conditions. He came to power with none of the feeling of
+ responsibility to his people which the earlier leaders showed. He
+ considered that the people lived for him, not that he lived for the
+ people. He regarded the Mormon system as an establishment of his family,
+ to which he had the family right of inheritance; and he waited with a
+ sulky impatience for the deaths of the men who stood between him and the
+ control of his family's Church. It was as if he accepted his predecessors
+ as exercising their powers, during an inter-regnum, by the consent of the
+ Mormon people, but saw himself acceding to the throne by family right and
+ the order of divinity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had no financial ability; he had no considerable property when he
+ became president of the Church at sixty-three. Nor did he need any such
+ ability. The continuous inflow of money&mdash;to be used without
+ accountability to anyone&mdash;and the wealth of opportunity offered by
+ the men who wished his aid in exploiting his people, made it unnecessary
+ that he should have any creative financial vision. He needed only to move,
+ with his opportunity, along the line of least resistance which was also,
+ with him, the line of choice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had, through all his years, shown an obvious envy of any member of the
+ Church whose circumstances were better than his own. It was apparent in
+ his manner that he regarded such success in the community as an
+ encroachment upon the Smith prerogatives. As soon as he came to power, he
+ accepted every opportunity of self-aggrandizement as a new Smith
+ prerogative. And the system of modern capitalism appealed at once to his
+ ambition. By the older method of tithes and conscription's, he could
+ collect only from the devotees of the Church; by the larger exploitation
+ he could levy tribute upon the Gentiles too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And he was aided by the Mormons themselves. They had been brought
+ together, in obedience to "a command of God," in order that the community,
+ by avoiding the sins of the world, might be saved from the plagues that
+ were to descend upon the world because of its injustice. They were a
+ credulous people, ignorant of the sins of modern finance, and prepared by
+ industry and isolation to be exploited. Their previous leaders had
+ observed, as a warning only, the modern aspiration for vast wealth
+ obtained by economic injustice; but that aspiration made an instant appeal
+ to Smith's ambition; and it is the peculiar iniquity of conditions in Utah
+ today that his ambition has betrayed his people to the very evils which
+ they were originally organized to escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In an earlier time it was the pride of the leader that the community in
+ the large was advancing and the average of conditions improving. Today the
+ leader assumes that as he grows richer the people are prospering and "the
+ revelations of God" being vindicated in practice. He speaks with pride of
+ "our" growth and wealth under "the benign authority of the Almighty" and
+ His "temporal revelations"&mdash;because he himself has been enriched by
+ the perversion of these same laws&mdash;very much as the "captain of
+ industry" elsewhere boasts of the "prosperity" of the country, because the
+ few are growing so rich at the expense of the many.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Along with this strain of commercial greed in Smith, there is an equally
+ strong strain of religious fanaticism that justifies the greed and
+ sanctifies it, to itself. He believes (as Apostle Orson Pratt taught, by
+ authority of the Church): "The Kingdom of God is an order of government
+ established by divine authority. It is the only legal government that can
+ exist in any part of the universe. All other governments are illegal and
+ unauthorized.... Any people attempting to govern themselves by laws of
+ their own making, and by officers of their own appointment, are in direct
+ rebellion against the Kingdom of God." Smith believes that over this
+ Kingdom the Smiths have been, by Divine revelation, ordained to rule. He
+ believes that his authority is the absolute and unquestionable authority
+ of God Himself. He believes that in all the affairs of life he has the
+ same right over his subjects that the Creator has over His creatures. He
+ believes that he has been appointed to use the Mormon people as he in his
+ inspired wisdom sees fit to use them, in order the more firmly to
+ establish God's Kingdom on Earth against the Powers of Evil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He believes that the people of the American Republic, "being governed by
+ laws of their own making and by officers of their own appointment," are in
+ direct rebellion against "his Kingdom of God." He believes that the
+ national government is destined to be broken in pieces by his power; that
+ it has only been preserved from destruction by the concessions recently
+ made by the Federal authorities; and that it can only continue to save
+ itself so long as it shall recognize Smith's ambassadors at Washington&mdash;and
+ so allow him to work out its destruction in the fullness of time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But with all this insanity of pretension he has a sort of cowardly
+ shrewdness, acquired in his days of hiding "on the underground." On the
+ witness stand in Washington he denied that he had had any direct
+ communication with God by revelation; and then he returned to Utah and
+ pleaded from the pulpit that on this point he had lied in Washington in
+ order to escape saying what his "inquisitors" had wished him to say in
+ order to "get him into a trap." He preaches in Utah that to deny the
+ doctrine of polygamy is to reject the teaching of Jesus Christ; before the
+ Senate committee he was coward enough to put the blame of his polygamous
+ cohabitation upon his five wives. In Washington he claimed that the
+ Gentiles of Utah condoned polygamous cohabitation and had a liberal
+ sympathy for the Church; but at St. George, Utah, for example (in
+ September, 1904), he was reported by a Church newspaper as saying: "The
+ Gentiles are coming among us to buy our homes and land. We should not sell
+ to them, as they are the enemies of the Kingdom of God." He is that most
+ perfect of all hypocrites&mdash;the fanatic who believes that he is lying
+ in the service of the Almighty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the early spring of 1888, I was in Washington, where measures of
+ proscription were then being prepared against our people; and, early in
+ the morning, as I walked up Massachusetts Avenue, I saw Joseph F. Smith
+ approaching me. For several years he had been "on the underground" under
+ the name of "Joseph Mack"&mdash;now in the Hawaiian Islands with one wife;
+ now hidden, with another, among the faithful in some Mormon village; or
+ again with a third, in Washington (which was probably as safe a place as
+ any) presiding secretly over the Church lobby. As he passed me, with his
+ head down, preoccupied, I said: "Good morning, President Smith." He jumped
+ as if I had been a Deputy Marshal with such a sudden start of fear that
+ his silk hat rolled on the pavement and his umbrella dropped from his
+ hand. He drew back from me as if he were about to take to his heels. Then
+ he recognized me, of course, and was quickly reassured; but his
+ embarrassment continued for some time, awkwardly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But a short time ago the President of the United States stood in the Salt
+ Lake Tabernacle (which is "Joseph Mack's" capitol and vatican) and
+ addressed a multitude that had assembled not more to honor the Chief
+ Executive of the nation than to pay their almost idolatrous tribute of
+ devotion to the head of their Church, who was reigning there in the pulpit
+ with President Taft. "Joseph Mack" no longer fears Deputy Marshals&mdash;he
+ appoints them; and the present United States Marshal of Utah would refuse
+ to serve a paper under the direction of the entire power of the United
+ States government if "Joseph Mack" forbade the service. He no longer fears
+ the proscriptions of legislators at Washington; they come to him, through
+ the leaders of their parties, and arrange with him for the support of the
+ trans-Mississippi states in which the influence of his Church control is
+ determinative. He no longer hides his wives, at the ends of the earth, and
+ visits them by stealth; they occupy a row of houses along one of the
+ principal streets of Salt Lake City, and the pilgrim and the tourist alike
+ admire his magnificence as they go by. He is still a law-breaker. He
+ stands even more in defiance of the authority of the nation than he did in
+ 1888, and he hates that authority as much as ever. But he is today not
+ only the Prophet of the Church; he is the Prophet of Mammon; and all the
+ powers and principalities of Mammon now give him gloriously: "All Hail!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XIX. The Subjects of the Kingdom
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ But what of the Mormon people? How can such leaders, directing the Church
+ to purposes that have become so cruel, so selfish, so dangerous and so
+ disloyal&mdash;how can they maintain their power over followers who are
+ themselves neither criminal nor degraded? That is a question which has
+ given the pause of doubt to many criticisms of the Mormon communism of our
+ day. That is the consideration which has obtained from the nation the
+ protection of tolerance under which the Prophets flourish. For not only
+ are the Mormon men and women obviously as worthy as any in the United
+ States: there is plainly much of community value in their social life;
+ there is manifestly a great deal of efficiency for human good in their
+ system and in the leadership by which it is directed; and this good is so
+ apparent that it appeals easily to the sympathetic conscience and
+ uninformed mind of the country at large.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let me try, then, to exhibit and to analyze the causes that keep such a
+ virtuous and sturdy people loyally supporting the leadership of men so
+ unworthy of them that if the people were as bad as the ends to which they
+ are being now directed, modern Mormonism would be destroyed by its own
+ evils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the first place, the average Mormon chief is sincere in his pretensions
+ and self-justified in his aims. Usually, he has been born, in the Church,
+ to a family that sees itself set apart, in holiness, from the rest of
+ humanity, as the direct heirs of the ancient prophets or even as the
+ lineal descendants of Christ. From his earliest age of understanding, he
+ is taught the divine splendor of his birth and impressed with the high
+ duties of his family privilege in being permitted to bear a part in
+ preparing the earth for the second coming of the Savior. He is taught
+ that, though all the world may be saved and nearly all the people of this
+ sphere will in some eternity work out a measure of salvation, he and
+ 143,999 others are to be a band of the elect who shall stand about the
+ Savior, on Mount Zion, in the final day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He is taught that, next to Christ, Joseph Smith, the founder of the faith,
+ has performed the largest mission for the salvation of the world; that in
+ the councils of the Gods, when the Creator measured off the ages of the
+ human race on this earth, to the Savior was apportioned "the meridian of
+ time," and to Joseph Smith, the Prophet, was given the "last
+ dispensation," which is "the fullness of times," in order that the world,
+ having apostatized from the atonement and the redemption, might be saved
+ to heaven by Joseph, "the Choice Seer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He is taught that the disciples of the Mormon Prophet are literally the
+ disciples of Jesus Christ; that the laws of right and wrong are within the
+ direction and subject to the authority of the Prophet, to be changed,
+ enlarged or even revoked by his commandment; that all human laws are
+ equally subject to his will, to be made or unmade at his order; that he
+ can condemn, by his excommunication, any man or any nation to the
+ vengeance of the Almighty here and hereafter; and that he can pronounce a
+ blessing upon the head of any man, or the career of any people, by virtue
+ of which blessing power shall be held in this world righteously and the
+ man elevated to sit at the right hand of God in the world to come. He is
+ taught that the greatest sin which can be committed&mdash;next to the
+ denial of Christ&mdash;is to raise hand or voice against "the Lord's
+ anointed," the Mormon prophets. And, for morality, he is taught from his
+ infancy, that he must scrupulously practice those special virtues of his
+ cult, industry, thrift, purity (except as in later life he shall be
+ inducted into the practice of the new polygamy) honesty in business, and
+ charity toward his needy fellow-men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Formed in character by this teaching, as a steady inculcation throughout
+ his youth, he comes to manhood strong of body, determined of mind,
+ practicing rigidly and intolerantly his petty virtues of abstinence from
+ the use of tobacco, tea and coffee, proclaiming with fanatical zeal the
+ gospel as it has been proclaimed to him, and self-justified in all that he
+ says or does by the large measure of sincerity in his delusions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And that is, in some degree, the common training of all Mormons. Every
+ Mormon boy attends Sunday School as soon as he is old enough to lisp his
+ song of adoration to Joseph, the Kingly Prophet, and to the Savior with
+ whom Joseph is early associated in his childish mind. At six years of age,
+ he enters the Primary Association; at twelve he is in the Young Men's
+ Mutual Improvement Association; at fourteen or even earlier, he stands in
+ the fast-day meeting and repeats like a creed: "Brethren and Sisters, I
+ feel called upon to say a few words. I am not able to edify you, but I can
+ say that I know this is the Church and Kingdom of God, and I bear my
+ testimony that Joseph Smith was a Prophet and that Brigham Young was his
+ lawful successor, and that the Prophet Joseph F. Smith is heir to all the
+ authority which the Lord has conferred in these days for the salvation of
+ men. And I feel that if I live my religion and do nothing to offend the
+ Holy Spirit I will be saved in the presence of my Father and His Son,
+ Jesus Christ. With these few words I will give way. Praying the Lord to
+ bless each and every one of us is my prayer in the name of Jesus Christ.
+ Amen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At fourteen he becomes a Deacon of the Church. Between that age and
+ twenty, he becomes an Elder. Very soon thereafter he becomes "a Seventy"
+ and perhaps a high priest. He takes upon himself "covenants in holy
+ places." He becomes "a priest unto the Most High God"&mdash;frequently
+ before his eighteenth year. Usually before he is twenty he is sent on a
+ mission to proclaim his gospel&mdash;the only one he has ever heard in his
+ life&mdash;to "an unenlightened nation" and "a wicked world." For, in
+ addition to being taught that the Mormons are the best, most virtuous,
+ most temperate, most industrious, and most God-fearing of all peoples&mdash;a
+ thing that is dinned into his ears from the pulpit every Sunday in the
+ year&mdash;he has been convinced by equal iteration that the rest of the
+ world is a festering mass of corruption.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Often he goes abroad, to some country whose language and customs he must
+ learn and upon the charity of whose toilers he must depend for his
+ maintenance. He goes with an implicit reliance upon God, strong in the
+ small virtues that have been taught him from the time he knelt at his
+ mother's knee. He sees, probably for the first time, the afflictions and
+ the sins among mankind; and he keeps himself unspotted from them,
+ congratulating himself that these grossnesses are unknown to his sheltered
+ home-life and to the religion which he holds as the ideal of his soul. He
+ proclaims his belief that God has spoken from the Heavens, through the
+ Mormon Prophet, in this last day, to restore the gospel of Christ from
+ which the peoples of the earth have wandered. He "bears testimony" to the
+ whole world, and he binds himself to the authority of his Church by
+ proclaiming his belief in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he returns home, after years of service, he is called to the stand in
+ the tabernacle to give a report of his work. He finds waiting for him a
+ ready advancement in the offices of the Church, according as he may show
+ himself worthy of advancement or as the power of family or the favor of
+ ecclesiastical authority may obtain it for him. He marries a girl who has
+ had a training almost identical with his own. She, too, has borne her
+ testimony before she reached years of responsibility. She has taken her
+ vows as a priestess at the age when he was dedicating himself a priest.
+ She may even have performed a foreign mission. They have both been
+ promised that they shall become kings and queens in the eternal world.
+ They are bound by their covenants to obey their superior priests. They
+ cannot disregard their Church affiliations without recanting their vows.
+ The only way they can adhere to their covenants with their Almighty Father&mdash;the
+ only way they can demonstrate their acceptance of the atoning power of the
+ Redeemer's sacrifice&mdash;is by yielding such obedience to the Prophet as
+ they would pay to the Father and the Son if They were on earth in Their
+ proper persons. To deviate from this faithfulness is to be marked as a
+ Judas Iscariot by all the Latter-Day Saints.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the Mormon becomes the head of a family&mdash;in addition to
+ all the testimonies and performances which he must give as proof of his
+ continued adherence&mdash;he must submit himself and his household to the
+ examination and espionage of the ward teachers, who invade his home at
+ least once a month. They enter absolutely as the proprietors of the house.
+ If the husband is there, they ask him whether he performs his duties in
+ the Church; whether he holds family prayer morning and evening; whether he
+ "keeps the word of wisdom"&mdash;that is, does he abstain from the use of
+ alcohol, tobacco, tea and coffee&mdash;whether he pays a full tithe and
+ all the prescribed donations to the Church; whether he has any hard
+ feelings against any of his brethren and sisters; and finally, does he
+ devoutly sustain the Prophet as the ruler of God's Kingdom upon earth.
+ These questions, so far as they apply, are put to each member of the
+ family above the age of eight years. Should the husband be away, all the
+ inquiries concerning him are made of the wife. If both parents are absent,
+ the questions concerning them are put to their children!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This one branch of the ecclesiastical service is sufficient of itself to
+ mark the Mormon Church as the most perfectly disciplined institution among
+ mankind. The teachers' quorum in any neighborhood consists of some tried
+ elders, usually of considerable ability and experience. With these are
+ associated numerous young men, many of them returned missionaries. The
+ fact that they have countless other duties in the Church and many other
+ and weightier responsibilities, is not permitted to excuse them from
+ performing strictly this important labor. Perhaps a dozen or twenty
+ families are assigned to a couple of teachers. They are required to visit
+ each of these families once every month. And if they discover any lapse of
+ fidelity, they report at once to the Bishop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one who has not seen them on their rounds will believe with what an air
+ of divinely privileged authority they enter a home and force its secrets
+ of conscience&mdash;with what an imposing and arrogant zeal&mdash;with
+ what a calm assumption of spiritual over-lordship and inquisitorial right.
+ Some few years ago after my public criticisms of Joseph F. Smith had been
+ followed by my excommunication, two teachers, on their monthly rounds,
+ came to my home in the evening and made their way calmly to the library
+ where I was sitting with some members of my family. I had just returned
+ from a long absence abroad, and the visit was an untimely intrusion at its
+ best; but we observed the obligations of hospitality with what courtesy we
+ could, and merely evaded the familiar questions which they began to put to
+ us. Finally, the elder of the two teachers, a man of some local prominence
+ in the Church, undertook to "bear testimony" to the wickedness of anyone
+ who opposed the divine rule of Joseph F. Smith; and when I cut him short
+ with a request that he leave the house, he was as shocked and surprised as
+ if he had been Milton's Archangel Michael, after "the fall," and I, a
+ defiant Adam, showing him the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In addition to the visitations of the ward teachers, some members of the
+ Ladies Relief Society call upon every family usually once a month, not
+ only to gather donations for the poor, but to have a little quiet talk
+ with the wife and mother of the household. These women of the Relief
+ Society are genuine "Sisters of Charity." In most cases they have
+ themselves plenty of household cares, yet they give much of their time to
+ visiting the sick, supplying the wants of the needy or ministering to the
+ miseries of the afflicted; and if it were not for them and their
+ noblework, the Mormon poor would fare ill in these days of Mormon Church
+ grandeur. Outside of their monthly visitations, they have definite
+ preaching to do. At the meetings of their organization, they "bear
+ testimony" that Joseph was a Prophet&mdash;and so on. They have the
+ quarterly stake conferences to attend. Their traveling missionaries go
+ from Salt Lake to the four quarters of the globe to institute and maintain
+ the discipline of the organization and to teach the methods of its
+ practical work in Nursing Schools, mother's classes and the like. They
+ make up one of the noblest bodies of women associated with any social
+ movement of humanity. And in their zeal and submissiveness they are so
+ innocently meek and "biddable" that they can listen with reverence to
+ young Hyrum Smith publicly lecturing the grandmothers of the order for
+ occasionally partaking of a cup of thin tea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under such a system of teaching, discipline and espionage, how can the
+ average Mormon man or woman develop any independence of thought or action?
+ At what time of life can he assert himself? Before he has attained the age
+ of reason he has declared his faith in public. If he shall then, in his
+ teens, express any doubt, the priests are ready for him. "You have borne
+ your testimony many times in the Church," they say sternly. "Were you
+ lying then, or have you lost the Spirit of God through your
+ transgressions?" If he reveals any doubt to the ward teachers, they will
+ overwhelm him with argument, and either absolutely reconvert him or
+ silence him with authority. The pressure of family love and pride will be
+ brought to bear upon him. The ecclesiastical authorities will move against
+ him. He knows that every one of his relatives will be humiliated by his
+ unfaithfulness. His "sin" will become known to the whole community, and he
+ will be looked at askance by his friends and his companions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After he has taken his vows as a priest, how shall he dare to violate
+ them? He knows that if he loses his faith on a mission&mdash;in other
+ words, if he dares to make any inquiry into the authenticity of the
+ mission which he is performing&mdash;he becomes a deserter from God in the
+ very ranks of battle. He knows that he will be held forever in dishonor
+ among his people; that he will be looked upon as one worse than dead; that
+ he will ruin his own life and despoil his parents of all their eternal
+ comfort and their hope in him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While I was editing the Salt Lake Tribune, a son of one of the famous
+ apostles came to me with some anxious inquiries, and said: "Frank, I have
+ been working in the Church and teaching this gospel so assiduously for
+ nearly forty years that I have never had time to find out whether it's
+ true or not!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Mormon, in his later years of manhood, dares to doubt, he must
+ either reveal his disloyalty to the ward teachers or continue to deny it,
+ from month to month, and remain a supine servant of authority. If he
+ reveals it, he knows that the news of his defection will permeate the
+ entire circle with which he is associated in politics, in business and in
+ religion. If his superstition does not hold him, his worldly prudence
+ will. He knows that all the aid of the community will be withdrawn from
+ him; every voice that has expressed affection for him will speak in hate;
+ every hand that has clasped his in friendship will be turned against him.
+ And into this very prudence there enters something of a moral warning. For
+ he has seen how many a man, deprived of the association and fraternity of
+ the Church, feeling himself shunned in a lonely ostracism, has not been
+ strong enough to endure in rectitude and has fallen into dissipation.
+ Every instance of the sort is rehearsed by the faithful, with many
+ exultant expressions of mourning, in the hearing of the doubter. And
+ finally, it is the prediction of the priests that no apostate can prosper;
+ and though the Mormon people are charitable and do not intend to be
+ unjust, they inevitably tend to fulfill the prophecy and devote the
+ apostate to material destruction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great doctrine of the Mormon faith is obedience; the one proof of
+ grace is conformity. So long as a man pays a full tithe, contributes all
+ the required donations, and yields unquestioningly to the orders of the
+ priests, he may even depart in a moral sense from any other of the
+ Church's laws and find himself excused. But any questioning of the
+ rulership of the Prophets&mdash;the rightfulness of their authority or the
+ justice of its exercise is apostasy, is a denial of the faith, is a sin
+ against the Holy Ghost. The man who obeys in all things is promised that
+ he shall come forth in the morning of the first resurrection; the man who
+ disobeys, and by his disobedience apostatizes, is condemned to work out,
+ through an eternity of suffering, his offense against the Holy Spirit. At
+ the first sign of defection&mdash;almost inevitably discovered in its
+ incipiency&mdash;the rebel is either disciplined into submission or at
+ once pushed over "the battlements of Heaven!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By such perfect means, the leaders, chosen under a pretense of revelation
+ from God, maintain an unassailable sanctity in the eyes of the people, who
+ are themselves priests. These people implicitly believe that the voice of
+ the leader is the voice of God. They follow with a passionate devotion
+ that is made up of a fanatical priestly faith and of a sympathy that sees
+ their Prophets "persecuted" by an ungenerous, impure and vindictive world.
+ We love that for which we suffer; and it has become the inheritance of the
+ Mormons to love the priesthood, for whose protection their parents and
+ grandparents suffered, and under whose oppressions they now suffer
+ themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joseph Smith, the original Prophet, was slain in the Carthage jail; to the
+ Mormon mind this is proof that he was the anointed of God and that he
+ sealed his testimony with his blood, as did the Savior. John Taylor,
+ afterwards President of the Church, was not slain at Carthage, but only
+ wounded; and this to the Mormons is proof that he was of the eternal
+ kindred of the Prophets, because, under God's direction, he gave his blood
+ to their defense. But Willard Richards, a companion of Smith and Taylor,
+ was not even injured at Carthage; and this is accepted as proof that God
+ had charge of his holy ones, and would not permit wicked men to do them
+ harm. When the people left Nauvoo and journeyed through Iowa, some of the
+ citizens of that state would not harbor them; and this is argued as
+ evidence that the Mormon movement was God's work, since the hand of the
+ wicked was against it; but in some localities of Iowa the emigrants were
+ aided, and this also is proof that the Mormon movement was God's work,
+ since the hearts of the people were melted to assist it. When Johnston's
+ army was sent to Utah, it was proof that the Mormon Church was the true
+ Church, hated and persecuted by a wicked nation; when Johnston's army
+ withdrew without a battle, it was a new guarantee of the divinity of the
+ work; and it is even believed among the Mormons that the Civil War was
+ ordained from the heavens, at the sudden command of God, to compel
+ Johnston's withdrawal and save God's people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the same way the persecutions of "the raid," and the cessation of those
+ persecutions&mdash;the early trials of poverty and the present abundance
+ of prosperity&mdash;the threat of the Smoot investigation and the abortive
+ conclusion of that exposure&mdash;are all argued as proofs of the divinity
+ of a persecuted Church or given as instances of the miraculous
+ "overruling" of God to prosper his chosen people. No matter what occurs,
+ the Prophets, by applying either one of these formulae, can translate the
+ incident into a new proof of grace; and their followers submissively
+ accept the interpretation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the night of April 18, 1905, Joseph F. Smith and some eight of his sons
+ sat in his official box at the Salt Lake theatre to watch a prize fight
+ that lasted for twenty gory rounds. The Salt Lake Tribune published the
+ fact that the Prophet of God, and vicegerent of Christ, had given the
+ approval of his "holy presence" to this clumsy barbarity. A devout old
+ lady, who had been with the Church since the days of Nauvoo, rebuked us
+ bitterly for publishing such a falsehood about President Smith. "How dare
+ you tell such wicked lies about God's servants?" she scolded. "President
+ Smith wouldn't do such a wicked thing as attend a prize fight. And you
+ know that no man with any sense of decency would take his young sons to
+ look at such a dreadful thing!" Some time later, when the facts in the
+ case had come to her, in her retirement, from her friends, the editor
+ called upon her to quiz her about the incident. She said: "I'm sure I
+ don't see what business it is of the outside world anyhow what President
+ Smith does. He has a right to go to the theatre if he wants to. I don't
+ believe they would have anything but what's good in the Salt Lake theatre.
+ It was built by our people and they own it. And if it wasn't good,
+ President Smith wouldn't have taken his boys there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And this was not merely the absurdity of an old woman. It is the logic of
+ all the faithful. The leaders cannot do wrong&mdash;because it is not
+ wrong, if they do it. No criticism of them can be effective. No act of
+ theirs can be proven an error. If they do not do a thing, it was right not
+ to do it; and it would have been a sin if it had been done. But if they do
+ that thing, then it was right to do it; and it would have been a sin if it
+ had not been done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This reliance upon the almighty power and prophetic infallibility of the
+ leaders prevents the Mormon people from truly appreciating the dangers
+ that threaten them. It keeps them ignorant of outside sentiment. It makes
+ them despise even a national hostility. And it has left them without
+ gratitude, too, for a national grace. Before these people can be roused to
+ any independence of responsible thought, it will be necessary to break
+ their trust in the ability of their leaders to make bargains of protection
+ with the world; and then it will still be necessary to force the eyes of
+ their self-complacency to turn from the satisfied contemplation of their
+ own virtues. "You will never be able to reach the conscience of the
+ Mormons," a man who knows them has declared. "I have had my experiences
+ with both leaders and people. If you tell them 'You're
+ ninety-nine-and-one-half per cent. pure gold,' they will ask, surprised
+ and indignant: 'What? Why, what's the matter with the other half per
+ cent?'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XX
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_CONC" id="link2H_CONC">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Conclusion
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Of the men who could have written this narrative, some are dead; some are
+ prudent; some are superstitious; and some are personally foresworn. It
+ appeared to me that the welfare of Utah and the common good of the whole
+ United States required the publication of the facts that I have tried to
+ demonstrate. Since there was apparently no one else who felt the duty and
+ also had the information or the wish to write, it seemed my place to
+ undertake it. And I have done it gladly. For when I was subscribing the
+ word of the Mormon chiefs for the fulfillment of our statehood pledges, I
+ engaged my own honor too, and gave bond myself against the very
+ treacheries that I have here recorded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We promised that the Church had forever renounced the doctrine of polygamy
+ and the practice of plural marriage living, by a "revelation from God"
+ promulgated by the supreme Prophet of the Church and accepted by the vote
+ of the whole congregation assembled in conference. We promised the
+ retirement of the Mormon Prophets from the political direction of their
+ followers&mdash;the abrogation of the claim that the Mormon Church was the
+ "Kingdom of God" re-established upon earth to supersede all civil
+ government&mdash;the abandonment by the Church of any authority to
+ exercise a temporal power in competition with the civil law. We promised
+ to make the teaching and practice of the Church conform to the
+ institutions of a Republic in which all citizens are equal in liberty. We
+ promised that the Church should cease to accumulate property for the
+ support of illegal practices and un-American government. And we made a
+ record in proof of our promises by the anti-polygamy manifesto of 1890 and
+ its public ratification; by the petition for amnesty and the acceptance of
+ amnesty upon conditions; by the provisions of Utah's enabling act and of
+ Utah's state constitution; by the acts of Congress and the judicial
+ decisions restoring escheated Church property; by the proceedings of the
+ Federal courts of Utah in re-opening citizenship to the alien members of
+ the Mormon Church; by the acquiescence of the Gentiles of Utah in the
+ proceedings by which statehood was obtained; and finally, and most
+ indisputably, by the admission of Utah into equal sovereignty in the Union&mdash;since
+ that admission would never have been granted, except upon the explicit
+ understanding that the state was to uphold the laws and institutions of
+ the American republic in accordance with our covenants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all these promises the Church authorities have kept not one. The
+ doctrine and practice of polygamy have been restored by the Church, and
+ plural marriage living is practiced by the ruler of the kingdom and his
+ favorites with all the show and circumstance of an oriental court. There
+ are now being born in his domains thousands of unfortunate children
+ outside the pale of law and convention, for whom there can be entertained
+ no hope that any statute will ever give them a place within the
+ recognition of civilized society. The Prophet of the Church rules with an
+ absolute political power in Utah, with almost as much authority in Idaho
+ and Wyoming, and with only a little less autocracy in parts of Colorado,
+ Montana, Oregon, Washington, California, Arizona and New Mexico. He names
+ the Representatives and Senators in Congress from his own state, and
+ influences decisively the selection of such "deputies of the people" from
+ many of the surrounding states. Through his ambassadors to the government
+ of the United States, sitting in House and Senate, he chooses the Federal
+ officials for Utah and influences the appointment of those for the
+ neighboring states and territories. He commands the making and unmaking of
+ state law. He holds the courts and the prosecuting officers to a strict
+ accountability. He levies tribute upon the people of Utah and helps to
+ loot the citizens of the whole nation by his alliance with the political
+ and financial Plunderbund at Washington. He has enslaved the subjects of
+ his kingdom absolutely, and he looks to it as the destiny of his Church to
+ destroy all the governments of the world and to substitute for them the
+ theocracy&mdash;the "government by God" and administration by oracle&mdash;of
+ his successors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet, even so, I could not have recorded the incidents of this betrayal
+ as mere matters of current history&mdash;and I would never have written
+ them in vindication of myself&mdash;if I had not been certain that there
+ is a remedy for the evil conditions in Utah, and that such a narrative as
+ this will help to hasten the remedy and right the wrong. Except for the
+ aggressive aid given by the national administrations to the leaders of the
+ Mormon Church, the people of Utah and the intermountain states would never
+ have permitted the revival of a priestly tyranny in politics. Except for
+ the protection of courts and the enforced silence of politicians and
+ journalists, polygamy could not have been restored in the Mormon Church.
+ Except for the interference of powerful influences at Washington to coerce
+ the Associated Press and affect the newspapers of the country, the Mormon
+ leaders would never have dared to defy the sensibilities of our
+ civilization. Except for the greed of the predatory "Interests" of the
+ nation, the commercial absolutism of the Mormon hierarchy could never have
+ been established. The present conditions in the Mormon kingdom are due to
+ national influences. The remedy for those conditions is the withdrawal of
+ national sympathy and support.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Break the power at Washington of Joseph F. Smith, ruler of the Kingdom of
+ God, and every seeker after federal patronage in Utah will desert him.
+ Break his power as a political partner of the Republican party now&mdash;and
+ of the Democratic party should it succeed to office&mdash;and every
+ ambitious politician in the West will rebel against his throne. Break his
+ power to control the channels of public communication through interested
+ politicians and commercial agencies, and the sentiment of the civilized
+ world will join with the revolt of the "American movement" in Utah to
+ overthrow his tyrannies. Break his connection with the illegal trusts and
+ combines of the United States, and his financial power will cease to be a
+ terror and a menace to the industry and commerce of the intermountain
+ country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nation owes Utah such a rectification, for the nation has been, in
+ this matter, a chief sinner and a strong encourager of sin. President
+ Theodore Roosevelt, representing the majesty of the Republic, stayed us
+ when we might have won our own liberties in the revolt that was provoked
+ by the election of Senator Apostle Reed Smoot. Misled by political and
+ personal advisers, the President procured delays in the Smoot
+ investigation. He seduced senators from their convictions. He certified
+ the ambassador from the Kingdom of God as a qualified senator of the
+ United States. He gave the hand of fellowship to Joseph, the tyrant of the
+ Kingdom. He rebuked our friends and his own, in their struggle for our
+ freedom, by warning them that they were raising the flag of a religious
+ warfare. He filled the Mormon priests with the belief that they might
+ proceed unrestrainedly to the sacrifice of women and children upon the
+ polygamous altar, to the absolute rule of politics in the intermountain
+ states, and to the commercial exploitation of their community in
+ partnership with the trusts. The one policy that President Taft seems to
+ have accepted unimpaired from his predecessor is this same respect for the
+ power of the Mormon kingdom. In his placid but wholehearted way he has
+ encouraged his co-ordinate ruler, the Mormon Prophet, and extended the
+ Executive license to the support and inevitable increase of these
+ religious tyrannies of the Mormon hierarchs which now the people of Utah,
+ unaided, are wholly unable to combat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the nation owes such a rectification not only to Utah, but also to
+ itself. The commercial and financial Plunderbund that is now preying upon
+ the whole country is sustained at Washington by the agents of the Mormon
+ Church. The Prophet not only delivers his own subjects up to pillage; he
+ helps to deliver the people of the entire United States. His senators are
+ not representatives of a political party; they are the tools of "the
+ Interests" that are his partners. The shameful conditions in Utah are not
+ isolated and peculiar to that state; they are largely the result of
+ national conditions and they have a national effect. The Prophet of Utah
+ is not a local despot only: he is a national enemy; and the nation must
+ deal with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not ask for a resumption of cruelty, for a return to proscription. I
+ ask only that the nation shall rouse itself to a sense of its
+ responsibility. The Mormon Church has shown its ability to conform to the
+ demands of the republic&mdash;even by "revelation from God" if necessary.
+ The leaders of the Church are now defiant in their treasons only because
+ the nation has ceased to reprove and the national administrations have
+ powerfully encouraged. As soon as the Mormon hierarchy discovers that the
+ people of this country, wearied of violated treaties and broken covenants,
+ are about to exclude the political agents of the Prophet from any
+ participation in national affairs, the advisers of his inspiration will
+ quickly persuade him to make a concession to popular wrath. As soon as the
+ "Interests" realize that the burden of shame in Utah is too large to be
+ comfortable on their backs, they will throw it off. The President of the
+ United States will be unable to gain votes by patronizing the crucifiers
+ of women and children. The national administrations will not dare to stand
+ against the efforts of the Gentiles and independent Mormons of Utah to
+ regain their liberty. And Utah, the Islam of the West, will depose its old
+ Sultan and rise free.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this hope&mdash;in this conviction&mdash;I have written, in all
+ candor, what no reasons of personal advantage or self-justification could
+ have induced me to write. I shall be accused of rancor, of religious
+ antagonism, of political ambition, of egotistical pride. But no man who
+ knows the truth will say sincerely that I have lied. Whatever is
+ attributed as my motive, my veracity in this book will not be successfully
+ impeached. In that confidence, I leave all the attacks that guilt and
+ bigotry can make upon me, to the public to whom they will be addressed.
+ The truth, in its own time, will prevail, in spite of cunning. I am
+ willing to await that time&mdash;for myself&mdash;and for the Mormon
+ people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The End
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Under the Prophet in Utah, by
+Frank J. Cannon and Harvey J. O'Higgins
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK UNDER THE PROPHET IN UTAH ***
+
+***** This file should be named 7066-h.htm or 7066-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/7/0/6/7066/
+
+Produced by David Schwan, Monique Cameron, and David Widger
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
diff --git a/7066.txt b/7066.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a6d6512
--- /dev/null
+++ b/7066.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,9195 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Under the Prophet in Utah, by
+Frank J. Cannon and Harvey J. O'Higgins
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Under the Prophet in Utah
+ The National Menace of a Political Priestcraft
+
+Author: Frank J. Cannon and Harvey J. O'Higgins
+
+Release Date: December, 2004 [EBook #7066]
+Posting Date: May 30, 2009
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK UNDER THE PROPHET IN UTAH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Schwan and Monique Cameron
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+UNDER THE PROPHET IN UTAH
+
+
+The National Menace of a Political Priestcraft
+
+
+By Frank J. Cannon
+
+Formerly United States Senator from Utah
+
+and
+
+Harvey J. O'Higgins
+
+Author "The Smoke-Eaters," "Don-a-Dreams," etc.
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+
+
+ Chapter
+
+ Note
+ Introduction
+ Foreword
+ I In the Days of the Raid
+ II On a Mission to Washington
+ III Without a Country
+ IV The Manifesto
+ V On the Road to Freedom
+ VI The Goal--and After
+ VII The First Betrayals
+ VIII The Church and the Interests
+ IX At the Crossways
+ X On the Downward Path
+ XI The Will of the Lord
+ XII The Conspiracy Completed.
+ XIII The Smoot Exposure
+ XIV Treason Triumphant
+ XV The Struggle for Liberty
+ XVI The Price of Protest
+ XVII The New Polygamy
+ XVIII The Prophet of Mammon
+ XIX The Subjects of the Kingdom
+ XX Conclusion
+
+
+
+
+Note
+
+When Harvey J. O'Higgins was in Denver, in the spring of 1910, working
+with Judge Ben B. Lindsey on the manuscript of "The Beast and the
+Jungle," for Everybody's Magazine, he met the Hon. Frank J. Cannon,
+formerly United States Senator from Utah, and heard from him the story
+of the betrayal of Utah by the present leaders of the Mormon Church.
+This story the editor of Everybody's Magazine commissioned Messrs.
+Cannon and O'Higgins to write. They worked on it for a year, verifying
+every detail of it from government reports, controversial pamphlets,
+Mormon books of propaganda, and the newspaper files of current record.
+It ran through nine numbers of the magazine, and not so much as a
+successful contradiction was ever made of one of the innumerable
+incidents or accusations that it contains. It is here published in book
+form at somewhat greater length than the magazine could print it. It
+is a joint work, but the autobiographic "I" has been used throughout,
+because it is Mr. Cannon's personal narrative of his personal
+experience.
+
+
+
+
+Introduction
+
+
+This is the story of what has been called "the great American
+despotism."
+
+It is the story of the establishment of an absolute throne and dynasty
+by one American citizen over a half-million others.
+
+And it is the story of the amazing reign of this one man, Joseph F.
+Smith, the Mormon Prophet, a religious fanatic of bitter mind, who
+claims that he has been divinely ordained to exercise the awful
+authority of God on earth over all the affairs of all mankind, and who
+plays the anointed despot in Utah and the surrounding states as cruelly
+as a Sultan and more securely than any Czar.
+
+To him the Mormon people pay a yearly tribute of more than two million
+dollars in tithes; and he uses that income, to his own ends, without an
+accounting. He is president of the Utah branch of the sugar trust, and
+of the local incorporation's of the salt trust; and he supports the
+exaction's of monopoly by his financial absolutism, while he defends
+them from competition by his religious power of interdict and
+excommunication. He is president of a system of "company stores," from
+which the faithful buy their merchandise; of a wagon and machine company
+from which the Mormon farmers purchase their vehicles and implements; of
+life-insurance and fire-insurance companies, of banking institutions,
+of a railroad, of a knitting company, of newspapers, which the Mormon
+people are required by their Church to patronize, and through which they
+are exploited, commercially and financially, for the sole profit of the
+sovereign of Utah and his religious court.
+
+He is the political Boss of the state, delivering the votes of his
+people by revelation of the Will of God, practically appointing the
+United States Senators from Utah--as he practically appoints the
+marshals, district attorneys, judges, legislators, officers and
+administrators of law throughout his "Kingdom of God on Earth"--and
+ruling the non-Mormons of Utah, as he rules his own people, by virtue
+of his political and financial partnership with the great "business
+interests" that govern and exploit this nation, and his Kingdom, for
+their own gain, and his.
+
+He lives, like the Grand Turk, openly with five wives, against the
+temporal law of the state, against the spiritual law of his Kingdom, and
+in violation of his own solemn covenant to the country--which he gave in
+1890, in order to obtain amnesty for himself from criminal prosecution
+and to help Utah obtain the powers of statehood which he has since
+usurped. He secretly preaches a proscribed doctrine of polygamy as
+necessary to salvation; he publicly denies his own teaching, so that he
+may escape responsibility for the sufferings of the "plural wives" and
+their unfortunate children, who have been betrayed by the authority of
+his dogma. And these women, by the hundreds, seduced into clandestine
+marriage relations with polygamous elders of the Church, unable to claim
+their husbands--even in some cases disowning their children and
+teaching these children to deny their parents--are suffering a pitiful
+self-immolation as martyrs to the religious barbarism of his rule.
+
+Demanding unquestioning obedience in all things, as the "mouthpiece
+of the Lord," and "sole vice-regent of God on Earth," he enforces his
+demands by his religious, political and financial control of the faith,
+the votes and the property of his fellow-citizens. He is at once--as
+the details of this story show--"the modern 'money king,' the absolute
+political Czar, the social despot and the infallible Pope of his
+Kingdom."
+
+Ex-Senator Cannon not only exposes but accounts for and explains the
+conditions that have made the Church-controlled government of Utah less
+free, less of a democracy, a greater tyranny and more of a disgrace to
+the nation than ever the corporation rule of Colorado was in the darkest
+period of the Cripple Creek labor war. He shows the enemies of the
+republic encouraging and profiting by the shame of Utah as they
+supported and made gain of Colorado's past disgrace. He shows the
+piratical "Interests," at Washington, sustaining, and sustained by, the
+misgovernment of Utah, in their campaign of national pillage. He shows
+that the condition of Utah today is not merely a local problem; that it
+affects and concerns the people of the whole country; that it can only
+be cured with their aid.
+
+The outside world has waited many years to hear the truth about the
+Mormons; here it is--told with sympathy, with affection, by a man who
+steadfastly defended and fought for the Mormon people when their present
+leaders were keeping themselves carefully inconspicuous. The Mormon
+system of religious communism has long been known as one of the most
+interesting social experiments of modern civilization; here is an
+intimate study of it, not only in its success but in the failure that
+has come upon it from the selfish ambitions of its leaders. The power of
+the Mormon hierarchy has been the theme of much imaginative fiction; but
+here is a story of church tyranny and misgovernment in the name of God,
+that outrages the credibilities of art. That such a story could come
+out of modern America--that such conditions could be possible in the
+democracy today--is an amazement that staggers belief.
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+Hon. Frank J. Cannon is the son of George Q. Cannon of Utah, who was
+First Councillor of the Mormon Church from 1880 to 1901. After the
+death of Brigham Young, George Q. Cannon's diplomacy saved the Mormon
+communism from destruction by the United States government. It was his
+influence that lifted the curse of polygamy from the Mormon faith. Under
+his leadership Utah obtained the right of statehood; and his financial
+policies were establishing the Mormon people in industrial prosperity
+when he died.
+
+In all these achievements the son shared with his father, and in some of
+them--notably in the obtaining of Utah's statehood--he had even a larger
+part than George Q. Cannon himself. When the Mormon communities, in
+1888, were being crushed by proscription and confiscation and the
+righteous bigotries of Federal officials, Frank J. Cannon went to
+Washington, alone--almost from the doors of a Federal prison--and,
+by the eloquence of his plea for his people, obtained from President
+Cleveland a mercy for the Mormons that all the diplomacies of the
+Church's politicians had been unable to procure. Again, in 1890, when
+the Mormons were threatened with a general disfranchisement by means of
+a test oath, he returned to Washington and saved them, with the aid
+of James G. Blame, on the promise that the doctrine and practice of
+polygamy were to be abandoned by the Mormon Church; and he assisted in
+the promulgation and acceptance of the famous "manifesto" of 1890,
+by which the Mormon Prophet, as the result of a "divine revelation,"
+withdrew the doctrine of polygamy from the practice of the faith.
+
+He organized the Republican party in Utah, and led it in the first
+campaigns that divided the people of the territory on the lines of
+national issues and freed them from the factions of a religious dispute.
+He delivered to Washington the pledges of the Mormon leaders, by which
+the emancipation of their people from hierarchical domination was
+promised and the right of statehood finally obtained. He was elected the
+first United States Senator from Utah, against the unwilling candidacy
+of his own father, when the intrigues of the Mormon priests pitted
+the father against the son and violated the Church's promise of
+non-interference in politics almost as soon as it had been given.
+
+It was his voice, in the Senate, that helped to reawaken the national
+conscience to the crimes of Spanish rule in Cuba, when the "financial
+interests" of this country were holding the government back from any
+interference in Cuban affairs. He was one of the leaders in Washington
+of the first ill-fated "Insurgent Republican" movement against the
+control of the Republican party by these same piratical "interests;" and
+he was the only Republican Senator who stood to oppose them by voting
+against the iniquitous Dingley tariff bill of 1897. He delivered the
+speech of defiance at the Republican national convention of 1896, when
+four "Silver Republican" Senators led their delegations out of that
+convention in revolt. And by all these acts of independence he put
+himself in opposition to the politicians of the Mormon Church, who were
+allying themselves with Hanna and Aldrich, the sugar trust, the railroad
+lobby, and the whole financial and commercial Plunderbund in politics
+that has since come to be called "The System."
+
+He returned to Utah to prevent the sale of a United States Senatorship
+by the Mormon Church; and, though he was himself defeated for
+re-election, he helped to hold the Utah legislature in a deadlock that
+prevented the selection of a successor to his seat. He fought to
+compel the leaders of the Church to fulfill the pledges which they had
+authorized him to give in Washington when statehood was being obtained.
+After his father's death, when these pledges began to be openly
+violated, he directed his attack particularly against Joseph F. Smith,
+the new President of the Church, who was principally responsible for the
+Church's breach of public faith. Through the columns of the Salt Lake
+Tribune he exposed the treasonable return to the practice of polygamy
+which Joseph F. Smith had secretly authorized and encouraged. He opposed
+the election of Apostle Reed Smoot to the United States Senate, as
+a violation of the statehood pledges. He criticized the financial
+absolutism of the Mormon Prophet, which Smith was establishing in
+partnership with "the Plunderbund." He was finally excommunicated and
+ostracized, by his father's successors in power, for championing the
+political and social liberties of the Mormon people whom he had helped
+to save from destruction and whose statehood sovereignty he had so
+largely obtained.
+
+When the partnership of the Church and "the Interests" prevented the
+expulsion of Apostle Smoot from the Senate, Senator Cannon withdrew from
+Utah, convinced that nothing could be done for the Mormons so long as
+the national administration sustained the sovereignty of the Mormon
+kingdom as a co-ordinate power in this Republic. For the last few years
+he has been a newspaper editor in Denver, Colorado--on the Denver Times
+and the Rocky Mountain News--helping the reform movement in Colorado
+against the corporation control of that state, and waiting for the
+opportunity to renew his long fight for the Mormon people.
+
+In the following narrative he returns to that fight. In fulfillment of
+a promise made before he left Utah--and seeing now, in the new
+"insurgency," the hope of freeing Utah from slavery to "the System"--he
+here addresses himself to the task of exposing the treasons and
+tyrannies of the Mormon Prophet and the consequent miseries among his
+people.
+
+In the course of his exposition, he gives a most remarkable picture
+of the Mormon people, patient, meek, and virtuous, "as gentle as the
+Quakers, as staunch as the Jews." He introduces the world for the first
+time to the conclaves of the Mormon ecclesiasts, explains the simplicity
+of some of them, the bitterness of others, the sincerity of almost
+all--illuminating the dark places of Church control with the
+understanding of a sympathetic experience, and bringing out the virtues
+of the Mormon system as impartially as he exposes its faults. He traces
+the degradation of its communism, step by step and incident by incident,
+from its success as a sort of religious socialism administered for the
+common good to its present failure as a hierarchical capitalism governed
+for the benefit of its modern "Prophet of Mammon" at the expense of the
+liberty, the happiness, and even the prosperity, of its victims.
+
+For the first time in the history of the Mormon Church, there has
+arrived a man who has the knowledge and the inclination to explain it.
+
+He does this fearlessly, as a duty, and without any apologies, as a
+public right. "He is not, and never has been an official member of the
+Church, in any sense or form," Joseph F. Smith, as President of the
+Church, testified concerning him, at Washington in 1904; and though this
+statement is one of the inspired Prophet's characteristic perversions of
+the truth, it covers the fact that Senator Cannon has always opposed the
+official tyrannies of the hierarchs. The present Mormon leaders accepted
+his aid in freeing Utah, well aware of his independence. They profited
+by his success with a more or less doubtful gratitude. They betrayed him
+promptly--as they betrayed the nation and their own followers--as soon
+as they found themselves in a position safely to betray. In this book
+he merely continues an independence which he has always maintained, and
+replies to secret and personal treason with a public criticism, to which
+he has never hesitated to resort.
+
+He begins his story with the year 1888, and devotes the first chapters
+to a depiction of the miseries of the Mormon people in the unhappy
+days of persecution. He continues with the private details of the
+confidential negotiations in Washington and the secret conferences in
+Salt Lake City by which the Mormons were saved. He gives the truth about
+the political intrigues that accompanied the grant of Utah's statehood,
+and he relates, pledge by pledge, the covenants then given by the Mormon
+leaders to the nation and since treasonably violated and repudiated
+by them. He explains the progress of this repudiation with an intimate
+"inside" knowledge of facts which the Mormon leaders now deny. And
+he exposes the horror of conditions in Utah today as no other man in
+America could expose them--for his life has been spent in combating the
+influences of which these conditions are the result; and he understands
+the present situation as a doctor understands the last stages of a
+disease which he has been for years vainly endeavoring to check.
+
+But aside from all this--aside from his exposure of the Mormon
+despotism, his study of the degradation of a modern community, or his
+secret history of the Church's dark policies in "sacred places"--he
+relates a story that is full of the most astonishing curiosities of
+human character and of dramatic situations that are almost mediaeval in
+their religious aspects. He goes from interviews with Cleveland or Blame
+to discuss American politics with men who believe themselves in direct
+communication with God--who talk and act like the patriarchs of the Old
+Testament--who accept their own thoughts as the inspiration of the Holy
+Ghost, and deliver their personal decisions, reverently, as the Will
+of the Lord. He shows men and women ready to suffer any martyrdom in
+defense of a doctrine of polygamy that is a continual unhappiness and
+cross upon them. He depicts the social life of the most peculiar sect
+that has ever lived in a Western civilization. He writes--unconsciously,
+and for the first time that it has ever been written--the naive,
+colossal drama of modern Mormonism.
+
+H. J. O'H.
+
+
+
+
+Forward
+
+
+On the fourth day of January, 1896, the territory of Utah was admitted
+to statehood, and the proscribed among its people were freed to the
+liberties of American citizenship, upon the solemn covenant of the
+leaders of the Mormon Church that they and their followers would live,
+thereafter, according to the laws and institutions of the nation of
+which they were allowed to become a part. And that gracious settlement
+of upwards of forty years of conflict was negotiated through responsible
+mediators, was endorsed by the good faith of the non-Mormons of Utah,
+and was sealed by a treaty convention in which the high contracting
+parties were the American Republic and the "Kingdom of God on Earth."
+
+I propose, in this narrative, to show that the leaders of the Mormon
+Church have broken their covenant to the nation; that they have abused
+the confidence of the Gentiles of Utah and betrayed the trust of the
+people under their power, by using that power to prevent the state of
+Utah from becoming what it had engaged to become. I propose to show
+that the people of Utah, upraised to freedom by the magnanimity of the
+nation, are being made to appear traitorous to the generosity that
+saved them; that the Mormons of Utah are being falsely misled into the
+peculiar dangers from which they thought they had forever escaped; that
+the unity, the solidarity, the loyalty of these fervent people is being
+turned as a weapon of offense against the whole country, for the
+greater profit of the leaders and the aggrandizement of their power. I
+undertake, in fact, in this narrative, to expose and to demonstrate what
+I do believe to be one of the most direful conspiracies of treachery in
+the history of the United States.
+
+Not that I have anything in my heart against the Mormon people! Heaven
+forbid! I know them to be great in their virtues, wholesome in their
+relations, capable of an heroic fortitude, living by the tenderest
+sentiments of fraternity, as gentle as the Quakers, as staunch as the
+Jews. I think of them as a man among strangers thinks of the dearness of
+his home. I am bound to them in affection by all the ties of life. The
+smiles of neighborliness, the greetings of friends, all the familiar
+devotion of brothers and sisters, the love of the parents who held me
+in their arms by these I know them as my own people, and by these I
+love them as a good people, as a strong people, as a people worthy to be
+strong and fit to be loved.
+
+But it is even through their virtue and by their very strength that they
+are being betrayed. A human devotion--the like of which has rarely
+lived among the citizens of any modern state--is being directed as
+an instrument of subjugation against others and held as a means of
+oppression upon the Mormons themselves. Noble when they were weak,
+they are being led to ignoble purpose now that they have become strong.
+Praying for justice when they had no power, now that they have gained
+power it is being abused to ends of injustice. Their leaders, reaching
+for the fleshpots for which these simple-hearted devotees have never
+sighed, have allied themselves with all the predaceous "interests" of
+the country and now use the superhuman power of a religious tyranny to
+increase the dividends of a national plunder.
+
+In the long years of misery when the Mormons of Utah were proscribed and
+hunted, because they refused to abandon what was to them, at that, time,
+a divine revelation and a confirmed article of faith, I sat many times
+in the gallery of the Senate in Washington, and heard discussed new
+measures of destruction against these victims of their own fidelity,
+and felt the dome above me impending like a brazen weight of national
+resentment upon all our heads. When, a few years later, I stood before
+the President's desk in the Senate chamber, to take my oath of office
+as the representative of the freed people of Utah in the councils of the
+nation, I raised my eyes to my old seat of terror in the gallery,
+and pledged myself, in that remembrance, never to vote nor speak for
+anything but the largest measure of justice that my soul was big enough
+to comprehend. By such engagement I write now, bound in a double debt
+of obligation to the nation whose magnanimity then saved us and to the
+people whom I humbly helped to save.
+
+Frank J. Cannon.
+
+
+
+UNDER THE PROPHET IN UTAH
+
+
+
+Chapter I. In the Days of the Raid
+
+
+About ten o'clock one night in the spring of 1888, I set out secretly,
+from Salt Lake City, on a nine-mile drive to Bountiful, to meet my
+father, who was concealed "on the underground," among friends; and that
+night drive, with its haste and its apprehension, was so of a piece with
+the times, that I can hardly separate it from them in my memory. We were
+all being carried along in an uncontrollable sweep of tragic events. In
+a sort of blindness, like the night, unable to see the nearest fork of
+the road ahead of us, we were being driven to a future that held we knew
+not what.
+
+I was with my brother Abraham (soon to become an apostle of the Mormon
+Church), who had himself been in prison and was still in danger of
+arrest. And there is something typical of those days in the recollection
+I have of him in the carriage: silent, self-contained, and--when he
+talked--discussing trivialities in the most calm way in the world. The
+whole district was picketed with deputy marshals; we did not know that
+we were not being followed; we had always the sense of evading patrols
+in an enemy's country. But this feeling was so old with us that it had
+become a thing of no regard.
+
+There was something even more typical in the personality of our
+driver--a giant of a man named Charles Wilcken--a veteran of the German
+army who had been decorated with the Iron Cross for bravery on the field
+of battle. He had come to Utah with General Johnston's forces in 1858,
+and had left the military service to attach himself to Brigham Young.
+After Young's death, my father had succeeded to the first place in his
+affections. He was an elder of the Church; he had been an aristocrat
+in his own country; but he forgot his every personal interest in his
+loyalty to his leaders, and he stood at all times ready to defend
+them with his life--as a hundred thousand others did!--for, though the
+Mormons did not resist the processes of law for themselves, except by
+evasion, they were prepared to protect their leaders, if necessary, by
+force of arms.
+
+With Wilcken holding the reins on a pair of fast horses at full speed,
+we whirled past the old adobe wall (which the Mormons had built to
+defend their city from the Indians) and came out into the purple night
+of Utah, with its frosty starlight and its black hills--a desert night,
+a mountain night, a night so vast in its height of space and breadth
+of distance that it seemed natural it should inspire the people that
+breathed it with freedom's ideals of freedom and all the sublimities of
+an eternal faith. And those people--!
+
+A more despairing situation than theirs, at that hour, has never been
+faced by an American community. Practically every Mormon man of any
+distinction was in prison, or had just served his term, or had escaped
+into exile. Hundreds of Mormon women had left their homes and their
+children to flee from the officers of law; many had been behind prison
+bars for refusing to answer the questions put to them in court; more
+were concealed, like outlaws, in the houses of friends. Husbands
+and wives, separated by the necessities of flight, had died apart,
+miserably. Old men were coming out of prison, broken in health. A
+young plural wife whom I knew--a mere girl, of good breeding, of gentle
+life--seeking refuge in the mountains to save her husband from a charge
+of "unlawful cohabitation," had had her infant die in her arms on the
+road; and she had been compelled to bury the child, wrapped in her
+shawl, under a rock, in a grave that she scratched in the soil with a
+stick. In our day! In a civilized state!
+
+By Act of Congress, all the church property in excess of $50,000 had
+been seized by the United States marshal, and the community faced the
+total loss of its common fund. Because of some evasions that had been
+attempted by the Church authorities--and the suspicion of more such--the
+marshal had taken everything that he could in any way assume to belong
+to the Church. Among the Mormons, there was an unconquerable spirit
+of sanctified lawlessness, and, among the non-Mormons, an equally
+indomitable determination to vindicate the law. Both were, for the most
+part, sincere. Both were resolute. And both were standing in fear of a
+fatal conflict, which any act of violence might begin.
+
+Moreover, the Mormons were being slowly but surely deprived of all civil
+rights. All polygamists had been disfranchised by the bill of 1882, and
+all the women of Utah by the bill of 1887. The Governor of the territory
+was appointed by Federal authority, so was the marshal, so were the
+judges, so were the United States Commissioners who had co-ordinate
+jurisdiction with magistrates and justices of the peace, so were
+the Election Commissioners. But the Mormons still controlled the
+legislature, and though the Governor could veto all legislation he could
+initiate none. For this reason it had been frequently proposed that the
+President should appoint a Legislative Council to take the place of
+the elected legislature; and bills were being talked of in Congress
+to effect a complete disfranchisement of the whole body of the Mormon
+people by means of a test oath.
+
+I did not then believe, and I do not now, that the practice of polygamy
+was a thing which the American nation could condone. But I knew that our
+people believed in it as a practice ordained, by a revelation from God,
+for the salvation of the world. It was to them an article of faith as
+sacred as any for which the martyrs of any religion ever died; and it
+seemed that the nation, in its resolve to vindicate the supremacy of
+civil government, was determined to put them to the point of martyrdom.
+
+It was with this prospect before us that we drove, that night, up the
+Salt Lake valley, across a corner of the desert, to the little town of
+Bountiful; and as soon as we arrived among the houses of the settlement,
+a man stepped out into the road, from the shadows, and stopped us.
+Wilcken spoke to him. He recognized us, and let us pass. As we turned
+into the farm where my father was concealed, I saw men lurking here and
+there, on guard, about the grounds. The house was an old-fashioned adobe
+farm-house; the windows were all dark; we entered through the kitchen.
+And I entered, let me say, with the sense that I was about to come
+before one of the most able among men.
+
+To those who knew George Q. Cannon I do not need to justify that
+feeling. He was the man in the hands of whose sagacity the fate of the
+Mormons at that moment lay. He was the First Councillor of the Church,
+and had been so for years. For ten years in Congress, he had fought and
+defeated the proscriptive legislation that had been attempted against
+his people; and Senator Hoar had said of him, "No man in Congress
+ever served a territory more ably." He had been the intimate friend of
+Randall and Blame. As a missionary in England he had impressed Dickens,
+who wrote of him in "An Uncommercial Traveller." The Hon. James Bryce
+had said of him: "He was one of the ablest Americans I ever met."
+
+An Englishman, well-educated, a linguist, an impressive orator, a
+persuasive writer, he had lived a life that was one long incredible
+adventure of romance and almost miraculous achievement. As a youth he
+had been sent by the Mormon leaders to California to wash out gold for
+the struggling community; and he had sent back to Utah all the proceeds
+of his labor, living himself upon the crudest necessaries of life. As
+a young man he had gone as a Mormon missionary to the Hawaiian Islands,
+and finding himself unable to convert the whites he had gone among the
+natives--starving, a ragged wanderer--and by simple force of personality
+he had made himself a power among them; so that in later years Napella,
+the famous native leader, journeyed to Utah to consult with him upon the
+affairs of that distressed state, and Queen Liluokalani, deposed and in
+exile, appealed to him for advice. He had edited and published a Mormon
+newspaper in San Francisco; and he had long successfully directed the
+affairs of the publishing house in Salt Lake City which he owned. He
+was a railroad builder, a banker, a developer of mines, a financier of
+a score of interests. He combined the activities of a statesman, a
+missionary, and a man of business, and seemed equally successful in all.
+
+But none of these things--nor all of them--contained the total of the
+man himself. He was greater than his work. He achieved by the force of
+a personality that was more impressive than its achievements. If he had
+been royalty, he could not have been surrounded with a greater deference
+than he commanded among our people. A feeling of responsibility for
+those dependent on him, such as a king might feel, added to a sense of
+divine guidance that gave him the dignity of inspiration, had made him
+majestical in his simple presence; and even among those who laughed at
+divine inspiration and scorned Mormonism as the *Uitlander scorned the
+faith of the Boer, his sagacity and his diplomacy and his power to read
+and handle men made him as fearfully admired as any Oom Paul in the
+Transvaal.
+
+When I entered the low-ceilinged, lamplit room in which he sat, he rose
+to meet me, and all rose with him, like a court. He embraced me without
+effusion, looking at me silently with his wise blue eyes that always
+seemed to read in my face--and to check up in his valuation of
+me--whatever I had become in my absence from his regard.
+
+He had a countenance that at no time bore any of the marks of the
+passions of men; and it showed, now, no shadow of the tribulations of
+that troubled day. His forehead was unworried. His eyes betrayed none of
+the anxieties with which his mind must have been busied. His expression
+was one of resolute stern contentment with all things--carrying the
+composure of spirit which he wished his people to have. If I had been
+agitated by the urgency of his summons to me, and he had wished to allay
+my anxiety at once, the sight of his face, as he looked at me, would
+have been reassurance enough.
+
+At a characteristic motion of the hand from him, the others left us.
+We sat down in the "horsehair" chairs of a well-to-do farmer's
+parlor--furnished in black walnut, with the usual organ against one
+wall, and the usual marble-topped bureau against the other. I remember
+the "store" carpet, the mortuary hair-wreaths on the walls, the
+walnut-framed lithographs of the Church authorities and of the angel
+Moroni with "the gold plates;" and none of these seem ludicrous to me to
+remember. They express, to me, in the recollection, some of the homely
+and devout simplicity of the people whose community life this man was to
+save.
+
+He talked a few minutes, affectionately, about family matters, and
+then--straightening his shoulders to the burden of more gravity--he
+said: "I have sent for you, my son, to see if you cannot find some way
+to help us in our difficulties. I have made it a matter of prayer, and
+I have been led to urge you to activity. You have never performed a
+Mission for the Church, and I have sometimes wondered if you cared
+anything about your religion. You have never obeyed the celestial
+covenant, and you have kept yourself aloof from the duties of the
+priesthood, but it may have been a providential overruling. I have
+talked with some of the brethren, and we feel that if relief does not
+soon appear, our community will be scattered and the great work crushed.
+The Lord can rescue us, but we must put forth our own efforts. Can you
+see any light?"
+
+I replied that I had already been in Washington twice, on my own
+initiative, conferring with some of his Congressional friends. "I am
+still," I said, "of the opinion I expressed to you and President Taylor
+four years ago. Plural marriage must be abandoned or our friends in
+Washington will not defend us."
+
+Four years before, when I had offered that opinion, President Taylor
+had cried out: "No! Plural marriage is the will of God! It's apostasy to
+question it!" And I paused now with the expectation that my father would
+say something of this sort. But, as I was afterwards to observe, it was
+part of his diplomacy, in conference, to pass the obvious opportunity of
+replying, and to remain silent when he was expected to speak, so that
+he might not be in the position of following the lead of his opponent's
+argument, but rather, by waiting his own time, be able to direct the
+conversation to his own purposes. He listened to me, silently, his eyes
+fixed on my face.
+
+"Senator Vest of Missouri," I went on, "has always been a strong
+opponent of what he considered unconstitutional legislation against us,
+but he tells me he'll no longer oppose proscription if we continue in
+an attitude of defiance. He says you're putting yourselves beyond
+assistance, by organized rebellion against the administration of the
+statutes." And I continued with instances of others among his friends
+who had spoken to the same purpose.
+
+When I had done, he took what I had said with a gesture that at once
+accepted and for the moment dismissed it; and he proceeded to a larger
+consideration of the situation, in words which I cannot pretend to
+recall, but to an effect which I wish to outline--because it not only
+accounts for the preservation of the Mormon people from all their
+dangers, but contains a reason why the world might have wished to see
+them preserved.
+
+The Mormons at this time had never written a line on social
+reform--except as the so-called "revelations" established a new social
+order--but they had practiced whole volumes. Their community was founded
+on the three principles of co-operation, contribution, and arbitration.
+By co-operation of effort they had realized that dream of the
+Socialists, "equality of opportunity"--not equality of individual
+capacity, which the accidents of nature prevent, but an equal
+opportunity for each individual to develop himself to the last reach of
+his power. By contribution by requiring each man to give one-tenth of
+his income to a common fund--they had attained the desired end of modern
+civilization, the abolition of poverty, and had adjusted the straps of
+the community burden to the strength of the individual to bear it. By
+arbitration, they had effected the settlement of every dispute of every
+kind without litigation; for their High Councils decided all sorts
+of personal or neighborhood disputes without expense of money to the
+disputants. The "storehouse of the Lord" had been kept open to fill
+every need of the poor among "God's people," and opportunities for self
+help had been created out of the common fund, so that neither unwilling
+idleness nor privation might mar the growth of the community or the
+progress of the individual.
+
+But Joseph Smith had gone further. Daring to believe himself the earthly
+representative of Omnipotence, whose duty it was to see that all had the
+rights to which he thought them entitled, and assuming that a woman's
+chief right was that of wifehood and maternity, he had instituted the
+practice of plural marriage, as a "Prophet of God," on the authority of
+a direct revelation from the Almighty. It was upon this rock that the
+whole enterprise, the whole experiment in religious communism, now
+threatened to split. Not that polygamy was so large an incident in the
+life of the community--for only a small proportion of the Mormons were
+living in plural marriage. And not that this practice was the cardinal
+sin of Mormonism--for among intelligent men, then as now, the great
+objection to the Church was its assumption of a divine authority to hold
+the "temporal power," to dictate in politics, to command action and
+to acquit of responsibility. But polygamy was the offense against
+civilization which the opponents of Mormonism could always cite in
+order to direct against the Church the concentrated antagonism of the
+governments of the Western world. And my father, in authorizing me to
+proceed to Washington as a sort of ambassador of the Church, evidently
+wished to impress upon me the larger importance of the value of the
+social experiment which the Mormons had, to this time, so successfully
+advanced.
+
+"It would be a cruel waste of human effort," he said, "if, after having
+attained comfort in these valleys--established our schools of art and
+science--developed our country and founded our industries--we should now
+be destroyed as a community, and the value of our experience lost to the
+world. We have a right to survive. We have a duty to survive. It would
+be to the profit of the nation that we should survive."
+
+But in order to survive, it was necessary to obtain some immediate
+mitigation of the enforcement of the laws against us. The manner in
+which they were being enforced was making compromise impossible, and
+the men who administered them stood in the way of getting a favorable
+hearing from the powers of government that alone could authorize a
+compromise. It was necessary to break this circle; and my father went
+over the names of the men in Washington who might help us. I could
+marvel at his understanding of these men and their motives, but we came
+to no plan of action until I spoke of what had been with me a sort of
+forlorn hope that I might appeal to President Cleveland himself.
+
+My father said thoughtfully: "What influence could you, a Republican,
+have with him? It's true that your youth may make an appeal--and the
+fact that you're pleading for your relatives, while not yourself a
+polygamist. But he would immediately ask us to abandon plural marriage,
+and that is established by a revelation from God which we cannot
+disregard. Even if the Prophet directed us, as a revelation from God, to
+abandon polygamy, still the nation would have further cause for quarrel
+because of the Church's temporal rule. No. I can make no promise. I can
+authorize no pledge. It must be for the Prophet of God to say what is
+the will of the Lord. You must see President Woodruff, and after he has
+asked for the will of the Lord I shall be content with his instruction."
+
+Now, I do not wish to say--though I did then believe it--that the First
+Councillor of the Mormon Church was prepared to have the doctrine of
+plural marriage abandoned in order to have the people saved. It is
+impossible to predicate the thoughts of a man so diplomatic, so astute,
+and at the same time so deeply religious and so credulous of all the
+miracles of faith. He did believe in Divine guidance. He was sincere
+in his submission to the "revelations" of the Prophet. But, in the
+complexity of the mind of man, even such a faith may be complicated with
+the strategies of foresight, and the priest who bows devoutly to the
+oracle may yet, even unconsciously, direct the oracle to the utterance
+of his desire. And if my father was--as I suspected--considering a
+recession from plural marriage, he had as justification the basic
+"revelation," given through "Joseph the Prophet," commanding that the
+people should hold themselves in subjection to the government under
+which they lived, "until He shall come Whose right it is to rule."
+
+We talked till midnight, in the quiet glow of the farmer's lamp-light,
+discussing possibilities, considering policies, weighing men; and then
+we parted--he to betake himself to whatever secure place of hiding
+he had found, and I to return to Ogden where I was then editing a
+newspaper. I was only twenty-nine years old, and the responsibility
+of the undertaking that had been entrusted to me weighed on my mind. I
+waited for a summons to confer with President Woodruff, but none came.
+Instead, my brother brought me word from the President that I must be
+"guided by the spirit of the Lord;" and, finally, my father sent me
+orders to consult the Second Councillor, Joseph F. Smith.
+
+Joseph F. Smith! Since the death of the founder of the Mormon Church,
+there have been three men pre-eminent in its history: Brigham Young,
+who led the people across the desert into the Salt Lake Valley and
+established them in prosperity there; George Q. Cannon, who directed
+their policies and secured their national rights; and Joseph F. Smith,
+who today rules over that prosperity and markets that political right,
+like a Sultan. Of all these, Smith is, to the nation now, of most
+importance--and sinisterly so.
+
+No Mormon in those years, I think, had more hate than Smith for the
+United States government; and surely none had better reasons to give
+himself for hate. He had the bitter recollection of the assassination
+of his father and his uncle in the jail of Carthage, Illinois; he could
+remember the journey that he had made with his widowed mother across the
+Mississippi, across Iowa, across the Missouri, and across the unknown
+and desert West, in ox teams, half starved, unarmed, persecuted by
+civilization and at the mercy of savages; he could remember all the
+toils and hardships of pioneer days "in the Valley;" he had seen the
+army of '58 arrive to complete, as he believed, the final destruction
+of our people; he had suffered from all the proscriptive legislation of
+"the raid," been outlawed, been in exile, been in hiding, hunted like a
+thief. He had been taught, and he firmly believed, that the Smiths had
+been divinely appointed to rule, in the name of God, over all mankind.
+He believed that he--ordained a ruler over this world before ever the
+world was--had been persecuted by the hate and wickedness of men. He
+believed it literally; he preached it literally; he still believes and
+still preaches it. I did not then sympathize with this point of view,
+any more than I do now; but I did sympathize with him in the hardships
+that he had already endured and in the trials that he was still
+enduring--in common with the rest of us. The bond of community
+persecution intensified my loyalty. I felt for him almost as I felt for
+my own father. I went to him with the young man's trust in age made wise
+by suffering.
+
+I had been directed to call on him in the President's offices, in Salt
+Lake City, where he was concealed, for the moment, under the name of
+"Mack"--the name that he used "on the underground"--and I went with my
+brother, late at night, to see him there. The President's offices were
+at that time in a little one-story plastered house that had been built
+by Brigham Young between two of his famous residences, the "Beehive
+House" and the "Lion House" (in which some twelve or fourteen of his
+wives had lived). The three houses were within the enclosure of a high
+cobblestone wall built by Brigham Young; and at night the great gate of
+the wall was shut and locked. We hammered discreetly on its panels
+of mountain pine, until a guard answered our knocking, recognized our
+voices and admitted us.
+
+"He's in there," he said, pointing to the darkened windows of the
+offices--toward which he led us.
+
+He unlocked the front door--having evidently locked it when he went to
+the gate--and he explained to a waiting attendant: "These brethren have
+an appointment. They wish to see Brother Mack."
+
+The attendant led us down a dimly-lighted hall, through the public
+offices of the President into a rear room, a sort of retiring room,
+carpeted, furnished with bookcases, chairs, a table. The window blinds
+had all been carefully drawn.
+
+Joseph F. Smith was waiting for us--a tall, lean, long-bearded man of
+a commanding figure standing as if our arrival had stopped him in some
+anxious pacing of the carpet. His overcoat and his hat had been thrown
+on a chair. He greeted us with the air of one who is hurried, and sat
+down tentatively; and as soon as we came to the question of my trip to
+Washington, he broke out:
+
+"These scoundrels here must be removed--if there's any way to do it.
+They're trying to repeat the persecutions of Missouri and Illinois. They
+want to despoil us of our heritage--of our families. I'm sick of being
+hunted like a wild beast. I've done no harm to them or theirs. Why can't
+they leave us alone to live our religion and obey the commandments of
+God and build up Zion?" He had begun to stride up and down the floor
+again, in a sort of driven and angry helplessness. "I thought Cleveland
+would stop this damnable raid and make them leave us in peace--but he's
+as bad as the rest. Can't they see that these carpet baggers are only
+trying to rob us? Make them see that. The hounds! Sometimes it seems to
+me that the Lord is letting these iniquities go on so that the nation
+may perish in its sins all the sooner!"
+
+He sneered at John W. Young who had gone to Washington for the Church.
+(I had met Smith himself there, earlier in the year.) "I thought
+he'd accomplish something," he said, "with his fashionable home and
+his--[**missing text?**] He's using money enough! He's down there,
+taking things easy, while the rest of us are driven from pillar to
+post." He attacked the Federal authorities, Governor West, the "whole
+gang." He cried: "I love my wives and my children--whom the Lord
+gave me. I love them more than my life--more than anything in the
+world--except my religion! And here I am, fleeing from place to place,
+from the wrath of the wicked--and they're left in sorrow and suffering."
+
+His face was pallid with emotion, and his voice came now hard with
+exasperation against his enemies and now husky with a passionate
+affection for his family--a man of fifty, graybearded, quivering in a
+nervous transport of excitement that jerked him up and down the room,
+gesticulating.
+
+When he had worn out his first anger of revolt, I brought the
+conversation round to the question of polygamy, by asking him about a
+provisional constitution for statehood which the non-polygamous
+Mormons had recently adopted. It contained a clause making polygamy a
+misdemeanor. "I would have seen them all damned," he said, "before I
+would have yielded it, but I'm willing to try the experiment, if any
+good can come."
+
+He had, I gathered, no aversion to "deceiving the wicked," but he was
+opposed to leading his people away from their loyalty to the doctrine of
+plural marriage, by conceding anything that might weaken their faith in
+it. And yet this impression may misrepresent him. He was too agitated,
+too exasperated, for any serious reflection on the situation.
+
+My brother had gone--to keep some other engagement--and I stayed late,
+talking as long as Smith seemed to wish to talk. He rose at last and
+"blessed" me, his hands on my head, in a return to some larger trust in
+his religious authority; and I left him--with very doubtful and mixed
+emotions. His natural violence and his lack of discipline had been
+matters of common gossip among our people, and I had heard of them from
+childhood; but I had supposed that tribulations would, by this time,
+have matured him. There was something compelling in his unsoftened
+turbulence, but nothing encouraging for me as a messenger of
+conciliation. I felt that there would be no help come from him in my
+task, and I dropped him from my reckoning.
+
+I had made up my mind to a plan that was almost as desperate as the
+conditions it sought to cure--a plan that was in some ways so absurd
+that I felt like keeping it concealed for fear of ridicule--and I went
+about my preparations for departure in a sort of hopeless hope. As the
+train drew out from Ogden, I looked back at the mountains from my car
+window, and saw again, in the spectacle of their power, the pathos of
+our people--as if it were the nation of my worship that bulked there
+so huge above the people of my love--and I, puny in my little efforts,
+going out to plot an intercession, to appeal for a truce! It was almost
+as if I were the son of a Confederate leader journeying to Washington,
+on the eve of the Civil War, to attempt to stand between North and South
+and hold back their opposing armies, single-handed.
+
+These are the things a man does when he is young.
+
+
+
+Chapter II. On A Mission to Washington
+
+
+
+I went discredited, as an envoy, by an incident of personal conflict
+with the Federal authorities; and I wish to relate that incident before
+I proceed any farther. I must relate it soon, because it came up for
+explanation in one of my first interviews with President Cleveland; and
+I wish to relate it now, because it was so typical of the day and the
+condition from which we had to save ourselves.
+
+In the winter of 1885-6, the United States Marshals had been pursuing my
+father from place to place with such determined persistence that it was
+evident his capture was only a matter of time. We believed that if
+he were arrested and tried before Chief Justice Zane--with District
+Attorney Dickson and Assistant District Attorney Varian prosecuting--he
+would be convicted on so many counts that he would be held in prison
+indefinitely--that he might, in fact, end his days there. There was
+the rumor of a boast, to this effect, made by Federal officers; and we
+misunderstood them and their motives, in those days, sufficiently to
+accept the unjust report as well-founded.
+
+My father, as First Councillor of the Church, had proposed to President
+Taylor that every man who was living in plural marriage should surrender
+himself voluntarily to the court and plead: "I entered into this
+covenant of celestial marriage with a personal conviction that it was an
+order revealed by our Father in Heaven for the salvation of mankind. I
+have kept my covenant in purity. I believed that no constitutional law
+of the country could forbid this practice of a religious faith. As the
+laws of Congress conflict with my sense of submission to the will of the
+Lord, I now offer myself, here, for whatever judgment the courts of my
+country may impose." He believed that such a course would vindicate the
+sincerity of the men who had engaged in polygamy and defied the law
+in an assumption of religious immunity; and he believed that the world
+would pause to reconsider its judgment upon us, if it saw thousands
+of men--the bankers, the farmers, the merchants, and all the religious
+leaders of a civilized community--marching in a mass to perform such an
+act of faith.
+
+But President Taylor was not prepared for a movement that would have
+recommended itself better to the daring genius of Brigham Young. Taylor
+had given himself into the custody of the officers of the law once--in
+Carthage, Illinois--with Joseph Smith and his brother, Hyrum Smith; and
+Taylor had been wounded by the mob that broke into the jail and shot
+the Smiths to death. This, perhaps, had cured him of any faith in the
+protecting power of innocency. He decided against voluntary surrender;
+and now that my father's liberty was so seriously threatened, he ordered
+him to go either to Mexico or to the Sandwich Islands--his old
+mission field--where he would be beyond the reach of the United States
+authorities.
+
+My father believed that if he left Utah, his recession might tend to
+placate the government and soften the severity of the prosecutions of
+the Mormons; and accordingly, on the night of February 12, 1886, he
+boarded a west-bound Central Pacific train at Willard. The Federal
+officers in some way learned of it; he was arrested, on the train, at
+Humboldt Wells, Nevada, and brought back to Utah. Near Promontory he
+fell from the steps of the moving car, at night, in the midst of an
+alkali desert, and hurt himself seriously. He was recaptured and brought
+to Salt Lake City on a stretcher, in a special car, guarded by a squad
+of soldiers from Fort Douglas, with loaded muskets, and a captain with
+a conspicuous sword. He was taken to Judge Zane's chambers and placed
+under bonds of $25,000. Immediately two bench warrants were issued by a
+United States Commissioner, and these were served upon him while he lay
+on a mattress on the floor of Zane's office. Two more bonds of $10,000
+each were given. He was then taken to his home.
+
+Later--(President Taylor still insisting that he must not stand
+trial)--he disappeared again, "on the underground," and his bonds
+were declared forfeited. But in the meantime, while the grand jury was
+hearing testimony against him, one of the beloved women of his family
+was called for examination, and District Attorney Dickson asked her
+some questions that deeply wounded her. She returned home weeping. My
+brothers and I felt that the questions had been needlessly offensive,
+and after an indignant discussion of the matter, I undertook to
+remonstrate personally with Mr. Dickson.
+
+If I had been as wise, then, as I sometimes think I am now, I should
+have realized that a meeting between us was dangerous; that the feeling,
+on our side at least, was too warm for calm remonstrances. And I should
+not have taken with me a younger brother, about sixteen years old, with
+all the hot-headedness of youth. Fortunately we did not go armed.
+
+We sought Dickson in the evening, at the Continental Hotel--the old,
+adobe Continental with its wide porches and its lawn trees--and we found
+him in the lobby. I asked him to step out on the porch, where I might
+speak with him in private. He came without a moment's hesitation. He was
+a big, handsome, black-bearded man in the prime of his strength.
+
+We had scarcely exchanged more than a few sentences formally, when my
+brother drew back and struck him a smashing blow in the face. Dickson
+grappled with me, a little blinded, and I called to the boy to
+run--which he very wisely did. Dickson and I were at once surrounded,
+and I was arrested.
+
+Ordinarily the incident would have been trivial enough, but in the
+alarmed state of the public mind it was magnified into an attempt on the
+part of George Q. Cannon's sons to take the life of the United States
+District Attorney. Indictments were found against my brother and myself,
+and against a cousin who happened to be in another part of the hotel at
+the time of the attack. Some weeks later, when the excitement had rather
+died down, I went to the District Attorney's office and arranged with
+his assistant, Mr. Varian, that the indictments against my brother (who
+had escaped from Utah) and my cousin (who was wholly innocent) should
+be quashed, and that I should plead guilty to a charge of assault and
+battery. On this understanding, I appeared in court before Chief Justice
+Zane.
+
+But Mr. Varian, having consulted with Mr. Dickson, had learned that I
+had not struck the blow--though, as the elder brother, I was morally
+responsible for it--and he suggested to the court that sentence be
+suspended. This, Justice Zane seemed prepared to do, but I objected. I
+was a newspaper writer (as I explained), and I felt that if I criticized
+the court thereafter for what I believed to be a harshness that amounted
+to persecution, I could be silenced by the imposition of the suspended
+sentence; and if I failed to criticize, I should be false to what I
+considered my duty. I did not wish to be put in any such position; and I
+said so.
+
+Justice Zane had a respect for the constitution and the statutes that
+amounted to a creed of infallibility. He was the most superbly rigid
+pontiff of legal justice that I ever knew. A man of unspotted character,
+a Puritan, of a sincerity that was afterwards accepted and admired
+from end to end of Utah, he was determined to vindicate the essential
+supremacy of the civil law over the ecclesiastical domination in
+the territory; and every act of insubordination against that law was
+resented and punished by him, unforgivingly. He promptly sentenced me to
+three months in the County jail and a fine of $150.
+
+My imprisonment was, of course, a farce. I was merely confined, most of
+the time, in a room in the County Court House, where I lived and worked
+as if I were in my home. But the sentence remained on my record as a
+sufficient mark of my recalcitrance; and I knew that it would not aid me
+in my appeal to Washington, where I intended to argue--as the first wise
+concession needed of the Federal authorities--that Chief Justice
+Zane should no longer be retained on the bench in Utah, but should
+be succeeded by a man more gentle. He was the great figure among our
+prosecutors; the others were District Attorney Dickson and the two
+assistants, Mr. Varian and Mr. Riles. The square had only seemed to
+be broken by the recent retirement of Mr. Dickson; the strength of his
+purpose remained still in power, in the person of Judge Zane.
+
+And let me say that whatever my opinion was of these men, at that time,
+I recognize now that they were justified as officers of the law in
+enforcing the law. If it had not been for them, the Mormon Church
+would never have been brought to the point of abating one jot of its
+pretensions. All four men, as their records have since proved, were much
+superior to their positions as territorial officers. Utah's admiration
+for Judge Zane was shown, upon the composition of our differences with
+the nation, by the Mormon vote that placed him on the Supreme
+Court bench. Indeed, it is one of the strange psychologies of this
+reconciliation, that, as soon as peace was made, the strongest men of
+both parties came into the warmest friendship; our fear and hatred
+of our prosecutors changed to respect; and their opposition to our
+indissoluble solidarity changed to regard when they saw us devoting our
+strength to purposes of which they could approve. But now, in the midst
+of our contentions, the aspect of splendor in their legal authority had
+something baleful in it, for us; and we saw our own defiance set with a
+halo of martyrdom and illumined by the radiance of a Church oppressed!
+
+There was more than a glimmer of that radiance in my thoughts as I made
+the railroad journey from Utah to the East. The Union Pacific Railway,
+on which I rode, followed the route that the Mormons had taken in their
+long trek from the Missouri; and I could look from my car window and
+imagine them toiling across those endless plains--in their creaking
+wagons, drawn by their oxen and lean farm cows--choked with dust, burned
+by the sun of the prairies, their faces to the unknown dangers of an
+unknown wilderness, and behind them the cool-roomed houses, the moist
+fields, the tree-shaded streets, all the quiet and comfort of the
+settled life of homekeeping happiness that they had left. My own mother
+had come that road, a little girl of eight; and my mind was full of
+pictures of her, at school in a wagon-box, singing hymns with her elders
+around the camp fires at night, or kneeling with the mourners beside the
+grave of an infant relative buried by the roadside. Our train crossed
+the Loup Fork of the Platte almost within sight of the place where my
+father, a lad of twenty, had led across the river at nightfall, had been
+lost to his party, and had nearly perished, naked to the cold, before
+he struggled back to the camp. I could see their little circle of wagons
+drawn up at sunset against the menace of the Indians who snaked through
+the long grass to kill. I could feel some of their despair, and my heart
+lifted to their heroism. Never had such a migration been made by any
+people with fewer of the concomitants of their civilization. Their arms
+had been taken from them at Nauvoo; they had bartered their goods for
+wagons and cattle to carry them; even the grain that they brought,
+for food, had to be saved for seed. They felt themselves devoted to
+destruction by the people with whose laws and institutions they had come
+in conflict, and they went forth bravely, trusting in the power of the
+God whom they were determined to worship according to their despised
+belief.
+
+Now they had built themselves new homes and meeting-houses in the
+fertile "Valley;" and the civilization that they had left, having
+covered the distance of their exile, was punishing them again for their
+law-breaking fidelity to their faith. Surely they had suffered enough!
+Surely it was evident that suffering only made them strong to resist!
+Surely there must be somebody in power in Washington who could be
+persuaded to see that, where force had always failed, there might be
+some profit in employing gentleness!
+
+This, at least, was the appeal which I had planned to make. And I had
+decided to make it through Mr. Abraham S. Hewitt, then mayor of New
+York City, who had been a friend of my father in Congress. He was not
+in favor with the administration at Washington. He was personally
+unfriendly to President Cleveland. I was a stranger to him. But I had
+seen enough of him to know that he had the heart to hear a plea
+on behalf of the Mormons, and the brain to help me carry that plea
+diplomatically to President Cleveland.
+
+When I arrived in New York I set about finding him without the aid of
+any common friend. I did not try to reach him at his home, being aware
+that he might resent an intrusion of public matters upon his private
+leisure, and fearing to impair my own confidence by beginning with a
+rebuff. I decided to see him in his office hours.
+
+I cannot recall why I did not find him in the municipal buildings, but I
+well remember going to and fro in the streets in search of him, feeling
+at every step the huge city's absorption in its own press and hurry of
+affairs, and seeing the troubles of Utah as distant as a foreign war.
+It was with a very keen sense of discouragement that I took my place, at
+last, in the long line of applicants waiting for a word with the man
+who directed the municipal activities of this tremendous hive of eager
+energy.
+
+He was in the old Stewart building, on Broadway, near Park Place; and
+he had his desk in what was, I think, a temporary office--an empty shop
+used as an office--on the ground floor. There must have been fifty men
+ahead of me, and they were the unemployed, as I remember it, besieging
+him for work. They came to his desk, spoke, and passed with a rapidity
+that was ominous. As I drew nearer, I watched him anxiously, and saw
+the incessant, nervous, querulous activity of eyes, lips, hands, as
+he dismissed each with a word or a scratch of the pen, and looked up
+sharply at the next one.
+
+"Well, young man," he greeted me, "what do you want?"
+
+I replied: "I want a half hour of your time."
+
+"Good God," he said, in a sort of reproachful indignation, "I couldn't
+give it to the President of the United States."
+
+I felt the crowd of applicants pressing behind me. I knew the man's
+prodigious humanity. I knew that if I could only hold them back long
+enough--"Mr. Hewitt," I said, "it's more important even than that. It's
+to save a whole people from suffering--from destruction."
+
+He may have thought me a maniac; or it may be that the desperation of
+the moment sounded in my voice. He frowned intently up at me. "Who are
+you?"
+
+"I'm the son of your old friend in Congress, George Q. Cannon of Utah,"
+I said. "My father's in exile. He and his people are threatened with
+endless proscriptions. I want time to tell you."
+
+His impatience had vanished. His eyes were steadily kind and interested.
+"Can you come to the Board of Health, in an hour? As soon as I open the
+meeting, I'll retire and listen to you."
+
+I asked him for a card, to admit me to the meeting, having been
+stopped that morning at many doors. He gave it, nodded, and flashed his
+attention on the man behind me. I went out with the heady assurance that
+my first move had succeeded; but I went, too, with the restrained pulse
+of realizing that I had yet to join issue with the decisive event and do
+it warily.
+
+I do not remember where I found the Board of Health in session. I recall
+only the dark, official board-room, the members at the table,
+and--as the one small spot of light and interest to me--Mr. Hewitt's
+white-bearded face, as an attendant opened the door to me, and the
+Mayor, looking up alertly, nodded across the room, and waved his hand to
+a chair.
+
+As soon as he had opened the meeting, we withdrew together to a settee
+in some remote corner, and I began to tell him, as quickly as I could,
+the desperateness of the Mormon situation. "Yes," he said, "but why
+can't your people obey the law?"
+
+I explained what I have been trying to explain in this narrative--that
+these people, following a Church which they believed to be guided by
+God, and regarding themselves as objects of a religious persecution,
+could not be brought by means of force to obey a law against conscience.
+I explained that I was not pleading to save their pride but to spare
+them useless suffering; their history showed that no proscription, short
+of extermination outright, could overcome their resistance; but what
+force could not accomplish, a little sensible diplomacy might hope to
+effect. No first step could be made, by them, towards a composition of
+their differences with the law so long as the law was administered
+with a hostility that provoked hostility. But if we could obtain some
+mitigation of the law's severity, the leaders of the Church were willing
+to surrender themselves to the court--such of them as had not already
+died of their privations or served their terms of imprisonment--and a
+sense of gratitude for leniency would prepare the way for a recession
+from their present attitude of unconquerable antagonism.
+
+He listened gravely, knowing the situation from his own experience
+in Congress, and checking off the items of my argument with a nod of
+acceptance that came, often, before I had completed what I had to say.
+He asked: "Do you know President Cleveland?"
+
+I told him that I had seen the President several times but was not known
+to him.
+
+"Well," he said, "I may be able to help you indirectly. I don't care
+for Cleveland, and I wouldn't ask him for a favor if I were sinking.
+But tell me what plan you have in your mind, and I'll see if I can't aid
+you--through friends."
+
+I replied that I hoped to have some man appointed as Chief Justice in
+Utah who should adopt a less rigorous way of adjudicating upon the cases
+of polygamists; but that before he was selected--or at least before he
+knew of his appointment--I wished to talk with him and convert him to
+the idea that he could begin the solution of "the Mormon question"
+by having the leaders of the community come into his court and accept
+sentences that should not be inconsistent with the sovereignty of the
+law but not unmerciful to the subjects of that sovereignty.
+
+"The man you want," Mr. Hewitt said, "is here in New York--Elliot F.
+Sandford. He's a referee of the Supreme Court of this state--a fine man,
+great legal ability, courageous, of undoubted integrity. Come to me,
+tomorrow. I'll introduce you to him."
+
+It was the first time that I had even heard the name of Elliot F.
+Sandford; and I had not the faintest notion of how best to approach him.
+
+I did not find him in Mr. Hewitt's office, on the morrow; but the Mayor
+had communicated with him, and now gave me a letter of introduction to
+him; and I went alone to present it.
+
+He received me in his outer office, with a manner full of kindliness but
+non-committal. He glanced through my letter of introduction, and I tried
+to read him while he did it. He was not on the surface. He was a tall,
+dignified man, his hair turning gray--thoughtful, judicial--evidently
+a man who was not quick to decide. He led me into his private room, and
+sat down with the air of a lawyer who has been asked to take a case and
+who wishes first to hear all the details of the action.
+
+I began by describing the Mormon situation as I saw it in those days:
+that the Mormons were growing more desperately determined in their
+opposition, because they believed their prosecutors were persecuting
+them; that the District Attorney and his assistants were harsh to the
+point of heartlessness, and that Judge Zane (to us, then) acted like
+a religious fanatic in his judicial office; that nearly every Federal
+official in Utah had taken a tone of bigoted opposition to the people;
+and that the law was detested and the government despised because of the
+actions of Federal "carpet-baggers."
+
+I was prejudiced, no doubt, and partisan in my account of the state of
+affairs, but I did not exaggerate the facts as I saw them; I believed
+what I said.
+
+I did not really reach his sympathy until I spoke of the court system
+in Utah--the open venire, the employment of "professional jurors"--the
+legal doctrine of "segregation," under which a man might be separately
+indicted for every day of his living in plural marriage--and the result
+of all this: that the pursuit of defendants and the confiscation of
+property had become less an enforcement of law than a profitable legal
+industry.
+
+After two hours of argument and examination, I ended with an appeal to
+him to accept the opportunity to undertake a merciful assuagement of
+our misery. After so many years of failure on the part of the Federal
+authorities, he might have the distinction of calling into his court the
+Mormon leaders who had been most long and vainly sought by the law;
+and by sentencing them to a supportable punishment, he could begin the
+composition of a conflict that had gone on for half a century.
+
+He replied with reasons that expressed a kindly unwillingness to
+undertake the work. It would mean the sacrifice of his professional
+career in New York. He would be putting himself entirely outside the
+progression of advancement. His friends, here, would never understand
+why he had done it. The affairs of Utah had little interest for them.
+
+I saw that he was not convinced. His wife had been waiting some minutes
+in the outer office; he proposed that he should bring her in; and I
+gathered from his manner, that he expected her to pronounce against his
+accepting my solicitation, and so terminate our interview pleasantly,
+with the aid of the feminine social grace.
+
+Mrs. Sandford, when she entered, certainly looked the very lady to
+do the thing with gentle skill. She was handsome, with an animated
+expression, dark-eyed, dark-haired, charming in her costume, a woman
+of the smiling world, but maturely sincere and unaffected. I took a
+somewhat distracted impression of her greeting, and heard him begin to
+explain my proposal to her, as one hears a "silent partner" formally
+consulted by a man who has already made up his mind. But when I glanced
+at her, seated, her manner had changed. She was listening as if she were
+used to being consulted and knew the responsibilities of decision. She
+had the abstracted eye of impersonal consideration--silent--with now and
+then a slow, meditative glance at me.
+
+Her first question seemed merely femininely curious as to the domestic
+aspects of polygamy. How did the women endure it?
+
+I repeated a conversation I had once had with Frances Willard, who had
+said: "The woman's heart must ache in polygamy." To which I had made the
+obvious reply: "Don't women's hearts ache all over the world? Is there
+any condition of society in which women do not bear more than an equal
+share of the suffering?"
+
+Mrs. Sandford asked me pointedly whether I was living in polygamy?
+
+No, I was not.
+
+Did I believe in it?
+
+I believed that those did who practiced it.
+
+Why didn't I practice it?
+
+Those who practiced it believed that it had been authorized by a divine
+revelation. I had not received such a revelation. I did not expect to.
+
+Our talk warmed into a very intimate discussion of the lives of the
+Mormon people, but I supposed that she was moved only by a curiosity
+to which I was accustomed--a curiosity that was not necessarily
+sympathetic--the curiosity one might have about the domestic life of
+a Mohammedan. I took advantage of her curiosity to lead up to an
+explanation of how the proscription of polygamy was driving young
+Mormons into the practice, instead of frightening them from it. And so
+I arrived at another recountal of the miserable condition of persecution
+and suffering which I had come to ask her husband help us relieve; and
+I made my appeal again, to them both, with something of despair, because
+of my failure with him, and perhaps with greater effect because of my
+despair. She listened thoughtfully, her hands clasped.
+
+It did not seem that I had reached her--until she turned to him, and
+said unexpectedly "It seems to me that this is an opportunity--a larger
+opportunity than any I see here--to do a great deal of good."
+
+He did not appear as surprised as I was. He made some joking reference
+to his income and asked her if she would be willing to live on a salary
+of--How much was the salary of the Chief Justice of Utah?
+
+I thought it was about $3,000 a year.
+
+"Two hundred and fifty dollars a month," he said. "How many bonnets will
+that buy?"
+
+"No," she retorted, "you can't put the blame on my millinery bill. If
+that's been the cause of your hesitation, I'll agree to dress as becomes
+the wife of a poor but upright judge."
+
+In such a happy spirit of good-natured raillery, my petition was
+provisionally entertained, till I could see the President; and it is
+one of the curiosities of experience, as I look back upon it now, that
+a decision so momentous in the history of Utah owed its induction to the
+wisdom of a woman and was confirmed with a domestic pleasantry.
+
+I left them after we had arrived at the tacit understanding that if
+President Cleveland should make the appointment, Mr. Sandford would
+accept it with the end in view that I had proposed. I went to report
+my progress, in a cipher telegram, to Salt Lake City, and I recall the
+peculiarly mixed satisfaction with which I regarded my work, as I
+walked the streets of New York after this interview. In all that city
+of millions, I knew, there were few if any men who were the equal of my
+father in the essentials of manhood; and yet, before he could enjoy the
+liberties of which they were so lightly unconscious, he must endure the
+shame of a prison. I was rejoicing because I was succeeding in getting
+for him a sentence that should not be ruinous! I was pleased because a
+prospective judge had been persuaded to be not too harsh to him!
+
+It did not make me bitter. I realized that the peculiar faith which we
+had accepted was responsible for our peculiar suffering. I saw that we
+were working out our human destiny; and if that destiny was not of God,
+but merely the issue of human impulsion, still our only prospect of
+success would come of our bearing with experience patiently to make us
+strong.
+
+When I went back to Mr. Hewitt, to tell him of my success, I consulted
+with him upon the best way of approaching Mr. Cleveland. And he was not
+encouraging. In his opinion of the President, he had, as I could see,
+the impatient resentment which a quick-minded, nervous, small-bodied
+man has for the big, slow one whose mental operations are stubbornly
+deliberate and leisurely. And he was obviously irritated by the
+President's continual assumption that he was better than his party.
+"He's honest," he said, "by right of original discovery of what honesty
+is. No one can question his honesty. But as soon as he discovers a
+better thing than he knew previously, he announces it as if it were
+the discovery of a new planet. It may have been a commonplace for a
+generation. That doesn't signify. He announces it with such ponderosity
+that the world believes it's as prodigious as his sentences!"
+
+As for my own mission: I would have to be persistent, patient,
+and--lucky. "You'll have to be lucky, if you intend to persuade him to
+acquire any information. He's been so successful in instructing mankind
+that it's hard to get him to see he doesn't know all he ought to know
+about a public question. But he's honest and he's courageous. If you can
+convince him that your view is right, he'll carry but the conviction
+in spite of everything. In fact he'll be all the better pleased if it
+requires fearlessness and defiance of general sentimentality to carry it
+out."
+
+He gave me a letter to Mr. William C. Whitney, then Secretary of the
+Navy, explaining my purpose in coming to Washington, and asking him to
+obtain for me an interview with President Cleveland without using Mr.
+Hewitt's name. Then he shook hands with me, and wished me success. "I
+have the faith," he said, "that is without hope."
+
+That expressed my own feeling. The faith that was without hope!
+
+
+
+Chapter III. Without A Country
+
+
+
+So I came to Washington. So I entered the capital of the government that
+commanded my allegiance and inspired my fear. I wonder whether another
+American ever saw that city with such eyes of envy, of aspiration, of
+wistful pride, of daunted admiration. Here were all the consecrations
+of a nation's memories, and they thrilled me, even while they pierced me
+with the sense that I was not, and might well despair of ever being,
+a citizen of their glory. Here were the monuments of patriotism
+in Statuary Hall, erected to the men whose histories had been the
+inspiration of my boyhood; and I remember how I stood before them,
+conscious that I was now almost an outlaw from their communion of
+splendor. I remember how I saw, with an indescribable conflict
+of feelings, the ranked graves of the soldiers in the cemetery at
+Arlington, and recollected that this very ground had been taken from
+General Lee, that heroic opponent of Federal authority--and read the
+tablet, "How sleep the brave who sink to rest by all their country's
+wishes bless'd,"--and bowed in spirit to the nation's benediction upon
+the men who had upheld its power. I was awed by a prodigious sense
+of the majesty of that power. I saw with fear its immovability to the
+struggles of our handful of people. And at night, walking under the
+trees of Lafayette Park, with all the odors of the southern Spring
+among the leaves, I looked at the lighted front of the White House and
+realized that behind the curtains of those quiet windows sat the
+ruler who held the almost absolute right of life and death over our
+community--as if it were the palace of a Czar that I must soon enter,
+with a petition for clemency, which he might refuse to entertain!
+
+When I had been in Washington, four years before, as secretary to
+Delegate John T. Caine of Utah, I had felt a younger assurance that
+our resistance would slowly wear out the Federal authority and carry us
+through to statehood. Four years of disaster had starved out that hope.
+The proposition had been established that Congress had supreme control
+over the territories; and there was no virtue either in our religious
+assumption of warrant to speak for God, or in our plea of inherent
+constitutional right to manage our own affairs. Thirty years earlier, my
+father had been elected Senator from the proposed state of Utah, and he
+had been rejected. In thirty years so little progress had been made! The
+way that was yet to travel seemed very long and very dark.
+
+Out of this mood of despondence I had to lift myself by an act of will.
+There, Washington itself helped me against itself. I made a pilgrimage
+of courage to its commemorations of courage, and drew an inspiration
+of hope from its monuments to the achievements of its past. And
+particularly I went to the house in which my father had lived when he
+had had his part in the statesman life of the capital, and animated my
+resolution with the thought that I must succeed in order that he might
+be restored in public honor.
+
+I narrate all this personal incident of emotion in the hope that it may
+help to explain a success that might otherwise seem inexplicable.
+The Mormon Church had, for years, employed every art of intrigue and
+diplomacy to protect itself in Washington. I wish to make plain that
+it was not by any superior cunning of negotiation that my mission
+succeeded. I undertook the task almost without instruction; I performed
+it without falsehood; I had nothing in my mind but an honest loyalty
+for my own people, a desire to be a citizen of my native country, and a
+filial devotion to the one man in the world, whom I most admired.
+
+When I delivered my letter of introduction from Mr. Hewitt to Mr.
+William C. Whitney, Secretary of the Navy, I found him very busy with
+his work in his department--carrying out the plans that established the
+modern American navy and entitled him to be called the "father" of it.
+He withdrew from the men who were discussing designs and figures at a
+table in his room, and sat with me before a window that looked out upon
+the White House and its grounds; and he listened to me, interestedly,
+genially, but with a thought still (as I could see) for the affairs that
+my arrival had interrupted. He struck me as a man who was used to having
+many weighty matters together on his mind, without finding his attention
+crowded by them all, and without being impatient in his consideration of
+any.
+
+I developed with him an idea which I had been considering: that the
+President might not only help the Mormons by taking up their case, but
+might gain political prestige for the coming campaign for re-election,
+by adjusting the dissentions in Utah. He heard me with a twinkle. He
+thought an interview might be arranged. He made an appointment to see
+me in the afternoon and to have with him Colonel Daniel S. Lamont, the
+President's secretary, who was then Mr. Cleveland's political "trainer."
+
+My meeting with Colonel Lamont, in the afternoon, began jocularly.
+"This," Mr. Whitney introduced me, "is the young man who has a plan to
+use that mooted--and booted--Mormon question to re-elect the President."
+
+"Hardly that, Mr. Secretary," I said. "I have a plan to help my father
+and his colleagues to regain their citizenship. If President Cleveland's
+re-election is essential to it, I suppose I must submit. You know I'm a
+Republican."
+
+They laughed. We sat down. And I found at once that Colonel Lamont
+understood the situation in Utah, thoroughly. He had often discussed
+it, he said, with the Church's agents in Washington. I went over the
+situation with him, as I had gone over it with Mr. Sandford, in careful
+detail. He seemed surprised at my assurance that my father and the other
+proscribed leaders of the Church would submit themselves to the courts
+if they could do so on the conditions that I proposed; I convinced
+him of the possibility by referring him to Mr. Richards, the Church's
+attorney in Washington, for a confirmation of it. I pointed out that if
+these leaders surrendered, President Cleveland could be made the direct
+beneficiary, politically, of their composition with the law.
+
+Colonel Lamont was a small, alert man with a conciseness of speech
+and manner that is associated in my memory with the bristle of his red
+mustache cut short and hard across a decisive mouth. He radiated nervous
+vitality; and I understood, as I studied him, how President Cleveland,
+with his infinite patience for [** missing text?**] survived so well in
+the multitudinous duties of his office--having as his secretary a man
+born with the ability to cut away the non-essentials, and to pass on to
+Mr. Cleveland only the affairs worthy of his careful deliberation.
+
+I was doubtful whether I should tell Colonel Lamont and Mr. Whitney of
+my conversation with Mr. Sandford. I decided that their considerateness
+entitled them to my full confidence, and I told them all--begging them,
+if I was indiscreet or undiplomatic, to charge the offense to my lack of
+experience rather than to debit it against my cause.
+
+They passed it off with banter. It was understood that the President
+should not be told--and that I should not tell him--of my talk with
+Mr. Sandford. Colonel Lamont undertook to arrange an audience with Mr.
+Cleveland for me. "You had better wait," he said, "until I can approach
+him with the suggestion that there's a young man here, from Utah, whom
+he ought to see."
+
+I knew, then, that I was at least well started on the open road to
+success. I knew that if Colonel Lamont said he would help me, there
+would be no difficulties in my way except those that were large in the
+person of the President himself.
+
+Two days later I received the expected word from Colonel Lamont, and I
+went to the White House as a man might go to face his own trial. I
+met the secretary in one of the eastern upstairs rooms of the official
+apartments; and after the usual crowd had passed out, he led me into the
+President's office--which then overlooked the Washington monument, the
+Potomac and the Virginia shore. Mr. Cleveland was working at his desk.
+Colonel Lamont introduced me by name, and added, "the young man from
+Utah, of whom I spoke."
+
+The President did not look up. He was signing some papers, bending
+heavily over his work. It took him a moment or two to finish; then he
+dropped his pen, pushed aside the papers, turned awkwardly in his swivel
+chair and held out his hand to me. It was a cool, firm hand, and its
+grasp surprised me, as much as the expression of his eyes--the steady
+eyes of complete self-control, composure, intentness.
+
+I had come with a prejudice against him; I was a partisan of Mr. Blame,
+whom he had defeated for the Presidency; I believed Mr. Blame to be the
+abler man. But there was something in Mr. Cleveland's hand and eyes
+to warn me that however slow-moving and even dull he might appear, the
+energy of a firm will compelled and controlled him. It stiffened me into
+instant attention.
+
+He made some remark to Colonel Lamont to indicate that our conversation
+was to occupy about half an hour. He asked me to be seated in a chair at
+the right-hand side of his desk. He said almost challengingly: "You're
+the young man they want I should talk to about the Utah question."
+
+The tone was not exactly unkind, but it was not inviting. I said, "Yes,
+sir."
+
+He looked at me, as a judge might eye the suspect of circumstantial
+evidence. "You're the son of one of the Mormon leaders."
+
+I admitted it.
+
+And then he began.
+
+He began with an account of what he had done to compose the differences
+in Utah. He explained and justified the appointments he had made
+there--appointments that had been recommended by Southern senators and
+representatives who, because they were Southerners, were opposed to the
+undue extension and arbitrary use of Federal power. He had made Caleb
+W. West of Kentucky governor of Utah on the recommendation of Senator
+Blackburn of Kentucky, my father's friend. He had made Frank H. Dyer,
+originally of Mississippi, United States Marshal. He had appointed a
+District Attorney in whom he had every confidence. He had a right to
+believe that these men, recommended by the statesmen of the South, would
+execute and adjudicate the laws in Utah according to the most lenient
+Southern construction of Federal rights. He dwelt upon Governor West's
+charitable intentions towards the Mormon leaders, went over West's
+efforts at pacification in accurate detail, and told of West's chagrin
+at his failure--with an irritation that showed how disappointed he
+himself was with the continued recurrence of the Mormon troubles.
+
+I had to tell him that the situation had not improved, and his face
+flushed with an anger that he made no attempt to conceal. He declared
+that the fault must lie in our obstinate determination to hold ourselves
+superior to the law. He could not sympathize with our sufferings, he
+said, since they were self-inflicted. He admitted that he had once been
+opposed to the Edmunds-Tucker bill, but felt now that it was justified
+by the immovability of the Mormons. All palliatives had failed. The
+patience of Congress had been exhausted. There was no recourse, except
+to make statutes cutting enough to destroy the illegal practices and
+unlawful leadership in the Mormon community.
+
+"Mr. President," I pleaded, "I've lived in Utah all my life. I know
+these people from both points of view. You know of the situation only
+from Federal office holders who consider it solely with regard to their
+official responsibility to you and to the country. Why not learn what
+the Mormons think?"
+
+He replied that it was not within the province of the President--his
+power or his duty--to consider the mental attitude of men who were
+opposing the enforcement of the law.
+
+It was an inexcusable offense against the general welfare that one
+community should be rising continually against the Federal authority
+and occupying the time and attention of Congress with a determined
+recalcitrance.
+
+For an hour, he continued, with vigor and dignity, to describe the
+situation as he saw it; and he chilled me to the heart with his
+determination to concede nothing more to a community that had refused to
+be placated by what he had already conceded. I listened without trying,
+without even wishing, to interrupt him; for I had been warned by Mr.
+Whitney and Colonel Lamont that it would be wise to let him deliver
+himself of his opinion before attempting to influence him to a milder
+one; and I could not contradict anything that he said, for he made no
+misstatements of fact.
+
+Colonel Lamont had entered once, and had withdrawn again when he saw
+that Mr. Cleveland was still talking. At the end of about an hour, the
+President rose. "Mr. Cannon," he said, "I don't see what more I can do
+than has already been done. Tell your people to obey the law, as all
+other citizens are required to obey it, and they'll find that their
+fellow-citizens of this country will do full justice to their heroism
+and their other good qualities. If the law seems harsh, tell them that
+there's an easy way to avoid its cruelty by simply getting out from
+under its condemnation."
+
+His manner indicated that the conference was at an end. He reached out
+his hand as if to drop the subject then and forever, as far as I was
+concerned. "Mr. President," I asked, with the composure of desperation,
+"do you really want to settle the Mormon question?"
+
+He looked at me with the first gleam of humor that had shown in his
+eyes--and it was a humor of peculiar richness and unction. "Young man,"
+he asked, "what have I been saying to you all this time? What have I
+been working for, ever since I first took up the consideration of this
+subject at the beginning of my term?"
+
+"Mr. President," I replied, "if you were traveling in the West, and came
+to an unbridged stream with your wagon train, and saw tracks leading
+down into the water where you thought there was a ford, you would
+naturally expect to cross there, assuming that others had done so before
+you. But suppose that some man on the bank should say to you: 'I've
+watched wagon trains go in here for more than twenty years, and I've
+never yet seen one come out on the other side. Look over at that
+opposite bank. You see there are no wagon tracks there. Now, down the
+river a piece, is a place where I think there's a ford. I've never got
+anybody to try it yet, but certainly it's as good a chance as this one!'
+Mr. President, what would you do? Would you attempt a crossing where
+there had been twenty years of failure, or would you try the other
+place--on the chance that it might take you over?"
+
+He had been regarding me with slowly fading amusement that gave way to
+an expression of grave attention.
+
+"I've been watching this situation for several years," I went on, "and
+it seems to me that there's the possibility of a just, a humane, and
+a final settlement of it, by getting the Mormon leaders to come
+voluntarily into court--and it can be done!--with the assurance that the
+object of the administration is to correct the community evil--not to
+exterminate the Mormon Church or to persecute its 'prophets,' but to
+secure obedience to the law and respect for the law, and to lead Utah
+into a worthy statehood."
+
+I paused. He thought a moment. Then he said: "I can't talk any longer,
+now. Make another appointment with Lamont. I want to hear what you have
+to say." And he dismissed me.
+
+Colonel Lamont told me to come back on the following afternoon; and I
+went away with the dubious relief of feeling that if I had not yet won
+my case I had, at least, succeeded in having judgment reserved. I went
+to work to arrange my arguments for the morrow, to make them as concise
+as possible and to divide them into brief chapters in case I should have
+as little opportunity for extended explanations as the President had
+been giving me. I saw that the whole matter was gloomy and oppressive
+to him--that his responsibility was as dark on his mind as our
+sufferings--and I took the hint of his amused interest, in order to work
+out ways of brightening the subject with anecdote and illustration.
+
+I saw Colonel Lamont on the morrow, and he beamed a congratulation on
+me. "You've aroused his curiosity," he said. "You've interested him."
+
+He had made an appointment some days ahead; and when I entered the
+President's office to keep that appointment, I found Mr. Cleveland at
+his desk, as if he had not moved in the interval, laboriously reading
+and signing papers as before. It gave me an impression of immovability,
+of patient and methodical relentlessness that was disheartening.
+
+But as soon as he turned to me, I found him another man. He was
+interested, receptive, almost genial. He gave me an opportunity to cover
+the whole ground of my case, and I went over it step by step. He showed
+no emotion when I recited some of the incidents of pathetic suffering
+among our people; and at first he seemed doubtful whether he should
+be amused by the humorous episodes that I narrated. But I did not wish
+merely to amuse him; I was trying to convey to his mind (without saying
+so) that so long as a people could suffer and laugh too, they could
+never be overcome by the mere reduplication of their sufferings. He
+looked squarely at me, with a most determined front, when I told him
+that the Mormons would be ground to powder before they would yield.
+"They can't yield," I warned him. "They're like the passengers on a
+train going with a mad speed down a dangerous grade. For any of them to
+attempt to jump is simple destruction. They can only pray to Providence
+to help them. But if that train were to be brought to a stop at some
+station where they could alight with anything like self-respect, there
+would be many of them glad to get off--even though the train had not
+arrived at its 'revealed' destination."
+
+I do not remember--and if I did, it would be tedious to relate--the
+exact sequence and progression of argument in this interview and the
+dozen others that succeeded it. Mr. Cleveland became more and more
+interested in the Mormon people, their family life, their religion, and
+their politics. He was as painstaking in acquiring information about
+them as he was in performing all the other duties of his office. I might
+have been discouraged by the number and apparent ineffectiveness of
+my interviews with him, had not Colonel Lamont kept me informed of the
+growth of the President's good feeling and of his genuinely paternal
+interest in the people of Utah. It became more than a personal desire
+with Mr. Cleveland to benefit politically by a settlement of the Mormon
+troubles, if indeed he had ever had such a desire. His humanity was
+enlisted, his conscience appealed to.
+
+He asked me, once, if I knew anything of Mr. Sandford, and I replied
+that I knew him and believed in him. He told me, at last, that he
+was going to appoint Mr. Sandford Chief Justice of Utah, and added
+significantly, "I suppose he will get in touch with the situation." I
+accepted this remark as a permission to confer with Mr. Sandford, and
+I journeyed to New York to see him and to renew the understanding I had
+with him.
+
+He was appointed Chief justice on the 9th day of July, 1888, and--as the
+Mormon people expressed it--"the backbone of the raid was broken."
+On August 26, 1888, he arrived in Salt Lake City. On September 17, my
+father came before him in court and pleaded guilty to two indictments
+charging him with "unlawful cohabitation." He was fined $450 and
+sentenced to the penitentiary for one hundred and seventy-five days. His
+example was followed by a number of prominent Mormons, including Francis
+Marion Lyman, who is today the President of the Quorum of the twelve
+Apostles and next in rank for the Presidency. It is true that not many
+cases, relatively speaking, came to Justice Sandford; but the leader
+whom the authorities were most eager to subjugate under Federal power
+was judged and sentenced; and the effect, both on the country and on the
+Mormon people, was all that we had expected.
+
+There are memories in a man's life that have a peculiar value. One
+such, to me, is the picture I have in mind of my father undergoing
+his penitentiary sentence, wearing his prison clothes with an
+unconsciousness that makes me still feel a pride in the power of the
+human soul to rise superior to the deformities of circumstance. Charles
+Wilcken (whom I have described driving us to Bountiful) was visiting
+him one day in the prison office, when a guard entered with his hat on.
+Wilcken snatched it from his head. "Never enter his presence," he said,
+"without taking it off." And the guard never did again.... I salute the
+memory. I come to it with my head bare and my back stiffened. I see in
+that calm face the possibilities of the human spirit. He was a man!
+
+He spent his time, there, as he would have spent it elsewhere, writing,
+conferring with the agents of his authority, planning for his people. I
+saw he was aware that he would emerge from his imprisonment a free man,
+personally, but still enslaved by the conditions of the community; and
+I knew that he would use his freedom to free the others. I knew that he
+had accepted his sentence with this end in view. In plain words, I knew
+now--though he never said so--that he was looking toward the necessary
+recession from the doctrine of polygamy, and that he may have counted
+on the spectacle of his imprisonment to help prepare his people for a
+general submission to the law.
+
+With the entry of these leaders into prison, the Mormons felt for them
+a warmer admiration, a deeper reverence; but it was mingled with a
+gratitude to the nation for the leniency of the court and an awed sense,
+too, of the power of the civil law. President Woodruff secretly and
+tentatively withdrew his necessary permission, as head of the Church,
+to the solemnization of any more plural marriages; and he ordered the
+demolition of the Endowment House in which such marriages had been
+chiefly celebrated. Many of the non-Mormons, who had despaired of any
+solution of the troubles in Utah, now began to hope. The country had
+been impoverished; the Mormons had been deprived of much of their
+substance and financial vigor; and reasons of business prudence among
+the Gentiles weighed against a continuance of proscription. Some of
+them distrusted the motives of their own leaders more than they did the
+Mormon people. Some were weary of the quarrel. For humane reasons, for
+business reasons, for the sake of young Utah, it was argued that the
+persecution should end.
+
+But in the years 1888 and 1889, thousands of newcomers arrived in Utah
+with a strong antagonism to the religion and the political authority
+of the Mormon Church; and, with the growth of Gentile population, there
+came a natural determination on their part to obtain control of the
+local governments of cities and counties. In opposing this movement,
+the power of the Church was again solidified. By 1889, the Gentiles
+had taken the city governments of Ogden and Salt Lake City, had elected
+members of the legislature in Salt Lake County, and had carried the
+passage of a Public School Bill, against the timid and secret opposition
+of the Church. President Cleveland had been defeated and succeeded by
+President Harrison; and Chief Justice Sandford had been removed and
+Chief Justice Zane reinstated. (He did not adjudicate with his previous
+rigor, however, because of the success of Justice Sandford's policy of
+leniency.) The Church made no move publicly to repudiate polygamy, and
+its silent attitude of defiance, in this regard, gave a battle cry to
+all its enemies.
+
+The crisis was precipitated by a movement that had begun in the
+territory of Idaho, where the Mormons had been disfranchised by means
+of a test oath--(a provision still remaining in the Idaho state
+constitution, but now nullified by the political power of the Mormon
+leaders in Salt Lake City.) A bill, known as the Cullom-Struble bill,
+was introduced at Washington, to do in Utah what had been done in Idaho.
+
+The Church was then directed by President Woodruff and his two
+Councillor's, George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith. But President
+Woodruff was as helpless in the political world as a nun. He was a
+gentle, earnest old man, patiently ingenuous and simple-minded, with a
+faith in the guidance of Heaven that was only greater than my father's
+because it was unmixed with any earthly sagacity. He had the mind, and
+the appearance, of a country preacher, and even when he was "on the
+underground" he used to do his daily "stint" of farm labor, secretly,
+either at night or in the very early morning. He was a successful
+farmer (born in Connecticut), of a Yankee shrewdness and industry. He
+recognized that in order to get a crop of wheat, it was necessary to do
+something more than trust in the Lord. But in administering the affairs
+of the Church, he seemed to have no such sophistication.
+
+I can see him yet, at the meetings of the Presidency, opening his mild
+blue eyes in surprised horror at a report of some new danger threatening
+us. "My conscience! My conscience!" he would cry. "Is that so, brother!"
+When he was assured that it was so, he would say, resignedly: "The Lord
+will look after us!" And then, after a silence, turning to his First
+Councillor, he would ask: "What do you think we ought to do, Brother
+George Q.?"
+
+The Second Councillor, Joseph F. Smith, sat at these meetings, in a
+saturnine reserve and silence, either nursing his concealed thought or
+having none. When a decision had been suggested, he was appealed to and
+added his assent. It always seemed to me that he was sulkily sleepy;
+but this impression may have come from the contrast of the First
+Councillor's mental alertness and the bright cheerfulness of the
+President--who never, to my knowledge, showed the slightest bitterness
+against anybody. President Woodruff believed that all the persecutions
+of the Mormons were due to the Devil's envy of the Lord's power as it
+showed itself in the establishment of the Mormon Church: and he assumed
+that the Gentiles did the work they were tempted to do against us,
+because the Holy Spirit had not yet ousted the evil from their souls.
+He had no fear of the ultimate triumph of the Church, because he had no
+fear of the ultimate triumph of God. Whenever he could escape for a day
+from the worldly duties of his office, he went fishing!
+
+When the progress of the Cullom-Struble bill began to make its
+threatening advance, my father went secretly to Washington; and a short
+time afterwards, word came to me in Ogden, through the Presidency, that
+he wished me to arrange my business affairs for a long absence from
+Utah, and follow him to the capital.
+
+I found him there, in the office of Delegate John T. Caine of Utah--the
+cluttered office of a busy man--and he explained, composedly, why he had
+sent for me. The Cullom-Struble bill had been favorably considered by
+the Senate Committee on Territories, and the disfranchisement of all the
+Mormons of Utah seemed imminent. Every argument, political or legal,
+had been used against the measure, in vain. Since I, a non-polygamous
+Mormon, would be disfranchised if the bill became law, he thought I
+might be a good advocate against it. He said: "I have not appeared in
+the matter. None of our friends know that I am here. If it were known,
+it might only increase our difficulties. Say nothing of it. We have been
+at a disadvantage with a Republican administration because most of our
+prominent men are Democrats. You were so effective with the Democrats,
+let us see what you can do now with your own party friends."
+
+After taking his advice, I went to see Senator Henry M. Teller, of
+Colorado, who was a friend of my father and of the Mormon people. He
+admitted that the situation was desperate. He proposed that I should
+speak before the committees of both houses; they might listen to me as
+a Republican who had no official rank in the Church and no political
+authority. He offered to introduce me to any of the Senators and members
+of Congress, but advised that I should rather go unintroduced, without
+influence, and make my appeal as a private citizen.
+
+This sounded to me depressingly like the call to lead a "forlorn hope."
+I reported to my father again, and was not altogether reassured by a
+tranquility which he seemed to be able to maintain in the face of any
+desperation. Other agencies of the Church had reached the end of their
+resources. There was no help in sight. And I went, at last, to throw our
+case upon the mercy of the Secretary of State, Mr. James G. Blaine,
+my father's friend, the friend of our people, the statesman whom I--in
+common with millions of other Americans--regarded with a reverence that
+approached idolatry.
+
+He received me in the long room of the Secretary's apartments, standing,
+a striking figure in black, against the rich and heavy background of the
+official furnishing. He was very pale--unhealthily so--perhaps with the
+progress of the disease of which he was to die in so short a time. In
+contrast with his usual brilliancy of mind, he seemed to me, at first,
+depressed and quiet--with a kindly serenity of manner, at once gracious,
+and intimate, but masterful.
+
+He was instantly and deeply interested in what I had to say; he seated
+himself--on a sofa, near the embrasure of a window--motioned me to bring
+a chair to his side, and heard me in an erect attitude of thoughtful
+attention, re-assuring me now and then by reaching out to lay a hand
+on my knee when he saw from my hesitancy that I feared I might be too
+candid in my confidences; and the look of his eye and the touch of
+his hand were as if he said: "I'm your friend. Anything you may say is
+perfectly safe with me."
+
+I told him of my father's imprisonment.
+
+"It is dreadful," he said. "You shock me to the soul." He spoke of their
+friendship, of his admiration for my father's work in Congress, of his
+personal regard for the man himself. "Of course," he said, "I have no
+sympathy with your peculiar marriage system, and I'll never be able to
+understand how a man like your father could enter it." I reminded him
+that my father believed it a system revealed and ordained by God. "I
+know," he replied. "That is what they say. And I suppose they have
+scriptural warrant for polygamy. But it is a thing that would be 'more
+honored in the breach than the observance.' Tell me, is the rule of the
+Church absolute over you younger men?"
+
+I told him that it was, in respect of political control; that the
+situation in Utah had placed us where there was no possibility of
+compromise; that we must be of, with, and for our own people, or against
+them.
+
+He asked me whether I intended to address myself to the President. I
+replied, "Not yet"--since the bills were still pending in Congress
+and were not being urged from the White House. He seemed pleased. As I
+afterwards learned, there was a strong rivalry between the President and
+the Secretary of State; and though I knew that Mr. Blaine's interest
+in Utah was almost wholly one of responsible statesmanship, warmed by
+a personal kindliness for our people, still it remains a fact that he
+expected the support of the Utah Republican delegation in the convention
+of 1892, and that it had been promised him by national Republicans who
+were now laboring at Washington in our behalf.
+
+He encouraged me with an almost intimate emotion of pity and
+friendliness; and I felt the largeness of the man as much in the warmth
+of his humanity as in the breadth of his view. He approved, of my
+appearing before the committees. "Go and tell them your own story,
+yourself," he said. "Make your plea independently of all the formal and
+official arguments that have been used. These have been exhausted.
+They have been ineffective. We must use the personal and"--he added it
+significantly--"the political appeal. If you find difficulty, let me
+know. I shall not be idle in your behalf. If you meet any insuperable
+obstacle, I'll see if I can't help you run over it."
+
+He rose to terminate the interview. He looked at me with a smile. "'The
+Lord giveth,'" he said, "'and the Lord taketh away.' Wouldn't it be
+possible for your people to find some way--without disobedience to
+the commands of God--to bring yourselves into harmony with the law and
+institutions of this country? Believe me, it's not possible for any
+people as weak in numbers as yours, to set themselves up as superior
+to the majesty of a nation like this. We may succeed, this time, in
+preventing your disfranchisement; but nothing permanent can be done
+until you 'get into line.'"
+
+He accompanied me toward the door, giving me friendly messages of regard
+to deliver to my father. He put his arm around my shoulders, at last,
+and said: "You may tell your father for me--as I tell you, young
+man--you shall not be harmed, this time."
+
+I parted from him with an almost speechless relief and gratitude, and
+hurried to my father with the news of hope. I had not told Mr. Blaine
+that he was in Washington; for, without feeling that he saw himself
+marked by his imprisonment, I was aware that his friends might pity him
+for it, if they did not condemn him; and neither sentiment (I knew) was
+he of the personal temper to encounter.
+
+I told him every detail of my talk with the Secretary of State; he heard
+me, silently, meditatively. When I concluded with Mr. Blaine's assurance
+that we should not be harmed "this time," but must "get into line,"
+he looked up at me with a significant steadiness of eye. "President
+Woodruff," he said, "has been praying.... He thinks he sees some
+light.... You are authorized to say that something will be done."
+
+I asked no question. His gaze conveyed assurance, but forbade inquiry. I
+had to understand, without being told, that the Church was preparing to
+concede a recession from the doctrine of polygamy.
+
+With this assurance to aid me, I began the work of reaching the
+committees--warm work in a Washington summer, but hopeful in the new
+prospect of a lasting success. The bill for disfranchisement had been
+reported out by the committees and was on the calendar for passage. It
+was necessary to have the question reopened before the committees
+for argument. In soliciting the opportunity of a re-hearing, from
+the Chairman of the Senate Committee, Senator Orville H. Platt, of
+Connecticut, I made my argument in a private conversation with him in
+his rooms in the Arlington Hotel. When I had done, he chewed his cigar
+a moment, looked at me quizzically, and asked: "Do you know Abbot R.
+Heywood, of Ogden?"--and, as he asked it, he drew a letter from his
+pocket.
+
+I replied that I knew Mr. Heywood well.
+
+"I have a letter here from him, on this same subject," he said. "Tell
+me. What kind of man is he? And to what extent do you think I ought to
+depend on his views?"
+
+I was never more tempted in my life to tell a lie. I knew Mr. Heywood
+to be a man of truth and high ideals; but he had been Chairman of the
+Anti-Church party in Weber County, and he had been one of the Gentile
+leaders for several years. I knew the intensity of his feelings against
+the rule of the Church in politics and the Mormon attitude of defiance
+to the law. I was sure that he would be strong in his demand for the
+passage of the disfranchisement act.
+
+I hesitated a moment. Senator Platt was watching me. Then, with a
+resolve that our cause must stand or fall by the truth, I said: "Mr.
+Heywood is a man of integrity. I think he would write exactly what he
+believed to be true. But you know, Senator, intense feeling in politics
+sometimes sways a man's judgment. In view of Mr. Heywood's long
+controversy, I hope that if he has taken a view adverse to mine, his
+antagonism may be mitigated in your mind by your own knowledge of human
+feelings."
+
+Senator Platt held out the letter to me. "You've won your motion for a
+re-hearing," he said. "I think we may be able to get the truth out of
+you. We have not always had it in this Utah question. Read that."
+
+I read it. It was Mr. Heywood's solemn protest, as an American
+citizen--on behalf of himself and the other members of the
+perfunctory Republican Committee of his County--against the wholesale
+disfranchisement of the Mormons, on the ground that it would only delay
+a progressive American settlement of the territory!
+
+Then I went to the other members of the Senate committee privately,
+and told them that the Mormon Church was about to make a concession
+concerning its doctrine of polygamy. I told them so in confidence,
+pointing out the necessity of secrecy, since to make public the news
+of such a recession, in advance, would be to prevent the Church from
+authorizing it. Not one of the Senators betrayed the trust. I was less
+confidential with the members of the House Committee, because I realized
+that nothing could be done against us unless the bill passed the Senate.
+But I gave the news of the Church's reconsideration of its attitude
+to Colonel G. W. R. Dorsey, the member from Nebraska, and he used his
+influence to get me a rehearing from the House Committee. Finally I
+appeared once before each committee, and argued our case at length. The
+bills did not become law. Aided by Mr. Blaine's powerful friendship, we
+were saved "for the time."
+
+It remained to make our safety permanent, and I took train for Utah, on
+my father's counsel, to see President Woodruff. I had given my word that
+"something was to be done." I went to plead that it should be done--and
+done speedily.
+
+
+
+Chapter IV. The Manifesto
+
+
+
+I found him in the office of the Presidency--in the little one-story
+house that I have described in my early interview with Joseph F
+Smith--and he received me with the gracious affectionateness of a
+fatherly old man. He asked me, almost at once: "What are they going to
+do to us in Washington?"
+
+"President Woodruff," I replied, "we've been spared--temporarily. The
+axe will not fall for a few moments. It depends on ourselves, now,
+whether it shall fall or not."
+
+"Come into the other room," he said, under his voice, in an eager
+confidentiality, like a child with a secret. And pattering along ahead
+of me, quick on his feet, he signed to me to follow him--with little
+nods and beckonings--into the retiring room where I had talked with
+Smith.
+
+There he sat down, on the edge of his chair, his elbows supported on the
+broad arms, leaning forward, partly bowed with his age, and partly with
+an intentness of curiosity that glittered innocently in his guileless
+eyes. A dear old character! Sweet in his sentiments, sweet in his
+language, sweet in the expression of his face.
+
+I told him, in detail, of the events in Washington, and of the men who
+had helped us in them--particularly of Mr. Blaine, who was apparently
+a new character in his experience, and of Senator Orville H. Platt, in
+whom he discovered an almost neighborly interest when I told him that
+the Senator came from Connecticut, his native state. I warned him that
+the passage of the measure of disfranchisement had been no more than
+retarded. I pointed out the fatal consequences for the community if the
+bill should ever become law--the fatal consequences for the leaders of
+the Church if the non-polygamous Mormons, deprived of their votes, were
+ever left unable to control the administration of local government. I
+repeated the promise that my father had authorized me to carry to the
+Senators and Congressmen who still had the Cullom-Struble bill in hand;
+and I emphasized the fact that because of this promise the bill had been
+held back--with the certainty that it would never become law if we met
+the nation half way.
+
+I was watching him to see if he sensed the point I wished him to get.
+When I touched the matter of my father's promise, his face became softly
+reverent; and when I had done--looking at me without a trace of cunning
+in his benignity, with an expression, rather, of exalted innocence
+and faith,--he said: "Brother Frank, I have been making it a matter of
+prayer. I have wrestled mightily with the Lord. And I think I see some
+light."
+
+In order that there might be no misunderstanding, I put into plainer
+words what I meant and what the prominent men in Washington had been led
+to look for: since, by a "revelation" of the Church we were ordered
+to give obedience to the government of the nation, and since we had
+exhausted all our legal defenses, it was hoped that the Prophet, Seer,
+and Revelator of the Church would find a way, under the guidance of God,
+to bring our people into conformity with the law.
+
+As he accepted this calmly, I added: "To be very plain with you,
+President Woodruff, our friends expect, and the country will insist,
+that the Church shall yield the practice of plural marriage."
+
+His eyelids quivered a little, but he showed no other sign of flinching.
+I saw that the counsels of his advisers and the comfort that he had
+derived from his prayers had prepared him for an immolation that was
+more serious to him than any personal sacrifice that he could make. He
+said sadly: "I had hoped we wouldn't have to meet this trouble this way.
+You know what it means to our people. I had hoped that the Lord might
+open the minds of the people of this nation to the truth, so that
+they might be converted to the everlasting covenant. Our prophets have
+suffered like those of old, and I thought that the persecutions of Zion
+were enough--that they would bring some other reward than this." If I
+had been the bearer of a new edict of proscription, I think he could not
+have been more profoundly oppressed by the sense of his responsibility.
+"Did your father tell you," he asked, "that I had been seeking the mind
+of the Lord?"
+
+I replied that he had.
+
+He reflected silently. "I shall talk with you again about it," he said,
+at last. "I hope the Lord will make the way plain for his people."
+
+I do not wish to idealize the polygamous relation--but in monogamy a man
+is not persecuted for his marriage, and sometimes he does not appreciate
+the tie. In polygamy, the men and women alike had been compelled to
+suffer on its account by the grim trials of the life itself and by the
+hatred of all civilization arrayed against it. They had grown to value
+their marriage system by what it had cost them. They had been driven by
+the contempt of the world to argue for its sanctity, to live up to their
+declarations, and to raise it in their esteem to what it professed to
+be, the celestial order that prevailed in the Heavens! I knew, as well
+as President Woodruff did, the wrench it would give their hearts to have
+to abandon, at last, what they had so long suffered for.
+
+In the days of anxious waiting that followed, I saw Joseph F. Smith and
+sounded him for any hint of progress. He said: "I'm sure I don't know
+what can be done. Your father talked with President Woodruff and me
+before he went to Washington, but I'm sure I can't see how we can
+do anything." When my father returned home, I went to him many
+times--without however learning anything definite. I knew that the men
+in Washington would demand some tangible evidence of our good faith
+before Congress should reconvene; and I repeatedly urged the necessity
+of action.
+
+At length he sent me word, in Ogden, that President Woodruff wished to
+confer with me, and he suggested that it would be permissible for me to
+speak my opinions freely. I hastened to Salt Lake City, to the offices
+of the Presidency. President Woodruff took me into a private room and
+read me his "manifesto."
+
+It was the same that was issued on September 24, 1890, and ratified by a
+General Conference of the Mormon Church on October 6, following. It
+was the proclamation that freed the oppressed of Utah; for, by the
+subsequent "covenant"--and its acceptance by the Federal government--the
+nation did but confirm their freedom and accord them their
+constitutional rights. Here, shaking in the hand of age, was a sheet of
+paper by which the future of a half million people was to be directed;
+and that simple old man was to speak through it, to them, with the awful
+authority of the voice of God.
+
+He told me he had written it himself, and it certainly appeared to me
+to be in his handwriting. Its authorship has since been variously
+attributed. Some of the present-day polygamists say that it was I who
+wrote it. Chas. W. Penrose and George Reynolds have claimed that they
+edited it. I presume that as Mormons, "in good standing," believing in
+the inspiration of the Prophet, they appreciate the blasphemy of their
+claim!
+
+I found it disappointingly mild. It denied that the Church had been
+solemnizing any plural marriages of late, and advised the faithful
+"to refrain from contracting any marriages forbidden by the law of the
+land." In spite of this mildness, President Woodruff asked me whether
+I thought the Mormons would support the revelation--whether they would
+accept it.
+
+I replied that there could be no proper anxiety on that point. The
+majority of the Mormon people were ready for such a message. It might
+be very much stronger without arousing resistance. With the exception
+of the comparatively few men and women who were living in polygamy, the
+community would accept it gratefully. Rather, I made bold to say,
+my anxiety was as to whether the nation would believe that such an
+equivocally-worded document meant an absolute recession from the
+practice of plural marriage.
+
+It was plain that his advisers had not pointed out this danger to him.
+He asked me how I thought the nation would take it.
+
+I asked him, point blank, whether it meant an absolute recession from
+polygamy.
+
+He answered that it did.
+
+Then (I said) with such an interpretation of it, and a formal and public
+acceptance of it by the Church authorities, I did not doubt that we
+could convince the nation of its sufficiency. I reminded him--as I am
+now glad to remember--that the word of the Mormon people had passed
+current in the political and commercial circles of the country; that
+I had several times been the bearer of messages from them to prominent
+men; that we had been taken on faith and the faith had been
+always vindicated. Finally, in order that I might carry away no
+misapprehension, nor convey any, I asked him if it was the intention of
+the manifesto to inhibit any further plural marriage living.
+
+He answered, quaintly: "Why, of course, Frank--because that's what
+they've been persecuting us for." There was not even a shrewdness in his
+voice when he added: "You know they didn't get our brethren in prison
+for polygamy, but for living with their plural wives."
+
+Perhaps no other man in Utah could have said such a thing without
+sarcasm. The fact was that the United States authorities had been
+practically unable to prove a case of polygamy (which was a felony)
+because the marriage records were concealed by the Church; but they
+could prove plural marriage living (a mere misdemeanor) by repute and
+circumstance. It was part of President Woodruff's unworldliness that he
+did not see the satire of his words; and I was the more convinced of his
+good faith.
+
+I was convinced also, by several of his remarks, that he had consulted
+with the Church's attorney, Mr. Franklin S. Richards; and while I
+trusted the President's unworldly faith, I trusted more the sagacity
+of his more worldly advisers. I began to see, with a sure hope, the
+beginning of the end of all our miseries.
+
+Some days later I was summoned to attend a meeting of the Church
+authorities in the President's offices; and I knew that the test had
+come. The Church was governed by the Presidency, composed of President
+Woodruff and his two Councillor's, with the Quorum of the Twelve
+Apostles, the Presidents of Seventies, and the presiding Bishopric,
+composed of three members. These quorums aggregate twenty-five men; and
+to their number may be added the Chief Patriarch of the Church, making a
+body of twenty-six general authorities--the Hierarchy. It was from these
+latter men, polygamists and (I feared) parochial in their ignorance of
+the nation and their trust in the protection of their followers--it was
+from them (and the other practicers of polygamy) that any opposition
+would come to the acceptance and publication of the manifesto.
+
+They met--something less than a score of them, with two or three of
+their most trusted advisers--in one of the general offices of the
+Presidency, sitting in leather chairs along its walls, with a sort of
+central skylight illuminating subduedly the anxiety of their silent
+faces. President Woodruff and his two Councillor's entered to them;
+and this insignificant-looking apartment--of such tremendous community
+significance, because of the memories of its past--seemed to take on the
+gravity of another momentous crisis in the destiny of its people. The
+portraits in oils of the dead presidents, martyrs, and prophets of
+the Church, looked down on us from the facade of a little gallery, and
+caught my eyes almost hypnotically with the imperturbability of their
+gaze. No word from them! In the midst of the broken utterance of
+emotion--when the tears were wet on faces to whose manliness tears
+were the very sweat of martyrdom--I saw those immovable countenances as
+placid as the features of the dead.
+
+President Woodruff stood under them, so old and other-worldly, that he
+seemed already of their circle rather than ours; and he spoke in a
+voice of feeling for us, but with a simple and courageous finality that
+sounded the very note of fate. He had called the brethren together (he
+said) to submit a decision to their consideration, and he desired from
+them an expression of their willingness to accept and abide by it. He
+knew what a trial it would be to the "whole household of Israel." "We
+have sought," he said, "to live our religion--to harm no one--to perform
+our mission in this world for the salvation of the living and the dead.
+We have obeyed the principle of celestial marriage because it came to us
+from God. We have suffered under the rage of the wicked; we were driven
+from our homes into the desert; our prophets have been slain, our holy
+ones persecuted--and it did seem to me that we were entitled to
+the constitutional protection of the courts in the practice of our
+religion."
+
+But the courts had decided "against us." The great men of the nation
+were determined to show us no mercy. Legislation was impending that
+would put us "in the power of the wicked." Brother George Q. Cannon,
+Brother John T. Caine, and the other brethren who had been in
+Washington, had found that the situation of the Church was critical.
+Brother Franklin S. Richards had advised him that our last legal defense
+had fallen. "In broken and contrite spirit" he had sought the will of
+the Lord, and the Holy Spirit had revealed to him that it was necessary
+for the Church to relinquish the practice of that principle for which
+the brethren had been willing to lay down their lives.
+
+A sort of ghastly stillness accepted what he said as a confirmation
+of the worst fears of the men who had evidently come there with some
+knowledge of what they were to hear. I glanced at the faces of those
+opposite me. A set and staring pallor held them motionless. I was
+conscious of a chill of heart that seemed communicated to me from them.
+My brother Abraham was sitting beside me; I knew his deep affection for
+his family; I knew with what a clutch of misery this edict of separation
+was crushing his hope; I felt myself growing as pale and tense as he.
+
+The silence was broken by President Woodruff asking one of the brethren
+to read the manifesto. When it was concluded, he said: "The matter is
+now before you. I want you to speak as the Spirit moves you."
+
+There was no reply, except a sort of general gasp of low-voiced
+interjections and a little buzz of whisperings that sounded like emotion
+taking its breath. He called on my father to speak. The First Councillor
+rose to make a statesmanlike review of the crisis; and I understood that
+with his usual diplomacy he was putting aside from him the authority of
+leadership until he could see whether an opposition was to develop that
+should make it necessary for him to front it.
+
+That opposition made a rustle of stirring in the pause that followed. I
+saw it in the changed expressions of some of the faces. Several of the
+men--including my brother Abraham, and Joseph F. Smith--asked whether
+the manifesto meant a cessation of plural marriages: whether no more
+such marriages were to be allowed.
+
+President Woodruff answered that it did; that the Lord had taken back
+the principle from the children of men and that we would have no power
+to restore it.
+
+Then they asked whether it meant a cessation of plural marriage
+living--whether they would be required to separate from the wives whom
+they had taken in the holy covenant.
+
+He answered, firmly, that it did; that the brethren in Washington found
+it imperative; that it was the will of the Lord; that we must submit.
+
+I saw their faces flush and then slowly pale again--and the storm broke.
+One after another they rose and protested, hoarsely, in the voice of
+tears, that they were willing to suffer "persecution unto death" rather
+than to violate the covenants which they had made "in holy places"
+with the women who had trusted them. One after another they offered
+themselves for any sacrifice but this betrayal of the women and children
+to whom they owed an everlasting faith. And a manlier lot of men never
+spoke in a manlier way. Not a petty word was uttered. Their thought was
+not for themselves. Their grief was not selfish. Their protests had a
+dignity in pathos that shook me in spite of myself.
+
+When they had done, my father rose again with a face that seemed to bear
+the marks of their grief while it repressed his own. He dwelt anew on
+the long efforts of our attorney and our friends in Congress to resist
+what we believed to be unconstitutional measures to repress our practice
+of a religious faith. But we were citizens of a nation. We were
+required to obey its laws. And when we found, by the highest judicial
+interpretation of statute and constitution, that we were without grounds
+for our plea of religious immunity, we had but the alternative either of
+defying the power of the whole nation or of submitting ourselves to its
+authority. For his part he was willing to do the will of the Lord. And
+since the Prophet of God, after a long season of prayer, had submitted
+this revelation as the will of the Lord, he was ready for the sacrifice.
+The leaders of the Church had no right to think of themselves. They
+must remember how loyally the people had sacrificed their substance and
+risked their safety to guard their brethren who were living in plural
+marriage. Those brethren must not be ungrateful now. They must not now
+refuse to make their sacrifice, in answer to the sacrifices that had
+been made for them so often. The people had long protected them. Now
+they must protect the people.
+
+Under the commanding persuasion of his voice I saw the determination of
+their resistance begin to falter and relax. President Woodruff called on
+me to speak, and I felt that it was my duty to represent the needs,
+the hopes, and the opportunities of the hundreds of thousands of the
+undistinguished mass who would make no decision for themselves, but
+whose fate was trembling on the event. I rose to speak for them, with
+my hand on my brother's shoulder, knowing that my every word would be a
+stab at his heart, and hoping that my grasp might be a touch of sympathy
+to him--knowing that I must urge these elders to sacrifice themselves
+and their families for a redemption of which I was to share the
+benefits--but sustained by the remembrance of the solemn pledge which
+I had been authorized to give in Washington to honorable men who had
+trusted in our honor--and strengthened by the thought of all those dear,
+to me, whose sufferings would be multiplied, with no hope of relief, if
+the few would not now yield to save the many.
+
+I described the situation as I had seen it in Washington and as I knew
+it in Utah from a more intimate personal experience than these leaders
+could have of the sufferings of the people. I told them how cheerfully
+and bravely the non-polygamists had borne the brunt of protecting them
+in the practice of their faith, and yet how patient a hope had been
+always with us that the final demand might not be made upon us for the
+sacrifice of a citizenship which we valued more because it shielded them
+than because it armed us.
+
+Encouraged by the face of President Woodruff, I reminded them that the
+sorrow and the parting, at which they rebelled, could only be for a
+little breath of time, according to their faith; that by the celestial
+covenant, into which they had entered, they were assured that they
+should have their wives and children with them throughout the endless
+ages of eternity. The people had given much to them. Surely they could
+yield the domestic happinesses of the little remaining day of life in
+this world, in order to save and prosper those who were not to enjoy
+their supreme exaltation of beatitude in the world to come.
+
+I had felt my brother strong under my hand. He rose, when I concluded.
+And with a manful brevity he replied that he submitted because it was
+the will of the Lord, and because he had no right to interpose his
+selfish love and yearnings between the people of God and their worldly
+opportunity. The others followed. Not one referred to the equivocal
+language of the manifesto or questioned it. They accepted it--as it was
+then and afterwards interpreted--as a revelation from God made through
+the Prophet of the Church; and they subscribed to it as a solemn
+covenant, before God, with the people of the nation.
+
+Joseph F. Smith was one of the last to speak. With a face like wax, his
+hands outstretched, in an intensity of passion that seemed as if it must
+sweep the assembly, he declared that he had covenanted, at the altar
+of God's house, in the presence of his Father, to cherish the wives and
+children whom the Lord had given him. They were more to him than life.
+They were dearer to him than happiness. He would rather choose to stand,
+with them, alone--persecuted--proscribed--outlawed--to wait until God in
+His anger should break the nation with His avenging stroke. But--
+
+He dropped his arms. He seemed to shrink in his commanding stature like
+a man stricken with a paralysis of despair. The tears came to the pained
+constriction of his eyelids.
+
+"I have never disobeyed a revelation from God," he said. "I cannot--I
+dare not--now."
+
+He announced--with his head up, though his body swayed--that he would
+accept and abide by the revelation. When he sank in his chair and
+covered his face with his hands, there was a gasp of sympathy and
+relief, as if we had been hearing the pain of a man in agony. And my
+heart gave a great leap; for, in these supreme moments of feeling,
+things come to us that are larger than our knowledge, more splendid than
+our hopes; and I saw, as if in the blinding glisten of the tears in my
+eyes, a radiant vision of our future, an unselfish people freed from
+a burden of persecution, a nation's forgiveness born, a grateful state
+created. I saw it--and I looked at Smith and loved him for it. I knew
+then, as I know now, that he and those others were at this moment
+sincere. I knew that they had relinquished what was more dear to them
+than the breath of life. I knew the appalling significance, to them,
+of the promise which they were making to the nation. And in all the
+degraded after-years, when so many of them were guilty of breach of
+covenant and base violation of trust, I tried never to forget that in
+the hour of their greatest trial, they had sacrificed themselves for
+their people; they had suffered for the happiness of others; they had
+said, sincerely: "Not my will, O Lord, but Thine, be done!"
+
+
+
+Chapter V. On the Road to Freedom
+
+
+
+In any discussion of the public affairs that make the subject matter of
+this narrative, a line of discrimination must be drawn at the year 1890.
+In that year the Church began a progressive course of submission to
+the civil law, and the nation received each act of surrender with
+forgiveness. The previous defiance's of the Mormon people ceased to give
+grounds for a complaint against them. The old harshnesses of the Federal
+government were canceled by the new generosity of a placated nation. And
+neither party to the present strife in Utah should go back, beyond the
+period of this composition, to dig up, from the past, its buried wrongs.
+
+In relating, here, some of the events of 1888 and 1889, I have tried
+neither to justify the Mormons nor to defend their prosecutors. I have
+wished merely to make clear the situation in Utah, and to introduce to
+you, in advance, some of the leaders of the distracted community, so
+that you might understand the conditions from which the Mormons escaped
+by giving their covenant to the nation and be able to judge of the
+obligations and responsibilities of the men who gave it.
+
+I, have described the promulgation and acceptance of "the manifesto"
+with such circumstance and detail, because of what has since occurred in
+Utah. Let me add that some two weeks later the General Conference of
+the Church endorsed the President's pronouncement as "authoritative and
+binding." And let me point out that it was the first and only law of the
+Mormon Church ever so sustained by triple sanctities--"revealed" as
+a command from God, accepted by the prophets in solemn fraternity
+assembled, and ratified by the vote of the entire "congregation of
+Israel" before it was declared to be binding upon men.
+
+At first, because of the somewhat indefinite promise of the message
+itself, many of the non-Mormons of Utah remained suspicious and in
+doubt of it. But it was recognized by Judge Zane, in court--on the
+day following the close of the Conference--as an official declaration,
+"honest and sincere." The newspapers throughout the whole country so
+received it. The Church authorities sent assurances to Washington that
+convinced the statesmen, there, of the completeness and finality of the
+submission. And the good faith of the covenant was at last admitted by
+the non-Mormons of Utah and endorsed by their trust. I do not know
+of any change in human affairs dependent on human will--more speedy,
+effective and comprehensive than this recession. Within the space of a
+few days a revolution was completed that had been sought by the power
+of our nation and of the civilized world, for a generation, with stripes
+and imprisonment, death, confiscation and the ostracism of the country's
+public contempt. It had been obtained, I knew, chiefly by the sagacity
+of the First Councillor using the pressure of circumstances to enforce
+the persuasions of diplomacy. I felt that a miracle of change had been
+brought to pass. He had placed us on the road to freedom; and I trusted
+his guidance to lead us to our goal.
+
+That goal, to me personally, was the honor of American citizenship--an
+ambition that had been an obsession with me from my earliest youth. I
+had never heard a man on a railroad train talk of how he was going to
+vote in a national election, without feeling a pang of shamed envy;
+for my lack of citizenship seemed a mark of inferiority. The patriotic
+reading of my boyhood had made the American republic, to me, the noblest
+administration of freemen in the history of government and the exercise
+of its franchise literally the highest dignity of human privilege. I
+would have been as proud--I was as proud when the day came--to vote for
+the President of the United States as he could have been to take his
+oath of office. I do not believe that any poor serf, escaped from the
+tyranny of Russia, ever saw the American shore with a more grateful eye
+than I looked to the prospect of being admitted, with the citizens of
+Utah, into the enfranchisement of the Republic.
+
+But it was evident that the Church's recession from polygamy would not
+be enough to free us, so long as its control of politics remained. Its
+other practices had flourished and been sheltered under its political
+power; and now that the Church had ceased to be a lawbreaker, our
+friends in Washington were properly expecting that it would cease to
+interfere with its members in the exercise of their citizenship. For
+this reason, when I was notified that I had been selected as a member of
+the advisory committee of the People's Party (the Church party), I went
+at once to my father and told him that I would not take the place;
+that I intended to work, personally, and through my newspaper, for the
+political division of Utah on the lines of the national parties. He held
+that until Gentile solidarity was dissolved, it would be dangerous to
+divide the allegiance of the Mormons; but he did not stand against
+my protest; he contented himself--diplomatically--with sending me to
+consult with President Woodruff and Joseph F. Smith.
+
+To them, I argued that the political emancipation of the Mormon people
+from ecclesiastical direction was as necessary as the recession from
+polygamy had been. We must be set free to perform our duty to the
+country solely as citizens of the country, before we could expect to be
+given the right to perform it at all. And, for my part, the only action
+I would consent to take as a member of the advisory committee of the
+People's Party would be to vote for the dissolution of the party.
+
+President Woodruff referred me to my father, and advised me to be guided
+by him. Joseph F. Smith urged that a division of the Mormon people on
+national party lines would enable the Liberal (the Gentile) party to
+march in between. I argued in reply that we must divide at some time,
+and the sooner the better, since every year was increasing the Gentile
+population. They would never split as long as we remained solid. And if
+we were ever to be permitted to nationalize ourselves, it would not be
+until we had dissolved the party organizations whose very names were a
+proof of the continued rule of the Church in politics.
+
+When he had no more arguments to advance, he gave a reluctant assent to
+mine. I reported back to my father and he approved of my plans. He asked
+me humorously with whom I expected to affiliate, since he knew of no one
+who was likely to go with me; but I could see that he was pleased with
+my independence and hoped I might succeed in doing something to break
+the deadlock-grapple of Mormon and Gentile that held Utah apart from the
+rest of the country in politics.
+
+His humorous idea of my undertaking gave its color to my beginnings.
+It was rather a spirited adventure, as I look back upon it now. When we
+organized a Republican Club at Ogden, my intimate friend, Ben E. Rich,
+and another friend named Joseph Belnap, were the only Mormons, so far
+as I know, who joined me in becoming members. Outside of us three, I did
+not know of another Mormon Republican in the whole territory.
+
+Indeed, the status of the Mormon people, in their fancied relation to
+the two great parties of the country, was almost identical with that of
+the people of the South after the Civil War. Practically every Mormon
+believed himself to be a Democrat. Among the young men of the Church
+there had been occasional attempts to form Democratic Clubs. Mr. John
+T. Caine, delegate in Congress from the territory, was a Democrat. My
+father had sat on the Democratic side of the House. Almost all the men
+who had braved the sentiments of their own states, to speak for us in
+Congress, had been Democrats. And, of course, the administration of the
+laws that had been so cruel to the feelings of the Mormons had been in
+Republican hands.
+
+Two years earlier, in Ogden, I had spoken in a meeting of Republicans
+that had been called to rejoice over the election of Benjamin Harrison
+to the Presidency; and I was still being taunted by my Mormon friends
+with having clasped hands with "the persecutors of the Prophets." When
+I came out, now, as an advocate of Republicanism, I was met everywhere
+with this charge--that I had joined the enemies of the Church, that
+I was assisting the persecutors of my father. The fact that my father
+approved of what I was doing, relieved the seriousness of the situation
+for me; and the humorous assistance of Ben Rich in our political
+evangelism gave a secret chuckle to many of the incidents of our
+campaign.
+
+We went from town to town, from district to district, up the
+mountain valleys, across the plains, into mining camps and farming
+communities--using the meeting-houses, the school-rooms, the town
+halls--taking the afternoon to coax the tired workers of the fields or
+of the mines to come and hear us in the evening, and watching them fall
+asleep in the light of our borrowed kerosene lamps while we talked. They
+came eagerly. Indeed, my own ambition for citizenship--for a right to
+participate in the affairs of the nation--was probably no keener than
+theirs; and they had an innocent curiosity about the questions of
+national politics, of which they had never before been invited to know
+anything. They listened almost devoutly.
+
+"Brethren and sisters," a bishop exhorted them at a meeting in which one
+of our party was to speak, "we have come to listen to this man, and I
+hope we will be guided in all our reflections by the Spirit of God
+and that we will do nothing to offend that Spirit. Let there be no
+commotion, no whispering, and, above all, no hand clapping."
+
+In a life that had as few diversions as theirs, a political meeting was
+an exciting event. The whole family came, and the mothers brought their
+babies. Surely in no other American community did politics ever have
+such a homely and serious consideration. Certainly no other community
+would have so quickly understood the theories of the two parties or
+accepted them so implicitly.
+
+But it was all theory! I recognize, now, that I preached a Republicanism
+that was an ideal of what it should be, rather than any modern faith
+of the "practical politician." I had gathered it from my reading, from
+hearing the speeches in Congress, from sympathetic conferences with the
+great men who were responsible for the dogmas of the party; and every
+assurance of grace that their ability could give and my credulity
+accept, I proclaimed religiously as a political salvation to our people.
+I built up an ideal, and then judged the party thereafter according to
+the measure of that ideal. When I found that some of the charges
+against the Republican party were true--charges which I had indignantly
+repelled--I was as shocked as any pious worshipper who ever found that
+his idol had feet of clay. Our people, having accepted the faith with as
+simple a hope as it was offered, were as easily turned from it when they
+found that it was false. The political moods of Utah, for its first
+few years of statehood, were a puzzle to the "practical" leaders of the
+parties; but to us who understood the impulses of honesty that moved the
+changes, things were as clear as they were encouraging.
+
+During the previous summer in Washington, I had met General James S.
+Clarkson, then president of the National League of Republican Clubs;
+and now, on his invitation, in the Spring of 1891, Rich and I went
+to Louisville to speak before the national convention of the league.
+Through the kindness of General Clarkson, I was given the official
+recognition of a perfunctory place on the executive committee of the
+league's national committee, and came into touch with many of the party
+leaders. It was about this time, I imagine, that they conceived the idea
+of using the gratitude of the Mormons in order to carry Utah and the
+surrounding states in which the Mormon vote might constitute a balance
+of political power. I know that the idea was old and established when
+I came upon it, in 1894, during the campaign for statehood. As I also
+found, still later, the Republican leaders and the business interests
+with which they were in relation, had their eyes on a distant prospect
+of fabulous financial schemes in which the secret funds of the Church
+were to help in the building of railroads and the promoting of other
+enterprises of associated capital. But at the time of which I am
+writing, I had not had sufficient experience to suspect the motives of
+the men who encouraged our work in Utah; and I accepted in good faith
+their public declarations that the sole aim of the party was to serve
+the needs of the people of the United States--and therefore of the
+people of Utah!
+
+It seemed to me that such a noble principle should win the support of
+Mormon and Gentile alike, and it was on this principle that I appealed
+for the support of both. I was so sure of winning with it that I
+resented and fought against the aid of the Church that came to us as our
+campaign succeeded.
+
+The People's Party (the Church Party) had been dissolved (June, 1891)
+by the formal action of the executive committee, under the direct
+instruction of the leaders of the Church. The tendency was for its
+members to organize themselves immediately as a Democratic party.
+They were led by such brilliant and trusted defenders of the Church as
+Franklin S. Richards, Chas. C. Richards, Wm. H. King, James H. Moyle,
+Brigham H. Roberts and Apostle Moses Thatcher; and a group of abler
+advocates could not have been found in any state in the Union. It was
+against the sentiment of the Mormon people, vivified by such inspiring
+Democracy as these men taught, that our little organization of
+Republicans had to make headway; and an anxiety began to show
+itself among the Church authorities for a less unequal division, and
+consequently a greater appearance of political independence, among the
+faithful.
+
+Apostle John Henry Smith came out as a Republican stump speaker in
+rivalry with Moses Thatcher, the Democratic Prophet. Joseph F. Smith
+announced himself a Republican descendant of Whigs. Apostle Francis
+Marion Lyman, in his religious ministrations, counselled leading
+brethren to withhold themselves from the Democratic party unless they
+had gone too far to retreat. Men of ecclesiastical office in various
+parts of the territory--who were regarded as being safe in their wisdom
+and fidelity--were urged to hold themselves and their influence in
+reserve for such use on either side of politics as the future might
+demand.
+
+Against this ecclesiastical direction of the people's choice, I objected
+again and again to the Presidency, and my objections seemed to meet with
+acquiescence. It required no prescience on my part to foresee that the
+growing dislike and distrust of Moses Thatcher at Church headquarters
+would lead to a strife in the Church that might be carried into our
+politics; and I knew how small would be the hope of preserving any
+political independence, if once it were involved in the intrigues of
+priests and their rivalries for a supremacy of influence among the
+people. I was resolved that not even a Church, ruling by "divine
+right," should interpose between my country and my franchise; and an
+encroachment that I would not permit upon my own freedom, I would not
+help to inflict upon others.
+
+The men with whom I had been working proposed me as the candidate for
+Congress of the new Utah Republicans; and I was supported by a strong
+delegation from my own country and from other parts of the territory;
+but I found that I was not "satisfactory" to some of the Mormon leaders,
+and in the convention (1892) Apostle John Henry Smith and my cousin
+George M. Cannon led in an attempt to nominate Judge Chas. Bennett, a
+Gentile lawyer. After a bitter fight of two days and nights, we carried
+the convention against them, and I was nominated.
+
+The Democrats selected, as their candidate, one of the strongest
+characters in the territory, Joseph L. Rawlins. He was the son of a
+Mormon bishop, but he had left the Church immediately upon reaching
+manhood. He was a great lawyer, a staunch Democrat, and wonderfully
+popular. There followed one of the swiftest and most exciting campaigns
+ever seen in Utah. The whole people rose to it with enthusiasm. Our
+party chairman, Chas. Crane, had a genius for organization; our speakers
+drew crowded meetings; and though charges of Church influence were
+made by both sides, the question of religion was no longer the one that
+divided Utah.
+
+We were getting on famously, when an incident occurred that was at once
+disastrous and salutary. While I was away from headquarters, stumping
+the districts, Chairman Crane (who was a Gentile), Ben Rich and Joseph
+F. Smith, issued a pamphlet in Republican behalf called "Nuggets of
+Truth." It gave a picture of Joseph Smith, the original Prophet, on
+the first page and a picture of me on the last one. (They issued also
+a certificate, obtained by Joseph F. Smith and given out by him, that
+I was a Mormon "in good standing.") As soon as I heard of the matter,
+I wired Chairman Crane that unless the pamphlet were immediately
+withdrawn, I should return to Salt Lake City and publicly denounce such
+methods. It was withdrawn, but the damage was done, I was defeated, as
+I deserved to be--though I was the innocent victim of the atrocity--and
+Mr. Rawlins was elected.
+
+The campaign proved, however, that if the Church leaders would only
+keep their hands off, there was ample strength in either party to make
+a presentation of national issues of sufficient appeal to divide the
+people on party lines; and it was evident that the people would choose
+the party that made the best showing of principles and candidates.
+"Nuggets of Truth" left us with a nasty sense that at no hour were we
+assured of safety from ecclesiastical interference--or the nefarious
+attempt to make an appearance of such interference--in our political
+affairs. But the disaster that followed, in this instance, was so prompt
+that we could hope it would prove a lesson.
+
+Most important of all, the campaign had made it evident that there
+was now no political mission in Utah for the Liberal (the Gentile)
+party--assuming that the retirement of the Mormon priests from politics
+was sincere and permanent. Accordingly, the organization formally met
+some months later, and formally dissolved; and, by that act, the
+last great obstacle to united progress was removed from our road to
+statehood, and the men who removed it acted with a generosity that
+makes one of the noblest records of self-sacrifice in the history of the
+state.
+
+They could foresee that their dissolution as a separate force meant
+statehood for Utah--a sovereignty in itself that would leave the
+Gentiles in the minority and without any appeal to the nation. Under
+territorial conditions, although the non-Mormons were less than
+one-third of the population, they had two-thirds of the political power.
+They held all the Federal offices, including executive and judicial
+positions. They had the Governor, with an absolute veto over the acts
+of the Mormon legislature. They had the President and Congress who could
+annul any statute of the territory; and they had with them almost the
+entire sentiment of the nation. It was in their power to have protracted
+the Mormon controversy, and to have withstood the appeal for statehood,
+to this day.
+
+They yielded everything; they accepted, in return, only the good faith
+of the Mormons. Was it within the capacity of any human mind to foresee
+that in return for such generosity the Church would ever give over its
+tabernacles to teaching its people to hold in detestation the very,
+names of these men who saved us? Was it to be suspected that the
+political power surrendered by them would ever be used as a persecution
+upon them?--that the liberty, given by them to us, would ever afterward
+be denied them by us? It was inconceivable. Neither in the magnanimity
+of their minds nor in the gratitude of ours was there a suspicion of
+such a catastrophe.
+
+During 1891, President Woodruff's manifesto had been ratified in local
+Church conferences in every "stake of Zion;" and a second General
+Conference had endorsed it in October of that year. President Woodruff,
+Councillor Joseph F. Smith and Apostle Lorenzo Snow went before the
+Federal Master in Chancery--in a proceeding to regain possession of
+escheated Church property--and swore that the manifesto had prohibited
+plural marriages, that it required a cessation of all plural marriage
+living, and that it was being obeyed by the Mormon people. These facts
+were recited in a petition for amnesty forwarded to President Harrison
+in December, 1891, accompanied by signed statements from Chief Justice
+Zane, Governor Thomas and other non-Mormons who pledged themselves that
+the petitioners were sincere and that if amnesty were granted good faith
+would be kept. "Our people are scattered," President Woodruff and his
+apostles declared in their petition. "Homes are made desolate. Many are
+still imprisoned; others are banished and in hiding. Our hearts bleed
+for these. In the past they followed our counsels, and while they are
+still afflicted our souls are in sackcloth and ashes.... As shepherds
+of a patient and suffering people we ask amnesty for them and pledge our
+faith and honor for their future."
+
+At Washington, the Church's attorney, Mr. Franklin S. Richards, and
+delegate John T. Caine supported the petition with their avowals of
+the sincerity of the Church leaders, the genuineness of our political
+division, and the sanctity with which we regarded the promise to obey
+the laws. The Utah Commission, a non-Mormon body, favored amnesty in an
+official report of September, 1892. And when I went to Washington, in
+the winter of 1892-3, the changed attitude of the Federal authorities
+toward us was strikingly evident.
+
+President Harrison issued his amnesty proclamation, early in January,
+1893, to all persons liable to the penalties of the Edmunds-Tucker Act,
+but "on the express condition that they shall in the future faithfully
+obey the laws of the United States... and not otherwise." The
+proclamation concluded: "Those who fail to avail themselves of the
+clemency hereby offered will be vigorously prosecuted." Not a polygamist
+in Utah, to my knowledge, declined to take advantage of the mercy, by
+refusing the expressly implied pledge.
+
+Meanwhile the campaign had been continued for the return of the
+escheated Church property and for the passage of an Enabling Act that
+should permit the territory to organize for statehood.
+
+[FOOTNOTE: Statehood seemed still very faraway. There was a
+Trans-Mississippi Congress held at Ogden in 1892, and though the
+delegates--coming from all the states and territories "west of the
+river," were the guests of the people of Utah, so hopeless was our
+status in the consideration of mankind that the delegates from the
+territories of New Mexico and Arizona would not let our names be joined
+to theirs in a resolution for statehood which we wished the committee
+on resolutions to propose to the Congress. Governor Prince of New Mexico
+replied, to our plea for a share in the resolution, that he did not
+intend to damn New Mexico by having her mixed up with Utah. We appealed
+to the Congress, and we were saved by a speech made by Thos. M.
+Patterson of Colorado, subsequently senator from Colorado, who carried
+the day for us. At a recent Trans-Mississippi Congress held in Denver,
+I sat with ex-Senator Patterson to hear Mr. Prince still proposing
+resolutions in support of statehood for New Mexico. Twenty years later!]
+Joseph L. Rawlins, Democratic delegate from Utah, worked valiantly among
+the Democrats, and he was assisted by the influence of Mr. Franklin S.
+Richards and John T. Caine and others among their old associates in that
+party. But, in the very midst of the fight, we were advised that,
+unless the Republican leaders would let the Enabling Act go through, the
+Democratic leaders would falter in our advocacy.
+
+I had been urged to go to Washington by the Presidency to do what I
+might to allay Republican antagonism, and I found that a number of
+self-appointed lobbyists (who expected political preferment's and other
+rewards from the Church in the event of statehood) had been using the
+most amazing arguments in our behalf. For example, they told some of
+the "financial Senators" that the Church had fourteen million dollars in
+secret funds with which to help build a railroad to the coast as soon
+as statehood should be granted. They cited the number of the Church's
+adherents in all the states and territories of the Pacific Coast and as
+far east as Iowa and Missouri, and predicted that the gratitude of these
+people to the Republicans who were helping to free Utah would enable the
+Republican party to control a balance of political power in the several
+states. They declared positively that plural marriages and plural
+marriage living had utterly ceased among the Mormons for all time. And
+they made such statements with great particularity to Senator Orville H.
+Platt, of Connecticut, who was too wise a man to credit them.
+
+As soon as I returned to Washington, he summoned me to a private
+meeting, in his parlor in the Arlington Hotel, and confronted me with
+one of the Republican lobbyists who had been soliciting his personal
+favor and his almost controlling influence. "Now, Mr. Cannon," he said,
+in his dry way, "have the Mormons stopped living with their plural
+wives? And will there never be another case of plural marriage among
+them?"
+
+I remembered the lesson of my interview with him at the time of the
+campaign against the disfranchisement bill, and I answered: "No. Not
+all the men of the Church have complied fully with the law. So far as
+I know, all the general authorities of the Church--with two or three
+exceptions--are fulfilling the covenant they gave; and so far as I can
+judge there will never be another plural marriage ceremony with the
+consent or connivance of the leaders of the Church. But human nature is
+very much the same in Utah as it is in Connecticut. Here and there, no
+doubt, a man feels that he's under an obligation to keep his covenant
+with his plural wives in preference to the covenant of his accepted
+amnesty; and there and here, possibly, in the future, some man will
+break the law and defy the orders of the Church and take a plural wife.
+But the leaders of the Church do not countenance either proceeding, and
+any man who violates the law, in either respect, offends against the
+revelations of the Church and, I believe, will be dealt with as an
+apostate. I come direct from the Presidency of the Church, and I am
+authorized to pledge their word of honor that they will themselves obey
+the law and do all in their power as men and leaders to bring their
+people into harmony with the institutions of this country as rapidly as
+possible."
+
+Senator Platt had slowly unwrapped himself, rising from his chair to his
+full height of more than six feet, in a lank and alarming indignation.
+"There," he said, striding up and down the room. "That's it! That's just
+it. These people have been telling us that you were obeying the law--all
+of you--in every instance--and would always obey it. And now you come
+here and admit, openly, that some of you, to whom we have granted
+amnesty, are breaking your word--and that 'possibly' others, in the
+future, will do the same thing!"
+
+"Senator," I pleaded, "what confidence could you have in me if I were to
+tell you the Mormons were so superhuman that in a single day they could
+eliminate all their human characteristics? I'm asking you to recognize
+that the tendency imparted to a whole community is more important
+than any one man's breach of the law. Believe me, if you grant us our
+statehood, there will never be any lawbreaking sanctioned or protected
+by the Church leaders, and just as speedily as possible the entire
+system will be brought into harmony with the institutions of the nation.
+I'm telling you the truth."
+
+He turned on me to ask, abruptly, how the polygamists had adjusted their
+family affairs.
+
+I answered that in nearly all cases within my personal knowledge, the
+polygamist had relinquished conjugal relations with his plural wives
+with the full acquiescence of them and their children. He supported
+them, cared for the children, and in all other ways acted as the
+guardian and protector of the household. In a few cases men had gone,
+to an extreme. For instance, my uncle, Angus M. Cannon--president of the
+Salt Lake "stake of Zion," a man of most decided character--had declared
+that he had entered into his marriage relations with his wives under a
+covenant that gave them equality in his regards; and in order that he
+might not wound the sensibilities of any, he had separated himself from
+all.
+
+I reminded Senator Platt that with such examples on the part of the
+leaders, there could be no general law-breaking among the Mormons, and
+that gradually the polygamous element would accommodate itself to the
+demands of law and the commands of God.
+
+He waved us away with a curt announcement that he would have to think
+the matter over. If I had not known the essential justice and common
+sense under his dry and irascible exterior, I might have been alarmed.
+The lobbyist's concern was almost comic. As soon as we were out of
+hearing of the Senator's apartment, shaking both fists frantically at
+me, he cried: "You've ruined everything! We had him. We had him--all
+right--until you came down here and let the cat out of the bag! You knew
+what we'd been telling him. Why didn't you stick to it?"
+
+I replied with equal warmth: "You may lie all you please; but if we have
+to win Utah's statehood with lies I don't want it. Senator Platt has
+been generous to us in our time of need, and I don't intend to deceive
+him--or any other man."
+
+As a matter of fact, this was not only common honesty; it was also the
+best policy. Senator Platt was, from that time to the day of his death,
+a good friend and wise counselor of the people of Utah. And I wish to
+lay particular stress upon this conversation with him, because it was
+a type of many had with such men as he. Fred T. Dubois, delegate in
+Congress from the territory of Idaho and subsequently Senator from that
+state, had been perhaps the strongest single opponent, in Washington, of
+the Mormon Church; he took our promises of honor, as Senator Platt did,
+and he pacified Senator Cullom, Senator Pettigrew and many others among
+our antagonists, who afterwards told me that they had accepted the
+pledges given by Senator Dubois in our behalf.
+
+They recognized that the Church and the community ought not to be
+held responsible for a few possible cases of individual resistance or
+offense, so long as there should be a strict adherence by the Church and
+its leaders to their personal and community covenant. I emphasize the
+nature of this generous appreciation of our difficulties, because
+the present-day polygamists in Utah claim that there was a "tacit
+understanding," between the statesmen in Washington and the agents
+of the Church, to the effect that the polygamists of that time might
+continue to live with their plural wives. This is not true. There never
+was any such understanding, to my knowledge. And there could not have
+been one, in the circumstances, without my knowledge. For though I
+did not know what delegate Rawlins, and former delegate Caine, and our
+attorney, Mr. Richards, were saying in their private interviews with
+senators and congressmen, I know that in all the frequent conversations
+I had with them I never heard an intimation of any "tacit understanding"
+beyond the one which I have defined.
+
+For my part I was more than eager to have all our political disabilities
+removed, the Church property restored, and the right of statehood
+accorded--believing implicitly in the sincerity of the Mormon leaders. I
+knew President Woodruff too well to doubt the pellacid character of his
+mind and purpose. I knew from my father's personal assurance--and from
+his constant practice from that time to the day of his death--that he
+was acting in good faith. I knew that the community was gladly following
+where these men led. I saw no slightest indication that any reactionary
+policy was likely to be entered upon in Utah, or that our people would
+accept it if it were.
+
+The Church's personal property was restored by an Act of Congress
+approved October 25, 1893, but it was stipulated in the Act that the
+money was not to be used for the support of any church buildings in
+which "the rightfulness of the practice of polygamy" should be taught.
+Similarly, when the Enabling Act was approved, in July 16, 1894,
+it, too, provided that "polygamous or plural marriage" was forever
+prohibited. A constitutional convention was held at Salt Lake City under
+the provisions of that act, and a constitution was adopted in which
+it was provided that "polygamous or plural marriages" were forever
+prohibited, that the territorial laws against polygamy were to be
+continued in force, that there should be "no union of church and state,"
+and that no church should "dominate the state or interfere with its
+functions." Upon no other basis would the nation have granted us our
+statehood; and we accepted the grant, knowing the expressed condition
+involved in that acceptance.
+
+But there was one other gift that came to us from the nation--by
+Congressional enactment and later by Utah statute as a consequence of
+statehood; and that gift was the legitimizing of every child born
+of plural marriage before January, 1896. The solemn benignity of the
+concession touched me, as it must have touched many, to the very heart
+of gratitude. By it, ten thousand children were taken from the outer
+darkness of this world's conventional exclusion and placed within
+the honored relations of mankind. It was a tribute to the purity
+and sincerity of the Mormon women who had borne the cross of plural
+marriage, believing that God had commanded their suffering. It
+recognized the holy nature and honorable intent of the marriages
+of these women, by according their children every right of legal
+inheritance from their fathers. If all other covenants could be
+forgotten and their proof obliterated, this should remain as Utah's
+pledge of honor--sacred for the sake of the Mormon mothers, holy in the
+name of the uplifted child.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VI. The Goal--And After
+
+
+
+Here we were then (as I saw the situation) assured of our statehood,
+rid of polygamy, relieved of religious control in politics, and free to
+devote our energies to the development of the land and the industries
+and the business of the community. The persecutions that our people had
+borne had schooled them to co-operation. They were ready, helping one
+another, to advance together to a common prosperity. They were under
+the leadership chiefly of the man who had guided them out of a most
+desperate condition of oppression toward the freedom of sovereign
+self-government. In that progress he had saved everything that was
+worthy in the Mormon communism; he had discarded much that was a curse.
+I knew that he had no thought but for the welfare of the people; and
+with such a man, leading such a following, we seemed certain of a future
+that should be an example to the world.
+
+But both the Church and the people had been involved in debt by
+confiscation and proscription; and it was necessary now to free
+ourselves financially. This work my father undertook in behalf of the
+Presidency--for the President of the Mormon Church is not only the
+Prophet, Seer and Revelator of God to the faithful; he is also "the
+trustee in trust" of all the Church's material property. He is the
+controller, almost the owner, of everything it owns. He is as sacred in
+his financial as in his religious absolutism. He is accountable to no
+one, The Church auditors, whom he appoints, concern themselves merely
+with the details of bookkeeping. The millions of dollars that are paid
+to him, by the people in tithes, are used by him as he sees fit to use
+them; and the annual contributors to this "common fund" would no more
+question his administration of it than they would question the ways of
+divinity.
+
+In the early days there had been a strongly animating idea that among
+the divinely-authorized duties of leadership was the obligation to
+develop the natural resources of the country in order to meet the
+people's needs. As the immigrants poured into Utah, these needs
+increased; and the Church leaders used the Church funds to develop coal
+and iron mines, support salt gardens, build a railway, establish a sugar
+factory (for which the people, through the legislature, voted a bounty),
+conduct a beach resort, and aid a hundred other enterprises that
+promised to be for the public good. These undertakings were not financed
+for profit. They were semi-socialistic in their establishment and
+half-benevolent in their administration.
+
+But during "the days of the raid" they were neglected, because the
+Church was involved in debt. And now it became pressingly necessary to
+obtain money to restore the moribund industries and to meet the payments
+that were continually falling due upon loans made to the Presidency.
+President Woodruff called on me to aid in the work. So I came into touch
+with a development of events that did not seem to me, then, of any great
+importance; yet it drew as its consequence a connection between the
+Mormon Church and the great financial "interests" of the East--a
+connection that is one of the strong determining causes of the
+perversion of government and denial of political liberty in Utah today.
+
+I wish, here, simply to foreshadow, this connection. It will reappear in
+the story again and again; and it is necessary to have the significance
+of the recurrence understood in advance. But, at the time of which
+I write, there was no more than an innocent approach on our part to
+Eastern financiers to obtain money for the Church and to concentrate our
+debts in the hands of two or three New York banks.
+
+For example, the Church had loaned to, or endorsed for, the Utah Sugar
+Company to the amount of $325,000; and my father had personally endorsed
+the general obligations for this and other sums, although he owned
+only $5,000 of the company's stock. He supported the factory with his
+personal credit and assumed the risk of loss (without any corresponding
+possibility of gain) in order to benefit the whole people by encouraging
+the beet sugar industry. A vain attempt had been made to sell the bonds
+in New York. Finally, the Church bought all the bonds of the company
+for $325,000 (of a face value of $400,000), and we sold them, for the
+Church, to Mr. Joseph Bannigan, the "rubber king," of Providence, Rhode
+Island, for $360,000, with the guarantee of the First Presidency, the
+trustee of the Church, and myself.
+
+Similarly, the First Presidency led in building an electric power plant
+in Ogden, after Chas. K. Bannister, a great engineer, and myself had
+persuaded the members of the Presidency that the work would benefit the
+community. The bonds of this company, too, were bought by Mr. Bannigan,
+with the guarantee of the trustee of the Church, the Presidency and
+myself. Both the power plant and the sugar factory were financially
+successful. They performed a large public service beneficently. The fact
+that Mr. Bannigan held their bonds was no detriment to their work and
+wrought no injury to the people.
+
+I single out these two enterprises because Joseph F. Smith has since
+sold the power plant to the "Harriman interests," and the control of the
+sugar factory to the sugar trust; and he has explained that in making
+the sales he merely followed my father's example and mine in selling
+the bonds to Mr. Bannigan. The power plant is now a part of the merger
+called the Utah Light and Railway Company, which has a monopoly right
+in all the streets of Salt Lake City and its suburbs, besides owning
+the electric power and light plants of Salt Lake City and Ogden, the gas
+plants of both these cities, and the natural gas wells and pipe
+lines supplying them. The Mormon people whose tithes aided these
+properties--whose good-will maintained them--whose leaders designed them
+as a community work for a community benefit--these people are now being
+mercilessly exploited by the Eastern "interests" to whom the Prophet
+of the Church has sold them bodily. The difference between selling
+the bonds of the sugar company to Bannigan, in order to raise money to
+support the factory, and selling half the stock to the sugar trust, in
+order to make a monopoly profit out of the Mormon consumers of sugar,
+has either not occurred to Smith or has been divinely waived by him.
+
+However, this is by the way and in advance of my story. In 1894 we had
+no more fear of the Eastern money power than we had of the return of
+the Church to politics or to polygamy. Throughout 1893 and 1894 I was
+engaged in the work of re-establishing the Church's business affairs
+with my father and a sort of finance committee of which the other two
+members were Colonel N. W. Clayton, of Salt Lake City, and Mr. James
+Jack, the cashier of the Church. In the summer of 1894 I heard various
+rumors that when Utah should gain its statehood, my father would
+probably be a candidate for the United States Senate. Since this would
+be a palpable breach of the Church's agreement to keep out of politics,
+I took occasion--one day, on a railroad journey--to ask him if he
+intended to be a candidate.
+
+He told me that he was being urged to stand for the Senatorship, but
+that for his part he had no desire to do so; and he asked me what I
+thought about it. I replied that if I had felt it was right for him
+to take the office and he desired it, I would walk barefoot across the
+continent to aid him. But I reminded him of the pledges which he and I
+had made repeatedly--on our own behalf, in the name of his associates in
+leadership, and on the honor of the Mormon people--to subdue thereafter
+the causes of the controversy that had divided Mormon and Gentile in
+Utah. He replied with an emphatic assurance of his purpose to keep those
+pledges, and dismissed the subject with a finality that left no doubt in
+my mind.
+
+I know that he might have desired the Senatorship as a public
+vindication, since, in the old days of quarrel, he had been legislated
+out of his place in the House of Representatives; and, for the first
+and only time in my life, I undertook to philosophize some comfort for
+him--out of the fact that to the position of authority which he held in
+Utah a Senatorship was a descent. He replied dryly: "I understand, my
+son--perfectly." The fact was that he needed no comfort from me or any
+other human being. He seemed all--sufficient to himself, because of the
+abiding sense he had of the constant presence of God and his habit of
+communing with that Spirit, instead of seeking human intercourse or
+earthly counsel. He did not need my affection. He did not need, much
+less seek, the approbation of any man. In the events to which this
+conversation was a prelude, he acted without explaining himself to me or
+to anyone else, and apparently without caring in the slightest what my
+opinion or any other man's might be of his course or of the motives that
+prompted it.
+
+Some months later, in the office of the Presidency (at a business
+meeting with him, Colonel Clayton and Joseph F. Smith), I excused myself
+from attending any further sittings of the committee for that day,
+because I had to go to Provo to receive the Republican nomination for
+Congress.
+
+My father said: "I am sorry to hear it. I thought Judge Zane--or someone
+else would be nominated. I wished you to be free to help with these
+business matters. Why have you not consulted us?"
+
+I reminded him that I had told him, some weeks before, that I expected
+to be nominated for Congress this year--and that I was practically
+certain, if elected, of going to the Senate when we were granted
+statehood. "I talked with you, then, as my father," I said. "But I'm
+sure you'll remember that I have not consulted you as a leader of the
+Church, or any of your colleagues as leaders of the Church, on the
+subject of partisan politics since the People's Party was dissolved."
+
+He accepted this mild declaration of political independence without
+protest, and I went to Provo, happily, a free man. The Republicans
+nominated me by acclamation, and the chairman of the committee that came
+to offer me the nomination was Colonel Wm. Nelson, then managing editor
+of the Salt Lake Tribune, a Gentile, a former leader of the Liberal
+Party, an opponent of Mormonism as practiced, who had fought the Church
+hierarchy for years. Here was a new evidence that we were now beyond
+the old quarrels--a further guarantee that we were prepared to take
+our place among the states of the Union, free of parochialism and its
+sectarian enmities.
+
+The campaign gave every proof of such political emancipation. The
+people divided, on national party lines, as completely as any American
+community in my experience. The Democrats, having nominated Joseph L.
+Rawlins, had the prestige that he had gained in helping to pass the
+Enabling Act; a Democratic administration was in power in Washington;
+Apostle Moses Thatcher, Brigham H. Roberts, and other members of the
+Church inspired the old loyalty of the Mormons for the Democracy. But
+the Republicans had been re-enforced by the dissolution of the Liberal
+Party, whose last preceding candidate (Mr. Clarence E. Allen) went
+on the stump for us. The Smith jealousy of Moses Thatcher divided the
+Church influence; and though charges of ecclesiastical interference were
+made on both sides, such interference was personal rather than official.
+Mr. Rawlins was defeated, and I was elected delegate in Congress from
+the territory--with the United States Senatorship practically assured to
+me.
+
+In the spring of 1895 the constitutional convention at Salt Lake City
+formulated a provisional constitution for the new Utah; and, in the Fall
+of the year, a general election was held to adopt this constitution and
+to elect officers who should enter upon their duties as soon as Utah
+became a state. The election was marked by a most significant and
+important incident.
+
+The Democrats, in their convention, nominated for Congress, Brigham H.
+Roberts, one of the first seven "presidents of the seventy," and for
+the United States Senate, Joseph L. Rawlins and Apostle Moses Thatcher.
+Immediately, at a priesthood meeting of the hierarchy, Joseph F. Smith
+denounced the candidacies of Roberts and Thatcher; and the grounds for
+the denunciation were subsequently stated in the "political manifesto"
+of April, 1896, in which the First Presidency announced, as a rule of
+the Church, that no official of the Church should accept a political
+nomination until he had obtained the permission of the Church
+authorities and had learned from them whether he could "consistently
+with the obligations already entered into with the Church, take upon
+himself the added duties and labors and responsibilities of the new
+position."
+
+This action, I knew, was the result of the old jealousy of Thatcher
+which the Smiths had so long nursed. But it was also in line with
+the Church's pledge, to keep its leaders out of politics. By it,
+the hierarchy bound themselves and set the people free. The leaders,
+thereafter, according to their own "manifesto," could not enter politics
+without the consent of their quorums; and, therefore, by any American
+doctrine, they could not enter politics at all. Thatcher and Roberts
+revolted against the inhibition as an infringement of their rights as
+citizens, and it was so construed by the whole Democratic party; but
+everyone knew that a Mormon apostle had no rights as a citizen that were
+not second to his Church allegiance, and the political manifesto
+simply made public the fact of such subservience, authoritatively. We
+Republicans welcomed it, with our eyes on the future freedom of politics
+in Utah; Thatcher and Roberts refused to accept the dictation of their
+quorums, and what was practically an "edict of apostasy" went out
+against them. They were defeated. The Republican candidates (Heber M.
+Wells, as governor, and Clarence B. Allen, as member of Congress)
+were elected. Thatcher, subsequently refusing to accept the "political
+manifesto," was deposed from his apostolic authority, and deprived of
+all priesthood in the Church. Roberts recanted and was reconciled with
+the hierarchy.
+
+[FOOTNOTE: He was afterwards elected to the House of Representatives and
+was refused his seat as a polygamist.]
+
+The Republicans elected forty-three out of sixty-three members of the
+legislature, and everyone of these had been pledged to support me, for
+the United States Senate, either by his convention, or by letter to me,
+or by a promise conveyed to me by friends; and none of these pledges had
+I solicited.
+
+The rumors of my father's candidacy now became more general--although
+he was a Democrat, although the new "political manifesto" bound him,
+although it was doubtful whether the Senate would allow him to be
+seated. Two influences were urging his election. One was the desire
+of the Smith faction to have the First Councillor break the ice at
+Washington for Apostle John Henry Smith, who was ambitious to be a
+Senator and was disqualified by the fact that he was a Church leader and
+a polygamist. The other was the desire of some Eastern capitalists to
+have my father's vote in the Senate to aid them in the promotion of a
+railroad from Salt Lake City to Los Angeles. A preliminary agreement
+for the construction of the road had already been signed by men who
+represented that they had close affiliations with large steel interests
+in the East, as one party, and my father as business representative of
+a group of associates, including the Presidency of the Church. The
+Church's interest in the project was communistic, and so was my
+father's. But his vote and influence in the Senate would be valuable to
+the promotion of the undertaking, and he had received written assurances
+from Republican leaders, senators and politicians, that if he were
+elected he would be allowed his seat.
+
+As a result of our Republican success in the two political campaigns
+that had just ended, I felt that I represented the independent votes
+of both Mormons and Gentiles; and I decided to confront the First
+Presidency (as such a representative) and try to make them declare
+themselves in the matter of my father's candidacy. Not that I thought
+his candidacy would be so vitally important for I did not then believe
+the Church authorities had power to sway the legislature away from its
+pledges. But every day, at home or abroad, I was being asked: "Are you
+sure that the Church's retirement from politics is sincere?" My friends
+were accepting my word, and I wished to add certainty to assurance that
+the Church leaders intended to fulfill the covenant of their personal
+honor and respect the constitution of the state by keeping out of
+politics.
+
+Without letting them know why I wished to see them, I procured an
+appointment for the interview. When we were all seated at the table I
+explained: "I'm going to Washington to attend to my duties as delegate
+in Congress. Before I return, Utah will be admitted to statehood, and
+the legislature will have to elect two United States Senators. As you
+all know, I've been a candidate for one of these places. It has been
+assured to me by the probably unanimous vote of the Republican caucus
+when it shall convene." I laid my clenched hand on the table, knuckles
+down, with a calculated abruptness. "The first senatorship from Utah is
+there," I said.
+
+"If it's to be disturbed by any ecclesiastical direction, I want to know
+it now, so that the men who are supporting me may be aware of what
+they must encounter if they persist in their support. I ask you, as
+the Presidency of the Church: what are you going to do about the
+Senatorship?" And I opened my hand and left it lying open before them,
+for their decision.
+
+It was evident enough, from their expressions, that this was a degree of
+boldness to which they were unaccustomed. It was, evident also that
+they were unprepared to reply to me. My father remained silent, with his
+usual placidity, waiting for the others to fail to take the initiative.
+President Woodruff blinked, somewhat bewildered, looking at my hand
+as if the sight of its emptiness and the assumption of what it held,
+confused him. Joseph F. Smith, frowning, eyed it askance with a darting
+glance, apparently annoyed by the mute insolence of its demand for a
+decision which he was not prepared to make.
+
+My father, at length, looking at me imperturbably, asked: "Are you
+inquiring of our personal view in this matter, Frank?"
+
+The question contained, of course, a tacit allusion to my refusal to
+consult the Church leaders about politics. I answered: "No, sir. I
+already have your personal view. That is the only personal view I have
+ever asked concerning the Senatorship. And I have purposely refrained
+from any allusions to it of late, with you, because I wished to lay it
+before the Presidency, as a body, formally, in order that there might be
+no possible misunderstanding."
+
+"In that case," he said, "the matter rests with President Woodruff."
+
+The President, thus forced to an explanation, made a very characteristic
+one. Several of the Church's friends in the East, he said, had urged
+father's name for the Senatorship, but it was impossible to see how he
+could be spared from the affairs of the priesthood. Zion needed him--and
+so forth.
+
+Apparently, to President Woodruff, the question of the Senatorship was
+resolvable wholly upon Church considerations. His mind was so filled
+with zealous hope for the advancement of "the Kingdom of God on Earth,"
+that he seemed quite unaware of the political aspects of the case, the
+violation of the Church's pledge, and the difficulties in the Senate
+that would surely attend upon my father's election.
+
+In the general discussion that ensued, both Joseph F. Smith and my
+father spoke of the appeal that had been made to them on behalf of the
+business interests of the community, with which the financial interests
+of the East were now eager to co-operate. But both followed the
+President's example in dismissing the possibility of the First
+Councillor's candidacy as infringing upon his duties in the Church. I
+pointed out to them that such a candidacy would be considered a breach
+of faith, that it would raise a storm of protest. They accepted the
+warning without comment, as if, having decided against the candidacy,
+they did not need to consider such aspects of it. I kept my hand open
+before them until my father said, with some trace of amusement: "You'd
+better take up that senatorship, Frank. I think you're entitled to it."
+
+I took it up, satisfied that there would be no more Church interference
+in the matter. The decision seemed to me final and momentous. I
+felt that the new Utah had faced the old and had been assured of
+independence.
+
+About this same time (although I cannot place it accurately in my
+recollection), President Woodruff, speaking from the pulpit, declared
+that it was the right of the priesthood of God to rule in all things on
+earth, and that they had in no wise relinquished any of their authority.
+The sermon raised a dangerous alarm in Salt Lake City, and I
+was immediately summoned from Ogden (by a messenger from Church
+headquarters) to see the proprietor and the editor of the Salt Lake
+Tribune--which paper, it was feared, might oppose Utah's admission to
+statehood, construing President Woodruff's remarks to mean that the
+Church's political covenants were to be broken.
+
+I found Mr. P. H. Lannan, the proprietor of the paper, anxious,
+indignant and ready to denounce the Church and fight against the
+admission to statehood. "When I heard of that sermon," he said, "my
+heart went into my boots. We Gentiles have trusted everything to the
+promises that have been made by the leaders of the Church. If the
+Tribune had not supported the movement for statehood, the Gentiles would
+never have taken the risk. I feel like a man who has sold his brethren
+into slavery."
+
+I assured him (as I was authorized to do) that President Woodruff
+was not speaking for our generation of the Mormon people nor for his
+associates in the leadership of the Church. I pleaded that it was the
+privilege of an old man (and President Woodruff was nearly ninety) to
+dream again the visions of his youth; his early life had been spent in
+the belief that a Kingdom of God was to be set up in the valleys of
+the mountains, governed by the priesthood and destined to rule all the
+nations of the earth; he had planted the first flag of the country over
+the Salt Lake Valley; he was still living in days that had passed for
+all but him, and cherishing hopes that he alone had not abandoned. But
+if the Tribune and the Gentiles would be magnanimous in this matter,
+they would add to the gratitude that already bound the younger
+generations of the Church to the fulfillment of its political promises.
+
+Mr. Lannan responded instantly to the appeal to his generosity, and
+after consultation with the editor-in-chief (Judge C. C. Goodwin) and
+the managing editor (Colonel Wm. Nelson) the Tribune continued to trust
+in Mormon good faith.
+
+I reported the result of my conference to Church headquarters. The news
+was received with relief and gratitude. And, in a long conversation
+with the authorities, I was told that it would be incumbent on us of the
+younger generation to see that all the Church's covenants to the nation
+should be scrupulously observed.
+
+I accepted my part of the charge with a light heart, and late in
+November, 1895, I took train for Washington for convening of Congress.
+Of the incidents of my brief services as delegate I shall write nothing
+here, since those incidents were merely introductory to matters which
+I shall have to consider later. But I was greeted with a great deal
+of cordiality by the Republicans who credited me with having brought
+a state and its national representation into the Republican party, and
+they assured me that my own political future would be as bright as that
+of my native state!
+
+President Cleveland, on January 4, 1896, proclaimed Utah a sovereign
+state of the Union, and its admission to statehood ended, of course, my
+service as a territorial delegate. I stood beside his desk in the White
+House to see him sign the proclamation--the same desk at which he had
+received me, some eight years before, when I came beseeching him to be
+merciful to the proscribed people whose freedom he was now announcing.
+Perhaps the manumission that he was granting, gave a benignity to his
+face. Perhaps the emotion in my own mind transfigured him to me. But
+I saw smiles and pathos in the ruggedness of his expression of
+congratulation as he said a few words of hope that Utah would fulfill
+every promise made, on her behalf, by her own people, and every happy
+expectation that had been entertained for her by her friends. His
+enormous rigid bulk, a little bowed now by years of service, seemed
+softened, as his face was, to the graciousness of clement power. He gave
+me the pen with which he had signed the paper, and dismissed me to some
+of the happiest hours of my life.
+
+I walked out of the White House dispossessed of office, but now, at
+last, a citizen of the Republic. I stood on the steps of the White
+House, to look at the city through whose streets I had so many times
+wandered in a worried despair, and I saw them with an emotion I would
+not dare transcribe. I do not know that the sun was really shining, but
+in my memory the scene has taken on all the accumulated brightnesses of
+all the radiant days I ever knew in Washington. And I remember that
+I saw the Washington Monument and the Capitol with a sense of almost
+affectionate personal possession!
+
+In an excited exultation I went to thank the men who had helped us
+in the House and the Senate--to wire jubilant messages home--to
+send Governor Wells the pen with which the President had signed his
+proclamation, and to procure from friends in the War Department the
+first two flags that had been made with forty-five stars--the star of
+Utah the forty-fifth. Wherever I went, some sinister aspect seemed to
+have gone out of things; and I remember that I enjoyed so much the sense
+of their new inhostility, that I planned to delay my return to Utah
+until I had made a pilgrimage to every spot in Washington where I had
+despaired of our future.
+
+All this may seem almost sentimental to you, who perhaps accept your
+citizenship as an unregarded commonplace of natural right. But, for me,
+the freeing of our people was an emancipation to be compared only to the
+enfranchisement of the Southern slaves and greater even than that,
+for we had come from citizenship in the older states, and we could
+appreciate our deprivation, smart under our ostracism, and resent the
+rejection that set us apart from the rest of the nation as an inferior
+people unfit for equal rights.
+
+I sat down to my dinner, that evening, with the appetite that comes
+from a day of fasting and emotional excitement; and I recall that I was
+planning a visit of self-congratulation to Arlington, for the morrow,
+when one of the hotel bell-boys brought me a telegram. I opened it
+eagerly--to enjoy the expected message of felicitation from home.
+
+It was in cipher, and that fact gave me a pause of doubt, since the
+days of political mysteries and their cipher telegrams were over for us,
+thank God! It was signed with President Woodruff's cipher name.
+
+I went to my room to translate it, and I did not return to my dinner.
+The message read: "It is the will of the Lord that your father shall be
+elected Senator from Utah."
+
+I do not need to explain all the treacherous implications of that
+announcement. As soon as I had recovered my breath, I wired back, for
+such interpretation as they should choose to give: "God bless Utah. I am
+coming home,"--and packed my trunk, for trouble.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VII. The First Betrayals
+
+
+
+Before I reached Utah, my friends, Ben Rich and James Devine, met me, on
+the train. The news of President Woodruff's "revelation" had percolated
+through the whole community. The Gentiles were alarmed for themselves.
+My friends were anxious for me. All the old enmities that had so long
+divided Utah were arranging themselves for a new conflict. And Rich and
+Devine had come to urge me to remember my promise that I would hold to
+my candidacy no matter who should appear in the field against me.
+
+Of my father's stand in the crisis Rich could give me only one
+indication: after a conference in the offices of the Presidency, Rich
+had said to President Woodruff: "Then I suppose I may as well close
+up Frank's rooms at the Templeton"--the hotel in which my friends had
+opened political headquarters for me--and my father, accompanying him
+to an anteroom, had hinted significantly: "I think you should not close
+Frank's rooms just yet. He may need them."
+
+Rich brought me word, too, that the Church authorities were expecting
+to see me; and soon as I arrived in Salt Lake City, I hastened to the
+little plastered house in which the Presidency had its offices.
+
+President Woodruff, my father, and Joseph F. Smith were there, in
+the large room of their official apartments. We withdrew, for private
+conference, into the small retiring room in which I had consulted with
+"Brother Joseph Mack" when he was on the underground--in 1888--and had
+consulted with President Woodruff about his "manifesto," in 1890. The
+change in their circumstances, since those unhappy days, was in my mind
+as I sat down.
+
+President Woodruff sat at the head of a bare walnut table in a chair so
+large that it rather dwarfed him; and he sank down in it, to an attitude
+of nervous reluctance to speak, occupied with his hands. Smith took his
+place at the opposite end of the board, with dropped eyes, his chair
+tilted back, silent, but (as I soon saw) unusually alert and attentive.
+My father assumed his inevitable composure--firmly and almost unmovingly
+seated--and looked at me squarely with a not unkind premonition of a
+smile.
+
+President Woodruff continued silent. Ordinarily, anything that came
+from the Lord was quite convincing to him and needed no argument (in his
+mind) to make it convincing to others. I could not suppose that the
+look of determination on my face troubled him. It was more likely that
+something unusual in the mental attitudes of his councillors was the
+cause of his hesitation; and with this suspicion to arouse me I
+became increasingly aware (as the conference proceeded) of two rival
+watchfulnesses upon me.
+
+"Well?" I said. "What was it you wanted of me?"
+
+Smith looked up at the President. And Smith had always, hitherto, seemed
+so unseeing of consequences, and, therefore, unappreciative of means,
+that his betrayal of interest was indicative of purpose. I thought I
+could detect, in the communication which his manner made, the plan of
+my father's ecclesiastical rivals to remove him from the scene of his
+supreme influence over the President, and the plan of ambitious church
+politicians to remove me from their path by the invocation of God's word
+appointing father to the Senate.
+
+"Frank," the President announced, "it is the will of the Lord that your
+father should go to the Senate from Utah."
+
+As he hesitated, I said: "Well, President Woodruff?"
+
+He added, with less decision: "And we want you to tell us how to bring
+it about?"
+
+It was evident that getting the revelation was easy to his spiritualized
+mind, but that fulfilling it was difficult to his unworldliness.
+
+"President Woodruff," I replied, "you have received the revelation on
+the wrong point. You do not need a voice from heaven to convince anyone
+that my father is worthy to go to the Senate, but you will need a
+revelation to tell how he is to get there."
+
+He seemed to raise himself to the inspiration of divine authority. "The
+only difficulty that we have encountered," he said, "is the fact that
+the legislators are pledged to you. Will you not release them from their
+promises and tell them to vote for your father?"
+
+"No," I said. "And my father would not permit me to do it, even if I
+could. He knows that I gave my word of honor to my supporters to stand
+as a candidate, no matter who might enter against me. He knows that he
+and I have given our pledges at Washington that political dictation in
+Utah by the heads of the Mormon Church shall cease. Of all men in Utah
+we cannot be amenable to such dictation. If you can get my supporters
+away from me--very well. I shall have no personal regrets. But you
+cannot get me away from my supporters."
+
+This inclusion of my father in my refusal evidently disconcerted
+President Woodruff; and, as evidently, it had its significance to Joseph
+F. Smith.
+
+I went on: "Before I was elected to the House of Representatives, I
+asked my father if he intended to be a candidate for the Senate. I
+knew that some prominent Gentiles, desiring to curry favor at Church
+headquarters had solicited his candidacy. I had been told that General
+Clarkson and others had assured him by letter that his election would be
+accepted at Washington, and elsewhere. I discussed the matter with him
+fully. He agreed with me that his election would be a violation of the
+understanding had with the country; and he declared that he did not care
+to become again the storm center of strife to his people, nor did he
+feel that he could honorably break our covenant to the country. With
+this clear understanding between us, I made my pledges to men who, in
+supporting me, cast aside equally advantageous relations which they
+might have established with another. I can't withdraw now without
+dishonor."
+
+My father said: "Don't let us have any misunderstandings. As President
+Woodruff stated the matter to me, I understood that it would be pleasing
+to the Lord, if the people desired my election to the Senate and it
+wouldn't antagonize the country."
+
+"Yes, yes," the President put in. "That's what I mean."
+
+Smith said, rather sourly: "The people are always willing to do what the
+Lord desires--if no one gives them bad counsel."
+
+Both he and my father emphasized the fact that the business interests of
+the East were making strong representations to the Presidency in support
+of my father's election; and I suspected (what I afterwards found to be
+the case) that both Joseph F. Smith and Apostle John Henry Smith, were
+by this time, in close communication with Republican politicians. There
+was a calm assumption, everywhere, that the Church had power to decide
+the election, if it could be induced to act; and this assumption was
+a deplorable evidence, to me, of the willingness of some of our former
+allies to drag us swiftly to the shame of a broken covenant, if only
+they could profit in purse or politics by our dishonor. I would not be
+an agent in any such betrayal, but I had to refuse without offending
+my father's trust in the divine inspiration of President Woodruff's
+decision and without aiding the Smiths in their conspiracy.
+
+Either at this conference or one of the later ones, two or three
+apostles came into the room; and among them was Apostle Brigham Young,
+son of the Prophet Brigham who had led the Mormons to the Salt Lake
+Valley. When he understood my refusal to abandon my candidacy, he said
+angrily: "This is a serious filial disrespect. I know my father never
+would have brooked such treatment from me." And I retorted: "I don't
+know who invited you into this conference, but I deny your right to
+instruct me in my filial duty. If my father doesn't understand that the
+senatorship has lost its value for me--that it's a cross now--then my
+whole lifetime of devotion to him has been in vain."
+
+My father rose and put his arm around my shoulders. "This boy," he
+said, "is acting honorably. I want him to know--and you to know--that
+I respect the position he has taken. If he is elected, he shall have my
+blessing."
+
+That was the only understanding I had with him--but it was enough. I
+could know that I was not to lose his trust and affection by holding to
+our obligations of honor; and--an assurance almost as precious--I could
+know that he would not consciously permit legislators to be crushed by
+the vengeance of the Church if they refused to yield to its pressure.
+
+A few days after my arrival in Utah, and while this controversy was at
+its height, my father's birthday was celebrated (January 11, 1896),
+with all the patriarchal pomp of a Mormon family gathering, in his big
+country house outside Salt Lake City. All his descendants and collateral
+relatives were there, as well as the members of the Presidency and many
+friends. After dinner, the usual exercises of the occasion were held in
+the large reception hall of the house, with President Woodruff and my
+father and two or three other Church leaders seated in semi-state at one
+end of the hall, and the others of the company deferentially withdrawn
+to face them. Towards the end of the program President Woodruff
+rose from his easy chair, and made a sort of informal address of
+congratulation; and in the course of it, with his hand on my father's
+shoulder, he said benignly: "Abraham was the friend of God. He had
+only one son on whom all his hopes were set. But the voice of the Lord
+commanded him to sacrifice Isaac upon an altar; and Abraham trusted the
+Lord and laid his son upon the altar, in obedience to God's commands.
+Now here is another servant of the Most High and a friend of God. I
+refer to President Cannon, whose birthday we are celebrating. He has
+twenty-one sons; and if it shall be the will of the Lord that he must
+sacrifice one of them he ought to be as willing as Abraham was, for he
+will have twenty left. And the son should be as willing as Isaac. We can
+all safely trust in the Lord. He will require no sacrifice at our hands
+without purpose."
+
+I remarked to a relative beside me that the altar was evidently ready
+for me, but that I feared I should have to "get out and rustle my own
+ram in the thicket." I received no reply. I heard no word of comment
+from anyone upon the President's speech. It was accepted devoutly,
+with no feeling that he had abused the privileges of a guest. Everyone
+understood (as I did) that President Woodruff was the gentlest of men;
+that he had often professed and always shown a kindly affection for me;
+but that the will of the Lord being now known, he thought I should be
+proud to be sacrificed to it!
+
+Among the legislators pledged to me were Mormon Bishops and other
+ecclesiasts who had promised their constituents to vote for me and who
+now stood between a betrayal of their people and a rebellion against the
+power of the hierarchy. I released one of them from his pledge, because
+of his pathetic fear that he would be eternally damned if he did not
+obey "the will of the Lord." The others went to the Presidency to admit
+that if they betrayed their people they would have to confess what
+pressure had been put upon them to force them to the betrayal. I went to
+notify my father (as I had notified the representatives of every
+other candidate) that we were going to call a caucus of the Republican
+majority of the legislature, and later I was advised that President
+Woodruff and his Councillor's had appointed a committee to investigate
+and report to them how many members could be counted upon to support
+my father's candidacy. The committee (composed of my uncle Angus, my
+brother Abraham, and Apostle John Henry Smith) brought back word that
+even among the men who had professed a willingness to vote for my father
+there was great reluctance and apprehension, and that in all probability
+his election could not be carried. With President Woodruff's consent,
+my father then announced that he was not a candidate. I was nominated by
+acclamation.
+
+When I called upon my father at the President's offices after the
+election, he said to me before his colleagues: "I wish to congratulate
+you on having acted honorably and fearlessly. You have my blessing." He
+turned to the President. "You see, President Woodruff," he added, "it
+was not the will of the Lord, after all, since the people did not desire
+my election!"
+
+I have dwelt so largely upon the religious aspects of this affair
+because they are as true of the Prophet in politics today as they were
+then. At the time, the personal complication of the situation most
+distressed me--the fact that I was opposing my father in order to
+fulfill the word of honor that we had given on behalf of the Mormon
+leaders. But there was another view of the matter; and it is the one
+that is most important to the purposes of this narrative. In the course
+of the various discussions and conferences upon the Senatorship, I
+learned that the inspiration of the whole attempted betrayal had come
+from certain Republican politicians and lobbyists (like Colonel Isaac
+Trumbo), who claimed to represent a political combination of business
+interests in Washington. Joseph F. Smith admitted as much to me in more
+than one conversation. (I had offended these interests by opposing a
+monetary and a tariff bill during my service as delegate in Congress--a
+matter which I have still to recount). They had chosen my father and
+Colonel Trumbo as Utah's two Senators. I made it my particular business
+to see that Trumbo's name was not even mentioned in the caucus. The
+man selected as the other senator was Arthur Brown, a prominent Gentile
+lawyer who was known as a "jack-Mormon" (meaning a Gentile adherent to
+Church power), although I then believed, and do now, that Judge Chas.
+C. Goodwin was the Gentile most entitled to the place, because of his
+ability and the love of his people.
+
+I was, however, content with the victory we had won by resisting the
+influence of the business interests that had been willing to sell
+our honor for their profit, and I set out for Washington with a
+determination to continue the resistance. I was in a good position to
+continue it. The election of two Republican Senators from Utah had given
+the Republicans a scant majority of the members of the Upper House,
+and the bills that I had fought in the Lower House were now before the
+Senate.
+
+These bills had been introduced in the House of Representatives,
+immediately upon its convening in December, 1895, by the committee on
+rules, before Speaker Reed had even appointed the general committees.
+One was a bill to authorize the issuance of interest-bearing securities
+of the United States at such times and in such sums as the Executive
+might determine. The other was a general tariff bill that proposed
+increases upon the then existing Wilson-Gorman bill. The first would
+put into the hands of the President a power that was not enjoyed by
+any ruler in Christendom; the second would add to the unfair and
+discriminatory tariff rates then in force, by making ad valorem
+increases in them. Many new members of Congress had been elected on
+the two issues thus created: the arbitrary increase of the bonded
+indebtedness by President Cleveland to maintain a gold reserve; and the
+unjust benefits afforded those industries that were least in need of
+aid, by duties increased in exact proportion to the strength of the
+industrial combination that was to be protected.
+
+The presentation of the two bills by the Committee on Rules--with
+a coacher to each proposing to prevent amendment and limit
+discussion--raised a revolt in the House. A caucus of the insurgent
+Republican members was held at the Ebbitt Hotel, and I was elected
+temporary chairman. We appointed a committee to demand from Speaker Reed
+a division of the questions and time for opposition to be heard. We had
+seventy-five insurgents when our committee waited on. Reed; and most
+of us were new men, elected to oppose such measures as these bills
+advocated. He received us with sarcasm, put us off with a promise to
+consider our demands, and then set his lieutenants at work among
+us. Under the threat of the Speaker's displeasure if we continued to
+"insurge" and the promise of his favor if we "got into line," forty-one
+(I think) of our seventy-five deserted us. We were gloriously beaten in
+the House on both measures.
+
+Some of the older Republican members of the House came to ask me how
+I had been "misled"; and they received with the raised eyebrow and
+the silent shrug my explanation that I had been merely following my
+convictions and living up to the promises I had made my constituents.
+I had supposed that I was upholding an orthodox Republican doctrine
+in helping to defend the country from exploitation by the financial
+interests, in the matter of the bond issue, and from the greed of the
+business interests in the attempt to increase horizontally the tariff
+rates.
+
+I do not need, in this day of tariff reform agitation, to argue the
+injustice of the latter measure. But the bond issue--looking back upon
+it now--seems the more cruelly absurd of the two. Here we were, in times
+of peace, with ample funds in the national treasury, proposing to permit
+the unlimited issuance of interest-bearing government bonds in order
+to procure gold, for that national treasury, out of the hoards of the
+banks, so that these same banks might be able to obtain the gold again
+from the treasury in return for paper money. The extent to which this
+sort of absurdity might be carried would depend solely upon the desire
+of the confederation of finance to have interest-bearing government
+bonds on which they might issue national bank notes, since the Executive
+was apparently willing to yield interminably to their greed, in the
+belief that he was protecting the public credit by encouraging the
+financiers to attack that credit with their raids on the government
+gold reserve. The whole difficulty had arisen, of course, out of the
+agitation upon the money question. The banks were drawing upon the
+government gold reserve; and the government was issuing bonds to recover
+the gold again from the banks.
+
+I had been, for some years, interested in the problem of our monetary
+system and had studied and discussed it among our Eastern bankers and
+abroad. The very fact that I was from a "silver state" had put me on my
+guard, lest a local influence should lead me, into economic error. I had
+grown into the belief that our system was wrong. It seemed to me that
+some remedy was imperative. I saw in bimetallism a part of the remedy,
+and I supported bimetallism not as a partisan of free coinage but as an
+advocate of monetary reform.
+
+The arrival of Utah's two representatives in the Senate (January 27,
+1896) gave the bimetallists a majority, and when the bond-issue bill
+came before us we made it into a bill to permit the free coinage of
+silver. (February 1). A few days later, the Finance Committee turned
+the tariff bill into a free-coinage bill also. On both measures, five
+Republican Senators voted against their party--Henry M. Teller, of
+Colorado; Fred T. Dubois, of Idaho; Thos. H. Carter, of Montana; Lee
+Mantle, of Montana; and myself. We were subsequently joined by Richard
+F. Pettigrew of South Dakota. Within two weeks of my taking the oath
+in the Senate we were read out of the party by Republican leaders and
+Republican organs.
+
+All this happened so swiftly that there was no time for any
+remonstrances to come to me from Salt Lake City, even if the Church
+authorities had wished to remonstrate. The fact was that the people of
+Utah were with us in our insurgency, and when the financial interests
+subsequently appealed to the hierarchy, they found the Church powerless
+to aid them in support of a gold platform. But they obtained that aid,
+at last, in support of a tariff that was as unjust to the people as it
+was favorable to the trusts, and my continued "insurgency" led me again
+into a revolt against Church interference.
+
+The thread of connection that ran through these incidents is clear
+enough to me now: they were all incidents in the progress of a
+partnership between the Church and the predatory business interests that
+have since so successfully exploited the country. But, at the time,
+I saw no such connection clearly. I supposed that the partnership was
+merely a political friendship between the Smith faction in the Church
+and the Republican politicians who wished to use the Church; and I had
+sufficient contempt for the political abilities of the Smiths to regard
+their conspiracy rather lightly.
+
+Believing still in the good faith of the Mormon people and their real
+leaders in authority, I introduced a joint resolution in the Senate
+restoring to the Church its escheated real estate, which was still in
+the hands of a receiver, although its personal property had been
+already restored. In conference with Senators Hoar and Allison,--of the
+committee to which the resolution was referred--I urged an unconditional
+restoration of the property, arguing that to place conditions upon the
+restoration would be to insult the people who had given so many proofs
+of their willingness to obey the law and keep their pledges. The
+property was restored without conditions by a joint resolution that
+passed the Senate on March 18, 1896, passed the House a week later, and
+was approved by the President on March 26. The Church was now free of
+the last measure of proscription. Its people were in the enjoyment of
+every political liberty of American citizenship; and I joined in the
+Presidential campaign of 1896 with no thought of any danger threatening
+us that was not common to the other communities of the country.
+
+But before I continue further with these political events, I must relate
+a private incident in the secret betrayal of Utah--an incident that must
+be related, if this narrative is to remain true to the ideals of public
+duty that have thus far assumed to inspire it--an incident of which a
+false account was given before a Senate Committee in Washington
+during the Smoot investigation of 1904, accompanied by a denial of
+responsibility by Joseph F. Smith, the man whose authority alone
+encouraged and accomplished the tragedy--for it was a tragedy, as
+dark in its import to the Mormon community as it was terrible in its
+immediate consequences to all our family.
+
+By his denial of responsibility and by secret whisper within the Church,
+Smith has placed the disgrace of the betrayal upon my father, who
+was guiltless of it, and blackened the memory of my dead brother by a
+misrepresentation of his motives. I feel that it is incumbent upon me,
+therefore, at whatever pain to myself, to relate the whole unhappy truth
+of the affair, as much to defend the memory of the dead as to denounce
+the betrayal of the living, to expose a public treason against the
+community not less than to correct a private wrong done to the good name
+of those whom it is my right to defend.
+
+Late in July, 1896, when I was in New York on business for the
+Presidency, I received a telegram announcing the death of my brother,
+Apostle Abraham H. Cannon. We had been companions all our lives; he had
+been the nearest to me of our family, the dearest of my friends but even
+in the first shock of my grief I realized that my father would have a
+greater stroke of sorrow to bear than I; and in hurrying back to Salt
+Lake City I nerved myself with the hope that I might console him.
+
+I found him and Joseph F. Smith in the office of the Presidency,
+sitting at their desks. My father turned as I entered, and his face was
+unusually pale in spite of its composure; but the moment he recognized
+me, his expression changed to a look of pain that alarmed me. He rose
+and put his hand on my shoulder with a tenderness that it was his habit
+to conceal. "I know how you feel his loss," he said hoarsely, "but when
+I think what he would have had to pass through if he had lived I cannot
+regret his death."
+
+The almost agonized expression of his face, as much as the terrible
+implication of his words, startled me with I cannot say what horrible
+fear about my brother. I asked, "Why! Why--what has happened?"
+
+With a sweep of his hand toward Smith at his desk--a gesture and a
+look the most unkind I ever saw him use--he answered: "A few weeks ago,
+Abraham took a plural wife, Lillian Hamlin. It became known. He would
+have had to face a prosecution in Court. His death has saved us from
+a calamity that would have been dreadful for the Church--and for the
+state."
+
+"Father!" I cried. "Has this thing come back again! And the ink hardly
+dry on the bill that restored your church property on the pledge of
+honor that there would never be another case--" I had caught the look on
+Smith's face, and it was a look of sullen defiance. "How did it happen?"
+
+My father replied: "I know--it's awful. I would have prevented it if
+I could. I was asked for my consent, and I refused it. President Smith
+obtained the acquiescence of President Woodruff, on the plea that it
+wasn't an ordinary case of polygamy but merely a fulfillment of the
+biblical instruction that a man should take his dead brother's wife.
+Lillian was betrothed to David, and had been sealed to him in eternity
+after his death. I understand that President Woodruff told Abraham
+he would leave the matter with them if he wished to take the
+responsibility--and President Smith performed the ceremony."
+
+Smith could hear every word that was said. My father had included him
+in the conversation, and he was listening. He not only did not deny
+his guilt; he accepted it in silence, with an expression of sulky
+disrespect.
+
+He did not deny it later, when the whole community had learned of it. He
+went with Apostle John Henry Smith to see Mr. P. H. Lannan, proprietor
+of the Salt Lake Tribune, to ask him not to attack the Church for
+this new and shocking violation of its covenant. Mr. Lannan had been
+intimately friendly with my brother, and he was distressed between his
+regard for his dead friend and his obligation to do his public duty.
+I do not know all that the Smiths said to him; but I know that the
+conversation assumed that Joseph F. Smith had performed the marriage
+ceremony; I know that neither of the Smiths made any attempt to deny the
+assumption; and I know that Joseph F. Smith sought to placate Mr. Lannan
+by promising "it shall not occur again." And this interview was sought
+by the Smiths, palpably because wherever the marriage of Abraham H.
+Cannon and Lillian Hamlin was talked of, Joseph F. Smith was named as
+the priest who had solemnized the offending relation. If it had not been
+for Smith's consciousness of his own guilt and his knowledge that the
+whole community was aware of that guilt, he would never have gone to the
+Tribune office to make such a promise to Mr. Lannan.
+
+All of which did not prevent Joseph F. Smith from testifying--in the
+Smoot investigation at Washington in 1904--that he did not marry Abraham
+Cannon and Lillian Hamlin, that he did not have any conversation with my
+father about the marriage, that he did not know Lillian Hamlin had been
+betrothed to Abraham's dead brother, that the first time he heard of
+the charge that he had married them was when he saw it printed in the
+newspapers!
+
+[FOOTNOTE: See Proceedings before Senate Committee on Privileges and
+Elections, 1904, Vol. 1, pages 110, 126, 177, etc.]
+
+If this first polygamous marriage had been the last--if it were an
+isolated and peculiar incident as the Smiths then claimed it was and
+promised it should be--it might be forgiven as generously now as Mr.
+Lannan then forgave it. But, about the same time there became public
+another case--that of Apostle Teasdale--and as this narrative shall
+prove, here was the beginning of a policy of treachery which the
+present Church leaders, under Joseph F. Smith, have since consistently
+practiced, in defiance of the laws of the state and the "revelation
+of God," with lies and evasions, with perjury and its subornation, in
+violation of the most solemn pledges to the country, and through the
+agency of a political tyranny that makes serious prosecution impossible
+and immunity a public boast.
+
+The world understands that polygamy is an enslavement of women. The
+ecclesiastical authorities in Utah today have discovered that it is
+more powerful as an enslaver of men. Once a man is bound in a polygamous
+relation, there is no place for him in the civilized world outside of
+a Mormon community. He must remain there, shielded by the Church,
+or suffer elsewhere social ostracism and the prosecution of bigamous
+relations. Since 1890, the date of the manifesto (and it is to the
+period since 1890 that my criticism solely applies) the polygamist must
+be abjectly subservient to the prophets who protect him; he must obey
+their orders and do their work, or endure the punishment which they can
+inflict upon him and his wives and his children. Inveigled into a plural
+marriage by the authority of a clandestine religious dogma--encouraged
+by his elders, seduced by the prospect of their favor, and impelled
+perhaps by a daring impulse to take the covenant and bond that shall
+swear him into the dangerous fellowship of the lawlessly faithful--he
+finds himself, at once, a law breaker who must pay the Church hierarchy
+for his protection by yielding to them every political right, every
+personal independence, every freedom of opinion, every liberty of act.
+
+I do not believe that Smith fully foresaw the policy which he has since
+undoubtedly pursued. I believe now, as I did then, that in betraying my
+brother into polygamy Smith was actuated by his anger against my father
+for having inspired the recession from the doctrine; that he desired
+to impair the success of the recession by having my brother dignify
+the recrudescence of polygamy by the apostolic sanction of his
+participation; and that this participation was jealously designed by
+Smith to avenge himself upon the First Councillor by having the son be
+one of the first to break the law, and violate the covenant. I saw that
+my brother's death had thwarted the conspiracy. Smith was so obviously
+frightened--despite his pretense of defiance--that I believed he had
+learned his needed lesson. And I accepted the incident as a private
+tragedy on which the final curtain had now fallen.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VIII. The Church and the Interests
+
+
+
+Meanwhile, I had been taking part in the Presidential campaign of 1896,
+and I had been one of the four "insurgent" Republican Senators (Teller
+of Colorado, Dubois of Idaho, Pettigrew of South Dakota and myself)
+who withdrew from the national Republican convention at St. Louis, in
+fulfillment of our obligations to our constituents, when we found
+that the convention was dominated by that confederation of finance in
+politics which has since come to be called "the System." I was a member
+of the committee on resolutions, and our actions in the committee had
+indicated that we would probably withdraw from the convention if
+it adopted the single gold platform as dictated by Senator Lodge of
+Massachusetts acting for a group of Republican leaders headed by Platt
+of New York, and Aldrich of Rhode Island. At the most critical point of
+our controversy I received a message from Church headquarters warning me
+that "we" had made powerful friends among the leading men of the nation
+and that we ought not to jeopardize their friendship by an inconsiderate
+insurgency. Accordingly, in bolting the convention, I was guilty of
+a new defiance of ecclesiastical authority and a new provocation of
+ecclesiastical vengeance.
+
+President Woodruff spoke to me of the matter after I returned to Utah,
+and I explained to him that I thought the Republican party, under the
+leadership of Mark Hanna and the flag of the "interests," had forgotten
+its duty to the people of the nation. I argued, to the President, that
+of all people in the world we, who had suffered so much ourselves,
+were most bound to bow to no unfairness ourselves and to oppose the
+imposition of unfairness upon others. And I talked in this strain to him
+not because I wished his approval of my action but because I wished
+to fortify him against the approach of the emissaries of the new
+Republicanism, who were sure to come to him to seek the support of the
+Church in the campaign.
+
+Some days later, while I was talking with my father in the offices of
+the Presidency, the secretary ushered in Senator Redfield Proctor of
+Vermont. I withdrew, understanding that he wished to speak in private
+with President Woodruff and his councillors. But I learned subsequently
+that he had come to Salt Lake to persuade the leaders of the Church
+to use their power in favor of the Republican party throughout the
+intermountain states.
+
+Senator Proctor asked me personally what chance I thought the party
+had in the West. I pointed out that the Republican platform of 1892
+had reproached Grover Cleveland for his antagonism to bimetallism--"a
+doctrine favored by the American people from tradition and interest,"
+to quote the language of that platform--and the Republicans of the
+intermountain states still held true to the doctrine. It had
+been repudiated by the St. Louis platform of June, 1896, and the
+intermountain states would probably refuse their electoral votes to the
+Republican party because of the repudiation.
+
+Senator Proctor thought that the leaders of the Church were powerful
+enough to control the votes of their followers; and he argued that
+gratitude to the Republican party for freeing Utah ought to be stronger
+than the opinions of the people in a merely economic question.
+
+I reminded him that one of our covenants had been that the Church was
+to refrain from dictating to its followers in politics; that we had been
+steadily growing away from the absolutism of earlier times; and that
+for the sake of the peace and progress of Utah I hoped that the leaders
+would keep their hands off. I did not, of course, convince him. Nor was
+it necessary. I was sure that no power that the Church would dare to use
+would be sufficient at this time to influence the people against their
+convictions.
+
+Joseph F. Smith, soon afterward, notified me that there was to be a
+meeting of the Church authorities in the Temple, and he asked me
+to attend it. Since I had never before been invited to one of these
+conferences in the "holy of holies," I inquired the purposes of the
+conclave. He replied that they desired to consider the situation
+in which our people had been placed by my action in the St. Louis
+convention, and to discuss the perceptible trend of public opinion
+in the state. I saw, then, that Senator Proctor's visit had not been
+without avail.
+
+On the appointed afternoon, I went to the sacred inner room of the
+temple, where the members of the Presidency and several of the apostles
+were waiting. I shall not describe the room or any of the religious
+ceremonies with which the conference was opened. I shall confine myself
+to the discussion--which was begun mildly by President Woodruff and
+Lorenzo Snow, then president of the quorum of apostles.
+
+To my great surprise, Joseph F. Smith made a violent Republican speech,
+declaring that I had humiliated the Church and alienated its political
+friends by withdrawing from the St. Louis convention. He was followed by
+Heber J. Grant, an apostle, who had always posed as a Democrat; and
+he was as Republican and denunciatory as Smith had been. He declaimed
+against our alienation of the great business interests of the country,
+whose friendship he and other prominent Mormons had done so much
+to cultivate, and from whom we might now procure such advantageous
+co-operation if we stood by them in politics.
+
+President Woodruff tried to defend me by saying that he was sure I had
+acted conscientiously; but by this time I desired no intervention of
+prophetic mercy and no mitigation of judgment that might come of such
+intervention. As soon as the President announced that they were prepared
+to hear from me, I rose and walked to the farther side of the solemn
+chamber, withdrawn from the assembled prophets and confronting
+them. Having first disavowed any recognition of their right as an
+ecclesiastical body to direct me in my political actions, I rehearsed
+the events of the two campaigns in which I had been elected on pledges
+that I had fulfilled by my course in Congress, in the Senate, and
+finally in the St. Louis convention. That course had been approved by
+the people. They had trusted me to carry out the policies on which they
+had elected me to Congress. They had reiterated the trust by electing
+me to the Senate after I had revolted against the Republican bond and
+tariff measures in the lower House. I could not and would not violate
+their trust now. And there was no authority on earth which I would
+recognize as empowered to come between the people's will and the
+people's elected servants.
+
+The prophets received this defiance in silence. Their expressions
+implied condemnation, but none was spoken--at least not while I was
+there. President Woodruff indicated that the conference was at an
+end, so far as I was concerned; and I withdrew. Some attempts were
+subsequently made to influence the people during the campaign, but in a
+half-hearted way and vainly. The Democrats carried Utah overwhelmingly;
+only three Republican members of the legislature were elected out of
+sixty-three.
+
+It was this conference in the Temple which gave me my first realization
+that most of the Prophets had not, and never would have, any feeling of
+citizenship in state or nation; that they considered, and would continue
+to consider, every public issue solely in its possible effect upon the
+fortunes of their Church. My father alone seemed to have a larger view;
+but he was a statesman of full worldly knowledge; and his experience in
+Congress, during a part of the "reconstruction period," and throughout
+the Tilden-Hayes controversy, had taught him how effectively the
+national power could assert itself. The others, blind to such dangers,
+seemed to feel that under Utah's sovereignty the literal "kingdom
+of God" (as they regard their Church) was to exercise an undisputed
+authority. Unable, myself, to take their viewpoint, I was conscious of
+a sense of transgression against the orthodoxy of their religion. I was
+aware, for the first time, that in gaining the fraternity of American
+citizenship I had in some way lost the fraternity of the faith in which
+I had been reared. I accepted this as a necessary consequence of our
+new freedom--a freedom that left us less close and unyielding in our
+religious loyalty by withdrawing the pressure that had produced our
+compactness. And I hoped that, in time, the Prophets themselves--or,
+at least, their successors--would grow into a more liberal sense of
+citizenship as their people grew. I knew that our progress must be a
+process of evolution. I was content to wait upon the slow amendments of
+time.
+
+My hope carried me through the disheartening incidents of the Senatorial
+campaign that followed upon the election of the legislature--a campaign
+in which the power of the hierarchy was used publicly to defeat the
+deposed apostle, Moses Thatcher, in his second candidacy for the
+United States Senate. But the Church only succeeded in defeating him by
+throwing its influence to Joseph L. Rawlins, whom the Prophets loved as
+little as they loved Thatcher; and I felt that in Rawlins' election the
+state at least gained a representative who was worthy of it.
+
+What was quite as sinister a use of Church influence occurred among the
+Mormons of Idaho, where I went to help Senator Fred. T. Dubois in his
+campaign for re-election. He had aided us in obtaining Utah's statehood
+as much as any man in Washington. He had accepted all the promises of
+the Mormon leaders in good faith--particularly their promise that no
+Church influence should intrude upon the politics of Idaho. Yet in his
+campaign I was followed through the Mormon settlements by Charles W.
+Penrose, a polygamist, since an apostle of the Church, and at that time
+editor of the Church's official organ, the Deseret News.
+
+I supposed that he was lying in his claim to represent the Presidency;
+and as soon as I returned to Salt Lake, I went to Church headquarters
+and asked whether Penrose had been authorized to say (as he had been
+saying) that he was sent out to prevent my making any misrepresentations
+of the political attitude of the Presidency.
+
+Joseph F. Smith replied, "Yes,"--speaking for himself and apparently for
+President Woodruff.
+
+"And when"--I demanded--"when did I ever claim to represent or
+misrepresent you in politics? Haven't I always said that I don't
+recognize you as politicians--and always denied that you have any right
+to dictate the politics of our people?"
+
+President Woodruff interposed gently:
+
+"Well, you know, Frank, we have no criticism to pass on you, but we
+were advised that you might tell the voters of Idaho we were friendly
+to Senator Dubois, and so we sent Brother Penrose, at the request of
+President Budge" (a Mormon stake president in Idaho) "to counsel
+our people. And Brother Penrose says you attacked him in one of your
+meetings, and said he was not a trustworthy political guide."
+
+President Woodruff's mildness was always irresistible. "If that's all
+he told you I said about him," I replied, "he didn't do justice to my
+remarks." And I explained that I had described Penrose as "a lying, oily
+hypocrite," come to advise the Idaho Mormons that the Presidency wished
+them to vote a certain political ticket although the Presidency had no
+interest in the question and although I myself had taken to Washington
+the Presidency's covenant of honor that the Church would never attempt
+to interfere in Idaho's political affairs.
+
+Smith sprang to his feet angrily. "I don't care what has been promised
+to Dubois or anyone else," he said. "He was the bitterest enemy our
+people had in the old days, and I'll never give my countenance to him in
+politics while the world stands. He sent many a one of our brethren
+to prison when he was marshal of the territory, and I can't forget his
+devilish persecutions--even if you can."
+
+I closed the conversation by remarking that not one among us would have
+had a vote as a citizen either of Utah or of Idaho if Dubois and men
+of his kind had not accepted our pledges of honor; and if we were
+determined to remember the persecutions and not the mercy, we ought to
+go back to the conditions from which mercy had rescued us.
+
+I left for Washington, soon after, with an unhappy apprehension that
+there were evil influences at work in Utah which might prove powerful
+enough to involve the whole community in the worst miseries of reaction.
+I saw those influences embodied in Joseph F. Smith; and because he was
+explosive where others were reflective, he had now more influence
+than previously--there being no longer any set resistance to him. The
+reverence of the Mormon people for the name of Smith was (as it had
+always been) his chief asset of popularity. He had a superlative
+physical impressiveness and a passion that seemed to take the place of
+magnetism in public address. But he never said anything memorable; he
+never showed any compelling ability of mind; he had a personal cunning
+without any large intelligence, and he was so many removes from the
+First Presidency that it seemed unlikely he would soon attain to
+that position of which the power is so great that it only makes the
+blundering more dangerous than the astute.
+
+I was going to Washington, before Congress reconvened, to confer with
+Senator Redfield Proctor. He wished to see me about the new protective
+tariff bill that was proposed by the Republican leaders. I wished to ask
+him not to use his political influence in Idaho against Senator Fred.
+T. Dubois, who had been Senator Proctor's political protege. I knew that
+Senator Proctor had once been given a semi-official promise that the
+Mormon Church leaders would not interfere in Idaho against Dubois. I
+wished to tell Proctor that this promise was not being kept, and to
+plead with him to give Dubois fair play--although I knew that Senator
+Dubois' "insurgency" had offended Senator Proctor.
+
+He received me, in his home in Washington, with an almost paternal
+kindliness that became sometimes more dictatorial than persuasive--as
+the manner of an older Senator is so apt to be when he wishes to correct
+the independence of a younger colleague. He explained that the House
+was Republican by a considerable majority; a good protective tariff
+bill would come from that body; and a careful canvass of the Senate had
+proved that the bill would pass there, if I would vote for it. "We
+have within one vote of a majority," he said. "As you're a devoted
+protectionist in your views--as your state is for protection--as your
+father and your people feel grateful to the Republican party for leading
+you out of the wilderness--I have felt that it was proper to appeal to
+you and learn your views definitely. If you'll pledge your support to
+the bill, we shall not look elsewhere for a vote--but it's essential
+that we should be secure of a majority."
+
+I replied that I could not promise to vote for the measure until
+I should see it. It was true that I had been a devoted advocate of
+protection and still believed in the principle; but I had learned
+something of the way in which tariff bills were framed, and something of
+the influences that controlled the party councils in support of them. I
+could not be sure that the new measure would be any more just than the
+original Dingley bill, which I had helped to defeat in the Senate;
+and the way in which this bill had been driven through the House was a
+sufficient warning to me not to harness myself in a pledge that might be
+misused in legislation.
+
+Senator Proctor did me the honor to say that he did not suppose any
+improper suggestion of personal advantage could influence me, and he
+hoped I knew him too well to suppose that he would use such an argument;
+"but," he added, "anything that it's within the 'political' power of the
+party to bestow, you may expect; I'm authorized to say that we will take
+care of you."
+
+As I still refused to bind myself blindly, he said, with regret: "We had
+great hopes of you. It seems that we must look elsewhere. I will leave
+the question open. If you conclude to assure us of your vote for
+the bill, I shall see that you are restored to a place in Republican
+councils. If I do not hear anything from you, it will be necessary
+to address ourselves to one or two other Senators who are probably
+available."
+
+It is, of course, a doctrine of present-day Republicanism that the will
+of the majority must rule within the party. An insurgent is therefore
+an apostate. The decision of the caucus is the infallible declaration of
+the creed. In setting myself up as a judge of what it was right for me
+to do, as the sworn representative of the people who had elected me, I
+was offending against party orthodoxy, as that orthodoxy was then, and
+is now, enforced in Washington.
+
+I was given an opportunity to return to conformity. I was sent a
+written invitation to attend the caucus of Republican Senators after the
+assembling of Congress; and, with the other "insurgents," I ignored
+the invitation. It was finally decided by the party leaders to let the
+tariff bill rest until after the inauguration of the President-elect,
+William McKinley, with the understanding that he would call a special
+session to consider it; and, in the interval, the Republican machine,
+under Mark Hanna, was set to work to produce a Republican majority in
+the Senate.
+
+Hanna was elected Senator, at this time, to succeed John Sherman, who
+had been removed to the office of Secretary of State, in order to make
+a seat for Hanna. The Republican majority was produced. (Senator Dubois
+had been defeated). And when the special session was called, in the
+spring of 1897, my vote was no longer so urgently needed. I was invited
+to a Republican caucus, but I was unwilling to return to political
+affiliations which I might have to renounce again; for I saw the power
+of the business interests in dictating the policy of the party and I did
+not propose to bow to that dictation.
+
+When the tariff bill came before the Senate, I could not in conscience
+support it. The beneficiaries of the bill seemed to be dictating their
+own schedules, and this was notably the case with the sugar trust, which
+had obtained a differential between raw and refined sugar several times
+greater than the entire cost of refining. I denounced the injustice of
+the sugar schedule particularly. A Mr. Oxnard came to remonstrate with
+me on behalf of the beet sugar industry of the West. "You know," he
+said, "what a hard time we're having with our sugar companies. Unless
+this schedule's adopted I greatly fear for our future."
+
+I replied that I was not opposing any protection of the struggling
+industries of the country, or of the sugar growers, but I was set
+against the extortionate differential that the sugar trust was
+demanding. Everybody knew that the trust had built its tremendous
+industrial power upon such criminally high protection as this
+differential afforded, and that its power now affected public councils,
+obtained improper favors, and terrorized the small competing beet
+sugar companies of the West. I argued that it was time to rally for the
+protection of the people as well as of the beet sugar industry.
+
+He predicted that if the differential was reduced the protection on beet
+sugar would fail. I laughed at him. "You don't know the temper of
+the Senate," I said. "Why, even some of the Democrats are in favor
+of protecting the beet sugar industry. That part of the bill is safe,
+whatever happens to the rest."
+
+"Senator Cannon," he replied, with all the scorn of superior knowledge,
+"you're somewhat new to this matter. Permit me to inform you that if
+we don't do our part in supporting the sugar schedule, including the
+differential, the friends of the schedule in the Senate will prevent us
+from obtaining our protection."
+
+"That," I retorted angrily, "is equivalent to saying that the sugar
+trust is writing the sugar schedule. I can't listen with patience to any
+such insult. The Senate of the United States cannot be dictated to, in
+a matter of such importance, by the trust. I will not vote for the
+differential. I will continue to oppose it to the end. If you're
+right--if the trust has such power--better that our struggling sugar
+industry should perish, so that we may arouse the people to the
+iniquitous manipulation that destroyed it."
+
+I continued to oppose the schedule. Soon after, I received a message
+from the Church authorities asking me to go to New York to attend to
+some of their financial affairs. I entered the lobby of the Plaza Hotel
+on Fifth Avenue about nine o'clock at night; I was met, unexpectedly, by
+Thomas R. Cutler, manager of the Utah Sugar Company, who was a Bishop of
+the Mormon Church; and he asked, almost at once, how the tariff bill was
+progressing at Washington.
+
+I had known Bishop Cutler for years. I knew that he had labored with
+extraordinary zeal and intelligence to establish the sugar industry in
+Utah. I understood that he had risked his own property, unselfishly,
+to save the enterprise when it was in peril. And I had every reason to
+expect that he would be as indignant as I was, at the proposal to use
+the support of the beet sugar states in behalf of their old tyrant.
+
+I told him of my conversation with Oxnard. "I'm glad," I said, "that
+we're independent enough to refuse such an alliance with the men who are
+robbing the country."
+
+A peculiar, pale smile curled Bishop Cutler's thin lips. "Well, Frank,"
+he replied, "that's just what I want to see you about. We"--with the
+intonation that is used among prominent Mormons when the "we" are
+voicing the conclusions of the hierarchy--"wouldn't like to do anything
+to hurt the sugar interests of the country. I've looked into this
+differential, and I don't see that it is particularly exorbitant. As a
+matter of fact, the American Sugar Refining Company is doing all it can
+to help us get our needed protection, and we have promised to do what we
+can for it, in return. I hope you can see your way clear to vote for the
+bill. I know that the brethren"--meaning the Church authorities--"will
+not approve of your opposition to it."
+
+I understand what his quiet warning meant, and when we had parted I
+went to my room to face the situation. Already I had been told, by a
+representative of the Union Pacific Railway, that the company intended
+to make Utah the legal home of the corporation, and to enter into a
+close affiliation with the prominent men of the Church. I had been asked
+to participate, and I had refused because I did not feel free, as a
+Senator, to become interested in a company whose relations with the
+government were of such a character. But I had not foreseen what this
+affiliation meant. Bishop Cutler's warning opened my eyes. The Church
+was protecting itself, in its commercial undertakings, by an alliance
+with the strongest and most unscrupulous of the national enemies.
+
+I saw that this was natural. The Mormon leaders had been for years
+struggling to save their community from poverty. Proscribed by the
+Federal laws, their home industries suffering for want of finances,
+fighting against the allied influences of business in politics, these
+leaders had been taught to feel a fearful respect for the power that had
+oppressed them. They were now being offered the aid and countenance of
+their old opponents. Our community, so long the object of the world's
+disdain, was to advance to favor and prosperity along the easy road of
+association with the most influential interests of the country.
+
+I remembered the long hard struggle of our people. I remembered the days
+and nights of anxiety that I myself had known when we were friendless
+and proscribed. Here was an open door for us, now, to power and wealth
+and all the comfort and consideration that would come of these. Other
+men better than I in personal character, more experienced in legislation
+than I, and wiser by natural gift, were willing to vote for the bill;
+and Bishop Cutler, a man whom I had always esteemed, the representative
+of the men whom I most revered, had urged me, for them, to support the
+bill, under suggestion of their anger if I refused to be guided by their
+leadership.
+
+I saw why the "interests" were eager to have our friendship; we could
+give them more than any other community of our size in the whole
+country. In the final analysis, the laws of our state and the
+administration of its government would be in the hands of the church
+authorities. Moses Thatcher might lead a rebellion for a time, but it
+would be brief. Brigham H. Roberts might avow his independence in some
+wonderful burst of campaign oratory, but he would be forced to fast and
+pray and see visions until he yielded. I might rebel and be successful
+for a moment, but the inexorable power of church control would crush me
+at last. Yet, if I surrendered in this matter of the tariff, I should
+be doing exactly what I had criticized so many of my colleagues for
+doing--for more than one man in the House and the Senate had given me
+the specious excuse that it was necessary to go against his conscience,
+here, in order to hold his influence and his power to do good in other
+instances.
+
+I did not sleep that night. On the day following, I transacted the
+financial affairs that I had been asked to undertake, and then I
+returned to Washington. My wife met me at the railway station, and--if
+you will bear with the intimacy of such psychology--the moment I saw
+her I knew how I would vote. I knew that neither the plea of community
+ambition, nor the equally invalid argument of an industrial need at
+home, nor the financial jeopardy of my friends who had invested in our
+home industries, nor the fear of church antagonism, could justify me in
+what would be, for me, an act of perfidy. When I had taken my oath of
+office I had pledged myself, in the memory of old days of injustice,
+never to vote as a Senator for an act of injustice. The test had come.
+By all the sanctities of that old suffering and the promise that I had
+made in its spirit, I would keep the faith.
+
+When the tariff bill came to its final vote in the Senate, I had the
+unhappy distinction of being the only Republican Senator who voted
+against it. A useless sacrifice! And yet if it had been my one act of
+public life, I should still be glad of it. The "interests" that forced
+the passage of that bill are those that have since exploited the country
+so shamefully. It is their control of Republican party councils that has
+since caused the loss of popular faith in Republicanism and the split in
+the party which threatens to disrupt it. It is their control of politics
+in Utah that has destroyed the whole value of the Mormon experiment
+in communism and made the Mormon Church an instrument of political
+oppression for commercial gain. They are the most dangerous domestic
+enemy that the nation has known since the close of the Civil War. My
+opposition was as doomed as such single independence must always be--but
+at least it was an opposition. There is a consolation in having been
+right, though you may have been futile!
+
+My father, visiting Washington soon afterwards, took occasion to
+criticize my vote publicly, in a newspaper interview; but he was
+content, by that criticism, to clear himself and his colleagues of
+any responsibility for my act. "You made a great mistake," he told me
+privately. "You are alienating the friends who have done so much for
+us." He added as if casually--with an air of off-handedness that was
+significant to me--"You lay yourself open to attack from your political
+enemies. When a man's head is high, it is easily hit." I was afterwards
+to understand how serious a danger he then foresaw and thus predicted.
+
+Many reports soon reached me of attacks that were being made upon me
+by the ecclesiastical authorities, particularly by Joseph F. Smith and
+Apostle Heber J. Grant. The formal criticism passed upon me by my father
+was magnified to make my tariff vote appear an inexcusable party and
+community defection. A vigorous and determined opposition was raised
+against me. And in this, Smith and his followers were aided by
+the perfect system of Church control in Utah--a system of complete
+ecclesiastical tyranny under the guise of democracy.
+
+Practically every Mormon man is in the priesthood. Nearly every Mormon
+man has some concrete authority to exercise in addition to holding his
+ordination as an elder. Obedience to his superiors is essential to his
+ambition to rise to higher dignity in the church; and obedience to his
+superiors is necessary in order to attract obedience to himself from his
+subordinates. There can be no lay jealousy of priestly interference in
+politics, because there are no laymen in the proper sense of the word.
+A man's worldly success in life is largely involved in his success as
+a churchman, since the church commands the opportunities of enterprise,
+and the leaders of the Church are the state's most powerful men of
+affairs. It is not uncommon, in any of our American communities, for men
+to use their church membership to support their business; but in Utah
+the Mormons practically must do so, and even the Gentiles find it wise
+to be subservient.
+
+Add to this temporal power of the Church the fact that it was
+establishing a policy of seeking material success for its people, and
+you have the explanation of its eagerness to accept an alliance with the
+"interests" and of its hostility to anyone who opposed that alliance.
+The Mormons, dispossessed of their means by the migration from Illinois,
+had been taught the difficulty of obtaining wealth and the value of it
+when once obtained. They fancied themselves set apart, in the mountains,
+by the world's exclusion. They were ambitious to make themselves as
+financially powerful in proportion to their numbers as the Jews were;
+and it was a common argument among them that the world's respect had
+turned to the Jews because of the dependence of Christian governments
+upon the Jewish financiers.
+
+The exploitation of this solid mass of industry and thrift could not
+long be obscured from the eyes of the East. The honest desire of the
+Mormon leaders to benefit their people by an alliance with financial
+power made them the easy victims of such an alliance. With the death
+of the older men of the hierarchy, the Church administration lost its
+tradition of religious leadership for the good of the community solely,
+and the new leaders became eager for financial aggrandizement for
+the sake, of power. Like every other church that has added a temporal
+scepter to its spiritual authority, its pontiffs have become kings of a
+civil government instead of primates of a religious faith.
+
+
+
+Chapter IX. At the Crossways
+
+
+
+In 1897, the Church, freed of proscription, with its people enjoying the
+sovereignty of their state rights, had--as I have already said--only one
+further enfranchisement to desire: and that was its freedom from debt.
+The informal "finance committee" of which I was a member, had succeeded
+in concentrating the bulk of the indebtedness in the East, on short term
+loans, and had brought a certain order out of the confusion of the
+older methods of administration. But, in 1897, my father proposed a
+comprehensive plan of Church finance that included the issuance of
+Church bonds and the formation of responsible committees to regulate and
+manage the business affairs of the Church, so that the bonds might be
+made a normal investment for Eastern capital by having a normal business
+method of administration to back them. The idea was tentatively approved
+by the Presidency, and I was asked to draw up the plan in detail.
+
+To this end there were placed in my hands sheets showing the assets,
+liabilities, revenues and disbursements of the Church. They gave a total
+cash indebtedness of $1,200,000, approximately. The revenues from
+tithes for the year 1897 were estimated at a trifle more than a million
+dollars--the total being low because of the financial depression
+from which the country was just recovering. The available property
+holdings--exclusive of premises used for religious worship, for
+educational and benevolent work, and such kindred purposes--were valued
+at several millions (from four to six), although there was no definite
+appraisal or means of obtaining appraisal, since the values would
+largely attach only when the properties were brought into business use.
+I was advised that the incomes of the Church would probably increase
+at the rate of ten per cent per annum, but I do not know by what
+calculations this ratio was reached.
+
+The disbursements were chiefly for interest on debt, for the maintenance
+of the temples and tabernacles, for educational and charitable work,
+for missionary headquarters in other countries, and for the return
+of released missionaries. The missionaries themselves received no
+compensation; they were supposed to travel "without purse or scrip;"
+their expenses were defrayed by their relatives, and they had to pay
+out of their own pockets for the printed tracts which they distributed.
+Neither the President nor any of the general authorities received
+salaries. There was an order that each apostle should be paid $2,000 a
+year, but this rule had been suspended, except, perhaps, in the cases
+of men who had to give their whole time to religious work and who had
+no independent incomes. Some occasional appropriations had been made for
+meeting houses in communities that had been unable to erect their own
+chapels of worship, but for the most part there were few calls made upon
+the Church revenues to support its religious activities, its priests or
+its propaganda.
+
+Our proposed committees, therefore, were a committee on missionary work,
+one on publication, one on colonization, one on political protective
+work for the Mormons in foreign countries, and most important--a finance
+committee selected from the body of apostles, with the addition of some
+able men connected with financial institutions. As a basis for the work
+of the finance committee, we proposed the establishment of an interest
+fund, a sinking fund, and a scale of percentage disbursements for the
+various community purposes. These committees were to be appointed by the
+Conferences of the people, and the committee reports were to be public.
+President Woodruff eagerly accepted the plan as relieving the Presidency
+of administrative cares that were becoming too great for the quorum to
+carry. Joseph F. Smith did not at once awake to the real meaning of the
+proposal; but when the scheme was submitted in its matured details,
+he spoke of the danger of allowing power to pass from the hands of the
+"trustee in trust" in business matters. His idea was sufficiently
+clear in its resistance to any diffusion of authority, but it was
+correspondingly void of any suggestion of substitute. For the time being
+he was pacified by the assurance that the "Kingdom of God" and the
+rule of its prophets would not be endangered by the organization
+of committees and the submission of financial plans to the general
+knowledge, and even to the consent, of the people.
+
+It was, of course, evident to the First Councillor that this scheme
+of Church administration would give the Mormon people a measure of
+responsible government, and the proposal was a part of his wisdom as a
+community leader seeking the common welfare. While we had been a people
+on whom the whole world seemed to be making war, a dictatorship had
+been necessary; but now that we had arrived at peace and liberty, a
+concentration of irresponsible power would surely become dangerous to
+progress. Without, therefore, impairing the religious authority of the
+Prophet, the First Councillor was willing to divide the temporal power
+of the Church among its members.
+
+He was as silent, about these aims, with me as with all others; but I
+had learned to understand him in his silences; and, in joining with him
+in his work of reform, I was as sure of his purpose as I have since been
+sure of the disaster to the Mormon people that has come of the failure
+to effect the reform.
+
+When the Presidency had approved of the flotation of bonds, I went with
+my father to New York to aid him in interesting Eastern capitalists
+in the investment. We interviewed Judge John F. Dillon and Mr. Winslow
+Pierce, of the law firm of Dillon and Pierce, attorneys for some of the
+Union Pacific interests; and through them we met Mr. Edward H. Harriman,
+Mr. George J. Gould and members of the firm of Kuhn Loeb and Company. It
+was interesting to watch the encounters between the Mormon prophet and
+some of these astutest of the nation's financiers; for it was as if one
+of the ancient patriarchs had stepped down from the days of early Israel
+to discuss the financial problems of his people with a modern "captain
+of industry." He described a condition of society that was, to Wall
+Street, archaic. He spoke with a serene assurance that the order of
+affairs in Utah was constituted in the wisdom of the word of God. He
+was listened to, with the interest of curiosity, as the chief living
+exponent of the Mormon movement, its processes and its aims; and I
+was impressed by the fact that these men of the world had a large and
+splendid sympathy for any wholesome social effort designed to abolish
+poverty and establish a quicker justice in the practical affairs of the
+race.
+
+It was of the abolition of poverty and the justice of the social order
+among the Mormons, that the First Councillor chiefly spoke. "Your
+clients," he said to Judge Dillon, "make their investments frequently in
+railroad stocks and bonds. What are the underlying bases of the values
+of railroad securities? Largely the industry and stability of the
+communities through which the railroad lines shall operate. Then, in
+reality, the security is valuable in proportion to the value of the
+community in its steadfastness, its prosperity and the safety of its
+productive labor. In your railroad investments you are obliged to take
+such considerations as a secondary security. In negotiating this Church
+loan with your clients, you can offer the same great values as a primary
+security. Probably no where else in the world is there a people at once
+so industrious and so stable as ours."
+
+It was the boast of the Mormons that there had not been an almshouse or
+an almstaker in any of their settlements, up to the time of the escheat
+proceedings by the Federal officials; and this was literally true. Every
+man had been helped to the employment for which he was best fitted. If
+an immigrant, in his former estate, had been a silk-weaver, efforts were
+made to establish his industry and give it public support. If he had
+been a musician of talent, a little conservatory was founded, and
+patronage obtained for him. When the growth of population made it
+necessary to open new valleys for agriculture, the Church, out of its
+community fund, rendered the initial aid; in many instances the original
+irrigation enterprises of small settlements were thus financed; and the
+investments were repaid not only directly, by the return of the loan,
+but indirectly, many times over, by the increased productiveness
+and larger contributions of the people. Co-operation, in mercantile,
+industrial and stock-raising undertakings, assured the support and
+patronage of each community for its own particular enterprise, prevented
+destructive competition and checked the greed of the individual--for the
+more he toiled for himself, the larger the share of the general burden
+he had to carry.
+
+It was the First Councillor's theory that when people contributed to a
+common fund they became interested in one another's material welfare.
+The man who paid less in tithes this year than last was counselled with
+as to why his business had been unsuccessful, and the wise men of his
+little circle aided him with advice and material help. The man who
+contributed largely was glad of a prosperity from which he yielded a
+part--in recognition of what the community had done for him and in
+a reverent gratitude to God for making him "a steward of mighty
+possessions"--but he was anxious that his neighbor also should be a
+larger contributor each year.
+
+The whole system of tithe-paying was built upon a series of purported
+"revelations" received by Joseph Smith, the original Prophet. It was
+declared to be the will of God that all men, as stewards of their
+possessions, should give of their increase annually into "the storehouse
+of the Lord," which should always be open for the relief of the poor.
+Inasmuch as the man who received help--or whose widow and children did
+so--had been a tithe-payer during all his productive years, there
+was none of the feeling of personal humiliation on the part of the
+recipient, nor any of the feeling of condescending charity on the part
+of the giver, in the distribution of funds to the needy. And it was
+astonishing how few the needy were--because of the abstemious lives, the
+industry, and the thrift of the workers.
+
+The Church tribunals heard and settled all disputes over property or
+personal rights not involving the criminal law. Expensive litigation was
+thus avoided. Society was saved the cost of innumerable courts. There
+were many counties in which no lawyer could be found; and everywhere,
+among the Mormons, it was considered an act of evil fellowship,
+amounting almost to apostasy, for a man to bring suit against his
+brother in the civil tribunals.
+
+In short--as my father pointed out--Utah, at that time, expressed the
+only full-bodied social proposition in the United States. There never
+had been in America another community whose future, in the economic
+aspects, offered so clear a solution of problems which still remain
+generally unsettled. It was as if a segment of the great circle of
+modern humanity had been transported to another world, otherwise
+unpopulated, and there with the experience gained through centuries of
+human travail--had attempted the establishment of a just, beneficent and
+satisfying social order.
+
+I am here repeating this argument--this exposition--because the
+financial absolutism of the Prophets of the Church has since ruined the
+whole Mormon experiment in communism, put the Mormon paupers into the
+public poor houses, used the tithes to support the large financial
+ventures of the Prophet's favorites, and turned the Church's "community
+enterprises" into monopolistic exploitations of the Mormon people.
+And this change began even while our negotiations were pending in New
+York--for they were prolonged, for various reasons, into the summer
+of 1898, and they were interrupted finally by the death of President
+Woodruff.
+
+As soon as I received word of his illness I took train for Utah.
+The news of his death met me on the journey home. Since I derived my
+authority solely from him, upon my arrival in Salt Lake I went to the
+Cashier of the Church, gave him the keys and the password to the safety
+deposit box in New York, and withdrew from any further participation
+in the Church's financial affairs. When I came to the office of the
+Presidency I found that my father had removed his desk; and this was an
+indication to me of what was happening in the inner circles of Church
+intrigue.
+
+The president of the quorum of apostles invariably succeeds to the
+Presidency of the Church, although it is left to the apostles to decide,
+and their choice is supposed to be directed by inspiration. His
+election is subsequently ratified by the General Conference; but this
+ratification is a mere form, because the conference must either accept
+the choice of the apostles or rebel against "the revelation of God."
+
+Apostle Lorenzo Snow was president of the quorum of apostles, and
+therefore in line for the Presidency. But usually, after the death of
+a President, a considerable period was allowed to elapse before the
+selection of his successor, with the government resting in the quorum
+of apostles meanwhile, even for a term of years. As soon as I arrived
+in Salt Lake, Apostle Snow asked me to a private interview (in the
+same small back room of the President's offices), inquired about the
+financial negotiations that I had been conducting, and asked me whether
+it was not essential to the success of our business affairs that as soon
+as possible the Church should elect a President, empowered as "trustee
+in trust." I replied that it was. He invited me to attend a conference
+of the apostles and give my views upon the situation to them.
+
+This seemed to me an act of rather shallow cunning, for I knew I was
+too unimportant a person to be so consulted unless he thought my report
+would aid his intrigue. Such intriguing was offensive to the religious
+traditions of the Church; and it outraged my feeling for President
+Woodruff, who was hardly cold in death before this personal and worldly
+ambition caught at the reins of his office. Snow had been a man of
+small weight in the government of the Church. He had known none of the
+responsibilities of great leadership. He was eighty-four years old.
+
+However, it was impossible for us to maintain the Church's credit in
+the East unless our community were represented by some choate authority,
+since our credit rested on the belief that the Mormon people were ready
+to consecrate all their possessions at any time to the service of the
+Church at the command of the President. I advised the apostles of this
+fact. Snow was elected President on September 13, 1898, eleven days
+after Woodruff's death. He followed the usual precedent in choosing my
+father and Joseph F. Smith as his Councillor's.
+
+But he took possession of his new authority with the manner of an heir
+entering upon the ownership of a personal estate for which he had long
+waited--and which he proposed to enjoy to the full for his remaining
+years. In a most literal sense he held that all the property of the
+people of the Church was subject to his direction, as chief earthly
+steward of "the Divine Monarch," and he proceeded to exercise his
+assumed prerogatives with an autocracy that made even Joseph F. Smith
+complain because the Councillor's were never asked for counsel. As
+resident apostle of Box Elder County and president of the Box Elder
+"stake of Zion," Snow had already shown his ambition as a financier,
+disastrously; and it was as the financial head of the Church that he was
+chiefly to rule during his term of absolutism.
+
+Of all the Church leaders whom I had known he was the only man who
+showed none of the robustness of the Western experience. Tall, stately,
+white-bearded, elegant and courtly, he prided himself most obviously on
+his manners and his culture. He rarely spoke in any but the most subdued
+and silken tones of suavity. He walked with a step that was almost
+affected in its gentility. If he had any passions, he held them in such
+smooth concealment that the public credited him with neither force
+nor unkindness. He had been a great traveler (as a missionary); he had
+written his autobiography, somewhat egotistically; he was devoted to
+the forms of his religion, like a mediaeval Prince of the Church and
+an elegante. But under all the artificialities of personal vanity and
+exterior grace, he proved to have a cold determination that seemed more
+selfishly ambitious than religiously zealous.
+
+At once, upon his accession to power, he notified us that he did
+not intend to carry out any such plan as we had suggested for the
+administration of the Church's finances. It meant a diffusion of
+authority; and he held that the best results had been obtained by
+keeping all power in the hands of the Prophet, Seer and Revelator, and
+of those whom he might appoint to work with him. Joseph F. Smith, at
+a meeting of the Presidency, was even more positive. No good, he said,
+could come of publishing the affairs of the community to the people
+of it; those affairs were purely the concern of the Prophets; the Lord
+revealed His will to the Prophets and they were responsible only to Him.
+
+My father necessarily bowed to the President's decision. "It is within
+the authority of the Prophet of the Lord," he counselled me, "to
+determine how he will conduct the business of the Church. President Snow
+has his own ideas."
+
+By that decision, as I see it now, an autocracy of financial power was
+confirmed to the President of the Mormon Church at a time when a renewal
+of prosperity among its people was about to make such power fatal to
+their liberties. It was confirmed to a man who proved himself eager for
+it, ambitious to increase it and secretly unscrupulous in his use of
+it. He proceeded at once to preach the doctrine of contribution with
+unexampled zeal, but he administered the "common fund," so collected,
+with none of the old feeling of responsibility to the people who
+contributed it He became the first of the new financial pontiffs of
+the Church who have used the "money power" as an aid to hierarchical
+domination.
+
+Moreover, in his desire to fill the coffers of the Church, he engaged in
+"practical politics" and made a profit out of Church influence, both
+in business enterprises and in political campaigns. He proved himself
+peculiarly qualified by nature to construct and direct a secret
+political machine--a machine whose operations were never to be
+observable except to the close student of Utah's ecclesiasticism--a
+machine that was to be all the more effective because of its silent
+certainty. As the succeeding chapters of this narrative will show,
+although he affected a fine superiority to unclean political work and
+always publicly professed that the Church of Christ was holding itself
+aloof from the strife of partisanship, there was no political event on
+which he did not fix the calculating eye of his ambitious clericalism
+and no candidacy that he did not reach with those slender but powerful
+fingers that controlled the destiny of a state and trifled with the
+honor of a people.
+
+His accession marked the change from the old to the new regime in Utah.
+Leadership was no longer a dangerous honor. Proscription no longer made
+the authorities of the Church strong by persecution--hardy chiefs of a
+poverty-stricken people--leaders as sensible of the obligations of power
+as their followers were faithful in their allegiance of duty. Political
+freedom and worldly prosperity made the office of President a luxurious
+sovereignty, easily tyrannical, fortified in its religious absolutism by
+its irresponsible power of finance, and protected in its social abuses,
+from the interference of the nation, by an alliance with the commercial
+rulers of the nation and by a duplicity that worldliness has learned to
+dignify with the respectability of material success.
+
+
+
+Chapter X. On the Downward Path
+
+
+
+During the last years of President Woodruff's life there had been a slow
+decline of the feeling that it was necessary for self-protection that
+the hierarchy should preserve a political control over the people. I
+cannot say that the feeling had wholly passed. It had continued to show
+itself, here and there, whenever a candidate was so pertinacious in
+his independence that words of disfavor were sent out from Church
+headquarters in one of those whispers that carry to the confines of the
+kingdom of the priests. But the progress was apparent. The tendency was
+clear. And in 1898 there was neither internal revolt nor external threat
+to provoke a renewal of the exercise of that force which is necessarily
+despotic if it be used at all.
+
+Yet, in September, 1898, President Snow, if he did not instigate, at
+least authorized the candidacy of Brigham H. Roberts for Congress--a
+polygamist who had been threatened with excommunication for his
+opposition to the "political manifesto" of 1896 and who had recanted and
+made his peace with the hierarchy. His election, now, would be a proof
+that the Church could punish a brilliant orator and courageous citizen
+in the time of his independence and then reward him in the day of his
+submission; and the authorities would thus demonstrate to all the people
+that the one way to political preferment lay through the annihilation of
+self-will and the submergence of national loyalty in priestly devotion.
+Such a candidacy was a sufficient shame to the state; but there was
+also a United States Senatorship to be bestowed; and it was deliberately
+bargained for, between the Church authorities and a man who deserved
+better than the alliance into which he entered.
+
+Alfred W. McCune was a citizen of Utah who had gone out from the
+territory in the days of its poverty (and his own), had made a fortune
+in British Columbia and Montana, and had returned to his home state to
+enrich it with his generosities. He was not a Mormon, but he had wide
+Mormon connections. He spent his millions in public enterprises and
+benefactions; and the Church had benefited in the sum of many thousands
+by his subscriptions to its funds and institutions.
+
+Apostle Heber J. Grant, a Republican by sentiment but a Democrat by
+pretension, was selected by President Snow to barter the Senatorship to
+McCune. There can be no doubt of it. Everyone immediately suspected
+it. Letters from Grant, published in the newspapers of January, 1899,
+subsequently confirmed it. And President Snow's actions, toward the end
+of the campaign, proved it.
+
+The other candidates were Judge O. W. Powers, a prominent Democrat;
+William H. King, also a Democrat, a former member of Congress and at one
+time a Federal judge; and myself as an independent Silver Republican.
+I had not allied myself with the Democrats after withdrawing from
+the Republican convention of 1896, and the Republican machine in
+Utah (thanks to the power of the "interests") had repudiated me, in
+September, 1898, by adopting a platform that refused to support as
+Senator any man who had opposed the Dingley Tariff Bill. But I had the
+votes of my own county of Weber, and some other votes that had been
+pledged to me before the election of members of the legislature; and
+though my return to the Senate seemed plainly impossible, I went into
+the fight in fulfillment of understandings which I had with progressive
+elements in Utah and with the "insurgents," of that day, in Washington.
+
+During the campaign to elect members of the Legislature, I supported the
+Democratic State and Congressional ticket. Brigham H. Roberts had been
+nominated for Congress on this ticket despite the protests of my father
+and many others who foresaw the evil results of electing a polygamist. I
+accepted Roberts' nomination as proof that this question must be settled
+anew at Washington; and I contented myself with predicting, throughout
+the campaign, that the House of Representatives would determine whether
+it would admit a polygamist and a member of the hierarchy as a lawmaker,
+and would so forever dispose of these ecclesiastical candidacies of
+which Utah refused to dispose for itself. (And it is a fact that since
+the prompt exclusion of Roberts from the House of Representatives no
+known polygamist has been elected to either House of Congress.)
+
+A Democratic legislature was elected, and A. W. McCune was put forward
+prominently as a candidate for the United States senatorship. He was
+assisted by his own newspaper, the Salt Lake Herald, by numberless
+business interests, cleverly by the Deseret News (the organ of the
+hierarchy) flagrantly and for financial reasons by Apostle Heber J.
+Grant, and incidentally by the Smiths on behalf of the Church. Also
+a Republican assistance was given him by my former colleague in the
+Senate, Arthur Brown, who specialized as an opponent to my candidacy.
+
+My old campaign manager, Ben Rich, had been withdrawn from me by a
+Church order appointing him in control of the Eastern missions. I
+was without the support of either the Democratic or Republican
+organizations: my following was a personal one: and consequently the
+attack upon me chiefly took the form of stories of personal immorality,
+privately circulated. These stories culminated in a motion before the
+Woman's Republican Club, demanding my withdrawal from the Senatorial
+contest on the ground of "gross misconduct"--a motion introduced by a
+Mrs. Anna M. Bradley, a woman politician (who was a stranger to me),
+with the assistance of Mrs. Arthur Brown, wife of the former Senator.
+
+If I ever had any resentment against these unfortunate women for
+allowing themselves to be used as the agents of slander, it passed
+in the miseries that overtook them later; for Mrs. Brown died of the
+scandal of her husband's intimacy with Mrs. Bradley, and Mrs. Bradley
+shot and killed ex-Senator Brown, in a Washington hotel, because he
+refused to marry her and recognize her child after her divorce from her
+husband.
+
+My anger then, and since, was not against the women, but against the
+men who hid behind them--against Apostle Heber J. Grant and Apostle John
+Henry Smith and their tool, ex-Senator Brown. In my anger I decided to
+take an action that looked as desperate as it proved successful. I hired
+the Salt Lake Theatre--for a night (February 9, 1899), and announced
+that I would speak on "Senatorial Candidates and Pharisees"--intending
+to use the opportunity of self-defense in order to attack the "financial
+apostles" who were selling Church influence.
+
+In taking that step I understood, of course, that it meant the death for
+me of any political ambition in Utah. It meant offending my father, who
+besought me not to raise my hand against "the Lord's anointed," but to
+leave my enemies "to God's justice"--as he had always done with his. It
+meant a breach with many of my friends in the Church who would blindly
+resent my criticism of the political apostles as an encouragement to the
+enemies of the faith. But the part that I had taken in helping Utah to
+gain its statehood made it impossible for me to stand aside, now, and
+see all our pledges broken, all our promises betrayed. I had to offer
+myself as a sacrifice to hierarchical resentment in the hope that my
+destruction might give at least a momentary pause to the reactionaries
+in their career.
+
+It is needless that I should relate all the incidents of that wild
+night. The theatre was packed with people who joined me for the moment
+in a sympathetic protest against the disgrace of Utah. President Lorenzo
+Snow, his two councillors and several apostles were present, and I spoke
+without any reservations on account of personal relationship, my own
+candidacy or the possible effect upon my own affairs. I appealed to the
+people to prevent the sale of Utah's senatorship to McCune by Apostle
+Grant and the Church reactionaries; and by turning the light of
+publicity upon the methods that were being employed in the legislature,
+I made it impossible for the hierarchy to sway enough votes to elect
+McCune. The men who had pledged themselves to the other candidates
+could not be shaken from their support without a national scandal. The
+election settled for the time into a deadlock, in which no candidate
+could obtain enough votes to elect him.
+
+Apostle Heber J. Grant started to write letters that should counteract
+the effect of my speech, but President Snow forbade him to continue the
+controversy and sent word to me that he had forbidden Grant to continue
+it. I did not know why President Snow wished me to feel that he was
+friendly to me, but I was soon to learn.
+
+The deadlock in the legislature continued, in spite of all the efforts
+of the Church authorities to break it. Our political workers, summoned
+one by one by messengers from Church headquarters, had gone to
+interviews from which they did not return to us--until I had left only
+Judge Ed. F. Colborn (a famous character in Kansas, Colorado and Utah),
+and an old friend, Jesse W. Fox. One night, about a week after the
+meeting in the theatre, we three were sitting alone in my rooms, when
+the door opened and someone beckoned to Fox. He went out. Judge Colborn
+opened a window to see Fox getting into a carriage with a man from
+Church headquarters--and we knew that our last worker was gone.
+
+He returned only to tell me that President Snow wished to see me--that
+if I were willing, the President would like to have me call upon him, at
+half past nine the following evening, in his residence. And I understood
+the significance of such an invitation for such an hour. I had been
+too often in contact with the power of the Prophets to doubt what was
+required of me. I was curious merely to know what form the ultimatum
+would take.
+
+President Snow was then living with his youngest wife in a house a few
+blocks from the offices of the Presidency. I drove there in a carriage
+and ordered the driver to wait for me. President Snow opened the door
+to me himself, received me with his usual engaging smile, and ushered
+me into a reception room that was shut off, by portieres, from a larger
+parlor. There, when he had invited me to be seated, he said, winningly:
+"I was not sure you would come in answer to my message."
+
+I assured him that I had not so far lost my regard for the men with whom
+my father was associated. "And besides," I said, "if there were no other
+reason, it is my place, as the younger of the two, to attend on your
+convenience."
+
+"I did not know," he replied, "but that you thought me one of the
+'Pharisees' of whom you spoke."
+
+I did not accept this invitation to reply that I did not consider him
+one of the Pharisees. I explained merely that I had identified the
+Pharisees in my speech by name and deed and accusation. "Unless
+something there said is applicable to you, I have no charge to make
+against you."
+
+He excused himself a moment to go to an infant whom we could hear crying
+in an inner room; and, when he returned, he had the child in his arms--a
+little girl, in a night gown. He sat down, petting her, stroking her
+hair with his supple lean hand, affectionately, and smiling with a sort
+of absentminded tenderness as he took up the conversation again.
+
+This memory of him sticks in my mind as one of the most extraordinary
+pictures of my experience. I knew that I had come there to hear my own
+or some other person's political death sentence. I knew that he would
+not have invited me at such an hour, with such secrecy, unless the issue
+of our conference was to be something dark and fatal. And in the soft
+radiance of the lamp he sat smiling--fragile of build, almost spiritual,
+white-haired, delicately cultured--soothing the child who played with
+his long silvery beard and blinked sleepily. He inquired whether my
+carriage was waiting for me, and I replied that it was. He asked me to
+dismiss it. When I returned to the room, the little girl was resting
+quiet, and he excused himself to take her to her cot. I heard him
+closing the doors behind him as he came back. "We may now talk with
+perfect freedom," he announced. "There's no one else in this part of the
+house."
+
+He sat down in his chair, composing himself with an air that might have
+distinguished one of the ancient kings. "I have sent for you to talk
+about the Senatorial situation. May I speak plainly to you?"
+
+I replied that he might. He was watching me, under his gray eyebrows,
+with his soft eyes, in which there was a glitter of blackness but none
+of the rheum of old age.
+
+"It would be most unfortunate," he said, "for us, as a people, if we
+failed to elect a Senator. I've had many business and other anxieties
+for the Church, and I want this question settled. If we act wisely--with
+the power and influence at our command--aid will come to me. I think you
+would not willingly permit our situation to become more difficult."
+
+He must have seen a change in my expression--a change that indicated
+how well I understood the significance of this guarded introduction.
+Suddenly, his manner broke into animation, and holding out both hands
+to me, palms up, he said, smiling: "You must know, Brother Frank, that
+I had nothing to do with Mr. McCune's candidacy for the Senate, do you
+not? I was not responsible for what Brother Grant did. Before we go on,
+I want you to acquit me of responsibility for that project."
+
+"President Snow," I replied, "I can't admit so much. I, too, wish to
+talk plainly--with your permission. Your responsibility is evident even
+to the casual observer--to say nothing of one reared as I've been.
+Every man in this community knows that when you point your finger your
+apostles go, and when you crook your finger your apostles return--and
+Heber J. Grant has only done what you permitted him to do with your full
+knowledge."
+
+He drew himself up, coldly. "What I have done," he retorted, "has been
+done with the knowledge of my Councillor's."
+
+The thrust was obvious. I replied: "If my father desires to discuss with
+me his responsibility for this indignity to the state, he knows I'm at
+his command. And if I have any charge to make, involving his good faith
+toward the country, I'll seek him alone."
+
+"Very well," he said, with a frigid suavity. "We will leave that part of
+the question." He paused. "Last night," he continued, "lying on my bed,
+I had a vision. I saw this work of God injured by the political strife
+of the brethren. And the voice of the Lord came to me, directing me to
+see that your father was elected to the Senate." He studied me a moment
+before he added: "What have you to say?"
+
+I answered: "It seems to me impossible. This legislature is strongly
+Democratic. My father's a Republican. It seems to me not only
+impracticable but very unwise--if it could be done."
+
+"Never mind that," he said. "The Lord will take care of the event.
+I want you to withdraw from the race and throw your strength to your
+father. It is the will of the Lord that you do so."
+
+"Have you a revelation to that effect also?" I asked.
+
+He answered, pontifically, "Yes."
+
+"You'll publish it to the world, then, the same as other revelations?"
+
+"No," he replied. "No."
+
+"Then I'll not obey it," I said, "because if God is ashamed of it, I
+am."
+
+His air of prophetic authority changed to one of combative resolution.
+He explained that one of the other candidates, a strong Democrat, had
+agreed to accept the revelation if I would; that the two of us could
+give our strength to the church candidate; that the Church would turn
+to my father the votes that it had already in command for McCune, and my
+father's election would be carried.
+
+I felt that the thumb-screws were being put on me again. For the second
+time I was being forced to the point of denying the Senatorship to my
+father by refusing him my support. And there could not have been, for
+me, a more vivid and instantaneous illumination of the hidden depths in
+this Church system--or in the individual Prophet of the cult--than was
+made by Snow's determined insistence that I should break my word of
+honor to the people of the state and of the nation, pledge that broken
+faith to him, induce all my supporters in the legislature to violate
+their covenants--Mormon and Gentile alike!--and upon his mere assumption
+of divine authority, direct Mormon and Gentile to stultify and disgrace
+themselves forever as men and public officials. There was something
+appalling in the calculating cruelty with which he proposed to devote us
+all to destruction and dishonor. There was something inhumanly malignant
+in the plan to use my known affection for my father in order to make
+me guilty of the very betrayal of the people which I had publicly
+denounced. I looked at him--and heard him, now, placidly, confidently,
+with a renewed suavity, urging me to do the thing.
+
+"President Snow," I interrupted, "does my father know of this?"
+
+He answered: "No."
+
+"I'm glad of it," I said. (And I was!) "This is not the way to work out
+either the destiny of 'God's people' or the destiny of this state. It
+would place my father in a most humiliating position to be elected--at
+the orders of the Church--under the assumption that God Almighty had
+directed men to break their solemn promises to their constituents. I
+have as high an admiration for my father's wisdom and ability as you or
+the Democratic candidate who has offered to withdraw at the will of the
+Church, but I should be paying no honor to my father by dishonoring my
+pledge to my constituents and asking other men to dishonor theirs."
+
+He dismissed me with an air of benignant sorrow!
+
+The deadlock in the legislature continued unbroken. Among my supporters
+was Lewis W. Shurtliff, the President of the "Stake of Zion" in which I
+lived; he was one of the highest Church dignitaries in the legislature
+and was regarded as my foremost champion in the Senatorial contest.
+On the last day of the legislative session, at President Snow's
+instruction, my father, known as a Republican, was offered as a
+senatorial candidate to this Democratic legislature, and all the power
+of the Church influence was thrown to him. President Shurtliff's wife
+came to our headquarters, that night, and knelt, with a number of other
+ladies, to pray that her husband might be spared the humiliation of
+breaking his repeated promise not to desert me! We all knew that if he
+broke his promise, it would cause him more mental anguish than
+anyone else; but we knew, too, that if the command came from Church
+headquarters, he would have to obey it. Men broke their political
+pledges to their people and outraged their own feelings of personal
+independence or partisan loyalty, rather than offend against "the will
+of the Lord." The forces of the other candidates went to pieces, and on
+the last night of the session my father's vote reached twenty-three. (It
+required thirty-two votes to elect.)
+
+The situation was saved by the action of a number of Democrats who
+got together and obtained a recess; when the recess was ended, a final
+ballot was taken, and, since no candidate had enough votes to elect him,
+the presiding officer, by pre-concertment, declared the joint assembly
+adjourned sine die, by operation of law. No Senator was elected.
+
+But it was the last time that the Church authorities were to be balked.
+Since that day, they have dictated the nominations and carried the
+elections of the United States Senators from Utah as if these were
+candidates for a church office. The present Senator, Reed Smoot, is an
+apostle of the Church; he obtained the Mormon President's "permission"
+to become a candidate, as he admitted to an investigating committee
+of the Senate; and when the recent tariff bill was being attacked by
+insurgent Republicans and carried by Senator Aldrich, Senator Smoot
+acted as Aldrich's lieutenant in debate, and remained to watch the
+defense of the "interests" when his chief was absent from the Senate
+chamber. (Not because Smoot was such an able defender of those
+"interests"! Not because his constituents would uphold his course! But
+because he has no constituents, and is responsible to no one but the
+hierarchical partners of those "interests.")
+
+Every pledge of the Mormon leaders that the Church would not interfere
+in politics has been broken at every election in Utah since President
+Snow that night pleaded to me that he had had many business anxieties
+for the Church and that if we elected the Church candidate "aid" would
+come to him. The covenants by which Utah obtained its statehood have
+been violated again and again. The provisions of the state constitution
+have been nullified. The trust of the Mormon people has been abused;
+their political liberties have been denied them; their Gentile brethren
+have been betrayed. And all this has been done not for the protection
+of the people, who were threatened with no proscription--and not for
+the advancement of the faith, which has been free to work out its
+own future. It has been done as a part of the alliance between the
+"financial" prophets of the Church and the financial "interests" of
+the country--which have been exploiting the people of Utah as they
+have exploited the whole nation with the aid of the ecclesiastical
+authorities in Utah.
+
+
+
+Chapter XI. The Will of the Lord
+
+
+
+The Mormon leaders were now hurried down their chosen path of dishonor
+with a fateful rapidity. A reform movement was demanding of Washington
+the adoption of a constitutional amendment that should give Congress
+power to regulate the marriage and divorce laws of all the states in the
+Union. And this proposed amendment--partly inspired by a growing
+doubt of the good faith of the Mormon leaders--gave the politicians
+in Washington something to trade for Mormon votes, in the presidential
+campaign of 1900.
+
+The Republicans had lost the electoral votes of Utah and the surrounding
+states, in 1896.
+
+Utah was now Democratic, and its one United States Senator (who was
+still in office) was a Democrat. Senator Hanna's lieutenant, Perry S.
+Heath, came to Salt Lake City in the summer of 1900, to confer with
+the heads of the Mormon Church. His authority (as representative of the
+ruler of the Republican party) had been authenticated by correspondence;
+and he was received by President Snow as royalty receives the envoy of
+royalty.
+
+Heath negotiated with his usual directness. In the phrase of the time,
+"he laid down his cards on the table, face up, and asked Snow to play
+to that hand." If the Mormon Church would pledge its support to the
+Republican party, the Republican leaders would avert the threatened
+constitutional amendment that was to give Congress the power to
+interfere in the domestic affairs of the Mormon people. But if the
+Church denied its support to the Republican party, the constitutional
+amendment would be carried, and the Mormons, in their marriage
+relations, would be returned to the Federal jurisdiction from which they
+had escaped when the territory was admitted to statehood.
+
+The sentiment of the country was known to be in favor of giving Congress
+such power. A strong body of reformers was urging the amendment, and
+the Church leaders had sent Apostle John Henry Smith and Bishop H. B.
+Clawson to lobby against it. After consulting with my father, I had
+written to President Snow pointing out the danger to the Mormons of
+having a lobby opposing such an amendment--for I was not then aware of
+the secret return to the practice of polygamy, after 1896. President
+Snow replied to me (in a message of guarded prudence) that although
+the Church inhibited plural marriage and did not intend to allow the
+practice, he was opposed to the interference of Congress in the domestic
+concerns of the other states of the Union!
+
+He made his "deal" with Perry Heath. Church messengers were sent out
+secretly to the Mormons in Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, Nevada, Montana,
+Washington, Oregon, California and the territories, with the whispered
+announcement that it was "the will of the Lord" that the Republicans
+should be aided. Utah went Republican; the Mormons in the surrounding
+states either openly supported, or secretly voted for McKinley; and the
+constitutional amendment was "side tracked" and forgotten.
+
+Utah elected a Republican legislature. Apostle Reed Smoot applied to
+President Snow for permission to become a candidate for the United
+States Senatorship, and obtained a promise that if he stood aside, for
+the time, he should receive his reward later. President Snow had decided
+that Thomas Kearns, already an active candidate, was the man whom the
+Church would support--since Mr. Kearns' ability, his wealth and his
+business connection promised greater advantages for the state and (under
+cunning manipulation by the priests) greater advantages for the Church
+than the election of any other candidate. And all this may be fairly
+said without assuming that there was any definite arrangement between he
+Church and any friends of Mr. Kearns.
+
+Kearns was associated with Senator Clark of Montana and R. C. Kerens of
+St. Louis in building a railroad from Salt Lake to Los Angeles, and the
+Church owned some fifteen miles of track that had been laid from Salt
+Lake City, as the beginning of a Los Angeles line. It was apparently
+assumed by President Snow that Kearns' election to the Senate would
+facilitate the sale of this Church railroad to the Clark-Kearns
+syndicate. The Church had a direct interest in numerous iron and coal
+properties in Southern Utah, and many members of the Church also had
+private properties there, which the Los Angeles line would develop.
+Some of Kearns' friends were negotiating for the purchase of Church
+properties, and one of his partners was proposing to buy (and
+subsequently bought) the Church's "Amelia Palace," a useless and
+expensive property which Brigham Young had built for his favorite wife,
+and which the Church had long been eager to sell.
+
+My father had been in ill-health for some months and he was away from
+Utah a large part of the time. President Snow took counsel of his Second
+Councillor, Joseph F. Smith, and of Apostle John Henry Smith; and to
+the Smiths, he indicated Thos. Kearns as the one whose election to the
+United States Senate might do most to advance Snow's concealed purpose.
+But the Smiths had other plans, that were equally advantageous to
+the Church and more advantageous to the Smiths; they rebelled against
+President Snow's dictation, and he ordered them both away on temporary
+"missions."
+
+As Joseph F. Smith was leaving the President's offices, in a rage, he
+met an old friend, Joseph Howell, who (at this writing) is a member of
+Congress from Utah, and was then a member of the Utah legislature. He
+told Smith that President Snow had sent for him, and Smith, controlling
+himself--without betraying any knowledge of the probable purpose of
+Snow's summons to Howell--said affectionately: "Brother Howell, I want
+you to make a promise to me on your honor as an elder in Israel. I want
+you to pledge yourself never to vote in this legislature for Thomas
+Kearns as Senator. I ask it as your friend, and as a Prophet to the
+people."
+
+Howell gave his promise, and proceeded to his interview with President
+Snow. There he received the announcement that it was "the will of the
+Lord" that he should vote for Kearns, and he had to reply that he had
+already received an inspired instruction, on this point, from a Prophet
+of the Lord, and had given his pledge against Kearns.
+
+The incident became one of the jokes of the campaign, for Howell held to
+his promise to Smith (and was subsequently rewarded by Smith with a seat
+in Congress), and President Snow was compelled to waive the question of
+conflicting "revelations."
+
+Kearns was elected. But he had had a powerful political machine of his
+own, and he had been supported by a strong Gentile vote. He immediately
+showed his independence by refusing to take orders from the political
+Church leaders. He declined, further, for himself and his financial
+confreres, to engage with the Church in business affairs. Many charges
+were made that he was breaking his agreement of cooperation with the
+authorities, but there never has been produced any evidence of such an
+agreement, and I do not believe (from my knowledge of Senator Kearns)
+that the agreement was ever made.
+
+The railroad into Southern Utah was later built by the Harriman
+interests in combination with Clark and Kearns; but there, too, Snow was
+disappointed. The expected development of the Church properties proved
+far less profitable than had been supposed, and the financial prophecies
+of the Seer and Revelator were not fulfilled.
+
+By this time it was abundantly evident that some of the Church leaders
+intended to rule their people in politics with an absolutism as supreme
+as any that Utah had ever known in the old days. And for these leaders
+to maintain their authority--despite the covenant of their amnesty, the
+terms of Utah's statehood and the provisions of the constitution--and to
+maintain that authority against the robust American sentiment that would
+be sure to assert itself--it was necessary that they should have the
+most effective political protection afforded by any organization in the
+whole country. The ideal arrangement of evil was offered to them by the
+men then in temporary leadership of the Republican party. The Prophets
+were able to make the Republican party a guilty partner of their perfidy
+by making it a recipient of the proceeds of that perfidy, and to assure
+themselves protection in every religious tyranny so long as they did not
+run counter to Republican purpose.
+
+For the moment, the Church took more benefit from the partnership than
+it conferred. The result of the presidential elections of 1900 showed
+that the Republicans could have elected their ticket without any help
+from the Prophets. But without the help of the dominant party the
+Prophets could not have renewed the rule of the state by the Church
+could not have prevented the passage of a constitutional amendment
+punishing polygamy by Federal statute--and could not have obtained such
+intimate relation and commanding influence with the great "interests" of
+the country.
+
+Throughout all these miserable incidents, I had a vague hope that
+they would prove merely temporary and peculiar to the term of Snow's
+presidency. He was now in his eighty-sixth year. My father was next in
+succession for the Presidency, and he was seventy-three. He had remained
+personally faithful to every pledge that he had made to the nation, and
+though he had been powerless to prevent the breaches of covenant that
+had followed the sovereignty of statehood, I knew that he had opposed
+some of them and been a willing party to none. It is true that he had
+become a director of the Union Pacific Railway and was close to the
+leading financiers of the East; but his Union Pacific connection had
+come from the fact that he had been one of the builders of the road
+that had afterward merged in the Oregon Short Line; and his financial
+relations had been those of a financier and not a politician. In all the
+years that I had been working with him, I had never known him to have
+any purpose that was not communistic in its final aspect and designed
+for the good of his people.
+
+Up to his seventieth year, he had shown no ill result of his early
+hardships. Living the abstemious life of the orthodox Mormon, to whom
+wine, tobacco and even tea and coffee are prohibited, he had seemed
+inexhaustibly robust and untiring. But almost from the day of
+President's Snow accession to office--deprived of the sustaining
+consciousness of the responsibilities of leadership--his physical
+strength gave signs of breaking. In the fall of 1900 he made a trip
+to the Sandwich Islands, to recuperate, and to assist at the fiftieth
+anniversary of the Mormon mission that he had founded there; but the
+Utah winter proved too rigorous for him on his return, and in March,
+1901, he was taken to California--to Monterey. In April the word came to
+me in New York that he was sinking.
+
+I found him in a cottage overlooking the beautiful Bay of Monterey and
+its wooded slope; and the doctors in attendance told me that he had been
+kept alive only by the determination to see me before he died. There
+was no hope. He had still a clear mind, but with ominous lapses of
+unconsciousness that foreboded the end; and in these intervals of coma,
+as we wheeled him to and fro on the veranda in an invalid chair--in an
+attempt to refresh him with the motion of the sea air--he would swing
+his right hand upward, with an old pulpit gesture, and say "Priesthood!
+Priesthood!" as if in that word he expressed the ruling thought of his
+life, the inspiration that had sustained his power, the obligation that
+had governed him in his direction of his people.
+
+On the afternoon of the 11th of April, he was lying in a stupor on a
+couch before an open window, with the sound of the surf in the quiet
+room. One of the doctors entered, looked at him intently, and said
+to me: "I can do nothing more here--and my patients need me in
+San Francisco. He can't last long. He'll probably never recover
+consciousness. If there's anything imperative--anything you must say to
+him--any word you wish to have from him--you could perhaps rouse him"--I
+said "No." We had never intruded upon any mood of his silence during his
+masterful life; and I felt a jealous rebellion against the idea that we
+should intrude now upon this last, helpless silence of unconsciousness.
+The doctor left us. I summoned the other members of the family from
+the veranda to the bedside. He lay motionless and placid, scarcely
+breathing, his eyes closed, his hands folded. In accordance with the
+rites of the Church, we laid our hands on his head, while my eldest
+brother said the prayer of filial blessing that "sealed" the dying man
+to eternity.
+
+In the silence that followed the last "Amen" of the prayer, he opened
+his eyes, and said in a steady, strong voice: "You thought I was passing
+away?"
+
+We replied that we had seen he was very weak.
+
+With a glance at the door through which the physician had departed, he
+said resolutely: "I shall go when my Father calls me--and not till then.
+I shall know the moment, and I will not struggle against His command.
+Lift me up. Carry me out on the balcony I want to see the water once
+more. And I want to talk with you."
+
+To me, it was the last struggle of the unconquerable will that had
+silently, composedly, cheerfully fought and overcome every obstacle that
+had opposed the purposes of his manhood for half a century. He would
+not yield even to death at the dictation of man. He would go when he was
+ready--when his mind had accepted the inevitable as the decree of God.
+
+We sat around his couch on the veranda, and for two hours he talked to
+us as clearly and as forcibly as ever. He spoke of the Church and of its
+mission in the world, with all the hope of a religious altruist. From
+the humblest beginnings, it had grown to the greatest power. From the
+depths of persecution, it had risen to win favor from the wisest among
+men. It had abolished poverty for hundreds of thousands, by its sound
+communal system. In its religious solidarity, it had become a guardian
+and administrator of equal justice within all the sphere of its
+influence. It was full of the most splendid possibilities of good for
+mankind.
+
+With his eyes fixed on the sea--facing eternity as calmly as he faced
+that great symbol of eternity--he voiced the sincerity of his life
+and the hope that had animated his statesmanship. In an exaltation of
+spirituality that made the moment one of the sublime experiences of my
+life, he adjured us all to hold true to our covenants. I do not write of
+his personal words of love and admonition to the members of his family.
+I wish to express only the aspects that may be of public interest,
+in his last aspirations--for these were the aspirations of the Mormon
+leaders of the older generation, whom he represented--and they are the
+aspirations of all the wise among the Mormons today, whatever may be the
+folly and the treachery of their Prophets.
+
+Ten hours later, he was dead.
+
+I cannot pretend that I had any true apprehension, then, of what his
+loss meant to the community. I had no clearer vision of events than
+others. I felt that I had no longer any tie to connect me closely with
+the government of the Church, and I was willing to stand aside from its
+affairs, believing that the momentum of progress imparted to it would
+carry it forward. The nation had cleared the path for it. Its faith, put
+into practice as a social gospel, had been freed of the offensive
+things that had antagonized the world. My father's last messages of hope
+remained with me as a cheering prophecy.
+
+At his funeral in the great tabernacle, President Snow put forward
+a favorite son, Leroy, to read an official statement in which the
+President took occasion to deny that my father had dictated the recent
+policies of the Church: those policies, he said, had been solely the
+President's. (He is welcome to the credit of them!) Joseph F. Smith
+showed more generosity of emotion, now that his path of succession
+was clear of the superior in authority whom he had so long regarded
+enviously; and he spoke of my father, both privately and in public, in a
+way that won me to him.
+
+The shock of grief had perhaps "mellowed" me. I felt more tolerant of
+these men, since I was no longer necessarily engaged in opposing them.
+When President Snow died (October, 1901), I shared only the general
+interest in the way Joseph F. Smith set about asserting his family's
+title to rulership of the "Kingdom of God on Earth;" for, in effect,
+he notified the world that his branch of the Smith family had been
+designated by Divine revelation to rule in the affairs of all men, by an
+appointment that had never been revoked. He has since made his cousin,
+John Henry Smith, his First Councillor; and he has inducted his son
+Hyrum into the apostolate by "revelation." This latter act roused the
+jealousy of the mother of his son Joseph F. Smith, Jr., and the amused
+gossip of the Mormons predicted another revelation that should give
+Joseph Jr. a similar promotion. The revelation came. So many others have
+also come that the Smith family is today represented in the hierarchy
+by Joseph F. Smith, President, "Prophet, Seer and Revelator to all the
+world;" John Smith (a brother) presiding Patriarch over the whole human
+race; John Henry Smith (a cousin) Apostle and First Councillor to the
+President; Hyrum Smith and Joseph F. Smith (sons) Apostles; George A.
+Smith (son of John Henry) apostle; David S. Smith (son of Joseph
+F.) Councillor to the presiding Bishop of the Church and in line of
+succession to the bishopric; and Bathseba W. Smith, President of the
+Relief Societies[4]. [FOOTNOTE: She has died since this was written.]
+
+As Joseph F. Smith has still thirty other sons--and at least four wives
+who are not represented in the apostolate--there may yet be a quorum of
+Smiths to succeed endlessly to the Presidency and make the Smith family
+a perpetual dynasty in Utah.
+
+It is one of the fascinating contradictions of Mormonism that many of
+the sincere people--who smilingly predicted the Divine interposition by
+which this family succession was founded--accept its rule devoutly. "The
+Lord," they will tell you, "will look after the Church. If these men are
+good enough for God, they are good enough for me. I do not have to save
+the Kingdom." And they continue paying their devotion (and their tithes)
+to a family autocracy whose imposition would have provoked a rebellion
+in any other community in the civilized world!
+
+It is "the will of the Lord!"
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XII. The Conspiracy Completed
+
+
+
+The Smiths were no sooner firm in power than rumors began to circulate
+of a recrudescence of plural marriage, and I heard reports of political
+plots by which the Prophets were to reestablish their autocracy in
+worldly affairs in the name of God. I sought to close my mind against
+such accusations, for I remembered how often my father had been
+misjudged, and I felt that nothing but the most direct evidence should
+be permitted to convince me of a recession by the Church authorities
+from the miraculous opportunity of progress that was now open to their
+leadership. Such direct evidence came, in part, in the state elections
+of 1902.
+
+The Utah Democrats re-nominated Wm. H. King for Congress; Senator Joseph
+L. Rawlins was their candidate to succeed himself in the United States
+Senate. The Republicans nominated President Smith's friend, Joseph
+Howell, for Congress; and there began to spread a rumor that Apostle
+Reed Smoot was to become a Republican candidate for the Senatorship
+under an old promise given him by President Snow and now endorsed by
+President Smith. I had been made state chairman of the Democratic party;
+and with the growing report of Apostle Smoot's candidacy, I observed a
+gradual cessation of political activity on the part of those prominent
+Democrats who were close to the Church leaders.
+
+Now, our party was not making war on the Church nor on any of its proper
+missions in the world. Our candidates were capable and popular men
+against whom no just ecclesiastical antagonism could be raised. We were
+asking no favors from the Church. And we were determined to have no
+opposition from the Church without a protest and an understanding.
+
+For this reason--after consulting confidentially with the leaders of our
+party--undertook to make a personal visit to President Smith's office
+to demand that the Church authorities should keep their hands out of
+politics. But even while I discussed the matter with our party leaders,
+I was afraid that some of them might betray our concerted purpose to
+Church headquarters. And my fear was well grounded. When I went to the
+offices of the Presidency, the authorities--for the first, last and only
+time--refused to see me; and the secretary betrayed a knowledge of my
+mission by telling me that I should hear from some one of the hierarchy,
+later.
+
+Two or three days afterward, Apostle M. F. Cowley came to me with word
+that my call had been considered and that he had been deputed to talk
+with me. We appointed a time for conference in my rooms at Democratic
+headquarters, where we spent the large part of a day in consultation.
+And since the argument between us covered the whole ground of Apostle
+Smoot's candidacy, I wish to give an account of that interview, as a
+brief exposition of some of the present-day aspects of the Church's
+interference in politics.
+
+Apostle Cowley and I had been boyhood friends. He had been one of the
+older students at the school that I had attended as a child; and I knew
+the integrity and directness of his character. He was a stocky, strong
+man, with a wholesome sort of face, brown with the sunburn of his
+missionary travels in Canada and in Mexico. (He had been, in fact,
+solemnizing plural marriages in these polygamous refuges--as we found
+out later.)
+
+As soon as it was clearly understood between us that I represented the
+Democratic state committee and he represented the Church authorities, I
+asked for an explanation of Apostle Smoot's candidacy.
+
+Cowley began by admitting the candidacy, which President Smith had
+endorsed (he said) in spite of the opposition of some of the apostles.
+He argued that Apostle Smoot was only exercising his right of American
+citizenship in aspiring to the Senatorship; and he explained that the
+Church authorities did not see why the Church should be drawn into the
+campaign.
+
+But, as I pointed out to him, the Church had already drawn itself in.
+It had held a solemn conclave of its hierarchy to authorize an apostle's
+candidacy. The opponents of Church rule would circulate the fact; in
+any close campaign, the apostle's friends would use the fact upon the
+faithful; and the Church would be compelled to support its apostle in an
+assumed necessity of defending itself.
+
+Perhaps I was objectionably forceful in my reply to him. With his
+characteristic gentleness, he rebuked me by recalling that President
+Woodruff had once taken him into "sacred places," assured him that
+"Frank Cannon, like David, was a man after God's own heart," and asked
+him to "labor" for me in politics. If it had been right for the Prophet
+of God to favor me, why was it not right for the Prophet now to favor
+some one else?
+
+My personal regard for Apostle Cowley kept me from showing the amusement
+I felt at finding myself in this new scriptural role remembering how
+President Woodruff had once devoted me to destruction like another Isaac
+on the altar of Church control. I replied to Cowley, as soberly as
+I could, that I had never consciously received the aid of any Church
+influence; that I had always objected to its use, either for or against
+either party; that I could oppose it now with free hands.
+
+He retreated upon the favorite argument of the ecclesiasts: that an
+apostle did not relinquish his citizenship because of his Church rank;
+that the very political freedom which we demanded, to be effective, must
+apply to all men, in or out of the Church. He asked naively: "What did
+we get statehood for--and amnesty--and our political rights--if we're
+not to enjoy them?"
+
+The answer to that was obvious: The Mormon Church is so constructed
+that the apostle carries with him the power of the Church wherever he
+appears. The whole people recognize in him the personified authority of
+the Church; and if an apostle were allowed to make a political campaign
+without a denunciation from the other Church authorities, it would be
+known that he had been selected for political office by "the mouthpiece
+of the Almighty." I cited the case of Apostle Moses Thatcher as proof
+that the Church did exercise power openly to negative an apostle's
+ambition. If it failed now to rebuke Smoot, this very failure would be
+an affirmative use of its power in his behalf; all Mormons who did not
+wish to raise their hands "against the Lord's anointed," would have
+to support Smoot's legislative ticket, regardless of their political
+convictions; and all Gentiles and independent Mormons would have to
+fight the intrusion of the Church into open political activities.
+
+Cowley replied that "the brethren"--meaning the hierarchy--believed that
+a Mormon should have as many political rights, as a Catholic; and he
+asked me if I would object to seeing a Catholic in the Senate.
+
+Of course not. There are, and have been, many such. "But suppose," I
+argued, "that the Pope were to select one of his Italian cardinals to
+come to this country and be naturalized in some state of this Union that
+was under the sole rule of the Roman Catholic Church; and suppose that
+still holding his princedom in the Catholic Church and exercising the
+plenary authority conferred on him by the Pope--suppose he were to
+appear before the Senate in his robes of office, with his credentials
+as a Senator from his Church-ruled state--all of this being a matter of
+public knowledge--do you think the Senate would seat him? Certainly
+not. Yet the cases are exactly analogous. We were but lately alien and
+proscribed. We were admitted into the Union on a covenant that forbade
+Church interference in politics. It is the whole teaching of the Church
+that a Prophet wears his prophetic authority constantly as a robe of
+office. The case of Moses Thatcher is proof to the world that the Church
+appoints and disappoints at its pleasure. I don't believe that Smoot, if
+elected, will be allowed to hold his seat, and--if he is allowed to hold
+it--a greater trouble than his exclusion will surely follow. For, with
+the princes of the Mormon Church holding high place in the national
+councils--and using the power of the Church to maintain themselves
+there--we are assuring for ourselves an indefinite future of the most
+bitter controversy."
+
+When Cowley had no more arguments to offer, he said: "Well, the Prophet
+has spoken. That's enough for me. I submit cheerfully when the will of
+the Lord comes to me through his appointed servants. The matter has
+been decided, and it does not lie in your power--or anyone else's--to
+withstand the purposes of the Almighty." He rose and put his hand on my
+shoulder, affectionately. "Your father is gone, Frank. I loved him very
+dearly. I hope that you are not going to be found warring against the
+Lord's anointed."
+
+"Mat," I replied, "you have already pointed out that Apostle Smoot
+appears in politics only as an American citizen. For the purposes of
+this fight--and to avoid the consequences that you fear I'll regard him
+as a politician merely, and fight him as such."
+
+"But, you know, Frank," he remonstrated, "he has been consecrated to the
+apostleship, and I'm afraid that you'll overstep the bounds."
+
+"Mat," I assured him, "I'll watch carefully, and unless he makes his
+lightning changes too fast, I'll aim my shots only when he's in his
+political clothes. If the change is too indefinite, blame yourselves
+and not us. The whole teaching of the Church is that an apostle must be
+regarded as an apostle at all times; but the whole teaching of politics
+is that all men should appear upon equal terms--in this country. That's
+why we insist that no apostle should become a candidate for public
+office."
+
+Cowley took his departure with evident relief. He had discharged
+his ambassadorial duty--and given me the warning which he had been
+authorized to deliver--without a rupture of our personal friendship. And
+I saw him go, for my part, in a sorrowful certainty that the Church had
+thrown off all disguise and proposed to show the world, by the election
+of an apostle to the United States Senate, that the "Kingdom of God" was
+established in Utah to rule in all the affairs of men. I knew that if
+Smoot were excluded from the Senate, his exclusion would be argued
+a proof that the wicked and unregenerate nation was still devilishly
+persecuting God's anointed servants, to its own destruction; and, if he
+were permitted to take his seat, that this fact would be cited to the
+faithful as proof that the Prophets had been called to save the nation
+from the destruction that threatened it!
+
+Of course, throughout the campaign that followed, the Church's
+newspapers and many of its political workers kept protesting publicly
+that the election of the Republican legislative ticket did not mean
+the election of Apostle Smoot to the Senate. But by means of the
+authoritative whisper of ecclesiasts--carried by visiting apostles to
+Presidents of Stakes, from them to the bishops, and from the bishops to
+the presiding officers of subsidiary organizations--the inspired order
+was given to the faithful that they must vote for the legislators who
+could be relied upon to do the will of the Lord by voting for the Lord's
+anointed prophet, Apostle Reed Smoot. This message was delivered to the
+sacred Sunday prayer circles. Even Senator Rawlins' mother received it,
+from one of the ecclesiastical authorities of her ward, who instructed
+her to vote against the election of her own son; and it was "at the
+peril of her immortal soul" that she disobeyed the injunction. Long
+before election day, every Mormon knew that he had been called upon
+by the Almighty to sacrifice his individual conviction in politics to
+protect his "assailed Church."
+
+The profound effectiveness of that appeal needs no further proof than
+the issue of the election. King and Rawlins, the popular leaders of
+the Democracy in a state that had but recently been overwhelmingly
+Democratic--after a campaign in which they studiously avoided an
+attack upon the Church--were overwhelmingly defeated. The Republican
+legislative ticket was carried. Apostle Smoot was elected to the United
+States Senate; and on January 21, 1903, Governor Wells issued to him a
+certificate of election.
+
+Five days later, a number of prominent citizens signed a protest, to
+President Roosevelt and the Senate, against allowing Apostle Smoot to
+take his seat. And the grounds of the protest, briefly stated, were
+these: The Mormon priesthood claimed supreme authority in politics,
+and such authority was exercised by the first presidency and the twelve
+apostles, of whom Smoot was one. They had not only not abandoned the
+practice of political dictation, but they had not abandoned the belief
+in polygamy and polygamous cohabitation; they connived at and encouraged
+its practice, sought to pass laws that should nullify the statutes
+against the practice, and protected and honored the violators of
+those statutes. And they had done all these things despite the public
+sentiment of the civilized world, in violation of the pledges given in
+procuring amnesty and in obtaining the return of the escheated Church
+property, contrary to the promises given by the representatives of the
+Church and of the territory in their plea for statehood, contrary to
+the pledges required by the Enabling Act and given in the State
+constitution, and contrary to the laws of the State itself.
+
+These charges were supported by innumerable citations from the published
+doctrines of the Church, and from the published speeches and sermons
+of the Prophets. Evidence was offered of the continuance of polygamous
+cohabitation (since 1890) by President Smith, all but three or four of
+the apostles, the entire Presidency of the Salt Lake Stake of Zion,
+and many others. New polygamy was specifically charged against three
+apostles, and against the son of a fourth. A second protest, signed by
+John L. Leilich, repeated these grounds of objection to Apostle Smoot,
+and charged further that Apostle Smoot was himself a polygamist; but no
+attempt was made to prove this latter charge.
+
+Upon the filing of the protest, there was a storm of anger at Church
+headquarters; and the ecclesiastical newspapers railed with the
+bitterness of anxious apprehension. Throughout Utah it seemed to be the
+popular belief that Apostle Smoot would be excluded--on the issue of
+whether a responsible representative of a Church that was protecting and
+encouraging law-breaking should be allowed a seat in the highest body of
+the nation's law-makers. But the issue against him was not to be heard
+until twelve months after his election, and every agent and influence of
+the Church was set to work at once to nullify the effect of the protest.
+
+Every financial institution, East or West, to which the Church could
+appeal, was solicited to demand a favorable hearing of the Smoot case
+from the Senators of its state. Every political and business interest
+that could be reached was moved to protect the threatened Apostle. The
+sugar trust magnates and their Senators were enlisted. The mercantile
+correspondents of the Church were urged to write letters to their
+Congressmen and to their Senators, and to use their power at home to
+check the anti-Mormon newspapers. The Utah representative of a powerful
+mercantile institution, that had vital business relations with the
+Church, confessed to me that he had been called East to consult with the
+head of his company, who had been asked to use his influence for Smoot.
+"I could not advise our president," he said, "to send the letter that
+was demanded of him. And yet I couldn't take the responsibility of
+injuring the company by advising him to refuse the Church request. You
+know, if we had refused it, point-blank, they would have destroyed every
+interest we had within the domain of their power. I should have been
+ruined financially. All our stockholders would have suffered. They would
+never have forgiven me."
+
+The president of the company failed to send the letter. His failure
+became known, through Church espionage and the report of the Church's
+friends in the Senate. Pressure was brought to bear upon him; and, with
+the aid of his Utah representative, he compromised on a letter that did
+partial violence to his conscience and partially endangered his business
+relations with the Church.
+
+Both these men were aware that the Church had broken its covenants to
+the country, and that Apostle Smoot could not be either a loyal citizen
+of the nation or a free representative of the people of his state.
+"I did not like the compromise we made," my friend told me. "I feel
+humiliated whenever I think of it. But I tried to do the best I could
+under the circumstances."
+
+The results of this pressure of political and business interests upon
+Washington showed gradually in the tone of the political newspapers
+throughout the whole country. It showed in the growing confidence
+expressed by the organs of the Church authorities in Utah. It showed in
+the cheerful predictions of the Prophets that the Lord would overrule in
+Apostle Smoot's behalf. It showed in Smoot's exercise of an autocratic
+leadership in the political affairs of the State.
+
+He was allowed to take his oath of office as Senator on March 5, 1903;
+the protests against him were referred to the Senate Committee on
+Privileges and Elections for a hearing (January 27, 1904); and a contest
+began that lasted from January, 1904, to February, 1907. During those
+years was completed the business and political conspiracy between
+financial "privilege" and religious absolutism, of which conspiracy this
+narrative has described the beginning and the growth.
+
+It is almost impossible to expose the progression of incident by which
+the end of that conspiracy was approached--since it was necessarily
+approached in the darkest secrecy. But several indications of the method
+and the progress did show, here and there, on the surface of events; and
+these indications are powerfully significant.
+
+As early as 1901 it had become known that Apostle Smoot was negotiating
+a sale, to the sugar trust, of the Church's sugar holdings. On May
+13, 1902, the president of the trust reported to the trust's executive
+committee--
+
+[FOOTNOTE: See a synopsis of the minutes of the trust's executive
+committee, published in Hampton's Magazine, in January, 1910.]
+
+that he had agreed to buy a one-half interest in the consolidation of
+the Mormon factories of La Grande, Logan and Ogden. (The following day,
+May 14, 1902, is given by Apostle Smoot as the day on which he obtained
+President Joseph F. Smith's permission to become a candidate for the
+Senatorship.) On June 24, 1902 the sugar trust's executive committee
+was informed of the trust's purchase of one-half of the capital stock
+of these three Church-owned sugar companies. On July 5, 1902 the three
+companies were consolidated under the name of the Amalgamated Sugar
+Company, with David Eccles, polygamist, trustee of Church bonds, and
+protege of Joseph F. Smith, as President; and the sugar trust took half
+the stock, in exchange for its holdings in the three original companies.
+
+Similarly, in this same year, the old Church-owned Utah Sugar Company
+increased its stock in order to buy the Garland sugar factory, and the
+sugar trust, it is understood, was concerned in the purchase In 1903,
+1904 and 1905, the Idaho Sugar Company, the Freemont Sugar Company,
+and West Idaho Sugar Company were incorporated; and in 1906 all these
+companies were amalgamated in the present Utah-Idaho Sugar Company,
+of which Joseph F. Smith is president, T. R. Cutler, a Mormon, is
+vice-president, Horace G. Whitney, the general manager of the Church's
+Deseret News, is secretary and treasurer, and other Church officials are
+directors. Of the stock of this company the sugar trust holds fifty-one
+per cent. So that between 1902 and 1906 a partnership in the manufacture
+of beet sugar was effected between the Church and the trust; and Apostle
+Smoot became a Sugar trust Senator, and argued and voted as such.
+
+Furthermore, it was at this same period that the Church sold the
+street railway of Salt Lake City and its electric power company to the
+"Harriman interests" under peculiar circumstances--a matter of which I
+have written in an earlier chapter. The Church owners of this Utah Light
+and Railway Company, through the Church's control of the City Council,
+had attempted to obtain a hundred-year franchise from the city on terms
+that were outrageously unjust to the citizens; and finally, on June 5,
+1905, a franchise was obtained for fifty years, for the company of
+which Joseph F. Smith was the president. On August 3, 1905, another city
+ordinance was passed, consolidating all former franchises, then held
+by the Utah Light and Power Company, but originally granted to D. F.
+Walker, the Salt Lake and Ogden Gas and Electric Light Company, the
+Pioneer Power Company and the Utah Power Company; and this ordinance
+extended the franchises to July 1, 1955. The properties were bonded for
+$6,300,000, but it was understood that they were worth not more than
+$4,000,000. They were sold to "the Harriman interests" for $10,000,000.
+The equipment of the Salt Lake City street railway was worse than
+valueless, and the new company had to remove the rails and discard
+the rolling stock. But the ten millions were well invested in this
+public-utility trust, for the company had a monopoly of the street
+railway service and electric power and gas supply of Salt Lake City; and
+its franchises left it free to extort whatever it could from the people
+of the whole country side, by virtue of a partnership with the Church
+authorities whereby extortion was given the protection of "God's
+anointed Prophets."
+
+Joseph F. Smith, of course, was already a director of Harriman's Union
+Pacific Railroad, a position to which he had been elected after his
+accession to the First Presidency. And he was so elected not because of
+his railroad holdings--for he came to the Presidency a poor man--and
+not because of his ability or experience as a financier or a railroad
+builder, for he had not had any such experience and he had not shown
+any such ability. He was elected because of the partnership between the
+Church leaders and the Union Pacific Railroad--a partnership that was
+doubtlessly used in defense of Apostle Smoot's seat in the Senate, just
+as the power of the Sugar Trust was used and the influence of the whole
+financial confederation in politics.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIII. The Smoot Exposure
+
+
+
+Just before the subpoenas were issued in the Smoot investigation, I met
+John R. Winder (then First Councillor to President Smith) on the street
+in Salt Lake City, and he expressed the hope that when I went "to
+Washington on the Smoot case," I would not "betray" my "brethren." I
+assured him that I was not going to Washington as a witness in the Smoot
+case; that the men whom he should warn, were at Church headquarters. He
+replied, with indignant alarm, "I don't see what 'the brethren' have to
+do with this!"
+
+But when the subpoenas arrived for Smith and the hierarchy, alarm and
+indignation assumed a new complexion. The authorities, for themselves,
+and through the mouths of such men as Brigham H. Roberts, began to boast
+of how they were about to "carry the gospel to the benighted nation" and
+preach it from the witness stand in Washington. The Mormon communities
+resounded with fervent praises to God that He had, through His servant,
+Apostle Smoot, given the opportunity to His living oracles to speak to
+an unrighteous people! And when the Senators decided that they would
+not summon polygamous wives and their children en bloc to Washington to
+testify (because it was not desired to "make war on women and children")
+some of Joseph F. Smith's several wives even complained feelingly that
+they "were not allowed to testify for Papa."
+
+The first oracular disclosure made by the Prophets, on the witness
+stand, came as a shock even to Utah. They testified that they had
+resumed polygamous cohabitation to an extent unsuspected by either
+Gentiles or Mormons. President Joseph F. Smith admitted that he had had
+eleven children borne to him by his five wives, since pledging
+himself to obey the "revealed" manifesto of 1890 forbidding polygamous
+relations. Apostle Francis Marion Lyman, who was next in succession to
+the Presidency, made a similar admission of guilt, though in a lesser
+degree. So did John Henry Smith and Charles W. Penrose, apostles. So did
+Brigham H. Roberts and George Reynolds, Presidents of Seventies. So did
+a score of others among the lesser authorities. And they confessed that
+they were living in polygamy in violation of their pledges to the nation
+and the terms of their amnesty, against the laws and the constitution of
+the state, and contrary to the "revelation of God" by which the doctrine
+of polygamy had been withdrawn from practice in the Church!
+
+President Joseph F. Smith admitted that he was violating the law of the
+State. He was asked: "Is there not a revelation that you shall abide by
+the law of the State and of the land?" He answered, "Yes, sir." He was
+asked: "And if that is a revelation, are you not violating the laws
+of God?" He answered: "I have admitted that, Mr. Senator, a great many
+times here."
+
+Apostle Francis Marion Lyman was asked: "You say that you, an apostle
+of your Church, expecting to succeed (if you survive Mr. Smith) to
+the office in which you will be the person to be the medium of Divine
+revelations, are living, and are known to your people to live, in
+disobedience of the law of the land and the law of God?" Apostle Lyman
+answered: "Yes, sir." The others pleaded guilty to the same charge.
+
+But this was not the worst. There had been new polygamous marriages.
+Bishop Chas. E. Merrill, the son of an apostle, testified that his
+father had married him to a plural wife in 1891, and that he had been
+living with both wives ever since. A Mrs. Clara Kennedy testified that
+she had been married to a polygamist in 1896, in Juarez, Mexico, by
+Apostle Brigham Young, Jr., in the home of the president of the stake.
+There was testimony to show that Apostle George Teasdale had taken a
+plural wife six years after the "manifesto" forbidding polygamy, and
+that Benjamin Cluff, Jr., president of the Church university, had
+taken a plural wife in 1899. Some ten other less notorious cases were
+exposed--including those of M. W. Merrill, an apostle, and J. M. Tanner,
+superintendent of Church schools. It was testified that Apostle John W.
+Taylor had taken two plural wives within four years, and that Apostle M.
+F. Cowley had taken one; and both these men had fled from the country in
+order to escape a summons to appear before the Senate committee.
+
+President Joseph F. Smith, in his attempts to justify his own polygamy,
+gave some very involved and contradictory testimony. He said that he
+adhered to both the divine revelation commanding polygamy and the
+divine revelation "suspending" the command. He said he believed that the
+principle of plural marriage was still as "correct a principle" as when
+first revealed, but that the "law commanding it" had been suspended
+by President Woodruff's manifesto. He said that he accepted President
+Woodruff's manifesto as a revelation from God, but he objected to having
+it called "a law of the Church;" he insisted that it was only "a rule
+of the Church." He admitted that the manifesto forbidding polygamy had
+never been printed among the other revelations in the Church's book of
+"Doctrine and Covenants," in which the original revelation commanding
+polygamy was still printed without note or qualification of any kind. He
+admitted that this anti-polygamy manifesto was not printed in any of the
+other doctrinal works which the Mormon missionaries took with them
+when they were sent out to preach the Mormon faith. He claimed that the
+manifesto was circulated in pamphlet form, but he subsequently admitted
+that the pamphlet did not "state in terms" that the manifesto was a
+"revelation." He finally pleaded that the manifesto had been omitted
+from the book of "Doctrine and Covenants" by an "oversight," and he
+promised to have it included in the next edition!
+
+[FOOTNOTE: He did not keep his promise. The manifesto was not added
+to the book of revelations until some time later, after considerable
+protest in Utah.]
+
+In short, it was shown, by the testimony given and the evidence
+introduced, not only that the Church authorities persisted in living in
+polygamy, not only that polygamous marriages were being contracted, but
+that the Church still adhered to the doctrine of polygamy and taught it
+as a law of God.
+
+President Joseph F. Smith denied the right of Congress to regulate his
+"private conduct" as a polygamist. "It is the law of my state to which
+I am amenable," he said, "and if the officers of the law have not
+done their duty toward me I can not blame them. I think they have some
+respect for me."
+
+A mass of testimony showed why the officers of the law did not do their
+duty. During the anti-polygamy agitation of 1899 (which ended in the
+refusal of Congress to seat Brigham H. Roberts) a number of prosecutions
+of polygamists had been attempted. In many instances the county
+attorney had refused to prosecute even upon sworn information. Wherever
+prosecutions were had, the fines imposed were nominal; these were in
+some cases never paid, and in other cases paid by popular subscription.
+It was testified that in Box Elder County subscription lists had been
+circulated to collect money for the fines, but that the fines were never
+paid, though the subscriptions had been collected. All the prosecutions
+had been dropped, at last. It was pleaded that there was a strong
+Gentile sentiment against these prosecutions, because of the hope that
+no new polygamous marriages were being contracted; but it was shown
+also, that the Church authorities controlled the enforcement of the law
+by their influence in the election of the agents of the law.
+
+The Church controlled, too, the making of the law. For example,
+testimony was given to show that in 1896 the Church authorities had
+appointed a committee of six elders to examine all bills introduced into
+the Utah legislature and decide which were "proper" to be passed. In the
+neighboring state of Idaho, the legislature, in 1904, unanimously and
+without discussion passed a resolution for a new state constitution that
+should omit the anti-polygamy test oath clauses objectionable to the
+Mormons; and in this connection it was testified that the state chairman
+of both political parties in Idaho always went to Salt Lake City, before
+a campaign, to consult with the Church authorities; that every request
+of the authorities made to the Idaho political leaders was granted; that
+six of the twenty-one countries in Idaho were "absolutely controlled"
+by Mormons, and the "balance of power" in six counties more was held by
+Mormons; and that it was "impossible for any man or party to go against
+the Mormon Church in Idaho." Apostle John Henry Smith testified that
+one-third of the population of Idaho was Mormon and one-fourth of the
+population of Wyoming, and that there were large settlements in
+Nevada, Colorado, California, Arizona and the surrounding states and
+territories.
+
+A striking example of the power of the Church as against the power of
+the nation was given to the Senate committee by John Nicholson, chief
+recorder of the temple in Salt Lake City. He had failed to produce some
+of the temple marriage records for which the committee had called. He
+was asked whether he would bring the books, on the order of the Senate
+of the United States, if the First Presidency of the Church forbade him
+to bring them. He answered: "I would not." He was asked: "And if the
+Senate should send the Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate and arrest you and
+order you to bring them" (the records) "with you, you would still refuse
+to bring them, unless the First Presidency asked you to?" He answered,
+"Yes, sir."
+
+It was shown that classes of instruction in the Mormon religion had been
+forced upon teachers in a number of public schools in Utah by the orders
+of the First Presidency. (These orders were withdrawn after the exposure
+before the committee.) Church control had gone so far in Brigham City,
+Box Elder County, Utah, that in a dispute between the City Council and
+the electric lighting company of the city, the local ecclesiastical
+council interfered. In the same city, two young men built a dancing
+pavilion that competed with the Church-owned Opera House; the
+ecclesiastical council "counselled" them to remove the pavilion and
+dispose of "the material in its construction;" they were threatened that
+they would be "dropped" if they did not obey this "counsel;" and they
+compromised by agreeing to pay twenty-five percent of the net earnings
+of their pavilion into the Church's "stake treasury." In Monroe ward,
+Sevier County, Utah, in 1901, a Mormon woman named Cora Birdsall had a
+dispute with a man named James E. Leavitt about a title to land. Leavitt
+went into the bishop's court and got a decision against her. She wrote
+to President Joseph F. Smith for permission either to appeal the case
+direct to him or "to go to law" in the matter; and Smith advised her
+"to follow the order provided of the Lord to govern in your case." The
+dispute was taken through the ecclesiastical courts and decided against
+her. She refused to deed the land to Leavitt and she was excommunicated
+by order of the High Council of the Sevier Stake of Zion. She became
+insane as a result of this punishment, and her mother appealed to the
+stake president to grant her some mitigation. He wrote, in reply: "Her
+only relief will be in complying with President Smith's wishes. You say
+she has never broken a rule of the Church. You forget that she has done
+so by failing to abide by the decision of the mouthpiece of God." She
+finally gave up a deed to the disputed land and was rebaptized in 1904.
+(Letters of the First Presidency were, however, introduced to show that
+it had been the policy of the presidency--particularly in President
+Woodruff's day--not to interfere in disputes involving titles to land.)
+
+It was testified that a Mormon merchant was expelled from the
+Church, ostensibly for apostasy, but really because he engaged in the
+manufacture of salt "against the interests of the President of the
+Church and some of his associates;" that a Mormon Church official was
+deposed "for distributing, at a school election, a ticket different from
+that prescribed by the Church authorities"--and so on, interminably.
+
+Witness after witness swore to the incidents of Church interference
+in politics which this narrative has already related in detail. But no
+attempt was made to show the Church's partnership with the "interests;"
+and the power of the Church in business circles was left to be inferred
+from President Smith's testimony that he was then president of the
+Zion's Cooperative Mercantile Institution, the State Bank of Utah,
+the Zion's Savings Bank and Trust Company, the Utah Sugar Company,
+the Consolidated Wagon and Machine Company, the Utah Light and Power
+Company, the Salt Lake and Los Angeles Railroad Company, the Saltair
+Beach Company, the Idaho Sugar Company, the Inland Crystal Salt Company,
+the Salt Lake Knitting Company, and the Salt Lake Dramatic Association;
+and that he was a director of the Union Pacific Railway Company,
+vice-president of the Bullion-Beck and Champion Mining Company, and
+editor of the Improvement Era and the Juvenile Instructor.
+
+It was shown that Utah had not been admitted to statehood until the
+Federal government had exacted, from the Church authorities and the
+representatives of the people of Utah, every sort of pledge that
+polygamy had been forever abandoned and polygamous relations
+discontinued by "revelation from God"; that statehood had not been
+granted until solemn promise had been given and provision made that
+there should be "no union of church and state," and no church should
+"dominate the state or interfere with its functions;" and that the
+Church's escheated property had been restored upon condition that such
+property should be used only for the relief of the poor of the Church,
+for the education of its children and for the building and repair
+of houses of worship "in which the rightfulness of the practice of
+polygamy" should not be "inculcated."
+
+Therefore the testimony given before the Senate committee by these
+members of the Mormon hierarchy, showed that they had not only broken.
+their covenants and violated their oaths, but that they had been guilty
+of treason. What was the remedy? Jeremiah M. Wilson, a lawyer employed
+by the Church authorities in 1888 to argue, before a Congressional
+committee, in behalf of the admission of Utah to statehood, had pointed
+out the remedy in these words:
+
+"It is idle to say that such a compact may be made, and then, when the
+considerations have been mutually received--statehood on the one side
+and the pledge not to do a particular thing on the other--either party
+can violate it without remedy to the other. But you ask me what is
+the remedy, and I answer that there are plenty of remedies in your own
+hands.
+
+"Suppose they violate this compact; suppose that after they put this
+into the constitution, and thereby induce you to grant them the high
+privilege and political right of statehood, they should turn right
+around and exercise the bad faith which is attributed to them here--what
+would you do? You could shut the doors of the Senate and House of
+Representatives against them; you could deny them a voice in the
+councils of this nation, because they have acted in bad faith and
+violated their solemn agreement by which they succeeded in getting
+themselves into the condition of statehood. You could deny them the
+Federal judiciary; you could deny them the right to use the mails--that
+indispensable thing in the matter of trade and commerce of this country.
+There are many ways in which peaceably, but all powerfully, you could
+compel the performance of that compact."
+
+This argument by Mr. Wilson in 1888 was recalled by the counsel for the
+protestants in the investigation. It was recalled with the qualification
+that though Congress might not have the power to undo the sovereignty of
+the state of Utah it could deal with Senator Smoot. And it was further
+argued: "The chief charge against Senator Smoot is that he encourages,
+countenances, and connives at the defiant violation of law. He is an
+integral part of a hierarchy; he is an integral part of a quorum of
+twelve, who constitute the backbone of the Church.... He, as one of that
+quorum of twelve apostles, encourages, connives at, and countenances
+defiance of law."
+
+On June 11, 1906, a majority of the committee made a report to the
+Senate recommending that Apostle Smoot was not entitled to his seat in
+the Senate. They found that he was one of a "self-perpetuating body of
+fifteen men, uniting in themselves authority in both Church and state,"
+who "so exercise this authority as to encourage a belief in polygamy as
+a divine institution, and by both precept and example encourage among
+their followers the practice of polygamy and polygamous cohabitation;"
+that the Church authorities had "endeavored to suppress, and succeed
+in suppressing, a great deal of testimony by which the fact of plural
+marriages contracted by those who were high in the councils of the
+Church might have been established beyond the shadow of a doubt;" and
+that "aside from this it was shown by the testimony that a majority
+of those who give law to the Mormon Church are now, and have been for
+years, living in open, notorious and shameless polygamous cohabitation."
+Concerning President Woodruff's anti-polygamy manifesto of 1890, the
+majority of the committee reported that "this manifesto in no way
+declares the principle of polygamy to be wrong or abrogates it as a
+doctrine of the Mormon Church, but simply suspends the practice of
+polygamy to be resumed at some more convenient season, either with
+or without another revelation." They found that Apostle Smoot was
+responsible for the conduct of the organization to which he belonged;
+that he had countenanced and encouraged polygamy "by repeated acts
+and in a number of instances, as a member of the quorum of the twelve
+apostles;" and that he was "no more entitled to a seat in the Senate
+than he would be if he were associating in polygamous cohabitation with
+a plurality of wives."
+
+The report continued: "The First Presidency and the twelve apostles
+exercise a controlling influence over the action of the members of
+the Church in secular affairs as well as in spiritual matters;" and
+"contrary to the principles of the common law under which we live, and
+the constitution of the State of Utah, the First Presidency and twelve
+apostles dominate the affairs of the State and constantly interfere in
+the performance of its functions.... But it is in political affairs that
+the domination of the First Presidency and the twelve apostles is
+most efficacious and most injurious to the interests of the State....
+Notwithstanding the plain provision of the constitution of Utah, the
+proof offered on the investigation demonstrates beyond the possibility
+of doubt that the hierarchy at the head of the Mormon Church has, for
+years past, formed a perfect union between the Mormon Church and the
+State of Utah, and that the Church, through its head, dominates the
+affairs of the State in things both great and small." And the report
+concluded: "The said Reed Smoot comes here, not as the accredited
+representative of the State of Utah in the Senate of the United States,
+but as the choice of the hierarchy which controls the Church and has
+usurped the functions of the State in Utah. It follows, as a necessary
+conclusion from these facts, that Mr. Smoot is not entitled to a seat in
+the Senate as a Senator from the State of Utah."
+
+On the same day a minority report was presented by Senators J. B.
+Foraker, Albert J. Beveridge, Wm. P. Dillingbam, A. J. Hopkins and P.
+C. Knox. They found that Reed Smoot possessed "all the qualifications
+prescribed by the Constitution to make him eligible to a seat in the
+Senate;" that "the regularity of his election" by the Utah
+legislature had not been questioned; that his private character was
+"irreproachable;" and that "so far as mere belief and membership in
+the Mormon Church are concerned, he is fully within his rights and
+privileges under the guaranty of religious freedom given by the
+Constitution of the United States." Having thus summarily excluded all
+the large and troublesome points of the investigation, these Senators
+decided that there remained "but two grounds on which the right or title
+of Reed Smoot to his seat in the Senate" was contested. The first was
+whether he had taken a certain "endowment oath" by which "he obligated
+himself to make his allegiance to the Church paramount to his allegiance
+to the United States;" and the second was whether "by reason of his
+official relation to the Church" he was "responsible for polygamous
+cohabitation" among the Mormons.
+
+As to the first charge, the minority found that the testimony upon the
+point was "limited in amount, vague and indefinite in character and
+utterly unreliable, because of the disreputable character of the
+witnesses"--oddly overlooking the fact that one of these witnesses had
+been called for Apostle Smoot; that no attempt had been made to impeach
+the character of this witness; that the other witnesses had been
+denounced, by a Mormon bishop, named Daniel Connolly, as "traitors who
+had broken their oaths to the Church" by betraying the secrets of
+the "endowment oath;" and that all the Smoot witnesses who denied the
+anti-patriotic obligation of the oath refused, suspiciously enough, to
+tell what obligation was imposed on those who took part in the ceremony.
+
+The charge that Smoot, as an apostle of the Church, had been responsible
+for polygamous cohabitation was as easily disposed of, by the minority
+report. He had himself, on oath, "positively denied" that he had "ever
+advised any person to violate the law either against polygamy or against
+polygamous cohabitation," and no witness had been produced to testify
+that Apostle Smoot had ever given "any such advice" or defended "such
+acts." True, it was admitted that he had "silently acquiesced" in the
+continuance of polygamous cohabitation by polygamists who had married
+before 1890; but it was contended that to understand this acquiescence
+it was "necessary to recall some historical facts, among which are
+some that indicate that the United States government is not free from
+responsibility for these violations of the law."
+
+In short, although Reed Smoot was one of a confessed band of
+law-breaking traitors, he was of "irreproachable" private character.
+Although the band had been guilty of every treachery, none of the band
+had admitted that Smoot had encouraged them in their villainies. Smoot
+had only "silently acquiesced"--and in this he had been no guiltier
+than the intimidated bystanders and the gagged victims of the outrages.
+Although the gang had stolen the machinery of elections and used it to
+print a Senatorial certificate for Smoot, there was nothing to show that
+the form of the certificate was not correct. Moreover, the band operated
+in politics as a religious organization, and the constitution of the
+United States protects a man in his right of religious freedom!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIV. Treason Triumphant
+
+
+
+While these disclosures of the Smoot investigation were shocking the
+sentiment of the whole nation, the Prophets carried on the conspiracy of
+their defense with all the boldness of defiant guilt. In Salt Lake City,
+the office of the United States Marshal and even the post-office were
+watched for the arrival of subpoenas from Washington; men were posted
+in the streets to give the alarm whenever the Marshal should attempt to
+serve papers; and before he entered the front door of a Mormon's house,
+the Church sentry had entered by the back door to warn the inmates. If
+the Federal power had been moving in a foreign land, it could not
+have been more determinedly opposed by local authority. Notorious
+polygamists, wanted as witnesses before the Senate committee, made a
+public flight through Utah, couriered, flanked and rear-guarded by the
+power of the hierarchy. One of these law-breakers (who, it was known,
+had been subpoenaed) went from Salt Lake City to take secret employment
+in one of the Church's sugar factories in Idaho. When he was discovered
+there and served with the Senate requisition, he gave his word that he
+would appear at Washington, and then he fled with his new polygamous
+wife to a polygamous Mormon settlement in Alberta, Canada--a fugitive,
+honored because he was a fugitive, and officially sustained as a ward of
+the Church.
+
+Apostles John W. Taylor and Mathias F. Cowley left the country, to
+escape a summons to Washington; and President Smith pleaded that he
+had no control over their movements, and promised that he would, if
+possible, bring them back to comply with the Senate subpoenas. He knew,
+as every Mormon and every well-informed Gentile knew, that the slightest
+expression of a wish from him would be the word of God to those two men.
+They would have gloried in going to Washington to show the courage
+of their fanaticism. They would never have left the country without
+instructions from their President. But they could not have married
+plural wives after the manifesto, and solemnized plural marriages
+for other polygamists, without Smith's knowledge and consent; their
+testimony would have placed the responsibility for these unlawful
+practices upon the Prophet; and the penalty would have fallen on the
+Prophet's Senator.
+
+They not only fled, but they allowed themselves in their absence to be
+made the scapegoats of the hierarchy. They were proven guilty of "new
+polygamy" before the Senate committee; and, for the sake of the effect
+upon the country, they were ostensibly deposed from the apostolate
+by order of the President, who, by their dismissal from the quorum,
+advanced his son Hyrum in seniority. But their apparent degradation
+involved none of the consequences that Moses Thatcher had suffered. They
+continued their ministrations in the Church. They remained high in favor
+with the hierarchy. They claimed and received from the faithful the
+right to be regarded as holily "the Lord's' anointed" as they had
+ever been. They still held their Melchisedec priesthood. One of them
+afterward took a new plural wife. It seems to be well authenticated that
+the other continued to perform plural marriages; and every Mormon
+looked upon them both--and still looks upon them--as zealous priests who
+endured the appearance of shame in order to preserve the power of the
+Prophet in governing the nation.
+
+Another crucial point in President Smith's responsibility was his
+solemnization of the plural marriage between Apostle Abraham H. Cannon
+and Lillian Hamlin, of which I have already written. One of the women
+of the dead apostle's family was subpoenaed to give her testimony in the
+matter. She thrice telephoned to me that she wished to consult me; but
+she was surrounded by such a system of espionage that again and again
+she failed to keep her appointment. At last, late at night, she arrived
+at my office--the editorial office of the Salt Lake Tribune--having
+escaped, as she explained, in her maid's clothes. The agents of the
+hierarchy had been subtly and ingeniously suggesting to her that she
+was perhaps mistaken in her recollection of the facts to which she would
+have to testify, and she was distressed with the doubt and fear which
+they had instilled into her mind. I could only adjure her to tell the
+truth as she remembered it. But on her journey to Washington she was
+constantly surrounded by Church "advisers;" and the effect of their
+"advice" showed in the testimony that she gave--a testimony that failed
+to prove the known guilt of the Prophet.
+
+For the Gentiles, there had begun a sort of "reign of terror," which
+can be best summed up by an account of a private conference of twelve
+prominent non-Mormons held as late as 1905. That conference was called
+to consider the situation, and to devise means of acquainting the nation
+with the desperate state of affairs in Utah. It was independent of the
+political movement that had already begun; it aimed rather to organize
+a social rebellion, so that we might not be dependent for all our
+opposition upon the annual or semi-annual campaigns of politics.
+
+The meeting first agreed upon the following statement of facts:
+
+"Utah's statehood, as now administered, is but a protection of the
+Mormon hierarchy in its establishment of a theocratic kingdom under
+the flag of the republic. This hierarchy holds itself superior to the
+Constitution and to the law. It is spreading polygamy throughout the
+ranks of its followers. Through its agents, it dominates the politics of
+the state, and its power is spreading to other common-wealths. It
+exerts such sway over the officers of the law that the hierarchy and its
+favorites cannot be reached by the hand of justice. It is master of the
+State Legislature and of the Governor.
+
+"By means of its immense collection of tithes and its large investments
+in commercial and financial enterprises, it dominates every line
+of business in Utah except mines and railroads; and these latter it
+influences by means of its control over Mormon labor and by its control
+of legislation and franchises. It holds nearly every Gentile merchant
+and professional man at its vengeance, by its influence over the
+patronage which he must have in order to be successful. It corrupts
+every Gentile who is affected by either fear or venality, and makes of
+him a part of its power to play the autocrat in Utah and to deceive the
+country as to its purposes and its operations. Every Gentile who
+refuses to testify at its request and in its behalf becomes a marked and
+endangered man. It rewards and it punishes according to its will; and
+those Gentiles who have gone to Washington to testify for Smoot are well
+aware of this fact. Unless the Gentiles of Utah shall soon be protected
+by the power of the United States they will suffer either ruin or exile
+at the hands of the hierarchy."
+
+When this declaration had been accepted, by all present, as truly
+expressing their views of the situation, it was decided that they should
+confer with other leading Gentiles, hold a mass meeting, adopt a set of
+resolutions embodying the declaration on which they had agreed, and then
+dispatch the resolutions to the Senate committee, as a protest against
+the testimony of some of the Gentiles in the Smoot case, and as an
+appeal to the nation for help.
+
+But although all approved of the declaration and all approved of the
+method by which it was to be sent to the nation, no man there dared
+to stand out publicly in support of such a protest, to offer the
+resolutions, or to speak for them. The merchant knew that his trade
+would vanish in a night, leaving him unable to meet his obligations
+and certain of financial destruction. The lawyer knew not only that the
+hierarchy would deprive him of all his Mormon clients, but that it would
+make him so unpopular with courts and juries that no Gentile litigant
+would dare employ him. The mining man knew that the hierarchy could
+direct legislation against him, might possibly influence courts and
+could assuredly influence jurors to destroy him. And so with all the
+others at the conference.
+
+They were not cowards. They had shown themselves, in the past, of more
+than average human courage, loyalty and ability. All recognized that if
+the power of the hierarchy were not soon met and broken it would grow
+too great to be resisted--that another generation would find itself
+hopelessly enslaved. Every father felt that the liberties of his
+children were at stake; that they would be bond or free by the issue
+of the conflict then in course at Washington. And yet not one dared to
+throw down the gauntlet to tyranny--to devote himself to certain ruin.
+They had to prefer simple slavery to beggary and slavery combined. They
+had to hope silently that the power of the nation would intervene. They
+could work only secretly for the fulfillment of that hope.
+
+At first, in President Roosevelt they saw the promise of their
+salvation. He had opposed the election of Apostle Smoot. When the report
+of the apostle's candidacy had first reached Washington, the President
+had summoned to the White House Senator Thomas Kearns of Utah and
+Senator Mark Hanna, who was chairman of the National Republican
+committee; and to these two men he had declared his opposition to
+the candidacy of a Mormon apostle as a Republican aspirant for a
+Senatorship. At his request Senator Hanna, as chairman of the party,
+signed a letter of remonstrance to the party chiefs in Utah, and
+President Roosevelt, at a later conference, gave this letter to
+Senator Kearns to be communicated to the state leaders. Senator Kearns
+transmitted the message, and by so doing he "dug his political grave" as
+the Mormon stake president, Lewis W. Shurtliff, expressed it.
+
+Colonel C. B. Loose of Provo went to Washington on behalf of the Church
+authorities. He was a Gentile, a partner of Apostle Smoot and of some of
+the other Mormon leaders in business undertakings, a wealthy mining man,
+a prominent Republican. It was reported in Utah that his arguments for
+Smoot carried some weight in Washington. President Roosevelt was to be
+a candidate for election; and the old guard of the Republican party,
+distrustful of the Roosevelt progressive policies, was gathering for
+a grim stand around Senator Mark Hanna. Both factions were playing for
+votes in the approaching national convention. I have it on the authority
+of a Mormon ecclesiast, who was in the political confidence of the
+Church leaders, that President Roosevelt was promised the votes of
+the Utah delegation and such other convention votes as the Church
+politicians could control. The death of Senator Hanna made this promise
+unnecessary, if there ever was an explicit promise. But this much is
+certain. President Roosevelt's opposition to Apostle Smoot, for whatever
+reason, changed to favor.
+
+The character and impulses of the President were of a sort to make him
+peculiarly susceptible to an appeal for help on the part of the Mormons.
+He had lived in the West. He knew something of the hardships attendant
+upon conquering the waste places. He sympathized with those who dared,
+for their own opinions, to oppose the opinions of the rest of the
+world. He had received the most adulating assurances of support for
+his candidacies and his policies. It would have required a man of the
+calmest discrimination and coolest judgment to find the line between
+any just claim for mercy presented by the Mormon advocates of "religious
+liberty" and the willful offenses which they were committing against the
+national integrity.
+
+I have received it personally, from the lips of more than one member
+of the Senate committee, that never in all their experience with public
+questions was such executive pressure brought to bear upon them as was
+urged from the White House, at this time, for the protection of Apostle
+Smoot's seat in the Senate. The President's most intimate friends on the
+committee voted with the minority to seat Smoot. One of the President's
+closest adherents, Senator Dolliver, after having signed a majority
+report to exclude Smoot and having been re-elected, in the meantime,
+by his own State legislature, to another term in the Senate--afterwards
+spoke and voted against the report which he had signed. Senator A. J.
+Hopkins of Illinois, who had supported Smoot consistently, found himself
+bitterly attacked, in his campaign for reelection, because of his
+record in the Smoot case, and he published in his defense a letter from
+President Roosevelt that read: "Just a line to congratulate you upon the
+Smoot case. It is not my business, but it is a pleasure to see a public
+servant show, under trying circumstances, the courage, ability and sense
+of right that you have shown."
+
+After the outrageous exposures of the violations of law, the treason
+and the criminal indifference to human rights shown by the rulers of
+the Church, if an early vote had been taken by the committee and by
+the Senate itself, the antagonism of the nation would have forced the
+exclusion of the Apostle from the upper House. Delay was his salvation.
+More to the President's influence than to any other cause is the delay
+attributable that prolonged the case through a term of three years.
+During that time the unfortunate Gentiles of Utah learned that, instead
+of receiving help from the President, they were to have only the most
+insuperable opposition. They believed that the President was being
+grossly misled; that it was, of course, impossible for him to read all
+the testimony given before the Senate committee, and that the matters
+that reached him were being tinged with other purpose than the
+vindication of truth and justice. But it was impossible to obtain the
+opportunity of setting him right. Even the women who were leading
+the national protest against the polygamous teaching and practices of
+Smoot's fellow apostles were told that the President had made up his
+mind and could not be re-convinced.
+
+The Mormon appeal to his generosity was not confined to Washington. On
+his travels he met President Smith more than once--the Prophet being
+accompanied by a different wife each time--and naturally Smith made
+every effort to impress President Roosevelt with his earnestness, the
+purity of his life, and the high motives that actuated the exercise
+of his authority. And at this sort of pretense the Lord's anointed are
+expert. They themselves may be crude in ideas and coarse in method,
+but their diplomacy is a growth of eighty years of applied devotion and
+energy.
+
+The American people are used to meeting prominent Mormons who are models
+of demeanor who are hearty of manner; who carry a kindly light in their
+eyes; who have a spontaneity that precludes hypocrisy or even deep
+purpose. These are not the men who make the Church diplomacy--they
+simply obey it. It is part of that diplomacy to send out such men for
+contact with the world. But the ablest minds of the Church, whether they
+are of the hierarchy or not, construct its policies. And given a system
+whose human units move instantly and unquestioningly at command; given
+a system whose worldly power is available at any point at any moment;
+given a system whose movement may be as secret as the grave until
+result is attained--and the clumsiest of politicians or the crudest of
+diplomats has a force to effect his ends that is as powerful for its
+size as any that Christendom has ever known.
+
+Among the emissaries of the Church who were deputed to "reach" President
+Roosevelt, was our old friend Ben Rich, the gay, the engaging, the
+apparently irresponsible agent of hierarchical diplomacy. And I should
+like to relate the story of his "approach," as it is still related
+in the inner circle of Church confidences. Not that I expect it to
+be wholly credited--not that I doubt but it will be denied on all
+sides--but because it is so characteristic of Church gossip and so
+typical (even if it were untrue) of the humorous cynicism of Church
+diplomacy.
+
+When President Roosevelt was making his "swing around the circle," Rich
+was appointed to join him, found the opportunity to do so, and (so the
+story is told) delighted the President by the spirit and candor of his
+good fellowship. When they were about to part, the President is reported
+to have said, "Why don't you run for Congress from your state? You're
+just the kind of man I'd like to have in the House to support my
+policies." And here (as the Mormons are told) is the dialogue that
+ensued:
+
+Rich: "I have no ambition that way, Mr. President. For many reasons
+it's out of the question although I'm grateful for the flattering
+suggestion."
+
+The President: "Then let me appoint you to some good office. You're the
+kind of man I'd like to have in my official family."
+
+Rich (impressively and in a low tone): "Mr. President, I'd count it the
+greatest honor of my life to have a commission from you to any office.
+I'd hand that commission down to my children as the most precious
+heritage. But--I love you too much, Mr. President, to put you in any
+such hole. I'm a polygamist. It would injure you before the whole
+country."
+
+The President (leaning forward eagerly): "No! Are you a polygamist? Tell
+me all about it."
+
+Rich. "The Lord has bestowed that blessing on me. I wish you could go
+into my home and see how my wives are living together like sisters--how
+tender they are to each other--how they bear each other's burdens and
+share each other's sorrows--and how fond all my children are of Mother
+and Auntie."
+
+The President: "Well--but how can women agree to share a husband?"
+
+Rich: "They do it in obedience to a revelation from the Lord--a
+revelation that proclaimed the doctrine of the eternity and the
+plurality of the marriage covenant. We believe that men and women,
+sealed in this life under proper authority, are united in the conjugal
+relation throughout eternity. We believe that the husband is tied to his
+wives, and they to him; that their children and all the generations
+of their children will belong to him hereafter. We believe in eternal
+progression; that as man is, God was; and as God is, man shall be. We
+believe that by obedience to this revealed covenant, we will be exalted
+in the celestial realm of our Father, with power in ourselves to create
+and people worlds. It is a never ending and constantly increasing
+intelligence and labor. If I keep my covenants to my wives and they to
+me, in this world, all the powers and rights of our marriage relation
+will be continued and amplified to us in the life to come; and we, in
+our turn, will be rulers over worlds and universes of worlds."
+
+Then--according to the unctuous gossip of the devout--President
+Roosevelt saw the true answer to his own desire to know what was to
+become of his mighty personality after this world should have fallen
+away from him! He saw, in this faith, a possible continuation throughout
+eternity of the tremendous energies of his being! He was to continue to
+rule not merely a nation but a world, a system of worlds, a universe of
+worlds! And it is told--sometimes solemnly, sometimes with a grin--that,
+in the Temple at Salt Lake, a proxy has stood for him and he has been
+baptized into the Mormon Church; that proxies have stood for the members
+of his family and that they have been sealed to him; and finally that
+proxies have stood for some of the great queens of the past (who had not
+already been sealed to Mormon leaders) and that they have been sealed to
+the President for eternity!
+
+[FOOTNOTE: It is a not uncommon practice in the Mormon Church thus to
+"do a work" for a Gentile who has befriended the people or otherwise won
+the gratitude of the Church authorities.]
+
+This may sound blasphemous toward Theodore Roosevelt--if not toward the
+Almighty--but it is told, and it is believed, by hundreds and thousands
+of the faithful among the Mormon people. It is given to them as the
+secret explanation of President Roosevelt's protection of the Mormon
+tyranny--a protection of which Apostle Hyrum Smith boasted in a sermon
+in the Salt Lake tabernacle (April 5, 1905) in these equivocal words:
+"We believe--and I want to say this--that in President Roosevelt we
+have a friend, and we believe that in the Latter-Day Saints President
+Roosevelt has the greatest friendship among them; and there are no
+people in the world who are more friendly to him, and will remain
+friendly unto him just so long as he remains true, as he has been, to
+the cause of humanity."
+
+The Smiths have their own idea of what "the cause of humanity" is.
+
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XV. The Struggle For Liberty
+
+
+
+As early as 1903, before the Smoot investigation began, the Utah State
+journal (of which I became editor) was founded as a Democratic daily
+newspaper, to attempt a restoration of political freedom in Utah and
+to remonstrate against the new polygamy, of which rumors were already
+insistent. I was at once warned by Judge Henry H. Rolapp (a prominent
+Democrat on the District bench, and secretary of the Amalgamated Sugar
+Company) that we need not look for aid from the political or business
+interests of the community, inasmuch as our avowed purpose had already
+antagonized the Church. He delivered this message in a friendly spirit
+from a number of Democrats whose support we had been expecting. And
+the warning proved to be well-inspired. Although a number of courageous
+Gentiles, like Colonel E. A. Wall of Salt Lake City, gave us material
+aid--and although there was no other Democratic daily paper in
+Utah (unless it was the Salt Lake Herald, owned by Senator Clark of
+Montana)--the most powerful Church Democratic interests stood against
+us, and we found it impossible to make any effective headway with the
+paper.
+
+After the Prophets began to give their awful testimony at Washington,
+the Democratic National Convention of 1904 (which I attended as a
+delegate from Utah) considered a resolution in opposition to polygamy
+and the Church's rule of the state. This resolution was as vigorously
+fought by some Utah Gentiles as by the Mormon delegates, on the grounds
+that it would defeat the Democratic party in Utah. It carried in the
+convention. Upon returning to Salt Lake City I called a meeting of the
+Democratic state committee (of which I was chairman) and urged that we
+make our state campaign on the issue of ecclesiastical domination, in
+consonance with the party's national platform. Of the whole committee
+only the secretary, Mr. P. J. Daly, supported the proposal. The others
+considered it "an attempt to establish a quarantine against Democratic
+success." Some of them had been promised by members of the hierarchy
+that the party was to have "a square deal this time." Others had
+fatuously accepted the assurances of ecclesiasts that "it looked like
+a Democratic year." In short, the Democratic party in Utah, like the
+Republican party, proved to be then, as it is now, less a political
+organization than the tool of a Church cabal. We found that we could no
+more hope to move the Democratic machine against the hierarchy than to
+move the Smoot-Republican machine itself.
+
+But when Joseph F. Smith, before the Senate committee, admitted that he
+was violating "the laws of God and man" and tried to extenuate his
+guilt with the plea that the Gentiles of Utah condoned it, he issued a
+challenge that no American citizen could ignore. The Gentiles of Utah
+had been silent, theretofore, partly because they were ignorant of the
+extent of the polygamous offenses of the hierarchy, and partly because
+they were hoping for better things. Smith's boast made their silence
+the acquiescence of sympathy. A meeting was called in Salt Lake City, in
+May, 1904, and under the direction of Colonel William Nelson, editor of
+the Salt Lake Tribune, the principles of the present "American party"
+were enunciated as a protest against the lawbreaking tyranny of the
+Church leaders. Later, as it became clear that the opponents of the
+Smith misrule must organize their own party of progress, committees were
+formed and a convention was held (in September, 1904) at which a
+full state and county ticket was put in the field, in the name of the
+American Party of Utah.
+
+We agreed that no war should be made on the Mormon religion as such;
+that no war should be made on the Mormon people because of their being
+Mormons; that we would draw a deadline at the year 1890, when the
+Church had effected a composition of its differences with the national
+government, and all the citizens of Utah, Mormon and Gentile alike, had
+accepted the conditions of settlement; that we would find our cause of
+quarrel in the hierarchy's violation of the statehood pledges; and that
+when we had corrected these evil practices we should dissolve, because
+(to quote the language used at the time) we did not wish "to raise a
+tyrant merely to slay a tyrant."
+
+In the idea that we would fight upon living issues--that we would not
+open the graves of the past to dig up a dead quarrel and parade it in
+its cerements--the American party movement began. Its first enlistment
+included practically all the Gentiles in Salt Lake City who resented
+the claim of the Prophet that they acquiesced in his crimes and his
+treasons. But the most promising sign for the party was its attraction
+of hundreds of independent Mormons of the younger generation. As one
+Mormon of that hopeful time expressed it: "The flag represents the
+political power. The golden angel Moroni, at the top of the Temple,
+represents the ecclesiastical authority. I will not pay to either one a
+deference which belongs to the other. I know how to keep them apart in
+my personal devotion."
+
+This was exactly what the Church authorities would not permit. It would
+have destroyed all the special and selfish prerogatives of the Mormon
+hierarchs. It would have subverted their claim of absolute temporal
+power. It would have set up the nation and the state as the objects of
+civic devotion--instead of the Kingdom of God.
+
+Although we of the American party disavowed and abstained from any
+attack upon the Mormon Church as such--and confined ourselves to a war
+upon the treasons, the violations of law, the breaches of covenant
+and the other offenses of the Church leaders, as the practices of
+individuals--these leaders dragged the whole body of the Church as
+a wall of defense around them, and in countless sermons and printed
+articles declared that the Church and its faith were the objects of our
+assault. In other words, though Smith claimed in Washington--and Smoot
+continues to claim before the nation--that the Church is not responsible
+for the crimes of its Prophets, whenever a criticism or a prosecution is
+directed against any of these men, they all unite in declaring that the
+Church is being persecuted; and the members of the hierarchy rouse all
+their followers, and use all their agencies, in a successful resistance.
+
+There was no blithesomeness in the campaign. It was not lightened by any
+humor. It was a hopeless assault on the one side and a grim overpowering
+resistance on the other. The American party, being organized as a
+protest, had at first little regard for offices. It sought to promulgate
+the principles of its cause for the enlightenment of the citizens of
+Utah and for the preservation of their rights. Some of the Gentiles who
+did not join us felt, perhaps, as strong an indignation as those who
+did, but they were entangled in politics with the hierarchs, or had
+business connections that would be destroyed. These men, in course of
+time, became the most dangerous opponents of our progress. (The average
+Mormon is obedient and supine enough in the presence of his Prophets,
+but he is a man of personal independence compared with the sycophantic
+Gentile who accepts political or commercial favors from the Church
+chiefs and yet continues to deny the existence of the very power to
+which he bends the knee.) Of the rebellious but discreet Mormons many
+came to the leaders of our party to say: "I think you're quite right. I,
+myself, have suffered under these tyrannies. I have no sympathy with
+new polygamy. But, as you know, I'm attorney for some of the Church
+interests"--or "I'm in business with high ecclesiasts"--or "I'm heavily
+in debt to the Church bank"--or "I'm closely connected by marriage with
+one of the Prophets"--"and I can do you more good by my quiet efforts
+than by coming out into the open. I'd be treated as an apostate. All my
+influence would be gone." And in most cases he preserved his influence,
+and we lost him. The Church had effective ways of recovering his
+support.
+
+For many reasons the American party looked for its recruits chiefly
+among Republicans, the Democracy being almost entirely Mormon. And in
+the first flush of enthusiasm some of our leaders laughed at the boast
+of the Republican state chairman that, for every Republican he lost, he
+would get two Mormon Democrats to vote the Republican ticket. (This was
+Hon. William Spry, a Mormon, since made Governor of Utah, for services
+rendered the hierarchy.) But the claim proved anything but laughable.
+He got probably four Mormon Democrats for every Republican he lost. As
+usual the hierarchy "delivered the goods" to the national organization
+in power.
+
+According to our best calculations we got from fifteen hundred to
+eighteen hundred Mormon votes. And, during this campaign and those that
+followed, I was approached by hundreds of Mormons who commended our work
+and gave private voice to the hope that we might succeed in freeing Utah
+so that they themselves might be free. After I joined the staff of the
+Salt Lake Tribune, as chief editor, these came to my office by stealth
+and in obvious fear. I could not blame them then, nor do I now. The cost
+of open defiance was too great.
+
+One woman, the first wife of a prominent Mormon physician, came to me
+to enlist in the work of the party. (Her husband was living with a
+young plural wife.) We accepted her aid. Her husband cut off her monthly
+allowance, and she had to take employment as a book canvasser, so that
+she might be able to earn her living. One Mormon who came out openly for
+us, was superintendent of a business owned by Gentiles. He was somewhat
+prominent as an ecclesiast, and he was a Sunday School worker in his
+ward. He reconciled his wife and daughters to his revolt against the
+recrudescence of polygamy and the tyranny of the Church's political
+control. He carried with him the sympathy of his brother, who was a
+newspaper editor. He won over some of his personal friends to pledge
+their support to our cause. He seemed too sturdy ever to retreat, too
+independent in his circumstances to be driven, and with too clear a
+vision to be led astray by the threats, the power, or the persuasions
+of the hierarchy. Yet, before long he came to confess that he could not
+continue to help us openly. His employers--his Gentile employers--had
+notified him that his work in the American party would be dangerously
+injurious to their business. They were in hearty accord with his
+views; they recognized his right as a citizen to act according to his
+convictions; but--they dared not provoke a war of business reprisals
+with the commercial and financial institutions of the Church. He must
+either cease his active opposition to the Church leaders, or lose his
+place of employment.... He retired from the fight.
+
+Another Mormon who joined us was Don. C. Musser, a son of one of the
+Church historians. He had been a missionary in Germany and in Palestine.
+He had been a soldier in the Philippines, and he had edited the first
+American newspaper there. His contact with the world and his experience
+in the military service of the United States had given him a high ideal
+of his country; and a feeling of loyalty to the nation had superseded
+his earlier devotion to the Prophets. His family was wealthy, but he was
+supporting himself and his young wife by his own efforts in business.
+As soon as he came out openly with the American party, his father's home
+was closed against him. His business connections were withdrawn from
+him. He found himself unable to provide for his wife, who was in
+delicate health. After a losing struggle, he came to tell us that he
+could no longer earn a living in Utah; that he had obtained means to
+emigrate; that he must say good-bye. And we lost him.
+
+Two other young men--the son and the son-in-law of an apostle--came to
+me and asked helplessly for advice. They admitted that the practices
+of the hierarchy were, to them, a violation of the covenant with the
+nation, a transgression of the revelation from God given to Wilford
+Woodruff, and destructive of all the securities of community
+association. But would I advise them to sacrifice their influence in the
+Church by joining the "American movement" publicly? Or had they better
+retain their influence and use it within the Church to correct the evils
+that we were attacking?
+
+With awful sincerity they spoke of conditions that had come under their
+own eyes, and related instances to show how mercilessly the polygamous
+favorites of the Church were permitted to prey on the young women
+teachers in Church schools. They spoke of J. M. Tanner, who was at
+that time head of the Church schools, a member of the general Board of
+Education, and one of the Sunday School superintendents. According to
+these young men--and according to general report--Tanner was marrying
+right and left.
+
+I knew of a young Mormon of Brigham City, who had been a suitor for the
+hand of L----, a teacher at the Logan College. He had been away from
+Utah for some time, and he had returned hoping to make her his wife.
+Stopping over night in Salt Lake, on his way home, he saw Tanner and
+L---- enter the lobby of the hotel in which he sat. They registered as
+man and wife and went upstairs together. He followed--to walk the floor
+of his room all night, struggling against the impulse to break in, and
+kill Tanner, and damn his own soul by meddling with the man who had been
+ordained by the Prophets to a wholesale polygamous prerogative.
+
+He had kept his hands clean of blood, but he had been living ever since
+with murder in his heart. Could these two sons of the Church do more to
+remedy such horrors by using their influence to have Tanner deposed, or
+by sacrificing that influence in an open revolt against the conditions
+that made Tanner possible? I could only advise them to act according to
+their own best sense of what was right. They did use their influence to
+help force Tanner's deposition, but we lost the public example of their
+opposition to the crimes of the hierarchy.
+
+I relate these incidents as typical of the different kinds of pressure
+that were brought to bear upon the independent Mormons who wished to
+aid us, and of the local difficulties against which we had to contend.
+Washington, of course, gave us no recognition. And we did not succeed
+in reaching the ear of the nation. Here and there a newspaper noted our
+effort and paid some small heed to our protest, but the overwhelming
+success of the Republican party--and the dumb-driven acquiescence of
+the Democracy--in Utah and the neighboring Church-ruled states, left the
+agitation with little of political interest for the country at large.
+
+And yet the struggle went on. Animated by the spirit of the Salt Lake
+Tribune, the leading newspaper of the community, the American party
+entered the city elections in the fall of 1905 and carried them against
+the hierarchy's Democratic ticket, with the help of the independent
+Mormons, under cover of the secret ballot. Emboldened by this success
+we proposed to move on the state and county offices, with the hope of
+gaining some members of the legislature and some of the judicial and
+executive offices, through which to enforce the laws that the Church
+leaders were defying. But here we failed. Outside of Salt Lake the rule
+of the Prophets was still absolute and unquestioned. The people bowed
+reverently to Joseph F. Smith's dictum: "When a man says 'You may direct
+me spiritually but not temporally,' he lies in the presence of God--that
+is, if he has got intelligence enough to know what he is talking about."
+The state politicians knew that they would destroy themselves by joining
+an organization opposed by the all-powerful-Church; and sufficient
+warning of this doom appeared to them in the fact that no member of the
+American party could obtain any recognition in Federal appointments.
+The Church had meanwhile dictated the election of another United States
+Senator (George Sutherland) to join Apostle Smoot, and Senator Kearns
+was retired for his opposition to the hierarchy. [FOOTNOTE: When Senator
+Aldrich was carrying the tariff bill of 1910 through the Senate, for
+the greater profit of the "Interests," Smoot and Sutherland did not once
+vote against him. Smoot supported him on every one of the one hundred
+and twenty-nine votes and missed none. Sutherland voted with him one
+hundred and seventeen times and was recorded as not voting on the
+remaining twelve. Only two other senators made anything like such a
+despicable record.]
+
+It began to be more and more apparent that whatever success we might
+achieve locally, the power of the financial and political allies of
+the Prophets in Washington, aided by the executive "Big Stick" of the
+President, would beat us back from any attempt to rouse the state or the
+nation to our support.
+
+Smoot was in a happy position: all the senators who represented the
+"Interests" were for him, and all the senators who represented the
+supposed progressive sentiment of Theodore Roosevelt were also for him.
+The women of the nation had sent a protest with a million signatures to
+the Senate; but they had not votes; they received, in reply, a public
+scolding. Long before the Senate voted on its committee's report, many
+of the notorious "new" polygamists of the Church returned from their
+exile in foreign missions and began to walk the streets of Salt Lake
+with their old swagger of self-confident authority. We foresaw the end.
+
+Early in December, 1906, Senator J. C. Burrows of Michigan, chairman
+of the committee that had investigated Smoot, called up the committee's
+report and spoke upon it in a denunciation of Smoot. Senator Dubois
+of Idaho followed, two days later, with a supplementary attack, and
+censured President Roosevelt for "allowing his name and office" to be
+used in defense of the Mormons. After an interval of a month, Senator
+Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois, undertook to reply with a defense
+of Smoot that reduced the Apostle's excuses to the absurd. Smoot, he
+declared, had opposed polygamy, "even from his infancy;" there was
+"nothing in the constitution" prohibiting "a State from having an
+established Church;" the old practices of Mormonism were dying out; and
+Smoot, as an exponent of the newer Mormonism, was largely responsible
+for the improvement.
+
+This bold falsehood was received with laughter by the members who had
+heard the testimony before the Senate committee or read the record of
+its sittings; but it was wired to all newspapers; and the contradictions
+that followed it failed (for reasons) to get the same publicity. It
+was repeated by Senator Sutherland (January 22, 1907); and he had the
+audacity to add that the Mormon Church, as well as Smoot, was opposed to
+polygamy; that the "sporadic cases" of new polygamy were "reprehended
+by Mormon and Gentile alike;" that polygamous marriages in Utah had been
+forbidden by the Enabling Act, but that polygamous cohabitation had
+been left to the state; and that the latter was rapidly dying out. And
+Sutherland knew, as every public man in Utah knew, that almost every
+word of this statement was untrue.
+
+Senator Philander C. Knox, of Pennsylvania (February 14, 1907) took up
+the lie that Smoot had been "from his youth against polygamy," and he
+added to it a legal argument that the Senate could only expel a member,
+by a two-thirds vote, if he were guilty of crime, offensive immorality,
+disloyalty or gross impropriety during his term of service. Senator
+Tillman (February 15) accused President Roosevelt of protecting Smoot
+in return for a pledge of Mormon support given previous to the last
+campaign. Apostle Smoot (February 19) declared that cases of "new"
+polygamy were rare; that they were not sanctioned by the Church; that
+every case since 1890 "has the express condemnation of the Church;"
+and that he himself had always opposed polygamy. On February 20,
+the question was forced to a vote after a debate that repeated these
+falsehoods, in spite of all disproof's of them. And Apostle Smoot was
+retained in his seat by a vote of fifty-one to thirty-seven, counting
+pairs.
+
+After this event, no growth of organization was immediately possible to
+the American party. Having gained political control of Salt Lake City
+and given it good municipal government, we were able to hold a local
+adherency; but hundreds of Mormons, who still vote the American city
+ticket, vote for the Church in state elections, because, though they
+want reform, they are not willing to risk the punishment of their
+relatives and the leaders of the Church to attain that reform. And
+when the national government granted its patent of approval to the
+hierarchy--by holding the hierarchy's appointed representative in
+the Senate as its prophetic monitor--nearly all the people of the
+intermountain country lost heart in the fight. Thousands of Gentiles,
+who knew the truth and had fought for it for years, argued despairingly:
+"If the nation likes this sort of thing--I guess it's the sort of thing
+it likes. I'm not going to ruin myself financially and politically by
+keeping up a losing struggle with these neighbors of mine, and fight
+the government at Washington besides. If the administration wants to be
+bossed by the Prophet, Seer and Revelator, I can stand it."
+
+The nation, having accepted responsibility for past polygamy, now,
+by accepting Senator Smoot, gave its responsible approval to the new
+polygamy and to the commercial and political tyrannies of the Church.
+In the old days the Mormons had claimed immunity for their practice
+of polygamy on the ground that the constitution of the United States
+protected them in the exercises of their faith. The Supreme Court of the
+country determined that the free-religion clause of the constitution did
+not cover violations of law; and the Church deliberately abandoned its
+claim of religious immunity. But now a majority of the Senate, supported
+by President Roosevelt, took the old ground--which the Supreme Court had
+made untenable and the Mormons themselves had vacated--and practically
+declared that violations of law were a part of the constitutional
+guaranty!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XVI. The Price of Protest
+
+
+
+The members of the Mormon hierarchy continually boast that they are
+sustained in their power--and in their abuses of that power--"by the
+free vote of the freest people under the sun." By an amazing self
+deception the Mormon people assume that their government is one of
+"common consent;" and nothing angers them more than the expression of
+any suspicion that they are not the freest community in the world. They
+live under an absolutism. They have no more right of judgment than a
+dead body. Yet the diffusion of authority is so clever that nearly every
+man seems to share in its operation upon some subordinate, and feels
+himself in some degree a master without observing that he is also a
+slave.
+
+The male members of the ward--who would be called "laymen" in any other
+Church--all hold the priesthood. Each is in possession of, or on the
+road to, some priestly office; and yet all are under the absolutism
+of the bishop of the ward. Of the hundreds of bishops, with their
+councillors, each seems to be exercising some independent authority, but
+all are obedient to the presidents of stakes. The presidents apparently
+direct the ecclesiastical destinies of their districts, but they are, in
+fact, supine and servile under the commands of the apostles; and these,
+in turn, render implicit obedience to the Prophet, Seer and Revelator.
+No policy ever arises from the people. All direction, all command, comes
+from the man at the top. It is not a government by common consent, but
+a government of common consent--of universal, absolute and unquestioning
+obedience--under penalty of eternal condemnation threatened and earthly
+punishment sure.
+
+Twice a year, with a fine show of democracy, the people assemble in the
+Tabernacle at Salt Lake, and there vote for the general authorities
+who are presented to them by the voice of revelation. If there were no
+tragedy, there would be farce in the solemnity with which this pretense
+of free government is staged and managed. Some ecclesiast rises in
+the pulpit and reads from his list: "It is moved and seconded that we
+sustain Joseph F. Smith as Prophet, Seer and Revelator to all the world.
+All who favor this make it manifest by raising the right hand." No
+motion has been made. No second has been offered. Very often, no adverse
+vote is asked. And, if it were, who would dare to offer it? These
+leaders represent the power of God to their people; and against them is
+arrayed "the power of the Devil and his cohorts among mankind." Three
+generations of tutelage and suppression restrain the members of the
+conference in a silent acquiescence. If there is any rebel among them,
+he must stand alone; for he has scarcely dared to voice his objections,
+lest he be betrayed, and any attempt to raise a concerted revolt
+would have been frustrated before this opportunity of concerted revolt
+presented itself. Being a member of the Church, he must combat the fear
+that he may condemn himself eternally if he raise his voice against the
+will of God. He must face the penalty of becoming an outcast or an
+exile from the people and the life that he has loved. He knows that
+the religious zealots will feel that he has gone wilfully "into outer
+darkness" through some deep and secret sin of his own; and that the
+prudent members of the community will tell him that he should have "kept
+his mouth shut." If there were a majority of the conference inclined
+to protest against the re-election of any of its rulers, the lack of
+communication, the pressure of training and the weight of fear would
+keep them silent. And in this manner, from Prophet down to "Choyer
+leader" (choir leader) the names are offered and "sustained by the free
+vote of the freest people under the sun."
+
+During the days just before the American party's political agitation, a
+young Mormon, named Samuel Russell, returned from a foreign mission for
+the Church and found that the girl whom he had been courting when he
+went away was married as a plural wife to Henry S. Tanner, brother of
+the other notorious polygamist, J. M. Tanner. The discovery that his
+sweetheart was a member of the Tanner household drove Russell almost
+frantic. She was the daughter of an eminent and wealthy family, of
+remarkable beauty, well-educated and rarely accomplished. Young Russell
+was a college student--a youth of intellect and high mind--and he
+suffered all the torments of a horrifying shock. Unless he should choose
+to commit an act of violence there was only one possible way for him to
+protest. At the next conference, when the name of Henry S. Tanner was
+read from the list to be "sustained"--as a member of the general Sunday
+School Board--Russell rose and objected that Tanner was unworthy and a
+"new" polygamist. He was silenced by remonstrances from the pulpit and
+from the people. He was told to take his complaint to the President
+of his Stake. He was denied the opportunity to present it to the
+assemblage.
+
+Almost immediately afterward, Tanner, for the first time in his life,
+was honored with a seat in the highest pulpit of the Church among the
+general authorities. And Russell was pursued by the ridicule of the
+Mormon community, the persecution of the Church that he had served, the
+contempt of the man who had wronged him, and the anger of the woman whom
+he had loved. One of the reporters of the Deseret News, the Church's
+newspaper, subsequently stated that he had been detailed, with others,
+to pursue Russell day and night, soliciting interviews, plaguing
+him with questions, and demanding the legal proofs of Tanner's
+marriage--which, of course, it was known that Russell could not
+give--until Russell's friends, fearing that he might be driven to
+violence, persuaded him to leave the state. Tanner is now reputed to
+have six plural wives (all married to him since the manifesto of 1890)
+of whom this young woman is one.
+
+Similarly, at the General Conference of April, 1905, Don C. Musser (of
+whom I have already written) attempted to protest against the sustaining
+of Apostles Taylor and Cowley; but Joseph F. Smith promptly called upon
+the choir to sing, and Musser's voice was drowned in harmony. In more
+recent years Charles J. Bowen rose at a General Conference to object to
+the sustaining of some of the polygamous authorities, and he was hustled
+from the building by the ushers.
+
+But the most notable case of individual revolt of this period was
+Charles A. Smurthwaite's. He had joined the Church, alone, when a boy in
+England, and the sufferings he had endured, for allying himself with
+an ostracized sect, had made him a very ardent Mormon. He had become
+a "teacher" in his ward of Ogden City, had succeeded in business as a
+commission merchant and was a great favorite with his bishop and his
+people, because of his charities and a certain gentle tolerance of
+disposition and kindly brightness of mind.
+
+Smurthwaite, in partnership with Richard J. Taylor (son of a former
+President of the Church, John Taylor) engaged in the manufacture of
+salt, with the financial backing of a leading Church banker. Along the
+shores of Salt Lake, salt is obtained, by evaporation, at the cost of
+about sixty cents a ton; its selling price, at the neighboring smelting
+centers, ranges from three dollars to fourteen dollars a ton; and the
+industry has always been one of the most profitable in the community.
+In the early days, the Church (as I have already related) encouraged the
+establishment of "salt gardens," financed the companies, protected them
+in their leasehold rights along the lake shores, and finally, through
+the Inland Crystal Salt Company, came to control a practical monopoly
+of the salt industry of the intermountain country. (This Inland Crystal
+Company, with Joseph F. Smith as its president, is now a part of the
+national salt trust.)
+
+After Smurthwaite and Taylor had invested heavily in the land and plant
+of their salt factory, the Church banker who had been helping them
+notified them that they had better see President Smith before they went
+any further. They called on Smith in his office, and there--according to
+Smurthwaite's sworn testimony before the Senate committee--the Prophet
+gave them notice that they must not compete with his Inland Crystal
+Salt Company by manufacturing salt, and that if they tried to, he would
+"ruin" them. This proceeding convinced Smurthwaite that Smith had
+"so violent a disregard and non-understanding of the rights of his
+fellow-man and his duty to God, as to render him morally unqualified for
+the high office which he holds." For expressing such an opinion of Smith
+to elders and teachers--and adding that Smith was not fit to act as
+Prophet, Seer and Revelator, since, according to his own confession
+to the Senate Committee he was "living in sin"--for expressing these
+opinions, charges were preferred against Smurthwaite by an elder named
+Goddard of Ogden City, and excommunication proceedings were begun
+against him.
+
+Smurthwaite replied by making a charge of polygamous cohabitation
+against Goddard; and after the April Conference of 1905, Don Musser and
+Smurthwaite joined in filing a complaint in the District Court of Salt
+Lake City demanding an accounting from Joseph F. Smith of the tithes
+which the Church was collecting. Meanwhile Smurthwaite had been
+"disfellowshipped" at a secret session of the bishop's court, on March
+22, without an opportunity of appearing in his own defense or having
+counsel or witnesses heard in support of his case; and on April 4, after
+a similarly secret and ex-parte proceeding, he was excommunicated by the
+High Council of his Stake, for "apostasy and un-Christianlike conduct."
+His charges against Goddard were ignored, and his suit for an accounting
+of the tithes was dismissed for want of jurisdiction!
+
+From the moment of his first public protest against Smith, all
+Smurthwaite's former associates fell away from him, and by many of the
+more devout he was shunned as if he were infected. Benevolent as he had
+been, he could find no further fellowship even among those whom he had
+benefited by his service and his means. I know of no more blameless life
+than his had been in his home community--and, to this, every one of
+his acquaintances can bear testimony--yet after the brutally unjust
+proceedings of excommunication against him the Deseret News, the
+Church's daily paper, referred to "recent cases of apostasy and
+excommunication" as having been made necessary by the "gross immorality"
+of the victims. When a man like Chas. A. Smurthwaite could not
+remonstrate against the individual offenses of Joseph F. Smith, without
+being overwhelmed by financial disaster, and social ostracism, and
+personal slander, it must be evident how impossible is such single
+revolt to the average Mormon. Nothing can be accomplished by individual
+protest except the ruin of the protestant and his family.
+
+In the case of my own excommunication, the issues were perhaps less
+clearly defined than in Smurthwaite's. I had not been for many years a
+formal member of the Church; and yet in the sense that Mormonism is a
+community system (as much as a religion) I had been an active and loyal
+member of it. In my childhood--when I was seven or eight years of age--I
+began to doubt the faith of my people; and I used to go into the orchard
+alone and thrust sticks lightly into the soft mould and pray that God
+would let them fall over if the Prophets had not been appointed by Him
+to do His work. And sometimes they fell and sometimes they stood! Later,
+when I was appalled by some of the things that had occurred in the early
+history of the Church, I silenced myself with the argument that one
+should not judge any religion by the crudities and intolerance's of its
+past. I felt that if I were not hypocritical--if I were myself guided by
+the truth as I saw it myself--and if I aided to the utmost of my power
+in advancing the community out of its errors, I should be doing all that
+could be asked of me. In the days of Mormon misery and proscription,
+I chose to stand with my own people, suffering in their sufferings
+and rejoicing with them in their triumphs. Their tendency was plainly
+upward; and I felt that no matter what had been the origin of the
+Church--whether in the egotism of a man or in an alleged revelation from
+God--if the tendencies were toward higher things, toward a more even
+justice among men, toward a more zealous patriotism for the country, no
+man of the community could do better than abide with the community.
+
+The Church authorities accepted my aid with that understanding of my
+position toward the Mormon religion; and, though Joseph F. Smith, in
+1892, for his own political purposes, circulated a procured statement
+that I was "a Mormon in good standing," later, when he was on the
+witness stand in the Smoot investigation, he testified concerning me:
+"He is not and never has been an official member of the Church, in any
+sense or form." I made no pretenses and none were asked of me. I was
+glad to give my services to a people whom I loved, and trusted, and
+admired; and the leaders were as eager to use me as I was eager to be
+used in the proper service of my fellows. (Even Joseph F. Smith, in
+those days, was glad to give me his "power of attorney" and to trust me
+with the care of the community's financial affairs.) But when all the
+hierarchy's covenants to the nation were being broken; when the tyranny
+of the Prophet's absolutism had been re-established with a fierceness
+that I had never seen even in the days of Brigham Young; when polygamy
+had been restored in its most offensive aspect, as a breach of the
+Church's own revelation; when hopelessly outlawed children were being
+born of cohabitation that was clandestine and criminal under the "laws
+both of God and of man"--it was impossible for me to be silent either
+before the leaders of the Church or in the public places among the
+people. I had spoken for the Mormons at a time when few spoke for
+them--when many of the men who were now so valiantly loyal to the
+hierarchy had been discreetly silent. I had helped defend the Mormon
+religion when it had few defenders. I did not propose to criticize it
+now; for to me, any sincere belief of the human soul is too sacred to be
+so assailed--if not out of respect, surely in pity--and the Mormon faith
+was the faith of my parents. But I was determined to make the strongest
+assault in my power on the treason and the tyranny which Smith and
+his associates in guilt were trying to cover with the sanctities of
+religion; and I had to make that assault, as a public man, for a public
+purpose, without any consideration of private consequences.
+
+After I began criticizing the Church leaders, in the editorial columns
+of the Salt Lake Tribune, my friend Ben Rich, then president of the
+Southern States Missions, and J. Golden Kimball, one of the seven
+presidents of the seventies, came to me repeatedly to suggest that if
+I wished to attack the leaders of the Church I should formally withdraw
+from the Church. This I declined to do: because I was in no different
+position toward the teachings of the Church than I had been in previous
+years--because I was not criticizing the Church or its religious
+teachings, but attacking the civil offenses of its leaders as citizens
+guilty against the state--and because I saw that my attack had more
+power as coming from a man who stood within the community, even though
+he had no standing in the Church. I continued as I had begun. After
+the publication of an editorial (January 22, 1905), in which I charged
+President Smith with being all that the testimony then before the Senate
+committee had proven him to be, Ben Rich advised me that I must either
+withdraw from the Church or Smith would proceed against me in the Church
+tribunals and make my family suffer. I replied that I would not withdraw
+and that I would fight all cases against me on the issue of free speech.
+On February 1, 1905, I published, editorially, "An address to the
+Earthly King of the Kingdom of God," in which I charged Smith with
+having violated the laws (revelations) of his predecessors; with having
+made and violated treaties upon which the safety of his "subjects"
+depended; with having taken the bodies of the daughters of his subjects
+and bestowed them upon his favorites; with having impoverished his
+subjects by a system of elaborate exaction's (tithes) in order to enrich
+"the crown" and so forth. All of which, burlesquely written as if to a
+Czar by a constitutionalist, was accepted by the Mormon people as in no
+way absurd in its tone as coming from one American citizen to another!
+
+Because of these two editorials I was charged (February 21, 1905)
+before a ward bishop's court in Ogden with "un-Christianlike conduct
+and apostasy," after two minor Church officials had called upon me at my
+home and received my acknowledgment of the authorship of the editorials,
+my refusal to retract them, and my statement that I did not "sustain"
+Joseph F. Smith as head of the Church, since he was "leaving the worship
+of God for the worship of Mammon and leading the people astray." On the
+night of February 24, I appeared in my own defense before the bishop's
+court, at the hour appointed, without witnesses or counsel, because I
+had been notified that no one would be permitted to attend with me. And,
+of course, the defense I made was that the articles were true and that I
+was prepared to prove them true.
+
+Such a court usually consists of a bishop and his two councillors, but
+in this case the place of the second councillor had been taken by a high
+priest named Elder George W. Larkin, a man reputed to be "richly endowed
+with the Spirit." I had a peculiar psychological experience with Larkin.
+After I had spoken at some length in my own defense, Larkin rose to work
+himself up into one of the rhapsodies for which he was noted. "Brother
+Frank," he began, "I want to bear my testimony to you that this is the
+work of God--and nothing can stay its progress--and all who
+interfere will be swept away as chaff"--rising to those transports of
+auto-hypnotic exaltation which such as he accept as the effect of the
+spirit of God speaking through them. "You were born in the covenant,
+and the condemnation is more severe upon one who has the birthright
+than upon one not of the faith who fights against the authority of
+God's servants." I had concluded to try the effect of a resistant mental
+force, and while I stared at him I was saying to myself: "This is a mere
+vapor of words. You shall not continue in this tirade. Stop!" He began
+to have difficulty in finding his phrases. The expected afflatus did not
+seem to have arrived to lift him. He faltered, hesitated, and finally,
+with an explanation that he had not been feeling well, he resumed his
+seat, apologetically.
+
+That left me free to "bear testimony" somewhat myself. I warned the
+members of the "court" that no work of righteousness could succeed
+except by keeping faith with the Almighty--which meant keeping faith
+with his children upon earth. I reminded them of the dark days, which
+all of them could recall, when we had repeatedly covenanted to God and
+to the nation that if we could be relieved of what we deemed the world's
+oppression we would fulfill every obligation of our promises. I pointed
+out to them that the Church was passing into the ways of the world;
+that our people were being pauperized; that some of them were in the
+poorhouses in their old age after having paid tithes all their active
+lives; that by our practices we were bearing testimony against the
+revelations which Mormons proclaimed to the world for the salvation of
+the bodies and souls of men.
+
+They listened to me with the same friendly spirit that had marked all
+their proceedings for these men had no animosity against me; they were
+merely obeying the orders of their superiors. And when we arose to
+disperse, the bishop put his hand on my shoulder and said, in the usual
+form of words: "Brother Frank, we will consider your case, and if we
+find you ought to do anything to make matters right, we will let you
+know what it is."
+
+I returned to my home, where I had left my wife and children chatting at
+the dinner table. They had known where I was going. They knew what the
+issue of my "trial" would be for them and for me. Yet when I came back
+to them, none asked me any questions and none seemed perturbed. And this
+is typical of the Mormon family. I think the experiences through which
+the people have passed have given them a quality of cheerful patience.
+They have been schooled to bear persecution with quiet fortitude.
+Tragedy sweeps by them in the daily current of life. A young man goes
+on a mission, and dies in a foreign land; and his parents accept their
+bereavement like Spartans, almost without mourning, sustained by the
+religious belief that he has ended his career gloriously. Taught to
+devote themselves and their children and their worldly goods to the
+service of their Church, they accept even the impositions and injustices
+of the Church leaders with a powerful forbearance that is at once a
+strength and a weakness.
+
+Two days later I was met on the street by a young Dutch elder, who could
+scarcely speak English, and he gave me the official document from
+the bishop's court notifying me that I had been "disfellowshipped for
+un-Christianlike conduct and apostasy." I was then summoned to appear
+before the High Council of the Stake in excommunication proceedings, and
+after filing a defense which it is unnecessary to give here--and after
+refusing to appear before the Council for reasons that it is equally
+unnecessary to repeat I was excommunicated on March 14, 1905. No denial
+was made by the Church authorities of any of the charges which I had
+made against Smith. No trial was made of the truth of those charges. As
+a free citizen of "one of the freest communities under the sun," I was
+officially ostracized by order of the religious despot of the community
+for daring to utter what everyone knew to be the truth about him.
+
+For myself, of course, no edict of excommunication had any terrors; but
+the aim of the authorities was to make me suffer through the sufferings
+of my family; and, in that, they succeeded. I shall not write of it. It
+has little place in such a public record as this, and I do not wish
+to present myself, in any record, as a martyr. It was not I who was
+ostracized from the Mormon Church by my excommunication; it was the
+right of free speech. The Mormon Church deprived me of nothing; it
+deprived itself of the helpful criticism of its members. No anathema of
+bigotry could take from me the affection of my family or the respect
+of any friends whose respect was worth the coveting. In that regard I
+suffered only in my pity for those of my neighbors who were so blindly
+servile to the decrees of religious tyranny that they turned their backs
+on the voice of their own liberty raised, in protest, for their own
+defense.
+
+And it was not by the individual protestants but by the entire community
+that the heaviest price was paid in this whole conflict. It divided the
+state again into the old factions and involved it in the old war from
+which it had been rescued. The Mormons instituted a determined boycott
+against all Gentiles, and "Thou shalt not support God's enemies" became
+a renewed commandment of the Prophet. Wherever a Gentile was employed
+in any Mormon institution, he was discharged, almost without exception,
+whether or not he had been an active member of the American party.
+Teachers in the Church would exclaim with horror if they heard that
+a Mormon family was employing a Gentile physician; and more than one
+Mormon litigant was advised that he not only "sinned against the work of
+God," but endangered the success of his law suit, by retaining a Gentile
+lawyer. Politicians were told that if they aided the American party,
+they need never hope for advancement in this world, or expect anything
+but eternal condemnation in the world to come; and though few of
+them counted on the "spoils" of the hereafter, they understood and
+appreciated the power of the hierarchy to reward in the present day. The
+Gentiles did not attempt any boycott in retaliation; they had not the
+solidarity necessary to such an attempt; and many Gentile business men,
+in order to get any Mormon patronage whatever, were compelled to employ
+none but Mormon clerks.
+
+The Gentiles had been largely attracted to Utah by its mines; they were
+heavily interested in the smelting industry. Colonel B. A. Wall, one of
+the strongest supporters of the American party, owned copper properties,
+was an inventor of methods of reduction, and had large smelting
+industries. Ex-Senator Thomas Kearns, and his partner David Keith,
+owners of the Salt Lake Tribune, and many of their associates, had their
+fortunes in mines and smelters; they were leaders of the American
+party and they were attempting to enlist with them such men as W.
+S. McCornick, a Gentile banker and mine owner, and D. C. Jackling,
+president of the Utah Copper Company, who is now one of the heads of the
+national "copper combine" and one of the ablest men of the West.
+
+In 1904, in the midst of the political crisis, the Church newspapers
+served editorial notice on these men that, on account of the smelter
+fumes and their destructive effect upon the vegetation of the valley,
+the smelters must go; and that if the present laws were not sufficient,
+new laws would be enacted to drive them out. Men like Wall and Keith and
+Kearns and Walker were not terrorized; but McCornick and Jackling and
+the representatives of the American Smelting and Refining Company either
+surrendered to a discreet silence or openly joined the Church in the
+campaign. They were rewarded with the assurance that the Church would
+protect them against any labor trouble and that no adverse legislation
+would be attempted against them. Today Jackling, of the copper combine,
+is a newspaper partner of Apostle Smoot, and he is mentioned for
+the United States Senate as the Church's selection to succeed George
+Sutherland. The Church has large mining interests; Smoot and Smith
+are in close affiliation with the smelting trust; and this is another
+powerful partnership in Washington that protected Smoot in his seat and
+has been rewarded by the Church's assistance in looting the nation.
+
+
+
+Chapter XVII. The New Polygamy
+
+
+
+In the old days of Mormonism--and as late as the anti-polygamous
+manifesto of 1890--the whole aim and effort of the Church was to exalt
+and sanctify and make pure the practice of plural marriage by means of
+the community's respect and the reverences of religion. The doctrine of
+polygamy was taught as a revealed mystery of faith. It was accepted as
+a sacrament ordained by God for the salvation of mankind. The most
+important families in the Church dignified it by their participation,
+and were in turn dignified by the Church's approval and by the wealth
+and power that followed approval. The inevitable mental sufferings
+of the plural wives were endured by them as part of an earthly
+self-immolation required by God, for which they should be rewarded in
+eternity. The very necessities of their situation compelled them
+to exact and cherish a super reverence for the doctrine of plural
+marriage--since the only way a mother could justify herself to her
+children was by teaching, as she believed, that she had been selected
+by God for the exaltation of this sacrifice, and by inculcating in her
+children a scrupulous respect for sexual purity. There was no pretense
+of denial of the polygamous relation. Plural wives held the place
+of honor in the community. Their marriages were considered the most
+sanctified. They and their progeny were called "the wives and children
+of the holy covenant," and they were esteemed accordingly.
+
+But as the history of the Church shows, plural marriage was always a
+heavy cross to the Mormon women; many had refused to bear it, in the
+face of the frequent pulpit scoldings of the Prophets; and few did not
+sometime weep under it in the secrecy of their family life. In the days
+immediately preceding the manifesto of 1890, there was a general hope
+and longing among the Mormon mothers that God would permit a relief
+before their daughters and their sons should become of an age to be
+drafted into the ranks of polygamy. The great majority of the young
+men were monogamists. It required the strong persuasions of personal
+affection as well as the authority of Divine command to make the young
+women accept a polygamist in marriage. And when the Church received
+President Woodruff's anti-polygamous revelation, every profound human
+emotion of the people coincided with the promise to abstain.
+
+Only among a few of the polygamous leaders themselves was there any
+inclination to break the Church's pledge--an inclination that was
+strengthened by resentment against the Federal power that had compelled
+the giving of the pledge. Almost immediately upon obtaining the
+freedom of statehood, some of these leaders returned to the practice of
+polygamous cohabitation--although they had accepted the revelation,
+had bound themselves by their covenant to the nation and had solemnly
+subscribed to the terms of their amnesty. To justify themselves, they
+found it necessary to teach that polygamy was still approved by the law
+of God--that the practice of plural marriage had only been abandoned
+because it was forbidden by the laws of man. Joseph F. Smith continued
+to live with his five wives and to rear children by all of them.
+Those of the apostles who were not assured of that attainment to the
+principality of Heaven which was promised the man of five wives and
+proportionate progeny, were naturally tempted (if, indeed, they were not
+actually encouraged) to take Joseph F. Smith as their examplar. It was
+scarcely worse to break the covenant by taking a new polygamous wife
+than by continuing polygamous relations with former plural wives; and
+when an apostle took a new polygamous wife, his inevitable and necessary
+course was to justify himself by the authority of God. He could not then
+deny the same authority to the minor ecclesiasts, even if he had wished
+to. And, finally, when the evil circle spread to the man on the fringe
+of the Church--who could not obtain even such poor authorization for his
+perfidy he found a way to perpetrate a pretended plural marriage with
+his victim, and the Church authorities did not dare but protect him.
+
+This was polygamy without the great saving grace that had previously
+defended the Mormon women from the cruelties and abuses of the practice.
+It was polygamy without honor--polygamy against an assumed revelation
+of God instead of by virtue of one--polygamy worse than that of the
+Mohammedans, since it was necessarily clandestine, could claim no social
+respect or acceptance, and was forbidden "by the laws of God and man"
+alike.
+
+This is the "new polygamy" of Mormonism. The Church leaders dare not
+acknowledge it for fear of the national consequences. They dare not even
+secretly issue certificates of plural marriage, lest the record should
+be betrayed. They protect the polygamist by a conspiracy of falsehood
+that is almost as shameful as the shame it seeks to cover; and the
+infection of the duplicity spreads like a plague to corrupt the whole
+social life of the people. The wife of a new polygamist cannot claim
+a husband; she has no social status; she cannot, even to her parents,
+prove the religious sanction for her marital relations. Her children
+are taught that they must not use a father's name. They are hopelessly
+outside the law--without the possibility that any further statutes
+of legitimization will be enacted for their relief. They are born in
+falsehood and bred to the living of a lie. Their father cannot claim
+the authority of the Church for their parentage, for he must protect his
+Prophet. He cannot even publicly acknowledge them--any more than he can
+publicly acknowledge their mother.
+
+Out of these terrible conditions comes such an instance as the notorious
+case of one of Henry S. Tanner's wives, who went on a visit to one
+of her relatives, with her children, and denied that they were her
+children, and denied that she was married--and was supported by her
+children's denial that she was their mother. Similarly, a plural wife of
+a wealthy Mormon, whose fortune is estimated at $25,000,000--a partner
+of the sugar trust, a community leader, a favorite of the Church went
+before the Senate Committee in December, 1904, and swore that her first
+husband had died thirteen years before, that she had had a child within
+six years, and that she had no second husband. And by doing so she not
+only marked the child as illegitimate beyond the relief of any future
+statutes--legitimizing the offspring of polygamous marriages, but she
+left herself and the child without any claim upon the estate of its
+father and publicly swore herself a social outcast before a committee of
+the United States Senate, and perjured herself--to the knowledge of all
+her friends and acquaintances in Utah--for the protection of her husband
+and her Church. What can one say of a man who will permit a woman to
+commit such an act of social suicide for him--or of a Church that will
+command it?
+
+Here is a condition of society unparalleled anywhere else in
+civilization--unparalleled even in barbarous countries, for wherever
+else polygamy is practiced it at least has the sanction of local
+convention. And the consequent suffering that falls upon the women and
+the children is a heart-break to see. During the days when I was in the
+editorial office of the Salt Lake Tribune, scores of miserable cases
+came to my knowledge by letter, by the report of friends, and by the
+visits of the agonized wives themselves. I shall never forget one young
+woman, in her twenties, who came to ask my help in forcing her husband
+to obtain a marriage certificate for her from the Church, so that her
+boy might have the right to claim a father. She wept, with her head
+on my desk, sobbing out her story, and appealing to me for aid with a
+convulsed and tear-drenched face.
+
+Four years earlier, she had become friendly with a man twice her age,
+whom she admired and respected. He had taken two wives before the
+manifesto of 1890, but that did not prevent him from coveting the youth
+and beauty of this young woman. He first approached her mother for
+permission to marry the girl, and when the mother-who was herself a
+plural wife replied that it was impossible under the law, he brought an
+apostle to persuade her that the practice of plural marriage was
+still as meet, just and available to salvation as it had been when she
+married. Then he went to the daughter.
+
+"I was terrified," she said, "when he proposed to me. And yet--he asked
+me if I thought my mother had done wrong when she married my father....
+There was no one else I liked as much. He was good. He was rich. He
+told me I'd never want for anything. He said I would be fulfilling the
+command of God against the wickedness of a persecuting world.... I don't
+know what devil of fanaticism entered into me. I thought it would be
+smart to defy the United States."
+
+Late one night, by appointment, he called for her with a carriage,
+driven by a man unknown to her, and took her to a darkened house that
+had a dim light only in the hallway. They entered alone and turned into
+a parlor that was dark, except for the reflection from the hall. He led
+her up to the portieres that hung across an inner door, and through the
+opening between the curtains she saw the indistinct figure of a man.
+They stood before him, hand in hand, while he mumbled over the words of
+a ceremony that sounded to her like the ceremonies she had heard in
+the Temple. She caught little of it clearly; she remembered practically
+nothing. She was not given anything to show that a ceremony had been
+performed, and she did not ask for anything. The elderly bridegroom
+kissed her when the mumbling ceased, led her out to the carriage, took
+her back to her mother's house, and that night became her husband.
+
+She bore him a son. No one except her mother, her father and a few
+trusted friends knew that she was married. In the early months of 1905
+she read in the Tribune the testimony given before the Senate committee
+by Professor James E. Talmage, for the Church, to the effect that since
+the manifesto of 1890 neither the President of the Church nor anybody
+else in the Church had power to authorize a plural marriage, and that
+any woman who had become a plural wife, since the manifesto, was "no
+more a wife by the law of the Church, than she is by the law of the
+land."
+
+She asked her husband about it. He replied that an apostle had married
+them. "I asked my husband," she said, "to get a certificate of marriage
+from the apostle. He told me I needed none--that it was recorded in
+the books here and recorded in heaven--that it would put the apostle in
+danger if he were to sign such a paper. I said that that was nothing to
+me--that I wanted to protect my good name. Finally, he said it was not
+an apostle. Then we had a bitter scene. And he did not come back for a
+long time. And he didn't write as long as he stayed away.
+
+"When he came back he was more loving than ever. I was afraid of having
+more children. I said to him: 'You cannot hold me as a wife any longer
+unless you write a paper certifying that I'm your wife and this boy is
+your child. You may place that paper anywhere you like, so long as I
+know I can get it in case you die. Suppose you were to die and all
+your folks were to deny that I was your wife--say that I was an
+imposter--that I was trying to foist my boy on the estate of a dead
+man--in the name of God, then what could I do?' He went away; and he
+hasn't come back; and he hasn't written. I don't know who married us. I
+don't even know the house where it happened. I don't know who the driver
+was. I don't even know who the apostle was that told mother it would be
+all right. He made her promise under a covenant not to tell.
+
+"I don't know where to go. A friend of mine told me you would advise me.
+He said perhaps you could make them give me a certificate. I don't want
+to expose my husband. I only want something so that my boy, when he
+grows up, won't be"--
+
+What could I do? What could anyone do for this unfortunate girl, seduced
+in the name of religion, with the aid of a Church that repudiated her
+for its own protection? She had to suffer, and see her boy suffer, the
+penalties of a social outcast.
+
+Her case was typical of many that came to my personal knowledge. At
+the Sunday Schools, in the choirs, in the joint meetings of mutual
+improvement associations, young girls--taught to believe that plural
+marriage was sacred, and reverencing the polygamous prophets as the
+anointed of the Lord--were being seduced into clandestine marriage
+relations with polygamous elders who persuaded their victims that the
+anti-polygamous manifesto had been given out to save a persecuted people
+from the cruelties of an unjust government; that it was never intended
+it should be obeyed; that all the celestial blessings promised by
+revelation to the polygamist and his wives were still waiting for those
+who would dare to enjoy them.
+
+If the tempted girl turned to one of her women friends, and besought
+her to say, on her honor, whether she thought that plural marriage was
+right, the other was likely enough to answer: "Yes, yes. Indeed it is.
+Promise me you won't tell a living soul. Tell me you'll die first....
+I'm married to Brother I,----, the leader of the ward choir."
+
+If she asked her mother: "Tell me. Is plural marriage wrong?" the mother
+could only reply: "Oh--I don't know--I don't know. Your father said it
+was right, and I accepted it--and we practiced it--and you have always
+loved your other brothers and sisters, and it seems to me it can't be
+wrong, since we have lived it. But--Oh, I don't know, daughter. I don't
+know."
+
+The man who is tempting her knows. He has the word of an apostle, the
+example of the Prophet, the secret teaching of the Church. He courts
+her as any other religious young girl might be courted--with little
+attentions, at the meetings, over the music books--and he has, to aid
+him, a religious exaltation in her, induced by his plea that she is to
+enter into the mystery of the holy covenant, to become one of the most
+faithful of a persecuted Church, to defy the wicked laws of its enemies.
+She is just as happy in her betrothal as any other innocent girl of
+her age. Even the secrecy is sweet to her. And then, some evening, they
+saunter down a side street to a strange house--or even to a back
+orchard where a man is waiting in a cowl under a tree (perhaps vulgarly
+disguised as a woman with a veil over his face)--and they are married in
+a mutter of which she hears nothing.
+
+Such a case was related to me by a horrified mother who had discovered
+that the marriage ceremony had been performed by an accomplice of the
+libertine who had seduced her daughter and since confessed his crime.
+But whether the ceremony be performed by a priest of the Church or by
+a more unauthorized scoundrel, the girl is equally at the mercy of her
+"husband" and equally betrayed in the world. Even in this case of the
+pretended marriage, the elders of the ward hushed up the threatened
+prosecution because the authorities of the Church objected to a
+proceeding that might expose other plural marriages more orthodox.
+
+Hundreds of Mormon men and women personally thanked me by letter or in
+interviews at the Tribune office, for our editorial attacks upon the
+hierarchy for encouraging these horrors. Strangers spoke to me on
+railroad trains, thanking me and telling me of cases. Three Mormon
+physicians, themselves priests of the Church, told me of innumerable
+instances that had come to them in their practice, and said that they
+did not know what was to become of the community. One Mormon woman wrote
+me from Mexico to say that she had exiled herself there with her
+husband and his two plural wives, and that she felt she had worked out
+sufficient atonement for all her descendants; yet she saw girls of the
+family on the verge of entering into plural marriage--if they had not
+already done so--and she begged us to continue our newspaper exposures,
+so that others might be saved from the bitter experiences of her life.
+
+President Winder met me on the street in 1905, towards the close of the
+year, and said: "Frank, you need not continue your fight against plural
+marriage. President Smith has stopped it." "Then," I replied, "two
+things are evident: I have been telling the truth when I said
+that plural marriage had been renewed--in spite of the authorized
+denials--and if President Smith has stopped it now, he has had authority
+over it all the time."
+
+To me, or to any other well-informed citizen of Utah, President Winder's
+admission was not necessary to prove Smith's responsibility. In the
+April conference of 1904, Smith had read an "official statement," signed
+by him, prohibiting plural marriages and threatening to excommunicate
+any officer or member of the Church who should solemnize one; and this
+official statement was carried to the Senate committee by Professor
+James E. Talmage, and offered in proof that the Church was keeping its
+covenant.
+
+For us, in Utah, the declaration served merely to illuminate the dark
+places of ecclesiastical bad faith. We knew that from the year 1900
+down, there had never been a sermon preached in any Mormon tabernacle,
+by any of the general authorities of the Church, against the practice
+of plural marriage, or against the propriety of the practice, or against
+the sanctity of the doctrine. We knew, on the contrary, that upon
+numerous occasions, at funerals and in public assemblages, Joseph F.
+Smith and John Henry Smith and others of the hierarchy, had proclaimed
+the doctrine as sacred. We knew that it was still being taught in the
+secret prayer meetings. Practically all the leading authorities of the
+Church were living in plural marriage. Some of them had taken new wives
+since the manifesto. None of them had been actually punished. All were
+in high favor. And though Joseph F. Smith denied his responsibility,
+every one knew that none of these things could be, except with his
+active approval.
+
+Perhaps, for a brief time, while Smoot's case was still before the
+Senate, some check was put upon the renewal of polygamy. But, even then,
+there were undoubtedly, occasional marriages allowed, where the parties
+were so situated as to make concealment perfect. And all checks were
+withdrawn when Smoot's case was favorably disposed of, and the Church
+found itself protected by the political power of the administration
+at Washington and by a political and financial alliance with "the
+Interests."
+
+Today, in spite of the difficulty of discovering plural marriages,
+because of the concealments by which they are protected, the Salt Lake
+Tribune is publishing a list of more than two hundred "new" polygamists
+with the dates and circumstances of their marriages; and these are
+probably not one tenth of all the cases. During President Taft's
+visit to Salt Lake City, in 1909, Senator Thomas Kearns, one of the
+proprietors of the Tribune, offered to prove to one of the President's
+confidants hundreds of cases of new polygamy, if the President would
+designate two secret service men to investigate. I believe, from my own
+observation, that there are more plural wives among the Mormons today
+than there were before 1890. Then the young men married early, and were
+chiefly monogamists. Now the change in economic conditions has raised
+the age at which men marry; it has made more bachelors than there were
+when simpler modes of life prevailed. The young women have fewer offers
+of marriage, and more of these come from well-to-do polygamists. The
+girls are still taught, as they have always been, that marriage is
+necessary to salvation; and they are betrayed into plural marriage by
+natural conditions as well as by the persuasions of the Church.
+
+A perfect "underground" system has been put in operation for the
+protection of the lawbreakers. If they reside in Utah, they frequently
+go to Canada or to Mexico to be married; and the whole polygamous
+paraphernalia can be transported with ease and comfort--the priest who
+performs the ceremony, the husband, sometimes the legal wife to give her
+consent so that she may not be damned, and the young woman whose soul is
+to be saved. And this "underground" is maintained against the reluctance
+of the Mormon people. They aid in it from a kindly feeling toward
+their fellow-believers--and with some faint thought that perhaps these
+wayfarers are being "persecuted" but all the time with no personal
+sympathy for polygamy. By one sincere word of reprehension from Joseph
+F. Smith every "underground" station could be abolished, the route could
+be destroyed, and an end could be put to the protection that is, of
+itself, an encouragement to polygamous practice. He has never spoken
+that word.
+
+Recently, the way in which the new polygamy is perpetrated in Utah has
+been almost officially revealed. A patriarch of the Church, resident
+in Davis County, less than fifteen miles from Salt Lake City, had been
+solemnizing these unlawful unions at wholesale. The situation became so
+notorious that the authorities of the Church felt themselves impelled
+about September, 1910, to put restrictions upon his activity. In the
+course of their investigations they discovered that he did not know the
+persons whom he married. They would come to his house, in the evening,
+wearing handkerchiefs over their faces; he sat hidden behind a screen in
+his parlor; and under these circumstances the two were declared man
+and wife, and were sealed up to everlasting bliss to rule over
+principalities and kingdoms, with power of endless increase and
+progression. He refused to tell the hierarchy from which one of the
+authorities he had received his endowment to perpetrate these crimes.
+He refused to give the names of any of the victims, claiming that he did
+not know them!
+
+It is probable that for a long time plural marriage ceremonies were not
+solemnized within the Salt Lake temple. Now, we know that there have
+lately been such marriages in it, and at Manti, and at Logan, and
+perhaps also in the temple at St. George. There are cases on record
+where a man has a wife on one side of the Utah-Colorado line and another
+wife across the border. No prosecutions are possible in Utah; for, as
+Joseph F. Smith told the Senate committee, the officers of the law
+have too much "respect" for the ecclesiastical rulers of the state.
+Similarly, in the surrounding states, the officers show exactly the
+same sort of "respect" and for the same reason. They not only know
+the Church's power in local politics, but they see the national
+administration allowing the polygamists and priests of the Church
+to select the Federal officials, and they are not eager to rouse a
+resentment against themselves, at Washington as well as at home, by
+prosecuting polygamous Mormons.
+
+Some few years ago, Irving Sayford, then representing the Los Angeles
+Times, asked Mr. P. H. Lannan, of the Salt Lake Tribune, why someone did
+not swear out warrants against President Smith for his offenses against
+the law. Mr. Lannan said: "You mean why don't I do it?"
+
+"Oh, no," Mr. Sayford explained, "I don't mean you particularly."
+
+"Oh, yes, you do," Mr. Lannan said. "You mean me if you mean anybody. If
+it's not my duty, it's no one's duty.... Well, I'll tell you why.... I
+don't make a complaint, because neither the district attorney nor the
+prosecuting attorney would entertain it. If he did entertain it and
+issued a warrant, the sheriff would refuse to serve the warrant. If the
+sheriff served the warrant, there would be no witnesses unless I got
+them. If I could get the witnesses, they wouldn't testify to the facts
+on the stand. If they did testify to the facts, the jury wouldn't bring
+in a verdict of guilty. If the jury did bring in a verdict of guilty,
+the judge would suspend sentence. If the judge did not suspend sentence,
+he would merely fine President Smith, three hundred dollars. And within
+twenty-four hours there would be a procession of Mormons and Gentiles
+crawling on their hands and knees to Church headquarters to offer to pay
+that three hundred dollar fine at a dime apiece."
+
+Mr. Lannan's statement of the case was later substantiated by an action
+of the Salt Lake District Court. Upon the birth of the twelfth child
+that has been borne to President Smith in plural marriage since the
+manifesto of 1890, Charles Mostyn Owen made complaint in the District
+Court at Salt Lake, charging Mr. Smith with a statutory offense. The
+District Attorney reduced the charge to "unlawful cohabitation" (a
+misdemeanor), without the complainant's consent or knowledge. All the
+preliminaries were then graciously arranged and President Smith appeared
+in the District Court by appointment. He pleaded guilty. The judge in
+sentencing him remarked that as this was the first time he had appeared
+before the court, he would be fined three hundred dollars, but that
+should he again appear, the penalty might be different. Smith had
+already testified in Washington, before the Senate Committee, to the
+birth of eleven children in plural marriage since he had given his
+covenant to the country to cease living in polygamy; he had practically
+defied the Senate and the United States to punish him; he had said that
+he would "stand" his "chances" before the law and courts of his own
+state. All of this was well known to the judge who fined him three
+hundred dollars--a sum of money scarcely equal to the amount of Smith's
+official income for the time he was in court!
+
+A leader of the Church, not long ago, asked me, in private conference,
+what was the policy of the American party with regard to the new plural
+wives and their children. I replied that as far as I knew it, the policy
+was to have the Church accept its responsibility in the matter and give
+the wives and children whatever recognition could be given them by their
+religion. The Church was guilty before God and man of having encouraged
+the awful condition. It was unspeakably cowardly and unfair for the
+Church leaders to put the whole burden of suffering on the helpless
+women and children; and, moreover, this course was a justification to
+polygamists in deserting their wives, on the ground that the Church had
+never sanctioned the relation.
+
+This Church leader, himself a new polygamist, answered miserably: "The
+Church will not let itself be put in such a light before the country.
+That would be to admit that it has been responsible all the time."
+
+I asked: "Has the Church not been responsible?"
+
+He replied--equivocating--: "Well, not the Church. The Church has never
+taken a vote on it."
+
+"That," I said, "answers why you have never got redress and never will
+get it because you are all liars, from top to bottom. You know you would
+never have entered the polygamous relation--nor could you have induced
+your wife to enter it--except with full knowledge that the Church did
+authorize it. The Church is one man, and you know it. The whole theory
+of your theology collapses if you deny that."
+
+He shook his head blankly. "I don't know what is to become of us. I
+don't see any way out."
+
+I could only advise him that he should join with other new polygamists
+in demanding that the Church authorities make all possible reparation to
+the women and children who were being crushed under the penalties of the
+Church's crime. But I knew that such advice was vain. He could not make
+such a demand, any more than any other slave could demand his freedom.
+And if the non-polygamists demanded it, the Prophets would deny that
+polygamy was being practiced. The children could not be legitimized--for
+the Church cannot obtain legitimizing statutes without avowing its
+responsibility for the need of them; and the Gentiles can not pass such
+statutes without encouraging the continuance of polygamy by removing the
+social penalty against it.
+
+So the burden of all this guilt, this shame, this deception, falls upon
+the unfortunate plural wife and her innocent offspring. She is bound by
+the most sacred obligations never to reveal the name of the officiating
+priest--even if she knew it--nor to disclose the circumstances of the
+ceremony. She has justified her degradation by the assumption that God
+has commanded it; that her husband has received a revelation authorizing
+him to take her into his household; that her children will be legitimate
+in the sight of God, and that eventually the civilized world will come
+to a joyous acceptance of the practice of polygamy. When the trials of
+her life afflict her and she finds no relentment in the world's disdain,
+she sees no avenue of retreat. To break the relation is to imply at once
+that it was not ordained of God, and to cast a darker ignominy upon her
+unfortunate children. Her only hope lies in her continued submission
+to her husband and his Church, even after she has mentally and morally
+rejected the doctrine that betrayed her. A more pitiably helpless band
+of self-immolants than these Mormon women has never suffered martyrdom
+in the history of the world. Heaven help them. There is no help for them
+on earth.
+
+
+
+Chapter XVIII. The Prophet of Mammon
+
+
+
+In an earlier day among the Mormons, the ecclesiastical authorities
+collected one-tenth of the "annual increase" of the faithful into "the
+storehouse of the Lord;" and this was practically the entire assessment
+made by the Church; although, by the same law of tithing, every Mormon
+was held obliged to consecrate all his earthly possessions to "God's
+work" on the demand of the Prophet. The common fund was used, then, to
+promote community enterprises and to relieve the poor. The tithe-payer
+saw the good result of the administration of the Church's moneys, and
+was generally satisfied. He was promised eternal happiness if he paid
+an honest tithe, but he was also given an earthly reward--for the
+Church admitted him to many opportunities and enterprises from which
+the niggardly were adroitly excluded. He was spiritually elevated
+and enlarged by giving for a purpose that he considered worthy--the
+fulfillment of a commandment of God and the relief of his
+fellow-creatures--and the community benefited by having a part of its
+yearly surplus administered for the common good.
+
+But by the time the Church had reached its third generation of
+tithe-payers, the "financial Prophets" had made a change. On the theory
+that since the Mormons were paying the bulk of the taxes, they should
+share in the distribution of the public relief funds, the Mormon poor
+were denied assistance from "the storehouse of the Lord," and were
+compelled to enter the poorhouses, to seek shelter on the "county
+farms," or to take charity from their neighbors. The resulting
+degradation of a sublime principle of human helpfulness is strikingly
+shown in the fact that in some cases, where the county relief funds are
+distributed through a Mormon clerk of paupers for out-door relief, the
+Mormon bishop even collects one-tenth of this money, from the wretched
+recipients, as their contribution to God Almighty!
+
+Nor is the greed of the present hierarchy satisfied with one-tenth of a
+Mormon's income. Said Joseph F. Smith, at the April Conference of 1899
+(according to the Church's official report): "If a farmer raises two
+thousand bushels of wheat, as the result of his year's labor, how
+many bushels should he pay for tithing? Well, some go straightway to
+dickering with the Lord. They will say that they hired a man so and
+so, and his wages must be taken out; that they had to pay such and such
+expenses, and this cost and that cost; and they reckon out all their
+expenses and tithe the balance." To Smith's inspired financial genius
+this was "dickering with the Lord." He wished to collect ten per cent of
+the farmer's entire yield--a tithe that would have bankrupted the farmer
+in three years!
+
+Nor is the tithe any longer the only exaction demanded by the Prophet.
+A score of "donations" have been added. There is the Stake Tabernacle
+Donation, which is a fund collected from the Mormons of each "Stake"
+(corresponding usually to a county) for the building of a house in which
+to hold Stake Conferences. There is the Ward Meeting-House Donation,
+which is a fund collected from the Mormons of every "ward" for the
+erection of a local chapel. There is the Fast Day Donation, made up
+of contributions gathered on the afternoon of the first Sunday of each
+month, at what is called "a fast meeting," for the support of the local
+poor; and this is supplemented by the Relief Society Donation, solicited
+by the members of the Ladies Relief Society, in a house-to-house
+canvass, from Mormons and Gentiles alike. A Light and Heat Donation is
+collected by the deacons of the ward, under direction of the bishop, to
+pay for the lighting and heating of the ward meeting house; a Missionary
+Donation is collected at a "Missionary benefit entertainment," to help
+defray the expenses of a member of a ward sent on a mission; and since a
+missionary must necessarily be an elder, a Quorum Missionary Donation is
+also taken from his fellow members of the quorum, to assist him. So
+far as the Church is concerned, he travels "without purse or scrip," by
+order of "revelation;" but this inhibition does not extend to the use of
+his own money--if he has any left after paying the other exaction's--nor
+does it prevent him either from receiving contributions from his
+impoverished fellows or accepting charity from "the enemies of God's
+people," whom he labors to redeem. And on these terms about ninety per
+cent. of the adult male Mormons perform missionary services for the
+Church.
+
+All priesthood quorums have monthly Quorum Dues collected from their
+members. On one Sunday of each month, called Nickel Sunday, the Sunday
+School members pay in five cents each for the purchase of new books,
+etc. On Dime Tuesday, once a month, the members of the Young Men's and
+the Young Women's Mutual Improvement Associations pay in ten cents each
+for the purchase of books, etc. On Nickel Friday, once a month, the
+infant members of the Primary Association pay in five cents each to
+the association. Religious Class Donations are paid once a month by the
+Mormon public-school pupils for the support of the week-day religious
+classes. Amusement Hall Donations are collected from the members of a
+ward whose bishop finds them able to build a place of amusement. When a
+temple is to be erected, Temple Donations are collected, continuously,
+until the work is finished and paid for; and when members of the Church
+"go through the Temple," they are required to pay another form of Temple
+Donation in any sum that they can afford. Should a need arise, not
+provided for by the specific donations given above, a Special Donation
+is collected to meet it. Yet in the face of all these exaction's of
+tithes and donations, the ecclesiast still boasts: "We are not like the
+'preachers for hire and diviners for money.' We never pass the plate
+at our sacred services. Our clergy labor, without pay, to give free
+salvation to a sinful world!"
+
+In addition to doing missionary service, paying tithes, and contributing
+donations, the latter-day Mormon, if he be obedient to the counsel
+of the Church's anointed financiers, must support the commercial and
+financial undertakings of the hierarchy. These are officially designated
+"the Church's institutions" by the authorities; but they are in no
+way the property of the Church. They are advertised as community
+enterprises, but they are such only in the sense that the community is
+commanded by "the voice of God" to sustain them. There is no voice of
+God to command a distribution of their profits. And they are no longer
+conducted for the benefit of the community but to exploit it.
+
+The good Mormon must purchase his sugar from "the Church's" sugar
+company (Joseph F. Smith, president), which is controlled by the
+national sugar trust and charges trust prices. He must buy salt from
+"the Church's" salt monopoly (Joseph F. Smith, president), which is a
+part of, and pays dividends to, the national salt trust. He is taught to
+go for his merchandise to the Zion's Co-operative Mercantile Institution
+(Joseph F. Smith, president), where even whiskey is sold under the
+symbol of the All-seeing Eye and the words "Holiness to the Lord" in
+gilt letters; and Joseph F. Smith, at the April Conference, of 1898
+(according to the Church's official report), scolded those "pretendedly
+pious" Mormons who "were shocked and horrified" to find "liquid poison"
+sold under these auspices--for, as Smith argued, with characteristic
+greed, if the Mormon who wanted whiskey could not get it in the Church
+store, "he would not patronize Z.C.M.I. at all, but would go elsewhere
+to deal!"
+
+The farmers are "counselled" to buy their vehicles from "the Church's"
+firm, the Consolidated Wagon and Machine Company (Joseph F. Smith,
+president); to take out their fire insurance with the Church's "Home
+Fire Insurance Company" (Joseph F. Smith, controller); and to insure
+their lives with the Church's "Beneficial Life Insurance Company"
+(Joseph F. Smith, president). The Salt Lake Knitting Company (of which
+Joseph F. Smith is president) makes, among other things, the sacred
+knitted garments that are prescribed for every Mormon who takes the
+"Endowment Oaths," to be worn by him forever after as a shield "against
+the Adversary;" and these garments bear the label: "Approved by the
+Presidency. No knitted garment approved which does not bear this label."
+By which ingenious bit of religious commercialism, the sacred marks
+on the garments (accepted as a sort of passport to Heaven) have been
+increased by the sacred Smith trademark that admits the wearer to the
+Smith Heaven.
+
+The Church's banking institutions, of which Joseph F. Smith is
+president, are recommended as safer than others because the money goes
+into the hands of "the brethren." Church newspapers must be subscribed
+for, because all others are "unreliable"--although the Church's Deseret
+News (Joseph F. Smith, president) is one of the most dishonest, unjust
+and mendacious organs that ever poisoned the public mind. And so
+on, through the whole list of business concerns by which the Church
+authorities are to profit. The Mormons, having learned of old the value
+of a solid, community support for community enterprises established
+in the interests of the community, are still kept solidly supporting
+ecclesiastical enterprises administered for the benefit of the hierarchy
+or its favorites, at the community's expense!
+
+The Utah Light and Railway Company (Joseph F. Smith, president), which
+was supported by the tithes of the Mormon people, was charging $1.25 per
+thousand cubic feet for fuel gas and $1.75 for illuminating gas, just
+before the company was sold to the "Harriman interests." (The Supreme
+Court of the United States has fixed a rate of 80 cents a thousand as
+a fair price for gas in New York City.) The Salt Lake Street Railway
+(operating under a fifty-year franchise, obtained from the City Council
+by, the power of the Church while Joseph F. Smith was president of the
+company) charges a five-cent fare, gives but one transfer, allows no
+half fares for children, and pays the city nothing for the use of its
+streets. Before the transfer of the Church's sugar stocks to the trust,
+the sugar factories paid the farmer $4.50 a ton for his beets and sold
+him sugar for $4.50 a hundred pounds; today beets are bought for $4.50
+a ton, and sugar sold at $6.00 a hundred. The price asked for salt in
+Utah, where it should be "dirt cheap," is the same as everywhere under
+the salt trust. And so on--through the rest of the list.
+
+To maintain this system of sanctified gain Joseph F. Smith invokes all
+the power of his "divine" authority as "the mouthpiece of the Lord." He
+protects the sugar trust by preventing the establishment of independent
+sugar factories (as for example in Sanpete and Sevier counties in 1905),
+just as he protects the salt trust by preventing the competition of
+independent salt gardens (as in the case of Smurthwaite and Taylor.) He
+issues his edict of protection as "the vicegerent of God on Earth" to
+the Mormons; and he excommunicates and ostracizes, in this world and the
+next, the Mormon protestant who dares rebel against commercial monopoly.
+
+He receives between two and three million dollars a year in tithes,
+gives no accounting of them, and has no responsibility for them, except
+to God and his own conscience. He is able to use this sum, in bulk,
+at any given point, with a weight of financial pressure that would
+overbalance any other such single power in the community. As "trustee in
+trust" for the Church, he has the added income from stocks and previous
+investments; and he has practical control of the wealth of all the
+leading men of the Church to assist him, if he should call upon them
+for assistance. He uses his financial dictatorship to support monopoly
+against the assault of Gentile opposition, and he compels the Gentile to
+pay tribute as the Mormon does.
+
+He backs his financial power with his control of legislation. He can not
+only prevent the passage of any laws against his favored monopolies,
+but (as in the case of the smelters) he can reduce independents to
+submission by threatening them with procured laws to penalize them. He
+largely controls the "labor troubles" of the State by controlling the
+obedience of the Mormon laboring men. He can influence judges, officers
+of the law and all the agents of local government by his power
+as political "Boss," and the same influence extends, through his
+representatives at Washington, to the local activities of Federal
+authority. He can check and govern public opinion among his subjects by
+announcing "the will of God" to them through the officers of the Church
+in every department of religious administration. He is, therefore, at
+once the modern "money king," the absolute political Czar the social
+despot and the infallible Pope of his "Kingdom!"
+
+Just as men fight for the retention of a throne and the maintenance of
+a dynasty, so he and his courtiers defend his rule and maintain his
+autocracy with every weapon of absolutism. And just as royalty, while
+possessed of unlimited wealth, has never lacked mercenaries, press
+bureaus, and all the sycophantic defenders of a crown, so Smith is
+able to command an array of service as great as any ever brought to
+the defense of a social system. This singular and enormous power stands
+solidly against any movement of domestic reform; and, by its alliance
+with the national rulers in finance and politics, it is saved from the
+danger of "foreign" intervention. Like every other such absolutism, it
+is crushing out the life of its subjects; for, in spite of the industry,
+the thrift, and the abstemiousness of the Mormon people, they are
+sinking under the burden of imposed exaction's. Although Utah became a
+territory in 1853, and had its well-settled towns at that time, and was
+organized in a compact social body for the upbuilding of its material
+prosperity before any of the surrounding states had received an organic
+act as a territory, Utah has now lost its leadership, and the individual
+initiative and enterprise of the typical Western community have been
+relatively lost.
+
+In this process of degeneration, one of the most promising modern
+experiments in communism has been frustrated and brought to ruin. In the
+early nineties, Dr. Josiah Strong, of New York City, viewed the Mormon
+system with an interested admiration. He saw that by contribution, and
+co-operation, and arbitration, the energies of the people were conserved
+and the products of their prosperity more equally distributed than under
+the conditions of economic war then prevalent elsewhere. He thought he
+saw in Utah a possible solution of some of the social problems of our
+civilization. But, a few years ago, he confessed that the Mormon system
+was no longer worthy of study. It had been destroyed by the greed of
+its rulers. Community contributions were being used for individual
+commercialism and the aggrandizement of leaders. The aged and infirm
+poor, who had contributed through all the working period of their
+lives, were being thrust into poor houses. The ambition of the earlier
+Prophets, to make the people great in their community prosperity and
+happiness, has been lost in the new desire of the head of the Church
+to exhibit that greatness only in his own person. The Mormon people had
+become the working slaves of a financial and political and religious
+autocracy, and Mormonism was no longer anything but a hopeless failure
+as a social experiment.
+
+It is difficult to say how much of this failure was due to the character
+of the present Prophet, and how much to the national conditions that
+are threatening the success of democracy in every state of the Union.
+It would seem that the conditions were ideal for the production of
+just such a man as Smith, and that Smith was by nature fitted for the
+greatest growth under just such conditions. He came to power with none
+of the feeling of responsibility to his people which the earlier leaders
+showed. He considered that the people lived for him, not that he lived
+for the people. He regarded the Mormon system as an establishment of his
+family, to which he had the family right of inheritance; and he waited
+with a sulky impatience for the deaths of the men who stood between him
+and the control of his family's Church. It was as if he accepted his
+predecessors as exercising their powers, during an inter-regnum, by the
+consent of the Mormon people, but saw himself acceding to the throne by
+family right and the order of divinity.
+
+He had no financial ability; he had no considerable property when he
+became president of the Church at sixty-three. Nor did he need any
+such ability. The continuous inflow of money--to be used without
+accountability to anyone--and the wealth of opportunity offered by the
+men who wished his aid in exploiting his people, made it unnecessary
+that he should have any creative financial vision. He needed only to
+move, with his opportunity, along the line of least resistance which was
+also, with him, the line of choice.
+
+He had, through all his years, shown an obvious envy of any member of
+the Church whose circumstances were better than his own. It was apparent
+in his manner that he regarded such success in the community as an
+encroachment upon the Smith prerogatives. As soon as he came to power,
+he accepted every opportunity of self-aggrandizement as a new Smith
+prerogative. And the system of modern capitalism appealed at once to
+his ambition. By the older method of tithes and conscription's, he could
+collect only from the devotees of the Church; by the larger exploitation
+he could levy tribute upon the Gentiles too.
+
+And he was aided by the Mormons themselves. They had been brought
+together, in obedience to "a command of God," in order that the
+community, by avoiding the sins of the world, might be saved from the
+plagues that were to descend upon the world because of its injustice.
+They were a credulous people, ignorant of the sins of modern finance,
+and prepared by industry and isolation to be exploited. Their previous
+leaders had observed, as a warning only, the modern aspiration for
+vast wealth obtained by economic injustice; but that aspiration made an
+instant appeal to Smith's ambition; and it is the peculiar iniquity of
+conditions in Utah today that his ambition has betrayed his people to
+the very evils which they were originally organized to escape.
+
+In an earlier time it was the pride of the leader that the community in
+the large was advancing and the average of conditions improving. Today
+the leader assumes that as he grows richer the people are prospering and
+"the revelations of God" being vindicated in practice. He speaks with
+pride of "our" growth and wealth under "the benign authority of the
+Almighty" and His "temporal revelations"--because he himself has been
+enriched by the perversion of these same laws--very much as the "captain
+of industry" elsewhere boasts of the "prosperity" of the country,
+because the few are growing so rich at the expense of the many.
+
+Along with this strain of commercial greed in Smith, there is an equally
+strong strain of religious fanaticism that justifies the greed and
+sanctifies it, to itself. He believes (as Apostle Orson Pratt taught, by
+authority of the Church): "The Kingdom of God is an order of government
+established by divine authority. It is the only legal government that
+can exist in any part of the universe. All other governments are illegal
+and unauthorized.... Any people attempting to govern themselves by laws
+of their own making, and by officers of their own appointment, are in
+direct rebellion against the Kingdom of God." Smith believes that over
+this Kingdom the Smiths have been, by Divine revelation, ordained to
+rule. He believes that his authority is the absolute and unquestionable
+authority of God Himself. He believes that in all the affairs of life
+he has the same right over his subjects that the Creator has over His
+creatures. He believes that he has been appointed to use the Mormon
+people as he in his inspired wisdom sees fit to use them, in order the
+more firmly to establish God's Kingdom on Earth against the Powers of
+Evil.
+
+He believes that the people of the American Republic, "being governed by
+laws of their own making and by officers of their own appointment," are
+in direct rebellion against "his Kingdom of God." He believes that the
+national government is destined to be broken in pieces by his power;
+that it has only been preserved from destruction by the concessions
+recently made by the Federal authorities; and that it can only continue
+to save itself so long as it shall recognize Smith's ambassadors at
+Washington--and so allow him to work out its destruction in the fullness
+of time.
+
+But with all this insanity of pretension he has a sort of cowardly
+shrewdness, acquired in his days of hiding "on the underground." On
+the witness stand in Washington he denied that he had had any direct
+communication with God by revelation; and then he returned to Utah and
+pleaded from the pulpit that on this point he had lied in Washington in
+order to escape saying what his "inquisitors" had wished him to say in
+order to "get him into a trap." He preaches in Utah that to deny the
+doctrine of polygamy is to reject the teaching of Jesus Christ; before
+the Senate committee he was coward enough to put the blame of his
+polygamous cohabitation upon his five wives. In Washington he claimed
+that the Gentiles of Utah condoned polygamous cohabitation and had a
+liberal sympathy for the Church; but at St. George, Utah, for example
+(in September, 1904), he was reported by a Church newspaper as saying:
+"The Gentiles are coming among us to buy our homes and land. We should
+not sell to them, as they are the enemies of the Kingdom of God." He is
+that most perfect of all hypocrites--the fanatic who believes that he is
+lying in the service of the Almighty.
+
+In the early spring of 1888, I was in Washington, where measures of
+proscription were then being prepared against our people; and, early in
+the morning, as I walked up Massachusetts Avenue, I saw Joseph F. Smith
+approaching me. For several years he had been "on the underground" under
+the name of "Joseph Mack"--now in the Hawaiian Islands with one wife;
+now hidden, with another, among the faithful in some Mormon village; or
+again with a third, in Washington (which was probably as safe a place as
+any) presiding secretly over the Church lobby. As he passed me, with
+his head down, preoccupied, I said: "Good morning, President Smith."
+He jumped as if I had been a Deputy Marshal with such a sudden start of
+fear that his silk hat rolled on the pavement and his umbrella dropped
+from his hand. He drew back from me as if he were about to take to his
+heels. Then he recognized me, of course, and was quickly reassured; but
+his embarrassment continued for some time, awkwardly.
+
+But a short time ago the President of the United States stood in the
+Salt Lake Tabernacle (which is "Joseph Mack's" capitol and vatican) and
+addressed a multitude that had assembled not more to honor the Chief
+Executive of the nation than to pay their almost idolatrous tribute
+of devotion to the head of their Church, who was reigning there in
+the pulpit with President Taft. "Joseph Mack" no longer fears Deputy
+Marshals--he appoints them; and the present United States Marshal of
+Utah would refuse to serve a paper under the direction of the entire
+power of the United States government if "Joseph Mack" forbade the
+service. He no longer fears the proscriptions of legislators at
+Washington; they come to him, through the leaders of their parties,
+and arrange with him for the support of the trans-Mississippi states in
+which the influence of his Church control is determinative. He no longer
+hides his wives, at the ends of the earth, and visits them by stealth;
+they occupy a row of houses along one of the principal streets of Salt
+Lake City, and the pilgrim and the tourist alike admire his magnificence
+as they go by. He is still a law-breaker. He stands even more in
+defiance of the authority of the nation than he did in 1888, and he
+hates that authority as much as ever. But he is today not only the
+Prophet of the Church; he is the Prophet of Mammon; and all the powers
+and principalities of Mammon now give him gloriously: "All Hail!"
+
+
+
+Chapter XIX. The Subjects of the Kingdom
+
+
+
+But what of the Mormon people? How can such leaders, directing the
+Church to purposes that have become so cruel, so selfish, so dangerous
+and so disloyal--how can they maintain their power over followers who
+are themselves neither criminal nor degraded? That is a question which
+has given the pause of doubt to many criticisms of the Mormon communism
+of our day. That is the consideration which has obtained from the nation
+the protection of tolerance under which the Prophets flourish. For not
+only are the Mormon men and women obviously as worthy as any in the
+United States: there is plainly much of community value in their social
+life; there is manifestly a great deal of efficiency for human good in
+their system and in the leadership by which it is directed; and this
+good is so apparent that it appeals easily to the sympathetic conscience
+and uninformed mind of the country at large.
+
+Let me try, then, to exhibit and to analyze the causes that keep such a
+virtuous and sturdy people loyally supporting the leadership of men so
+unworthy of them that if the people were as bad as the ends to which
+they are being now directed, modern Mormonism would be destroyed by its
+own evils.
+
+In the first place, the average Mormon chief is sincere in his
+pretensions and self-justified in his aims. Usually, he has been born,
+in the Church, to a family that sees itself set apart, in holiness, from
+the rest of humanity, as the direct heirs of the ancient prophets or
+even as the lineal descendants of Christ. From his earliest age of
+understanding, he is taught the divine splendor of his birth and
+impressed with the high duties of his family privilege in being
+permitted to bear a part in preparing the earth for the second coming
+of the Savior. He is taught that, though all the world may be saved and
+nearly all the people of this sphere will in some eternity work out
+a measure of salvation, he and 143,999 others are to be a band of the
+elect who shall stand about the Savior, on Mount Zion, in the final day.
+
+He is taught that, next to Christ, Joseph Smith, the founder of the
+faith, has performed the largest mission for the salvation of the world;
+that in the councils of the Gods, when the Creator measured off the
+ages of the human race on this earth, to the Savior was apportioned "the
+meridian of time," and to Joseph Smith, the Prophet, was given the
+"last dispensation," which is "the fullness of times," in order that the
+world, having apostatized from the atonement and the redemption, might
+be saved to heaven by Joseph, "the Choice Seer."
+
+He is taught that the disciples of the Mormon Prophet are literally the
+disciples of Jesus Christ; that the laws of right and wrong are within
+the direction and subject to the authority of the Prophet, to be
+changed, enlarged or even revoked by his commandment; that all human
+laws are equally subject to his will, to be made or unmade at his order;
+that he can condemn, by his excommunication, any man or any nation
+to the vengeance of the Almighty here and hereafter; and that he can
+pronounce a blessing upon the head of any man, or the career of any
+people, by virtue of which blessing power shall be held in this world
+righteously and the man elevated to sit at the right hand of God in
+the world to come. He is taught that the greatest sin which can be
+committed--next to the denial of Christ--is to raise hand or voice
+against "the Lord's anointed," the Mormon prophets. And, for morality,
+he is taught from his infancy, that he must scrupulously practice those
+special virtues of his cult, industry, thrift, purity (except as in
+later life he shall be inducted into the practice of the new polygamy)
+honesty in business, and charity toward his needy fellow-men.
+
+Formed in character by this teaching, as a steady inculcation throughout
+his youth, he comes to manhood strong of body, determined of mind,
+practicing rigidly and intolerantly his petty virtues of abstinence from
+the use of tobacco, tea and coffee, proclaiming with fanatical zeal the
+gospel as it has been proclaimed to him, and self-justified in all that
+he says or does by the large measure of sincerity in his delusions.
+
+And that is, in some degree, the common training of all Mormons. Every
+Mormon boy attends Sunday School as soon as he is old enough to lisp his
+song of adoration to Joseph, the Kingly Prophet, and to the Savior with
+whom Joseph is early associated in his childish mind. At six years of
+age, he enters the Primary Association; at twelve he is in the Young
+Men's Mutual Improvement Association; at fourteen or even earlier, he
+stands in the fast-day meeting and repeats like a creed: "Brethren and
+Sisters, I feel called upon to say a few words. I am not able to edify
+you, but I can say that I know this is the Church and Kingdom of God,
+and I bear my testimony that Joseph Smith was a Prophet and that Brigham
+Young was his lawful successor, and that the Prophet Joseph F. Smith is
+heir to all the authority which the Lord has conferred in these days
+for the salvation of men. And I feel that if I live my religion and do
+nothing to offend the Holy Spirit I will be saved in the presence of my
+Father and His Son, Jesus Christ. With these few words I will give way.
+Praying the Lord to bless each and every one of us is my prayer in the
+name of Jesus Christ. Amen."
+
+At fourteen he becomes a Deacon of the Church. Between that age and
+twenty, he becomes an Elder. Very soon thereafter he becomes "a Seventy"
+and perhaps a high priest. He takes upon himself "covenants in holy
+places." He becomes "a priest unto the Most High God"--frequently before
+his eighteenth year. Usually before he is twenty he is sent on a mission
+to proclaim his gospel--the only one he has ever heard in his life--to
+"an unenlightened nation" and "a wicked world." For, in addition
+to being taught that the Mormons are the best, most virtuous, most
+temperate, most industrious, and most God-fearing of all peoples--a
+thing that is dinned into his ears from the pulpit every Sunday in the
+year--he has been convinced by equal iteration that the rest of the
+world is a festering mass of corruption.
+
+Often he goes abroad, to some country whose language and customs he
+must learn and upon the charity of whose toilers he must depend for his
+maintenance. He goes with an implicit reliance upon God, strong in the
+small virtues that have been taught him from the time he knelt at his
+mother's knee. He sees, probably for the first time, the afflictions
+and the sins among mankind; and he keeps himself unspotted from them,
+congratulating himself that these grossnesses are unknown to his
+sheltered home-life and to the religion which he holds as the ideal of
+his soul. He proclaims his belief that God has spoken from the Heavens,
+through the Mormon Prophet, in this last day, to restore the gospel
+of Christ from which the peoples of the earth have wandered. He "bears
+testimony" to the whole world, and he binds himself to the authority of
+his Church by proclaiming his belief in it.
+
+When he returns home, after years of service, he is called to the stand
+in the tabernacle to give a report of his work. He finds waiting for him
+a ready advancement in the offices of the Church, according as he may
+show himself worthy of advancement or as the power of family or the
+favor of ecclesiastical authority may obtain it for him. He marries a
+girl who has had a training almost identical with his own. She, too, has
+borne her testimony before she reached years of responsibility. She has
+taken her vows as a priestess at the age when he was dedicating himself
+a priest. She may even have performed a foreign mission. They have both
+been promised that they shall become kings and queens in the eternal
+world. They are bound by their covenants to obey their superior priests.
+They cannot disregard their Church affiliations without recanting
+their vows. The only way they can adhere to their covenants with their
+Almighty Father--the only way they can demonstrate their acceptance
+of the atoning power of the Redeemer's sacrifice--is by yielding such
+obedience to the Prophet as they would pay to the Father and the Son
+if They were on earth in Their proper persons. To deviate from this
+faithfulness is to be marked as a Judas Iscariot by all the Latter-Day
+Saints.
+
+As soon as the Mormon becomes the head of a family--in addition to all
+the testimonies and performances which he must give as proof of his
+continued adherence--he must submit himself and his household to the
+examination and espionage of the ward teachers, who invade his home
+at least once a month. They enter absolutely as the proprietors of the
+house. If the husband is there, they ask him whether he performs
+his duties in the Church; whether he holds family prayer morning and
+evening; whether he "keeps the word of wisdom"--that is, does he abstain
+from the use of alcohol, tobacco, tea and coffee--whether he pays a full
+tithe and all the prescribed donations to the Church; whether he has any
+hard feelings against any of his brethren and sisters; and finally,
+does he devoutly sustain the Prophet as the ruler of God's Kingdom upon
+earth. These questions, so far as they apply, are put to each member of
+the family above the age of eight years. Should the husband be away, all
+the inquiries concerning him are made of the wife. If both parents are
+absent, the questions concerning them are put to their children!
+
+This one branch of the ecclesiastical service is sufficient of itself
+to mark the Mormon Church as the most perfectly disciplined institution
+among mankind. The teachers' quorum in any neighborhood consists of some
+tried elders, usually of considerable ability and experience. With these
+are associated numerous young men, many of them returned missionaries.
+The fact that they have countless other duties in the Church and many
+other and weightier responsibilities, is not permitted to excuse them
+from performing strictly this important labor. Perhaps a dozen or twenty
+families are assigned to a couple of teachers. They are required to
+visit each of these families once every month. And if they discover any
+lapse of fidelity, they report at once to the Bishop.
+
+No one who has not seen them on their rounds will believe with what an
+air of divinely privileged authority they enter a home and force its
+secrets of conscience--with what an imposing and arrogant zeal--with
+what a calm assumption of spiritual over-lordship and inquisitorial
+right. Some few years ago after my public criticisms of Joseph F. Smith
+had been followed by my excommunication, two teachers, on their monthly
+rounds, came to my home in the evening and made their way calmly to the
+library where I was sitting with some members of my family. I had just
+returned from a long absence abroad, and the visit was an untimely
+intrusion at its best; but we observed the obligations of hospitality
+with what courtesy we could, and merely evaded the familiar questions
+which they began to put to us. Finally, the elder of the two teachers,
+a man of some local prominence in the Church, undertook to "bear
+testimony" to the wickedness of anyone who opposed the divine rule of
+Joseph F. Smith; and when I cut him short with a request that he leave
+the house, he was as shocked and surprised as if he had been Milton's
+Archangel Michael, after "the fall," and I, a defiant Adam, showing him
+the door.
+
+In addition to the visitations of the ward teachers, some members of the
+Ladies Relief Society call upon every family usually once a month, not
+only to gather donations for the poor, but to have a little quiet talk
+with the wife and mother of the household. These women of the Relief
+Society are genuine "Sisters of Charity." In most cases they have
+themselves plenty of household cares, yet they give much of their time
+to visiting the sick, supplying the wants of the needy or ministering
+to the miseries of the afflicted; and if it were not for them and their
+noblework, the Mormon poor would fare ill in these days of Mormon Church
+grandeur. Outside of their monthly visitations, they have definite
+preaching to do. At the meetings of their organization, they "bear
+testimony" that Joseph was a Prophet--and so on. They have the quarterly
+stake conferences to attend. Their traveling missionaries go from Salt
+Lake to the four quarters of the globe to institute and maintain the
+discipline of the organization and to teach the methods of its practical
+work in Nursing Schools, mother's classes and the like. They make up one
+of the noblest bodies of women associated with any social movement of
+humanity. And in their zeal and submissiveness they are so innocently
+meek and "biddable" that they can listen with reverence to young Hyrum
+Smith publicly lecturing the grandmothers of the order for occasionally
+partaking of a cup of thin tea.
+
+Under such a system of teaching, discipline and espionage, how can
+the average Mormon man or woman develop any independence of thought
+or action? At what time of life can he assert himself? Before he has
+attained the age of reason he has declared his faith in public. If he
+shall then, in his teens, express any doubt, the priests are ready for
+him. "You have borne your testimony many times in the Church," they
+say sternly. "Were you lying then, or have you lost the Spirit of
+God through your transgressions?" If he reveals any doubt to the ward
+teachers, they will overwhelm him with argument, and either absolutely
+reconvert him or silence him with authority. The pressure of family
+love and pride will be brought to bear upon him. The ecclesiastical
+authorities will move against him. He knows that every one of his
+relatives will be humiliated by his unfaithfulness. His "sin" will
+become known to the whole community, and he will be looked at askance by
+his friends and his companions.
+
+After he has taken his vows as a priest, how shall he dare to violate
+them? He knows that if he loses his faith on a mission--in other words,
+if he dares to make any inquiry into the authenticity of the mission
+which he is performing--he becomes a deserter from God in the very ranks
+of battle. He knows that he will be held forever in dishonor among his
+people; that he will be looked upon as one worse than dead; that he will
+ruin his own life and despoil his parents of all their eternal comfort
+and their hope in him.
+
+While I was editing the Salt Lake Tribune, a son of one of the famous
+apostles came to me with some anxious inquiries, and said: "Frank, I
+have been working in the Church and teaching this gospel so assiduously
+for nearly forty years that I have never had time to find out whether
+it's true or not!"
+
+If the Mormon, in his later years of manhood, dares to doubt, he must
+either reveal his disloyalty to the ward teachers or continue to deny
+it, from month to month, and remain a supine servant of authority. If
+he reveals it, he knows that the news of his defection will permeate the
+entire circle with which he is associated in politics, in business and
+in religion. If his superstition does not hold him, his worldly prudence
+will. He knows that all the aid of the community will be withdrawn from
+him; every voice that has expressed affection for him will speak in
+hate; every hand that has clasped his in friendship will be turned
+against him. And into this very prudence there enters something of
+a moral warning. For he has seen how many a man, deprived of the
+association and fraternity of the Church, feeling himself shunned in a
+lonely ostracism, has not been strong enough to endure in rectitude and
+has fallen into dissipation. Every instance of the sort is rehearsed by
+the faithful, with many exultant expressions of mourning, in the hearing
+of the doubter. And finally, it is the prediction of the priests that no
+apostate can prosper; and though the Mormon people are charitable and
+do not intend to be unjust, they inevitably tend to fulfill the prophecy
+and devote the apostate to material destruction.
+
+The great doctrine of the Mormon faith is obedience; the one proof of
+grace is conformity. So long as a man pays a full tithe, contributes all
+the required donations, and yields unquestioningly to the orders of
+the priests, he may even depart in a moral sense from any other of
+the Church's laws and find himself excused. But any questioning of the
+rulership of the Prophets--the rightfulness of their authority or the
+justice of its exercise is apostasy, is a denial of the faith, is a sin
+against the Holy Ghost. The man who obeys in all things is promised that
+he shall come forth in the morning of the first resurrection; the man
+who disobeys, and by his disobedience apostatizes, is condemned to work
+out, through an eternity of suffering, his offense against the Holy
+Spirit. At the first sign of defection--almost inevitably discovered in
+its incipiency--the rebel is either disciplined into submission or at
+once pushed over "the battlements of Heaven!"
+
+By such perfect means, the leaders, chosen under a pretense of
+revelation from God, maintain an unassailable sanctity in the eyes of
+the people, who are themselves priests. These people implicitly believe
+that the voice of the leader is the voice of God. They follow with a
+passionate devotion that is made up of a fanatical priestly faith and
+of a sympathy that sees their Prophets "persecuted" by an ungenerous,
+impure and vindictive world. We love that for which we suffer; and it
+has become the inheritance of the Mormons to love the priesthood, for
+whose protection their parents and grandparents suffered, and under
+whose oppressions they now suffer themselves.
+
+Joseph Smith, the original Prophet, was slain in the Carthage jail; to
+the Mormon mind this is proof that he was the anointed of God and that
+he sealed his testimony with his blood, as did the Savior. John Taylor,
+afterwards President of the Church, was not slain at Carthage, but only
+wounded; and this to the Mormons is proof that he was of the eternal
+kindred of the Prophets, because, under God's direction, he gave his
+blood to their defense. But Willard Richards, a companion of Smith and
+Taylor, was not even injured at Carthage; and this is accepted as proof
+that God had charge of his holy ones, and would not permit wicked men
+to do them harm. When the people left Nauvoo and journeyed through Iowa,
+some of the citizens of that state would not harbor them; and this is
+argued as evidence that the Mormon movement was God's work, since the
+hand of the wicked was against it; but in some localities of Iowa the
+emigrants were aided, and this also is proof that the Mormon movement
+was God's work, since the hearts of the people were melted to assist
+it. When Johnston's army was sent to Utah, it was proof that the Mormon
+Church was the true Church, hated and persecuted by a wicked nation;
+when Johnston's army withdrew without a battle, it was a new guarantee
+of the divinity of the work; and it is even believed among the Mormons
+that the Civil War was ordained from the heavens, at the sudden command
+of God, to compel Johnston's withdrawal and save God's people.
+
+In the same way the persecutions of "the raid," and the cessation
+of those persecutions--the early trials of poverty and the present
+abundance of prosperity--the threat of the Smoot investigation and the
+abortive conclusion of that exposure--are all argued as proofs of the
+divinity of a persecuted Church or given as instances of the miraculous
+"overruling" of God to prosper his chosen people. No matter what occurs,
+the Prophets, by applying either one of these formulae, can translate
+the incident into a new proof of grace; and their followers submissively
+accept the interpretation.
+
+On the night of April 18, 1905, Joseph F. Smith and some eight of his
+sons sat in his official box at the Salt Lake theatre to watch a
+prize fight that lasted for twenty gory rounds. The Salt Lake Tribune
+published the fact that the Prophet of God, and vicegerent of Christ,
+had given the approval of his "holy presence" to this clumsy barbarity.
+A devout old lady, who had been with the Church since the days of
+Nauvoo, rebuked us bitterly for publishing such a falsehood about
+President Smith. "How dare you tell such wicked lies about God's
+servants?" she scolded. "President Smith wouldn't do such a wicked thing
+as attend a prize fight. And you know that no man with any sense of
+decency would take his young sons to look at such a dreadful thing!"
+Some time later, when the facts in the case had come to her, in her
+retirement, from her friends, the editor called upon her to quiz her
+about the incident. She said: "I'm sure I don't see what business it is
+of the outside world anyhow what President Smith does. He has a right
+to go to the theatre if he wants to. I don't believe they would have
+anything but what's good in the Salt Lake theatre. It was built by our
+people and they own it. And if it wasn't good, President Smith wouldn't
+have taken his boys there."
+
+And this was not merely the absurdity of an old woman. It is the logic
+of all the faithful. The leaders cannot do wrong--because it is not
+wrong, if they do it. No criticism of them can be effective. No act of
+theirs can be proven an error. If they do not do a thing, it was right
+not to do it; and it would have been a sin if it had been done. But if
+they do that thing, then it was right to do it; and it would have been a
+sin if it had not been done.
+
+This reliance upon the almighty power and prophetic infallibility of the
+leaders prevents the Mormon people from truly appreciating the dangers
+that threaten them. It keeps them ignorant of outside sentiment. It
+makes them despise even a national hostility. And it has left them
+without gratitude, too, for a national grace. Before these people can be
+roused to any independence of responsible thought, it will be necessary
+to break their trust in the ability of their leaders to make bargains of
+protection with the world; and then it will still be necessary to
+force the eyes of their self-complacency to turn from the satisfied
+contemplation of their own virtues. "You will never be able to reach the
+conscience of the Mormons," a man who knows them has declared. "I
+have had my experiences with both leaders and people. If you tell them
+'You're ninety-nine-and-one-half per cent. pure gold,' they will ask,
+surprised and indignant: 'What? Why, what's the matter with the other
+half per cent?'"
+
+
+
+Chapter XX
+
+Conclusion
+
+Of the men who could have written this narrative, some are dead; some
+are prudent; some are superstitious; and some are personally foresworn.
+It appeared to me that the welfare of Utah and the common good of the
+whole United States required the publication of the facts that I have
+tried to demonstrate. Since there was apparently no one else who felt
+the duty and also had the information or the wish to write, it seemed
+my place to undertake it. And I have done it gladly. For when I was
+subscribing the word of the Mormon chiefs for the fulfillment of our
+statehood pledges, I engaged my own honor too, and gave bond myself
+against the very treacheries that I have here recorded.
+
+We promised that the Church had forever renounced the doctrine of
+polygamy and the practice of plural marriage living, by a "revelation
+from God" promulgated by the supreme Prophet of the Church and accepted
+by the vote of the whole congregation assembled in conference. We
+promised the retirement of the Mormon Prophets from the political
+direction of their followers--the abrogation of the claim that the
+Mormon Church was the "Kingdom of God" re-established upon earth to
+supersede all civil government--the abandonment by the Church of any
+authority to exercise a temporal power in competition with the civil
+law. We promised to make the teaching and practice of the Church conform
+to the institutions of a Republic in which all citizens are equal in
+liberty. We promised that the Church should cease to accumulate property
+for the support of illegal practices and un-American government. And we
+made a record in proof of our promises by the anti-polygamy manifesto
+of 1890 and its public ratification; by the petition for amnesty and
+the acceptance of amnesty upon conditions; by the provisions of Utah's
+enabling act and of Utah's state constitution; by the acts of Congress
+and the judicial decisions restoring escheated Church property; by the
+proceedings of the Federal courts of Utah in re-opening citizenship
+to the alien members of the Mormon Church; by the acquiescence of the
+Gentiles of Utah in the proceedings by which statehood was obtained;
+and finally, and most indisputably, by the admission of Utah into equal
+sovereignty in the Union--since that admission would never have been
+granted, except upon the explicit understanding that the state was to
+uphold the laws and institutions of the American republic in accordance
+with our covenants.
+
+Of all these promises the Church authorities have kept not one. The
+doctrine and practice of polygamy have been restored by the Church, and
+plural marriage living is practiced by the ruler of the kingdom and his
+favorites with all the show and circumstance of an oriental court. There
+are now being born in his domains thousands of unfortunate children
+outside the pale of law and convention, for whom there can be
+entertained no hope that any statute will ever give them a place within
+the recognition of civilized society. The Prophet of the Church rules
+with an absolute political power in Utah, with almost as much authority
+in Idaho and Wyoming, and with only a little less autocracy in parts
+of Colorado, Montana, Oregon, Washington, California, Arizona and New
+Mexico. He names the Representatives and Senators in Congress from his
+own state, and influences decisively the selection of such "deputies of
+the people" from many of the surrounding states. Through his ambassadors
+to the government of the United States, sitting in House and Senate, he
+chooses the Federal officials for Utah and influences the appointment of
+those for the neighboring states and territories. He commands the making
+and unmaking of state law. He holds the courts and the prosecuting
+officers to a strict accountability. He levies tribute upon the people
+of Utah and helps to loot the citizens of the whole nation by his
+alliance with the political and financial Plunderbund at Washington. He
+has enslaved the subjects of his kingdom absolutely, and he looks to it
+as the destiny of his Church to destroy all the governments of the world
+and to substitute for them the theocracy--the "government by God" and
+administration by oracle--of his successors.
+
+And yet, even so, I could not have recorded the incidents of this
+betrayal as mere matters of current history--and I would never have
+written them in vindication of myself--if I had not been certain that
+there is a remedy for the evil conditions in Utah, and that such a
+narrative as this will help to hasten the remedy and right the wrong.
+Except for the aggressive aid given by the national administrations
+to the leaders of the Mormon Church, the people of Utah and the
+intermountain states would never have permitted the revival of a
+priestly tyranny in politics. Except for the protection of courts and
+the enforced silence of politicians and journalists, polygamy could not
+have been restored in the Mormon Church. Except for the interference
+of powerful influences at Washington to coerce the Associated Press and
+affect the newspapers of the country, the Mormon leaders would never
+have dared to defy the sensibilities of our civilization. Except for
+the greed of the predatory "Interests" of the nation, the commercial
+absolutism of the Mormon hierarchy could never have been established.
+The present conditions in the Mormon kingdom are due to national
+influences. The remedy for those conditions is the withdrawal of
+national sympathy and support.
+
+Break the power at Washington of Joseph F. Smith, ruler of the Kingdom
+of God, and every seeker after federal patronage in Utah will desert
+him. Break his power as a political partner of the Republican party
+now--and of the Democratic party should it succeed to office--and every
+ambitious politician in the West will rebel against his throne. Break
+his power to control the channels of public communication through
+interested politicians and commercial agencies, and the sentiment of the
+civilized world will join with the revolt of the "American movement" in
+Utah to overthrow his tyrannies. Break his connection with the illegal
+trusts and combines of the United States, and his financial power will
+cease to be a terror and a menace to the industry and commerce of the
+intermountain country.
+
+The nation owes Utah such a rectification, for the nation has been, in
+this matter, a chief sinner and a strong encourager of sin. President
+Theodore Roosevelt, representing the majesty of the Republic, stayed us
+when we might have won our own liberties in the revolt that was provoked
+by the election of Senator Apostle Reed Smoot. Misled by political
+and personal advisers, the President procured delays in the Smoot
+investigation. He seduced senators from their convictions. He certified
+the ambassador from the Kingdom of God as a qualified senator of the
+United States. He gave the hand of fellowship to Joseph, the tyrant of
+the Kingdom. He rebuked our friends and his own, in their struggle
+for our freedom, by warning them that they were raising the flag of a
+religious warfare. He filled the Mormon priests with the belief that
+they might proceed unrestrainedly to the sacrifice of women and children
+upon the polygamous altar, to the absolute rule of politics in the
+intermountain states, and to the commercial exploitation of their
+community in partnership with the trusts. The one policy that President
+Taft seems to have accepted unimpaired from his predecessor is this
+same respect for the power of the Mormon kingdom. In his placid but
+wholehearted way he has encouraged his co-ordinate ruler, the Mormon
+Prophet, and extended the Executive license to the support and
+inevitable increase of these religious tyrannies of the Mormon hierarchs
+which now the people of Utah, unaided, are wholly unable to combat.
+
+And the nation owes such a rectification not only to Utah, but also to
+itself. The commercial and financial Plunderbund that is now preying
+upon the whole country is sustained at Washington by the agents of the
+Mormon Church. The Prophet not only delivers his own subjects up to
+pillage; he helps to deliver the people of the entire United States.
+His senators are not representatives of a political party; they are the
+tools of "the Interests" that are his partners. The shameful conditions
+in Utah are not isolated and peculiar to that state; they are largely
+the result of national conditions and they have a national effect. The
+Prophet of Utah is not a local despot only: he is a national enemy; and
+the nation must deal with him.
+
+I do not ask for a resumption of cruelty, for a return to proscription.
+I ask only that the nation shall rouse itself to a sense of its
+responsibility. The Mormon Church has shown its ability to conform to
+the demands of the republic--even by "revelation from God" if necessary.
+The leaders of the Church are now defiant in their treasons only because
+the nation has ceased to reprove and the national administrations have
+powerfully encouraged. As soon as the Mormon hierarchy discovers that
+the people of this country, wearied of violated treaties and broken
+covenants, are about to exclude the political agents of the Prophet from
+any participation in national affairs, the advisers of his inspiration
+will quickly persuade him to make a concession to popular wrath. As soon
+as the "Interests" realize that the burden of shame in Utah is too large
+to be comfortable on their backs, they will throw it off. The President
+of the United States will be unable to gain votes by patronizing the
+crucifiers of women and children. The national administrations will
+not dare to stand against the efforts of the Gentiles and independent
+Mormons of Utah to regain their liberty. And Utah, the Islam of the
+West, will depose its old Sultan and rise free.
+
+With this hope--in this conviction--I have written, in all candor,
+what no reasons of personal advantage or self-justification could
+have induced me to write. I shall be accused of rancor, of religious
+antagonism, of political ambition, of egotistical pride. But no man
+who knows the truth will say sincerely that I have lied. Whatever
+is attributed as my motive, my veracity in this book will not be
+successfully impeached. In that confidence, I leave all the attacks that
+guilt and bigotry can make upon me, to the public to whom they will
+be addressed. The truth, in its own time, will prevail, in spite of
+cunning. I am willing to await that time--for myself--and for the Mormon
+people.
+
+
+
+The End
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Under the Prophet in Utah, by
+Frank J. Cannon and Harvey J. O'Higgins
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK UNDER THE PROPHET IN UTAH ***
+
+***** This file should be named 7066.txt or 7066.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/7/0/6/7066/
+
+Produced by David Schwan and Monique Cameron
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/7066.zip b/7066.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..24492db
--- /dev/null
+++ b/7066.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+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
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9f49a0c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #7066 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/7066)
diff --git a/old/pruta10.txt b/old/pruta10.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d80e304
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/pruta10.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,9248 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Under the Prophet in Utah
+by Frank J. Cannon and Harvey J. O'Higgins
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.
+
+This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project
+Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the
+header without written permission.
+
+Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the
+eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is
+important information about your specific rights and restrictions in
+how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a
+donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved.
+
+
+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: Under the Prophet in Utah
+
+Author: Frank J. Cannon and Harvey J. O'Higgins
+
+Release Date: December, 2004 [EBook #7066]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on March 5, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK UNDER THE PROPHET IN UTAH ***
+
+
+
+
+This eBook was produced by David Schwan and Monique Cameron
+
+
+
+
+
+Under the Prophet in Utah
+
+
+
+The National Menace of a Political Priestcraft
+
+
+
+By
+Frank J. Cannon
+Formerly United States Senator from Utah
+
+and
+
+Harvey J. O'Higgins
+Author
+"The Smoke-Eaters," "Don-a-Dreams," etc.
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+
+
+Chapter
+
+ Note
+ Introduction
+ Foreword
+ I In the Days of the Raid
+ II On a Mission to Washington
+ III Without a Country
+ IV The Manifesto
+ V On the Road to Freedom
+ VI The Goal--and After
+ VII The First Betrayals
+ VIII The Church and the Interests
+ IX At the Crossways
+ X On the Downward Path
+ XI The Will of the Lord
+ XII The Conspiracy Completed.
+ XIII The Smoot Exposure
+ XIV Treason Triumphant
+ XV The Struggle for Liberty
+ XVI The Price of Protest
+ XVII The New Polygamy
+XVIII The Prophet of Mammon
+ XIX The Subjects of the Kingdom
+ XX Conclusion
+
+
+Note
+
+
+When Harvey J. O'Higgins was in Denver, in the spring of 1910, working
+with Judge Ben B. Lindsey on the manuscript of "The Beast and the
+Jungle," for Everybody's Magazine, he met the Hon. Frank J. Cannon,
+formerly United States Senator from Utah, and heard from him the story
+of the betrayal of Utah by the present leaders of the Mormon Church.
+This story the editor of Everybody's Magazine commissioned Messrs.
+Cannon and O'Higgins to write. They worked on it for a year, verifying
+every detail of it from government reports, controversial pamphlets,
+Mormon books of propaganda, and the newspaper files of current record.
+It ran through nine numbers of the magazine, and not so much as a
+successful contradiction was ever made of one of the innumerable
+incidents or accusations that it contains. It is here published in book
+form at somewhat greater length than the magazine could print it. It is
+a joint work, but the autobiographic "I" has been used throughout,
+because it is Mr. Cannon's personal narrative of his personal
+experience.
+
+
+
+Introduction
+
+
+This is the story of what has been called "the great American
+despotism."
+
+It is the story of the establishment of an absolute throne and dynasty
+by one American citizen over a half-million others.
+
+And it is the story of the amazing reign of this one man, Joseph F.
+Smith, the Mormon Prophet, a religious fanatic of bitter mind, who
+claims that he has been divinely ordained to exercise the awful
+authority of God on earth over all the affairs of all mankind, and who
+plays the anointed despot in Utah and the surrounding states as cruelly
+as a Sultan and more securely than any Czar.
+
+To him the Mormon people pay a yearly tribute of more than two million
+dollars in tithes; and he uses that income, to his own ends, without an
+accounting. He is president of the Utah branch of the sugar trust, and
+of the local incorporation's of the salt trust; and he supports the
+exaction's of monopoly by his financial absolutism, while he defends
+them from competition by his religious power of interdict and
+excommunication. He is president of a system of "company stores," from
+which the faithful buy their merchandise; of a wagon and machine company
+from which the Mormon farmers purchase their vehicles and implements; of
+life-insurance and fire-insurance companies, of banking institutions, of
+a railroad, of a knitting company, of newspapers, which the Mormon
+people are required by their Church to patronize, and through which they
+are exploited, commercially and financially, for the sole profit of the
+sovereign of Utah and his religious court.
+
+He is the political Boss of the state, delivering the votes of his
+people by revelation of the Will of God, practically appointing the
+United States Senators from Utah--as he practically appoints the
+marshals, district attorneys, judges, legislators, officers and
+administrators of law throughout his "Kingdom of God on Earth"--and
+ruling the non-Mormons of Utah, as he rules his own people, by virtue of
+his political and financial partnership with the great "business
+interests" that govern and exploit this nation, and his Kingdom, for
+their own gain, and his.
+
+He lives, like the Grand Turk, openly with five wives, against the
+temporal law of the state, against the spiritual law of his Kingdom, and
+in violation of his own solemn covenant to the country--which he gave
+in 1890, in order to obtain amnesty for himself from criminal
+prosecution and to help Utah obtain the powers of statehood which he has
+since usurped. He secretly preaches a proscribed doctrine of polygamy as
+necessary to salvation; he publicly denies his own teaching, so that he
+may escape responsibility for the sufferings of the "plural wives" and
+their unfortunate children, who have been betrayed by the authority of
+his dogma. And these women, by the hundreds, seduced into clandestine
+marriage relations with polygamous elders of the Church, unable to claim
+their husbands--even in some cases disowning their children and
+teaching these children to deny their parents--are suffering a pitiful
+self-immolation as martyrs to the religious barbarism of his rule.
+
+Demanding unquestioning obedience in all things, as the "mouthpiece of
+the Lord," and "sole vice-regent of God on Earth," he enforces his
+demands by his religious, political and financial control of the faith,
+the votes and the property of his fellow-citizens. He is at once--as
+the details of this story show--"the modern 'money king,' the absolute
+political Czar, the social despot and the infallible Pope of his
+Kingdom."
+
+Ex-Senator Cannon not only exposes but accounts for and explains the
+conditions that have made the Church-controlled government of Utah less
+free, less of a democracy, a greater tyranny and more of a disgrace to
+the nation than ever the corporation rule of Colorado was in the darkest
+period of the Cripple Creek labor war. He shows the enemies of the
+republic encouraging and profiting by the shame of Utah as they
+supported and made gain of Colorado's past disgrace. He shows the
+piratical "Interests," at Washington, sustaining, and sustained by, the
+misgovernment of Utah, in their campaign of national pillage. He shows
+that the condition of Utah today is not merely a local problem; that it
+affects and concerns the people of the whole country; that it can only
+be cured with their aid.
+
+The outside world has waited many years to hear the truth about the
+Mormons; here it is--told with sympathy, with affection, by a man who
+steadfastly defended and fought for the Mormon people when their present
+leaders were keeping themselves carefully inconspicuous. The Mormon
+system of religious communism has long been known as one of the most
+interesting social experiments of modern civilization; here is an
+intimate study of it, not only in its success but in the failure that
+has come upon it from the selfish ambitions of its leaders. The power of
+the Mormon hierarchy has been the theme of much imaginative fiction; but
+here is a story of church tyranny and misgovernment in the name of God,
+that outrages the credibilities of art. That such a story could come out
+of modern America--that such conditions could be possible in the
+democracy today--is an amazement that staggers belief.
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+
+Hon. Frank J. Cannon is the son of George Q. Cannon of Utah, who was
+First Councillor of the Mormon Church from 1880 to 1901. After the death
+of Brigham Young, George Q. Cannon's diplomacy saved the Mormon
+communism from destruction by the United States government. It was his
+influence that lifted the curse of polygamy from the Mormon faith. Under
+his leadership Utah obtained the right of statehood; and his financial
+policies were establishing the Mormon people in industrial prosperity
+when he died.
+
+In all these achievements the son shared with his father, and in some of
+them--notably in the obtaining of Utah's statehood--he had even a
+larger part than George Q. Cannon himself. When the Mormon communities,
+in 1888, were being crushed by proscription and confiscation and the
+righteous bigotries of Federal officials, Frank J. Cannon went to
+Washington, alone--almost from the doors of a Federal prison--and, by
+the eloquence of his plea for his people, obtained from President
+Cleveland a mercy for the Mormons that all the diplomacies of the
+Church's politicians had been unable to procure. Again, in 1890, when
+the Mormons were threatened with a general disfranchisement by means of
+a test oath, he returned to Washington and saved them, with the aid of
+James G. Blame, on the promise that the doctrine and practice of
+polygamy were to be abandoned by the Mormon Church; and he assisted in
+the promulgation and acceptance of the famous "manifesto" of 1890, by
+which the Mormon Prophet, as the result of a "divine revelation,"
+withdrew the doctrine of polygamy from the practice of the faith.
+
+He organized the Republican party in Utah, and led it in the first
+campaigns that divided the people of the territory on the lines of
+national issues and freed them from the factions of a religious dispute.
+He delivered to Washington the pledges of the Mormon leaders, by which
+the emancipation of their people from hierarchical domination was
+promised and the right of statehood finally obtained. He was elected the
+first United States Senator from Utah, against the unwilling candidacy
+of his own father, when the intrigues of the Mormon priests pitted the
+father against the son and violated the Church's promise of
+non-interference in politics almost as soon as it had been given.
+
+It was his voice, in the Senate, that helped to reawaken the national
+conscience to the crimes of Spanish rule in Cuba, when the "financial
+interests" of this country were holding the government back from any
+interference in Cuban affairs. He was one of the leaders in Washington
+of the first ill-fated "Insurgent Republican" movement against the
+control of the Republican party by these same piratical "interests;" and
+he was the only Republican Senator who stood to oppose them by voting
+against the iniquitous Dingley tariff bill of 1897. He delivered the
+speech of defiance at the Republican national convention of 1896, when
+four "Silver Republican" Senators led their delegations out of that
+convention in revolt. And by all these acts of independence he put
+himself in opposition to the politicians of the Mormon Church, who were
+allying themselves with Hanna and Aldrich, the sugar trust, the railroad
+lobby, and the whole financial and commercial Plunderbund in politics
+that has since come to be called "The System."
+
+He returned to Utah to prevent the sale of a United States Senatorship
+by the Mormon Church; and, though he was himself defeated for
+re-election, he helped to hold the Utah legislature in a deadlock that
+prevented the selection of a successor to his seat. He fought to compel
+the leaders of the Church to fulfill the pledges which they had
+authorized him to give in Washington when statehood was being obtained.
+After his father's death, when these pledges began to be openly
+violated, he directed his attack particularly against Joseph F. Smith,
+the new President of the Church, who was principally responsible for the
+Church's breach of public faith. Through the columns of the Salt Lake
+Tribune he exposed the treasonable return to the practice of polygamy
+which Joseph F. Smith had secretly authorized and encouraged. He opposed
+the election of Apostle Reed Smoot to the United States Senate, as a
+violation of the statehood pledges. He criticized the financial
+absolutism of the Mormon Prophet, which Smith was establishing in
+partnership with "the Plunderbund." He was finally excommunicated and
+ostracized, by his father's successors in power, for championing the
+political and social liberties of the Mormon people whom he had helped
+to save from destruction and whose statehood sovereignty he had so
+largely obtained.
+
+When the partnership of the Church and "the Interests" prevented the
+expulsion of Apostle Smoot from the Senate, Senator Cannon withdrew from
+Utah, convinced that nothing could be done for the Mormons so long as
+the national administration sustained the sovereignty of the Mormon
+kingdom as a co-ordinate power in this Republic. For the last few years
+he has been a newspaper editor in Denver, Colorado--on the Denver Times
+and the Rocky Mountain News--helping the reform movement in Colorado
+against the corporation control of that state, and waiting for the
+opportunity to renew his long fight for the Mormon people.
+
+In the following narrative he returns to that fight. In fulfillment of a
+promise made before he left Utah--and seeing now, in the new
+"insurgency," the hope of freeing Utah from slavery to "the System"--he
+here addresses himself to the task of exposing the treasons and
+tyrannies of the Mormon Prophet and the consequent miseries among his
+people.
+
+In the course of his exposition, he gives a most remarkable picture of
+the Mormon people, patient, meek, and virtuous, "as gentle as the
+Quakers, as staunch as the Jews." He introduces the world for the first
+time to the conclaves of the Mormon ecclesiasts, explains the simplicity
+of some of them, the bitterness of others, the sincerity of almost all--
+illuminating the dark places of Church control with the understanding of
+a sympathetic experience, and bringing out the virtues of the Mormon
+system as impartially as he exposes its faults. He traces the
+degradation of its communism, step by step and incident by incident,
+from its success as a sort of religious socialism administered for the
+common good to its present failure as a hierarchical capitalism governed
+for the benefit of its modern "Prophet of Mammon" at the expense of the
+liberty, the happiness, and even the prosperity, of its victims.
+
+For the first time in the history of the Mormon Church, there has
+arrived a man who has the knowledge and the inclination to explain it.
+
+He does this fearlessly, as a duty, and without any apologies, as a
+public right. "He is not, and never has been an official member of the
+Church, in any sense or form," Joseph F. Smith, as President of the
+Church, testified concerning him, at Washington in 1904; and though this
+statement is one of the inspired Prophet's characteristic perversions of
+the truth, it covers the fact that Senator Cannon has always opposed the
+official tyrannies of the hierarchs. The present Mormon leaders accepted
+his aid in freeing Utah, well aware of his independence. They profited
+by his success with a more or less doubtful gratitude. They betrayed him
+promptly--as they betrayed the nation and their own followers--as soon
+as they found themselves in a position safely to betray. In this book he
+merely continues an independence which he has always maintained, and
+replies to secret and personal treason with a public criticism, to which
+he has never hesitated to resort.
+
+He begins his story with the year 1888, and devotes the first chapters
+to a depiction of the miseries of the Mormon people in the unhappy days
+of persecution. He continues with the private details of the
+confidential negotiations in Washington and the secret conferences in
+Salt Lake City by which the Mormons were saved. He gives the truth about
+the political intrigues that accompanied the grant of Utah's statehood,
+and he relates, pledge by pledge, the covenants then given by the Mormon
+leaders to the nation and since treasonably violated and repudiated by
+them. He explains the progress of this repudiation with an intimate
+"inside" knowledge of facts which the Mormon leaders now deny. And he
+exposes the horror of conditions in Utah today as no other man in
+America could expose them--for his life has been spent in combating the
+influences of which these conditions are the result; and he understands
+the present situation as a doctor understands the last stages of a
+disease which he has been for years vainly endeavoring to check.
+
+But aside from all this--aside from his exposure of the Mormon
+despotism, his study of the degradation of a modern community, or his
+secret history of the Church's dark policies in "sacred places"--he
+relates a story that is full of the most astonishing curiosities of
+human character and of dramatic situations that are almost mediaeval in
+their religious aspects. He goes from interviews with Cleveland or Blame
+to discuss American politics with men who believe themselves in direct
+communication with God--who talk and act like the patriarchs of the Old
+Testament--who accept their own thoughts as the inspiration of the Holy
+Ghost, and deliver their personal decisions, reverently, as the Will of
+the Lord. He shows men and women ready to suffer any martyrdom in
+defense of a doctrine of polygamy that is a continual unhappiness and
+cross upon them. He depicts the social life of the most peculiar sect
+that has ever lived in a Western civilization. He writes--
+unconsciously, and for the first time that it has ever been written--
+the naive, colossal drama of modern Mormonism.
+
+H. J. O'H.
+
+
+
+Forward
+
+
+
+On the fourth day of January, 1896, the territory of Utah was admitted
+to statehood, and the proscribed among its people were freed to the
+liberties of American citizenship, upon the solemn covenant of the
+leaders of the Mormon Church that they and their followers would live,
+thereafter, according to the laws and institutions of the nation of
+which they were allowed to become a part. And that gracious settlement
+of upwards of forty years of conflict was negotiated through responsible
+mediators, was endorsed by the good faith of the non-Mormons of Utah,
+and was sealed by a treaty convention in which the high contracting
+parties were the American Republic and the "Kingdom of God on Earth."
+
+I propose, in this narrative, to show that the leaders of the Mormon
+Church have broken their covenant to the nation; that they have abused
+the confidence of the Gentiles of Utah and betrayed the trust of the
+people under their power, by using that power to prevent the state of
+Utah from becoming what it had engaged to become. I propose to show that
+the people of Utah, upraised to freedom by the magnanimity of the
+nation, are being made to appear traitorous to the generosity that saved
+them; that the Mormons of Utah are being falsely misled into the
+peculiar dangers from which they thought they had forever escaped; that
+the unity, the solidarity, the loyalty of these fervent people is being
+turned as a weapon of offense against the whole country, for the greater
+profit of the leaders and the aggrandizement of their power. I
+undertake, in fact, in this narrative, to expose and to demonstrate what
+I do believe to be one of the most direful conspiracies of treachery in
+the history of the United States.
+
+Not that I have anything in my heart against the Mormon people! Heaven
+forbid! I know them to be great in their virtues, wholesome in their
+relations, capable of an heroic fortitude, living by the tenderest
+sentiments of fraternity, as gentle as the Quakers, as staunch as the
+Jews. I think of them as a man among strangers thinks of the dearness of
+his home. I am bound to them in affection by all the ties of life. The
+smiles of neighborliness, the greetings of friends, all the familiar
+devotion of brothers and sisters, the love of the parents who held me in
+their arms by these I know them as my own people, and by these I love
+them as a good people, as a strong people, as a people worthy to be
+strong and fit to be loved.
+
+But it is even through their virtue and by their very strength that they
+are being betrayed. A human devotion--the like of which has rarely
+lived among the citizens of any modern state--is being directed as an
+instrument of subjugation against others and held as a means of
+oppression upon the Mormons themselves. Noble when they were weak, they
+are being led to ignoble purpose now that they have become strong.
+Praying for justice when they had no power, now that they have gained
+power it is being abused to ends of injustice. Their leaders, reaching
+for the fleshpots for which these simple-hearted devotees have never
+sighed, have allied themselves with all the predaceous "interests" of
+the country and now use the superhuman power of a religious tyranny to
+increase the dividends of a national plunder.
+
+In the long years of misery when the Mormons of Utah were proscribed and
+hunted, because they refused to abandon what was to them, at that, time,
+a divine revelation and a confirmed article of faith, I sat many times
+in the gallery of the Senate in Washington, and heard discussed new
+measures of destruction against these victims of their own fidelity, and
+felt the dome above me impending like a brazen weight of national
+resentment upon all our heads. When, a few years later, I stood before
+the President's desk in the Senate chamber, to take my oath of office as
+the representative of the freed people of Utah in the councils of the
+nation, I raised my eyes to my old seat of terror in the gallery, and
+pledged myself, in that remembrance, never to vote nor speak for
+anything but the largest measure of justice that my soul was big enough
+to comprehend. By such engagement I write now, bound in a double debt of
+obligation to the nation whose magnanimity then saved us and to the
+people whom I humbly helped to save.
+
+Frank J. Cannon.
+
+
+
+Under the Prophet in Utah
+
+
+
+Chapter I
+
+
+
+In the Days of the Raid
+
+
+
+About ten o'clock one night in the spring of 1888, I set out secretly,
+from Salt Lake City, on a nine-mile drive to Bountiful, to meet my
+father, who was concealed "on the underground," among friends; and that
+night drive, with its haste and its apprehension, was so of a piece with
+the times, that I can hardly separate it from them in my memory. We were
+all being carried along in an uncontrollable sweep of tragic events. In
+a sort of blindness, like the night, unable to see the nearest fork of
+the road ahead of us, we were being driven to a future that held we knew
+not what.
+
+I was with my brother Abraham (soon to become an apostle of the Mormon
+Church), who had himself been in prison and was still in danger of
+arrest. And there is something typical of those days in the recollection
+I have of him in the carriage: silent, self-contained, and--when he
+talked--discussing trivialities in the most calm way in the world. The
+whole district was picketed with deputy marshals; we did not know that
+we were not being followed; we had always the sense of evading patrols
+in an enemy's country. But this feeling was so old with us that it had
+become a thing of no regard.
+
+There was something even more typical in the personality of our driver--
+a giant of a man named Charles Wilcken--a veteran of the German army
+who had been decorated with the Iron Cross for bravery on the field of
+battle. He had come to Utah with General Johnston's forces in 1858, and
+had left the military service to attach himself to Brigham Young. After
+Young's death, my father had succeeded to the first place in his
+affections. He was an elder of the Church; he had been an aristocrat in
+his own country; but he forgot his every personal interest in his
+loyalty to his leaders, and he stood at all times ready to defend them
+with his life--as a hundred thousand others did!--for, though the
+Mormons did not resist the processes of law for themselves, except by
+evasion, they were prepared to protect their leaders, if necessary, by
+force of arms.
+
+With Wilcken holding the reins on a pair of fast horses at full speed,
+we whirled past the old adobe wall (which the Mormons had built to
+defend their city from the Indians) and came out into the purple night
+of Utah, with its frosty starlight and its black hills--a desert night,
+a mountain night, a night so vast in its height of space and breadth of
+distance that it seemed natural it should inspire the people that
+breathed it with freedom's ideals of freedom and all the sublimities of
+an eternal faith. And those people--!
+
+A more despairing situation than theirs, at that hour, has never been
+faced by an American community. Practically every Mormon man of any
+distinction was in prison, or had just served his term, or had escaped
+into exile. Hundreds of Mormon women had left their homes and their
+children to flee from the officers of law; many had been behind prison
+bars for refusing to answer the questions put to them in court; more
+were concealed, like outlaws, in the houses of friends. Husbands and
+wives, separated by the necessities of flight, had died apart,
+miserably. Old men were coming out of prison, broken in health. A young
+plural wife whom I knew--a mere girl, of good breeding, of gentle life--
+seeking refuge in the mountains to save her husband from a charge of
+"unlawful cohabitation," had had her infant die in her arms on the road;
+and she had been compelled to bury the child, wrapped in her shawl,
+under a rock, in a grave that she scratched in the soil with a stick. In
+our day! In a civilized state!
+
+By Act of Congress, all the church property in excess of $50,000 had
+been seized by the United States marshal, and the community faced the
+total loss of its common fund. Because of some evasions that had been
+attempted by the Church authorities--and the suspicion of more such--
+the marshal had taken everything that he could in any way assume to
+belong to the Church. Among the Mormons, there was an unconquerable
+spirit of sanctified lawlessness, and, among the non-Mormons, an equally
+indomitable determination to vindicate the law. Both were, for the most
+part, sincere. Both were resolute. And both were standing in fear of a
+fatal conflict, which any act of violence might begin.
+
+Moreover, the Mormons were being slowly but surely deprived of all civil
+rights. All polygamists had been disfranchised by the bill of 1882, and
+all the women of Utah by the bill of 1887. The Governor of the territory
+was appointed by Federal authority, so was the marshal, so were the
+judges, so were the United States Commissioners who had co-ordinate
+jurisdiction with magistrates and justices of the peace, so were the
+Election Commissioners. But the Mormons still controlled the
+legislature, and though the Governor could veto all legislation he could
+initiate none. For this reason it had been frequently proposed that the
+President should appoint a Legislative Council to take the place of the
+elected legislature; and bills were being talked of in Congress to
+effect a complete disfranchisement of the whole body of the Mormon
+people by means of a test oath.
+
+I did not then believe, and I do not now, that the practice of polygamy
+was a thing which the American nation could condone. But I knew that our
+people believed in it as a practice ordained, by a revelation from God,
+for the salvation of the world. It was to them an article of faith as
+sacred as any for which the martyrs of any religion ever died; and it
+seemed that the nation, in its resolve to vindicate the supremacy of
+civil government, was determined to put them to the point of martyrdom.
+
+It was with this prospect before us that we drove, that night, up the
+Salt Lake valley, across a corner of the desert, to the little town of
+Bountiful; and as soon as we arrived among the houses of the settlement,
+a man stepped out into the road, from the shadows, and stopped us.
+Wilcken spoke to him. He recognized us, and let us pass. As we turned
+into the farm where my father was concealed, I saw men lurking here and
+there, on guard, about the grounds. The house was an old-fashioned adobe
+farm-house; the windows were all dark; we entered through the kitchen.
+And I entered, let me say, with the sense that I was about to come
+before one of the most able among men.
+
+To those who knew George Q. Cannon I do not need to justify that
+feeling. He was the man in the hands of whose sagacity the fate of the
+Mormons at that moment lay. He was the First Councillor of the Church,
+and had been so for years. For ten years in Congress, he had fought and
+defeated the proscriptive legislation that had been attempted against
+his people; and Senator Hoar had said of him, "No man in Congress ever
+served a territory more ably." He had been the intimate friend of
+Randall and Blame. As a missionary in England he had impressed Dickens,
+who wrote of him in "An Uncommercial Traveller." The Hon. James Bryce
+had said of him: "He was one of the ablest Americans I ever met."
+
+An Englishman, well-educated, a linguist, an impressive orator, a
+persuasive writer, he had lived a life that was one long incredible
+adventure of romance and almost miraculous achievement. As a youth he
+had been sent by the Mormon leaders to California to wash out gold for
+the struggling community; and he had sent back to Utah all the proceeds
+of his labor, living himself upon the crudest necessaries of life. As a
+young man he had gone as a Mormon missionary to the Hawaiian Islands,
+and finding himself unable to convert the whites he had gone among the
+natives--starving, a ragged wanderer--and by simple force of
+personality he had made himself a power among them; so that in later
+years Napella, the famous native leader, journeyed to Utah to consult
+with him upon the affairs of that distressed state, and Queen
+Liluokalani, deposed and in exile, appealed to him for advice. He had
+edited and published a Mormon newspaper in San Francisco; and he had
+long successfully directed the affairs of the publishing house in Salt
+Lake City which he owned. He was a railroad builder, a banker, a
+developer of mines, a financier of a score of interests. He combined the
+activities of a statesman, a missionary, and a man of business, and
+seemed equally successful in all.
+
+But none of these things--nor all of them--contained the total of the
+man himself. He was greater than his work. He achieved by the force of a
+personality that was more impressive than its achievements. If he had
+been royalty, he could not have been surrounded with a greater deference
+than he commanded among our people. A feeling of responsibility for
+those dependent on him, such as a king might feel, added to a sense of
+divine guidance that gave him the dignity of inspiration, had made him
+majestical in his simple presence; and even among those who laughed at
+divine inspiration and scorned Mormonism as the *Uitlander scorned the
+faith of the Boer, his sagacity and his diplomacy and his power to read
+and handle men made him as fearfully admired as any Oom Paul in the
+Transvaal.
+
+When I entered the low-ceilinged, lamplit room in which he sat, he rose
+to meet me, and all rose with him, like a court. He embraced me without
+effusion, looking at me silently with his wise blue eyes that always
+seemed to read in my face--and to check up in his valuation of me--
+whatever I had become in my absence from his regard.
+
+He had a countenance that at no time bore any of the marks of the
+passions of men; and it showed, now, no shadow of the tribulations of
+that troubled day. His forehead was unworried. His eyes betrayed none of
+the anxieties with which his mind must have been busied. His expression
+was one of resolute stern contentment with all things--carrying the
+composure of spirit which he wished his people to have. If I had been
+agitated by the urgency of his summons to me, and he had wished to allay
+my anxiety at once, the sight of his face, as he looked at me, would
+have been reassurance enough.
+
+At a characteristic motion of the hand from him, the others left us. We
+sat down in the "horsehair" chairs of a well-to-do farmer's parlor--
+furnished in black walnut, with the usual organ against one wall, and
+the usual marble-topped bureau against the other. I remember the "store"
+carpet, the mortuary hair-wreaths on the walls, the walnut-framed
+lithographs of the Church authorities and of the angel Moroni with "the
+gold plates;" and none of these seem ludicrous to me to remember. They
+express, to me, in the recollection, some of the homely and devout
+simplicity of the people whose community life this man was to save.
+
+He talked a few minutes, affectionately, about family matters, and then -
+straightening his shoulders to the burden of more gravity--he said:
+"I have sent for you, my son, to see if you cannot find some way to help
+us in our difficulties. I have made it a matter of prayer, and I have
+been led to urge you to activity. You have never performed a Mission for
+the Church, and I have sometimes wondered if you cared anything about
+your religion. You have never obeyed the celestial covenant, and you
+have kept yourself aloof from the duties of the priesthood, but it may
+have been a providential overruling. I have talked with some of the
+brethren, and we feel that if relief does not soon appear, our community
+will be scattered and the great work crushed. The Lord can rescue us,
+but we must put forth our own efforts. Can you see any light?"
+
+I replied that I had already been in Washington twice, on my own
+initiative, conferring with some of his Congressional friends. "I am
+still," I said, "of the opinion I expressed to you and President Taylor
+four years ago. Plural marriage must be abandoned or our friends in
+Washington will not defend us."
+
+Four years before, when I had offered that opinion, President Taylor had
+cried out: "No! Plural marriage is the will of God! It's apostasy to
+question it!" And I paused now with the expectation that my father would
+say something of this sort. But, as I was afterwards to observe, it was
+part of his diplomacy, in conference, to pass the obvious opportunity of
+replying, and to remain silent when he was expected to speak, so that he
+might not be in the position of following the lead of his opponent's
+argument, but rather, by waiting his own time, be able to direct the
+conversation to his own purposes. He listened to me, silently, his eyes
+fixed on my face.
+
+"Senator Vest of Missouri," I went on, "has always been a strong
+opponent of what he considered unconstitutional legislation against us,
+but he tells me he'll no longer oppose proscription if we continue in an
+attitude of defiance. He says you're putting yourselves beyond
+assistance, by organized rebellion against the administration of the
+statutes." And I continued with instances of others among his friends
+who had spoken to the same purpose.
+
+When I had done, he took what I had said with a gesture that at once
+accepted and for the moment dismissed it; and he proceeded to a larger
+consideration of the situation, in words which I cannot pretend to
+recall, but to an effect which I wish to outline--because it not only
+accounts for the preservation of the Mormon people from all their
+dangers, but contains a reason why the world might have wished to see
+them preserved.
+
+The Mormons at this time had never written a line on social reform--
+except as the so-called "revelations" established a new social order--
+but they had practiced whole volumes. Their community was founded on the
+three principles of co-operation, contribution, and arbitration. By
+co-operation of effort they had realized that dream of the Socialists,
+"equality of opportunity"--not equality of individual capacity, which
+the accidents of nature prevent, but an equal opportunity for each
+individual to develop himself to the last reach of his power. By
+contribution by requiring each man to give one-tenth of his income to a
+common fund--they had attained the desired end of modern civilization,
+the abolition of poverty, and had adjusted the straps of the community
+burden to the strength of the individual to bear it. By arbitration,
+they had effected the settlement of every dispute of every kind without
+litigation; for their High Councils decided all sorts of personal or
+neighborhood disputes without expense of money to the disputants. The
+"storehouse of the Lord" had been kept open to fill every need of the
+poor among "God's people," and opportunities for self help had been
+created out of the common fund, so that neither unwilling idleness nor
+privation might mar the growth of the community or the progress of the
+individual.
+
+But Joseph Smith had gone further. Daring to believe himself the earthly
+representative of Omnipotence, whose duty it was to see that all had the
+rights to which he thought them entitled, and assuming that a woman's
+chief right was that of wifehood and maternity, he had instituted the
+practice of plural marriage, as a "Prophet of God," on the authority of
+a direct revelation from the Almighty. It was upon this rock that the
+whole enterprise, the whole experiment in religious communism, now
+threatened to split. Not that polygamy was so large an incident in the
+life of the community--for only a small proportion of the Mormons were
+living in plural marriage. And not that this practice was the cardinal
+sin of Mormonism--for among intelligent men, then as now, the great
+objection to the Church was its assumption of a divine authority to hold
+the "temporal power," to dictate in politics, to command action and to
+acquit of responsibility. But polygamy was the offense against
+civilization which the opponents of Mormonism could always cite in order
+to direct against the Church the concentrated antagonism of the
+governments of the Western world. And my father, in authorizing me to
+proceed to Washington as a sort of ambassador of the Church, evidently
+wished to impress upon me the larger importance of the value of the
+social experiment which the Mormons had, to this time, so successfully
+advanced.
+
+"It would be a cruel waste of human effort," he said, "if, after having
+attained comfort in these valleys--established our schools of art and
+science--developed our country and founded our industries--we should
+now be destroyed as a community, and the value of our experience lost to
+the world. We have a right to survive. We have a duty to survive. It
+would be to the profit of the nation that we should survive."
+
+But in order to survive, it was necessary to obtain some immediate
+mitigation of the enforcement of the laws against us. The manner in
+which they were being enforced was making compromise impossible, and the
+men who administered them stood in the way of getting a favorable
+hearing from the powers of government that alone could authorize a
+compromise. It was necessary to break this circle; and my father went
+over the names of the men in Washington who might help us. I could
+marvel at his understanding of these men and their motives, but we came
+to no plan of action until I spoke of what had been with me a sort of
+forlorn hope that I might appeal to President Cleveland himself.
+
+My father said thoughtfully: "What influence could you, a Republican,
+have with him? It's true that your youth may make an appeal--and the
+fact that you're pleading for your relatives, while not yourself a
+polygamist. But he would immediately ask us to abandon plural marriage,
+and that is established by a revelation from God which we cannot
+disregard. Even if the Prophet directed us, as a revelation from God, to
+abandon polygamy, still the nation would have further cause for quarrel
+because of the Church's temporal rule. No. I can make no promise. I can
+authorize no pledge. It must be for the Prophet of God to say what is
+the will of the Lord. You must see President Woodruff, and after he has
+asked for the will of the Lord I shall be content with his instruction."
+
+Now, I do not wish to say--though I did then believe it--that the
+First Councillor of the Mormon Church was prepared to have the doctrine
+of plural marriage abandoned in order to have the people saved. It is
+impossible to predicate the thoughts of a man so diplomatic, so astute,
+and at the same time so deeply religious and so credulous of all the
+miracles of faith. He did believe in Divine guidance. He was sincere in
+his submission to the "revelations" of the Prophet. But, in the
+complexity of the mind of man, even such a faith may be complicated with
+the strategies of foresight, and the priest who bows devoutly to the
+oracle may yet, even unconsciously, direct the oracle to the utterance
+of his desire. And if my father was--as I suspected--considering a
+recession from plural marriage, he had as justification the basic
+"revelation," given through "Joseph the Prophet," commanding that the
+people should hold themselves in subjection to the government under
+which they lived, "until He shall come Whose right it is to rule."
+
+We talked till midnight, in the quiet glow of the farmer's lamp-light,
+discussing possibilities, considering policies, weighing men; and then
+we parted--he to betake himself to whatever secure place of hiding he
+had found, and I to return to Ogden where I was then editing a
+newspaper. I was only twenty-nine years old, and the responsibility of
+the undertaking that had been entrusted to me weighed on my mind. I
+waited for a summons to confer with President Woodruff, but none came.
+Instead, my brother brought me word from the President that I must be
+"guided by the spirit of the Lord;" and, finally, my father sent me
+orders to consult the Second Councillor, Joseph F. Smith.
+
+Joseph F. Smith! Since the death of the founder of the Mormon Church,
+there have been three men pre-eminent in its history: Brigham Young, who
+led the people across the desert into the Salt Lake Valley and
+established them in prosperity there; George Q. Cannon, who directed
+their policies and secured their national rights; and Joseph F. Smith,
+who today rules over that prosperity and markets that political right,
+like a Sultan. Of all these, Smith is, to the nation now, of most
+importance--and sinisterly so.
+
+No Mormon in those years, I think, had more hate than Smith for the
+United States government; and surely none had better reasons to give
+himself for hate. He had the bitter recollection of the assassination of
+his father and his uncle in the jail of Carthage, Illinois; he could
+remember the journey that he had made with his widowed mother across the
+Mississippi, across Iowa, across the Missouri, and across the unknown
+and desert West, in ox teams, half starved, unarmed, persecuted by
+civilization and at the mercy of savages; he could remember all the
+toils and hardships of pioneer days "in the Valley;" he had seen the
+army of '58 arrive to complete, as he believed, the final destruction of
+our people; he had suffered from all the proscriptive legislation of
+"the raid," been outlawed, been in exile, been in hiding, hunted like a
+thief. He had been taught, and he firmly believed, that the Smiths had
+been divinely appointed to rule, in the name of God, over all mankind.
+He believed that he--ordained a ruler over this world before ever the
+world was--had been persecuted by the hate and wickedness of men. He
+believed it literally; he preached it literally; he still believes and
+still preaches it. I did not then sympathize with this point of view,
+any more than I do now; but I did sympathize with him in the hardships
+that he had already endured and in the trials that he was still enduring--
+in common with the rest of us. The bond of community persecution
+intensified my loyalty. I felt for him almost as I felt for my own
+father. I went to him with the young man's trust in age made wise by
+suffering.
+
+I had been directed to call on him in the President's offices, in Salt
+Lake City, where he was concealed, for the moment, under the name of
+"Mack"--the name that he used "on the underground"--and I went with my
+brother, late at night, to see him there. The President's offices were
+at that time in a little one-story plastered house that had been built
+by Brigham Young between two of his famous residences, the "Beehive
+House" and the "Lion House" (in which some twelve or fourteen of his
+wives had lived). The three houses were within the enclosure of a high
+cobblestone wall built by Brigham Young; and at night the great gate of
+the wall was shut and locked. We hammered discreetly on its panels of
+mountain pine, until a guard answered our knocking, recognized our
+voices and admitted us.
+
+"He's in there," he said, pointing to the darkened windows of the
+offices--toward which he led us.
+
+He unlocked the front door--having evidently locked it when he went to
+the gate--and he explained to a waiting attendant: "These brethren have
+an appointment. They wish to see Brother Mack."
+
+The attendant led us down a dimly-lighted hall, through the public
+offices of the President into a rear room, a sort of retiring room,
+carpeted, furnished with bookcases, chairs, a table. The window blinds
+had all been carefully drawn.
+
+Joseph F. Smith was waiting for us--a tall, lean, long-bearded man of a
+commanding figure standing as if our arrival had stopped him in some
+anxious pacing of the carpet. His overcoat and his hat had been thrown
+on a chair. He greeted us with the air of one who is hurried, and sat
+down tentatively; and as soon as we came to the question of my trip to
+Washington, he broke out:
+
+"These scoundrels here must be removed--if there's any way to do it.
+They're trying to repeat the persecutions of Missouri and Illinois. They
+want to despoil us of our heritage--of our families. I'm sick of being
+hunted like a wild beast. I've done no harm to them or theirs. Why can't
+they leave us alone to live our religion and obey the commandments of
+God and build up Zion?" He had begun to stride up and down the floor
+again, in a sort of driven and angry helplessness. "I thought Cleveland
+would stop this damnable raid and make them leave us in peace--but he's
+as bad as the rest. Can't they see that these carpet baggers are only
+trying to rob us? Make them see that. The hounds! Sometimes it seems to
+me that the Lord is letting these iniquities go on so that the nation
+may perish in its sins all the sooner!"
+
+He sneered at John W. Young who had gone to Washington for the Church.
+(I had met Smith himself there, earlier in the year.) "I thought he'd
+accomplish something," he said, "with his fashionable home and his--
+[**missing text?**]
+He's using money enough! He's down there, taking things easy, while the
+rest of us are driven from pillar to post." He attacked the Federal
+authorities, Governor West, the "whole gang." He cried: "I love my wives
+and my children--whom the Lord gave me. I love them more than my life--
+more than anything in the world--except my religion! And here I am,
+fleeing from place to place, from the wrath of the wicked--and they're
+left in sorrow and suffering."
+
+His face was pallid with emotion, and his voice came now hard with
+exasperation against his enemies and now husky with a passionate
+affection for his family--a man of fifty, graybearded, quivering in a
+nervous transport of excitement that jerked him up and down the room,
+gesticulating.
+
+When he had worn out his first anger of revolt, I brought the
+conversation round to the question of polygamy, by asking him about a
+provisional constitution for statehood which the non-polygamous Mormons
+had recently adopted. It contained a clause making polygamy a
+misdemeanor. "I would have seen them all damned," he said, "before I
+would have yielded it, but I'm willing to try the experiment, if any
+good can come."
+
+He had, I gathered, no aversion to "deceiving the wicked," but he was
+opposed to leading his people away from their loyalty to the doctrine of
+plural marriage, by conceding anything that might weaken their faith in
+it. And yet this impression may misrepresent him. He was too agitated,
+too exasperated, for any serious reflection on the situation.
+
+My brother had gone--to keep some other engagement--and I stayed late,
+talking as long as Smith seemed to wish to talk. He rose at last and
+"blessed" me, his hands on my head, in a return to some larger trust in
+his religious authority; and I left him--with very doubtful and mixed
+emotions. His natural violence and his lack of discipline had been
+matters of common gossip among our people, and I had heard of them from
+childhood; but I had supposed that tribulations would, by this time,
+have matured him. There was something compelling in his unsoftened
+turbulence, but nothing encouraging for me as a messenger of
+conciliation. I felt that there would be no help come from him in my
+task, and I dropped him from my reckoning.
+
+I had made up my mind to a plan that was almost as desperate as the
+conditions it sought to cure--a plan that was in some ways so absurd
+that I felt like keeping it concealed for fear of ridicule--and I went
+about my preparations for departure in a sort of hopeless hope. As the
+train drew out from Ogden, I looked back at the mountains from my car
+window, and saw again, in the spectacle of their power, the pathos of
+our people--as if it were the nation of my worship that bulked there so
+huge above the people of my love--and I, puny in my little efforts,
+going out to plot an intercession, to appeal for a truce! It was almost
+as if I were the son of a Confederate leader journeying to Washington,
+on the eve of the Civil War, to attempt to stand between North and South
+and hold back their opposing armies, single-handed.
+
+These are the things a man does when he is young.
+
+
+
+Chapter II
+
+
+
+On A Mission to Washington
+
+
+
+I went discredited, as an envoy, by an incident of personal conflict
+with the Federal authorities; and I wish to relate that incident before
+I proceed any farther. I must relate it soon, because it came up for
+explanation in one of my first interviews with President Cleveland; and
+I wish to relate it now, because it was so typical of the day and the
+condition from which we had to save ourselves.
+
+In the winter of 1885-6, the United States Marshals had been pursuing my
+father from place to place with such determined persistence that it was
+evident his capture was only a matter of time. We believed that if he
+were arrested and tried before Chief Justice Zane--with District
+Attorney Dickson and Assistant District Attorney Varian prosecuting--he
+would be convicted on so many counts that he would be held in prison
+indefinitely--that he might, in fact, end his days there. There was the
+rumor of a boast, to this effect, made by Federal officers; and we
+misunderstood them and their motives, in those days, sufficiently to
+accept the unjust report as well-founded.
+
+My father, as First Councillor of the Church, had proposed to President
+Taylor that every man who was living in plural marriage should surrender
+himself voluntarily to the court and plead: "I entered into this
+covenant of celestial marriage with a personal conviction that it was an
+order revealed by our Father in Heaven for the salvation of mankind. I
+have kept my covenant in purity. I believed that no constitutional law
+of the country could forbid this practice of a religious faith. As the
+laws of Congress conflict with my sense of submission to the will of the
+Lord, I now offer myself, here, for whatever judgment the courts of my
+country may impose." He believed that such a course would vindicate the
+sincerity of the men who had engaged in polygamy and defied the law in
+an assumption of religious immunity; and he believed that the world
+would pause to reconsider its judgment upon us, if it saw thousands of
+men--the bankers, the farmers, the merchants, and all the religious
+leaders of a civilized community--marching in a mass to perform such an
+act of faith.
+
+But President Taylor was not prepared for a movement that would have
+recommended itself better to the daring genius of Brigham Young. Taylor
+had given himself into the custody of the officers of the law once--in
+Carthage, Illinois--with Joseph Smith and his brother, Hyrum Smith; and
+Taylor had been wounded by the mob that broke into the jail and shot the
+Smiths to death. This, perhaps, had cured him of any faith in the
+protecting power of innocency. He decided against voluntary surrender;
+and now that my father's liberty was so seriously threatened, he ordered
+him to go either to Mexico or to the Sandwich Islands--his old mission
+field--where he would be beyond the reach of the United States
+authorities.
+
+My father believed that if he left Utah, his recession might tend to
+placate the government and soften the severity of the prosecutions of
+the Mormons; and accordingly, on the night of February 12, 1886, he
+boarded a west-bound Central Pacific train at Willard. The Federal
+officers in some way learned of it; he was arrested, on the train, at
+Humboldt Wells, Nevada, and brought back to Utah. Near Promontory he
+fell from the steps of the moving car, at night, in the midst of an
+alkali desert, and hurt himself seriously. He was recaptured and brought
+to Salt Lake City on a stretcher, in a special car, guarded by a squad
+of soldiers from Fort Douglas, with loaded muskets, and a captain with a
+conspicuous sword. He was taken to Judge Zane's chambers and placed
+under bonds of $25,000. Immediately two bench warrants were issued by a
+United States Commissioner, and these were served upon him while he lay
+on a mattress on the floor of Zane's office. Two more bonds of $10,000
+each were given. He was then taken to his home.
+
+Later--(President Taylor still insisting that he must not stand trial)--
+he disappeared again, "on the underground," and his bonds were
+declared forfeited. But in the meantime, while the grand jury was
+hearing testimony against him, one of the beloved women of his family
+was called for examination, and District Attorney Dickson asked her some
+questions that deeply wounded her. She returned home weeping. My
+brothers and I felt that the questions had been needlessly offensive,
+and after an indignant discussion of the matter, I undertook to
+remonstrate personally with Mr. Dickson.
+
+If I had been as wise, then, as I sometimes think I am now, I should
+have realized that a meeting between us was dangerous; that the feeling,
+on our side at least, was too warm for calm remonstrances. And I should
+not have taken with me a younger brother, about sixteen years old, with
+all the hot-headedness of youth. Fortunately we did not go armed.
+
+We sought Dickson in the evening, at the Continental Hotel--the old,
+adobe Continental with its wide porches and its lawn trees--and we
+found him in the lobby. I asked him to step out on the porch, where I
+might speak with him in private. He came without a moment's hesitation.
+He was a big, handsome, black-bearded man in the prime of his strength.
+
+We had scarcely exchanged more than a few sentences formally, when my
+brother drew back and struck him a smashing blow in the face. Dickson
+grappled with me, a little blinded, and I called to the boy to run--
+which he very wisely did. Dickson and I were at once surrounded, and I
+was arrested.
+
+Ordinarily the incident would have been trivial enough, but in the
+alarmed state of the public mind it was magnified into an attempt on the
+part of George Q. Cannon's sons to take the life of the United States
+District Attorney. Indictments were found against my brother and myself,
+and against a cousin who happened to be in another part of the hotel at
+the time of the attack. Some weeks later, when the excitement had rather
+died down, I went to the District Attorney's office and arranged with
+his assistant, Mr. Varian, that the indictments against my brother (who
+had escaped from Utah) and my cousin (who was wholly innocent) should be
+quashed, and that I should plead guilty to a charge of assault and
+battery. On this understanding, I appeared in court before Chief Justice
+Zane.
+
+But Mr. Varian, having consulted with Mr. Dickson, had learned that I
+had not struck the blow--though, as the elder brother, I was morally
+responsible for it--and he suggested to the court that sentence be
+suspended. This, Justice Zane seemed prepared to do, but I objected. I
+was a newspaper writer (as I explained), and I felt that if I criticized
+the court thereafter for what I believed to be a harshness that amounted
+to persecution, I could be silenced by the imposition of the suspended
+sentence; and if I failed to criticize, I should be false to what I
+considered my duty. I did not wish to be put in any such position; and I
+said so.
+
+Justice Zane had a respect for the constitution and the statutes that
+amounted to a creed of infallibility. He was the most superbly rigid
+pontiff of legal justice that I ever knew. A man of unspotted character,
+a Puritan, of a sincerity that was afterwards accepted and admired from
+end to end of Utah, he was determined to vindicate the essential
+supremacy of the civil law over the ecclesiastical domination in the
+territory; and every act of insubordination against that law was
+resented and punished by him, unforgivingly. He promptly sentenced me to
+three months in the County jail and a fine of $150.
+
+My imprisonment was, of course, a farce. I was merely confined, most of
+the time, in a room in the County Court House, where I lived and worked
+as if I were in my home. But the sentence remained on my record as a
+sufficient mark of my recalcitrance; and I knew that it would not aid me
+in my appeal to Washington, where I intended to argue--as the first
+wise concession needed of the Federal authorities--that Chief Justice
+Zane should no longer be retained on the bench in Utah, but should be
+succeeded by a man more gentle. He was the great figure among our
+prosecutors; the others were District Attorney Dickson and the two
+assistants, Mr. Varian and Mr. Riles. The square had only seemed to be
+broken by the recent retirement of Mr. Dickson; the strength of his
+purpose remained still in power, in the person of Judge Zane.
+
+And let me say that whatever my opinion was of these men, at that time,
+I recognize now that they were justified as officers of the law in
+enforcing the law. If it had not been for them, the Mormon Church would
+never have been brought to the point of abating one jot of its
+pretensions. All four men, as their records have since proved, were much
+superior to their positions as territorial officers. Utah's admiration
+for Judge Zane was shown, upon the composition of our differences with
+the nation, by the Mormon vote that placed him on the Supreme Court
+bench. Indeed, it is one of the strange psychologies of this
+reconciliation, that, as soon as peace was made, the strongest men of
+both parties came into the warmest friendship; our fear and hatred of
+our prosecutors changed to respect; and their opposition to our
+indissoluble solidarity changed to regard when they saw us devoting our
+strength to purposes of which they could approve. But now, in the midst
+of our contentions, the aspect of splendor in their legal authority had
+something baleful in it, for us; and we saw our own defiance set with a
+halo of martyrdom and illumined by the radiance of a Church oppressed!
+
+There was more than a glimmer of that radiance in my thoughts as I made
+the railroad journey from Utah to the East. The Union Pacific Railway,
+on which I rode, followed the route that the Mormons had taken in their
+long trek from the Missouri; and I could look from my car window and
+imagine them toiling across those endless plains--in their creaking
+wagons, drawn by their oxen and lean farm cows--choked with dust,
+burned by the sun of the prairies, their faces to the unknown dangers of
+an unknown wilderness, and behind them the cool-roomed houses, the moist
+fields, the tree-shaded streets, all the quiet and comfort of the
+settled life of homekeeping happiness that they had left. My own mother
+had come that road, a little girl of eight; and my mind was full of
+pictures of her, at school in a wagon-box, singing hymns with her elders
+around the camp fires at night, or kneeling with the mourners beside the
+grave of an infant relative buried by the roadside. Our train crossed
+the Loup Fork of the Platte almost within sight of the place where my
+father, a lad of twenty, had led across the river at nightfall, had been
+lost to his party, and had nearly perished, naked to the cold, before he
+struggled back to the camp. I could see their little circle of wagons
+drawn up at sunset against the menace of the Indians who snaked through
+the long grass to kill. I could feel some of their despair, and my heart
+lifted to their heroism. Never had such a migration been made by any
+people with fewer of the concomitants of their civilization. Their arms
+had been taken from them at Nauvoo; they had bartered their goods for
+wagons and cattle to carry them; even the grain that they brought, for
+food, had to be saved for seed. They felt themselves devoted to
+destruction by the people with whose laws and institutions they had come
+in conflict, and they went forth bravely, trusting in the power of the
+God whom they were determined to worship according to their despised
+belief.
+
+Now they had built themselves new homes and meeting-houses in the
+fertile "Valley;" and the civilization that they had left, having
+covered the distance of their exile, was punishing them again for their
+law-breaking fidelity to their faith. Surely they had suffered enough!
+Surely it was evident that suffering only made them strong to resist!
+Surely there must be somebody in power in Washington who could be
+persuaded to see that, where force had always failed, there might be
+some profit in employing gentleness!
+
+This, at least, was the appeal which I had planned to make. And I had
+decided to make it through Mr. Abraham S. Hewitt, then mayor of New York
+City, who had been a friend of my father in Congress. He was not in
+favor with the administration at Washington. He was personally
+unfriendly to President Cleveland. I was a stranger to him. But I had
+seen enough of him to know that he had the heart to hear a plea on
+behalf of the Mormons, and the brain to help me carry that plea
+diplomatically to President Cleveland.
+
+When I arrived in New York I set about finding him without the aid of
+any common friend. I did not try to reach him at his home, being aware
+that he might resent an intrusion of public matters upon his private
+leisure, and fearing to impair my own confidence by beginning with a
+rebuff. I decided to see him in his office hours.
+
+I cannot recall why I did not find him in the municipal buildings, but I
+well remember going to and fro in the streets in search of him, feeling
+at every step the huge city's absorption in its own press and hurry of
+affairs, and seeing the troubles of Utah as distant as a foreign war. It
+was with a very keen sense of discouragement that I took my place, at
+last, in the long line of applicants waiting for a word with the man who
+directed the municipal activities of this tremendous hive of eager
+energy.
+
+He was in the old Stewart building, on Broadway, near Park Place; and he
+had his desk in what was, I think, a temporary office--an empty shop
+used as an office--on the ground floor. There must have been fifty men
+ahead of me, and they were the unemployed, as I remember it, besieging
+him for work. They came to his desk, spoke, and passed with a rapidity
+that was ominous. As I drew nearer, I watched him anxiously, and saw the
+incessant, nervous, querulous activity of eyes, lips, hands, as he
+dismissed each with a word or a scratch of the pen, and looked up
+sharply at the next one.
+
+"Well, young man," he greeted me, "what do you want?"
+
+I replied: "I want a half hour of your time."
+
+"Good God," he said, in a sort of reproachful indignation, "I couldn't
+give it to the President of the United States."
+
+I felt the crowd of applicants pressing behind me. I knew the man's
+prodigious humanity. I knew that if I could only hold them back long
+enough--"Mr. Hewitt," I said, "it's more important even than that.
+It's to save a whole people from suffering--from destruction."
+
+He may have thought me a maniac; or it may be that the desperation of
+the moment sounded in my voice. He frowned intently up at me. "Who are
+you?"
+
+"I'm the son of your old friend in Congress, George Q. Cannon of Utah,"
+I said. "My father's in exile. He and his people are threatened with
+endless proscriptions. I want time to tell you."
+
+His impatience had vanished. His eyes were steadily kind and interested.
+"Can you come to the Board of Health, in an hour? As soon as I open the
+meeting, I'll retire and listen to you."
+
+I asked him for a card, to admit me to the meeting, having been stopped
+that morning at many doors. He gave it, nodded, and flashed his
+attention on the man behind me. I went out with the heady assurance that
+my first move had succeeded; but I went, too, with the restrained pulse
+of realizing that I had yet to join issue with the decisive event and do
+it warily.
+
+I do not remember where I found the Board of Health in session. I recall
+only the dark, official board-room, the members at the table, and--as
+the one small spot of light and interest to me--Mr. Hewitt's
+white-bearded face, as an attendant opened the door to me, and the
+Mayor, looking up alertly, nodded across the room, and waved his hand to
+a chair.
+
+As soon as he had opened the meeting, we withdrew together to a settee
+in some remote corner, and I began to tell him, as quickly as I could,
+the desperateness of the Mormon situation. "Yes," he said, "but why
+can't your people obey the law?"
+
+I explained what I have been trying to explain in this narrative--that
+these people, following a Church which they believed to be guided by
+God, and regarding themselves as objects of a religious persecution,
+could not be brought by means of force to obey a law against conscience.
+I explained that I was not pleading to save their pride but to spare
+them useless suffering; their history showed that no proscription, short
+of extermination outright, could overcome their resistance; but what
+force could not accomplish, a little sensible diplomacy might hope to
+effect. No first step could be made, by them, towards a composition of
+their differences with the law so long as the law was administered with
+a hostility that provoked hostility. But if we could obtain some
+mitigation of the law's severity, the leaders of the Church were willing
+to surrender themselves to the court--such of them as had not already
+died of their privations or served their terms of imprisonment--and a
+sense of gratitude for leniency would prepare the way for a recession
+from their present attitude of unconquerable antagonism.
+
+He listened gravely, knowing the situation from his own experience in
+Congress, and checking off the items of my argument with a nod of
+acceptance that came, often, before I had completed what I had to say.
+He asked: "Do you know President Cleveland?"
+
+I told him that I had seen the President several times but was not known
+to him.
+
+"Well," he said, "I may be able to help you indirectly. I don't care for
+Cleveland, and I wouldn't ask him for a favor if I were sinking. But
+tell me what plan you have in your mind, and I'll see if I can't aid you--
+through friends."
+
+I replied that I hoped to have some man appointed as Chief Justice in
+Utah who should adopt a less rigorous way of adjudicating upon the cases
+of polygamists; but that before he was selected--or at least before he
+knew of his appointment--I wished to talk with him and convert him to
+the idea that he could begin the solution of "the Mormon question" by
+having the leaders of the community come into his court and accept
+sentences that should not be inconsistent with the sovereignty of the
+law but not unmerciful to the subjects of that sovereignty.
+
+"The man you want," Mr. Hewitt said, "is here in New York--Elliot F.
+Sandford. He's a referee of the Supreme Court of this state--a fine
+man, great legal ability, courageous, of undoubted integrity. Come to
+me, tomorrow. I'll introduce you to him."
+
+It was the first time that I had even heard the name of Elliot F.
+Sandford; and I had not the faintest notion of how best to approach him.
+
+I did not find him in Mr. Hewitt's office, on the morrow; but the Mayor
+had communicated with him, and now gave me a letter of introduction to
+him; and I went alone to present it.
+
+He received me in his outer office, with a manner full of kindliness but
+non-committal. He glanced through my letter of introduction, and I tried
+to read him while he did it. He was not on the surface. He was a tall,
+dignified man, his hair turning gray--thoughtful, judicial--evidently a
+man who was not quick to decide. He led me into his private room, and
+sat down with the air of a lawyer who has been asked to take a case and
+who wishes first to hear all the details of the action.
+
+I began by describing the Mormon situation as I saw it in those days:
+that the Mormons were growing more desperately determined in their
+opposition, because they believed their prosecutors were persecuting
+them; that the District Attorney and his assistants were harsh to the
+point of heartlessness, and that Judge Zane (to us, then) acted like a
+religious fanatic in his judicial office; that nearly every Federal
+official in Utah had taken a tone of bigoted opposition to the people;
+and that the law was detested and the government despised because of the
+actions of Federal "carpet-baggers."
+
+I was prejudiced, no doubt, and partisan in my account of the state of
+affairs, but I did not exaggerate the facts as I saw them; I believed
+what I said.
+
+I did not really reach his sympathy until I spoke of the court system in
+Utah--the open venire, the employment of "professional jurors"--the
+legal doctrine of "segregation," under which a man might be separately
+indicted for every day of his living in plural marriage--and the result
+of all this: that the pursuit of defendants and the confiscation of
+property had become less an enforcement of law than a profitable legal
+industry.
+
+After two hours of argument and examination, I ended with an appeal to
+him to accept the opportunity to undertake a merciful assuagement of our
+misery. After so many years of failure on the part of the Federal
+authorities, he might have the distinction of calling into his court the
+Mormon leaders who had been most long and vainly sought by the law; and
+by sentencing them to a supportable punishment, he could begin the
+composition of a conflict that had gone on for half a century.
+
+He replied with reasons that expressed a kindly unwillingness to
+undertake the work. It would mean the sacrifice of his professional
+career in New York. He would be putting himself entirely outside the
+progression of advancement. His friends, here, would never understand
+why he had done it. The affairs of Utah had little interest for them.
+
+I saw that he was not convinced. His wife had been waiting some minutes
+in the outer office; he proposed that he should bring her in; and I
+gathered from his manner, that he expected her to pronounce against his
+accepting my solicitation, and so terminate our interview pleasantly,
+with the aid of the feminine social grace.
+
+Mrs. Sandford, when she entered, certainly looked the very lady to do
+the thing with gentle skill. She was handsome, with an animated
+expression, dark-eyed, dark-haired, charming in her costume, a woman of
+the smiling world, but maturely sincere and unaffected. I took a
+somewhat distracted impression of her greeting, and heard him begin to
+explain my proposal to her, as one hears a "silent partner" formally
+consulted by a man who has already made up his mind. But when I glanced
+at her, seated, her manner had changed. She was listening as if she were
+used to being consulted and knew the responsibilities of decision. She
+had the abstracted eye of impersonal consideration--silent--with now
+and then a slow, meditative glance at me.
+
+Her first question seemed merely femininely curious as to the domestic
+aspects of polygamy. How did the women endure it?
+
+I repeated a conversation I had once had with Frances Willard, who had
+said: "The woman's heart must ache in polygamy." To which I had made the
+obvious reply: "Don't women's hearts ache all over the world? Is there
+any condition of society in which women do not bear more than an equal
+share of the suffering?"
+
+Mrs. Sandford asked me pointedly whether I was living in polygamy?
+
+No, I was not.
+
+Did I believe in it?
+
+I believed that those did who practiced it.
+
+Why didn't I practice it?
+
+Those who practiced it believed that it had been authorized by a divine
+revelation. I had not received such a revelation. I did not expect to.
+
+Our talk warmed into a very intimate discussion of the lives of the
+Mormon people, but I supposed that she was moved only by a curiosity to
+which I was accustomed--a curiosity that was not necessarily
+sympathetic--the curiosity one might have about the domestic life of a
+Mohammedan. I took advantage of her curiosity to lead up to an
+explanation of how the proscription of polygamy was driving young
+Mormons into the practice, instead of frightening them from it. And so I
+arrived at another recountal of the miserable condition of persecution
+and suffering which I had come to ask her husband help us relieve; and I
+made my appeal again, to them both, with something of despair, because
+of my failure with him, and perhaps with greater effect because of my
+despair. She listened thoughtfully, her hands clasped.
+
+It did not seem that I had reached her--until she turned to him, and
+said unexpectedly "It seems to me that this is an opportunity--a larger
+opportunity than any I see here--to do a great deal of good."
+
+He did not appear as surprised as I was. He made some joking reference
+to his income and asked her if she would be willing to live on a salary
+of--How much was the salary of the Chief Justice of Utah?
+
+I thought it was about $3,000 a year.
+
+"Two hundred and fifty dollars a month," he said. "How many bonnets will
+that buy?"
+
+"No," she retorted, "you can't put the blame on my millinery bill. If
+that's been the cause of your hesitation, I'll agree to dress as becomes
+the wife of a poor but upright judge."
+
+In such a happy spirit of good-natured raillery, my petition was
+provisionally entertained, till I could see the President; and it is one
+of the curiosities of experience, as I look back upon it now, that a
+decision so momentous in the history of Utah owed its induction to the
+wisdom of a woman and was confirmed with a domestic pleasantry.
+
+I left them after we had arrived at the tacit understanding that if
+President Cleveland should make the appointment, Mr. Sandford would
+accept it with the end in view that I had proposed. I went to report my
+progress, in a cipher telegram, to Salt Lake City, and I recall the
+peculiarly mixed satisfaction with which I regarded my work, as I walked
+the streets of New York after this interview. In all that city of
+millions, I knew, there were few if any men who were the equal of my
+father in the essentials of manhood; and yet, before he could enjoy the
+liberties of which they were so lightly unconscious, he must endure the
+shame of a prison. I was rejoicing because I was succeeding in getting
+for him a sentence that should not be ruinous! I was pleased because a
+prospective judge had been persuaded to be not too harsh to him!
+
+It did not make me bitter. I realized that the peculiar faith which we
+had accepted was responsible for our peculiar suffering. I saw that we
+were working out our human destiny; and if that destiny was not of God,
+but merely the issue of human impulsion, still our only prospect of
+success would come of our bearing with experience patiently to make us
+strong.
+
+When I went back to Mr. Hewitt, to tell him of my success, I consulted
+with him upon the best way of approaching Mr. Cleveland. And he was not
+encouraging. In his opinion of the President, he had, as I could see,
+the impatient resentment which a quick-minded, nervous, small-bodied man
+has for the big, slow one whose mental operations are stubbornly
+deliberate and leisurely. And he was obviously irritated by the
+President's continual assumption that he was better than his party.
+"He's honest," he said, "by right of original discovery of what honesty
+is. No one can question his honesty. But as soon as he discovers a
+better thing than he knew previously, he announces it as if it were the
+discovery of a new planet. It may have been a commonplace for a
+generation. That doesn't signify. He announces it with such ponderosity
+that the world believes it's as prodigious as his sentences!"
+
+As for my own mission: I would have to be persistent, patient,
+and--lucky. "You'll have to be lucky, if you intend to persuade him to
+acquire any information. He's been so successful in instructing mankind
+that it's hard to get him to see he doesn't know all he ought to know
+about a public question. But he's honest and he's courageous. If you can
+convince him that your view is right, he'll carry but the conviction in
+spite of everything. In fact he'll be all the better pleased if it
+requires fearlessness and defiance of general sentimentality to carry it
+out."
+
+He gave me a letter to Mr. William C. Whitney, then Secretary of the
+Navy, explaining my purpose in coming to Washington, and asking him to
+obtain for me an interview with President Cleveland without using Mr.
+Hewitt's name. Then he shook hands with me, and wished me success. "I
+have the faith," he said, "that is without hope."
+
+That expressed my own feeling. The faith that was without hope!
+
+
+
+Chapter III
+
+
+
+Without A Country
+
+
+
+So I came to Washington. So I entered the capital of the government that
+commanded my allegiance and inspired my fear. I wonder whether another
+American ever saw that city with such eyes of envy, of aspiration, of
+wistful pride, of daunted admiration. Here were all the consecrations of
+a nation's memories, and they thrilled me, even while they pierced me
+with the sense that I was not, and might well despair of ever being, a
+citizen of their glory. Here were the monuments of patriotism in
+Statuary Hall, erected to the men whose histories had been the
+inspiration of my boyhood; and I remember how I stood before them,
+conscious that I was now almost an outlaw from their communion of
+splendor. I remember how I saw, with an indescribable conflict of
+feelings, the ranked graves of the soldiers in the cemetery at
+Arlington, and recollected that this very ground had been taken from
+General Lee, that heroic opponent of Federal authority--and read the
+tablet, "How sleep the brave who sink to rest by all their country's
+wishes bless'd,"--and bowed in spirit to the nation's benediction upon
+the men who had upheld its power. I was awed by a prodigious sense of
+the majesty of that power. I saw with fear its immovability to the
+struggles of our handful of people. And at night, walking under the
+trees of Lafayette Park, with all the odors of the southern Spring among
+the leaves, I looked at the lighted front of the White House and
+realized that behind the curtains of those quiet windows sat the ruler
+who held the almost absolute right of life and death over our community--
+as if it were the palace of a Czar that I must soon enter, with a
+petition for clemency, which he might refuse to entertain!
+
+When I had been in Washington, four years before, as secretary to
+Delegate John T. Caine of Utah, I had felt a younger assurance that our
+resistance would slowly wear out the Federal authority and carry us
+through to statehood. Four years of disaster had starved out that hope.
+The proposition had been established that Congress had supreme control
+over the territories; and there was no virtue either in our religious
+assumption of warrant to speak for God, or in our plea of inherent
+constitutional right to manage our own affairs. Thirty years earlier, my
+father had been elected Senator from the proposed state of Utah, and he
+had been rejected. In thirty years so little progress had been made! The
+way that was yet to travel seemed very long and very dark.
+
+Out of this mood of despondence I had to lift myself by an act of will.
+There, Washington itself helped me against itself. I made a pilgrimage
+of courage to its commemorations of courage, and drew an inspiration of
+hope from its monuments to the achievements of its past. And
+particularly I went to the house in which my father had lived when he
+had had his part in the statesman life of the capital, and animated my
+resolution with the thought that I must succeed in order that he might
+be restored in public honor.
+
+I narrate all this personal incident of emotion in the hope that it may
+help to explain a success that might otherwise seem inexplicable. The
+Mormon Church had, for years, employed every art of intrigue and
+diplomacy to protect itself in Washington. I wish to make plain that it
+was not by any superior cunning of negotiation that my mission
+succeeded. I undertook the task almost without instruction; I performed
+it without falsehood; I had nothing in my mind but an honest loyalty for
+my own people, a desire to be a citizen of my native country, and a
+filial devotion to the one man in the world, whom I most admired.
+
+When I delivered my letter of introduction from Mr. Hewitt to Mr.
+William C. Whitney, Secretary of the Navy, I found him very busy with
+his work in his department--carrying out the plans that established the
+modern American navy and entitled him to be called the "father" of it.
+He withdrew from the men who were discussing designs and figures at a
+table in his room, and sat with me before a window that looked out upon
+the White House and its grounds; and he listened to me, interestedly,
+genially, but with a thought still (as I could see) for the affairs that
+my arrival had interrupted. He struck me as a man who was used to having
+many weighty matters together on his mind, without finding his attention
+crowded by them all, and without being impatient in his consideration of
+any.
+
+I developed with him an idea which I had been considering: that the
+President might not only help the Mormons by taking up their case, but
+might gain political prestige for the coming campaign for re-election,
+by adjusting the dissentions in Utah. He heard me with a twinkle. He
+thought an interview might be arranged. He made an appointment to see me
+in the afternoon and to have with him Colonel Daniel S. Lamont, the
+President's secretary, who was then Mr. Cleveland's political "trainer."
+
+My meeting with Colonel Lamont, in the afternoon, began jocularly.
+"This," Mr. Whitney introduced me, "is the young man who has a plan to
+use that mooted--and booted--Mormon question to re-elect the
+President."
+
+"Hardly that, Mr. Secretary," I said. "I have a plan to help my father
+and his colleagues to regain their citizenship. If President Cleveland's
+re-election is essential to it, I suppose I must submit. You know I'm a
+Republican."
+
+They laughed. We sat down. And I found at once that Colonel Lamont
+understood the situation in Utah, thoroughly. He had often discussed it,
+he said, with the Church's agents in Washington. I went over the
+situation with him, as I had gone over it with Mr. Sandford, in careful
+detail. He seemed surprised at my assurance that my father and the other
+proscribed leaders of the Church would submit themselves to the courts
+if they could do so on the conditions that I proposed; I convinced him
+of the possibility by referring him to Mr. Richards, the Church's
+attorney in Washington, for a confirmation of it. I pointed out that if
+these leaders surrendered, President Cleveland could be made the direct
+beneficiary, politically, of their composition with the law.
+
+Colonel Lamont was a small, alert man with a conciseness of speech and
+manner that is associated in my memory with the bristle of his red
+mustache cut short and hard across a decisive mouth. He radiated nervous
+vitality; and I understood, as I studied him, how President Cleveland,
+with his infinite patience for [** missing text?**] survived so well in
+the multitudinous duties of his office--having as his secretary a man
+born with the ability to cut away the non-essentials, and to pass on to
+Mr. Cleveland only the affairs worthy of his careful deliberation.
+
+I was doubtful whether I should tell Colonel Lamont and Mr. Whitney of
+my conversation with Mr. Sandford. I decided that their considerateness
+entitled them to my full confidence, and I told them all--begging them,
+if I was indiscreet or undiplomatic, to charge the offense to my lack of
+experience rather than to debit it against my cause.
+
+They passed it off with banter. It was understood that the President
+should not be told--and that I should not tell him--of my talk with
+Mr. Sandford. Colonel Lamont undertook to arrange an audience with Mr.
+Cleveland for me. "You had better wait," he said, "until I can approach
+him with the suggestion that there's a young man here, from Utah, whom
+he ought to see."
+
+I knew, then, that I was at least well started on the open road to
+success. I knew that if Colonel Lamont said he would help me, there
+would be no difficulties in my way except those that were large in the
+person of the President himself.
+
+Two days later I received the expected word from Colonel Lamont, and I
+went to the White House as a man might go to face his own trial. I met
+the secretary in one of the eastern upstairs rooms of the official
+apartments; and after the usual crowd had passed out, he led me into the
+President's office--which then overlooked the Washington monument, the
+Potomac and the Virginia shore. Mr. Cleveland was working at his desk.
+Colonel Lamont introduced me by name, and added, "the young man from
+Utah, of whom I spoke."
+
+The President did not look up. He was signing some papers, bending
+heavily over his work. It took him a moment or two to finish; then he
+dropped his pen, pushed aside the papers, turned awkwardly in his swivel
+chair and held out his hand to me. It was a cool, firm hand, and its
+grasp surprised me, as much as the expression of his eyes--the steady
+eyes of complete self-control, composure, intentness.
+
+I had come with a prejudice against him; I was a partisan of Mr. Blame,
+whom he had defeated for the Presidency; I believed Mr. Blame to be the
+abler man. But there was something in Mr. Cleveland's hand and eyes to
+warn me that however slow-moving and even dull he might appear, the
+energy of a firm will compelled and controlled him. It stiffened me into
+instant attention.
+
+He made some remark to Colonel Lamont to indicate that our conversation
+was to occupy about half an hour. He asked me to be seated in a chair at
+the right-hand side of his desk. He said almost challengingly: "You're
+the young man they want I should talk to about the Utah question."
+
+The tone was not exactly unkind, but it was not inviting. I said, "Yes,
+sir."
+
+He looked at me, as a judge might eye the suspect of circumstantial
+evidence. "You're the son of one of the Mormon leaders."
+
+I admitted it.
+
+And then he began.
+
+He began with an account of what he had done to compose the differences
+in Utah. He explained and justified the appointments he had made there--
+appointments that had been recommended by Southern senators and
+representatives who, because they were Southerners, were opposed to the
+undue extension and arbitrary use of Federal power. He had made Caleb W.
+West of Kentucky governor of Utah on the recommendation of Senator
+Blackburn of Kentucky, my father's friend. He had made Frank H. Dyer,
+originally of Mississippi, United States Marshal. He had appointed a
+District Attorney in whom he had every confidence. He had a right to
+believe that these men, recommended by the statesmen of the South, would
+execute and adjudicate the laws in Utah according to the most lenient
+Southern construction of Federal rights. He dwelt upon Governor West's
+charitable intentions towards the Mormon leaders, went over West's
+efforts at pacification in accurate detail, and told of West's chagrin
+at his failure--with an irritation that showed how disappointed he
+himself was with the continued recurrence of the Mormon troubles.
+
+I had to tell him that the situation had not improved, and his face
+flushed with an anger that he made no attempt to conceal. He declared
+that the fault must lie in our obstinate determination to hold ourselves
+superior to the law. He could not sympathize with our sufferings, he
+said, since they were self-inflicted. He admitted that he had once been
+opposed to the Edmunds-Tucker bill, but felt now that it was justified
+by the immovability of the Mormons. All palliatives had failed. The
+patience of Congress had been exhausted. There was no recourse, except
+to make statutes cutting enough to destroy the illegal practices and
+unlawful leadership in the Mormon community.
+
+"Mr. President," I pleaded, "I've lived in Utah all my life. I know
+these people from both points of view. You know of the situation only
+from Federal office holders who consider it solely with regard to their
+official responsibility to you and to the country. Why not learn what
+the Mormons think?"
+
+He replied that it was not within the province of the President--his
+power or his duty--to consider the mental attitude of men who were
+opposing the enforcement of the law.
+
+It was an inexcusable offense against the general welfare that one
+community should be rising continually against the Federal authority and
+occupying the time and attention of Congress with a determined
+recalcitrance.
+
+For an hour, he continued, with vigor and dignity, to describe the
+situation as he saw it; and he chilled me to the heart with his
+determination to concede nothing more to a community that had refused to
+be placated by what he had already conceded. I listened without trying,
+without even wishing, to interrupt him; for I had been warned by Mr.
+Whitney and Colonel Lamont that it would be wise to let him deliver
+himself of his opinion before attempting to influence him to a milder
+one; and I could not contradict anything that he said, for he made no
+misstatements of fact.
+
+Colonel Lamont had entered once, and had withdrawn again when he saw
+that Mr. Cleveland was still talking. At the end of about an hour, the
+President rose. "Mr. Cannon," he said, "I don't see what more I can do
+than has already been done. Tell your people to obey the law, as all
+other citizens are required to obey it, and they'll find that their
+fellow-citizens of this country will do full justice to their heroism
+and their other good qualities. If the law seems harsh, tell them that
+there's an easy way to avoid its cruelty by simply getting out from
+under its condemnation."
+
+His manner indicated that the conference was at an end. He reached out
+his hand as if to drop the subject then and forever, as far as I was
+concerned. "Mr. President," I asked, with the composure of desperation,
+"do you really want to settle the Mormon question?"
+
+He looked at me with the first gleam of humor that had shown in his eyes--
+and it was a humor of peculiar richness and unction. "Young man," he
+asked, "what have I been saying to you all this time? What have I been
+working for, ever since I first took up the consideration of this
+subject at the beginning of my term?"
+
+"Mr. President," I replied, "if you were traveling in the West, and came
+to an unbridged stream with your wagon train, and saw tracks leading
+down into the water where you thought there was a ford, you would
+naturally expect to cross there, assuming that others had done so before
+you. But suppose that some man on the bank should say to you: 'I've
+watched wagon trains go in here for more than twenty years, and I've
+never yet seen one come out on the other side. Look over at that
+opposite bank. You see there are no wagon tracks there. Now, down the
+river a piece, is a place where I think there's a ford. I've never got
+anybody to try it yet, but certainly it's as good a chance as this one!'
+Mr. President, what would you do? Would you attempt a crossing where
+there had been twenty years of failure, or would you try the other place--
+on the chance that it might take you over?"
+
+He had been regarding me with slowly fading amusement that gave way to
+an expression of grave attention.
+
+"I've been watching this situation for several years," I went on, "and
+it seems to me that there's the possibility of a just, a humane, and a
+final settlement of it, by getting the Mormon leaders to come
+voluntarily into court--and it can be done!--with the assurance that
+the object of the administration is to correct the community evil--not
+to exterminate the Mormon Church or to persecute its 'prophets,' but to
+secure obedience to the law and respect for the law, and to lead Utah
+into a worthy statehood."
+
+I paused. He thought a moment. Then he said: "I can't talk any longer,
+now. Make another appointment with Lamont. I want to hear what you have
+to say." And he dismissed me.
+
+Colonel Lamont told me to come back on the following afternoon; and I
+went away with the dubious relief of feeling that if I had not yet won
+my case I had, at least, succeeded in having judgment reserved. I went
+to work to arrange my arguments for the morrow, to make them as concise
+as possible and to divide them into brief chapters in case I should have
+as little opportunity for extended explanations as the President had
+been giving me. I saw that the whole matter was gloomy and oppressive to
+him--that his responsibility was as dark on his mind as our sufferings--
+and I took the hint of his amused interest, in order to work out ways
+of brightening the subject with anecdote and illustration.
+
+I saw Colonel Lamont on the morrow, and he beamed a congratulation on
+me. "You've aroused his curiosity," he said. "You've interested him."
+
+He had made an appointment some days ahead; and when I entered the
+President's office to keep that appointment, I found Mr. Cleveland at
+his desk, as if he had not moved in the interval, laboriously reading
+and signing papers as before. It gave me an impression of immovability,
+of patient and methodical relentlessness that was disheartening.
+
+But as soon as he turned to me, I found him another man. He was
+interested, receptive, almost genial. He gave me an opportunity to cover
+the whole ground of my case, and I went over it step by step. He showed
+no emotion when I recited some of the incidents of pathetic suffering
+among our people; and at first he seemed doubtful whether he should be
+amused by the humorous episodes that I narrated. But I did not wish
+merely to amuse him; I was trying to convey to his mind (without saying
+so) that so long as a people could suffer and laugh too, they could
+never be overcome by the mere reduplication of their sufferings. He
+looked squarely at me, with a most determined front, when I told him
+that the Mormons would be ground to powder before they would yield.
+"They can't yield," I warned him. "They're like the passengers on a
+train going with a mad speed down a dangerous grade. For any of them to
+attempt to jump is simple destruction. They can only pray to Providence
+to help them. But if that train were to be brought to a stop at some
+station where they could alight with anything like self-respect, there
+would be many of them glad to get off--even though the train had not
+arrived at its 'revealed' destination."
+
+I do not remember--and if I did, it would be tedious to relate--the
+exact sequence and progression of argument in this interview and the
+dozen others that succeeded it. Mr. Cleveland became more and more
+interested in the Mormon people, their family life, their religion, and
+their politics. He was as painstaking in acquiring information about
+them as he was in performing all the other duties of his office. I might
+have been discouraged by the number and apparent ineffectiveness of my
+interviews with him, had not Colonel Lamont kept me informed of the
+growth of the President's good feeling and of his genuinely paternal
+interest in the people of Utah. It became more than a personal desire
+with Mr. Cleveland to benefit politically by a settlement of the Mormon
+troubles, if indeed he had ever had such a desire. His humanity was
+enlisted, his conscience appealed to.
+
+He asked me, once, if I knew anything of Mr. Sandford, and I replied
+that I knew him and believed in him. He told me, at last, that he was
+going to appoint Mr. Sandford Chief Justice of Utah, and added
+significantly, "I suppose he will get in touch with the situation." I
+accepted this remark as a permission to confer with Mr. Sandford, and I
+journeyed to New York to see him and to renew the understanding I had
+with him.
+
+He was appointed Chief justice on the 9th day of July, 1888, and--as
+the Mormon people expressed it--"the backbone of the raid was broken."
+On August 26, 1888, he arrived in Salt Lake City. On September 17, my
+father came before him in court and pleaded guilty to two indictments
+charging him with "unlawful cohabitation." He was fined $450 and
+sentenced to the penitentiary for one hundred and seventy-five days. His
+example was followed by a number of prominent Mormons, including Francis
+Marion Lyman, who is today the President of the Quorum of the twelve
+Apostles and next in rank for the Presidency. It is true that not many
+cases, relatively speaking, came to Justice Sandford; but the leader
+whom the authorities were most eager to subjugate under Federal power
+was judged and sentenced; and the effect, both on the country and on the
+Mormon people, was all that we had expected.
+
+There are memories in a man's life that have a peculiar value. One such,
+to me, is the picture I have in mind of my father undergoing his
+penitentiary sentence, wearing his prison clothes with an
+unconsciousness that makes me still feel a pride in the power of the
+human soul to rise superior to the deformities of circumstance. Charles
+Wilcken (whom I have described driving us to Bountiful) was visiting him
+one day in the prison office, when a guard entered with his hat on.
+Wilcken snatched it from his head. "Never enter his presence," he said,
+"without taking it off." And the guard never did again . . . . I salute
+the memory. I come to it with my head bare and my back stiffened. I see
+in that calm face the possibilities of the human spirit. He was a man!
+
+He spent his time, there, as he would have spent it elsewhere, writing,
+conferring with the agents of his authority, planning for his people. I
+saw he was aware that he would emerge from his imprisonment a free man,
+personally, but still enslaved by the conditions of the community; and I
+knew that he would use his freedom to free the others. I knew that he
+had accepted his sentence with this end in view. In plain words, I knew
+now--though he never said so--that he was looking toward the necessary
+recession from the doctrine of polygamy, and that he may have counted on
+the spectacle of his imprisonment to help prepare his people for a
+general submission to the law.
+
+With the entry of these leaders into prison, the Mormons felt for them a
+warmer admiration, a deeper reverence; but it was mingled with a
+gratitude to the nation for the leniency of the court and an awed sense,
+too, of the power of the civil law. President Woodruff secretly and
+tentatively withdrew his necessary permission, as head of the Church, to
+the solemnization of any more plural marriages; and he ordered the
+demolition of the Endowment House in which such marriages had been
+chiefly celebrated. Many of the non-Mormons, who had despaired of any
+solution of the troubles in Utah, now began to hope. The country had
+been impoverished; the Mormons had been deprived of much of their
+substance and financial vigor; and reasons of business prudence among
+the Gentiles weighed against a continuance of proscription. Some of them
+distrusted the motives of their own leaders more than they did the
+Mormon people. Some were weary of the quarrel. For humane reasons, for
+business reasons, for the sake of young Utah, it was argued that the
+persecution should end.
+
+But in the years 1888 and 1889, thousands of newcomers arrived in Utah
+with a strong antagonism to the religion and the political authority of
+the Mormon Church; and, with the growth of Gentile population, there
+came a natural determination on their part to obtain control of the
+local governments of cities and counties. In opposing this movement, the
+power of the Church was again solidified. By 1889, the Gentiles had
+taken the city governments of Ogden and Salt Lake City, had elected
+members of the legislature in Salt Lake County, and had carried the
+passage of a Public School Bill, against the timid and secret opposition
+of the Church. President Cleveland had been defeated and succeeded by
+President Harrison; and Chief Justice Sandford had been removed and
+Chief Justice Zane reinstated. (He did not adjudicate with his previous
+rigor, however, because of the success of Justice Sandford's policy of
+leniency.) The Church made no move publicly to repudiate polygamy, and
+its silent attitude of defiance, in this regard, gave a battle cry to
+all its enemies.
+
+The crisis was precipitated by a movement that had begun in the
+territory of Idaho, where the Mormons had been disfranchised by means of
+a test oath--(a provision still remaining in the Idaho state
+constitution, but now nullified by the political power of the Mormon
+leaders in Salt Lake City.) A bill, known as the Cullom-Struble bill,
+was introduced at Washington, to do in Utah what had been done in Idaho.
+
+The Church was then directed by President Woodruff and his two
+Councillor's, George Q. Cannon and Joseph F. Smith. But President
+Woodruff was as helpless in the political world as a nun. He was a
+gentle, earnest old man, patiently ingenuous and simple-minded, with a
+faith in the guidance of Heaven that was only greater than my father's
+because it was unmixed with any earthly sagacity. He had the mind, and
+the appearance, of a country preacher, and even when he was "on the
+underground" he used to do his daily "stint" of farm labor, secretly,
+either at night or in the very early morning. He was a successful farmer
+(born in Connecticut), of a Yankee shrewdness and industry. He
+recognized that in order to get a crop of wheat, it was necessary to do
+something more than trust in the Lord. But in administering the affairs
+of the Church, he seemed to have no such sophistication.
+
+I can see him yet, at the meetings of the Presidency, opening his mild
+blue eyes in surprised horror at a report of some new danger threatening
+us. "My conscience! My conscience!" he would cry. "Is that so, brother!"
+When he was assured that it was so, he would say, resignedly: "The Lord
+will look after us!" And then, after a silence, turning to his First
+Councillor, he would ask: "What do you think we ought to do, Brother
+George Q.?"
+
+The Second Councillor, Joseph F. Smith, sat at these meetings, in a
+saturnine reserve and silence, either nursing his concealed thought or
+having none. When a decision had been suggested, he was appealed to and
+added his assent. It always seemed to me that he was sulkily sleepy; but
+this impression may have come from the contrast of the First Councillor's
+mental alertness and the bright cheerfulness of the President--who
+never, to my knowledge, showed the slightest bitterness against anybody.
+President Woodruff believed that all the persecutions of the Mormons
+were due to the Devil's envy of the Lord's power as it showed itself in
+the establishment of the Mormon Church: and he assumed that the Gentiles
+did the work they were tempted to do against us, because the Holy Spirit
+had not yet ousted the evil from their souls. He had no fear of the
+ultimate triumph of the Church, because he had no fear of the ultimate
+triumph of God. Whenever he could escape for a day from the worldly
+duties of his office, he went fishing!
+
+When the progress of the Cullom-Struble bill began to make its
+threatening advance, my father went secretly to Washington; and a short
+time afterwards, word came to me in Ogden, through the Presidency, that
+he wished me to arrange my business affairs for a long absence from
+Utah, and follow him to the capital.
+
+I found him there, in the office of Delegate John T. Caine of Utah--the
+cluttered office of a busy man--and he explained, composedly, why he
+had sent for me. The Cullom-Struble bill had been favorably considered
+by the Senate Committee on Territories, and the disfranchisement of all
+the Mormons of Utah seemed imminent. Every argument, political or legal,
+had been used against the measure, in vain. Since I, a non-polygamous
+Mormon, would be disfranchised if the bill became law, he thought I
+might be a good advocate against it. He said: "I have not appeared in
+the matter. None of our friends know that I am here. If it were known,
+it might only increase our difficulties. Say nothing of it. We have been
+at a disadvantage with a Republican administration because most of our
+prominent men are Democrats. You were so effective with the Democrats,
+let us see what you can do now with your own party friends."
+
+After taking his advice, I went to see Senator Henry M. Teller, of
+Colorado, who was a friend of my father and of the Mormon people. He
+admitted that the situation was desperate. He proposed that I should
+speak before the committees of both houses; they might listen to me as a
+Republican who had no official rank in the Church and no political
+authority. He offered to introduce me to any of the Senators and members
+of Congress, but advised that I should rather go unintroduced, without
+influence, and make my appeal as a private citizen.
+
+This sounded to me depressingly like the call to lead a "forlorn hope."
+I reported to my father again, and was not altogether reassured by a
+tranquility which he seemed to be able to maintain in the face of any
+desperation. Other agencies of the Church had reached the end of their
+resources. There was no help in sight. And I went, at last, to throw our
+case upon the mercy of the Secretary of State, Mr. James G. Blaine, my
+father's friend, the friend of our people, the statesman whom I--in
+common with millions of other Americans--regarded with a reverence that
+approached idolatry.
+
+He received me in the long room of the Secretary's apartments, standing,
+a striking figure in black, against the rich and heavy background of the
+official furnishing. He was very pale--unhealthily so--perhaps with
+the progress of the disease of which he was to die in so short a time.
+In contrast with his usual brilliancy of mind, he seemed to me, at
+first, depressed and quiet--with a kindly serenity of manner, at once
+gracious, and intimate, but masterful.
+
+He was instantly and deeply interested in what I had to say; he seated
+himself--on a sofa, near the embrasure of a window--motioned me to
+bring a chair to his side, and heard me in an erect attitude of
+thoughtful attention, re-assuring me now and then by reaching out to lay
+a hand on my knee when he saw from my hesitancy that I feared I might be
+too candid in my confidences; and the look of his eye and the touch of
+his hand were as if he said: "I'm your friend. Anything you may say is
+perfectly safe with me."
+
+I told him of my father's imprisonment.
+
+"It is dreadful," he said. "You shock me to the soul." He spoke of their
+friendship, of his admiration for my father's work in Congress, of his
+personal regard for the man himself. "Of course," he said, "I have no
+sympathy with your peculiar marriage system, and I'll never be able to
+understand how a man like your father could enter it." I reminded him
+that my father believed it a system revealed and ordained by God. "I
+know," he replied. "That is what they say. And I suppose they have
+scriptural warrant for polygamy. But it is a thing that would be 'more
+honored in the breach than the observance.' Tell me, is the rule of the
+Church absolute over you younger men?"
+
+I told him that it was, in respect of political control; that the
+situation in Utah had placed us where there was no possibility of
+compromise; that we must be of, with, and for our own people, or against
+them.
+
+He asked me whether I intended to address myself to the President. I
+replied, "Not yet"--since the bills were still pending in Congress and
+were not being urged from the White House. He seemed pleased. As I
+afterwards learned, there was a strong rivalry between the President and
+the Secretary of State; and though I knew that Mr. Blaine's interest in
+Utah was almost wholly one of responsible statesmanship, warmed by a
+personal kindliness for our people, still it remains a fact that he
+expected the support of the Utah Republican delegation in the convention
+of 1892, and that it had been promised him by national Republicans who
+were now laboring at Washington in our behalf.
+
+He encouraged me with an almost intimate emotion of pity and
+friendliness; and I felt the largeness of the man as much in the warmth
+of his humanity as in the breadth of his view. He approved, of my
+appearing before the committees. "Go and tell them your own story,
+yourself," he said. "Make your plea independently of all the formal and
+official arguments that have been used. These have been exhausted. They
+have been ineffective. We must use the personal and"--he added it
+significantly--"the political appeal. If you find difficulty, let me
+know. I shall not be idle in your behalf. If you meet any insuperable
+obstacle, I'll see if I can't help you run over it."
+
+He rose to terminate the interview. He looked at me with a smile. "'The
+Lord giveth,'" he said, "'and the Lord taketh away.' Wouldn't it be
+possible for your people to find some way--without disobedience to the
+commands of God--to bring yourselves into harmony with the law and
+institutions of this country? Believe me, it's not possible for any
+people as weak in numbers as yours, to set themselves up as superior to
+the majesty of a nation like this. We may succeed, this time, in
+preventing your disfranchisement; but nothing permanent can be done
+until you 'get into line.'"
+
+He accompanied me toward the door, giving me friendly messages of regard
+to deliver to my father. He put his arm around my shoulders, at last,
+and said: "You may tell your father for me--as I tell you, young man--
+you shall not be harmed, this time."
+
+I parted from him with an almost speechless relief and gratitude, and
+hurried to my father with the news of hope. I had not told Mr. Blaine
+that he was in Washington; for, without feeling that he saw himself
+marked by his imprisonment, I was aware that his friends might pity him
+for it, if they did not condemn him; and neither sentiment (I knew) was
+he of the personal temper to encounter.
+
+I told him every detail of my talk with the Secretary of State; he heard
+me, silently, meditatively. When I concluded with Mr. Blaine's assurance
+that we should not be harmed "this time," but must "get into line," he
+looked up at me with a significant steadiness of eye. "President
+Woodruff," he said, "has been praying . . . . He thinks he sees some
+light . . . . You are authorized to say that something will be done."
+
+I asked no question. His gaze conveyed assurance, but forbade inquiry. I
+had to understand, without being told, that the Church was preparing to
+concede a recession from the doctrine of polygamy.
+
+With this assurance to aid me, I began the work of reaching the
+committees--warm work in a Washington summer, but hopeful in the new
+prospect of a lasting success. The bill for disfranchisement had been
+reported out by the committees and was on the calendar for passage. It
+was necessary to have the question reopened before the committees for
+argument. In soliciting the opportunity of a re-hearing, from the
+Chairman of the Senate Committee, Senator Orville H. Platt, of
+Connecticut, I made my argument in a private conversation with him in
+his rooms in the Arlington Hotel. When I had done, he chewed his cigar a
+moment, looked at me quizzically, and asked: "Do you know Abbot R.
+Heywood, of Ogden?"--and, as he asked it, he drew a letter from his
+pocket.
+
+I replied that I knew Mr. Heywood well.
+
+"I have a letter here from him, on this same subject," he said. "Tell
+me. What kind of man is he? And to what extent do you think I ought to
+depend on his views?"
+
+I was never more tempted in my life to tell a lie. I knew Mr. Heywood to
+be a man of truth and high ideals; but he had been Chairman of the
+Anti-Church party in Weber County, and he had been one of the Gentile
+leaders for several years. I knew the intensity of his feelings against
+the rule of the Church in politics and the Mormon attitude of defiance
+to the law. I was sure that he would be strong in his demand for the
+passage of the disfranchisement act.
+
+I hesitated a moment. Senator Platt was watching me. Then, with a
+resolve that our cause must stand or fall by the truth, I said: "Mr.
+Heywood is a man of integrity. I think he would write exactly what he
+believed to be true. But you know, Senator, intense feeling in politics
+sometimes sways a man's judgment. In view of Mr. Heywood's long
+controversy, I hope that if he has taken a view adverse to mine, his
+antagonism may be mitigated in your mind by your own knowledge of human
+feelings."
+
+Senator Platt held out the letter to me. "You've won your motion for a
+re-hearing," he said. "I think we may be able to get the truth out of
+you. We have not always had it in this Utah question. Read that."
+
+I read it. It was Mr. Heywood's solemn protest, as an American citizen--
+on behalf of himself and the other members of the perfunctory Republican
+Committee of his County--against the wholesale disfranchisement of the
+Mormons, on the ground that it would only delay a progressive American
+settlement of the territory!
+
+Then I went to the other members of the Senate committee privately, and
+told them that the Mormon Church was about to make a concession
+concerning its doctrine of polygamy. I told them so in confidence,
+pointing out the necessity of secrecy, since to make public the news of
+such a recession, in advance, would be to prevent the Church from
+authorizing it. Not one of the Senators betrayed the trust. I was less
+confidential with the members of the House Committee, because I realized
+that nothing could be done against us unless the bill passed the Senate.
+But I gave the news of the Church's reconsideration of its attitude to
+Colonel G. W. R. Dorsey, the member from Nebraska, and he used his
+influence to get me a rehearing from the House Committee. Finally I
+appeared once before each committee, and argued our case at length. The
+bills did not become law. Aided by Mr. Blaine's powerful friendship, we
+were saved "for the time."
+
+It remained to make our safety permanent, and I took train for Utah, on
+my father's counsel, to see President Woodruff. I had given my word that
+"something was to be done." I went to plead that it should be done--and
+done speedily.
+
+
+
+Chapter IV
+
+
+
+The Manifesto
+
+
+
+I found him in the office of the Presidency--in the little one-story
+house that I have described in my early interview with Joseph F Smith--
+and he received me with the gracious affectionateness of a fatherly old
+man. He asked me, almost at once: "What are they going to do to us in
+Washington?"
+
+"President Woodruff," I replied, "we've been spared--temporarily. The axe
+will not fall for a few moments. It depends on ourselves, now, whether
+it shall fall or not."
+
+"Come into the other room," he said, under his voice, in an eager
+confidentiality, like a child with a secret. And pattering along ahead
+of me, quick on his feet, he signed to me to follow him--with little
+nods and beckonings--into the retiring room where I had talked with
+Smith.
+
+There he sat down, on the edge of his chair, his elbows supported on the
+broad arms, leaning forward, partly bowed with his age, and partly with
+an intentness of curiosity that glittered innocently in his guileless
+eyes. A dear old character! Sweet in his sentiments, sweet in his
+language, sweet in the expression of his face.
+
+I told him, in detail, of the events in Washington, and of the men who
+had helped us in them--particularly of Mr. Blaine, who was apparently a
+new character in his experience, and of Senator Orville H. Platt, in
+whom he discovered an almost neighborly interest when I told him that
+the Senator came from Connecticut, his native state. I warned him that
+the passage of the measure of disfranchisement had been no more than
+retarded. I pointed out the fatal consequences for the community if the
+bill should ever become law--the fatal consequences for the leaders of
+the Church if the non-polygamous Mormons, deprived of their votes, were
+ever left unable to control the administration of local government. I
+repeated the promise that my father had authorized me to carry to the
+Senators and Congressmen who still had the Cullom-Struble bill in hand;
+and I emphasized the fact that because of this promise the bill had been
+held back--with the certainty that it would never become law if we met
+the nation half way.
+
+I was watching him to see if he sensed the point I wished him to get.
+When I touched the matter of my father's promise, his face became softly
+reverent; and when I had done--looking at me without a trace of cunning
+in his benignity, with an expression, rather, of exalted innocence and
+faith,--he said: "Brother Frank, I have been making it a matter of
+prayer. I have wrestled mightily with the Lord. And I think I see some
+light."
+
+In order that there might be no misunderstanding, I put into plainer
+words what I meant and what the prominent men in Washington had been led
+to look for: since, by a "revelation" of the Church we were ordered to
+give obedience to the government of the nation, and since we had
+exhausted all our legal defenses, it was hoped that the Prophet, Seer,
+and Revelator of the Church would find a way, under the guidance of God,
+to bring our people into conformity with the law.
+
+As he accepted this calmly, I added: "To be very plain with you,
+President Woodruff, our friends expect, and the country will insist, that
+the Church shall yield the practice of plural marriage."
+
+His eyelids quivered a little, but he showed no other sign of flinching.
+I saw that the counsels of his advisers and the comfort that he had
+derived from his prayers had prepared him for an immolation that was
+more serious to him than any personal sacrifice that he could make. He
+said sadly: "I had hoped we wouldn't have to meet this trouble this way.
+You know what it means to our people. I had hoped that the Lord might
+open the minds of the people of this nation to the truth, so that they
+might be converted to the everlasting covenant. Our prophets have
+suffered like those of old, and I thought that the persecutions of Zion
+were enough--that they would bring some other reward than this." If I
+had been the bearer of a new edict of proscription, I think he could not
+have been more profoundly oppressed by the sense of his responsibility.
+"Did your father tell you," he asked, "that I had been seeking the mind
+of the Lord?"
+
+I replied that he had.
+
+He reflected silently. "I shall talk with you again about it," he said,
+at last. "I hope the Lord will make the way plain for his people."
+
+I do not wish to idealize the polygamous relation--but in monogamy a
+man is not persecuted for his marriage, and sometimes he does not
+appreciate the tie. In polygamy, the men and women alike had been
+compelled to suffer on its account by the grim trials of the life itself
+and by the hatred of all civilization arrayed against it. They had grown
+to value their marriage system by what it had cost them. They had been
+driven by the contempt of the world to argue for its sanctity, to live
+up to their declarations, and to raise it in their esteem to what it
+professed to be, the celestial order that prevailed in the Heavens! I
+knew, as well as President Woodruff did, the wrench it would give their
+hearts to have to abandon, at last, what they had so long suffered for.
+
+In the days of anxious waiting that followed, I saw Joseph F. Smith and
+sounded him for any hint of progress. He said: "I'm sure I don't know
+what can be done. Your father talked with President Woodruff and me
+before he went to Washington, but I'm sure I can't see how we can do
+anything." When my father returned home, I went to him many times--
+without however learning anything definite. I knew that the men in
+Washington would demand some tangible evidence of our good faith before
+Congress should reconvene; and I repeatedly urged the necessity of
+action.
+
+At length he sent me word, in Ogden, that President Woodruff wished to
+confer with me, and he suggested that it would be permissible for me to
+speak my opinions freely. I hastened to Salt Lake City, to the offices
+of the Presidency. President Woodruff took me into a private room and
+read me his "manifesto."
+
+It was the same that was issued on September 24, 1890, and ratified by a
+General Conference of the Mormon Church on October 6, following. It was
+the proclamation that freed the oppressed of Utah; for, by the
+subsequent "covenant"--and its acceptance by the Federal government--
+the nation did but confirm their freedom and accord them their
+constitutional rights. Here, shaking in the hand of age, was a sheet of
+paper by which the future of a half million people was to be directed;
+and that simple old man was to speak through it, to them, with the awful
+authority of the voice of God.
+
+He told me he had written it himself, and it certainly appeared to me to
+be in his handwriting. Its authorship has since been variously
+attributed. Some of the present-day polygamists say that it was I who
+wrote it. Chas. W. Penrose and George Reynolds have claimed that they
+edited it. I presume that as Mormons, "in good standing," believing in
+the inspiration of the Prophet, they appreciate the blasphemy of their
+claim!
+
+I found it disappointingly mild. It denied that the Church had been
+solemnizing any plural marriages of late, and advised the faithful "to
+refrain from contracting any marriages forbidden by the law of the
+land." In spite of this mildness, President Woodruff asked me whether I
+thought the Mormons would support the revelation--whether they would
+accept it.
+
+I replied that there could be no proper anxiety on that point. The
+majority of the Mormon people were ready for such a message. It might be
+very much stronger without arousing resistance. With the exception of
+the comparatively few men and women who were living in polygamy, the
+community would accept it gratefully. Rather, I made bold to say, my
+anxiety was as to whether the nation would believe that such an
+equivocally-worded document meant an absolute recession from the
+practice of plural marriage.
+
+It was plain that his advisers had not pointed out this danger to him.
+He asked me how I thought the nation would take it.
+
+I asked him, point blank, whether it meant an absolute recession from
+polygamy.
+
+He answered that it did.
+
+Then (I said) with such an interpretation of it, and a formal and public
+acceptance of it by the Church authorities, I did not doubt that we
+could convince the nation of its sufficiency. I reminded him--as I am
+now glad to remember--that the word of the Mormon people had passed
+current in the political and commercial circles of the country; that I
+had several times been the bearer of messages from them to prominent
+men; that we had been taken on faith and the faith had been always
+vindicated. Finally, in order that I might carry away no
+misapprehension, nor convey any, I asked him if it was the intention of
+the manifesto to inhibit any further plural marriage living.
+
+He answered, quaintly: "Why, of course, Frank--because that's what
+they've been persecuting us for." There was not even a shrewdness in his
+voice when he added: "You know they didn't get our brethren in prison
+for polygamy, but for living with their plural wives."
+
+Perhaps no other man in Utah could have said such a thing without
+sarcasm. The fact was that the United States authorities had been
+practically unable to prove a case of polygamy (which was a felony)
+because the marriage records were concealed by the Church; but they
+could prove plural marriage living (a mere misdemeanor) by repute and
+circumstance. It was part of President Woodruff's unworldliness that he
+did not see the satire of his words; and I was the more convinced of his
+good faith.
+
+I was convinced also, by several of his remarks, that he had consulted
+with the Church's attorney, Mr. Franklin S. Richards; and while I
+trusted the President's unworldly faith, I trusted more the sagacity of
+his more worldly advisers. I began to see, with a sure hope, the
+beginning of the end of all our miseries.
+
+Some days later I was summoned to attend a meeting of the Church
+authorities in the President's offices; and I knew that the test had
+come. The Church was governed by the Presidency, composed of President
+Woodruff and his two Councillor's, with the Quorum of the Twelve
+Apostles, the Presidents of Seventies, and the presiding Bishopric,
+composed of three members. These quorums aggregate twenty-five men; and
+to their number may be added the Chief Patriarch of the Church, making a
+body of twenty-six general authorities--the Hierarchy. It was from
+these latter men, polygamists and (I feared) parochial in their
+ignorance of the nation and their trust in the protection of their
+followers--it was from them (and the other practicers of polygamy) that
+any opposition would come to the acceptance and publication of the
+manifesto.
+
+They met--something less than a score of them, with two or three of
+their most trusted advisers--in one of the general offices of the
+Presidency, sitting in leather chairs along its walls, with a sort of
+central skylight illuminating subduedly the anxiety of their silent
+faces. President Woodruff and his two Councillor's entered to them; and
+this insignificant-looking apartment--of such tremendous community
+significance, because of the memories of its past--seemed to take on
+the gravity of another momentous crisis in the destiny of its people.
+The portraits in oils of the dead presidents, martyrs, and prophets of
+the Church, looked down on us from the facade of a little gallery, and
+caught my eyes almost hypnotically with the imperturbability of their
+gaze. No word from them! In the midst of the broken utterance of emotion--
+when the tears were wet on faces to whose manliness tears were the
+very sweat of martyrdom--I saw those immovable countenances as placid
+as the features of the dead.
+
+President Woodruff stood under them, so old and other-worldly, that he
+seemed already of their circle rather than ours; and he spoke in a voice
+of feeling for us, but with a simple and courageous finality that
+sounded the very note of fate. He had called the brethren together (he
+said) to submit a decision to their consideration, and he desired from
+them an expression of their willingness to accept and abide by it. He
+knew what a trial it would be to the "whole household of Israel." "We
+have sought," he said, "to live our religion--to harm no one--to
+perform our mission in this world for the salvation of the living and
+the dead. We have obeyed the principle of celestial marriage because it
+came to us from God. We have suffered under the rage of the wicked; we
+were driven from our homes into the desert; our prophets have been
+slain, our holy ones persecuted--and it did seem to me that we were
+entitled to the constitutional protection of the courts in the practice
+of our religion."
+
+But the courts had decided "against us." The great men of the nation
+were determined to show us no mercy. Legislation was impending that
+would put us "in the power of the wicked." Brother George Q. Cannon,
+Brother John T. Caine, and the other brethren who had been in
+Washington, had found that the situation of the Church was critical.
+Brother Franklin S. Richards had advised him that our last legal defense
+had fallen. "In broken and contrite spirit" he had sought the will of
+the Lord, and the Holy Spirit had revealed to him that it was necessary
+for the Church to relinquish the practice of that principle for which
+the brethren had been willing to lay down their lives.
+
+A sort of ghastly stillness accepted what he said as a confirmation of
+the worst fears of the men who had evidently come there with some
+knowledge of what they were to hear. I glanced at the faces of those
+opposite me. A set and staring pallor held them motionless. I was
+conscious of a chill of heart that seemed communicated to me from them.
+My brother Abraham was sitting beside me; I knew his deep affection for
+his family; I knew with what a clutch of misery this edict of separation
+was crushing his hope; I felt myself growing as pale and tense as he.
+
+The silence was broken by President Woodruff asking one of the brethren
+to read the manifesto. When it was concluded, he said: "The matter is
+now before you. I want you to speak as the Spirit moves you."
+
+There was no reply, except a sort of general gasp of low-voiced
+interjections and a little buzz of whisperings that sounded like emotion
+taking its breath. He called on my father to speak. The First Councillor
+rose to make a statesmanlike review of the crisis; and I understood that
+with his usual diplomacy he was putting aside from him the authority of
+leadership until he could see whether an opposition was to develop that
+should make it necessary for him to front it.
+
+That opposition made a rustle of stirring in the pause that followed. I
+saw it in the changed expressions of some of the faces. Several of the
+men--including my brother Abraham, and Joseph F. Smith--asked whether
+the manifesto meant a cessation of plural marriages: whether no more
+such marriages were to be allowed.
+
+President Woodruff answered that it did; that the Lord had taken back
+the principle from the children of men and that we would have no power
+to restore it.
+
+Then they asked whether it meant a cessation of plural marriage living--
+whether they would be required to separate from the wives whom they had
+taken in the holy covenant.
+
+He answered, firmly, that it did; that the brethren in Washington found
+it imperative; that it was the will of the Lord; that we must submit.
+
+I saw their faces flush and then slowly pale again--and the storm
+broke. One after another they rose and protested, hoarsely, in the voice
+of tears, that they were willing to suffer "persecution unto death"
+rather than to violate the covenants which they had made "in holy
+places" with the women who had trusted them. One after another they
+offered themselves for any sacrifice but this betrayal of the women and
+children to whom they owed an everlasting faith. And a manlier lot of
+men never spoke in a manlier way. Not a petty word was uttered. Their
+thought was not for themselves. Their grief was not selfish. Their
+protests had a dignity in pathos that shook me in spite of myself.
+
+When they had done, my father rose again with a face that seemed to bear
+the marks of their grief while it repressed his own. He dwelt anew on
+the long efforts of our attorney and our friends in Congress to resist
+what we believed to be unconstitutional measures to repress our practice
+of a religious faith. But we were citizens of a nation. We were required
+to obey its laws. And when we found, by the highest judicial
+interpretation of statute and constitution, that we were without grounds
+for our plea of religious immunity, we had but the alternative either of
+defying the power of the whole nation or of submitting ourselves to its
+authority. For his part he was willing to do the will of the Lord. And
+since the Prophet of God, after a long season of prayer, had submitted
+this revelation as the will of the Lord, he was ready for the sacrifice.
+The leaders of the Church had no right to think of themselves. They must
+remember how loyally the people had sacrificed their substance and
+risked their safety to guard their brethren who were living in plural
+marriage. Those brethren must not be ungrateful now. They must not now
+refuse to make their sacrifice, in answer to the sacrifices that had
+been made for them so often. The people had long protected them. Now
+they must protect the people.
+
+Under the commanding persuasion of his voice I saw the determination of
+their resistance begin to falter and relax. President Woodruff called on
+me to speak, and I felt that it was my duty to represent the needs, the
+hopes, and the opportunities of the hundreds of thousands of the
+undistinguished mass who would make no decision for themselves, but
+whose fate was trembling on the event. I rose to speak for them, with my
+hand on my brother's shoulder, knowing that my every word would be a
+stab at his heart, and hoping that my grasp might be a touch of sympathy
+to him--knowing that I must urge these elders to sacrifice themselves
+and their families for a redemption of which I was to share the benefits--
+but sustained by the remembrance of the solemn pledge which I had been
+authorized to give in Washington to honorable men who had trusted in our
+honor--and strengthened by the thought of all those dear, to me, whose
+sufferings would be multiplied, with no hope of relief, if the few would
+not now yield to save the many.
+
+I described the situation as I had seen it in Washington and as I knew
+it in Utah from a more intimate personal experience than these leaders
+could have of the sufferings of the people. I told them how cheerfully
+and bravely the non-polygamists had borne the brunt of protecting them
+in the practice of their faith, and yet how patient a hope had been
+always with us that the final demand might not be made upon us for the
+sacrifice of a citizenship which we valued more because it shielded them
+than because it armed us.
+
+Encouraged by the face of President Woodruff, I reminded them that the
+sorrow and the parting, at which they rebelled, could only be for a
+little breath of time, according to their faith; that by the celestial
+covenant, into which they had entered, they were assured that they
+should have their wives and children with them throughout the endless
+ages of eternity. The people had given much to them. Surely they could
+yield the domestic happinesses of the little remaining day of life in
+this world, in order to save and prosper those who were not to enjoy
+their supreme exaltation of beatitude in the world to come.
+
+I had felt my brother strong under my hand. He rose, when I concluded.
+And with a manful brevity he replied that he submitted because it was
+the will of the Lord, and because he had no right to interpose his
+selfish love and yearnings between the people of God and their worldly
+opportunity. The others followed. Not one referred to the equivocal
+language of the manifesto or questioned it. They accepted it--as it was
+then and afterwards interpreted--as a revelation from God made through
+the Prophet of the Church; and they subscribed to it as a solemn
+covenant, before God, with the people of the nation.
+
+Joseph F. Smith was one of the last to speak. With a face like wax, his
+hands outstretched, in an intensity of passion that seemed as if it must
+sweep the assembly, he declared that he had covenanted, at the altar of
+God's house, in the presence of his Father, to cherish the wives and
+children whom the Lord had given him. They were more to him than life.
+They were dearer to him than happiness. He would rather choose to stand,
+with them, alone--persecuted--proscribed--outlawed--to wait until
+God in His anger should break the nation with His avenging stroke. But--
+
+He dropped his arms. He seemed to shrink in his commanding stature like
+a man stricken with a paralysis of despair. The tears came to the pained
+constriction of his eyelids.
+
+"I have never disobeyed a revelation from God," he said. "I cannot--I
+dare not--now."
+
+He announced--with his head up, though his body swayed--that he would
+accept and abide by the revelation. When he sank in his chair and
+covered his face with his hands, there was a gasp of sympathy and
+relief, as if we had been hearing the pain of a man in agony. And my
+heart gave a great leap; for, in these supreme moments of feeling,
+things come to us that are larger than our knowledge, more splendid than
+our hopes; and I saw, as if in the blinding glisten of the tears in my
+eyes, a radiant vision of our future, an unselfish people freed from a
+burden of persecution, a nation's forgiveness born, a grateful state
+created. I saw it--and I looked at Smith and loved him for it. I knew
+then, as I know now, that he and those others were at this moment
+sincere. I knew that they had relinquished what was more dear to them
+than the breath of life. I knew the appalling significance, to them, of
+the promise which they were making to the nation. And in all the
+degraded after-years, when so many of them were guilty of breach of
+covenant and base violation of trust, I tried never to forget that in
+the hour of their greatest trial, they had sacrificed themselves for
+their people; they had suffered for the happiness of others; they had
+said, sincerely: "Not my will, O Lord, but Thine, be done!"
+
+
+
+Chapter V
+
+
+
+On the Road to Freedom
+
+
+
+In any discussion of the public affairs that make the subject matter of
+this narrative, a line of discrimination must be drawn at the year 1890.
+In that year the Church began a progressive course of submission to the
+civil law, and the nation received each act of surrender with
+forgiveness. The previous defiance's of the Mormon people ceased to give
+grounds for a complaint against them. The old harshnesses of the Federal
+government were canceled by the new generosity of a placated nation. And
+neither party to the present strife in Utah should go back, beyond the
+period of this composition, to dig up, from the past, its buried wrongs.
+
+In relating, here, some of the events of 1888 and 1889, I have tried
+neither to justify the Mormons nor to defend their prosecutors. I have
+wished merely to make clear the situation in Utah, and to introduce to
+you, in advance, some of the leaders of the distracted community, so
+that you might understand the conditions from which the Mormons escaped
+by giving their covenant to the nation and be able to judge of the
+obligations and responsibilities of the men who gave it.
+
+I, have described the promulgation and acceptance of "the manifesto"
+with such circumstance and detail, because of what has since occurred in
+Utah. Let me add that some two weeks later the General Conference of the
+Church endorsed the President's pronouncement as "authoritative and
+binding." And let me point out that it was the first and only law of the
+Mormon Church ever so sustained by triple sanctities--"revealed" as a
+command from God, accepted by the prophets in solemn fraternity
+assembled, and ratified by the vote of the entire "congregation of
+Israel" before it was declared to be binding upon men.
+
+At first, because of the somewhat indefinite promise of the message
+itself, many of the non-Mormons of Utah remained suspicious and in doubt
+of it. But it was recognized by Judge Zane, in court--on the day
+following the close of the Conference--as an official declaration,
+"honest and sincere." The newspapers throughout the whole country so
+received it. The Church authorities sent assurances to Washington that
+convinced the statesmen, there, of the completeness and finality of the
+submission. And the good faith of the covenant was at last admitted by
+the non-Mormons of Utah and endorsed by their trust. I do not know of
+any change in human affairs dependent on human will--more speedy,
+effective and comprehensive than this recession. Within the space of a
+few days a revolution was completed that had been sought by the power of
+our nation and of the civilized world, for a generation, with stripes
+and imprisonment, death, confiscation and the ostracism of the country's
+public contempt. It had been obtained, I knew, chiefly by the sagacity
+of the First Councillor using the pressure of circumstances to enforce
+the persuasions of diplomacy. I felt that a miracle of change had been
+brought to pass. He had placed us on the road to freedom; and I trusted
+his guidance to lead us to our goal.
+
+That goal, to me personally, was the honor of American citizenship--an
+ambition that had been an obsession with me from my earliest youth. I
+had never heard a man on a railroad train talk of how he was going to
+vote in a national election, without feeling a pang of shamed envy; for
+my lack of citizenship seemed a mark of inferiority. The patriotic
+reading of my boyhood had made the American republic, to me, the noblest
+administration of freemen in the history of government and the exercise
+of its franchise literally the highest dignity of human privilege. I
+would have been as proud--I was as proud when the day came--to vote
+for the President of the United States as he could have been to take his
+oath of office. I do not believe that any poor serf, escaped from the
+tyranny of Russia, ever saw the American shore with a more grateful eye
+than I looked to the prospect of being admitted, with the citizens of
+Utah, into the enfranchisement of the Republic.
+
+But it was evident that the Church's recession from polygamy would not
+be enough to free us, so long as its control of politics remained. Its
+other practices had flourished and been sheltered under its political
+power; and now that the Church had ceased to be a lawbreaker, our
+friends in Washington were properly expecting that it would cease to
+interfere with its members in the exercise of their citizenship. For
+this reason, when I was notified that I had been selected as a member of
+the advisory committee of the People's Party (the Church party), I went
+at once to my father and told him that I would not take the place; that
+I intended to work, personally, and through my newspaper, for the
+political division of Utah on the lines of the national parties. He held
+that until Gentile solidarity was dissolved, it would be dangerous to
+divide the allegiance of the Mormons; but he did not stand against my
+protest; he contented himself--diplomatically--with sending me to
+consult with President Woodruff and Joseph F. Smith.
+
+To them, I argued that the political emancipation of the Mormon people
+from ecclesiastical direction was as necessary as the recession from
+polygamy had been. We must be set free to perform our duty to the
+country solely as citizens of the country, before we could expect to be
+given the right to perform it at all. And, for my part, the only action
+I would consent to take as a member of the advisory committee of the
+People's Party would be to vote for the dissolution of the party.
+
+President Woodruff referred me to my father, and advised me to be guided
+by him. Joseph F. Smith urged that a division of the Mormon people on
+national party lines would enable the Liberal (the Gentile) party to
+march in between. I argued in reply that we must divide at some time,
+and the sooner the better, since every year was increasing the Gentile
+population. They would never split as long as we remained solid. And if
+we were ever to be permitted to nationalize ourselves, it would not be
+until we had dissolved the party organizations whose very names were a
+proof of the continued rule of the Church in politics.
+
+When he had no more arguments to advance, he gave a reluctant assent to
+mine. I reported back to my father and he approved of my plans. He asked
+me humorously with whom I expected to affiliate, since he knew of no one
+who was likely to go with me; but I could see that he was pleased with
+my independence and hoped I might succeed in doing something to break
+the deadlock-grapple of Mormon and Gentile that held Utah apart from the
+rest of the country in politics.
+
+His humorous idea of my undertaking gave its color to my beginnings. It
+was rather a spirited adventure, as I look back upon it now. When we
+organized a Republican Club at Ogden, my intimate friend, Ben E. Rich,
+and another friend named Joseph Belnap, were the only Mormons, so far as
+I know, who joined me in becoming members. Outside of us three, I did
+not know of another Mormon Republican in the whole territory.
+
+Indeed, the status of the Mormon people, in their fancied relation to
+the two great parties of the country, was almost identical with that of
+the people of the South after the Civil War. Practically every Mormon
+believed himself to be a Democrat. Among the young men of the Church
+there had been occasional attempts to form Democratic Clubs. Mr. John T.
+Caine, delegate in Congress from the territory, was a Democrat. My
+father had sat on the Democratic side of the House. Almost all the men
+who had braved the sentiments of their own states, to speak for us in
+Congress, had been Democrats. And, of course, the administration of the
+laws that had been so cruel to the feelings of the Mormons had been in
+Republican hands.
+
+Two years earlier, in Ogden, I had spoken in a meeting of Republicans
+that had been called to rejoice over the election of Benjamin Harrison
+to the Presidency; and I was still being taunted by my Mormon friends
+with having clasped hands with "the persecutors of the Prophets." When I
+came out, now, as an advocate of Republicanism, I was met everywhere
+with this charge--that I had joined the enemies of the Church, that I
+was assisting the persecutors of my father. The fact that my father
+approved of what I was doing, relieved the seriousness of the situation
+for me; and the humorous assistance of Ben Rich in our political
+evangelism gave a secret chuckle to many of the incidents of our
+campaign.
+
+We went from town to town, from district to district, up the mountain
+valleys, across the plains, into mining camps and farming communities--
+using the meeting-houses, the school-rooms, the town halls--taking the
+afternoon to coax the tired workers of the fields or of the mines to
+come and hear us in the evening, and watching them fall asleep in the
+light of our borrowed kerosene lamps while we talked. They came eagerly.
+Indeed, my own ambition for citizenship--for a right to participate in
+the affairs of the nation--was probably no keener than theirs; and they
+had an innocent curiosity about the questions of national politics, of
+which they had never before been invited to know anything. They listened
+almost devoutly.
+
+"Brethren and sisters," a bishop exhorted them at a meeting in which one
+of our party was to speak, "we have come to listen to this man, and I
+hope we will be guided in all our reflections by the Spirit of God and
+that we will do nothing to offend that Spirit. Let there be no
+commotion, no whispering, and, above all, no hand clapping."
+
+In a life that had as few diversions as theirs, a political meeting was
+an exciting event. The whole family came, and the mothers brought their
+babies. Surely in no other American community did politics ever have
+such a homely and serious consideration. Certainly no other community
+would have so quickly understood the theories of the two parties or
+accepted them so implicitly.
+
+But it was all theory! I recognize, now, that I preached a Republicanism
+that was an ideal of what it should be, rather than any modern faith of
+the "practical politician." I had gathered it from my reading, from
+hearing the speeches in Congress, from sympathetic conferences with the
+great men who were responsible for the dogmas of the party; and every
+assurance of grace that their ability could give and my credulity
+accept, I proclaimed religiously as a political salvation to our people.
+I built up an ideal, and then judged the party thereafter according to
+the measure of that ideal. When I found that some of the charges against
+the Republican party were true--charges which I had indignantly
+repelled--I was as shocked as any pious worshipper who ever found that
+his idol had feet of clay. Our people, having accepted the faith with as
+simple a hope as it was offered, were as easily turned from it when they
+found that it was false. The political moods of Utah, for its first few
+years of statehood, were a puzzle to the "practical" leaders of the
+parties; but to us who understood the impulses of honesty that moved the
+changes, things were as clear as they were encouraging.
+
+During the previous summer in Washington, I had met General James S.
+Clarkson, then president of the National League of Republican Clubs; and
+now, on his invitation, in the Spring of 1891, Rich and I went to
+Louisville to speak before the national convention of the league.
+Through the kindness of General Clarkson, I was given the official
+recognition of a perfunctory place on the executive committee of the
+league's national committee, and came into touch with many of the party
+leaders. It was about this time, I imagine, that they conceived the idea
+of using the gratitude of the Mormons in order to carry Utah and the
+surrounding states in which the Mormon vote might constitute a balance
+of political power. I know that the idea was old and established when I
+came upon it, in 1894, during the campaign for statehood. As I also
+found, still later, the Republican leaders and the business interests
+with which they were in relation, had their eyes on a distant prospect
+of fabulous financial schemes in which the secret funds of the Church
+were to help in the building of railroads and the promoting of other
+enterprises of associated capital. But at the time of which I am
+writing, I had not had sufficient experience to suspect the motives of
+the men who encouraged our work in Utah; and I accepted in good faith
+their public declarations that the sole aim of the party was to serve
+the needs of the people of the United States--and therefore of the
+people of Utah!
+
+It seemed to me that such a noble principle should win the support of
+Mormon and Gentile alike, and it was on this principle that I appealed
+for the support of both. I was so sure of winning with it that I
+resented and fought against the aid of the Church that came to us as our
+campaign succeeded.
+
+The People's Party (the Church Party) had been dissolved (June, 1891) by
+the formal action of the executive committee, under the direct
+instruction of the leaders of the Church. The tendency was for its
+members to organize themselves immediately as a Democratic party. They
+were led by such brilliant and trusted defenders of the Church as
+Franklin S. Richards, Chas. C. Richards, Wm. H. King, James H. Moyle,
+Brigham H. Roberts and Apostle Moses Thatcher; and a group of abler
+advocates could not have been found in any state in the Union. It was
+against the sentiment of the Mormon people, vivified by such inspiring
+Democracy as these men taught, that our little organization of
+Republicans had to make headway; and an anxiety began to show itself
+among the Church authorities for a less unequal division, and
+consequently a greater appearance of political independence, among the
+faithful.
+
+Apostle John Henry Smith came out as a Republican stump speaker in
+rivalry with Moses Thatcher, the Democratic Prophet. Joseph F. Smith
+announced himself a Republican descendant of Whigs. Apostle Francis
+Marion Lyman, in his religious ministrations, counselled leading brethren
+to withhold themselves from the Democratic party unless they had gone
+too far to retreat. Men of ecclesiastical office in various parts of the
+territory--who were regarded as being safe in their wisdom and fidelity--
+were urged to hold themselves and their influence in reserve for such
+use on either side of politics as the future might demand.
+
+Against this ecclesiastical direction of the people's choice, I objected
+again and again to the Presidency, and my objections seemed to meet with
+acquiescence. It required no prescience on my part to foresee that the
+growing dislike and distrust of Moses Thatcher at Church headquarters
+would lead to a strife in the Church that might be carried into our
+politics; and I knew how small would be the hope of preserving any
+political independence, if once it were involved in the intrigues of
+priests and their rivalries for a supremacy of influence among the
+people. I was resolved that not even a Church, ruling by "divine right,"
+should interpose between my country and my franchise; and an
+encroachment that I would not permit upon my own freedom, I would not
+help to inflict upon others.
+
+The men with whom I had been working proposed me as the candidate for
+Congress of the new Utah Republicans; and I was supported by a strong
+delegation from my own country and from other parts of the territory;
+but I found that I was not "satisfactory" to some of the Mormon leaders,
+and in the convention (1892) Apostle John Henry Smith and my cousin
+George M. Cannon led in an attempt to nominate Judge Chas. Bennett, a
+Gentile lawyer. After a bitter fight of two days and nights, we carried
+the convention against them, and I was nominated.
+
+The Democrats selected, as their candidate, one of the strongest
+characters in the territory, Joseph L. Rawlins. He was the son of a
+Mormon bishop, but he had left the Church immediately upon reaching
+manhood. He was a great lawyer, a staunch Democrat, and wonderfully
+popular. There followed one of the swiftest and most exciting campaigns
+ever seen in Utah. The whole people rose to it with enthusiasm. Our
+party chairman, Chas. Crane, had a genius for organization; our speakers
+drew crowded meetings; and though charges of Church influence were made
+by both sides, the question of religion was no longer the one that
+divided Utah.
+
+We were getting on famously, when an incident occurred that was at once
+disastrous and salutary. While I was away from headquarters, stumping
+the districts, Chairman Crane (who was a Gentile), Ben Rich and Joseph
+F. Smith, issued a pamphlet in Republican behalf called "Nuggets of
+Truth." It gave a picture of Joseph Smith, the original Prophet, on the
+first page and a picture of me on the last one. (They issued also a
+certificate, obtained by Joseph F. Smith and given out by him, that I
+was a Mormon "in good standing.") As soon as I heard of the matter, I
+wired Chairman Crane that unless the pamphlet were immediately
+withdrawn, I should return to Salt Lake City and publicly denounce such
+methods. It was withdrawn, but the damage was done, I was defeated, as I
+deserved to be--though I was the innocent victim of the atrocity--and
+Mr. Rawlins was elected.
+
+The campaign proved, however, that if the Church leaders would only keep
+their hands off, there was ample strength in either party to make a
+presentation of national issues of sufficient appeal to divide the
+people on party lines; and it was evident that the people would choose
+the party that made the best showing of principles and candidates.
+"Nuggets of Truth " left us with a nasty sense that at no hour were we
+assured of safety from ecclesiastical interference--or the nefarious
+attempt to make an appearance of such interference--in our political
+affairs. But the disaster that followed, in this instance, was so prompt
+that we could hope it would prove a lesson.
+
+Most important of all, the campaign had made it evident that there was
+now no political mission in Utah for the Liberal (the Gentile) party--
+assuming that the retirement of the Mormon priests from politics was
+sincere and permanent. Accordingly, the organization formally met some
+months later, and formally dissolved; and, by that act, the last great
+obstacle to united progress was removed from our road to statehood, and
+the men who removed it acted with a generosity that makes one of the
+noblest records of self-sacrifice in the history of the state.
+
+They could foresee that their dissolution as a separate force meant
+statehood for Utah--a sovereignty in itself that would leave the
+Gentiles in the minority and without any appeal to the nation. Under
+territorial conditions, although the non-Mormons were less than
+one-third of the population, they had two-thirds of the political power.
+They held all the Federal offices, including executive and judicial
+positions. They had the Governor, with an absolute veto over the acts of
+the Mormon legislature. They had the President and Congress who could
+annul any statute of the territory; and they had with them almost the
+entire sentiment of the nation. It was in their power to have protracted
+the Mormon controversy, and to have withstood the appeal for statehood,
+to this day.
+
+They yielded everything; they accepted, in return, only the good faith
+of the Mormons. Was it within the capacity of any human mind to foresee
+that in return for such generosity the Church would ever give over its
+tabernacles to teaching its people to hold in detestation the very,
+names of these men who saved us? Was it to be suspected that the
+political power surrendered by them would ever be used as a persecution
+upon them?--that the liberty, given by them to us, would ever afterward
+be denied them by us? It was inconceivable. Neither in the magnanimity
+of their minds nor in the gratitude of ours was there a suspicion of
+such a catastrophe.
+
+During 1891, President Woodruff's manifesto had been ratified in local
+Church conferences in every "stake of Zion;" and a second General
+Conference had endorsed it in October of that year. President Woodruff,
+Councillor Joseph F. Smith and Apostle Lorenzo Snow went before the
+Federal Master in Chancery--in a proceeding to regain possession of
+escheated Church property--and swore that the manifesto had prohibited
+plural marriages, that it required a cessation of all plural marriage
+living, and that it was being obeyed by the Mormon people. These facts
+were recited in a petition for amnesty forwarded to President Harrison
+in December, 1891, accompanied by signed statements from Chief Justice
+Zane, Governor Thomas and other non-Mormons who pledged themselves that
+the petitioners were sincere and that if amnesty were granted good faith
+would be kept. "Our people are scattered," President Woodruff and his
+apostles declared in their petition. "Homes are made desolate. Many are
+still imprisoned; others are banished and in hiding. Our hearts bleed
+for these. In the past they followed our counsels, and while they are
+still afflicted our souls are in sackcloth and ashes.... As
+shepherds of a patient and suffering people we ask amnesty for them and
+pledge our faith and honor for their future."
+
+At Washington, the Church's attorney, Mr. Franklin S. Richards, and
+delegate John T. Caine supported the petition with their avowals of the
+sincerity of the Church leaders, the genuineness of our political
+division, and the sanctity with which we regarded the promise to obey
+the laws. The Utah Commission, a non-Mormon body, favored amnesty in an
+official report of September, 1892. And when I went to Washington, in
+the winter of 1892-3, the changed attitude of the Federal authorities
+toward us was strikingly evident.
+
+President Harrison issued his amnesty proclamation, early in January,
+1893, to all persons liable to the penalties of the Edmunds-Tucker Act,
+but "on the express condition that they shall in the future faithfully
+obey the laws of the United States ... and not otherwise." The
+proclamation concluded: "Those who fail to avail themselves of the
+clemency hereby offered will be vigorously prosecuted." Not a polygamist
+in Utah, to my knowledge, declined to take advantage of the mercy, by
+refusing the expressly implied pledge.
+
+Meanwhile the campaign had been continued for the return of the
+escheated Church property and for the passage of an Enabling Act that
+should permit the territory to organize for statehood.
+
+[FOOTNOTE: Statehood seemed still very faraway. There was a Trans-
+Mississippi Congress held at Ogden in 1892, and though the delegates--
+coming from all the states and territories "west of the river," were the
+guests of the people of Utah, so hopeless was our status in the
+consideration of mankind that the delegates from the territories of New
+Mexico and Arizona would not let our names be joined to theirs in a
+resolution for statehood which we wished the committee on resolutions to
+propose to the Congress. Governor Prince of New Mexico replied, to our
+plea for a share in the resolution, that he did not intend to damn New
+Mexico by having her mixed up with Utah. We appealed to the Congress,
+and we were saved by a speech made by Thos. M. Patterson of Colorado,
+subsequently senator from Colorado, who carried the day for us. At a
+recent Trans-Mississippi Congress held in Denver, I sat with ex-Senator
+Patterson to hear Mr. Prince still proposing resolutions in support of
+statehood for New Mexico. Twenty years later!] Joseph L. Rawlins,
+Democratic delegate from Utah, worked valiantly among the Democrats, and
+he was assisted by the influence of Mr. Franklin S. Richards and John T.
+Caine and others among their old associates in that party. But, in the
+very midst of the fight, we were advised that, unless the Republican
+leaders would let the Enabling Act go through, the Democratic leaders
+would falter in our advocacy.
+
+I had been urged to go to Washington by the Presidency to do what I
+might to allay Republican antagonism, and I found that a number of
+self-appointed lobbyists (who expected political preferment's and other
+rewards from the Church in the event of statehood) had been using the
+most amazing arguments in our behalf. For example, they told some of the
+"financial Senators" that the Church had fourteen million dollars in
+secret funds with which to help build a railroad to the coast as soon as
+statehood should be granted. They cited the number of the Church's
+adherents in all the states and territories of the Pacific Coast and as
+far east as Iowa and Missouri, and predicted that the gratitude of these
+people to the Republicans who were helping to free Utah would enable the
+Republican party to control a balance of political power in the several
+states. They declared positively that plural marriages and plural
+marriage living had utterly ceased among the Mormons for all time. And
+they made such statements with great particularity to Senator Orville H.
+Platt, of Connecticut, who was too wise a man to credit them.
+
+As soon as I returned to Washington, he summoned me to a private
+meeting, in his parlor in the Arlington Hotel, and confronted me with
+one of the Republican lobbyists who had been soliciting his personal
+favor and his almost controlling influence. "Now, Mr. Cannon," he said,
+in his dry way, "have the Mormons stopped living with their plural
+wives? And will there never be another case of plural marriage among
+them?"
+
+I remembered the lesson of my interview with him at the time of the
+campaign against the disfranchisement bill, and I answered: "No. Not all
+the men of the Church have complied fully with the law. So far as I
+know, all the general authorities of the Church--with two or three
+exceptions--are fulfilling the covenant they gave; and so far as I can
+judge there will never be another plural marriage ceremony with the
+consent or connivance of the leaders of the Church. But human nature is
+very much the same in Utah as it is in Connecticut. Here and there, no
+doubt, a man feels that he's under an obligation to keep his covenant
+with his plural wives in preference to the covenant of his accepted
+amnesty; and there and here, possibly, in the future, some man will
+break the law and defy the orders of the Church and take a plural wife.
+But the leaders of the Church do not countenance either proceeding, and
+any man who violates the law, in either respect, offends against the
+revelations of the Church and, I believe, will be dealt with as an
+apostate. I come direct from the Presidency of the Church, and I am
+authorized to pledge their word of honor that they will themselves obey
+the law and do all in their power as men and leaders to bring their
+people into harmony with the institutions of this country as rapidly as
+possible."
+
+Senator Platt had slowly unwrapped himself, rising from his chair to
+his full height of more than six feet, in a lank and alarming
+indignation. "There," he said, striding up and down the room. "That's
+it! That's just it. These people have been telling us that you were
+obeying the law--all of you--in every instance--and would always obey
+it. And now you come here and admit, openly, that some of you, to whom
+we have granted amnesty, are breaking your word--and that 'possibly'
+others, in the future, will do the same thing!"
+
+"Senator," I pleaded, "what confidence could you have in me if I were to
+tell you the Mormons were so superhuman that in a single day they could
+eliminate all their human characteristics? I'm asking you to recognize
+that the tendency imparted to a whole community is more important than
+any one man's breach of the law. Believe me, if you grant us our
+statehood, there will never be any lawbreaking sanctioned or protected
+by the Church leaders, and just as speedily as possible the entire
+system will be brought into harmony with the institutions of the nation.
+I'm telling you the truth."
+
+He turned on me to ask, abruptly, how the polygamists had adjusted their
+family affairs.
+
+I answered that in nearly all cases within my personal knowledge, the
+polygamist had relinquished conjugal relations with his plural wives
+with the full acquiescence of them and their children. He supported
+them, cared for the children, and in all other ways acted as the
+guardian and protector of the household. In a few cases men had gone, to
+an extreme. For instance, my uncle, Angus M. Cannon--president of the
+Salt Lake "stake of Zion," a man of most decided character--had
+declared that he had entered into his marriage relations with his wives
+under a covenant that gave them equality in his regards; and in order
+that he might not wound the sensibilities of any, he had separated
+himself from all.
+
+I reminded Senator Platt that with such examples on the part of the
+leaders, there could be no general law-breaking among the Mormons, and
+that gradually the polygamous element would accommodate itself to the
+demands of law and the commands of God.
+
+He waved us away with a curt announcement that he would have to think
+the matter over. If I had not known the essential justice and common
+sense under his dry and irascible exterior, I might have been alarmed.
+The lobbyist's concern was almost comic. As soon as we were out of
+hearing of the Senator's apartment, shaking both fists frantically at
+me, he cried: "You've ruined everything! We had him. We had him--all
+right--until you came down here and let the cat out of the bag! You knew
+what we'd been telling him. Why didn't you stick to it?"
+
+I replied with equal warmth: "You may lie all you please; but if we have
+to win Utah's statehood with lies I don't want it. Senator Platt has
+been generous to us in our time of need, and I don't intend to deceive
+him--or any other man."
+
+As a matter of fact, this was not only common honesty; it was also the
+best policy. Senator Platt was, from that time to the day of his death,
+a good friend and wise counselor of the people of Utah. And I wish to
+lay particular stress upon this conversation with him, because it was a
+type of many had with such men as he. Fred T. Dubois, delegate in
+Congress from the territory of Idaho and subsequently Senator from that
+state, had been perhaps the strongest single opponent, in Washington, of
+the Mormon Church; he took our promises of honor, as Senator Platt did,
+and he pacified Senator Cullom, Senator Pettigrew and many others among
+our antagonists, who afterwards told me that they had accepted the
+pledges given by Senator Dubois in our behalf.
+
+They recognized that the Church and the community ought not to be held
+responsible for a few possible cases of individual resistance or
+offense, so long as there should be a strict adherence by the Church and
+its leaders to their personal and community covenant. I emphasize the
+nature of this generous appreciation of our difficulties, because the
+present-day polygamists in Utah claim that there was a "tacit
+understanding," between the statesmen in Washington and the agents of
+the Church, to the effect that the polygamists of that time might
+continue to live with their plural wives. This is not true. There never
+was any such understanding, to my knowledge. And there could not have
+been one, in the circumstances, without my knowledge. For though I did
+not know what delegate Rawlins, and former delegate Caine, and our
+attorney, Mr. Richards, were saying in their private interviews with
+senators and congressmen, I know that in all the frequent conversations
+I had with them I never heard an intimation of any "tacit understanding"
+beyond the one which I have defined.
+
+For my part I was more than eager to have all our political disabilities
+removed, the Church property restored, and the right of statehood
+accorded--believing implicitly in the sincerity of the Mormon leaders.
+I knew President Woodruff too well to doubt the pellacid character of
+his mind and purpose. I knew from my father's personal assurance--and
+from his constant practice from that time to the day of his death--that
+he was acting in good faith. I knew that the community was gladly
+following where these men led. I saw no slightest indication that any
+reactionary policy was likely to be entered upon in Utah, or that our
+people would accept it if it were.
+
+The Church's personal property was restored by an Act of Congress
+approved October 25, 1893, but it was stipulated in the Act that the
+money was not to be used for the support of any church buildings in
+which "the rightfulness of the practice of polygamy" should be taught.
+Similarly, when the Enabling Act was approved, in July 16, 1894, it,
+too, provided that "polygamous or plural marriage" was forever
+prohibited. A constitutional convention was held at Salt Lake City under
+the provisions of that act, and a constitution was adopted in which it
+was provided that "polygamous or plural marriages" were forever
+prohibited, that the territorial laws against polygamy were to be
+continued in force, that there should be "no union of church and state,"
+and that no church should "dominate the state or interfere with its
+functions." Upon no other basis would the nation have granted us our
+statehood; and we accepted the grant, knowing the expressed condition
+involved in that acceptance.
+
+But there was one other gift that came to us from the nation--by
+Congressional enactment and later by Utah statute as a consequence of
+statehood; and that gift was the legitimizing of every child born of
+plural marriage before January, 1896. The solemn benignity of the
+concession touched me, as it must have touched many, to the very heart
+of gratitude. By it, ten thousand children were taken from the outer
+darkness of this world's conventional exclusion and placed within the
+honored relations of mankind. It was a tribute to the purity and
+sincerity of the Mormon women who had borne the cross of plural
+marriage, believing that God had commanded their suffering. It
+recognized the holy nature and honorable intent of the marriages of
+these women, by according their children every right of legal
+inheritance from their fathers. If all other covenants could be
+forgotten and their proof obliterated, this should remain as Utah's
+pledge of honor--sacred for the sake of the Mormon mothers, holy in the
+name of the uplifted child.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VI
+
+
+
+The Goal--And After
+
+
+
+Here we were then (as I saw the situation) assured of our statehood, rid
+of polygamy, relieved of religious control in politics, and free to
+devote our energies to the development of the land and the industries
+and the business of the community. The persecutions that our people had
+borne had schooled them to co-operation. They were ready, helping one
+another, to advance together to a common prosperity. They were under the
+leadership chiefly of the man who had guided them out of a most
+desperate condition of oppression toward the freedom of sovereign
+self-government. In that progress he had saved everything that was
+worthy in the Mormon communism; he had discarded much that was a curse.
+I knew that he had no thought but for the welfare of the people; and
+with such a man, leading such a following, we seemed certain of a future
+that should be an example to the world.
+
+But both the Church and the people had been involved in debt by
+confiscation and proscription; and it was necessary now to free
+ourselves financially. This work my father undertook in behalf of the
+Presidency--for the President of the Mormon Church is not only the
+Prophet, Seer and Revelator of God to the faithful; he is also "the
+trustee in trust" of all the Church's material property. He is the
+controller, almost the owner, of everything it owns. He is as sacred in
+his financial as in his religious absolutism. He is accountable to no
+one, The Church auditors, whom he appoints, concern themselves merely
+with the details of bookkeeping. The millions of dollars that are paid
+to him, by the people in tithes, are used by him as he sees fit to use
+them; and the annual contributors to this "common fund" would no more
+question his administration of it than they would question the ways of
+divinity.
+
+In the early days there had been a strongly animating idea that among
+the divinely-authorized duties of leadership was the obligation to
+develop the natural resources of the country in order to meet the
+people's needs. As the immigrants poured into Utah, these needs
+increased; and the Church leaders used the Church funds to develop coal
+and iron mines, support salt gardens, build a railway, establish a sugar
+factory (for which the people, through the legislature, voted a bounty),
+conduct a beach resort, and aid a hundred other enterprises that
+promised to be for the public good. These undertakings were not financed
+for profit. They were semi-socialistic in their establishment and
+half-benevolent in their administration.
+
+But during "the days of the raid" they were neglected, because the
+Church was involved in debt. And now it became pressingly necessary to
+obtain money to restore the moribund industries and to meet the payments
+that were continually falling due upon loans made to the Presidency.
+President Woodruff called on me to aid in the work. So I came into touch
+with a development of events that did not seem to me, then, of any great
+importance; yet it drew as its consequence a connection between the
+Mormon Church and the great financial "interests" of the East--a
+connection that is one of the strong determining causes of the
+perversion of government and denial of political liberty in Utah today.
+
+I wish, here, simply to foreshadow, this connection. It will reappear in
+the story again and again; and it is necessary to have the significance
+of the recurrence understood in advance. But, at the time of which I
+write, there was no more than an innocent approach on our part to
+Eastern financiers to obtain money for the Church and to concentrate our
+debts in the hands of two or three New York banks.
+
+For example, the Church had loaned to, or endorsed for, the Utah Sugar
+Company to the amount of $325,000; and my father had personally endorsed
+the general obligations for this and other sums, although he owned only
+$5,000 of the company's stock. He supported the factory with his
+personal credit and assumed the risk of loss (without any corresponding
+possibility of gain) in order to benefit the whole people by encouraging
+the beet sugar industry. A vain attempt had been made to sell the bonds
+in New York. Finally, the Church bought all the bonds of the company for
+$325,000 (of a face value of $400,000), and we sold them, for the
+Church, to Mr. Joseph Bannigan, the "rubber king," of Providence, Rhode
+Island, for $360,000, with the guarantee of the First Presidency, the
+trustee of the Church, and myself.
+
+Similarly, the First Presidency led in building an electric power plant
+in Ogden, after Chas. K. Bannister, a great engineer, and myself had
+persuaded the members of the Presidency that the work would benefit the
+community. The bonds of this company, too, were bought by Mr. Bannigan,
+with the guarantee of the trustee of the Church, the Presidency and
+myself. Both the power plant and the sugar factory were financially
+successful. They performed a large public service beneficently. The fact
+that Mr. Bannigan held their bonds was no detriment to their work and
+wrought no injury to the people.
+
+I single out these two enterprises because Joseph F. Smith has since
+sold the power plant to the "Harriman interests," and the control of the
+sugar factory to the sugar trust; and he has explained that in making
+the sales he merely followed my father's example and mine in selling the
+bonds to Mr. Bannigan. The power plant is now a part of the merger
+called the Utah Light and Railway Company, which has a monopoly right in
+all the streets of Salt Lake City and its suburbs, besides owning the
+electric power and light plants of Salt Lake City and Ogden, the gas
+plants of both these cities, and the natural gas wells and pipe lines
+supplying them. The Mormon people whose tithes aided these properties--
+whose good-will maintained them--whose leaders designed them as a
+community work for a community benefit--these people are now being
+mercilessly exploited by the Eastern "interests" to whom the Prophet of
+the Church has sold them bodily. The difference between selling the
+bonds of the sugar company to Bannigan, in order to raise money to
+support the factory, and selling half the stock to the sugar trust, in
+order to make a monopoly profit out of the Mormon consumers of sugar,
+has either not occurred to Smith or has been divinely waived by him.
+
+However, this is by the way and in advance of my story. In 1894 we had
+no more fear of the Eastern money power than we had of the return of the
+Church to politics or to polygamy. Throughout 1893 and 1894 I was
+engaged in the work of re-establishing the Church's business affairs
+with my father and a sort of finance committee of which the other two
+members were Colonel N. W. Clayton, of Salt Lake City, and Mr. James
+Jack, the cashier of the Church. In the summer of 1894 I heard various
+rumors that when Utah should gain its statehood, my father would
+probably be a candidate for the United States Senate. Since this would
+be a palpable breach of the Church's agreement to keep out of politics,
+I took occasion--one day, on a railroad journey--to ask him if he
+intended to be a candidate.
+
+He told me that he was being urged to stand for the Senatorship, but
+that for his part he had no desire to do so; and he asked me what I
+thought about it. I replied that if I had felt it was right for him to
+take the office and he desired it, I would walk barefoot across the
+continent to aid him. But I reminded him of the pledges which he and I
+had made repeatedly--on our own behalf, in the name of his associates
+in leadership, and on the honor of the Mormon people--to subdue
+thereafter the causes of the controversy that had divided Mormon and
+Gentile in Utah. He replied with an emphatic assurance of his purpose to
+keep those pledges, and dismissed the subject with a finality that left
+no doubt in my mind.
+
+I know that he might have desired the Senatorship as a public
+vindication, since, in the old days of quarrel, he had been legislated
+out of his place in the House of Representatives; and, for the first and
+only time in my life, I undertook to philosophize some comfort for him--
+out of the fact that to the position of authority which he held in Utah
+a Senatorship was a descent. He replied dryly: "I understand, my son--
+perfectly." The fact was that he needed no comfort from me or any other
+human being. He seemed all--sufficient to himself, because of the
+abiding sense he had of the constant presence of God and his habit of
+communing with that Spirit, instead of seeking human intercourse or
+earthly counsel. He did not need my affection. He did not need, much
+less seek, the approbation of any man. In the events to which this
+conversation was a prelude, he acted without explaining himself to me or
+to anyone else, and apparently without caring in the slightest what my
+opinion or any other man's might be of his course or of the motives that
+prompted it.
+
+Some months later, in the office of the Presidency (at a business
+meeting with him, Colonel Clayton and Joseph F. Smith), I excused myself
+from attending any further sittings of the committee for that day,
+because I had to go to Provo to receive the Republican nomination for
+Congress.
+
+My father said: "I am sorry to hear it. I thought Judge Zane--or
+someone else would be nominated. I wished you to be free to help with
+these business matters. Why have you not consulted us?"
+
+I reminded him that I had told him, some weeks before, that I expected
+to be nominated for Congress this year--and that I was practically
+certain, if elected, of going to the Senate when we were granted
+statehood. "I talked with you, then, as my father," I said. "But I'm
+sure you'll remember that I have not consulted you as a leader of the
+Church, or any of your colleagues as leaders of the Church, on the
+subject of partisan politics since the People's Party was dissolved."
+
+He accepted this mild declaration of political independence without
+protest, and I went to Provo, happily, a free man. The Republicans
+nominated me by acclamation, and the chairman of the committee that came
+to offer me the nomination was Colonel Wm. Nelson, then managing editor
+of the Salt Lake Tribune, a Gentile, a former leader of the Liberal
+Party, an opponent of Mormonism as practiced, who had fought the Church
+hierarchy for years. Here was a new evidence that we were now beyond the
+old quarrels--a further guarantee that we were prepared to take our
+place among the states of the Union, free of parochialism and its
+sectarian enmities.
+
+The campaign gave every proof of such political emancipation. The people
+divided, on national party lines, as completely as any American
+community in my experience. The Democrats, having nominated Joseph L.
+Rawlins, had the prestige that he had gained in helping to pass the
+Enabling Act; a Democratic administration was in power in Washington;
+Apostle Moses Thatcher, Brigham H. Roberts, and other members of the
+Church inspired the old loyalty of the Mormons for the Democracy. But
+the Republicans had been re-enforced by the dissolution of the Liberal
+Party, whose last preceding candidate (Mr. Clarence E. Allen) went on
+the stump for us. The Smith jealousy of Moses Thatcher divided the
+Church influence; and though charges of ecclesiastical interference were
+made on both sides, such interference was personal rather than official.
+Mr. Rawlins was defeated, and I was elected delegate in Congress from
+the territory--with the United States Senatorship practically assured
+to me.
+
+In the spring of 1895 the constitutional convention at Salt Lake City
+formulated a provisional constitution for the new Utah; and, in the Fall
+of the year, a general election was held to adopt this constitution and
+to elect officers who should enter upon their duties as soon as Utah
+became a state. The election was marked by a most significant and
+important incident.
+
+The Democrats, in their convention, nominated for Congress, Brigham H.
+Roberts, one of the first seven "presidents of the seventy," and for the
+United States Senate, Joseph L. Rawlins and Apostle Moses Thatcher.
+Immediately, at a priesthood meeting of the hierarchy, Joseph F. Smith
+denounced the candidacies of Roberts and Thatcher; and the grounds for
+the denunciation were subsequently stated in the "political manifesto"
+of April, 1896, in which the First Presidency announced, as a rule of
+the Church, that no official of the Church should accept a political
+nomination until he had obtained the permission of the Church
+authorities and had learned from them whether he could "consistently
+with the obligations already entered into with the Church, take upon
+himself the added duties and labors and responsibilities of the new
+position."
+
+This action, I knew, was the result of the old jealousy of Thatcher
+which the Smiths had so long nursed. But it was also in line with the
+Church's pledge, to keep its leaders out of politics. By it, the
+hierarchy bound themselves and set the people free. The leaders,
+thereafter, according to their own "manifesto," could not enter politics
+without the consent of their quorums; and, therefore, by any American
+doctrine, they could not enter politics at all. Thatcher and Roberts
+revolted against the inhibition as an infringement of their rights as
+citizens, and it was so construed by the whole Democratic party; but
+everyone knew that a Mormon apostle had no rights as a citizen that were
+not second to his Church allegiance, and the political manifesto simply
+made public the fact of such subservience, authoritatively. We
+Republicans welcomed it, with our eyes on the future freedom of politics
+in Utah; Thatcher and Roberts refused to accept the dictation of their
+quorums, and what was practically an "edict of apostasy" went out
+against them. They were defeated. The Republican candidates (Heber M.
+Wells, as governor, and Clarence B. Allen, as member of Congress) were
+elected. Thatcher, subsequently refusing to accept the "political
+manifesto," was deposed from his apostolic authority, and deprived of
+all priesthood in the Church. Roberts recanted and was reconciled with
+the hierarchy.
+
+[FOOTNOTE: He was afterwards elected to the House of Representatives
+and was refused his seat as a polygamist.]
+
+The Republicans elected forty-three out of sixty-three members of the
+legislature, and everyone of these had been pledged to support me, for
+the United States Senate, either by his convention, or by letter to me,
+or by a promise conveyed to me by friends; and none of these pledges had
+I solicited.
+
+The rumors of my father's candidacy now became more general--although
+he was a Democrat, although the new "political manifesto" bound him,
+although it was doubtful whether the Senate would allow him to be
+seated. Two influences were urging his election. One was the desire of
+the Smith faction to have the First Councillor break the ice at
+Washington for Apostle John Henry Smith, who was ambitious to be a
+Senator and was disqualified by the fact that he was a Church leader and
+a polygamist. The other was the desire of some Eastern capitalists to
+have my father's vote in the Senate to aid them in the promotion of a
+railroad from Salt Lake City to Los Angeles. A preliminary agreement for
+the construction of the road had already been signed by men who
+represented that they had close affiliations with large steel interests
+in the East, as one party, and my father as business representative of a
+group of associates, including the Presidency of the Church. The
+Church's interest in the project was communistic, and so was my
+father's. But his vote and influence in the Senate would be valuable to
+the promotion of the undertaking, and he had received written assurances
+from Republican leaders, senators and politicians, that if he were
+elected he would be allowed his seat.
+
+As a result of our Republican success in the two political campaigns
+that had just ended, I felt that I represented the independent votes of
+both Mormons and Gentiles; and I decided to confront the First
+Presidency (as such a representative) and try to make them declare
+themselves in the matter of my father's candidacy. Not that I thought
+his candidacy would be so vitally important for I did not then believe
+the Church authorities had power to sway the legislature away from its
+pledges. But every day, at home or abroad, I was being asked: "Are you
+sure that the Church's retirement from politics is sincere?" My friends
+were accepting my word, and I wished to add certainty to assurance that
+the Church leaders intended to fulfill the covenant of their personal
+honor and respect the constitution of the state by keeping out of
+politics.
+
+Without letting them know why I wished to see them, I procured an
+appointment for the interview. When we were all seated at the table I
+explained: "I'm going to Washington to attend to my duties as delegate
+in Congress. Before I return, Utah will be admitted to statehood, and
+the legislature will have to elect two United States Senators. As you
+all know, I've been a candidate for one of these places. It has been
+assured to me by the probably unanimous vote of the Republican caucus
+when it shall convene." I laid my clenched hand on the table, knuckles
+down, with a calculated abruptness. "The first senatorship from Utah is
+there," I said.
+
+"If it's to be disturbed by any ecclesiastical direction, I want to know
+it now, so that the men who are supporting me may be aware of what they
+must encounter if they persist in their support. I ask you, as the
+Presidency of the Church: what are you going to do about the
+Senatorship?" And I opened my hand and left it lying open before them,
+for their decision.
+
+It was evident enough, from their expressions, that this was a degree of
+boldness to which they were unaccustomed. It was, evident also that they
+were unprepared to reply to me. My father remained silent, with his
+usual placidity, waiting for the others to fail to take the initiative.
+President Woodruff blinked, somewhat bewildered, looking at my hand as
+if the sight of its emptiness and the assumption of what it held,
+confused him. Joseph F. Smith, frowning, eyed it askance with a darting
+glance, apparently annoyed by the mute insolence of its demand for a
+decision which he was not prepared to make.
+
+My father, at length, looking at me imperturbably, asked: "Are you
+inquiring of our personal view in this matter, Frank?"
+
+The question contained, of course, a tacit allusion to my refusal to
+consult the Church leaders about politics. I answered: "No, sir. I
+already have your personal view. That is the only personal view I have
+ever asked concerning the Senatorship. And I have purposely refrained
+from any allusions to it of late, with you, because I wished to lay it
+before the Presidency, as a body, formally, in order that there might be
+no possible misunderstanding."
+
+"In that case," he said, "the matter rests with President Woodruff."
+
+The President, thus forced to an explanation, made a very characteristic
+one. Several of the Church's friends in the East, he said, had urged
+father's name for the Senatorship, but it was impossible to see how he
+could be spared from the affairs of the priesthood. Zion needed him--
+and so forth.
+
+Apparently, to President Woodruff, the question of the Senatorship was
+resolvable wholly upon Church considerations. His mind was so filled
+with zealous hope for the advancement of "the Kingdom of God on Earth,"
+that he seemed quite unaware of the political aspects of the case, the
+violation of the Church's pledge, and the difficulties in the Senate
+that would surely attend upon my father's election.
+
+In the general discussion that ensued, both Joseph F. Smith and my
+father spoke of the appeal that had been made to them on behalf of the
+business interests of the community, with which the financial interests
+of the East were now eager to co-operate. But both followed the
+President's example in dismissing the possibility of the First
+Councillor's candidacy as infringing upon his duties in the Church. I
+pointed out to them that such a candidacy would be considered a breach
+of faith, that it would raise a storm of protest. They accepted the
+warning without comment, as if, having decided against the candidacy,
+they did not need to consider such aspects of it. I kept my hand open
+before them until my father said, with some trace of amusement: "You'd
+better take up that senatorship, Frank. I think you're entitled to it."
+
+I took it up, satisfied that there would be no more Church interference
+in the matter. The decision seemed to me final and momentous. I felt
+that the new Utah had faced the old and had been assured of
+independence.
+
+About this same time (although I cannot place it accurately in my
+recollection), President Woodruff, speaking from the pulpit, declared
+that it was the right of the priesthood of God to rule in all things on
+earth, and that they had in no wise relinquished any of their authority.
+The sermon raised a dangerous alarm in Salt Lake City, and I was
+immediately summoned from Ogden (by a messenger from Church
+headquarters) to see the proprietor and the editor of the Salt Lake
+Tribune--which paper, it was feared, might oppose Utah's admission to
+statehood, construing President Woodruff's remarks to mean that the
+Church's political covenants were to be broken.
+
+I found Mr. P. H. Lannan, the proprietor of the paper, anxious,
+indignant and ready to denounce the Church and fight against the
+admission to statehood. "When I heard of that sermon," he said, "my
+heart went into my boots. We Gentiles have trusted everything to the
+promises that have been made by the leaders of the Church. If the
+Tribune had not supported the movement for statehood, the Gentiles would
+never have taken the risk. I feel like a man who has sold his brethren
+into slavery."
+
+I assured him (as I was authorized to do) that President Woodruff was
+not speaking for our generation of the Mormon people nor for his
+associates in the leadership of the Church. I pleaded that it was the
+privilege of an old man (and President Woodruff was nearly ninety) to
+dream again the visions of his youth; his early life had been spent in
+the belief that a Kingdom of God was to be set up in the valleys of the
+mountains, governed by the priesthood and destined to rule all the
+nations of the earth; he had planted the first flag of the country over
+the Salt Lake Valley; he was still living in days that had passed for
+all but him, and cherishing hopes that he alone had not abandoned. But
+if the Tribune and the Gentiles would be magnanimous in this matter,
+they would add to the gratitude that already bound the younger
+generations of the Church to the fulfillment of its political promises.
+
+Mr. Lannan responded instantly to the appeal to his generosity, and
+after consultation with the editor-in-chief (Judge C. C. Goodwin) and
+the managing editor (Colonel Wm. Nelson) the Tribune continued to trust
+in Mormon good faith.
+
+I reported the result of my conference to Church headquarters. The news
+was received with relief and gratitude. And, in a long conversation with
+the authorities, I was told that it would be incumbent on us of the
+younger generation to see that all the Church's covenants to the nation
+should be scrupulously observed.
+
+I accepted my part of the charge with a light heart, and late in
+November, 1895, I took train for Washington for convening of Congress.
+Of the incidents of my brief services as delegate I shall write nothing
+here, since those incidents were merely introductory to matters which I
+shall have to consider later. But I was greeted with a great deal of
+cordiality by the Republicans who credited me with having brought a
+state and its national representation into the Republican party, and
+they assured me that my own political future would be as bright as that
+of my native state!
+
+President Cleveland, on January 4, 1896, proclaimed Utah a sovereign
+state of the Union, and its admission to statehood ended, of course, my
+service as a territorial delegate. I stood beside his desk in the White
+House to see him sign the proclamation--the same desk at which he had
+received me, some eight years before, when I came beseeching him to be
+merciful to the proscribed people whose freedom he was now announcing.
+Perhaps the manumission that he was granting, gave a benignity to his
+face. Perhaps the emotion in my own mind transfigured him to me. But I
+saw smiles and pathos in the ruggedness of his expression of
+congratulation as he said a few words of hope that Utah would fulfill
+every promise made, on her behalf, by her own people, and every happy
+expectation that had been entertained for her by her friends. His
+enormous rigid bulk, a little bowed now by years of service, seemed
+softened, as his face was, to the graciousness of clement power. He gave
+me the pen with which he had signed the paper, and dismissed me to some
+of the happiest hours of my life.
+
+I walked out of the White House dispossessed of office, but now, at
+last, a citizen of the Republic. I stood on the steps of the White
+House, to look at the city through whose streets I had so many times
+wandered in a worried despair, and I saw them with an emotion I would
+not dare transcribe. I do not know that the sun was really shining, but
+in my memory the scene has taken on all the accumulated brightnesses of
+all the radiant days I ever knew in Washington. And I remember that I
+saw the Washington Monument and the Capitol with a sense of almost
+affectionate personal possession!
+
+In an excited exultation I went to thank the men who had helped us in
+the House and the Senate--to wire jubilant messages home--to send
+Governor Wells the pen with which the President had signed his
+proclamation, and to procure from friends in the War Department the
+first two flags that had been made with forty-five stars--the star of
+Utah the forty-fifth. Wherever I went, some sinister aspect seemed to
+have gone out of things; and I remember that I enjoyed so much the sense
+of their new inhostility, that I planned to delay my return to Utah
+until I had made a pilgrimage to every spot in Washington where I had
+despaired of our future.
+
+All this may seem almost sentimental to you, who perhaps accept your
+citizenship as an unregarded commonplace of natural right. But, for me,
+the freeing of our people was an emancipation to be compared only to the
+enfranchisement of the Southern slaves and greater even than that, for
+we had come from citizenship in the older states, and we could
+appreciate our deprivation, smart under our ostracism, and resent the
+rejection that set us apart from the rest of the nation as an inferior
+people unfit for equal rights.
+
+I sat down to my dinner, that evening, with the appetite that comes from
+a day of fasting and emotional excitement; and I recall that I was
+planning a visit of self-congratulation to Arlington, for the morrow,
+when one of the hotel bell-boys brought me a telegram. I opened it
+eagerly--to enjoy the expected message of felicitation from home.
+
+It was in cipher, and that fact gave me a pause of doubt, since the days
+of political mysteries and their cipher telegrams were over for us,
+thank God! It was signed with President Woodruff's cipher name.
+
+I went to my room to translate it, and I did not return to my dinner.
+The message read: "It is the will of the Lord that your father shall be
+elected Senator from Utah."
+
+I do not need to explain all the treacherous implications of that
+announcement. As soon as I had recovered my breath, I wired back, for
+such interpretation as they should choose to give: "God bless Utah. I am
+coming home,"--and packed my trunk, for trouble.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VII
+
+
+
+The First Betrayals
+
+
+
+Before I reached Utah, my friends, Ben Rich and James Devine, met me, on
+the train. The news of President Woodruff's "revelation" had percolated
+through the whole community. The Gentiles were alarmed for themselves.
+My friends were anxious for me. All the old enmities that had so long
+divided Utah were arranging themselves for a new conflict. And Rich and
+Devine had come to urge me to remember my promise that I would hold to
+my candidacy no matter who should appear in the field against me.
+
+Of my father's stand in the crisis Rich could give me only one
+indication: after a conference in the offices of the Presidency, Rich
+had said to President Woodruff: "Then I suppose I may as well close up
+Frank's rooms at the Templeton"--the hotel in which my friends had
+opened political headquarters for me--and my father, accompanying him
+to an anteroom, had hinted significantly: "I think you should not close
+Frank's rooms just yet. He may need them."
+
+Rich brought me word, too, that the Church authorities were expecting to
+see me; and soon as I arrived in Salt Lake City, I hastened to the
+little plastered house in which the Presidency had its offices.
+
+President Woodruff, my father, and Joseph F. Smith were there, in the
+large room of their official apartments. We withdrew, for private
+conference, into the small retiring room in which I had consulted with
+"Brother Joseph Mack" when he was on the underground--in 1888--and had
+consulted with President Woodruff about his "manifesto," in 1890. The
+change in their circumstances, since those unhappy days, was in my mind
+as I sat down.
+
+President Woodruff sat at the head of a bare walnut table in a chair so
+large that it rather dwarfed him; and he sank down in it, to an attitude
+of nervous reluctance to speak, occupied with his hands. Smith took his
+place at the opposite end of the board, with dropped eyes, his chair
+tilted back, silent, but (as I soon saw) unusually alert and attentive.
+My father assumed his inevitable composure--firmly and almost
+unmovingly seated--and looked at me squarely with a not unkind
+premonition of a smile.
+
+President Woodruff continued silent. Ordinarily, anything that came from
+the Lord was quite convincing to him and needed no argument (in his
+mind) to make it convincing to others. I could not suppose that the look
+of determination on my face troubled him. It was more likely that
+something unusual in the mental attitudes of his councillors was the
+cause of his hesitation; and with this suspicion to arouse me I became
+increasingly aware (as the conference proceeded) of two rival
+watchfulnesses upon me.
+
+"Well?" I said. "What was it you wanted of me?"
+
+Smith looked up at the President. And Smith had always, hitherto, seemed
+so unseeing of consequences, and, therefore, unappreciative of means,
+that his betrayal of interest was indicative of purpose. I thought I
+could detect, in the communication which his manner made, the plan of my
+father's ecclesiastical rivals to remove him from the scene of his
+supreme influence over the President, and the plan of ambitious church
+politicians to remove me from their path by the invocation of God's word
+appointing father to the Senate.
+
+"Frank," the President announced, "it is the will of the Lord that your
+father should go to the Senate from Utah."
+
+As he hesitated, I said: "Well, President Woodruff?"
+
+He added, with less decision: "And we want you to tell us how to bring
+it about?"
+
+It was evident that getting the revelation was easy to his spiritualized
+mind, but that fulfilling it was difficult to his unworldliness.
+
+"President Woodruff," I replied, "you have received the revelation on
+the wrong point. You do not need a voice from heaven to convince anyone
+that my father is worthy to go to the Senate, but you will need a
+revelation to tell how he is to get there."
+
+He seemed to raise himself to the inspiration of divine authority. "The
+only difficulty that we have encountered," he said, "is the fact that
+the legislators are pledged to you. Will you not release them from their
+promises and tell them to vote for your father?"
+
+"No," I said. "And my father would not permit me to do it, even if I
+could. He knows that I gave my word of honor to my supporters to stand
+as a candidate, no matter who might enter against me. He knows that he
+and I have given our pledges at Washington that political dictation in
+Utah by the heads of the Mormon Church shall cease. Of all men in Utah
+we cannot be amenable to such dictation. If you can get my supporters
+away from me--very well. I shall have no personal regrets. But you
+cannot get me away from my supporters."
+
+This inclusion of my father in my refusal evidently disconcerted
+President Woodruff; and, as evidently, it had its significance to Joseph
+F. Smith.
+
+I went on: "Before I was elected to the House of Representatives, I
+asked my father if he intended to be a candidate for the Senate. I knew
+that some prominent Gentiles, desiring to curry favor at Church
+headquarters had solicited his candidacy. I had been told that General
+Clarkson and others had assured him by letter that his election would be
+accepted at Washington, and elsewhere. I discussed the matter with him
+fully. He agreed with me that his election would be a violation of the
+understanding had with the country; and he declared that he did not care
+to become again the storm center of strife to his people, nor did he
+feel that he could honorably break our covenant to the country. With
+this clear understanding between us, I made my pledges to men who, in
+supporting me, cast aside equally advantageous relations which they
+might have established with another. I can't withdraw now without
+dishonor."
+
+My father said: "Don't let us have any misunderstandings. As President
+Woodruff stated the matter to me, I understood that it would be pleasing
+to the Lord, if the people desired my election to the Senate and it
+wouldn't antagonize the country."
+
+"Yes, yes," the President put in. "That's what I mean."
+
+Smith said, rather sourly: "The people are always willing to do what the
+Lord desires--if no one gives them bad counsel."
+
+Both he and my father emphasized the fact that the business interests of
+the East were making strong representations to the Presidency in support
+of my father's election; and I suspected (what I afterwards found to be
+the case) that both Joseph F. Smith and Apostle John Henry Smith, were
+by this time, in close communication with Republican politicians. There
+was a calm assumption, everywhere, that the Church had power to decide
+the election, if it could be induced to act; and this assumption was a
+deplorable evidence, to me, of the willingness of some of our former
+allies to drag us swiftly to the shame of a broken covenant, if only
+they could profit in purse or politics by our dishonor. I would not be
+an agent in any such betrayal, but I had to refuse without offending my
+father's trust in the divine inspiration of President Woodruff's
+decision and without aiding the Smiths in their conspiracy.
+
+Either at this conference or one of the later ones, two or three
+apostles came into the room; and among them was Apostle Brigham Young,
+son of the Prophet Brigham who had led the Mormons to the Salt Lake
+Valley. When he understood my refusal to abandon my candidacy, he said
+angrily: "This is a serious filial disrespect. I know my father never
+would have brooked such treatment from me." And I retorted: "I don't
+know who invited you into this conference, but I deny your right to
+instruct me in my filial duty. If my father doesn't understand that the
+senatorship has lost its value for me--that it's a cross now--then my
+whole lifetime of devotion to him has been in vain."
+
+My father rose and put his arm around my shoulders. "This boy," he said,
+"is acting honorably. I want him to know--and you to know--that I
+respect the position he has taken. If he is elected, he shall have my
+blessing."
+
+That was the only understanding I had with him--but it was enough. I
+could know that I was not to lose his trust and affection by holding to
+our obligations of honor; and--an assurance almost as precious--I
+could know that he would not consciously permit legislators to be
+crushed by the vengeance of the Church if they refused to yield to its
+pressure.
+
+A few days after my arrival in Utah, and while this controversy was at
+its height, my father's birthday was celebrated (January 11, 1896), with
+all the patriarchal pomp of a Mormon family gathering, in his big
+country house outside Salt Lake City. All his descendants and collateral
+relatives were there, as well as the members of the Presidency and many
+friends. After dinner, the usual exercises of the occasion were held in
+the large reception hall of the house, with President Woodruff and my
+father and two or three other Church leaders seated in semi-state at one
+end of the hall, and the others of the company deferentially withdrawn
+to face them. Towards the end of the program President Woodruff rose
+from his easy chair, and made a sort of informal address of
+congratulation; and in the course of it, with his hand on my father's
+shoulder, he said benignly: "Abraham was the friend of God. He had only
+one son on whom all his hopes were set. But the voice of the Lord
+commanded him to sacrifice Isaac upon an altar; and Abraham trusted the
+Lord and laid his son upon the altar, in obedience to God's commands.
+Now here is another servant of the Most High and a friend of God. I
+refer to President Cannon, whose birthday we are celebrating. He has
+twenty-one sons; and if it shall be the will of the Lord that he must
+sacrifice one of them he ought to be as willing as Abraham was, for he
+will have twenty left. And the son should be as willing as Isaac. We can
+all safely trust in the Lord. He will require no sacrifice at our hands
+without purpose."
+
+I remarked to a relative beside me that the altar was evidently ready
+for me, but that I feared I should have to "get out and rustle my own
+ram in the thicket." I received no reply. I heard no word of comment
+from anyone upon the President's speech. It was accepted devoutly, with
+no feeling that he had abused the privileges of a guest. Everyone
+understood (as I did) that President Woodruff was the gentlest of men;
+that he had often professed and always shown a kindly affection for me;
+but that the will of the Lord being now known, he thought I should be
+proud to be sacrificed to it!
+
+Among the legislators pledged to me were Mormon Bishops and other
+ecclesiasts who had promised their constituents to vote for me and who
+now stood between a betrayal of their people and a rebellion against the
+power of the hierarchy. I released one of them from his pledge, because
+of his pathetic fear that he would be eternally damned if he did not
+obey "the will of the Lord." The others went to the Presidency to admit
+that if they betrayed their people they would have to confess what
+pressure had been put upon them to force them to the betrayal. I went to
+notify my father (as I had notified the representatives of every other
+candidate) that we were going to call a caucus of the Republican
+majority of the legislature, and later I was advised that President
+Woodruff and his Councillor's had appointed a committee to investigate
+and report to them how many members could be counted upon to support my
+father's candidacy. The committee (composed of my uncle Angus, my
+brother Abraham, and Apostle John Henry Smith) brought back word that
+even among the men who had professed a willingness to vote for my father
+there was great reluctance and apprehension, and that in all probability
+his election could not be carried. With President Woodruff's consent, my
+father then announced that he was not a candidate. I was nominated by
+acclamation.
+
+When I called upon my father at the President's offices after the
+election, he said to me before his colleagues: "I wish to congratulate
+you on having acted honorably and fearlessly. You have my blessing." He
+turned to the President. "You see, President Woodruff," he added, "it
+was not the will of the Lord, after all, since the people did not desire
+my election!"
+
+I have dwelt so largely upon the religious aspects of this affair
+because they are as true of the Prophet in politics today as they were
+then. At the time, the personal complication of the situation most
+distressed me--the fact that I was opposing my father in order to
+fulfill the word of honor that we had given on behalf of the Mormon
+leaders. But there was another view of the matter; and it is the one
+that is most important to the purposes of this narrative. In the course
+of the various discussions and conferences upon the Senatorship, I
+learned that the inspiration of the whole attempted betrayal had come
+from certain Republican politicians and lobbyists (like Colonel Isaac
+Trumbo), who claimed to represent a political combination of business
+interests in Washington. Joseph F. Smith admitted as much to me in more
+than one conversation. (I had offended these interests by opposing a
+monetary and a tariff bill during my service as delegate in Congress--a
+matter which I have still to recount). They had chosen my father and
+Colonel Trumbo as Utah's two Senators. I made it my particular business
+to see that Trumbo's name was not even mentioned in the caucus. The man
+selected as the other senator was Arthur Brown, a prominent Gentile
+lawyer who was known as a "jack-Mormon" (meaning a Gentile adherent to
+Church power), although I then believed, and do now, that Judge Chas. C.
+Goodwin was the Gentile most entitled to the place, because of his
+ability and the love of his people.
+
+I was, however, content with the victory we had won by resisting the
+influence of the business interests that had been willing to sell our
+honor for their profit, and I set out for Washington with a
+determination to continue the resistance. I was in a good position to
+continue it. The election of two Republican Senators from Utah had given
+the Republicans a scant majority of the members of the Upper House, and
+the bills that I had fought in the Lower House were now before the
+Senate.
+
+These bills had been introduced in the House of Representatives,
+immediately upon its convening in December, 1895, by the committee on
+rules, before Speaker Reed had even appointed the general committees.
+One was a bill to authorize the issuance of interest-bearing securities
+of the United States at such times and in such sums as the Executive
+might determine. The other was a general tariff bill that proposed
+increases upon the then existing Wilson-Gorman bill. The first would put
+into the hands of the President a power that was not enjoyed by any
+ruler in Christendom; the second would add to the unfair and
+discriminatory tariff rates then in force, by making ad valorem
+increases in them. Many new members of Congress had been elected on the
+two issues thus created: the arbitrary increase of the bonded
+indebtedness by President Cleveland to maintain a gold reserve; and the
+unjust benefits afforded those industries that were least in need of
+aid, by duties increased in exact proportion to the strength of the
+industrial combination that was to be protected.
+
+The presentation of the two bills by the Committee on Rules--with a
+coacher to each proposing to prevent amendment and limit discussion--
+raised a revolt in the House. A caucus of the insurgent Republican
+members was held at the Ebbitt Hotel, and I was elected temporary
+chairman. We appointed a committee to demand from Speaker Reed a
+division of the questions and time for opposition to be heard. We had
+seventy-five insurgents when our committee waited on. Reed; and most of
+us were new men, elected to oppose such measures as these bills
+advocated. He received us with sarcasm, put us off with a promise to
+consider our demands, and then set his lieutenants at work among us.
+Under the threat of the Speaker's displeasure if we continued to
+"insurge" and the promise of his favor if we "got into line," forty-one
+(I think) of our seventy-five deserted us. We were gloriously beaten in
+the House on both measures.
+
+Some of the older Republican members of the House came to ask me how I
+had been "misled"; and they received with the raised eyebrow and the
+silent shrug my explanation that I had been merely following my
+convictions and living up to the promises I had made my constituents. I
+had supposed that I was upholding an orthodox Republican doctrine in
+helping to defend the country from exploitation by the financial
+interests, in the matter of the bond issue, and from the greed of the
+business interests in the attempt to increase horizontally the tariff
+rates.
+
+I do not need, in this day of tariff reform agitation, to argue the
+injustice of the latter measure. But the bond issue--looking back upon
+it now--seems the more cruelly absurd of the two. Here we were, in
+times of peace, with ample funds in the national treasury, proposing to
+permit the unlimited issuance of interest-bearing government bonds in
+order to procure gold, for that national treasury, out of the hoards of
+the banks, so that these same banks might be able to obtain the gold
+again from the treasury in return for paper money. The extent to which
+this sort of absurdity might be carried would depend solely upon the
+desire of the confederation of finance to have interest-bearing
+government bonds on which they might issue national bank notes, since
+the Executive was apparently willing to yield interminably to their
+greed, in the belief that he was protecting the public credit by
+encouraging the financiers to attack that credit with their raids on the
+government gold reserve. The whole difficulty had arisen, of course, out
+of the agitation upon the money question. The banks were drawing upon
+the government gold reserve; and the government was issuing bonds to
+recover the gold again from the banks.
+
+I had been, for some years, interested in the problem of our monetary
+system and had studied and discussed it among our Eastern bankers and
+abroad. The very fact that I was from a "silver state" had put me on my
+guard, lest a local influence should lead me, into economic error. I had
+grown into the belief that our system was wrong. It seemed to me that
+some remedy was imperative. I saw in bimetallism a part of the remedy,
+and I supported bimetallism not as a partisan of free coinage but as an
+advocate of monetary reform.
+
+The arrival of Utah's two representatives in the Senate (January 27,
+1896) gave the bimetallists a majority, and when the bond-issue bill
+came before us we made it into a bill to permit the free coinage of
+silver. (February 1). A few days later, the Finance Committee turned the
+tariff bill into a free-coinage bill also. On both measures, five
+Republican Senators voted against their party--Henry M. Teller, of
+Colorado; Fred T. Dubois, of Idaho; Thos. H. Carter, of Montana; Lee
+Mantle, of Montana; and myself. We were subsequently joined by Richard
+F. Pettigrew of South Dakota. Within two weeks of my taking the oath in
+the Senate we were read out of the party by Republican leaders and
+Republican organs.
+
+All this happened so swiftly that there was no time for any
+remonstrances to come to me from Salt Lake City, even if the Church
+authorities had wished to remonstrate. The fact was that the people of
+Utah were with us in our insurgency, and when the financial interests
+subsequently appealed to the hierarchy, they found the Church powerless
+to aid them in support of a gold platform. But they obtained that aid,
+at last, in support of a tariff that was as unjust to the people as it
+was favorable to the trusts, and my continued "insurgency" led me again
+into a revolt against Church interference.
+
+The thread of connection that ran through these incidents is clear
+enough to me now: they were all incidents in the progress of a
+partnership between the Church and the predatory business interests that
+have since so successfully exploited the country. But, at the time, I
+saw no such connection clearly. I supposed that the partnership was
+merely a political friendship between the Smith faction in the Church
+and the Republican politicians who wished to use the Church; and I had
+sufficient contempt for the political abilities of the Smiths to regard
+their conspiracy rather lightly.
+
+Believing still in the good faith of the Mormon people and their real
+leaders in authority, I introduced a joint resolution in the Senate
+restoring to the Church its escheated real estate, which was still in
+the hands of a receiver, although its personal property had been already
+restored. In conference with Senators Hoar and Allison,--of the
+committee to which the resolution was referred--I urged an
+unconditional restoration of the property, arguing that to place
+conditions upon the restoration would be to insult the people who had
+given so many proofs of their willingness to obey the law and keep their
+pledges. The property was restored without conditions by a joint
+resolution that passed the Senate on March 18, 1896, passed the House a
+week later, and was approved by the President on March 26. The Church
+was now free of the last measure of proscription. Its people were in the
+enjoyment of every political liberty of American citizenship; and I
+joined in the Presidential campaign of 1896 with no thought of any
+danger threatening us that was not common to the other communities of
+the country.
+
+But before I continue further with these political events, I must relate
+a private incident in the secret betrayal of Utah--an incident that
+must be related, if this narrative is to remain true to the ideals of
+public duty that have thus far assumed to inspire it--an incident of
+which a false account was given before a Senate Committee in Washington
+during the Smoot investigation of 1904, accompanied by a denial of
+responsibility by Joseph F. Smith, the man whose authority alone
+encouraged and accomplished the tragedy--for it was a tragedy, as dark
+in its import to the Mormon community as it was terrible in its
+immediate consequences to all our family.
+
+By his denial of responsibility and by secret whisper within the Church,
+Smith has placed the disgrace of the betrayal upon my father, who was
+guiltless of it, and blackened the memory of my dead brother by a
+misrepresentation of his motives. I feel that it is incumbent upon me,
+therefore, at whatever pain to myself, to relate the whole unhappy truth
+of the affair, as much to defend the memory of the dead as to denounce
+the betrayal of the living, to expose a public treason against the
+community not less than to correct a private wrong done to the good name
+of those whom it is my right to defend.
+
+Late in July, 1896, when I was in New York on business for the
+Presidency, I received a telegram announcing the death of my brother,
+Apostle Abraham H. Cannon. We had been companions all our lives; he had
+been the nearest to me of our family, the dearest of my friends but even
+in the first shock of my grief I realized that my father would have a
+greater stroke of sorrow to bear than I; and in hurrying back to Salt
+Lake City I nerved myself with the hope that I might console him.
+
+I found him and Joseph F. Smith in the office of the Presidency, sitting
+at their desks. My father turned as I entered, and his face was
+unusually pale in spite of its composure; but the moment he recognized
+me, his expression changed to a look of pain that alarmed me. He rose
+and put his hand on my shoulder with a tenderness that it was his habit
+to conceal. "I know how you feel his loss," he said hoarsely, "but when
+I think what he would have had to pass through if he had lived I cannot
+regret his death."
+
+The almost agonized expression of his face, as much as the terrible
+implication of his words, startled me with I cannot say what horrible
+fear about my brother. I asked, "Why! Why--what has happened?"
+
+With a sweep of his hand toward Smith at his desk--a gesture and a look
+the most unkind I ever saw him use--he answered: "A few weeks ago,
+Abraham took a plural wife, Lillian Hamlin. It became known. He would
+have had to face a prosecution in Court. His death has saved us from a
+calamity that would have been dreadful for the Church--and for the
+state."
+
+"Father!" I cried. "Has this thing come back again! And the ink hardly
+dry on the bill that restored your church property on the pledge of
+honor that there would never be another case--" I had caught the look
+on Smith's face, and it was a look of sullen defiance. "How did it
+happen?"
+
+My father replied: "I know--it's awful. I would have prevented it if I
+could. I was asked for my consent, and I refused it. President Smith
+obtained the acquiescence of President Woodruff, on the plea that it
+wasn't an ordinary case of polygamy but merely a fulfillment of the
+biblical instruction that a man should take his dead brother's wife.
+Lillian was betrothed to David, and had been sealed to him in eternity
+after his death. I understand that President Woodruff told Abraham he
+would leave the matter with them if he wished to take the responsibility--
+and President Smith performed the ceremony."
+
+Smith could hear every word that was said. My father had included him in
+the conversation, and he was listening. He not only did not deny his
+guilt; he accepted it in silence, with an expression of sulky
+disrespect.
+
+He did not deny it later, when the whole community had learned of it. He
+went with Apostle John Henry Smith to see Mr. P. H. Lannan, proprietor
+of the Salt Lake Tribune, to ask him not to attack the Church for this
+new and shocking violation of its covenant. Mr. Lannan had been
+intimately friendly with my brother, and he was distressed between his
+regard for his dead friend and his obligation to do his public duty. I
+do not know all that the Smiths said to him; but I know that the
+conversation assumed that Joseph F. Smith had performed the marriage
+ceremony; I know that neither of the Smiths made any attempt to deny the
+assumption; and I know that Joseph F. Smith sought to placate Mr. Lannan
+by promising "it shall not occur again." And this interview was sought
+by the Smiths, palpably because wherever the marriage of Abraham H.
+Cannon and Lillian Hamlin was talked of, Joseph F. Smith was named as
+the priest who had solemnized the offending relation. If it had not been
+for Smith's consciousness of his own guilt and his knowledge that the
+whole community was aware of that guilt, he would never have gone to the
+Tribune office to make such a promise to Mr. Lannan.
+
+All of which did not prevent Joseph F. Smith from testifying--in the
+Smoot investigation at Washington in 1904--that he did not marry
+Abraham Cannon and Lillian Hamlin, that he did not have any conversation
+with my father about the marriage, that he did not know Lillian Hamlin
+had been betrothed to Abraham's dead brother, that the first time he
+heard of the charge that he had married them was when he saw it printed
+in the newspapers!
+
+[FOOTNOTE: See Proceedings before Senate Committee on Privileges and
+Elections, 1904, Vol. 1, pages 110, 126, 177, etc.]
+
+If this first polygamous marriage had been the last--if it were an
+isolated and peculiar incident as the Smiths then claimed it was and
+promised it should be--it might be forgiven as generously now as Mr.
+Lannan then forgave it. But, about the same time there became public
+another case--that of Apostle Teasdale--and as this narrative shall
+prove, here was the beginning of a policy of treachery which the present
+Church leaders, under Joseph F. Smith, have since consistently
+practiced, in defiance of the laws of the state and the "revelation of
+God," with lies and evasions, with perjury and its subornation, in
+violation of the most solemn pledges to the country, and through the
+agency of a political tyranny that makes serious prosecution impossible
+and immunity a public boast.
+
+The world understands that polygamy is an enslavement of women. The
+ecclesiastical authorities in Utah today have discovered that it is more
+powerful as an enslaver of men. Once a man is bound in a polygamous
+relation, there is no place for him in the civilized world outside of a
+Mormon community. He must remain there, shielded by the Church, or
+suffer elsewhere social ostracism and the prosecution of bigamous
+relations. Since 1890, the date of the manifesto (and it is to the
+period since 1890 that my criticism solely applies) the polygamist must
+be abjectly subservient to the prophets who protect him; he must obey
+their orders and do their work, or endure the punishment which they can
+inflict upon him and his wives and his children. Inveigled into a plural
+marriage by the authority of a clandestine religious dogma--encouraged
+by his elders, seduced by the prospect of their favor, and impelled
+perhaps by a daring impulse to take the covenant and bond that shall
+swear him into the dangerous fellowship of the lawlessly faithful--he
+finds himself, at once, a law breaker who must pay the Church hierarchy
+for his protection by yielding to them every political right, every
+personal independence, every freedom of opinion, every liberty of act.
+
+I do not believe that Smith fully foresaw the policy which he has since
+undoubtedly pursued. I believe now, as I did then, that in betraying my
+brother into polygamy Smith was actuated by his anger against my father
+for having inspired the recession from the doctrine; that he desired to
+impair the success of the recession by having my brother dignify the
+recrudescence of polygamy by the apostolic sanction of his
+participation; and that this participation was jealously designed by
+Smith to avenge himself upon the First Councillor by having the son be
+one of the first to break the law, and violate the covenant. I saw that
+my brother's death had thwarted the conspiracy. Smith was so obviously
+frightened--despite his pretense of defiance--that I believed he had
+learned his needed lesson. And I accepted the incident as a private
+tragedy on which the final curtain had now fallen.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VIII
+
+
+
+The Church and the Interests
+
+
+
+Meanwhile, I had been taking part in the Presidential campaign of 1896,
+and I had been one of the four "insurgent" Republican Senators (Teller
+of Colorado, Dubois of Idaho, Pettigrew of South Dakota and myself) who
+withdrew from the national Republican convention at St. Louis, in
+fulfillment of our obligations to our constituents, when we found that
+the convention was dominated by that confederation of finance in
+politics which has since come to be called "the System." I was a member
+of the committee on resolutions, and our actions in the committee had
+indicated that we would probably withdraw from the convention if it
+adopted the single gold platform as dictated by Senator Lodge of
+Massachusetts acting for a group of Republican leaders headed by Platt
+of New York, and Aldrich of Rhode Island. At the most critical point of
+our controversy I received a message from Church headquarters warning me
+that "we" had made powerful friends among the leading men of the nation
+and that we ought not to jeopardize their friendship by an inconsiderate
+insurgency. Accordingly, in bolting the convention, I was guilty of a
+new defiance of ecclesiastical authority and a new provocation of
+ecclesiastical vengeance.
+
+President Woodruff spoke to me of the matter after I returned to Utah,
+and I explained to him that I thought the Republican party, under the
+leadership of Mark Hanna and the flag of the "interests," had forgotten
+its duty to the people of the nation. I argued, to the President, that
+of all people in the world we, who had suffered so much ourselves, were
+most bound to bow to no unfairness ourselves and to oppose the
+imposition of unfairness upon others. And I talked in this strain to him
+not because I wished his approval of my action but because I wished to
+fortify him against the approach of the emissaries of the new
+Republicanism, who were sure to come to him to seek the support of the
+Church in the campaign.
+
+Some days later, while I was talking with my father in the offices of
+the Presidency, the secretary ushered in Senator Redfield Proctor of
+Vermont. I withdrew, understanding that he wished to speak in private
+with President Woodruff and his councillors. But I learned subsequently
+that he had come to Salt Lake to persuade the leaders of the Church to
+use their power in favor of the Republican party throughout the
+intermountain states.
+
+Senator Proctor asked me personally what chance I thought the party had
+in the West. I pointed out that the Republican platform of 1892 had
+reproached Grover Cleveland for his antagonism to bimetallism--"a
+doctrine favored by the American people from tradition and interest," to
+quote the language of that platform--and the Republicans of the
+intermountain states still held true to the doctrine. It had been
+repudiated by the St. Louis platform of June, 1896, and the
+intermountain states would probably refuse their electoral votes to the
+Republican party because of the repudiation.
+
+Senator Proctor thought that the leaders of the Church were powerful
+enough to control the votes of their followers; and he argued that
+gratitude to the Republican party for freeing Utah ought to be stronger
+than the opinions of the people in a merely economic question.
+
+I reminded him that one of our covenants had been that the Church was to
+refrain from dictating to its followers in politics; that we had been
+steadily growing away from the absolutism of earlier times; and that for
+the sake of the peace and progress of Utah I hoped that the leaders
+would keep their hands off. I did not, of course, convince him. Nor was
+it necessary. I was sure that no power that the Church would dare to use
+would be sufficient at this time to influence the people against their
+convictions.
+
+Joseph F. Smith, soon afterward, notified me that there was to be a
+meeting of the Church authorities in the Temple, and he asked me to
+attend it. Since I had never before been invited to one of these
+conferences in the "holy of holies," I inquired the purposes of the
+conclave. He replied that they desired to consider the situation in
+which our people had been placed by my action in the St. Louis
+convention, and to discuss the perceptible trend of public opinion in
+the state. I saw, then, that Senator Proctor's visit had not been
+without avail.
+
+On the appointed afternoon, I went to the sacred inner room of the
+temple, where the members of the Presidency and several of the apostles
+were waiting. I shall not describe the room or any of the religious
+ceremonies with which the conference was opened. I shall confine myself
+to the discussion--which was begun mildly by President Woodruff and
+Lorenzo Snow, then president of the quorum of apostles.
+
+To my great surprise, Joseph F. Smith made a violent Republican speech,
+declaring that I had humiliated the Church and alienated its political
+friends by withdrawing from the St. Louis convention. He was followed by
+Heber J. Grant, an apostle, who had always posed as a Democrat; and he
+was as Republican and denunciatory as Smith had been. He declaimed
+against our alienation of the great business interests of the country,
+whose friendship he and other prominent Mormons had done so much to
+cultivate, and from whom we might now procure such advantageous
+co-operation if we stood by them in politics.
+
+President Woodruff tried to defend me by saying that he was sure I had
+acted conscientiously; but by this time I desired no intervention of
+prophetic mercy and no mitigation of judgment that might come of such
+intervention. As soon as the President announced that they were prepared
+to hear from me, I rose and walked to the farther side of the solemn
+chamber, withdrawn from the assembled prophets and confronting them.
+Having first disavowed any recognition of their right as an
+ecclesiastical body to direct me in my political actions, I rehearsed
+the events of the two campaigns in which I had been elected on pledges
+that I had fulfilled by my course in Congress, in the Senate, and
+finally in the St. Louis convention. That course had been approved by
+the people. They had trusted me to carry out the policies on which they
+had elected me to Congress. They had reiterated the trust by electing me
+to the Senate after I had revolted against the Republican bond and
+tariff measures in the lower House. I could not and would not violate
+their trust now. And there was no authority on earth which I would
+recognize as empowered to come between the people's will and the people's
+elected servants.
+
+The prophets received this defiance in silence. Their expressions
+implied condemnation, but none was spoken--at least not while I was
+there. President Woodruff indicated that the conference was at an end,
+so far as I was concerned; and I withdrew. Some attempts were
+subsequently made to influence the people during the campaign, but in a
+half-hearted way and vainly. The Democrats carried Utah overwhelmingly;
+only three Republican members of the legislature were elected out of
+sixty-three.
+
+It was this conference in the Temple which gave me my first realization
+that most of the Prophets had not, and never would have, any feeling of
+citizenship in state or nation; that they considered, and would continue
+to consider, every public issue solely in its possible effect upon the
+fortunes of their Church. My father alone seemed to have a larger view;
+but he was a statesman of full worldly knowledge; and his experience in
+Congress, during a part of the "reconstruction period," and throughout
+the Tilden-Hayes controversy, had taught him how effectively the
+national power could assert itself. The others, blind to such dangers,
+seemed to feel that under Utah's sovereignty the literal "kingdom of
+God" (as they regard their Church) was to exercise an undisputed
+authority. Unable, myself, to take their viewpoint, I was conscious of a
+sense of transgression against the orthodoxy of their religion. I was
+aware, for the first time, that in gaining the fraternity of American
+citizenship I had in some way lost the fraternity of the faith in which
+I had been reared. I accepted this as a necessary consequence of our new
+freedom--a freedom that left us less close and unyielding in our
+religious loyalty by withdrawing the pressure that had produced our
+compactness. And I hoped that, in time, the Prophets themselves--or, at
+least, their successors--would grow into a more liberal sense of
+citizenship as their people grew. I knew that our progress must be a
+process of evolution. I was content to wait upon the slow amendments of
+time.
+
+My hope carried me through the disheartening incidents of the Senatorial
+campaign that followed upon the election of the legislature--a campaign
+in which the power of the hierarchy was used publicly to defeat the
+deposed apostle, Moses Thatcher, in his second candidacy for the United
+States Senate. But the Church only succeeded in defeating him by
+throwing its influence to Joseph L. Rawlins, whom the Prophets loved as
+little as they loved Thatcher; and I felt that in Rawlins' election the
+state at least gained a representative who was worthy of it.
+
+What was quite as sinister a use of Church influence occurred among the
+Mormons of Idaho, where I went to help Senator Fred. T. Dubois in his
+campaign for re-election. He had aided us in obtaining Utah's statehood
+as much as any man in Washington. He had accepted all the promises of
+the Mormon leaders in good faith--particularly their promise that no
+Church influence should intrude upon the politics of Idaho. Yet in his
+campaign I was followed through the Mormon settlements by Charles W.
+Penrose, a polygamist, since an apostle of the Church, and at that time
+editor of the Church's official organ, the Deseret News.
+
+I supposed that he was lying in his claim to represent the Presidency;
+and as soon as I returned to Salt Lake, I went to Church headquarters
+and asked whether Penrose had been authorized to say (as he had been
+saying) that he was sent out to prevent my making any misrepresentations
+of the political attitude of the Presidency.
+
+Joseph F. Smith replied, "Yes,"--speaking for himself and apparently
+for President Woodruff.
+
+"And when"--I demanded--"when did I ever claim to represent or
+misrepresent you in politics? Haven't I always said that I don't
+recognize you as politicians--and always denied that you have any right
+to dictate the politics of our people?"
+
+President Woodruff interposed gently:
+
+"Well, you know, Frank, we have no criticism to pass on you, but we were
+advised that you might tell the voters of Idaho we were friendly to
+Senator Dubois, and so we sent Brother Penrose, at the request of
+President Budge" (a Mormon stake president in Idaho) "to counsel our
+people. And Brother Penrose says you attacked him in one of your
+meetings, and said he was not a trustworthy political guide."
+
+President Woodruff's mildness was always irresistible. "If that's all he
+told you I said about him," I replied, "he didn't do justice to my
+remarks." And I explained that I had described Penrose as "a lying, oily
+hypocrite," come to advise the Idaho Mormons that the Presidency wished
+them to vote a certain political ticket although the Presidency had no
+interest in the question and although I myself had taken to Washington
+the Presidency's covenant of honor that the Church would never attempt
+to interfere in Idaho's political affairs.
+
+Smith sprang to his feet angrily. "I don't care what has been promised
+to Dubois or anyone else," he said. "He was the bitterest enemy our
+people had in the old days, and I'll never give my countenance to him in
+politics while the world stands. He sent many a one of our brethren to
+prison when he was marshal of the territory, and I can't forget his
+devilish persecutions--even if you can."
+
+I closed the conversation by remarking that not one among us would have
+had a vote as a citizen either of Utah or of Idaho if Dubois and men of
+his kind had not accepted our pledges of honor; and if we were
+determined to remember the persecutions and not the mercy, we ought to
+go back to the conditions from which mercy had rescued us.
+
+I left for Washington, soon after, with an unhappy apprehension that
+there were evil influences at work in Utah which might prove powerful
+enough to involve the whole community in the worst miseries of reaction.
+I saw those influences embodied in Joseph F. Smith; and because he was
+explosive where others were reflective, he had now more influence than
+previously--there being no longer any set resistance to him. The
+reverence of the Mormon people for the name of Smith was (as it had
+always been) his chief asset of popularity. He had a superlative
+physical impressiveness and a passion that seemed to take the place of
+magnetism in public address. But he never said anything memorable; he
+never showed any compelling ability of mind; he had a personal cunning
+without any large intelligence, and he was so many removes from the
+First Presidency that it seemed unlikely he would soon attain to that
+position of which the power is so great that it only makes the
+blundering more dangerous than the astute.
+
+I was going to Washington, before Congress reconvened, to confer with
+Senator Redfield Proctor. He wished to see me about the new protective
+tariff bill that was proposed by the Republican leaders. I wished to ask
+him not to use his political influence in Idaho against Senator Fred. T.
+Dubois, who had been Senator Proctor's political protege. I knew that
+Senator Proctor had once been given a semi-official promise that the
+Mormon Church leaders would not interfere in Idaho against Dubois. I
+wished to tell Proctor that this promise was not being kept, and to
+plead with him to give Dubois fair play--although I knew that Senator
+Dubois' "insurgency" had offended Senator Proctor.
+
+He received me, in his home in Washington, with an almost paternal
+kindliness that became sometimes more dictatorial than persuasive--as
+the manner of an older Senator is so apt to be when he wishes to correct
+the independence of a younger colleague. He explained that the House was
+Republican by a considerable majority; a good protective tariff bill
+would come from that body; and a careful canvass of the Senate had
+proved that the bill would pass there, if I would vote for it. "We have
+within one vote of a majority," he said. "As you're a devoted
+protectionist in your views--as your state is for protection--as your
+father and your people feel grateful to the Republican party for leading
+you out of the wilderness--I have felt that it was proper to appeal to
+you and learn your views definitely. If you'll pledge your support to
+the bill, we shall not look elsewhere for a vote--but it's essential
+that we should be secure of a majority."
+
+I replied that I could not promise to vote for the measure until I
+should see it. It was true that I had been a devoted advocate of
+protection and still believed in the principle; but I had learned
+something of the way in which tariff bills were framed, and something of
+the influences that controlled the party councils in support of them. I
+could not be sure that the new measure would be any more just than the
+original Dingley bill, which I had helped to defeat in the Senate; and
+the way in which this bill had been driven through the House was a
+sufficient warning to me not to harness myself in a pledge that might be
+misused in legislation.
+
+Senator Proctor did me the honor to say that he did not suppose any
+improper suggestion of personal advantage could influence me, and he
+hoped I knew him too well to suppose that he would use such an argument;
+"but," he added, "anything that it's within the 'political' power of the
+party to bestow, you may expect; I'm authorized to say that we will take
+care of you."
+
+As I still refused to bind myself blindly, he said, with regret: "We had
+great hopes of you. It seems that we must look elsewhere. I will leave
+the question open. If you conclude to assure us of your vote for the
+bill, I shall see that you are restored to a place in Republican
+councils. If I do not hear anything from you, it will be necessary to
+address ourselves to one or two other Senators who are probably
+available."
+
+It is, of course, a doctrine of present-day Republicanism that the will
+of the majority must rule within the party. An insurgent is therefore an
+apostate. The decision of the caucus is the infallible declaration of
+the creed. In setting myself up as a judge of what it was right for me
+to do, as the sworn representative of the people who had elected me, I
+was offending against party orthodoxy, as that orthodoxy was then, and
+is now, enforced in Washington.
+
+I was given an opportunity to return to conformity. I was sent a written
+invitation to attend the caucus of Republican Senators after the
+assembling of Congress; and, with the other "insurgents," I ignored the
+invitation. It was finally decided by the party leaders to let the
+tariff bill rest until after the inauguration of the President-elect,
+William McKinley, with the understanding that he would call a special
+session to consider it; and, in the interval, the Republican machine,
+under Mark Hanna, was set to work to produce a Republican majority in
+the Senate.
+
+Hanna was elected Senator, at this time, to succeed John Sherman, who
+had been removed to the office of Secretary of State, in order to make a
+seat for Hanna. The Republican majority was produced. (Senator Dubois
+had been defeated). And when the special session was called, in the
+spring of 1897, my vote was no longer so urgently needed. I was invited
+to a Republican caucus, but I was unwilling to return to political
+affiliations which I might have to renounce again; for I saw the power
+of the business interests in dictating the policy of the party and I did
+not propose to bow to that dictation.
+
+When the tariff bill came before the Senate, I could not in conscience
+support it. The beneficiaries of the bill seemed to be dictating their
+own schedules, and this was notably the case with the sugar trust, which
+had obtained a differential between raw and refined sugar several times
+greater than the entire cost of refining. I denounced the injustice of
+the sugar schedule particularly. A Mr. Oxnard came to remonstrate with
+me on behalf of the beet sugar industry of the West. "You know," he
+said, "what a hard time we're having with our sugar companies. Unless
+this schedule's adopted I greatly fear for our future."
+
+I replied that I was not opposing any protection of the struggling
+industries of the country, or of the sugar growers, but I was set
+against the extortionate differential that the sugar trust was
+demanding. Everybody knew that the trust had built its tremendous
+industrial power upon such criminally high protection as this
+differential afforded, and that its power now affected public councils,
+obtained improper favors, and terrorized the small competing beet sugar
+companies of the West. I argued that it was time to rally for the
+protection of the people as well as of the beet sugar industry.
+
+He predicted that if the differential was reduced the protection on beet
+sugar would fail. I laughed at him. "You don't know the temper of the
+Senate," I said. "Why, even some of the Democrats are in favor of
+protecting the beet sugar industry. That part of the bill is safe,
+whatever happens to the rest."
+
+"Senator Cannon," he replied, with all the scorn of superior knowledge,
+"you're somewhat new to this matter. Permit me to inform you that if we
+don't do our part in supporting the sugar schedule, including the
+differential, the friends of the schedule in the Senate will prevent us
+from obtaining our protection."
+
+"That," I retorted angrily, "is equivalent to saying that the sugar
+trust is writing the sugar schedule. I can't listen with patience to any
+such insult. The Senate of the United States cannot be dictated to, in a
+matter of such importance, by the trust. I will not vote for the
+differential. I will continue to oppose it to the end. If you're right--
+if the trust has such power--better that our struggling sugar industry
+should perish, so that we may arouse the people to the iniquitous
+manipulation that destroyed it."
+
+I continued to oppose the schedule. Soon after, I received a message
+from the Church authorities asking me to go to New York to attend to
+some of their financial affairs. I entered the lobby of the Plaza Hotel
+on Fifth Avenue about nine o'clock at night; I was met, unexpectedly, by
+Thomas R. Cutler, manager of the Utah Sugar Company, who was a Bishop of
+the Mormon Church; and he asked, almost at once, how the tariff bill was
+progressing at Washington.
+
+I had known Bishop Cutler for years. I knew that he had labored with
+extraordinary zeal and intelligence to establish the sugar industry in
+Utah. I understood that he had risked his own property, unselfishly, to
+save the enterprise when it was in peril. And I had every reason to
+expect that he would be as indignant as I was, at the proposal to use
+the support of the beet sugar states in behalf of their old tyrant.
+
+I told him of my conversation with Oxnard. "I'm glad," I said, "that
+we're independent enough to refuse such an alliance with the men who are
+robbing the country."
+
+A peculiar, pale smile curled Bishop Cutler's thin lips. "Well, Frank,"
+he replied, "that's just what I want to see you about. We"--with the
+intonation that is used among prominent Mormons when the "we" are
+voicing the conclusions of the hierarchy--"wouldn't like to do anything
+to hurt the sugar interests of the country. I've looked into this
+differential, and I don't see that it is particularly exorbitant. As a
+matter of fact, the American Sugar Refining Company is doing all it can
+to help us get our needed protection, and we have promised to do what we
+can for it, in return. I hope you can see your way clear to vote for the
+bill. I know that the brethren"--meaning the Church authorities--"will
+not approve of your opposition to it."
+
+I understand what his quiet warning meant, and when we had parted I went
+to my room to face the situation. Already I had been told, by a
+representative of the Union Pacific Railway, that the company intended
+to make Utah the legal home of the corporation, and to enter into a
+close affiliation with the prominent men of the Church. I had been asked
+to participate, and I had refused because I did not feel free, as a
+Senator, to become interested in a company whose relations with the
+government were of such a character. But I had not foreseen what this
+affiliation meant. Bishop Cutler's warning opened my eyes. The Church
+was protecting itself, in its commercial undertakings, by an alliance
+with the strongest and most unscrupulous of the national enemies.
+
+I saw that this was natural. The Mormon leaders had been for years
+struggling to save their community from poverty. Proscribed by the
+Federal laws, their home industries suffering for want of finances,
+fighting against the allied influences of business in politics, these
+leaders had been taught to feel a fearful respect for the power that had
+oppressed them. They were now being offered the aid and countenance of
+their old opponents. Our community, so long the object of the world's
+disdain, was to advance to favor and prosperity along the easy road of
+association with the most influential interests of the country.
+
+I remembered the long hard struggle of our people. I remembered the days
+and nights of anxiety that I myself had known when we were friendless
+and proscribed. Here was an open door for us, now, to power and wealth
+and all the comfort and consideration that would come of these. Other
+men better than I in personal character, more experienced in legislation
+than I, and wiser by natural gift, were willing to vote for the bill;
+and Bishop Cutler, a man whom I had always esteemed, the representative
+of the men whom I most revered, had urged me, for them, to support the
+bill, under suggestion of their anger if I refused to be guided by their
+leadership.
+
+I saw why the "interests" were eager to have our friendship; we could
+give them more than any other community of our size in the whole
+country. In the final analysis, the laws of our state and the
+administration of its government would be in the hands of the church
+authorities. Moses Thatcher might lead a rebellion for a time, but it
+would be brief. Brigham H. Roberts might avow his independence in some
+wonderful burst of campaign oratory, but he would be forced to fast and
+pray and see visions until he yielded. I might rebel and be successful
+for a moment, but the inexorable power of church control would crush me
+at last. Yet, if I surrendered in this matter of the tariff, I should be
+doing exactly what I had criticized so many of my colleagues for doing--
+for more than one man in the House and the Senate had given me the
+specious excuse that it was necessary to go against his conscience,
+here, in order to hold his influence and his power to do good in other
+instances.
+
+I did not sleep that night. On the day following, I transacted the
+financial affairs that I had been asked to undertake, and then I
+returned to Washington. My wife met me at the railway station, and--if
+you will bear with the intimacy of such psychology--the moment I saw
+her I knew how I would vote. I knew that neither the plea of community
+ambition, nor the equally invalid argument of an industrial need at
+home, nor the financial jeopardy of my friends who had invested in our
+home industries, nor the fear of church antagonism, could justify me in
+what would be, for me, an act of perfidy. When I had taken my oath of
+office I had pledged myself, in the memory of old days of injustice,
+never to vote as a Senator for an act of injustice. The test had come.
+By all the sanctities of that old suffering and the promise that I had
+made in its spirit, I would keep the faith.
+
+When the tariff bill came to its final vote in the Senate, I had the
+unhappy distinction of being the only Republican Senator who voted
+against it. A useless sacrifice! And yet if it had been my one act of
+public life, I should still be glad of it. The "interests" that forced
+the passage of that bill are those that have since exploited the country
+so shamefully. It is their control of Republican party councils that has
+since caused the loss of popular faith in Republicanism and the split in
+the party which threatens to disrupt it. It is their control of politics
+in Utah that has destroyed the whole value of the Mormon experiment in
+communism and made the Mormon Church an instrument of political
+oppression for commercial gain. They are the most dangerous domestic
+enemy that the nation has known since the close of the Civil War. My
+opposition was as doomed as such single independence must always be--
+but at least it was an opposition. There is a consolation in having been
+right, though you may have been futile!
+
+My father, visiting Washington soon afterwards, took occasion to
+criticize my vote publicly, in a newspaper interview; but he was
+content, by that criticism, to clear himself and his colleagues of any
+responsibility for my act. "You made a great mistake," he told me
+privately. "You are alienating the friends who have done so much for
+us." He added as if casually--with an air of off-handedness that was
+significant to me--"You lay yourself open to attack from your political
+enemies. When a man's head is high, it is easily hit." I was afterwards
+to understand how serious a danger he then foresaw and thus predicted.
+
+Many reports soon reached me of attacks that were being made upon me by
+the ecclesiastical authorities, particularly by Joseph F. Smith and
+Apostle Heber J. Grant. The formal criticism passed upon me by my father
+was magnified to make my tariff vote appear an inexcusable party and
+community defection. A vigorous and determined opposition was raised
+against me. And in this, Smith and his followers were aided by the
+perfect system of Church control in Utah--a system of complete
+ecclesiastical tyranny under the guise of democracy.
+
+Practically every Mormon man is in the priesthood. Nearly every Mormon
+man has some concrete authority to exercise in addition to holding his
+ordination as an elder. Obedience to his superiors is essential to his
+ambition to rise to higher dignity in the church; and obedience to his
+superiors is necessary in order to attract obedience to himself from his
+subordinates. There can be no lay jealousy of priestly interference in
+politics, because there are no laymen in the proper sense of the word. A
+man's worldly success in life is largely involved in his success as a
+churchman, since the church commands the opportunities of enterprise,
+and the leaders of the Church are the state's most powerful men of
+affairs. It is not uncommon, in any of our American communities, for men
+to use their church membership to support their business; but in Utah
+the Mormons practically must do so, and even the Gentiles find it wise
+to be subservient.
+
+Add to this temporal power of the Church the fact that it was
+establishing a policy of seeking material success for its people, and
+you have the explanation of its eagerness to accept an alliance with the
+"interests" and of its hostility to anyone who opposed that alliance.
+The Mormons, dispossessed of their means by the migration from Illinois,
+had been taught the difficulty of obtaining wealth and the value of it
+when once obtained. They fancied themselves set apart, in the mountains,
+by the world's exclusion. They were ambitious to make themselves as
+financially powerful in proportion to their numbers as the Jews were;
+and it was a common argument among them that the world's respect had
+turned to the Jews because of the dependence of Christian governments
+upon the Jewish financiers.
+
+The exploitation of this solid mass of industry and thrift could not
+long be obscured from the eyes of the East. The honest desire of the
+Mormon leaders to benefit their people by an alliance with financial
+power made them the easy victims of such an alliance. With the death of
+the older men of the hierarchy, the Church administration lost its
+tradition of religious leadership for the good of the community solely,
+and the new leaders became eager for financial aggrandizement for the
+sake, of power. Like every other church that has added a temporal
+scepter to its spiritual authority, its pontiffs have become kings of a
+civil government instead of primates of a religious faith.
+
+
+
+Chapter IX
+
+
+
+At the Crossways
+
+
+
+In 1897, the Church, freed of proscription, with its people enjoying the
+sovereignty of their state rights, had--as I have already said--only
+one further enfranchisement to desire: and that was its freedom from
+debt. The informal "finance committee" of which I was a member, had
+succeeded in concentrating the bulk of the indebtedness in the East, on
+short term loans, and had brought a certain order out of the confusion
+of the older methods of administration. But, in 1897, my father proposed
+a comprehensive plan of Church finance that included the issuance of
+Church bonds and the formation of responsible committees to regulate and
+manage the business affairs of the Church, so that the bonds might be
+made a normal investment for Eastern capital by having a normal business
+method of administration to back them. The idea was tentatively approved
+by the Presidency, and I was asked to draw up the plan in detail.
+
+To this end there were placed in my hands sheets showing the assets,
+liabilities, revenues and disbursements of the Church. They gave a total
+cash indebtedness of $1,200,000, approximately. The revenues from tithes
+for the year 1897 were estimated at a trifle more than a million dollars--
+the total being low because of the financial depression from which the
+country was just recovering. The available property holdings--exclusive
+of premises used for religious worship, for educational and benevolent
+work, and such kindred purposes--were valued at several millions (from
+four to six), although there was no definite appraisal or means of
+obtaining appraisal, since the values would largely attach only when the
+properties were brought into business use. I was advised that the
+incomes of the Church would probably increase at the rate of ten per
+cent per annum, but I do not know by what calculations this ratio was
+reached.
+
+The disbursements were chiefly for interest on debt, for the maintenance
+of the temples and tabernacles, for educational and charitable work, for
+missionary headquarters in other countries, and for the return of
+released missionaries. The missionaries themselves received no
+compensation; they were supposed to travel "without purse or scrip;"
+their expenses were defrayed by their relatives, and they had to pay out
+of their own pockets for the printed tracts which they distributed.
+Neither the President nor any of the general authorities received
+salaries. There was an order that each apostle should be paid $2,000 a
+year, but this rule had been suspended, except, perhaps, in the cases of
+men who had to give their whole time to religious work and who had no
+independent incomes. Some occasional appropriations had been made for
+meeting houses in communities that had been unable to erect their own
+chapels of worship, but for the most part there were few calls made upon
+the Church revenues to support its religious activities, its priests or
+its propaganda.
+
+Our proposed committees, therefore, were a committee on missionary work,
+one on publication, one on colonization, one on political protective
+work for the Mormons in foreign countries, and most important--a
+finance committee selected from the body of apostles, with the addition
+of some able men connected with financial institutions. As a basis for
+the work of the finance committee, we proposed the establishment of an
+interest fund, a sinking fund, and a scale of percentage disbursements
+for the various community purposes. These committees were to be
+appointed by the Conferences of the people, and the committee reports
+were to be public. President Woodruff eagerly accepted the plan as
+relieving the Presidency of administrative cares that were becoming too
+great for the quorum to carry. Joseph F. Smith did not at once awake to
+the real meaning of the proposal; but when the scheme was submitted in
+its matured details, he spoke of the danger of allowing power to pass
+from the hands of the "trustee in trust" in business matters. His idea
+was sufficiently clear in its resistance to any diffusion of authority,
+but it was correspondingly void of any suggestion of substitute. For the
+time being he was pacified by the assurance that the "Kingdom of God"
+and the rule of its prophets would not be endangered by the organization
+of committees and the submission of financial plans to the general
+knowledge, and even to the consent, of the people.
+
+It was, of course, evident to the First Councillor that this scheme of
+Church administration would give the Mormon people a measure of
+responsible government, and the proposal was a part of his wisdom as a
+community leader seeking the common welfare. While we had been a people
+on whom the whole world seemed to be making war, a dictatorship had been
+necessary; but now that we had arrived at peace and liberty, a
+concentration of irresponsible power would surely become dangerous to
+progress. Without, therefore, impairing the religious authority of the
+Prophet, the First Councillor was willing to divide the temporal power of
+the Church among its members.
+
+He was as silent, about these aims, with me as with all others; but I
+had learned to understand him in his silences; and, in joining with him
+in his work of reform, I was as sure of his purpose as I have since been
+sure of the disaster to the Mormon people that has come of the failure
+to effect the reform.
+
+When the Presidency had approved of the flotation of bonds, I went with
+my father to New York to aid him in interesting Eastern capitalists in
+the investment. We interviewed Judge John F. Dillon and Mr. Winslow
+Pierce, of the law firm of Dillon and Pierce, attorneys for some of the
+Union Pacific interests; and through them we met Mr. Edward H. Harriman,
+Mr. George J. Gould and members of the firm of Kuhn Loeb and Company. It
+was interesting to watch the encounters between the Mormon prophet and
+some of these astutest of the nation's financiers; for it was as if one
+of the ancient patriarchs had stepped down from the days of early Israel
+to discuss the financial problems of his people with a modern "captain
+of industry." He described a condition of society that was, to Wall
+Street, archaic. He spoke with a serene assurance that the order of
+affairs in Utah was constituted in the wisdom of the word of God. He was
+listened to, with the interest of curiosity, as the chief living
+exponent of the Mormon movement, its processes and its aims; and I was
+impressed by the fact that these men of the world had a large and
+splendid sympathy for any wholesome social effort designed to abolish
+poverty and establish a quicker justice in the practical affairs of the
+race.
+
+It was of the abolition of poverty and the justice of the social order
+among the Mormons, that the First Councillor chiefly spoke. "Your
+clients," he said to Judge Dillon, "make their investments frequently in
+railroad stocks and bonds. What are the underlying bases of the values
+of railroad securities? Largely the industry and stability of the
+communities through which the railroad lines shall operate. Then, in
+reality, the security is valuable in proportion to the value of the
+community in its steadfastness, its prosperity and the safety of its
+productive labor. In your railroad investments you are obliged to take
+such considerations as a secondary security. In negotiating this Church
+loan with your clients, you can offer the same great values as a primary
+security. Probably no where else in the world is there a people at once
+so industrious and so stable as ours."
+
+It was the boast of the Mormons that there had not been an almshouse or
+an almstaker in any of their settlements, up to the time of the escheat
+proceedings by the Federal officials; and this was literally true. Every
+man had been helped to the employment for which he was best fitted. If
+an immigrant, in his former estate, had been a silk-weaver, efforts were
+made to establish his industry and give it public support. If he had
+been a musician of talent, a little conservatory was founded, and
+patronage obtained for him. When the growth of population made it
+necessary to open new valleys for agriculture, the Church, out of its
+community fund, rendered the initial aid; in many instances the original
+irrigation enterprises of small settlements were thus financed; and the
+investments were repaid not only directly, by the return of the loan,
+but indirectly, many times over, by the increased productiveness and
+larger contributions of the people. Co-operation, in mercantile,
+industrial and stock-raising undertakings, assured the support and
+patronage of each community for its own particular enterprise, prevented
+destructive competition and checked the greed of the individual--for
+the more he toiled for himself, the larger the share of the general
+burden he had to carry.
+
+It was the First Councillor's theory that when people contributed to a
+common fund they became interested in one another's material welfare.
+The man who paid less in tithes this year than last was counselled with
+as to why his business had been unsuccessful, and the wise men of his
+little circle aided him with advice and material help. The man who
+contributed largely was glad of a prosperity from which he yielded a
+part--in recognition of what the community had done for him and in a
+reverent gratitude to God for making him "a steward of mighty
+possessions"--but he was anxious that his neighbor also should be a
+larger contributor each year.
+
+The whole system of tithe-paying was built upon a series of purported
+"revelations" received by Joseph Smith, the original Prophet. It was
+declared to be the will of God that all men, as stewards of their
+possessions, should give of their increase annually into "the storehouse
+of the Lord," which should always be open for the relief of the poor.
+Inasmuch as the man who received help--or whose widow and children did
+so--had been a tithe-payer during all his productive years, there was
+none of the feeling of personal humiliation on the part of the
+recipient, nor any of the feeling of condescending charity on the part
+of the giver, in the distribution of funds to the needy. And it was
+astonishing how few the needy were--because of the abstemious lives,
+the industry, and the thrift of the workers.
+
+The Church tribunals heard and settled all disputes over property or
+personal rights not involving the criminal law. Expensive litigation was
+thus avoided. Society was saved the cost of innumerable courts. There
+were many counties in which no lawyer could be found; and everywhere,
+among the Mormons, it was considered an act of evil fellowship,
+amounting almost to apostasy, for a man to bring suit against his
+brother in the civil tribunals.
+
+In short--as my father pointed out--Utah, at that time, expressed the
+only full-bodied social proposition in the United States. There never
+had been in America another community whose future, in the economic
+aspects, offered so clear a solution of problems which still remain
+generally unsettled. It was as if a segment of the great circle of
+modern humanity had been transported to another world, otherwise
+unpopulated, and there with the experience gained through centuries of
+human travail--had attempted the establishment of a just, beneficent
+and satisfying social order.
+
+I am here repeating this argument--this exposition--because the
+financial absolutism of the Prophets of the Church has since ruined the
+whole Mormon experiment in communism, put the Mormon paupers into the
+public poor houses, used the tithes to support the large financial
+ventures of the Prophet's favorites, and turned the Church's "community
+enterprises" into monopolistic exploitations of the Mormon people. And
+this change began even while our negotiations were pending in New York--
+for they were prolonged, for various reasons, into the summer of 1898,
+and they were interrupted finally by the death of President Woodruff.
+
+As soon as I received word of his illness I took train for Utah. The
+news of his death met me on the journey home. Since I derived my
+authority solely from him, upon my arrival in Salt Lake I went to the
+Cashier of the Church, gave him the keys and the password to the safety
+deposit box in New York, and withdrew from any further participation in
+the Church's financial affairs. When I came to the office of the
+Presidency I found that my father had removed his desk; and this was an
+indication to me of what was happening in the inner circles of Church
+intrigue.
+
+The president of the quorum of apostles invariably succeeds to the
+Presidency of the Church, although it is left to the apostles to decide,
+and their choice is supposed to be directed by inspiration. His election
+is subsequently ratified by the General Conference; but this
+ratification is a mere form, because the conference must either accept
+the choice of the apostles or rebel against "the revelation of God."
+
+Apostle Lorenzo Snow was president of the quorum of apostles, and
+therefore in line for the Presidency. But usually, after the death of a
+President, a considerable period was allowed to elapse before the
+selection of his successor, with the government resting in the quorum of
+apostles meanwhile, even for a term of years. As soon as I arrived in
+Salt Lake, Apostle Snow asked me to a private interview (in the same
+small back room of the President's offices), inquired about the
+financial negotiations that I had been conducting, and asked me whether
+it was not essential to the success of our business affairs that as soon
+as possible the Church should elect a President, empowered as "trustee
+in trust." I replied that it was. He invited me to attend a conference
+of the apostles and give my views upon the situation to them.
+
+This seemed to me an act of rather shallow cunning, for I knew I was too
+unimportant a person to be so consulted unless he thought my report
+would aid his intrigue. Such intriguing was offensive to the religious
+traditions of the Church; and it outraged my feeling for President
+Woodruff, who was hardly cold in death before this personal and worldly
+ambition caught at the reins of his office. Snow had been a man of small
+weight in the government of the Church. He had known none of the
+responsibilities of great leadership. He was eighty-four years old.
+
+However, it was impossible for us to maintain the Church's credit in the
+East unless our community were represented by some choate authority,
+since our credit rested on the belief that the Mormon people were ready
+to consecrate all their possessions at any time to the service of the
+Church at the command of the President. I advised the apostles of this
+fact. Snow was elected President on September 13, 1898, eleven days
+after Woodruff's death. He followed the usual precedent in choosing my
+father and Joseph F. Smith as his Councillor's.
+
+But he took possession of his new authority with the manner of an heir
+entering upon the ownership of a personal estate for which he had long
+waited--and which he proposed to enjoy to the full for his remaining
+years. In a most literal sense he held that all the property of the
+people of the Church was subject to his direction, as chief earthly
+steward of "the Divine Monarch," and he proceeded to exercise his
+assumed prerogatives with an autocracy that made even Joseph F. Smith
+complain because the Councillor's were never asked for counsel. As
+resident apostle of Box Elder County and president of the Box Elder
+"stake of Zion," Snow had already shown his ambition as a financier,
+disastrously; and it was as the financial head of the Church that he was
+chiefly to rule during his term of absolutism.
+
+Of all the Church leaders whom I had known he was the only man who
+showed none of the robustness of the Western experience. Tall, stately,
+white-bearded, elegant and courtly, he prided himself most obviously on
+his manners and his culture. He rarely spoke in any but the most subdued
+and silken tones of suavity. He walked with a step that was almost
+affected in its gentility. If he had any passions, he held them in such
+smooth concealment that the public credited him with neither force nor
+unkindness. He had been a great traveler (as a missionary); he had
+written his autobiography, somewhat egotistically; he was devoted to the
+forms of his religion, like a mediaeval Prince of the Church and an
+elegante. But under all the artificialities of personal vanity and
+exterior grace, he proved to have a cold determination that seemed more
+selfishly ambitious than religiously zealous.
+
+At once, upon his accession to power, he notified us that he did not
+intend to carry out any such plan as we had suggested for the
+administration of the Church's finances. It meant a diffusion of
+authority; and he held that the best results had been obtained by
+keeping all power in the hands of the Prophet, Seer and Revelator, and
+of those whom he might appoint to work with him. Joseph F. Smith, at a
+meeting of the Presidency, was even more positive. No good, he said,
+could come of publishing the affairs of the community to the people of
+it; those affairs were purely the concern of the Prophets; the Lord
+revealed His will to the Prophets and they were responsible only to Him.
+
+My father necessarily bowed to the President's decision. "It is within
+the authority of the Prophet of the Lord," he counselled me, "to
+determine how he will conduct the business of the Church. President Snow
+has his own ideas."
+
+By that decision, as I see it now, an autocracy of financial power was
+confirmed to the President of the Mormon Church at a time when a renewal
+of prosperity among its people was about to make such power fatal to
+their liberties. It was confirmed to a man who proved himself eager for
+it, ambitious to increase it and secretly unscrupulous in his use of it.
+He proceeded at once to preach the doctrine of contribution with
+unexampled zeal, but he administered the "common fund," so collected,
+with none of the old feeling of responsibility to the people who
+contributed it He became the first of the new financial pontiffs of the
+Church who have used the "money power" as an aid to hierarchical
+domination.
+
+Moreover, in his desire to fill the coffers of the Church, he engaged in
+"practical politics" and made a profit out of Church influence, both in
+business enterprises and in political campaigns. He proved himself
+peculiarly qualified by nature to construct and direct a secret
+political machine--a machine whose operations were never to be
+observable except to the close student of Utah's ecclesiasticism--a
+machine that was to be all the more effective because of its silent
+certainty. As the succeeding chapters of this narrative will show,
+although he affected a fine superiority to unclean political work and
+always publicly professed that the Church of Christ was holding itself
+aloof from the strife of partisanship, there was no political event on
+which he did not fix the calculating eye of his ambitious clericalism
+and no candidacy that he did not reach with those slender but powerful
+fingers that controlled the destiny of a state and trifled with the
+honor of a people.
+
+His accession marked the change from the old to the new regime in Utah.
+Leadership was no longer a dangerous honor. Proscription no longer made
+the authorities of the Church strong by persecution--hardy chiefs of a
+poverty-stricken people--leaders as sensible of the obligations of
+power as their followers were faithful in their allegiance of duty.
+Political freedom and worldly prosperity made the office of President a
+luxurious sovereignty, easily tyrannical, fortified in its religious
+absolutism by its irresponsible power of finance, and protected in its
+social abuses, from the interference of the nation, by an alliance with
+the commercial rulers of the nation and by a duplicity that worldliness
+has learned to dignify with the respectability of material success.
+
+
+
+Chapter X
+
+
+
+On the Downward Path
+
+
+
+During the last years of President Woodruff's life there had been a slow
+decline of the feeling that it was necessary for self-protection that
+the hierarchy should preserve a political control over the people. I
+cannot say that the feeling had wholly passed. It had continued to show
+itself, here and there, whenever a candidate was so pertinacious in his
+independence that words of disfavor were sent out from Church
+headquarters in one of those whispers that carry to the confines of the
+kingdom of the priests. But the progress was apparent. The tendency was
+clear. And in 1898 there was neither internal revolt nor external threat
+to provoke a renewal of the exercise of that force which is necessarily
+despotic if it be used at all.
+
+Yet, in September, 1898, President Snow, if he did not instigate, at
+least authorized the candidacy of Brigham H. Roberts for Congress--a
+polygamist who had been threatened with excommunication for his
+opposition to the "political manifesto" of 1896 and who had recanted and
+made his peace with the hierarchy. His election, now, would be a proof
+that the Church could punish a brilliant orator and courageous citizen
+in the time of his independence and then reward him in the day of his
+submission; and the authorities would thus demonstrate to all the people
+that the one way to political preferment lay through the annihilation of
+self-will and the submergence of national loyalty in priestly devotion.
+Such a candidacy was a sufficient shame to the state; but there was also
+a United States Senatorship to be bestowed; and it was deliberately
+bargained for, between the Church authorities and a man who deserved
+better than the alliance into which he entered.
+
+Alfred W. McCune was a citizen of Utah who had gone out from the
+territory in the days of its poverty (and his own), had made a fortune
+in British Columbia and Montana, and had returned to his home state to
+enrich it with his generosities. He was not a Mormon, but he had wide
+Mormon connections. He spent his millions in public enterprises and
+benefactions; and the Church had benefited in the sum of many thousands
+by his subscriptions to its funds and institutions.
+
+Apostle Heber J. Grant, a Republican by sentiment but a Democrat by
+pretension, was selected by President Snow to barter the Senatorship to
+McCune. There can be no doubt of it. Everyone immediately suspected it.
+Letters from Grant, published in the newspapers of January, 1899,
+subsequently confirmed it. And President Snow's actions, toward the end
+of the campaign, proved it.
+
+The other candidates were Judge O. W. Powers, a prominent Democrat;
+William H. King, also a Democrat, a former member of Congress and at one
+time a Federal judge; and myself as an independent Silver Republican. I
+had not allied myself with the Democrats after withdrawing from the
+Republican convention of 1896, and the Republican machine in Utah
+(thanks to the power of the "interests") had repudiated me, in
+September, 1898, by adopting a platform that refused to support as
+Senator any man who had opposed the Dingley Tariff Bill. But I had the
+votes of my own county of Weber, and some other votes that had been
+pledged to me before the election of members of the legislature; and
+though my return to the Senate seemed plainly impossible, I went into
+the fight in fulfillment of understandings which I had with progressive
+elements in Utah and with the "insurgents," of that day, in Washington.
+
+During the campaign to elect members of the Legislature, I supported the
+Democratic State and Congressional ticket. Brigham H. Roberts had been
+nominated for Congress on this ticket despite the protests of my father
+and many others who foresaw the evil results of electing a polygamist. I
+accepted Roberts' nomination as proof that this question must be settled
+anew at Washington; and I contented myself with predicting, throughout
+the campaign, that the House of Representatives would determine whether
+it would admit a polygamist and a member of the hierarchy as a lawmaker,
+and would so forever dispose of these ecclesiastical candidacies of
+which Utah refused to dispose for itself. (And it is a fact that since
+the prompt exclusion of Roberts from the House of Representatives no
+known polygamist has been elected to either House of Congress.)
+
+A Democratic legislature was elected, and A. W. McCune was put forward
+prominently as a candidate for the United States senatorship. He was
+assisted by his own newspaper, the Salt Lake Herald, by numberless
+business interests, cleverly by the Deseret News (the organ of the
+hierarchy) flagrantly and for financial reasons by Apostle Heber J.
+Grant, and incidentally by the Smiths on behalf of the Church. Also a
+Republican assistance was given him by my former colleague in the
+Senate, Arthur Brown, who specialized as an opponent to my candidacy.
+
+My old campaign manager, Ben Rich, had been withdrawn from me by a
+Church order appointing him in control of the Eastern missions. I was
+without the support of either the Democratic or Republican
+organizations: my following was a personal one: and consequently the
+attack upon me chiefly took the form of stories of personal immorality,
+privately circulated. These stories culminated in a motion before the
+Woman's Republican Club, demanding my withdrawal from the Senatorial
+contest on the ground of "gross misconduct"--a motion introduced by a
+Mrs. Anna M. Bradley, a woman politician (who was a stranger to me),
+with the assistance of Mrs. Arthur Brown, wife of the former Senator.
+
+If I ever had any resentment against these unfortunate women for
+allowing themselves to be used as the agents of slander, it passed in
+the miseries that overtook them later; for Mrs. Brown died of the
+scandal of her husband's intimacy with Mrs. Bradley, and Mrs. Bradley
+shot and killed ex-Senator Brown, in a Washington hotel, because he
+refused to marry her and recognize her child after her divorce from her
+husband.
+
+My anger then, and since, was not against the women, but against the men
+who hid behind them--against Apostle Heber J. Grant and Apostle John
+Henry Smith and their tool, ex-Senator Brown. In my anger I decided to
+take an action that looked as desperate as it proved successful. I hired
+the Salt Lake Theatre--for a night (February 9, 1899), and announced
+that I would speak on "Senatorial Candidates and Pharisees"--intending
+to use the opportunity of self-defense in order to attack the "financial
+apostles" who were selling Church influence.
+
+In taking that step I understood, of course, that it meant the death for
+me of any political ambition in Utah. It meant offending my father, who
+besought me not to raise my hand against "the Lord's anointed," but to
+leave my enemies "to God's justice"--as he had always done with his. It
+meant a breach with many of my friends in the Church who would blindly
+resent my criticism of the political apostles as an encouragement to the
+enemies of the faith. But the part that I had taken in helping Utah to
+gain its statehood made it impossible for me to stand aside, now, and
+see all our pledges broken, all our promises betrayed. I had to offer
+myself as a sacrifice to hierarchical resentment in the hope that my
+destruction might give at least a momentary pause to the reactionaries
+in their career.
+
+It is needless that I should relate all the incidents of that wild
+night. The theatre was packed with people who joined me for the moment
+in a sympathetic protest against the disgrace of Utah. President Lorenzo
+Snow, his two councillors and several apostles were present, and I spoke
+without any reservations on account of personal relationship, my own
+candidacy or the possible effect upon my own affairs. I appealed to the
+people to prevent the sale of Utah's senatorship to McCune by Apostle
+Grant and the Church reactionaries; and by turning the light of
+publicity upon the methods that were being employed in the legislature,
+I made it impossible for the hierarchy to sway enough votes to elect
+McCune. The men who had pledged themselves to the other candidates could
+not be shaken from their support without a national scandal. The
+election settled for the time into a deadlock, in which no candidate
+could obtain enough votes to elect him.
+
+Apostle Heber J. Grant started to write letters that should counteract
+the effect of my speech, but President Snow forbade him to continue the
+controversy and sent word to me that he had forbidden Grant to continue
+it. I did not know why President Snow wished me to feel that he was
+friendly to me, but I was soon to learn.
+
+The deadlock in the legislature continued, in spite of all the efforts
+of the Church authorities to break it. Our political workers, summoned
+one by one by messengers from Church headquarters, had gone to
+interviews from which they did not return to us--until I had left only
+Judge Ed. F. Colborn (a famous character in Kansas, Colorado and Utah),
+and an old friend, Jesse W. Fox. One night, about a week after the
+meeting in the theatre, we three were sitting alone in my rooms, when
+the door opened and someone beckoned to Fox. He went out. Judge Colborn
+opened a window to see Fox getting into a carriage with a man from
+Church headquarters--and we knew that our last worker was gone.
+
+He returned only to tell me that President Snow wished to see me--that
+if I were willing, the President would like to have me call upon him, at
+half past nine the following evening, in his residence. And I understood
+the significance of such an invitation for such an hour. I had been too
+often in contact with the power of the Prophets to doubt what was
+required of me. I was curious merely to know what form the ultimatum
+would take.
+
+President Snow was then living with his youngest wife in a house a few
+blocks from the offices of the Presidency. I drove there in a carriage
+and ordered the driver to wait for me. President Snow opened the door to
+me himself, received me with his usual engaging smile, and ushered me
+into a reception room that was shut off, by portieres, from a larger
+parlor. There, when he had invited me to be seated, he said, winningly:
+"I was not sure you would come in answer to my message."
+
+I assured him that I had not so far lost my regard for the men with whom
+my father was associated. "And besides," I said, "if there were no other
+reason, it is my place, as the younger of the two, to attend on your
+convenience."
+
+"I did not know," he replied, "but that you thought me one of the
+'Pharisees' of whom you spoke."
+
+I did not accept this invitation to reply that I did not consider him
+one of the Pharisees. I explained merely that I had identified the
+Pharisees in my speech by name and deed and accusation. "Unless
+something there said is applicable to you, I have no charge to make
+against you."
+
+He excused himself a moment to go to an infant whom we could hear crying
+in an inner room; and, when he returned, he had the child in his arms--
+a little girl, in a night gown. He sat down, petting her, stroking her
+hair with his supple lean hand, affectionately, and smiling with a sort
+of absentminded tenderness as he took up the conversation again.
+
+This memory of him sticks in my mind as one of the most extraordinary
+pictures of my experience. I knew that I had come there to hear my own
+or some other person's political death sentence. I knew that he would
+not have invited me at such an hour, with such secrecy, unless the issue
+of our conference was to be something dark and fatal. And in the soft
+radiance of the lamp he sat smiling--fragile of build, almost
+spiritual, white-haired, delicately cultured--soothing the child who
+played with his long silvery beard and blinked sleepily. He inquired
+whether my carriage was waiting for me, and I replied that it was. He
+asked me to dismiss it. When I returned to the room, the little girl was
+resting quiet, and he excused himself to take her to her cot. I heard
+him closing the doors behind him as he came back. "We may now talk with
+perfect freedom," he announced. "There's no one else in this part of the
+house."
+
+He sat down in his chair, composing himself with an air that might have
+distinguished one of the ancient kings. "I have sent for you to talk
+about the Senatorial situation. May I speak plainly to you?"
+
+I replied that he might. He was watching me, under his gray eyebrows,
+with his soft eyes, in which there was a glitter of blackness but none
+of the rheum of old age.
+
+"It would be most unfortunate," he said, "for us, as a people, if we
+failed to elect a Senator. I've had many business and other anxieties
+for the Church, and I want this question settled. If we act wisely--
+with the power and influence at our command--aid will come to me. I
+think you would not willingly permit our situation to become more
+difficult."
+
+He must have seen a change in my expression--a change that indicated
+how well I understood the significance of this guarded introduction.
+Suddenly, his manner broke into animation, and holding out both hands to
+me, palms up, he said, smiling: "You must know, Brother Frank, that I
+had nothing to do with Mr. McCune's candidacy for the Senate, do you
+not? I was not responsible for what Brother Grant did. Before we go on,
+I want you to acquit me of responsibility for that project."
+
+"President Snow," I replied, "I can't admit so much. I, too, wish to
+talk plainly--with your permission. Your responsibility is evident even
+to the casual observer--to say nothing of one reared as I've been.
+Every man in this community knows that when you point your finger your
+apostles go, and when you crook your finger your apostles return--and
+Heber J. Grant has only done what you permitted him to do with your full
+knowledge."
+
+He drew himself up, coldly. "What I have done," he retorted, "has been
+done with the knowledge of my Councillor's."
+
+The thrust was obvious. I replied: "If my father desires to discuss with
+me his responsibility for this indignity to the state, he knows I'm at
+his command. And if I have any charge to make, involving his good faith
+toward the country, I'll seek him alone."
+
+"Very well," he said, with a frigid suavity. "We will leave that part of
+the question." He paused. "Last night," he continued, "lying on my bed,
+I had a vision. I saw this work of God injured by the political strife
+of the brethren. And the voice of the Lord came to me, directing me to
+see that your father was elected to the Senate." He studied me a moment
+before he added: "What have you to say?"
+
+I answered: "It seems to me impossible. This legislature is strongly
+Democratic. My father's a Republican. It seems to me not only
+impracticable but very unwise--if it could be done."
+
+"Never mind that," he said. "The Lord will take care of the event. I
+want you to withdraw from the race and throw your strength to your
+father. It is the will of the Lord that you do so."
+
+"Have you a revelation to that effect also?" I asked.
+
+He answered, pontifically, "Yes."
+
+"You'll publish it to the world, then, the same as other revelations?"
+
+"No," he replied. "No."
+
+"Then I'll not obey it," I said, "because if God is ashamed of it, I
+am."
+
+His air of prophetic authority changed to one of combative resolution.
+He explained that one of the other candidates, a strong Democrat, had
+agreed to accept the revelation if I would; that the two of us could
+give our strength to the church candidate; that the Church would turn to
+my father the votes that it had already in command for McCune, and my
+father's election would be carried.
+
+I felt that the thumb-screws were being put on me again. For the second
+time I was being forced to the point of denying the Senatorship to my
+father by refusing him my support. And there could not have been, for
+me, a more vivid and instantaneous illumination of the hidden depths in
+this Church system--or in the individual Prophet of the cult--than was
+made by Snow's determined insistence that I should break my word of
+honor to the people of the state and of the nation, pledge that broken
+faith to him, induce all my supporters in the legislature to violate
+their covenants--Mormon and Gentile alike!--and upon his mere
+assumption of divine authority, direct Mormon and Gentile to stultify
+and disgrace themselves forever as men and public officials. There was
+something appalling in the calculating cruelty with which he proposed to
+devote us all to destruction and dishonor. There was something inhumanly
+malignant in the plan to use my known affection for my father in order
+to make me guilty of the very betrayal of the people which I had
+publicly denounced. I looked at him--and heard him, now, placidly,
+confidently, with a renewed suavity, urging me to do the thing.
+
+"President Snow," I interrupted, "does my father know of this?"
+
+He answered: "No."
+
+"I'm glad of it," I said. (And I was!) "This is not the way to work out
+either the destiny of 'God's people' or the destiny of this state. It
+would place my father in a most humiliating position to be elected--at
+the orders of the Church--under the assumption that God Almighty had
+directed men to break their solemn promises to their constituents. I
+have as high an admiration for my father's wisdom and ability as you or
+the Democratic candidate who has offered to withdraw at the will of the
+Church, but I should be paying no honor to my father by dishonoring my
+pledge to my constituents and asking other men to dishonor theirs."
+
+He dismissed me with an air of benignant sorrow!
+
+The deadlock in the legislature continued unbroken. Among my supporters
+was Lewis W. Shurtliff, the President of the "Stake of Zion" in which I
+lived; he was one of the highest Church dignitaries in the legislature
+and was regarded as my foremost champion in the Senatorial contest. On
+the last day of the legislative session, at President Snow's
+instruction, my father, known as a Republican, was offered as a
+senatorial candidate to this Democratic legislature, and all the power
+of the Church influence was thrown to him. President Shurtliff's wife
+came to our headquarters, that night, and knelt, with a number of other
+ladies, to pray that her husband might be spared the humiliation of
+breaking his repeated promise not to desert me! We all knew that if he
+broke his promise, it would cause him more mental anguish than anyone
+else; but we knew, too, that if the command came from Church
+headquarters, he would have to obey it. Men broke their political
+pledges to their people and outraged their own feelings of personal
+independence or partisan loyalty, rather than offend against "the will
+of the Lord." The forces of the other candidates went to pieces, and on
+the last night of the session my father's vote reached twenty-three. (It
+required thirty-two votes to elect.)
+
+The situation was saved by the action of a number of Democrats who got
+together and obtained a recess; when the recess was ended, a final
+ballot was taken, and, since no candidate had enough votes to elect him,
+the presiding officer, by pre-concertment, declared the joint assembly
+adjourned sine die, by operation of law. No Senator was elected.
+
+But it was the last time that the Church authorities were to be balked.
+Since that day, they have dictated the nominations and carried the
+elections of the United States Senators from Utah as if these were
+candidates for a church office. The present Senator, Reed Smoot, is an
+apostle of the Church; he obtained the Mormon President's "permission"
+to become a candidate, as he admitted to an investigating committee of
+the Senate; and when the recent tariff bill was being attacked by
+insurgent Republicans and carried by Senator Aldrich, Senator Smoot
+acted as Aldrich's lieutenant in debate, and remained to watch the
+defense of the "interests" when his chief was absent from the Senate
+chamber. (Not because Smoot was such an able defender of those
+"interests"! Not because his constituents would uphold his course! But
+because he has no constituents, and is responsible to no one but the
+hierarchical partners of those "interests.")
+
+Every pledge of the Mormon leaders that the Church would not interfere
+in politics has been broken at every election in Utah since President
+Snow that night pleaded to me that he had had many business anxieties
+for the Church and that if we elected the Church candidate "aid" would
+come to him. The covenants by which Utah obtained its statehood have
+been violated again and again. The provisions of the state constitution
+have been nullified. The trust of the Mormon people has been abused;
+their political liberties have been denied them; their Gentile brethren
+have been betrayed. And all this has been done not for the protection of
+the people, who were threatened with no proscription--and not for the
+advancement of the faith, which has been free to work out its own
+future. It has been done as a part of the alliance between the
+"financial" prophets of the Church and the financial "interests" of the
+country--which have been exploiting the people of Utah as they have
+exploited the whole nation with the aid of the ecclesiastical
+authorities in Utah.
+
+
+
+Chapter XI
+
+
+
+The Will of the Lord
+
+
+
+The Mormon leaders were now hurried down their chosen path of dishonor
+with a fateful rapidity. A reform movement was demanding of Washington
+the adoption of a constitutional amendment that should give Congress
+power to regulate the marriage and divorce laws of all the states in the
+Union. And this proposed amendment--partly inspired by a growing doubt
+of the good faith of the Mormon leaders--gave the politicians in
+Washington something to trade for Mormon votes, in the presidential
+campaign of 1900.
+
+The Republicans had lost the electoral votes of Utah and the surrounding
+states, in 1896.
+
+Utah was now Democratic, and its one United States Senator (who was
+still in office) was a Democrat. Senator Hanna's lieutenant, Perry S.
+Heath, came to Salt Lake City in the summer of 1900, to confer with the
+heads of the Mormon Church. His authority (as representative of the
+ruler of the Republican party) had been authenticated by correspondence;
+and he was received by President Snow as royalty receives the envoy of
+royalty.
+
+Heath negotiated with his usual directness. In the phrase of the time,
+"he laid down his cards on the table, face up, and asked Snow to play to
+that hand." If the Mormon Church would pledge its support to the
+Republican party, the Republican leaders would avert the threatened
+constitutional amendment that was to give Congress the power to
+interfere in the domestic affairs of the Mormon people. But if the
+Church denied its support to the Republican party, the constitutional
+amendment would be carried, and the Mormons, in their marriage
+relations, would be returned to the Federal jurisdiction from which they
+had escaped when the territory was admitted to statehood.
+
+The sentiment of the country was known to be in favor of giving Congress
+such power. A strong body of reformers was urging the amendment, and the
+Church leaders had sent Apostle John Henry Smith and Bishop H. B.
+Clawson to lobby against it. After consulting with my father, I had
+written to President Snow pointing out the danger to the Mormons of
+having a lobby opposing such an amendment--for I was not then aware of
+the secret return to the practice of polygamy, after 1896. President
+Snow replied to me (in a message of guarded prudence) that although the
+Church inhibited plural marriage and did not intend to allow the
+practice, he was opposed to the interference of Congress in the domestic
+concerns of the other states of the Union!
+
+He made his "deal" with Perry Heath. Church messengers were sent out
+secretly to the Mormons in Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, Nevada, Montana,
+Washington, Oregon, California and the territories, with the whispered
+announcement that it was "the will of the Lord" that the Republicans
+should be aided. Utah went Republican; the Mormons in the surrounding
+states either openly supported, or secretly voted for McKinley; and the
+constitutional amendment was "side tracked" and forgotten.
+
+Utah elected a Republican legislature. Apostle Reed Smoot applied to
+President Snow for permission to become a candidate for the United
+States Senatorship, and obtained a promise that if he stood aside, for
+the time, he should receive his reward later. President Snow had decided
+that Thomas Kearns, already an active candidate, was the man whom the
+Church would support--since Mr. Kearns' ability, his wealth and his
+business connection promised greater advantages for the state and (under
+cunning manipulation by the priests) greater advantages for the Church
+than the election of any other candidate. And all this may be fairly
+said without assuming that there was any definite arrangement between he
+Church and any friends of Mr. Kearns.
+
+Kearns was associated with Senator Clark of Montana and R. C. Kerens of
+St. Louis in building a railroad from Salt Lake to Los Angeles, and the
+Church owned some fifteen miles of track that had been laid from Salt
+Lake City, as the beginning of a Los Angeles line. It was apparently
+assumed by President Snow that Kearns' election to the Senate would
+facilitate the sale of this Church railroad to the Clark-Kearns
+syndicate. The Church had a direct interest in numerous iron and coal
+properties in Southern Utah, and many members of the Church also had
+private properties there, which the Los Angeles line would develop. Some
+of Kearns' friends were negotiating for the purchase of Church
+properties, and one of his partners was proposing to buy (and
+subsequently bought) the Church's "Amelia Palace," a useless and
+expensive property which Brigham Young had built for his favorite wife,
+and which the Church had long been eager to sell.
+
+My father had been in ill-health for some months and he was away from
+Utah a large part of the time. President Snow took counsel of his Second
+Councillor, Joseph F. Smith, and of Apostle John Henry Smith; and to the
+Smiths, he indicated Thos. Kearns as the one whose election to the
+United States Senate might do most to advance Snow's concealed purpose.
+But the Smiths had other plans, that were equally advantageous to the
+Church and more advantageous to the Smiths; they rebelled against
+President Snow's dictation, and he ordered them both away on temporary
+"missions."
+
+As Joseph F. Smith was leaving the President's offices, in a rage, he
+met an old friend, Joseph Howell, who (at this writing) is a member of
+Congress from Utah, and was then a member of the Utah legislature. He
+told Smith that President Snow had sent for him, and Smith, controlling
+himself--without betraying any knowledge of the probable purpose of
+Snow's summons to Howell--said affectionately: "Brother Howell, I want
+you to make a promise to me on your honor as an elder in Israel. I want
+you to pledge yourself never to vote in this legislature for Thomas
+Kearns as Senator. I ask it as your friend, and as a Prophet to the
+people."
+
+Howell gave his promise, and proceeded to his interview with President
+Snow. There he received the announcement that it was "the will of the
+Lord" that he should vote for Kearns, and he had to reply that he had
+already received an inspired instruction, on this point, from a Prophet
+of the Lord, and had given his pledge against Kearns.
+
+The incident became one of the jokes of the campaign, for Howell held to
+his promise to Smith (and was subsequently rewarded by Smith with a seat
+in Congress), and President Snow was compelled to waive the question of
+conflicting "revelations."
+
+Kearns was elected. But he had had a powerful political machine of his
+own, and he had been supported by a strong Gentile vote. He immediately
+showed his independence by refusing to take orders from the political
+Church leaders. He declined, further, for himself and his financial
+confreres, to engage with the Church in business affairs. Many charges
+were made that he was breaking his agreement of cooperation with the
+authorities, but there never has been produced any evidence of such an
+agreement, and I do not believe (from my knowledge of Senator Kearns)
+that the agreement was ever made.
+
+The railroad into Southern Utah was later built by the Harriman
+interests in combination with Clark and Kearns; but there, too, Snow was
+disappointed. The expected development of the Church properties proved
+far less profitable than had been supposed, and the financial prophecies
+of the Seer and Revelator were not fulfilled.
+
+By this time it was abundantly evident that some of the Church leaders
+intended to rule their people in politics with an absolutism as supreme
+as any that Utah had ever known in the old days. And for these leaders
+to maintain their authority--despite the covenant of their amnesty, the
+terms of Utah's statehood and the provisions of the constitution--and
+to maintain that authority against the robust American sentiment that
+would be sure to assert itself--it was necessary that they should have
+the most effective political protection afforded by any organization in
+the whole country. The ideal arrangement of evil was offered to them by
+the men then in temporary leadership of the Republican party. The
+Prophets were able to make the Republican party a guilty partner of
+their perfidy by making it a recipient of the proceeds of that perfidy,
+and to assure themselves protection in every religious tyranny so long
+as they did not run counter to Republican purpose.
+
+For the moment, the Church took more benefit from the partnership than
+it conferred. The result of the presidential elections of 1900 showed
+that the Republicans could have elected their ticket without any help
+from the Prophets. But without the help of the dominant party the
+Prophets could not have renewed the rule of the state by the Church
+could not have prevented the passage of a constitutional amendment
+punishing polygamy by Federal statute--and could not have obtained such
+intimate relation and commanding influence with the great "interests" of
+the country.
+
+Throughout all these miserable incidents, I had a vague hope that they
+would prove merely temporary and peculiar to the term of Snow's
+presidency. He was now in his eighty-sixth year. My father was next in
+succession for the Presidency, and he was seventy-three. He had remained
+personally faithful to every pledge that he had made to the nation, and
+though he had been powerless to prevent the breaches of covenant that
+had followed the sovereignty of statehood, I knew that he had opposed
+some of them and been a willing party to none. It is true that he had
+become a director of the Union Pacific Railway and was close to the
+leading financiers of the East; but his Union Pacific connection had
+come from the fact that he had been one of the builders of the road that
+had afterward merged in the Oregon Short Line; and his financial
+relations had been those of a financier and not a politician. In all the
+years that I had been working with him, I had never known him to have
+any purpose that was not communistic in its final aspect and designed
+for the good of his people.
+
+Up to his seventieth year, he had shown no ill result of his early
+hardships. Living the abstemious life of the orthodox Mormon, to whom
+wine, tobacco and even tea and coffee are prohibited, he had seemed
+inexhaustibly robust and untiring. But almost from the day of
+President's Snow accession to office--deprived of the sustaining
+consciousness of the responsibilities of leadership--his physical
+strength gave signs of breaking. In the fall of 1900 he made a trip to
+the Sandwich Islands, to recuperate, and to assist at the fiftieth
+anniversary of the Mormon mission that he had founded there; but the
+Utah winter proved too rigorous for him on his return, and in March,
+1901, he was taken to California--to Monterey. In April the word came
+to me in New York that he was sinking.
+
+I found him in a cottage overlooking the beautiful Bay of Monterey and
+its wooded slope; and the doctors in attendance told me that he had been
+kept alive only by the determination to see me before he died. There was
+no hope. He had still a clear mind, but with ominous lapses of
+unconsciousness that foreboded the end; and in these intervals of coma,
+as we wheeled him to and fro on the veranda in an invalid chair--in an
+attempt to refresh him with the motion of the sea air--he would swing
+his right hand upward, with an old pulpit gesture, and say "Priesthood!
+Priesthood!" as if in that word he expressed the ruling thought of his
+life, the inspiration that had sustained his power, the obligation that
+had governed him in his direction of his people.
+
+On the afternoon of the 11th of April, he was lying in a stupor on a
+couch before an open window, with the sound of the surf in the quiet
+room. One of the doctors entered, looked at him intently, and said to
+me: "I can do nothing more here--and my patients need me in San
+Francisco. He can't last long. He'll probably never recover
+consciousness. If there's anything imperative--anything you must say to
+him--any word you wish to have from him--you could perhaps rouse him"
+--I said "No." We had never intruded upon any mood of his silence during
+his masterful life; and I felt a jealous rebellion against the idea that
+we should intrude now upon this last, helpless silence of
+unconsciousness. The doctor left us. I summoned the other members of the
+family from the veranda to the bedside. He lay motionless and placid,
+scarcely breathing, his eyes closed, his hands folded. In accordance
+with the rites of the Church, we laid our hands on his head, while my
+eldest brother said the prayer of filial blessing that "sealed" the
+dying man to eternity.
+
+In the silence that followed the last "Amen" of the prayer, he opened
+his eyes, and said in a steady, strong voice: "You thought I was passing
+away?"
+
+We replied that we had seen he was very weak.
+
+With a glance at the door through which the physician had departed, he
+said resolutely: "I shall go when my Father calls me--and not till
+then. I shall know the moment, and I will not struggle against His
+command. Lift me up. Carry me out on the balcony I want to see the water
+once more. And I want to talk with you."
+
+To me, it was the last struggle of the unconquerable will that had
+silently, composedly, cheerfully fought and overcome every obstacle that
+had opposed the purposes of his manhood for half a century. He would not
+yield even to death at the dictation of man. He would go when he was
+ready--when his mind had accepted the inevitable as the decree of God.
+
+We sat around his couch on the veranda, and for two hours he talked to
+us as clearly and as forcibly as ever. He spoke of the Church and of its
+mission in the world, with all the hope of a religious altruist. From
+the humblest beginnings, it had grown to the greatest power. From the
+depths of persecution, it had risen to win favor from the wisest among
+men. It had abolished poverty for hundreds of thousands, by its sound
+communal system. In its religious solidarity, it had become a guardian
+and administrator of equal justice within all the sphere of its
+influence. It was full of the most splendid possibilities of good for
+mankind.
+
+With his eyes fixed on the sea--facing eternity as calmly as he faced
+that great symbol of eternity--he voiced the sincerity of his life and
+the hope that had animated his statesmanship. In an exaltation of
+spirituality that made the moment one of the sublime experiences of my
+life, he adjured us all to hold true to our covenants. I do not write of
+his personal words of love and admonition to the members of his family.
+I wish to express only the aspects that may be of public interest, in
+his last aspirations--for these were the aspirations of the Mormon
+leaders of the older generation, whom he represented--and they are the
+aspirations of all the wise among the Mormons today, whatever may be the
+folly and the treachery of their Prophets.
+
+Ten hours later, he was dead.
+
+I cannot pretend that I had any true apprehension, then, of what his
+loss meant to the community. I had no clearer vision of events than
+others. I felt that I had no longer any tie to connect me closely with
+the government of the Church, and I was willing to stand aside from its
+affairs, believing that the momentum of progress imparted to it would
+carry it forward. The nation had cleared the path for it. Its faith, put
+into practice as a social gospel, had been freed of the offensive things
+that had antagonized the world. My father's last messages of hope
+remained with me as a cheering prophecy.
+
+At his funeral in the great tabernacle, President Snow put forward a
+favorite son, Leroy, to read an official statement in which the
+President took occasion to deny that my father had dictated the recent
+policies of the Church: those policies, he said, had been solely the
+President's. (He is welcome to the credit of them!) Joseph F. Smith
+showed more generosity of emotion, now that his path of succession was
+clear of the superior in authority whom he had so long regarded
+enviously; and he spoke of my father, both privately and in public, in a
+way that won me to him.
+
+The shock of grief had perhaps "mellowed" me. I felt more tolerant of
+these men, since I was no longer necessarily engaged in opposing them.
+When President Snow died (October, 1901), I shared only the general
+interest in the way Joseph F. Smith set about asserting his family's
+title to rulership of the "Kingdom of God on Earth;" for, in effect, he
+notified the world that his branch of the Smith family had been
+designated by Divine revelation to rule in the affairs of all men, by an
+appointment that had never been revoked. He has since made his cousin,
+John Henry Smith, his First Councillor; and he has inducted his son Hyrum
+into the apostolate by "revelation." This latter act roused the jealousy
+of the mother of his son Joseph F. Smith, Jr., and the amused gossip of
+the Mormons predicted another revelation that should give Joseph Jr. a
+similar promotion. The revelation came. So many others have also come
+that the Smith family is today represented in the hierarchy by Joseph F.
+Smith, President, "Prophet, Seer and Revelator to all the world;" John
+Smith (a brother) presiding Patriarch over the whole human race; John
+Henry Smith (a cousin) Apostle and First Councillor to the President;
+Hyrum Smith and Joseph F. Smith (sons) Apostles; George A. Smith (son of
+John Henry) apostle; David S. Smith (son of Joseph F.) Councillor to the
+presiding Bishop of the Church and in line of succession to the
+bishopric; and Bathseba W. Smith, President of the Relief Societies[4].
+[FOOTNOTE: She has died since this was written.]
+
+As Joseph F. Smith has still thirty other sons--and at least four wives
+who are not represented in the apostolate--there may yet be a quorum of
+Smiths to succeed endlessly to the Presidency and make the Smith family
+a perpetual dynasty in Utah.
+
+It is one of the fascinating contradictions of Mormonism that many of
+the sincere people--who smilingly predicted the Divine interposition by
+which this family succession was founded--accept its rule devoutly.
+"The Lord," they will tell you, "will look after the Church. If these
+men are good enough for God, they are good enough for me. I do not have
+to save the Kingdom." And they continue paying their devotion (and their
+tithes) to a family autocracy whose imposition would have provoked a
+rebellion in any other community in the civilized world!
+
+It is "the will of the Lord!"
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XII
+
+
+
+The Conspiracy Completed
+
+
+
+The Smiths were no sooner firm in power than rumors began to circulate
+of a recrudescence of plural marriage, and I heard reports of political
+plots by which the Prophets were to reestablish their autocracy in
+worldly affairs in the name of God. I sought to close my mind against
+such accusations, for I remembered how often my father had been
+misjudged, and I felt that nothing but the most direct evidence should
+be permitted to convince me of a recession by the Church authorities
+from the miraculous opportunity of progress that was now open to their
+leadership. Such direct evidence came, in part, in the state elections
+of 1902.
+
+The Utah Democrats re-nominated Wm. H. King for Congress; Senator Joseph
+L. Rawlins was their candidate to succeed himself in the United States
+Senate. The Republicans nominated President Smith's friend, Joseph
+Howell, for Congress; and there began to spread a rumor that Apostle
+Reed Smoot was to become a Republican candidate for the Senatorship
+under an old promise given him by President Snow and now endorsed by
+President Smith. I had been made state chairman of the Democratic party;
+and with the growing report of Apostle Smoot's candidacy, I observed a
+gradual cessation of political activity on the part of those prominent
+Democrats who were close to the Church leaders.
+
+Now, our party was not making war on the Church nor on any of its proper
+missions in the world. Our candidates were capable and popular men
+against whom no just ecclesiastical antagonism could be raised. We were
+asking no favors from the Church. And we were determined to have no
+opposition from the Church without a protest and an understanding.
+
+For this reason--after consulting confidentially with the leaders of
+our party--undertook to make a personal visit to President Smith's
+office to demand that the Church authorities should keep their hands out
+of politics. But even while I discussed the matter with our party
+leaders, I was afraid that some of them might betray our concerted
+purpose to Church headquarters. And my fear was well grounded. When I
+went to the offices of the Presidency, the authorities--for the first,
+last and only time--refused to see me; and the secretary betrayed a
+knowledge of my mission by telling me that I should hear from some one
+of the hierarchy, later.
+
+Two or three days afterward, Apostle M. F. Cowley came to me with word
+that my call had been considered and that he had been deputed to talk
+with me. We appointed a time for conference in my rooms at Democratic
+headquarters, where we spent the large part of a day in consultation.
+And since the argument between us covered the whole ground of Apostle
+Smoot's candidacy, I wish to give an account of that interview, as a
+brief exposition of some of the present-day aspects of the Church's
+interference in politics.
+
+Apostle Cowley and I had been boyhood friends. He had been one of the
+older students at the school that I had attended as a child; and I knew
+the integrity and directness of his character. He was a stocky, strong
+man, with a wholesome sort of face, brown with the sunburn of his
+missionary travels in Canada and in Mexico. (He had been, in fact,
+solemnizing plural marriages in these polygamous refuges--as we found
+out later.)
+
+As soon as it was clearly understood between us that I represented the
+Democratic state committee and he represented the Church authorities, I
+asked for an explanation of Apostle Smoot's candidacy.
+
+Cowley began by admitting the candidacy, which President Smith had
+endorsed (he said) in spite of the opposition of some of the apostles.
+He argued that Apostle Smoot was only exercising his right of American
+citizenship in aspiring to the Senatorship; and he explained that the
+Church authorities did not see why the Church should be drawn into the
+campaign.
+
+But, as I pointed out to him, the Church had already drawn itself in. It
+had held a solemn conclave of its hierarchy to authorize an apostle's
+candidacy. The opponents of Church rule would circulate the fact; in any
+close campaign, the apostle's friends would use the fact upon the
+faithful; and the Church would be compelled to support its apostle in an
+assumed necessity of defending itself.
+
+Perhaps I was objectionably forceful in my reply to him. With his
+characteristic gentleness, he rebuked me by recalling that President
+Woodruff had once taken him into "sacred places," assured him that
+"Frank Cannon, like David, was a man after God's own heart," and asked
+him to "labor" for me in politics. If it had been right for the Prophet
+of God to favor me, why was it not right for the Prophet now to favor
+some one else?
+
+My personal regard for Apostle Cowley kept me from showing the amusement
+I felt at finding myself in this new scriptural role remembering how
+President Woodruff had once devoted me to destruction like another Isaac
+on the altar of Church control. I replied to Cowley, as soberly as I
+could, that I had never consciously received the aid of any Church
+influence; that I had always objected to its use, either for or against
+either party; that I could oppose it now with free hands.
+
+He retreated upon the favorite argument of the ecclesiasts: that an
+apostle did not relinquish his citizenship because of his Church rank;
+that the very political freedom which we demanded, to be effective, must
+apply to all men, in or out of the Church. He asked naively: "What did
+we get statehood for--and amnesty--and our political rights--if we're
+not to enjoy them?"
+
+The answer to that was obvious: The Mormon Church is so constructed that
+the apostle carries with him the power of the Church wherever he
+appears. The whole people recognize in him the personified authority of
+the Church; and if an apostle were allowed to make a political campaign
+without a denunciation from the other Church authorities, it would be
+known that he had been selected for political office by "the mouthpiece
+of the Almighty." I cited the case of Apostle Moses Thatcher as proof
+that the Church did exercise power openly to negative an apostle's
+ambition. If it failed now to rebuke Smoot, this very failure would be
+an affirmative use of its power in his behalf; all Mormons who did not
+wish to raise their hands "against the Lord's anointed," would have to
+support Smoot's legislative ticket, regardless of their political
+convictions; and all Gentiles and independent Mormons would have to
+fight the intrusion of the Church into open political activities.
+
+Cowley replied that "the brethren"--meaning the hierarchy--believed
+that a Mormon should have as many political rights, as a Catholic; and
+he asked me if I would object to seeing a Catholic in the Senate.
+
+Of course not. There are, and have been, many such. "But suppose," I
+argued, "that the Pope were to select one of his Italian cardinals to
+come to this country and be naturalized in some state of this Union that
+was under the sole rule of the Roman Catholic Church; and suppose that
+still holding his princedom in the Catholic Church and exercising the
+plenary authority conferred on him by the Pope--suppose he were to
+appear before the Senate in his robes of office, with his credentials as
+a Senator from his Church-ruled state--all of this being a matter of
+public knowledge--do you think the Senate would seat him? Certainly
+not. Yet the cases are exactly analogous. We were but lately alien and
+proscribed. We were admitted into the Union on a covenant that forbade
+Church interference in politics. It is the whole teaching of the Church
+that a Prophet wears his prophetic authority constantly as a robe of
+office. The case of Moses Thatcher is proof to the world that the Church
+appoints and disappoints at its pleasure. I don't believe that Smoot, if
+elected, will be allowed to hold his seat, and--if he is allowed to
+hold it--a greater trouble than his exclusion will surely follow. For,
+with the princes of the Mormon Church holding high place in the national
+councils--and using the power of the Church to maintain themselves
+there--we are assuring for ourselves an indefinite future of the most
+bitter controversy."
+
+When Cowley had no more arguments to offer, he said: "Well, the Prophet
+has spoken. That's enough for me. I submit cheerfully when the will of
+the Lord comes to me through his appointed servants. The matter has been
+decided, and it does not lie in your power--or anyone else's--to
+withstand the purposes of the Almighty." He rose and put his hand on my
+shoulder, affectionately. "Your father is gone, Frank. I loved him very
+dearly. I hope that you are not going to be found warring against the
+Lord's anointed."
+
+"Mat," I replied, "you have already pointed out that Apostle Smoot
+appears in politics only as an American citizen. For the purposes of
+this fight--and to avoid the consequences that you fear I'll regard him
+as a politician merely, and fight him as such."
+
+"But, you know, Frank," he remonstrated, "he has been consecrated to the
+apostleship, and I'm afraid that you'll overstep the bounds."
+
+"Mat," I assured him, "I'll watch carefully, and unless he makes his
+lightning changes too fast, I'll aim my shots only when he's in his
+political clothes. If the change is too indefinite, blame yourselves and
+not us. The whole teaching of the Church is that an apostle must be
+regarded as an apostle at all times; but the whole teaching of politics
+is that all men should appear upon equal terms--in this country. That's
+why we insist that no apostle should become a candidate for public
+office."
+
+Cowley took his departure with evident relief. He had discharged his
+ambassadorial duty--and given me the warning which he had been
+authorized to deliver--without a rupture of our personal friendship.
+And I saw him go, for my part, in a sorrowful certainty that the Church
+had thrown off all disguise and proposed to show the world, by the
+election of an apostle to the United States Senate, that the "Kingdom of
+God" was established in Utah to rule in all the affairs of men. I knew
+that if Smoot were excluded from the Senate, his exclusion would be
+argued a proof that the wicked and unregenerate nation was still
+devilishly persecuting God's anointed servants, to its own destruction;
+and, if he were permitted to take his seat, that this fact would be
+cited to the faithful as proof that the Prophets had been called to save
+the nation from the destruction that threatened it!
+
+Of course, throughout the campaign that followed, the Church's
+newspapers and many of its political workers kept protesting publicly
+that the election of the Republican legislative ticket did not mean the
+election of Apostle Smoot to the Senate. But by means of the
+authoritative whisper of ecclesiasts--carried by visiting apostles to
+Presidents of Stakes, from them to the bishops, and from the bishops to
+the presiding officers of subsidiary organizations--the inspired order
+was given to the faithful that they must vote for the legislators who
+could be relied upon to do the will of the Lord by voting for the Lord's
+anointed prophet, Apostle Reed Smoot. This message was delivered to the
+sacred Sunday prayer circles. Even Senator Rawlins' mother received it,
+from one of the ecclesiastical authorities of her ward, who instructed
+her to vote against the election of her own son; and it was "at the
+peril of her immortal soul" that she disobeyed the injunction. Long
+before election day, every Mormon knew that he had been called upon by
+the Almighty to sacrifice his individual conviction in politics to
+protect his "assailed Church."
+
+The profound effectiveness of that appeal needs no further proof than
+the issue of the election. King and Rawlins, the popular leaders of the
+Democracy in a state that had but recently been overwhelmingly
+Democratic--after a campaign in which they studiously avoided an attack
+upon the Church--were overwhelmingly defeated. The Republican
+legislative ticket was carried. Apostle Smoot was elected to the United
+States Senate; and on January 21, 1903, Governor Wells issued to him a
+certificate of election.
+
+Five days later, a number of prominent citizens signed a protest, to
+President Roosevelt and the Senate, against allowing Apostle Smoot to
+take his seat. And the grounds of the protest, briefly stated, were
+these: The Mormon priesthood claimed supreme authority in politics, and
+such authority was exercised by the first presidency and the twelve
+apostles, of whom Smoot was one. They had not only not abandoned the
+practice of political dictation, but they had not abandoned the belief
+in polygamy and polygamous cohabitation; they connived at and encouraged
+its practice, sought to pass laws that should nullify the statutes
+against the practice, and protected and honored the violators of those
+statutes. And they had done all these things despite the public
+sentiment of the civilized world, in violation of the pledges given in
+procuring amnesty and in obtaining the return of the escheated Church
+property, contrary to the promises given by the representatives of the
+Church and of the territory in their plea for statehood, contrary to the
+pledges required by the Enabling Act and given in the State
+constitution, and contrary to the laws of the State itself.
+
+These charges were supported by innumerable citations from the published
+doctrines of the Church, and from the published speeches and sermons of
+the Prophets. Evidence was offered of the continuance of polygamous
+cohabitation (since 1890) by President Smith, all but three or four of
+the apostles, the entire Presidency of the Salt Lake Stake of Zion, and
+many others. New polygamy was specifically charged against three
+apostles, and against the son of a fourth. A second protest, signed by
+John L. Leilich, repeated these grounds of objection to Apostle Smoot,
+and charged further that Apostle Smoot was himself a polygamist; but no
+attempt was made to prove this latter charge.
+
+Upon the filing of the protest, there was a storm of anger at Church
+headquarters; and the ecclesiastical newspapers railed with the
+bitterness of anxious apprehension. Throughout Utah it seemed to be the
+popular belief that Apostle Smoot would be excluded--on the issue of
+whether a responsible representative of a Church that was protecting and
+encouraging law-breaking should be allowed a seat in the highest body of
+the nation's law-makers. But the issue against him was not to be heard
+until twelve months after his election, and every agent and influence of
+the Church was set to work at once to nullify the effect of the protest.
+
+Every financial institution, East or West, to which the Church could
+appeal, was solicited to demand a favorable hearing of the Smoot case
+from the Senators of its state. Every political and business interest
+that could be reached was moved to protect the threatened Apostle. The
+sugar trust magnates and their Senators were enlisted. The mercantile
+correspondents of the Church were urged to write letters to their
+Congressmen and to their Senators, and to use their power at home to
+check the anti-Mormon newspapers. The Utah representative of a powerful
+mercantile institution, that had vital business relations with the
+Church, confessed to me that he had been called East to consult with the
+head of his company, who had been asked to use his influence for Smoot.
+"I could not advise our president," he said, "to send the letter that
+was demanded of him. And yet I couldn't take the responsibility of
+injuring the company by advising him to refuse the Church request. You
+know, if we had refused it, point-blank, they would have destroyed every
+interest we had within the domain of their power. I should have been
+ruined financially. All our stockholders would have suffered. They would
+never have forgiven me."
+
+The president of the company failed to send the letter. His failure
+became known, through Church espionage and the report of the Church's
+friends in the Senate. Pressure was brought to bear upon him; and, with
+the aid of his Utah representative, he compromised on a letter that did
+partial violence to his conscience and partially endangered his business
+relations with the Church.
+
+Both these men were aware that the Church had broken its covenants to
+the country, and that Apostle Smoot could not be either a loyal citizen
+of the nation or a free representative of the people of his state. "I
+did not like the compromise we made," my friend told me. "I feel
+humiliated whenever I think of it. But I tried to do the best I could
+under the circumstances."
+
+The results of this pressure of political and business interests upon
+Washington showed gradually in the tone of the political newspapers
+throughout the whole country. It showed in the growing confidence
+expressed by the organs of the Church authorities in Utah. It showed in
+the cheerful predictions of the Prophets that the Lord would overrule in
+Apostle Smoot's behalf. It showed in Smoot's exercise of an autocratic
+leadership in the political affairs of the State.
+
+He was allowed to take his oath of office as Senator on March 5, 1903;
+the protests against him were referred to the Senate Committee on
+Privileges and Elections for a hearing (January 27, 1904); and a contest
+began that lasted from January, 1904, to February, 1907. During those
+years was completed the business and political conspiracy between
+financial "privilege" and religious absolutism, of which conspiracy this
+narrative has described the beginning and the growth.
+
+It is almost impossible to expose the progression of incident by which
+the end of that conspiracy was approached--since it was necessarily
+approached in the darkest secrecy. But several indications of the method
+and the progress did show, here and there, on the surface of events; and
+these indications are powerfully significant.
+
+As early as 1901 it had become known that Apostle Smoot was negotiating
+a sale, to the sugar trust, of the Church's sugar holdings. On May 13,
+1902, the president of the trust reported to the trust's executive
+committee--
+
+[FOOTNOTE: See a synopsis of the minutes of the trust's executive
+committee, published in Hampton's Magazine, in January, 1910.]
+
+that he had agreed to buy a one-half interest in the consolidation of the
+Mormon factories of La Grande, Logan and Ogden. (The following day, May
+14, 1902, is given by Apostle Smoot as the day on which he obtained
+President Joseph F. Smith's permission to become a candidate for the
+Senatorship.) On June 24, 1902 the sugar trust's executive committee was
+informed of the trust's purchase of one-half of the capital stock of
+these three Church-owned sugar companies. On July 5, 1902 the three
+companies were consolidated under the name of the Amalgamated Sugar
+Company, with David Eccles, polygamist, trustee of Church bonds, and
+protege of Joseph F. Smith, as President; and the sugar trust took half
+the stock, in exchange for its holdings in the three original companies.
+
+Similarly, in this same year, the old Church-owned Utah Sugar Company
+increased its stock in order to buy the Garland sugar factory, and the
+sugar trust, it is understood, was concerned in the purchase In 1903,
+1904 and 1905, the Idaho Sugar Company, the Freemont Sugar Company, and
+West Idaho Sugar Company were incorporated; and in 1906 all these
+companies were amalgamated in the present Utah-Idaho Sugar Company, of
+which Joseph F. Smith is president, T. R. Cutler, a Mormon, is
+vice-president, Horace G. Whitney, the general manager of the Church's
+Deseret News, is secretary and treasurer, and other Church officials are
+directors. Of the stock of this company the sugar trust holds fifty-one
+per cent. So that between 1902 and 1906 a partnership in the manufacture
+of beet sugar was effected between the Church and the trust; and Apostle
+Smoot became a Sugar trust Senator, and argued and voted as such.
+
+Furthermore, it was at this same period that the Church sold the street
+railway of Salt Lake City and its electric power company to the
+"Harriman interests" under peculiar circumstances--a matter of which I
+have written in an earlier chapter. The Church owners of this Utah Light
+and Railway Company, through the Church's control of the City Council,
+had attempted to obtain a hundred-year franchise from the city on terms
+that were outrageously unjust to the citizens; and finally, on June 5,
+1905, a franchise was obtained for fifty years, for the company of which
+Joseph F. Smith was the president. On August 3, 1905, another city
+ordinance was passed, consolidating all former franchises, then held by
+the Utah Light and Power Company, but originally granted to D. F.
+Walker, the Salt Lake and Ogden Gas and Electric Light Company, the
+Pioneer Power Company and the Utah Power Company; and this ordinance
+extended the franchises to July 1, 1955. The properties were bonded for
+$6,300,000, but it was understood that they were worth not more than
+$4,000,000. They were sold to "the Harriman interests" for $10,000,000.
+The equipment of the Salt Lake City street railway was worse than
+valueless, and the new company had to remove the rails and discard the
+rolling stock. But the ten millions were well invested in this
+public-utility trust, for the company had a monopoly of the street
+railway service and electric power and gas supply of Salt Lake City; and
+its franchises left it free to extort whatever it could from the people
+of the whole country side, by virtue of a partnership with the Church
+authorities whereby extortion was given the protection of "God's
+anointed Prophets."
+
+Joseph F. Smith, of course, was already a director of Harriman's Union
+Pacific Railroad, a position to which he had been elected after his
+accession to the First Presidency. And he was so elected not because of
+his railroad holdings--for he came to the Presidency a poor man--and
+not because of his ability or experience as a financier or a railroad
+builder, for he had not had any such experience and he had not shown any
+such ability. He was elected because of the partnership between the
+Church leaders and the Union Pacific Railroad--a partnership that was
+doubtlessly used in defense of Apostle Smoot's seat in the Senate, just
+as the power of the Sugar Trust was used and the influence of the whole
+financial confederation in politics.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIII
+
+
+
+The Smoot Exposure
+
+
+
+Just before the subpoenas were issued in the Smoot investigation, I met
+John R. Winder (then First Councillor to President Smith) on the street
+in Salt Lake City, and he expressed the hope that when I went "to
+Washington on the Smoot case," I would not "betray" my "brethren." I
+assured him that I was not going to Washington as a witness in the Smoot
+case; that the men whom he should warn, were at Church headquarters. He
+replied, with indignant alarm, "I don't see what 'the brethren' have to
+do with this!"
+
+But when the subpoenas arrived for Smith and the hierarchy, alarm and
+indignation assumed a new complexion. The authorities, for themselves,
+and through the mouths of such men as Brigham H. Roberts, began to boast
+of how they were about to "carry the gospel to the benighted nation" and
+preach it from the witness stand in Washington. The Mormon communities
+resounded with fervent praises to God that He had, through His servant,
+Apostle Smoot, given the opportunity to His living oracles to speak to
+an unrighteous people! And when the Senators decided that they would not
+summon polygamous wives and their children en bloc to Washington to
+testify (because it was not desired to "make war on women and children")
+some of Joseph F. Smith's several wives even complained feelingly that
+they "were not allowed to testify for Papa."
+
+The first oracular disclosure made by the Prophets, on the witness
+stand, came as a shock even to Utah. They testified that they had
+resumed polygamous cohabitation to an extent unsuspected by either
+Gentiles or Mormons. President Joseph F. Smith admitted that he had had
+eleven children borne to him by his five wives, since pledging himself
+to obey the "revealed" manifesto of 1890 forbidding polygamous
+relations. Apostle Francis Marion Lyman, who was next in succession to
+the Presidency, made a similar admission of guilt, though in a lesser
+degree. So did John Henry Smith and Charles W. Penrose, apostles. So did
+Brigham H. Roberts and George Reynolds, Presidents of Seventies. So did
+a score of others among the lesser authorities. And they confessed that
+they were living in polygamy in violation of their pledges to the nation
+and the terms of their amnesty, against the laws and the constitution of
+the state, and contrary to the "revelation of God" by which the doctrine
+of polygamy had been withdrawn from practice in the Church!
+
+President Joseph F. Smith admitted that he was violating the law of the
+State. He was asked: "Is there not a revelation that you shall abide by
+the law of the State and of the land?" He answered, "Yes, sir." He was
+asked: "And if that is a revelation, are you not violating the laws of
+God?" He answered: "I have admitted that, Mr. Senator, a great many
+times here."
+
+Apostle Francis Marion Lyman was asked: "You say that you, an apostle of
+your Church, expecting to succeed (if you survive Mr. Smith) to the
+office in which you will be the person to be the medium of Divine
+revelations, are living, and are known to your people to live, in
+disobedience of the law of the land and the law of God?" Apostle Lyman
+answered: "Yes, sir." The others pleaded guilty to the same charge.
+
+But this was not the worst. There had been new polygamous marriages.
+Bishop Chas. E. Merrill, the son of an apostle, testified that his
+father had married him to a plural wife in 1891, and that he had been
+living with both wives ever since. A Mrs. Clara Kennedy testified that
+she had been married to a polygamist in 1896, in Juarez, Mexico, by
+Apostle Brigham Young, Jr., in the home of the president of the stake.
+There was testimony to show that Apostle George Teasdale had taken a
+plural wife six years after the "manifesto" forbidding polygamy, and
+that Benjamin Cluff, Jr., president of the Church university, had taken
+a plural wife in 1899. Some ten other less notorious cases were exposed--
+including those of M. W. Merrill, an apostle, and J. M. Tanner,
+superintendent of Church schools. It was testified that Apostle John W.
+Taylor had taken two plural wives within four years, and that Apostle M.
+F. Cowley had taken one; and both these men had fled from the country in
+order to escape a summons to appear before the Senate committee.
+
+President Joseph F. Smith, in his attempts to justify his own polygamy,
+gave some very involved and contradictory testimony. He said that he
+adhered to both the divine revelation commanding polygamy and the divine
+revelation "suspending" the command. He said he believed that the
+principle of plural marriage was still as "correct a principle" as when
+first revealed, but that the "law commanding it" had been suspended by
+President Woodruff's manifesto. He said that he accepted President
+Woodruff's manifesto as a revelation from God, but he objected to having
+it called "a law of the Church;" he insisted that it was only "a rule of
+the Church." He admitted that the manifesto forbidding polygamy had
+never been printed among the other revelations in the Church's book of
+"Doctrine and Covenants," in which the original revelation commanding
+polygamy was still printed without note or qualification of any kind. He
+admitted that this anti-polygamy manifesto was not printed in any of the
+other doctrinal works which the Mormon missionaries took with them when
+they were sent out to preach the Mormon faith. He claimed that the
+manifesto was circulated in pamphlet form, but he subsequently admitted
+that the pamphlet did not "state in terms" that the manifesto was a
+"revelation." He finally pleaded that the manifesto had been omitted
+from the book of "Doctrine and Covenants" by an "oversight," and he
+promised to have it included in the next edition!
+
+[FOOTNOTE: He did not keep his promise. The manifesto was not added
+to the book of revelations until some time later, after considerable
+protest in Utah.]
+
+In short, it was shown, by the testimony given and the evidence
+introduced, not only that the Church authorities persisted in living in
+polygamy, not only that polygamous marriages were being contracted, but
+that the Church still adhered to the doctrine of polygamy and taught it
+as a law of God.
+
+President Joseph F. Smith denied the right of Congress to regulate his
+"private conduct" as a polygamist. "It is the law of my state to which I
+am amenable," he said, "and if the officers of the law have not done
+their duty toward me I can not blame them. I think they have some
+respect for me."
+
+A mass of testimony showed why the officers of the law did not do their
+duty. During the anti-polygamy agitation of 1899 (which ended in the
+refusal of Congress to seat Brigham H. Roberts) a number of prosecutions
+of polygamists had been attempted. In many instances the county attorney
+had refused to prosecute even upon sworn information. Wherever
+prosecutions were had, the fines imposed were nominal; these were in
+some cases never paid, and in other cases paid by popular subscription.
+It was testified that in Box Elder County subscription lists had been
+circulated to collect money for the fines, but that the fines were never
+paid, though the subscriptions had been collected. All the prosecutions
+had been dropped, at last. It was pleaded that there was a strong
+Gentile sentiment against these prosecutions, because of the hope that
+no new polygamous marriages were being contracted; but it was shown
+also, that the Church authorities controlled the enforcement of the law
+by their influence in the election of the agents of the law.
+
+The Church controlled, too, the making of the law. For example,
+testimony was given to show that in 1896 the Church authorities had
+appointed a committee of six elders to examine all bills introduced into
+the Utah legislature and decide which were "proper" to be passed. In the
+neighboring state of Idaho, the legislature, in 1904, unanimously and
+without discussion passed a resolution for a new state constitution that
+should omit the anti-polygamy test oath clauses objectionable to the
+Mormons; and in this connection it was testified that the state chairman
+of both political parties in Idaho always went to Salt Lake City, before
+a campaign, to consult with the Church authorities; that every request
+of the authorities made to the Idaho political leaders was granted; that
+six of the twenty-one countries in Idaho were "absolutely controlled" by
+Mormons, and the "balance of power" in six counties more was held by
+Mormons; and that it was "impossible for any man or party to go against
+the Mormon Church in Idaho." Apostle John Henry Smith testified that
+one-third of the population of Idaho was Mormon and one-fourth of the
+population of Wyoming, and that there were large settlements in Nevada,
+Colorado, California, Arizona and the surrounding states and
+territories.
+
+A striking example of the power of the Church as against the power of
+the nation was given to the Senate committee by John Nicholson, chief
+recorder of the temple in Salt Lake City. He had failed to produce some
+of the temple marriage records for which the committee had called. He
+was asked whether he would bring the books, on the order of the Senate
+of the United States, if the First Presidency of the Church forbade him
+to bring them. He answered: "I would not." He was asked: "And if the
+Senate should send the Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate and arrest you and
+order you to bring them" (the records) "with you, you would still refuse
+to bring them, unless the First Presidency asked you to?" He answered,
+"Yes, sir."
+
+It was shown that classes of instruction in the Mormon religion had been
+forced upon teachers in a number of public schools in Utah by the orders
+of the First Presidency. (These orders were withdrawn after the exposure
+before the committee.) Church control had gone so far in Brigham City,
+Box Elder County, Utah, that in a dispute between the City Council and
+the electric lighting company of the city, the local ecclesiastical
+council interfered. In the same city, two young men built a dancing
+pavilion that competed with the Church-owned Opera House; the
+ecclesiastical council "counselled" them to remove the pavilion and
+dispose of "the material in its construction;" they were threatened that
+they would be "dropped" if they did not obey this "counsel;" and they
+compromised by agreeing to pay twenty-five percent of the net earnings
+of their pavilion into the Church's "stake treasury." In Monroe ward,
+Sevier County, Utah, in 1901, a Mormon woman named Cora Birdsall had a
+dispute with a man named James E. Leavitt about a title to land. Leavitt
+went into the bishop's court and got a decision against her. She wrote
+to President Joseph F. Smith for permission either to appeal the case
+direct to him or "to go to law" in the matter; and Smith advised her "to
+follow the order provided of the Lord to govern in your case." The
+dispute was taken through the ecclesiastical courts and decided against
+her. She refused to deed the land to Leavitt and she was excommunicated
+by order of the High Council of the Sevier Stake of Zion. She became
+insane as a result of this punishment, and her mother appealed to the
+stake president to grant her some mitigation. He wrote, in reply: "Her
+only relief will be in complying with President Smith's wishes. You say
+she has never broken a rule of the Church. You forget that she has done
+so by failing to abide by the decision of the mouthpiece of God." She
+finally gave up a deed to the disputed land and was rebaptized in 1904.
+(Letters of the First Presidency were, however, introduced to show that
+it had been the policy of the presidency--particularly in President
+Woodruff's day--not to interfere in disputes involving titles to land.)
+
+It was testified that a Mormon merchant was expelled from the Church,
+ostensibly for apostasy, but really because he engaged in the
+manufacture of salt "against the interests of the President of the
+Church and some of his associates;" that a Mormon Church official was
+deposed "for distributing, at a school election, a ticket different from
+that prescribed by the Church authorities"--and so on, interminably.
+
+Witness after witness swore to the incidents of Church interference in
+politics which this narrative has already related in detail. But no
+attempt was made to show the Church's partnership with the "interests;"
+and the power of the Church in business circles was left to be inferred
+from President Smith's testimony that he was then president of the
+Zion's Cooperative Mercantile Institution, the State Bank of Utah, the
+Zion's Savings Bank and Trust Company, the Utah Sugar Company, the
+Consolidated Wagon and Machine Company, the Utah Light and Power
+Company, the Salt Lake and Los Angeles Railroad Company, the Saltair
+Beach Company, the Idaho Sugar Company, the Inland Crystal Salt Company,
+the Salt Lake Knitting Company, and the Salt Lake Dramatic Association;
+and that he was a director of the Union Pacific Railway Company,
+vice-president of the Bullion-Beck and Champion Mining Company, and
+editor of the Improvement Era and the Juvenile Instructor.
+
+It was shown that Utah had not been admitted to statehood until the
+Federal government had exacted, from the Church authorities and the
+representatives of the people of Utah, every sort of pledge that
+polygamy had been forever abandoned and polygamous relations
+discontinued by "revelation from God"; that statehood had not been
+granted until solemn promise had been given and provision made that
+there should be "no union of church and state," and no church should
+"dominate the state or interfere with its functions;" and that the
+Church's escheated property had been restored upon condition that such
+property should be used only for the relief of the poor of the Church,
+for the education of its children and for the building and repair of
+houses of worship "in which the rightfulness of the practice of
+polygamy" should not be "inculcated."
+
+Therefore the testimony given before the Senate committee by these
+members of the Mormon hierarchy, showed that they had not only broken.
+their covenants and violated their oaths, but that they had been guilty
+of treason. What was the remedy? Jeremiah M. Wilson, a lawyer employed
+by the Church authorities in 1888 to argue, before a Congressional
+committee, in behalf of the admission of Utah to statehood, had pointed
+out the remedy in these words:
+
+"It is idle to say that such a compact may be made, and then, when the
+considerations have been mutually received--statehood on the one side
+and the pledge not to do a particular thing on the other--either party
+can violate it without remedy to the other. But you ask me what is the
+remedy, and I answer that there are plenty of remedies in your own
+hands.
+
+"Suppose they violate this compact; suppose that after they put this
+into the constitution, and thereby induce you to grant them the high
+privilege and political right of statehood, they should turn right
+around and exercise the bad faith which is attributed to them here--
+what would you do? You could shut the doors of the Senate and House of
+Representatives against them; you could deny them a voice in the
+councils of this nation, because they have acted in bad faith and
+violated their solemn agreement by which they succeeded in getting
+themselves into the condition of statehood. You could deny them the
+Federal judiciary; you could deny them the right to use the mails--that
+indispensable thing in the matter of trade and commerce of this country.
+There are many ways in which peaceably, but all powerfully, you could
+compel the performance of that compact."
+
+This argument by Mr. Wilson in 1888 was recalled by the counsel for the
+protestants in the investigation. It was recalled with the qualification
+that though Congress might not have the power to undo the sovereignty of
+the state of Utah it could deal with Senator Smoot. And it was further
+argued: "The chief charge against Senator Smoot is that he encourages,
+countenances, and connives at the defiant violation of law. He is an
+integral part of a hierarchy; he is an integral part of a quorum of
+twelve, who constitute the backbone of the Church.... He, as one of
+that quorum of twelve apostles, encourages, connives at, and
+countenances defiance of law."
+
+On June 11, 1906, a majority of the committee made a report to the
+Senate recommending that Apostle Smoot was not entitled to his seat in
+the Senate. They found that he was one of a "self-perpetuating body of
+fifteen men, uniting in themselves authority in both Church and state,"
+who "so exercise this authority as to encourage a belief in polygamy as
+a divine institution, and by both precept and example encourage among
+their followers the practice of polygamy and polygamous cohabitation;"
+that the Church authorities had "endeavored to suppress, and succeed in
+suppressing, a great deal of testimony by which the fact of plural
+marriages contracted by those who were high in the councils of the
+Church might have been established beyond the shadow of a doubt;" and
+that "aside from this it was shown by the testimony that a majority of
+those who give law to the Mormon Church are now, and have been for
+years, living in open, notorious and shameless polygamous cohabitation."
+Concerning President Woodruff's anti-polygamy manifesto of 1890, the
+majority of the committee reported that "this manifesto in no way
+declares the principle of polygamy to be wrong or abrogates it as a
+doctrine of the Mormon Church, but simply suspends the practice of
+polygamy to be resumed at some more convenient season, either with or
+without another revelation." They found that Apostle Smoot was
+responsible for the conduct of the organization to which he belonged;
+that he had countenanced and encouraged polygamy "by repeated acts and
+in a number of instances, as a member of the quorum of the twelve
+apostles;" and that he was "no more entitled to a seat in the Senate
+than he would be if he were associating in polygamous cohabitation with
+a plurality of wives."
+
+The report continued: "The First Presidency and the twelve apostles
+exercise a controlling influence over the action of the members of the
+Church in secular affairs as well as in spiritual matters;" and
+"contrary to the principles of the common law under which we live, and
+the constitution of the State of Utah, the First Presidency and twelve
+apostles dominate the affairs of the State and constantly interfere in
+the performance of its functions.... But it is in political affairs
+that the domination of the First Presidency and the twelve apostles is
+most efficacious and most injurious to the interests of the State....
+Notwithstanding the plain provision of the constitution of Utah, the
+proof offered on the investigation demonstrates beyond the possibility
+of doubt that the hierarchy at the head of the Mormon Church has, for
+years past, formed a perfect union between the Mormon Church and the
+State of Utah, and that the Church, through its head, dominates the
+affairs of the State in things both great and small." And the report
+concluded: "The said Reed Smoot comes here, not as the accredited
+representative of the State of Utah in the Senate of the United States,
+but as the choice of the hierarchy which controls the Church and has
+usurped the functions of the State in Utah. It follows, as a necessary
+conclusion from these facts, that Mr. Smoot is not entitled to a seat in
+the Senate as a Senator from the State of Utah."
+
+On the same day a minority report was presented by Senators J. B.
+Foraker, Albert J. Beveridge, Wm. P. Dillingbam, A. J. Hopkins and P. C.
+Knox. They found that Reed Smoot possessed "all the qualifications
+prescribed by the Constitution to make him eligible to a seat in the
+Senate;" that "the regularity of his election" by the Utah legislature
+had not been questioned; that his private character was
+"irreproachable;" and that "so far as mere belief and membership in the
+Mormon Church are concerned, he is fully within his rights and
+privileges under the guaranty of religious freedom given by the
+Constitution of the United States." Having thus summarily excluded all
+the large and troublesome points of the investigation, these Senators
+decided that there remained "but two grounds on which the right or title
+of Reed Smoot to his seat in the Senate" was contested. The first was
+whether he had taken a certain "endowment oath" by which "he obligated
+himself to make his allegiance to the Church paramount to his allegiance
+to the United States;" and the second was whether "by reason of his
+official relation to the Church" he was "responsible for polygamous
+cohabitation" among the Mormons.
+
+As to the first charge, the minority found that the testimony upon the
+point was "limited in amount, vague and indefinite in character and
+utterly unreliable, because of the disreputable character of the
+witnesses"--oddly overlooking the fact that one of these witnesses had
+been called for Apostle Smoot; that no attempt had been made to impeach
+the character of this witness; that the other witnesses had been
+denounced, by a Mormon bishop, named Daniel Connolly, as "traitors who
+had broken their oaths to the Church" by betraying the secrets of the
+"endowment oath;" and that all the Smoot witnesses who denied the
+anti-patriotic obligation of the oath refused, suspiciously enough, to
+tell what obligation was imposed on those who took part in the ceremony.
+
+The charge that Smoot, as an apostle of the Church, had been responsible
+for polygamous cohabitation was as easily disposed of, by the minority
+report. He had himself, on oath, "positively denied" that he had "ever
+advised any person to violate the law either against polygamy or against
+polygamous cohabitation," and no witness had been produced to testify
+that Apostle Smoot had ever given "any such advice" or defended "such
+acts." True, it was admitted that he had "silently acquiesced" in the
+continuance of polygamous cohabitation by polygamists who had married
+before 1890; but it was contended that to understand this acquiescence
+it was "necessary to recall some historical facts, among which are some
+that indicate that the United States government is not free from
+responsibility for these violations of the law."
+
+In short, although Reed Smoot was one of a confessed band of
+law-breaking traitors, he was of "irreproachable" private character.
+Although the band had been guilty of every treachery, none of the band
+had admitted that Smoot had encouraged them in their villainies. Smoot
+had only "silently acquiesced"--and in this he had been no guiltier
+than the intimidated bystanders and the gagged victims of the outrages.
+Although the gang had stolen the machinery of elections and used it to
+print a Senatorial certificate for Smoot, there was nothing to show that
+the form of the certificate was not correct. Moreover, the band operated
+in politics as a religious organization, and the constitution of the
+United States protects a man in his right of religious freedom!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIV
+
+
+
+Treason Triumphant
+
+
+
+While these disclosures of the Smoot investigation were shocking the
+sentiment of the whole nation, the Prophets carried on the conspiracy of
+their defense with all the boldness of defiant guilt. In Salt Lake City,
+the office of the United States Marshal and even the post-office were
+watched for the arrival of subpoenas from Washington; men were posted in
+the streets to give the alarm whenever the Marshal should attempt to
+serve papers; and before he entered the front door of a Mormon's house,
+the Church sentry had entered by the back door to warn the inmates. If
+the Federal power had been moving in a foreign land, it could not have
+been more determinedly opposed by local authority. Notorious
+polygamists, wanted as witnesses before the Senate committee, made a
+public flight through Utah, couriered, flanked and rear-guarded by the
+power of the hierarchy. One of these law-breakers (who, it was known,
+had been subpoenaed) went from Salt Lake City to take secret employment
+in one of the Church's sugar factories in Idaho. When he was discovered
+there and served with the Senate requisition, he gave his word that he
+would appear at Washington, and then he fled with his new polygamous
+wife to a polygamous Mormon settlement in Alberta, Canada--a fugitive,
+honored because he was a fugitive, and officially sustained as a ward of
+the Church.
+
+Apostles John W. Taylor and Mathias F. Cowley left the country, to
+escape a summons to Washington; and President Smith pleaded that he had
+no control over their movements, and promised that he would, if
+possible, bring them back to comply with the Senate subpoenas. He knew,
+as every Mormon and every well-informed Gentile knew, that the slightest
+expression of a wish from him would be the word of God to those two men.
+They would have gloried in going to Washington to show the courage of
+their fanaticism. They would never have left the country without
+instructions from their President. But they could not have married
+plural wives after the manifesto, and solemnized plural marriages for
+other polygamists, without Smith's knowledge and consent; their
+testimony would have placed the responsibility for these unlawful
+practices upon the Prophet; and the penalty would have fallen on the
+Prophet's Senator.
+
+They not only fled, but they allowed themselves in their absence to be
+made the scapegoats of the hierarchy. They were proven guilty of "new
+polygamy" before the Senate committee; and, for the sake of the effect
+upon the country, they were ostensibly deposed from the apostolate by
+order of the President, who, by their dismissal from the quorum,
+advanced his son Hyrum in seniority. But their apparent degradation
+involved none of the consequences that Moses Thatcher had suffered. They
+continued their ministrations in the Church. They remained high in favor
+with the hierarchy. They claimed and received from the faithful the
+right to be regarded as holily "the Lord's' anointed" as they had ever
+been. They still held their Melchisedec priesthood. One of them
+afterward took a new plural wife. It seems to be well authenticated that
+the other continued to perform plural marriages; and every Mormon looked
+upon them both--and still looks upon them--as zealous priests who
+endured the appearance of shame in order to preserve the power of the
+Prophet in governing the nation.
+
+Another crucial point in President Smith's responsibility was his
+solemnization of the plural marriage between Apostle Abraham H. Cannon
+and Lillian Hamlin, of which I have already written. One of the women
+of the dead apostle's family was subpoenaed to give her testimony in the
+matter. She thrice telephoned to me that she wished to consult me; but
+she was surrounded by such a system of espionage that again and again
+she failed to keep her appointment. At last, late at night, she arrived
+at my office--the editorial office of the Salt Lake Tribune--having
+escaped, as she explained, in her maid's clothes. The agents of the
+hierarchy had been subtly and ingeniously suggesting to her that she was
+perhaps mistaken in her recollection of the facts to which she would
+have to testify, and she was distressed with the doubt and fear which
+they had instilled into her mind. I could only adjure her to tell the
+truth as she remembered it. But on her journey to Washington she was
+constantly surrounded by Church "advisers;" and the effect of their
+"advice" showed in the testimony that she gave--a testimony that failed
+to prove the known guilt of the Prophet.
+
+For the Gentiles, there had begun a sort of "reign of terror," which can
+be best summed up by an account of a private conference of twelve
+prominent non-Mormons held as late as 1905. That conference was called
+to consider the situation, and to devise means of acquainting the nation
+with the desperate state of affairs in Utah. It was independent of the
+political movement that had already begun; it aimed rather to organize a
+social rebellion, so that we might not be dependent for all our
+opposition upon the annual or semi-annual campaigns of politics.
+
+The meeting first agreed upon the following statement of facts:
+
+"Utah's statehood, as now administered, is but a protection of the
+Mormon hierarchy in its establishment of a theocratic kingdom under the
+flag of the republic. This hierarchy holds itself superior to the
+Constitution and to the law. It is spreading polygamy throughout the
+ranks of its followers. Through its agents, it dominates the politics of
+the state, and its power is spreading to other common-wealths. It exerts
+such sway over the officers of the law that the hierarchy and its
+favorites cannot be reached by the hand of justice. It is master of the
+State Legislature and of the Governor.
+
+"By means of its immense collection of tithes and its large investments
+in commercial and financial enterprises, it dominates every line of
+business in Utah except mines and railroads; and these latter it
+influences by means of its control over Mormon labor and by its control
+of legislation and franchises. It holds nearly every Gentile merchant
+and professional man at its vengeance, by its influence over the
+patronage which he must have in order to be successful. It corrupts
+every Gentile who is affected by either fear or venality, and makes of
+him a part of its power to play the autocrat in Utah and to deceive the
+country as to its purposes and its operations. Every Gentile who refuses
+to testify at its request and in its behalf becomes a marked and
+endangered man. It rewards and it punishes according to its will; and
+those Gentiles who have gone to Washington to testify for Smoot are well
+aware of this fact. Unless the Gentiles of Utah shall soon be protected
+by the power of the United States they will suffer either ruin or exile
+at the hands of the hierarchy."
+
+When this declaration had been accepted, by all present, as truly
+expressing their views of the situation, it was decided that they should
+confer with other leading Gentiles, hold a mass meeting, adopt a set of
+resolutions embodying the declaration on which they had agreed, and then
+dispatch the resolutions to the Senate committee, as a protest against
+the testimony of some of the Gentiles in the Smoot case, and as an
+appeal to the nation for help.
+
+But although all approved of the declaration and all approved of the
+method by which it was to be sent to the nation, no man there dared to
+stand out publicly in support of such a protest, to offer the
+resolutions, or to speak for them. The merchant knew that his trade
+would vanish in a night, leaving him unable to meet his obligations and
+certain of financial destruction. The lawyer knew not only that the
+hierarchy would deprive him of all his Mormon clients, but that it would
+make him so unpopular with courts and juries that no Gentile litigant
+would dare employ him. The mining man knew that the hierarchy could
+direct legislation against him, might possibly influence courts and
+could assuredly influence jurors to destroy him. And so with all the
+others at the conference.
+
+They were not cowards. They had shown themselves, in the past, of more
+than average human courage, loyalty and ability. All recognized that if
+the power of the hierarchy were not soon met and broken it would grow
+too great to be resisted--that another generation would find itself
+hopelessly enslaved. Every father felt that the liberties of his
+children were at stake; that they would be bond or free by the issue of
+the conflict then in course at Washington. And yet not one dared to
+throw down the gauntlet to tyranny--to devote himself to certain ruin.
+They had to prefer simple slavery to beggary and slavery combined. They
+had to hope silently that the power of the nation would intervene. They
+could work only secretly for the fulfillment of that hope.
+
+At first, in President Roosevelt they saw the promise of their
+salvation. He had opposed the election of Apostle Smoot. When the report
+of the apostle's candidacy had first reached Washington, the President
+had summoned to the White House Senator Thomas Kearns of Utah and
+Senator Mark Hanna, who was chairman of the National Republican
+committee; and to these two men he had declared his opposition to the
+candidacy of a Mormon apostle as a Republican aspirant for a
+Senatorship. At his request Senator Hanna, as chairman of the party,
+signed a letter of remonstrance to the party chiefs in Utah, and
+President Roosevelt, at a later conference, gave this letter to Senator
+Kearns to be communicated to the state leaders. Senator Kearns
+transmitted the message, and by so doing he "dug his political grave" as
+the Mormon stake president, Lewis W. Shurtliff, expressed it.
+
+Colonel C. B. Loose of Provo went to Washington on behalf of the Church
+authorities. He was a Gentile, a partner of Apostle Smoot and of some of
+the other Mormon leaders in business undertakings, a wealthy mining man,
+a prominent Republican. It was reported in Utah that his arguments for
+Smoot carried some weight in Washington. President Roosevelt was to be a
+candidate for election; and the old guard of the Republican party,
+distrustful of the Roosevelt progressive policies, was gathering for a
+grim stand around Senator Mark Hanna. Both factions were playing for
+votes in the approaching national convention. I have it on the authority
+of a Mormon ecclesiast, who was in the political confidence of the
+Church leaders, that President Roosevelt was promised the votes of the
+Utah delegation and such other convention votes as the Church
+politicians could control. The death of Senator Hanna made this promise
+unnecessary, if there ever was an explicit promise. But this much is
+certain. President Roosevelt's opposition to Apostle Smoot, for whatever
+reason, changed to favor.
+
+The character and impulses of the President were of a sort to make him
+peculiarly susceptible to an appeal for help on the part of the Mormons.
+He had lived in the West. He knew something of the hardships attendant
+upon conquering the waste places. He sympathized with those who dared,
+for their own opinions, to oppose the opinions of the rest of the world.
+He had received the most adulating assurances of support for his
+candidacies and his policies. It would have required a man of the
+calmest discrimination and coolest judgment to find the line between any
+just claim for mercy presented by the Mormon advocates of "religious
+liberty" and the willful offenses which they were committing against the
+national integrity.
+
+I have received it personally, from the lips of more than one member of
+the Senate committee, that never in all their experience with public
+questions was such executive pressure brought to bear upon them as was
+urged from the White House, at this time, for the protection of Apostle
+Smoot's seat in the Senate. The President's most intimate friends on the
+committee voted with the minority to seat Smoot. One of the President's
+closest adherents, Senator Dolliver, after having signed a majority
+report to exclude Smoot and having been re-elected, in the meantime, by
+his own State legislature, to another term in the Senate--afterwards
+spoke and voted against the report which he had signed. Senator A. J.
+Hopkins of Illinois, who had supported Smoot consistently, found himself
+bitterly attacked, in his campaign for reelection, because of his record
+in the Smoot case, and he published in his defense a letter from
+President Roosevelt that read: "Just a line to congratulate you upon the
+Smoot case. It is not my business, but it is a pleasure to see a public
+servant show, under trying circumstances, the courage, ability and sense
+of right that you have shown."
+
+After the outrageous exposures of the violations of law, the treason and
+the criminal indifference to human rights shown by the rulers of the
+Church, if an early vote had been taken by the committee and by the
+Senate itself, the antagonism of the nation would have forced the
+exclusion of the Apostle from the upper House. Delay was his salvation.
+More to the President's influence than to any other cause is the delay
+attributable that prolonged the case through a term of three years.
+During that time the unfortunate Gentiles of Utah learned that, instead
+of receiving help from the President, they were to have only the most
+insuperable opposition. They believed that the President was being
+grossly misled; that it was, of course, impossible for him to read all
+the testimony given before the Senate committee, and that the matters
+that reached him were being tinged with other purpose than the
+vindication of truth and justice. But it was impossible to obtain the
+opportunity of setting him right. Even the women who were leading the
+national protest against the polygamous teaching and practices of
+Smoot's fellow apostles were told that the President had made up his
+mind and could not be re-convinced.
+
+The Mormon appeal to his generosity was not confined to Washington. On
+his travels he met President Smith more than once--the Prophet being
+accompanied by a different wife each time--and naturally Smith made
+every effort to impress President Roosevelt with his earnestness, the
+purity of his life, and the high motives that actuated the exercise of
+his authority. And at this sort of pretense the Lord's anointed are
+expert. They themselves may be crude in ideas and coarse in method, but
+their diplomacy is a growth of eighty years of applied devotion and
+energy.
+
+The American people are used to meeting prominent Mormons who are models
+of demeanor who are hearty of manner; who carry a kindly light in their
+eyes; who have a spontaneity that precludes hypocrisy or even deep
+purpose. These are not the men who make the Church diplomacy--they
+simply obey it. It is part of that diplomacy to send out such men for
+contact with the world. But the ablest minds of the Church, whether they
+are of the hierarchy or not, construct its policies. And given a system
+whose human units move instantly and unquestioningly at command; given a
+system whose worldly power is available at any point at any moment;
+given a system whose movement may be as secret as the grave until result
+is attained--and the clumsiest of politicians or the crudest of
+diplomats has a force to effect his ends that is as powerful for its
+size as any that Christendom has ever known.
+
+Among the emissaries of the Church who were deputed to "reach" President
+Roosevelt, was our old friend Ben Rich, the gay, the engaging, the
+apparently irresponsible agent of hierarchical diplomacy. And I should
+like to relate the story of his "approach," as it is still related in
+the inner circle of Church confidences. Not that I expect it to be
+wholly credited--not that I doubt but it will be denied on all sides--
+but because it is so characteristic of Church gossip and so typical
+(even if it were untrue) of the humorous cynicism of Church diplomacy.
+
+When President Roosevelt was making his "swing around the circle," Rich
+was appointed to join him, found the opportunity to do so, and (so the
+story is told) delighted the President by the spirit and candor of his
+good fellowship. When they were about to part, the President is reported
+to have said, "Why don't you run for Congress from your state? You're
+just the kind of man I'd like to have in the House to support my
+policies." And here (as the Mormons are told) is the dialogue that
+ensued:
+
+Rich: "I have no ambition that way, Mr. President. For many reasons it's
+out of the question although I'm grateful for the flattering suggestion."
+
+The President: "Then let me appoint you to some good office. You're the
+kind of man I'd like to have in my official family."
+
+Rich (impressively and in a low tone): "Mr. President, I'd count it the
+greatest honor of my life to have a commission from you to any office.
+I'd hand that commission down to my children as the most precious
+heritage. But--I love you too much, Mr. President, to put you in any
+such hole. I'm a polygamist. It would injure you before the whole
+country."
+
+The President (leaning forward eagerly): "No! Are you a polygamist? Tell
+me all about it."
+
+Rich. "The Lord has bestowed that blessing on me. I wish you could go
+into my home and see how my wives are living together like sisters--how
+tender they are to each other--how they bear each other's burdens and
+share each other's sorrows--and how fond all my children are of Mother
+and Auntie."
+
+The President: "Well--but how can women agree to share a husband?"
+
+Rich: "They do it in obedience to a revelation from the Lord--a
+revelation that proclaimed the doctrine of the eternity and the
+plurality of the marriage covenant. We believe that men and women,
+sealed in this life under proper authority, are united in the conjugal
+relation throughout eternity. We believe that the husband is tied to his
+wives, and they to him; that their children and all the generations of
+their children will belong to him hereafter. We believe in eternal
+progression; that as man is, God was; and as God is, man shall be. We
+believe that by obedience to this revealed covenant, we will be exalted
+in the celestial realm of our Father, with power in ourselves to create
+and people worlds. It is a never ending and constantly increasing
+intelligence and labor. If I keep my covenants to my wives and they to
+me, in this world, all the powers and rights of our marriage relation
+will be continued and amplified to us in the life to come; and we, in
+our turn, will be rulers over worlds and universes of worlds."
+
+Then--according to the unctuous gossip of the devout--President
+Roosevelt saw the true answer to his own desire to know what was to
+become of his mighty personality after this world should have fallen
+away from him! He saw, in this faith, a possible continuation throughout
+eternity of the tremendous energies of his being! He was to continue to
+rule not merely a nation but a world, a system of worlds, a universe of
+worlds! And it is told--sometimes solemnly, sometimes with a grin--
+that, in the Temple at Salt Lake, a proxy has stood for him and he has
+been baptized into the Mormon Church; that proxies have stood for the
+members of his family and that they have been sealed to him; and finally
+that proxies have stood for some of the great queens of the past (who
+had not already been sealed to Mormon leaders) and that they have been
+sealed to the President for eternity!
+
+[FOOTNOTE: It is a not uncommon practice in the Mormon Church thus to
+"do a work" for a Gentile who has befriended the people or otherwise
+won the gratitude of the Church authorities.]
+
+This may sound blasphemous toward Theodore Roosevelt--if not toward the
+Almighty--but it is told, and it is believed, by hundreds and thousands
+of the faithful among the Mormon people. It is given to them as the
+secret explanation of President Roosevelt's protection of the Mormon
+tyranny--a protection of which Apostle Hyrum Smith boasted in a sermon
+in the Salt Lake tabernacle (April 5, 1905) in these equivocal words:
+"We believe--and I want to say this--that in President Roosevelt we
+have a friend, and we believe that in the Latter-Day Saints President
+Roosevelt has the greatest friendship among them; and there are no
+people in the world who are more friendly to him, and will remain
+friendly unto him just so long as he remains true, as he has been, to
+the cause of humanity."
+
+The Smiths have their own idea of what "the cause of humanity" is.
+
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XV
+
+
+
+The Struggle For Liberty
+
+
+
+As early as 1903, before the Smoot investigation began, the Utah State
+journal (of which I became editor) was founded as a Democratic daily
+newspaper, to attempt a restoration of political freedom in Utah and to
+remonstrate against the new polygamy, of which rumors were already
+insistent. I was at once warned by Judge Henry H. Rolapp (a prominent
+Democrat on the District bench, and secretary of the Amalgamated Sugar
+Company) that we need not look for aid from the political or business
+interests of the community, inasmuch as our avowed purpose had already
+antagonized the Church. He delivered this message in a friendly spirit
+from a number of Democrats whose support we had been expecting. And the
+warning proved to be well-inspired. Although a number of courageous
+Gentiles, like Colonel E. A. Wall of Salt Lake City, gave us material
+aid--and although there was no other Democratic daily paper in Utah
+(unless it was the Salt Lake Herald, owned by Senator Clark of Montana)--
+the most powerful Church Democratic interests stood against us, and we
+found it impossible to make any effective headway with the paper.
+
+After the Prophets began to give their awful testimony at Washington,
+the Democratic National Convention of 1904 (which I attended as a
+delegate from Utah) considered a resolution in opposition to polygamy
+and the Church's rule of the state. This resolution was as vigorously
+fought by some Utah Gentiles as by the Mormon delegates, on the grounds
+that it would defeat the Democratic party in Utah. It carried in the
+convention. Upon returning to Salt Lake City I called a meeting of the
+Democratic state committee (of which I was chairman) and urged that we
+make our state campaign on the issue of ecclesiastical domination, in
+consonance with the party's national platform. Of the whole committee
+only the secretary, Mr. P. J. Daly, supported the proposal. The others
+considered it "an attempt to establish a quarantine against Democratic
+success." Some of them had been promised by members of the hierarchy
+that the party was to have "a square deal this time." Others had
+fatuously accepted the assurances of ecclesiasts that "it looked like a
+Democratic year." In short, the Democratic party in Utah, like the
+Republican party, proved to be then, as it is now, less a political
+organization than the tool of a Church cabal. We found that we could no
+more hope to move the Democratic machine against the hierarchy than to
+move the Smoot-Republican machine itself.
+
+But when Joseph F. Smith, before the Senate committee, admitted that he
+was violating "the laws of God and man" and tried to extenuate his guilt
+with the plea that the Gentiles of Utah condoned it, he issued a
+challenge that no American citizen could ignore. The Gentiles of Utah
+had been silent, theretofore, partly because they were ignorant of the
+extent of the polygamous offenses of the hierarchy, and partly because
+they were hoping for better things. Smith's boast made their silence the
+acquiescence of sympathy. A meeting was called in Salt Lake City, in
+May, 1904, and under the direction of Colonel William Nelson, editor of
+the Salt Lake Tribune, the principles of the present "American party"
+were enunciated as a protest against the lawbreaking tyranny of the
+Church leaders. Later, as it became clear that the opponents of the
+Smith misrule must organize their own party of progress, committees were
+formed and a convention was held (in September, 1904) at which a full
+state and county ticket was put in the field, in the name of the
+American Party of Utah.
+
+We agreed that no war should be made on the Mormon religion as such;
+that no war should be made on the Mormon people because of their being
+Mormons; that we would draw a deadline at the year 1890, when the Church
+had effected a composition of its differences with the national
+government, and all the citizens of Utah, Mormon and Gentile alike, had
+accepted the conditions of settlement; that we would find our cause of
+quarrel in the hierarchy's violation of the statehood pledges; and that
+when we had corrected these evil practices we should dissolve, because
+(to quote the language used at the time) we did not wish "to raise a
+tyrant merely to slay a tyrant."
+
+In the idea that we would fight upon living issues--that we would not
+open the graves of the past to dig up a dead quarrel and parade it in
+its cerements--the American party movement began. Its first enlistment
+included practically all the Gentiles in Salt Lake City who resented the
+claim of the Prophet that they acquiesced in his crimes and his
+treasons. But the most promising sign for the party was its attraction
+of hundreds of independent Mormons of the younger generation. As one
+Mormon of that hopeful time expressed it: "The flag represents the
+political power. The golden angel Moroni, at the top of the Temple,
+represents the ecclesiastical authority. I will not pay to either one a
+deference which belongs to the other. I know how to keep them apart in
+my personal devotion."
+
+This was exactly what the Church authorities would not permit. It would
+have destroyed all the special and selfish prerogatives of the Mormon
+hierarchs. It would have subverted their claim of absolute temporal
+power. It would have set up the nation and the state as the objects of
+civic devotion--instead of the Kingdom of God.
+
+Although we of the American party disavowed and abstained from any
+attack upon the Mormon Church as such--and confined ourselves to a war
+upon the treasons, the violations of law, the breaches of covenant and
+the other offenses of the Church leaders, as the practices of
+individuals--these leaders dragged the whole body of the Church as a
+wall of defense around them, and in countless sermons and printed
+articles declared that the Church and its faith were the objects of our
+assault. In other words, though Smith claimed in Washington--and Smoot
+continues to claim before the nation--that the Church is not
+responsible for the crimes of its Prophets, whenever a criticism or a
+prosecution is directed against any of these men, they all unite in
+declaring that the Church is being persecuted; and the members of the
+hierarchy rouse all their followers, and use all their agencies, in a
+successful resistance.
+
+There was no blithesomeness in the campaign. It was not lightened by any
+humor. It was a hopeless assault on the one side and a grim overpowering
+resistance on the other. The American party, being organized as a
+protest, had at first little regard for offices. It sought to promulgate
+the principles of its cause for the enlightenment of the citizens of
+Utah and for the preservation of their rights. Some of the Gentiles who
+did not join us felt, perhaps, as strong an indignation as those who
+did, but they were entangled in politics with the hierarchs, or had
+business connections that would be destroyed. These men, in course of
+time, became the most dangerous opponents of our progress. (The average
+Mormon is obedient and supine enough in the presence of his Prophets,
+but he is a man of personal independence compared with the sycophantic
+Gentile who accepts political or commercial favors from the Church
+chiefs and yet continues to deny the existence of the very power to
+which he bends the knee.) Of the rebellious but discreet Mormons many
+came to the leaders of our party to say: "I think you're quite right. I,
+myself, have suffered under these tyrannies. I have no sympathy with new
+polygamy. But, as you know, I'm attorney for some of the Church
+interests"--or "I'm in business with high ecclesiasts"--or "I'm
+heavily in debt to the Church bank"--or "I'm closely connected by
+marriage with one of the Prophets"--"and I can do you more good by my
+quiet efforts than by coming out into the open. I'd be treated as an
+apostate. All my influence would be gone." And in most cases he
+preserved his influence, and we lost him. The Church had effective ways
+of recovering his support.
+
+For many reasons the American party looked for its recruits chiefly
+among Republicans, the Democracy being almost entirely Mormon. And in
+the first flush of enthusiasm some of our leaders laughed at the boast
+of the Republican state chairman that, for every Republican he lost, he
+would get two Mormon Democrats to vote the Republican ticket. (This was
+Hon. William Spry, a Mormon, since made Governor of Utah, for services
+rendered the hierarchy.) But the claim proved anything but laughable. He
+got probably four Mormon Democrats for every Republican he lost. As
+usual the hierarchy "delivered the goods" to the national organization
+in power.
+
+According to our best calculations we got from fifteen hundred to
+eighteen hundred Mormon votes. And, during this campaign and those that
+followed, I was approached by hundreds of Mormons who commended our work
+and gave private voice to the hope that we might succeed in freeing Utah
+so that they themselves might be free. After I joined the staff of the
+Salt Lake Tribune, as chief editor, these came to my office by stealth
+and in obvious fear. I could not blame them then, nor do I now. The cost
+of open defiance was too great.
+
+One woman, the first wife of a prominent Mormon physician, came to me to
+enlist in the work of the party. (Her husband was living with a young
+plural wife.) We accepted her aid. Her husband cut off her monthly
+allowance, and she had to take employment as a book canvasser, so that
+she might be able to earn her living. One Mormon who came out openly for
+us, was superintendent of a business owned by Gentiles. He was somewhat
+prominent as an ecclesiast, and he was a Sunday School worker in his
+ward. He reconciled his wife and daughters to his revolt against the
+recrudescence of polygamy and the tyranny of the Church's political
+control. He carried with him the sympathy of his brother, who was a
+newspaper editor. He won over some of his personal friends to pledge
+their support to our cause. He seemed too sturdy ever to retreat, too
+independent in his circumstances to be driven, and with too clear a
+vision to be led astray by the threats, the power, or the persuasions of
+the hierarchy. Yet, before long he came to confess that he could not
+continue to help us openly. His employers--his Gentile employers--had
+notified him that his work in the American party would be dangerously
+injurious to their business. They were in hearty accord with his views;
+they recognized his right as a citizen to act according to his
+convictions; but--they dared not provoke a war of business reprisals
+with the commercial and financial institutions of the Church. He must
+either cease his active opposition to the Church leaders, or lose his
+place of employment.... He retired from the fight.
+
+Another Mormon who joined us was Don. C. Musser, a son of one of the
+Church historians. He had been a missionary in Germany and in Palestine.
+He had been a soldier in the Philippines, and he had edited the first
+American newspaper there. His contact with the world and his experience
+in the military service of the United States had given him a high ideal
+of his country; and a feeling of loyalty to the nation had superseded
+his earlier devotion to the Prophets. His family was wealthy, but he was
+supporting himself and his young wife by his own efforts in business. As
+soon as he came out openly with the American party, his father's home
+was closed against him. His business connections were withdrawn from
+him. He found himself unable to provide for his wife, who was in
+delicate health. After a losing struggle, he came to tell us that he
+could no longer earn a living in Utah; that he had obtained means to
+emigrate; that he must say good-bye. And we lost him.
+
+Two other young men--the son and the son-in-law of an apostle--came to
+me and asked helplessly for advice. They admitted that the practices of
+the hierarchy were, to them, a violation of the covenant with the
+nation, a transgression of the revelation from God given to Wilford
+Woodruff, and destructive of all the securities of community
+association. But would I advise them to sacrifice their influence in the
+Church by joining the "American movement" publicly? Or had they better
+retain their influence and use it within the Church to correct the evils
+that we were attacking?
+
+With awful sincerity they spoke of conditions that had come under their
+own eyes, and related instances to show how mercilessly the polygamous
+favorites of the Church were permitted to prey on the young women
+teachers in Church schools. They spoke of J. M. Tanner, who was at that
+time head of the Church schools, a member of the general Board of
+Education, and one of the Sunday School superintendents. According to
+these young men--and according to general report--Tanner was marrying
+right and left.
+
+I knew of a young Mormon of Brigham City, who had been a suitor for the
+hand of L----, a teacher at the Logan College. He had been away from Utah
+for some time, and he had returned hoping to make her his wife. Stopping
+over night in Salt Lake, on his way home, he saw Tanner and L---- enter
+the lobby of the hotel in which he sat. They registered as man and wife
+and went upstairs together. He followed--to walk the floor of his room all
+night, struggling against the impulse to break in, and kill Tanner, and
+damn his own soul by meddling with the man who had been ordained by the
+Prophets to a wholesale polygamous prerogative.
+
+He had kept his hands clean of blood, but he had been living ever since
+with murder in his heart. Could these two sons of the Church do more to
+remedy such horrors by using their influence to have Tanner deposed, or
+by sacrificing that influence in an open revolt against the conditions
+that made Tanner possible? I could only advise them to act according to
+their own best sense of what was right. They did use their influence to
+help force Tanner's deposition, but we lost the public example of their
+opposition to the crimes of the hierarchy.
+
+I relate these incidents as typical of the different kinds of pressure
+that were brought to bear upon the independent Mormons who wished to aid
+us, and of the local difficulties against which we had to contend.
+Washington, of course, gave us no recognition. And we did not succeed in
+reaching the ear of the nation. Here and there a newspaper noted our
+effort and paid some small heed to our protest, but the overwhelming
+success of the Republican party--and the dumb-driven acquiescence of the
+Democracy--in Utah and the neighboring Church-ruled states, left the
+agitation with little of political interest for the country at large.
+
+And yet the struggle went on. Animated by the spirit of the Salt Lake
+Tribune, the leading newspaper of the community, the American party
+entered the city elections in the fall of 1905 and carried them against
+the hierarchy's Democratic ticket, with the help of the independent
+Mormons, under cover of the secret ballot. Emboldened by this success we
+proposed to move on the state and county offices, with the hope of
+gaining some members of the legislature and some of the judicial and
+executive offices, through which to enforce the laws that the Church
+leaders were defying. But here we failed. Outside of Salt Lake the rule
+of the Prophets was still absolute and unquestioned. The people bowed
+reverently to Joseph F. Smith's dictum: "When a man says 'You may direct
+me spiritually but not temporally,' he lies in the presence of God--
+that is, if he has got intelligence enough to know what he is talking
+about." The state politicians knew that they would destroy themselves by
+joining an organization opposed by the all-powerful-Church; and
+sufficient warning of this doom appeared to them in the fact that no
+member of the American party could obtain any recognition in Federal
+appointments. The Church had meanwhile dictated the election of another
+United States Senator (George Sutherland) to join Apostle Smoot, and
+Senator Kearns was retired for his opposition to the hierarchy.
+[FOOTNOTE: When Senator Aldrich was carrying the tariff bill of 1910
+through the Senate, for the greater profit of the "Interests," Smoot and
+Sutherland did not once vote against him. Smoot supported him on every
+one of the one hundred and twenty-nine votes and missed none. Sutherland
+voted with him one hundred and seventeen times and was recorded as not
+voting on the remaining twelve. Only two other senators made anything
+like such a despicable record.]
+
+It began to be more and more apparent that whatever success we might
+achieve locally, the power of the financial and political allies of the
+Prophets in Washington, aided by the executive "Big Stick" of the
+President, would beat us back from any attempt to rouse the state or the
+nation to our support.
+
+Smoot was in a happy position: all the senators who represented the
+"Interests" were for him, and all the senators who represented the
+supposed progressive sentiment of Theodore Roosevelt were also for him.
+The women of the nation had sent a protest with a million signatures to
+the Senate; but they had not votes; they received, in reply, a public
+scolding. Long before the Senate voted on its committee's report, many
+of the notorious "new" polygamists of the Church returned from their
+exile in foreign missions and began to walk the streets of Salt Lake
+with their old swagger of self-confident authority. We foresaw the end.
+
+Early in December, 1906, Senator J. C. Burrows of Michigan, chairman of
+the committee that had investigated Smoot, called up the committee's
+report and spoke upon it in a denunciation of Smoot. Senator Dubois of
+Idaho followed, two days later, with a supplementary attack, and
+censured President Roosevelt for "allowing his name and office" to be
+used in defense of the Mormons. After an interval of a month, Senator
+Albert J. Hopkins, of Illinois, undertook to reply with a defense of
+Smoot that reduced the Apostle's excuses to the absurd. Smoot, he
+declared, had opposed polygamy, "even from his infancy;" there was
+"nothing in the constitution" prohibiting "a State from having an
+established Church;" the old practices of Mormonism were dying out; and
+Smoot, as an exponent of the newer Mormonism, was largely responsible
+for the improvement.
+
+This bold falsehood was received with laughter by the members who had
+heard the testimony before the Senate committee or read the record of
+its sittings; but it was wired to all newspapers; and the contradictions
+that followed it failed (for reasons) to get the same publicity. It was
+repeated by Senator Sutherland (January 22, 1907); and he had the
+audacity to add that the Mormon Church, as well as Smoot, was opposed to
+polygamy; that the "sporadic cases" of new polygamy were "reprehended by
+Mormon and Gentile alike;" that polygamous marriages in Utah had been
+forbidden by the Enabling Act, but that polygamous cohabitation had been
+left to the state; and that the latter was rapidly dying out. And
+Sutherland knew, as every public man in Utah knew, that almost every
+word of this statement was untrue.
+
+Senator Philander C. Knox, of Pennsylvania (February 14, 1907) took up
+the lie that Smoot had been "from his youth against polygamy," and he
+added to it a legal argument that the Senate could only expel a member,
+by a two-thirds vote, if he were guilty of crime, offensive immorality,
+disloyalty or gross impropriety during his term of service. Senator
+Tillman (February 15) accused President Roosevelt of protecting Smoot in
+return for a pledge of Mormon support given previous to the last
+campaign. Apostle Smoot (February 19) declared that cases of "new"
+polygamy were rare; that they were not sanctioned by the Church; that
+every case since 1890 "has the express condemnation of the Church;" and
+that he himself had always opposed polygamy. On February 20, the
+question was forced to a vote after a debate that repeated these
+falsehoods, in spite of all disproof's of them. And Apostle Smoot was
+retained in his seat by a vote of fifty-one to thirty-seven, counting
+pairs.
+
+After this event, no growth of organization was immediately possible to
+the American party. Having gained political control of Salt Lake City
+and given it good municipal government, we were able to hold a local
+adherency; but hundreds of Mormons, who still vote the American city
+ticket, vote for the Church in state elections, because, though they
+want reform, they are not willing to risk the punishment of their
+relatives and the leaders of the Church to attain that reform. And when
+the national government granted its patent of approval to the hierarchy--
+by holding the hierarchy's appointed representative in the Senate as
+its prophetic monitor--nearly all the people of the intermountain
+country lost heart in the fight. Thousands of Gentiles, who knew the
+truth and had fought for it for years, argued despairingly: "If the
+nation likes this sort of thing--I guess it's the sort of thing it
+likes. I'm not going to ruin myself financially and politically by
+keeping up a losing struggle with these neighbors of mine, and fight the
+government at Washington besides. If the administration wants to be
+bossed by the Prophet, Seer and Revelator, I can stand it."
+
+The nation, having accepted responsibility for past polygamy, now, by
+accepting Senator Smoot, gave its responsible approval to the new
+polygamy and to the commercial and political tyrannies of the Church. In
+the old days the Mormons had claimed immunity for their practice of
+polygamy on the ground that the constitution of the United States
+protected them in the exercises of their faith. The Supreme Court of the
+country determined that the free-religion clause of the constitution did
+not cover violations of law; and the Church deliberately abandoned its
+claim of religious immunity. But now a majority of the Senate, supported
+by President Roosevelt, took the old ground--which the Supreme Court
+had made untenable and the Mormons themselves had vacated--and
+practically declared that violations of law were a part of the
+constitutional guaranty!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XVI
+
+
+
+The Price of Protest
+
+
+
+The members of the Mormon hierarchy continually boast that they are
+sustained in their power--and in their abuses of that power--"by the
+free vote of the freest people under the sun." By an amazing self
+deception the Mormon people assume that their government is one of
+"common consent;" and nothing angers them more than the expression of
+any suspicion that they are not the freest community in the world. They
+live under an absolutism. They have no more right of judgment than a
+dead body. Yet the diffusion of authority is so clever that nearly every
+man seems to share in its operation upon some subordinate, and feels
+himself in some degree a master without observing that he is also a
+slave.
+
+The male members of the ward--who would be called "laymen" in any other
+Church--all hold the priesthood. Each is in possession of, or on the
+road to, some priestly office; and yet all are under the absolutism of
+the bishop of the ward. Of the hundreds of bishops, with their
+councillors, each seems to be exercising some independent authority, but
+all are obedient to the presidents of stakes. The presidents apparently
+direct the ecclesiastical destinies of their districts, but they are, in
+fact, supine and servile under the commands of the apostles; and these,
+in turn, render implicit obedience to the Prophet, Seer and Revelator.
+No policy ever arises from the people. All direction, all command, comes
+from the man at the top. It is not a government by common consent, but a
+government of common consent--of universal, absolute and unquestioning
+obedience--under penalty of eternal condemnation threatened and earthly
+punishment sure.
+
+Twice a year, with a fine show of democracy, the people assemble in the
+Tabernacle at Salt Lake, and there vote for the general authorities who
+are presented to them by the voice of revelation. If there were no
+tragedy, there would be farce in the solemnity with which this pretense
+of free government is staged and managed. Some ecclesiast rises in the
+pulpit and reads from his list: "It is moved and seconded that we
+sustain Joseph F. Smith as Prophet, Seer and Revelator to all the world.
+All who favor this make it manifest by raising the right hand." No
+motion has been made. No second has been offered. Very often, no adverse
+vote is asked. And, if it were, who would dare to offer it? These
+leaders represent the power of God to their people; and against them is
+arrayed "the power of the Devil and his cohorts among mankind." Three
+generations of tutelage and suppression restrain the members of the
+conference in a silent acquiescence. If there is any rebel among them,
+he must stand alone; for he has scarcely dared to voice his objections,
+lest he be betrayed, and any attempt to raise a concerted revolt would
+have been frustrated before this opportunity of concerted revolt
+presented itself. Being a member of the Church, he must combat the fear
+that he may condemn himself eternally if he raise his voice against the
+will of God. He must face the penalty of becoming an outcast or an exile
+from the people and the life that he has loved. He knows that the
+religious zealots will feel that he has gone wilfully "into outer
+darkness" through some deep and secret sin of his own; and that the
+prudent members of the community will tell him that he should have "kept
+his mouth shut." If there were a majority of the conference inclined to
+protest against the re-election of any of its rulers, the lack of
+communication, the pressure of training and the weight of fear would
+keep them silent. And in this manner, from Prophet down to "Choyer
+leader" (choir leader) the names are offered and "sustained by the free
+vote of the freest people under the sun."
+
+During the days just before the American party's political agitation, a
+young Mormon, named Samuel Russell, returned from a foreign mission for
+the Church and found that the girl whom he had been courting when he
+went away was married as a plural wife to Henry S. Tanner, brother of
+the other notorious polygamist, J. M. Tanner. The discovery that his
+sweetheart was a member of the Tanner household drove Russell almost
+frantic. She was the daughter of an eminent and wealthy family, of
+remarkable beauty, well-educated and rarely accomplished. Young Russell
+was a college student--a youth of intellect and high mind--and he
+suffered all the torments of a horrifying shock. Unless he should choose
+to commit an act of violence there was only one possible way for him to
+protest. At the next conference, when the name of Henry S. Tanner was
+read from the list to be "sustained"--as a member of the general Sunday
+School Board--Russell rose and objected that Tanner was unworthy and a
+"new" polygamist. He was silenced by remonstrances from the pulpit and
+from the people. He was told to take his complaint to the President of
+his Stake. He was denied the opportunity to present it to the
+assemblage.
+
+Almost immediately afterward, Tanner, for the first time in his life,
+was honored with a seat in the highest pulpit of the Church among the
+general authorities. And Russell was pursued by the ridicule of the
+Mormon community, the persecution of the Church that he had served, the
+contempt of the man who had wronged him, and the anger of the woman whom
+he had loved. One of the reporters of the Deseret News, the Church's
+newspaper, subsequently stated that he had been detailed, with others,
+to pursue Russell day and night, soliciting interviews, plaguing him
+with questions, and demanding the legal proofs of Tanner's marriage--
+which, of course, it was known that Russell could not give--until
+Russell's friends, fearing that he might be driven to violence,
+persuaded him to leave the state. Tanner is now reputed to have six
+plural wives (all married to him since the manifesto of 1890) of whom
+this young woman is one.
+
+Similarly, at the General Conference of April, 1905, Don C. Musser (of
+whom I have already written) attempted to protest against the sustaining
+of Apostles Taylor and Cowley; but Joseph F. Smith promptly called upon
+the choir to sing, and Musser's voice was drowned in harmony. In more
+recent years Charles J. Bowen rose at a General Conference to object to
+the sustaining of some of the polygamous authorities, and he was hustled
+from the building by the ushers.
+
+But the most notable case of individual revolt of this period was
+Charles A. Smurthwaite's. He had joined the Church, alone, when a boy in
+England, and the sufferings he had endured, for allying himself with an
+ostracized sect, had made him a very ardent Mormon. He had become a
+"teacher" in his ward of Ogden City, had succeeded in business as a
+commission merchant and was a great favorite with his bishop and his
+people, because of his charities and a certain gentle tolerance of
+disposition and kindly brightness of mind.
+
+Smurthwaite, in partnership with Richard J. Taylor (son of a former
+President of the Church, John Taylor) engaged in the manufacture of
+salt, with the financial backing of a leading Church banker. Along the
+shores of Salt Lake, salt is obtained, by evaporation, at the cost of
+about sixty cents a ton; its selling price, at the neighboring smelting
+centers, ranges from three dollars to fourteen dollars a ton; and the
+industry has always been one of the most profitable in the community. In
+the early days, the Church (as I have already related) encouraged the
+establishment of "salt gardens," financed the companies, protected them
+in their leasehold rights along the lake shores, and finally, through
+the Inland Crystal Salt Company, came to control a practical monopoly of
+the salt industry of the intermountain country. (This Inland Crystal
+Company, with Joseph F. Smith as its president, is now a part of the
+national salt trust.)
+
+After Smurthwaite and Taylor had invested heavily in the land and plant
+of their salt factory, the Church banker who had been helping them
+notified them that they had better see President Smith before they went
+any further. They called on Smith in his office, and there--according
+to Smurthwaite's sworn testimony before the Senate committee--the
+Prophet gave them notice that they must not compete with his Inland
+Crystal Salt Company by manufacturing salt, and that if they tried to,
+he would "ruin" them. This proceeding convinced Smurthwaite that Smith
+had "so violent a disregard and non-understanding of the rights of his
+fellow-man and his duty to God, as to render him morally unqualified for
+the high office which he holds." For expressing such an opinion of Smith
+to elders and teachers--and adding that Smith was not fit to act as
+Prophet, Seer and Revelator, since, according to his own confession to
+the Senate Committee he was "living in sin"--for expressing these
+opinions, charges were preferred against Smurthwaite by an elder named
+Goddard of Ogden City, and excommunication proceedings were begun
+against him.
+
+Smurthwaite replied by making a charge of polygamous cohabitation
+against Goddard; and after the April Conference of 1905, Don Musser and
+Smurthwaite joined in filing a complaint in the District Court of Salt
+Lake City demanding an accounting from Joseph F. Smith of the tithes
+which the Church was collecting. Meanwhile Smurthwaite had been
+"disfellowshipped" at a secret session of the bishop's court, on March
+22, without an opportunity of appearing in his own defense or having
+counsel or witnesses heard in support of his case; and on April 4, after
+a similarly secret and ex-parte proceeding, he was excommunicated by the
+High Council of his Stake, for "apostasy and un-Christianlike conduct."
+His charges against Goddard were ignored, and his suit for an accounting
+of the tithes was dismissed for want of jurisdiction!
+
+From the moment of his first public protest against Smith, all
+Smurthwaite's former associates fell away from him, and by many of the
+more devout he was shunned as if he were infected. Benevolent as he had
+been, he could find no further fellowship even among those whom he had
+benefited by his service and his means. I know of no more blameless life
+than his had been in his home community--and, to this, every one of his
+acquaintances can bear testimony--yet after the brutally unjust
+proceedings of excommunication against him the Deseret News, the
+Church's daily paper, referred to "recent cases of apostasy and
+excommunication" as having been made necessary by the "gross immorality"
+of the victims. When a man like Chas. A. Smurthwaite could not
+remonstrate against the individual offenses of Joseph F. Smith, without
+being overwhelmed by financial disaster, and social ostracism, and
+personal slander, it must be evident how impossible is such single
+revolt to the average Mormon. Nothing can be accomplished by individual
+protest except the ruin of the protestant and his family.
+
+In the case of my own excommunication, the issues were perhaps less
+clearly defined than in Smurthwaite's. I had not been for many years a
+formal member of the Church; and yet in the sense that Mormonism is a
+community system (as much as a religion) I had been an active and loyal
+member of it. In my childhood--when I was seven or eight years of age--
+I began to doubt the faith of my people; and I used to go into the
+orchard alone and thrust sticks lightly into the soft mould and pray
+that God would let them fall over if the Prophets had not been appointed
+by Him to do His work. And sometimes they fell and sometimes they stood!
+Later, when I was appalled by some of the things that had occurred in
+the early history of the Church, I silenced myself with the argument
+that one should not judge any religion by the crudities and
+intolerance's of its past. I felt that if I were not hypocritical--if I
+were myself guided by the truth as I saw it myself--and if I aided to
+the utmost of my power in advancing the community out of its errors, I
+should be doing all that could be asked of me. In the days of Mormon
+misery and proscription, I chose to stand with my own people, suffering
+in their sufferings and rejoicing with them in their triumphs. Their
+tendency was plainly upward; and I felt that no matter what had been the
+origin of the Church--whether in the egotism of a man or in an alleged
+revelation from God--if the tendencies were toward higher things,
+toward a more even justice among men, toward a more zealous patriotism
+for the country, no man of the community could do better than abide with
+the community.
+
+The Church authorities accepted my aid with that understanding of my
+position toward the Mormon religion; and, though Joseph F. Smith, in
+1892, for his own political purposes, circulated a procured statement
+that I was "a Mormon in good standing," later, when he was on the
+witness stand in the Smoot investigation, he testified concerning me:
+"He is not and never has been an official member of the Church, in any
+sense or form." I made no pretenses and none were asked of me. I was
+glad to give my services to a people whom I loved, and trusted, and
+admired; and the leaders were as eager to use me as I was eager to be
+used in the proper service of my fellows. (Even Joseph F. Smith, in
+those days, was glad to give me his "power of attorney" and to trust me
+with the care of the community's financial affairs.) But when all the
+hierarchy's covenants to the nation were being broken; when the tyranny
+of the Prophet's absolutism had been re-established with a fierceness
+that I had never seen even in the days of Brigham Young; when polygamy
+had been restored in its most offensive aspect, as a breach of the
+Church's own revelation; when hopelessly outlawed children were being
+born of cohabitation that was clandestine and criminal under the "laws
+both of God and of man"--it was impossible for me to be silent either
+before the leaders of the Church or in the public places among the
+people. I had spoken for the Mormons at a time when few spoke for them--
+when many of the men who were now so valiantly loyal to the hierarchy
+had been discreetly silent. I had helped defend the Mormon religion when
+it had few defenders. I did not propose to criticize it now; for to me,
+any sincere belief of the human soul is too sacred to be so assailed--if
+not out of respect, surely in pity--and the Mormon faith was the faith
+of my parents. But I was determined to make the strongest assault in my
+power on the treason and the tyranny which Smith and his associates in
+guilt were trying to cover with the sanctities of religion; and I had to
+make that assault, as a public man, for a public purpose, without any
+consideration of private consequences.
+
+After I began criticizing the Church leaders, in the editorial columns
+of the Salt Lake Tribune, my friend Ben Rich, then president of the
+Southern States Missions, and J. Golden Kimball, one of the seven
+presidents of the seventies, came to me repeatedly to suggest that if I
+wished to attack the leaders of the Church I should formally withdraw
+from the Church. This I declined to do: because I was in no different
+position toward the teachings of the Church than I had been in previous
+years--because I was not criticizing the Church or its religious
+teachings, but attacking the civil offenses of its leaders as citizens
+guilty against the state--and because I saw that my attack had more
+power as coming from a man who stood within the community, even though
+he had no standing in the Church. I continued as I had begun. After the
+publication of an editorial (January 22, 1905), in which I charged
+President Smith with being all that the testimony then before the Senate
+committee had proven him to be, Ben Rich advised me that I must either
+withdraw from the Church or Smith would proceed against me in the Church
+tribunals and make my family suffer. I replied that I would not withdraw
+and that I would fight all cases against me on the issue of free speech.
+On February 1, 1905, I published, editorially, "An address to the
+Earthly King of the Kingdom of God," in which I charged Smith with
+having violated the laws (revelations) of his predecessors; with having
+made and violated treaties upon which the safety of his "subjects"
+depended; with having taken the bodies of the daughters of his subjects
+and bestowed them upon his favorites; with having impoverished his
+subjects by a system of elaborate exaction's (tithes) in order to enrich
+"the crown" and so forth. All of which, burlesquely written as if to a
+Czar by a constitutionalist, was accepted by the Mormon people as in no
+way absurd in its tone as coming from one American citizen to another!
+
+Because of these two editorials I was charged (February 21, 1905) before
+a ward bishop's court in Ogden with "un-Christianlike conduct and
+apostasy," after two minor Church officials had called upon me at my
+home and received my acknowledgment of the authorship of the editorials,
+my refusal to retract them, and my statement that I did not "sustain"
+Joseph F. Smith as head of the Church, since he was "leaving the worship
+of God for the worship of Mammon and leading the people astray." On the
+night of February 24, I appeared in my own defense before the bishop's
+court, at the hour appointed, without witnesses or counsel, because I
+had been notified that no one would be permitted to attend with me. And,
+of course, the defense I made was that the articles were true and that I
+was prepared to prove them true.
+
+Such a court usually consists of a bishop and his two councillors, but in
+this case the place of the second councillor had been taken by a high
+priest named Elder George W. Larkin, a man reputed to be "richly endowed
+with the Spirit." I had a peculiar psychological experience with Larkin.
+After I had spoken at some length in my own defense, Larkin rose to work
+himself up into one of the rhapsodies for which he was noted. "Brother
+Frank," he began, "I want to bear my testimony to you that this is the
+work of God--and nothing can stay its progress--and all who interfere
+will be swept away as chaff"--rising to those transports of
+auto-hypnotic exaltation which such as he accept as the effect of the
+spirit of God speaking through them. "You were born in the covenant, and
+the condemnation is more severe upon one who has the birthright than
+upon one not of the faith who fights against the authority of God's
+servants." I had concluded to try the effect of a resistant mental
+force, and while I stared at him I was saying to myself: "This is a mere
+vapor of words. You shall not continue in this tirade. Stop!" He began
+to have difficulty in finding his phrases. The expected afflatus did not
+seem to have arrived to lift him. He faltered, hesitated, and finally,
+with an explanation that he had not been feeling well, he resumed his
+seat, apologetically.
+
+That left me free to "bear testimony" somewhat myself. I warned the
+members of the "court" that no work of righteousness could succeed
+except by keeping faith with the Almighty--which meant keeping faith
+with his children upon earth. I reminded them of the dark days, which
+all of them could recall, when we had repeatedly covenanted to God and
+to the nation that if we could be relieved of what we deemed the world's
+oppression we would fulfill every obligation of our promises. I pointed
+out to them that the Church was passing into the ways of the world; that
+our people were being pauperized; that some of them were in the
+poorhouses in their old age after having paid tithes all their active
+lives; that by our practices we were bearing testimony against the
+revelations which Mormons proclaimed to the world for the salvation of
+the bodies and souls of men.
+
+They listened to me with the same friendly spirit that had marked all
+their proceedings for these men had no animosity against me; they were
+merely obeying the orders of their superiors. And when we arose to
+disperse, the bishop put his hand on my shoulder and said, in the usual
+form of words: "Brother Frank, we will consider your case, and if we
+find you ought to do anything to make matters right, we will let you
+know what it is."
+
+I returned to my home, where I had left my wife and children chatting at
+the dinner table. They had known where I was going. They knew what the
+issue of my "trial" would be for them and for me. Yet when I came back
+to them, none asked me any questions and none seemed perturbed. And this
+is typical of the Mormon family. I think the experiences through which
+the people have passed have given them a quality of cheerful patience.
+They have been schooled to bear persecution with quiet fortitude.
+Tragedy sweeps by them in the daily current of life. A young man goes on
+a mission, and dies in a foreign land; and his parents accept their
+bereavement like Spartans, almost without mourning, sustained by the
+religious belief that he has ended his career gloriously. Taught to
+devote themselves and their children and their worldly goods to the
+service of their Church, they accept even the impositions and injustices
+of the Church leaders with a powerful forbearance that is at once a
+strength and a weakness.
+
+Two days later I was met on the street by a young Dutch elder, who could
+scarcely speak English, and he gave me the official document from the
+bishop's court notifying me that I had been "disfellowshipped for
+un-Christianlike conduct and apostasy." I was then summoned to appear
+before the High Council of the Stake in excommunication proceedings, and
+after filing a defense which it is unnecessary to give here--and after
+refusing to appear before the Council for reasons that it is equally
+unnecessary to repeat I was excommunicated on March 14, 1905. No denial
+was made by the Church authorities of any of the charges which I had
+made against Smith. No trial was made of the truth of those charges. As
+a free citizen of "one of the freest communities under the sun," I was
+officially ostracized by order of the religious despot of the community
+for daring to utter what everyone knew to be the truth about him.
+
+For myself, of course, no edict of excommunication had any terrors; but
+the aim of the authorities was to make me suffer through the sufferings
+of my family; and, in that, they succeeded. I shall not write of it. It
+has little place in such a public record as this, and I do not wish to
+present myself, in any record, as a martyr. It was not I who was
+ostracized from the Mormon Church by my excommunication; it was the
+right of free speech. The Mormon Church deprived me of nothing; it
+deprived itself of the helpful criticism of its members. No anathema of
+bigotry could take from me the affection of my family or the respect of
+any friends whose respect was worth the coveting. In that regard I
+suffered only in my pity for those of my neighbors who were so blindly
+servile to the decrees of religious tyranny that they turned their backs
+on the voice of their own liberty raised, in protest, for their own
+defense.
+
+And it was not by the individual protestants but by the entire community
+that the heaviest price was paid in this whole conflict. It divided the
+state again into the old factions and involved it in the old war from
+which it had been rescued. The Mormons instituted a determined boycott
+against all Gentiles, and "Thou shalt not support God's enemies" became
+a renewed commandment of the Prophet. Wherever a Gentile was employed in
+any Mormon institution, he was discharged, almost without exception,
+whether or not he had been an active member of the American party.
+Teachers in the Church would exclaim with horror if they heard that a
+Mormon family was employing a Gentile physician; and more than one
+Mormon litigant was advised that he not only "sinned against the work of
+God," but endangered the success of his law suit, by retaining a Gentile
+lawyer. Politicians were told that if they aided the American party,
+they need never hope for advancement in this world, or expect anything
+but eternal condemnation in the world to come; and though few of them
+counted on the "spoils" of the hereafter, they understood and
+appreciated the power of the hierarchy to reward in the present day. The
+Gentiles did not attempt any boycott in retaliation; they had not the
+solidarity necessary to such an attempt; and many Gentile business men,
+in order to get any Mormon patronage whatever, were compelled to employ
+none but Mormon clerks.
+
+The Gentiles had been largely attracted to Utah by its mines; they were
+heavily interested in the smelting industry. Colonel B. A. Wall, one of
+the strongest supporters of the American party, owned copper properties,
+was an inventor of methods of reduction, and had large smelting
+industries. Ex-Senator Thomas Kearns, and his partner David Keith,
+owners of the Salt Lake Tribune, and many of their associates, had their
+fortunes in mines and smelters; they were leaders of the American party
+and they were attempting to enlist with them such men as W. S.
+McCornick, a Gentile banker and mine owner, and D. C. Jackling,
+president of the Utah Copper Company, who is now one of the heads of the
+national "copper combine" and one of the ablest men of the West.
+
+In 1904, in the midst of the political crisis, the Church newspapers
+served editorial notice on these men that, on account of the smelter
+fumes and their destructive effect upon the vegetation of the valley,
+the smelters must go; and that if the present laws were not sufficient,
+new laws would be enacted to drive them out. Men like Wall and Keith and
+Kearns and Walker were not terrorized; but McCornick and Jackling and
+the representatives of the American Smelting and Refining Company either
+surrendered to a discreet silence or openly joined the Church in the
+campaign. They were rewarded with the assurance that the Church would
+protect them against any labor trouble and that no adverse legislation
+would be attempted against them. Today Jackling, of the copper combine,
+is a newspaper partner of Apostle Smoot, and he is mentioned for the
+United States Senate as the Church's selection to succeed George
+Sutherland. The Church has large mining interests; Smoot and Smith are
+in close affiliation with the smelting trust; and this is another
+powerful partnership in Washington that protected Smoot in his seat and
+has been rewarded by the Church's assistance in looting the nation.
+
+
+
+Chapter XVII
+
+
+
+The New Polygamy
+
+
+
+In the old days of Mormonism--and as late as the anti-polygamous
+manifesto of 1890--the whole aim and effort of the Church was to exalt
+and sanctify and make pure the practice of plural marriage by means of
+the community's respect and the reverences of religion. The doctrine of
+polygamy was taught as a revealed mystery of faith. It was accepted as a
+sacrament ordained by God for the salvation of mankind. The most
+important families in the Church dignified it by their participation,
+and were in turn dignified by the Church's approval and by the wealth
+and power that followed approval. The inevitable mental sufferings of
+the plural wives were endured by them as part of an earthly
+self-immolation required by God, for which they should be rewarded in
+eternity. The very necessities of their situation compelled them to
+exact and cherish a super reverence for the doctrine of plural marriage--
+since the only way a mother could justify herself to her children was
+by teaching, as she believed, that she had been selected by God for the
+exaltation of this sacrifice, and by inculcating in her children a
+scrupulous respect for sexual purity. There was no pretense of denial of
+the polygamous relation. Plural wives held the place of honor in the
+community. Their marriages were considered the most sanctified. They and
+their progeny were called "the wives and children of the holy covenant,"
+and they were esteemed accordingly.
+
+But as the history of the Church shows, plural marriage was always a
+heavy cross to the Mormon women; many had refused to bear it, in the
+face of the frequent pulpit scoldings of the Prophets; and few did not
+sometime weep under it in the secrecy of their family life. In the days
+immediately preceding the manifesto of 1890, there was a general hope
+and longing among the Mormon mothers that God would permit a relief
+before their daughters and their sons should become of an age to be
+drafted into the ranks of polygamy. The great majority of the young men
+were monogamists. It required the strong persuasions of personal
+affection as well as the authority of Divine command to make the young
+women accept a polygamist in marriage. And when the Church received
+President Woodruff's anti-polygamous revelation, every profound human
+emotion of the people coincided with the promise to abstain.
+
+Only among a few of the polygamous leaders themselves was there any
+inclination to break the Church's pledge--an inclination that was
+strengthened by resentment against the Federal power that had compelled
+the giving of the pledge. Almost immediately upon obtaining the freedom
+of statehood, some of these leaders returned to the practice of
+polygamous cohabitation--although they had accepted the revelation, had
+bound themselves by their covenant to the nation and had solemnly
+subscribed to the terms of their amnesty. To justify themselves, they
+found it necessary to teach that polygamy was still approved by the law
+of God--that the practice of plural marriage had only been abandoned
+because it was forbidden by the laws of man. Joseph F. Smith continued
+to live with his five wives and to rear children by all of them. Those
+of the apostles who were not assured of that attainment to the
+principality of Heaven which was promised the man of five wives and
+proportionate progeny, were naturally tempted (if, indeed, they were not
+actually encouraged) to take Joseph F. Smith as their examplar. It was
+scarcely worse to break the covenant by taking a new polygamous wife
+than by continuing polygamous relations with former plural wives; and
+when an apostle took a new polygamous wife, his inevitable and necessary
+course was to justify himself by the authority of God. He could not then
+deny the same authority to the minor ecclesiasts, even if he had wished
+to. And, finally, when the evil circle spread to the man on the fringe
+of the Church--who could not obtain even such poor authorization for
+his perfidy he found a way to perpetrate a pretended plural marriage with
+his victim, and the Church authorities did not dare but protect him.
+
+This was polygamy without the great saving grace that had previously
+defended the Mormon women from the cruelties and abuses of the practice.
+It was polygamy without honor--polygamy against an assumed revelation
+of God instead of by virtue of one--polygamy worse than that of the
+Mohammedans, since it was necessarily clandestine, could claim no social
+respect or acceptance, and was forbidden "by the laws of God and man"
+alike.
+
+This is the "new polygamy" of Mormonism. The Church leaders dare not
+acknowledge it for fear of the national consequences. They dare not even
+secretly issue certificates of plural marriage, lest the record should
+be betrayed. They protect the polygamist by a conspiracy of falsehood
+that is almost as shameful as the shame it seeks to cover; and the
+infection of the duplicity spreads like a plague to corrupt the whole
+social life of the people. The wife of a new polygamist cannot claim a
+husband; she has no social status; she cannot, even to her parents,
+prove the religious sanction for her marital relations. Her children are
+taught that they must not use a father's name. They are hopelessly
+outside the law--without the possibility that any further statutes of
+legitimization will be enacted for their relief. They are born in
+falsehood and bred to the living of a lie. Their father cannot claim the
+authority of the Church for their parentage, for he must protect his
+Prophet. He cannot even publicly acknowledge them--any more than he can
+publicly acknowledge their mother.
+
+Out of these terrible conditions comes such an instance as the notorious
+case of one of Henry S. Tanner's wives, who went on a visit to one of
+her relatives, with her children, and denied that they were her
+children, and denied that she was married--and was supported by her
+children's denial that she was their mother. Similarly, a plural wife of
+a wealthy Mormon, whose fortune is estimated at $25,000,000--a partner
+of the sugar trust, a community leader, a favorite of the Church went
+before the Senate Committee in December, 1904, and swore that her first
+husband had died thirteen years before, that she had had a child within
+six years, and that she had no second husband. And by doing so she not
+only marked the child as illegitimate beyond the relief of any future
+statutes--legitimizing the offspring of polygamous marriages, but she
+left herself and the child without any claim upon the estate of its
+father and publicly swore herself a social outcast before a committee of
+the United States Senate, and perjured herself--to the knowledge of all
+her friends and acquaintances in Utah--for the protection of her
+husband and her Church. What can one say of a man who will permit a
+woman to commit such an act of social suicide for him--or of a Church
+that will command it?
+
+Here is a condition of society unparalleled anywhere else in
+civilization--unparalleled even in barbarous countries, for wherever
+else polygamy is practiced it at least has the sanction of local
+convention. And the consequent suffering that falls upon the women and
+the children is a heart-break to see. During the days when I was in the
+editorial office of the Salt Lake Tribune, scores of miserable cases
+came to my knowledge by letter, by the report of friends, and by the
+visits of the agonized wives themselves. I shall never forget one young
+woman, in her twenties, who came to ask my help in forcing her husband
+to obtain a marriage certificate for her from the Church, so that her
+boy might have the right to claim a father. She wept, with her head on
+my desk, sobbing out her story, and appealing to me for aid with a
+convulsed and tear-drenched face.
+
+Four years earlier, she had become friendly with a man twice her age,
+whom she admired and respected. He had taken two wives before the
+manifesto of 1890, but that did not prevent him from coveting the youth
+and beauty of this young woman. He first approached her mother for
+permission to marry the girl, and when the mother-who was herself a
+plural wife replied that it was impossible under the law, he brought an
+apostle to persuade her that the practice of plural marriage was still
+as meet, just and available to salvation as it had been when she
+married. Then he went to the daughter.
+
+"I was terrified," she said, "when he proposed to me. And yet--he asked
+me if I thought my mother had done wrong when she married my father....
+There was no one else I liked as much. He was good. He was rich. He told
+me I'd never want for anything. He said I would be fulfilling the
+command of God against the wickedness of a persecuting world.... I
+don't know what devil of fanaticism entered into me. I thought it would
+be smart to defy the United States."
+
+Late one night, by appointment, he called for her with a carriage,
+driven by a man unknown to her, and took her to a darkened house that
+had a dim light only in the hallway. They entered alone and turned into
+a parlor that was dark, except for the reflection from the hall. He led
+her up to the portieres that hung across an inner door, and through the
+opening between the curtains she saw the indistinct figure of a man.
+They stood before him, hand in hand, while he mumbled over the words of
+a ceremony that sounded to her like the ceremonies she had heard in the
+Temple. She caught little of it clearly; she remembered practically
+nothing. She was not given anything to show that a ceremony had been
+performed, and she did not ask for anything. The elderly bridegroom
+kissed her when the mumbling ceased, led her out to the carriage, took
+her back to her mother's house, and that night became her husband.
+
+She bore him a son. No one except her mother, her father and a few
+trusted friends knew that she was married. In the early months of 1905
+she read in the Tribune the testimony given before the Senate committee
+by Professor James E. Talmage, for the Church, to the effect that since
+the manifesto of 1890 neither the President of the Church nor anybody
+else in the Church had power to authorize a plural marriage, and that
+any woman who had become a plural wife, since the manifesto, was "no
+more a wife by the law of the Church, than she is by the law of the
+land."
+
+She asked her husband about it. He replied that an apostle had married
+them. "I asked my husband," she said, "to get a certificate of marriage
+from the apostle. He told me I needed none--that it was recorded in the
+books here and recorded in heaven--that it would put the apostle in
+danger if he were to sign such a paper. I said that that was nothing to
+me--that I wanted to protect my good name. Finally, he said it was not
+an apostle. Then we had a bitter scene. And he did not come back for a
+long time. And he didn't write as long as he stayed away.
+
+"When he came back he was more loving than ever. I was afraid of having
+more children. I said to him: 'You cannot hold me as a wife any longer
+unless you write a paper certifying that I'm your wife and this boy is
+your child. You may place that paper anywhere you like, so long as I
+know I can get it in case you die. Suppose you were to die and all your
+folks were to deny that I was your wife--say that I was an imposter--
+that I was trying to foist my boy on the estate of a dead man--in the
+name of God, then what could I do?' He went away; and he hasn't come
+back; and he hasn't written. I don't know who married us. I don't even
+know the house where it happened. I don't know who the driver was. I
+don't even know who the apostle was that told mother it would be all
+right. He made her promise under a covenant not to tell.
+
+"I don't know where to go. A friend of mine told me you would advise me.
+He said perhaps you could make them give me a certificate. I don't want
+to expose my husband. I only want something so that my boy, when he
+grows up, won't be"--
+
+What could I do? What could anyone do for this unfortunate girl, seduced
+in the name of religion, with the aid of a Church that repudiated her
+for its own protection? She had to suffer, and see her boy suffer, the
+penalties of a social outcast.
+
+Her case was typical of many that came to my personal knowledge. At the
+Sunday Schools, in the choirs, in the joint meetings of mutual
+improvement associations, young girls--taught to believe that plural
+marriage was sacred, and reverencing the polygamous prophets as the
+anointed of the Lord--were being seduced into clandestine marriage
+relations with polygamous elders who persuaded their victims that the
+anti-polygamous manifesto had been given out to save a persecuted people
+from the cruelties of an unjust government; that it was never intended
+it should be obeyed; that all the celestial blessings promised by
+revelation to the polygamist and his wives were still waiting for those
+who would dare to enjoy them.
+
+If the tempted girl turned to one of her women friends, and besought her
+to say, on her honor, whether she thought that plural marriage was
+right, the other was likely enough to answer: "Yes, yes. Indeed it is.
+Promise me you won't tell a living soul. Tell me you'll die first....
+I'm married to Brother I,----, the leader of the ward choir."
+
+If she asked her mother: "Tell me. Is plural marriage wrong?" the mother
+could only reply: "Oh--I don't know--I don't know. Your father said it
+was right, and I accepted it--and we practiced it--and you have always
+loved your other brothers and sisters, and it seems to me it can't be
+wrong, since we have lived it. But--Oh, I don't know, daughter. I don't
+know."
+
+The man who is tempting her knows. He has the word of an apostle, the
+example of the Prophet, the secret teaching of the Church. He courts her
+as any other religious young girl might be courted--with little
+attentions, at the meetings, over the music books--and he has, to aid
+him, a religious exaltation in her, induced by his plea that she is to
+enter into the mystery of the holy covenant, to become one of the most
+faithful of a persecuted Church, to defy the wicked laws of its enemies.
+She is just as happy in her betrothal as any other innocent girl of her
+age. Even the secrecy is sweet to her. And then, some evening, they
+saunter down a side street to a strange house--or even to a back
+orchard where a man is waiting in a cowl under a tree (perhaps vulgarly
+disguised as a woman with a veil over his face)--and they are married
+in a mutter of which she hears nothing.
+
+Such a case was related to me by a horrified mother who had discovered
+that the marriage ceremony had been performed by an accomplice of the
+libertine who had seduced her daughter and since confessed his crime.
+But whether the ceremony be performed by a priest of the Church or by a
+more unauthorized scoundrel, the girl is equally at the mercy of her
+"husband" and equally betrayed in the world. Even in this case of the
+pretended marriage, the elders of the ward hushed up the threatened
+prosecution because the authorities of the Church objected to a
+proceeding that might expose other plural marriages more orthodox.
+
+Hundreds of Mormon men and women personally thanked me by letter or in
+interviews at the Tribune office, for our editorial attacks upon the
+hierarchy for encouraging these horrors. Strangers spoke to me on
+railroad trains, thanking me and telling me of cases. Three Mormon
+physicians, themselves priests of the Church, told me of innumerable
+instances that had come to them in their practice, and said that they
+did not know what was to become of the community. One Mormon woman wrote
+me from Mexico to say that she had exiled herself there with her husband
+and his two plural wives, and that she felt she had worked out
+sufficient atonement for all her descendants; yet she saw girls of the
+family on the verge of entering into plural marriage--if they had not
+already done so--and she begged us to continue our newspaper exposures,
+so that others might be saved from the bitter experiences of her life.
+
+President Winder met me on the street in 1905, towards the close of the
+year, and said: "Frank, you need not continue your fight against plural
+marriage. President Smith has stopped it." "Then," I replied, "two
+things are evident: I have been telling the truth when I said that
+plural marriage had been renewed--in spite of the authorized denials--and
+if President Smith has stopped it now, he has had authority over it all
+the time."
+
+To me, or to any other well-informed citizen of Utah, President Winder's
+admission was not necessary to prove Smith's responsibility. In the
+April conference of 1904, Smith had read an "official statement," signed
+by him, prohibiting plural marriages and threatening to excommunicate
+any officer or member of the Church who should solemnize one; and this
+official statement was carried to the Senate committee by Professor
+James E. Talmage, and offered in proof that the Church was keeping its
+covenant.
+
+For us, in Utah, the declaration served merely to illuminate the dark
+places of ecclesiastical bad faith. We knew that from the year 1900
+down, there had never been a sermon preached in any Mormon tabernacle,
+by any of the general authorities of the Church, against the practice of
+plural marriage, or against the propriety of the practice, or against
+the sanctity of the doctrine. We knew, on the contrary, that upon
+numerous occasions, at funerals and in public assemblages, Joseph F.
+Smith and John Henry Smith and others of the hierarchy, had proclaimed
+the doctrine as sacred. We knew that it was still being taught in the
+secret prayer meetings. Practically all the leading authorities of the
+Church were living in plural marriage. Some of them had taken new wives
+since the manifesto. None of them had been actually punished. All were
+in high favor. And though Joseph F. Smith denied his responsibility,
+every one knew that none of these things could be, except with his
+active approval.
+
+Perhaps, for a brief time, while Smoot's case was still before the
+Senate, some check was put upon the renewal of polygamy. But, even then,
+there were undoubtedly, occasional marriages allowed, where the parties
+were so situated as to make concealment perfect. And all checks were
+withdrawn when Smoot's case was favorably disposed of, and the Church
+found itself protected by the political power of the administration at
+Washington and by a political and financial alliance with "the
+Interests."
+
+Today, in spite of the difficulty of discovering plural marriages,
+because of the concealments by which they are protected, the Salt Lake
+Tribune is publishing a list of more than two hundred "new" polygamists
+with the dates and circumstances of their marriages; and these are
+probably not one tenth of all the cases. During President Taft's visit
+to Salt Lake City, in 1909, Senator Thomas Kearns, one of the
+proprietors of the Tribune, offered to prove to one of the President's
+confidants hundreds of cases of new polygamy, if the President would
+designate two secret service men to investigate. I believe, from my own
+observation, that there are more plural wives among the Mormons today
+than there were before 1890. Then the young men married early, and were
+chiefly monogamists. Now the change in economic conditions has raised
+the age at which men marry; it has made more bachelors than there were
+when simpler modes of life prevailed. The young women have fewer offers
+of marriage, and more of these come from well-to-do polygamists. The
+girls are still taught, as they have always been, that marriage is
+necessary to salvation; and they are betrayed into plural marriage by
+natural conditions as well as by the persuasions of the Church.
+
+A perfect "underground" system has been put in operation for the
+protection of the lawbreakers. If they reside in Utah, they frequently
+go to Canada or to Mexico to be married; and the whole polygamous
+paraphernalia can be transported with ease and comfort--the priest who
+performs the ceremony, the husband, sometimes the legal wife to give her
+consent so that she may not be damned, and the young woman whose soul is
+to be saved. And this "underground" is maintained against the reluctance
+of the Mormon people. They aid in it from a kindly feeling toward their
+fellow-believers--and with some faint thought that perhaps these
+wayfarers are being "persecuted" but all the time with no personal
+sympathy for polygamy. By one sincere word of reprehension from Joseph
+F. Smith every "underground" station could be abolished, the route could
+be destroyed, and an end could be put to the protection that is, of
+itself, an encouragement to polygamous practice. He has never spoken
+that word.
+
+Recently, the way in which the new polygamy is perpetrated in Utah has
+been almost officially revealed. A patriarch of the Church, resident in
+Davis County, less than fifteen miles from Salt Lake City, had been
+solemnizing these unlawful unions at wholesale. The situation became so
+notorious that the authorities of the Church felt themselves impelled
+about September, 1910, to put restrictions upon his activity. In the
+course of their investigations they discovered that he did not know the
+persons whom he married. They would come to his house, in the evening,
+wearing handkerchiefs over their faces; he sat hidden behind a screen in
+his parlor; and under these circumstances the two were declared man and
+wife, and were sealed up to everlasting bliss to rule over
+principalities and kingdoms, with power of endless increase and
+progression. He refused to tell the hierarchy from which one of the
+authorities he had received his endowment to perpetrate these crimes. He
+refused to give the names of any of the victims, claiming that he did
+not know them!
+
+It is probable that for a long time plural marriage ceremonies were not
+solemnized within the Salt Lake temple. Now, we know that there have
+lately been such marriages in it, and at Manti, and at Logan, and
+perhaps also in the temple at St. George. There are cases on record
+where a man has a wife on one side of the Utah-Colorado line and another
+wife across the border. No prosecutions are possible in Utah; for, as
+Joseph F. Smith told the Senate committee, the officers of the law have
+too much "respect" for the ecclesiastical rulers of the state.
+Similarly, in the surrounding states, the officers show exactly the same
+sort of "respect" and for the same reason. They not only know the
+Church's power in local politics, but they see the national
+administration allowing the polygamists and priests of the Church to
+select the Federal officials, and they are not eager to rouse a
+resentment against themselves, at Washington as well as at home, by
+prosecuting polygamous Mormons.
+
+Some few years ago, Irving Sayford, then representing the Los Angeles
+Times, asked Mr. P. H. Lannan, of the Salt Lake Tribune, why someone did
+not swear out warrants against President Smith for his offenses against
+the law. Mr. Lannan said: "You mean why don't I do it?"
+
+"Oh, no," Mr. Sayford explained, "I don't mean you particularly."
+
+"Oh, yes, you do," Mr. Lannan said. "You mean me if you mean anybody. If
+it's not my duty, it's no one's duty.... Well, I'll tell you why....
+I don't make a complaint, because neither the district attorney nor
+the prosecuting attorney would entertain it. If he did entertain it and
+issued a warrant, the sheriff would refuse to serve the warrant. If the
+sheriff served the warrant, there would be no witnesses unless I got
+them. If I could get the witnesses, they wouldn't testify to the facts
+on the stand. If they did testify to the facts, the jury wouldn't
+bring in a verdict of guilty. If the jury did bring in a verdict of
+guilty, the judge would suspend sentence. If the judge did not suspend
+sentence, he would merely fine President Smith, three hundred dollars.
+And within twenty-four hours there would be a procession of Mormons and
+Gentiles crawling on their hands and knees to Church headquarters to
+offer to pay that three hundred dollar fine at a dime apiece."
+
+Mr. Lannan's statement of the case was later substantiated by an action
+of the Salt Lake District Court. Upon the birth of the twelfth child
+that has been borne to President Smith in plural marriage since the
+manifesto of 1890, Charles Mostyn Owen made complaint in the District
+Court at Salt Lake, charging Mr. Smith with a statutory offense. The
+District Attorney reduced the charge to "unlawful cohabitation" (a
+misdemeanor), without the complainant's consent or knowledge. All the
+preliminaries were then graciously arranged and President Smith appeared
+in the District Court by appointment. He pleaded guilty. The judge in
+sentencing him remarked that as this was the first time he had appeared
+before the court, he would be fined three hundred dollars, but that
+should he again appear, the penalty might be different. Smith had
+already testified in Washington, before the Senate Committee, to the
+birth of eleven children in plural marriage since he had given his
+covenant to the country to cease living in polygamy; he had practically
+defied the Senate and the United States to punish him; he had said that
+he would "stand" his "chances" before the law and courts of his own
+state. All of this was well known to the judge who fined him three
+hundred dollars--a sum of money scarcely equal to the amount of Smith's
+official income for the time he was in court!
+
+A leader of the Church, not long ago, asked me, in private conference,
+what was the policy of the American party with regard to the new plural
+wives and their children. I replied that as far as I knew it, the policy
+was to have the Church accept its responsibility in the matter and give
+the wives and children whatever recognition could be given them by their
+religion. The Church was guilty before God and man of having encouraged
+the awful condition. It was unspeakably cowardly and unfair for the
+Church leaders to put the whole burden of suffering on the helpless
+women and children; and, moreover, this course was a justification to
+polygamists in deserting their wives, on the ground that the Church had
+never sanctioned the relation.
+
+This Church leader, himself a new polygamist, answered miserably: "The
+Church will not let itself be put in such a light before the country.
+That would be to admit that it has been responsible all the time."
+
+I asked: "Has the Church not been responsible?"
+
+He replied--equivocating--: "Well, not the Church. The Church has
+never taken a vote on it."
+
+"That," I said, "answers why you have never got redress and never will
+get it because you are all liars, from top to bottom. You know you would
+never have entered the polygamous relation--nor could you have induced
+your wife to enter it--except with full knowledge that the Church did
+authorize it. The Church is one man, and you know it. The whole theory
+of your theology collapses if you deny that."
+
+He shook his head blankly. "I don't know what is to become of us. I
+don't see any way out."
+
+I could only advise him that he should join with other new polygamists
+in demanding that the Church authorities make all possible reparation to
+the women and children who were being crushed under the penalties of the
+Church's crime. But I knew that such advice was vain. He could not make
+such a demand, any more than any other slave could demand his freedom.
+And if the non-polygamists demanded it, the Prophets would deny that
+polygamy was being practiced. The children could not be legitimized--
+for the Church cannot obtain legitimizing statutes without avowing its
+responsibility for the need of them; and the Gentiles can not pass such
+statutes without encouraging the continuance of polygamy by removing the
+social penalty against it.
+
+So the burden of all this guilt, this shame, this deception, falls upon
+the unfortunate plural wife and her innocent offspring. She is bound by
+the most sacred obligations never to reveal the name of the officiating
+priest--even if she knew it--nor to disclose the circumstances of the
+ceremony. She has justified her degradation by the assumption that God
+has commanded it; that her husband has received a revelation authorizing
+him to take her into his household; that her children will be legitimate
+in the sight of God, and that eventually the civilized world will come
+to a joyous acceptance of the practice of polygamy. When the trials of
+her life afflict her and she finds no relentment in the world's disdain,
+she sees no avenue of retreat. To break the relation is to imply at once
+that it was not ordained of God, and to cast a darker ignominy upon her
+unfortunate children. Her only hope lies in her continued submission to
+her husband and his Church, even after she has mentally and morally
+rejected the doctrine that betrayed her. A more pitiably helpless band
+of self-immolants than these Mormon women has never suffered martyrdom
+in the history of the world. Heaven help them. There is no help for them
+on earth.
+
+
+
+Chapter XVIII
+
+
+
+The Prophet of Mammon
+
+
+
+In an earlier day among the Mormons, the ecclesiastical authorities
+collected one-tenth of the "annual increase" of the faithful into "the
+storehouse of the Lord;" and this was practically the entire assessment
+made by the Church; although, by the same law of tithing, every Mormon
+was held obliged to consecrate all his earthly possessions to "God's
+work" on the demand of the Prophet. The common fund was used, then, to
+promote community enterprises and to relieve the poor. The tithe-payer
+saw the good result of the administration of the Church's moneys, and
+was generally satisfied. He was promised eternal happiness if he paid an
+honest tithe, but he was also given an earthly reward--for the Church
+admitted him to many opportunities and enterprises from which the
+niggardly were adroitly excluded. He was spiritually elevated and
+enlarged by giving for a purpose that he considered worthy--the
+fulfillment of a commandment of God and the relief of his
+fellow-creatures--and the community benefited by having a part of its
+yearly surplus administered for the common good.
+
+But by the time the Church had reached its third generation of
+tithe-payers, the "financial Prophets" had made a change. On the theory
+that since the Mormons were paying the bulk of the taxes, they should
+share in the distribution of the public relief funds, the Mormon poor
+were denied assistance from "the storehouse of the Lord," and were
+compelled to enter the poorhouses, to seek shelter on the "county
+farms," or to take charity from their neighbors. The resulting
+degradation of a sublime principle of human helpfulness is strikingly
+shown in the fact that in some cases, where the county relief funds are
+distributed through a Mormon clerk of paupers for out-door relief, the
+Mormon bishop even collects one-tenth of this money, from the wretched
+recipients, as their contribution to God Almighty!
+
+Nor is the greed of the present hierarchy satisfied with one-tenth of a
+Mormon's income. Said Joseph F. Smith, at the April Conference of 1899
+(according to the Church's official report): "If a farmer raises two
+thousand bushels of wheat, as the result of his year's labor, how many
+bushels should he pay for tithing? Well, some go straightway to
+dickering with the Lord. They will say that they hired a man so and so,
+and his wages must be taken out; that they had to pay such and such
+expenses, and this cost and that cost; and they reckon out all their
+expenses and tithe the balance." To Smith's inspired financial genius
+this was "dickering with the Lord." He wished to collect ten per cent of
+the farmer's entire yield--a tithe that would have bankrupted the
+farmer in three years!
+
+Nor is the tithe any longer the only exaction demanded by the Prophet. A
+score of "donations" have been added. There is the Stake Tabernacle
+Donation, which is a fund collected from the Mormons of each "Stake"
+(corresponding usually to a county) for the building of a house in which
+to hold Stake Conferences. There is the Ward Meeting-House Donation,
+which is a fund collected from the Mormons of every "ward" for the
+erection of a local chapel. There is the Fast Day Donation, made up of
+contributions gathered on the afternoon of the first Sunday of each
+month, at what is called "a fast meeting," for the support of the local
+poor; and this is supplemented by the Relief Society Donation, solicited
+by the members of the Ladies Relief Society, in a house-to-house
+canvass, from Mormons and Gentiles alike. A Light and Heat Donation is
+collected by the deacons of the ward, under direction of the bishop, to
+pay for the lighting and heating of the ward meeting house; a Missionary
+Donation is collected at a "Missionary benefit entertainment," to help
+defray the expenses of a member of a ward sent on a mission; and since a
+missionary must necessarily be an elder, a Quorum Missionary Donation is
+also taken from his fellow members of the quorum, to assist him. So far
+as the Church is concerned, he travels "without purse or scrip," by
+order of "revelation;" but this inhibition does not extend to the use of
+his own money--if he has any left after paying the other exaction's--
+nor does it prevent him either from receiving contributions from his
+impoverished fellows or accepting charity from "the enemies of God's
+people," whom he labors to redeem. And on these terms about ninety per
+cent. of the adult male Mormons perform missionary services for the
+Church.
+
+All priesthood quorums have monthly Quorum Dues collected from their
+members. On one Sunday of each month, called Nickel Sunday, the Sunday
+School members pay in five cents each for the purchase of new books,
+etc. On Dime Tuesday, once a month, the members of the Young Men's and
+the Young Women's Mutual Improvement Associations pay in ten cents each
+for the purchase of books, etc. On Nickel Friday, once a month, the
+infant members of the Primary Association pay in five cents each to the
+association. Religious Class Donations are paid once a month by the
+Mormon public-school pupils for the support of the week-day religious
+classes. Amusement Hall Donations are collected from the members of a
+ward whose bishop finds them able to build a place of amusement. When a
+temple is to be erected, Temple Donations are collected, continuously,
+until the work is finished and paid for; and when members of the Church
+"go through the Temple," they are required to pay another form of Temple
+Donation in any sum that they can afford. Should a need arise, not
+provided for by the specific donations given above, a Special Donation
+is collected to meet it. Yet in the face of all these exaction's of
+tithes and donations, the ecclesiast still boasts: "We are not like the
+'preachers for hire and diviners for money.' We never pass the plate at
+our sacred services. Our clergy labor, without pay, to give free
+salvation to a sinful world!"
+
+In addition to doing missionary service, paying tithes, and contributing
+donations, the latter-day Mormon, if he be obedient to the counsel of
+the Church's anointed financiers, must support the commercial and
+financial undertakings of the hierarchy. These are officially designated
+"the Church's institutions" by the authorities; but they are in no way
+the property of the Church. They are advertised as community
+enterprises, but they are such only in the sense that the community is
+commanded by "the voice of God" to sustain them. There is no voice of
+God to command a distribution of their profits. And they are no longer
+conducted for the benefit of the community but to exploit it.
+
+The good Mormon must purchase his sugar from "the Church's" sugar
+company (Joseph F. Smith, president), which is controlled by the
+national sugar trust and charges trust prices. He must buy salt from
+"the Church's" salt monopoly (Joseph F. Smith, president), which is a
+part of, and pays dividends to, the national salt trust. He is taught to
+go for his merchandise to the Zion's Co-operative Mercantile Institution
+(Joseph F. Smith, president), where even whiskey is sold under the
+symbol of the All-seeing Eye and the words "Holiness to the Lord" in
+gilt letters; and Joseph F. Smith, at the April Conference, of 1898
+(according to the Church's official report), scolded those "pretendedly
+pious" Mormons who "were shocked and horrified" to find "liquid poison"
+sold under these auspices--for, as Smith argued, with characteristic
+greed, if the Mormon who wanted whiskey could not get it in the Church
+store, "he would not patronize Z.C.M.I. at all, but would go elsewhere
+to deal!"
+
+The farmers are "counselled" to buy their vehicles from "the Church's"
+firm, the Consolidated Wagon and Machine Company (Joseph F. Smith,
+president); to take out their fire insurance with the Church's "Home
+Fire Insurance Company" (Joseph F. Smith, controller); and to insure
+their lives with the Church's "Beneficial Life Insurance Company"
+(Joseph F. Smith, president). The Salt Lake Knitting Company (of which
+Joseph F. Smith is president) makes, among other things, the sacred
+knitted garments that are prescribed for every Mormon who takes the
+"Endowment Oaths," to be worn by him forever after as a shield "against
+the Adversary;" and these garments bear the label: "Approved by the
+Presidency. No knitted garment approved which does not bear this label."
+By which ingenious bit of religious commercialism, the sacred marks on
+the garments (accepted as a sort of passport to Heaven) have been
+increased by the sacred Smith trademark that admits the wearer to the
+Smith Heaven.
+
+The Church's banking institutions, of which Joseph F. Smith is
+president, are recommended as safer than others because the money goes
+into the hands of "the brethren." Church newspapers must be subscribed
+for, because all others are "unreliable"--although the Church's Deseret
+News (Joseph F. Smith, president) is one of the most dishonest, unjust
+and mendacious organs that ever poisoned the public mind. And so on,
+through the whole list of business concerns by which the Church
+authorities are to profit. The Mormons, having learned of old the value
+of a solid, community support for community enterprises established in
+the interests of the community, are still kept solidly supporting
+ecclesiastical enterprises administered for the benefit of the hierarchy
+or its favorites, at the community's expense!
+
+The Utah Light and Railway Company (Joseph F. Smith, president), which
+was supported by the tithes of the Mormon people, was charging $1.25 per
+thousand cubic feet for fuel gas and $1.75 for illuminating gas, just
+before the company was sold to the "Harriman interests." (The Supreme
+Court of the United States has fixed a rate of 80 cents a thousand as a
+fair price for gas in New York City.) The Salt Lake Street Railway
+(operating under a fifty-year franchise, obtained from the City Council
+by, the power of the Church while Joseph F. Smith was president of the
+company) charges a five-cent fare, gives but one transfer, allows no
+half fares for children, and pays the city nothing for the use of its
+streets. Before the transfer of the Church's sugar stocks to the trust,
+the sugar factories paid the farmer $4.50 a ton for his beets and sold
+him sugar for $4.50 a hundred pounds; today beets are bought for $4.50 a
+ton, and sugar sold at $6.00 a hundred. The price asked for salt in
+Utah, where it should be "dirt cheap," is the same as everywhere under
+the salt trust. And so on--through the rest of the list.
+
+To maintain this system of sanctified gain Joseph F. Smith invokes all
+the power of his "divine" authority as "the mouthpiece of the Lord." He
+protects the sugar trust by preventing the establishment of independent
+sugar factories (as for example in Sanpete and Sevier counties in 1905),
+just as he protects the salt trust by preventing the competition of
+independent salt gardens (as in the case of Smurthwaite and Taylor.) He
+issues his edict of protection as "the vicegerent of God on Earth" to
+the Mormons; and he excommunicates and ostracizes, in this world and the
+next, the Mormon protestant who dares rebel against commercial monopoly.
+
+He receives between two and three million dollars a year in tithes,
+gives no accounting of them, and has no responsibility for them, except
+to God and his own conscience. He is able to use this sum, in bulk, at
+any given point, with a weight of financial pressure that would
+overbalance any other such single power in the community. As "trustee in
+trust" for the Church, he has the added income from stocks and previous
+investments; and he has practical control of the wealth of all the
+leading men of the Church to assist him, if he should call upon them for
+assistance. He uses his financial dictatorship to support monopoly
+against the assault of Gentile opposition, and he compels the Gentile to
+pay tribute as the Mormon does.
+
+He backs his financial power with his control of legislation. He can not
+only prevent the passage of any laws against his favored monopolies, but
+(as in the case of the smelters) he can reduce independents to
+submission by threatening them with procured laws to penalize them. He
+largely controls the "labor troubles" of the State by controlling the
+obedience of the Mormon laboring men. He can influence judges, officers
+of the law and all the agents of local government by his power as
+political "Boss," and the same influence extends, through his
+representatives at Washington, to the local activities of Federal
+authority. He can check and govern public opinion among his subjects by
+announcing "the will of God" to them through the officers of the Church
+in every department of religious administration. He is, therefore, at
+once the modern "money king," the absolute political Czar the social
+despot and the infallible Pope of his "Kingdom!"
+
+Just as men fight for the retention of a throne and the maintenance of a
+dynasty, so he and his courtiers defend his rule and maintain his
+autocracy with every weapon of absolutism. And just as royalty, while
+possessed of unlimited wealth, has never lacked mercenaries, press
+bureaus, and all the sycophantic defenders of a crown, so Smith is able
+to command an array of service as great as any ever brought to the
+defense of a social system. This singular and enormous power stands
+solidly against any movement of domestic reform; and, by its alliance
+with the national rulers in finance and politics, it is saved from the
+danger of "foreign" intervention. Like every other such absolutism, it
+is crushing out the life of its subjects; for, in spite of the industry,
+the thrift, and the abstemiousness of the Mormon people, they are
+sinking under the burden of imposed exaction's. Although Utah became a
+territory in 1853, and had its well-settled towns at that time, and was
+organized in a compact social body for the upbuilding of its material
+prosperity before any of the surrounding states had received an organic
+act as a territory, Utah has now lost its leadership, and the individual
+initiative and enterprise of the typical Western community have been
+relatively lost.
+
+In this process of degeneration, one of the most promising modern
+experiments in communism has been frustrated and brought to ruin. In the
+early nineties, Dr. Josiah Strong, of New York City, viewed the Mormon
+system with an interested admiration. He saw that by contribution, and
+co-operation, and arbitration, the energies of the people were conserved
+and the products of their prosperity more equally distributed than under
+the conditions of economic war then prevalent elsewhere. He thought he
+saw in Utah a possible solution of some of the social problems of our
+civilization. But, a few years ago, he confessed that the Mormon system
+was no longer worthy of study. It had been destroyed by the greed of its
+rulers. Community contributions were being used for individual
+commercialism and the aggrandizement of leaders. The aged and infirm
+poor, who had contributed through all the working period of their lives,
+were being thrust into poor houses. The ambition of the earlier
+Prophets, to make the people great in their community prosperity and
+happiness, has been lost in the new desire of the head of the Church to
+exhibit that greatness only in his own person. The Mormon people had
+become the working slaves of a financial and political and religious
+autocracy, and Mormonism was no longer anything but a hopeless failure
+as a social experiment.
+
+It is difficult to say how much of this failure was due to the character
+of the present Prophet, and how much to the national conditions that are
+threatening the success of democracy in every state of the Union. It
+would seem that the conditions were ideal for the production of just
+such a man as Smith, and that Smith was by nature fitted for the
+greatest growth under just such conditions. He came to power with none
+of the feeling of responsibility to his people which the earlier leaders
+showed. He considered that the people lived for him, not that he lived
+for the people. He regarded the Mormon system as an establishment of his
+family, to which he had the family right of inheritance; and he waited
+with a sulky impatience for the deaths of the men who stood between him
+and the control of his family's Church. It was as if he accepted his
+predecessors as exercising their powers, during an inter-regnum, by the
+consent of the Mormon people, but saw himself acceding to the throne by
+family right and the order of divinity.
+
+He had no financial ability; he had no considerable property when he
+became president of the Church at sixty-three. Nor did he need any such
+ability. The continuous inflow of money--to be used without
+accountability to anyone--and the wealth of opportunity offered by the
+men who wished his aid in exploiting his people, made it unnecessary
+that he should have any creative financial vision. He needed only to
+move, with his opportunity, along the line of least resistance which was
+also, with him, the line of choice.
+
+He had, through all his years, shown an obvious envy of any member of
+the Church whose circumstances were better than his own. It was apparent
+in his manner that he regarded such success in the community as an
+encroachment upon the Smith prerogatives. As soon as he came to power,
+he accepted every opportunity of self-aggrandizement as a new Smith
+prerogative. And the system of modern capitalism appealed at once to his
+ambition. By the older method of tithes and conscription's, he could
+collect only from the devotees of the Church; by the larger exploitation
+he could levy tribute upon the Gentiles too.
+
+And he was aided by the Mormons themselves. They had been brought
+together, in obedience to "a command of God," in order that the
+community, by avoiding the sins of the world, might be saved from the
+plagues that were to descend upon the world because of its injustice.
+They were a credulous people, ignorant of the sins of modern finance,
+and prepared by industry and isolation to be exploited. Their previous
+leaders had observed, as a warning only, the modern aspiration for vast
+wealth obtained by economic injustice; but that aspiration made an
+instant appeal to Smith's ambition; and it is the peculiar iniquity of
+conditions in Utah today that his ambition has betrayed his people to
+the very evils which they were originally organized to escape.
+
+In an earlier time it was the pride of the leader that the community in
+the large was advancing and the average of conditions improving. Today
+the leader assumes that as he grows richer the people are prospering and
+"the revelations of God" being vindicated in practice. He speaks with
+pride of "our" growth and wealth under "the benign authority of the
+Almighty" and His "temporal revelations"--because he himself has been
+enriched by the perversion of these same laws--very much as the
+"captain of industry" elsewhere boasts of the "prosperity" of the
+country, because the few are growing so rich at the expense of the many.
+
+Along with this strain of commercial greed in Smith, there is an equally
+strong strain of religious fanaticism that justifies the greed and
+sanctifies it, to itself. He believes (as Apostle Orson Pratt taught, by
+authority of the Church): "The Kingdom of God is an order of government
+established by divine authority. It is the only legal government that
+can exist in any part of the universe. All other governments are illegal
+and unauthorized.... Any people attempting to govern themselves by
+laws of their own making, and by officers of their own appointment, are
+in direct rebellion against the Kingdom of God." Smith believes that
+over this Kingdom the Smiths have been, by Divine revelation, ordained
+to rule. He believes that his authority is the absolute and
+unquestionable authority of God Himself. He believes that in all the
+affairs of life he has the same right over his subjects that the Creator
+has over His creatures. He believes that he has been appointed to use
+the Mormon people as he in his inspired wisdom sees fit to use them, in
+order the more firmly to establish God's Kingdom on Earth against the
+Powers of Evil.
+
+He believes that the people of the American Republic, "being governed by
+laws of their own making and by officers of their own appointment," are
+in direct rebellion against "his Kingdom of God." He believes that the
+national government is destined to be broken in pieces by his power;
+that it has only been preserved from destruction by the concessions
+recently made by the Federal authorities; and that it can only continue
+to save itself so long as it shall recognize Smith's ambassadors at
+Washington--and so allow him to work out its destruction in the
+fullness of time.
+
+But with all this insanity of pretension he has a sort of cowardly
+shrewdness, acquired in his days of hiding "on the underground." On the
+witness stand in Washington he denied that he had had any direct
+communication with God by revelation; and then he returned to Utah and
+pleaded from the pulpit that on this point he had lied in Washington in
+order to escape saying what his "inquisitors" had wished him to say in
+order to "get him into a trap." He preaches in Utah that to deny the
+doctrine of polygamy is to reject the teaching of Jesus Christ; before
+the Senate committee he was coward enough to put the blame of his
+polygamous cohabitation upon his five wives. In Washington he claimed
+that the Gentiles of Utah condoned polygamous cohabitation and had a
+liberal sympathy for the Church; but at St. George, Utah, for example
+(in September, 1904), he was reported by a Church newspaper as saying:
+"The Gentiles are coming among us to buy our homes and land. We should
+not sell to them, as they are the enemies of the Kingdom of God." He is
+that most perfect of all hypocrites--the fanatic who believes that he
+is lying in the service of the Almighty.
+
+In the early spring of 1888, I was in Washington, where measures of
+proscription were then being prepared against our people; and, early in
+the morning, as I walked up Massachusetts Avenue, I saw Joseph F. Smith
+approaching me. For several years he had been "on the underground" under
+the name of "Joseph Mack"--now in the Hawaiian Islands with one wife;
+now hidden, with another, among the faithful in some Mormon village; or
+again with a third, in Washington (which was probably as safe a place as
+any) presiding secretly over the Church lobby. As he passed me, with his
+head down, preoccupied, I said: "Good morning, President Smith." He
+jumped as if I had been a Deputy Marshal with such a sudden start of
+fear that his silk hat rolled on the pavement and his umbrella dropped
+from his hand. He drew back from me as if he were about to take to his
+heels. Then he recognized me, of course, and was quickly reassured; but
+his embarrassment continued for some time, awkwardly.
+
+But a short time ago the President of the United States stood in the
+Salt Lake Tabernacle (which is "Joseph Mack's" capitol and vatican) and
+addressed a multitude that had assembled not more to honor the Chief
+Executive of the nation than to pay their almost idolatrous tribute of
+devotion to the head of their Church, who was reigning there in the
+pulpit with President Taft. "Joseph Mack" no longer fears Deputy
+Marshals--he appoints them; and the present United States Marshal of
+Utah would refuse to serve a paper under the direction of the entire
+power of the United States government if "Joseph Mack" forbade the
+service. He no longer fears the proscriptions of legislators at
+Washington; they come to him, through the leaders of their parties, and
+arrange with him for the support of the trans-Mississippi states in
+which the influence of his Church control is determinative. He no longer
+hides his wives, at the ends of the earth, and visits them by stealth;
+they occupy a row of houses along one of the principal streets of Salt
+Lake City, and the pilgrim and the tourist alike admire his magnificence
+as they go by. He is still a law-breaker. He stands even more in
+defiance of the authority of the nation than he did in 1888, and he
+hates that authority as much as ever. But he is today not only the
+Prophet of the Church; he is the Prophet of Mammon; and all the powers
+and principalities of Mammon now give him gloriously: "All Hail!"
+
+
+
+Chapter XIX
+
+
+
+The Subjects of the Kingdom
+
+
+
+But what of the Mormon people? How can such leaders, directing the
+Church to purposes that have become so cruel, so selfish, so dangerous
+and so disloyal--how can they maintain their power over followers who
+are themselves neither criminal nor degraded? That is a question which
+has given the pause of doubt to many criticisms of the Mormon communism
+of our day. That is the consideration which has obtained from the nation
+the protection of tolerance under which the Prophets flourish. For not
+only are the Mormon men and women obviously as worthy as any in the
+United States: there is plainly much of community value in their social
+life; there is manifestly a great deal of efficiency for human good in
+their system and in the leadership by which it is directed; and this
+good is so apparent that it appeals easily to the sympathetic conscience
+and uninformed mind of the country at large.
+
+Let me try, then, to exhibit and to analyze the causes that keep such a
+virtuous and sturdy people loyally supporting the leadership of men so
+unworthy of them that if the people were as bad as the ends to which
+they are being now directed, modern Mormonism would be destroyed by its
+own evils.
+
+In the first place, the average Mormon chief is sincere in his
+pretensions and self-justified in his aims. Usually, he has been born,
+in the Church, to a family that sees itself set apart, in holiness, from
+the rest of humanity, as the direct heirs of the ancient prophets or
+even as the lineal descendants of Christ. From his earliest age of
+understanding, he is taught the divine splendor of his birth and
+impressed with the high duties of his family privilege in being
+permitted to bear a part in preparing the earth for the second coming of
+the Savior. He is taught that, though all the world may be saved and
+nearly all the people of this sphere will in some eternity work out a
+measure of salvation, he and 143,999 others are to be a band of the
+elect who shall stand about the Savior, on Mount Zion, in the final day.
+
+He is taught that, next to Christ, Joseph Smith, the founder of the
+faith, has performed the largest mission for the salvation of the world;
+that in the councils of the Gods, when the Creator measured off the ages
+of the human race on this earth, to the Savior was apportioned "the
+meridian of time," and to Joseph Smith, the Prophet, was given the "last
+dispensation," which is "the fullness of times," in order that the
+world, having apostatized from the atonement and the redemption, might
+be saved to heaven by Joseph, "the Choice Seer."
+
+He is taught that the disciples of the Mormon Prophet are literally the
+disciples of Jesus Christ; that the laws of right and wrong are within
+the direction and subject to the authority of the Prophet, to be
+changed, enlarged or even revoked by his commandment; that all human
+laws are equally subject to his will, to be made or unmade at his order;
+that he can condemn, by his excommunication, any man or any nation to
+the vengeance of the Almighty here and hereafter; and that he can
+pronounce a blessing upon the head of any man, or the career of any
+people, by virtue of which blessing power shall be held in this world
+righteously and the man elevated to sit at the right hand of God in the
+world to come. He is taught that the greatest sin which can be committed--
+next to the denial of Christ--is to raise hand or voice against "the
+Lord's anointed," the Mormon prophets. And, for morality, he is taught
+from his infancy, that he must scrupulously practice those special
+virtues of his cult, industry, thrift, purity (except as in later life
+he shall be inducted into the practice of the new polygamy) honesty in
+business, and charity toward his needy fellow-men.
+
+Formed in character by this teaching, as a steady inculcation throughout
+his youth, he comes to manhood strong of body, determined of mind,
+practicing rigidly and intolerantly his petty virtues of abstinence from
+the use of tobacco, tea and coffee, proclaiming with fanatical zeal the
+gospel as it has been proclaimed to him, and self-justified in all that
+he says or does by the large measure of sincerity in his delusions.
+
+And that is, in some degree, the common training of all Mormons. Every
+Mormon boy attends Sunday School as soon as he is old enough to lisp his
+song of adoration to Joseph, the Kingly Prophet, and to the Savior with
+whom Joseph is early associated in his childish mind. At six years of
+age, he enters the Primary Association; at twelve he is in the Young
+Men's Mutual Improvement Association; at fourteen or even earlier, he
+stands in the fast-day meeting and repeats like a creed: "Brethren and
+Sisters, I feel called upon to say a few words. I am not able to edify
+you, but I can say that I know this is the Church and Kingdom of God,
+and I bear my testimony that Joseph Smith was a Prophet and that Brigham
+Young was his lawful successor, and that the Prophet Joseph F. Smith is
+heir to all the authority which the Lord has conferred in these days for
+the salvation of men. And I feel that if I live my religion and do
+nothing to offend the Holy Spirit I will be saved in the presence of my
+Father and His Son, Jesus Christ. With these few words I will give way.
+Praying the Lord to bless each and every one of us is my prayer in the
+name of Jesus Christ. Amen."
+
+At fourteen he becomes a Deacon of the Church. Between that age and
+twenty, he becomes an Elder. Very soon thereafter he becomes "a Seventy"
+and perhaps a high priest. He takes upon himself "covenants in holy
+places." He becomes "a priest unto the Most High God"--frequently
+before his eighteenth year. Usually before he is twenty he is sent on a
+mission to proclaim his gospel--the only one he has ever heard in his
+life--to "an unenlightened nation" and "a wicked world." For, in
+addition to being taught that the Mormons are the best, most virtuous,
+most temperate, most industrious, and most God-fearing of all peoples--
+a thing that is dinned into his ears from the pulpit every Sunday in the
+year--he has been convinced by equal iteration that the rest of the
+world is a festering mass of corruption.
+
+Often he goes abroad, to some country whose language and customs he must
+learn and upon the charity of whose toilers he must depend for his
+maintenance. He goes with an implicit reliance upon God, strong in the
+small virtues that have been taught him from the time he knelt at his
+mother's knee. He sees, probably for the first time, the afflictions
+and the sins among mankind; and he keeps himself unspotted from them,
+congratulating himself that these grossnesses are unknown to his
+sheltered home-life and to the religion which he holds as the ideal of
+his soul. He proclaims his belief that God has spoken from the Heavens,
+through the Mormon Prophet, in this last day, to restore the gospel of
+Christ from which the peoples of the earth have wandered. He "bears
+testimony" to the whole world, and he binds himself to the authority of
+his Church by proclaiming his belief in it.
+
+When he returns home, after years of service, he is called to the stand
+in the tabernacle to give a report of his work. He finds waiting for him
+a ready advancement in the offices of the Church, according as he may
+show himself worthy of advancement or as the power of family or the
+favor of ecclesiastical authority may obtain it for him. He marries a
+girl who has had a training almost identical with his own. She, too, has
+borne her testimony before she reached years of responsibility. She has
+taken her vows as a priestess at the age when he was dedicating himself
+a priest. She may even have performed a foreign mission. They have both
+been promised that they shall become kings and queens in the eternal
+world. They are bound by their covenants to obey their superior priests.
+They cannot disregard their Church affiliations without recanting their
+vows. The only way they can adhere to their covenants with their
+Almighty Father--the only way they can demonstrate their acceptance of
+the atoning power of the Redeemer's sacrifice--is by yielding such
+obedience to the Prophet as they would pay to the Father and the Son if
+They were on earth in Their proper persons. To deviate from this
+faithfulness is to be marked as a Judas Iscariot by all the Latter-Day
+Saints.
+
+As soon as the Mormon becomes the head of a family--in addition to all
+the testimonies and performances which he must give as proof of his
+continued adherence--he must submit himself and his household to the
+examination and espionage of the ward teachers, who invade his home at
+least once a month. They enter absolutely as the proprietors of the
+house. If the husband is there, they ask him whether he performs his
+duties in the Church; whether he holds family prayer morning and
+evening; whether he "keeps the word of wisdom"--that is, does he
+abstain from the use of alcohol, tobacco, tea and coffee--whether he pays
+a full tithe and all the prescribed donations to the Church; whether he
+has any hard feelings against any of his brethren and sisters; and
+finally, does he devoutly sustain the Prophet as the ruler of God's
+Kingdom upon earth. These questions, so far as they apply, are put to
+each member of the family above the age of eight years. Should the
+husband be away, all the inquiries concerning him are made of the wife.
+If both parents are absent, the questions concerning them are put to
+their children!
+
+This one branch of the ecclesiastical service is sufficient of itself to
+mark the Mormon Church as the most perfectly disciplined institution
+among mankind. The teachers' quorum in any neighborhood consists of some
+tried elders, usually of considerable ability and experience. With these
+are associated numerous young men, many of them returned missionaries.
+The fact that they have countless other duties in the Church and many
+other and weightier responsibilities, is not permitted to excuse them
+from performing strictly this important labor. Perhaps a dozen or twenty
+families are assigned to a couple of teachers. They are required to
+visit each of these families once every month. And if they discover any
+lapse of fidelity, they report at once to the Bishop.
+
+No one who has not seen them on their rounds will believe with what an
+air of divinely privileged authority they enter a home and force its
+secrets of conscience--with what an imposing and arrogant zeal--with
+what a calm assumption of spiritual over-lordship and inquisitorial
+right. Some few years ago after my public criticisms of Joseph F. Smith
+had been followed by my excommunication, two teachers, on their monthly
+rounds, came to my home in the evening and made their way calmly to the
+library where I was sitting with some members of my family. I had just
+returned from a long absence abroad, and the visit was an untimely
+intrusion at its best; but we observed the obligations of hospitality
+with what courtesy we could, and merely evaded the familiar questions
+which they began to put to us. Finally, the elder of the two teachers, a
+man of some local prominence in the Church, undertook to "bear
+testimony" to the wickedness of anyone who opposed the divine rule of
+Joseph F. Smith; and when I cut him short with a request that he leave
+the house, he was as shocked and surprised as if he had been Milton's
+Archangel Michael, after "the fall," and I, a defiant Adam, showing him
+the door.
+
+In addition to the visitations of the ward teachers, some members of the
+Ladies Relief Society call upon every family usually once a month, not
+only to gather donations for the poor, but to have a little quiet talk
+with the wife and mother of the household. These women of the Relief
+Society are genuine "Sisters of Charity." In most cases they have
+themselves plenty of household cares, yet they give much of their time
+to visiting the sick, supplying the wants of the needy or ministering to
+the miseries of the afflicted; and if it were not for them and their
+noblework, the Mormon poor would fare ill in these days of Mormon Church
+grandeur. Outside of their monthly visitations, they have definite
+preaching to do. At the meetings of their organization, they "bear
+testimony" that Joseph was a Prophet--and so on. They have the
+quarterly stake conferences to attend. Their traveling missionaries go
+from Salt Lake to the four quarters of the globe to institute and
+maintain the discipline of the organization and to teach the methods of
+its practical work in Nursing Schools, mother's classes and the like.
+They make up one of the noblest bodies of women associated with any
+social movement of humanity. And in their zeal and submissiveness they
+are so innocently meek and "biddable" that they can listen with
+reverence to young Hyrum Smith publicly lecturing the grandmothers of
+the order for occasionally partaking of a cup of thin tea.
+
+Under such a system of teaching, discipline and espionage, how can the
+average Mormon man or woman develop any independence of thought or
+action? At what time of life can he assert himself? Before he has
+attained the age of reason he has declared his faith in public. If he
+shall then, in his teens, express any doubt, the priests are ready for
+him. "You have borne your testimony many times in the Church," they say
+sternly. "Were you lying then, or have you lost the Spirit of God
+through your transgressions?" If he reveals any doubt to the ward
+teachers, they will overwhelm him with argument, and either absolutely
+reconvert him or silence him with authority. The pressure of family love
+and pride will be brought to bear upon him. The ecclesiastical
+authorities will move against him. He knows that every one of his
+relatives will be humiliated by his unfaithfulness. His "sin" will
+become known to the whole community, and he will be looked at askance by
+his friends and his companions.
+
+After he has taken his vows as a priest, how shall he dare to violate
+them? He knows that if he loses his faith on a mission--in other words,
+if he dares to make any inquiry into the authenticity of the mission
+which he is performing--he becomes a deserter from God in the very
+ranks of battle. He knows that he will be held forever in dishonor among
+his people; that he will be looked upon as one worse than dead; that he
+will ruin his own life and despoil his parents of all their eternal
+comfort and their hope in him.
+
+While I was editing the Salt Lake Tribune, a son of one of the famous
+apostles came to me with some anxious inquiries, and said: "Frank, I
+have been working in the Church and teaching this gospel so assiduously
+for nearly forty years that I have never had time to find out whether
+it's true or not!"
+
+If the Mormon, in his later years of manhood, dares to doubt, he must
+either reveal his disloyalty to the ward teachers or continue to deny
+it, from month to month, and remain a supine servant of authority. If he
+reveals it, he knows that the news of his defection will permeate the
+entire circle with which he is associated in politics, in business and
+in religion. If his superstition does not hold him, his worldly prudence
+will. He knows that all the aid of the community will be withdrawn from
+him; every voice that has expressed affection for him will speak in
+hate; every hand that has clasped his in friendship will be turned
+against him. And into this very prudence there enters something of a
+moral warning. For he has seen how many a man, deprived of the
+association and fraternity of the Church, feeling himself shunned in a
+lonely ostracism, has not been strong enough to endure in rectitude and
+has fallen into dissipation. Every instance of the sort is rehearsed by
+the faithful, with many exultant expressions of mourning, in the hearing
+of the doubter. And finally, it is the prediction of the priests that no
+apostate can prosper; and though the Mormon people are charitable and do
+not intend to be unjust, they inevitably tend to fulfill the prophecy
+and devote the apostate to material destruction.
+
+The great doctrine of the Mormon faith is obedience; the one proof of
+grace is conformity. So long as a man pays a full tithe, contributes all
+the required donations, and yields unquestioningly to the orders of the
+priests, he may even depart in a moral sense from any other of the
+Church's laws and find himself excused. But any questioning of the
+rulership of the Prophets--the rightfulness of their authority or the
+justice of its exercise is apostasy, is a denial of the faith, is a sin
+against the Holy Ghost. The man who obeys in all things is promised that
+he shall come forth in the morning of the first resurrection; the man
+who disobeys, and by his disobedience apostatizes, is condemned to work
+out, through an eternity of suffering, his offense against the Holy
+Spirit. At the first sign of defection--almost inevitably discovered in
+its incipiency--the rebel is either disciplined into submission or at
+once pushed over "the battlements of Heaven!"
+
+By such perfect means, the leaders, chosen under a pretense of
+revelation from God, maintain an unassailable sanctity in the eyes of
+the people, who are themselves priests. These people implicitly believe
+that the voice of the leader is the voice of God. They follow with a
+passionate devotion that is made up of a fanatical priestly faith and of
+a sympathy that sees their Prophets "persecuted" by an ungenerous,
+impure and vindictive world. We love that for which we suffer; and it
+has become the inheritance of the Mormons to love the priesthood, for
+whose protection their parents and grandparents suffered, and under
+whose oppressions they now suffer themselves.
+
+Joseph Smith, the original Prophet, was slain in the Carthage jail; to
+the Mormon mind this is proof that he was the anointed of God and that
+he sealed his testimony with his blood, as did the Savior. John Taylor,
+afterwards President of the Church, was not slain at Carthage, but only
+wounded; and this to the Mormons is proof that he was of the eternal
+kindred of the Prophets, because, under God's direction, he gave his
+blood to their defense. But Willard Richards, a companion of Smith and
+Taylor, was not even injured at Carthage; and this is accepted as proof
+that God had charge of his holy ones, and would not permit wicked men to
+do them harm. When the people left Nauvoo and journeyed through Iowa,
+some of the citizens of that state would not harbor them; and this is
+argued as evidence that the Mormon movement was God's work, since the
+hand of the wicked was against it; but in some localities of Iowa the
+emigrants were aided, and this also is proof that the Mormon movement
+was God's work, since the hearts of the people were melted to assist it.
+When Johnston's army was sent to Utah, it was proof that the Mormon
+Church was the true Church, hated and persecuted by a wicked nation;
+when Johnston's army withdrew without a battle, it was a new guarantee
+of the divinity of the work; and it is even believed among the Mormons
+that the Civil War was ordained from the heavens, at the sudden command
+of God, to compel Johnston's withdrawal and save God's people.
+
+In the same way the persecutions of "the raid," and the cessation of
+those persecutions--the early trials of poverty and the present
+abundance of prosperity--the threat of the Smoot investigation and the
+abortive conclusion of that exposure--are all argued as proofs of the
+divinity of a persecuted Church or given as instances of the miraculous
+"overruling" of God to prosper his chosen people. No matter what occurs,
+the Prophets, by applying either one of these formulae, can translate
+the incident into a new proof of grace; and their followers submissively
+accept the interpretation.
+
+On the night of April 18, 1905, Joseph F. Smith and some eight of his
+sons sat in his official box at the Salt Lake theatre to watch a prize
+fight that lasted for twenty gory rounds. The Salt Lake Tribune
+published the fact that the Prophet of God, and vicegerent of Christ,
+had given the approval of his "holy presence" to this clumsy barbarity.
+A devout old lady, who had been with the Church since the days of
+Nauvoo, rebuked us bitterly for publishing such a falsehood about
+President Smith. "How dare you tell such wicked lies about God's
+servants?" she scolded. "President Smith wouldn't do such a wicked thing
+as attend a prize fight. And you know that no man with any sense of
+decency would take his young sons to look at such a dreadful thing!"
+Some time later, when the facts in the case had come to her, in her
+retirement, from her friends, the editor called upon her to quiz her
+about the incident. She said: "I'm sure I don't see what business it is
+of the outside world anyhow what President Smith does. He has a right to
+go to the theatre if he wants to. I don't believe they would have
+anything but what's good in the Salt Lake theatre. It was built by our
+people and they own it. And if it wasn't good, President Smith wouldn't
+have taken his boys there."
+
+And this was not merely the absurdity of an old woman. It is the logic
+of all the faithful. The leaders cannot do wrong--because it is not
+wrong, if they do it. No criticism of them can be effective. No act of
+theirs can be proven an error. If they do not do a thing, it was right
+not to do it; and it would have been a sin if it had been done. But if
+they do that thing, then it was right to do it; and it would have been a
+sin if it had not been done.
+
+This reliance upon the almighty power and prophetic infallibility of the
+leaders prevents the Mormon people from truly appreciating the dangers
+that threaten them. It keeps them ignorant of outside sentiment. It
+makes them despise even a national hostility. And it has left them
+without gratitude, too, for a national grace. Before these people can be
+roused to any independence of responsible thought, it will be necessary
+to break their trust in the ability of their leaders to make bargains of
+protection with the world; and then it will still be necessary to force
+the eyes of their self-complacency to turn from the satisfied
+contemplation of their own virtues. "You will never be able to reach the
+conscience of the Mormons," a man who knows them has declared. "I have
+had my experiences with both leaders and people. If you tell them
+'You're ninety-nine-and-one-half per cent. pure gold,' they will ask,
+surprised and indignant: 'What? Why, what's the matter with the other
+half per cent?'"
+
+
+
+Chapter XX
+
+Conclusion
+
+Of the men who could have written this narrative, some are dead; some
+are prudent; some are superstitious; and some are personally foresworn.
+It appeared to me that the welfare of Utah and the common good of the
+whole United States required the publication of the facts that I have
+tried to demonstrate. Since there was apparently no one else who felt
+the duty and also had the information or the wish to write, it seemed my
+place to undertake it. And I have done it gladly. For when I was
+subscribing the word of the Mormon chiefs for the fulfillment of our
+statehood pledges, I engaged my own honor too, and gave bond myself
+against the very treacheries that I have here recorded.
+
+We promised that the Church had forever renounced the doctrine of
+polygamy and the practice of plural marriage living, by a "revelation
+from God" promulgated by the supreme Prophet of the Church and accepted
+by the vote of the whole congregation assembled in conference. We
+promised the retirement of the Mormon Prophets from the political
+direction of their followers--the abrogation of the claim that the
+Mormon Church was the "Kingdom of God" re-established upon earth to
+supersede all civil government--the abandonment by the Church of any
+authority to exercise a temporal power in competition with the civil
+law. We promised to make the teaching and practice of the Church conform
+to the institutions of a Republic in which all citizens are equal in
+liberty. We promised that the Church should cease to accumulate property
+for the support of illegal practices and un-American government. And we
+made a record in proof of our promises by the anti-polygamy manifesto of
+1890 and its public ratification; by the petition for amnesty and the
+acceptance of amnesty upon conditions; by the provisions of Utah's
+enabling act and of Utah's state constitution; by the acts of Congress
+and the judicial decisions restoring escheated Church property; by the
+proceedings of the Federal courts of Utah in re-opening citizenship to
+the alien members of the Mormon Church; by the acquiescence of the
+Gentiles of Utah in the proceedings by which statehood was obtained; and
+finally, and most indisputably, by the admission of Utah into equal
+sovereignty in the Union--since that admission would never have been
+granted, except upon the explicit understanding that the state was to
+uphold the laws and institutions of the American republic in accordance
+with our covenants.
+
+Of all these promises the Church authorities have kept not one. The
+doctrine and practice of polygamy have been restored by the Church, and
+plural marriage living is practiced by the ruler of the kingdom and his
+favorites with all the show and circumstance of an oriental court. There
+are now being born in his domains thousands of unfortunate children
+outside the pale of law and convention, for whom there can be
+entertained no hope that any statute will ever give them a place within
+the recognition of civilized society. The Prophet of the Church rules
+with an absolute political power in Utah, with almost as much authority
+in Idaho and Wyoming, and with only a little less autocracy in parts of
+Colorado, Montana, Oregon, Washington, California, Arizona and New
+Mexico. He names the Representatives and Senators in Congress from his
+own state, and influences decisively the selection of such "deputies of
+the people" from many of the surrounding states. Through his ambassadors
+to the government of the United States, sitting in House and Senate, he
+chooses the Federal officials for Utah and influences the appointment of
+those for the neighboring states and territories. He commands the making
+and unmaking of state law. He holds the courts and the prosecuting
+officers to a strict accountability. He levies tribute upon the people
+of Utah and helps to loot the citizens of the whole nation by his
+alliance with the political and financial Plunderbund at Washington. He
+has enslaved the subjects of his kingdom absolutely, and he looks to it
+as the destiny of his Church to destroy all the governments of the world
+and to substitute for them the theocracy--the "government by God" and
+administration by oracle--of his successors.
+
+And yet, even so, I could not have recorded the incidents of this
+betrayal as mere matters of current history--and I would never have
+written them in vindication of myself--if I had not been certain that
+there is a remedy for the evil conditions in Utah, and that such a
+narrative as this will help to hasten the remedy and right the wrong.
+Except for the aggressive aid given by the national administrations to
+the leaders of the Mormon Church, the people of Utah and the
+intermountain states would never have permitted the revival of a
+priestly tyranny in politics. Except for the protection of courts and
+the enforced silence of politicians and journalists, polygamy could not
+have been restored in the Mormon Church. Except for the interference of
+powerful influences at Washington to coerce the Associated Press and
+affect the newspapers of the country, the Mormon leaders would never
+have dared to defy the sensibilities of our civilization. Except for the
+greed of the predatory "Interests" of the nation, the commercial
+absolutism of the Mormon hierarchy could never have been established.
+The present conditions in the Mormon kingdom are due to national
+influences. The remedy for those conditions is the withdrawal of
+national sympathy and support.
+
+Break the power at Washington of Joseph F. Smith, ruler of the Kingdom
+of God, and every seeker after federal patronage in Utah will desert
+him. Break his power as a political partner of the Republican party now--
+and of the Democratic party should it succeed to office--and every
+ambitious politician in the West will rebel against his throne. Break
+his power to control the channels of public communication through
+interested politicians and commercial agencies, and the sentiment of the
+civilized world will join with the revolt of the "American movement" in
+Utah to overthrow his tyrannies. Break his connection with the illegal
+trusts and combines of the United States, and his financial power will
+cease to be a terror and a menace to the industry and commerce of the
+intermountain country.
+
+The nation owes Utah such a rectification, for the nation has been, in
+this matter, a chief sinner and a strong encourager of sin. President
+Theodore Roosevelt, representing the majesty of the Republic, stayed us
+when we might have won our own liberties in the revolt that was provoked
+by the election of Senator Apostle Reed Smoot. Misled by political and
+personal advisers, the President procured delays in the Smoot
+investigation. He seduced senators from their convictions. He certified
+the ambassador from the Kingdom of God as a qualified senator of the
+United States. He gave the hand of fellowship to Joseph, the tyrant of
+the Kingdom. He rebuked our friends and his own, in their struggle for
+our freedom, by warning them that they were raising the flag of a
+religious warfare. He filled the Mormon priests with the belief that
+they might proceed unrestrainedly to the sacrifice of women and children
+upon the polygamous altar, to the absolute rule of politics in the
+intermountain states, and to the commercial exploitation of their
+community in partnership with the trusts. The one policy that President
+Taft seems to have accepted unimpaired from his predecessor is this same
+respect for the power of the Mormon kingdom. In his placid but
+wholehearted way he has encouraged his co-ordinate ruler, the Mormon
+Prophet, and extended the Executive license to the support and
+inevitable increase of these religious tyrannies of the Mormon hierarchs
+which now the people of Utah, unaided, are wholly unable to combat.
+
+And the nation owes such a rectification not only to Utah, but also to
+itself. The commercial and financial Plunderbund that is now preying
+upon the whole country is sustained at Washington by the agents of the
+Mormon Church. The Prophet not only delivers his own subjects up to
+pillage; he helps to deliver the people of the entire United States. His
+senators are not representatives of a political party; they are the
+tools of "the Interests" that are his partners. The shameful conditions
+in Utah are not isolated and peculiar to that state; they are largely
+the result of national conditions and they have a national effect. The
+Prophet of Utah is not a local despot only: he is a national enemy; and
+the nation must deal with him.
+
+I do not ask for a resumption of cruelty, for a return to proscription.
+I ask only that the nation shall rouse itself to a sense of its
+responsibility. The Mormon Church has shown its ability to conform to
+the demands of the republic--even by "revelation from God" if
+necessary. The leaders of the Church are now defiant in their treasons
+only because the nation has ceased to reprove and the national
+administrations have powerfully encouraged. As soon as the Mormon
+hierarchy discovers that the people of this country, wearied of violated
+treaties and broken covenants, are about to exclude the political agents
+of the Prophet from any participation in national affairs, the advisers
+of his inspiration will quickly persuade him to make a concession to
+popular wrath. As soon as the "Interests" realize that the burden of
+shame in Utah is too large to be comfortable on their backs, they will
+throw it off. The President of the United States will be unable to gain
+votes by patronizing the crucifiers of women and children. The national
+administrations will not dare to stand against the efforts of the
+Gentiles and independent Mormons of Utah to regain their liberty. And
+Utah, the Islam of the West, will depose its old Sultan and rise free.
+
+With this hope--in this conviction--I have written, in all candor,
+what no reasons of personal advantage or self-justification could have
+induced me to write. I shall be accused of rancor, of religious
+antagonism, of political ambition, of egotistical pride. But no man who
+knows the truth will say sincerely that I have lied. Whatever is
+attributed as my motive, my veracity in this book will not be
+successfully impeached. In that confidence, I leave all the attacks that
+guilt and bigotry can make upon me, to the public to whom they will be
+addressed. The truth, in its own time, will prevail, in spite of
+cunning. I am willing to await that time--for myself--and for the
+Mormon people.
+
+
+
+The End
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Under the Prophet in Utah
+by Frank J. Cannon and Harvey J. O'Higgins
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK UNDER THE PROPHET IN UTAH ***
+
+This file should be named pruta10.txt or pruta10.zip
+Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, pruta11.txt
+VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, pruta10a.txt
+
+This eBook was produced by David Schwan and Monique Cameron
+
+Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we usually do not
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+We are now trying to release all our eBooks one year in advance
+of the official release dates, leaving time for better editing.
+Please be encouraged to tell us about any error or corrections,
+even years after the official publication date.
+
+Please note neither this listing nor its contents are final til
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg eBooks is at
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
+and editing by those who wish to do so.
+
+Most people start at our Web sites at:
+http://gutenberg.net or
+http://promo.net/pg
+
+These Web sites include award-winning information about Project
+Gutenberg, including how to donate, how to help produce our new
+eBooks, and how to subscribe to our email newsletter (free!).
+
+
+Those of you who want to download any eBook before announcement
+can get to them as follows, and just download by date. This is
+also a good way to get them instantly upon announcement, as the
+indexes our cataloguers produce obviously take a while after an
+announcement goes out in the Project Gutenberg Newsletter.
+
+http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext03 or
+ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext03
+
+Or /etext02, 01, 00, 99, 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90
+
+Just search by the first five letters of the filename you want,
+as it appears in our Newsletters.
+
+
+Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
+
+We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
+time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty hours
+to get any eBook selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. Our
+projected audience is one hundred million readers. If the value
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
+million dollars per hour in 2002 as we release over 100 new text
+files per month: 1240 more eBooks in 2001 for a total of 4000+
+We are already on our way to trying for 2000 more eBooks in 2002
+If they reach just 1-2% of the world's population then the total
+will reach over half a trillion eBooks given away by year's end.
+
+The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away 1 Trillion eBooks!
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
+which is only about 4% of the present number of computer users.
+
+Here is the briefest record of our progress (* means estimated):
+
+eBooks Year Month
+
+ 1 1971 July
+ 10 1991 January
+ 100 1994 January
+ 1000 1997 August
+ 1500 1998 October
+ 2000 1999 December
+ 2500 2000 December
+ 3000 2001 November
+ 4000 2001 October/November
+ 6000 2002 December*
+ 9000 2003 November*
+10000 2004 January*
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been created
+to secure a future for Project Gutenberg into the next millennium.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+As of February, 2002, contributions are being solicited from people
+and organizations in: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Connecticut,
+Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois,
+Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts,
+Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New
+Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio,
+Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South
+Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West
+Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
+
+We have filed in all 50 states now, but these are the only ones
+that have responded.
+
+As the requirements for other states are met, additions to this list
+will be made and fund raising will begin in the additional states.
+Please feel free to ask to check the status of your state.
+
+In answer to various questions we have received on this:
+
+We are constantly working on finishing the paperwork to legally
+request donations in all 50 states. If your state is not listed and
+you would like to know if we have added it since the list you have,
+just ask.
+
+While we cannot solicit donations from people in states where we are
+not yet registered, we know of no prohibition against accepting
+donations from donors in these states who approach us with an offer to
+donate.
+
+International donations are accepted, but we don't know ANYTHING about
+how to make them tax-deductible, or even if they CAN be made
+deductible, and don't have the staff to handle it even if there are
+ways.
+
+Donations by check or money order may be sent to:
+
+Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+PMB 113
+1739 University Ave.
+Oxford, MS 38655-4109
+
+Contact us if you want to arrange for a wire transfer or payment
+method other than by check or money order.
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been approved by
+the US Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)(3) organization with EIN
+[Employee Identification Number] 64-622154. Donations are
+tax-deductible to the maximum extent permitted by law. As fund-raising
+requirements for other states are met, additions to this list will be
+made and fund-raising will begin in the additional states.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+You can get up to date donation information online at:
+
+http://www.gutenberg.net/donation.html
+
+
+***
+
+If you can't reach Project Gutenberg,
+you can always email directly to:
+
+Michael S. Hart <hart@pobox.com>
+
+Prof. Hart will answer or forward your message.
+
+We would prefer to send you information by email.
+
+
+**The Legal Small Print**
+
+
+(Three Pages)
+
+***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS**START***
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
+your copy of this eBook, even if you got it for free from
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
+you may distribute copies of this eBook if you want to.
+
+*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS EBOOK
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+eBook, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this eBook by
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
+you got it from. If you received this eBook on a physical
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
+
+ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM EBOOKS
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBooks,
+is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor Michael S. Hart
+through the Project Gutenberg Association (the "Project").
+Among other things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
+distribute it in the United States without permission and
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this eBook
+under the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
+
+Please do not use the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark to market
+any commercial products without permission.
+
+To create these eBooks, the Project expends considerable
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's eBooks and any
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
+disk or other eBook medium, a computer virus, or computer
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
+[1] Michael Hart and the Foundation (and any other party you may
+receive this eBook from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook) disclaims
+all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+If you discover a Defect in this eBook within 90 days of
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
+receive it electronically.
+
+THIS EBOOK IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
+TO THE EBOOK OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
+may have other legal rights.
+
+INDEMNITY
+You will indemnify and hold Michael Hart, the Foundation,
+and its trustees and agents, and any volunteers associated
+with the production and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+texts harmless, from all liability, cost and expense, including
+legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the
+following that you do or cause: [1] distribution of this eBook,
+[2] alteration, modification, or addition to the eBook,
+or [3] any Defect.
+
+DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
+You may distribute copies of this eBook electronically, or by
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
+or:
+
+[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
+ requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
+ eBook or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
+ if you wish, distribute this eBook in machine readable
+ binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
+ including any form resulting from conversion by word
+ processing or hypertext software, but only so long as
+ *EITHER*:
+
+ [*] The eBook, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
+ does *not* contain characters other than those
+ intended by the author of the work, although tilde
+ (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
+ be used to convey punctuation intended by the
+ author, and additional characters may be used to
+ indicate hypertext links; OR
+
+ [*] The eBook may be readily converted by the reader at
+ no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
+ form by the program that displays the eBook (as is
+ the case, for instance, with most word processors);
+ OR
+
+ [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
+ no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
+ eBook in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
+ or other equivalent proprietary form).
+
+[2] Honor the eBook refund and replacement provisions of this
+ "Small Print!" statement.
+
+[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Foundation of 20% of the
+ gross profits you derive calculated using the method you
+ already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
+ don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
+ payable to "Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation"
+ the 60 days following each date you prepare (or were
+ legally required to prepare) your annual (or equivalent
+ periodic) tax return. Please contact us beforehand to
+ let us know your plans and to work out the details.
+
+WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
+Project Gutenberg is dedicated to increasing the number of
+public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed
+in machine readable form.
+
+The Project gratefully accepts contributions of money, time,
+public domain materials, or royalty free copyright licenses.
+Money should be paid to the:
+"Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+If you are interested in contributing scanning equipment or
+software or other items, please contact Michael Hart at:
+hart@pobox.com
+
+[Portions of this eBook's header and trailer may be reprinted only
+when distributed free of all fees. Copyright (C) 2001, 2002 by
+Michael S. Hart. Project Gutenberg is a TradeMark and may not be
+used in any sales of Project Gutenberg eBooks or other materials be
+they hardware or software or any other related product without
+express permission.]
+
+*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS*Ver.02/11/02*END*
+
diff --git a/old/pruta10.zip b/old/pruta10.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..090e1d8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/pruta10.zip
Binary files differ