8384 lines
490 KiB
Plaintext
8384 lines
490 KiB
Plaintext
1907
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THE IRON HEEL
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by Jack London
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FOREWORD
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FOREWORD.
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IT CANNOT BE SAID THAT THE Everhard Manuscript is an important
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historical document. To the historian it bristles with errors- not
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errors of fact, but errors of interpretation. Looking back across
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the seven centuries that have lapsed since Avis Everhard completed her
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manuscript, events, and the bearings of events, that were confused and
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veiled to her, are clear to us. She lacked perspective. She was too
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close to the events she writes about. Nay, she was merged in the
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events she has described.
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Nevertheless, as a personal document, the Everhard Manuscript is
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of inestimable value. But here again enter error of perspective, and
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vitiation due to the bias of love. Yet we smile, indeed, and forgive
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Avis Everhard for the heroic lines upon which she modelled her
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husband. We know to-day that he was not so colossal, and that he
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loomed among the events of his times less largely than the
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Manuscript would lead us to believe.
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We know that Ernest Everhard was an exceptionally strong man, but
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not so exceptional as his wife thought him to be. He was, after all,
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but one of a large number of heroes who, throughout the world, devoted
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their lives to the Revolution; though it must be conceded that he
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did unusual work, especially in his elaboration and interpretation
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of working-class philosophy. 'Proletarian science' and 'proletarian
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philosophy' were his phrases for it, and therein he shows the
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provincialism of his mind- a defect, however, that was due to the
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times and that none in that day could escape.
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But to return to the Manuscript. Especially valuable is it in
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communicating to us the feel of those terrible times. Nowhere do we
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find more vividly portrayed the psychology of the persons that lived
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in that turbulent period embraced between the years 1912 and 1932-
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their mistakes and ignorance, their doubts and fears and
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misapprehensions, their ethical delusions, their violent passions,
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their inconceivable sordidness and selfishness. These are the things
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that are so hard for us of this enlightened age to understand. History
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tells us that these things were, and biology and psychology tell us
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why they were; but history and biology and psychology do not make
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these things alive. We accept them as facts, but we are left without
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sympathetic comprehension of them.
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This sympathy comes to us, however, as we peruse the Everhard
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Manuscript. We enter into the minds of the actors in that long-ago
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world-drama, and for the time being their mental processes are our
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mental processes. Not alone do we understand Avis Everhard's love
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for her hero-husband, but we feel, as he felt, in those first days,
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the vague and terrible loom of the Oligarchy. The Iron Heel (well
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named) we feel descending upon and crushing mankind.
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And in passing we note that that historic phrase, the Iron Heel,
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originated in Ernest Everhard's mind. This, we may say, is the one
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moot question that this new-found document clears up. Previous to
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this, the earliest-known use of the phrase occurred in the pamphlet,
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'Ye Slaves,' written by George Milford and published in December,
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1912. This George Milford was an obscure agitator about whom nothing
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is known, save the one additional bit of information gained from the
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Manuscript, which mentions that he was shot in the Chicago Commune.
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Evidently he had heard Ernest Everhard make use of the phrase in
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some public speech, most probably when he was running for Congress
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in the fall of 1912. From the Manuscript we learn that Everhard used
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the phrase at a private dinner in the spring of 1912. This is, without
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discussion, the earliest-known occasion on which the Oligarchy was
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so designated.
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The rise of the Oligarchy will always remain a cause of secret
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wonder to the historian and the philosopher. Other great historical
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events have their place in social evolution. They were inevitable.
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Their coming could have been predicted with the same certitude that
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astronomers to-day predict the outcome of the movements of stars.
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Without these other great historical events, social evolution could
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not have proceeded. Primitive communism, chattel slavery, serf
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slavery, and wage slavery were necessary stepping-stones in the
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evolution of society. But it were ridiculous to assert that the Iron
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Heel was a necessary stepping-stone. Rather, to-day, is it adjudged
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a step aside, or a step backward, to the social tyrannies that made
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the early world a hell, but that were as necessary as the Iron Heel
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was unnecessary.
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Black as Feudalism was, yet the coming of it was inevitable. What
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else than Feudalism could have followed upon the breakdown of that
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great centralized governmental machine known as the Roman Empire?
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Not so, however, with the Iron Heel. In the orderly procedure of
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social evolution there was no place for it. It was not necessary,
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and it was not inevitable. It must always remain the great curiosity
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of history- a whim, a fantasy, an apparition, a thing unexpected and
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undreamed; and it should serve as a warning to those rash political
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theorists of to-day who speak with certitude of social processes.
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Capitalism was adjudged by the sociologists of the time to be the
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culmination of bourgeois rule, the ripened fruit of the bourgeois
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revolution. And we of to-day can but applaud that judgment.
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Following upon Capitalism, it was held, even by such intellectual
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and antagonistic giants as Herbert Spencer, that Socialism would come.
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Out of the decay of self-seeking capitalism, it was held, would
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arise that flower of the ages, the Brotherhood of Man. Instead of
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which, appalling alike to us who look back and to those that lived
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at the time, capitalism, rotten-ripe, sent forth that monstrous
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offshoot, the Oligarchy.
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Too late did the socialist movement of the early twentieth century
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divine the coming of the Oligarchy. Even as it was divined, the
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Oligarchy was there- a fact established in blood, a stupendous and
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awful reality. Nor even then, as the Everhard Manuscript well shows,
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was any permanence attributed to the Iron Heel. Its overthrow was a
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matter of a few short years, was the judgment of the revolutionists.
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It is true, they realized that the Peasant Revolt was unplanned, and
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that the First Revolt was premature; but they little realized that the
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Second Revolt, planned and mature, was doomed to equal futility and
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more terrible punishment.
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It is apparent that Avis Everhard completed the Manuscript during
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the last days of preparation for the Second Revolt; hence the fact
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that there is no mention of the disastrous outcome of the Second
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Revolt. It is quite clear that she intended the Manuscript for
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immediate publication, as soon as the Iron Heel was overthrown, so
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that her husband, so recently dead, should receive full credit for all
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that he had ventured and accomplished. Then came the frightful
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crushing of the Second Revolt, and it is probable that in the moment
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of danger, ere she fled or was captured by the Mercenaries, she hid
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the Manuscript in the hollow oak at Wake Robin Lodge.
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Of Avis Everhard there is no further record. Undoubtedly she was
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executed by the Mercenaries; and, as is well known, no record of
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such executions was kept by the Iron Heel. But little did she realize,
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even then, as she hid the Manuscript and prepared to flee, how
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terrible had been the breakdown of the Second Revolt. Little did she
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realize that the tortuous and distorted evolution of the next three
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centuries would compel a Third Revolt and a Fourth Revolt, and many
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Revolts, all drowned in seas of blood, ere the world-movement of labor
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should come into its own. And little did she dream that for seven long
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centuries the tribute of her love to Ernest Everhard would repose
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undisturbed in the heart of the ancient oak of Wake Robin Lodge.
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ANTHONY MEREDITH
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Ardis,
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November 27, 419 B.O.M.
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CHAPTER ONE.
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My Eagle.
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THE SOFT SUMMER WIND stirs the redwoods, and Wild-Water ripples
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sweet cadences over its mossy stones. There are butterflies in the
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sunshine, and from everywhere arises the drowsy hum of bees. It is
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so quiet and peaceful, and I sit here, and ponder, and am restless. It
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is the quiet that makes me restless. It seems unreal. All the world is
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quiet, but it is the quiet before the storm. I strain my ears, and all
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my senses, for some betrayal of that impending storm. Oh, that it
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may not be premature! That it may not be premature!*
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* The Second Revolt was largely the work of Ernest Everhard,
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though he cooperated, of course, with the European leaders. The
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capture and secret execution of Everhard was the great event of the
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spring of 1932 A.D. Yet so thoroughly had he prepared for the
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revolt, that his fellow-conspirators were able, with little
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confusion or delay, to carry out his plans. It was after Everhard's
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execution that his wife went to Wake Robin Lodge, a small bungalow
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in the Sonoma Hills of California.
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Small wonder that I am restless. I think, and think, and I cannot
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cease from thinking. I have been in the thick of life so long that I
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am oppressed by the peace and quiet, and I cannot forbear from
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dwelling upon that mad maelstrom of death and destruction so soon to
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burst forth. In my ears are the cries of the stricken; and I can
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see, as I have seen in the past,* all the marring and mangling of
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the sweet, beautiful flesh, and the souls torn with violence from
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proud bodies and hurled to God. Thus do we poor humans attain our
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ends, striving through carnage and destruction to bring lasting
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peace and happiness upon the earth.
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* Without doubt she here refers to the Chicago Commune.
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And then I am lonely. When I do not think of what is to come, I
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think of what has been and is no more- my Eagle, beating with tireless
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wings the void, soaring toward what was ever his sun, the flaming
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ideal of human freedom. I cannot sit idly by and wait the great
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event that is his making, though he is not here to see. He devoted all
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the years of his manhood to it, and for it he gave his life. It is his
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handiwork. He made it.*
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* With all respect to Avis Everhard, it must be pointed out that
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Everhard was but one of many able leaders who planned the Second
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Revolt. And we to-day, looking back across the centuries, can safely
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say that even had he lived, the Second Revolt would not have been less
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calamitous in its outcome than it was.
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And so it is, in this anxious time of waiting, that I shall write of
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my husband. There is much light that I alone of all persons living can
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throw upon his character, and so noble a character cannot be
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blazoned forth too brightly. His was a great soul, and, when my love
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grows unselfish, my chiefest regret is that he is not here to
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witness to-morrow's dawn. We cannot fail. He has built too stoutly and
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too surely for that. Woe to the Iron Heel! Soon shall it be thrust
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back from off prostrate humanity. When the word goes forth, the
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labor hosts of all the world shall rise. There has been nothing like
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it in the history of the world. The solidarity of labor is assured,
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and for the first time will there be an international revolution
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wide as the world is wide.*
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* The Second Revolt was truly international. It was a colossal plan-
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too colossal to be wrought by the genius of one man alone. Labor, in
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all the oligarchies of the world, was prepared to rise at the
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signal. Germany, Italy, France, and all Australasia were labor
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countries- socialist states. They were ready to lend aid to the
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revolution. Gallantly they did; and it was for this reason, when the
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Second Revolt was crushed, that they, too, were crushed by the
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united oligarchies of the world, their socialist governments being
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replaced by oligarchical governments.
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You see, I am full of what is impending. I have lived it day and
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night utterly and for so long that it is ever present in my mind.
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For that matter, I cannot think of my husband without thinking of
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it. He was the soul of it, and how can I possibly separate the two
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in thought?
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As I have said, there is much light that I alone can throw upon
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his character. It is well known that he toiled hard for liberty and
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suffered sore. How hard he toiled and how greatly he suffered, I
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well know; for I have been with him during these twenty anxious
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years and I know his patience, his untiring effort, his infinite
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devotion to the Cause for which, only two months gone, he laid down
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his life.
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I shall try to write simply and to tell here how Ernest Everhard
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entered my life- how I first met him, how he grew until I became a
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part of him, and the tremendous changes he wrought in my life. In this
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way may you look at him through my eyes and learn him as I learned
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him- in all save the things too secret and sweet for me to tell.
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It was in February, 1912, that I first met him, when, as a guest
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of my father's* at dinner, he came to our house in Berkeley. I
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cannot say that my very first impression of him was favorable. He
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was one of many at dinner, and in the drawing-room where we gathered
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and waited for all to arrive, he made a rather incongruous appearance.
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It was 'preacher's night,' as my father privately called it, and
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Ernest was certainly out of place in the midst of the churchmen.
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* John Cunningham, Avis Everhard's father, was a professor at the
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State University at Berkeley, California. His chosen field was
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physics, and in addition he did much original research and was greatly
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distinguished as a scientist. His chief contribution to science was
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his studies of the electron and his monumental work on the
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'Identification of Matter and Energy,' wherein he established,
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beyond cavil and for all time, that the ultimate unit of matter and
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the ultimate unit of force were identical. This idea had been
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earlier advanced, but not demonstrated, by Sir Oliver Lodge and
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other students in the new field of radio-activity.
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In the first place, his clothes did not fit him. He wore a
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ready-made suit of dark cloth that was ill adjusted to his body. In
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fact, no ready-made suit of clothes ever could fit his body. And on
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this night, as always, the cloth bulged with his muscles, while the
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coat between the shoulders, what of the heavy shoulder-development,
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was a maze of wrinkles. His neck was the neck of a prize-fighter,*
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thick and strong. So this was the social philosopher and ex-horseshoer
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my father had discovered, was my thought. And he certainly looked it
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with those bulging muscles and that bull-throat. Immediately I
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classified him- a sort of prodigy, I thought, a Blind Tom*(2) of the
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working class.
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* In that day it was the custom of men to compete for purses of
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money. They fought with their hands. When one was beaten into
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insensibility or killed, the survivor took the money.
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*(2) This obscure reference applies to a blind negro musician who
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took the world by storm in the latter half of the nineteenth century
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of the Christian Era.
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And then, when he shook hands with me! His handshake was firm and
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strong, but he looked at me boldly with his black eyes- too boldly,
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I thought. You see, I was a creature of environment, and at that
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time had strong class instincts. Such boldness on the part of a man of
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my own class would have been almost unforgivable. I know that I
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could not avoid dropping my eyes, and I was quite relieved when I
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passed him on and turned to greet Bishop Morehouse- a favorite of
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mine, a sweet and serious man of middle age, Christ-like in appearance
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and goodness, and a scholar as well.
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But this boldness that I took to be presumption was a vital clew
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to the nature of Ernest Everhard. He was simple, direct, afraid of
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nothing, and he refused to waste time on conventional mannerisms. 'You
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pleased me,' he explained long afterward; 'and why should I not fill
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my eyes with that which pleases me?' I have said that he was afraid of
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nothing. He was a natural aristocrat- and this in spite of the fact
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that he was in the camp of the non-aristocrats. He was a superman, a
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blond beast such as Nietzsche* has described, and in addition he was
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aflame with democracy.
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* Friederich Nietzsche, the mad philosopher of the nineteenth
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century of the Christian Era, who caught wild glimpses of truth, but
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who, before he was done, reasoned himself around the great circle of
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human thought and off into madness.
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In the interest of meeting the other guests, and what of my
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unfavorable impression, I forgot all about the working-class
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philosopher, though once or twice at table I noticed him- especially
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the twinkle in his eye as he listened to the talk first of one
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minister and then of another. He has humor, I thought, and I almost
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forgave him his clothes. But the time went by, and the dinner went by,
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and he never opened his mouth to speak, while the ministers talked
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interminably about the working class and its relation to the church,
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and what the church had done and was doing for it. I noticed that my
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father was annoyed because Ernest did not talk. Once father took
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advantage of a lull and asked him to say something; but Ernest
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shrugged his shoulders and with an 'I have nothing to say' went on
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eating salted almonds.
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But father was not to be denied. After a while he said:
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'We have with us a member of the working class. I am sure that he
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can present things from a new point of view that will be interesting
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and refreshing. I refer to Mr. Everhard.'
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The others betrayed a well-mannered interest, and urged Ernest for a
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statement of his views. Their attitude toward him was so broadly
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tolerant and kindly that it was really patronizing. And I saw that
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Ernest noted it and was amused. He looked slowly about him, and I
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saw the glint of laughter in his eyes.
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'I am not versed in the courtesies of ecclesiastical controversy,'
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he began, and then hesitated with modesty and indecision.
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'Go on,' they urged, and Dr. Hammerfield said: 'We do not mind the
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truth that is in any man. If it is sincere,' he amended.
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'Then you separate sincerity from truth?' Ernest laughed quickly.
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Dr. Hammerfield gasped, and managed to answer, 'The best of us may
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be mistaken, young man, the best of us.'
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Ernest's manner changed on the instant. He became another man.
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'All right, then,' he answered; 'and let me begin by saying that you
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are all mistaken. You know nothing, and worse than nothing, about
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the working class. Your sociology is as vicious and worthless as is
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your method of thinking.'
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It was not so much what he said as how he said it. I roused at the
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first sound of his voice. It was as bold as his eyes. It was a
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clarion-call that thrilled me. And the whole table was aroused, shaken
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alive from monotony and drowsiness.
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'What is so dreadfully vicious and worthless in our method of
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thinking, young man?' Dr. Hammerfield demanded, and already there
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was something unpleasant in his voice and manner of utterance.
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'You are metaphysicians. You can prove anything by metaphysics;
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and having done so, every metaphysician can prove every other
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metaphysician wrong- to his own satisfaction. You are anarchists in
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the realm of thought. And you are mad cosmos-makers. Each of you
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dwells in a cosmos of his own making, created out of his own fancies
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and desires. You do not know the real world in which you live, and
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your thinking has no place in the real world except in so far as it is
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phenomena of mental aberration.
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'Do you know what I was reminded of as I sat at table and listened
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to you talk and talk? You reminded me for all the world of the
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scholastics of the Middle Ages who gravely and learnedly debated the
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absorbing question of how many angels could dance on the point of a
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needle. Why, my dear sirs, you are as remote from the intellectual
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life of the twentieth century as an Indian medicine-man making
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incantation in the primeval forest ten thousand years ago.'
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As Ernest talked he seemed in a fine passion; his face glowed, his
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eyes snapped and flashed, and his chin and jaw were eloquent with
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aggressiveness. But it was only a way he had. It always aroused
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people. His smashing, sledge-hammer manner of attack invariably made
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them forget themselves. And they were forgetting themselves now.
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Bishop Morehouse was leaning forward and listening intently.
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Exasperation and anger were flushing the face of Dr. Hammerfield.
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And others were exasperated, too, and some were smiling in an amused
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and superior way. As for myself, I found it most enjoyable. I
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glanced at father, and I was afraid he was going to giggle at the
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effect of this human bombshell he had been guilty of launching amongst
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us.
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'Your terms are rather vague,' Dr. Hammerfield interrupted. 'Just
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precisely what do you mean when you call us metaphysicians?'
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'I call you metaphysicians because you reason metaphysically,'
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Ernest went on. 'Your method of reasoning is the opposite to that of
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science. There is no validity to your conclusions. You can prove
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everything and nothing, and no two of you can agree upon anything.
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Each of you goes into his own consciousness to explain himself and the
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universe. As well may you lift yourselves by your own bootstraps as to
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explain consciousness by consciousness.'
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'I do not understand,' Bishop Morehouse said. 'It seems to me that
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all things of the mind are metaphysical. That most exact and
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convincing of all sciences, mathematics, is sheerly metaphysical. Each
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and every thought-process of the scientific reasoner is
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metaphysical. Surely you will agree with me?'
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'As you say, you do not understand,' Ernest replied. 'The
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metaphysician reasons deductively out of his own subjectivity. The
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scientist reasons inductively from the facts of experience. The
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metaphysician reasons from theory to facts, the scientist reasons from
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facts to theory. The metaphysician explains the universe by himself,
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the scientist explains himself by the universe.'
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'Thank God we are not scientists,' Dr. Hammerfield murmured
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complacently.
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'What are you then?' Ernest demanded.
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'Philosophers.'
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'There you go,' Ernest laughed. 'You have left the real and solid
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earth and are up in the air with a word for a flying machine. Pray
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come down to earth and tell me precisely what you do mean by
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philosophy.'
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'Philosophy is-' (Dr. Hammerfield paused and cleared his throat)
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'something that cannot be defined comprehensively except to such minds
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and temperaments as are philosophical. The narrow scientist with his
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nose in a test-tube cannot understand philosophy.'
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Ernest ignored the thrust. It was always his way to turn the point
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back upon an opponent, and he did it now, with a beaming brotherliness
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of face and utterance.
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'Then you will undoubtedly understand the definition I shall now
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make of philosophy. But before I make it, I shall challenge you to
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point out error in it or to remain a silent metaphysician.
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Philosophy is merely the widest science of all. Its reasoning method
|
|
is the same as that of any particular science and of all particular
|
|
sciences. And by that same method of reasoning, the inductive
|
|
method, philosophy fuses all particular sciences into one great
|
|
science. As Spencer says, the data of any particular science are
|
|
partially unified knowledge. Philosophy unifies the knowledge that
|
|
is contributed by all the sciences. Philosophy is the science of
|
|
science, the master science, if you please. How do you like my
|
|
definition?'
|
|
'Very creditable, very creditable,' Dr. Hammerfield muttered lamely.
|
|
But Ernest was merciless.
|
|
'Remember,' he warned, 'my definition is fatal to metaphysics. If
|
|
you do not now point out a flaw in my definition, you are disqualified
|
|
later on from advancing metaphysical arguments. You must go through
|
|
life seeking that flaw and remaining metaphysically silent until you
|
|
have found it.'
|
|
Ernest waited. The silence was painful. Dr. Hammerfield was
|
|
pained. He was also puzzled. Ernest's sledge-hammer attack
|
|
disconcerted him. He was not used to the simple and direct method of
|
|
controversy. He looked appealingly around the table, but no one
|
|
answered for him. I caught father grinning into his napkin.
|
|
'There is another way of disqualifying the metaphysicians,' Ernest
|
|
said, when he had rendered Dr. Hammerfield's discomfiture complete.
|
|
'Judge them by their works. What have they done for mankind beyond the
|
|
spinning of airy fancies and the mistaking of their own shadows for
|
|
gods? They have added to the gayety of mankind, I grant; but what
|
|
tangible good have they wrought for mankind? They philosophized, if
|
|
you will pardon my misuse of the word, about the heart as the seat
|
|
of the emotions, while the scientists were formulating the circulation
|
|
of the blood. They declaimed about famine and pestilence as being
|
|
scourges of God, while the scientists were building granaries and
|
|
draining cities. They builded gods in their own shapes and out of
|
|
their own desires, while the scientists were building roads and
|
|
bridges. They were describing the earth as the centre of the universe,
|
|
while the scientists were discovering America and probing space for
|
|
the stars and the laws of the stars. In short, the metaphysicians have
|
|
done nothing, absolutely nothing, for mankind. Step by step, before
|
|
the advance of science, they have been driven back. As fast as the
|
|
ascertained facts of science have overthrown their subjective
|
|
explanations of things, they have made new subjective explanations
|
|
of things, including explanations of the latest ascertained facts. And
|
|
this, I doubt not, they will go on doing to the end of time.
|
|
Gentlemen, a metaphysician is a medicine man. The difference between
|
|
you and the Eskimo who makes a fur-clad blubber-eating god is merely a
|
|
difference of several thousand years of ascertained facts. That is
|
|
all.'
|
|
'Yet the thought of Aristotle ruled Europe for twelve centuries,'
|
|
Dr. Ballingford announced pompously. 'And Aristotle was a
|
|
metaphysician.'
|
|
Dr. Ballingford glanced around the table and was rewarded by nods
|
|
and smiles of approval.
|
|
'Your illustration is most unfortunate,' Ernest replied. 'You
|
|
refer to a very dark period in human history. In fact, we call that
|
|
period the Dark Ages. A period wherein science was raped by the
|
|
metaphysicians, wherein physics became a search for the
|
|
Philosopher's Stone, wherein chemistry became alchemy, and astronomy
|
|
became astrology. Sorry the domination of Aristotle's thought!'
|
|
Dr. Ballingford looked pained, then he brightened up and said:
|
|
'Granted this horrible picture you have drawn, yet you must
|
|
confess that metaphysics was inherently potent in so far as it drew
|
|
humanity out of this dark period and on into the illumination of the
|
|
succeeding centuries.'
|
|
'Metaphysics had nothing to do with it,' Ernest retorted.
|
|
'What?' Dr. Hammerfield cried. 'It was not the thinking and the
|
|
speculation that led to the voyages of discovery?'
|
|
'Ah, my dear sir,' Ernest smiled, 'I thought you were
|
|
disqualified. You have not yet picked out the flaw in my definition of
|
|
philosophy. You are now on an unsubstantial basis. But it is the way
|
|
of the metaphysicians, and I forgive you. No, I repeat, metaphysics
|
|
had nothing to do with it. Bread and butter, silks and jewels, dollars
|
|
and cents, and, incidentally, the closing up of the overland
|
|
trade-routes to India, were the things that caused the voyages of
|
|
discovery. With the fall of Constantinople, in 1453, the Turks blocked
|
|
the way of the caravans to India. The traders of Europe had to find
|
|
another route. Here was the original cause for the voyages of
|
|
discovery. Columbus sailed to find a new route to the Indies. It is so
|
|
stated in all the history books. Incidentally, new facts were
|
|
learned about the nature, size, and form of the earth, and the
|
|
Ptolemaic system went glimmering.'
|
|
Dr. Hammerfield snorted.
|
|
'You do not agree with me?' Ernest queried. 'Then wherein am I
|
|
wrong?'
|
|
'I can only reaffirm my position,' Dr. Hammerfield retorted
|
|
tartly. 'It is too long a story to enter into now.'
|
|
'No story is too long for the scientist,' Ernest said sweetly. 'That
|
|
is why the scientist gets to places. That is why he got to America.'
|
|
I shall not describe the whole evening, though it is a joy to me
|
|
to recall every moment, every detail, of those first hours of my
|
|
coming to know Ernest Everhard.
|
|
Battle royal raged, and the ministers grew red-faced and excited,
|
|
especially at the moments when Ernest called them romantic
|
|
philosophers, shadow-projectors, and similar things. And always he
|
|
checked them back to facts. 'The fact, man, the irrefragable fact!' he
|
|
would proclaim triumphantly, when he had brought one of them a
|
|
cropper. He bristled with facts. He tripped them up with facts,
|
|
ambuscaded them with facts, bombarded them with broadsides of facts.
|
|
'You seem to worship at the shrine of fact,' Dr. Hammerfield taunted
|
|
him.
|
|
'There is no God but Fact, and Mr. Everhard is its prophet,' Dr.
|
|
Ballingford paraphrased.
|
|
Ernest smilingly acquiesced.
|
|
'I'm like the man from Texas,' he said. And, on being solicited,
|
|
he explained. 'You see, the man from Missouri always says, 'You've got
|
|
to show me.' But the man from Texas says, 'You've got to put it in
|
|
my hand.' From which it is apparent that he is no metaphysician.'
|
|
Another time, when Ernest had just said that the metaphysical
|
|
philosophers could never stand the test of truth, Dr. Hammerfield
|
|
suddenly demanded:
|
|
'What is the test of truth, young man? Will you kindly explain
|
|
what has so long puzzled wiser heads than yours?'
|
|
'Certainly,' Ernest answered. His cocksureness irritated them.
|
|
'The wise heads have puzzled so sorely over truth because they went up
|
|
into the air after it. Had they remained on the solid earth, they
|
|
would have found it easily enough- ay, they would have found that they
|
|
themselves were precisely testing truth with every practical act and
|
|
thought of their lives.'
|
|
'The test, the test,' Dr. Hammerfield repeated impatiently. 'Never
|
|
mind the preamble. Give us that which we have sought so long- the test
|
|
of truth. Give it us, and we will be as gods.'
|
|
There was an impolite and sneering scepticism in his words and
|
|
manner that secretly pleased most of them at the table, though it
|
|
seemed to bother Bishop Morehouse.
|
|
'Dr. Jordan* has stated it very clearly,' Ernest said. 'His test
|
|
of truth is: "Will it work? Will you trust your life to it?"'
|
|
|
|
* A noted educator of the late nineteenth and early twentieth
|
|
centuries of the Christian Era. He was president of the Stanford
|
|
University, a private benefaction of the times.
|
|
|
|
'Pish!' Dr. Hammerfield sneered. 'You have not taken Bishop
|
|
Berkeley* into account. He has never been answered.'
|
|
|
|
* An idealistic monist who long puzzled the philosophers of that
|
|
time with his denial of the existence of matter, but whose clever
|
|
argument was finally demolished when the new empiric facts of
|
|
science were philosophically generalized.
|
|
|
|
'The noblest metaphysician of them all,' Ernest laughed. 'But your
|
|
example is unfortunate. As Berkeley himself attested, his
|
|
metaphysics didn't work.'
|
|
Dr. Hammerfield was angry, righteously angry. It was as though he
|
|
had caught Ernest in a theft or a lie.
|
|
'Young man,' he trumpeted, 'that statement is on a par with all
|
|
you have uttered to-night. It is a base and unwarranted assumption.'
|
|
'I am quite crushed,' Ernest murmured meekly. 'Only I don't know
|
|
what hit me. You'll have to put it in my hand, Doctor.'
|
|
'I will, I will,' Dr. Hammerfield spluttered. 'How do you know?
|
|
You do not know that Bishop Berkeley attested that his metaphysics did
|
|
not work. You have no proof. Young man, they have always worked.'
|
|
'I take it as proof that Berkeley's metaphysics did not work,
|
|
because-' Ernest paused calmly for a moment. 'Because Berkeley made an
|
|
invariable practice of going through doors instead of walls. Because
|
|
he trusted his life to solid bread and butter and roast beef.
|
|
Because he shaved himself with a razor that worked when it removed the
|
|
hair from his face.'
|
|
'But those are actual things!' Dr. Hammerfield cried. 'Metaphysics
|
|
is of the mind.'
|
|
'And they work- in the mind?' Ernest queried softly.
|
|
The other nodded.
|
|
'And even a multitude of angels can dance on the point of a
|
|
needle- in the mind,' Ernest went on reflectively. 'And a
|
|
blubber-eating, fur-clad god can exist and work- in the mind; and
|
|
there are no proofs to the contrary- in the mind. I suppose, Doctor,
|
|
you live in the mind?'
|
|
'My mind to me a kingdom is,' was the answer.
|
|
'That's another way of saying that you live up in the air. But you
|
|
come back to earth at meal-time, I am sure, or when an earthquake
|
|
happens along. Or, tell me, Doctor, do you have no apprehension in
|
|
an earthquake that that incorporeal body of yours will be hit by an
|
|
immaterial brick?'
|
|
Instantly, and quite unconsciously, Dr. Hammerfield's hand shot up
|
|
to his head, where a scar disappeared under the hair. It happened that
|
|
Ernest had blundered on an apposite illustration. Dr. Hammerfield
|
|
had been nearly killed in the Great Earthquake* by a falling
|
|
chimney. Everybody broke out into roars of laughter.
|
|
|
|
* The Great Earthquake of 1906 A.D. that destroyed San Francisco.
|
|
|
|
'Well?' Ernest asked, when the merriment had subsided. 'Proofs to
|
|
the contrary?'
|
|
And in the silence he asked again, 'Well?' Then he added, 'Still
|
|
well, but not so well, that argument of yours.'
|
|
But Dr. Hammerfield was temporarily crushed, and the battle raged on
|
|
in new directions. On point after point, Ernest challenged the
|
|
ministers. When they affirmed that they knew the working class, he
|
|
told them fundamental truths about the working class that they did not
|
|
know, and challenged them for disproofs. He gave them facts, always
|
|
facts, checked their excursions into the air, and brought them back to
|
|
the solid earth and its facts.
|
|
How the scene comes back to me! I can hear him now, with that
|
|
war-note in his voice, flaying them with his facts, each fact a lash
|
|
that stung and stung again. And he was merciless. He took no quarter,*
|
|
and gave none. I can never forget the flaying he gave them at the end:
|
|
|
|
* This figure arises from the customs of the times. When, among
|
|
men fighting to the death in their wild-animal way, a beaten man threw
|
|
down his weapons, it was at the option of the victor to slay him or
|
|
spare him.
|
|
|
|
'You have repeatedly confessed to-night, by direct avowal or
|
|
ignorant statement, that you do not know the working class. But you
|
|
are not to be blamed for this. How can you know anything about the
|
|
working class? You do not live in the same locality with the working
|
|
class. You herd with the capitalist class in another locality. And why
|
|
not? It is the capitalist class that pays you, that feeds you, that
|
|
puts the very clothes on your backs that you are wearing to-night. And
|
|
in return you preach to your employers the brands of metaphysics
|
|
that are especially acceptable to them; and the especially
|
|
acceptable brands are acceptable because they do not menace the
|
|
established order of society.'
|
|
Here there was a stir of dissent around the table.
|
|
'Oh, I am not challenging your sincerity,' Ernest continued. 'You
|
|
are sincere. You preach what you believe. There lies your strength and
|
|
your value- to the capitalist class. But should you change your belief
|
|
to something that menaces the established order, your preaching
|
|
would be unacceptable to your employers, and you would be
|
|
discharged. Every little while some one or another of you is so
|
|
discharged.* Am I not right?'
|
|
|
|
* During this period there were many ministers cast out of the
|
|
church for preaching unacceptable doctrine. Especially were they
|
|
cast out when their preaching became tainted with socialism.
|
|
|
|
This time there was no dissent. They sat dumbly acquiescent, with
|
|
the exception of Dr. Hammerfield, who said:
|
|
'It is when their thinking is wrong that they are asked to resign.'
|
|
'Which is another way of saying when their thinking is
|
|
unacceptable,' Ernest answered, and then went on. 'So I say to you, go
|
|
ahead and preach and earn your pay, but for goodness' sake leave the
|
|
working class alone. You belong in the enemy's camp. You have
|
|
nothing in common with the working class. Your hands are soft with the
|
|
work others have performed for you. Your stomachs are round with the
|
|
plenitude of eating.' (Here Dr. Ballingford winced, and every eye
|
|
glanced at his prodigious girth. It was said he had not seen his own
|
|
feet in years.) 'And your minds are filled with doctrines that are
|
|
buttresses of the established order. You are as much mercenaries
|
|
(sincere mercenaries, I grant) as were the men of the Swiss Guard.* Be
|
|
true to your salt and your hire; guard, with your preaching, the
|
|
interests of your employers; but do not come down to the working class
|
|
and serve as false leaders. You cannot honestly be in the two camps at
|
|
once. The working class has done without you. Believe me, the
|
|
working class will continue to do without you. And, furthermore, the
|
|
working class can do better without you than with you.'
|
|
|
|
* The hired foreign palace guards of Louis XVI, a king of France
|
|
that was beheaded by his people.
|
|
CHAPTER TWO.
|
|
Challenges.
|
|
|
|
AFTER THE GUESTS HAD GONE, father threw himself into a chair and
|
|
gave vent to roars of Gargantuan laughter. Not since the death of my
|
|
mother had I known him to laugh so heartily.
|
|
I'll wager Dr. Hammerfield was never up against anything like it
|
|
in his life,' he laughed. '"The courtesies of ecclesiastical
|
|
controversy!" Did you notice how he began like a lamb- Everhard, I
|
|
mean, and how quickly he became a roaring lion? He has a splendidly
|
|
disciplined mind. He would have made a good scientist if his
|
|
energies had been directed that way.'
|
|
I need scarcely say that I was deeply interested in Ernest Everhard.
|
|
It was not alone what he had said and how he had said it, but it was
|
|
the man himself. I had never met a man like him. I suppose that was
|
|
why, in spite of my twenty-four years, I had not married. I liked him;
|
|
I had to confess it to myself. And my like for him was founded on
|
|
things beyond intellect and argument. Regardless of his bulging
|
|
muscles and prize-fighter's throat, he impressed me as an ingenuous
|
|
boy. I felt that under the guise of an intellectual swashbuckler was a
|
|
delicate and sensitive spirit. I sensed this, in ways I knew not, save
|
|
that they were my woman's intuitions.
|
|
There was something in that clarion-call of his that went to my
|
|
heart. It still rang in my ears, and I felt that I should like to hear
|
|
it again- and to see again that glint of laughter in his eyes that
|
|
belied the impassioned seriousness of his face. And there were further
|
|
reaches of vague and indeterminate feelings that stirred in me. I
|
|
almost loved him then, though I am confident, had I never seen him
|
|
again, that the vague feelings would have passed away and that I
|
|
should easily have forgotten him.
|
|
But I was not destined never to see him again. My father's
|
|
new-born interest in sociology and the dinner parties he gave would
|
|
not permit. Father was not a sociologist. His marriage with my
|
|
mother had been very happy, and in the researches of his own
|
|
science, physics, he had been very happy. But when mother died, his
|
|
own work could not fill the emptiness. At first, in a mild way, he had
|
|
dabbled in philosophy; then, becoming interested, he had drifted on
|
|
into economics and sociology. He had a strong sense of justice, and he
|
|
soon became fired with a passion to redress wrong. It was with
|
|
gratitude that I hailed these signs of a new interest in life,
|
|
though I little dreamed what the outcome would be. With the enthusiasm
|
|
of a boy he plunged excitedly into these new pursuits, regardless of
|
|
whither they led him.
|
|
He had been used always to the laboratory, and so it was that he
|
|
turned the dining room into a sociological laboratory. Here came to
|
|
dinner all sorts and conditions of men,- scientists, politicians,
|
|
bankers, merchants, professors, labor leaders, socialists, and
|
|
anarchists. He stirred them to discussion, and analyzed their thoughts
|
|
of life and society.
|
|
He had met Ernest shortly prior to the 'preacher's night.' And after
|
|
the guests were gone, I learned how he had met him, passing down a
|
|
street at night and stopping to listen to a man on a soap-box who
|
|
was addressing a crowd of workingmen. The man on the box was Ernest.
|
|
Not that he was a mere soap-box orator. He stood high in the
|
|
councils of the socialist party, was one of the leaders, and was the
|
|
acknowledged leader in the philosophy of socialism. But he had a
|
|
certain clear way of stating the abstruse in simple language, was a
|
|
born expositor and teacher, and was not above the soap-box as a
|
|
means of interpreting economics to the workingmen.
|
|
My father stopped to listen, became interested, effected a
|
|
meeting, and, after quite an acquaintance, invited him to the
|
|
ministers' dinner. It was after the dinner that father told me what
|
|
little he knew about him. He had been born in the. working class,
|
|
though he was a descendant of the old line of Everhards that for
|
|
over two hundred years had lived in America.* At ten years of age he
|
|
had gone to work in the mills, and later he served his
|
|
apprenticeship and became a horseshoer. He was self-educated, had
|
|
taught himself German and French, and at that time was earning a
|
|
meagre living by translating scientific and philosophical works for
|
|
a struggling socialist publishing house in Chicago. Also, his earnings
|
|
were added to by the royalties from the small sales of his own
|
|
economic and philosophic works.
|
|
|
|
* The distinction between being native born and foreign born was
|
|
sharp and invidious in those days.
|
|
|
|
This much I learned of him before I went to bed, and I lay long
|
|
awake, listening in memory to the sound of his voice. I grew
|
|
frightened at my thoughts. He was so unlike the men of my own class,
|
|
so alien and so strong. His masterfulness delighted me and terrified
|
|
me, for my fancies wantonly roved until I found myself considering him
|
|
as a lover, as a husband. I had always heard that the strength of
|
|
men was an irresistible attraction to women; but he was too strong.
|
|
'No! no!' I cried out. 'It is impossible, absurd!' And on the morrow I
|
|
awoke to find in myself a longing to see him again. I wanted to see
|
|
him mastering men in discussion, the war-note in his voice; to see
|
|
him, in all his certitude and strength, shattering their
|
|
complacency, shaking them out of their ruts of thinking. What if he
|
|
did swashbuckle? To use his own phrase, 'it worked,' it produced
|
|
effects. And, besides, his swashbuckling was a fine thing to see. It
|
|
stirred one like the onset of battle.
|
|
Several days passed during which I read Ernest's books, borrowed
|
|
from my father. His written word was as his spoken word, clear and
|
|
convincing. It was its absolute simplicity that convinced even while
|
|
one continued to doubt. He had the gift of lucidity. He was the
|
|
perfect expositor. Yet, in spite of his style, there was much that I
|
|
did not like. He laid too great stress on what he called the class
|
|
struggle, the antagonism between labor and capital, the conflict of
|
|
interest.
|
|
Father reported with glee Dr. Hammerfield's judgment of Ernest,
|
|
which was to the effect that he was an insolent young puppy, made
|
|
bumptious by a little and very inadequate learning.' Also, Dr.
|
|
Hammerfield declined to meet Ernest again.
|
|
But Bishop Morehouse turned out to have become interested in Ernest,
|
|
and was anxious for another meeting. 'A strong young man,' he said;
|
|
'and very much alive, very much alive. But he is too sure, too sure.'
|
|
Ernest came one afternoon with father. The Bishop had already
|
|
arrived, and we were having tea on the veranda. Ernest's continued
|
|
presence in Berkeley, by the way, was accounted for by the fact that
|
|
he was taking special courses in biology at the university, and also
|
|
that he was hard at work on a new book entitled 'Philosophy and
|
|
Revolution.'*
|
|
|
|
* This book continued to be secretly printed throughout the three
|
|
centuries of the Iron Heel. There are several copies of various
|
|
editions in the National Library of Ardis.
|
|
|
|
The veranda seemed suddenly to have become small when Ernest
|
|
arrived. Not that he was so very large- he stood only five feet nine
|
|
inches; but that he seemed to radiate an atmosphere of largeness. As
|
|
he stopped to meet me, he betrayed a certain slight awkwardness that
|
|
was strangely at variance with his bold-looking eyes and his firm,
|
|
sure hand that clasped for a moment in greeting. And in that moment
|
|
his eyes were just as steady and sure. There seemed a question in them
|
|
this time, and as before he looked at me over long.
|
|
'I have been reading your "Working-class Philosophy,"' I said, and
|
|
his eyes lighted in a pleased way.
|
|
'Of course,' he answered, 'you took into consideration the
|
|
audience to which it was addressed.'
|
|
'I did, and it is because I did that I have a quarrel with you,' I
|
|
challenged.
|
|
'I, too, have a quarrel with you, Mr. Everhard,' Bishop Morehouse
|
|
said.
|
|
Ernest shrugged his shoulders whimsically and accepted a cup of tea.
|
|
The Bishop bowed and gave me precedence.
|
|
'You foment class hatred,' I said. 'I consider it wrong and criminal
|
|
to appeal to all that is narrow and brutal in the working class. Class
|
|
hatred is anti-social, and, it seems to me, antisocialistic.'
|
|
'Not guilty,' he answered. 'Class hatred is neither in the text
|
|
nor in the spirit of anything I have every written.'
|
|
'Oh!' I cried reproachfully, and reached for his book and opened it.
|
|
He sipped his tea and smiled at me while I ran over the pages.
|
|
'Page one hundred and thirty-two,' I read aloud: '"The class
|
|
struggle, therefore, presents itself in the present stage of social
|
|
development between the wage-paying and the wage-paid classes."'
|
|
I looked at him triumphantly.
|
|
'No mention there of class hatred,' he smiled back.
|
|
'But,' I answered, 'you say "class struggle."'
|
|
'A different thing from class hatred,' he replied. 'And, believe me,
|
|
we foment no hatred. We say that the class struggle is a law of social
|
|
development. We are not responsible for it. We do not make the class
|
|
struggle. We merely explain it, as Newton explained gravitation. We
|
|
explain the nature of the conflict of interest that produces the class
|
|
struggle.'
|
|
'But there should be no conflict of interest!' I cried.
|
|
'I agree with you heartily,' he answered. 'That is what we
|
|
socialists are trying to bring about,- the abolition of the conflict
|
|
of interest. Pardon me. Let me read an extract.' He took his book
|
|
and turned back several pages. 'Page one hundred and twenty-six:
|
|
"The cycle of class struggles which began with the dissolution of
|
|
rude, tribal communism and the rise of private property will end
|
|
with the passing of private property in the means of social
|
|
existence."'
|
|
'But I disagree with you,' the Bishop interposed, his pale,
|
|
ascetic face betraying by a faint glow the intensity of his
|
|
feelings. 'Your premise is wrong. There is no such thing as a conflict
|
|
of interest between labor and capital- or, rather, there ought not
|
|
to be.'
|
|
'Thank you,' Ernest said gravely. 'By that last statement you have
|
|
given me back my premise.'
|
|
'But why should there be a conflict?' the Bishop demanded warmly.
|
|
Ernest shrugged his shoulders. 'Because we are so made, I guess.'
|
|
'But we are not so made!' cried the other.
|
|
'Are you discussing the ideal man?' Ernest asked, '-unselfish and
|
|
godlike, and so few in numbers as to be practically non-existent, or
|
|
are you discussing the common and ordinary average man?'
|
|
'The common and ordinary man,' was the answer.
|
|
'Who is weak and fallible, prone to error?'
|
|
Bishop Morehouse nodded.
|
|
'And petty and selfish?'
|
|
Again he nodded.
|
|
'Watch out!' Ernest warned. 'I said "selfish."'
|
|
'The average man is selfish,' the Bishop affirmed valiantly.
|
|
'Wants all he can get?'
|
|
'Wants all he can get- true but deplorable.'
|
|
'Then I've got you.' Ernest's jaw snapped like a trap. 'Let me
|
|
show you. Here is a man who works on the street railways.'
|
|
'He couldn't work if it weren't for capital,' the Bishop
|
|
interrupted.
|
|
'True, and you will grant that capital would perish if there were no
|
|
labor to earn the dividends.'
|
|
The Bishop was silent.
|
|
'Won't you?' Ernest insisted.
|
|
The Bishop nodded.
|
|
'Then our statements cancel each other,' Ernest said in a
|
|
matter-of-fact tone, 'and we are where we were. Now to begin again.
|
|
The workingmen on the street railway furnish the labor. The
|
|
stockholders furnish the capital. By the joint effort of the
|
|
workingmen and the capital, money is earned.* They divide between them
|
|
this money that is earned. Capital's share is called "dividends."
|
|
Labor's share is called "wages."'
|
|
|
|
* In those days, groups of predatory individuals controlled all
|
|
the means of transportation, and for the use of same levied toll
|
|
upon the public.
|
|
|
|
'Very good,' the Bishop interposed. 'And there is no reason that the
|
|
division should not be amicable.'
|
|
'You have already forgotten what we had agreed upon,' Ernest
|
|
replied. 'We agreed that the average man is selfish. He is the man
|
|
that is. You have gone up in the air and are arranging a division
|
|
between the kind of men that ought to be but are not. But to return to
|
|
the earth, the workingman, being selfish, wants all he can get in
|
|
the division. The capitalist, being selfish, wants all he can get in
|
|
the division. When there is only so much of the same thing, and when
|
|
two men want all they can get of the same thing, there is a conflict
|
|
of interest between labor and capital. And it is an irreconcilable
|
|
conflict. As long as workingmen and capitalists exist, they will
|
|
continue to quarrel over the division. If you were in San Francisco
|
|
this afternoon, you'd have to walk. There isn't a street car running.'
|
|
'Another strike?'* the Bishop queried with alarm.
|
|
|
|
* These quarrels were very common in those irrational and anarchic
|
|
times. Sometimes the laborers refused to work. Sometimes the
|
|
capitalists refused to let the laborers work. In the violence and
|
|
turbulence of such disagreements much property was destroyed and
|
|
many lives lost. All this is inconceivable to us- as inconceivable
|
|
as another custom of that time, namely, the habit the men of the lower
|
|
classes had of breaking the furniture when they quarrelled with
|
|
their wives.
|
|
|
|
'Yes, they're quarrelling over the division of the earnings of the
|
|
street railways.'
|
|
Bishop Morehouse became excited.
|
|
'It is wrong!' he cried. 'It is so short-sighted on the part of
|
|
the workingmen. How can they hope to keep our sympathy-'
|
|
'When we are compelled to walk,' Ernest said slyly.
|
|
But Bishop Morehouse ignored him and went on:
|
|
'Their outlook is too narrow. Men should be men, not brutes. There
|
|
will be violence and murder now, and sorrowing widows and orphans.
|
|
Capital and labor should be friends. They should work hand in hand and
|
|
to their mutual benefit.'
|
|
'Ah, now you are up in the air again,' Ernest remarked dryly.
|
|
'Come back to earth. Remember, we agreed that the average man is
|
|
selfish.'
|
|
'But he ought not to be!' the Bishop cried.
|
|
'And there I agree with you,' was Ernest's rejoinder. 'He ought
|
|
not to be selfish, but he will continue to be selfish as long as he
|
|
lives in a social system that is based on pig-ethics.'
|
|
The Bishop was aghast, and my father chuckled.
|
|
'Yes, pig-ethics,' Ernest went on remorselessly. 'That is the
|
|
meaning of the capitalist system. And that is what your church is
|
|
standing for, what you are preaching for every time you get up in
|
|
the pulpit. Pig-ethics! There is no other name for it.'
|
|
Bishop Morehouse turned appealingly to my father, but he laughed and
|
|
nodded his head.
|
|
'I'm afraid Mr. Everhard is right,' he said. 'Laissez-faire, the
|
|
let-alone policy of each for himself and devil take the hindmost. As
|
|
Mr. Everhard said the other night, the function you churchmen
|
|
perform is to maintain the established order of society, and society
|
|
is established on that foundation.'
|
|
'But that is not the teaching of Christ!' cried the Bishop.
|
|
The Church is not teaching Christ these days,' Ernest put in
|
|
quickly. 'That is why the workingmen will have nothing to do with
|
|
the Church. The Church condones the frightful brutality and savagery
|
|
with which the capitalist class treats the working class.'
|
|
'The Church does not condone it,' the Bishop objected.
|
|
'The Church does not protest against it,' Ernest replied. 'And in so
|
|
far as the Church does not protest, it condones, for remember the
|
|
Church is supported by the capitalist class.'
|
|
'I had not looked at it in that light,' the Bishop said naively.
|
|
'You must be wrong. I know that there is much that is sad and wicked
|
|
in this world. I know that the Church has lost the- what you call
|
|
the proletariat.'*
|
|
|
|
* Proletariat: Derived originally from the Latin proletarii, the
|
|
name given in the census of Servius Tullius to those who were of value
|
|
to the state only as the rearers of offspring (proles); in other
|
|
words, they were of no importance either for wealth, or position, or
|
|
exceptional ability.
|
|
|
|
'You never had the proletariat,' Ernest cried. 'The proletariat
|
|
has grown up outside the Church and without the Church.'
|
|
'I do not follow you,' the Bishop said faintly.
|
|
'Then let me explain. With the introduction of machinery and the
|
|
factory system in the latter part of the eighteenth century, the great
|
|
mass of the working people was separated from the land. The old system
|
|
of labor was broken down. The working people were driven from their
|
|
villages and herded in factory towns. The mothers and children were
|
|
put to work at the new machines. Family life ceased. The conditions
|
|
were frightful. It is a tale of blood.'
|
|
'I know, I know,' Bishop Morehouse interrupted with an agonized
|
|
expression on his face. 'It was terrible. But it occurred a century
|
|
and a half ago.'
|
|
'And there, a century and a half ago, originated the modern
|
|
proletariat,' Ernest continued. 'And the Church ignored it. While a
|
|
slaughter-house was made of the nation by the capitalist, the Church
|
|
was dumb. It did not protest, as to-day it does not protest. As Austin
|
|
Lewis* says, speaking of that time, those to whom the command "Feed my
|
|
lambs" had been given, saw those lambs sold into slavery and worked to
|
|
death without a protest.*(2) The Church was dumb, then, and before I
|
|
go on I want you either flatly to agree with me or flatly to
|
|
disagree with me. Was the Church dumb then?'
|
|
|
|
* Candidate for Governor of California on the Socialist ticket in
|
|
the fall election of 1906 Christian Era. An Englishman by birth, a
|
|
writer of many books on political economy and philosophy, and one of
|
|
the Socialist leaders of the times.
|
|
*(2) There is no more horrible page in history than the treatment of
|
|
the child and women slaves in the English factories in the latter half
|
|
of the eighteenth century of the Christian Era. In such industrial
|
|
hells arose some of the proudest fortunes of that day.
|
|
|
|
Bishop Morehouse hesitated. Like Dr. Hammerfield, he was unused to
|
|
this fierce 'infighting,' as Ernest called it.
|
|
'The history of the eighteenth century is written,' Ernest prompted.
|
|
'If the Church was not dumb, it will be found not dumb in the books.'
|
|
'I am afraid the Church was dumb,' the Bishop confessed.
|
|
'And the Church is dumb to-day.'
|
|
'There I disagree,' said the Bishop.
|
|
Ernest paused, looked at him searchingly, and accepted the
|
|
challenge.
|
|
'All right,' he said. 'Let us see. In Chicago there are women who
|
|
toil all the week for ninety cents. Has the Church protested?'
|
|
'This is news to me,' was the answer. 'Ninety cents per week! It
|
|
is horrible!'
|
|
'Has the Church protested?' Ernest insisted.
|
|
'The Church does not know.' The Bishop was struggling hard.
|
|
'Yet the command to the Church was, "Feed my lambs,"' Ernest
|
|
sneered. And then, the next moment, 'Pardon my sneer, Bishop. But
|
|
can you wonder that we lose patience with you? When have you protested
|
|
to your capitalistic congregations at the working of children in the
|
|
Southern cotton mills?* Children, six and seven years of age,
|
|
working every night at twelve-hour shifts? They never see the
|
|
blessed sunshine. They die like flies. The dividends are paid out of
|
|
their blood. And out of the dividends magnificent churches are builded
|
|
in New England, wherein your kind preaches pleasant platitudes to
|
|
the sleek, full-bellied recipients of those dividends.'
|
|
|
|
* Everhard might have drawn a better illustration from the
|
|
Southern Church's outspoken defence of chattel slavery prior to what
|
|
is known as the 'War of the Rebellion.' Several such illustrations,
|
|
culled from the documents of the times, are here appended. In 1835
|
|
A.D., the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church resolved that:
|
|
'slavery is recognized in both the Old and the New Testaments, and
|
|
is not condemned by the authority of God.' The Charleston Baptist
|
|
Association issued the following, in an address, in 1835 A.D.: 'The
|
|
right of masters to dispose of the time of their slaves has been
|
|
distinctly recognized by the Creator of all things, who is surely at
|
|
liberty to vest the right of property over any object whomsoever He
|
|
pleases.' The Rev. E. D. Simon, Doctor of Divinity and professor in
|
|
the Randolph-Macon Methodist College of Virginia, wrote: 'Extracts
|
|
from Holy Writ unequivocally assert the right of property in slaves,
|
|
together with the usual incidents to that right. The right to buy
|
|
and sell is clearly stated. Upon the whole, then, whether we consult
|
|
the Jewish policy instituted by God himself, or the uniform opinion
|
|
and practice of mankind in all ages, or the injunctions of the New
|
|
Testament and the moral law, we are brought to the conclusion that
|
|
slavery is not immoral. Having established the point that the first
|
|
African slaves were legally brought into bondage, the right to
|
|
detain their children in bondage follows as an indispensable
|
|
consequence. Thus we see that the slavery that exists in America was
|
|
founded in right.'
|
|
It is not at all remarkable that this same note should have been
|
|
struck by the Church a generation or so later in relation to the
|
|
defence of capitalistic property. In the great museum at Asgard
|
|
there is a book entitled 'Essays in Application,' written by Henry van
|
|
Dyke. The book was published in 1905 of the Christian Era. From what
|
|
we can make out, Van Dyke must have been a churchman. The book is a
|
|
good example of what Everhard would have called bourgeois thinking.
|
|
Note the similarity between the utterance of the Charleston Baptist
|
|
Association quoted above, and the following utterance of Van Dyke
|
|
seventy years later: 'The Bible teaches that God owns the world. He
|
|
distributes to every man according to His own good pleasure,
|
|
conformably to general laws.'
|
|
|
|
'I did not know,' the Bishop murmured faintly. His face was pale,
|
|
and he seemed suffering from nausea.
|
|
'Then you have not protested?'
|
|
The Bishop shook his head.
|
|
'Then the Church is dumb to-day, as it was in the eighteenth
|
|
century?'
|
|
The Bishop was silent, and for once Ernest forbore to press the
|
|
point.
|
|
'And do not forget, whenever a churchman does protest that he is
|
|
discharged.'
|
|
'I hardly think that is fair,' was the objection.
|
|
'Will you protest?' Ernest demanded.
|
|
'Show me evils, such as you mention, in our own community, and I
|
|
will protest.'
|
|
'I'll show you,' Ernest said quietly. 'I am at your disposal. I will
|
|
take you on a journey through hell.'
|
|
'And I shall protest.' The Bishop straightened himself in his chair,
|
|
and over his gentle face spread the harshness of the warrior. 'The
|
|
Church shall not be dumb!'
|
|
'You will be discharged,' was the warning.
|
|
'I shall prove the contrary,' was the retort. 'I shall prove, if
|
|
what you say is so, that the Church has erred through ignorance.
|
|
And, furthermore, I hold that whatever is horrible in industrial
|
|
society is due to the ignorance of the capitalist class. It will
|
|
mend all that is wrong as soon as it receives the message. And this
|
|
message it shall be the duty of the Church to deliver.'
|
|
Ernest laughed. He laughed brutally, and I was driven to the
|
|
Bishop's defence.
|
|
'Remember,' I said, 'you see but one side of the shield. There is
|
|
much good in us, though you give us credit for no good at all.
|
|
Bishop Morehouse is right. The industrial wrong, terrible as you say
|
|
it is, is due to ignorance. The divisions of society have become too
|
|
widely separated.'
|
|
'The wild Indian is not so brutal and savage as the capitalist
|
|
class,' he answered; and in that moment I hated him.
|
|
'You do not know us,' I answered. 'We are not brutal and savage.'
|
|
'Prove it,' he challenged.
|
|
'How can I prove it... to you?' I was growing angry.
|
|
He shook his head. 'I do not ask you to prove it to me. I ask you to
|
|
prove it to yourself.'
|
|
'I know,' I said.
|
|
'You know nothing,' was his rude reply.
|
|
'There, there, children,' father said soothingly.
|
|
'I don't care-' I began indignantly, but Ernest interrupted.
|
|
'I understand you have money, or your father has, which is the
|
|
same thing- money invested in the Sierra Mills.'
|
|
'What has that to do with it?' I cried.
|
|
'Nothing much,' he began slowly, 'except that the gown you wear is
|
|
stained with blood. The food you eat is a bloody stew. The blood of
|
|
little children and of strong men is dripping from your very
|
|
roof-beams. I can close my eyes, now, and hear it drip, drop, drip,
|
|
drop, all about me.'
|
|
And suiting the action to the words, he closed his eyes and leaned
|
|
back in his chair. I burst into tears of mortification and hurt
|
|
vanity. I had never been so brutally treated in my life. Both the
|
|
Bishop and my father were embarrassed and perturbed. They tried to
|
|
lead the conversation away into easier channels; but Ernest opened his
|
|
eyes, looked at me, and waved them aside. His mouth was stern, and his
|
|
eyes too; and in the latter there was no glint of laughter. What he
|
|
was about to say, what terrible castigation he was going to give me, I
|
|
never knew; for at that moment a man, passing along the sidewalk,
|
|
stopped and glanced in at us. He was a large man, poorly dressed,
|
|
and on his back was a great load of rattan and bamboo stands,
|
|
chairs, and screens. He looked at the house as if debating whether
|
|
or not he should come in and try to sell some of his wares.
|
|
'That man's name is Jackson,' Ernest said.
|
|
'With that strong body of his he should be at work, and not
|
|
peddling,'* I answered curtly.
|
|
|
|
* In that day there were many thousands of these poor merchants
|
|
called pedlers. They carried their whole stock in trade from door to
|
|
door. It was a most wasteful expenditure of energy. Distribution was
|
|
as confused and irrational as the whole general system of society.
|
|
|
|
'Notice the sleeve of his left arm,' Ernest said gently.
|
|
I looked, and saw that the sleeve was empty.
|
|
'It was some of the blood from that arm that I heard dripping from
|
|
your roof-beams,' Ernest said with continued gentleness. 'He lost
|
|
his arm in the Sierra Mills, and like a broken-down horse you turned
|
|
him out on the highway to die. When I say "you," I mean the
|
|
superintendent and the officials that you and the other stockholders
|
|
pay to manage the mills for you. It was an accident. It was caused
|
|
by his trying to save the company a few dollars. The toothed drum of
|
|
the picker caught his arm. He might have let the small flint that he
|
|
saw in the teeth go through. It would have smashed out a double row of
|
|
spikes. But he reached for the flint, and his arm was picked and
|
|
clawed to shreds from the finger tips to the shoulder. It was at
|
|
night. The mills were working overtime. They paid a fat dividend
|
|
that quarter. Jackson had been working many hours, and his muscles had
|
|
lost their resiliency and snap. They made his movements a bit slow.
|
|
That was why the machine caught him. He had a wife and three
|
|
children.'
|
|
'And what did the company do for him?' I asked.
|
|
'Nothing. Oh, yes, they did do something. They successfully fought
|
|
the damage suit he brought when he came out of hospital. The company
|
|
employs very efficient lawyers, you know.'
|
|
'You have not told the whole story,' I said with conviction. 'Or
|
|
else you do not know the whole story. Maybe the man was insolent.'
|
|
'Insolent! Ha! ha!' His laughter was Mephistophelian. 'Great God!
|
|
Insolent! And with his arm chewed off! Nevertheless he was a meek
|
|
and lowly servant, and there is no record of his having been
|
|
insolent.'
|
|
'But the courts,' I urged. 'The case would not have been decided
|
|
against him had there been no more to the affair than you have
|
|
mentioned.'
|
|
'Colonel Ingram is leading counsel for the company. He is a shrewd
|
|
lawyer.' Ernest looked at me intently for a moment, then went on.
|
|
'I'll tell you what you do, Miss Cunningham. You investigate Jackson's
|
|
case.'
|
|
'I had already determined to,' I said coldly.
|
|
'All right,' he beamed good-naturedly, 'and I'll tell you where to
|
|
find him. But I tremble for you when I think of all you are to prove
|
|
by Jackson's arm.'
|
|
And so it came about that both the Bishop and I accepted Ernest's
|
|
challenges. They went away together, leaving me smarting with a sense
|
|
of injustice that had been done me and my class. The man was a beast.
|
|
I hated him, then, and consoled myself with the thought that his
|
|
behavior was what was to be expected from a man of the working class.
|
|
CHAPTER THREE.
|
|
Jackson's Arm.
|
|
|
|
LITTLE DID I DREAM THE FATEFUL part Jackson's arm was to play in
|
|
my life. Jackson himself did not impress me when I hunted him out. I
|
|
found him in a crazy, ramshackle* house down near the bay on the
|
|
edge of the marsh. Pools of stagnant water stood around the house,
|
|
their surfaces covered with a green and putrid-looking scum, while the
|
|
stench that arose from them was intolerable.
|
|
|
|
* An adjective descriptive of ruined and dilapidated houses in which
|
|
great numbers of the working people found shelter in those days.
|
|
They invariably paid rent, and, considering the value of such
|
|
houses, enormous rent, to the landlords.
|
|
|
|
I found Jackson the meek and lowly man he had been described. He was
|
|
making some sort of rattan-work, and he toiled on stolidly while I
|
|
talked with him. But in spite of his meekness and lowliness, I fancied
|
|
I caught the first note of a nascent bitterness in him when he said:
|
|
'They might a-given me a job as watchman,* anyway.'
|
|
|
|
* In those days thievery was incredibly prevalent. Everybody stole
|
|
property from everybody else. The lords of society stole legally or
|
|
else legalized their stealing, while the poorer classes stole
|
|
illegally. Nothing was safe unless guarded. Enormous numbers of men
|
|
were employed as watchmen to protect property. The houses of the
|
|
well-to-do were a combination of safe deposit vault and fortress.
|
|
The appropriation of the personal belongings of others by our own
|
|
children of to-day is looked upon as a rudimentary survival of the
|
|
theft-characteristic that in those early times was universal.
|
|
|
|
I got little out of him. He struck me as stupid, and yet the
|
|
deftness with which he worked with his one hand seemed to belie his
|
|
stupidity. This suggested an idea to me.
|
|
'How did you happen to get your arm caught in the machine?' I asked.
|
|
He looked at me in a slow and pondering way, and shook his head.
|
|
'I don't know. It just happened.'
|
|
'Carelessness?' I prompted.
|
|
'No,' he answered, 'I ain't for callin' it that. I was workin'
|
|
overtime, an' I guess I was tired out some. I worked seventeen years
|
|
in them mills, an' I've took notice that most of the accidents happens
|
|
just before whistle-blow.* I'm willin' to bet that more accidents
|
|
happens in the hour before whistle-blow than in all the rest of the
|
|
day. A man ain't so quick after workin' steady for hours. I've seen
|
|
too many of 'em cut up an' gouged an' chawed not to know.'
|
|
|
|
* The laborers were called to work and dismissed by savage,
|
|
screaming, nerve-racking steam-whistles.
|
|
|
|
'Many of them?' I queried.
|
|
'Hundreds an' hundreds, an' children, too.'
|
|
With the exception of the terrible details, Jackson's story of his
|
|
accident was the same as that I had already heard. When I asked him if
|
|
he had broken some rule of working the machinery, he shook his head.
|
|
'I chucked off the belt with my right hand,' he said, 'an' made a
|
|
reach for the flint with my left. I didn't stop to see if the belt was
|
|
off. I thought my right hand had done it- only it didn't. I reached
|
|
quick, and the belt wasn't all the way off. And then my arm was chewed
|
|
off.'
|
|
'It must have been painful,' I said sympathetically.
|
|
'The crunchin' of the bones wasn't nice,' was his answer.
|
|
His mind was rather hazy concerning the damage suit. Only one
|
|
thing was clear to him, and that was that he had not got any
|
|
damages. He had a feeling that the testimony of the foremen and the
|
|
superintendent had brought about the adverse decision of the court.
|
|
Their testimony, as he put it, 'wasn't what it ought to have ben.' And
|
|
to them I resolved to go.
|
|
One thing was plain, Jackson's situation was wretched. His wife
|
|
was in ill health, and he was unable to earn, by his rattan-work and
|
|
peddling, sufficient food for the family. He was back in his rent, and
|
|
the oldest boy, a lad of eleven, had started to work in the mills.
|
|
'They might a-given me that watchman's job,' were his last words
|
|
as I went away.
|
|
By the time I had seen the lawyer who had handled Jackson's case,
|
|
and the two foremen and the superintendent at the mills who had
|
|
testified, I began to feel that there was something after all in
|
|
Ernest's contention.
|
|
He was a weak and inefficient-looking man, the lawyer, and at
|
|
sight of him I did not wonder that Jackson's case had been lost. My
|
|
first thought was that it had served Jackson right for getting such
|
|
a lawyer. But the next moment two of Ernest's statements came flashing
|
|
into my consciousness: 'The company employs very efficient lawyers'
|
|
and 'Colonel Ingram is a shrewd lawyer.' I did some rapid thinking. It
|
|
dawned upon me that of course the company could afford finer legal
|
|
talent than could a workingman like Jackson. But this was merely a
|
|
minor detail. There was some very good reason, I was sure, why
|
|
Jackson's case had gone against him.
|
|
'Why did you lose the case?' I asked.
|
|
The lawyer was perplexed and worried for a moment, and I found it in
|
|
my heart to pity the wretched little creature. Then he began to whine.
|
|
I do believe his whine was congenital. He was a man beaten at birth.
|
|
He whined about the testimony. The witnesses had given only the
|
|
evidence that helped the other side. Not one word could he get out
|
|
of them that would have helped Jackson. They knew which side their
|
|
bread was buttered on. Jackson was a fool. He had been brow-beaten and
|
|
confused by Colonel Ingram. Colonel Ingram was brilliant at
|
|
cross-examination. He had made Jackson answer damaging questions.
|
|
'How could his answers be damaging if he had the right on his side?'
|
|
I demanded.
|
|
'What's right got to do with it?' he demanded back. 'You see all
|
|
those books.' He moved his hand over the array of volumes on the walls
|
|
of his tiny office. 'All my reading and studying of them has taught me
|
|
that law is one thing and right is another thing. Ask any lawyer.
|
|
You go to Sunday-school to learn what is right. But you go to those
|
|
books to learn... law.'
|
|
'Do you mean to tell me that Jackson had the right on his side and
|
|
yet was beaten?' I queried tentatively. 'Do you mean to tell me that
|
|
there is no justice in Judge Caldwell's court?'
|
|
The little lawyer glared at me a moment, and then the belligerence
|
|
faded out of his face.
|
|
'I hadn't a fair chance,' he began whining again. 'They made a
|
|
fool out of Jackson and out of me, too. What chance had I? Colonel
|
|
Ingram is a great lawyer. If he wasn't great, would he have charge
|
|
of the law business of the Sierra Mills, of the Erston Land Syndicate,
|
|
of the Berkeley Consolidated, of the Oakland, San Leandro, and
|
|
Pleasanton Electric? He's a corporation lawyer, and corporation
|
|
lawyers are not paid for being fools.* What do you think the Sierra
|
|
Mills alone give him twenty thousand dollars a year for? Because
|
|
he's worth twenty thousand dollars a year to them, that's what for.
|
|
I'm not worth that much. If I was, I wouldn't be on the outside,
|
|
starving and taking cases like Jackson's. What do you think I'd have
|
|
got if I'd won Jackson's case?'
|
|
'You'd have robbed him, most probably,' I answered.
|
|
'Of course I would,' he cried angrily. 'I've got to live, haven't
|
|
I?'*(2)
|
|
|
|
* The function of the corporation lawyer was to serve, by corrupt
|
|
methods, the money-grabbing propensities of the corporations. It is on
|
|
record that Theodore Roosevelt, at that time President of the United
|
|
States, said in 1905 A.D., in his address at Harvard Commencement: 'We
|
|
all know that, as things actually are, many of the most influential
|
|
and most highly remunerated members of the Bar in every centre of
|
|
wealth, make it their special task to work out bold and ingenious
|
|
schemes by which their wealthy clients, individual or corporate, can
|
|
evade the laws which were made to regulate, in the interests of the
|
|
public, the uses of great wealth.'
|
|
*(2) A typical illustration of the internecine strife that permeated
|
|
all society. Men preyed upon one another like ravening wolves. The big
|
|
wolves ate the little wolves, and in the social pack Jackson was one
|
|
of the least of the little wolves.
|
|
|
|
'He has a wife and children,' I chided.
|
|
'So have I a wife and children,' he retorted. 'And there's not a
|
|
soul in this world except myself that cares whether they starve or
|
|
not.'
|
|
His face suddenly softened, and he opened his watch and showed me
|
|
a small photograph of a woman and two little girls pasted inside the
|
|
case.
|
|
'There they are. Look at them. We've had a hard time, a hard time. I
|
|
had hoped to send them away to the country if I'd won Jackson's
|
|
case. They're not healthy here, but I can't afford to send them away.'
|
|
When I started to leave, he dropped back into his whine.
|
|
'I hadn't the ghost of a chance. Colonel Ingram and Judge Caldwell
|
|
are pretty friendly. I'm not saying that if I'd got the right kind
|
|
of testimony out of their witnesses on cross-examination, that
|
|
friendship would have decided the case. And yet I must say that
|
|
Judge Caldwell did a whole lot to prevent my getting that very
|
|
testimony. Why, Judge Caldwell and Colonel Ingram belong to the same
|
|
lodge and the same club. They live in the same neighborhood- one I
|
|
can't afford. And their wives are always in and out of each other's
|
|
houses. They're always having whist parties and such things back and
|
|
forth.'
|
|
'And yet you think Jackson had the right of it?' I asked, pausing
|
|
for the moment on the threshold.
|
|
'I don't think; I know it,' was his answer. 'And at first I
|
|
thought he had some show, too. But I didn't tell my wife. I didn't
|
|
want to disappoint her. She had her heart set on a trip to the country
|
|
hard enough as it was.'
|
|
'Why did you not call attention to the fact that Jackson was
|
|
trying to save the machinery from being injured?' I asked Peter
|
|
Donnelly, one of the foremen who had testified at the trial.
|
|
He pondered a long time before replying. Then he cast an anxious
|
|
look about him and said:
|
|
'Because I've a good wife an' three of the sweetest children ye ever
|
|
laid eyes on, that's why.'
|
|
'I do not understand,' I said.
|
|
'In other words, because it wouldn't a-ben healthy,' he answered.
|
|
'You mean-' I began.
|
|
But he interrupted passionately.
|
|
'I mean what I said. It's long years I've worked in the mills. I
|
|
began as a little lad on the spindles. I worked up ever since. It's by
|
|
hard work I got to my present exalted position. I'm a foreman, if
|
|
you please. An' I doubt me if there's a man in the mills that'd put
|
|
out a hand to drag me from drownin'. I used to belong to the union.
|
|
But I've stayed by the company through two strikes. They called me
|
|
"scab." There's not a man among 'em to-day to take a drink with me
|
|
if I asked him. D'ye see the scars on me head where I was struck
|
|
with flying bricks? There ain't a child at the spindles but what would
|
|
curse me name. Me only friend is the company. It's not me duty, but me
|
|
bread an' butter an' the life of me children to stand by the mills.
|
|
That's why.'
|
|
'Was Jackson to blame?' I asked.
|
|
'He should a-got the damages. He was a good worker an' never made
|
|
trouble.'
|
|
'Then you were not at liberty to tell the whole truth, as you had
|
|
sworn to do?'
|
|
He shook his head.
|
|
'The truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth?' I said
|
|
solemnly.
|
|
Again his face became impassioned, and he lifted it, not to me,
|
|
but to heaven.
|
|
'I'd let me soul an' body burn in everlastin' hell for them children
|
|
of mine,' was his answer.
|
|
Henry Dallas, the superintendent, was a vulpine-faced creature who
|
|
regarded me insolently and refused to talk. Not a word could I get
|
|
from him concerning the trial and his testimony. But with the other
|
|
foreman I had better luck. James Smith was a hard-faced man, and my
|
|
heart sank as I encountered him. He, too, gave me the impression
|
|
that he was not a free agent, as we talked I began to see that he
|
|
was mentally superior to the average of his kind. He agreed with Peter
|
|
Donnelly that Jackson should have got damages, and he went farther and
|
|
called the action heartless and cold-blooded that had turned the
|
|
worker adrift after he had been made helpless by the accident. Also,
|
|
he explained that there were many accidents in the mills, and that the
|
|
company's policy was to fight to the bitter end all consequent
|
|
damage suits.
|
|
'It means hundreds of thousands a year to the stockholders,' he
|
|
said; and as he spoke I remembered the last dividend that had been
|
|
paid my father, and the pretty gown for me and the books for him
|
|
that had been bought out of that dividend. I remembered Ernest's
|
|
charge that my gown was stained with blood, and my flesh began to
|
|
crawl underneath my garments.
|
|
'When you testified at the trial, you didn't point out that
|
|
Jackson received his accident through trying to save the machinery
|
|
from damage?' I said.
|
|
'No, I did not,' was the answer, and his mouth set bitterly. 'I
|
|
testified to the effect that Jackson injured himself by neglect and
|
|
carelessness, and that the company was not in any way to blame or
|
|
liable.'
|
|
'Was it carelessness?' I asked.
|
|
'Call it that, or anything you want to call it. The fact is, a man
|
|
gets tired after he's been working for hours.'
|
|
I was becoming interested in the man. He certainly was of a superior
|
|
kind.
|
|
'You are better educated than most workingmen,' I said.
|
|
'I went through high school,' he replied. 'I worked my way through
|
|
doing janitor-work. I wanted to go through the university. But my
|
|
father died, and I came to work in the mills.
|
|
'I wanted to become a naturalist,' he explained shyly, as though
|
|
confessing a weakness. 'I love animals. But I came to work in the
|
|
mills. When I was promoted to foreman I got married, then the family
|
|
came, and... well, I wasn't my own boss any more.'
|
|
'What do you mean by that?' I asked.
|
|
'I was explaining why I testified at the trial the way I did- why
|
|
I followed instructions.'
|
|
'Whose instructions?'
|
|
'Colonel Ingram. He outlined the evidence I was to give.'
|
|
'And it lost Jackson's case for him.'
|
|
He nodded, and the blood began to rise darkly in his face.
|
|
'And Jackson had a wife and two children dependent on him.'
|
|
'I know,' he said quietly, though his face was growing darker.
|
|
'Tell me,' I went on, 'was it easy to make yourself over from what
|
|
you were, say in high school, to the man you must have become to do
|
|
such a thing at the trial?'
|
|
The suddenness of his outburst startled and frightened me. He
|
|
ripped* out a savage oath, and clenched his fist as though about to
|
|
strike me.
|
|
|
|
* It is interesting to note the virilities of language that were
|
|
common speech in that day, as indicative of the life, 'red of claw and
|
|
fang,' that was then lived. Reference is here made, of course, not
|
|
to the oath of Smith, but to the verb ripped used by Avis Everhard.
|
|
|
|
'I beg your pardon,' he said the next moment. 'No, it was not
|
|
easy. And now I guess you can go away. You've got all you wanted out
|
|
of me. But let me tell you this before you go. It won't do you any
|
|
good to repeat anything I've said. I'll deny it, and there are no
|
|
witnesses. I'll deny every word of it; and if I have to, I'll do it
|
|
under oath on the witness stand.'
|
|
After my interview with Smith I went to my father's office in the
|
|
Chemistry Building and there encountered Ernest. It was quite
|
|
unexpected, but he met me with his bold eyes and firm hand-clasp,
|
|
and with that curious blend of his awkwardness and ease. It was as
|
|
though our last stormy meeting was forgotten; but I was not in the
|
|
mood to have it forgotten.
|
|
'I have been looking up Jackson's case,' I said abruptly.
|
|
He was all interested attention, and waited for me to go on,
|
|
though I could see in his eyes the certitude that my convictions had
|
|
been shaken.
|
|
'He seems to have been badly treated,' I confessed. 'I- I- think
|
|
some of his blood is dripping from our roof-beams.'
|
|
'Of course,' he answered. 'If Jackson and all his fellows were
|
|
treated mercifully, the dividends would not be so large.'
|
|
'I shall never be able to take pleasure in pretty gowns again,' I
|
|
added.
|
|
I felt humble and contrite, and was aware of a sweet feeling that
|
|
Ernest was a sort of father confessor. Then, as ever after, his
|
|
strength appealed to me. It seemed to radiate a promise of peace and
|
|
protection.
|
|
'Nor will you be able to take pleasure in sackcloth,' he said
|
|
gravely. 'There are the jute mills, you know, and the same thing
|
|
goes on there. It goes on everywhere. Our boasted civilization is
|
|
based upon blood, soaked in blood, and neither you nor I nor any of us
|
|
can escape the scarlet stain. The men you talked with- who were they?'
|
|
I told him all that had taken place.
|
|
'And not one of them was a free agent,' he said. 'They were all tied
|
|
to the merciless industrial machine. And the pathos of it and the
|
|
tragedy is that they are tied by their heartstrings. Their children-
|
|
always the young life that it is their instinct to protect. This
|
|
instinct is stronger than any ethic they possess. My father! He
|
|
lied, he stole, he did all sorts of dishonorable things to put bread
|
|
into my mouth and into the mouths of my brothers and sisters. He was a
|
|
slave to the industrial machine, and it stamped his life out, worked
|
|
him to death.'
|
|
'But you,' I interjected. 'You are surely a free agent.'
|
|
'Not wholly,' he replied. 'I am not tied by my heartstrings. I am
|
|
often thankful that I have no children, and I dearly love children.
|
|
Yet if I married I should not dare to have any.'
|
|
'That surely is bad doctrine,' I cried.
|
|
'I know it is,' he said sadly. 'But it is expedient doctrine. I am a
|
|
revolutionist, and it is a perilous vocation.'
|
|
I laughed incredulously.
|
|
'If I tried to enter your father's house at night to steal his
|
|
dividends from the Sierra Mills, what would he do?'
|
|
'He sleeps with a revolver on the stand by the bed,' I answered. 'He
|
|
would most probably shoot you.'
|
|
'And if I and a few others should lead a million and a half of
|
|
men* into the houses of all the well-to-do, there would be a great
|
|
deal of shooting, wouldn't there?'
|
|
|
|
* This reference is to the socialist vote cast in the United
|
|
States in 1910. The rise of this vote clearly indicates the swift
|
|
growth of the party of revolution. Its voting strength in the United
|
|
States in 1888 was 2068; in 1902, 127,713; in 1904, 435,040; in
|
|
1908, 1,108,427; and in 1910, 1,688,211.
|
|
|
|
'Yes, but you are not doing that,' I objected.
|
|
'It is precisely what I am doing. And we intend to take, not the
|
|
mere wealth in the houses, but all the sources of that wealth, all the
|
|
mines, and railroads, and factories, and banks, and stores. That is
|
|
the revolution. It is truly perilous. There will be more shooting, I
|
|
am afraid, than even I dream of. But as I was saying, no one to-day is
|
|
a free agent. We are all caught up in the wheels and cogs of the
|
|
industrial machine. You found that you were, and that the men you
|
|
talked with were. Talk with more of them. Go and see Colonel Ingram.
|
|
Look up the reporters that kept Jackson's case out of the papers,
|
|
and the editors that run the papers. You will find them all slaves
|
|
of the machine.'
|
|
A little later in our conversation I asked him a simple little
|
|
question about the liability of workingmen to accidents, and
|
|
received a statistical lecture in return.
|
|
'It is all in the books,' he said. 'The figures have been
|
|
gathered, and it has been proved conclusively that accidents rarely
|
|
occur in the first hours of the morning work, but that they increase
|
|
rapidly in the succeeding hours as the workers grow tired and slower
|
|
in both their muscular and mental processes.
|
|
'Why, do you know that your father has three times as many chances
|
|
for safety of life and limb than has a working-man? He has. The
|
|
insurance* companies know. They will charge him four dollars and
|
|
twenty cents a year on a thousand-dollar accident policy, and for
|
|
the same policy they will charge a laborer fifteen dollars.'
|
|
|
|
* In the terrible wolf-struggle of those centuries, no man was
|
|
permanently safe, no matter how much wealth he amassed. Out of fear
|
|
for the welfare of their families, men devised the scheme of
|
|
insurance. To us, in this intelligent age, such a device is
|
|
laughably absurd and primitive. But in that age insurance was a very
|
|
serious matter. The amusing part of it is that the funds of the
|
|
insurance companies were frequently plundered and wasted by the very
|
|
officials who were intrusted with the management of them.
|
|
|
|
'And you?' I asked; and in the moment of asking I was aware of a
|
|
solicitude that was something more than slight.
|
|
'Oh, as a revolutionist, I have about eight chances to the
|
|
workingman's one of being injured or killed,' he answered
|
|
carelessly. 'The insurance companies charge the highly trained
|
|
chemists that handle explosives eight times what they charge the
|
|
workingmen. I don't think they'd insure me at all. Why did you ask?'
|
|
My eyes fluttered, and I could feel the blood warm in my face. It
|
|
was not that he had caught me in my solicitude, but that I had
|
|
caught myself, and in his presence.
|
|
Just then my father came in and began making preparations to
|
|
depart with me. Ernest returned some books he had borrowed, and went
|
|
away first. But just as he was going, he turned and said:
|
|
'Oh, by the way, while you are ruining your own peace of mind and
|
|
I am ruining the Bishop's, you'd better look up Mrs. Wickson and
|
|
Mrs. Pertonwaithe. Their husbands, you know, are the two principal
|
|
stockholders in the Mills. Like all the rest of humanity, those two
|
|
women are tied to the machine, but they are so tied that they sit on
|
|
top of it.'
|
|
CHAPTER FOUR.
|
|
Slaves of the Machine.
|
|
|
|
THE MORE I THOUGHT OF JACKSON'S arm, the more shaken I was. I was
|
|
confronted by the concrete. For the first time I was seeing life. My
|
|
university life, and study and culture, had not been real. I had
|
|
learned nothing but theories of life and society that looked all
|
|
very well on the printed page, but now I had seen life itself.
|
|
Jackson's arm was a fact of life. 'The fact, man, the irrefragable
|
|
fact!' of Ernest's was ringing in my consciousness.
|
|
It seemed monstrous, impossible, that our whole society was based
|
|
upon blood. And yet there was Jackson. I could not get away from
|
|
him. Constantly my thought swung back to him as the compass to the
|
|
Pole. He had been monstrously treated. His blood had not been paid for
|
|
in order that a larger dividend might be paid. And I knew a score of
|
|
happy complacent families that had received those dividends and by
|
|
that much had profited by Jackson's blood. If one man could be so
|
|
monstrously treated and society move on its way unheeding, might not
|
|
many men be so monstrously treated? I remembered Ernest's women of
|
|
Chicago who toiled for ninety cents a week, and the child slaves of
|
|
the Southern cotton mills he had described. And I could see their
|
|
wan white hands, from which the blood had been pressed, at work upon
|
|
the cloth out of which had been made my gown. And then I thought of
|
|
the Sierra Mills and the dividends that had been paid, and I saw the
|
|
blood of Jackson upon my gown as well. Jackson I could not escape.
|
|
Always my meditations led me back to him.
|
|
Down in the depths of me I had a feeling that I stood on the edge of
|
|
a precipice. It was as though I were about to see a new and awful
|
|
revelation of life. And not I alone. My whole world was turning
|
|
over. There was my father. I could see the effect Ernest was beginning
|
|
to have on him. And then there was the Bishop. When I had last seen
|
|
him he had looked a sick man. He was at high nervous tension, and in
|
|
his eyes there was unspeakable horror. From the little I learned I
|
|
knew that Ernest had been keeping his promise of taking him through
|
|
hell. But what scenes of hell the Bishop's eyes had seen, I knew
|
|
not, for he seemed too stunned to speak about them.
|
|
Once, the feeling strong upon me that my little world and all the
|
|
world was turning over, I thought of Ernest as the cause of it; and
|
|
also I thought, 'We were so happy and peaceful before he came!' And
|
|
the next moment I was aware that the thought was a treason against
|
|
truth, and Ernest rose before me transfigured, the apostle of truth,
|
|
with shining brows and the fearlessness of one of God's own angels,
|
|
battling for the truth and the right, and battling for the succor of
|
|
the poor and lonely and oppressed. And then there arose before me
|
|
another figure, the Christ! He, too, had taken the part of the lowly
|
|
and oppressed, and against all the established power of priest and
|
|
pharisee. And I remembered his end upon the cross, and my heart
|
|
contracted with a pang as I thought of Ernest. Was he, too, destined
|
|
for a cross?- he, with his clarion call and war-noted voice, and all
|
|
the fine man's vigor of him!
|
|
And in that moment I knew that I loved him, and that I was melting
|
|
with desire to comfort him. I thought of his life. A sordid, harsh,
|
|
and meagre life it must have been. And I thought of his father, who
|
|
had lied and stolen for him and been worked to death. And he himself
|
|
had gone into the mills when he was ten! All my heart seemed
|
|
bursting with desire to fold my arms around him, and to rest his
|
|
head on my breast- his head that must be weary with so many
|
|
thoughts; and to give him rest- just rest- and easement and
|
|
forgetfulness for a tender space.
|
|
I met Colonel Ingram at a church reception. Him I knew well and
|
|
had known well for many years. I trapped him behind large palms and
|
|
rubber plants, though he did not know he was trapped. He met me with
|
|
the conventional gayety and gallantry. He was ever a graceful man,
|
|
diplomatic, tactful, and considerate. And as for appearance, he was
|
|
the most distinguished-looking man in our society. Beside him even the
|
|
venerable head of the university looked tawdry and small.
|
|
And yet I found Colonel Ingram situated the same as the unlettered
|
|
mechanics. He was not a free agent. He, too, was bound upon the wheel.
|
|
I shall never forget the change in him when I mentioned Jackson's
|
|
case. His smiling good nature vanished like a ghost. A sudden,
|
|
frightful expression distorted his well-bred face. I felt the same
|
|
alarm that I had felt when James Smith broke out. But Colonel Ingram
|
|
did not curse. That was the slight difference that was left between
|
|
the workingman and him. He was famed as a wit, but he had no wit
|
|
now. And, unconsciously, this way and that he glanced for avenues of
|
|
escape. But he was trapped amid the palms and rubber trees.
|
|
Oh, he was sick of the sound of Jackson's name. Why had I brought
|
|
the matter up? He did not relish my joke. It was poor taste on my
|
|
part, and very inconsiderate. Did I not know that in his profession
|
|
personal feelings did not count? He left his personal feelings at home
|
|
when he went down to the office. At the office he had only
|
|
professional feelings.
|
|
'Should Jackson have received damages?' I asked.
|
|
'Certainly,' he answered. 'That is, personally, I have a feeling
|
|
that he should. But that has nothing to do with the legal aspects of
|
|
the case.'
|
|
He was getting his scattered wits slightly in hand.
|
|
'Tell me, has right anything to do with the law?' I asked.
|
|
'You have used the wrong initial consonant,' he smiled in answer.
|
|
'Might?' I queried; and he nodded his head. 'And yet we are supposed
|
|
to get justice by means of the law?'
|
|
'That is the paradox of it,' he countered. 'We do get justice.'
|
|
'You are speaking professionally now, are you not?' I asked.
|
|
Colonel Ingram blushed, actually blushed, and again he looked
|
|
anxiously about him for a way of escape. But I blocked his path and
|
|
did not offer to move.
|
|
'Tell me,' I said, 'when one surrenders his personal feelings to his
|
|
professional feelings, may not the action be defined as a sort of
|
|
spiritual mayhem?'
|
|
I did not get an answer. Colonel Ingram had ingloriously bolted,
|
|
overturning a palm in his flight.
|
|
Next I tried the newspapers. I wrote a quiet, restrained,
|
|
dispassionate account of Jackson's case. I made no charges against the
|
|
men with whom I had talked, nor, for that matter, did I even mention
|
|
them. I gave the actual facts of the case, the long years Jackson
|
|
had worked in the mills, his effort to save the machinery from
|
|
damage and the consequent accident, and his own present wretched and
|
|
starving condition. The three local newspapers rejected my
|
|
communication, likewise did the two weeklies.
|
|
I got hold of Percy Layton. He was a graduate of the university, had
|
|
gone in for journalism, and was then serving his apprenticeship as
|
|
reporter on the most influential of the three newspapers. He smiled
|
|
when I asked him the reason the newspapers suppressed all mention of
|
|
Jackson or his case.
|
|
'Editorial policy,' he said. 'We have nothing to do with that.
|
|
It's up to the editors.'
|
|
'But why is it policy?' I asked.
|
|
'We're all solid with the corporations,' he answered. 'If you paid
|
|
advertising rates, you couldn't get any such matter into the papers. A
|
|
man who tried to smuggle it in would lose his job. You couldn't get it
|
|
in if you paid ten times the regular advertising rates.'
|
|
'How about your own policy?' I questioned. 'It would seem your
|
|
function is to twist truth at the command of your employers, who, in
|
|
turn, obey the behests of the corporations.'
|
|
'I haven't anything to do with that.' He looked uncomfortable for
|
|
the moment, then brightened as he saw his way out. 'I, myself, do
|
|
not write untruthful things. I keep square all right with my own
|
|
conscience. Of course, there's lots that's repugnant in the course
|
|
of the day's work. But then, you see, that's all part of the day's
|
|
work,' he wound up boyishly.
|
|
'Yet you expect to sit at an editor's desk some day and conduct a
|
|
policy.'
|
|
'I'll be case-hardened by that time,' was his reply.
|
|
'Since you are not yet case-hardened, tell me what you think right
|
|
now about the general editorial policy.'
|
|
'I don't think,' he answered quickly. 'One can't kick over the ropes
|
|
if he's going to succeed in journalism. I've learned that much, at any
|
|
rate.'
|
|
And he nodded his young head sagely.
|
|
'But the right?' I persisted.
|
|
'You don't understand the game. Of course it's all right, because it
|
|
comes out all right, don't you see?'
|
|
'Delightfully vague,' I murmured; but my heart was aching for the
|
|
youth of him, and I felt that I must either scream or burst into
|
|
tears.
|
|
I was beginning to see through the appearances of the society in
|
|
which I had always lived, and to find the frightful realities that
|
|
were beneath. There seemed a tacit conspiracy against Jackson, and I
|
|
was aware of a thrill of sympathy for the whining lawyer who had
|
|
ingloriously fought his case. But this tacit conspiracy grew large.
|
|
Not alone was it aimed against Jackson. It was aimed against every
|
|
workingman who was maimed in the mills. And if against every man in
|
|
the mills, why not against every man in all the other mills and
|
|
factories? In fact, was it not true of all the industries?
|
|
And if this was so, then society was a lie. I shrank back from my
|
|
own conclusions. It was too terrible and awful to be true. But there
|
|
was Jackson, and Jackson's arm, and the blood that stained my gown and
|
|
dripped from my own roof-beams. And there were many Jacksons- hundreds
|
|
of them in the mills alone, as Jackson himself had said. Jackson I
|
|
could not escape.
|
|
I saw Mr. Wickson and Mr. Pertonwaithe, the two men who held most of
|
|
the stock in the Sierra Mills. But I could not shake them as I had
|
|
shaken the mechanics in their employ. I discovered that they had an
|
|
ethic superior to that of the rest of society. It was what I may
|
|
call the aristocratic ethic or the master ethic.* They talked in large
|
|
ways of policy, and they identified policy and right. And to me they
|
|
talked in fatherly ways, patronizing my youth and inexperience. They
|
|
were the most hopeless of all I had encountered in my quest. They
|
|
believed absolutely that their conduct was right. There was no
|
|
question about it, no discussion. They were convinced that they were
|
|
the saviours of society, and that it was they who made happiness for
|
|
the many. And they drew pathetic pictures of what would be the
|
|
sufferings of the working class were it not for the employment that
|
|
they, and they alone, by their wisdom, provided for it.
|
|
|
|
* Before Avis Everhard was born, John Stuart Mill, in his essay,
|
|
On Liberty, wrote: 'Wherever there is an ascendant class, a large
|
|
portion of the morality emanates from its class interests and its
|
|
class feelings of superiority.'
|
|
|
|
Fresh from these two masters, I met Ernest and related my
|
|
experience. He looked at me with a pleased expression, and said:
|
|
'Really, this is fine. You are beginning to dig truth for
|
|
yourself. It is your own empirical generalization, and it is
|
|
correct. No man in the industrial machine is a free-will agent, except
|
|
the large capitalist, and he isn't, if you'll pardon the Irishism.*
|
|
You see, the masters are quite sure that they are right in what they
|
|
are doing. That is the crowning absurdity of the whole situation. They
|
|
are so tied by their human nature that they can't do a thing unless
|
|
they think it is right. They must have a sanction for their acts.
|
|
|
|
* Verbal contradictions, called bulls, were long an amiable weakness
|
|
of the ancient Irish.
|
|
|
|
'When they want to do a thing, in business of course, they must wait
|
|
till there arises in their brains, somehow, a religious, or ethical,
|
|
or scientific, or philosophic, concept that the thing is right. And
|
|
then they go ahead and do it, unwitting that one of the weaknesses
|
|
of the human mind is that the wish is parent to the thought. No matter
|
|
what they want to do, the sanction always comes. They are
|
|
superficial casuists. They are Jesuitical. They even see their way
|
|
to doing wrong that right may come of it. One of the pleasant and
|
|
axiomatic fictions they have created is that they are superior to
|
|
the rest of mankind in wisdom and efficiency. Therefrom comes their
|
|
sanction to manage the bread and butter of the rest of mankind. They
|
|
have even resurrected the theory of the divine right of kings-
|
|
commercial kings in their case.*
|
|
|
|
* The newspapers, in 1902 of that era, credited the president of the
|
|
Anthracite Coal Trust, George F. Baer, with the enunciation of the
|
|
following principle: 'The rights and interests of the laboring man
|
|
will be protected by the Christian men to whom God in His infinite
|
|
wisdom has given the property interests of the country.'
|
|
|
|
'The weakness in their position lies in that they are merely
|
|
business men. They are not philosophers. They are not biologists nor
|
|
sociologists. If they were, of course all would be well. A business
|
|
man who was also a biologist and a sociologist would know,
|
|
approximately, the right thing to do for humanity. But, outside the
|
|
realm of business, these men are stupid. They know only business. They
|
|
do not know mankind nor society, and yet they set themselves up as
|
|
arbiters of the fates of the hungry millions and all the other
|
|
millions thrown in. History, some day, will have an excruciating laugh
|
|
at their expense.'
|
|
I was not surprised when I had my talk out with Mrs. Wickson and
|
|
Mrs. Pertonwaithe. They were society women.* Their homes were palaces.
|
|
They had many homes scattered over the country, in the mountains, on
|
|
lakes, and by the sea. They were tended by armies of servants, and
|
|
their social activities were bewildering. They patronized the
|
|
university and the churches, and the pastors especially bowed at their
|
|
knees in meek subservience.*(2) They were powers, these two women,
|
|
what of the money that was theirs. The power of subsidization of
|
|
thought was theirs to a remarkable degree, as I was soon to learn
|
|
under Ernest's tuition.
|
|
|
|
* Society is here used in a restricted sense, a common usage of
|
|
the times to denote the gilded drones that did no labor, but only
|
|
glutted themselves at the honey-vats of the workers. Neither the
|
|
business men nor the laborers had time or opportunity for society.
|
|
Society was the creation of the idle rich who toiled not and who in
|
|
this way played.
|
|
*(2) 'Bring on your tainted money,' was the expressed sentiment of
|
|
the Church during this period.
|
|
|
|
They aped their husbands, and talked in the same large ways about
|
|
policy, and the duties and responsibilities of the rich. They were
|
|
swayed by the same ethic that dominated their husbands- the ethic of
|
|
their class; and they uttered glib phrases that their own ears did not
|
|
understand.
|
|
Also, they grew irritated when I told them of the deplorable
|
|
condition of Jackson's family, and when I wondered that they had
|
|
made no voluntary provision for the man. I was told that they
|
|
thanked no one for instructing them in their social duties. When I
|
|
asked them flatly to assist Jackson, they as flatly refused. The
|
|
astounding thing about it was that they refused in almost
|
|
identically the same language, and this in face of the fact that I
|
|
interviewed them separately and that one did not know that I had
|
|
seen or was going to see the other. Their common reply was that they
|
|
were glad of the opportunity to make it perfectly plain that no
|
|
premium would ever be put on carelessness by them; nor would they,
|
|
by paying for accident, tempt the poor to hurt themselves in the
|
|
machinery.*
|
|
|
|
* In the files of the Outlook, a critical weekly of the period, in
|
|
the number dated August 18, 1906, is related the circumstance of a
|
|
workingman losing his arm, the details of which are quite similar to
|
|
those of Jackson's case as related by Avis Everhard.
|
|
|
|
And they were sincere, these two women. They were drunk with
|
|
conviction of the superiority of their class and of themselves. They
|
|
had a sanction, in their own class-ethic, for every act they
|
|
performed. As I drove away from Mrs. Pertonwaithe's great house, I
|
|
looked back at it, and I remembered Ernest's expression that they were
|
|
bound to the machine, but that they were so bound that they sat on top
|
|
of it.
|
|
CHAPTER FIVE.
|
|
The Philomaths.
|
|
|
|
ERNEST WAS OFTEN AT THE house. Nor was it my father, merely, nor the
|
|
controversial dinners, that drew him there. Even at that time I
|
|
flattered myself that I played some part in causing his visits, and it
|
|
was not long before I learned the correctness of my surmise. For never
|
|
was there such a lover as Ernest Everhard. His gaze and his hand-clasp
|
|
grew firmer and steadier, if that were possible; and the question that
|
|
had grown from the first in his eyes, grew only the more imperative.
|
|
My impression of him, the first time I saw him, had been
|
|
unfavorable. Then I had found myself attracted toward him. Next came
|
|
my repulsion, when he so savagely attacked my class and me. After
|
|
that, as I saw that he had not maligned my class, and that the harsh
|
|
and bitter things he said about it were justified, I had drawn
|
|
closer to him again. He became my oracle. For me he tore the sham from
|
|
the face of society and gave me glimpses of reality that were as
|
|
unpleasant as they were undeniably true.
|
|
As I have said, there was never such a lover as he. No girl could
|
|
live in a university town till she was twenty-four and not have love
|
|
experiences. I had been made love to by beardless sophomores and
|
|
gray professors, and by the athletes and the football giants. But
|
|
not one of them made love to me as Ernest did. His arms were around me
|
|
before I knew. His lips were on mine before I could protest or resist.
|
|
Before his earnestness conventional maiden dignity was ridiculous.
|
|
He swept me off my feet by the splendid invincible rush of him. He did
|
|
not propose. He put his arms around me and kissed me and took it for
|
|
granted that we should be married. There was no discussion about it.
|
|
The only discussion- and that arose afterward- was when we should be
|
|
married.
|
|
It was unprecedented. It was unreal. Yet, in accordance with
|
|
Ernest's test of truth, it worked. I trusted my life to it. And
|
|
fortunate was the trust. Yet during those first days of our love, fear
|
|
of the future came often to me when I thought of the violence and
|
|
impetuosity of his love-making. Yet such fears were groundless. No
|
|
woman was ever blessed with a gentler, tenderer husband. This
|
|
gentleness and violence on his part was a curious blend similar to the
|
|
one in his carriage of awkwardness and ease. That slight
|
|
awkwardness! He never got over it, and it was delicious. His
|
|
behavior in our drawing-room reminded me of a careful bull in a
|
|
china shop.*
|
|
|
|
* In those days it was still the custom to fill the living rooms
|
|
with bric-a-brac. They had not discovered simplicity of living. Such
|
|
rooms were museums, entailing endless labor to keep clean. The
|
|
dust-demon was the lord of the household. There were a myriad
|
|
devices for catching dust, and only a few devices for getting rid of
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
It was at this time that vanished my last doubt of the
|
|
completeness of my love for him (a subconscious doubt, at most). It
|
|
was at the Philomath Club- a wonderful night of battle, wherein Ernest
|
|
bearded the masters in their lair. Now the Philomath Club was the most
|
|
select on the Pacific Coast. It was the creation of Miss Brentwood, an
|
|
enormously wealthy old maid; and it was her husband, and family, and
|
|
toy. Its members were the wealthiest in the community, and the
|
|
strongest-minded of the wealthy, with, of course, a sprinkling of
|
|
scholars to give it intellectual tone.
|
|
The Philomath had no club house. It was not that kind of a club.
|
|
Once a month its members gathered at some one of their private
|
|
houses to listen to a lecture. The lecturers were usually, though
|
|
not always, hired. If a chemist in New York made a new discovery in
|
|
say radium, all his expenses across the continent were paid, and as
|
|
well he received a princely fee for his time. The same with a
|
|
returning explorer from the polar regions, or the latest literary or
|
|
artistic success. No visitors were allowed, while it was the
|
|
Philomath's policy to permit none of its discussions to get into the
|
|
papers. Thus great statesmen- and there had been such occasions-
|
|
were able fully to speak their minds.
|
|
I spread before me a wrinkled letter, written to me by Ernest twenty
|
|
years ago, and from it I copy the following:
|
|
'Your father is a member of the Philomath, so you are able to
|
|
come. Therefore come next Tuesday night. I promise you that you will
|
|
have the time of your life. In your recent encounters, you failed to
|
|
shake the masters. If you come, I'll shake them for you. I'll make
|
|
them snarl like wolves. You merely questioned their morality. When
|
|
their morality is questioned, they grow only the more complacent and
|
|
superior. But I shall menace their money-bags. That will shake them to
|
|
the roots of their primitive natures. If you can come, you will see
|
|
the cave-man, in evening dress, snarling and snapping over a bone. I
|
|
promise you a great caterwauling and an illuminating insight into
|
|
the nature of the beast.
|
|
'They've invited me in order to tear me to pieces. This is the
|
|
idea of Miss Brentwood. She clumsily hinted as much when she invited
|
|
me. She's given them that kind of fun before. They delight in
|
|
getting trustful-souled gentle reformers before them. Miss Brentwood
|
|
thinks I am as mild as a kitten and as good-natured and stolid as
|
|
the family cow. I'll not deny that I helped to give her that
|
|
impression. She was very tentative at first, until she divined my
|
|
harmlessness. I am to receive a handsome fee- two hundred and fifty
|
|
dollars- as befits the man who, though a radical, once ran for
|
|
governor. Also, I am to wear evening dress. This is compulsory. I
|
|
never was so apparelled in my life. I suppose I'll have to hire one
|
|
somewhere. But I'd do more than that to get a chance at the
|
|
Philomaths.'
|
|
Of all places, the Club gathered that night at the Pertonwaithe
|
|
house. Extra chairs had been brought into the great drawing-room,
|
|
and in all there must have been two hundred Philomaths that sat down
|
|
to hear Ernest. They were truly lords of society. I amused myself with
|
|
running over in my mind the sum of the fortunes represented, and it
|
|
ran well into the hundreds of millions. And the possessors were not of
|
|
the idle rich. They were men of affairs who took most active parts
|
|
in industrial and political life.
|
|
We were all seated when Miss Brentwood brought Ernest in. They moved
|
|
at once to the head of the room, from where he was to speak. He was in
|
|
evening dress, and, what of his broad shoulders and kingly head, he
|
|
looked magnificent. And then there was that faint and unmistakable
|
|
touch of awkwardness in his movements. I almost think I could have
|
|
loved him for that alone. And as I looked at him I was aware of a
|
|
great joy. I felt again the pulse of his palm on mine, the touch of
|
|
his lips; and such pride was mine that I felt I must rise up and cry
|
|
out to the assembled company: 'He is mine! He has held me in his arms,
|
|
and I, mere I, have filled that mind of his to the exclusion of all
|
|
his multitudinous and kingly thoughts!'
|
|
At the head of the room, Miss Brentwood introduced him to Colonel
|
|
Van Gilbert, and I knew that the latter was to preside. Colonel Van
|
|
Gilbert was a great corporation lawyer. In addition, he was
|
|
immensely wealthy. The smallest fee he would deign to notice was a
|
|
hundred thousand dollars. He was a master of law. The law was a puppet
|
|
with which he played. He moulded it like clay, twisted and distorted
|
|
it like a Chinese puzzle into any design he chose. In appearance and
|
|
rhetoric he was old-fashioned, but in imagination and knowledge and
|
|
resource he was as young as the latest statute. His first prominence
|
|
had come when he broke the Shardwell will.* His fee for this one act
|
|
was five hundred thousand dollars. From then on he had risen like a
|
|
rocket. He was often called the greatest lawyer in the country-
|
|
corporation lawyer, of course; and no classification of the three
|
|
greatest lawyers in the United States could have excluded him.
|
|
|
|
* This breaking of wills was a peculiar feature of the period.
|
|
With the accumulation of vast fortunes, the problem of disposing of
|
|
these fortunes after death was a vexing one to the accumulators.
|
|
Will-making and will-breaking became complementary trades, like
|
|
armor-making and gun-making. The shrewdest will-making lawyers were
|
|
called in to make wills that could not be broken. But these wills were
|
|
always broken, and very often by the very lawyers that had drawn
|
|
them up. Nevertheless the delusion persisted in the wealthy class that
|
|
an absolutely unbreakable will could be cast; and so, through the
|
|
generations, clients and lawyers pursued the illusion. It was a
|
|
pursuit like unto that of the Universal Solvent of the mediaeval
|
|
alchemists.
|
|
|
|
He arose and began, in a few well-chosen phrases that carried an
|
|
undertone of faint irony, to introduce Ernest. Colonel Van Gilbert was
|
|
subtly facetious in his introduction of the social reformer and member
|
|
of the working class, and the audience smiled. It made me angry, and I
|
|
glanced at Ernest. The sight of him made me doubly angry. He did not
|
|
seem to resent the delicate slurs. Worse than that, he did not seem to
|
|
be aware of them. There he sat, gentle, and stolid, and somnolent.
|
|
He really looked stupid. And for a moment the thought rose in my mind,
|
|
What if he were overawed by this imposing array of power and brains?
|
|
Then I smiled. He couldn't fool me. But he fooled the others, just
|
|
as he had fooled Miss Brentwood. She occupied a chair right up to
|
|
the front, and several times she turned her head toward one or another
|
|
of her confreres and smiled her appreciation of the remarks.
|
|
Colonel Van Gilbert done, Ernest arose and began to speak. He
|
|
began in a low voice, haltingly and modestly, and with an air of
|
|
evident embarrassment. He spoke of his birth in the working class, and
|
|
of the sordidness and wretchedness of his environment, where flesh and
|
|
spirit were alike starved and tormented. He described his ambitions
|
|
and ideals, and his conception of the paradise wherein lived the
|
|
people of the upper classes. As he said:
|
|
'Up above me, I knew, were unselfishnesses of the spirit, clean
|
|
and noble thinking, keen intellectual living. I knew all this
|
|
because I read "Seaside Library"* novels, in which, with the exception
|
|
of the villains and adventuresses, all men and women thought beautiful
|
|
thoughts, spoke a beautiful tongue, and performed glorious deeds. In
|
|
short, as I accepted the rising of the sun, I accepted that up above
|
|
me was all that was fine and noble and gracious, all that gave decency
|
|
and dignity to life, all that made life worth living and that
|
|
remunerated one for his travail and misery.'
|
|
|
|
* A curious and amazing literature that served to make the working
|
|
class utterly misapprehend the nature of the leisure class.
|
|
|
|
He went on and traced his life in the mills, the learning of the
|
|
horseshoeing trade, and his meeting with the socialists. Among them,
|
|
he said, he had found keen intellects and brilliant wits, ministers of
|
|
the Gospel who had been broken because their Christianity was too wide
|
|
for any congregation of mammon-worshippers, and professors who had
|
|
been broken on the wheel of university subservience to the ruling
|
|
class. The socialists were revolutionists, he said, struggling to
|
|
overthrow the irrational society of the present and out of the
|
|
material to build the rational society of the future. Much more he
|
|
said that would take too long to write, but I shall never forget how
|
|
he described the life among the revolutionists. All halting
|
|
utterance vanished. His voice grew strong and confident, and it glowed
|
|
as he glowed, and as the thoughts glowed that poured out from him.
|
|
He said;
|
|
'Amongst the revolutionists I found, also, warm faith in the
|
|
human, ardent idealism, sweetnesses of unselfishness, renunciation,
|
|
and martyrdom- all the splendid, stinging things of the spirit. Here
|
|
life was clean, noble, and alive. I was in touch with great souls
|
|
who exalted flesh and spirit over dollars and cents, and to whom the
|
|
thin wail of the starved slum child meant more than all the pomp and
|
|
circumstance of commercial expansion and world empire. All about me
|
|
were nobleness of purpose and heroism of effort, and my days and
|
|
nights were sunshine and starshine, all fire and dew, with before my
|
|
eyes, ever burning and blazing, the Holy Grail, Christ's own Grail,
|
|
the warm human, long-suffering and maltreated but to be rescued and
|
|
saved at the last.'
|
|
As before I had seen him transfigured, so now he stood
|
|
transfigured before me. His brows were bright with the divine that was
|
|
in him, and brighter yet shone his eyes from the midst of the radiance
|
|
that seemed to envelop him as a mantle. But the others did not see
|
|
this radiance, and I assumed that it was due to the tears of joy and
|
|
love that dimmed my vision. At any rate, Mr. Wickson, who sat behind
|
|
me, was unaffected, for I heard him sneer aloud, 'Utopian.'*
|
|
|
|
* The people of that age were phrase slaves. The abjectness of their
|
|
servitude is incomprehensible to us. There was a magic in words
|
|
greater than the conjurer's art. So befuddled and chaotic were their
|
|
minds that the utterance of a single word could negative the
|
|
generalizations of a lifetime of serious research and thought. Such
|
|
a word was the adjective Utopian. The mere utterance of it could
|
|
damn any scheme, no matter how sanely conceived, of economic
|
|
amelioration or regeneration. Vast populations grew frenzied over such
|
|
phrases as 'an honest dollar' and 'a full dinner pail.' The coinage of
|
|
such phrases was considered strokes of genius.
|
|
|
|
Ernest went on to his rise in society, till at last he came in touch
|
|
with members of the upper classes, and rubbed shoulders with the men
|
|
who sat in the high places. Then came his disillusionment, and this
|
|
disillusionment he described in terms that did not flatter his
|
|
audience. He was surprised at the commonness of the clay. Life
|
|
proved not to be fine and gracious. He was appalled by the selfishness
|
|
he encountered, and what had surprised him even more than that was the
|
|
absence of intellectual life. Fresh from his revolutionists, he was
|
|
shocked by the intellectual stupidity of the master class. And then,
|
|
in spite of their magnificent churches and well-paid preachers, he had
|
|
found the masters, men and women, grossly material. It was true that
|
|
they prattled sweet little ideals and dear little moralities, but in
|
|
spite of their prattle the dominant key of the life they lived was
|
|
materialistic. And they were without real morality- for instance, that
|
|
which Christ had preached but which was no longer preached.
|
|
'I met men,' he said, 'who invoked the name of the Prince of Peace
|
|
in their diatribes against war, and who put rifles in the hands of
|
|
Pinkertons* with which to shoot down strikers in their own
|
|
factories. I met men incoherent with indignation at the brutality of
|
|
prize-fighting, and who, at the same time, were parties to the
|
|
adulteration of food that killed each year more babes than even
|
|
red-handed Herod had killed.
|
|
|
|
* Originally, they were private detectives; but they quickly
|
|
became hired fighting men of the capitalists, and ultimately developed
|
|
into the Mercenaries of the Oligarchy.
|
|
|
|
'This delicate, aristocratic-featured gentleman was a dummy director
|
|
and a tool of corporations that secretly robbed widows and orphans.
|
|
This gentleman, who collected fine editions and was a patron of
|
|
literature, paid blackmail to a heavy-jowled, black-browed boss of a
|
|
municipal machine. This editor, who published patent medicine
|
|
advertisements, called me a scoundrelly demagogue because I dared
|
|
him to print in his paper the truth about patent medicines.* This man,
|
|
talking soberly and earnestly about the beauties of idealism and the
|
|
goodness of God, had just betrayed his comrades in a business deal.
|
|
This man, a pillar of the church and heavy contributor to foreign
|
|
missions, worked his shop girls ten hours a day on a starvation wage
|
|
and thereby directly encouraged prostitution. This man, who endowed
|
|
chairs in universities and erected magnificent chapels, perjured
|
|
himself in courts of law over dollars and cents. This railroad magnate
|
|
broke his word as a citizen, as a gentleman, and as a Christian,
|
|
when he granted a secret rebate, and he granted many secret rebates.
|
|
This senator was the tool and the slave, the little puppet, of a
|
|
brutal uneducated machine boss;*(2) so was this governor and this
|
|
supreme court judge; and all three rode on railroad passes; and, also,
|
|
this sleek capitalist owned the machine, the machine boss, and the
|
|
railroads that issued the passes.
|
|
|
|
* Patent medicines were patent lies, but, like the charms and
|
|
indulgences of the Middle Ages, they deceived the people. The only
|
|
difference lay in that the patent medicines were more harmful and more
|
|
costly.
|
|
*(2) Even as late as 1912, A.D., the great mass of the people
|
|
still persisted in the belief that they ruled the country by virtue of
|
|
their ballots. In reality, the country was ruled by what were called
|
|
political machines. At first the machine bosses charged the master
|
|
capitalists extortionate tolls for legislation; but in a short time
|
|
the master capitalists found it cheaper to own the political
|
|
machines themselves and to hire the machine bosses.
|
|
|
|
'And so it was, instead of in paradise, that I found myself in the
|
|
arid desert of commercialism. I found nothing but stupidity, except
|
|
for business. I found none clean, noble, and alive, though I found
|
|
many who were alive- with rottenness. What I did find was monstrous
|
|
selfishness and heartlessness, and a gross, gluttonous, practised, and
|
|
practical materialism.'
|
|
Much more Ernest told them of themselves and of his disillusionment.
|
|
Intellectually they had bored him; morally and spiritually they had
|
|
sickened him; so that he was glad to go back to his revolutionists,
|
|
who were clean, noble, and alive, and all that the capitalists were
|
|
not.
|
|
'And now,' he said, 'let me tell you about that revolution.'
|
|
But first I must say that his terrible diatribe had not touched
|
|
them. I looked about me at their faces and saw that they remained
|
|
complacently superior to what he had charged. And I remembered what he
|
|
had told me: that no indictment of their morality could shake them.
|
|
However, I could see that the boldness of his language had affected
|
|
Miss Brentwood. She was looking worried and apprehensive.
|
|
Ernest began by describing the army of revolution, and as he gave
|
|
the figures of its strength (the votes cast in the various countries),
|
|
the assemblage began to grow restless. Concern showed in their
|
|
faces, and I noticed a tightening of lips. At last the gage of
|
|
battle had been thrown down. He described the international
|
|
organization of the socialists that united the million and a half in
|
|
the United States with the twenty-three millions and a half in the
|
|
rest of the world.
|
|
'Such an army of revolution,' he said, 'twenty-five millions strong,
|
|
is a thing to make rulers and ruling classes pause and consider. The
|
|
cry of this army is: "No quarter! We want all that you possess. We
|
|
will be content with nothing less than all that you possess. We want
|
|
in our hands the reins of power and the destiny of mankind. Here are
|
|
our hands. They are strong hands. We are going to take your
|
|
governments, your palaces, and all your purpled ease away from you,
|
|
and in that day you shall work for your bread even as the peasant in
|
|
the field or the starved and runty clerk in your metropolises. Here
|
|
are our hands. They are strong hands!"'
|
|
And as he spoke he extended from his splendid shoulders his two
|
|
great arms, and the horseshoer's hands were clutching the air like
|
|
eagle's talons. He was the spirit of regnant labor as he stood
|
|
there, his hands outreaching to rend and crush his audience. I was
|
|
aware of a faintly perceptible shrinking on the part of the
|
|
listeners before this figure of revolution, concrete, potential, and
|
|
menacing. That is, the women shrank, and fear was in their faces.
|
|
Not so with the men. They were of the active rich, and not the idle,
|
|
and they were fighters. A low, throaty rumble arose, lingered on the
|
|
air a moment, and ceased. It was the forerunner of the snarl, and I
|
|
was to hear it many times that night- the token of the brute in man,
|
|
the earnest of his primitive passions. And they were unconscious
|
|
that they had made this sound. It was the growl of the pack, mouthed
|
|
by the pack, and mouthed in all unconsciousness. And in that moment,
|
|
as I saw the harshness form in their faces and saw the fight-light
|
|
flashing in their eyes, I realized that not easily would they let
|
|
their lordship of the world be wrested from them.
|
|
Ernest proceeded with his attack. He accounted for the existence
|
|
of the million and a half of revolutionists in the United States by
|
|
charging the capitalist class with having mismanaged society. He
|
|
sketched the economic condition of the cave-man and of the savage
|
|
peoples of to-day, pointing out that they possessed neither tools
|
|
nor machines, and possessed only a natural efficiency of one in
|
|
producing power. Then he traced the development of machinery and
|
|
social organization so that to-day the producing power of civilized
|
|
man was a thousand times greater than that of the savage.
|
|
'Five men,' he said, 'can produce bread for a thousand. One man
|
|
can produce cotton cloth for two hundred and fifty people, woollens
|
|
for three hundred, and boots and shoes for a thousand. One would
|
|
conclude from this that under a capable management of society modern
|
|
civilized man would be a great deal better off than the cave-man.
|
|
But is he? Let us see. In the United States to-day there are fifteen
|
|
million* people living in poverty; and by poverty is meant that
|
|
condition in life in which, through lack of food and adequate shelter,
|
|
the mere standard of working efficiency cannot be maintained. In the
|
|
United States to-day, in spite of all your so-called labor
|
|
legislation, there are three millions of child laborers.*(2) In twelve
|
|
years their numbers have been doubled. And in passing I will ask you
|
|
managers of society why you did not make public the census figures
|
|
of 1910? And I will answer for you, that you were afraid. The
|
|
figures of misery would have precipitated the revolution that even now
|
|
is gathering.
|
|
|
|
* Robert Hunter, in 1906, in a book entitled 'Poverty,' pointed
|
|
out that at that time there were ten millions in the United States
|
|
living in poverty.
|
|
*(2) In the United States Census of 1900 (the last census the
|
|
figures of which were made public), the number of child laborers was
|
|
placed at 1,752,187.
|
|
|
|
'But to return to my indictment. If modern man's producing power
|
|
is a thousand times greater than that of the cave-man, why then, in
|
|
the United States to-day, are there fifteen million people who are not
|
|
properly sheltered and properly fed? Why then, in the United States
|
|
to-day, are there three million child laborers? It is a true
|
|
indictment. The capitalist class has mismanaged. In face of the
|
|
facts that modern man lives more wretchedly than the cave-man, and
|
|
that his producing power is a thousand times greater than that of
|
|
the cave-man, no other conclusion is possible than that the capitalist
|
|
class has mismanaged, that you have mismanaged, my masters, that you
|
|
have criminally and selfishly mismanaged. And on this count you cannot
|
|
answer me here to-night, face to face, any more than can your whole
|
|
class answer the million and a half of revolutionists in the United
|
|
States. You cannot answer. I challenge you to answer. And furthermore,
|
|
I dare to say to you now that when I have finished you will not
|
|
answer. On that point you will be tongue-tied, though you will talk
|
|
wordily enough about other things.
|
|
'You have failed in your management. You have made a shambles of
|
|
civilization. You have been blind and greedy. You have risen up (as
|
|
you to-day rise up), shamelessly, in our legislative halls, and
|
|
declared that profits were impossible without the toil of children and
|
|
babes. Don't take my word for it. It is all in the records against
|
|
you. You have lulled your conscience to sleep with prattle of sweet
|
|
ideals and dear moralities. You are fat with power and possession,
|
|
drunken with success; and you have no more hope against us than have
|
|
the drones, clustered about the honey-vats, when the worker-bees
|
|
spring upon them to end their rotund existence. You have failed in
|
|
your management of society, and your management is to be taken away
|
|
from you. A million and a half of the men of the working class say
|
|
that they are going to get the rest of the working class to join
|
|
with them and take the management away from you. This is the
|
|
revolution, my masters. Stop it if you can.'
|
|
For an appreciable lapse of time Ernest's voice continued to ring
|
|
through the great room. Then arose the throaty rumble I had heard
|
|
before, and a dozen men were on their feet clamoring for recognition
|
|
from Colonel Van Gilbert. I noticed Miss Brentwood's shoulders
|
|
moving convulsively, and for the moment I was angry, for I thought
|
|
that she was laughing at Ernest. And then I discovered that it was not
|
|
laughter, but hysteria. She was appalled by what she had done in
|
|
bringing this firebrand before her blessed Philomath Club.
|
|
Colonel Van Gilbert did not notice the dozen men, with
|
|
passion-wrought faces, who strove to get permission from him to speak.
|
|
His own face was passion-wrought. He sprang to his feet, waving his
|
|
arms, and for a moment could utter only incoherent sounds. Then speech
|
|
poured from him. But it was not the speech of a
|
|
one-hundred-thousand-dollar lawyer, nor was the rhetoric
|
|
old-fashioned.
|
|
'Fallacy upon fallacy!' he cried. 'Never in all my life have I heard
|
|
so many fallacies uttered in one short hour. And besides, young man, I
|
|
must tell you that you have said nothing new. I learned all that at
|
|
college before you were born. Jean Jacques Rousseau enunciated your
|
|
socialistic theory nearly two centuries ago. A return to the soil,
|
|
forsooth! Reversion! Our biology teaches the absurdity of it. It has
|
|
been truly said that a little learning is a dangerous thing, and you
|
|
have exemplified it to-night with your madcap theories. Fallacy upon
|
|
fallacy! I was never so nauseated in my life with overplus of fallacy.
|
|
That for your immature generalizations and childish reasonings!'
|
|
He snapped his fingers contemptuously and proceeded to sit down.
|
|
There were lip-exclamations of approval on the part of the women,
|
|
and hoarser notes of confirmation came from the men. As for the
|
|
dozen men who were clamoring for the floor, half of them began
|
|
speaking at once. The confusion and babel was indescribable. Never had
|
|
Mrs. Pertonwaithe's spacious walls beheld such a spectacle. These,
|
|
then, were the cool captains of industry and lords of society, these
|
|
snarling, growling savages in evening clothes. Truly Ernest had shaken
|
|
them when he stretched out his hands for their moneybags, his hands
|
|
that had appeared in their eyes as the hands of the fifteen hundred
|
|
thousand revolutionists.
|
|
But Ernest never lost his head in a situation. Before Colonel Van
|
|
Gilbert had succeeded in sitting down, Ernest was on his feet and
|
|
had sprung forward.
|
|
'One at a time!' he roared at them.
|
|
The sound arose from his great lungs and dominated the human
|
|
tempest. By sheer compulsion of personality he commanded silence.
|
|
'One at a time,' he repeated softly. 'Let me answer Colonel Van
|
|
Gilbert. After that the rest of you can come at me- but one at a time,
|
|
remember. No mass-plays here. This is not a football field.
|
|
'As for you,' he went on, turning toward Colonel Van Gilbert, 'you
|
|
have replied to nothing I have said. You have merely made a few
|
|
excited and dogmatic assertions about my mental caliber. That may
|
|
serve you in your business, but you can't talk to me like that. I am
|
|
not a workingman, cap in hand, asking you to increase my wages or to
|
|
protect me from the machine at which I work. You cannot be dogmatic
|
|
with truth when you deal with me. Save that for dealing with your
|
|
wage-slaves. They will not dare reply to you because you hold their
|
|
bread and butter, their lives, in your hands.
|
|
'As for this return to nature that you say you learned at college
|
|
before I was born, permit me to point out that on the face of it you
|
|
cannot have learned anything since. Socialism has no more to do with
|
|
the state of nature than has differential calculus with a Bible class.
|
|
I have called your class stupid when outside the realm of business.
|
|
You, sir, have brilliantly exemplified my statement.'
|
|
This terrible castigation of her hundred-thousand-dollar lawyer
|
|
was too much for Miss Brentwood's nerves. Her hysteria became violent,
|
|
and she was helped, weeping and laughing, out of the room. It was just
|
|
as well, for there was worse to follow.
|
|
'Don't take my word for it,' Ernest continued, when the interruption
|
|
had been led away. 'Your own authorities with one unanimous voice will
|
|
prove you stupid. Your own hired purveyors of knowledge will tell
|
|
you that you are wrong. Go to your meekest little assistant instructor
|
|
of sociology and ask him what is the difference between Rousseau's
|
|
theory of the return to nature and the theory of socialism; ask your
|
|
greatest orthodox bourgeois political economists and sociologists;
|
|
question through the pages of every text-book written on the subject
|
|
and stored on the shelves of your subsidized libraries; and from one
|
|
and all the answer will be that there is nothing congruous between the
|
|
return to nature and socialism. On the other hand, the unanimous
|
|
affirmative answer will be that the return to nature and socialism are
|
|
diametrically opposed to each other. As I say, don't take my word
|
|
for it. The record of your stupidity is there in the books, your own
|
|
books that you never read. And so far as your stupidity is
|
|
concerned, you are but the exemplar of your class.
|
|
'You know law and business, Colonel Van Gilbert. You know how to
|
|
serve corporations and increase dividends by twisting the law. Very
|
|
good. Stick to it. You are quite a figure. You are a very good lawyer,
|
|
but you are a poor historian, you know nothing of sociology, and
|
|
your biology is contemporaneous with Pliny.'
|
|
Here Colonel Van Gilbert writhed in his chair. There was perfect
|
|
quiet in the room. Everybody sat fascinated- paralyzed, I may say.
|
|
Such fearful treatment of the great Colonel Van Gilbert was unheard
|
|
of, undreamed of, impossible to believe- the great Colonel Van Gilbert
|
|
before whom judges trembled when he arose in court. But Ernest never
|
|
gave quarter to an enemy.
|
|
'This is, of course, no reflection on you,' Ernest said. 'Every
|
|
man to his trade. Only you stick to your trade, and I'll stick to
|
|
mine. You have specialized. When it comes to a knowledge of the law,
|
|
of how best to evade the law or make new law for the benefit of
|
|
thieving corporations, I am down in the dirt at your feet. But when it
|
|
comes to sociology- my trade- you are down in the dirt at my feet.
|
|
Remember that. Remember, also, that your law is the stuff of a day,
|
|
and that you are not versatile in the stuff of more than a day.
|
|
Therefore your dogmatic assertions and rash generalizations on
|
|
things historical and sociological are not worth the breath you
|
|
waste on them.'
|
|
Ernest paused for a moment and regarded him thoughtfully, noting his
|
|
face dark and twisted with anger, his panting chest, his writhing
|
|
body, and his slim white hands nervously clenching and unclenching.
|
|
'But it seems you have breath to use, and I'll give you a chance
|
|
to use it. I indicted your class. Show me that my indictment is wrong.
|
|
I pointed out to you the wretchedness of modern man- three million
|
|
child slaves in the United States, without whose labor profits would
|
|
not be possible, and fifteen million under-fed, ill-clothed, and
|
|
worse-housed people. I pointed out that modern man's producing power
|
|
through social organization and the use of machinery was a thousand
|
|
times greater than that of the cave-man. And I stated that from
|
|
these two facts no other conclusion was possible than that the
|
|
capitalist class had mismanaged. This was my indictment, and I
|
|
specifically and at length challenged you to answer it. Nay, I did
|
|
more. I prophesied that you would not answer. It remains for your
|
|
breath to smash my prophecy. You called my speech fallacy. Show the
|
|
fallacy, Colonel Van Gilbert. Answer the indictment that I and my
|
|
fifteen hundred thousand comrades have brought against your class
|
|
and you.'
|
|
Colonel Van Gilbert quite forgot that he was presiding, and that
|
|
in courtesy he should permit the other clamorers to speak. He was on
|
|
his feet, flinging his arms, his rhetoric, and his control to the
|
|
winds, alternately abusing Ernest for his youth and demagoguery, and
|
|
savagely attacking the working class, elaborating its inefficiency and
|
|
worthlessness.
|
|
'For a lawyer, you are the hardest man to keep to a point I ever
|
|
saw,' Ernest began his answer to the tirade. 'My youth has nothing
|
|
to do with what I have enunciated. Nor has the worthlessness of the
|
|
working class. I charged the capitalist class with having mismanaged
|
|
society. You have not answered. You have made no attempt to answer.
|
|
Why? Is it because you have no answer? You are the champion of this
|
|
whole audience. Every one here, except me, is hanging on your lips for
|
|
that answer. They are hanging on your lips for that answer because
|
|
they have no answer themselves. As for me, as I said before, I know
|
|
that you not only cannot answer, but that you will not attempt an
|
|
answer.'
|
|
'This is intolerable!' Colonel Van Gilbert cried out. 'This is
|
|
insult!'
|
|
'That you should not answer is intolerable,' Ernest replied gravely.
|
|
'No man can be intellectually insulted. Insult, in its very nature, is
|
|
emotional. Recover yourself. Give me an intellectual answer to my
|
|
intellectual charge that the capitalist class has mismanaged society.'
|
|
Colonel Van Gilbert remained silent, a sullen, superior expression
|
|
on his face, such as will appear on the face of a man who will not
|
|
bandy words with a ruffian.
|
|
'Do not be downcast,' Ernest said. 'Take consolation in the fact
|
|
that no member of your class has ever yet answered that charge.' He
|
|
turned to the other men who were anxious to speak. 'And now it's
|
|
your chance. Fire away, and do not forget that I here challenge you to
|
|
give the answer that Colonel Van Gilbert has failed to give.'
|
|
It would be impossible for me to write all that was said in the
|
|
discussion. I never realized before how many words could be spoken
|
|
in three short hours. At any rate, it was glorious. The more his
|
|
opponents grew excited, the more Ernest deliberately excited them.
|
|
He had an encyclopaedic command of the field of knowledge, and by a
|
|
word or a phrase, by delicate rapier thrusts, he punctured them, He
|
|
named the points of their illogic. This was a false syllogism, that
|
|
conclusion had no connection with the premise, while that next premise
|
|
was an impostor because it had cunningly hidden in it the conclusion
|
|
that was being attempted to be proved. This was an error, that was
|
|
an assumption, and the next was an assertion contrary to ascertained
|
|
truth as printed in all the text-books.
|
|
And so it went. Sometimes he exchanged the rapier for the club and
|
|
went smashing amongst their thoughts right and left. And always he
|
|
demanded facts and refused to discuss theories. And his facts made for
|
|
them a Waterloo. When they attacked the working class, he always
|
|
retorted, 'The pot calling the kettle black; that is no answer to
|
|
the charge that your own face is dirty.' And to one and all he said:
|
|
'Why have you not answered the charge that your class has
|
|
mismanaged? You have talked about other things and things concerning
|
|
other things, but you have not answered. Is it because you have no
|
|
answer?'
|
|
It was at the end of the discussion that Mr. Wickson spoke. He was
|
|
the only one that was cool, and Ernest treated him with a respect he
|
|
had not accorded the others.
|
|
'No answer is necessary,' Mr. Wickson said with slow deliberation.
|
|
'I have followed the whole discussion with amazement and disgust. I am
|
|
disgusted with you gentlemen, members of my class. You have behaved
|
|
like foolish little schoolboys, what with intruding ethics and the
|
|
thunder of the common politician into such a discussion. You have been
|
|
outgeneralled and outclassed. You have been very wordy, and all you
|
|
have done is buzz. You have buzzed like gnats about a bear. Gentlemen,
|
|
there stands the bear' (he pointed at Ernest), 'and your buzzing has
|
|
only tickled his ears.
|
|
'Believe me, the situation is serious. That bear reached out his
|
|
paws tonight to crush us. He has said there are a million and a half
|
|
of revolutionists in the United States. That is a fact. He has said
|
|
that it is their intention to take away from us our governments, our
|
|
palaces, and all our purpled ease. That, also, is a fact. A change,
|
|
a great change, is coming in society; but, haply, it may not be the
|
|
change the bear anticipates. The bear has said that he will crush
|
|
us. What if we crush the bear?'
|
|
The throat-rumble arose in the great room, and man nodded to man
|
|
with indorsement and certitude. Their faces were set hard. They were
|
|
fighters, that was certain.
|
|
'But not by buzzing will we crush the bear,' Mr. Wickson went on
|
|
coldly and dispassionately. 'We will hunt the bear. We will not
|
|
reply to the bear in words. Our reply shall be couched in terms of
|
|
lead. We are in power. Nobody will deny it. By virtue of that power we
|
|
shall remain in power.'
|
|
He turned suddenly upon Ernest. The moment was dramatic.
|
|
'This, then, is our answer. We have no words to waste on you. When
|
|
you reach out your vaunted strong hands for our palaces and purpled
|
|
ease, we will show you what strength is. In roar of shell and shrapnel
|
|
and in whine of machine-guns will our answer be couched.* We will
|
|
grind you revolutionists down under our heel, and we shall walk upon
|
|
your faces. The world is ours, we are its lords, and ours it shall
|
|
remain. As for the host of labor, it has been in the dirt since
|
|
history began, and I read history aright. And in the dirt it shall
|
|
remain so long as I and mine and those that come after us have the
|
|
power. There is the word. It is the king of words- Power. Not God, not
|
|
Mammon, but Power. Pour it over your tongue till it tingles with it.
|
|
Power.'
|
|
|
|
* To show the tenor of thought, the following definition is quoted
|
|
from 'The Cynic's Word Book' (1906 A.D.), written by one Ambrose
|
|
Bierce, an avowed and confirmed misanthrope of the period: 'Grapeshot,
|
|
n. An argument which the future is preparing in answer to the
|
|
demands of American Socialism.'
|
|
|
|
'I am answered,' Ernest said quietly. 'It is the only answer that
|
|
could be given. Power. It is what we of the working class preach. We
|
|
know, and well we know by bitter experience, that no appeal for the
|
|
right, for justice, for humanity, can ever touch you. Your hearts
|
|
are hard as your heels with which you tread upon the faces of the
|
|
poor. So we have preached power. By the power of our ballots on
|
|
election day will we take your government away from you-'
|
|
'What if you do get a majority, a sweeping majority, on election
|
|
day?' Mr. Wickson broke in to demand. 'Suppose we refuse to turn the
|
|
government over to you after you have captured it at the ballot-box?'
|
|
'That, also, have we considered,' Ernest replied. 'And we shall give
|
|
you an answer in terms of lead. Power you have proclaimed the king
|
|
of words. Very good. Power it shall be. And in the day that we sweep
|
|
to victory at the ballot-box, and you refuse to turn over to us the
|
|
government we have constitutionally and peacefully captured, and you
|
|
demand what we are going to do about it- in that day, I say, we
|
|
shall answer you; and in roar of shell and shrapnel and in whine of
|
|
machine-guns shall our answer be couched.
|
|
'You cannot escape us. It is true that you have read history aright.
|
|
It is true that labor has from the beginning of history been in the
|
|
dirt. And it is equally true that so long as you and yours and those
|
|
that come after you have power, that labor shall remain in the dirt. I
|
|
agree with you. I agree with all that you have said. Power will be the
|
|
arbiter, as it always has been the arbiter. It is a struggle of
|
|
classes. Just as your class dragged down the old feudal nobility, so
|
|
shall it be dragged down by my class, the working class. If you will
|
|
read your biology and your sociology as clearly as you do your
|
|
history, you will see that this end I have described is inevitable. It
|
|
does not matter whether it is in one year, ten, or a thousand- your
|
|
class shall be dragged down. And it shall be done by power. We of
|
|
the labor hosts have conned that word over till our minds are all
|
|
a-tingle with it. Power. It is a kingly word.'
|
|
And so ended the night with the Philomaths.
|
|
CHAPTER SIX.
|
|
Adumbrations.
|
|
|
|
IT WAS ABOUT THIS TIME THAT the warnings of coming events began to
|
|
fall about us thick and fast. Ernest had already questioned father's
|
|
policy of having socialists and labor leaders at his house, and of
|
|
openly attending socialist meetings; and father had only laughed at
|
|
him for his pains. As for myself, I was learning much from this
|
|
contact with the working-class leaders and thinkers. I was seeing
|
|
the other side of the shield. I was delighted with the unselfishness
|
|
and high idealism I encountered, though I was appalled by the vast
|
|
philosophic and scientific literature of socialism that was opened
|
|
up to me. I was learning fast, but I learned not fast enough to
|
|
realize then the peril of our position.
|
|
There were warnings, but I did not heed them. For instance, Mrs.
|
|
Pertonwaithe and Mrs. Wickson exercised tremendous social power in the
|
|
university town, and from them emanated the sentiment that I was a
|
|
too-forward and self-assertive young woman with a mischievous penchant
|
|
for officiousness and interference in other persons' affairs. This I
|
|
thought no more than natural, considering the part I had played in
|
|
investigating the case of Jackson's arm. But the effect of such a
|
|
sentiment, enunciated by two such powerful social arbiters, I
|
|
underestimated.
|
|
True, I noticed a certain aloofness on the part of my general
|
|
friends, but this I ascribed to the disapproval that was prevalent
|
|
in my circles of my intended marriage with Ernest. It was not till
|
|
some time afterward that Ernest pointed out to me clearly that this
|
|
general attitude of my class was something more than spontaneous, that
|
|
behind it were the hidden springs of an organized conduct. 'You have
|
|
given shelter to an enemy of your class,' he said. 'And not alone
|
|
shelter, for you have given your love, yourself. This is treason to
|
|
your class. Think not that you will escape being penalized.'
|
|
But it was before this that father returned one afternoon. Ernest
|
|
was with me, and we could see that father was angry- philosophically
|
|
angry. He was rarely really angry; but a certain measure of controlled
|
|
anger he allowed himself. He called it a tonic. And we could see
|
|
that he was tonic-angry when he entered the room.
|
|
'What do you think?' he demanded. 'I had luncheon with Wilcox.'
|
|
Wilcox was the superannuated president of the university, whose
|
|
withered mind was stored with generalizations that were young in 1870,
|
|
and which he had since failed to revise.
|
|
'I was invited,' father announced. 'I was sent for.'
|
|
He paused, and we waited.
|
|
'Oh, it was done very nicely, I'll allow; but I was reprimanded.
|
|
I! And by that old fossil!'
|
|
'I'll wager I know what you were reprimanded for,' Ernest said.
|
|
'Not in three guesses,' father laughed.
|
|
'One guess will do,' Ernest retorted. 'And it won't be a guess. It
|
|
will be a deduction. You were reprimanded for your private life.'
|
|
'The very thing!' father cried. 'How did you guess?'
|
|
'I knew it was coming. I warned you before about it.'
|
|
'Yes, you did,' father meditated. 'But I couldn't believe it. At any
|
|
rate, it is only so much more clinching evidence for my book.'
|
|
'It is nothing to what will come,' Ernest went on, 'if you persist
|
|
in your policy of having these socialists and radicals of all sorts at
|
|
your house, myself included.'
|
|
'Just what old Wilcox said. And of all unwarranted things! He said
|
|
it was in poor taste, utterly profitless, anyway, and not in harmony
|
|
with university traditions and policy. He said much more of the same
|
|
vague sort, and I couldn't pin him down to anything specific. I made
|
|
it pretty awkward for him, and he could only go on repeating himself
|
|
and telling me how much he honored me, and all the world honored me,
|
|
as a scientist. It wasn't an agreeable task for him. I could see he
|
|
didn't like it.'
|
|
'He was not a free agent,' Ernest said. 'The leg-bar* is not
|
|
always worn graciously.'
|
|
|
|
* Leg-bar- the African slaves were so manacled; also criminals. It
|
|
was not until the coming of the Brotherhood of Man that the leg-bar
|
|
passed out of use.
|
|
|
|
'Yes. I got that much out of him. He said the university needed ever
|
|
so much more money this year than the state was willing to furnish;
|
|
and that it must come from wealthy personages who could not but be
|
|
offended by the swerving of the university from its high ideal of
|
|
the passionless pursuit of passionless intelligence. When I tried to
|
|
pin him down to what my home life had to do with swerving the
|
|
university from its high ideal, he offered me a two years' vacation,
|
|
on full pay, in Europe, for recreation and research. Of course I
|
|
couldn't accept it under the circumstances.'
|
|
'It would have been far better if you had,' Ernest said gravely.
|
|
'It was a bribe,' father protested; and Ernest nodded.
|
|
'Also, the beggar said that there was talk, tea-table gossip and
|
|
so forth, about my daughter being seen in public with so notorious a
|
|
character as you, and that it was not in keeping with university
|
|
tone and dignity. Not that he personally objected- oh, no; but that
|
|
there was talk and that I would understand.'
|
|
Ernest considered this announcement for a moment, and then said, and
|
|
his face was very grave, withal there was a sombre wrath in it:
|
|
'There is more behind this than a mere university ideal. Somebody
|
|
has put pressure on President Wilcox.'
|
|
'Do you think so?' father asked, and his face showed that he was
|
|
interested rather than frightened.
|
|
'I wish I could convey to you the conception that is dimly forming
|
|
in my own mind,' Ernest said. 'Never in the history of the world was
|
|
society in so terrific flux as it is right now. The swift changes in
|
|
our industrial system are causing equally swift changes in our
|
|
religious, political, and social structures. An unseen and fearful
|
|
revolution is taking place in the fibre and structure of society.
|
|
One can only dimly feel these things. But they are in the air, now,
|
|
to-day. One can feel the loom of them- things vast, vague, and
|
|
terrible. My mind recoils from contemplation of what they may
|
|
crystallize into. You heard Wickson talk the other night. Behind
|
|
what he said were the same nameless, formless things that I feel. He
|
|
spoke out of a superconscious apprehension of them.'
|
|
'You mean...?' father began, then paused.
|
|
'I mean that there is a shadow of something colossal and menacing
|
|
that even now is beginning to fall across the land. Call it the shadow
|
|
of an oligarchy, if you will; it is the nearest I dare approximate it.
|
|
What its nature may be I refuse to imagine.* But what I wanted to
|
|
say was this: You are in a perilous position- a peril that my own fear
|
|
enhances because I am not able even to measure it. Take my advice
|
|
and accept the vacation.'
|
|
|
|
* Though, like Everhard, they did not dream of the nature of it,
|
|
there were men, even before his time, who caught glimpses of the
|
|
shadow. John C. Calhoun said: 'A power has risen up in the
|
|
government greater than the people themselves, consisting of many
|
|
and various and powerful interests, combined into one mass, and held
|
|
together by the cohesive power of the vast surplus in the banks.'
|
|
And that great humanist, Abraham Lincoln, said, just before his
|
|
assassination: 'I see in the near future a crisis approaching that
|
|
unnerves me and causes me to tremble for the safety of my
|
|
country.... Corporations have been enthroned, an era of corruption
|
|
in high places will follow, and the money-power of the country will
|
|
endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the
|
|
people until the wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the
|
|
Republic is destroyed.'
|
|
|
|
'But it would be cowardly,' was the protest.
|
|
'Not at all. You are an old man. You have done your work in the
|
|
world, and a great work. Leave the present battle to youth and
|
|
strength. We young fellows have our work yet to do. Avis will stand by
|
|
my side in what is to come. She will be your representative in the
|
|
battle-front.'
|
|
'But they can't hurt me,' father objected. 'Thank God I am
|
|
independent. Oh, I assure you, I know the frightful persecution they
|
|
can wage on a professor who is economically dependent on his
|
|
university. But I am independent. I have not been a professor for
|
|
the sake of my salary. I can get along very comfortably on my own
|
|
income, and the salary is all they can take away from me.'
|
|
'But you do not realize,' Ernest answered. 'If all that I fear be
|
|
so, your private income, your principal itself, can be taken from
|
|
you just as easily as your salary.'
|
|
Father was silent for a few minutes. He was thinking deeply, and I
|
|
could see the lines of decision forming in his face. At last he spoke.
|
|
'I shall not take the vacation.' He paused again. 'I shall go on
|
|
with my book.* You may be wrong, but whether you are wrong or right, I
|
|
shall stand by my guns.'
|
|
|
|
* This book, 'Economics and Education,' was published in that
|
|
year. Three copies of it are extant; two at Ardis, and one at
|
|
Asgard. It dealt, in elaborate detail, with one factor in the
|
|
persistence of the established, namely, the capitalistic bias of the
|
|
universities and common schools. It was a logical and crushing
|
|
indictment of the whole system of education that developed in the
|
|
minds of the students only such ideas as were favorable to the
|
|
capitalistic regime, to the exclusion of all ideas that were
|
|
inimical and subversive. The book created a furor, and was promptly
|
|
suppressed by the Oligarchy.
|
|
|
|
'All right,' Ernest said. 'You are travelling the same path that
|
|
Bishop Morehouse is, and toward a similar smash-up. You'll both be
|
|
proletarians before you're done with it.'
|
|
The conversation turned upon the Bishop, and we got Ernest to
|
|
explain what he had been doing with him.
|
|
'He is soul-sick from the journey through hell I have given him. I
|
|
took him through the homes of a few of our factory workers. I showed
|
|
him the human wrecks cast aside by the industrial machine, and he
|
|
listened to their life stories. I took him through the slums of San
|
|
Francisco, and in drunkenness, prostitution, and criminality he
|
|
learned a deeper cause than innate depravity. He is very sick, and,
|
|
worse than that, he has got out of hand. He is too ethical. He has
|
|
been too severely touched. And, as usual, he is unpractical. He is
|
|
up in the air with all kinds of ethical delusions and plans for
|
|
mission work among the cultured. He feels it is his bounden duty to
|
|
resurrect the ancient spirit of the Church and to deliver its
|
|
message to the masters. He is overwrought. Sooner or later he is going
|
|
to break out, and then there's going to be a smash-up. What form it
|
|
will take I can't even guess. He is a pure, exalted soul, but he is so
|
|
unpractical. He's beyond me. I can't keep his feet on the earth. And
|
|
through the air he is rushing on to his Gethsemane. And after this his
|
|
crucifixion. Such high souls are made for crucifixion.'
|
|
'And you?' I asked; and beneath my smile was the seriousness of
|
|
the anxiety of love.
|
|
'Not I,' he laughed back. 'I may be executed, or assassinated, but I
|
|
shall never be crucified. I am planted too solidly and stolidly upon
|
|
the earth.'
|
|
'But why should you bring about the crucifixion of the Bishop?' I
|
|
asked. 'You will not deny that you are the cause of it.'
|
|
'Why should I leave one comfortable soul in comfort when there are
|
|
millions in travail and misery?' he demanded back.
|
|
'Then why did you advise father to accept the vacation?'
|
|
'Because I am not a pure, exalted soul,' was the answer. 'Because
|
|
I am solid and stolid and selfish. Because I love you and, like Ruth
|
|
of old, thy people are my people. As for the Bishop, he has no
|
|
daughter. Besides, no matter how small the good, nevertheless his
|
|
little inadequate wail will be productive of some good in the
|
|
revolution, and every little bit counts.'
|
|
I could not agree with Ernest. I knew well the noble nature of
|
|
Bishop Morehouse, and I could not conceive that his voice raised for
|
|
righteousness would be no more than a little inadequate wail. But I
|
|
did not yet have the harsh facts of life at my fingers' ends as Ernest
|
|
had. He saw clearly the futility of the Bishop's great soul, as coming
|
|
events were soon to show as clearly to me.
|
|
It was shortly after this day that Ernest told me, as a good
|
|
story, the offer he had received from the government, namely, an
|
|
appointment as United States Commissioner of Labor. I was overjoyed.
|
|
The salary was comparatively large, and would make safe our
|
|
marriage. And then it surely was congenial work for Ernest, and,
|
|
furthermore, my jealous pride in him made me hail the proffered
|
|
appointment as a recognition of his abilities.
|
|
Then I noticed the twinkle in his eyes. He was laughing at me.
|
|
'You are not going to... to decline?' I quavered.
|
|
'It is a bribe,' he said. 'Behind it is the fine hand of Wickson,
|
|
and behind him the hands of greater men than he. It is an old trick,
|
|
old as the class struggle is old- stealing the captains from the
|
|
army of labor. Poor betrayed labor! If you but knew how many of its
|
|
leaders have been bought out in similar ways in the past. It is
|
|
cheaper, so much cheaper, to buy a general than to fight him and his
|
|
whole army. There was- but I'll not call any names. I'm bitter
|
|
enough over it as it is. Dear heart, I am a captain of labor. I
|
|
could not sell out. If for no other reason, the memory of my poor
|
|
old father and the way he was worked to death would prevent.'
|
|
The tears were in his eyes, this great, strong hero of mine. He
|
|
never could forgive the way his father had been malformed- the
|
|
sordid lies and the petty thefts he had been compelled to, in order to
|
|
put food in his children's mouths.
|
|
'My father was a good man,' Ernest once said to me. 'The soul of him
|
|
was good, and yet it was twisted, and maimed, and blunted by the
|
|
savagery of his life. He was made into a broken-down beast by his
|
|
masters, the arch-beasts. He should be alive to-day, like your father.
|
|
He had a strong constitution. But he was caught in the machine and
|
|
worked to death- for profit. Think of it. For profit- his life blood
|
|
transmuted into a wine-supper, or a jewelled gewgaw, or some similar
|
|
sense-orgy of the parasitic and idle rich, his masters, the
|
|
arch-beasts.'
|
|
CHAPTER SEVEN.
|
|
The Bishop's Vision.
|
|
|
|
'THE BISHOP IS OUT OF HAND,' Ernest wrote me. 'He is clear up in the
|
|
air. Tonight he is going to begin putting to rights this very
|
|
miserable world of ours. He is going to deliver his message. He has
|
|
told me so, and I cannot dissuade him. To-night he is chairman of
|
|
the I.P.H.*, and he will embody his message in his introductory
|
|
remarks.
|
|
|
|
* There is no clew to the name of the organization for which these
|
|
initials stand.
|
|
|
|
'May I bring you to hear him? Of course, he is foredoomed to
|
|
futility. It will break your heart- it will break his; but for you
|
|
it will be an excellent object lesson. You know, dear heart, how proud
|
|
I am because you love me. And because of that I want you to know my
|
|
fullest value, I want to redeem, in your eyes, some small measure of
|
|
my unworthiness. And so it is that my pride desires that you shall
|
|
know my thinking is correct and right. My views are harsh; the
|
|
futility of so noble a soul as the Bishop will show you the compulsion
|
|
for such harshness. So come to-night. Sad though this night's
|
|
happening will be, I feel that it will but draw you more closely to
|
|
me.'
|
|
The I.P.H. held its convention that night in San Francisco.* This
|
|
convention had been called to consider public immorality and the
|
|
remedy for it. Bishop Morehouse presided. He was very nervous as he
|
|
sat on the platform, and I could see the high tension he was under. By
|
|
his side were Bishop Dickinson; H. H. Jones, the head of the ethical
|
|
department in the University of California; Mrs. W. W. Hurd, the great
|
|
charity organizer; Philip Ward, the equally great philanthropist;
|
|
and several lesser luminaries in the field of morality and charity.
|
|
Bishop Morehouse arose and abruptly began:
|
|
|
|
* It took but a few minutes to cross by ferry from Berkeley to San
|
|
Francisco. These, and the other bay cities, practically composed one
|
|
community.
|
|
|
|
'I was in my brougham, driving through the streets. It was
|
|
night-time. Now and then I looked through the carriage windows, and
|
|
suddenly my eyes seemed to be opened, and I saw things as they
|
|
really are. At first I covered my eyes with my hands to shut out the
|
|
awful sight, and then, in the darkness, the question came to me:
|
|
What is to be done? What is to be done? A little later the question
|
|
came to me in another way: What would the Master do? And with the
|
|
question a great light seemed to fill the place, and I saw my duty
|
|
sun-clear, as Saul saw his on the way to Damascus.
|
|
'I stopped the carriage, got out, and, after a few minutes'
|
|
conversation, persuaded two of the public women to get into the
|
|
brougham with me. If Jesus was right, then these two unfortunates were
|
|
my sisters, and the only hope of their purification was in my
|
|
affection and tenderness.
|
|
'I live in one of the loveliest localities of San Francisco. The
|
|
house in which I live cost a hundred thousand dollars, and its
|
|
furnishings, books, and works of art cost as much more. The house is a
|
|
mansion. No, it is a palace, wherein there are many servants. I
|
|
never knew what palaces were good for. I had thought they were to live
|
|
in. But now I know. I took the two women of the street to my palace,
|
|
and they are going to stay with me. I hope to fill every room in my
|
|
palace with such sisters as they.'
|
|
The audience had been growing more and more restless and
|
|
unsettled, and the faces of those that sat on the platform had been
|
|
betraying greater and greater dismay and consternation. And at this
|
|
point Bishop Dickinson arose, and with an expression of disgust on his
|
|
face, fled from the platform and the hall. But Bishop Morehouse,
|
|
oblivious to all, his eyes filled with his vision, continued:
|
|
'Oh, sisters and brothers, in this act of mine I find the solution
|
|
of all my difficulties. I didn't know what broughams were made for,
|
|
but now I know. They are made to carry the weak, the sick, and the
|
|
aged; they are made to show honor to those who have lost the sense
|
|
even of shame.
|
|
'I did not know what palaces were made for, but now I have found a
|
|
use for them. The palaces of the Church should be hospitals and
|
|
nurseries for those who have fallen by the wayside and are perishing.'
|
|
He made a long pause, plainly overcome by the thought that was in
|
|
him, and nervous how best to express it.
|
|
'I am not fit, dear brethren, to tell you anything about morality. I
|
|
have lived in shame and hypocrisies too long to be able to help
|
|
others; but my action with those women, sisters of mine, shows me that
|
|
the better way is easy to find. To those who believe in Jesus and
|
|
his gospel there can be no other relation between man and man than the
|
|
relation of affection. Love alone is stronger than sin- stronger
|
|
than death. I therefore say to the rich among you that it is their
|
|
duty to do what I have done and am doing. Let each one of you who is
|
|
prosperous take into his house some thief and treat him as his
|
|
brother, some unfortunate and treat her as his sister, and San
|
|
Francisco will need no police force and no magistrates; the prisons
|
|
will be turned into hospitals, and the criminal will disappear with
|
|
his crime.
|
|
'We must give ourselves and not our money alone. We must do as
|
|
Christ did; that is the message of the Church today. We have
|
|
wandered far from the Master's teaching. We are consumed in our own
|
|
flesh-pots. We have put mammon in the place of Christ. I have here a
|
|
poem that tells the whole story. I should like to read it to you. It
|
|
was written by an erring soul who yet saw clearly.* It must not be
|
|
mistaken for an attack upon the Catholic Church. It is an attack
|
|
upon all churches, upon the pomp and splendor of all churches that
|
|
have wandered from the Master's path and hedged themselves in from his
|
|
lambs. Here it is:
|
|
|
|
* Oscar Wilde, one of the lords of language of the nineteenth
|
|
century of the Christian Era.
|
|
|
|
'The silver trumpets rang across the Dome;
|
|
The people knelt upon the ground with awe;
|
|
And borne upon the necks of men I saw,
|
|
Like some great God, the Holy Lord of Rome.
|
|
|
|
'Priest-like, he wore a robe more white than foam,
|
|
And, king-like, swathed himself in royal red,
|
|
Three crowns of gold rose high upon his head;
|
|
In splendor and in light the Pope passed home.
|
|
|
|
'My heart stole back across wide wastes of years
|
|
To One who wandered by a lonely sea;
|
|
And sought in vain for any place of rest:
|
|
"Foxes have holes, and every bird its nest,
|
|
I, only I, must wander wearily,
|
|
And bruise my feet, and drink wine salt with tears."'
|
|
|
|
The audience was agitated, but unresponsive. Yet Bishop Morehouse
|
|
was not aware of it. He held steadily on his way.
|
|
'And so I say to the rich among you, and to all the rich, that
|
|
bitterly you oppress the Master's lambs. You have hardened your
|
|
hearts. You have closed your ears to the voices that are crying in the
|
|
land- the voices of pain and sorrow that you will not hear but that
|
|
some day will be heard. And so I say-'
|
|
But at this point H. H. Jones and Philip Ward, who had already risen
|
|
from their chairs, led the Bishop off the platform, while the audience
|
|
sat breathless and shocked.
|
|
Ernest laughed harshly and savagely when he had gained the street.
|
|
His laughter jarred upon me. My heart seemed ready to burst with
|
|
suppressed tears.
|
|
'He has delivered his message,' Ernest cried. 'The manhood and the
|
|
deep-hidden, tender nature of their Bishop burst out, and his
|
|
Christian audience, that loved him, concluded that he was crazy! Did
|
|
you see them leading him so solicitously from the platform? There must
|
|
have been laughter in hell at the spectacle.'
|
|
'Nevertheless, it will make a great impression, what the Bishop
|
|
did and said to-night,' I said.
|
|
'Think so?' Ernest queried mockingly.
|
|
'It will make a sensation,' I asserted. 'Didn't you see the
|
|
reporters scribbling like mad while he was speaking?'
|
|
'Not a line of which will appear in to-morrow's papers.'
|
|
'I can't believe it,' I cried.
|
|
'Just wait and see,' was the answer. 'Not a line, not a thought that
|
|
he uttered. The daily press? The daily suppressage!'
|
|
'But the reporters,' I objected. 'I saw them.'
|
|
'Not a word that he uttered will see print. You have forgotten the
|
|
editors. They draw their salaries for the policy they maintain.
|
|
Their policy is to print nothing that is a vital menace to the
|
|
established. The Bishop's utterance was a violent assault upon the
|
|
established morality. It was heresy. They led him from the platform to
|
|
prevent him from uttering more heresy. The newspapers will purge his
|
|
heresy in the oblivion of silence. The press of the United States?
|
|
It is a parasitic growth that battens on the capitalist class. Its
|
|
function is to serve the established by moulding public opinion, and
|
|
right well it serves it.
|
|
'Let me prophesy. To-morrow's papers will merely mention that the
|
|
Bishop is in poor health, that he has been working too hard, and
|
|
that he broke down last night. The next mention, some days hence, will
|
|
be to the effect that he is suffering from nervous prostration and has
|
|
been given a vacation by his grateful flock. After that, one of two
|
|
things will happen: either the Bishop will see the error of his way
|
|
and return from his vacation a well man in whose eyes there are no
|
|
more visions, or else he will persist in his madness, and then you may
|
|
expect to see in the papers, couched pathetically and tenderly, the
|
|
announcement of his insanity. After that he will be left to gibber his
|
|
visions to padded walls.'
|
|
'Now there you go too far!' I cried out.
|
|
'In the eyes of society it will truly be insanity,' he replied.
|
|
'What honest man, who is not insane, would take lost women and thieves
|
|
into his house to dwell with him sisterly and brotherly? True,
|
|
Christ died between two thieves, but that is another story.
|
|
Insanity? The mental processes of the man with whom one disagrees, are
|
|
always wrong. Therefore the mind of the man is wrong. Where is the
|
|
line between wrong mind and insane mind? It is inconceivable that
|
|
any sane man can radically disagree with one's most sane conclusions.
|
|
'There is a good example of it in this evening's paper. Mary McKenna
|
|
lives south of Market Street. She is a poor but honest woman. She is
|
|
also patriotic. But she has erroneous ideas concerning the American
|
|
flag and the protection it is supposed to symbolize. And here's what
|
|
happened to her. Her husband had an accident and was laid up in
|
|
hospital three months. In spite of taking in washing, she got behind
|
|
in her rent. Yesterday they evicted her. But first, she hoisted an
|
|
American flag, and from under its folds she announced that by virtue
|
|
of its protection they could not turn her out on to the cold street.
|
|
What was done? She was arrested and arraigned for insanity. To-day she
|
|
was examined by the regular insanity experts. She was found insane.
|
|
She was consigned to the Napa Asylum.'
|
|
'But that is far-fetched,' I objected. 'Suppose I should disagree
|
|
with everybody about the literary style of a book. They wouldn't
|
|
send me to an asylum for that.'
|
|
'Very true,' he replied. 'But such divergence of opinion would
|
|
constitute no menace to society. Therein lies the difference. The
|
|
divergence of opinion on the parts of Mary McKenna and the Bishop do
|
|
menace society. What if all the poor people should refuse to pay
|
|
rent and shelter themselves under the American flag? Landlordism would
|
|
go crumbling. The Bishop's views are just as perilous to society.
|
|
Ergo, to the asylum with him.'
|
|
But still I refused to believe.
|
|
'Wait and see,' Ernest said, and I waited.
|
|
Next morning I sent out for all the papers. So far Ernest was right.
|
|
Not a word that Bishop Morehouse had uttered was in print. Mention was
|
|
made in one or two of the papers that he had been overcome by his
|
|
feelings. Yet the platitudes of the speakers that followed him were
|
|
reported at length.
|
|
Several days later the brief announcement was made that he had
|
|
gone away on a vacation to recover from the effects of overwork. So
|
|
far so good, but there had been no hint of insanity, nor even of
|
|
nervous collapse. Little did I dream the terrible road the Bishop
|
|
was destined to travel- the Gethsemane and crucifixion that Ernest had
|
|
pondered about.
|
|
CHAPTER EIGHT.
|
|
The Machine Breakers.
|
|
|
|
IT WAS JUST BEFORE ERNEST ran for Congress, on the socialist ticket,
|
|
that father gave what he privately called his 'Profit and Loss'
|
|
dinner. Ernest called it the dinner of the Machine Breakers. In
|
|
point of fact, it was merely a dinner for business men- small business
|
|
men, of course. I doubt if one of them was interested in any
|
|
business the total capitalization of which exceeded a couple of
|
|
hundred thousand dollars. They were truly representative
|
|
middle-class business men.
|
|
There was Owen, of Silverberg, Owen & Company- a large grocery
|
|
firm with several branch stores. We bought our groceries from them.
|
|
There were both partners of the big drug firm of Kowalt & Washburn,
|
|
and Mr. Asmunsen, the owner of a large granite quarry in Contra
|
|
Costa County. And there were many similar men, owners or part-owners
|
|
in small factories, small businesses and small industries- small
|
|
capitalists, in short.
|
|
They were shrewd-faced, interesting men, and they talked with
|
|
simplicity and clearness. Their unanimous complaint was against the
|
|
corporations and trusts. Their creed was, 'Bust the Trusts.' All
|
|
oppression originated in the trusts, and one and all told the same
|
|
tale of woe. They advocated government ownership of such trusts as the
|
|
railroads and telegraphs, and excessive income taxes, graduated with
|
|
ferocity, to destroy large accumulations. Likewise they advocated,
|
|
as a cure for local ills, municipal ownership of such public utilities
|
|
as water, gas, telephones, and street railways.
|
|
Especially interesting was Mr. Asmunsen's narrative of his
|
|
tribulations as a quarry owner. He confessed that he never made any
|
|
profits out of his quarry, and this, in spite of the enormous volume
|
|
of business that had been caused by the destruction of San Francisco
|
|
by the big earthquake. For six years the rebuilding of San Francisco
|
|
had been going on, and his business had quadrupled and octupled, and
|
|
yet he was no better off.
|
|
'The railroad knows my business just a little bit better than I do,'
|
|
he said. 'It knows my operating expenses to a cent, and it knows the
|
|
terms of my contracts. How it knows these things I can only guess.
|
|
It must have spies in my employ, and it must have access to the
|
|
parties to all my contracts. For look you, when I place a big
|
|
contract, the terms of which favor me a goodly profit, the freight
|
|
rate from my quarry to market is promptly raised. No explanation is
|
|
made. The railroad gets my profit. Under such circumstances I have
|
|
never succeeded in getting the railroad to reconsider its raise. On
|
|
the other hand, when there have been accidents, increased expenses
|
|
of operating, or contracts with less profitable terms, I have always
|
|
succeeded in getting the railroad to lower its rate. What is the
|
|
result? Large or small, the railroad always gets my profits.'
|
|
'What remains to you over and above,' Ernest interrupted to ask,
|
|
'would roughly be the equivalent of your salary as a manager did the
|
|
railroad own the quarry.'
|
|
'The very thing,' Mr. Asmunsen replied. 'Only a short time ago I had
|
|
my books gone through for the past ten years. I discovered that for
|
|
those ten years my gain was just equivalent to a manager's salary. The
|
|
railroad might just as well have owned my quarry and hired me to run
|
|
it.'
|
|
'But with this difference,' Ernest laughed; 'the railroad would have
|
|
had to assume all the risk which you so obligingly assumed for it.'
|
|
'Very true,' Mr. Asmunsen answered sadly.
|
|
Having let them have they say, Ernest began asking questions right
|
|
and left. He began with Mr. Owen.
|
|
'You started a branch store here in Berkeley about six months ago?'
|
|
'Yes,' Mr. Owen answered.
|
|
'And since then I've noticed that three little corner groceries have
|
|
gone out of business. Was your branch store the cause of it?'
|
|
Mr. Owen affirmed with a complacent smile. 'They had no chance
|
|
against us.
|
|
'Why not?'
|
|
'We had greater capital. With a large business there is always
|
|
less waste and greater efficiency.'
|
|
'And your branch store absorbed the profits of the three small ones.
|
|
I see. But tell me, what became of the owners of the three stores?'
|
|
'One is driving a delivery wagon for us. I don't know what
|
|
happened to the other two.'
|
|
Ernest turned abruptly on Mr. Kowalt.
|
|
'You sell a great deal at cut-rates.* What have become of the owners
|
|
of the small drug stores that you forced to the wall?'
|
|
|
|
* A lowering of selling price to cost, and even to less than cost.
|
|
Thus, a large company could sell at a loss for a longer period than
|
|
a small company, and so drive the small company out of business. A
|
|
common device of competition.
|
|
|
|
'One of them, Mr. Haasfurther, has charge now of our prescription
|
|
department,' was the answer.
|
|
'And you absorbed the profits they had been making?'
|
|
'Surely. That is what we are in business for.'
|
|
'And you?' Ernest said suddenly to Mr. Asmunsen. 'You are
|
|
disgusted because the railroad has absorbed your profits?'
|
|
Mr. Asmunsen nodded.
|
|
'What you want is to make profits yourself?'
|
|
Again Mr. Asmunsen nodded.
|
|
'Out of others?'
|
|
There was no answer.
|
|
'Out of others?' Ernest insisted.
|
|
'That is the way profits are made,' Mr. Asmunsen replied curtly.
|
|
'Then the business game is to make profits out of others, and to
|
|
prevent others from making profits out of you. That's it, isn't it?'
|
|
Ernest had to repeat his question before Mr. Asmunsen gave an
|
|
answer, and then he said:
|
|
'Yes, that's it, except that we do not object to the others making
|
|
profits so long as they are not extortionate.'
|
|
'By extortionate you mean large; yet you do not object to making
|
|
large profits yourself?... Surely not?'
|
|
And Mr. Asmunsen amiably confessed to the weakness. There was one
|
|
other man who was quizzed by Ernest at this juncture, a Mr. Calvin,
|
|
who had once been a great dairy-owner.
|
|
'Some time ago you were fighting the Milk Trust,' Ernest said to
|
|
him; 'and now you are in Grange politics.* How did it happen?'
|
|
|
|
* Many efforts were made during this period to organize the
|
|
perishing farmer class into a political party, the aim of which was
|
|
destroy the trusts and corporations by drastic legislation. All such
|
|
attempts ended in failure.
|
|
|
|
'Oh, I haven't quit the fight,' Mr. Calvin answered, and he looked
|
|
belligerent enough. 'I'm fighting the Trust on the only field where it
|
|
is possible to fight- the political field. Let me show you. A few
|
|
years ago we dairymen had everything our own way.'
|
|
'But you competed among yourselves?' Ernest interrupted.
|
|
'Yes, that was what kept the profits down. We did try to organize,
|
|
but independent dairymen always broke through us. Then came the Milk
|
|
Trust.' 'Financed by surplus capital from Standard Oil,* Ernest said.
|
|
|
|
* The first successful great trust- almost a generation in advance
|
|
of the rest.
|
|
|
|
'Yes,' Mr. Calvin acknowledged. 'But we did not know it at the time.
|
|
Its agents approached us with a club. "Come in and be fat," was
|
|
their proposition, "or stay out and starve." Most of us came in. Those
|
|
that didn't, starved. Oh, it paid us... at first. Milk was raised a
|
|
cent a quart. One-quarter of this cent came to us. Three-quarters of
|
|
it went to the Trust. Then milk was raised another cent, only we
|
|
didn't get any of that cent. Our complaints were useless. The Trust
|
|
was in control. We discovered that we were pawns. Finally, the
|
|
additional quarter of a cent was denied us. Then the Trust began to
|
|
squeeze us out. What could we do? We were squeezed out. There were
|
|
no dairymen, only a Milk Trust.'
|
|
'But with milk two cents higher, I should think you could have
|
|
competed,' Ernest suggested slyly.
|
|
'So we thought. We tried it.' Mr. Calvin paused a moment. 'It
|
|
broke us. The Trust could put milk upon the market more cheaply than
|
|
we. It could sell still at a slight profit when we were selling at
|
|
actual loss. I dropped fifty thousand dollars in that venture. Most of
|
|
us went bankrupt.* The dairymen were wiped out of existence.'
|
|
|
|
* Bankruptcy- a peculiar institution that enabled an individual, who
|
|
had failed in competitive industry, to forego paying his debts. The
|
|
effect was to ameliorate the too savage conditions of the
|
|
fang-and-claw social struggle.
|
|
|
|
'So the Trust took your profits away from you,' Ernest said, 'and
|
|
you've gone into politics in order to legislate the Trust out of
|
|
existence and get the profits back?'
|
|
Mr. Calvin's face lighted up. 'That is precisely what I say in my
|
|
speeches to the farmers. That's our whole idea in a nutshell.'
|
|
'And yet the Trust produces milk more cheaply than could the
|
|
independent dairymen?' Ernest queried.
|
|
'Why shouldn't it, with the splendid organization and new
|
|
machinery its large capital makes possible?'
|
|
'There is no discussion,' Ernest answered. 'It certainly should,
|
|
and, furthermore, it does.'
|
|
Mr. Calvin here launched out into a political speech in exposition
|
|
of his views. He was warmly followed by a number of the others, and
|
|
the cry of all was to destroy the trusts.
|
|
'Poor simple folk,' Ernest said to me in an undertone. 'They see
|
|
clearly as far as they see, but they see only to the ends of their
|
|
noses.'
|
|
A little later he got the floor again, and in his characteristic way
|
|
controlled it for the rest of the evening.
|
|
'I have listened carefully to all of you,' he began, 'and I see
|
|
plainly that you play the business game in the orthodox fashion.
|
|
Life sums itself up to you in profits. You have a firm and abiding
|
|
belief that you were created for the sole purpose of making profits.
|
|
Only there is a hitch. In the midst of your own profit-making along
|
|
comes the trust and takes your profits away from you. This is a
|
|
dilemma that interferes somehow with the aim of creation, and the only
|
|
way out, as it seems to you, is to destroy that which takes from you
|
|
your profits.
|
|
'I have listened carefully, and there is only one name that will
|
|
epitomize you. I shall call you that name. You are machine-breakers.
|
|
Do you know what a machine-breaker is? Let me tell you. In the
|
|
eighteenth century, in England, men and women wove cloth on hand-looms
|
|
in their own cottages. It was a slow, clumsy, and costly way of
|
|
weaving cloth, this cottage system of manufacture. Along came the
|
|
steam-engine and labor-saving machinery. A thousand looms assembled in
|
|
a large factory, and driven by a central engine wove cloth vastly more
|
|
cheaply than could the cottage weavers on their hand-looms. Here in
|
|
the factory was combination, and before it competition faded away. The
|
|
men and women who had worked the hand-looms for themselves now went
|
|
into the factories and worked the machine-looms, not for themselves,
|
|
but for the capitalist owners. Furthermore, little children went to
|
|
work on the machine-looms, at lower wages, and displaced the men. This
|
|
made hard times for the men. Their standard of living fell. They
|
|
starved. And they said it was all the fault of the machines.
|
|
Therefore, they proceeded to break the machines. They did not succeed,
|
|
and they were very stupid.
|
|
'Yet you have not learned their lesson. Here are you, a century
|
|
and a half later, trying to break machines. By your own confession the
|
|
trust machines do the work more efficiently and more cheaply than
|
|
you can. That is why you cannot compete with them. And yet you would
|
|
break those machines. You are even more stupid than the stupid workmen
|
|
of England. And while you maunder about restoring competition, the
|
|
trusts go on destroying you.
|
|
'One and all you tell the same story,- the passing away of
|
|
competition and the coming on of combination. You, Mr. Owen, destroyed
|
|
competition here in Berkeley when your branch store drove the three
|
|
small groceries out of business. Your combination was more
|
|
effective. Yet you feel the pressure of other combinations on you, the
|
|
trust combinations, and you cry out. It is because you are not a
|
|
trust. If you were a grocery trust for the whole United States, you
|
|
would be singing another song. And the song would be, "Blessed are the
|
|
trusts." And yet again, not only is your small combination not a
|
|
trust, but you are aware yourself of its lack of strength. You are
|
|
beginning to divine your own end. You feel yourself and your branch
|
|
stores a pawn in the game. You see the powerful interests rising and
|
|
growing more powerful day by day; you feel their mailed hands
|
|
descending upon your profits and taking a pinch here and a pinch
|
|
there- the railroad trust, the oil trust, the steel trust, the coal
|
|
trust; and you know that in the end they will destroy you, take away
|
|
from you the last per cent of your little profits.
|
|
'You, sir, are a poor gamester. When you squeezed out the three
|
|
small groceries here in Berkeley by virtue of your superior
|
|
combination, you swelled out your chest, talked about efficiency and
|
|
enterprise, and sent your wife to Europe on the profits you had gained
|
|
by eating up the three small groceries. It is dog eat dog, and you ate
|
|
them up. But, on the other hand, you are being eaten up in turn by the
|
|
bigger dogs, wherefore you squeal. And what I say to you is true of
|
|
all of you at this table. You are all squealing. You are all playing
|
|
the losing game, and you are all squealing about it.
|
|
'But when you squeal you don't state the situation flatly, as I have
|
|
stated it. You don't say that you like to squeeze profits out of
|
|
others, and that you are making all the row because others are
|
|
squeezing your profits out of you. No, you are too cunning for that.
|
|
You say something else. You make small-capitalist political speeches
|
|
such as Mr. Calvin made. What did he say? Here are a few of his
|
|
phrases I caught: "Our original principles are all right," "What
|
|
this country requires is a return to fundamental American methods-
|
|
free opportunity for all," "The spirit of liberty in which this nation
|
|
was born," "Let us return to the principles of our forefathers."
|
|
'When he says "free opportunity for all," he means free
|
|
opportunity to squeeze profits, which freedom of opportunity is now
|
|
denied him by the great trusts. And the absurd thing about it is
|
|
that you have repeated these phrases so often that you believe them.
|
|
You want opportunity to plunder your fellow-men in your own small way,
|
|
but you hypnotize yourselves into thinking you want freedom. You are
|
|
piggish and acquisitive, but the magic of your phrases leads you to
|
|
believe that you are patriotic. Your desire for profits, which is
|
|
sheer selfishness, you metamorphose into altruistic solicitude for
|
|
suffering humanity. Come on now, right here amongst ourselves, and
|
|
be honest for once. Look the matter in the face and state it in direct
|
|
terms.'
|
|
There were flushed and angry faces at the table, and withal a
|
|
measure of awe. They were a little frightened at this smooth-faced
|
|
young fellow, and the swing and smash of his words, and his dreadful
|
|
trait of calling a spade a spade. Mr. Calvin promptly replied.
|
|
'And why not?' he demanded. 'Why can we not return to ways of our
|
|
fathers when this republic was founded? You have spoken much truth,
|
|
Mr. Everhard, unpalatable though it has been. But here amongst
|
|
ourselves let us speak out. Let us throw off all disguise and accept
|
|
the truth as Mr. Everhard has flatly stated it. It is true that we
|
|
smaller capitalists are after profits, and that the trusts are
|
|
taking our profits away from us. It is true that we want to destroy
|
|
the trusts in order that our profits may remain to us. And why can
|
|
we not do it? Why not? I say, why not?'
|
|
'Ah, now we come to the gist of the matter,' Ernest said with a
|
|
pleased expression. 'I'll try to tell you why not, though the
|
|
telling will be rather hard. You see, you fellows have studied
|
|
business, in a small way, but you have not studied social evolution at
|
|
all. You are in the midst of a transition stage now in economic
|
|
evolution, but you do not understand it, and that's what causes all
|
|
the confusion. Why cannot you return? Because you can't. You can no
|
|
more make water run up hill than can you cause the tide of economic
|
|
evolution to flow back in its channel along the way it came. Joshua
|
|
made the sun stand still upon Gibeon, but you would outdo Joshua.
|
|
You would make the sun go backward in the sky. You would have time
|
|
retrace its steps from noon to morning.
|
|
'In the face of labor-saving machinery, of organized production,
|
|
of the increased efficiency of combination, you would set the economic
|
|
sun back a whole generation or so to the time when there were no great
|
|
capitalists, no great machinery, no railroads- a time when a host of
|
|
little capitalists warred with each other in economic anarchy, and
|
|
when production was primitive, wasteful, unorganized, and costly.
|
|
Believe me, Joshua's task was easier, and he had Jehovah to help
|
|
him. But God has forsaken you small capitalists. The sun of the
|
|
small capitalists is setting. It will never rise again. Nor is it in
|
|
your power even to make it stand still. You are perishing, and you are
|
|
doomed to perish utterly from the face of society.
|
|
'This is the fiat of evolution. It is the word of God. Combination
|
|
is stronger than competition. Primitive man was a puny creature hiding
|
|
in the crevices of the rocks. He combined and made war upon his
|
|
carnivorous enemies. They were competitive beasts. Primitive man was a
|
|
combinative beast, and because of it he rose to primacy over all the
|
|
animals. And man has been achieving greater and greater combinations
|
|
ever since. It is combination versus competition, a thousand centuries
|
|
long struggle, in which competition has always been worsted. Whoso
|
|
enlists on the side of competition perishes.'
|
|
'But the trusts themselves arose out of competition,' Mr. Calvin
|
|
interrupted.
|
|
Very true,' Ernest answered. 'And the trusts themselves destroyed
|
|
competition. That, by your own word, is why you are no longer in the
|
|
dairy business.'
|
|
The first laughter of the evening went around the table, and even
|
|
Mr. Calvin joined in the laugh against himself.
|
|
'And now, while we are on the trusts,' Ernest went on, 'let us
|
|
settle a few things. I shall make certain statements, and if you
|
|
disagree with them, speak up. Silence will mean agreement. Is it not
|
|
true that a machine-loom will weave more cloth and weave more
|
|
cheaply than a hand-loom?' He paused, but nobody spoke up. 'Is it
|
|
not then highly irrational to break the machine-loom and go back to
|
|
the clumsy and more costly hand-loom method of weaving?' Heads
|
|
nodded in acquiescence. 'Is it not true that that known as a trust
|
|
produces more efficiently and cheaply than can a thousand competing
|
|
small concerns?' Still no one objected. 'Then is it not irrational
|
|
to destroy that cheap and efficient combination?'
|
|
No one answered for a long time. Then Mr. Kowalt spoke.
|
|
'What are we to do, then?' he demanded. 'To destroy the trusts is
|
|
the only way we can see to escape their domination.'
|
|
Ernest was all fire and aliveness on the instant.
|
|
'I'll show you another way!' he cried. 'Let us not destroy those
|
|
wonderful machines that produce efficiently and cheaply. Let us
|
|
control them. Let us profit by their efficiency and cheapness. Let
|
|
us run them for ourselves. Let us oust the present owners of the
|
|
wonderful machines, and let us own the wonderful machines ourselves.
|
|
That, gentlemen, is socialism, a greater combination than the
|
|
trusts, a greater economic and social combination than any that has as
|
|
yet appeared on the planet. It is in line with evolution. We meet
|
|
combination with greater combination. It is the winning side. Come
|
|
on over with us socialists and play on the winning side.'
|
|
Here arose dissent. There was a shaking of heads, and mutterings
|
|
arose.
|
|
'All right, then, you prefer to be anachronisms,' Ernest laughed.
|
|
'You prefer to play atavistic roles. You are doomed to perish as all
|
|
atavisms perish. Have you ever asked what will happen to you when
|
|
greater combinations than even the present trusts arise? Have you ever
|
|
considered where you will stand when the great trusts themselves
|
|
combine into the combination of combinations- into the social,
|
|
economic, and political trust?'
|
|
He turned abruptly and irrelevantly upon Mr. Calvin.
|
|
'Tell me,' Ernest said, 'if this is not true. You are compelled to
|
|
form a new political party because the old parties are in the hands of
|
|
the trusts. The chief obstacle to your Grange propaganda is the
|
|
trusts. Behind every obstacle you encounter, every blow that smites
|
|
you, every defeat that you receive, is the hand of the trusts. Is this
|
|
not so? Tell me.'
|
|
Mr. Calvin sat in uncomfortable silence.
|
|
'Go ahead,' Ernest encouraged.
|
|
'It is true,' Mr. Calvin confessed. 'We captured the state
|
|
legislature of Oregon and put through splendid protective legislation,
|
|
and it was vetoed by the governor, who was a creature of the trusts.
|
|
We elected a governor of Colorado, and the legislature refused to
|
|
permit him to take office. Twice we have passed a national income tax,
|
|
and each time the supreme court smashed it as unconstitutional. The
|
|
courts are in the hands of the trusts. We, the people, do not pay
|
|
our judges sufficiently. But there will come a time-'
|
|
'When the combination of the trusts will control all legislation,
|
|
when the combination of the trusts will itself be the government,'
|
|
Ernest interrupted.
|
|
'Never! never!' were the cries that arose. Everybody was excited and
|
|
belligerent.
|
|
'Tell me,' Ernest demanded, 'what will you do when such a time
|
|
comes?'
|
|
'We will rise in our strength!' Mr. Asmunsen cried, and many
|
|
voices backed his decision.
|
|
'That will be civil war,' Ernest warned them.
|
|
'So be it, civil war,' was Mr. Asmunsen's answer, with the cries
|
|
of all the men at the table behind him. 'We have not forgotten the
|
|
deeds of our forefathers. For our liberties we are ready to fight
|
|
and die.'
|
|
Ernest smiled.
|
|
'Do not forget,' he said, 'that we had tacitly agreed that liberty
|
|
in your case, gentlemen, means liberty to squeeze profits out of
|
|
others.'
|
|
The table was angry, now, fighting angry; but Ernest controlled
|
|
the tumult and made himself heard.
|
|
'One more question. When you rise in your strength, remember, the
|
|
reason for your rising will be that the government is in the hands
|
|
of the trusts. Therefore, against your strength the government will
|
|
turn the regular army, the navy, the militia, the police- in short,
|
|
the whole organized war machinery of the United States. Where will
|
|
your strength be then?'
|
|
Dismay sat on their faces, and before they could recover, Ernest
|
|
struck again.
|
|
'Do you remember, not so long ago, when our regular army was only
|
|
fifty thousand? Year by year it has been increased until to-day it
|
|
is three hundred thousand.'
|
|
Again he struck.
|
|
'Nor is that all. While you diligently pursued that favorite phantom
|
|
of yours, called profits, and moralized about that favorite fetich
|
|
of yours, called competition, even greater and more direful things
|
|
have been accomplished by combination. There is the militia.'
|
|
'It is our strength!' cried Mr. Kowalt. 'With it we would repel
|
|
the invasion of the regular army.'
|
|
'You would go into the militia yourself,' was Ernest's retort,
|
|
'and be sent to Maine, or Florida, or the Philippines, or anywhere
|
|
else, to drown in blood your own comrades civil-warring for their
|
|
liberties. While from Kansas, or Wisconsin, or any other state, your
|
|
own comrades would go into the militia and come here to California
|
|
to drown in blood your own civil-warring.'
|
|
Now they were really shocked, and they sat wordless, until Mr.
|
|
Owen murmured:
|
|
'We would not go into the militia. That would settle it. We would
|
|
not be so foolish.'
|
|
Ernest laughed outright.
|
|
'You do not understand the combination that has been effected. You
|
|
could not help yourself. You would be drafted into the militia.'
|
|
'There is such a thing as civil law,' Mr. Owen insisted.
|
|
'Not when the government suspends civil law. In that day when you
|
|
speak of rising in your strength, your strength would be turned
|
|
against yourself. Into the militia you would go, willy-nilly. Habeas
|
|
corpus, I heard some one mutter just now. Instead of habeas corpus you
|
|
would get post mortems. If you refused to go into the militia, or to
|
|
obey after you were in, you would be tried by drumhead court martial
|
|
and shot down like dogs. It is the law.'
|
|
'It is not the law!' Mr. Calvin asserted positively. 'There is no
|
|
such law. Young man, you have dreamed all this. Why, you spoke of
|
|
sending the militia to the Philippines. That is unconstitutional.
|
|
The Constitution especially states that the militia cannot be sent out
|
|
of the country.'
|
|
'What's the Constitution got to do with it?' Ernest demanded. 'The
|
|
courts interpret the Constitution, and the courts, as Mr. Asmunsen
|
|
agreed, are the creatures of the trusts. Besides, it is as I have
|
|
said, the law. It has been the law for years, for nine years,
|
|
gentlemen.'
|
|
'That we can be drafted into the militia?' Mr. Calvin asked
|
|
incredulously. 'That they can shoot us by drumhead court martial if we
|
|
refuse?'
|
|
'Yes,' Ernest answered, 'precisely that.'
|
|
'How is it that we have never heard of this law?' my father asked,
|
|
and I could see that it was likewise new to him.
|
|
'For two reasons,' Ernest said. 'First, there has been no need to
|
|
enforce it. If there had, you'd have heard of it soon enough. And
|
|
secondly, the law was rushed through Congress and the Senate secretly,
|
|
with practically no discussion. Of course, the newspapers made no
|
|
mention of it. But we socialists knew about it. We published it in our
|
|
papers. But you never read our papers.'
|
|
'I still insist you are dreaming,' Mr. Calvin said stubbornly.
|
|
'The country would never have permitted it.'
|
|
'But the country did permit it,' Ernest replied. 'And as for my
|
|
dreaming-' he put his hand in his pocket and drew out a small
|
|
pamphlet- 'tell me if this looks like dream-stuff.'
|
|
He opened it and began to read:
|
|
'"Section One, be it enacted, and so forth and so forth, that the
|
|
militia shall consist of every able-bodied male citizen of the
|
|
respective states, territories, and District of Columbia, who is
|
|
more than eighteen and less than forty-five years of age."
|
|
'"Section Seven, that any officer or enlisted man"- remember Section
|
|
One, gentlemen, you are all enlisted men- "that any enlisted man of
|
|
the militia who shall refuse or neglect to present himself to such
|
|
mustering officer upon being called forth as herein prescribed,
|
|
shall be subject to trial by court martial, and shall be punished as
|
|
such court martial shall direct."
|
|
'"Section Eight, that courts martial, for the trial of officers or
|
|
men of the militia, shall be composed of militia officers only."
|
|
'"Section Nine, that the militia, when called into the actual
|
|
service of the United States, shall be subject to the same rules and
|
|
articles of war as the regular troops of the United States."
|
|
'There you are gentlemen, American citizens, and
|
|
fellow-militiamen. Nine years ago we socialists thought that law was
|
|
aimed against labor. But it would seem that it was aimed against
|
|
you, too. Congressman Wiley, in the brief discussion that was
|
|
permitted, said that the bill "provided for a reserve force to take
|
|
the mob by the throat"- you're the mob, gentlemen- "and protect at all
|
|
hazards life, liberty, and property." And in the time to come, when
|
|
you rise in your strength, remember that you will be rising against
|
|
the property of the trusts, and the liberty of the trusts, according
|
|
to the law, to squeeze you. Your teeth are pulled, gentlemen. Your
|
|
claws are trimmed. In the day you rise in your strength, toothless and
|
|
clawless, you will be as harmless as any army of clams.'
|
|
'I don't believe it!' Kowalt cried. 'There is no such law. It is a
|
|
canard got up by you socialists.'
|
|
'This bill was introduced in the House of Representatives on July
|
|
30, 1902,' was the reply. 'It was introduced by Representative Dick of
|
|
Ohio. It was rushed through. It was passed unanimously by the Senate
|
|
on January 14, 1903. And just seven days afterward was approved by the
|
|
President of the United States.'*
|
|
|
|
* Everhard was right in the essential particulars, though his date
|
|
of the introduction of the bill is in error. The bill was introduced
|
|
on June 30, and not on July 30. The Congressional Record is here in
|
|
Ardis, and a reference to it shows mention of the bill on the
|
|
following dates: June 30, December 9, 15, 16, and 17, 1902, and
|
|
January 7 and 14, 1903. The ignorance evidenced by the business men at
|
|
the dinner was nothing unusual. Very few people knew of the
|
|
existence of this law. E. Untermann, a revolutionist, in July, 1903,
|
|
published a pamphlet at Girard, Kansas, on the 'Militia Bill.' This
|
|
pamphlet had a small circulation among workingmen; but already had the
|
|
segregation of classes proceeded so far, that the members of the
|
|
middle class never heard of the pamphlet at all, and so remained in
|
|
ignorance of the law.
|
|
CHAPTER NINE.
|
|
The Mathematics of a Dream.
|
|
|
|
IN THE MIDST OF THE consternation his revelation had produced,
|
|
Ernest began again to speak.
|
|
'You have said, a dozen of you to-night, that socialism is
|
|
impossible. You have asserted the impossible, now let me demonstrate
|
|
the inevitable. Not only is it inevitable that you small capitalists
|
|
shall pass away, but it is inevitable that the large capitalists,
|
|
and the trusts also, shall pass away. Remember, the tide of
|
|
evolution never flows backward. It flows on and on, and it flows
|
|
from competition to combination, and from little combination to
|
|
large combination, and from large combination to colossal combination,
|
|
and it flows on to socialism, which is the most colossal combination
|
|
of all.
|
|
'You tell me that I dream. Very good. I'll give you the
|
|
mathematics of my dream; and here, in advance, I challenge you to show
|
|
that my mathematics are wrong. I shall develop the inevitability of
|
|
the breakdown of the capitalist system, and I shall demonstrate
|
|
mathematically why it must break down. Here goes, and bear with me
|
|
if at first I seem irrelevant.
|
|
'Let us, first of all, investigate a particular industrial
|
|
process, and whenever I state something with which you disagree,
|
|
please interrupt me. Here is a shoe factory. This factory takes
|
|
leather and makes it into shoes. Here is one hundred dollars' worth of
|
|
leather. It goes through the factory and comes out in the form of
|
|
shoes, worth, let us say, two hundred dollars. What has happened?
|
|
One hundred dollars has been added to the value of the leather. How
|
|
was it added? Let us see.
|
|
'Capital and labor added this value of one hundred dollars.
|
|
Capital furnished the factory, the machines, and paid all the
|
|
expenses. Labor furnished labor. By the joint effort of capital and
|
|
labor one hundred dollars of value was added. Are you all agreed so
|
|
far?'
|
|
Heads nodded around the table in affirmation.
|
|
'Labor and capital having produced this one hundred dollars, now
|
|
proceed to divide it. The statistics of this division are
|
|
fractional; so let us, for the sake of convenience, make them
|
|
roughly approximate. Capital takes fifty dollars as its share, and
|
|
labor gets in wages fifty dollars as its share. We will not enter into
|
|
the squabbling over the division.* No matter how much squabbling takes
|
|
place, in one percentage or another the division is arranged. And take
|
|
notice here, that what is true of this particular industrial process
|
|
is true of all industrial processes. Am I right?'
|
|
|
|
* Everhard here clearly develops the cause of all the labor troubles
|
|
of that time. In the division of the joint-product, capital wanted all
|
|
it could get, and labor wanted all it could get. This quarrel over the
|
|
division was irreconcilable. So long as the system of capitalistic
|
|
production existed, labor and capital continued to quarrel over the
|
|
division of the joint-product. It is a ludicrous spectacle to us,
|
|
but we must not forget that we have seven centuries' advantage over
|
|
those that lived in that time.
|
|
|
|
Again the whole table agreed with Ernest.
|
|
'Now, suppose labor, having received its fifty dollars, wanted to
|
|
buy back shoes. It could only buy back fifty dollars' worth. That's
|
|
clear, isn't it?
|
|
'And now we shift from this particular process to the sum total of
|
|
all industrial processes in the United States, which includes the
|
|
leather itself, raw material, transportation, selling, everything.
|
|
We will say, for the sake of round figures, that the total
|
|
production of wealth in the United States is one year is four
|
|
billion dollars. Then labor has received in wages, during the same
|
|
period, two billion dollars. Four billion dollars has been produced.
|
|
How much of this can labor buy back? Two billions. There is no
|
|
discussion of this, I am sure. For that matter, my percentages are
|
|
mild. Because of a thousand capitalistic devices, labor cannot buy
|
|
back even half of the total product.
|
|
'But to return. We will say labor buys back two billions. Then it
|
|
stands to reason that labor can consume only two billions. There are
|
|
still two billions to be accounted for, which labor cannot buy back
|
|
and consume.'
|
|
'Labor does not consume its two billions, even,' Mr. Kowalt spoke
|
|
up. 'If it did, it would not have any deposits in the savings banks.'
|
|
'Labor's deposits in the savings banks are only a sort of reserve
|
|
fund that is consumed as fast as it accumulates. These deposits are
|
|
saved for old age, for sickness and accident, and for funeral
|
|
expenses. The savings bank deposit is simply a piece of the loaf put
|
|
back on the shelf to be eaten next day. No, labor consumes all of
|
|
the total product that its wages will buy back.
|
|
'Two billions are left to capital. After it has paid its expenses,
|
|
does it consume the remainder? Does capital consume all of its two
|
|
billions?'
|
|
Ernest stopped and put the question point blank to a number of the
|
|
men. They shook their heads.
|
|
'I don't know,' one of them frankly said.
|
|
'Of course you do,' Ernest went on. 'Stop and think a moment. If
|
|
capital consumed its share, the sum total of capital could not
|
|
increase. It would remain constant. If you will look at the economic
|
|
history of the United States, you will see that the sum total of
|
|
capital has continually increased. Therefore capital does not
|
|
consume its share. Do you remember when England owned so much of our
|
|
railroad bonds? As the years went by, we bought back those bonds. What
|
|
does that mean? That part of capital's unconsumed share bought back
|
|
the bonds. What is the meaning of the fact that to-day the capitalists
|
|
of the United States own hundreds and hundreds of millions of
|
|
dollars of Mexican bonds, Russian bonds, Italian bonds, Grecian bonds?
|
|
The meaning is that those hundreds and hundreds of millions were
|
|
part of capital's share which capital did not consume. Furthermore,
|
|
from the very beginning of the capitalist system, capital has never
|
|
consumed all of its share.
|
|
'And now we come to the point. Four billion dollars of wealth is
|
|
produced in one year in the United States. Labor buys back and
|
|
consumes two billions. Capital does not consume the remaining two
|
|
billions. There is a large balance left over unconsumed. What is
|
|
done with this balance? What can be done with it? Labor cannot consume
|
|
any of it, for labor has already spent all its wages. Capital will not
|
|
consume this balance, because, already, according to its nature, it
|
|
has consumed all it can. And still remains the balance. What can be
|
|
done with it? What is done with it?'
|
|
'It is sold abroad,' Mr. Kowalt volunteered.
|
|
'The very thing,' Ernest agreed. 'Because of this balance arises our
|
|
need for a foreign market. This is sold abroad. It has to be sold
|
|
abroad. There is no other way of getting rid of it. And that
|
|
unconsumed surplus, sold abroad, becomes what we call our favorable
|
|
balance of trade. Are we all agreed so far?'
|
|
'Surely it is a waste of time to elaborate these A B C's of
|
|
commerce,' Mr. Calvin said tartly. 'We all understand them.'
|
|
'And it is by these A B C's I have so carefully elaborated that I
|
|
shall confound you,' Ernest retorted. 'There's the beauty of it. And
|
|
I'm going to confound you with them right now. Here goes.
|
|
'The United States is a capitalist country that has developed its
|
|
resources. According to its capitalist system of industry, it has an
|
|
unconsumed surplus that must be got rid of, and that must be got rid
|
|
of abroad.* What is true of the United States is true of every other
|
|
capitalist country with developed resources. Every one of such
|
|
countries has an unconsumed surplus. Don't forget that they have
|
|
already traded with one another, and that these surpluses yet
|
|
remain. Labor in all these countries has spent it wages, and cannot
|
|
buy any of the surpluses. Capital in all these countries has already
|
|
consumed all it is able according to its nature. And still remain
|
|
the surpluses. They cannot dispose of these surpluses to one
|
|
another. How are they going to get rid of them?'
|
|
|
|
* Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United States a few years
|
|
prior to this time, made the following public declaration: 'A more
|
|
liberal and extensive reciprocity in the purchase and sale of
|
|
commodities is necessary, so that the overproduction of the United
|
|
States can be satisfactorily disposed of to foreign countries.' Of
|
|
course, this overproduction he mentions was the profits of the
|
|
capitalist system over and beyond the consuming power of the
|
|
capitalists. It was at this time that Senator Mark Hanna said: 'The
|
|
production of wealth in the United States is one-third larger annually
|
|
than its consumption.' Also a fellow-Senator, Chauncey Depew, said:
|
|
'The American people produce annually two billions more wealth than
|
|
they consume.'
|
|
|
|
'Sell them to countries with undeveloped resources,' Mr. Kowalt
|
|
suggested.
|
|
'The very thing. You see, my argument is so clear and simple that in
|
|
your own minds you carry it on for me. And now for the next step.
|
|
Suppose the United States disposes of its surplus to a country with
|
|
undeveloped resources like, say, Brazil. Remember this surplus is over
|
|
and above trade, which articles of trade have been consumed. What,
|
|
then, does the United States get in return from Brazil?'
|
|
'Gold,' said Mr. Kowalt.
|
|
'But there is only so much gold, and not much of it, in the
|
|
world,' Ernest objected.
|
|
'Gold in the form of securities and bonds and so forth,' Mr.
|
|
Kowalt amended.
|
|
'Now you've struck it,' Ernest said. 'From Brazil the United States,
|
|
in return for her surplus, gets bonds and securities. And what does
|
|
that mean? It means that the United States is coming to own
|
|
railroads in Brazil, factories, mines, and lands in Brazil. And what
|
|
is the meaning of that in turn?'
|
|
Mr. Kowalt pondered and shook his head.
|
|
'I'll tell you,' Ernest continued. 'It means that the resources of
|
|
Brazil are being developed. And now, the next point. When Brazil,
|
|
under the capitalist system, has developed her resources, she will
|
|
herself have an unconsumed surplus. Can she get rid of this surplus to
|
|
the United States? No, because the United States has herself a
|
|
surplus. Can the United States do what she previously did- get rid
|
|
of her surplus to Brazil? No, for Brazil now has a surplus, too.
|
|
'What happens? The United States and Brazil must both seek out other
|
|
countries with undeveloped resources, in order to unload the surpluses
|
|
on them. But by the very process of unloading the surpluses, the
|
|
resources of those countries are in turn developed. Soon they have
|
|
surpluses, and are seeking other countries on which to unload. Now,
|
|
gentlemen, follow me. The planet is only so large. There are only so
|
|
many countries in the world. What will happen when every country in
|
|
the world, down to the smallest and last, with a surplus in its hands,
|
|
stands confronting every other country with surpluses in their hands?'
|
|
He paused and regarded his listeners. The bepuzzlement in their
|
|
faces was delicious. Also, there was awe in their faces. Out of
|
|
abstractions Ernest had conjured a vision and made them see it. They
|
|
were seeing it then, as they sat there, and they were frightened by
|
|
it.
|
|
'We started with A B C, Mr. Calvin,' Ernest said slyly. 'I have
|
|
now given you the rest of the alphabet. It is very simple. That is the
|
|
beauty of it. You surely have the answer forthcoming. What, then, when
|
|
every country in the world has an unconsumed surplus? Where will
|
|
your capitalist system be then?'
|
|
But Mr. Calvin shook a troubled head. He was obviously questing back
|
|
through Ernest's reasoning in search of an error.
|
|
'Let me briefly go over the ground with you again,' Ernest said. 'We
|
|
began with a particular industrial process, the shoe factory. We found
|
|
that the division of the joint product that took place there was
|
|
similar to the division that took place in the sum total of all
|
|
industrial processes. We found that labor could buy back with its
|
|
wages only so much of the product, and that capital did not consume
|
|
all of the remainder of the product. We found that when labor had
|
|
consumed to the full extent of its wages, and when capital had
|
|
consumed all it wanted, there was still left an unconsumed surplus. We
|
|
agreed that this surplus could only be disposed of abroad. We
|
|
agreed, also, that the effect of unloading this surplus on another
|
|
country would be to develop the resources of that country, and that in
|
|
a short time that country would have an unconsumed surplus. We
|
|
extended this process to all the countries on the planet, till every
|
|
country was producing every year, and every day, an unconsumed
|
|
surplus, which it could dispose of to no other country. And now I
|
|
ask you again, what are we going to do with those surpluses?'
|
|
Still no one answered.
|
|
'Mr. Calvin?' Ernest queried.
|
|
'It beats me,' Mr. Calvin confessed.
|
|
'I never dreamed of such a thing,' Mr. Asmunsen said. 'And yet it
|
|
does seem clear as print.'
|
|
It was the first time I had ever heard Karl Marx's* doctrine of
|
|
surplus value elaborated, and Ernest had done it so simply that I,
|
|
too, sat puzzled and dumbfounded.
|
|
|
|
* Karl Marx- the great intellectual hero of Socialism. A German
|
|
Jew of the nineteenth century. A contemporary of John Stuart Mill.
|
|
It seems incredible to us that whole generations should have elapsed
|
|
after the enunciation of Marx's economic discoveries, in which time he
|
|
was sneered at by the world's accepted thinkers and scholars.
|
|
Because of his discoveries he was banished from his native country,
|
|
and he died an exile in England.
|
|
|
|
'I'll tell you a way to get rid of the surplus,' Ernest said. 'Throw
|
|
it into the sea. Throw every year hundreds of millions of dollars'
|
|
worth of shoes and wheat and clothing and all the commodities of
|
|
commerce into the sea. Won't that fix it?'
|
|
'It will certainly fix it,' Mr. Calvin answered. 'But it is absurd
|
|
for you to talk that way.'
|
|
Ernest was upon him like a flash.
|
|
'Is it a bit more absurd than what you advocate, you
|
|
machine-breaker, returning to the antediluvian ways of your
|
|
forefathers? What do you propose in order to get rid of the surplus?
|
|
You would escape the problem of the surplus by not producing any
|
|
surplus. And how do you propose to avoid producing a surplus? By
|
|
returning to a primitive method of production, so confused and
|
|
disorderly and irrational, so wasteful and costly, that it will be
|
|
impossible to produce a surplus.'
|
|
Mr. Calvin swallowed. The point had been driven home. He swallowed
|
|
again and cleared his throat.
|
|
'You are right,' he said. 'I stand convicted. It is absurd. But
|
|
we've got to do something. It is a case of life and death for us of
|
|
the middle class. We refuse to perish. We elect to be absurd and to
|
|
return to the truly crude and wasteful methods of our forefathers.
|
|
We will put back industry to its pre-trust stage. We will break the
|
|
machines. And what are you going to do about it?'
|
|
'But you can't break the machines,' Ernest replied. 'You cannot make
|
|
the tide of evolution flow backward. Opposed to you are two great
|
|
forces, each of which is more powerful than you of the middle class.
|
|
The large capitalists, the trusts, in short, will not let you turn
|
|
back. They don't want the machines destroyed. And greater than the
|
|
trusts, and more powerful, is labor. It will not let you destroy the
|
|
machines. The ownership of the world, along with the machines, lies
|
|
between the trusts and labor. That is the battle alignment. Neither
|
|
side wants the destruction of the machines. But each side wants to
|
|
possess the machines. In this battle the middle class has no place.
|
|
The middle class is a pygmy between two giants. Don't you see, you
|
|
poor perishing middle class, you are caught between the upper and
|
|
nether millstones, and even now has the grinding begun.
|
|
'I have demonstrated to you mathematically the inevitable
|
|
breakdown of the capitalist system. When every country stands with
|
|
an unconsumed and unsalable surplus on its hands, the capitalist
|
|
system will break down under the terrific structure of profits that it
|
|
itself has reared. And in that day there won't be any destruction of
|
|
the machines. The struggle then will be for the ownership of the
|
|
machines. If labor wins, your way will be easy. The United States, and
|
|
the whole world for that matter, will enter upon a new and
|
|
tremendous era. Instead of being crushed by the machines, life will be
|
|
made fairer, and happier, and nobler by them. You of the destroyed
|
|
middle class, along with labor- there will be nothing but labor
|
|
then; so you, and all the rest of labor, will participate in the
|
|
equitable distribution of the products of the wonderful machines.
|
|
And we, all of us, will make new and more wonderful machines. And
|
|
there won't be any unconsumed surplus, because there won't be any
|
|
profits.'
|
|
'But suppose the trusts win in this battle over the ownership of the
|
|
machines and the world?' Mr. Kowalt asked.
|
|
'Then,' Ernest answered, 'you, and labor, and all of us, will be
|
|
crushed under the iron heel of a despotism as relentless and
|
|
terrible as any despotism that has blackened the pages of the
|
|
history of man. That will be a good name for that despotism, the
|
|
Iron Heel.'*
|
|
|
|
* The earliest known use of that name to designate the Oligarchy.
|
|
|
|
There was a long pause, and every man at the table meditated in ways
|
|
unwonted and profound.
|
|
'But this socialism of yours is a dream,' Mr. Calvin said; and
|
|
repeated, 'a dream.'
|
|
'I'll show you something that isn't a dream, then,' Ernest answered.
|
|
'And that something I shall call the Oligarchy. You call it the
|
|
Plutocracy. We both mean the same thing, the large capitalists or
|
|
the trusts. Let us see where the power lies today. And in order to
|
|
do so, let us apportion society into its class divisions.
|
|
'There are three big classes in society. First comes the Plutocracy,
|
|
which is composed of wealthy bankers, railway magnates, corporation
|
|
directors, and trust magnates. Second, is the middle class, your
|
|
class, gentlemen, which is composed of farmers, merchants, small
|
|
manufacturers, and professional men. And third and last comes my
|
|
class, the proletariat, which is composed of the wage-workers.*
|
|
|
|
* This division of society made by Everhard is in accordance with
|
|
that made by Lucien Sanial, one of the statistical authorities of that
|
|
time. His calculation of the membership of these divisions by
|
|
occupation, from the United States Census of 1900, is as follows:
|
|
Plutocratic class, 250,251; Middle class, 8,429,845; and Proletariat
|
|
class, 20,393,137.
|
|
|
|
'You cannot but grant that the ownership of wealth constitutes
|
|
essential power in the United States to-day. How is this wealth
|
|
owned by these three classes? Here are the figures. The Plutocracy
|
|
owns sixty-seven billions of wealth. Of the total number of persons
|
|
engaged in occupations in the United States, only nine-tenths of one
|
|
per cent are from the Plutocracy, yet the Plutocracy owns seventy
|
|
per cent of the total wealth. The middle class owns twenty-four
|
|
billions. Twenty-nine per cent of those in occupations are from the
|
|
middle class, and they own twenty-five per cent of the total wealth.
|
|
Remains the proletariat. It owns four billions. Of all persons in
|
|
occupations, seventy per cent come from the proletariat; and the
|
|
proletariat owns four per cent of the total wealth. Where does the
|
|
power lie, gentlemen?'
|
|
'From your own figures, we of the middle class are more powerful
|
|
than labor,' Mr. Asmunsen remarked.
|
|
'Calling us weak does not make you stronger in the face of the
|
|
strength of the Plutocracy,' Ernest retorted. 'And furthermore, I'm
|
|
not done with you. There is a greater strength than wealth, and it
|
|
is greater because it cannot be taken away. Our strength, the strength
|
|
of the proletariat, is in our muscles, in our hands to cast ballots,
|
|
in our fingers to pull triggers. This strength we cannot be stripped
|
|
of. It is the primitive strength, it is the strength that is to life
|
|
germane, it is the strength that is stronger than wealth, and that
|
|
wealth cannot take away.
|
|
'But your strength is detachable. It can be taken away from you.
|
|
Even now the Plutocracy is taking it away from you. In the end it will
|
|
take it all away from you. And then you will cease to be the middle
|
|
class. You will descend to us. You will become proletarians. And the
|
|
beauty of it is that you will then add to our strength. We will hail
|
|
you brothers, and we will fight shoulder to shoulder in the cause of
|
|
humanity.
|
|
'You see, labor has nothing concrete of which to be despoiled. Its
|
|
share of the wealth of the country consists of clothes and household
|
|
furniture, with here and there, in very rare cases, an unencumbered
|
|
home. But you have the concrete wealth, twenty-four billions of it,
|
|
and the Plutocracy will take it away from you. Of course, there is the
|
|
large likelihood that the proletariat will take it away first. Don't
|
|
you see your position, gentlemen? The middle class is a wobbly
|
|
little lamb between a lion and a tiger. If one doesn't get you, the
|
|
other will. And if the Plutocracy gets you first, why it's only a
|
|
matter of time when the Proletariat gets the Plutocracy.
|
|
'Even your present wealth is not a true measure of your power. The
|
|
strength of your wealth at this moment is only an empty shell. That is
|
|
why you are crying out your feeble little battle-cry, "Return to the
|
|
ways of our fathers." You are aware of your impotency. You know that
|
|
your strength is an empty shell. And I'll show you the emptiness of
|
|
it.
|
|
'What power have the farmers? Over fifty per cent are thralls by
|
|
virtue of the fact that they are merely tenants or are mortgaged.
|
|
And all of them are thralls by virtue of the fact that the trusts
|
|
already own or control (which is the same thing only better)- own
|
|
and control all the means of marketing the crops, such as cold
|
|
storage, railroads, elevators, and steamship lines. And,
|
|
furthermore, the trusts control the markets. In all this the farmers
|
|
are without power. As regards their political and governmental
|
|
power, I'll take that up later, along with the political and
|
|
governmental power of the whole middle class.
|
|
'Day by day the trusts squeeze out the farmers as they squeezed
|
|
out Mr. Calvin and the rest of the dairymen. And day by day are the
|
|
merchants squeezed out in the same way. Do you remember how, in six
|
|
months, the Tobacco Trust squeezed out over four hundred cigar
|
|
stores in New York City alone? Where are the old-time owners of the
|
|
coal fields? You know today, without my telling you, that the Railroad
|
|
Trust owns or controls the entire anthracite and bituminous coal
|
|
fields. Doesn't the Standard Oil Trust* own a score of the ocean
|
|
lines? And does it not also control copper, to say nothing of
|
|
running a smelter trust as a little side enterprise? There are ten
|
|
thousand cities in the United States to-night lighted by the companies
|
|
owned or controlled by Standard Oil, and in as many cities all the
|
|
electric transportation,- urban, suburban, and interurban,- is in
|
|
the hands of Standard Oil. The small capitalists who were in these
|
|
thousands of enterprises are gone. You know that. It's the same way
|
|
that you are going.
|
|
|
|
* Standard Oil and Rockefeller- See upcoming footnote:
|
|
'Rockefeller began as...'
|
|
|
|
'The small manufacturer is like the farmer; and small
|
|
manufacturers and farmers to-day are reduced, to all intents and
|
|
purposes, to feudal tenure. For that matter, the professional men
|
|
and the artists are at this present moment villeins in everything
|
|
but name, while the politicians are henchmen. Why do you, Mr.
|
|
Calvin, work all your nights and days to organize the farmers, along
|
|
with the rest of the middle class, into a new political party? Because
|
|
the politicians of the old parties will have nothing to do with your
|
|
atavistic ideas; and with your atavistic ideas, they will have nothing
|
|
to do because they are what I said they are, henchmen, retainers of
|
|
the Plutocracy.
|
|
'I spoke of the professional men and the artists as villeins. What
|
|
else are they? One and all, the professors, the preachers, and the
|
|
editors, hold their jobs by serving the Plutocracy, and their
|
|
service consists of propagating only such ideas as are either harmless
|
|
to or commendatory of the Plutocracy. Whenever they propagate ideas
|
|
that menace the Plutocracy, they lose their jobs, in which case, if
|
|
they have not provided for the rainy day, they descend into the
|
|
proletariat and either perish or become working-class agitators. And
|
|
don't forget that it is the press, the pulpit, and the university that
|
|
mould public opinion, set the thought-pace of the nation. As for the
|
|
artists, they merely pander to the little less than ignoble tastes
|
|
of the Plutocracy.
|
|
'But after all, wealth in itself is not the real power; it is the
|
|
means to power, and power is governmental. Who controls the government
|
|
to-day? The proletariat with its twenty millions engaged in
|
|
occupations? Even you laugh at the idea. Does the middle class, with
|
|
its eight million occupied members? No more than the proletariat. Who,
|
|
then, controls the government? The Plutocracy, with its paltry quarter
|
|
of a million of occupied members. But this quarter of a million does
|
|
not control the government, though it renders yeoman service. It is
|
|
the brain of the Plutocracy that controls the government, and this
|
|
brain consists of seven* small and powerful groups of men. And do
|
|
not forget that these groups are working to-day practically in unison.
|
|
|
|
* Even as late as 1907, it was considered that eleven groups
|
|
dominated the country, but this number was reduced by the amalgamation
|
|
of the five railroad groups into a supreme combination of all the
|
|
railroads. These five groups so amalgamated, along with their
|
|
financial and political allies, were (1) James J. Hill with his
|
|
control of the Northwest; (2) the Pennsylvania railway group, Schiff
|
|
financial manager, with big banking firms of Philadelphia and New
|
|
York; (3) Harriman, with Frick for counsel and Odell as political
|
|
lieutenant, controlling the central continental, Southwestern and
|
|
Southern Pacific Coast lines of transportation; (4) the Gould family
|
|
railway interests; and (5) Moore, Reid, and Leeds, known as the
|
|
'Rock Island crowd.' These strong oligarchs arose out of the
|
|
conflict of competition and travelled the inevitable road toward
|
|
combination.
|
|
|
|
'Let me point out the power of but one of them, the railroad
|
|
group. It employs forty thousand lawyers to defeat the people in the
|
|
courts. It issues countless thousands of free passes to judges,
|
|
bankers, editors, ministers, university men, members of state
|
|
legislatures, and of Congress. It maintains luxurious lobbies* at
|
|
every state capital, and at the national capital; and in all the
|
|
cities and towns of the land it employs an immense army of
|
|
pettifoggers and small politicians whose business is to attend
|
|
primaries, pack conventions, get on juries, bribe judges, and in every
|
|
way to work for its interests.*(2)
|
|
|
|
* Lobby- a peculiar institution for bribing, bulldozing, and
|
|
corrupting the legislators who were supposed to represent the people's
|
|
interests.
|
|
*(2) A decade before this speech of Everhard's, the New York Board
|
|
of Trade issued a report from which the following is quoted: 'The
|
|
railroads control absolutely the legislatures of a majority of the
|
|
states of the Union; they make and unmake United States Senators,
|
|
congressmen, and governors, and are practically dictators of the
|
|
governmental policy of the United States.'
|
|
|
|
'Gentlemen, I have merely sketched the power of one of the seven
|
|
groups that constitute the brain of the Plutocracy.* Your
|
|
twenty-four billions of wealth does not give you twenty-five cents'
|
|
worth of governmental power. It is an empty shell, and soon even the
|
|
empty shell will be taken away from you. The Plutocracy has all
|
|
power in its hands to-day. It to-day makes the laws, for it owns the
|
|
Senate, Congress, the courts, and the state legislatures. And not only
|
|
that. Behind law must be force to execute the law. To-day the
|
|
Plutocracy makes the law, and to enforce the law it has at its beck
|
|
and call the, police, the army, the navy, and, lastly, the militia,
|
|
which is you, and me, and all of us.'
|
|
|
|
* Rockefeller began as a member of the proletariat, and through
|
|
thrift and cunning succeeded in developing the first perfect trust,
|
|
namely that known as Standard Oil. We cannot forbear giving the
|
|
following remarkable page from the history of the times, to show how
|
|
the need for reinvestment of the Standard Oil surplus crushed out
|
|
small capitalists and hastened the breakdown of the capitalist system.
|
|
David Graham Phillips was a radical writer of the period, and the
|
|
quotation, by him, is taken from a copy of the Saturday Evening
|
|
Post, dated October 4, 1902 A.D. This is the only copy of this
|
|
publication that has come down to us, and yet, from its appearance and
|
|
content, we cannot but conclude that it was one of the popular
|
|
periodicals with a large circulation. The quotation here follows:
|
|
'About ten years ago Rockefeller's income was given as thirty
|
|
millions by an excellent authority. He had reached the limit of
|
|
profitable investment of profits in the oil industry. Here, then, were
|
|
these enormous sums in cash pouring in- more than $2,000,000 a month
|
|
for John Davison Rockefeller alone. The problem of reinvestment became
|
|
more serious. It became a nightmare. The oil income was swelling,
|
|
swelling, and the number of sound investments limited, even more
|
|
limited than it is now. It was through no special eagerness for more
|
|
gains that the Rockefellers began to branch out from oil into other
|
|
things. They were forced, swept on by this inrolling tide of wealth
|
|
which their monopoly magnet irresistibly attracted. They developed a
|
|
staff of investment seekers and investigators. It is said that the
|
|
chief of this staff has a salary of $125,000 a year.
|
|
'The first conspicuous excursion and incursion of the Rockefellers
|
|
was into the railway field. By 1895 they controlled one-fifth of the
|
|
railway mileage of the country. What do they own or, through
|
|
dominant ownership, control to-day? They are powerful in all the great
|
|
railways of New York, north, east, and west, except one, where their
|
|
share is only a few millions. They are in most of the great railways
|
|
radiating from Chicago. They dominate in several of the systems that
|
|
extend to the Pacific. It is their votes that make Mr. Morgan so
|
|
potent, though, it may be added, they need his brains more than he
|
|
needs their votes- at present, and the combination of the two
|
|
constitutes in large measure the "community of interest."
|
|
'But railways could not alone absorb rapidly enough those mighty
|
|
floods of gold. Presently John D. Rockefeller's $2,500,000 a month had
|
|
increased to four, to five, to six millions a month, to $75,000,000
|
|
a year. Illuminating oil was becoming all profit. The reinvestments of
|
|
income were adding their mite of many annual millions.
|
|
'The Rockefellers went into gas and electricity when those
|
|
industries had developed to the safe investment stage. And now a large
|
|
part of the American people must begin to enrich the Rockefellers as
|
|
soon as the sun goes down, no matter what form of illuminant they use.
|
|
They went into farm mortgages. It is said that when prosperity a few
|
|
years ago enabled the farmers to rid themselves of their mortgages,
|
|
John D. Rockefeller was moved almost to tears; eight millions which he
|
|
had thought taken care of for years to come at a good interest were
|
|
suddenly dumped upon his doorstep and there set up a-squawking for a
|
|
new home. This unexpected addition to his worriments in finding places
|
|
for the progeny of his petroleum and their progeny and their progeny's
|
|
progeny was too much for the equanimity of a man without a
|
|
digestion...
|
|
'The Rockefellers went into mines- iron and coal and copper and
|
|
lead; into other industrial companies; into street railways, into
|
|
national, state, and municipal bonds; into steamships and steamboats
|
|
and telegraphy; into real estate, into skyscrapers and residences
|
|
and hotels and business blocks; into life insurance, into banking.
|
|
There was soon literally no field of industry where their millions
|
|
were not at work...
|
|
'The Rockefeller bank- the National City Bank- is by itself far
|
|
and away the biggest bank in the United States. It is exceeded in
|
|
the world only by the Bank of England and the Bank of France. The
|
|
deposits average more than one hundred millions a day; and it
|
|
dominates the call loan market on Wall Street and the stock market.
|
|
But it is not alone; it is the head of the Rockefeller chain of banks,
|
|
which includes fourteen banks and trust companies in New York City,
|
|
and banks of great strength and influence in every large money
|
|
center in the country.
|
|
'John D. Rockefeller owns Standard Oil stock worth between four
|
|
and five hundred millions at the market quotations. He has a hundred
|
|
millions in the steel trust, almost as much in a single western
|
|
railway system, half as much in a second, and so on and on and on
|
|
until the mind wearies of the cataloguing. His income last year was
|
|
about $100,000,000- it is doubtful if the incomes of all the
|
|
Rothschilds together make a greater sum. And it is going up by leaps
|
|
and bounds.'
|
|
|
|
Little discussion took place after this, and the dinner soon broke
|
|
up. All were quiet and subdued, and leave-taking was done with low
|
|
voices. It seemed almost that they were scared by the vision of the
|
|
times they had seen.
|
|
'The situation is, indeed, serious,' Mr. Calvin said to Ernest. 'I
|
|
have little quarrel with the way you have depicted it. Only I disagree
|
|
with you about the doom of the middle class. We shall survive, and
|
|
we shall overthrow the trusts.'
|
|
'And return to the ways of your fathers,' Ernest finished for him.
|
|
'Even so,' Mr. Calvin answered gravely. 'I know it's a sort of
|
|
machine-breaking, and that it is absurd. But then life seems absurd
|
|
to-day, what of the machinations of the Plutocracy. And at any rate,
|
|
our sort of machine-breaking is at least practical and possible, which
|
|
your dream is not. Your socialistic dream is... well, a dream. We
|
|
cannot follow you.'
|
|
'I only wish you fellows knew a little something about evolution and
|
|
sociology,' Ernest said wistfully, as they shook hands. 'We would be
|
|
saved so much trouble if you did.'
|
|
CHAPTER TEN.
|
|
The Vortex.
|
|
|
|
FOLLOWING LIKE THUNDER claps upon the Business Men's dinner,
|
|
occurred event after event of terrifying moment; and I, little I,
|
|
who had lived so placidly all my days in the quiet university town,
|
|
found myself and my personal affairs drawn into the vortex of the
|
|
great world-affairs. Whether it was my love for Ernest, or the clear
|
|
sight he had given me of the society in which I lived, that made me
|
|
a revolutionist, I know not; but a revolutionist I became, and I was
|
|
plunged into a whirl of happenings that would have been
|
|
inconceivable three short months before.
|
|
The crisis in my own fortunes came simultaneously with great
|
|
crises in society. First of all, father was discharged from the
|
|
university. Oh, he was not technically discharged. His resignation was
|
|
demanded, that was all. This, in itself, did not amount to much.
|
|
Father, in fact, was delighted. He was especially delighted because
|
|
his discharge had been precipitated by the publication of his book,
|
|
'Economics and Education.' It clinched his argument, he contended.
|
|
What better evidence could be advanced to prove that education was
|
|
dominated by the capitalist class?
|
|
But this proof never got anywhere. Nobody knew he had been forced to
|
|
resign from the university. He was so eminent a scientist that such an
|
|
announcement, coupled with the reason for his enforced resignation,
|
|
would have created somewhat of a furor all over the world. The
|
|
newspapers showered him with praise and honor, and commended him for
|
|
having given up the drudgery of the lecture room in order to devote
|
|
his whole time to scientific research.
|
|
At first father laughed. Then he became angry- tonic angry. Then
|
|
came the suppression of his book. This suppression was performed
|
|
secretly, so secretly that at first we could not comprehend. The
|
|
publication of the book had immediately caused a bit of excitement
|
|
in the country. Father had been politely abused in the capitalist
|
|
press, the tone of the abuse being to the effect that it was a pity so
|
|
great a scientist should leave his field and invade the realm of
|
|
sociology, about which he knew nothing and wherein he had promptly
|
|
become lost. This lasted for a week, while father chuckled and said
|
|
the book had touched a sore spot on capitalism. And then, abruptly,
|
|
the newspapers and the critical magazines ceased saying anything about
|
|
the book at all. Also, and with equal suddenness, the book disappeared
|
|
from the market. Not a copy was obtainable from any bookseller. Father
|
|
wrote to the publishers and was informed that the plates had been
|
|
accidentally injured. An unsatisfactory correspondence followed.
|
|
Driven finally to an unequivocal stand, the publishers stated that
|
|
they could not see their way to putting the book into type again,
|
|
but that they were willing to relinquish their rights in it.
|
|
'And you won't find another publishing house in the country to touch
|
|
it,' Ernest said. 'And if I were you, I'd hunt cover right now. You've
|
|
merely got a foretaste of the Iron Heel.'
|
|
But father was nothing if not a scientist. He never believed in
|
|
jumping to conclusions. A laboratory experiment was no experiment if
|
|
it were not carried through in all its details. So he patiently went
|
|
the round of the publishing houses. They gave a multitude of
|
|
excuses, but not one house would consider the book.
|
|
When father became convinced that the book had actually been
|
|
suppressed, he tried to get the fact into the newspapers; but his
|
|
communications were ignored. At a political meeting of the socialists,
|
|
where many reporters were present, father saw his chance. He arose and
|
|
related the history of the suppression of the book. He laughed next
|
|
day when he read the newspapers, and then he grew angry to a degree
|
|
that eliminated all tonic qualities. The papers made no mention of the
|
|
book, but they misreported him beautifully. They twisted his words and
|
|
phrases away from the context, and turned his subdued and controlled
|
|
remarks into a howling anarchistic speech. It was done artfully. One
|
|
instance, in particular, I remember. He had used the phrase 'social
|
|
revolution.' The reporter merely dropped out 'social.' This was sent
|
|
out all over the country in an Associated Press despatch, and from all
|
|
over the country arose a cry of alarm. Father was branded as a
|
|
nihilist and an anarchist, and in one cartoon that was copied widely
|
|
he was portrayed waving a red flag at the head of a mob of
|
|
long-haired, wild-eyed men who bore in their hands torches, knives,
|
|
and dynamite bombs.
|
|
He was assailed terribly in the press, in long and abusive
|
|
editorials, for his anarchy, and hints were made of mental breakdown
|
|
on his part. This behavior, on the part of the capitalist press, was
|
|
nothing new, Ernest told us. It was the custom, he said, to send
|
|
reporters to all the socialist meetings for the express purpose of
|
|
misreporting and distorting what was said, in order to frighten the
|
|
middle class away from any possible affiliation with the
|
|
proletariat. And repeatedly Ernest warned father to cease fighting and
|
|
to take to cover.
|
|
The socialist press of the country took up the fight, however, and
|
|
throughout the reading portion of the working class it was known
|
|
that the book had been suppressed. But this knowledge stopped with the
|
|
working class. Next, the 'Appeal to Reason,' a big socialist
|
|
publishing house, arranged with father to bring out the book. Father
|
|
was jubilant, but Ernest was alarmed.
|
|
'I tell you we are on the verge of the unknown,' he insisted. 'Big
|
|
things are happening secretly all around us. We can feel them. We do
|
|
not know what they are, but they are there. The whole fabric of
|
|
society is a-tremble with them. Don't ask me. I don't know myself. But
|
|
out of this flux of society something is about to crystallize. It is
|
|
crystallizing now. The suppression of the book is a precipitation. How
|
|
many books have been suppressed? We haven't the least idea. We are
|
|
in the dark. We have no way of learning. Watch out next for the
|
|
suppression of the socialist press and socialist publishing houses.
|
|
I'm afraid it's coming. We are going to be throttled.'
|
|
Ernest had his hand on the pulse of events even more closely than
|
|
the rest of the socialists, and within two days the first blow was
|
|
struck. The Appeal to Reason was a weekly, and its regular circulation
|
|
amongst the proletariat was seven hundred and fifty thousand. Also, it
|
|
very frequently got out special editions of from two to five millions.
|
|
These great editions were paid for and distributed by the small army
|
|
of voluntary workers who had marshalled around the Appeal. The first
|
|
blow was aimed at these special editions, and it was a crushing one.
|
|
By an arbitrary ruling of the Post Office, these editions were decided
|
|
to be not the regular circulation of the paper, and for that reason
|
|
were denied admission to the mails.
|
|
A week later the Post Office Department ruled that the paper was
|
|
seditious, and barred it entirely from the mails. This was a fearful
|
|
blow to the socialist propaganda. The Appeal was desperate. It devised
|
|
a plan of reaching its subscribers through the express companies,
|
|
but they declined to handle it. This was the end of the Appeal. But
|
|
not quite. It prepared to go on with its book publishing. Twenty
|
|
thousand copies of father's book were in the bindery, and the
|
|
presses were turning off more. And then, without warning, a mob
|
|
arose one night, and, under a waving American flag, singing
|
|
patriotic songs, set fire to the great plant of the Appeal and totally
|
|
destroyed it.
|
|
Now Girard, Kansas, was a quiet, peaceable town. There had never
|
|
been any labor troubles there. The Appeal paid union wages; and, in
|
|
fact, was the backbone of the town, giving employment to hundreds of
|
|
men and women. It was not the citizens of Girard that composed the
|
|
mob. This mob had risen up out of the earth apparently, and to all
|
|
intents and purposes, its work done, it had gone back into the
|
|
earth. Ernest saw in the affair the most sinister import.
|
|
'The Black Hundreds* are being organized in the United States,' he
|
|
said. 'This is the beginning. There will be more of it. The Iron
|
|
Heel is getting bold.'
|
|
|
|
* The Black Hundreds were reactionary mobs organized by the
|
|
perishing Autocracy in the Russian Revolution. These reactionary
|
|
groups attacked the revolutionary groups, and also, at needed moments,
|
|
rioted and destroyed property so as to afford the Autocracy the
|
|
pretext of calling out the Cossacks.
|
|
|
|
And so perished father's book. We were to see much of the Black
|
|
Hundreds as the days went by. Week by week more of the socialist
|
|
papers were barred from the mails, and in a number of instances the
|
|
Black Hundreds destroyed the socialist presses. Of course, the
|
|
newspapers of the land lived up to the reactionary policy of the
|
|
ruling class, and the destroyed socialist press was misrepresented and
|
|
vilified, while the Black Hundreds were represented as true patriots
|
|
and saviours of society. So convincing was all this
|
|
misrepresentation that even sincere ministers in the pulpit praised
|
|
the Black Hundreds while regretting the necessity of violence.
|
|
History was making fast. The fall elections were soon to occur,
|
|
and Ernest was nominated by the socialist party to run for Congress.
|
|
His chance for election was most favorable. The street-car strike in
|
|
San Francisco had been broken. And following upon it the teamsters'
|
|
strike had been broken. These two defeats had been very disastrous
|
|
to organized labor. The whole Water Front Federation, along with its
|
|
allies in the structural trades, had backed up the teamsters, and
|
|
all had smashed down ingloriously. It had been a bloody strike. The
|
|
police had broken countless heads with their riot clubs; and the death
|
|
list had been augmented by the turning loose of a machine-gun on the
|
|
strikers from the barns of the Marsden Special Delivery Company.
|
|
In consequence, the men were sullen and vindictive. They wanted
|
|
blood, and revenge. Beaten on their chosen field, they were ripe to
|
|
seek revenge by means of political action. They still maintained their
|
|
labor organization, and this gave them strength in the political
|
|
struggle that was on. Ernest's chance for election grew stronger and
|
|
stronger. Day by day unions and more unions voted their support to the
|
|
socialists, until even Ernest laughed when the Undertakers' Assistants
|
|
and the Chicken Pickers fell into line. Labor became mulish. While
|
|
it packed the socialist meetings with mad enthusiasm, it was
|
|
impervious to the wiles of the old-party politicians. The old-party
|
|
orators were usually greeted with empty halls, though occasionally
|
|
they encountered full halls where they were so roughly handled that
|
|
more than once it was necessary to call out the police reserves.
|
|
History was making fast. The air was vibrant with things happening
|
|
and impending. The country was on the verge of hard times,* caused
|
|
by a series of prosperous years wherein the difficulty of disposing
|
|
abroad of the unconsumed surplus had become increasingly difficult.
|
|
Industries were working short time; many great factories were standing
|
|
idle against the time when the surplus should be gone; and wages
|
|
were being cut right and left.
|
|
|
|
* Under the capitalist regime these periods of hard times were as
|
|
inevitable as they were absurd. Prosperity always brought calamity.
|
|
This, of course, was due to the excess of unconsumed profits that
|
|
was piled up.
|
|
|
|
Also, the great machinist strike had been broken. Two hundred
|
|
thousand machinists, along with their five hundred thousand allies
|
|
in the metalworking trades, had been defeated in as bloody a strike as
|
|
had ever marred the United States. Pitched battles had been fought
|
|
with the small armies of armed strike-breakers* put in the field by
|
|
the employers' associations; the Black Hundreds, appearing in scores
|
|
of wide-scattered places, had destroyed property; and, in consequence,
|
|
a hundred thousand regular soldiers of the United States has been
|
|
called out to put a frightful end to the whole affair. A number of the
|
|
labor leaders had been executed; many others had been sentenced to
|
|
prison, while thousands of the rank and file of the strikers had
|
|
been herded into bull-pens*(2) and abominably treated by the soldiers.
|
|
|
|
* Strike-breakers- these were, in purpose and practice and
|
|
everything except name, the private soldiers of the capitalists.
|
|
They were thoroughly organized and well armed, and they were held in
|
|
readiness to be hurled in special trains to any part of the country
|
|
where labor went on strike or was locked out by the employers. Only
|
|
those curious times could have given rise to the amazing spectacle
|
|
of one, Farley, a notorious commander of strike-breakers, who, in
|
|
1906, swept across the United States in special trains from New York
|
|
to San Francisco with an army of twenty-five hundred men, fully
|
|
armed and equipped, to break a strike of the San Francisco
|
|
street-car men. Such an act was in direct violation of the laws of the
|
|
land. The fact that this act, and thousands of similar acts, went
|
|
unpunished, goes to show how completely the judiciary was the creature
|
|
of the Plutocracy.
|
|
*(2) Bull-pen- in a miners' strike in Idaho, in the latter part of
|
|
the nineteenth century, it happened that many of the strikers were
|
|
confined in a bull-pen by the troops. The practice and the name
|
|
continued in the twentieth century.
|
|
|
|
The years of prosperity were now to be paid for. All markets were
|
|
glutted; all markets were falling; and amidst the general crumble of
|
|
prices the price of labor crumbled fastest of all. The land was
|
|
convulsed with industrial dissensions. Labor was striking here, there,
|
|
and everywhere; and where it was not striking, it was being turned out
|
|
by the capitalists. The papers were filled with tales of violence
|
|
and blood. And through it all the Black Hundreds played their part.
|
|
Riot, arson, and wanton destruction of property was their function,
|
|
and well they performed it. The whole regular army was in the field,
|
|
called there by the actions of the Black Hundreds.* All cities and
|
|
towns were like armed camps, and laborers were shot down like dogs.
|
|
Out of the vast army of the unemployed the strike-breakers were
|
|
recruited; and when the strike-breakers were worsted by the labor
|
|
unions, the troops always appeared and crushed the unions. Then
|
|
there was the militia. As yet, it was not necessary to have recourse
|
|
to the secret militia law. Only the regularly organized militia was
|
|
out, and it was out everywhere. And in this time of terror, the
|
|
regular army was increased an additional hundred thousand by the
|
|
government.
|
|
|
|
* The name only, and not the idea, was imported from Russia. The
|
|
Black Hundreds were a development out of the secret agents of the
|
|
capitalists, and their use arose in the labor struggles of the
|
|
nineteenth century. There is no discussion of this. No less an
|
|
authority of the times than Carroll D. Wright, United States
|
|
Commissioner of Labor, is responsible for the statement. From his
|
|
book, entitled 'The Battles of Labor,' is quoted the declaration
|
|
that 'in some of the great historic strikes the employers themselves
|
|
have instigated acts of violence;' that manufacturers have
|
|
deliberately provoked strikes in order to get rid of surplus stock;
|
|
and that freight cars have been burned by employers' agents during
|
|
railroad strikes in order to increase disorder. It was out of these
|
|
secret agents of the employers that the Black Hundreds arose; and it
|
|
was they, in turn, that later became that terrible weapon of the
|
|
Oligarchy, the agents-provocateurs.
|
|
|
|
Never had labor received such an all-around beating. The great
|
|
captains of industry, the oligarchs, had for the first time thrown
|
|
their full weight into the breach the struggling employers'
|
|
associations had made. These associations were practically
|
|
middle-class affairs, and now, compelled by hard times and crashing
|
|
markets, and aided by the great captains of industry, they gave
|
|
organized labor an awful and decisive defeat. It was an all-powerful
|
|
alliance, but it was an alliance of the lion and the lamb, as the
|
|
middle class was soon to learn.
|
|
Labor was bloody and sullen, but crushed. Yet its defeat did not put
|
|
an end to the hard times. The banks, themselves constituting one of
|
|
the most important forces of the Oligarchy, continued to call in
|
|
credits. The Wall Street* group turned the stock market into a
|
|
maelstrom where the values of all the land crumbled away almost to
|
|
nothingness. And out of all the rack and ruin rose the form of the
|
|
nascent Oligarchy, imperturbable, indifferent, and sure. Its
|
|
serenity and certitude was terrifying. Not only did it use its own
|
|
vast power, but it used all the power of the United States Treasury to
|
|
carry out its plans.
|
|
|
|
* Wall Street- so named from a street in ancient New York, where was
|
|
situated the stock exchange, and where the irrational organization
|
|
of society permitted underhanded manipulation of all the industries of
|
|
the country.
|
|
|
|
The captains of industry had turned upon the middle class. The
|
|
employers' associations, that had helped the captains of industry to
|
|
tear and rend labor, were now torn and rent by their quondam allies.
|
|
Amidst the crashing of the middle men, the small business men and
|
|
manufacturers, the trusts stood firm. Nay, the trusts did more than
|
|
stand firm. They were active. They sowed wind, and wind, and ever more
|
|
wind; for they alone knew how to reap the whirlwind and make a
|
|
profit out of it. And such profits! Colossal profits! Strong enough
|
|
themselves to weather the storm that was largely their own brewing,
|
|
they turned loose and plundered the wrecks that floated about them.
|
|
Values were pitifully and inconceivably shrunken, and the trusts added
|
|
hugely to their holdings, even extending their enterprises into many
|
|
new fields- and always at the expense of the middle class.
|
|
Thus the summer of 1912 witnessed the virtual death-thrust to the
|
|
middle class. Even Ernest was astounded at the quickness with which it
|
|
had been done. He shook his head ominously and looked forward
|
|
without hope to the fall elections.
|
|
'It's no use,' he said. 'We are beaten. The Iron Heel is here. I had
|
|
hoped for a peaceable victory at the ballot-box. I was wrong.
|
|
Wickson was right. We shall be robbed of our few remaining
|
|
liberties; the Iron Heel will walk upon our faces; nothing remains but
|
|
a bloody revolution of the working class. Of course we will win, but I
|
|
shudder to think of it.'
|
|
And from then on Ernest pinned his faith in revolution. In this he
|
|
was in advance of his party. His fellow-socialists could not agree
|
|
with him. They still insisted that victory could be gained through the
|
|
elections. It was not that they were stunned. They were too
|
|
cool-headed and courageous for that. They were merely incredulous,
|
|
that was all. Ernest could not get them seriously to fear the coming
|
|
of the Oligarchy. They were stirred by him, but they were too sure
|
|
of their own strength. There was no room in their theoretical social
|
|
evolution for an oligarchy, therefore the Oligarchy could not be.
|
|
'We'll send you to Congress and it will be all right,' they told him
|
|
at one of our secret meetings.
|
|
'And when they take me out of Congress,' Ernest replied coldly, 'and
|
|
put me against a wall, and blow my brains out- what then?'
|
|
'Then we'll rise in our might,' a dozen voices answered at once.
|
|
'Then you'll welter in your gore,' was his retort. 'I've heard
|
|
that song sung by the middle class, and where is it now in its might?'
|
|
CHAPTER ELEVEN.
|
|
The Great Adventure.
|
|
|
|
MR. WICKSON DID NOT SEND for father. They met by chance on the
|
|
ferry-boat to San Francisco, so that the warning he gave father was
|
|
not premeditated. Had they not met accidentally, there would not
|
|
have been any warning. Not that the outcome would have been different,
|
|
however. Father came of stout old Mayflower* stock, and the blood
|
|
was imperative in him.
|
|
|
|
* One of the first ships that carried colonies to America, after the
|
|
discovery of the New World. Descendants of these original colonists
|
|
were for a while inordinately proud of their genealogy; but in time
|
|
the blood became so widely diffused that it ran in the veins
|
|
practically of all Americans.
|
|
|
|
'Ernest was right,' he told me, as soon as he had returned home.
|
|
'Ernest is a very remarkable young man, and I'd rather see you his
|
|
wife than the wife of Rockefeller himself or the King of England.'
|
|
'What's the matter?' I asked in alarm.
|
|
'The Oligarchy is about to tread upon our faces- yours and mine.
|
|
Wickson as much as told me so. He was very kind- for an oligarch. He
|
|
offered to reinstate me in the university. What do you think of
|
|
that? He, Wickson, a sordid money-grabber, has the power to
|
|
determine whether I shall or shall not teach in the university of
|
|
the state. But he offered me even better than that- offered to make me
|
|
president of some great college of physical sciences that is being
|
|
planned- the Oligarchy must get rid of its surplus somehow, you see.
|
|
'"Do you remember what I told that socialist lover of your
|
|
daughter's?" he said. "I told him that we would walk upon the faces of
|
|
the working class. And so we shall. As for you, I have for you a
|
|
deep respect as a scientist; but if you throw your fortunes in with
|
|
the working class- well, watch out for your face, that is all." And
|
|
then he turned and left me.'
|
|
'It means we'll have to marry earlier than you planned,' was
|
|
Ernest's comment when we told him.
|
|
I could not follow his reasoning, but I was soon to learn it. It was
|
|
at this time that the quarterly dividend of the Sierra Mills was paid-
|
|
or, rather, should have been paid, for father did not receive his.
|
|
After waiting several days, father wrote to the secretary. Promptly
|
|
came the reply that there was no record on the books of father's
|
|
owning any stock, and a polite request for more explicit information.
|
|
'I'll make it explicit enough, confound him,' father declared, and
|
|
departed for the bank to get the stock in question from his
|
|
safe-deposit box.
|
|
'Ernest is a very remarkable man,' he said when he got back and
|
|
while I was helping him off with his overcoat. 'I repeat, my daughter,
|
|
that young man of yours is a very remarkable young man.'
|
|
I had learned, whenever he praised Ernest in such fashion, to expect
|
|
disaster.
|
|
'They have already walked upon my face,' father explained. 'There
|
|
was no stock. The box was empty. You and Ernest will have to get
|
|
married pretty quickly.'
|
|
Father insisted on laboratory methods. He brought the Sierra Mills
|
|
into court, but he could not bring the books of the Sierra Mills
|
|
into court. He did not control the courts, and the Sierra Mills did.
|
|
That explained it all. He was thoroughly beaten by the law, and the
|
|
bare-faced robbery held good.
|
|
It is almost laughable now, when I look back on it, the way father
|
|
was beaten. He met Wickson accidentally on the street in San
|
|
Francisco, and he told Wickson that he was a damned scoundrel. And
|
|
then father was arrested for attempted assault, fined in the police
|
|
court, and bound over to keep the peace. It was all so ridiculous that
|
|
when he got home he had to laugh himself. But what a furor was
|
|
raised in the local papers! There was grave talk about the bacillus of
|
|
violence that infected all men who embraced socialism; and father,
|
|
with his long and peaceful life, was instanced as a shining example of
|
|
how the bacillus of violence worked. Also, it was asserted by more
|
|
than one paper that father's mind had weakened under the strain of
|
|
scientific study, and confinement in a state asylum for the insane was
|
|
suggested. Nor was this merely talk. It was an imminent peril. But
|
|
father was wise enough to see it. He had the Bishop's experience to
|
|
lesson from, and he lessoned well. He kept quiet no matter what
|
|
injustice was perpetrated on him, and really, I think, surprised his
|
|
enemies.
|
|
There was the matter of the house- our home. A mortgage was
|
|
foreclosed on it, and we had to give up possession. Of course there
|
|
wasn't any mortgage, and never had been any mortgage. The ground had
|
|
been bought outright, and the house had been paid for when it was
|
|
built. And house and lot had always been free and unencumbered.
|
|
Nevertheless there was the mortgage, properly and legally drawn up and
|
|
signed, with a record of the payments of interest through a number
|
|
of years. Father made no outcry. As he had been robbed of his money,
|
|
so was he now robbed of his home. And he had no recourse. The
|
|
machinery of society was in the hands of those who were bent on
|
|
breaking him. He was a philosopher at heart, and he was no longer even
|
|
angry.
|
|
'I am doomed to be broken,' he said to me; 'but that is no reason
|
|
that I should not try to be shattered as little as possible. These old
|
|
bones of mine are fragile, and I've learned my lesson. God knows I
|
|
don't want to spend my last days in an insane asylum.'
|
|
Which reminds me of Bishop Morehouse, whom I have neglected for many
|
|
pages. But first let me tell of my marriage. In the play of events, my
|
|
marriage sinks into insignificance, I know, so I shall barely
|
|
mention it.
|
|
'Now we shall become real proletarians,' father said, when we were
|
|
driven from our home. 'I have often envied that young man of yours for
|
|
his actual knowledge of the proletariat. Now I shall see and learn for
|
|
myself.'
|
|
Father must have had strong in him the blood of adventure. He looked
|
|
upon our catastrophe in the light of an adventure. No anger nor
|
|
bitterness possessed him. He was too philosophic and simple to be
|
|
vindictive, and he lived too much in the world of mind to miss the
|
|
creature comforts we were giving up. So it was, when we moved to San
|
|
Francisco into four wretched rooms in the slum south of Market Street,
|
|
that he embarked upon the adventure with the joy and enthusiasm of a
|
|
child- combined with the clear sight and mental grasp of an
|
|
extraordinary intellect. He really never crystallized mentally. He had
|
|
no false sense of values. Conventional or habitual values meant
|
|
nothing to him. The only values he recognized were mathematical and
|
|
scientific facts. My father was a great man. He had the mind and the
|
|
soul that only great men have. In ways he was even greater than
|
|
Ernest, than whom I have known none greater.
|
|
Even I found some relief in our change of living. If nothing else, I
|
|
was escaping from the organized ostracism that had been our increasing
|
|
portion in the university town ever since the enmity of the nascent
|
|
Oligarchy had been incurred. And the change was to me likewise
|
|
adventure, and the greatest of all, for it was love-adventure. The
|
|
change in our fortunes had hastened my marriage, and it was as a
|
|
wife that I came to live in the four rooms on Pell Street, in the
|
|
San Francisco slum.
|
|
And this out of all remains: I made Ernest happy. I came into his
|
|
stormy life, not as a new perturbing force, but as one that made
|
|
toward peace and repose. I gave him rest. It was the guerdon of my
|
|
love for him. It was the one infallible token that I had not failed.
|
|
To bring forgetfulness, or the light of gladness, into those poor
|
|
tired eyes of his- what greater joy could have blessed me than that?
|
|
Those dear tired eyes. He toiled as few men ever toiled, and all his
|
|
lifetime he toiled for others. That was the measure of his manhood. He
|
|
was a humanist and a lover. And he, with his incarnate spirit of
|
|
battle, his gladiator body and his eagle spirit- he was as gentle
|
|
and tender to me as a poet. He was a poet. A singer in deeds. And
|
|
all his life he sang the song of man. And he did it out of sheer
|
|
love of man, and for man he gave his life and was crucified.
|
|
And all this he did with no hope of future reward. In his conception
|
|
of things there was no future life. He, who fairly burnt with
|
|
immortality, denied himself immortality- such was the paradox of
|
|
him. He, so warm in spirit, was dominated by that cold and
|
|
forbidding philosophy, materialistic monism. I used to refute him by
|
|
telling him that I measured his immortality by the wings of his
|
|
soul, and that I should have to live endless aeons in order to achieve
|
|
the full measurement. Whereat he would laugh, and his arms would
|
|
leap out to me, and he would call me his sweet metaphysician; and
|
|
the tiredness would pass out of his eyes, and into them would flood
|
|
the happy love-light that was in itself a new and sufficient
|
|
advertisement of his immortality.
|
|
Also, he used to call me his dualist, and he would explain how Kant,
|
|
by means of pure reason, had abolished reason, in order to worship
|
|
God. And he drew the parallel and included me guilty of a similar act.
|
|
And when I pleaded guilty, but defended the act as highly rational, he
|
|
but pressed me closer and laughed as only one of God's own lovers
|
|
could laugh. I was wont to deny that heredity and environment could
|
|
explain his own originality and genius, any more than could the cold
|
|
groping finger of science catch and analyze and classify that
|
|
elusive essence that lurked in the constitution of life itself.
|
|
I held that space was an apparition of God, and that soul was a
|
|
projection of the character of God; and when he called me his sweet
|
|
metaphysician, I called him my immortal materialist. And so we loved
|
|
and were happy; and I forgave him his materialism because of his
|
|
tremendous work in the world, performed without thought of soul-gain
|
|
thereby, and because of his so exceeding modesty of spirit that
|
|
prevented him from having pride and regal consciousness of himself and
|
|
his soul.
|
|
But he had pride. How could he have been an eagle and not have
|
|
pride? His contention was that it was finer for a finite mortal
|
|
speck of life to feel Godlike, than for a god to feel godlike; and
|
|
so it was that he exalted what he deemed his mortality. He was fond of
|
|
quoting a fragment from a certain poem. He had never seen the whole
|
|
poem, and he had tried vainly to learn its authorship. I here give the
|
|
fragment, not alone because he loved it, but because it epitomized the
|
|
paradox that he was in the spirit of him, and his conception of his
|
|
spirit. For how can a man, with thrilling, and burning, and
|
|
exaltation, recite the following and still be mere mortal earth, a bit
|
|
of fugitive force, an evanescent form? Here it is:
|
|
|
|
'Joy upon joy and gain upon gain
|
|
Are the destined rights of my birth,
|
|
And I shout the praise of my endless days
|
|
To the echoing edge of the earth.
|
|
Though I suffer all deaths that a man can die
|
|
To the uttermost end of time,
|
|
I have deep-drained this, my cup of bliss,
|
|
In every age and clime-
|
|
|
|
'The froth of Pride, the tang of Power,
|
|
The sweet of Womanhood!
|
|
I drain the lees upon my knees,
|
|
For oh, the draught is good;
|
|
I drink to Life, I drink to Death,
|
|
And smack my lips with song,
|
|
For when I die, another 'I' shall pass the cup along.
|
|
|
|
'The man you drove from Eden's grove
|
|
Was I, my Lord, was I,
|
|
And I shall be there when the earth and the air
|
|
Are rent from sea to sky;
|
|
For it is my world, my gorgeous world,
|
|
The world of my dearest woes,
|
|
From the first faint cry of the newborn
|
|
To the rack of the woman's throes.
|
|
|
|
'Packed with the pulse of an unborn race,
|
|
Torn with a world's desire,
|
|
The surging flood of my wild young blood
|
|
Would quench the judgment fire.
|
|
I am Man, Man, Man, from the tingling flesh
|
|
To the dust of my earthly goal,
|
|
From the nestling gloom of the pregnant womb
|
|
To the sheen of my naked soul.
|
|
Bone of my bone and flesh of my flesh
|
|
The whole world leaps to my will,
|
|
And the unslaked thirst of an Eden cursed
|
|
Shall harrow the earth for its fill.
|
|
Almighty God, when I drain life's glass
|
|
Of all its rainbow gleams,
|
|
The hapless plight of eternal night
|
|
Shall be none too long for my dreams.
|
|
|
|
'The man you drove from Eden's grove
|
|
Was I, my Lord, was I,
|
|
And I shall be there when the earth and the air
|
|
Are rent from sea to sky;
|
|
For it is my world, my gorgeous world,
|
|
The world of my dear delight,
|
|
From the brightest gleam of the Arctic stream
|
|
To the dusk of my own love-night.'
|
|
|
|
Ernest always overworked. His wonderful constitution kept him up;
|
|
but even that constitution could not keep the tired look out of his
|
|
eyes. His dear, tired eyes! He never slept more than four and one-half
|
|
hours a night; yet he never found time to do all the work he wanted to
|
|
do. He never ceased from his activities as a propagandist, and was
|
|
always scheduled long in advance for lectures to workingmen's
|
|
organizations. Then there was the campaign. He did a man's full work
|
|
in that alone. With the suppression of the socialist publishing
|
|
houses, his meagre royalties ceased, and he was hard-put to make a
|
|
living; for he had to make a living in addition to all his other
|
|
labor. He did a great deal of translating for the magazines on
|
|
scientific and philosophic subjects; and, coming home late at night,
|
|
worn out from the strain of the campaign, he would plunge into his
|
|
translating and toil on well into the morning hours. And in addition
|
|
to everything, there was his studying. To the day of his death he kept
|
|
up his studies, and he studied prodigiously.
|
|
And yet he found time in which to love me and make me happy. But
|
|
this was accomplished only through my merging my life completely
|
|
into his. I learned shorthand and typewriting, and became his
|
|
secretary. He insisted that I succeeded in cutting his work in half;
|
|
and so it was that I schooled myself to understand his work. Our
|
|
interests became mutual, and we worked together and played together.
|
|
And then there were our sweet stolen moments in the midst of our
|
|
work- just a word, or caress, or flash of love-light; and our
|
|
moments were sweeter for being stolen. For we lived on the heights,
|
|
where the air was keen and sparkling, where the toil was for humanity,
|
|
and where sordidness and selfishness never entered. We loved love, and
|
|
our love was never smirched by anything less than the best. And this
|
|
out of all remains: I did not fail. I gave him rest- he who worked
|
|
so hard for others, my dear, tired-eyed mortalist.
|
|
CHAPTER TWELVE.
|
|
The Bishop.
|
|
|
|
IT WAS AFTER MY MARRIAGE that I chanced upon Bishop Morehouse. But I
|
|
must give the events in their proper sequence. After his outbreak at
|
|
the I.P.H. Convention, the Bishop, being a gentle soul, had yielded to
|
|
the friendly pressure brought to bear upon him, and had gone away on a
|
|
vacation. But he returned more fixed than ever in his determination to
|
|
preach the message of the Church. To the consternation of his
|
|
congregation, his first sermon was quite similar to the address he had
|
|
given before the Convention. Again he said, and at length and with
|
|
distressing detail, that the Church had wandered away from the
|
|
Master's teaching, and that Mammon had been instated in the place of
|
|
Christ.
|
|
And the result was, willy-nilly, that he was led away to a private
|
|
sanitarium for mental disease, while in the newspapers appeared
|
|
pathetic accounts of his mental breakdown and of the saintliness of
|
|
his character. He was held a prisoner in the sanitarium. I called
|
|
repeatedly, but was denied access to him; and I was terribly impressed
|
|
by the tragedy of a sane, normal, saintly man being crushed by the
|
|
brutal will of society. For the Bishop was sane, and pure, and
|
|
noble. As Ernest said, all that was the matter with him was that he
|
|
had incorrect notions of biology and sociology, and because of his
|
|
incorrect notions he had not gone about it in the right way to rectify
|
|
matters.
|
|
What terrified me was the Bishop's helplessness. If he persisted
|
|
in the truth as he saw it, he was doomed to an insane ward. And he
|
|
could do nothing. His money, his position, his culture, could not save
|
|
him. His views were perilous to society, and society could not
|
|
conceive that such perilous views could be the product of a sane mind.
|
|
Or, at least, it seems to me that such was society's attitude.
|
|
But the Bishop, in spite of the gentleness and purity of his spirit,
|
|
was possessed of guile. He apprehended clearly his danger. He saw
|
|
himself caught in the web, and he tried to escape from it. Denied help
|
|
from his friends, such as father and Ernest and I could have given, he
|
|
was left to battle for himself alone. And in the enforced solitude
|
|
of the sanitarium he recovered. He became again sane. His eyes
|
|
ceased to see visions; his brain was purged of the fancy that it was
|
|
the duty of society to feed the Master's lambs.
|
|
As I say, he became well, quite well, and the newspapers and the
|
|
church people hailed his return with joy. I went once to his church.
|
|
The sermon was of the same order as the ones he had preached long
|
|
before his eyes had seen visions. I was disappointed, shocked. Had
|
|
society then beaten him into submission? Was he a coward? Had he
|
|
been bulldozed into recanting? Or had the strain been too great for
|
|
him, and had he meekly surrendered to the juggernaut of the
|
|
established?
|
|
I called upon him in his beautiful home. He was woefully changed. He
|
|
was thinner, and there were lines on his face which I had never seen
|
|
before. He was manifestly distressed by my coming. He plucked
|
|
nervously at his sleeve as we talked; and his eyes were restless,
|
|
fluttering here, there, and everywhere, and refusing to meet mine. His
|
|
mind seemed preoccupied, and there were strange pauses in his
|
|
conversation, abrupt changes of topic, and an inconsecutiveness that
|
|
was bewildering. Could this, then, be the firm-poised, Christ-like man
|
|
I had known, with pure, limpid eyes and a gaze steady and
|
|
unfaltering as his soul? He had been man-handled; he had been cowed
|
|
into subjection. His spirit was too gentle. It had not been mighty
|
|
enough to face the organized wolf-pack of society.
|
|
I felt sad, unutterably sad. He talked ambiguously, and was so
|
|
apprehensive of what I might say that I had not the heart to catechise
|
|
him. He spoke in a far-away manner of his illness, and we talked
|
|
disjointedly about the church, the alterations in the organ, and about
|
|
petty charities; and he saw me depart with such evident relief that
|
|
I should have laughed had not my heart been so full of tears.
|
|
The poor little hero! If I had only known! He was battling like a
|
|
giant, and I did not guess it. Alone, all alone, in the midst of
|
|
millions of his fellow-men, he was fighting his fight. Torn by his
|
|
horror of the asylum and his fidelity to truth and the right, he clung
|
|
steadfastly to truth and the right; but so alone was he that he did
|
|
not dare to trust even me. He had learned his lesson well- too well.
|
|
But I was soon to know. One day the Bishop disappeared. He had
|
|
told nobody that he was going away; and as the days went by and he did
|
|
not reappear, there was much gossip to the effect that he had
|
|
committed suicide while temporarily deranged. But this idea was
|
|
dispelled when it was learned that he had sold all his possessions,-
|
|
his city mansion, his country house at Menlo Park, his paintings,
|
|
and collections, and even his cherished library. It was patent that he
|
|
had made a clean and secret sweep of everything before he disappeared.
|
|
This happened during the time when calamity had overtaken us in
|
|
our own affairs; and it was not till we were well settled in our new
|
|
home that we had opportunity really to wonder and speculate about
|
|
the Bishop's doings. And then, everything was suddenly made clear.
|
|
Early one evening, while it was yet twilight, I had run across the
|
|
street and into the butcher-shop to get some chops for Ernest's
|
|
supper. We called the last meal of the day 'supper' in our new
|
|
environment.
|
|
Just at the moment I came out of the butcher-shop, a man emerged
|
|
from the corner grocery that stood alongside. A queer sense
|
|
familiarity made me look again. But the man had turned and was walking
|
|
rapidly away. There was something about the slope of the shoulders and
|
|
the fringe of silver hair between coat collar and slouch hat that
|
|
aroused vague memories. Instead of crossing the street, I hurried
|
|
after the man. I quickened my pace, trying not to think the thoughts
|
|
that formed unbidden in my brain. No, it was impossible. It could
|
|
not be- not in those faded overalls, too long in the legs and frayed
|
|
at the bottoms.
|
|
I paused, laughed at myself, and almost abandoned the chase. But the
|
|
haunting familiarity of those shoulders and that silver hair! Again
|
|
I hurried on. As I passed him, I shot a keen look at his face; then
|
|
I whirled around abruptly and confronted- the Bishop.
|
|
He halted with equal abruptness, and gasped. A large paper bag in
|
|
his right hand fell to the sidewalk. It burst, and about his feet
|
|
and mine bounced and rolled a flood of potatoes. He looked at me
|
|
with surprise and alarm, then he seemed to wilt away; the shoulders
|
|
drooped with dejection, and he uttered a deep sigh.
|
|
I held out my hand. He shook it, but his hand felt clammy. He
|
|
cleared his throat in embarrassment, and I could see the sweat
|
|
starting out on his forehead. It was evident that he was badly
|
|
frightened.
|
|
'The potatoes,' he murmured faintly. 'They are precious.'
|
|
Between us we picked them up and replaced them in the broken bag,
|
|
which he now held carefully in the hollow of his arm. I tried to
|
|
tell him my gladness at meeting him and that he must come right home
|
|
with me.
|
|
'Father will be rejoiced to see you,' I said. 'We live only a
|
|
stone's throw away.
|
|
'I can't,' he said, 'I must be going. Good-by.'
|
|
He looked apprehensively about him, as though dreading discovery,
|
|
and made an attempt to walk on.
|
|
'Tell me where you live, and I shall call later,' he said, when he
|
|
saw that I walked beside him and that it was my intention to stick
|
|
to him now that he was found.
|
|
'No,' I answered firmly. 'You must come now.'
|
|
He looked at the potatoes spilling on his arm, and at the small
|
|
parcels on his other arm.
|
|
'Really, it is impossible,' he said. 'Forgive me for my rudeness. If
|
|
you only knew.'
|
|
He looked as if he were going to break down, but the next moment
|
|
he had himself in control.
|
|
'Besides, this food,' he went on. 'It is a sad case. It is terrible.
|
|
She is an old woman. I must take it to her at once. She is suffering
|
|
from want of it. I must go at once. You understand. Then I will
|
|
return. I promise you.'
|
|
'Let me go with you,' I volunteered. 'Is it far?'
|
|
He sighed again, and surrendered.
|
|
'Only two blocks,' he said. 'Let us hasten.'
|
|
Under the Bishop's guidance I learned something of my own
|
|
neighborhood. I had not dreamed such wretchedness and misery existed
|
|
in it. Of course, this was because I did not concern myself with
|
|
charity. I had become convinced that Ernest was right when he
|
|
sneered at charity as a poulticing of an ulcer. Remove the ulcer,
|
|
was his remedy; give to the worker his product; pension as soldiers
|
|
those who grow honorably old in their toil, and there will be no
|
|
need for charity. Convinced of this, I toiled with him at the
|
|
revolution, and did not exhaust my energy in alleviating the social
|
|
ills that continuously arose from the injustice of the system.
|
|
I followed the Bishop into a small room, ten by twelve, in a rear
|
|
tenement. And there we found a little old German woman- sixty-four
|
|
years old, the Bishop said. She was surprised at seeing me, but she
|
|
nodded a pleasant greeting and went on sewing on the pair of men's
|
|
trousers in her lap. Beside her, on the floor, was a pile of trousers.
|
|
The Bishop discovered there was neither coal nor kindling, and went
|
|
out to buy some.
|
|
I took up a pair of trousers and examined her work.
|
|
'Six cents, lady,' she said, nodding her head gently while she
|
|
went on stitching. She stitched slowly, but never did she cease from
|
|
stitching. She seemed mastered by the verb 'to stitch.'
|
|
'For all that work?' I asked. 'Is that what they pay? How long
|
|
does it take you?'
|
|
'Yes,' she answered, 'that is what they pay. Six cents for
|
|
finishing. Two hours' sewing on each pair.'
|
|
But the boss doesn't know that,' she added quickly, betraying a fear
|
|
of getting him into trouble. 'I'm slow. I've got the rheumatism in
|
|
my hands. Girls work much faster. They finish in half that time. The
|
|
boss is kind. He lets me take the work home, now that I am old and the
|
|
noise of the machine bothers my head. If it wasn't for his kindness,
|
|
I'd starve.
|
|
'Yes, those who work in the shop get eight cents. But what can you
|
|
do? There is not enough work for the young. The old have no chance.
|
|
Often one pair is all I can get. Sometimes, like to-day, I am given
|
|
eight pair to finish before night.'
|
|
I asked her the hours she worked, and she said it depended on the
|
|
season.
|
|
'In the summer, when there is a rush order, I work from five in
|
|
the morning to nine at night. But in the winter it is too cold. The
|
|
hands do not early get over the stiffness. Then you must work later-
|
|
till after midnight sometimes.
|
|
'Yes, it has been a bad summer. The hard times. God must be angry.
|
|
This is the first work the boss has given me in a week. It is true,
|
|
one cannot eat much when there is no work. I am used to it. I have
|
|
sewed all my life, in the old country and here in San Francisco-
|
|
thirty-three years.
|
|
'If you are sure of the rent, it is all right. The houseman is
|
|
very kind, but he must have his rent. It is fair. He only charges
|
|
three dollars for this room. That is cheap. But it is not easy for you
|
|
to find all of three dollars every month.'
|
|
She ceased talking, and, nodding her head, went on stitching.
|
|
'You have to be very careful as to how you spend your earnings,' I
|
|
suggested.
|
|
She nodded emphatically.
|
|
'After the rent it's not so bad. Of course you can't buy meat. And
|
|
there is no milk for the coffee. But always there is one meal a day,
|
|
and often two.'
|
|
She said this last proudly. There was a smack of success in her
|
|
words. But as she stitched on in silence, I noticed the sadness in her
|
|
pleasant eyes and the droop of her mouth. The look in her eyes
|
|
became far away. She rubbed the dimness hastily out of them; it
|
|
interfered with her stitching.
|
|
No, it is not the hunger that makes the heart ache,' she
|
|
explained. 'You get used to being hungry. It is for my child that I
|
|
cry. It was the machine that killed her. It is true she worked hard,
|
|
but I cannot understand. She was strong. And she was young- only
|
|
forty; and she worked only thirty years. She began young, it is
|
|
true; but my man died. The boiler exploded down at the works. And what
|
|
were we to do? She was ten, but she was very strong. But the machine
|
|
killed her. Yes, it did. It killed her, and she was the fastest worker
|
|
in the shop. I have thought about it often, and I know. That is why
|
|
I cannot work in the shop. The machine bothers my head. Always I
|
|
hear it saying, "I did it, I did it." And it says that all day long.
|
|
And then I think of my daughter, and I cannot work.'
|
|
The moistness was in her old eyes again, and she had to wipe it away
|
|
before she could go on stitching.
|
|
I heard the Bishop stumbling up the stairs, and I opened the door.
|
|
What a spectacle he was. On his back he carried half a sack of coal,
|
|
with kindling on top. Some of the coal dust had coated his face, and
|
|
the sweat from his exertions was running in streaks. He dropped his
|
|
burden in the corner by the stove and wiped his face on a coarse
|
|
bandana handkerchief. I could scarcely accept the verdict of my
|
|
senses. The Bishop, black as a coal-heaver, in a workingman's cheap
|
|
cotton shirt (one button was missing from the throat), and in
|
|
overalls! That was the most incongruous of all- the overalls, frayed
|
|
at the bottoms, dragged down at the heels, and held up by a narrow
|
|
leather belt around the hips such as laborers wear.
|
|
Though the Bishop was warm, the poor swollen hands of the old
|
|
woman were already cramping with the cold; and before we left her, the
|
|
Bishop had built the fire, while I had peeled the potatoes and put
|
|
them on to boil. I was to learn, as time went by, that there were many
|
|
cases similar to hers, and many worse, hidden away in the monstrous
|
|
depths of the tenements in my neighborhood.
|
|
We got back to find Ernest alarmed by my absence. After the first
|
|
surprise of greeting was over, the Bishop leaned back in his chair,
|
|
stretched out his overall-covered legs, and actually sighed a
|
|
comfortable sigh. We were the first of his old friends he had met
|
|
since his disappearance, he told us; and during the intervening
|
|
weeks he must have suffered greatly from loneliness. He told us
|
|
much, though he told us more of the joy he had experienced in doing
|
|
the Master's bidding.
|
|
'For truly now,' he said, 'I am feeding his lambs. And I have
|
|
learned a great lesson. The soul cannot be ministered to till the
|
|
stomach is appeased. His lambs must be fed bread and butter and
|
|
potatoes and meat; after that, and only after that, are their
|
|
spirits ready for more refined nourishment.'
|
|
He ate heartily of the supper I cooked. Never had he had such an
|
|
appetite at our table in the old days. We spoke of it, and he said
|
|
that he had never been so healthy in his life.
|
|
'I walk always now,' he said, and a blush was on his cheek at the
|
|
thought of the time when he rode in his carriage, as though it were
|
|
a sin not lightly to be laid.
|
|
'My health is better for it,' he added hastily. 'And I am very
|
|
happy- indeed, most happy. At last I am a consecrated spirit.'
|
|
And yet there was in his face a permanent pain, the pain of the
|
|
world that he was now taking to himself. He was seeing life in the
|
|
raw, and it was a different life from what he had known within the
|
|
printed books of his library.
|
|
'And you are responsible for all this, young man,' he said
|
|
directly to Ernest.
|
|
Ernest was embarrassed and awkward.
|
|
'I- I warned you,' he faltered.
|
|
'No, you misunderstand,' the Bishop answered. 'I speak not in
|
|
reproach, but in gratitude. I have you to thank for showing me my
|
|
path. You led me from theories about life to life itself. You pulled
|
|
aside the veils from the social shams. You were light in my
|
|
darkness, but now I, too, see the light. And I am very happy, only...'
|
|
he hesitated painfully, and in his eyes fear leaped large. 'Only the
|
|
persecution. I harm no one. Why will they not let me alone? But it
|
|
is not that. It is the nature of the persecution. I shouldn't mind
|
|
if they cut my flesh with stripes, or burned me at the stake, or
|
|
crucified me head- downward. But it is the asylum that frightens me.
|
|
Think of it! Of me- in an asylum for the insane! It is revolting. I
|
|
saw some of the cases at the sanitarium. They were violent. My blood
|
|
chills when I think of it. And to be imprisoned for the rest of my
|
|
life amid scenes of screaming madness! No! no! Not that! Not that!'
|
|
It was pitiful. His hands shook, his whole body quivered and
|
|
shrank away from the picture he had conjured. But the next moment he
|
|
was calm.
|
|
'Forgive me,' he said simply. 'It is my wretched nerves. And if
|
|
the Master's work leads there, so be it. Who am I to complain?'
|
|
I felt like crying aloud as I looked at him: 'Great Bishop! O
|
|
hero! God's hero!'
|
|
As the evening wore on we learned more of his doings.
|
|
'I sold my house- my houses, rather,' he said, all my other
|
|
possessions. I knew I must do it secretly, else they would have
|
|
taken everything away from me. That would have been terrible. I
|
|
often marvel these days at the immense quantity of potatoes two or
|
|
three hundred thousand dollars will buy, or bread, or meat, or coal
|
|
and kindling.' He turned to Ernest. 'You are right, young man. Labor
|
|
is dreadfully underpaid. I never did a bit of work in my life,
|
|
except to appeal aesthetically to Pharisees- I thought I was preaching
|
|
the message- and yet I was worth half a million dollars. I never
|
|
knew what half a million dollars meant until I realized how much
|
|
potatoes and bread and butter and meat it could buy. And then I
|
|
realized something more. I realized that all those potatoes and that
|
|
bread and butter and meat were mine, and that I had not worked to make
|
|
them. Then it was clear to me, some one else had worked and made
|
|
them and been robbed of them. And when I came down amongst the poor
|
|
I found those who had been robbed and who were hungry and wretched
|
|
because they had been robbed.'
|
|
We drew him back to his narrative.
|
|
'The money? I have it deposited in many different banks under
|
|
different names. It can never be taken away from me, because it can
|
|
never be found. And it is so good, that money. It buys so much food. I
|
|
never knew before what money was good for.'
|
|
'I wish we could get some of it for the propaganda,' Ernest said
|
|
wistfully. 'It would do immense good.'
|
|
'Do you think so?' the Bishop said. 'I do not have much faith in
|
|
politics. In fact, I am afraid I do not understand politics.'
|
|
Ernest was delicate in such matters. He did not repeat his
|
|
suggestion, though he knew only too well the sore straits the
|
|
Socialist Party was in through lack of money.
|
|
'I sleep in cheap lodging houses,' the Bishop went on. 'But I am
|
|
afraid, and never stay long in one place. Also, I rent two rooms in
|
|
workingmen's houses in different quarters of the city. It is a great
|
|
extravagance, I know, but it is necessary. I make up for it in part by
|
|
doing my own cooking, though sometimes I get something to eat in cheap
|
|
coffee-houses. And I have made a discovery. Tamales* are very good
|
|
when the air grows chilly late at night. Only they are so expensive.
|
|
But I have discovered a place where I can get three for ten cents.
|
|
They are not so good as the others, but they are very warming.
|
|
|
|
* A Mexican dish, referred to occasionally in the literature of
|
|
the times. It is supposed that it was warmly seasoned. No recipe of it
|
|
has come down to us.
|
|
|
|
'And so I have at last found my work in the world, thanks to you,
|
|
young man. It is the Master's work.' He looked at me, and his eyes
|
|
twinkled. 'You caught me feeding his lambs, you know. And of course
|
|
you will all keep my secret.'
|
|
He spoke carelessly enough, but there was real fear behind the
|
|
speech. He promised to call upon us again. But a week later we read in
|
|
the newspaper of the sad case of Bishop Morehouse, who had been
|
|
committed to the Napa Asylum and for whom there were still hopes
|
|
held out. In vain we tried to see him, to have his case reconsidered
|
|
or investigated. Nor could we learn anything about him except the
|
|
reiterated statements that slight hopes were still held for his
|
|
recovery.
|
|
'Christ told the rich young man to sell all he had,' Ernest said
|
|
bitterly. 'The Bishop obeyed Christ's injunction and got locked up
|
|
in a madhouse. Times have changed since Christ's day. A rich man
|
|
to-day who gives all he has to the poor is crazy. There is no
|
|
discussion. Society has spoken.'
|
|
CHAPTER THIRTEEN.
|
|
The General Strike.
|
|
|
|
OF COURSE ERNEST WAS ELECTED to Congress in the great socialist
|
|
landslide that took place in the fall of 1912. One great factor that
|
|
helped to swell the socialist vote was the destruction of Hearst.*
|
|
This the Plutocracy found an easy task. It cost Hearst eighteen
|
|
million dollars a year to run his various papers, and this sum, and
|
|
more, he got back from the middle class in payment for advertising.
|
|
The source of his financial strength lay wholly in the middle class.
|
|
The trusts did not advertise.*(2) To destroy Hearst, all that was
|
|
necessary was to take away from him his advertising.
|
|
|
|
* William Randolph Hearst- a young California millionaire who became
|
|
the most powerful newspaper owner in the country. His newspapers
|
|
were published in all the large cities, and they appealed to the
|
|
perishing middle class and to the proletariat. So large was his
|
|
following that he managed to take possession of the empty shell of the
|
|
old Democratic Party. He occupied an anomalous position, preaching
|
|
an emasculated socialism combined with a nondescript sort of petty
|
|
bourgeois capitalism. It was oil and water, and there was no hope
|
|
for him, though for a short period he was a source of serious
|
|
apprehension to the Plutocrats.
|
|
*(2) The cost of advertising was amazing in those helter-skelter
|
|
times. Only the small capitalists competed, and therefore they did the
|
|
advertising. There being no competition where there was a trust, there
|
|
was no need for the trusts to advertise.
|
|
|
|
The whole middle class had not yet been exterminated. The sturdy
|
|
skeleton of it remained; but it was without power. The small
|
|
manufacturers and small business men who still survived were at the
|
|
complete mercy of the Plutocracy. They had no economic nor political
|
|
souls of their own. When the fiat of the Plutocracy went forth, they
|
|
withdrew their advertisements from the Hearst papers.
|
|
Hearst made a gallant fight. He brought his papers out at a loss
|
|
of a million and a half each month. He continued to publish the
|
|
advertisements for which he no longer received pay. Again the fiat
|
|
of the Plutocracy went forth, and the small business men and
|
|
manufacturers swamped him with a flood of notices that he must
|
|
discontinue running their old advertisements. Hearst persisted.
|
|
Injunctions were served on him. Still he persisted. He received six
|
|
months' imprisonment for contempt of court in disobeying the
|
|
injunctions, while he was bankrupted by countless damage suits. He had
|
|
no chance. The Plutocracy had passed sentence on him. The courts
|
|
were in the hands of the Plutocracy to carry the sentence out. And
|
|
with Hearst crashed also to destruction the Democratic Party that he
|
|
had so recently captured.
|
|
With the destruction of Hearst and the Democratic Party, there
|
|
were only two paths for his following to take. One was into the
|
|
Socialist Party; the other was into the Republican Party. Then it
|
|
was that we socialists reaped the fruit of Hearst's pseudo-socialistic
|
|
preaching; for the great Majority of his followers came over to us.
|
|
The expropriation of the farmers that took place at this time
|
|
would also have swelled our vote had it not been for the brief and
|
|
futile rise of the Grange Party. Ernest and the socialist leaders
|
|
fought fiercely to capture the farmers; but the destruction of the
|
|
socialist press and publishing houses constituted too great a
|
|
handicap, while the mouth-to-mouth propaganda had not yet been
|
|
perfected. So it was that politicians like Mr. Calvin, who were
|
|
themselves farmers long since expropriated, captured the farmers and
|
|
threw their political strength away in a vain campaign.
|
|
'The poor farmers,' Ernest once laughed savagely; 'the trusts have
|
|
them both coming and going.'
|
|
And that was really the situation. The seven great trusts, working
|
|
together, had pooled their enormous surpluses and made a farm trust.
|
|
The railroads, controlling rates, and the bankers and stock exchange
|
|
gamesters, controlling prices, had long since bled the farmers into
|
|
indebtedness. The bankers, and all the trusts for that matter, had
|
|
likewise long since loaned colossal amounts of money to the farmers.
|
|
The farmers were in the net. All that remained to be done was the
|
|
drawing in of the net. This the farm trust proceeded to do.
|
|
The hard times of 1912 had already caused a frightful slump in the
|
|
farm markets. Prices were now deliberately pressed down to bankruptcy,
|
|
while the railroads, with extortionate rates, broke the back of the
|
|
farmer-camel. Thus the farmers were compelled to borrow more and more,
|
|
while they were prevented from paying back old loans. Then ensued
|
|
the great foreclosing of mortgages and enforced collection of notes.
|
|
The farmers simply surrendered the land to the farm trust. There was
|
|
nothing else for them to do. And having surrendered the land, the
|
|
farmers next went to work for the farm trust, becoming managers,
|
|
superintendents, foremen, and common laborers. They worked for
|
|
wages. They became villeins, in short- serfs bound to the soil by a
|
|
living wage. They could not leave their masters, for their masters
|
|
composed the Plutocracy. They could not go to the cities, for there,
|
|
also, the Plutocracy was in control. They had but one alternative,- to
|
|
leave the soil and become vagrants, in brief, to starve. And even
|
|
there they were frustrated, for stringent vagrancy laws were passed
|
|
and rigidly enforced.
|
|
Of course, here and there, farmers, and even whole communities of
|
|
farmers, escaped expropriation by virtue of exceptional conditions.
|
|
But they were merely strays and did not count, and they were
|
|
gathered in anyway during the following year.*
|
|
|
|
* The destruction of the Roman yeomanry proceeded far less rapidly
|
|
than the destruction of the American farmers and small capitalists.
|
|
There was momentum in the twentieth century, while there was
|
|
practically none in ancient Rome.
|
|
Numbers of the farmers, impelled by an insane lust for the soil, and
|
|
willing to show what beasts they could become, tried to escape
|
|
expropriation by withdrawing from any and all market-dealing. They
|
|
sold nothing. They bought nothing. Among themselves a primitive barter
|
|
began to spring up. Their privation and hardships were terrible, but
|
|
they persisted. It became quite a movement, in fact. The manner in
|
|
which they were beaten was unique and logical and simple. The
|
|
Plutocracy, by virtue of its possession of the government, raised
|
|
their taxes. It was the weak joint in their armor. Neither buying
|
|
nor selling, they had no money, and in the end their land was sold
|
|
to pay the taxes.
|
|
|
|
Thus it was that in the fall of 1912 the socialist leaders, with the
|
|
exception of Ernest, decided that the end of capitalism had come. What
|
|
of the hard times and the consequent vast army of the unemployed; what
|
|
of the destruction of the farmers and the middle class; and what of
|
|
the decisive defeat administered all along the line to the labor
|
|
unions; the socialists were really justified in believing that the end
|
|
of capitalism had come and in themselves throwing down the gauntlet to
|
|
the Plutocracy.
|
|
Alas, how we underestimated the strength of the enemy! Everywhere
|
|
the socialists proclaimed their coming victory at the ballot-box,
|
|
while, in unmistakable terms, they stated the situation. The
|
|
Plutocracy accepted the challenge. It was the Plutocracy, weighing and
|
|
balancing, that defeated us by dividing our strength. It was the
|
|
Plutocracy, through its secret agents, that raised the cry that
|
|
socialism was sacrilegious and atheistic; it was the Plutocracy that
|
|
whipped the churches, and especially the Catholic Church, into line,
|
|
and robbed us of a portion of the labor vote. And it was the
|
|
Plutocracy, through its secret agents of course, that encouraged the
|
|
Grange Party and even spread it to the cities into the ranks of the
|
|
dying middle class.
|
|
Nevertheless the socialist landslide occurred. But, instead of a
|
|
sweeping victory with chief executive officers and majorities in all
|
|
legislative bodies, we found ourselves in the minority. It is true, we
|
|
elected fifty Congressmen; but when they took their seats in the
|
|
spring of 1913, they found themselves without power of any sort. Yet
|
|
they were more fortunate than the Grangers, who captured a dozen state
|
|
governments, and who, in the spring, were not permitted to take
|
|
possession of the captured offices. The incumbents refused to
|
|
retire, and the courts were in the hands of the Oligarchy. But this is
|
|
too far in advance of events. I have yet to tell of the stirring times
|
|
of the winter of 1912.
|
|
The hard times at home had caused an immense decrease in
|
|
consumption. Labor, out of work, had no wages with which to buy. The
|
|
result was that the Plutocracy found a greater surplus than ever on
|
|
its hands. This surplus it was compelled to dispose of abroad, and,
|
|
what of its colossal plans, it needed money. Because of its
|
|
strenuous efforts to dispose of the surplus in the world market, the
|
|
Plutocracy clashed with Germany. Economic clashes were usually
|
|
succeeded by wars, and this particular clash was no exception. The
|
|
great German war-lord prepared, and so did the United States prepare.
|
|
The war-cloud hovered dark and ominous. The stage was set for a
|
|
world-catastrophe, for in all the world were hard times, labor
|
|
troubles, perishing middle classes, armies of unemployed, clashes of
|
|
economic interests in the world-market, and mutterings and rumblings
|
|
of the socialist revolution.*
|
|
|
|
* For a long time these mutterings and rumblings had been heard.
|
|
As far back as 1906 A.D., Lord Avebury, an Englishman, uttered the
|
|
following in the House of Lords: 'The unrest in Europe, the spread
|
|
of socialism, and the ominous rise of Anarchism, are warnings to the
|
|
governments and the ruling classes that the condition of the working
|
|
classes in Europe is becoming intolerable, and that if a revolution is
|
|
to be avoided some steps must be taken to increase wages, reduce the
|
|
hours of labor, and lower the prices of the necessaries of life.'
|
|
The Wall Street Journal, a stock gamesters' publication, in commenting
|
|
upon Lord Avebury's speech, said: 'These words were spoken by an
|
|
aristocrat and a member of the most conservative body in all Europe.
|
|
That gives them all the more significance. They contain more
|
|
valuable political economy than is to be found in most of the books.
|
|
They sound a note of warning. Take heed, gentlemen of the war and navy
|
|
departments!'
|
|
At the same time, Sydney Brooks, writing in America, in Harper's
|
|
Weekly, said: 'You will not hear the socialists mentioned in
|
|
Washington. Why should you? The politicians are always the last people
|
|
in this country to see what is going on under their noses. They will
|
|
jeer at me when I prophesy, and prophesy with the utmost confidence,
|
|
that at the next presidential election the socialists will poll over a
|
|
million votes.'
|
|
|
|
The Oligarchy wanted the war with Germany. And it wanted the war for
|
|
a dozen reasons. In the juggling of events such a war would cause,
|
|
in the reshuffling of the international cards and the making of new
|
|
treaties and alliances, the Oligarchy had much to gain. And,
|
|
furthermore, the war would consume many national surpluses, reduce the
|
|
armies of unemployed that menaced all countries, and give the
|
|
Oligarchy a breathing space in which to perfect its plans and carry
|
|
them out. Such a war would virtually put the Oligarchy in possession
|
|
of the world-market. Also, such a war would create a large standing
|
|
army that need never be disbanded, while in the minds of the people
|
|
would be substituted the issue, 'America versus Germany,' in place
|
|
of 'Socialism versus Oligarchy.'
|
|
And truly the war would have done all these things had it not been
|
|
for the socialists. A secret meeting of the Western leaders was held
|
|
in our four tiny rooms in Pell Street. Here was first considered the
|
|
stand the socialists were to take. It was not the first time we had
|
|
put our foot down upon war,* but it was the first time we had done
|
|
so in the United States. After our secret meeting we got in touch with
|
|
the national organization, and soon our code cables were passing
|
|
back and forth across the Atlantic between us and the International
|
|
Bureau.
|
|
|
|
* It was at the very beginning of the twentieth century A.D., that
|
|
the international organization of the socialists finally formulated
|
|
their long-maturing policy on war. Epitomized their doctrine was: 'Why
|
|
should the workingmen of one country fight with the workingmen of
|
|
another country for the benefit of their capitalist masters?'
|
|
On May 21, 1905 A.D., when war threatened between Austria and Italy,
|
|
the socialists of Italy, Austria, and Hungary held a conference at
|
|
Trieste, and threatened a general strike of the workingmen of both
|
|
countries in case war was declared. This was repeated the following
|
|
year, when the 'Morocco Affair' threatened to involve France, Germany,
|
|
and England.
|
|
|
|
The German socialists were ready to act with us. There were over
|
|
five million of them, many of them in the standing army, and, in
|
|
addition, they were on friendly terms with the labor unions. In both
|
|
countries the socialists came out in bold declaration against the
|
|
war and threatened the general strike. And in the meantime they made
|
|
preparation for the general strike. Furthermore, the revolutionary
|
|
parties in all countries gave public utterance to the socialist
|
|
principle of international peace that must be preserved at all
|
|
hazards, even to the extent of revolt and revolution at home.
|
|
The general strike was the one great victory we American
|
|
socialists won. On 4 December the American minister was withdrawn from
|
|
the German capital. That night a German fleet made a dash on Honolulu,
|
|
sinking three American cruisers and a revenue cutter, and bombarding
|
|
the city. Next day both Germany and the United States declared war,
|
|
and within an hour the socialists called the general strike in both
|
|
countries.
|
|
For the first time the German war-lord faced the men of his empire
|
|
who made his empire go. Without them he could not run his empire.
|
|
The novelty of the situation lay in that their revolt was passive.
|
|
They did not fight. They did nothing. And by doing nothing they tied
|
|
their war-lord's hands. He would have asked for nothing better than an
|
|
opportunity to loose his war-dogs on his rebellious proletariat. But
|
|
this was denied him. He could not loose his war-dogs. Neither could he
|
|
mobilize his army to go forth to war, nor could he punish his
|
|
recalcitrant subjects. Not a wheel moved in his empire. Not a train
|
|
ran, not a telegraphic message went over the wires, for the
|
|
telegraphers and railroad men had ceased work along with the rest of
|
|
the population.
|
|
And as it was in Germany, so it was in the United States. At last
|
|
organized labor had learned its lesson. Beaten decisively on its own
|
|
chosen field, it had abandoned that field and come over to the
|
|
political field of the socialists; for the general strike was a
|
|
political strike. Besides, organized labor had been so badly beaten
|
|
that it did not care. It joined in the general strike out of sheer
|
|
desperation. The workers threw down their tools and left their tasks
|
|
by the millions. Especially notable were the machinists. Their heads
|
|
were bloody, their organization had apparently been destroyed, yet out
|
|
they came, along with their allies in the metal-working trades.
|
|
Even the common laborers and all unorganized labor ceased work.
|
|
The strike had tied everything up so that nobody could work.
|
|
Besides, the women proved to be the strongest promoters of the strike.
|
|
They set their faces against the war. They did not want their men to
|
|
go forth to die. Then, also, the idea of the general strike caught the
|
|
mood of the people. It struck their sense of humor. The idea was
|
|
infectious. The children struck in all the schools, and such
|
|
teachers as came, went home again from deserted class rooms. The
|
|
general strike took the form of a great national picnic. And the
|
|
idea of the solidarity of labor, so evidenced, appealed to the
|
|
imagination of all. And, finally, there was no danger to be incurred
|
|
by the colossal frolic. When everybody was guilty, how was anybody
|
|
to be punished?
|
|
The United States was paralyzed. No one knew what was happening.
|
|
There were no newspapers, no letters, no despatches. Every community
|
|
was as completely isolated as though ten thousand miles of primeval
|
|
wilderness stretched between it and the rest of the world. For that
|
|
matter, the world had ceased to exist. And for a week this state of
|
|
affairs was maintained.
|
|
In San Francisco we did not know what was happening even across
|
|
the bay in Oakland or Berkeley. The effect on one's sensibilities
|
|
was weird, depressing. It seemed as though some great cosmic thing lay
|
|
dead. The pulse of the land had ceased to beat. Of a truth the
|
|
nation had died. There were no wagons rumbling on the streets, no
|
|
factory whistles, no hum of electricity in the air, no passing of
|
|
street cars, no cries of news-boys- nothing but persons who at rare
|
|
intervals went by like furtive ghosts, themselves oppressed and made
|
|
unreal by the silence.
|
|
And during that week of silence the Oligarchy was taught its lesson.
|
|
And well it learned the lesson. The general strike was a warning. It
|
|
should never occur again. The Oligarchy would see to that.
|
|
At the end of the week, as had been prearranged, the telegraphers of
|
|
Germany and the United States returned to their posts. Through them
|
|
the socialist leaders of both countries presented their ultimatum to
|
|
the rulers. The war should be called off, or the general strike
|
|
would continue. It did not take long to come to an understanding.
|
|
The war was declared off, and the populations of both countries
|
|
returned to their tasks.
|
|
It was this renewal of peace that brought about the alliance between
|
|
Germany and the United States. In reality, this was an alliance
|
|
between the Emperor and the Oligarchy, for the purpose of meeting
|
|
their common foe, the revolutionary proletariat of both countries. And
|
|
it was this alliance that the Oligarchy afterward so treacherously
|
|
broke when the German socialists rose and drove the war-lord from
|
|
his throne. It was the very thing the Oligarchy had played for- the
|
|
destruction of its great rival in the world-market. With the German
|
|
Emperor out of the way, Germany would have no surplus to sell
|
|
abroad. By the very nature of the socialist state, the German
|
|
population would consume all that it produced. Of course, it would
|
|
trade abroad certain things it produced for things it did not produce;
|
|
but this would be quite different from an unconsumable surplus.
|
|
'I'll wager the Oligarchy finds justification,' Ernest said, when
|
|
its treachery to the German Emperor became known. 'As usual, the
|
|
Oligarchy will believe it has done right.'
|
|
And sure enough. The Oligarchy's public defence for the act was that
|
|
it had done it for the sake of the American people whose interests
|
|
it was looking out for. It had flung its hated rival out of the
|
|
world-market and enabled us to dispose of our surplus in that market.
|
|
'And the howling folly of it is that we are so helpless that such
|
|
idiots really are managing our interests,' was Ernest's comment. 'They
|
|
have enabled us to sell more abroad, which means that we'll be
|
|
compelled to consume less at home.'
|
|
CHAPTER FOURTEEN.
|
|
The Beginning of the End.
|
|
|
|
AS EARLY AS JANUARY, 1913, Ernest saw the true trend of affairs, but
|
|
he could not get his brother leaders to see the vision of the Iron
|
|
Heel that had arisen in his brain. They were too confident. Events
|
|
were rushing too rapidly to culmination. A crisis had come in world
|
|
affairs. The American Oligarchy was practically in possession of the
|
|
world-market, and scores of countries were flung out of that market
|
|
with unconsumable and unsalable surpluses on their hands. For such
|
|
countries nothing remained but reorganization. They could not continue
|
|
their method of producing surpluses. The capitalistic system, so far
|
|
as they were concerned, had hopelessly broken down.
|
|
The reorganization of these countries took the form of revolution.
|
|
It was a time of confusion and violence. Everywhere institutions and
|
|
governments were crashing. Everywhere, with the exception of two or
|
|
three countries, the erstwhile capitalist masters fought bitterly
|
|
for their possessions. But the governments were taken away from them
|
|
by the militant proletariat. At last was being realized Karl Marx's
|
|
classic: 'The knell of private capitalist property sounds. The
|
|
expropriators are expropriated.' And as fast as capitalistic
|
|
governments crashed, cooperative commonwealths arose in their place.
|
|
'Why does the United States lag behind?'; 'Get busy, you American
|
|
revolutionists!'; 'What's the matter with America?'- were the messages
|
|
sent to us by our successful comrades in other lands. But we could not
|
|
keep up. The Oligarchy stood in the way. Its bulk, like that of some
|
|
huge monster, blocked our path.
|
|
'Wait till we take office in the spring,' we answered. 'Then
|
|
you'll see.'
|
|
Behind this lay our secret. We had won over the Grangers, and in the
|
|
spring a dozen states would pass into their hands by virtue of the
|
|
elections of the preceding fall. At once would be instituted a dozen
|
|
cooperative commonwealth states. After that, the rest would be easy.
|
|
'But what if the Grangers fail to get possession?' Ernest
|
|
demanded. And his comrades called him a calamity howler.
|
|
But this failure to get possession was not the chief danger that
|
|
Ernest had in mind. What he foresaw was the defection of the great
|
|
labor unions and the rise of the castes.
|
|
'Ghent has taught the oligarchs how to do it,' Ernest said. 'I'll
|
|
wager they've made a text-book out of his "Benevolent Feudalism."'*
|
|
|
|
* 'Our Benevolent Feudalism,' a book published in 1902 A.D., by W.
|
|
J. Ghent. It has always been insisted that Ghent put the idea of the
|
|
Oligarchy into the minds of the great capitalists. This belief
|
|
persists throughout the literature of the three centuries of the
|
|
Iron Heel, and even in the literature of the first century of the
|
|
Brotherhood of Man. To-day we know better, but our knowledge does
|
|
not overcome the fact that Ghent remains the most abused innocent
|
|
man in all history.
|
|
|
|
Never shall I forget the night when, after a hot discussion with
|
|
half a dozen labor leaders, Ernest turned to me and said quietly:
|
|
'That settles it. The Iron Heel has won. The end is in sight.'
|
|
This little conference in our home was unofficial; but Ernest,
|
|
like the rest of his comrades, was working for assurances from the
|
|
labor leaders that they would call out their men in the next general
|
|
strike. O'Connor, the president of the Association of Machinists,
|
|
had been foremost of the six leaders present in refusing to give
|
|
such assurance.
|
|
'You have seen that you were beaten soundly at your old tactics of
|
|
strike and boycott,' Ernest urged.
|
|
O'Connor and the others nodded their heads.
|
|
'And you saw what a general strike would do,' Ernest went on. 'We
|
|
stopped the war with Germany. Never was there so fine a display of the
|
|
solidarity and the power of labor. Labor can and will rule the
|
|
world. If you continue to stand with us, we'll put an end to the reign
|
|
of capitalism. It is your only hope. And what is more, you know it.
|
|
There is no other way out. No matter what you do under your old
|
|
tactics, you are doomed to defeat, if for no other reason because
|
|
the masters control the courts.'*
|
|
|
|
* As a sample of the decisions of the courts adverse to labor, the
|
|
following instances are given. In the coal-mining regions the
|
|
employment of children was notorious. In 1905 A.D., labor succeeded in
|
|
getting a law passed in Pennsylvania providing that proof of the age
|
|
of the child and of certain educational qualifications must
|
|
accompany the oath of the parent. This was promptly declared
|
|
unconstitutional by the Luzerne County Court, on the ground that it
|
|
violated the Fourteenth Amendment in that it discriminated between
|
|
individuals of the same class- namely, children above fourteen years
|
|
of age and children below. The state court sustained the decision. The
|
|
New York Court of Special Sessions, in 1905 A.D., declared
|
|
unconstitutional the law prohibiting minors and women from working
|
|
in factories after nine o'clock at night, the ground taken being
|
|
that such a law was 'class legislation.' Again, the bakers of that
|
|
time were terribly overworked. The New York Legislature passed a law
|
|
restricting work in bakeries to ten hours a day. In 1906 A.D., the
|
|
Supreme Court of the United States declared this law to be
|
|
unconstitutional. In part the decision read: 'There is no reasonable
|
|
ground for interfering with the liberty of persons or the right of
|
|
free contract by determining the hours of labor in the occupation of a
|
|
baker.'
|
|
|
|
'You run ahead too fast,' O'Connor answered. 'You don't know all the
|
|
ways out. There is another way out. We know what we're about. We're
|
|
sick of strikes. They've got us beaten that way to a frazzle. But I
|
|
don't think we'll ever need to call our men out again.'
|
|
'What is your way out?' Ernest demanded bluntly.
|
|
O'Connor laughed and shook his head. 'I can tell you this much:
|
|
We've not been asleep. And we're not dreaming now.'
|
|
'There's nothing to be afraid of, or ashamed of, I hope,' Ernest
|
|
challenged.
|
|
'I guess we know our business best,' was the retort.
|
|
'It's a dark business, from the way you hide it,' Ernest said with
|
|
growing anger.
|
|
'We've paid for our experience in sweat and blood, and we've
|
|
earned all that's coming to us,' was the reply. 'Charity begins at
|
|
home.'
|
|
'If you're afraid to tell me your way out, I'll tell it to you.'
|
|
Ernest's blood was up. 'You're going in for grab-sharing. You've
|
|
made terms with the enemy, that's what you've done. You've sold out
|
|
the cause of labor, of all labor. You are leaving the battle-field
|
|
like cowards.'
|
|
'I'm not saying anything,' O'Connor answered sullenly. 'Only I guess
|
|
we know what's best for us a little bit better than you do.'
|
|
'And you don't care a cent for what is best for the rest of labor.
|
|
You kick it into the ditch.'
|
|
'I'm not saying anything,' O'Connor replied, 'except that I'm
|
|
president of the Machinists' Association, and it's my business to
|
|
consider the interests of the men I represent, that's all.'
|
|
And then, when the labor leaders had left, Ernest, with the calmness
|
|
of defeat, outlined to me the course of events to come.
|
|
'The socialists used to foretell with joy,' he said, 'the coming
|
|
of the day when organized labor, defeated on the industrial field,
|
|
would come over on to the political field. Well, the Iron Heel has
|
|
defeated the labor unions on the industrial field and driven them over
|
|
to the political field; and instead of this being joyful for us, it
|
|
will be a source of grief. The Iron Heel learned its lesson. We showed
|
|
it our power in the general strike. It has taken steps to prevent
|
|
another general strike.'
|
|
'But how?' I asked.
|
|
'Simply by subsidizing the great unions. They won't join in the next
|
|
general strike. Therefore it won't be a general strike.'
|
|
'But the Iron Heel can't maintain so costly a programme forever,'
|
|
I objected.
|
|
'Oh, it hasn't subsidized all of the unions. That's not necessary.
|
|
Here is what is going to happen. Wages are going to be advanced and
|
|
hours shortened in the railroad unions, the iron and steel workers
|
|
unions, and the engineer and machinist unions. In these unions more
|
|
favorable conditions will continue to prevail. Membership in these
|
|
unions will become like seats in Paradise.'
|
|
'Still I don't see,' I objected. 'What is to become of the other
|
|
unions? There are far more unions outside of this combination than
|
|
in it.'
|
|
'The other unions will be ground out of existence- all of them. For,
|
|
don't you see, the railway men, machinists and engineers, iron and
|
|
steel workers, do all of the vitally essential work in our machine
|
|
civilization. Assured of their faithfulness, the Iron Heel can snap
|
|
its fingers at all the rest of labor. Iron, steel, coal, machinery,
|
|
and transportation constitute the backbone of the whole industrial
|
|
fabric.'
|
|
'But coal?' I queried. 'There are nearly a million coal miners.'
|
|
They are practically unskilled labor. They will not count. Their
|
|
wages will go down and their hours will increase. They will be
|
|
slaves like all the rest of us, and they will become about the most
|
|
bestial of all of us. They will be compelled to work, just as the
|
|
farmers are compelled to work now for the masters who robbed them of
|
|
their land. And the same with all the other unions outside the
|
|
combination. Watch them wobble and go to pieces, and their members
|
|
become slaves driven to toil by empty stomachs and the law of the
|
|
land.
|
|
'Do you know what will happen to Farley* and his strike-breakers?
|
|
I'll tell you. Strike-breaking as an occupation will cease. There
|
|
won't be any more strikes. In place of strikes will be slave
|
|
revolts. Farley and his gang will be promoted to slave-driving. Oh, it
|
|
won't be called that; it will be called enforcing the law of the
|
|
land that compels the laborers to work. It simply prolongs the
|
|
fight, this treachery of the big unions. Heaven only knows now where
|
|
and when the Revolution will triumph.'
|
|
|
|
* James Farley- a notorious strike-breaker of the period. A man more
|
|
courageous than ethical, and of undeniable ability. He rose high under
|
|
the rule of the Iron Heel and finally was translated into the oligarch
|
|
class. He was assassinated in 1932 by Sarah Jenkins, whose husband,
|
|
thirty years before, had been killed by Farley's strike-breakers.
|
|
|
|
'But with such a powerful combination as the Oligarchy and the big
|
|
unions, is there any reason to believe that the Revolution will ever
|
|
triumph?' I queried. 'May not the combination endure forever?'
|
|
He shook his head. 'One of our generalizations is that every
|
|
system founded upon class and caste contains within itself the germs
|
|
of its own decay. When a system is founded upon class, how can caste
|
|
be prevented? The Iron Heel will not be able to prevent it, and in the
|
|
end caste will destroy the Iron Heel. The oligarchs have already
|
|
developed caste among themselves; but wait until the favored unions
|
|
develop caste. The Iron Heel will use all its power to prevent it, but
|
|
it will fail.
|
|
'In the favored unions are the flower of the American workingmen.
|
|
They are strong, efficient men. They have become members of those
|
|
unions through competition for place. Every fit workman in the
|
|
United States will be possessed by the ambition to become a member
|
|
of the favored unions. The Oligarchy will encourage such ambition
|
|
and the consequent competition. Thus will the strong men, who might
|
|
else be revolutionists, be won away and their strength used to bolster
|
|
the Oligarchy.
|
|
'On the other hand, the labor castes, the members of the favored
|
|
unions, will strive to make their organizations into close
|
|
corporations. And they will succeed. Membership in the labor castes
|
|
will become hereditary. Sons will succeed fathers, and there will be
|
|
no inflow of new strength from that eternal reservoir of strength, the
|
|
common people. This will mean deterioration of the labor castes, and
|
|
in the end they will become weaker and weaker. At the same time, as an
|
|
institution, they will become temporarily all-powerful. They will be
|
|
like the guards of the palace in old Rome, and there will be palace
|
|
revolutions whereby the labor castes will seize the reins of power.
|
|
And there will be counter-palace revolutions of the oligarchs, and
|
|
sometimes the one, and sometimes the other, will be in power. And
|
|
through it all the inevitable caste-weakening will go on, so that in
|
|
the end the common people will come into their own.'
|
|
This foreshadowing of a slow social evolution was made when Ernest
|
|
was first depressed by the defection of the great unions. I never
|
|
agreed with him in it, and I disagree now, as I write these lines,
|
|
more heartily than ever; for even now, though Ernest is gone, we are
|
|
on the verge of the revolt that will sweep all oligarchies away. Yet I
|
|
have here given Ernest's prophecy because it was his prophecy. In
|
|
spite of his belief in it, he worked like a giant against it, and
|
|
he, more than any man, has made possible the revolt that even now
|
|
waits the signal to burst forth.*
|
|
|
|
* Everhard's social foresight was remarkable. As clearly as in the
|
|
light of past events, he saw the defection of the favored unions,
|
|
the rise and the slow decay of the labor castes, and the struggle
|
|
between the decaying oligarchs and labor castes for control of the
|
|
great governmental machine.
|
|
|
|
'But if the Oligarchy persists,' I asked him that evening, 'what
|
|
will become of the great surpluses that will fall to its share every
|
|
year?'
|
|
'The surpluses will have to be expended somehow,' he answered;
|
|
'and trust the oligarchs to find a way. Magnificent roads will be
|
|
built. There will be great achievements in science, and especially
|
|
in art. When the oligarchs have completely mastered the people, they
|
|
will have time to spare for other things. They will become worshippers
|
|
of beauty. They will become art-lovers. And under their direction
|
|
and generously rewarded, will toil the artists. The result will be
|
|
great art; for no longer, as up to yesterday, will the artists
|
|
pander to the bourgeois taste of the middle class. It will be great
|
|
art, I tell you, and wonder cities will arise that will make tawdry
|
|
and cheap the cities of old time. And in these cities will the
|
|
oligarchs dwell and worship beauty.*
|
|
|
|
* We cannot but marvel at Everhard's foresight. Before ever the
|
|
thought of wonder cities like Ardis and Asgard entered the minds of
|
|
the oligarchs, Everhard saw those cities and the inevitable
|
|
necessity for their creation.
|
|
|
|
'Thus will the surplus be constantly expended while labor does the
|
|
work. The building of these great works and cities will give a
|
|
starvation ration to millions of common laborers, for the enormous
|
|
bulk of the surplus will compel an equally enormous expenditure, and
|
|
the oligarchs will build for a thousand years- ay, for ten thousand
|
|
years. They will build as the Egyptians and the Babylonians never
|
|
dreamed of building; and when the oligarchs have passed away, their
|
|
great roads and their wonder cities will remain for the brotherhood of
|
|
labor to tread upon and dwell within.*
|
|
|
|
* And since that day of prophecy, have passed away the three
|
|
centuries of the Iron Heel and the four centuries of the Brotherhood
|
|
of Man, and to-day we tread the roads and dwell in the cities that the
|
|
oligarchs built. It is true, we are even now building still more
|
|
wonderful wonder cities, but the wonder cities of the oligarchs
|
|
endure, and I write these lines in Ardis, one of the most wonderful of
|
|
them all.
|
|
|
|
'These things the oligarchs will do because they cannot help doing
|
|
them. These great works will be the form their expenditure of the
|
|
surplus will take, and in the same way that the ruling classes of
|
|
Egypt of long ago expended the surplus they robbed from the people
|
|
by the building of temples and pyramids. Under the oligarchs will
|
|
flourish, not a priest class, but an artist class. And in place of the
|
|
merchant class of bourgeoisie will be the labor castes. And beneath
|
|
will be the abyss, wherein will fester and starve and rot, and ever
|
|
renew itself, the common people, the great bulk of the population. And
|
|
in the end, who knows in what day, the common people will rise up
|
|
out of the abyss; the labor castes and the Oligarchy will crumble
|
|
away; and then, at last, after the travail of the centuries, will it
|
|
be the day of the common man. I had thought to see that day; but now I
|
|
know that I shall never see it.'
|
|
He paused and looked at me, and added:
|
|
'Social evolution is exasperatingly slow, isn't it, sweetheart?'
|
|
My arms were about him, and his head was on my breast.
|
|
'Sing me to sleep,' he murmured whimsically. 'I have had a
|
|
visioning, and I wish to forget.'
|
|
CHAPTER FIFTEEN.
|
|
Last Days.
|
|
|
|
IT WAS NEAR THE END OF January, 1913, that the changed attitude of
|
|
the Oligarchy toward the favored unions was made public. The
|
|
newspapers published information of an unprecedented rise in wages and
|
|
shortening of hours for the railroad employees, the iron and steel
|
|
workers, and the engineers and machinists. But the whole truth was not
|
|
told. The oligarchs did not dare permit the telling of the whole
|
|
truth. In reality, the wages had been raised much higher, and the
|
|
privileges were correspondingly greater. All this was secret, but
|
|
secrets will out. Members of the favored unions told their wives,
|
|
and the wives gossiped, and soon all the labor world knew what had
|
|
happened.
|
|
It was merely the logical development of what in the nineteenth
|
|
century had been known as grab-sharing. In the industrial warfare of
|
|
that time, profit-sharing had been tried. That is, the capitalists had
|
|
striven to placate the workers by interesting them financially in
|
|
their work. But profit-sharing, as a system, was ridiculous and
|
|
impossible. Profit-sharing could be successful only in isolated
|
|
cases in the midst of a system of industrial strife; for if all
|
|
labor and all capital shared profits, the same conditions would obtain
|
|
as did obtain when there was no profit-sharing.
|
|
So, out of the unpractical idea of profit-sharing, arose the
|
|
practical idea of grab-sharing. 'Give us more pay and charge it to the
|
|
public,' was the slogan of the strong unions.* And here and there this
|
|
selfish policy worked successfully. In charging it to the public, it
|
|
was charged to the great mass of unorganized labor and of weakly
|
|
organized labor. These workers actually paid the increased wages of
|
|
their stronger brothers who were members of unions that were labor
|
|
monopolies. This idea, as I say, was merely carried to its logical
|
|
conclusion, on a large scale, by the combination of the oligarchs
|
|
and the favored unions.
|
|
|
|
* All the railroad unions entered into this combination with the
|
|
oligarchs, and it is of interest to note that the first definite
|
|
application of the policy of profit-grabbing was made by a railroad
|
|
union in the nineteenth century A.D., namely, the Brotherhood of
|
|
Locomotive Engineers. P. M. Arthur was for twenty years Grand Chief of
|
|
the Brotherhood. After the strike on the Pennsylvania Railroad in
|
|
1877, he broached a scheme to have the Locomotive Engineers make terms
|
|
with the railroads and to 'go it alone' so far as the rest of the
|
|
labor unions were concerned. This scheme was eminently successful.
|
|
It was as successful as it was selfish, and out of it was coined the
|
|
word 'arthurization,' to denote grab-sharing on the part of labor
|
|
unions. This word 'arthurization' has long puzzled the etymologists,
|
|
but its derivation, I hope, is now made clear.
|
|
|
|
As soon as the secret of the defection of the favored unions
|
|
leaked out, there were rumblings and mutterings in the labor world.
|
|
Next, the favored unions withdrew from the international organizations
|
|
and broke off all affiliations. Then came trouble and violence. The
|
|
members of the favored unions were branded as traitors, and in saloons
|
|
and brothels, on the streets and at work, and, in fact, everywhere,
|
|
they were assaulted by the comrades they had so treacherously
|
|
deserted.
|
|
Countless heads were broken, and there were many killed. No member
|
|
of the favored unions was safe. They gathered together in bands in
|
|
order to go to work or to return from work. They walked always in
|
|
the middle of the street. On the sidewalk they were liable to have
|
|
their skulls crushed by bricks and cobblestones thrown from windows
|
|
and house-tops. They were permitted to carry weapons, and the
|
|
authorities aided them in every way. Their persecutors were
|
|
sentenced to long terms in prison, where they were harshly treated;
|
|
while no man, not a member of the favored unions, was permitted to
|
|
carry weapons. Violation of this law was made a high misdemeanor and
|
|
punished accordingly.
|
|
Outraged labor continued to wreak vengeance on the traitors. Caste
|
|
lines formed automatically. The children of the traitors were
|
|
persecuted by the children of the workers who had been betrayed, until
|
|
it was impossible for the former to play on the streets or to attend
|
|
the public schools. Also, the wives and families of the traitors
|
|
were ostracized, while the corner groceryman who sold provisions to
|
|
them was boycotted.
|
|
As a result, driven back upon themselves from every side, the
|
|
traitors and their families became clannish. Finding it impossible
|
|
to dwell in safety in the midst of the betrayed proletariat, they
|
|
moved into new localities inhabited by themselves alone. In this
|
|
they were favored by the oligarchs. Good dwellings, modern and
|
|
sanitary, were built for them, surrounded by spacious yards, and
|
|
separated here and there by parks and playgrounds. Their children
|
|
attended schools especially built for them, and in these schools
|
|
manual training and applied science were specialized upon. Thus, and
|
|
unavoidably, at the very beginning, out of this segregation arose
|
|
caste. The members of the favored unions became the aristocracy of
|
|
labor. They were set apart from the rest of labor. They were better
|
|
housed, better clothed, better fed, better treated. They were
|
|
grab-sharing with a vengeance.
|
|
In the meantime, the rest of the working class was more harshly
|
|
treated. Many little privileges were taken away from it, while its
|
|
wages and its standard of living steadily sank down. Incidentally, its
|
|
public schools deteriorated, and education slowly ceased to be
|
|
compulsory. The increase in the younger generation of children who
|
|
could not read nor write was perilous.
|
|
The capture of the world-market by the United States had disrupted
|
|
the rest of the world. Institutions and governments were everywhere
|
|
crashing or transforming. Germany, Italy, France, Australia, and New
|
|
Zealand were busy forming cooperative commonwealths. The British
|
|
Empire was falling apart. England's hands were full. In India revolt
|
|
was in full swing. The cry in all Asia was, 'Asia for the Asiatics!'
|
|
And behind this cry was Japan, ever urging and aiding the yellow and
|
|
brown races against the white. And while Japan dreamed of
|
|
continental empire and strove to realize the dream, she suppressed her
|
|
own proletarian revolution. It was a simple war of the castes,
|
|
Coolie versus Samurai, and the coolie socialists were executed by tens
|
|
of thousands. Forty thousand were killed in the street-fighting of
|
|
Tokio and in the futile assault on the Mikado's palace. Kobe was a
|
|
shambles; the slaughter of the cotton operatives by machine-guns
|
|
became classic as the most terrific execution ever achieved by
|
|
modern war machines. Most savage of all was the Japanese Oligarchy
|
|
that arose. Japan dominated the East, and took to herself the whole
|
|
Asiatic portion of the world-market, with the exception of India.
|
|
England managed to crush her own proletarian revolution and to
|
|
hold on to India, though she was brought to the verge of exhaustion.
|
|
Also, she was compelled to let her great colonies slip away from
|
|
her. So it was that the socialists succeeded in making Australia and
|
|
New Zealand into cooperative commonwealths. And it was for the same
|
|
reason that Canada was lost to the mother country. But Canada
|
|
crushed her own socialist revolution, being aided in this by the
|
|
Iron Heel. At the same time, the Iron Heel helped Mexico and Cuba to
|
|
put down revolt. The result was that the Iron Heel was firmly
|
|
established in the New World. It had welded into one compact political
|
|
mass the whole of North America from the Panama Canal to the Arctic
|
|
Ocean.
|
|
And England, at the sacrifice of her great colonies, had succeeded
|
|
only in retaining India. But this was no more than temporary. The
|
|
struggle with Japan and the rest of Asia for India was merely delayed.
|
|
England was destined shortly to lose India, while behind that event
|
|
loomed the struggle between a united Asia and the world.
|
|
And while all the world was torn with conflict, we of the United
|
|
States were not placid and peaceful. The defection of the great unions
|
|
had prevented our proletarian revolt, but violence was everywhere.
|
|
In addition to the labor troubles, and the discontent of the farmers
|
|
and of the remnant of the middle class, a religious revival had blazed
|
|
up. An offshoot of the Seventh Day Adventists sprang into sudden
|
|
prominence, proclaiming the end of the world.
|
|
'Confusion thrice confounded!' Ernest cried. 'How can we hope for
|
|
solidarity with all these cross purposes and conflicts?'
|
|
And truly the religious revival assumed formidable proportions.
|
|
The people, what of their wretchedness, and of their disappointment in
|
|
all things earthly, were ripe and eager for a heaven where
|
|
industrial tyrants entered no more than camels passed through
|
|
needle-eyes. Wild-eyed itinerant preachers swarmed over the land;
|
|
and despite the prohibition of the civil authorities, and the
|
|
persecution for disobedience, the flames of religious frenzy were
|
|
fanned by countless camp-meetings.
|
|
It was the last days, they claimed, the beginning of the end of
|
|
the world. The four winds had been loosed. God had stirred the nations
|
|
to strife. It was a time of visions and miracles, while seers and
|
|
prophetesses were legion. The people ceased work by hundreds of
|
|
thousands and fled to the mountains, there to await the imminent
|
|
coming of God and the rising of the hundred and forty and four
|
|
thousand to heaven. But in the meantime God did not come, and they
|
|
starved to death in great numbers. In their desperation they ravaged
|
|
the farms for food, and the consequent tumult and anarchy in the
|
|
country districts but increased the woes of the poor expropriated
|
|
farmers.
|
|
Also, the farms and warehouses were the property of the Iron Heel.
|
|
Armies of troops were put into the field, and the fanatics were herded
|
|
back at the bayonet point to their tasks in the cities. There they
|
|
broke out in ever recurring mobs and riots. Their leaders were
|
|
executed for sedition or confined in madhouses. Those who were
|
|
executed went to their deaths with all the gladness of martyrs. It was
|
|
a time of madness. The unrest spread. In the swamps and deserts and
|
|
waste places, from Florida to Alaska, the small groups of Indians that
|
|
survived were dancing ghost dances and waiting the coming of a Messiah
|
|
of their own.
|
|
And through it all, with a serenity and certitude that was
|
|
terrifying, continued to rise the form of that monster of the ages,
|
|
the Oligarchy. With iron hand and iron heel it mastered the surging
|
|
millions, out of confusion brought order, out of the very chaos
|
|
wrought its own foundation and structure.
|
|
'Just wait till we get in,' the Grangers said- Calvin said it to
|
|
us in our Pell Street quarters. 'Look at the states we've captured.
|
|
With you socialists to back us, we'll make them sing another song when
|
|
we take office.'
|
|
'The millions of the discontented and the impoverished are ours,'
|
|
the socialists said. 'The Grangers have come over to us, the
|
|
farmers, the middle class, and the laborers. The capitalist system
|
|
will fall to pieces. In another month we send fifty men to Congress.
|
|
Two years hence every office will be ours, from the President down
|
|
to the local dog-catcher.'
|
|
To all of which Ernest would shake his head and say:
|
|
'How many rifles have you got? Do you know where you can get
|
|
plenty of lead? When it comes to powder, chemical mixtures are
|
|
better than mechanical mixtures, you take my word.'
|
|
CHAPTER SIXTEEN.
|
|
The End.
|
|
|
|
WHEN IT CAME TIME FOR Ernest and me to go to Washington, father
|
|
did not accompany us. He had become enamoured of proletarian life.
|
|
He looked upon our slum neighborhood as a great sociological
|
|
laboratory, and he had embarked upon an apparently endless orgy of
|
|
investigation. He chummed with the laborers, and was an intimate in
|
|
scores of homes. Also, he worked at odd jobs, and the work was play as
|
|
well as learned investigation, for he delighted in it and was always
|
|
returning home with copious notes and bubbling over with new
|
|
adventures. He was the perfect scientist.
|
|
There was no need for his working at all, because Ernest managed
|
|
to earn enough from his translating to take care of the three of us.
|
|
But father insisted on pursuing his favorite phantom, and a protean
|
|
phantom it was, judging from the jobs he worked at. I shall never
|
|
forget the evening he brought home his street pedler's outfit of
|
|
shoe-laces and suspenders, nor the time I went into the little
|
|
corner grocery to make some purchase and had him wait on me. After
|
|
that I was not surprised when he tended bar for a week in the saloon
|
|
across the street. He worked as a night watchman, hawked potatoes on
|
|
the street, pasted labels in a cannery warehouse, was utility man in a
|
|
paper-box factory, and water-carrier for a street railway construction
|
|
gang, and even joined the Dishwashers' Union just before it fell to
|
|
pieces.
|
|
I think the Bishop's example, so far as wearing apparel was
|
|
concerned, must have fascinated father, for he wore the cheap cotton
|
|
shirt of the laborer and the overalls with the narrow strap about
|
|
the hips. Yet one habit remained to him from the old life; he always
|
|
dressed for dinner, or supper, rather.
|
|
I could be happy anywhere with Ernest; and father's happiness in our
|
|
changed circumstances rounded out my own happiness.
|
|
'When I was a boy,' father said, 'I was very curious. I wanted to
|
|
know why things were and how they came to pass. That was why I
|
|
became a physicist. The life in me to-day is just as curious as it was
|
|
in my boyhood, and it's the being curious that makes life worth
|
|
living.'
|
|
Sometimes he ventured north of Market Street into the shopping and
|
|
theatre district, where he sold papers, ran errands, and opened
|
|
cabs. There, one day, closing a cab, he encountered Mr. Wickson. In
|
|
high glee father described the incident to us that evening.
|
|
'Wickson looked at me sharply when I closed the door on him, and
|
|
muttered, "Well, I'll be damned." Just like that he said it, "Well,
|
|
I'll be damned." His face turned red and he was so confused that he
|
|
forgot to tip me. But he must have recovered himself quickly, for
|
|
the cab hadn't gone fifty feet before it turned around and came
|
|
back. He leaned out of the door.
|
|
'"Look here, Professor," he said, "this is too much. What can I do
|
|
for you?"
|
|
'"I closed the cab door for you," I answered. "According to common
|
|
custom you might give me a dime."
|
|
'"Bother that!" he snorted. "I mean something substantial."
|
|
'He was certainly serious- a twinge of ossified conscience or
|
|
something; and so I considered with grave deliberation for a moment.
|
|
'His face was quite expectant when I began my answer, but you should
|
|
have seen it when I finished.
|
|
'"You might give me back my home," I said, "and my stock in the
|
|
Sierra Mills."'
|
|
Father paused.
|
|
'What did he say?' I questioned eagerly.
|
|
'What could he say? He said nothing. But I said. "I hope you are
|
|
happy." He looked at me curiously. "Tell me, are you happy?"' I asked.
|
|
'He ordered the cabman to drive on, and went away swearing horribly.
|
|
And he didn't give me the dime, much less the home and stock; so you
|
|
see, my dear, your father's street-arab career is beset with
|
|
disappointments.'
|
|
And so it was that father kept on at our Pell Street quarters, while
|
|
Ernest and I went to Washington. Except for the final consummation,
|
|
the old order had passed away, and the final consummation was nearer
|
|
than I dreamed. Contrary to our expectation, no obstacles were
|
|
raised to prevent the socialist Congressmen from taking their seats.
|
|
Everything went smoothly, and I laughed at Ernest when he looked
|
|
upon the very smoothness as something ominous.
|
|
We found our socialist comrades confident, optimistic of their
|
|
strength and of the things they would accomplish. A few Grangers who
|
|
had been elected to Congress increased our strength, and an
|
|
elaborate programme of what was to be done was prepared by the
|
|
united forces. In all of which Ernest joined loyally and
|
|
energetically, though he could not forbear, now and again, from
|
|
saying, apropos of nothing in particular, 'When it comes to powder,
|
|
chemical mixtures are better than mechanical mixtures, you take my
|
|
word.'
|
|
The trouble arose first with the Grangers in the various states they
|
|
had captured at the last election. There were a dozen of these states,
|
|
but the Grangers who had been elected were not permitted to take
|
|
office. The incumbents refused to get out. It was very simple. They
|
|
merely charged illegality in the elections and wrapped up the whole
|
|
situation in the interminable red tape of the law. The Grangers were
|
|
powerless. The courts were in the hands of their enemies.
|
|
This was the moment of danger. If the cheated Grangers became
|
|
violent, all was lost. How we socialists worked to hold them back!
|
|
There were days and nights when Ernest never closed his eyes in sleep.
|
|
The big leaders of the Grangers saw the peril and were with us to a
|
|
man. But it was all of no avail. The Oligarchy wanted violence, and it
|
|
set its agents-provocateurs to work. Without discussion, it was the
|
|
agents-provocateurs who caused the Peasant Revolt.
|
|
In a dozen states the revolt flared up. The expropriated farmers
|
|
took forcible possession of the state governments. Of course this
|
|
was unconstitutional, and of course the United States put its soldiers
|
|
into the field. Everywhere the agents-provocateurs urged the people
|
|
on. These emissaries of the Iron Heel disguised themselves as
|
|
artisans, farmers, and farm laborers. In Sacramento, the capital of
|
|
California, the Grangers had succeeded in maintaining order. Thousands
|
|
of secret agents were rushed to the devoted city. In mobs composed
|
|
wholly of themselves, they fired and looted buildings and factories.
|
|
They worked the people up until they joined them in the pillage.
|
|
Liquor in large quantities was distributed among the slum classes
|
|
further to inflame their minds. And then, when all was ready, appeared
|
|
upon the scene the soldiers of the United States, who were, in
|
|
reality, the soldiers of the Iron Heel. Eleven thousand men, women,
|
|
and children were shot down on the streets of Sacramento or murdered
|
|
in their houses. The national government took possession of the
|
|
state government, and all was over for California.
|
|
And as with California, so elsewhere. Every Granger state was
|
|
ravaged with violence and washed in blood. First, disorder was
|
|
precipitated by the secret agents and the Black Hundreds, then the
|
|
troops were called out. Rioting and mob-rule reigned throughout the
|
|
rural districts. Day and night the smoke of burning farms, warehouses,
|
|
villages, and cities filled the sky. Dynamite appeared. Railroad
|
|
bridges and tunnels were blown up and trains were wrecked. The poor
|
|
farmers were shot and hanged in great numbers. Reprisals were
|
|
bitter, and many plutocrats and army officers were murdered. Blood and
|
|
vengeance were in men's hearts. The regular troops fought the
|
|
farmers as savagely as had they been Indians. And the regular troops
|
|
had cause. Twenty-eight hundred of them had been annihilated in a
|
|
tremendous series of dynamite explosions in Oregon, and in a similar
|
|
manner, a number of train loads, at different times and places, had
|
|
been destroyed. So it was that the regular troops fought for their
|
|
lives as well as did the farmers.
|
|
As for the militia, the militia law of 1903 was put into effect, and
|
|
the workers of one state were compelled, under pain of death, to shoot
|
|
down their comrade-workers in other states. Of course, the militia law
|
|
did not work smoothly at first. Many militia officers were murdered,
|
|
and many militiamen were executed by drumhead court martial.
|
|
Ernest's prophecy was strikingly fulfilled in the cases of Mr.
|
|
Kowalt and Mr. Asmunsen. Both were eligible for the militia, and
|
|
both were drafted to serve in the punitive expedition that was
|
|
despatched from California against the farmers of Missouri. Mr. Kowalt
|
|
and Mr. Asmunsen refused to serve. They were given short shrift.
|
|
Drumhead court martial was their portion, and military execution their
|
|
end. They were shot with their backs to the firing squad.
|
|
Many young men fled into the mountains to escape serving in the
|
|
militia. There they became outlaws, and it was not until more peaceful
|
|
times that they received their punishment. It was drastic. The
|
|
government issued a proclamation for all law-abiding citizens to
|
|
come in from the mountains for a period of three months. When the
|
|
proclaimed date arrived, half a million soldiers were sent into the
|
|
mountainous districts everywhere. There was no investigation, no
|
|
trial. Wherever a man was encountered, he was shot down on the spot.
|
|
The troops operated on the basis that no man not an outlaw remained in
|
|
the mountains. Some bands, in strong positions, fought gallantly,
|
|
but in the end every deserter from the militia met death.
|
|
A more immediate lesson, however, was impressed on the minds of
|
|
the people by the punishment meted out to the Kansas militia. The
|
|
great Kansas Mutiny occurred at the very beginning of military
|
|
operations against the Grangers. Six thousand of the militia mutinied.
|
|
They had been for several weeks very turbulent and sullen, and for
|
|
that reason had been kept in camp. Their open mutiny, however, was
|
|
without doubt precipitated by the agents-provocateurs.
|
|
On the night of the April 22 they arose and murdered their officers,
|
|
only a small remnant of the latter escaping. This was beyond the
|
|
scheme of the Iron Heel, for the agents-provocateurs had done their
|
|
work too well. But everything was grist to the Iron Heel. It had
|
|
prepared for the outbreak, and the killing of so many officers gave it
|
|
justification for what followed. As by magic, forty thousand
|
|
soldiers of the regular army surrounded the malcontents. It was a
|
|
trap. The wretched militiamen found that their machine-guns had been
|
|
tampered with, and that the cartridges from the captured magazines did
|
|
not fit their rifles. They hoisted the white flag of surrender, but it
|
|
was ignored. There were no survivors. The entire six thousand were
|
|
annihilated. Common shell and shrapnel were thrown in upon them from a
|
|
distance, and, when, in their desperation, they charged the encircling
|
|
lines, they were mowed down by the machine-guns. I talked with an
|
|
eye-witness, and he said that the nearest any militiaman approached
|
|
the machine-guns was a hundred and fifty yards. The earth was carpeted
|
|
with the slain, and a final charge of cavalry, with trampling of
|
|
horses' hoofs, revolvers, and sabres, crushed the wounded into the
|
|
ground.
|
|
Simultaneously with the destruction of the Grangers came the
|
|
revolt of the coal miners. It was the expiring effort of organized
|
|
labor. Three-quarters of a million of miners went out on strike. But
|
|
they were too widely scattered over the country to advantage from
|
|
their own strength. They were segregated in their own districts and
|
|
beaten into submission. This was the first great slave-drive.
|
|
Pocock* won his spurs as a slave-driver and earned the undying
|
|
hatred of the proletariat. Countless attempts were made upon his life,
|
|
but he seemed to bear a charmed existence. It was he who was
|
|
responsible for the introduction of the Russian passport system
|
|
among the miners, and the denial of their right of removal from one
|
|
part of the country to another.
|
|
|
|
* Albert Pocock, another of the notorious strike-breakers of earlier
|
|
years, who, to the day of his death, successfully held all the
|
|
coal-miners of the country to their task. He was succeeded by his son,
|
|
Lewis Pocock, and for five generations this remarkable line of
|
|
slave-drivers handled the coal mines. The elder Pocock, known as
|
|
Pocock I., has been described as follows: 'A long, lean head,
|
|
semicircled by a fringe of brown and gray hair, with big cheek-bones
|
|
and a heavy chin,... a pale face, lustreless gray eyes, a metallic
|
|
voice, and a languid manner.' He was born of humble parents, and began
|
|
his career as a bartender. He next became a private detective for a
|
|
street railway corporation, and by successive steps developed into a
|
|
professional strikebreaker. Pocock V., the last of the line, was blown
|
|
up in a pump-house by a bomb during a petty revolt of the miners in
|
|
the Indian Territory. This occurred in 2073 A.D.
|
|
|
|
In the meantime, the socialists held firm. While the Grangers
|
|
expired in flame and blood, and organized labor was disrupted, the
|
|
socialists held their peace and perfected their secret organization.
|
|
In vain the Grangers pleaded with us. We rightly contended that any
|
|
revolt on our part was virtually suicide for the whole Revolution. The
|
|
Iron Heel, at first dubious about dealing with the entire
|
|
proletariat at one time, had found the work easier than it had
|
|
expected, and would have asked nothing better than an uprising on
|
|
our part. But we avoided the issue, in spite of the fact that
|
|
agents-provocateurs swarmed in our midst. In those early days, the
|
|
agents of the Iron Heel were clumsy in their methods. They had much to
|
|
learn and in the meantime our Fighting Groups weeded them out. It
|
|
was bitter, bloody work, but we were fighting for life and for the
|
|
Revolution, and we had to fight the enemy with its own weapons. Yet we
|
|
were fair. No agent of the Iron Heel was executed without a trial.
|
|
We may have made mistakes, but if so, very rarely. The bravest, and
|
|
the most combative and self-sacrificing of our comrades went into
|
|
the Fighting Groups. Once, after ten years had passed, Ernest made a
|
|
calculation from figures furnished by the chiefs of the Fighting
|
|
Groups, and his conclusion was that the average life of a man or woman
|
|
after becoming a member was five years. The comrades of the Fighting
|
|
Groups were heroes all, and the peculiar thing about it was that
|
|
they were opposed to the taking of life. They violated their own
|
|
natures, yet they loved liberty and knew of no sacrifice too great
|
|
to make for the Cause.*
|
|
|
|
* These Fighting groups were modelled somewhat after the Fighting
|
|
Organization of the Russian Revolution, and, despite the unceasing
|
|
efforts of the Iron Heel, these groups persisted throughout the
|
|
three centuries of its existence. Composed of men and women actuated
|
|
by lofty purpose and unafraid to die, the Fighting Groups exercised
|
|
tremendous influence and tempered the savage brutality of the
|
|
rulers. Not alone was their work confined to unseen warfare with the
|
|
secret agents of the Oligarchy. The oligarchs themselves were
|
|
compelled to listen to the decrees of the Groups, and often, when they
|
|
disobeyed, were punished by death- and likewise with the
|
|
subordinates of the oligarchs, with the officers of the army and the
|
|
leaders of the labor castes.
|
|
Stern justice was meted out by these organized avengers, but most
|
|
remarkable was their passionless and judicial procedure. There were no
|
|
snap judgments. When a man was captured he was given fair trial and
|
|
opportunity for defence. Of necessity, many men were tried and
|
|
condemned by proxy, as in the case of General Lampton. This occurred
|
|
in 2138 A.D. Possibly the most bloodthirsty and malignant of all the
|
|
mercenaries that ever served the Iron Heel, he was informed by the
|
|
Fighting Groups that they had tried him, found him guilty, and
|
|
condemned him to death- and this, after three warnings for him to
|
|
cease from his ferocious treatment of the proletariat. After his
|
|
condemnation he surrounded himself with a myriad protective devices.
|
|
Years passed, and in vain the Fighting Groups strove to execute
|
|
their decree. Comrade after comrade, men and women, failed in their
|
|
attempts, and were cruelly executed by the Oligarchy. It was the
|
|
case of General Lampton that revived crucifixion as a legal method
|
|
of execution. But in the end the condemned man found his executioner
|
|
in the form of a slender girl of seventeen, Madeline Provence, who, to
|
|
accomplish her purpose, served two years in his palace as a seamstress
|
|
to the household. She died in solitary confinement after horrible
|
|
and prolonged torture; but to-day she stands in imperishable bronze in
|
|
the Pantheon of Brotherhood in the wonder city of Serles.
|
|
We, who by personal experience know nothing of bloodshed, must not
|
|
judge harshly the heroes of the Fighting Groups. They gave up their
|
|
lives for humanity, no sacrifice was too great for them to accomplish,
|
|
while inexorable necessity compelled them to bloody expression in an
|
|
age of blood. The Fighting Groups constituted the one thorn in the
|
|
side of the Iron Heel that the Iron Heel could never remove.
|
|
Everhard was the father of this curious army, and its
|
|
accomplishments and successful persistence for three hundred years
|
|
bear witness to the wisdom with which he organized and the solid
|
|
foundation he laid for the succeeding generations to build upon. In
|
|
some respects, despite his great economic and sociological
|
|
contributions, and his work as a general leader in the Revolution, his
|
|
organization of the Fighting Groups must be regarded as his greatest
|
|
achievement.
|
|
|
|
The task we set ourselves was threefold. First, the weeding out from
|
|
our circles of the secret agents of the Oligarchy. Second, the
|
|
organizing of the Fighting Groups, and outside of them, of the general
|
|
secret organization of the Revolution. And third, the introduction
|
|
of our own secret agents into every branch of the Oligarchy- into
|
|
the labor castes and especially among the telegraphers and secretaries
|
|
and clerks, into the army, the agents-provocateurs, and the
|
|
slave-drivers. It was slow work, and perilous, and often were our
|
|
efforts rewarded with costly failures.
|
|
The Iron Heel had triumphed in open warfare, but we held our own
|
|
in the new warfare, strange and awful and subterranean, that we
|
|
instituted. All was unseen, much was unguessed; the blind fought the
|
|
blind; and yet through it all was order, purpose, control. We
|
|
permeated the entire organization of the Iron Heel with our agents,
|
|
while our own organization was permeated with the agents of the Iron
|
|
Heel. It was warfare dark and devious, replete with intrigue and
|
|
conspiracy, plot and counterplot. And behind all, ever menacing, was
|
|
death, violent and terrible. Men and women disappeared, our nearest
|
|
and dearest comrades. We saw them to-day. To-morrow they were gone; we
|
|
never saw them again, and we knew that they had died.
|
|
There was no trust, no confidence anywhere. The man who plotted
|
|
beside us, for all we knew, might be an agent of the Iron Heel. We
|
|
mined the organization of the Iron Heel with our secret agents, and
|
|
the Iron Heel countermined with its secret agents inside its own
|
|
organization. And it was the same with our organization. And despite
|
|
the absence of confidence and trust we were compelled to base our
|
|
every effort on confidence and trust. Often were we betrayed. Men were
|
|
weak. The Iron Heel could offer money, leisure, the joys and pleasures
|
|
that waited in the repose of the wonder cities. We could offer nothing
|
|
but the satisfaction of being faithful to a noble ideal. As for the
|
|
rest, the wages of those who were loyal were unceasing peril, torture,
|
|
and death.
|
|
Men were weak, I say, and because of their weakness we were
|
|
compelled to make the only other reward that was within our power.
|
|
It was the reward of death. Out of necessity we had to punish our
|
|
traitors. For every man who betrayed us, from one to a dozen
|
|
faithful avengers were loosed upon his heels. We might fail to carry
|
|
out our decrees against our enemies, such as the Pococks, for
|
|
instance; but the one thing we could not afford to fail in was the
|
|
punishment of our own traitors. Comrades turned traitor by permission,
|
|
in order to win to the wonder cities and there execute our sentences
|
|
on the real traitors. In fact, so terrible did we make ourselves, that
|
|
it became a greater peril to betray us than to remain loyal to us.
|
|
The Revolution took on largely the character of religion. We
|
|
worshipped at the shrine of the Revolution, which was the shrine of
|
|
liberty. It was the divine flashing through us. Men and women
|
|
devoted their lives to the Cause, and new-born babes were sealed to it
|
|
as of old they had been sealed to the service of God. We were lovers
|
|
of Humanity.
|
|
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN.
|
|
The Scarlet Livery.
|
|
|
|
WITH THE DESTRUCTION OF THE Granger states, the Grangers in Congress
|
|
disappeared. They were being tried for high treason, and their
|
|
places were taken by the creatures of the Iron Heel. The socialists
|
|
were in a pitiful minority, and they knew that their end was near.
|
|
Congress and the Senate were empty pretences, farces. Public questions
|
|
were gravely debated and passed upon according to the old forms, while
|
|
in reality all that was done was to give the stamp of constitutional
|
|
procedure to the mandates of the Oligarchy.
|
|
Ernest was in the thick of the fight when the end came. It was in
|
|
the debate on the bill to assist the unemployed. The hard times of the
|
|
preceding year had thrust great masses of the proletariat beneath
|
|
the starvation line, and the continued and wide-reaching disorder
|
|
had but sunk them deeper. Millions of people were starving, while
|
|
the oligarchs and their supporters were surfeiting on the surplus*
|
|
We called these wretched people the people of the abyss,*(2) and it
|
|
was to alleviate their awful suffering that the socialists had
|
|
introduced the unemployed bill. But this was not to the fancy of the
|
|
Iron Heel. In its own way it was preparing to set these millions to
|
|
work, but the way was not our way, wherefore it had issued its
|
|
orders that our bill should be voted down. Ernest and his fellows knew
|
|
that their effort was futile, but they were tired of the suspense.
|
|
They wanted something to happen. They were accomplishing nothing,
|
|
and the best they hoped for was the putting of an end to the
|
|
legislative farce in which they were unwilling players. They knew
|
|
not what end would come, but they never anticipated a more
|
|
disastrous end than the one that did come.
|
|
|
|
* The same conditions obtained in the nineteenth century A.D.
|
|
under British rule in India. The natives died of starvation by the
|
|
million, while their rulers robbed them of the fruits of their toil
|
|
and expended it on magnificent pageants and mumbo-jumbo fooleries.
|
|
Perforce, in this enlightened age, we have much to blush for in the
|
|
acts of our ancestors. Our only consolation is philosophic. We must
|
|
accept the capitalistic stage in social evolution as about on a par
|
|
with the earlier monkey stage. The human had to pass through those
|
|
stages in its rise from the mire and slime of low organic life. It was
|
|
inevitable that much of the mire and slime should cling and be not
|
|
easily shaken off.
|
|
*(2) The people of the abyss- this phrase was struck out by the
|
|
genius of H. G. Wells in the late nineteenth century A.D. Wells was
|
|
a sociological seer, sane and normal as well as warm human. Many
|
|
fragments of his work have come down to us, while two of his
|
|
greatest achievements, 'Anticipations' and 'Mankind in the Making,'
|
|
have come down intact. Before the oligarchs, and before Everhard,
|
|
Wells speculated upon the building of the wonder cities, though in his
|
|
writings they are referred to as 'pleasure cities.'
|
|
|
|
I sat in the gallery that day. We all knew that something terrible
|
|
was imminent. It was in the air, and its presence was made visible
|
|
by the armed soldiers drawn up in lines in the corridors, and by the
|
|
officers grouped in the entrances to the House itself. The Oligarchy
|
|
was about to strike. Ernest was speaking. He was describing the
|
|
sufferings of the unemployed, as if with the wild idea of in some
|
|
way touching their hearts and consciences; but the Republican and
|
|
Democratic members sneered and jeered at him, and there was uproar and
|
|
confusion. Ernest abruptly changed front.
|
|
'I know nothing that I may say can influence you,' he said. 'You
|
|
have no souls to be influenced. You are spineless, flaccid things. You
|
|
pompously call yourselves Republicans and Democrats. There is no
|
|
Republican Party. There is no Democratic Party. There are no
|
|
Republicans nor Democrats in this House. You are lick-spittlers and
|
|
panderers, the creatures of the Plutocracy. You talk verbosely in
|
|
antiquated terminology of your love of liberty, and all the while
|
|
you wear the scarlet livery of the Iron Heel.'
|
|
Here the shouting and the cries of 'Order! order!' drowned his
|
|
voice, and he stood disdainfully till the din had somewhat subsided.
|
|
He waved his hand to include all of them, turned to his own
|
|
comrades, and said:
|
|
'Listen to the bellowing of the well-fed beasts.'
|
|
Pandemonium broke out again. The Speaker rapped for order and
|
|
glanced expectantly at the officers in the doorways. There were
|
|
cries of 'Sedition!' and a great, rotund New York member began
|
|
shouting 'Anarchist!' at Ernest. And Ernest was not pleasant to look
|
|
at. Every fighting fibre of him was quivering, and his face was the
|
|
face of a fighting animal, withal he was cool and collected.
|
|
'Remember,' he said, in a voice that made itself heard above the
|
|
din, 'that as you show mercy now to the proletariat, some day will
|
|
that same proletariat show mercy to you.'
|
|
The cries of 'Sedition!' and 'Anarchist!' redoubled.
|
|
'I know that you will not vote for this bill' Ernest went on. 'You
|
|
have received the command from your masters to vote against it. And
|
|
yet you call me anarchist. You, who have destroyed the government of
|
|
the people, and who shamelessly flaunt your scarlet shame in public
|
|
places, call me anarchist. I do not believe in hell-fire and
|
|
brimstone; but in moments like this I regret my unbelief. Nay, in
|
|
moments like this I almost do believe. Surely there must be a hell,
|
|
for in no less place could it be possible for you to receive
|
|
punishment adequate to your crimes. So long as you exist, there is a
|
|
vital need for hell-fire in the Cosmos.'
|
|
There was movement in the doorways. Ernest, the Speaker, all the
|
|
members turned to see.
|
|
'Why do you not call your soldiers in, Mr. Speaker, and bid them
|
|
do their work?' Ernest demanded. 'They should carry out your plan with
|
|
expedition.'
|
|
'There are other plans afoot,' was the retort. 'That is why the
|
|
soldiers are present.'
|
|
'Our plans, I suppose,' Ernest sneered. 'Assassination or
|
|
something kindred.'
|
|
But at the word 'assassination' the uproar broke out again. Ernest
|
|
could not make himself heard, but he remained on his feet waiting
|
|
for a lull. And then it happened. From my place in the gallery I saw
|
|
nothing except the flash of the explosion. The roar of it filled my
|
|
ears and I saw Ernest reeling and falling in a swirl of smoke, and the
|
|
soldiers rushing up all the aisles. His comrades were on their feet,
|
|
wild with anger, capable of any violence. But Ernest steadied
|
|
himself for a moment, and waved his arms for silence.
|
|
'It is a plot!' his voice rang out in warning to his comrades. 'Do
|
|
nothing, or you will be destroyed.'
|
|
Then he slowly sank down, and the soldiers reached him. The next
|
|
moment soldiers were clearing the galleries and I saw no more.
|
|
Though he was my husband, I was not permitted to get to him. When
|
|
I announced who I was, I was promptly placed under arrest. And at
|
|
the same time were arrested all socialist Congressmen in Washington,
|
|
including the unfortunate Simpson, who lay ill with typhoid fever in
|
|
his hotel.
|
|
The trial was prompt and brief. The men were foredoomed. The
|
|
wonder was that Ernest was not executed. This was a blunder on the
|
|
part of the Oligarchy, and a costly one. But the Oligarchy was too
|
|
confident in those days. It was drunk with success, and little did
|
|
it dream that that small handful of heroes had within them the power
|
|
to rock it to its foundations. To-morrow, when the Great Revolt breaks
|
|
out and all the world resounds with the tramp, tramp of the
|
|
millions, the Oligarchy, will realize, and too late, how mightily that
|
|
band of heroes has grown.*
|
|
|
|
* Avis Everhard took for granted that her narrative would be read in
|
|
her own day, and so omits to mention the outcome of the trial for high
|
|
treason. Many other similar disconcerting omissions will be noticed in
|
|
the Manuscript. Fifty-two socialist Congressmen were tried, and all
|
|
were found guilty. Strange to relate, not one received the death
|
|
sentence. Everhard and eleven others, among whom were Theodore
|
|
Donnelson and Matthew Kent, received life imprisonment. The
|
|
remaining forty received sentences varying from thirty to forty-five
|
|
years; while Arthur Simpson, referred to in the Manuscript as being
|
|
ill of typhoid fever at the time of the explosion, received only
|
|
fifteen years. It is the tradition that he died of starvation in
|
|
solitary confinement, and this harsh treatment is explained as
|
|
having been caused by his uncompromising stubbornness and his fiery
|
|
and tactless hatred for all men that served the despotism. He died
|
|
in Cabanas in Cuba, where three of his comrades were also confined.
|
|
The fifty-two socialist Congressmen were confined in military
|
|
fortresses scattered all over the United States. Thus, Du Bois and
|
|
Woods were held in Porto Rico, while Everhard and Merryweather were
|
|
placed in Alcatraz, an island in San Francisco Bay that had already
|
|
seen long service as a military prison.
|
|
|
|
As a revolutionist myself, as one on the inside who knew the hopes
|
|
and fears and secret plans of the revolutionists, I am fitted to
|
|
answer, as very few are, the charge that they were guilty of exploding
|
|
the bomb in Congress. And I can say flatly, without qualification or
|
|
doubt of any sort, that the socialists, in Congress and out, had no
|
|
hand in the affair. Who threw the bomb we do not know, but the one
|
|
thing we are absolutely sure of is that we did not throw it.
|
|
On the other hand, there is evidence to show that the Iron Heel
|
|
was responsible for the act. Of course, we cannot prove this. Our
|
|
conclusion is merely presumptive. But here are such facts as we do
|
|
know. It had been reported to the Speaker of the House, by
|
|
secret-service agents of the government, that the Socialist
|
|
Congressmen were about to resort to terroristic tactics, and that they
|
|
had decided upon the day when their tactics would go into effect. This
|
|
day was the very day of the explosion. Wherefore the Capitol had
|
|
been packed with troops in anticipation. Since we knew nothing about
|
|
the bomb, and since a bomb actually was exploded, and since the
|
|
authorities had prepared in advance for the explosion, it is only fair
|
|
to conclude that the Iron Heel did know. Furthermore, we charge that
|
|
the Iron Heel was guilty of the outrage, and that the Iron Heel
|
|
planned and perpetrated the outrage for the purpose of foisting the
|
|
guilt on our shoulders and so bringing about our destruction.
|
|
From the Speaker the warning leaked out to all the creatures in
|
|
the House that wore the scarlet livery. They knew, while Ernest was
|
|
speaking, that some violent act was to be committed. And to do them
|
|
justice, they honestly believed that the act was to be committed by
|
|
the socialists. At the trial, and still with honest belief, several
|
|
testified to having seen Ernest prepare to throw the bomb, and that it
|
|
exploded prematurely. Of course they saw nothing of the sort. In the
|
|
fevered imagination of fear they thought they saw, that was all.
|
|
As Ernest said at the trial: 'Does it stand to reason, if I were
|
|
going to throw a bomb, that I should elect to throw a feeble little
|
|
squib like the one that was thrown? There wasn't enough powder in
|
|
it. It made a lot of smoke, but hurt no one except me. It exploded
|
|
right at my feet, and yet it did not kill me. Believe me, when I get
|
|
to throwing bombs, I'll do damage. There'll be more than smoke in my
|
|
petards.'
|
|
In return it was argued by the prosecution that the weakness of
|
|
the bomb was a blunder on the part of the socialists, just as its
|
|
premature explosion, caused by Ernest's losing his nerve and
|
|
dropping it, was a blunder. And to clinch the argument, there were the
|
|
several Congressmen who testified to having seen Ernest fumble and
|
|
drop the bomb.
|
|
As for ourselves, not one of us knew how the bomb was thrown. Ernest
|
|
told me that the fraction of an instant before it exploded he both
|
|
heard and saw it strike at his feet. He testified to this at the
|
|
trial, but no one believed him. Besides, the whole thing, in popular
|
|
slang, was 'cooked up.' The Iron Heel had made up its mind to
|
|
destroy us, and there was no withstanding it.
|
|
There is a saying that truth will out. I have come to doubt that
|
|
saying. Nineteen years have elapsed, and despite our untiring efforts,
|
|
we have failed to find the man who really did throw the bomb.
|
|
Undoubtedly he was some emissary of the Iron Heel, but he has
|
|
escaped detection. We have never got the slightest clew to his
|
|
identity. And now, at this late date, nothing remains but for the
|
|
affair to take its place among the mysteries of history.*
|
|
|
|
* Avis Everhard would have had to live for many generations ere
|
|
she could have seen the clearing up of this particular mystery. A
|
|
little less than a hundred years ago, and a little more than six
|
|
hundred years after the death, the confession of Pervaise was
|
|
discovered in the secret archives of the Vatican. It is perhaps well
|
|
to tell a little something about this obscure document, which, in
|
|
the main, is of interest to the historian only.
|
|
Pervaise was an American, of French descent, who in 1913 A.D., was
|
|
lying in the Tombs Prison, New York City, awaiting trial for murder.
|
|
From his confession we learn that he was not a criminal. He was
|
|
warm-blooded, passionate, emotional. In an insane fit of jealousy he
|
|
killed his wife- a very common act in those times. Pervaise was
|
|
mastered by the fear of death, all of which is recounted at length
|
|
in his confession. To escape death he would have done anything, and
|
|
the police agents prepared him by assuring him that he could not
|
|
possibly escape conviction of murder in the first degree when his
|
|
trial came off. In those days, murder in the first degree was a
|
|
capital offense. The guilty man or woman was placed in a specially
|
|
constructed death-chair, and, under the supervision of competent
|
|
physicians, was destroyed by a current of electricity. This was called
|
|
electrocution, and it was very popular during that period.
|
|
Anaesthesia, as a mode of compulsory death, was not introduced until
|
|
later.
|
|
This man, good at heart but with a ferocious animalism close at
|
|
the surface of his being, lying in jail and expectant of nothing
|
|
less than death, was prevailed upon by the agents of the Iron Heel
|
|
to throw the bomb in the House of Representatives. In his confession
|
|
he states explicitly that he was informed that the bomb was to be a
|
|
feeble thing and that no lives would be lost. This is directly in line
|
|
with the fact that the bomb was lightly charged, and that its
|
|
explosion at Everhard's feet was not deadly.
|
|
Pervaise was smuggled into one of the galleries ostensibly closed
|
|
for repairs. He was to select the moment for the throwing of the bomb,
|
|
and he naively confesses that in his interest in Everhard's tirade and
|
|
the general commotion raised thereby, he nearly forgot his mission.
|
|
Not only was he released from prison in reward for his deed, but
|
|
he was granted an income for life. This he did not long enjoy. In 1914
|
|
A.D., in September, he was stricken with rheumatism of the heart and
|
|
lived for three days. It was then that he sent for the Catholic
|
|
priest, Father Peter Durban, and to him made confession. So
|
|
important did it seem to the priest, that he had the confession
|
|
taken down in writing and sworn to. What happened after this we can
|
|
only surmise. The document was certainly important enough to find
|
|
its way to Rome. Powerful influences must have been brought to bear,
|
|
hence its suppression. For centuries no hint of its existence
|
|
reached the world. It was not until in the last century that Lorbia,
|
|
the brilliant Italian scholar, stumbled upon it quite by chance during
|
|
his researches in the Vatican.
|
|
There is to-day no doubt whatever that the Iron Heel was responsible
|
|
for the bomb that exploded in the House of Representatives in 1913
|
|
A.D. Even though the Pervaise confession had never come to light, no
|
|
reasonable doubt could obtain; for the act in question, that sent
|
|
fifty-two Congressmen to prison, was on a par with countless other
|
|
acts committed by the oligarchs, and, before them, by the capitalists.
|
|
There is the classic instance of the ferocious and wanton judicial
|
|
murder of the innocent and so-called Haymarket Anarchists in Chicago
|
|
in the penultimate decade of the nineteenth century A.D. In a category
|
|
by itself is the deliberate burning and destruction of capitalist
|
|
property by the capitalists themselves. For such destruction of
|
|
property innocent men were frequently punished- 'railroaded' in the
|
|
parlance of the times.
|
|
In the labor troubles of the first decade of the twentieth century
|
|
A.D., between the capitalists and the Western Federation of Miners,
|
|
similar but more bloody tactics were employed. The railroad station at
|
|
Independence was blown up by the agents of the capitalists. Thirteen
|
|
men were killed, and many more were wounded. And then the capitalists,
|
|
controlling the legislative and judicial machinery of the state of
|
|
Colorado, charged the miners with the crime and came very near to
|
|
convicting them. Romaines, one of the tools in this affair, like
|
|
Pervaise, was lying in jail in another state, Kansas, awaiting
|
|
trial, when he was approached by the agents of the capitalists. But,
|
|
unlike Pervaise the confession of Romaines was made public in his
|
|
own time.
|
|
Then, during this same period, there was the case of Moyer and
|
|
Haywood, two strong, fearless leaders of labor. One was president
|
|
and the other was secretary of the Western Federation of Miners. The
|
|
ex-governor of Idaho had been mysteriously murdered. The crime, at the
|
|
time, was openly charged to the mine owners by the socialists and
|
|
miners. Nevertheless, in violation of the national and state
|
|
constitutions, and by means of conspiracy on the parts of the
|
|
governors of Idaho and Colorado, Moyer and Haywood were kidnapped,
|
|
thrown into jail, and charged with the murder. It was this instance
|
|
that provoked from Eugene V. Debs, national leader of the American
|
|
socialists at the time, the following words: 'The labor leaders that
|
|
cannot be bribed nor bullied, must be ambushed and murdered. The
|
|
only crime of Moyer and Haywood is that they have been unswervingly
|
|
true to the working class. The capitalists have stolen our country,
|
|
debauched our politics, defiled our judiciary, and ridden over us
|
|
rough-shod, and now they propose to murder those who will not abjectly
|
|
surrender to their brutal dominion. The governors of Colorado and
|
|
Idaho are but executing the mandates of their masters, the Plutocracy.
|
|
The issue is the Workers versus the Plutocracy. If they strike the
|
|
first violent blow, we will strike the last.'
|
|
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN.
|
|
In the Shadow of Sonoma.
|
|
|
|
OF MYSELF, DURING THIS PERIOD, there is not much to say. For six
|
|
months I was kept in prison, though charged with no crime. I was a
|
|
suspect- a word of fear that all revolutionists were soon to come to
|
|
know. But our own nascent secret service was beginning to work. By the
|
|
end of my second month in prison, one of the jailers made himself
|
|
known as a revolutionist in touch with the organization. Several weeks
|
|
later, Joseph Parkhurst, the prison doctor who had just been
|
|
appointed, proved himself to be a member of one of the Fighting
|
|
Groups.
|
|
Thus, throughout the organization of the Oligarchy, our own
|
|
organization, weblike and spidery, was insinuating itself. And so I
|
|
was kept in touch with all that was happening in the world without.
|
|
And furthermore, every one of our imprisoned leaders was in contact
|
|
with brave comrades who masqueraded in the livery of the Iron Heel.
|
|
Though Ernest lay in prison three thousand miles away, on the
|
|
Pacific Coast, I was in unbroken communication with him, and our
|
|
letters passed regularly back and forth.
|
|
The leaders, in prison and out, were able to discuss and direct
|
|
the campaign. It would have been possible, within a few months, to
|
|
have effected the escape of some of them; but since imprisonment
|
|
proved no bar to our activities, it was decided to avoid anything
|
|
premature. Fifty-two Congressmen were in prison, and fully three
|
|
hundred more of our leaders. It was planned that they should be
|
|
delivered simultaneously. If part of them escaped, the vigilance of
|
|
the oligarchs might be aroused so as to prevent the escape of the
|
|
remainder. On the other hand, it was held that a simultaneous
|
|
jail-delivery all over the land would have immense psychological
|
|
influence on the proletariat. It would show our strength and give
|
|
confidence.
|
|
So it was arranged, when I was released at the end of six months,
|
|
that I was to disappear and prepare a secure hiding-place for
|
|
Ernest. To disappear was in itself no easy thing. No sooner did I
|
|
get my freedom than my footsteps began to be dogged by the spies of
|
|
the Iron Heel. It was necessary that they should be thrown off the
|
|
track, and that I should win to California. It is laughable, the way
|
|
this was accomplished.
|
|
Although the passport system, modelled on the Russian, was
|
|
developing. I dared not cross the continent in my own character. It
|
|
was necessary that I should be completely lost if ever I was to see
|
|
Ernest again, for by trailing me after he escaped, he would be
|
|
caught once more. Again, I could not disguise myself as a
|
|
proletarian and travel. There remained the disguise of a member of the
|
|
Oligarchy. While the arch-oligarchs were no more than a handful, there
|
|
were myriads of lesser ones of the type, say, of Mr. Wickson- men,
|
|
worth a few millions, who were adherents of the arch-oligarchs. The
|
|
wives and daughters of these lesser oligarchs were legion, and it
|
|
was decided that I should assume the disguise of such a one. A few
|
|
years later this would have been impossible, because the passport
|
|
system was to become so perfect that no man, woman, nor child in all
|
|
the land was unregistered and unaccounted for in his or her movements.
|
|
When the time was ripe, the spies were thrown off my track. An
|
|
hour later Avis Everhard was no more. At that time one Felice Van
|
|
Verdighan, accompanied by two maids and a lap-dog, with another maid
|
|
for the lap-dog,* entered a drawing-room on a Pullman,*(2) and a few
|
|
minutes later was speeding west.
|
|
|
|
* This ridiculous picture well illustrates the heartless conduct
|
|
of the masters. While people starved, lap-dogs were waited upon by
|
|
maids. This was a serious masquerade on the part of Avis Everhard.
|
|
Life and death and the Cause were in the issue; therefore the
|
|
picture must be accepted as a true picture. It affords a striking
|
|
commentary of the times.
|
|
*(2) Pullman- the designation of the more luxurious railway cars
|
|
of the period and so named from the inventor.
|
|
|
|
The three maids who accompanied me were revolutionists. Two were
|
|
members of the Fighting Groups, and the third, Grace Holbrook, entered
|
|
a group the following year, and six months later was executed by the
|
|
Iron Heel. She it was who waited upon the dog. Of the other two,
|
|
Bertha Stole disappeared twelve years later, while Anna Roylston still
|
|
lives and plays an increasingly important part in the Revolution.*
|
|
|
|
* Despite continual and almost inconceivable hazards, Anna
|
|
Roylston lived to the royal age of ninety-one. As the Pococks defied
|
|
the executioners of the Fighting Groups, so she defied the
|
|
executioners of the Iron Heel. She bore a charmed life and prospered
|
|
amid dangers and alarms. She herself was an executioner for the
|
|
Fighting Groups, and, known as the Red Virgin, she became one of the
|
|
inspired figures of the Revolution. When she was an old woman of
|
|
sixty-nine she shot 'Bloody' Halcliffe down in the midst of his
|
|
armed escort and got away unscathed. In the end she died peaceably
|
|
of old age in a secret refuge of the revolutionists in the Ozark
|
|
mountains.
|
|
|
|
Without adventure we crossed the United States to California. When
|
|
the train stopped at Sixteenth Street Station, in Oakland, we
|
|
alighted, and there Felice Van Verdighan, with her two maids, her
|
|
lap-dog, and her lap-dog's maid, disappeared forever. The maids,
|
|
guided by trusty comrades, were led away. Other comrades took charge
|
|
of me. Within half an hour after leaving the train I was on board a
|
|
small fishing boat and out on the waters of San Francisco Bay. The
|
|
winds baffled, and we drifted aimlessly the greater part of the night.
|
|
But I saw the lights of Alcatraz where Ernest lay, and found comfort
|
|
in the thought of nearness to him. By dawn, what with the rowing of
|
|
the fishermen, we made the Marin Islands. Here we lay in hiding all
|
|
day, and on the following night, swept on by a flood tide and a
|
|
fresh wind, we crossed San Pablo Bay in two hours and ran up
|
|
Petaluma Creek.
|
|
Here horses were ready and another comrade, and without delay we
|
|
were away through the starlight. To the north I could see the loom
|
|
of Sonoma Mountain, toward which we rode. We left the old town of
|
|
Sonoma to the right and rode up a canyon that lay between outlying
|
|
buttresses of the mountain. The wagon-road became a wood-road, the
|
|
wood-road became a cow-path, and the cow-path dwindled away and ceased
|
|
among the upland pastures. Straight over Sonoma Mountain we rode. It
|
|
was the safest route. There was no one to mark our passing.
|
|
Dawn caught us on the northern brow, and in the gray light we
|
|
dropped down through chaparral into redwood canyons deep and warm with
|
|
the breath of passing summer. It was old country to me that I knew and
|
|
loved, and soon I became the guide. The hiding-place was mine. I had
|
|
selected it. We let down the bars and crossed an upland meadow.
|
|
Next, we went over a low, oak-covered ridge and descended into a
|
|
smaller meadow. Again we climbed a ridge, this time riding under
|
|
red-limbed madronos and manzanitas of deeper red. The first rays of
|
|
the sun streamed upon our backs as we climbed. A flight of quail
|
|
thrummed off through the thickets. A big jackrabbit crossed our
|
|
path, leaping swiftly and silently like a deer. And then a deer, a
|
|
many-pronged buck, the sun flashing red-gold from neck and
|
|
shoulders, cleared the crest of the ridge before us and was gone.
|
|
We followed in his wake a space, then dropped down a zigzag trail
|
|
that he disdained into a group of noble redwoods that stood about a
|
|
pool of water murky with minerals from the mountain side. I knew every
|
|
inch of the way. Once a writer friend of mine had owned the ranch; but
|
|
he, too, had become a revolutionist, though more disastrously than
|
|
I, for he was already dead and gone, and none knew where nor how. He
|
|
alone, in the days he had lived, knew the secret of the hiding-place
|
|
for which I was bound. He had bought the ranch for beauty, and paid
|
|
a round price for it, much to the disgust of the local farmers. He
|
|
used to tell with great glee how they were wont to shake their heads
|
|
mournfully at the price, to accomplish ponderously a bit of mental
|
|
arithmetic, and then to say, 'But you can't make six per cent on it.'
|
|
But he was dead now, nor did the ranch descend to his children. Of
|
|
all men, it was now the property of Mr. Wickson, who owned the whole
|
|
eastern and northern slopes of Sonoma Mountain, running from the
|
|
Spreckels estate to the divide of Bennett Valley. Out of it he had
|
|
made a magnificent deerpark, where, over thousands of acres of sweet
|
|
slopes and glades and canyons, the deer ran almost in primitive
|
|
wildness. The people who had owned the soil had been driven away. A
|
|
state home for the feeble-minded had also been demolished to make room
|
|
for the deer.
|
|
To cap it all, Wickson's hunting lodge was a quarter of a mile
|
|
from my hiding-place. This, instead of being a danger, was an added
|
|
security. We were sheltered under the very aegis of one of the minor
|
|
oligarchs. Suspicion, by the nature of the situation, was turned
|
|
aside. The last place in the world the spies of the Iron Heel would
|
|
dream of looking for me, and for Ernest when he joined me, was
|
|
Wickson's deer-park.
|
|
We tied our horses among the redwoods at the pool. From a cache
|
|
behind a hollow rotting log my companion brought out a variety of
|
|
things,- a fifty-pound sack of flour, tinned foods of all sorts,
|
|
cooking utensils, blankets, a canvas tarpaulin, books and writing
|
|
material, a great bundle of letters, a five-gallon can of kerosene, an
|
|
oil stove, and, last and most important, a large coil of stout rope.
|
|
So large was the supply of things that a number of trips would be
|
|
necessary to carry them to the refuge.
|
|
But the refuge was very near. Taking the rope and leading the way, I
|
|
passed through a glade of tangled vines and bushes that ran between
|
|
two wooded knolls. The glade ended abruptly at the steep bank of a
|
|
stream. It was a little stream, rising from springs, and the hottest
|
|
summer never dried it up. On every hand were tall wooded knolls, a
|
|
group of them, with all the seeming of having been flung there from
|
|
some careless Titan's hand. There was no bed-rock in them. They rose
|
|
from their bases hundreds of feet, and they were composed of red
|
|
volcanic earth, the famous wine-soil of Sonoma. Through these the tiny
|
|
stream had cut its deep and precipitous channel.
|
|
It was quite a scramble down to the stream bed, and, once on the
|
|
bed, we went down stream perhaps for a hundred feet. And then we
|
|
came to the great hole. There was no warning of the existence of the
|
|
hole, nor was it a hole in the common sense of the word. One crawled
|
|
through tight-locked briers and branches, and found oneself on the
|
|
very edge, peering out and down through a green screen. A couple of
|
|
hundred feet in length and width, it was half of that in depth.
|
|
Possibly because of some fault that had occurred when the knolls
|
|
were flung together, and certainly helped by freakish erosion, the
|
|
hole had been scooped out in the course of centuries by the wash of
|
|
water. Nowhere did the raw earth appear. All was garmented by
|
|
vegetation, from tiny maiden-hair and gold-back ferns to mighty
|
|
redwood and Douglas spruces. These great trees even sprang out from
|
|
the walls of the hole. Some leaned over at angles as great as
|
|
forty-five degrees, though the majority towered straight up from the
|
|
soft and almost perpendicular earth walls.
|
|
It was a perfect hiding-place. No one ever came there, not even
|
|
the village boys of Glen Ellen. Had this hole existed in the bed of
|
|
a canyon a mile long, or several miles long, it would have been well
|
|
known. But this was no canyon. From beginning to end the length of the
|
|
stream was no more than five hundred yards. Three hundred yards
|
|
above the hole the stream took its rise in a spring at the foot of a
|
|
flat meadow. A hundred yards below the hole the stream ran out into
|
|
open country, joining the main stream and flowing across rolling and
|
|
grass-covered land.
|
|
My companion took a turn of the rope around a tree, and with me fast
|
|
on the other end lowered away. In no time I was on the bottom. And
|
|
in but a short while he had carried all the articles from the cache
|
|
and lowered them down to me. He hauled the rope up and hid it, and
|
|
before he went away called down to me a cheerful parting.
|
|
Before I go on I want to say a word for this comrade, John
|
|
Carlson, a humble figure of the Revolution, one of the countless
|
|
faithful ones in the ranks. He worked for Wickson, in the stables near
|
|
the hunting lodge. In fact, it was on Wickson's horses that we had
|
|
ridden over Sonoma Mountain. For nearly twenty years now John
|
|
Carlson has been custodian of the refuge. No thought of disloyalty,
|
|
I am sure, has ever entered his mind during all that time. To betray
|
|
his trust would have been in his mind a thing undreamed. He was
|
|
phlegmatic, stolid to such a degree that one could not but wonder
|
|
how the Revolution had any meaning to him at all. And yet love of
|
|
freedom glowed sombrely and steadily in his dim soul. In ways it was
|
|
indeed good that he was not flighty and imaginative. He never lost his
|
|
head. He could obey orders, and he was neither curious nor
|
|
garrulous. Once I asked how it was that he was a revolutionist.
|
|
'When I was a young man I was a soldier,' was his answer. 'It was in
|
|
Germany. There all young men must be in the army. So I was in the
|
|
army. There was another soldier there, a young man, too. His father
|
|
was what you call an agitator, and his father was in jail for lese
|
|
majesty- what you call speaking the truth about the Emperor. And the
|
|
young man, the son, talked with me much about people, and work, and
|
|
the robbery of the people by the capitalists. He made me see things in
|
|
new ways, and I became a socialist. His talk was very true and good,
|
|
and I have never forgotten. When I came to the United States I
|
|
hunted up the socialists. I became a member of a section- that was
|
|
in the day of the S.L.P. Then later, when the split came, I joined the
|
|
local of the S.P. I was working in a livery stable in San Francisco
|
|
then. That was before the Earthquake. I have paid my dues for
|
|
twenty-two years. I am yet a member, and I yet pay my dues, though
|
|
it is very secret now. I will always pay my dues, and when the
|
|
cooperative commonwealth comes, I will be glad.'
|
|
Left to myself, I proceeded to cook breakfast on the oil stove and
|
|
to prepare my home. Often, in the early morning, or in the evening
|
|
after dark, Carlson would steal down to the refuge and work for a
|
|
couple of hours. At first my home was the tarpaulin. Later, a small
|
|
tent was put up. And still later, when we became assured of the
|
|
perfect security of the place, a small house was erected. This house
|
|
was completely hidden from any chance eye that might peer down from
|
|
the edge of the hole. The lush vegetation of that sheltered spot
|
|
make a natural shield. Also, the house was built against the
|
|
perpendicular wall; and in the wall itself, shored by strong
|
|
timbers, well drained and ventilated, we excavated two small rooms.
|
|
Oh, believe me, we had many comforts. When Biedenbach, the German
|
|
terrorist, hid with us some time later, he installed a smoke-consuming
|
|
device that enabled us to sit by crackling wood fires on winter
|
|
nights.
|
|
And here I must say a word for that gentle-souled terrorist, than
|
|
whom there is no comrade in the Revolution more fearfully
|
|
misunderstood. Comrade Biedenbach did not betray the Cause. Nor was he
|
|
executed by the comrades as is commonly supposed. This canard was
|
|
circulated by the creatures of the Oligarchy. Comrade Biedenbach was
|
|
absent-minded, forgetful. He was shot by one of our lookouts at the
|
|
cave-refuge at Carmel, through failure on his part to remember the
|
|
secret signals. It was all a sad mistake. And that he betrayed his
|
|
Fighting Group is an absolute lie. No truer, more loyal man ever
|
|
labored for the Cause.*
|
|
|
|
* Search as we may through all the material of those times that
|
|
has come down to us, we can find no clew to the Biedenbach here
|
|
referred to. No mention is made of him anywhere save in the Everhard
|
|
Manuscript.
|
|
|
|
For nineteen years now the refuge that I selected had been almost
|
|
continuously occupied, and in all that time, with one exception, it
|
|
has never been discovered by an outsider. And yet it was only a
|
|
quarter of a mile from Wickson's hunting-lodge, and a short mile
|
|
from the village of Glen Ellen. I was able, always, to hear the
|
|
morning and evening trains arrive and depart, and I used to set my
|
|
watch by the whistle at the brickyards.*
|
|
|
|
* If the curious traveller will turn south from Glen Ellen, he
|
|
will find himself on a boulevard that is identical with the old
|
|
country road seven centuries ago. A quarter of a mile from Glen Ellen,
|
|
after the second bridge is passed, to the right will be noticed a
|
|
barranca that runs like a scar across the rolling land toward a
|
|
group of wooded knolls. The barranca is the site of the ancient
|
|
right of way that in the time of private property in land ran across
|
|
the holding of one Chauvet, a French pioneer of California who came
|
|
from his native country in the fabled days of gold. The wooded
|
|
knolls are the same knolls referred to by Avis Everhard.
|
|
The Great Earthquake of 2368 A.D. broke off the side of one of these
|
|
knolls and toppled it into the hole where the Everhards made their
|
|
refuge. Since the finding of the Manuscript excavations have been
|
|
made, and the house, the two cave rooms, and all the accumulated
|
|
rubbish of long occupancy have been brought to light. Many valuable
|
|
relics have been found, among which, curious to relate, is the
|
|
smoke-consuming device of Biedenbach's mentioned in the narrative.
|
|
Students interested in such matters should read the brochure of Arnold
|
|
Bentham soon to be published.
|
|
A mile northwest from the wooded knolls brings one to the site of
|
|
Wake Robin Lodge at the junction of Wild-Water and Sonoma Creeks. It
|
|
may be noticed, in passing, that Wild-Water was originally called
|
|
Graham Creek and was so named on the early local maps. But the later
|
|
name sticks. It was at Wake Robin Lodge that Avis Everhard later lived
|
|
for short periods, when, disguised as an agent-provocateur of the Iron
|
|
Heel, she was enabled to play with impunity her part among men and
|
|
events. The official permission to occupy Wake Robin Lodge is still on
|
|
the records, signed by no less a man than Wickson, the minor
|
|
oligarch of the Manuscript.
|
|
CHAPTER NINETEEN.
|
|
Transformation.
|
|
|
|
'YOU MUST MAKE YOURSELF over again,' Ernest wrote to me. 'You must
|
|
cease to be. You must become another woman- and not merely in the
|
|
clothes you wear, but inside your skin under the clothes. You must
|
|
make yourself over again so that even I would not know you- your
|
|
voice, your gestures, your mannerisms, your carriage, your walk,
|
|
everything.'
|
|
This command I obeyed. Every day I practised for hours in burying
|
|
forever the old Avis Everhard beneath the skin of another woman whom I
|
|
may call my other self. It was only by long practice that such results
|
|
could be obtained. In the mere detail of voice intonation I
|
|
practised almost perpetually till the voice of my new self became
|
|
fixed, automatic. It was this automatic assumption of a role that
|
|
was considered imperative. One must become so adept as to deceive
|
|
oneself. It was like learning a new language, say the French. At first
|
|
speech in French is self-conscious, a matter of the will. The
|
|
student thinks in English and then transmutes into French, or reads in
|
|
French but transmutes into English before he can understand. Then
|
|
later, becoming firmly grounded, automatic, the student reads, writes,
|
|
and thinks in French, without any recourse to English at all.
|
|
And so with our disguises. It was necessary for us to practise until
|
|
our assumed roles became real; until to be our original selves would
|
|
require a watchful and strong exercise of will. Of course, at first,
|
|
much was mere blundering experiment. We were creating a new art, and
|
|
we had much to discover. But the work was going on everywhere; masters
|
|
in the art were developing, and a fund of tricks and expedients was
|
|
being accumulated. This fund became a sort of text-book that was
|
|
passed on, a part of the curriculum, as it were, of the school of
|
|
Revolution.*
|
|
|
|
* Disguise did become a veritable art during that period. The
|
|
revolutionists maintained schools of acting in all their refuges. They
|
|
scorned accessories, such as wigs and beards, false eyebrows, and such
|
|
aids of the theatrical actors. The game of revolution was a game of
|
|
life and death, and mere accessories were traps. Disguise had to be
|
|
fundamental, intrinsic, part and parcel of one's being, second nature.
|
|
The Red Virgin is reported to have been one of the most adept in the
|
|
art, to which must be ascribed her long and successful career.
|
|
|
|
It was at this time that my father disappeared. His letters, which
|
|
had come to me regularly, ceased. He no longer appeared at our Pell
|
|
Street quarters. Our comrades sought him everywhere. Through our
|
|
secret service we ransacked every prison in the land. But he was
|
|
lost as completely as if the earth had swallowed him up, and to this
|
|
day no clew to his end has been discovered.*
|
|
|
|
* Disappearance was one of the horrors of the time. As a motif, in
|
|
song and story, it constantly crops up. It was an inevitable
|
|
concomitant of the subterranean warfare that raged through those three
|
|
centuries. This phenomenon was almost as common in the oligarch
|
|
class and the labor castes, as it was in the ranks of the
|
|
revolutionists. Without warning, without trace, men and women, and
|
|
even children, disappeared and were seen no more, their end shrouded
|
|
in mystery.
|
|
|
|
Six lonely months I spent in the refuge, but they were not idle
|
|
months. Our organization went on apace, and there were mountains of
|
|
work always waiting to be done. Ernest and his fellow-leaders, from
|
|
their prisons, decided what should be done; and it remained for us
|
|
on the outside to do it. There was the organization of the
|
|
mouth-to-mouth propaganda; the organization, with all its
|
|
ramifications, of our spy system; the establishment of our secret
|
|
printing-presses; and the establishment of our underground railways,
|
|
which meant the knitting together of all our myriads of places of
|
|
refuge, and the formation of new refuges where links were missing in
|
|
the chains we ran over all the land.
|
|
So I say, the work was never done. At the end of six months my
|
|
loneliness was broken by the arrival of two comrades. They were
|
|
young girls, brave souls and passionate lovers of liberty: Lora
|
|
Peterson, who disappeared in 1922, and Kate Bierce, who later
|
|
married Du Bois,* and who is still with us with eyes lifted to
|
|
to-morrow's sun, that heralds in the new age.
|
|
|
|
* Du Bois, the present librarian of Ardis, is a lineal descendant of
|
|
this revolutionary pair.
|
|
|
|
The two girls arrived in a flurry of excitement, danger, and
|
|
sudden death. In the crew of the fishing boat that conveyed them
|
|
across San Pablo Bay was a spy. A creature of the Iron Heel, he had
|
|
successfully masqueraded as a revolutionist and penetrated deep into
|
|
the secrets of our organization. Without doubt he was on my trail, for
|
|
we had long since learned that my disappearance had been cause of deep
|
|
concern to the secret service of the Oligarchy. Luckily, as the
|
|
outcome proved, he had not divulged his discoveries to any one. He had
|
|
evidently delayed reporting, preferring to wait until he had brought
|
|
things to a successful conclusion by discovering my hiding-place and
|
|
capturing me. His information died with him. Under some pretext, after
|
|
the girls had landed at Petaluma Creek and taken to the horses, he
|
|
managed to get away from the boat.
|
|
Part way up Sonoma Mountain, John Carlson let the girls go on,
|
|
leading his horse, while he went back on foot. His suspicions had been
|
|
aroused. He captured the spy, and as to what then happened, Carlson
|
|
gave us a fair idea.
|
|
'I fixed him,' was Carlson's unimaginative way of describing the
|
|
affair. 'I fixed him,' he repeated, while a sombre light burnt in
|
|
his eyes, and his huge, toil-distorted hands opened and closed
|
|
eloquently. 'He made no noise. I hid him, and tonight I will go back
|
|
and bury him deep.'
|
|
During that period I used to marvel at my own metamorphosis. At
|
|
times it seemed impossible, either that I had ever lived a placid,
|
|
peaceful life in a college town, or else that I had become a
|
|
revolutionist inured to scenes of violence and death. One or the other
|
|
could not be. One was real, the other was a dream, but which was
|
|
which? Was this present life of a revolutionist, hiding in a hole, a
|
|
nightmare? or was I a revolutionist who had somewhere, somehow,
|
|
dreamed that in some former existence I have lived in Berkeley and
|
|
never known of life more violent than teas and dances, debating
|
|
societies, and lectures rooms? But then I suppose this was a common
|
|
experience of all of us who had rallied under the red banner of the
|
|
brotherhood of man.
|
|
I often remembered figures from that other life, and, curiously
|
|
enough, they appeared and disappeared, now and again, in my new
|
|
life. There was Bishop Morehouse. In vain we searched for him after
|
|
our organization had developed. He had been transferred from asylum to
|
|
asylum. We traced him from the state hospital for the insane at Napa
|
|
to the one in Stockton, and from there to the one in the Santa Clara
|
|
Valley called Agnews, and there the trail ceased. There was no
|
|
record of his death. In some way he must have escaped. Little did I
|
|
dream of the awful manner in which I was to see him once again- the
|
|
fleeting glimpse of him in the whirlwind carnage of the Chicago
|
|
Commune.
|
|
Jackson, who had lost his arm in the Sierra Mills and who had been
|
|
the cause of my own conversion into a revolutionist, I never saw
|
|
again; but we all knew what he did before he died. He never joined the
|
|
revolutionists. Embittered by his fate, brooding over his wrongs, he
|
|
became an anarchist- not a philosophic anarchist, but a mere animal,
|
|
mad with hate and lust for revenge. And well he revenged himself.
|
|
Evading the guards, in the nighttime while all were asleep, he blew
|
|
the Pertonwaithe palace into atoms. Not a soul escaped, not even the
|
|
guards. And in prison, while awaiting trial, he suffocated himself
|
|
under his blankets.
|
|
Dr. Hammerfield and Dr. Ballingford achieved quite different fates
|
|
from that of Jackson. They have been faithful to their salt, and
|
|
they have been correspondingly rewarded with ecclesiastical palaces
|
|
wherein they dwell at peace with the world. Both are apologists for
|
|
the Oligarchy. Both have grown very fat. 'Dr. Hammerfield,' as
|
|
Ernest once said, 'has succeeded in modifying his metaphysics so as to
|
|
give God's sanction to the Iron Heel, and also to include much worship
|
|
of beauty and to reduce to an invisible wraith the gaseous
|
|
vertebrate described by Haeckel- the difference between Dr.
|
|
Hammerfield and Dr. Ballingford being that the latter has made the God
|
|
of the oligarchs a little more gaseous and a little less vertebrate.'
|
|
Peter Donnelly, the scab foreman at the Sierra Mills whom I
|
|
encountered while investigating the case of Jackson, was a surprise to
|
|
all of us. In 1918 I was present at a meeting of the 'Frisco Reds.
|
|
Of all our Fighting Groups this one was the most formidable,
|
|
ferocious, and merciless. It was really not a part of our
|
|
organization. Its members were fanatics, madmen. We dared not
|
|
encourage such a spirit. On the other hand, though they did not belong
|
|
to us, we remained on friendly terms with them. It was a matter of
|
|
vital importance that brought me there that night. I, alone in the
|
|
midst of a score of men, was the only person unmasked. After the
|
|
business that brought me there was transacted, I was led away by one
|
|
of them. In a dark passage this guide struck a match, and, holding
|
|
it close to his face, slipped back his mask. For a moment I gazed upon
|
|
the passion-wrought features of Peter Donnelly. Then the match went
|
|
out.
|
|
'I just wanted you to know it was me,' he said in the darkness.
|
|
'D'you remember Dallas, the superintendent?'
|
|
I nodded at recollection of the vulpine-face superintendent of the
|
|
Sierra Mills.
|
|
'Well, I got him first,' Donnelly said with pride. ''Twas after that
|
|
I joined the Reds.'
|
|
'But how comes it that you are here?' I queried. 'Your wife and
|
|
children?'
|
|
'Dead,' he answered. 'That's why. No,' he went on hastily, ''tis not
|
|
revenge for them. They died easily in their beds- sickness, you see,
|
|
one time and another. They tied my arms while they lived. And now that
|
|
they're gone, 'tis revenge for my blasted manhood I'm after. I was
|
|
once Peter Donnelly, the scab foreman. But to-night I'm Number 27 of
|
|
the 'Frisco Reds. Come on now, and I'll get you out of this.'
|
|
More I heard of him afterward. In his own way he had told the
|
|
truth when he said all were dead. But one lived, Timothy, and him
|
|
his father considered dead because he had taken service with the
|
|
Iron Heel in the Mercenaries.* A member of the 'Frisco Reds pledged
|
|
himself to twelve annual executions. The penalty for failure was
|
|
death. A member who failed to complete his number committed suicide.
|
|
These executions were not haphazard. This group of madmen met
|
|
frequently and passed wholesale judgments upon offending members and
|
|
servitors of the Oligarchy. The executions were afterward
|
|
apportioned by lot.
|
|
|
|
* In addition to the labor castes, there arose another caste, the
|
|
military. A standing army of professional soldiers was created,
|
|
officered by members of the Oligarchy and known as the Mercenaries.
|
|
This institution took the place of the militia, which had proved
|
|
impracticable under the new regime. Outside the regular secret service
|
|
of the Iron Heel, there was further established a secret service of
|
|
the Mercenaries, this latter forming a connecting link between the
|
|
police and the military.
|
|
|
|
In fact, the business that brought me there the night of my visit
|
|
was such a trial. One of our own comrades, who for years had
|
|
successfully maintained himself in a clerical position in the local
|
|
bureau of the secret service of the Iron Heel, had fallen under the
|
|
ban of the 'Frisco Reds and was being tried. Of course he was not
|
|
present, and of course his judges did not know that he was one of
|
|
our men. My mission had been to testify to his identity and loyalty.
|
|
It may be wondered how we came to know of the affair at all. The
|
|
explanation is simple. One of our secret agents was a member of the
|
|
'Frisco Reds. It was necessary for us to keep an eye on friend as well
|
|
as foe, and this group of madmen was not too unimportant to escape our
|
|
surveillance.
|
|
But to return to Peter Donnelly and his son. All went well with
|
|
Donnelly until, in the following year, he found among the sheaf of
|
|
executions that fell to him the name of Timothy Donnelly. Then it
|
|
was that that clannishness, which was his to so extraordinary a
|
|
degree, asserted itself. To save his son, he betrayed his comrades. In
|
|
this he was partially blocked, but a dozen of the 'Frisco Reds were
|
|
executed, and the group was well-nigh destroyed. In retaliation, the
|
|
survivors meted out to Donnelly the death he had earned by his
|
|
treason.
|
|
Nor did Timothy Donnelly long survive. The 'Frisco Reds pledged
|
|
themselves to his execution. Every effort was made by the Oligarchy to
|
|
save him. He was transferred from one part of the country to
|
|
another. Three of the Reds lost their lives in vain efforts to get
|
|
him. The Group was composed only of men. In the end they fell back
|
|
on a woman, one of our comrades, and none other than Anna Roylston.
|
|
Our Inner Circle forbade her, but she had ever a will of her own and
|
|
disdained discipline. Furthermore, she was a genius and lovable, and
|
|
we could never discipline her anyway. She is in a class by herself and
|
|
not amenable to the ordinary standards of the revolutionists.
|
|
Despite our refusal to grant permission to do the deed, she went
|
|
on with it. Now Anna Roylston was a fascinating woman. All she had
|
|
to do was to beckon a man to her. She broke the hearts of scores of
|
|
our young comrades, and scores of others she captured, and by their
|
|
heart-strings led into our organization. Yet she steadfastly refused
|
|
to marry. She dearly loved children, but she held that a child of
|
|
her own would claim her from the Cause, and that it was the Cause to
|
|
which her life was devoted.
|
|
It was an easy task for Anna Roylston to win Timothy Donnelly. Her
|
|
conscience did not trouble her, for at that very time occurred the
|
|
Nashville Massacre, when the Mercenaries, Donnelly in command,
|
|
literally murdered eight hundred weavers of that city. But she did not
|
|
kill Donnelly. She turned him over, a prisoner, to the 'Frisco Reds.
|
|
This happened only last year, and now she had been renamed. The
|
|
revolutionists everywhere are calling her the 'Red Virgin.'*
|
|
|
|
* It was not until the Second Revolt was crushed, that the 'Frisco
|
|
Reds flourished again. And for two generations the Group flourished.
|
|
Then an agent of the Iron Heel managed to become a member,
|
|
penetrated all its secrets, and brought about its total
|
|
annihilation. This occurred in 2002 A.D. The members were executed one
|
|
at a time, at intervals of three weeks, and their bodies exposed in
|
|
the labor-ghetto of San Francisco.
|
|
|
|
Colonel Ingram and Colonel Van Gilbert are two more familiar figures
|
|
that I was later to encounter. Colonel Ingram rose high in the
|
|
Oligarchy and became Minister to Germany. He was cordially detested by
|
|
the proletariat of both countries. It was in Berlin that I met him,
|
|
where, as an accredited international spy of the Iron Heel, I was
|
|
received by him and afforded much assistance. Incidentally, I may
|
|
state that in my dual role I managed a few important things for the
|
|
Revolution.
|
|
Colonel Van Gilbert became known as 'Snarling' Van Gilbert. His
|
|
important part was played in drafting the new code after the Chicago
|
|
Commune. But before that, as trial judge, he had earned sentence of
|
|
death by his fiendish malignancy. I was one of those that tried him
|
|
and passed sentence upon him. Anna Roylston carried out the execution.
|
|
Still another figure arises out of the old life- Jackson's lawyer.
|
|
Least of all would I have expected again to meet this man, Joseph
|
|
Hurd. It was a strange meeting. Late at night, two years after the
|
|
Chicago Commune, Ernest and I arrived together at the Benton Harbor
|
|
refuge. This was in Michigan, across the lake from Chicago. We arrived
|
|
just at the conclusion of the trial of a spy. Sentence of death had
|
|
been passed, and he was being led away. Such was the scene as we
|
|
came upon it. The next moment the wretched man had wrenched free
|
|
from his captors and flung himself at my feet, his arms clutching me
|
|
about the knees in a vicelike grip as he prayed in a frenzy for mercy.
|
|
As he turned his agonized face up to me, I recognized him as Joseph
|
|
Hurd. Of all the terrible things I have witnessed, never have I been
|
|
so unnerved as by this frantic creature's pleading for life. He was
|
|
mad for life. It was pitiable. He refused to let go of me, despite the
|
|
hands of a dozen comrades. And when at last he was dragged shrieking
|
|
away, I sank down fainting upon the floor. It is far easier to see
|
|
brave men die than to hear a coward beg for life.*
|
|
|
|
* The Benton Harbor refuge was a catacomb, the entrance of which was
|
|
cunningly contrived by way of a well. It has been maintained in a fair
|
|
state of preservation, and the curious visitor may to-day tread its
|
|
labyrinths to the assembly hall, where, without doubt, occurred the
|
|
scene described by Avis Everhard. Farther on are the cells where the
|
|
prisoners were confined, and the death chamber where the executions
|
|
took place. Beyond is the cemetery- long, winding galleries hewn out
|
|
of the solid rock, with recesses on either hand, wherein, tier above
|
|
tier, lie the revolutionists just as they were laid away by their
|
|
comrades long years agone.
|
|
CHAPTER TWENTY.
|
|
A Lost Oligarch.
|
|
|
|
BUT IN REMEMBERING THE old life I have run ahead of my story into
|
|
the new life. The wholesale jail delivery did not occur until well
|
|
along into 1915. Complicated as it was, it was carried through without
|
|
a hitch, and as a very creditable achievement it cheered us on in
|
|
our work. From Cuba to California, out of scores of jails, military
|
|
prisons, and fortresses, in a single night, we delivered fifty-one
|
|
of our fifty-two Congressmen, and in addition over three hundred other
|
|
leaders. There was not a single instance of miscarriage. Not only
|
|
did they escape, but every one of them won to the refuges as
|
|
planned. The one comrade Congressman we did not get was Arthur
|
|
Simpson, and he had already died in Cabanas after cruel tortures.
|
|
The eighteen months that followed was perhaps the happiest of my
|
|
life with Ernest. During that time we were never apart. Later, when we
|
|
went back into the world, we were separated much. Not more impatiently
|
|
do I await the flame of to-morrow's revolt than did I that night await
|
|
the coming of Ernest. I had not seen him for so long, and the
|
|
thought of a possible hitch or error in our plans that would keep
|
|
him still in his island prison almost drove me mad. The hours passed
|
|
like ages. I was all alone. Biedenbach, and three young men who had
|
|
been living in the refuge, were out and over the mountain, heavily
|
|
armed and prepared for anything. The refuges all over the land were
|
|
quite empty, I imagine, of comrades that night.
|
|
Just as the sky paled with the first warning of dawn, I heard the
|
|
signal from above and gave the answer. In the darkness I almost
|
|
embraced Biedenbach, who came down first; but the next moment I was in
|
|
Ernest's arms. And in that moment, so complete had been my
|
|
transformation, I discovered it was only by an effort of will that I
|
|
could be the old Avis Everhard, with the old mannerisms and smiles,
|
|
phrases and intonations of voice. It was by strong effort only that
|
|
I was able to maintain my old identity; I could not allow myself to
|
|
forget for an instant, so automatically imperative had become the
|
|
new personality I had created.
|
|
Once inside the little cabin, I saw Ernest's face in the light. With
|
|
the exception of the prison pallor, there was no change in him- at
|
|
least, not much. He was my same lover- husband and hero. And yet there
|
|
was a certain ascetic lengthening of the lines of his face. But he
|
|
could well stand it, for it seemed to add a certain nobility of
|
|
refinement to the riotous excess of life that had always marked his
|
|
features. He might have been a trifle graver than of yore, but the
|
|
glint of laughter still was in his eyes. He was twenty pounds lighter,
|
|
but in splendid physical condition. He had kept up exercise during the
|
|
whole period of confinement, and his muscles were like iron. In truth,
|
|
he was in better condition than when he had entered prison. Hours
|
|
passed before his head touched pillow and I had soothed him off to
|
|
sleep. But there was no sleep for me. I was too happy, and the fatigue
|
|
of jail-breaking and riding horseback had not been mine.
|
|
While Ernest slept, I changed my dress, arranged my hair
|
|
differently, and came back to my new automatic self. Then, when
|
|
Biedenbach and the other comrades awoke, with their aid I concocted
|
|
a little conspiracy. All was ready, and we were in the cave-room
|
|
that served for kitchen and dining room when Ernest opened the door
|
|
and entered. At that moment Biedenbach addressed me as Mary, and I
|
|
turned and answered him. Then I glanced at Ernest with curious
|
|
interest, such as any young comrade might betray on seeing for the
|
|
first time so noted a hero of the Revolution. But Ernest's glance took
|
|
me in and questioned impatiently past and around the room. The next
|
|
moment I was being introduced to him as Mary Holmes.
|
|
To complete the deception, an extra plate was laid, and when we
|
|
sat down to table one chair was not occupied. I could have cried
|
|
with joy as I noted Ernest's increasing uneasiness and impatience.
|
|
Finally he could stand it no longer.
|
|
'Where's my wife?' he demanded bluntly.
|
|
'She is still asleep,' I answered.
|
|
It was the crucial moment. But my voice was a strange voice, and
|
|
in it he recognized nothing familiar. The meal went on. I talked a
|
|
great deal, and enthusiastically, as a hero-worshipper might talk, and
|
|
it was obvious that he was my hero. I rose to a climax of enthusiasm
|
|
and worship, and, before he could guess my intention, threw my arms
|
|
around his neck and kissed him on the lips. He held me from him at
|
|
arm's length and stared about in annoyance and perplexity. The four
|
|
men greeted him with roars of laughter, and explanations were made. At
|
|
first he was sceptical. He scrutinized me keenly and was half
|
|
convinced, then shook his head and would not believe. It was not until
|
|
I became the old Avis Everhard and whispered secrets in his ear that
|
|
none knew but he and Avis Everhard, that he accepted me as his really,
|
|
truly wife.
|
|
It was later in the day that he took me in his arms, manifesting
|
|
great embarrassment and claiming polygamous emotions.
|
|
'You are my Avis,' he said, and you are also some one else. You
|
|
are two women, and therefore you are my harem. At any rate, we are
|
|
safe now. If the United States becomes too hot for us, why I have
|
|
qualified for citizenship in Turkey.'*
|
|
|
|
* At that time polygamy was still practised in Turkey.
|
|
|
|
Life became for me very happy in the refuge. It is true, we worked
|
|
hard and for long hours; but we worked together. We had each other for
|
|
eighteen precious months, and we were not lonely, for there was always
|
|
a coming and going of leaders and comrades- strange voices from the
|
|
under-world of intrigue and revolution, bringing stranger tales of
|
|
strife and war from all our battle-line. And there was much fun and
|
|
delight. We were not mere gloomy conspirators. We toiled hard and
|
|
suffered greatly, filled the gaps in our ranks and went on, and
|
|
through all the labour and the play and interplay of life and death we
|
|
found time to laugh and love. There were artists, scientists,
|
|
scholars, musicians, and poets among us; and in that hole in the
|
|
ground culture was higher and finer than in the palaces of
|
|
wonder-cities of the oligarchs. In truth, many of our comrades
|
|
toiled at making beautiful those same palaces and wonder-cities.*
|
|
|
|
* This is not braggadocio on the part of Avis Everhard. The flower
|
|
of the artistic and intellectual world were revolutionists. With the
|
|
exception of a few of the musicians and singers, and of a few of the
|
|
oligarchs, all the great creators of the period whose names have
|
|
come down to us, were revolutionists.
|
|
|
|
Nor were we confined to the refuge itself. Often at night we rode
|
|
over the mountains for exercise, and we rode on Wickson's horses. If
|
|
only he knew how many revolutionists his horses have carried! We
|
|
even went on picnics to isolated spots we knew, where we remained
|
|
all day, going before daylight and returning after dark. Also, we used
|
|
Wickson's cream and butter,* and Ernest was not above shooting
|
|
Wickson's quail and rabbits, and, on occasion, his young bucks.
|
|
|
|
* Even as late as that period, cream and butter were still crudely
|
|
extracted from cow's milk. The laboratory preparation of foods had not
|
|
yet begun.
|
|
|
|
Indeed, it was a safe refuge. I have said that it was discovered
|
|
only once, and this brings me to the clearing up of the mystery of the
|
|
disappearance of young Wickson. Now that he is dead. I am free to
|
|
speak. There was a nook on the bottom of the great hole where the
|
|
sun shone for several hours and which was hidden from above. Here we
|
|
had carried many loads of gravel from the creek-bed, so that it was
|
|
dry and warm, a pleasant basking place; and here, one afternoon, I was
|
|
drowsing, half asleep, over a volume of Mendenhall.* I was so
|
|
comfortable and secure that even his flaming lyrics failed to stir me.
|
|
|
|
* In all the extant literature and documents of that period,
|
|
continual reference is made to the poems of Rudolph Mendenhall. By his
|
|
comrades he was called 'The Flame.' He was undoubtedly a great genius;
|
|
yet, beyond weird and haunting fragments of his verse, quoted in the
|
|
writings of others, nothing of his has come down to us. He was
|
|
executed by the Iron Heel in 1928 A.D.
|
|
|
|
I was aroused by a clod of earth striking at my feet. Then from
|
|
above, I heard a sound of scrambling. The next moment a young man,
|
|
with a final slide down the crumbling wall, alighted at my feet. It
|
|
was Philip Wickson, though I did not know him at the time. He looked
|
|
at me coolly and uttered a low whistle of surprise.
|
|
'Well,' he said; and the next moment, cap in hand, he was saying, 'I
|
|
beg your pardon. I did not expect to find any one here.'
|
|
I was not so cool. I was still a tyro so far as concerned knowing
|
|
how to behave in desperate circumstances. Later on, when I was an
|
|
international spy, I should have been less clumsy, I am sure. As it
|
|
was, I scrambled to my feet and cried out the danger call.
|
|
'Why did you do that?' he asked, looking at me searchingly.
|
|
It was evident that he had no suspicion of our presence when
|
|
making the descent. I recognized this with relief.
|
|
'For what purpose do you think I did it?' I countered. I was
|
|
indeed clumsy in those days.
|
|
'I don't know,' he answered, shaking his head. 'Unless you've got
|
|
friends about. Anyway, you've got some explanations to make. I don't
|
|
like the look of it. You are trespassing. This is my father's land,
|
|
and-'
|
|
But at that moment, Biedenbach, every polite and gentle, said from
|
|
behind him in a low voice, 'Hands up, my young sir.'
|
|
Young Wickson put his hands up first, then turned to confront
|
|
Biedenbach, who held a thirty-thirty automatic rifle on him. Wickson
|
|
was imperturbable.
|
|
'Oh, ho,' he said, 'a nest of revolutionists- and quite a hornet's
|
|
nest it would seem. Well, you won't abide here long, I can tell you.'
|
|
'Maybe you'll abide here long enough to reconsider that
|
|
statement,' Biedenbach said quietly. 'And in the meanwhile I must
|
|
ask you to come inside with me'
|
|
'Inside?' The young man was genuinely astonished. 'Have you a
|
|
catacomb here? I have heard of such things.'
|
|
'Come and see,' Biedenbach answered with his adorable accent.
|
|
'But it is unlawful,' was the protest.
|
|
'Yes, by your law,' the terrorist replied significantly. 'But by our
|
|
law, believe me, it is quite lawful. You must accustom yourself to the
|
|
fact that you are in another world than the one of oppression and
|
|
brutality in which you have lived.'
|
|
'There is room for argument there,' Wickson muttered.
|
|
'Then stay with us and discuss it.'
|
|
The young fellow laughed and followed his captor into the house.
|
|
He was led into the inner cave-room, and one of the young comrades
|
|
left to guard him, while we discussed the situation in the kitchen.
|
|
Biedenbach, with tears in his eyes, held that Wickson must die,
|
|
and was quite relieved when we outvoted him and his horrible
|
|
proposition. On the other hand, we could not dream of allowing the
|
|
young oligarch to depart.
|
|
'I'll tell you what to do,' Ernest said. 'We'll keep him and give
|
|
him an education.'
|
|
'I bespeak the privilege, then, of enlightening him in
|
|
jurisprudence, Biedenbach cried.
|
|
And so a decision was laughingly reached. We would keep Philip
|
|
Wickson a prisoner and educate him in our ethics and sociology. But in
|
|
the meantime there was work to be done. All trace of the young
|
|
oligarch must be obliterated. There were the marks he had left when
|
|
descending the crumbling wall of the hole. This task fell to
|
|
Biedenbach, and, slung on a rope from above, he toiled cunningly for
|
|
the rest of the day till no sign remained. Back up the canyon from the
|
|
lip of the hole all marks were likewise removed. Then, at twilight,
|
|
came John Carlson, who demanded Wickson's shoes.
|
|
The young man did not want to give up his shoes, and even offered to
|
|
fight for them, till he felt the horseshoer's strength in Ernest's
|
|
hands. Carlson afterward reported several blisters and much grievous
|
|
loss of skin due to the smallness of the shoes, but he succeeded in
|
|
doing gallant work with them. Back from the lip of the hole, where
|
|
ended the young man's obliterated trial, Carlson put on the shoes
|
|
and walked away to the left. He walked for miles, around knolls,
|
|
over ridges and through canyons, and finally covered the trail in
|
|
the running water of a creek-bed. Here he removed the shoes, and,
|
|
still hiding trail for a distance, at last put on his own shoes. A
|
|
week later Wickson got back his shoes.
|
|
That night the hounds were out, and there was little sleep in the
|
|
refuge. Next day, time and again, the baying hounds came down the
|
|
canyon, plunged off to the left on the trail Carlson had made for
|
|
them, and were lost to ear in the farther canyons high up the
|
|
mountain. And all the time our men waited in the refuge, weapons in
|
|
hand- automatic revolvers and rifles, to say nothing of half a dozen
|
|
infernal machines of Biedenbach's manufacture. A more surprised
|
|
party of rescuers could not be imagined, had they ventured down into
|
|
our hiding-place.
|
|
I have now given the true disappearance of Philip Wickson,
|
|
one-time oligarch, and, later, comrade in the Revolution. For we
|
|
converted him in the end. His mind was fresh and plastic, and by
|
|
nature he was very ethical. Several months later we rode him, on one
|
|
of his father's horses, over Sonoma Mountains to Petaluma Creek and
|
|
embarked him in a small fishing-launch. By easy stages we smuggled him
|
|
along our underground railway to the Carmel refuge.
|
|
There he remained eight months, at the end of which time, for two
|
|
reasons, he was loath to leave us. One reason was that he had fallen
|
|
in love with Anna Roylston, and the other was that he had become one
|
|
of us. It was not until he became convinced of the hopelessness of his
|
|
love affair that he acceded to our wishes and went back to his father.
|
|
Ostensibly an oligarch until his death, he was in reality one of the
|
|
most valuable of our agents. Often and often has the Iron Heel been
|
|
dumbfounded by the miscarriage of its plans and operations against us.
|
|
If it but knew the number of its own members who are our agents, it
|
|
would understand. Young Wickson never wavered in his loyalty to the
|
|
Cause. In truth, his very death was incurred by his devotion to
|
|
duty. In the great storm of 1927, while attending a meeting of our
|
|
leaders, he contracted the pneumonia of which he died.*
|
|
|
|
* The case of this young man was not unusual. Many young men of
|
|
the Oligarchy, impelled by sense of right conduct, or their
|
|
imaginations captured by the glory of the Revolution, ethically or
|
|
romantically devoted their lives to it. In similar way, many sons of
|
|
the Russian nobility played their parts in the earlier and
|
|
protracted revolution in that country.
|
|
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE.
|
|
The Roaring Abysmal Beast.
|
|
|
|
DURING THE LONG PERIOD Of our stay in the refuge, we were kept
|
|
closely in touch with what was happening in the world without, and
|
|
we were learning thoroughly the strength of the Oligarchy with which
|
|
we were at war. Out of the flux of transition the new institutions
|
|
were forming more definitely and taking on the appearance and
|
|
attributes of permanence. The oligarchs had succeeded in devising a
|
|
governmental machine, as intricate as it was vast, that worked- and
|
|
this despite all our efforts to clog and hamper.
|
|
This was a surprise to many of the revolutionists. They had not
|
|
conceived it possible. Nevertheless the work of the country went on.
|
|
The men toiled in the mines and fields- perforce they were no more
|
|
than slaves. As for the vital industries, everything prospered. The
|
|
members of the great labor castes were contented and worked on
|
|
merrily. For the first time in their lives they knew industrial peace.
|
|
No more were they worried by slack times, strike and lockout, and
|
|
the union label. They lived in more comfortable homes and in
|
|
delightful cities of their own- delightful compared with the slums and
|
|
ghettos in which they had formerly dwelt. They had better food to eat,
|
|
less hours of labor, more holidays, and a greater amount and variety
|
|
of interests and pleasures. And for their less fortunate brothers
|
|
and sisters, the unfavored laborers, the driven people of the abyss,
|
|
they cared nothing. An age of selfishness was dawning upon mankind.
|
|
And yet this is not altogether true. The labor castes were honeycombed
|
|
by our agents- men whose eyes saw, beyond the belly-need, the
|
|
radiant figure of liberty and brotherhood.
|
|
Another great institution that had taken form and was working
|
|
smoothly was the Mercenaries. This body of soldiers had been evolved
|
|
out of the old regular army and was now a million strong, to say
|
|
nothing of the colonial forces. The Mercenaries constituted a race
|
|
apart. They dwelt in cities of their own which were practically
|
|
self-governed, and they were granted many privileges. By them a
|
|
large portion of the perplexing surplus was consumed. They were losing
|
|
all touch and sympathy with the rest of the people, and, in fact, were
|
|
developing their own class morality and consciousness. And yet we
|
|
had thousands of our agents among them.*
|
|
|
|
* The Mercenaries, in the last days of the Iron Heel, played an
|
|
important role. They constituted the balance of power in the struggles
|
|
between the labor castes and the oligarchs, and now to one side and
|
|
now to the other, threw their strength according to the play of
|
|
intrigue and conspiracy.
|
|
|
|
The oligarchs themselves were going through a remarkable and, it
|
|
must be confessed, unexpected development. As a class, they
|
|
disciplined themselves. Every member had his work to do in the
|
|
world, and this work he was compelled to do. There were no more
|
|
idle-rich young men. Their strength was used to give united strength
|
|
to the Oligarchy. They served as leaders of troops and as
|
|
lieutenants and captains of industry. They found careers in applied
|
|
science, and many of them became great engineers. They went into the
|
|
multitudinous divisions of the government, took service in the
|
|
colonial possessions, and by tens of thousands went into the various
|
|
secret services. They were, I may say, apprenticed to education, to
|
|
art, to the church, to science, to literature; and in those fields
|
|
they served the important function of moulding the thought-processes
|
|
of the nation in the direction of the perpetuity of the Oligarchy.
|
|
They were taught, and later they in turn taught, that what they were
|
|
doing was right. They assimilated the aristocratic idea from the
|
|
moment they began, as children, to receive impressions of the world.
|
|
The aristocratic idea was woven into the making of them until it
|
|
became bone of them and flesh of them. They looked upon themselves
|
|
as wild-animal trainers, rulers of beasts. From beneath their feet
|
|
rose always the subterranean rumbles of revolt. Violent death ever
|
|
stalked in their midst; bomb and knife and bullet were looked upon
|
|
as so many fangs of the roaring abysmal beast they must dominate if
|
|
humanity were to persist. They were the saviours of humanity, and they
|
|
regarded themselves as heroic and sacrificing laborers for the highest
|
|
good.
|
|
They, as a class, believed that they alone maintained
|
|
civilization. It was their belief that if ever they weakened, the
|
|
great beast would ingulf them and everything of beauty and wonder
|
|
and joy and good in its cavernous and slime-dripping maw. Without
|
|
them, anarchy would reign and humanity would drop backward into the
|
|
primitive night out of which it had so painfully emerged. The horrid
|
|
picture of anarchy was held always before their child's eyes until
|
|
they, in turn, obsessed by this cultivated fear, held the picture of
|
|
anarchy before the eyes of the children that followed them. This was
|
|
the beast to be stamped upon, and the highest duty of the aristocrat
|
|
was to stamp upon it. In short, they alone, by their unremitting
|
|
toil and sacrifice, stood between weak humanity and the
|
|
all-devouring beast; and they believed it, firmly believed it.
|
|
I cannot lay too great stress upon this high ethical righteousness
|
|
of the whole oligarch class. This has been the strength of the Iron
|
|
Heel, and too many of the comrades have been slow or loath to
|
|
realize it. Many of them have ascribed the strength of the Iron Heel
|
|
to its system of reward and punishment. This is a mistake. Heaven
|
|
and hell may be the prime factors of zeal in the religion of a
|
|
fanatic; but for the great majority of the religious, heaven and
|
|
hell are incidental to right and wrong. Love of the right, desire
|
|
for the right, unhappiness with anything less than the right- in
|
|
short, right conduct, is the prime factor of religion. And so with the
|
|
Oligarchy. Prisons, banishment and degradation, honors and palaces and
|
|
wonder-cities, are all incidental. The great driving force of the
|
|
oligarchs is the belief that they are doing right. Never mind the
|
|
exceptions, and never mind the oppression and injustice in Which the
|
|
Iron Heel was conceived. All is granted. The point is that the
|
|
strength of the Oligarchy today lies in its satisfied conception of
|
|
its own righteousness.*
|
|
|
|
* Out of the ethical incoherency and inconsistency of capitalism,
|
|
the oligarchs emerged with a new ethics, coherent and definite,
|
|
sharp and severe as steel, the most absurd and unscientific and at the
|
|
same time the most potent ever possessed by any tyrant class. The
|
|
oligarchs believed their ethics, in spite of the fact that biology and
|
|
evolution gave them the lie; and, because of their faith, for three
|
|
centuries they were able to hold back the mighty tide of human
|
|
progress- a spectacle, profound, tremendous, puzzling to the
|
|
metaphysical moralist, and one that to the materialist is the cause of
|
|
many doubts and reconsiderations.
|
|
|
|
For that matter, the strength of the Revolution, during these
|
|
frightful twenty years, has resided in nothing else than the sense
|
|
of righteousness. In no other way can be explained our sacrifices
|
|
and martyrdoms. For no other reason did Rudolph Mendenhall flame out
|
|
his soul for the Cause and sing his wild swan-song that last night
|
|
of life. For no other reason did Hurlbert die under torture,
|
|
refusing to the last to betray his comrades. For no other reason has
|
|
Anna Roylston refused blessed motherhood. For no other reason has John
|
|
Carlson been the faithful and unrewarded custodian of the Glen Ellen
|
|
Refuge. It does not matter, young or old, man or woman, high or low,
|
|
genius or clod, go where one will among the comrades of the
|
|
Revolution, the motor-force will be found to be a great and abiding
|
|
desire for the right.
|
|
But I have run away from my narrative. Ernest and I well understood,
|
|
before we left the refuge, how the strength of the Iron Heel was
|
|
developing. The labor castes, the Mercenaries, and the great hordes of
|
|
secret agents and police of various sorts were all pledged to the
|
|
Oligarchy. In the main, and ignoring the loss of liberty, they were
|
|
better off than they had been. On the other hand, the great helpless
|
|
mass of the population, the people of the abyss, was sinking into a
|
|
brutish apathy of content with misery. Whenever strong proletarians
|
|
asserted their strength in the midst of the mass, they were drawn away
|
|
from the mass by the oligarchs and given better conditions by being
|
|
made members of the labor castes or of the Mercenaries. Thus
|
|
discontent was lulled and the proletariat robbed of its natural
|
|
leaders.
|
|
The condition of the people of the abyss was pitiable. Common school
|
|
education, so far as they were concerned, had ceased. They lived
|
|
like beasts in great squalid labor-ghettos, festering in misery and
|
|
degradation. All their old liberties were gone. They were
|
|
labor-slaves. Choice of work was denied them. Likewise was denied them
|
|
the right to move from place to place, or the right to bear or possess
|
|
arms. They were not land serfs like the farmers. They were
|
|
machine-serfs and labor-serfs. When unusual needs arose for them, such
|
|
as the building of the great highways and air-lines, of canals,
|
|
tunnels, subways, and fortifications, levies were made on the
|
|
labor-ghettos, and tens of thousands of serfs, willy-nilly, were
|
|
transported to the scene of operations. Great armies of them are
|
|
toiling now at the building of Ardis, housed in wretched barracks
|
|
where family life cannot exist, and where decency is displaced by dull
|
|
bestiality. In all truth, there in the labor-ghettos is the roaring
|
|
abysmal beast the oligarchs fear so dreadfully- but it is the beast of
|
|
their own making. In it they will not let the ape and tiger die.
|
|
And just now the word has gone forth that new levies are being
|
|
imposed for the building of Asgard, the projected wonder-city that
|
|
will far exceed Ardis when the latter is completed.* We of the
|
|
Revolution will go on with that great work, but it will not be done by
|
|
the miserable serfs. The walls and towers and shafts of that fair city
|
|
will arise to the sound of singing, and into its beauty and wonder
|
|
will be woven, not sighs and groans, but music and laughter.
|
|
|
|
* Ardis was completed in 1942 A.D., Asgard was not completed until
|
|
1984 A.D. It was fifty-two years in the building, during which time
|
|
a permanent army of half a million serfs was employed. At times
|
|
these numbers swelled to over a million- without any account being
|
|
taken of the hundreds of thousands of the labor castes and the
|
|
artists.
|
|
|
|
Ernest was madly impatient to be out in the world and doing, for our
|
|
ill-fated First Revolt, that had miscarried in the Chicago Commune,
|
|
was ripening fast. Yet he possessed his soul with patience, and during
|
|
this time of his torment, when Hadly, who had been brought for the
|
|
purpose from Illinois, made him over into another man* he revolved
|
|
great plans in his head for the organization of the learned
|
|
proletariat, and for the maintenance of at least the rudiments of
|
|
education amongst the people of the abyss- all this of course in the
|
|
event of the First Revolt being a failure.
|
|
|
|
* Among the Revolutionists were many surgeons, and in vivisection
|
|
they attained marvellous proficiency. In Avis Everhard's words, they
|
|
could literally make a man over. To them the elimination of scars
|
|
and disfigurements was a trivial detail. They changed the features
|
|
with such microscopic care that no traces were left of their
|
|
handiwork. The nose was a favorite organ to work upon. Skin-grafting
|
|
and hair-transplanting were among their commonest devices. The changes
|
|
in expression they accomplished were wizard-like. Eyes and eyebrows,
|
|
lips, mouths, and ears, were radically altered. By cunning
|
|
operations on tongue, throat, larynx, and nasal cavities a man's whole
|
|
enunciation and manner of speech could be changed. Desperate times
|
|
give need for desperate remedies, and the surgeons of the Revolution
|
|
rose to the need. Among other things, they could increase an adult's
|
|
stature by as much as four or five inches and decrease it by one or
|
|
two inches. What they did is to-day a lost art. We have no need for
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
It was not until January, 1917, that we left the refuge. All had
|
|
been arranged. We took our place at once as agents-provocateurs in the
|
|
scheme of the Iron Heel. I was supposed to be Ernest's sister. By
|
|
oligarchs and comrades on the inside who were high in authority, place
|
|
had been made for us, we were in possession of all necessary
|
|
documents, and our pasts were accounted for. With help on the
|
|
inside, this was not difficult, for in that shadow-world of secret
|
|
service identity was nebulous. Like ghosts the agents came and went,
|
|
obeying commands, fulfilling duties, following clews, making their
|
|
reports often to officers they never saw or cooperating with other
|
|
agents they had never seen before and would never see again.
|
|
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO.
|
|
The Chicago Commune.
|
|
|
|
AS AGENTS-PROVOCATEURS, not alone were we able to travel a great
|
|
deal, but our very work threw us in contact with the proletariat and
|
|
with our comrades, the revolutionists. Thus we were in both camps at
|
|
the same time, ostensibly serving the Iron Heel and secretly working
|
|
with all our might for the Cause. There were many of us in the various
|
|
secret services of the Oligarchy, and despite the shakings-up and
|
|
reorganizations the secret services have undergone, they have never
|
|
been able to weed all of us out.
|
|
Ernest had largely planned the First Revolt, and the date set had
|
|
been somewhere early in the spring of 1918. In the fall of 1917 we
|
|
were not ready; much remained to be done, and when the Revolt was
|
|
precipitated, of course it was doomed to failure. The plot of
|
|
necessity was frightfully intricate, and anything premature was sure
|
|
to destroy it. This the Iron Heel foresaw and laid its schemes
|
|
accordingly.
|
|
We had planned to strike our first blow at the nervous system of the
|
|
Oligarchy. The latter had remembered the general strike, and had
|
|
guarded against the defection of the telegraphers by installing
|
|
wireless stations, in the control of the Mercenaries. We, in turn, had
|
|
countered this move. When the signal was given, from every refuge, all
|
|
over the land, and from the cities, and towns, and barracks, devoted
|
|
comrades were to go forth and blow up the wireless stations. Thus at
|
|
the first shock would the Iron Heel be brought to earth and lie
|
|
practically dismembered.
|
|
At the same moment, other comrades were to blow up the bridges and
|
|
tunnels and disrupt the whole network of railroads. Still further,
|
|
other groups of comrades, at the signal, were to seize the officers of
|
|
the Mercenaries and the police, as well as all Oligarchs of unusual
|
|
ability or who held executive positions. Thus would the leaders of the
|
|
enemy be removed from the field of the local battles that would
|
|
inevitably be fought all over the land.
|
|
Many things were to occur simultaneously when the signal went forth.
|
|
The Canadian and Mexican patriots, who were far stronger than the Iron
|
|
Heel dreamed, were to duplicate our tactics. Then there were
|
|
comrades (these were the women, for the men would be busy elsewhere)
|
|
who were to post the proclamations from our secret presses. Those of
|
|
us in the higher employ of the Iron Heel were to proceed immediately
|
|
to make confusion and anarchy in all our departments. Inside the
|
|
Mercenaries were thousands of our comrades. Their work was to blow
|
|
up the magazines and to destroy the delicate mechanism of all the
|
|
war machinery. In the cities of the Mercenaries and of the labor
|
|
castes similar programmes of disruption were to be carried out.
|
|
In short, a sudden, colossal, stunning blow was to be struck. Before
|
|
the paralyzed Oligarchy could recover itself, its end would have come.
|
|
It would have meant terrible times and great loss of life, but no
|
|
revolutionist hesitates at such things. Why, we even depended much, in
|
|
our plan, on the unorganized people of the abyss. They were to be
|
|
loosed on the palaces and cities of the masters. Never mind the
|
|
destruction of life and property. Let the abysmal brute roar and the
|
|
police and Mercenaries slay. The abysmal brute would roar anyway,
|
|
and the police and Mercenaries would slay anyway. It would merely mean
|
|
that various dangers to us were harmlessly destroying one another.
|
|
In the meantime we would be doing our own work, largely unhampered,
|
|
and gaining control of all the machinery of society.
|
|
Such was our plan, every detail of which had to be worked out in
|
|
secret, and, as the day drew near, communicated to more and more
|
|
comrades. This was the danger point, the stretching of the conspiracy.
|
|
But that danger-point was never reached. Through its spy-system the
|
|
Iron Heel got wind of the Revolt and prepared to teach us another of
|
|
its bloody lessons. Chicago was the devoted city selected for the
|
|
instruction, and well were we instructed.
|
|
Chicago* was the ripest of all- Chicago which of old time was the
|
|
city of blood and which was to earn anew its name. There the
|
|
revolutionary spirit was strong. Too many bitter strikes had been
|
|
curbed there in the days of capitalism for the workers to forget and
|
|
forgive. Even the labor castes of the city were alive with revolt. Too
|
|
many heads had been broken in the early strikes. Despite their changed
|
|
and favorable conditions, their hatred for the master class had not
|
|
died. This spirit had infected the Mercenaries, of which three
|
|
regiments in particular were ready to come over to us en masse.
|
|
|
|
* Chicago was the industrial inferno of the nineteenth century
|
|
A.D. A curious anecdote has come down to us of John Burns, a great
|
|
English labor leader and one time member of the British Cabinet. In
|
|
Chicago, while on a visit to the United States, he was asked by a
|
|
newspaper reporter for his opinion of that city. 'Chicago,' he
|
|
answered, 'is a pocket edition of hell.' Some time later, as he was
|
|
going aboard his steamer to sail to England, he was approached by
|
|
another reporter, who wanted to know if he had changed his opinion
|
|
of Chicago. 'Yes, I have,' was his reply. 'My present opinion is
|
|
that hell is a pocket edition of Chicago.'
|
|
|
|
Chicago had always been the storm-centre of the conflict between
|
|
labor and capital, a city of street-battles and violent death, with
|
|
a class-conscious capitalist organization and a class-conscious
|
|
workman organization, where, in the old days, the very school-teachers
|
|
were formed into labor unions and affiliated with the hod-carriers and
|
|
brick-layers in the American Federation of Labor. And Chicago became
|
|
the storm-centre of the premature First Revolt.
|
|
The trouble was precipitated by the Iron Heel. It was cleverly done.
|
|
The whole population, including the favored labor castes, was given
|
|
a course of outrageous treatment. Promises and agreements were broken,
|
|
and most drastic punishments visited upon even petty offenders. The
|
|
people of the abyss were tormented out of their apathy. In fact, the
|
|
Iron Heel was preparing to make the abysmal beast roar. And hand in
|
|
hand with this, in all precautionary measures in Chicago, the Iron
|
|
Heel was inconceivably careless. Discipline was relaxed among the
|
|
Mercenaries that remained, while many regiments had been withdrawn and
|
|
sent to various parts of the country.
|
|
It did not take long to carry out this programme- only several
|
|
weeks. We of the Revolution caught vague rumors of the state of
|
|
affairs, but had nothing definite enough for an understanding. In
|
|
fact, we thought it was a spontaneous spirit of revolt that would
|
|
require careful curbing on our part, and never dreamed that it was
|
|
deliberately manufactured- and it had been manufactured so secretly,
|
|
from the very innermost circle of the Iron Heel, that we had got no
|
|
inkling. The counter-plot was an able achievement, and ably carried
|
|
out.
|
|
I was in New York when I received the order to proceed immediately
|
|
to Chicago. The man who gave me the order was one of the oligarchs,
|
|
I could tell that by his speech, though I did not know his name nor
|
|
see his face. His instructions were too clear for me to make a
|
|
mistake. Plainly I read between the lines that our plot had been
|
|
discovered, that we had been countermined. The explosion was ready for
|
|
the flash of powder, and countless agents of the Iron Heel,
|
|
including me, either on the ground or being sent there, were to supply
|
|
that flash. I flatter myself that I maintained my composure under
|
|
the keen eye of the oligarch, but my heart was beating madly. I
|
|
could almost have shrieked and flown at his throat with my naked hands
|
|
before his final, cold-blooded instructions were given.
|
|
Once out of his presence, I calculated the time. I had just the
|
|
moments to spare, if I were lucky, to get in touch with some local
|
|
leader before catching my train. Guarding against being trailed, I
|
|
made a rush of it for the Emergency Hospital. Luck was with me, and
|
|
I gained access at once to comrade Galvin, the surgeon-in-chief. I
|
|
started to gasp out my information, but he stopped me.
|
|
'I already know,' he said quietly, though his Irish eyes were
|
|
flashing. 'I knew what you had come for. I got the word fifteen
|
|
minutes ago, and I have already passed it along. Everything shall be
|
|
done here to keep the comrades quiet. Chicago is to be sacrificed, but
|
|
it shall be Chicago alone.'
|
|
'Have you tried to get word to Chicago?' I asked.
|
|
He shook his head. 'No telegraphic communication. Chicago is shut
|
|
off. It's going to be hell there.'
|
|
He paused a moment, and I saw his white hands clinch. Then he
|
|
burst out:
|
|
'By God! I wish I were going to be there!'
|
|
'There is yet a chance to stop it,' I said, 'if nothing happens to
|
|
the train and I can get there in time. Or if some of the other
|
|
secret-service comrades who have learned the truth can get there in
|
|
time.'
|
|
'You on the inside were caught napping this time,' he said.
|
|
I nodded my head humbly.
|
|
'It was very secret,' I answered. 'Only the inner chiefs could
|
|
have known up to to-day. We haven't yet penetrated that far, so we
|
|
couldn't escape being kept in the dark. If only Ernest were here.
|
|
Maybe he is in Chicago now, and all is well.'
|
|
Dr. Galvin shook his head. 'The last news I heard of him was that he
|
|
had been sent to Boston or New Haven. This secret service for the
|
|
enemy must hamper him a lot, but it's better than lying in a refuge.'
|
|
I started to go, and Galvin wrung my hand.
|
|
'Keep a stout heart,' were his parting words. 'What if the First
|
|
Revolt is lost? There will be a second, and we will be wiser then.
|
|
Good-by and good luck. I don't know whether I'll ever see you again.
|
|
It's going to be hell there, but I'd give ten years of my life for
|
|
your chance to be in it.'
|
|
The Twentieth Century* left New York at six in the evening, and
|
|
was supposed to arrive at Chicago at seven next morning. But it lost
|
|
time that night. We were running behind another train. Among the
|
|
travellers in my Pullman was comrade Hartman, like myself in the
|
|
secret service of the Iron Heel. He it was who told me of the train
|
|
that immediately preceded us. It was an exact duplicate of our
|
|
train, though it contained no passengers. The idea was that the
|
|
empty train should receive the disaster were an attempt made to blow
|
|
up the Twentieth Century. For that matter there were very few people
|
|
on the train- only a baker's dozen in our car.
|
|
|
|
* This was reputed to be the fastest train in the world then. It was
|
|
quite a famous train.
|
|
|
|
'There must be some big men on board,' Hartman concluded. 'I noticed
|
|
a private car on the rear.'
|
|
Night had fallen when we made our first change of engine, and I
|
|
walked down the platform for a breath of fresh air and to see what I
|
|
could see. Through the windows of the private car I caught a glimpse
|
|
of three men whom I recognized. Hartman was right. One of the men
|
|
was General Altendorff; and the other two were Mason and Vanderbold,
|
|
the brains of the inner circle of the Oligarchy's secret service.
|
|
It was a quiet moonlight night, but I tossed restlessly and could
|
|
not sleep. At five in the morning I dressed and abandoned my bed.
|
|
I asked the man in the dressing-room how late the train was, and she
|
|
told me two hours. She was a mulatto woman, and I noticed that her
|
|
face was haggard, with great circles under the eyes, while the eyes
|
|
themselves were wide with some haunting fear.
|
|
'What is the matter?' I asked.
|
|
'Nothing, miss; I didn't sleep well, I guess,' was her reply.
|
|
I looked at her closely, and tried her with one of our signals.
|
|
She responded, and I made sure of her.
|
|
'Something terrible is going to happen in Chicago,' she said.
|
|
'There's that fake* train in front of us. That and the troop-trains
|
|
have made us late.'
|
|
|
|
* False.
|
|
|
|
'Troop-trains?' I queried.
|
|
She nodded her head. 'The line is thick with them. We've been
|
|
passing them all night. And they're all heading for Chicago. And
|
|
bringing them over the air-line- that means business.
|
|
'I've a lover in Chicago,' she added apologetically. 'He's one of
|
|
us, and he's in the Mercenaries, and I'm afraid for him.'
|
|
Poor girl. Her lover was in one of the three disloyal regiments.
|
|
Hartman and I had breakfast together in the dining car, and I forced
|
|
myself to eat. The sky had clouded, and the train rushed on like a
|
|
sullen thunderbolt through the gray pall of advancing day. The very
|
|
negroes that waited on us knew that something terrible was
|
|
impending. Oppression sat heavily upon them; the lightness of their
|
|
natures had ebbed out of them; they were slack and absent-minded in
|
|
their service, and they whispered gloomily to one another in the far
|
|
end of the car next to the kitchen. Hartman was hopeless over the
|
|
situation.
|
|
'What can we do?' he demanded for the twentieth time, with a
|
|
helpless shrug of the shoulders.
|
|
He pointed out of the window. 'See, all is ready. You can depend
|
|
upon it that they're holding them like this, thirty or forty miles
|
|
outside the city, on every road.'
|
|
He had reference to troop-trains on the side-track. The soldiers
|
|
were cooking their breakfasts over fires built on the ground beside
|
|
the track, and they looked up curiously at us as we thundered past
|
|
without slackening our terrific speed.
|
|
All was quiet as we entered Chicago. It was evident nothing had
|
|
happened yet. In the suburbs the morning papers came on board the
|
|
train. There was nothing in them, and yet there was much in them for
|
|
those skilled in reading between the lines that it was intended the
|
|
ordinary reader should read into the text. The fine hand of the Iron
|
|
Heel was apparent in every column. Glimmerings of weakness in the
|
|
armor of the Oligarchy were given. Of course, there was nothing
|
|
definite. It was intended that the reader should feel his way to these
|
|
glimmerings. It was cleverly done. As fiction, those morning papers of
|
|
October 27 were masterpieces.
|
|
The local news was missing. This in itself was a masterstroke. It
|
|
shrouded Chicago in mystery, and it suggested to the average Chicago
|
|
reader that the Oligarchy did not dare give the local news. Hints that
|
|
were untrue, of course, were given of insubordination all over the
|
|
land, crudely disguised with complacent references to punitive
|
|
measures to be taken. There were reports of numerous wireless stations
|
|
that had been blown up, with heavy rewards offered for the detection
|
|
of the perpetrators. Of course no wireless stations had been blown up.
|
|
Many similar outrages, that dovetailed with the plot of the
|
|
revolutionists, were given. The impression to be made on the minds
|
|
of the Chicago comrades was that the general Revolt was beginning,
|
|
albeit with a confusing miscarriage in many details. It was impossible
|
|
for one uninformed to escape the vague yet certain feeling that all
|
|
the land was ripe for the revolt that had already begun to break out.
|
|
It was reported that the defection of the Mercenaries in
|
|
California had become so serious that half a dozen regiments had
|
|
been disbanded and broken, and that their members with their
|
|
families had been driven from their own city and on into the
|
|
labor-ghettos. And the California Mercenaries were in reality the most
|
|
faithful of all to their salt! But how was Chicago, shut off from
|
|
the rest of the world, to know? Then there was a ragged telegram
|
|
describing an outbreak of the populace in New York City, in which
|
|
the labor castes were joining, concluding with the statement (intended
|
|
to be accepted as a bluff*) that the troops had the situation in hand.
|
|
|
|
* A lie.
|
|
|
|
And as the oligarchs had done with the morning papers, so had they
|
|
done in a thousand other ways. These we learned afterward, as, for
|
|
example, the secret messages of the oligarchs, sent with the express
|
|
purpose of leaking to the ears of the revolutionists, that had come
|
|
over the wires, now and again, during the first part of the night.
|
|
'I guess the Iron Heel won't need our services,' Hartman remarked,
|
|
putting down the paper he had been reading, when the train pulled into
|
|
the central depot. 'They wasted their time sending us here. Their
|
|
plans have evidently prospered better than they expected. Hell will
|
|
break loose any second now.'
|
|
He turned and looked down the train as we alighted.
|
|
'I thought so,' he muttered. 'They dropped that private car when the
|
|
papers came aboard.'
|
|
Hartman was hopelessly depressed. I tried to cheer him up, but he
|
|
ignored my effort and suddenly began talking very hurriedly, in a
|
|
low voice, as we passed through the station. At first I could not
|
|
understand.
|
|
'I have not been sure,' he was saying, 'and I have told no one. I
|
|
have been working on it for weeks, and I cannot make sure. Watch out
|
|
for Knowlton. I suspect him. He knows the secrets of a score of our
|
|
refuges. He carries the lives of hundreds of us in his hands, and I
|
|
think he is a traitor. It's more a feeling on my part than anything
|
|
else. But I thought I marked a change in him a short while back. There
|
|
is the danger that he has sold us out, or is going to sell us out. I
|
|
am almost sure of it. I wouldn't whisper my suspicions to a soul, but,
|
|
somehow, I don't think I'll leave Chicago alive. Keep your eye on
|
|
Knowlton. Trap him. Find out. I don't know anything more. It is only
|
|
an intuition, and so far I have failed to find the slightest clew.' We
|
|
were just stepping out upon the sidewalk. 'Remember,' Hartman
|
|
concluded earnestly. 'Keep your eyes upon Knowlton.'
|
|
And Hartman was right. Before a month went by Knowlton paid for
|
|
his treason with his life. He was formally executed by the comrades in
|
|
Milwaukee.
|
|
All was quiet on the streets- too quiet. Chicago lay dead. There was
|
|
no roar and rumble of traffic. There were not even cabs on the
|
|
streets. The surface cars and the elevated were not running. Only
|
|
occasionally, on the sidewalks, were there stray pedestrians, and
|
|
these pedestrians did not loiter. They went their ways with great
|
|
haste and definiteness, withal there was a curious indecision in their
|
|
movements, as though they expected the buildings to topple over on
|
|
them or the sidewalks to sink under their feet or fly up in the air. A
|
|
few gamins, however, were around, in their eyes a suppressed eagerness
|
|
in anticipation of wonderful and exciting things to happen.
|
|
From somewhere, far to the south, the dull sound of an explosion
|
|
came to our ears. That was all. Then quiet again, though the gamins
|
|
had startled and listened, like young deer, at the sound. The doorways
|
|
to all the buildings were closed; the shutters to the shops were up.
|
|
But there were many police and watchmen in evidence, and now and again
|
|
automobile patrols of the Mercenaries slipped swiftly past.
|
|
Hartman and I agreed that it was useless to report ourselves to
|
|
the local chiefs of the secret service. Our failure so to report would
|
|
be excused, we knew, in the light of subsequent events. So we headed
|
|
for the great labor-ghetto on the South Side in the hope of getting in
|
|
contact with some of the comrades. Too late! We knew it. But we
|
|
could not stand still and do nothing in those ghastly, silent streets.
|
|
Where was Ernest? I was wondering. What was happening in the cities of
|
|
the labor castes and Mercenaries? In the fortresses?
|
|
As if in answer, a great screaming roar went up, dim with
|
|
distance, punctuated with detonation after detonation.
|
|
'It's the fortresses,' Hartman said. 'God pity those three
|
|
regiments!'
|
|
At a crossing we noticed, in the direction of the stockyards, a
|
|
gigantic pillar of smoke. At the next crossing several similar smoke
|
|
pillars were rising skyward in the direction of the West Side. Over
|
|
the city of the Mercenaries we saw a great captive war-balloon that
|
|
burst even as we looked at it, and fell in flaming wreckage toward the
|
|
earth. There was no clew to that tragedy of the air. We could not
|
|
determine whether the balloon had been manned by comrades or
|
|
enemies. A vague sound came to our ears, like the bubbling of a
|
|
gigantic caldron a long way off, and Hartman said it was
|
|
machine-guns and automatic rifles.
|
|
And still we walked in immediate quietude. Nothing was happening
|
|
where we were. The police and the automobile patrols went by, and once
|
|
half a dozen fire-engines, returning evidently from some
|
|
conflagration. A question was called to the fireman by an officer in
|
|
an automobile, and we heard one shout in reply: 'No water! They've
|
|
blown up the mains!'
|
|
'We've smashed the water supply,' Hartman cried excitedly to me. 'If
|
|
we can do all this in a premature, isolated, abortive attempt, what
|
|
can't we do in a concerted, ripened effort all over the land?'
|
|
The automobile containing the officer who had asked the question
|
|
darted on. Suddenly there was a deafening roar. The machine, with
|
|
its human freight, lifted in an upburst of smoke, and sank down a mass
|
|
of wreckage and death.
|
|
Hartman was jubilant. 'Well done! well done!' he was repeating, over
|
|
and over, in a whisper. 'The proletariat gets its lesson to-day, but
|
|
it gives one, too.'
|
|
Police were running for the spot. Also, another patrol machine had
|
|
halted. As for myself, I was in a daze. The suddenness of it was
|
|
stunning. How had it happened? I knew not how, and yet I had been
|
|
looking directly at it. So dazed was I for the moment that I was
|
|
scarcely aware of the fact that we were being held up by the police. I
|
|
abruptly saw that a policeman was in the act of shooting Hartman.
|
|
But Hartman was cool and was giving the proper passwords. I saw the
|
|
levelled revolver hesitate, then sink down, and heard the disgusted
|
|
grunt of the policeman. He was very angry, and was cursing the whole
|
|
secret service. It was always in the way, he was averring, while
|
|
Hartman was talking back to him and with fitting secret-service
|
|
pride explaining to him the clumsiness of the police.
|
|
The next moment I knew how it had happened. There was quite a
|
|
group about the wreck, and two men were just lifting up the wounded
|
|
officer to carry him to the other machine. A panic seized all of them,
|
|
and they scattered in every direction, running in blind terror, the
|
|
wounded officer, roughly dropped, being left behind. The cursing
|
|
policeman alongside of me also ran, and Hartman and I ran, too, we
|
|
knew not why, obsessed with the same blind terror to get away from
|
|
that particular spot.
|
|
Nothing really happened then, but everything was explained. The
|
|
flying men were sheepishly coming back, but all the while their eyes
|
|
were raised apprehensively to the many-windowed, lofty buildings
|
|
that towered like the sheer walls of a canyon on each side of the
|
|
street. From one of those countless windows the bomb had been
|
|
thrown, but which window? There had been no second bomb, only a fear
|
|
of one.
|
|
Thereafter we looked with speculative comprehension at the
|
|
windows. Any of them contained possible death. Each building was a
|
|
possible ambuscade. This was warfare in that modern jungle, a great
|
|
city. Every street was a canyon, every building a mountain. We had not
|
|
changed much from primitive man, despite the war automobiles that were
|
|
sliding by.
|
|
Turning a corner, we came upon a woman. She was lying on the
|
|
pavement, in a pool of blood. Hartman bent over and examined her. As
|
|
for myself, I turned deathly sick. I was to see many dead that day,
|
|
but the total carnage was not to affect me as did this first forlorn
|
|
body lying there at my feet abandoned on the pavement. 'Shot in the
|
|
breast,' was Hartman's report. Clasped in the hollow of her arm, as
|
|
a child might be clasped, was a bundle of printed matter. Even in
|
|
death she seemed loath to part with that which had caused her death;
|
|
for when Hartman had succeeded in withdrawing the bundle, we found
|
|
that it consisted of large printed sheets, the proclamations of the
|
|
revolutionists.
|
|
'A comrade,' I said.
|
|
But Hartman only cursed the Iron Heel, and we passed on. Often we
|
|
were halted by the police and patrols, but our passwords enabled us to
|
|
proceed. No more bombs fell from the windows, the last pedestrians
|
|
seemed to have vanished from the streets, and our immediate quietude
|
|
grew more profound; though the gigantic caldron continued to bubble in
|
|
the distance, dull roars of explosions came to us from all directions,
|
|
and the smoke-pillars were towering more ominously in the heavens.
|
|
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE.
|
|
The People of the Abyss.
|
|
|
|
SUDDENLY A CHANGE CAME over the face of things. A tingle of
|
|
excitement ran along the air. Automobiles fled past, two, three, a
|
|
dozen, and from them warnings were shouted to us. One of the
|
|
machines swerved wildly at high speed half a block down, and the
|
|
next moment, already left well behind it, the pavement was torn into a
|
|
great hole by a bursting bomb. We saw the police disappearing down the
|
|
cross-streets on the run, and knew that something terrible was coming.
|
|
We could hear the rising roar of it.
|
|
'Our brave comrades are coming,' Hartman said.
|
|
We could see the front of their column filling the street from
|
|
gutter to gutter, as the last war-automobile fled past. The machine
|
|
stopped for a moment just abreast of us. A soldier leaped from it,
|
|
carrying something carefully in his hands. This, with the same care,
|
|
he deposited in the gutter. Then he leaped back to his seat and the
|
|
machine dashed on, took the turn at the corner, and was gone from
|
|
sight. Hartman ran to the gutter and stooped over the object.
|
|
'Keep back,' he warned me.
|
|
I could see he was working rapidly with his hands. When he
|
|
returned to me the sweat was heavy on his forehead.
|
|
'I disconnected it,' he said, 'and just in the nick of time. The
|
|
soldier was clumsy. He intended it for our comrades, but he didn't
|
|
give it enough time. It would have exploded prematurely. Now it
|
|
won't explode at all.'
|
|
Everything was happening rapidly now. Across the street and half a
|
|
block down, high up in a building, I could see heads peering out. I
|
|
had just pointed them out to Hartman, when a sheet of flame and
|
|
smoke ran along that portion of the face of the building where the
|
|
heads had appeared, and the air was shaken by the explosion. In places
|
|
the stone facing of the building was torn away, exposing the iron
|
|
construction beneath. The next moment similar sheets of flame and
|
|
smoke smote the front of the building across the street opposite it.
|
|
Between the explosions we could hear the rattle of the automatic
|
|
pistols and rifles. For several minutes this mid-air battle continued,
|
|
then died out. It was patent that our comrades were in one building,
|
|
that Mercenaries were in the other, and that they were fighting across
|
|
the street. But we could not tell which was which- which building
|
|
contained our comrades and which the Mercenaries.
|
|
By this time the column on the street was almost on us. As the front
|
|
of it passed under the warring buildings, both went into action again-
|
|
one building dropping bombs into the street, being attacked from
|
|
across the street, and in return replying to that attack. Thus we
|
|
learned which building was held by our comrades, and they did good
|
|
work, saving those in the street from the bombs of the enemy.
|
|
Hartman gripped my arm and dragged me into a wide entrance.
|
|
'They're not our comrades,' he shouted in my ear.
|
|
The inner doors to the entrance were locked and bolted. We could not
|
|
escape. The next moment the front of the column went by. It was not
|
|
a column, but a mob, an awful river that filled the street, the people
|
|
of the abyss, mad with drink and wrong, up at last and roaring for the
|
|
blood of their masters. I had seen the people of the abyss before,
|
|
gone through its ghettos, and thought I knew it; but I found that I
|
|
was now looking on it for the first time. Dumb apathy had vanished. It
|
|
was now dynamic- a fascinating spectacle of dread. It surged past my
|
|
vision in concrete waves of wrath, snarling and growling, carnivorous,
|
|
drunk with whiskey from pillaged warehouses, drunk with hatred,
|
|
drunk with lust for blood- men, women, and children, in rags and
|
|
tatters, dim ferocious intelligences with all the godlike blotted from
|
|
their features and all the fiendlike stamped in, apes and tigers,
|
|
anaemic consumptives and great hairy beasts of burden, wan faces
|
|
from which vampire society had sucked the juice of life, bloated forms
|
|
swollen with physical grossness and corruption, withered hags and
|
|
death's-heads bearded like patriarchs, festering youth and festering
|
|
age, faces of fiends, crooked, twisted, misshapen monsters blasted
|
|
with the ravages of disease and all the horrors of chronic
|
|
innutrition- the refuse and the scum of life, a raging, screaming,
|
|
screeching, demoniacal horde.
|
|
And why not? The people of the abyss had nothing to lose but the
|
|
misery and pain of living. And to gain?- nothing, save one final,
|
|
awful glut of vengeance. And as I looked the thought came to me that
|
|
in that rushing stream of human lava were men, comrades and heroes,
|
|
whose mission had been to rouse the abysmal beast and to keep the
|
|
enemy occupied in coping with it.
|
|
And now a strange thing happened to me. A transformation came over
|
|
me. The fear of death, for myself and for others, left me. I was
|
|
strangely exalted, another being in another life. Nothing mattered.
|
|
The Cause for this one time was lost, but the Cause would be here
|
|
to-morrow, the same Cause, ever fresh and ever burning. And
|
|
thereafter, in the orgy of horror that raged through the succeeding
|
|
hours, I was able to take a calm interest. Death meant nothing, life
|
|
meant nothing. I was an interested spectator of events, and, sometimes
|
|
swept on by the rush, was myself a curious participant. For my mind
|
|
had leaped to a star-cool altitude and grasped a passionless
|
|
transvaluation of values. Had it not done this, I know that I should
|
|
have died.
|
|
Half a mile of the mob had swept by when we were discovered. A woman
|
|
in fantastic rags, with cheeks cavernously hollow and with narrow
|
|
black eyes like burning gimlets, caught a glimpse of Hartman and me.
|
|
She let out a shrill shriek and bore in upon us. A section of the
|
|
mob tore itself loose and surged in after her. I can see her now, as I
|
|
write these lines, a leap in advance, her gray hair flying in thin
|
|
tangled strings, the blood dripping down her forehead from some
|
|
wound in the scalp, in her right hand a hatchet, her left hand, lean
|
|
and wrinkled, a yellow talon, gripping the air convulsively. Hartman
|
|
sprang in front of me. This was no time for explanations. We were well
|
|
dressed, and that was enough. His fist shot out, striking the woman
|
|
between her burning eyes. The impact of the blow drove her backward,
|
|
but she struck the wall of her on-coming fellows and bounced forward
|
|
again, dazed and helpless, the brandished hatchet falling feebly on
|
|
Hartman's shoulder.
|
|
The next moment I knew not what was happening. I was overborne by
|
|
the crowd. The confined space was filled with shrieks and yells and
|
|
curses. Blows were falling on me. Hands were ripping and tearing at my
|
|
flesh and garments. I felt that I was being torn to pieces. I was
|
|
being borne down, suffocated. Some strong hand gripped my shoulder
|
|
in the thick of the press and was dragging fiercely at me. Between
|
|
pain and pressure I fainted. Hartman never came out of that
|
|
entrance. He had shielded me and received the first brunt of the
|
|
attack. This had saved me, for the jam had quickly become too dense
|
|
for anything more than the mad gripping and tearing of hands.
|
|
I came to in the midst of wild movement. All about me was the same
|
|
movement. I had been caught up in a monstrous flood that was
|
|
sweeping me I knew not whither. Fresh air was on my cheek and biting
|
|
sweetly in my lungs. Faint and dizzy, I was vaguely aware of a
|
|
strong arm around my body under the arms, and half-lifting me and
|
|
dragging me along. Feebly my own limbs were helping me. In front of me
|
|
I could see the moving back of a man's coat. It had been slit from top
|
|
to bottom along the centre seam, and it pulsed rhythmically, the
|
|
slit opening and closing regularly with every leap of the wearer. This
|
|
phenomenon fascinated me for a time, while my senses were coming
|
|
back to me. Next I became aware of stinging cheeks and nose, and could
|
|
feel blood dripping on my face. My hat was gone. My hair was down
|
|
and flying, and from the stinging of the scalp I managed to
|
|
recollect a hand in the press of the entrance that had torn at my
|
|
hair. My chest and arms were bruised and aching in a score of places.
|
|
My brain grew clearer, and I turned as I ran and looked at the man
|
|
who was holding me up. He it was who had dragged me out and saved
|
|
me. He noticed my movement.
|
|
'It's all right!' he shouted hoarsely. 'I knew you on the instant.'
|
|
I failed to recognize him, but before I could speak I trod upon
|
|
something that was alive and that squirmed under my foot. I was
|
|
swept on by those behind and could not look down and see, and yet I
|
|
knew that it was a woman who had fallen and who was being trampled
|
|
into the pavement by thousands of successive feet.
|
|
'It's all right,' he repeated. 'I'm Garthwaite.'
|
|
He was bearded and gaunt and dirty, but I succeeded in remembering
|
|
him as the stalwart youth that had spent several months in our Glen
|
|
Ellen refuge three years before. He passed me the signals of the
|
|
Iron Heel's secret service, in token that he, too, was in its employ.
|
|
'I'll get you out of this as soon as I can get a chance,' he assured
|
|
me. 'But watch your footing. On your life don't stumble and go down.'
|
|
All things happened abruptly on that day, and with an abruptness
|
|
that was sickening the mob checked itself. I came in violent collision
|
|
with a large woman in front of me (the man with the split coat had
|
|
vanished), while those behind collided against me. A devilish
|
|
pandemonium reigned,- shrieks, curses, and cries of death, while above
|
|
all rose the churning rattle of machine-guns and the put-a-put,
|
|
put-a-put of rifles. At first I could make out nothing. People were
|
|
falling about me right and left. The woman in front doubled up and
|
|
went down, her hands on her abdomen in a frenzied clutch. A man was
|
|
quivering against my legs in a death-struggle.
|
|
It came to me that we were at the head of the column. Half a mile of
|
|
it had disappeared- where or how I never learned. To this day I do not
|
|
know what became of that half-mile of humanity- whether it was blotted
|
|
out by some frightful bolt of war, whether it was scattered and
|
|
destroyed piecemeal, or whether it escaped. But there we were, at
|
|
the head of the column instead of in its middle, and we were being
|
|
swept out of life by a torrent of shrieking lead.
|
|
As soon as death had thinned the jam, Garthwaite, still grasping
|
|
my arm, led a rush of survivors into the wide entrance of an office
|
|
building. Here, at the rear, against the doors, we were pressed by a
|
|
panting, gasping mass of creatures. For some time we remained in
|
|
this position without a change in the situation.
|
|
'I did it beautifully,' Garthwaite was lamenting to me. 'Ran you
|
|
right into a trap. We had a gambler's chance in the street, but in
|
|
here there is no chance at all. It's all over but the shouting. Vive
|
|
la Revolution!'
|
|
Then, what he expected, began. The Mercenaries were killing
|
|
without quarter. At first, the surge back upon us was crushing, but as
|
|
the killing continued the pressure was eased. The dead and dying
|
|
went down and made room. Garthwaite put his mouth to my ear and
|
|
shouted, but in the frightful din I could not catch what he said. He
|
|
did not wait. He seized me and threw me down. Next he dragged a
|
|
dying woman over on top of me, and, with much squeezing and shoving,
|
|
crawled in beside me and partly over me. A mound of dead and dying
|
|
began to pile up over us, and over this mound, pawing and moaning,
|
|
crept those that still survived. But these, too, soon ceased, and a
|
|
semi-silence settled down, broken by groans and sobs and sounds of
|
|
strangulation.
|
|
I should have been crushed had it not been for Garthwaite. As it
|
|
was, it seemed inconceivable that I could bear the weight I did and
|
|
live. And yet, outside of pain, the only feeling I possessed was one
|
|
of curiosity. How was it going to end? What would death be like?
|
|
Thus did I receive my red baptism in that Chicago shambles. Prior to
|
|
that, death to me had been a theory; but ever afterward death has been
|
|
a simple fact that does not matter, it is so easy.
|
|
But the Mercenaries were not content with what they had done. They
|
|
invaded the entrance, killing the wounded and searching out the unhurt
|
|
that, like ourselves, were playing dead. I remember one man they
|
|
dragged out of a heap, who pleaded abjectly until a revolver shot
|
|
cut him short. Then there was a woman who charged from a heap,
|
|
snarling and shooting. She fired six shots before they got her, though
|
|
what damage she did we could not know. We could follow these tragedies
|
|
only by the sound. Every little while flurries like this occurred,
|
|
each flurry culminating in the revolver shot that put an end to it. In
|
|
the intervals we could hear the soldiers talking and swearing as
|
|
they rummaged among the carcasses, urged on by their officers to hurry
|
|
up.
|
|
At last they went to work on our heap, and we could feel the
|
|
pressure diminish as they dragged away the dead and wounded.
|
|
Garthwaite began uttering aloud the signals. At first he was not
|
|
heard. Then he raised his voice.
|
|
'Listen to that,' we heard a soldier say. And next the sharp voice
|
|
of an officer. 'Hold on there! Careful as you go!'
|
|
Oh, that first breath of air as we were dragged out! Garthwaite
|
|
did the talking at first, but I was compelled to undergo a brief
|
|
examination to prove service with the Iron Heel.
|
|
'Agents-provocateurs all right,' was the officer's conclusion. He
|
|
was a beardless young fellow, a cadet, evidently, of some great
|
|
oligarch family.
|
|
'It's a hell of a job,' Garthwaite grumbled. 'I'm going to try and
|
|
resign and get into the army. You fellows have a snap.'
|
|
'You've earned it,' was the young officer's answer. 'I've got some
|
|
pull, and I'll see if it can be managed. I can tell them how I found
|
|
you.'
|
|
He took Garthwaite's name and number, then turned to me.
|
|
'And you?'
|
|
'Oh, I'm going to be married,' I answered lightly, 'and then I'll be
|
|
out of it all.'
|
|
And so we talked, while the killing of the wounded went on. It is
|
|
all a dream, now, as I look back on it; but at the time it was the
|
|
most natural thing in the world. Garthwaite and the young officer fell
|
|
into an animated conversation over the difference between so-called
|
|
modern warfare and the present street-fighting and sky-scraper
|
|
fighting that was taking place all over the city. I followed them
|
|
intently, fixing up my hair at the same time and pinning together my
|
|
torn skirts. And all the time the killing of the wounded went on.
|
|
Sometimes the revolver shots drowned the voices of Garthwaite and
|
|
the officer, and they were compelled to repeat what they had been
|
|
saying.
|
|
I lived through three days of the Chicago Commune, and the
|
|
vastness of it and of the slaughter may be imagined when I say that in
|
|
all that time I saw practically nothing outside the killing of the
|
|
people of the abyss and the mid-air fighting between sky-scrapers. I
|
|
really saw nothing of the heroic work done by the comrades. I could
|
|
hear the explosions of their mines and bombs, and see the smoke of
|
|
their conflagrations, and that was all. The mid-air part of one
|
|
great deed I saw, however, and that was the balloon attacks made by
|
|
our comrades on the fortresses. That was on the second day. The
|
|
three disloyal regiments had been destroyed in the fortresses to the
|
|
last man. The fortresses were crowded with Mercenaries, the wind
|
|
blew in the right direction, and up went our balloons from one of
|
|
the office buildings in the city.
|
|
Now Biedenbach, after he left Glen Ellen, had invented a most
|
|
powerful explosive- 'expedite' he called it. This was the weapon the
|
|
balloons used. They were only hot-air balloons, clumsily and hastily
|
|
made, but they did the work. I saw it all from the top of an office
|
|
building. The first balloon missed the fortresses completely and
|
|
disappeared into the country; but we learned about it afterward.
|
|
Burton and O'Sullivan were in it. As they were descending they swept
|
|
across a railroad directly over a troop-train that was heading at full
|
|
speed for Chicago. They dropped their whole supply of expedite upon
|
|
the locomotive. The resulting wreck tied the line up for days. And the
|
|
best of it was that, released from the weight of expedite, the balloon
|
|
shot up into the air and did not come down for half a dozen miles,
|
|
both heroes escaping unharmed.
|
|
The second balloon was a failure. Its flight was lame. It floated
|
|
too low and was shot full of holes before it could reach the
|
|
fortresses. Herford and Guinness were in it, and they were blown to
|
|
pieces along with the field into which they fell. Biedenbach was in
|
|
despair- we heard all about it afterward- and he went up alone in
|
|
the third balloon. He, too, made a low flight, but he was in luck, for
|
|
they failed seriously to puncture his balloon. I can see it now as I
|
|
did then, from the lofty top of the building- that inflated bag
|
|
drifting along the air, and that tiny speck of a man clinging on
|
|
beneath. I could not see the fortress, but those on the roof with me
|
|
said he was directly over it. I did not see the expedite fall when
|
|
he cut it loose. But I did see the balloon suddenly leap up into the
|
|
sky. An appreciable time after that the great column of the
|
|
explosion towered in the air, and after that, in turn, I heard the
|
|
roar of it. Biedenbach the gentle had destroyed a fortress. Two
|
|
other balloons followed at the same time. One was blown to pieces in
|
|
the air, the expedite exploding, and the shock of it disrupted the
|
|
second balloon, which fell prettily into the remaining fortress. It
|
|
couldn't have been better planned, though the two comrades in it
|
|
sacrificed their lives.
|
|
But to return to the people of the abyss. My experiences were
|
|
confined to them. They raged and slaughtered and destroyed all over
|
|
the city proper, and were in turn destroyed; but never once did they
|
|
succeed in reaching the city of the oligarchs over on the west side.
|
|
The oligarchs had protected themselves well. No matter what
|
|
destruction was wreaked in the heart of the city, they, and their
|
|
womenkind and children, were to escape hurt. I am told that their
|
|
children played in the parks during those terrible days and that their
|
|
favorite game was an imitation of their elders stamping upon the
|
|
proletariat.
|
|
But the Mercenaries found it no easy task to cope with the people of
|
|
the abyss and at the same time fight with the comrades. Chicago was
|
|
true to her traditions, and though a generation of revolutionists
|
|
was wiped out, it took along with it pretty close to a generation of
|
|
its enemies. Of course, the Iron Heel kept the figures secret, but, at
|
|
a very conservative estimate, at least one hundred and thirty thousand
|
|
Mercenaries were slain. But the comrades had no chance. Instead of the
|
|
whole country being hand in hand in revolt, they were all alone, and
|
|
the total strength of the Oligarchy could have been directed against
|
|
them if necessary. As it was, hour after hour, day after day, in
|
|
endless train-loads, by hundreds of thousands, the Mercenaries were
|
|
hurled into Chicago.
|
|
And there were so many of the people of the abyss! Tiring of the
|
|
slaughter, a great herding movement was begun by the soldiers, the
|
|
intent of which was to drive the street mobs, like cattle, into Lake
|
|
Michigan. It was at the beginning of this movement that Garthwaite and
|
|
I had encountered the young officer. This herding movement was
|
|
practically a failure, thanks to the splendid work of the comrades.
|
|
Instead of the great host the Mercenaries had hoped to gather
|
|
together, they succeeded in driving no more than forty thousand of the
|
|
wretches into the lake. Time and again, when a mob of them was well in
|
|
hand and being driven along the streets to the water, the comrades
|
|
would create a diversion, and the mob would escape through the
|
|
consequent hole torn in the encircling net.
|
|
'Garthwaite and I saw an example of this shortly after meeting
|
|
with the young officer. The mob of which we had been a part, and which
|
|
had been put in retreat, was prevented from escaping to the south
|
|
and east by strong bodies of troops. The troops we had fallen in
|
|
with had held it back on the west. The only outlet was north, and
|
|
north it went toward the lake, driven on from east and west and
|
|
south by machine-gun fire and automatics. Whether it divined that it
|
|
was being driven toward the lake, or whether it was merely a blind
|
|
squirm of the monster, I do not know; but at any rate the mob took a
|
|
cross street to the west, turned down the next street, and came back
|
|
upon its track, heading south toward the great ghetto.
|
|
Garthwaite and I at that time were trying to make our way westward
|
|
to get out of the territory of street-fighting, and we were caught
|
|
right in the thick of it again. As we came to the corner we saw the
|
|
howling mob bearing down upon us. Garthwaite seized my arm and we were
|
|
just starting to run, when he dragged me back from in front of the
|
|
wheels of half a dozen war automobiles, equipped with machine-guns,
|
|
that were rushing for the spot. Behind them came the soldiers with
|
|
their automatic rifles. By the time they took position, the mob was
|
|
upon them, and it looked as though they would be overwhelmed before
|
|
they could get into action.
|
|
Here and there a soldier was discharging his rifle, but this
|
|
scattered fire had no effect in checking the mob. On it came,
|
|
bellowing with brute rage. It seemed the machine-guns could not get
|
|
started. The automobiles on which they were mounted blocked the
|
|
street, compelling the soldiers to find positions in, between, and
|
|
on the sidewalks. More and more soldiers were arriving, and in the jam
|
|
we were unable to get away. Garthwaite held me by the arm, and we
|
|
pressed close against the front of a building.
|
|
The mob was no more than twenty-five feet away when the machine-guns
|
|
opened up; but before that flaming sheet of death nothing could
|
|
live. The mob came on, but it could not advance. It piled up in a
|
|
heap, a mound, a huge and growing wave of dead and dying. Those behind
|
|
urged on, and the column, from gutter to gutter, telescoped upon
|
|
itself. Wounded creatures, men and women, were vomited over the top of
|
|
that awful wave and fell squirming down the face of it till they
|
|
threshed about under the automobiles and against the legs of the
|
|
soldiers. The latter bayoneted the struggling wretches, though one I
|
|
saw who gained his feet and flew at a soldier's throat with his teeth.
|
|
Together they went down, soldier and slave, into the welter.
|
|
The firing ceased. The work was done. The mob had been stopped in
|
|
its wild attempt to break through. Orders were being given to clear
|
|
the wheels of the war-machines. They could not advance over that
|
|
wave of dead, and the idea was to run them down the cross street.
|
|
The soldiers were dragging the bodies away from the wheels when it
|
|
happened. We learned afterward how it happened. A block distant a
|
|
hundred of our comrades had been holding a building. Across roofs
|
|
and through buildings they made their way, till they found
|
|
themselves looking down upon the close-packed soldiers. Then it was
|
|
counter-massacre.
|
|
Without warning, a shower of bombs fell from the top of the
|
|
building. The automobiles were blown to fragments, along with many
|
|
soldiers. We, with the survivors, swept back in mad retreat. Half a
|
|
block down another building opened fire on us. As the soldiers had
|
|
carpeted the street with dead slaves, so, in turn, did they themselves
|
|
become carpet. Garthwaite and I bore charmed lives. As we had done
|
|
before, so again we sought shelter in an entrance. But he was not to
|
|
be caught napping this time. As the roar of the bombs died away, he
|
|
began peering out.
|
|
'The mob's coming back!' he called to me. 'We've got to get out of
|
|
this!'
|
|
We fled, hand in hand, down the bloody pavement, slipping and
|
|
sliding, and making for the corner. Down the cross street we could see
|
|
a few soldiers still running. Nothing was happening to them. The way
|
|
was clear. So we paused a moment and looked back. The mob came on
|
|
slowly. It was busy arming itself with the rifles of the slain and
|
|
killing the wounded. We saw the end of the young officer who had
|
|
rescued us. He painfully lifted himself on his elbow and turned
|
|
loose with his automatic pistol.
|
|
'There goes my chance of promotion,' Garthwaite laughed, as a
|
|
woman bore down on the wounded man, brandishing a butcher's cleaver.
|
|
'Come on. It's the wrong direction, but we'll get out somehow.'
|
|
And we fled eastward through the quiet streets, prepared at every
|
|
cross street for anything to happen. To the south a monster
|
|
conflagration was filling the sky, and we knew that the great ghetto
|
|
was burning. At last I sank down on the sidewalk. I was exhausted
|
|
and could go no farther. I was bruised and sore and aching in every
|
|
limb; yet I could not escape smiling at Garthwaite, who was rolling
|
|
a cigarette and saying:
|
|
'I know I'm making a mess of rescuing you, but I can't get head
|
|
nor tail of the situation. It's all a mess. Every time we try to break
|
|
out, something happens and we're turned back. We're only a couple of
|
|
blocks now from where I got you out of that entrance. Friend and foe
|
|
are all mixed up. It's chaos. You can't tell who is in those darned
|
|
buildings. Try to find out, and you get a bomb on your head. Try to go
|
|
peaceably on your way, and you run into a mob and are killed by
|
|
machine-guns, or you run into the Mercenaries and are killed by your
|
|
own comrades from a roof. And on the top of it all the mob comes along
|
|
and kills you, too.'
|
|
He shook his head dolefully, lighted his cigarette, and sat down
|
|
beside me.
|
|
'And I'm that hungry,' he added, 'I could eat cobblestones.'
|
|
The next moment he was on his feet again and out in the street
|
|
prying up a cobblestone. He came back with it and assaulted the window
|
|
of a store behind us.
|
|
'It's ground floor and no good,' he explained as he helped me
|
|
through the hole he had made; 'but it's the best we can do. You get
|
|
a nap and I'll reconnoitre. I'll finish this rescue all right, but I
|
|
want time, time, lots of it- and something to eat.'
|
|
It was a harness store we found ourselves in, and he fixed me up a
|
|
couch of horse blankets in the private office well to the rear. To add
|
|
to my wretchedness a splitting headache was coming on, and I was
|
|
only too glad to close my eyes and try to sleep.
|
|
'I'll be back,' were his parting words. 'I don't hope to get an
|
|
auto, but I'll surely bring some grub,* anyway.'
|
|
|
|
* Food.
|
|
|
|
And that was the last I saw of Garthwaite for three years. Instead
|
|
of coming back, he was carried away to a hospital with a bullet
|
|
through his lungs and another through the fleshy part of his neck.
|
|
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR.
|
|
Nightmare.
|
|
|
|
I HAD NOT CLOSED MY EYES the night before on the Twentieth
|
|
Century, and what of that and of my exhaustion I slept soundly. When I
|
|
first awoke, it was night. Garthwaite had not returned. I had lost
|
|
my watch and had no idea of the time. As I lay with my eyes closed,
|
|
I heard the same dull sound of distant explosions. The inferno was
|
|
still raging. I crept through the store to the front. The reflection
|
|
from the sky of vast conflagrations made the street almost as light as
|
|
day. One could have read the finest print with ease. From several
|
|
blocks away came the crackle of small hand-bombs and the churning of
|
|
machine-guns, and from a long way off came a long series of heavy
|
|
explosions. I crept back to my horse blankets and slept again.
|
|
When next I awoke, a sickly yellow light was filtering in on me.
|
|
It was dawn of the second day. I crept to the front of the store. A
|
|
smoke pall, shot through with lurid gleams, filled the sky. Down the
|
|
opposite side of the street tottered a wretched slave. One hand he
|
|
held tightly against his side, and behind him he left a bloody
|
|
trail. His eyes roved everywhere, and they were filled with
|
|
apprehension and dread. Once he looked straight across at me, and in
|
|
his face was all the dumb pathos of the wounded and hunted animal.
|
|
He saw me, but there was no kinship between us, and with him, at
|
|
least, no sympathy of understanding; for he cowered perceptibly and
|
|
dragged himself on. He could expect no aid in all God's world. He
|
|
was a helot in the great hunt of helots that the masters were
|
|
making. All he could hope for, all he sought, was some hole to crawl
|
|
away in and hide like any animal. The sharp clang of a passing
|
|
ambulance at the corner gave him a start. Ambulances were not for such
|
|
as he. With a groan of pain he threw himself into a doorway. A
|
|
minute later he was out again and desperately hobbling on.
|
|
I went back to my horse blankets and waited an hour for
|
|
Garthwaite. My headache had not gone away. On the contrary, it was
|
|
increasing. It was by an effort of will only that I was able to open
|
|
my eyes and look at objects. And with the opening of my eyes and the
|
|
looking came intolerable torment. Also, a great pulse was beating in
|
|
my brain. Weak and reeling, I went out through the broken window and
|
|
down the street, seeking to escape, instinctively and gropingly,
|
|
from the awful shambles. And thereafter I lived nightmare. My memory
|
|
of what happened in the succeeding hours is the memory one would
|
|
have of nightmare. Many events are focussed sharply on my brain, but
|
|
between these indelible pictures I retain are intervals of
|
|
unconsciousness. What occurred in those intervals I know not, and
|
|
never shall know.
|
|
I remember stumbling at the corner over the legs of a man. It was
|
|
the poor hunted wretch that had dragged himself past my
|
|
hiding-place. How distinctly do I remember his poor, pitiful,
|
|
gnarled hands as he lay there on the pavement- hands that were more
|
|
hoof and claw than hands, all twisted and distorted by the toil of all
|
|
his days, with on the palms a horny growth of callous a half inch
|
|
thick. And as I picked myself up and started on, I looked into the
|
|
face of the thing and saw that it still lived; for the eyes, dimly
|
|
intelligent, were looking at me and seeing me.
|
|
After that came a kindly blank. I knew nothing, saw nothing,
|
|
merely tottered on in my quest for safety. My next nightmare vision
|
|
was a quiet street of the dead. I came upon it abruptly, as a wanderer
|
|
in the country would come upon a flowing stream. Only this stream I
|
|
gazed upon did not flow. It was congealed in death. From pavement to
|
|
pavement, and covering the sidewalks, it lay there, spread out quite
|
|
evenly, with only here and there a lump or mound of bodies to break
|
|
the surface. Poor driven people of the abyss, hunted helots- they
|
|
lay there as the rabbits in California after a drive.* Up the street
|
|
and down I looked. There was no movement, no sound. The quiet
|
|
buildings looked down upon the scene from their many windows. And
|
|
once, and once only, I saw an arm that moved in that dead stream. I
|
|
swear I saw it move, with a strange writhing gesture of agony, and
|
|
with it lifted a head, gory with nameless horror, that gibbered at
|
|
me and then lay down again and moved no more.
|
|
|
|
* In those days, so sparsely populated was the land that wild
|
|
animals often became pests. In California the custom of rabbit-driving
|
|
obtained. On a given day all the farmers in a locality would
|
|
assemble and sweep across the country in converging lines, driving the
|
|
rabbits by scores of thousands into a prepared enclosure, where they
|
|
were clubbed to death by men and boys.
|
|
|
|
I remember another street, with quiet buildings on either side,
|
|
and the panic that smote me into consciousness as again I saw the
|
|
people of the abyss, but this time in a stream that flowed and came
|
|
on. And then I saw there was nothing to fear. The stream moved slowly,
|
|
while from it arose groans and lamentations, cursings, babblings of
|
|
senility, hysteria, and insanity; for these were the very young and
|
|
the very old, the feeble and the sick, the helpless and the
|
|
hopeless, all the wreckage of the ghetto. The burning of the great
|
|
ghetto on the South Side had driven them forth into the inferno of the
|
|
street-fighting, and whither they wended and whatever became of them I
|
|
did not know and never learned.*
|
|
|
|
* It was long a question of debate, whether the burning of the South
|
|
Side ghetto was accidental, or whether it was done by the Mercenaries;
|
|
but it is definitely settled now that the ghetto was fired by the
|
|
Mercenaries under orders from their chiefs.
|
|
|
|
I have faint memories of breaking a window and hiding in some shop
|
|
to escape a street mob that was pursued by soldiers. Also, a bomb
|
|
burst near me, once, in some still street, where, look as I would,
|
|
up and down, I could see no human being. But my next sharp
|
|
recollection begins with the crack of a rifle and an abrupt becoming
|
|
aware that I am being fired at by a soldier in an automobile. The shot
|
|
missed, and the next moment I was screaming and motioning the signals.
|
|
My memory of riding in the automobile is very hazy, though this
|
|
ride, in turn, is broken by one vivid picture. The crack of the
|
|
rifle of the soldier sitting beside me made me open my eyes, and I saw
|
|
George Milford, whom I had known in the Pell Street days, sinking
|
|
slowly down to the sidewalk. Even as he sank the soldier fired
|
|
again, and Milford doubled in, then flung his body out, and fell
|
|
sprawling. The soldier chuckled, and the automobile sped on.
|
|
The next I knew after that I was awakened out of a sound sleep by
|
|
a man who walked up and down close beside me. His face was drawn and
|
|
strained, and the sweat rolled down his nose from his forehead. One
|
|
hand was clutched tightly against his chest by the other hand, and
|
|
blood dripped down upon the floor as he walked. He wore the uniform of
|
|
the Mercenaries. From without, as through thick walls, came the
|
|
muffled roar of bursting bombs. I was in some building that was locked
|
|
in combat with some other building.
|
|
A surgeon came in to dress the wounded soldier, and I learned that
|
|
it was two in the afternoon. My headache was no better, and the
|
|
surgeon paused from his work long enough to give me a powerful drug
|
|
that would depress the heart and bring relief. I slept again, and
|
|
the next I knew I was on top of the building. The immediate fighting
|
|
had ceased, and I was watching the balloon attack on the fortresses.
|
|
Some one had an arm around me and I was leaning close against him.
|
|
It came to me quite as a matter of course that this was Ernest, and
|
|
I found myself wondering how he had got his hair and eyebrows so badly
|
|
singed.
|
|
It was by the merest chance that we had found each other in that
|
|
terrible city. He had had no idea that I had left New York, and,
|
|
coming through the room where I lay asleep, could not at first believe
|
|
that it was I. Little more I saw of the Chicago Commune. After
|
|
watching the balloon attack, Ernest took me down into the heart of the
|
|
building, where I slept the afternoon out and the night. The third day
|
|
we spent in the building, and on the fourth, Ernest having got
|
|
permission and an automobile from the authorities, we left Chicago.
|
|
My headache was gone, but, body and soul, I was very tired. I lay
|
|
back against Ernest in the automobile, and with apathetic eyes watched
|
|
the soldiers trying to get the machine out of the city. Fighting was
|
|
still going on, but only in isolated localities. Here and there
|
|
whole districts were still in possession of the comrades, but such
|
|
districts were surrounded and guarded by heavy bodies of troops. In
|
|
a hundred segregated traps were the comrades thus held while the
|
|
work of subjugating them went on. Subjugation meant death, for no
|
|
quarter was given, and they fought heroically to the last man.*
|
|
|
|
* Numbers of the buildings held out over a week, while one held
|
|
out eleven days. Each building had to be stormed like a fort, and
|
|
the Mercenaries fought their way upward floor by floor. It was
|
|
deadly fighting. Quarter was neither given nor taken, and in the
|
|
fighting the revolutionists had the advantage of being above. While
|
|
the revolutionists were wiped out, the loss was not one-sided. The
|
|
proud Chicago proletariat lived up to its ancient boast. For as many
|
|
of itself as were killed, it killed that many of the enemy.
|
|
|
|
Whenever we approached such localities, the guards turned us back
|
|
and sent us around. Once, the only way past two strong positions of
|
|
the comrades was through a burnt section that lay between. From either
|
|
side we could hear the rattle and roar of war, while the automobile
|
|
picked its way through smoking ruins and tottering walls. Often the
|
|
streets were blocked by mountains of debris that compelled us to go
|
|
around. We were in a labyrinth of ruin, and our progress was slow.
|
|
The stockyards (ghetto, plant, and everything) were smouldering
|
|
ruins. Far off to the right a wide smoke haze dimmed the sky,- the
|
|
town of Pullman, the soldier chauffeur told us, or what had been the
|
|
town of Pullman, for it was utterly destroyed. He had driven the
|
|
machine out there, with despatches, on the afternoon of the third day.
|
|
Some of the heaviest fighting had occurred there, he said, many of the
|
|
streets being rendered impassable by the heaps of the dead.
|
|
Swinging around the shattered walls of a building, in the stockyards
|
|
district, the automobile was stopped by a wave of dead. It was for all
|
|
the world like a wave tossed up by the sea. It was patent to us what
|
|
had happened. As the mob charged past the corner, it had been swept,
|
|
at right angles and point-blank range, by the machine-guns drawn up on
|
|
the cross street. But disaster had come to the soldiers. A chance bomb
|
|
must have exploded among them, for the mob, checked until its dead and
|
|
dying formed the wave, had white-capped and flung forward its foam
|
|
of living, fighting slaves. Soldiers and slaves lay together, torn and
|
|
mangled, around and over the wreckage of the automobiles and guns.
|
|
Ernest sprang out. A familiar pair of shoulders in a cotton shirt
|
|
and a familiar fringe of white hair had caught his eye. I did not
|
|
watch him, and it was not until he was back beside me and we were
|
|
speeding on that he said:
|
|
'It was Bishop Morehouse.'
|
|
Soon we were in the green country, and I took one last glance back
|
|
at the smoke-filled sky. Faint and far came the low thud of an
|
|
explosion. Then I turned my face against Ernest's breast and wept
|
|
softly for the Cause that was lost. Ernest's arm about me was eloquent
|
|
with love.
|
|
'For this time lost, dear heart,' he said, 'but not forever. We have
|
|
learned. To-morrow the Cause will rise again, strong with wisdom and
|
|
discipline.'
|
|
The automobile drew up at a railroad station. Here we would catch
|
|
a train to New York. As we waited on the platform, three trains
|
|
thundered past, bound west to Chicago. They were crowded with
|
|
ragged, unskilled laborers, people of the abyss.
|
|
'Slave-levies for the rebuilding of Chicago,' Ernest said. 'You see,
|
|
the Chicago slaves are all killed.'
|
|
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE.
|
|
The Terrorists.
|
|
|
|
IT WAS NOT UNTIL ERNEST and I were back in New York, and after weeks
|
|
had elapsed, that we were able to comprehend thoroughly the full sweep
|
|
of the disaster that had befallen the Cause. The situation was
|
|
bitter and bloody. In many places, scattered over the country, slave
|
|
revolts and massacres had occurred. The roll of the martyrs
|
|
increased mightily. Countless executions took place everywhere. The
|
|
mountains and waste regions were filled with outlaws and refugees
|
|
who were being hunted down mercilessly. Our own refuges were packed
|
|
with comrades who had prices on their heads. Through information
|
|
furnished by its spies, scores of our refuges were raided by the
|
|
soldiers of the Iron Heel.
|
|
Many of the comrades were disheartened, and they retaliated with
|
|
terroristic tactics. The set-back to their hopes made them
|
|
despairing and desperate. Many terrorist organizations unaffiliated
|
|
with us sprang into existence and caused us much trouble.* These
|
|
misguided people sacrificed their own lives wantonly, very often
|
|
made our own plans go astray, and retarded our organization.
|
|
|
|
* The annals of this short-lived era of despair make bloody reading.
|
|
Revenge was the ruling motive, and the members of the terroristic
|
|
organizations were careless of their own lives and hopeless about
|
|
the future. The Danites, taking their name from the avenging angels of
|
|
the Mormon mythology, sprang up in the mountains of the Great West and
|
|
spread over the Pacific Coast from Panama to Alaska. The Valkyries
|
|
were women. They were the most terrible of all. No woman was
|
|
eligible for membership who had not lost near relatives at the hands
|
|
of the Oligarchy. They were guilty of torturing their prisoners to
|
|
death. Another famous organization of women was The Widows of War. A
|
|
companion organization to the Valkyries was the Berserkers. These
|
|
men placed no value whatever upon their own lives, and it was they who
|
|
totally destroyed the great Mercenary city of Bellona along with its
|
|
population of over a hundred thousand souls. The Bedlamites and the
|
|
Helldamites were twin slave organizations, while a new religious
|
|
sect that did not flourish long was called The Wrath of God. Among
|
|
others, to show the whimsicality of their deadly seriousness, may be
|
|
mentioned the following: The Bleeding Hearts, Sons of the Morning, the
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Morning Stars, The Flamingoes, The Triple Triangles, The Three Bars,
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The Rubonics, The Vindicators, The Comanches, and the Erebusites.
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And through it all moved the Iron Heel, impassive and deliberate,
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shaking up the whole fabric of the social structure in its search
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for the comrades, combing out the Mercenaries, the labor castes, and
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all its secret services, punishing without mercy and without malice,
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suffering in silence all retaliations that were made upon it, and
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filling the gaps in its fighting line as fast as they appeared. And
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hand in hand with this, Ernest and the other leaders were hard at work
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reorganizing the forces of the Revolution. The magnitude of the task
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may be understood when it is taken into*
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* This is the end of the Everhard Manuscript. It breaks off abruptly
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in the middle of a sentence. She must have received warning of the
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coming of the Mercenaries, for she had time safely to hide the
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Manuscript before she fled or was captured. It is to be regretted that
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she did not live to complete her narrative, for then, undoubtedly,
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would have been cleared away the mystery that has shrouded for seven
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centuries the execution of Ernest Everhard.
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THE END
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