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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #56095 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/56095)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Janus in Modern Life, by W. M. Flinders Petrie
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Janus in Modern Life
-
-Author: W. M. Flinders Petrie
-
-Release Date: December 1, 2017 [EBook #56095]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JANUS IN MODERN LIFE ***
-
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-Produced by Larry B. Harrison, MFR and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
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-
-
-
- JANUS IN MODERN LIFE
-
-
-
-
- JANUS
- IN
- MODERN LIFE
-
- BY
- W. M. FLINDERS PETRIE
- D.C.L., LL.D., F.R.S., F.B.A., &c.
-
- _Fools only learn by their own experience,
- Wise men learn by the experience of others._
-
- LONDON:
- ARCHIBALD CONSTABLE & CO. LTD.
- 10 ORANGE STREET, LEICESTER SQUARE W.C.
- 1907.
-
-
-
-
-"There are two roads to reformation for mankind—one through
-misfortunes of their own, the other through those of others; the former
-is the more unmistakable, the latter the less painful.... For it is
-history, and history alone, which, without involving us in actual
-danger, will mature our judgment, and prepare us to take right views,
-whatever may be the crisis or the posture of affairs."
-
- POLYBIUS.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-These papers essay an understanding of some of the various principles
-which underlie the course of political movements in the present age.
-There is no attempt at introducing any considerations which are
-not familiar to every intelligent person, nor any comparisons with
-other instances which are not already well known in history. Why
-considerations which seem so obvious when stated, should yet not be
-familiar, may perhaps be due to the estrangement between science and
-corporate life, which is an unhappy feature of a time of transition
-both in education and in motives.
-
-The point of view here is that of public and general conditions and
-not of private variations of beliefs. Such moral factors, though
-all important to the individual, are not so much the subject of
-the direct physical causes and effects which are here considered.
-Similarly the beneficial result of private benevolence is not added
-to these considerations, because it is largely outside of the effects
-of conduct, and finds its good in amending or neutralising the evil
-consequences of various actions. It will always have its scope, but in
-opposition to, rather than in concert with, the direct effects which we
-are here to consider.
-
-Too often the objections to various new views are based upon some
-sentiment of one party, rather than upon the reason which is common to
-all parties. Here, on the contrary, the aim is to consider the natural
-consequences of various actions, apart from personal opinion, and
-therefore on a common ground which all readers can equally accept.
-
-The position of a partisan or an advocate has been avoided so far as
-possible. No doubt to many of the statements and deductions here, one
-party or another would cry, Anathema. As a whole the results are more
-in accord with Individualism than with Collectivism; but an attempt
-is made to trace what are the limits of a Collectivism that may not
-involve deleterious consequences. It may seem a fault to many minds
-that no cut and dried definite system or course of action is advocated;
-many people prefer a medicine which is guaranteed to relieve all
-their complaints, instead of a physiological research on the obscure
-causes of their troubles. But, if we are to advance, we must study
-the diseases of bodies politic with the same disinterestedness, and
-somewhat of the same unfeeling temper, as that of the physiologist in
-dealing with "animated nature." Such a line of study will be useless
-to the politician, so long as he is an opportunist or a placeman;
-and useless to the socialist, so long as he refuses to learn by the
-experience of others.
-
-The present time seems to most people so infinitely more important
-to them than the past or future, that they are impatient at the
-introduction of comparisons which seem to reflect upon their immediate
-judgment, or of anticipations which would check their present
-gratification. They forget that it is only a fiction to speak of the
-present, an infinitely thin division between what has been and that
-which will be. Every step of the past has been a present, living,
-urgent, imperative, to the whole world; and every such present has
-been entirely conditioned by its past, just as the future to us is
-conditioned by our present. If any race now cares to learn somewhat
-from its own past, and that of others, it may benefit its own future;
-if it prefers a blind selfishness, a better race will be welcomed to
-its place.
-
-Janus, who looked to the past and to the future, was the god whose
-temple stood always open during war, that he might bring peace upon
-earth. And in our day it is only the view of the past and the future
-which can warn us of evils to come, and save us from violence and
-confusion.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- PAGE
-
- PREFACE v
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
- CHARACTER, THE BASIS OF SOCIETY.
-
- Production of character the most important object, p. 1. The
- known conditions of physical variation, p. 2. Mental equivalents
- of physical variation in (1) benefits of ability, p. 4; (2)
- Inheritance, p. 4; (3) Artificial increase of variation, p. 5;
- (4) Excitement of variation, p. 6; (5) Gain by use, p. 6;
- (6) Loss by atrophy, p. 7; (7) Variation made permanent by
- competition, p. 10. Immutability of general type, physical and
- mental, p. 11.
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
- PRESENT CHANGES OF CHARACTER.
-
- Loss of national character by emigration, p. 13; by promotion
- of sloth, p. 16. Lack of adaptability, p. 16. Low type of
- public pleasure, p. 17. Repression of character by communism,
- p. 20. Conditions of successful communism, p. 20. Communism
- in early Christianity, p. 23. Intense competition
- among herbivora, p. 25. Communism fatalistic, p. 26.
- Destruction of character by municipal communism, p. 26.
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
- TRADE UNIONISM, ITS FLOWER AND FRUITION.
-
- Town influence in Rome, p. 28. Decay of the country, p. 29.
- Growth of trade unions, p. 30. Trade unions compulsory, p. 30.
- Cheap production for the proletariat, p. 32. Sharing of proletariat
- burden by a trade, p. 32. All property hypothecated to
- the Trade Unions, p. 33. The social burden the destruction of
- Rome, p. 34. The growth of the little-Italy party, p. 35. Devolution
- of government, p. 36. The state regulation of prices and
- wages, p. 37.
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
- REVOLUTION OR EVOLUTION?
-
- Great effects best produced by small causes, p. 40. Revolution
- leads to greater tyranny, p. 40; also leads to military
- despotism, p. 41. Radical changes show ignorance, p. 42.
- Scope to be allowed for gradual change, p. 43. Variability
- tolerated by bye-laws, p. 44. Effects of small changes as seen
- in Death Duties and reduced colonising power, p. 44. Income
- tax and expulsion of trade, p. 47; benefits of taxing extravagance,
- p. 52; Irish tenant right, p. 53; high interest on loans,
- p. 55; equalisation of land values, p. 56; growth of cities, p. 57.
- Effect of workmen's compensation, p. 58; of old age pensions,
- p. 59; of state help for children, p. 60. Effects of wealth in the
- hands of different classes, p. 60.
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
- THE NEED OF DIVERSITY.
-
- Variability needful for advance of a species, p. 65. Large
- states a necessary result of rapid communication, p. 66. Diversity
- needed therefore within the state, as well as between
- states, p. 67. No moral obligation to uniformity, p. 67.
- Separate states needed for a doubled-centred diversity, p. 70.
- Diversity as yet remaining in marriage-law and custom, p. 71.
- Society a mixture of many past stages of culture, p. 72. Present
- education a bar to progress by diversity, p. 73. Need of diversity
- in education, p. 75.
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
- LINES OF ADVANCE.
-
- Personal initiative essential, p. 78. Prevention of waste the
- main principle of advance, p. 79. Gain in health, p. 79. Gain
- in amount of activities of life, p. 80. Gain in rapidity, p. 81.
- Gain by working instead of playing, p. 81. Gain by saving
- waste in renewal, p. 83. Gain by permanent marriage, p. 84.
- Gain by high-tending of families, p. 85. Gain by improving or
- weeding of bad stocks, p. 86. Gain by individualism, p. 89.
- Gain by free combinations, p. 92. Gain by international
- labour, p. 93. The meaning of war, by trade, by armament,
- and by violence, p. 95. Improvement of checks, p. 99. The
- ultimate type of states, p. 100. The ultimate type of man,
- p. 101.
-
-
- INDEX 105
-
-
-
-
-JANUS IN MODERN LIFE.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-CHARACTER, THE BASIS OF SOCIETY.
-
-
-In considering or designing any kind of work the first and most
-essential condition is the quality of material that has to be used.
-"You cannot make a silk purse out of a sow's ear." And what is
-true materially is true also mentally; the character of a people
-is the essential basis of all their institutions and government.
-If we intend to consider what improvements are possible, or what
-degradations may occur, we must treat the matter entirely as a question
-of character. "For forms of Government let fools contest, whate'er
-is best administered is best," and the administration depends upon
-the character of the people. We see on all sides that races of a
-low character necessarily pass, by the force of events, under the
-domination of other races who have a higher or stronger character. It
-is the quality of the race which is the most essential and determining
-factor in its history. That every nation has the kind of government
-which it deserves, is an old remark, which implies that its character
-determines its fate. The diligent but cautious Scot; the slovenly
-Slovene; the self-deceived Gaul; the tediously complete and logical
-German; these all show the manner in which their administration is the
-product of the individual character. Further, happiness is essentially
-dependent upon character, and is—by comparison—determined by
-character alone, almost apart from external circumstances.
-
-It is therefore a matter of the first importance to consider how
-character is produced or modified. Possibly to some it may appear
-presumptuous to apply to the mind those natural laws which it is
-now generally agreed apply to bodily development. Yet even the
-probabilities of chance distribution may be shown to apply to the
-varieties of mind; both by rough observation in general, and also
-by a test case quantitatively applied (see _Religion and Conscience
-in Ancient Egypt_). A feeling against this treatment of the mind
-by material law is based on the idea that it implies an absence of
-free-will. But, to take an illustration, a railway company may be
-certain of carrying very closely the same number of passengers each
-day, without in the least embarrassing the free-will of any passenger
-as to whether or no he will travel. Let us notice, therefore, how
-the various principles of physical modification are applicable also
-to mental change. Whether it may be that changes take place by the
-inheritance of acquired characteristics, or whether they occur solely
-by accidental variation which proves beneficial, is a much debated
-question which is not requisite for us to settle here. It is agreed
-that in the physical life of all animals it may be seen that: (1)
-Favourable variations give a determining advantage to one individual
-over another, or to one more than another against a common enemy; (2)
-Useful variations tend to be maintained in successive generations;
-(3) Artificial conditions tend to produce variation; (4) Greater
-variability accompanies unusual developments; (5) Growth is directed
-and encouraged by use; and (6), as the total activity is limited,
-therefore disuse causes atrophy and degradation, by favouring of parts
-more used. To these follows the important corollary (7): Variation
-being only of benefit where there is competition in which it gives an
-advantage, its improvements will cease to be maintained in the absence
-of competition; it is only competition which makes improved variations
-permanent. For instance, if there were no carnivora the swifter deer
-would not have found their pace a benefit, and there would be no
-sufficient cause for their attaining their present swiftness. In place
-of looking on selection as merely a struggle we must look on it as the
-sole physical means of permanent elevation, the motor which has raised
-every species to its present point of ability.
-
-To these principles common to all organic nature must be added another
-which is almost peculiar to man alone. We often hear that environment
-is the determinant of the nature of both animals and man. But the
-distinctive quality of man is the subjection of the environment to the
-ruling faculty; man is not necessarily conditioned by his environment,
-but a direct measure of his civilisation is the extent to which he
-creates his own conditions. Other communal animals, as the ant, the
-bee, or the beaver, have anticipated this to some extent; but in man
-alone can the ruling faculty rise to an entire reversal of almost
-every condition of environment.
-
-The mental equivalents of these physical modifications are obviously
-true in common experience and in historical example.
-
-(1) That a favourable variation of mind gives a determining advantage
-needs no illustration, as every sharp and able man of business has
-shown this in all ages.
-
-(2) That mental qualities are inherited has been pretty generally
-recognised, and the work of Galton on Hereditary Genius has enforced
-this by statistical example. But the historical consequences have not
-been sufficiently noticed; for it is obviously possible by selective
-action to increase or diminish not only the bodily activity but
-also the mental ability seen in the whole community. The series of
-proscriptions of all the leading men of Rome, alternately on one side
-and then on the other, from Marius down to Octavius, was so disastrous
-a drain of political ability, that only the Julian family was left; and
-there was never an able emperor of Roman ancestry after that line was
-extinct. The expulsion of the Huguenots from France drained it of the
-active middle class minds, and left the great gap in the continuity of
-sympathy which made the Revolution possible. The later expulsion or
-extermination also of the active upper class minds drained that land of
-nearly all the hereditary ability of the race: the consequence has been
-to leave at the present day a nation of mediocrities, among whom there
-is but a fraction of the genius seen in Germany and England on either
-side of it. Almost every leading name is that of a foreigner, as for
-instance Waddington, Zurlinden, Eiffel, Reinach, Rothschild, Gambetta,
-Maspero. Another very important consideration is that sporadic ability
-is not inherited in the same manner as long continued family ability.
-Not a single Roman Emperor who rose solely from his individual powers
-left a worthy and capable son. The Gordians were a good senatorial
-family, and ran through three generations on the throne. In England
-the same thing is seen. The main source of new men of ability is from
-sturdy Puritan or Quaker stocks that have long practised self-denial
-and hard work; old families with long traditions of public service
-continue usually on the same line of ability; but the _nouveaux riches_
-who have sprung forward on some lucky speculation or trade enterprise
-usually go hopelessly to pieces in the next generation. The longer a
-useful type has been maintained the more stable it is.
-
-(3) That artificial conditions tend to produce variation is obvious
-in every civilisation. The more intense is the artificiality of life,
-the greater are the extremes of ability and incompetence, of riches
-and poverty, accompanying it. It is often a problem to kind hearts
-that there should be such misery and degradation side by side with the
-ease and welfare of civilisation. The answer is that it is inevitable,
-because the very same artificiality which gives scope to the capable
-to rise, equally gives scope for the incapable to fall. Every chance,
-every opening, every benefit attainable by exertion, is a means of
-advance to him who uses it; but it is accompanied by equal chances of
-failure, equal openings to loss, equal injuries resulting from sloth,
-which are the equally sure means of degradation for those who have
-not the wit or energy to avoid them. The "submerged tenth" is the
-inevitable complement of the leading tenth.
-
-(4) Greater variability of mind accompanies unusual development;
-this is seen in the great outbursts of mental activity which have
-occurred along with external expansion in the times of Elizabeth and of
-Victoria. Or in earlier times the growth of Greek literature following
-the Periclean expansion, or of Roman literature with the Augustan
-settlement of the world.
-
-(5) Mental growth is directed and encouraged by use. This fact is so
-obvious that it is proverbial, as in the saying, "The mind grows by
-what it feeds upon." All mental training and teaching recognise this,
-but it is true in later life as well as in youth. It is well known
-how in the least civilised races small children are as advanced—or
-more so—than in higher races. The Australian is said to come to a
-standstill at ten or twelve years old. The Egyptian seldom advances
-mentally after sixteen. A low-class Englishman does not improve after
-twenty or so. A capable man will continue to expand till thirty or
-forty. And the man of the greatest capacity will continue to grow
-mentally, and assimilate new lines of thought, until seventy or eighty.
-
-Thus the greater the power of use and the activity of the mind, the
-longer will it continue to grow. This may well be regarded as one of
-the main tests of a great mind; and it is strictly in accord with the
-system of the well-known embryonic changes passing from lower to higher
-stages, and continuing to grow in development into higher and higher
-types. The savage ceased to grow mentally even while in childhood; the
-sage continues the expansion of mind to extreme old age.
-
-(6) Disuse of mind causes atrophy and degradation. This principle
-is one of the most important of all in its practical bearings. The
-familiar figure of the later Merovings, the _rois fainéants_, is
-an historical example: freed from all necessity of thought by the
-assiduity of the mayors of the palace, the family mind atrophied
-further in each generation, until the king became a puppet without
-volition in royal affairs. The same working may be seen in the
-upper classes of many countries, where the spur of the necessity
-of action ceases. Within a century of the cessation of the Moorish
-wars the chivalry of Spain began to atrophy; the same was seen in a
-century after the cessation of civil war in France. In England the
-strong tradition of training for the public careers in the civil and
-military services and parliament, has saved the upper classes more
-than elsewhere. But a rich family without active interests almost
-always shows atrophy of mind. There is a fine saying of Mencius,
-"Those whom God destines for some great part, He first chastens by
-suffering and toil." The same tendency to atrophy is equally seen in
-the lower classes, when the necessity of self-help is removed. And many
-of the modern movements have been of a degrading tendency, leading
-to the holding back of the capable and the artificial help of the
-incapable. It is obvious that if persons have retrograded and got into
-difficulties, they are presumably less capable than those around them.
-If then they are relieved independently of their own exertions, their
-incapacity is fostered and they retrograde still further. To compensate
-them for their incapacity by relief works, by farm colonies, by outdoor
-relief doles, by maintenance of their children, will inevitably lead
-to further atrophy of mind. The doctrine of equality of wages in a
-trade is a double injury, it encourages the most incapable man that can
-possibly squeeze into the trade, and it discourages the capable man who
-is worth far more than the average. It must tend to drive capable men
-out of the trades which they might have raised by their example and
-stimulus, into other lines where capacity can still earn its value.
-The mental atrophy that has come over ordinary workmen is appalling,
-at least in the region of London. In case after case, the common sense
-and intelligence seems to have been entirely lost, and the grossest
-blunders will be made by well-paid men; and it is safe to say that in
-most business a really capable and active man can do from three to six
-times as much as the average workman, beside avoiding the loss of time
-by mistakes. In short a certified ease of conditions, and absence of
-direct penalties of incapacity, has atrophied the ordinary working mind
-to a point which is dangerously low in comparison with that of other
-races. The remedy lies in training the incapable by a stern discipline
-of gradually teaching them the maximum that they can perform in the
-day, with good direction and avoidance of bad conditions. After a
-couple of years of such intensive training they should be drafted into
-ordinary factories, with the warning that if they fall out of work
-again, another year's compulsory hard training will be the result.
-
-In another way this atrophy of mind may be seen and felt as a temporary
-condition by members of boards and committees. What is everyone's
-business is nobody's business; and when each person feels that he is
-not personally responsible, a numbness and inaction ensues which is
-characteristic of such bodies. Men, any one of whom would act sensibly
-when alone, will succumb to the paralysing sense that they need not
-think because nine other men are doing so, and the results are well
-known as characterising these assemblies which have "neither a body to
-be kicked nor a soul to be damned." There are very few public bodies
-which are not really dependent on the individual thought and design of
-one person, criticised and amended by the collateral views of others.
-In short, all action and rule must be personal and not corporate,
-however much the person may be checked and controlled by general
-opinion of the public, or of a restricted body. Without personal
-initiative atrophy is the result.
-
-Another great theatre of mental atrophy is officialism, where a man
-is bound to follow certain rules and routine rather than to think.
-A German has remarked to me that a man who is perfectly reasonable
-and intelligent in private life becomes quite foolish as soon as he
-enters his office. This constant result is the strongest reason for not
-extending official control of affairs needlessly, or the management
-of public work by officials. Private enterprise will always be more
-effective than an official system, because it is solely the result of
-individual initiative. The enormous monopolies of railways in England
-are on the whole far more beneficial to the public than the State
-railways of other countries. The evils of corporate monopoly, checked
-by law and supervision of the Board of Trade, are less than the evil of
-stagnation by official atrophy. In the Republic of France the principal
-line runs its best trains slower than, and at three times the cost of,
-the best trains on great English lines.
-
-(7) It is only competition which makes permanent the improved mental
-variations which occur. The evils of competition in physical things
-almost disappear in the mental field; and, unless misused as in a
-foolishly designed examination, there seems an unmixed benefit from
-unlimited competition of mind. It is only by such competition that
-higher types of ability have been established in the past, and it is
-to such that we must look for future improvement. It is true that in
-various directions we find a dislike of competition; but that is the
-surest sign that it is effective, and therefore beneficial to the whole
-body.
-
-We see then that each of those principles which rule in physical
-modification is equally true of mental modification.
-
-But though the modes of mental variation may be fairly clear, we
-must not be carried away by the view that therefore great changes in
-man are to be expected. The effects of various conditions upon the
-body are tolerably familiar, yet the average form of man has varied
-extraordinarily little during ten thousand years. The highest type
-of ancient man differs almost inappreciably from the highest type of
-modern man, certainly by not a tenth of the difference that may be seen
-between different types at present. It may be practically said that man
-is at a standstill in physical development. Sanitary improvements and
-better feeding may do great things, but they leave the essential form
-and constitution unaltered. The same is true of mind. When we become
-familiar with details of early ages nothing is more astonishing than
-to see how unaltered the mind of man is in its essentials. In tales
-and maxims six thousand years old we see not only the common stock of
-primary instincts, but also the _finesse_ of conduct in public life,
-the modes of ensuring respect in dealing with superiors and inferiors,
-the attention to very varied elements of character, and a fine suavity
-and kindliness pervading the whole. There is not a single class or a
-single public body at present that practically stands as high as the
-ideal of two hundred generations ago. And when we look at the material
-civilisation we see still farther back the appreciation of qualities of
-work which only a very small proportion of mankind care for now. The
-overwhelming zeal for minute accuracy was as perfect a mental state at
-4700 B.C. as it is in a Royal Society paper of our day. The subject
-and the method have changed; but the mental attitude is the same in a
-man who demanded, and in those who executed, beautifully true plane
-surfaces, and long measurements exact to far within the variation of
-size caused by a hot or a cold day, and the men now who triangulate
-a continent and measure the world. The mind is the same, only the
-stock-in-trade of it has increased. At the beginning of history the
-palaces were adorned with table services cut in the hardest and most
-beautiful stones, exquisitely formed and polished; and such homes
-were assuredly inhabited by men whose tastes and artistic sense were
-closely the same as the best of ours, and who would, like us, have
-revolted at most of the products of the present time. Not only was
-there the body of highly skilled and intelligent men to do such work,
-but there must have been a widely spread standard of taste demanding
-this exquisite work as an aesthetic pleasure. The nature of mind is
-unchanged, its motives, its feelings, its sense of life; only in
-knowledge and the applications of it do we differ from the earliest
-civilisation that we can trace.
-
-It is, therefore, quite unreal for us to anticipate any change in the
-essential nature of man in the next few thousand years. The increase
-of knowledge and its applications will not alter that nature, or the
-relation of mind to mind. We shall still desire and admire the same
-things, and be moved by the same impulses; and we may neglect as
-ignorant dreams all speculations about any essential changes in the
-motives or constitution of man.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-PRESENT CHANGES OF CHARACTER.
-
-
-Having now seen how the fluctuations of amendment or deterioration
-of character, are subject to the same common laws as those of the
-variation of physical structure, we are in a position to see more
-clearly the effect of gradual changes around us in England. Emigration
-has been very active in the past three generations, and immigration has
-recently become important. The loss of the earliest emigrants who moved
-for religious and political reasons affected the national character
-very little; there was plenty of solid character remaining in England,
-and the removal of the more disputatious elements gave added strength
-to those who continued at home. The compulsory emigration of convicts
-was similarly a gain by removing those who were most out of harmony
-with the majority. Happily those whose characters made it most irksome
-to them to comply with the legal formulae of life at home, were just
-those best suited for the type of a new country, less restrained and
-more varied, with greater scope for enterprise. So far there had been
-a gain by removal of the two extreme types. But then succeeded a most
-serious movement of the voluntary selection of persons who thought that
-their energies would have a better and more remunerative scope in the
-colonies. This implied a draining away of those who had intelligence
-to choose a more promising career, energy to break with their
-present life and start afresh, and who possessed most adaptability,
-self-reliance, and hopefulness. All of these qualities are greatly
-needed at home for a prosperous population; and the incessant natural
-selection from the general mass, and removal of those who had most
-of such qualities, must have produced a serious effect on the home
-population. We see in England undoubtedly a lessening of sturdiness
-as a whole, and the deficiency of the abilities which have been most
-exported. There is a general outcry about the lack of adaptability in
-business; and the general want of self-reliance is shown by all the
-grandmotherly legislation which is sought and granted. At first we
-succeeded in getting rid of some amount of less desirable stock along
-with the capable stock; but in later years most countries will not
-admit any but good stock, and we lose the valuable examples of national
-character without any compensation. The drain of capacity from the
-nation is a most serious feature of life in England; and how far the
-prominence of the "submerged tenth," and the large proportion who live
-only a week's remove from starvation, is due to the lowering of the
-standard of capacity by the emigration of the more capable, is a very
-important question. The same consideration applies to Ireland in a far
-more acute form, as the emigration has been of much larger proportions.
-
-A large immigration into England has recently grown up. So far as this
-is of more energetic men, who see their way to win over our heads,
-they should be welcomed. The German who comes to England to establish
-factories and exploit the English market is at least a gain to the
-country, as it is far better he should do this in England rather than
-expend all that energy and management out of England. The trade and
-manufacture of England have been largely built up by immigrations of
-Flemings, Huguenots, Dutch, French, and now Germans, who have each
-contributed to our capacity for work. In commercial business the
-foreign influence is strong. In north-west London one-tenth of the
-private residents are of German origin. A movement is going on quite
-comparable to other great race movements of past history; but it only
-affects the upper classes, and not the hand-labourer. Beside this there
-is the large movement of the lowest and most depressed mass of European
-humanity, from the sink of poverty in Poland and Western Russia. It is
-essentially a bad stock, one of the lowest in Europe; and the large
-proportion of criminal cases arising among these immigrants shows how
-undesirable they are. To allow such a low type free settlement in
-England, after draining the capable Englishmen to the colonies, makes a
-serious danger of a national collapse under a sudden pressure of some
-new circumstances, which might arise by trade or warfare.
-
-Some other consequences which flow from recent changes will be dealt
-with in the fourth chapter in considering the effects of small causes.
-
-The low type of character prevailing in all classes in England at
-present needs to be fully recognised. No doubt there has been in
-past centuries more external coarseness, and this detail strikes the
-attention of many people because it differs from their own present
-convention. But mere directness and plainness of speech is quite
-immaterial compared with the essentials of working power of mind and
-body, and the capacity for intelligent interests. Some centuries ago,
-when men thought more about the quality of their actions, sloth was
-ranked as one of the seven deadly sins. But now, in place of regarding
-it as anything wrong, there is an elaborate system of compulsory sloth;
-it is enforced by heavy penalties, and drilled into the character by
-example and self-interest. One man is forbidden to lay more than three
-hundred bricks a day, another forbidden to make more than so many glass
-dishes, another forbidden to attend to more than one machine. In every
-trade where a selfish short-sighted policy has gained its way, there
-is this system, which is doing inconceivable harm to character. The
-compulsory glorification of sloth is the most deleterious misfortune
-that can happen to a nation. The wreck of wars, pestilence and famine,
-will leave a more hopeful prospect than that of a people sunk in
-organised sloth.
-
-Connected with this is the strange lack of thought and adaptability in
-common matters of everyday life. The daily loss of time, and cost in
-trivial matters, which affects thousands of persons, makes a heavy tax
-on the whole. For instance, such a simple matter as putting the offices
-of a terminal station at the ends of the platforms is still ignored
-at many termini; the name of a station is often hard to find, and is
-never once put up in most termini; the price of a ticket is often not
-to be discovered; the right types of carriages are only now being
-tried, after persevering in a wrong form for two generations. In the
-streets the same lack of sense is seen in the immense omnibus system,
-which is difficult to use, especially for strangers, owing to the lack
-of numbered routes and conveyances. It has been officially decided
-that the numbering of routes and omnibuses is beyond the powers of
-the London County Council; and we must be compensated by the pleasing
-reflection that something at least is too hard for that body. The
-thoughtless edict however was enforced that every vehicle must carry a
-white light in front, and all the distinctive colours of the tram-car
-lights were abolished, causing great inconvenience at night. Even in
-the most recent appliances the same dulness is shown; electric fans
-are commonly placed where they only stir foul air, and not where they
-draw in fresh or expel used air. The whole lighting system still throws
-away two thirds of all its cost by lighting sky and walls as much as
-streets. In every direction it seems hard to believe that five minutes'
-thought has been given to matters costing thousands of pounds. If we
-traced such a mixture of design and of chance in any other subject it
-would lead to some curious speculations on the implied limitations of
-the directing Intellect. And in private matters it is the same; the
-extraordinary blunders and oversights in common trade work show that
-the most obvious details have not had a minute's real thought given
-to their arrangement. The result is an accumulation of difficulty and
-muddle which cripples, if not destroys, the purpose of the work. This
-persistent dulness, and incapacity for management and design, shows a
-defect of character which is a heavy detriment to the whole community.
-
-The pleasures of the public show the same low type as their business.
-The illustrated papers that are read, apart from serious news, are a
-revelation of the vacuity of the public mind, as the advertisements
-are a testimony to its imbecility. The absence of any thoughts or
-information that can enlarge the mind, or give it fresh insight or
-understanding, and the fatuity of the illustrations, show the helpless
-little round of common ideas of the well-to-do classes: while the
-dishing up of legal filth for the lower classes, and the morbid love of
-trivial accidents and catastrophes, shows terribly the mere animalism
-which fills their horizon. The one subject on which most print is spent
-is that which is absolutely futile, sport and games. Whether one group
-of men, selected by mere accident, is a minute trifle more active than
-another accidental group, is a matter of such utter insignificance that
-it would seem impossible to suppose that anyone would turn the head to
-see the result decided. Yet such questions absorb most of the interests
-and spare thoughts and reading of a great part—perhaps the greater
-part—of the population, just as the races of the circus swamped all
-other interests of the decadent Roman. The results which they crave for
-cannot possibly mean anything to the present or to the future, as the
-selection is merely due to accidental causes. Even a lower depth is the
-relative excellence of two horses which are completely unknown to the
-persons who speculate on them. The utter waste of thought and print in
-such interests is a form of insanity which is worse than a drug habit,
-as it implies a hopeless atrophy of the mind to interests which would
-help it or develop it.
-
-The whole interest of betting on sport, and also of gambling, is
-another evidence of an unwholesome condition. It implies a craving
-for excitement apart from personal exertion, which is always a bane
-to character; it involves the idea of gain apart from labour of mind
-or body, which is demoralising to the sense of work; it results in
-unearned fluctuations, which induce a wasteful habit; and it is based
-on the essentially ungentlemanly principle of benefiting by the loss
-of another, whereas all honourable gain is by the sharing of the
-benefits of labour. If a large part of the public are determined on
-deteriorating in this manner, it might be better for the community to
-satisfy it by public lottery, where one party is the government, which
-at least removes the last-named serious detriment to character. The
-gaming at Monte Carlo is moral compared with promiscuous betting.
-
-The objections to such forms of interest are perhaps too often urged by
-moralists who wish to cause an alteration in the customs around them.
-Even if we can care for the benefit of persons with such interests,
-certainly we are not likely to make any difference to them by talking
-on the subject. But as students of diseased society we may take a deep
-interest in such forms of aberration as a pathologist may in a case
-of cancer. And it is difficult to feel any particular wish to change
-habits which so obviously belong to a bad stock that is hardly worth
-improving. The best hope is that the unmitigated results of such mental
-disease may quickly have full effect on the type, and result in its
-extermination before a better class or better race. So far as cure
-is possible, the most hopeful direction is by an increase of useful
-and beneficial interests, which will make such vapid and senseless
-amusements decay by mere disgust.
-
-The distaste for work and craving for amusement extends beyond the
-above limits in a manner very deleterious to character. It is a feature
-of a decaying civilisation, as shown on the later Mykenaean frescoes,
-and the rage for the circus in later Roman times. Besides the waste of
-time and labour, it acts injuriously in producing a restless incapable
-type of mind, brought more forward lately in motoring; and also by
-creating a false social atmosphere, in which the business of life is
-contemned and treated as a drudgery, instead of being a main subject of
-interest and emulation. As the shrewd Carl Peters remarks on English
-society, "Nobody can fail to be struck by its utter recklessness and
-shallowness," and "an increasing objection to labour is noticeable
-right through the British nation."
-
-These various forms of a low type of character are on the increase, and
-it does not seem at all likely that they will be checked, except by
-great disasters which remove the less capable part of the population,
-and compel the rest to adopt a more energetic mode of life.
-
-Among the various movements which are by some expected to benefit
-character, the communistic ideals have enthusiastic support. But it
-must be remembered that all such types of society tend to repress
-ability. If any form of communism is to succeed there must be a fixed
-minimum of labour compulsory on each member; and it is certain that
-human nature will take the minimum limit as all that need be done. The
-tendency will be to drag down all energy to the speed of the weakest.
-Moreover, if there is to be any private _peculium_ outside of the share
-of common produce, the able man will at once rise into a capitalist; if
-no private _peculium_ is tolerated it is certain that ability will be
-driven out to other lands, or to other lines of life where communism
-cannot be enforced. It must always be kept in view that mediocrity
-hates ability, wherever it comes into comparison or competition; and
-in a uniform community, mediocrity must be dominant, and ability
-persecuted.
-
-Again the communistic type tends to repress variation and diversity
-by making everyone subject to the control of the dull average; and
-this repression is most fatal to due advance by natural selection of
-beneficial variation. We may see in France how a centralised management
-by the State accompanies the lack of enterprise in affairs. It is
-notorious that in business the French will not spend freely on creating
-new openings and encouraging new demand. Probably the habit of mind and
-the type of government act and react by one intensifying the other.
-
-Where we can study an actual working system of communism in such a
-climate as our own, we see that it only succeeded by some elaborate
-and very forcible regulations. To outsiders, ignorant of the machine,
-the less advanced states of society are generally supposed to be very
-simple, and to leave a large amount of liberty. On the contrary,
-whenever a barbaric or savage society is really understood, the
-complexity which is essential to its success is seen to be even greater
-than among ourselves. The movement of society has been from an earlier
-complexity of special restriction, to a later generalised simplicity.
-The whole of northern Europe appears to have had a very similar system
-of communal organisation, which has been mainly brought to light by the
-researches of Dr. Seebohm. The peace was kept by making every relation
-of a man responsible for his actions; either wounding in any degree,
-or murder, had to be compounded for by fines extending even to distant
-cousins, which were payable to the similar relations of the injured
-or murdered man. The immediate male relatives, father, son, brother,
-and first cousin, were responsible for two-thirds of the blood money,
-and other relations to the fifteenth degree made up the remainder.
-Thus the criminal law was communal in a full sense; and injuries were
-fully compensated in a manner which made every man his brother's keeper
-in a real communism. How would modern admirers of communism like to
-undertake the responsibilities of making up for the misdeeds of every
-relative? Yet that is an essential part of communal duties.
-
-The poor-law system, as revealed in the Norse laws, was that all
-the poorer men were bound to do a certain amount of work for their
-chief, like the payment of taxes at present, which amounts now to
-more than a month's work in the year. In return the chief was bound
-to see that they were insured against extreme-poverty or distress.
-They were free to accumulate wealth if they had the ability to do so,
-but their bargains and marriages had to be ratified by the chief in
-order to safeguard them from the follies of incapacity. When a man
-wished to resign this position of insurance against misfortune there
-was no objection to his independence, and he could do so on paying
-a small fee, and having a feast with the chief and witnesses. But if
-after that he played the fool, and his family came to naught, no one
-was responsible for them, as he had resigned his insurance. There
-was but one course left, a wide grave in the churchyard received the
-whole family alive, and only the one who survived longest had the
-right to live at the cost of his chief afterwards. Such was the price
-of communal support; and this decisive treatment, even in Christian
-times, ensured the sturdiness of the hardy Norseman, by effectively
-weeding the incapable. This was the practical working of the communal
-system which did not check ability, and which succeeded in our
-climate in past times. It needed a fuller organisation of penalties
-and obligations than our present individualism; and whether any
-communism could permanently succeed with less compulsion may gravely
-be doubted. In using the terms Socialism and Communism they are taken
-here in their widest sense, as referring to all the courses opposed to
-individualism. Such is the general usage of our language at present,
-and we cannot restrict these terms solely to extreme views, as some of
-their advocates would wish. Moreover, it is the influence of views on
-practical life that we are considering, and not an ideal state which
-never has been realised, and probably never can be put in practice.
-
-A favourite idea has been that the New Testament teaching favours
-communism. To many such an authority would be decisive; and those who
-would not accept it as authoritative, must consider that the teaching
-is at least that of men who had such an instinctive knowledge of human
-nature, and such sympathy with the springs of action, that their views
-have held Western man more firmly than any other system. The first
-point to notice in looking at the teaching, is that it was given to
-a very severely selected group of persons. The early disciples were
-one of the hardest-weeded bodies of men that ever existed, like the
-Huguenots or the Quakers; ready perception, hearty conscientiousness,
-and a will to do right at all costs were the first qualifications,
-and incessant persecution from various sides weeded out all those who
-had no deep root of character. To such a body temporary communism was
-almost a need of existence at starting; all the causes and characters
-which would ordinarily make it a failure were weeded out, and such a
-highly selected group might safely benefit by a system which depended
-on self-abnegation. But so soon as the Church spread, no trace of
-communism remained; and even in general altruism the injunctions
-referred only to the Church and not to the world. The teaching was
-"Bear ye one another's burdens"; not, bear the burdens of the Roman
-rabble, but only those of the stringently weeded community. The one
-saying which survived most strongly of all the Gospel teaching, and is
-repeated oftenest, is, "To him that hath shall be given, and from him
-that hath not shall be taken away even that which he seemeth to have."
-The full benefit of capacity and its utmost gains, and the direst
-losses of incapacity, are the main principle that is inculcated.
-
-In another point of view the parable of the prodigal son is sometimes
-felt to inculcate the ignoring of failure in life, and the permitting
-of follies to have no effect on the position of a person. The prodigal
-son among us is too often allowed to go on draining the resources on
-which his brethren rightfully have a claim. But the father in the
-parable, who had divided the family property already, was not intending
-to give anything more to the prodigal, however penitent he might be;
-forgiveness might be his, but the other brother was reassured at once
-by the formal declaration, "All that I have is thine." The greatest
-penitence, and the fullest forgiveness after it, will not give the
-prodigal a farthing beyond those rights which he has already misused.
-
-Another appeal has been made, to a comparison with nature, in favour of
-communism. It is asked why we should be struggling like the carnivora,
-instead of peacefully browsing in amity like herbivora. But it would
-be hard to find a more intense example of competition than that among
-the cattle. Look at the skeleton of a bull, and see how every rib is
-broadened out into an armour plating for its vitals, each rib lapping
-over the other, so that no opening can be found for the point of its
-adversary's horn. None but those thus proof against goring have ever
-survived the desperate struggle of the strongest. In place of the
-artificial paddocks, where man has placed a single bull to lord the
-herd, look at the tragedy of the wild cattle, where the dispossessed
-chief of the Chillingham breed mopes apart in sullen anger, a Saturn
-dethroned and banished by the Jupiter who now leads the race. Then
-reflect how competition is more bitter and more intense in the bovine
-commune than among any individualistic carnivora.
-
-The communistic view appears to tend to fatalism. This is practically
-seen for instance in Tolstoi's _Peace and War_, where the gigantic
-movements of the French and Russian hosts are looked on as inherent in
-the millions of people, and not originating in the leaders. And the
-habit of looking to the commune as the source of action will naturally
-tend toward a sense of the impossibility of altering the determination
-of a whole people, and the powerlessness of the individual against such
-forces. Now nothing more surely undermines activity and initiative than
-a fatalistic view. It saps the whole springs of action, and destroys
-the spirit of advance and improvement. In this aspect therefore we
-again see how injurious the communistic ideal is to solid character.
-
-The recent growth of "municipalising" enterprises is another outcome
-of this spirit. The principle of it seems to be to absorb any public
-business which appears profitable, whether conveyance, supplies of
-material, or contracting for public work. Apart from the fact that
-only strong personal interest in management will make such enterprises
-profitable, there is also the inherent objection to the bad management
-which clings to the atrophy of mind of officials, as such; but there is
-also another serious influence upon character, which we should notice.
-The energy and initiative needed to start and work improvements, which
-is the essential source of profit in business, is easily suppressed or
-driven away. Many an enterprise which would succeed well is set aside
-because of the risks or the trouble of starting it, many another is
-left alone owing to little deterring causes; and if the great incentive
-of the possibility of large profits on some schemes, to compensate for
-the risks of many failures, is cut away by a municipality having the
-right of seizure of whatever succeeds, the whole enterprising character
-is cut down at the roots, to the immense injury of the nation at large.
-Supposing that some public enterprise makes 20 per cent. profit to its
-shareholders, the people who use it are certainly better off, or they
-would leave it alone, and the profit is no loss to the community, as
-it merely means so much transferred from one pocket to another, and
-none wasted. But if such enterprises are choked at the roots by fear
-of seizure, the whole community suffers. Who will care to develop
-suburbs by starting electric trams when the whole can be seized in
-twenty-one years, so soon as it begins to repay the risks incurred?
-This short-sighted grasping system has held England back behind most
-civilised countries, and been a gigantic public loss, not only by
-hindering specific enterprises, but more by thwarting most valuable
-characteristics.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-TRADE UNIONISM, ITS FLOWER AND FRUITION.
-
-
-When we are continually assured that there is a new and better way of
-doing anything, it is only reasonable to ask if anyone has tried it
-before. "The proof of the pudding is in the eating," and if some one
-has eaten such a pudding before us, we may be saved from using up good
-materials in a bad concoction. Until now the attention of historians
-has been so fixed upon the great military autocracy of Rome, that the
-growth of trade unionism and socialism under that government has been
-overlooked. Here we will trace and put together such facts as seem
-curiously parallel to the growth of modern unionism; and which, when
-they outstep our present position, may serve to show what further
-developments may be expected by us.
-
-The first great step, which bore centuries of bitter results, was the
-favouring of the townsman as against the countryman. The voter in Rome
-could push laws to his own advantage in the hurly-burly of the public
-assembly, while the countryman was working hard in his furrow miles
-away. The conquered provinces were a great temptation; they had to
-yield tribute, grain came pouring into Rome, and why should not this
-abundance benefit the citizen by being sold at a low price? They forgot
-the countryman. His toil was none the less because Carthage or Sicily
-or Egypt were being plundered. But his pay was much the less if his
-produce lost its market value. The cheap corn of Gracchus was the knell
-of the honest agriculturist, as Professor Oman has pointed out. The
-only remedy was to try to cheapen production in Italy. This was done by
-giving up the small farmer altogether, and running only big estates by
-slave-labour, the human machine which was to Rome what machinery is to
-us. This staved off the evil somewhat. But soon the townsman demanded
-more and more, and at last free doles of corn were given to him, and
-agriculture became impossible in Italy. What tribute-corn did to Italy,
-cheap transport has done to England. The townsman is always favoured
-at the cost of the countryman, and the country is being depopulated.
-Not only cheap bread, but doles of every kind—hospitals, wash-houses,
-music, games, libraries—all are given to the townsman, while the
-countryman cannot possibly share in such doles. A large policy of
-equivalent benefits to the countryman would be the only corrective to
-this one-sided and deleterious favouritism. But the votes carry it, as
-they did in Rome.
-
-In the earlier part of the second century, under Trajan, two little
-statements show what was going on. A guild or trade union of firemen in
-Asia Minor wished to be incorporated: but the emperor forbade, because
-such trade guilds became political centres. There must have been
-some experience of such movement for it to be anticipated. The other
-statement is that the more able and wealthy men avoided entering the
-guild of permanent aldermen, or _curia_, because of the burdens which
-were thrown upon them. A century later, about 230 A.D., all trades
-were organised into corporations or trades unions, recognised by the
-government, instead of being only private societies as before. This
-seems to have been a compulsory unionism; but there was some difference
-in class between this trades unionism and our own. In Rome the trades
-were in the hands of smaller men, and not of large firms and companies
-as much as with us; and on the other hand the mere mechanic was
-usually a slave, this slave labour being economically the equivalent
-of machinery in our time. Hence the Roman trades unions were small
-employers of the status of our plumbers or upholsterers, more than, as
-with us, a large mass of crude labour organised against all capital.
-They were trade unions, rather than unions of the mechanics as against
-the managers. The compulsory entry of all the master employers into a
-union would no doubt be a step very welcome to modern unionism; and the
-compulsory extension of it, so as to leave no free labour, would be an
-ideal condition, in which picketing would be quite superseded by legal
-compulsion to join the union. The differences therefore were mainly
-such as our trades unions would desire, and aim at in future; in short
-unionism by 230 A.D. was more developed than it is at present with us.
-
-But here came in a very difficult question, which is before us also
-whenever unionism becomes dominant in any trade. It is all very well to
-let unions pillage capital, or even pillage each other, but can they be
-allowed to pillage the poor? This at once clashes with the favouring of
-the proletariat. It has already raised an acute difficulty in England.
-The Bricklayers' Union cannot be competed with from abroad, except
-very slightly by means of imported wooden houses. Hence this union
-has been able to close its grip firmly on the throat of the public;
-it has raised wages, and it has cut down work from eight hundred or
-nine hundred bricks laid daily to two hundred and seventy or three
-hundred and thirty in different standards now. By raising the cost
-of labour to about three times the amount, the cost of building as a
-whole must be nearly doubled. The dearness of lodging of the poor is
-really due to the remorseless extortion of the bricklayers, abetted
-by the extravagant building regulations locally in force in their
-interest, to increase the expenditure on a building. In the country
-there is disgraceful overcrowding for lack of cottage accommodation,
-and in towns miserable rooms fetch high rents. The ground-landlord,
-who is so much abused, has little to do with this; for ground-rents
-are seldom more than a tenth of the house rent and taxes. If all land
-were confiscated to-morrow it would not lower most rentals more than a
-fraction. If the Bricklayers' Union and all its results were abolished,
-rentals would descend to nearly half the present amounts.
-
-If we were to meet this difficulty in the way that Rome dealt with it,
-the Government would give the Bricklayers' Union an absolute monopoly
-of building, on condition that dwellings under a certain value were
-charged at a third of the cost of labour, that is on the old terms of a
-full day's work fifty years ago, leaving all later profits to be gained
-from the wealthier classes. In the present straits about housing it is
-by no means certain that this would not be a popular course.
-
-In Rome the grain importers and the bakers were the two trades
-which touched the proletariat most closely. And early in the third
-century these, and probably other essential trades, were organised
-as monopolist unions, on condition that the union was bound over to
-do a certain amount of work for the poor at a nominal rate. Thus the
-wastrel was favoured and protected, with his right to maintenance;
-and all profits of the business were to be made from work done for
-those who could afford to pay for it. This is unquestionably an ideal
-toward which a great deal of social legislation is tending at present.
-Railway companies and tramways are bound to carry workmen at nominal
-rates, while all their profits are to be earned from wealth. So far has
-this burden been imposed, that the construction of one railway line at
-least has been prevented by the heavy toll of cheap transport which was
-demanded before sanctioning it.
-
-If the trade is not in the hands of a single firm for a whole district,
-like a railway company, there arises the problem, how is the burden
-of cheap work for the poor to be distributed over the constituent
-firms? This was solved in Rome by the union, which was the sole body
-recognised in law. Each member of the union was assessed by his union,
-on the basis of both his capital and his trade returns, and he had to
-do so much of the cheap work in proportion. Hence the wealth of each
-firm determined the amount of their proletariat taxation. If they could
-withdraw temporarily part of the capital from the business, their
-assessment would be lighter. Hence to each person the aim was to work
-with the smallest amount of capital, and to remove from the business
-all spare capital, and invest it elsewhere. This naturally resulted in
-business being badly worked. The difficulty was met by the law that
-all capital once in the business could never be withdrawn; and all
-profits—and, later, all acquired wealth—must be kept in the business,
-so that the richer firms should do their full share of proletariat
-service. The results of these logical developments of unionism and help
-to the proletariat, were that many withdrew altogether from unions,
-retiring on a small competence rather than live under such a burden,
-and that there was a general decline of commerce and of industry.
-
-Property having thus become the gauge of responsibility in the union,
-the only way to prevent desertions was to declare that the property
-was attached to the union permanently, and whosoever acquired it did
-so under the implied covenant of supplying the share of union work out
-of it. The result of this law was that no one with capital would join
-a trade union, as their whole property became attached to the union;
-and poor persons were not desired on unions, as they could not take
-up a share of the proletariat service. This condition was met by the
-law forcibly enrolling capitalists in the unions, and demanding their
-personal service as well as the use of their capital.
-
-By 270 A.D. Aurelian had made unionism compulsory for life so as to
-prevent the able men from withdrawing, to better themselves by free
-work individually. He also gave a wine dole, and gave bread in place
-of corn, to save the wastrel the trouble of baking. In the fourth
-century every member, and all his sons, and all his property, belonged
-inalienably to the trades union. By 369 A.D. all property however
-acquired belonged to the union.
-
-Yet still men would leave all they had to get out of the hateful
-bondage, and so the unpopular trades—such as the moneyers in 380
-A.D. and the bakers in 408—were recruited by requiring that everyone
-who married the daughter of a unionist must join his father-in-law's
-business. And thus "the Empire was an immense gaol where all worked not
-according to taste but by force," as Waltzing remarks in his great work
-_Corporations Professionnelles_, where the foregoing facts are stated.
-
-There was but one end possible to this accumulation of move upon move,
-on the false basis of compulsory trade unionism, and work under cost
-for the proletariat. The whole system was so destructive of character
-and of wealth that it ruined the empire. Slavery was by no means the
-destruction of Rome, it flourished in the centuries when the Government
-was strongest, and diminished in advance of the social decay. Vice
-was by no means the destruction of Rome, it was worst when Rome was
-most powerful and was lessened in the decline. The one movement which
-grew steadily as Rome declined, and which was intimately connected
-with every stage of that decline, was the compulsion of labour and
-the maintenance of the wastrel as a burden on society. It was that
-which pulled down the greatest political organism, by the crushing of
-initiative and character, and by the steady drain on all forms of
-wealth. The free Goth was the welcome deliverer from social bondage.
-This growth of trade unionism has been followed here as a whole,
-without stopping to note other effects of the same type of mind, which
-are also very instructive to us. We now turn back to look at some
-earlier developments.
-
-The Empire had a long age of internal peace, from the accession of
-Vespasian to the rise of Severus, comprising four or five generations.
-Men had forgotten in Italy and the provinces what war meant, as the
-only troubles had been frontier fighting. They ceased to value the
-strength of unity, and the importance of keeping the empire bound
-together. The sayings attributed to Gallienus in the middle of the
-third century cannot be looked on as merely wild vagaries, contrary
-to all the public opinion around him. Had no one else advocated the
-subdivision of the empire, he would never have continued to jest about
-not needing the produce of Gaul or of Syria. Such phrases must have
-been familiar among a little-Italy party, of whom Gallienus was the
-agent and mouthpiece. And such a situation will help to explain his
-conduct regarding the captivity of Valerian his father in Persia. A
-glance at old Valerian shows him to have been a rigid gentleman of
-the old school, like Galba or Nerva. And, when he was captured, the
-little-Italy party who had hold of Gallienus were relieved rather than
-otherwise. Had George III been captured by the French, probably George
-IV and Charles James Fox would not have been very anxious for his
-return.
-
-The policy of the party seems to have been to encourage each province
-to start a separate government under its local ruler, in touch with
-the Roman Government, but with recognised independence. Britain was
-separated, and was only reunited to the empire at later times for
-short periods; Postumus, Victorinus, Tetricus, Carausius, Allectus,
-Constantius, Magnentius, Magnus Maximus, Jovinus, all ruled without
-any check from Italy. Syria was separated with such good will that the
-coinage for Zenobia was struck at the Imperial mint in Alexandria. In
-all, nineteen independent rulers are enumerated in this reign; and no
-attempt was made to reunite the provinces. There were gains in such a
-course; the heavy charge on Italy of keeping a great army was lessened;
-the risks of civil war seemed to be reduced, when each province was
-not tempted to set up its own ruler for the whole empire; and local
-feelings and variations could have free scope. It might be thought that
-three centuries of rule had fitted the provinces to hold their own in
-the world, and to be ruled independently. The result of the experiment
-in devolution, or home rule all round, was a time of such anarchy,
-misery and loss, as had not been known since a unified civilisation had
-existed in those lands.
-
-After the immediate catastrophes had been somewhat rectified by
-succeeding emperors, Aurelian took up the great task of reuniting the
-whole empire. He carried this out victoriously; Tetricus from Gaul
-and Zenobia from Syria adorned his triumph. But Rome was bitter at
-such a policy. A furious rebellion broke out, nominally called the
-revolt of the mint; that it was a great social movement was seen by
-Gibbon, though he confesses that it is mysterious how three senators,
-most of the senatorial families, and multitudes of minor people were
-involved in it. The fighting was so severe that five thousand of
-Aurelian's trained army were killed. That the mint workmen took part
-in it is certain: but probably the mint was adopted as headquarters
-of the movement owing to its strength. All this shows that, so far
-from the great victories making Aurelian popular in Rome, they were
-most bitterly opposed. The only ground for this must be that a very
-strong party clung to the little-Italy policy, and hated Aurelian in
-consequence. This movement gives good ground for interpreting the
-policy of Gallienus in the way we have done above, as being a great
-party policy and not merely an imperial freak.
-
-Within less than a generation later came the vast socialist decree of
-Diocletian, regulating all prices and wages throughout the empire. A
-maximum value was fixed for every kind of food—grain, wine, oil, meat,
-fish, vegetables and fruit. Hence such food would never be produced
-where the natural conditions prevented a profit within this maximum
-price; nor would it be transported beyond the distance within which the
-maximum yielded a profit. Whole districts must have been cut off from
-different kinds of supply by such legislation. Meanwhile the wages of
-labourers, of artizans, and of professions were all equally regulated,
-so that the best men could never have their superior ability rewarded.
-The prices of skins and leather, of all clothing, and of jewellery were
-likewise defined.
-
-The consequence must have been that the losses in bad years of supply,
-owing to weather and other circumstances, must have fallen wholly on
-the producer, who might be ruined by the whole brunt of the loss,
-instead of being partly compensated by a rise in prices which taxed the
-whole body of users. No wonder that after such a law the whole empire
-plunged ever deeper into poverty and confusion. The coinage depreciated
-even more rapidly than before; and the economic distress of such a
-fixed system with a falling currency must have been overwhelming. Such
-were the results of one of the great socialistic attempts to remedy the
-course of events by artificial legislation.
-
-We thus see how by the establishment of unionism, the feeding of
-paupers, the devolution of the empire, and the legislation on prices
-and wages, the socialistic policy brought to naught the greatest social
-organism that had yet appeared in the world.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-REVOLUTION OR EVOLUTION?
-
-
-Those persons who are unaccustomed to consider the great effects
-which flow from a continuous action of small causes, are too liable
-to suppose that a large result can only be obtained by a violent and
-immediate action. They suppose that only some mighty impulse can change
-the face of affairs; they pray that the mountains be rent, and look to
-the earthquake and the tempest, not thinking that it is the still small
-voice that really directs. They forget that it is the humble earthworms
-that plough the land, and the invisible bacteria that destroy nations
-and alter the face of politics.
-
-Ignoring the far-reaching after-effects of action, men are led to
-over-do all the changes which they attempt to carry out by direct and
-immediate means. This is like a child who asks to have its hand cut off
-because its finger aches.
-
-The bad effect of sudden and violent changes may best be observed
-in our own history. The great changes of the Civil War left England
-without any checks on the violence of parties. The King and Lords had
-been abolished, and the Commons ruled alone. The fierce factions of the
-Presbyterians and Independents would have wrecked the country, had not
-a ruler come forward far more arbitrary than the one already rejected.
-Charles had looked over the wall when he tried to arrest five members,
-but Cromwell stole the horse outright when he dismissed the parliament
-by armed force. Pride's Purge was a greater violation of popular
-liberties than anything done by Tudor or Stuart; and the effect of half
-a generation of such violence was that the nation was heartily glad to
-get back a worse king than the one they had beheaded. Cromwell's great
-service was, that he saved England from a fanatical and factious House
-of Commons, by exercising monarchical prerogatives which Charles never
-dared to assert. The needs of the time drove him, as a capable man,
-to act for the highest good outside the law. When we hear a faction
-lauding Cromwell now, it may be overlooked that he made short work of
-Fifth Monarchy men and other extremists; and that the great struggle
-of mind to him was the dire necessity of crushing the factions, and of
-using that compulsion which he clearly saw was the only alternative to
-anarchy. The bitter persecuting spirit of the factions was far more
-violent than any course of action which preceded or followed their
-rule. Neither Charles I nor Charles II touched the private religious
-actions of the people; but the factions proscribed even the private use
-of the Book of Common Prayer. The subsequent Five-mile Act regulating
-public meetings for worship was mild compared with the domiciliary
-visitations in search of the Prayer Book in 1645. But for the visits
-of the parliamentary soldiery, breaking into chapels and putting their
-swords to the breasts of the kneeling communicants, there would never
-have been the milder dispersions of the Restoration. But for the
-bitter persecution of the so-called Malignants, and the deprivation of
-the clergy throughout the country by the parliament, there would never
-have been the milder reversion of Bartholomew's Day, 1662. In every
-point the violent changes of constitution wrought more tyranny and more
-personal hardship than was even caused by the revulsion which followed.
-
-In France the same effect was seen. The Revolution probably caused more
-bloodshed and more personal misery in ten years, than the old _régime_
-had done in a century. England has paid twenty-five millions a year for
-a century past as interest on the debt incurred for crushing Napoleon.
-
-Another result should be noted with care. A great popular ferment with
-a diminution of constitutional control, must result in establishing
-a military despotism as the lesser evil for the country. Caesar,
-Aurelian, Cromwell, Napoleon, all arose from the popular party, as the
-necessary substitutes, by arbitrary action, for the constitutionalism
-which had been abolished. In the place of the legally regulated
-courses, more or less unsuitable and corrupted, it proved absolutely
-necessary when they were abolished to have some other supreme authority
-with power to enforce obedience.
-
-We are not concerned at this point to consider the relative right or
-wrong of the various parties just mentioned; that has nothing to do
-with the matter. The lesson is that a violent and rapid change of
-constitution leads to worse evils than those which it is sought to
-remedy. Every existing order of things, however imperfect or bad, must
-have a certain balance of parts or it could not continue. And when
-that balance is destroyed the results can seldom be foreseen. It is
-exactly the same in nature; when any species of animal is exterminated
-suddenly—as by firearms—the far-reaching consequences of its
-disappearance cannot be anticipated; other species will increase or
-disappear, and even vegetable life will be modified.
-
-The phrase therefore of a "radical reform," or briefly "radicalism," is
-in defiance of natural science and of historical experience; it denies
-the principle of gradual evolution in the development of institutions
-and of character. A small amount of experience of different types is
-enough to show its fallacy, for radicals say that "travelling abroad
-always spoils a good radical."
-
-In order to avoid violent change it is needful to allow free scope
-for gradual change. The greatest catastrophes may be caused by the
-accumulation of small forces; when a tiny stream becomes dammed by a
-landslip it may form a lake, which in bursting will devastate a whole
-valley. So when the gradual movement of a people is checked, and an
-artificial condition is enforced by laws, the breaking down of such
-restrictions will cause wholesale disaster. Had the Romans allowed
-free immigration of Gothic settlers there would never have been the
-Gothic conquest of Italy. Were the Californians and Australians to
-allow a free immigration of Japanese, under fair and equal laws, they
-would not have to fear a squadron demanding justice in their ports.
-The necessity of violent changes is therefore always the fault of
-those who prevent gradual changes to fit new conditions. If the House
-of Commons tries again the experiment of the Long Parliament, and by
-force or subterfuge abrogates the second chamber, it will be largely
-due to the House of Lords refusing changes in its mode of action. An
-Upper House which elected a legislative committee, like the election of
-Scotch and Irish Peers, would be in a far stronger position. The House
-of Commons at present is too much like an elephant picking up pins; and
-if the public become so much disgusted with its incapacity for business
-that at some crisis they throw the reins of power to an able man like
-Kitchener, it will be largely due to the fossilisation of the Rules of
-Procedure. A Lower House which allotted its time strictly according to
-the value of its votes of supply, or of the interests involved—which
-registered its decisions instantly, as by the electric signals which
-are now found in every hotel, and which employed diagrams in debate
-by means of the lantern and screen which are now found in every
-school—would stand a better chance of coping with its business in a
-creditable manner. The fault of violent change, and all its damaging
-consequences, rests in the first place on those who resist gradual
-change.
-
-It is therefore needful to leave the way open for gradual changes. In
-every new law, the changes of circumstance which are likely to arise
-should be anticipated, by leaving the way open for them to begin to
-act gently and gradually. The principle of fixed fines (based on
-income tax), regardless of any reflection on character, for various
-infractions of a civil law (or even of some criminal laws) should be
-always open, so that, as necessities arise, the prevalence of such
-fines would call attention to the need of some change. An excellent
-system has been found in allowing a department a large latitude in
-interpreting a law, or a dispensing power in administering it; and this
-system might well be extended so far as it was not seriously abused by
-favouritism. Another mode of change is to permit a variety of types in
-different places, as in local administration, and then allow a large
-latitude for the adoption of any type found to work well in another
-place. This is partly reached by varying bye-laws; but this might well
-be extended higher in the scale, and with local liberty to adopt any
-bye-law already sanctioned elsewhere. The ways would thus be open for
-gradual movements, which could extend until they produced such pressure
-on the larger and more organic laws as to cause a serious legislative
-step.
-
-We will now turn to observe the far-reaching actual and probable
-effects of various laws, which at first might seem quite inadequate
-to cause such changes. Some years have passed since the graduation of
-death-duties, and we can begin to see the effects. The simple action
-of a tax, without any compulsion, has produced a profound change in a
-family system which centuries or thousands of years had left unaltered.
-The notorious clinging to power and money among the aged, has given
-way before the screw of the State. The custom which left the control
-of large estates to men generally between fifty and eighty years of
-age, and hampered their development by the dying hand, has largely
-yielded to the Indian custom, of the division of property among sons
-on their marriage or entry on public life. It is becoming habitual for
-a father to establish his sons with the family property, and only
-to retain such a portion of the estate as he may wish to fill his
-declining activities. This is a very beneficial change, though by no
-means a grateful one to the Exchequer which has brought it about. In
-lesser properties the same action occurs; a father will buy an annuity
-for himself, and distribute the remaining capital, each son being at
-liberty either to place his portion at compound interest, so as to
-replace at the probable date of his father's death the full amount
-which he would have received otherwise, or else to trust to replacing
-the amount when he may be at his most remunerative age.
-
-Not only is this a great social change, with far-reaching consequences
-in the management of property, but it will also act in other lines.
-When a man deals with his property in the unchecked privacy of a will,
-he can neglect the pressure of personality of his children in favour
-of the sentiment of leaving a powerful family name in perpetuity. But
-primogeniture must more or less succumb before the obvious personal
-claims of those who are joining in the daily life. It requires not only
-a flinty heart but also a brazen face, to leave younger sons penniless
-when personally distributing the means of ensuring the happiness and
-the amenities of life. Hence it is probable that estates will be much
-more sub-divided, and sons encouraged to continue to live on corners
-of the paternal acres. In short it will be a step toward the French
-infinitesimal splitting of property.
-
-This again will act in a fundamental manner on our colonising ability.
-Primogeniture has made us a colonising race; no system is so perfect
-for ensuring a supply of fit colonists. When each wealthy house in
-the land educated two or three sturdy sons, with every benefit of
-health and knowledge, and then sent them out to form new centres,
-with a small capital to start with, and a reserve of help at home for
-any dire emergencies, the most perfect colonising machine had been
-evolved. Without these conditions England could never have filled
-other continents as she has. When sons stay at home on portions of the
-old estate, and have not enough wealth for the high training of their
-families, all this colonising power will be at an end. France cannot
-colonise because her domestic system does not produce this type of man,
-fitted in person and in condition to take up such a life. Our high
-death-duties are a certain way to stop educated colonisation.
-
-Another change is also seen resulting from these duties. England, more
-than other lands, was rich in private treasure houses of precious
-things—pictures, statuary, libraries, and other collections. These
-represented a large amount of capital locked up, but it yielded a rich
-interest in the home education of the upper classes, in redeeming
-them from the dull, unimaginative, coarse, or sordid lives of wealthy
-classes in some other lands. So long as a duty only equal to a few
-months' or a year's interest was levied, the succession was not too
-burdensome, and the state reaped a steady small return. But when
-the possession of such means of amenity involves at each generation
-a crushing tax on the productive part of an estate, they must be
-sacrificed. The collections are vanishing to other lands, where such
-short-sighted policy is unknown, and England will be left bare. A
-far more profitable policy would have been to exempt all artistic or
-historical collections from death-duties, if they were thrown open to
-the public for a certain number of days in each year. They would thus
-have become partly public museums, provided free of all cost to the
-surrounding districts.
-
-Another serious consideration is that 10 or 15 per cent., or even
-20 per cent. in case of bequests for public purposes, is taken off
-accumulated national capital and thrown into yearly income. The estate
-duty is incessantly eating up the national reserves, and using them for
-current expenses. We should call any family which did this shameless
-spendthrifts, yet this is the immoral fashion of our taxation.
-
-The effect of income tax is one of the most serious economic subjects,
-because it directly touches the production of wealth. There is little
-objection to income tax for emergencies of war, because if merely
-nominal (1_d._ in the pound) during peace, the true amount taxable
-will be well known, and a sudden increase will be truly collected and
-will not have distinct economic effects if only used for a year or
-two. But treating direct tax on incomes as a large source of revenue
-has very important effects on a commercial nation. A tax as high as
-1_s._ in the pound is practically a tax on all English enterprise
-as compared with foreign. If a mill can be run at Calais to produce
-non-dutiable articles, free of income tax on its dividends, while a
-mill at Dover pays 5 per cent. tax on its dividends, that constitutes
-a discrimination of 5 per cent. against the English manufacturer's
-capital. The outcome of the whole is that all shares of English
-companies will stand permanently at 5 per cent. lower value than the
-shares of foreign companies. Or in other words £4 interest will have to
-be paid by an English company for £95 raised by debenture, while the
-foreign company will raise £100 for the same interest. The immediate
-result is that investments will increasingly be made in foreign
-governments and companies, whose dividends are payable _abroad_,
-instead of in London. This is not merely an evasion of tax, but it is
-perfectly legal if the dividends are spent abroad. No one need pay
-tax on any cost of foreign travel or residence if they draw the money
-from foreign sources, and do not let it be trapped in London. Thus
-there will be an ever increasing demand for purely foreign investment,
-according to the amount of tax on the investments in England. If
-the proposal was carried out to tax all investments much higher as
-"unearned income," it would cripple all English manufacture for lack of
-the capital, which would be driven abroad to escape the tax. It might
-be thought that other governments will come into line, and tax equally
-with ours; but if they see their own commercial advantage they will be
-very loth to put this bar on English capital flowing into their land
-to gain freedom. Even if France and Germany did as we do, it might be
-well worth while for Monaco to become the financial centre of Europe by
-having no income tax on companies centred there. The recent De Beers
-decision illustrates this very clearly. A company with its work abroad,
-and its investors largely abroad, is taxed on all its income because
-it uses a few square yards of space in London as an office. Obviously
-it will not remain. London will no longer be the centre of commercial
-work of the world if 5 per cent. or perhaps 10 per cent. is the price
-to be paid by all who use it. No company will remain in England that
-is not fixed by its works being here, and all those who are fixed here
-will work at a permanent disadvantage compared to the foreigner. It
-is doubtless thought that the large income yielded by the interest on
-the national debt is a safe and easy subject of taxation; Italy indeed
-raises 20 per cent. income tax on its debt interest. But this tax is
-purely nominal, as it is discounted in the price of stock, and such a
-government is merely paying with the left hand what it takes with the
-right. The case is seen clearly in Italian stock which stands at 20
-per cent. lower value than it otherwise would; that is to say, that
-Italy pays say £4 for the loan of £80 now, instead of for the loan of
-£100 which it would receive if this tax was not imposed. The same is
-equally true of the tax as applied to government salaries; it cannot
-be evaded, and therefore it is merely a diminution of the salary, or a
-depreciation of the quality of men obtained for the nominal salary. A
-government cannot tax its own payments by any financial jugglery. Of
-course a government can cheat like a private person; promise a certain
-payment, and then break its word, and pay less by a tax. But that is
-only a transient profit raised by the sale of its character, and is not
-a permanent bargain.
-
-Another effect of income tax will be seen if the proposed higher
-grading of incomes is carried out. The same changes that we have traced
-owing to the death duties will be produced by the life duties. Property
-will be sub-divided wherever possible. Every child will have a trust
-created for its benefit, every member of a family will have a separate
-income, every large estate will be nominally the property of a group
-of independent persons—a family club. This will tend, like the death
-duties, toward equal shares, instead of the parent hive system of
-primogeniture; and it likewise marks the end of educated colonising.
-The effect of this may be good for family life, but it will be
-disastrous commercially. There will no longer be the large capitalists
-who can take the risks of great enterprises. To raise a large floating
-capital for great undertakings will require the co-operation of so many
-small capitalists, that it will not be worth while for any one investor
-to give time to the affair. The lack of personal concern and interest,
-and the cost of dealing with widely collected capital, will all be a
-detriment to enterprises of large extent.
-
-But the most disastrous as well as immoral kind of taxation will be
-that proposed as additional upon all permanent investments, under
-the guise of "unearned income." It is a fatally easy screw for a
-government to put on; but the effect of it will be to penalise all
-British manufacture in competition with foreign productions. All that
-we have noticed about the effect of a 5 per cent. tax will apply far
-more rapidly and decisively if a 10 per cent. tax should be put on.
-Shippers would sail under another flag and transfer their offices of
-registration; manufacturers would pass to a tax-free country; and a
-larger proportion of persons living on fixed income would spend it
-abroad. Beside the material disadvantages of such high taxation on
-enterprise, it would be a grave moral detriment.
-
-It is too often forgotten that in taxation the government wields one
-of the greatest means of moral education. What does it say now by its
-taxation? Suppose a man to have saved £100, and to consider whether
-he will spend it on unremunerative pleasures, or on useful public
-works. The government says, "If you will spend your money on waste
-and luxury, paying for useless and monstrous rooms, making men stand
-idle in your hall, or decorate your extravagant food; if you will make
-women waste their eyes and lives on a fresh absurdity of fashion, or
-sell their souls; or if you will pay boys to become ne'er-do-weels on
-golf-links—in short if you will do as much mischief as possible, we
-will take 5 per cent. of your money. But if you spend it on benefiting
-the world, improving cultivation, building railways, opening the waste
-places and making them blossom, we will take 18 per cent., and leave
-you only £82 out of your £100." That is to say 5 per cent. on the
-original earning of the capital, 5 per cent. tax on investment income,
-and 10 per cent. on death duties, as estimated on large capital by
-the Income Tax Commission, 1906. And if the proposed higher taxing
-of so-called "unearned income" were carried out, this government
-claim would rise to 23 per cent. or even higher. In all reason, after
-money when earned has paid its tax of 5 per cent. it should be free
-of all further claims, at least if employed for public utility, and
-there should be no tax on dividends whatever, nor any death duties
-on savings; all such taxation falls eventually on the capital of the
-useful undertakings, and directly cripples the industry of the country.
-
-The only way to escape the deadly effects of income tax upon home
-manufactures and produce would be to lay a countervailing duty on all
-imports, and a bounty on all exports. Then, and only then, would the
-manufacturer or farmer here be on exactly the same footing as one
-abroad. Then, and only then, would free trade be really carried out.
-So long as taxes fall on home production or home capital, which do not
-fall similarly abroad, so long free trade cannot exist.
-
-Another highly immoral view of taxation is that of "plucking the
-goose so that it feels it least." Such a maxim was appropriate and
-excellent for an opportunist minister of an autocratic sovereign. But
-the first necessity for the political health of a democracy is that
-the individual shall feel every tax; such is the only way to prevent
-the squandering of public money by the votes of ignorant taxpayers. It
-would be very wholesome if the national expenditure was presented as a
-series of personal bills, showing how much was spent on each department
-by an average £50, or £100, or £200 householder. He would then be as
-much ashamed of the smallness of some items as of the largeness of
-others.
-
-What is needed in place of the tax upon industry is a tax upon
-extravagance. We are accustomed to taxes which far exceed the prime
-cost upon tobacco and alcohol; and other luxuries should also be
-similarly taxed. If instead of taxing income (which is often requisite
-for reasonable living, or else usefully spent on improvements of the
-world), we had the luxuries taxed, the only people to complain (if the
-change were gradual) would be those who wasted instead of using their
-income. Let all ostentation be taxed very heavily, spacious rooms,
-large numbers of servants, costly food, motor cars (not professionally
-needed), entrance money for amusements, and tailors' and milliners'
-bills; and then a much smaller amount of such extravagance will equally
-bespeak wealth, and gain as much social consideration as at present.
-Such would be a moral taxation in place of the present wholly immoral
-and indefensible system of taxing industry and leaving waste unchecked.
-
-We will now look to other eventual results of small continual action.
-The effect of transferring little by little the property in Irish
-land to the present occupiers has not been sufficiently noticed. For
-the present generation such a transference was merry enough to the
-tenant. But when he sells to another tenant what is to happen? Will a
-future tenant enter and gradually expropriate the present tenant, by
-treating him as a landlord? Certainly the present tenant will not be
-so foolish as to be thus trapped, he will demand money on the nail.
-How then is the future tenant to get his capital to buy the land? In
-most cases he will have to get it by borrowing on mortgage. And if
-the government is not prepared to always keep open a loan office for
-every incoming tenant to the end of time, a loan society or company
-must be his resort. Then if he should not pay this rent to the distant
-intangible society, his mortgage will be foreclosed. In place of a body
-of landlords, and landlords' agents who could always be personally
-approached, Ireland will fall into the hands of a landlordism of
-distant money-lenders without souls or feelings, and whom neither
-blandishments nor bullets can affect.
-
-The remedy for land difficulties and various ills, that has been so
-often proposed, namely the State ownership of the land, is by no means
-promising. The greatest objection that can be flung at a landlord is
-that he is an absentee. No amount of agency, no excellence in the
-subordinate, is thought to compensate for the personal interest, the
-personal influence and care, of a good conscientious landlord spending
-his life among his tenants. Yet the State ownership would be worse
-than any absentee landlord. The agent would be that of an impersonal
-government, and responsible to nobody so long as he fulfilled a certain
-set of hard rules. He would have no personality more or less pliable
-behind him, but would blindly carry out the general dictates of a
-Parliament or a Revenue office, which neither knew nor cared about
-any personal exceptions or local details. We all know the ways of the
-Inland Revenue already; the extortions which have to be tediously
-reclaimed at a greater cost of time than the refunded money is worth;
-the starving of the Post Office in order to wring a profit of 50 per
-cent. on the whole correspondence of the country; the various illegal
-demands which have had to be resisted by legal trial, and appeal over
-appeal, at a ruinous cost to those who will not be cheated; we see in
-France and Italy the atrophy of a railway system which is ruled by
-government officials. And yet unobservant enthusiasts wish that every
-field should be under some petty official tied by red tape, and every
-farmer bound by laws and regulations which could never be applied to
-even a small district without individual hardship. The townsman cannot
-be allowed to play political experiments with the largest industry of
-England, of which he is profoundly ignorant: it must rest with the
-farmer only, to decide if he prefer to be under the Inland Revenue
-or under his landlord. It is notorious that government lands are
-administered more wastefully and less remuneratively than any private
-property; and it would be ruinous to tie up the whole country to such
-administration. It is useless to say that these are mere abuses which
-must be rectified. Let them be rectified in the minor scale first,
-before the system can be applied in the major scale. There is no kind
-of government in the world that would not ruin this country if it
-introduced State ownership. Human nature does not allow of it, and only
-ignorance of human nature could propose it.
-
-Another large effect of trifles is seen in the cumulative character
-of borrowers. Mr. Harold Cox, M.P., has reminded those who are in
-favour of rather confiscatory proposals, that a loss of character of
-a public body, so that their good faith is not certain, may easily
-mean that they have to pay 4 per cent. instead of 3 per cent. for
-loans: and hence that all rents of public works paid for by loans will
-have to be 33 per cent. higher. This loss is far more than could be
-gained by entire confiscation of ground values, and entire ruin of all
-landlords. That this is by no means only a future risk may be seen in
-the stock list any day. India is not entirely safe; there are risks
-of financial ruin—by conquest, by ruinous wars against invasion, by
-ruin in insurrection, by ejectment, or by having to drop India owing
-to a collapse of the navy. Yet all these risks together are thought
-to be less than the risk of bad faith on the London County Council.
-Their stock stands at a lower price than India stock. Such is the large
-result of the many little touches of folly and extravagance which have
-lowered the financial barometer.
-
-Another instance of remote changes is in the effects of the steam
-engine and other cheap and rapid communication. The full extent of the
-changes caused are yet far from being completed. Externally the great
-change is that of the equalisation of land values for agriculture all
-over the world, as the produce can be carried from land to land for a
-small part of its value. Hence tropical lands with rapid growth and
-high fertility will compete with others; and the cheapness of labour
-there, owing to the smaller requirements in a warmer climate, will
-react on all agricultural wages. There will also be a demand for cheap
-labour to work tropical lands to their full extent; and the facility
-for transportation of labourers will result in constantly shifting
-energetic people from rather cooler climates into the hotter land for
-a time, and withdrawing them again. The same system we already carry
-out for governing classes in India; and cheap transport will make it
-possible for an energetic race to hold hot countries continuously,
-without decay due to enervation by climate, as was the case in all
-earlier northern invaders.
-
-Internally the changes owing to cheap communication are that land of
-similar quality equalises in value; and hence the worst land will
-fall to bottom price all over the country, and cannot be locally of
-any higher value. Also it will be difficult to get people to live in
-unpleasant districts, as they can easily shift about; hence wages will
-need to be higher in such districts, and therefore the land will be
-still lower. Thus the mobility of the inhabitants exaggerates the
-variation of land values already due to differing quality. The more
-bulky industries that need cheap land, and not much labour, will be
-fixed in the unpleasant districts; and peasant proprietors will tend to
-the worse land, as being abnormally low in value. Regarding movement of
-population only, as capable men can move about freely to get work that
-gives them full scope, the less capable will supplant the capable in
-all work that they are able to do. Hence we shall no longer find men
-of high quality leading simple lives in remote districts. The gain to
-the whole community is clear, but we lose one of the most interesting
-types of national character. The free and rapid transit in cities will
-cause them to be much less crowded in one mass. At Chicago men go to
-business from five miles out in five minutes. Our cumbrous stoppages
-along the whole route must be entirely given up for the outer districts
-of London. What is needed is a series of new centres twenty to thirty
-miles out of London; joined, some to the City, some to the West End,
-by non-stop trains, at sixty miles an hour. Such is certainly the
-type of great city which will finally be reached—a county covered
-with separate centres linked by trains at the highest speed. As we
-shall note further on, the development of great equatorial estates of
-European powers, and the growth of immense permanent armaments are both
-the inevitable result of rapid communication. We see thus how the whole
-type of human life and conditions has been altered, and the whole balance
-of circumstances readjusted, by the evolution of cheap motor power.
-
-We have already noticed another effect of this change, in the increase
-of emigration draining the more capable persons from England, and so
-leaving a residue inferior in energy, initiative and self-reliance.
-This deterioration of the occupants of England and Ireland is thus due
-to the purely mechanical contrivance of a steam engine.
-
-We have now traced the large effects of small economic causes, and
-we see how such apparently insignificant alterations may be far more
-effective and act far more beneficially than smashing the social
-machine with a sledge hammer because it does not run smoothly. We will
-now turn to look at some of the effects of favourite ideas of the
-present time.
-
-The compensation to workmen for accident seems at first sight a
-righteous charge upon capital for the benefit of those who are injured
-in their business. The immediate effect upon character is to save
-the careless, thoughtless, and incompetent from the results of their
-faults; this at once reduces largely the weeding and educational
-effects of the bad qualities. No man would ever have become careful
-if he did not find the necessity of being so. Even if a tendency to
-malingering can be avoided, yet the teaching effect is done away.
-It may be thought that it is better to save the individual from his
-indiscretions rather than cure the race. Like most sentimentalism it
-causes more misery in the long run. Another, and entirely separate,
-effect is to prevent the employment of those who by age or bodily
-defect are the more liable to accident; the immediate hardship of loss
-of employment to these classes is, in the total, probably greater than
-the hardship of loss of employment by accidents which it is sought
-to compensate. We injure the individual as well as the race by such
-grandmothering. A severe law demanding full and adequate protection of
-workers, where they can be mechanically protected, is the utmost that
-could be beneficially enforced.
-
-The provision of old age pensions is another pleasing scheme. In
-the first place it will diminish the need of foresight and of
-self-restraint; it will thus weaken character by removing the great
-driving force of self-interest. The burden will have to be borne by
-all, including those who are already at the last gasp, and will tend
-to push such over the border line. It will not discriminate between
-those who have borne a large share in the cost of national renewal
-by bringing up a family, and those who have selfishly squandered all
-they received. And like outdoor poor relief, it will be discounted
-in wages, and tend to lower the wage rate if no savings are to be
-expected. A sounder plan would be to revert to the kind of communal
-system of our forefathers, and make a legal demand for a pension of,
-say, £2 a year from every child, and 10_s._ a year from every grown
-up nephew or grandchild. Thus those who have done most for the State
-by renewal would receive most in return, and the greatest inducement
-would be given to bring up children to active and capable lives. The
-idea of a right to maintenance would be the knell of any State which
-undertook it. The endowment of wastrels, the taxing of all the capable
-for the propagation of the incapable, and the wholesale deterioration
-of character, would be utter ruin to a nation. Nature knows of no right
-to maintenance, but only the necessity of getting rid of those who need
-it by mending or ending them.
-
-There is another movement which seems most desirable and humane at
-first sight, and irreproachable in its economic aspect: the saving of
-infant life by greater care. A huge waste of life is going on, and
-it has been proved that it is preventable. But however much we must
-sympathise with it, we cannot shut our eyes to its meaning. England
-produces over 300,000 excess of births over deaths yearly, and perhaps
-a tenth more might be added to that by care of infant life. But would
-that tenth be of the best stock or the worst? We must agree that it
-would be of the lower, or lowest type of careless, thriftless, dirty,
-and incapable families that the increase would be obtained. Is it worth
-while to dilute our increase of population by 10 per cent. more of the
-most inferior kind? Will England be stronger for having one thirtieth
-more, and that of the worst stock, added to the population every year?
-This movement is doing away with one of the few remains of natural
-weeding out of the unfit that our civilisation has left to us. And it
-will certainly cause more misery than happiness in the course of a
-century.
-
-Lastly, let us look to the general question of the results of the
-accumulation of wealth in the hands of different classes. Roughly we
-may divide three classes of money-earners: the lower, who receive
-weekly pay, and are tempted to spend it all by the certainty of poor
-relief when needed; the middle, who receive yearly pay, and must
-save if they are to avoid losing caste in late life; the upper, who
-make large but uncertain profits by organising work, or by financial
-manipulation, regular or irregular. During the last century we have
-seen a great growth of wealth in England. At first it spread to
-workmen and manufacturers, then to the middle classes generally, and
-latterly much has accumulated in the hands of large operators with
-trusts and financial dealings. What has been the result of the wealth
-in the hands of each class, to that class, and to the whole community?
-The rise of workmen's pay has mainly been used up; there has been a
-great benefit by improving the conditions of life, but perhaps half of
-the increase has been lost in mere waste; very little has gone toward
-lifting families to a higher class, and but a very small proportion
-has been saved. The whole property of the poor is estimated now at
-nearly a year's income, the result of savings in a century, or less
-than 1 per cent. saved. When we turn to the middle classes there is
-a worse spectacle. There was, broadly speaking, but little need to
-raise the standard of expenditure among the middle classes. They
-were fairly comfortable, and need not have spent more on themselves;
-their gains might have been spent on profitable enterprises, or given
-for endowments to public purposes. On the contrary, but a small part
-of their gains have been saved or remuneratively spent, and far the
-greater part has disappeared in ever-increasing ostentation. It has
-been turned into a curse by creating an absurdly artificial standard of
-living and of sociality, so burdensome that every man is ashamed to ask
-a friend to the leg of mutton dinners of his grandfather's standard.
-It is thought mean to spend less per head on a single dinner than the
-amount which ought to keep a man in comfort for a couple of weeks.
-Real, genial sociality has been uprooted and killed in the senseless
-race of ostentation. And practically nothing has been done for public
-benefits by endowments. As a manufacturer in a park, with a motor,
-remarked, "you cannot expect anyone not to spend up to his income." The
-idea of using what is really requisite for successful living, and not
-squandering money beyond that, is entirely forgotten. The simplicity
-of having nothing that is unnecessary, the pleasure of having a large
-balance to use beyond the needs of life, and the comfort of never
-needing to worry about money, are all unknown to those who spend up to
-the hilt, and who turn their money into a grinding curse of life. The
-distribution of surplus wealth among the middle classes has proved an
-entire failure in national economics.
-
-Now, lastly, the surplus is passing into a new class, the large
-business speculator, the financier, and trust-man. So far as we can
-yet see, this class is justifying itself far more than the middle
-class. In fifty years the middle classes have not given as much to
-endow education as the millionaires have given in five years. A man
-with a gigantic income cannot spend more than a few per cent. of
-it on himself. He must use it for large public enterprises which
-benefit mankind. To put it in another form, a great dealer has
-organised a method for taxing the community in such a way that they
-do not notice it. And if he spends the tax on public improvements or
-endowments—railways, new inventions, or universities—he is an active
-benefactor to the whole community. He sponges up the surplus which
-would otherwise be frittered away in ostentation or luxury, and drops
-it out where it is a permanent benefit. As a principle we may hate the
-trust-man and multi-millionaire, but he may be a lesser curse than the
-extravagant middle or lower-class man. War is hateful, but it may be a
-lesser curse than rotting in peace. So long as the average man shows
-by his selfish luxury that he is incapable of managing wealth, so long
-the private taxer—who prevents some of the waste—will be a positive
-blessing to the community. The evolution of the great money-manager
-type now going on is a distinct step forward in the prevention of
-waste, and the growth of a better system of expenditure. A million
-pounds a year scattered over a hundred thousand men will be all eaten
-up in luxuries or lost in folly; spread among a thousand men it will
-only swell their wasteful pride of life; but put it in the hands of ten
-men who have worked for it, and they will spend most of it in useful
-work that will bear fruit. Until the education, moral and intellectual,
-of the average man is on a higher plane, it will be well for the
-surplus wealth to be in the safer hands of those who have proved their
-capacity for avoiding waste. The evolution of society is not fitted at
-present for a wealthy middle-class, or a proletariat domination.
-
-We have now seen in many directions how great are the changes in the
-constitution of society, which are brought about by a succession of
-small movements, each of which imperceptibly bears its share in the
-change. We see thus how carefully small tendencies should be watched;
-and we learn how needless and often how futile is a violent uprooting
-of institutions instead of a gradual growth.
-
-Another lesson to note is that every attempt to interfere by
-legislation in the natural working of causes is more likely to do
-harm than good. The long lesson, which it took all the middle ages to
-teach, was that legislative interference with trade always did harm;
-we have come to believe that in a half-hearted way, but we are still
-perpetually longing to tinker society by interfering with natural cause
-and effect.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE NEED OF DIVERSITY.
-
-
-A large part of the aims of government in all ages has been the
-securing of uniformity, and much of the misery of mankind has been
-caused by the enforcing of it. But when we look at nature we see that a
-highly uniform species is the least likely to advance; and a seedsman
-or a breeder will try to break up too uniform a strain by exciting
-conditions which may lead to beneficial new varieties. It is only in a
-fluctuating species in which new "sports" easily arise, or are quickly
-developed by conditions, that we can expect to acquire new qualities or
-beneficial advance.
-
-It is therefore one of the essentials for an advancing species that it
-should have full scope for diversity, so that any new varieties may not
-be crushed out by a uniformity of conditions. Too uniform a type of
-government is a deadly thing. Compulsory orthodoxy killed the vitality
-of Spain, and—so far as it succeeded—that of France also. No state
-was more brilliant or vigorous than the Norman rule in Sicily, which
-equally patronised Muhammedan and Christian.
-
-Diversity may be secured in two ways, either by large varieties within
-a single great state, or by differences between homogeneous small
-states. The diversity within a large state may be seen in England or
-America; diversity between small states was attained between the cities
-of ancient Greece or mediaeval Italy.
-
-But we meet with limiting conditions in the necessity of combination
-for mutual support; and in small states that can be carried out by a
-vigorous intolerance which weeds out those who are not conformable, and
-drives them into more congenial communities. Intolerance, therefore, is
-a gain to a small community, though detrimental to a large state where
-it excludes the neighbourhood of variety.
-
-In modern times it is with large states that we have mainly to deal.
-They are a necessary development where communication is sufficiently
-easy for the concentrated military pressure of the whole to be brought
-to bear on a single point. If states are so small that concentration
-on the border is too easy, the state will expand; if concentration is
-difficult owing to size, the state will tend to fall apart again. The
-size for states which is most successful is a function of the facility
-of internal communication. Let those who deplore the absorption of
-small states, and the growth of Imperialism in all countries, ponder
-the tale of the North American Indians, who resented the power of the
-white man, and considered how to rid themselves of him. Their great
-council was rejoiced, when one sage said that if they would do as he
-said, he would promise that no white man should remain. "If the white
-man is to go you must give up all that he brought, the horse, the gun,
-the blanket, the firewater; if you will do this you may be free." They
-thought—and then said, "No, he must stay." So, if we are willing to
-revert to nothing quicker than a cob, we might get back to a Heptarchy.
-
-The modern condition of great states being therefore forced upon us by
-the railway and telegraph, the only practical question is the form of
-life in such communities. Uniformity that is enforced, either by law,
-or by custom or fashion, is certainly a detriment, as it will suppress
-the useful variations when they arise. And the objection to it bursts
-out in the form of anarchism, which is specially a disease of great
-states. The amount of anarchism is very closely related to the size of
-the state; and it is probably an exact measure of the internal strain
-produced by repulsion of diverse types and the pressure needed to keep
-them together.
-
-It is only a very crude form of intolerance to expect many tens of
-millions of people to agree in religion, morals, and government. A
-degree of intolerance that may succeed, and even be useful, for some
-thousands, will be disastrous if applied to as many millions of men.
-
-But here we run against another guiding principle of many people. It
-is often assumed that possibly in government, probably in religion,
-and certainly in morals, there is an absolute standard of right and
-wrong, immutable and irremovable. To take the last subject—that of
-morals—to the utilitarian they are the conditions for the well-being
-of society, and may vary indefinitely with the variations of society,
-and he recognises that there is perhaps no action which may not belong
-to the best code of morality for certain possible conditions. To the
-theologian morals are the Divine dictates, which have varied immensely
-under different dispensations; and the Patriarchal, early Jewish,
-Prophetic, or Christian codes are represented as quite incompatible one
-with another. The subjects of sister-marriage, concubinage of captives,
-lapidation, private revenge, communal or individual responsibility,
-and others, all show how entirely variable the presentation of the
-moral standard is for different states of society. Hence we must always
-regard any given moral standard as being rightly associated with some
-particular condition of society and typical of it; much as the colour
-of red heat, or yellow heat, or white heat, is typical of particular
-temperatures. And instead of blindly reprobating those among us who do
-not conform to our present theoretical standard, or even the present
-normal standard, we should regard them as fragments of a different
-society gone astray in time or space.
-
-Thus we see that diversity should be tolerated up to the limits
-of the laws that are absolutely necessary to avoid confusion and
-misunderstanding between members of the same community: and there is no
-constraining principle which would narrow the variability allowable,
-short of permitting injustice, hardship, or unfair competition between
-those who need to work together in mutual confidence and good faith. It
-may truly be said that civilisation is the means for giving scope to
-diversity.
-
-Under stagnant and uniform conditions there may be a fossilised form
-of civilisation; but any living form must yield opportunities for
-individual effort, and every such opportunity is the making or marring
-of the man who rises to it or who falls before it. The leading
-tenth and the submerged tenth are equally the proof that a living
-civilisation is doing its work of sorting out the best and getting rid
-of the worst stock.
-
-From another point of view, toleration is essential to completion.
-The enormous variety of character, and ability for special work, is
-all needed in a complete community. There are many "wrong paradises"
-in a whole society. We see the necessity for mental diversity, from
-the pure mathematician who is proud of the inapplicability of his
-results, through all the successive stages of research work, commercial
-work, administrative management, and mechanical work, even down to
-merely automatic work which needs no more mind than a cow's. And it
-is perfectly clear that such mental diversity must have corresponding
-variety of external life to accommodate it. The student or experimental
-worker finds the disturbances of communal life almost insufferable,
-while the mechanical worker would be miserable almost to suicide in
-the silence and lack of excitement of a life devoted to abstract
-thought or to millionths of an inch. If, therefore, the productions of
-the externals of life differ so profoundly in a complete society, we
-must expect and allow equally great differences in all the feelings,
-instincts, and requirements. One man may have a physical repulsion
-to affecting his mind and condition by stimulants and narcotics, a
-repulsion that extends more or less to every one addicted to such
-drugging of the senses. But it would be a misfortune to be without
-that variety, and the world would be poorer by losing Falstaff, or
-even Bardolph. The utmost we can say is that we should never be blind
-to the bad effects on the community of a low type if it be too widely
-diffused.
-
-So long as the extreme parties are but a small portion, and the
-distribution of variation is normal, most in the middle course and
-thinning away to the upper and lower limits, the society is stable and
-benefits by its variations. But if the curve of variation is irregular,
-and shows two large groups with fewer in the middle course between
-them, the condition is dangerous. We had such a condition in England
-in the seventeenth century, and after a long struggle of each group
-to capture the middle party, the separation into two communities took
-place. The spiritual ancestors of Clifford and Perks and Byles were
-happy in their paradise of intolerant puritanism in New England, while
-Old England had internal peace for a couple of centuries. Another such
-process of fission now seems growing imminent, and it is again the
-question as to which group will capture the middle party. The positive
-danger of a diversity running into two separate groups is notorious in
-history. The Copts invited the Arab invasion to rid them of Byzantine
-bondage; the Britons invited the Saxons to save them from their
-neighbours. The ideals of a County Council which will not tolerate a
-quiet square in London, or of labour members who promote marches of
-the unemployed and unlimited taxation at their will, may drive the
-best thought in England to the tranquillity of a well-governed capital
-abroad; and as there are many people now who would prefer in England a
-Boer domination to that of the party represented by Cecil, Halifax, and
-Riley, so there are many others who would rather submit to a German
-government of London than to a sacking by a hungry mob. The segregation
-into two groups with an unstable link between them is fatal to the
-virtues classed as Patriotism. A studious Englishman would sooner have
-a Japanese or Russian professor for a neighbour, than have the average
-drinking workman and rowdy family who may be his distant cousins. And
-assuredly he would make no personal sacrifices to keep out of England
-any people who were proved to be the moral or intellectual superiors of
-the rest of his countrymen. We thus see that diversity, however great,
-must vary about a single centre, if it is to be favourable to society
-as a whole.
-
-Looking at the general domination of modern law it is truly astonishing
-how much uniformity is possible. But the fact of a uniform law being in
-force must not blind us to the existence of a great amount of diversity
-being now tolerated side by side with it. For instance, we are so
-accustomed to think of only one type of marriage that the various
-stages recognised in Roman law seem astonishing. Yet in legal status
-in England there are ten stages surviving, most of which are tolerated
-by the law. There is (1) royal assent, needful in the royal family,
-just as it is needful in every family in some African communities; (2)
-normal religious or civil marriage; (3) marriage of divorced persons,
-only civil; (4) within prohibited degrees, but tolerated socially, as
-deceased wife's sister, or (5) not tolerated, as uncle and niece; (6)
-quasi-permanent connection with full legal responsibility for children;
-(7) temporary license. Only in case of lack of full consent does the
-law step in to punish, in (8) marriage under age, (9) bigamy or (10)
-violence. Every one of these stages has been normal in some conditions
-of society, and most are normal in some countries even at present. We
-may, for example, instance (1) normal in Benin; (2) religious marriage
-only normal in England; (3) normal in Eastern Europe; (4) normal in
-our colonies; (5) normal in Italy; (6) normal in Islam; (7) normal in
-Madagascar in interregnum of sovereignty, and in other countries; (8)
-normal in India; (9) normal in Islam; (10) normal in most warfare.
-And each of these stages carries with it in England different legal
-and social conditions. Again, as regards the period of the marriage
-ceremony, the Church has had a long and hard fight to get it recognised
-as a hymeneal ceremony and not a maternity ceremony; yet the latter
-status is recognised in law as equal to the former, and it is still
-prevalent among a third of marriages in some Australian colonies, and
-very largely in England, both in the country from end to end and in
-town life. On the whole some fifteen hundred years of church pressure
-has not turned the scale very far against the older custom, which we
-might well call approximation by trial and error. Such is the diversity
-which is yet uncontrolled.
-
-We must regard society, therefore, as in the above definite subject,
-in the light of a mixture of many stages of evolution. We may still
-sit at table with palaeolithic man, put into modern dress and eating
-modern dishes it is true, but absolutely in the palaeolithic stage of
-thought and intellect; he is entirely absorbed in the interests of
-hunting wild animals, and devoted to his appliances for the chase,
-while incapable of making or improving anything belonging to a higher
-kind of civilisation. Crime and illegalities are very largely merely
-survivals of different conditions of society, which the law of the
-majority has not succeeded in repressing. As such, the more reasonable
-and favourable mode of dealing with them would be deportation to
-communities where such actions are still normal. Instead of five years'
-sentence for bigamy, let us exile a man to a Muhammedan country. If we
-were seriously to establish island communities where theft, violence,
-anarchy, and other phases incompatible with any passable diversity,
-were still normal and unpunished, we might leave all those who
-preferred to practise such conditions to work out their own life and
-views with kindred minds.
-
-Regarding now the individual rather than the community, we see in
-modern education a very serious force acting against that diversity
-which is needful for progress. So far as it is a social force, owing
-to the herding together of large masses of children, and so destroying
-family types, it is mainly deleterious. The enforcement of trivial
-and senseless regulations by boys themselves is entirely a detriment
-to character, as destroying a habit of dealing with matters on their
-own merits, and creating a terrible bogey of senseless public opinion.
-The compulsory games and the ordering of the use of personal time,
-is another detriment, for it certainly destroys some ability which
-might find its footing in the character permanently. But beside the
-detriment of the system of herding, there is the more direct question
-of the influence of the teaching. Most children begin with a great
-curiosity concerning the world and their experience of it, a curiosity
-which when unguided leads to many unpleasant and inconvenient results.
-Hence, instead of guiding it aright, and encouraging the benefits of
-it, the selfish and lazy plan of elders is to destroy and obliterate
-the reasoning interest in things, and try to enforce in its place a
-knowledge of matters, which are generally less useful, and certainly
-less interesting, than those which a child wants to know about. The
-leading factor of character, the acquisition of knowledge of benefits
-and injuries, of good and of evil, is mainly rooted out; and the new
-plants of abstract ideas and bookwork require generally many years to
-take good root, if they do so at all. This system lies at the base of
-the unintellectual character of the average educated Englishman, who
-takes no useful interest in anything. As an example of this, there is
-a foreign land full of interest, scientific, historical, and social;
-for a quarter of a century hundreds of Englishmen have been there in
-comfortable official positions with reasonable leisure. Yet there is
-not a single good memoir produced, not even a hundred pages of original
-matter, outside of official work, by all this mass of educated minds
-during nearly a generation. The possibility of what might have been
-done in such grand opportunities has been stamped out by the education
-which they have suffered. They are all of regulation pattern, with as
-little variation as is possible between different temperaments—amiable
-upright men, who will leave no trace of anyone being the wiser in
-future for their existence. Such is the product of the numbing chill of
-uniformity, and the weeding out of the advancing power of diversity.
-
-We are all familiar with the epigram of England having a hundred
-religions but only one sauce; but we see a worse misfortune in the
-absurd incongruity of now having two hundred religions and only one
-system of elementary education. Amid the great variety of minds, which
-is illustrated by the free choice of religious belief and practice,
-we certainly require a great diversity of education to bring out the
-best development of each type. We require simultaneous experiment on
-a small scale, instead of vast experiments of Acts which apply to
-the whole country for a generation at a time. Every Act is only an
-experiment, and one which is usually spoiled by attempting too much
-in a compromise, which is neither fish, flesh, nor fowl. Had there
-been in 1870 a hundred schools used for experiment, say five of twenty
-different types in different parts of the country, the life-history
-of the pupils would by now have given us a firm basis for rational
-adjustment of a system. It is fatuous to suppose it possible to make
-one Procrustean bed to fit children of the country, the mining centre,
-the manufacturing district, the commercial town, or the fisher folk—of
-the Yorkshire tyke, the Suffolk dumpling, or the Hampshire hog. Nor is
-it merely the success of a system in producing examination results that
-has to be attained. It is quite possible that the best workers in after
-life may not be the best to cram with temporary bookwork. Nothing short
-of twenty years of active life can test the value of the education on
-which it is based.
-
-Should we not at least try the effect of varying amount of control by
-the central board, the local council, and the teacher himself? May
-not some latitude in subject be allowed to a teacher, to follow lines
-which his own mind is best capable of making useful? Should not a great
-difference be made between the town, where an infant school is needed,
-to keep children safe while parents are at work, and the country where
-they can be left to play in the open? Should not country teaching be
-adapted to making agriculturists? Might it not be possible to leave
-children entirely in the fields till sixteen, provided that they could
-pass in reading at nine, and in figures at twelve, however it was
-learned? A solid two years' half-timing from sixteen to eighteen, when
-they valued knowledge, might be worth all they gain in the present
-way. Such are a few of the questions to which answers are necessary,
-before we can begin to provide for the diversity of education, which is
-certainly requisite if we are to make it successful—a help instead of
-a detriment in after life.
-
-And in more detailed education is it not possible to let a child's mind
-grow on what is of interest to it—to further it on whatever subjects
-are most attractive and easy to that type of mind, until the habit of
-learning is so developed that it can be more easily levelled up on
-the subjects which have been neglected? The mere habit of learning
-and applying knowledge has to be acquired to begin with, and surely
-the easier subjects are the best on which to practise the power of
-concentration of mind. The trainer knows that his monkeys cannot be
-taught unless they can concentrate attention on the subject in hand.
-In every direction we need to gain diversity—in types of society,
-in customs, in varieties of mind; and to gain this basis for useful
-variation we must begin by cultivating diversity and providing for its
-success, in place of attacking and crushing it wherever it appears.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-LINES OF ADVANCE.
-
-
-Before we can imagine what may be lines of possible advance, for the
-individual or the community, we should base our ideas on observing
-what have been the means of advance in the past. Many of the Utopian
-visions which have been sketched by different writers are in flagrant
-contradiction of all history and human nature. It is at least far more
-likely that gain in the future will be on similar lines to those which
-have been successful in the past, rather than on lines opposed to all
-previous growth.
-
-The personal, rather than the communal, advance is the main
-consideration, inasmuch as it is personal initiative of the most
-able which helps the rest of the community forward. The greatest
-improvements are the result of a single mind, animating perhaps a small
-group of similar minds. We all know how such great benefits as prison
-reform, the abolition of slavery, the restriction of child labour,
-and similar movements of which the public are now proud, were each
-originated by one mind, and worked by a small group in the teeth of the
-bitterest opposition to start with. It goes without saying that the
-same is the case in all inventions; it takes not only an inventor, but
-also a commercial organiser (seldom one and the same man), to help the
-public to any improvement. If ten thousand men could be picked out of
-any one country, so as to remove the most fruitful minds, that country
-would come to an entire standstill, and would continue in mechanical
-repetition until a fresh generation gave a chance of the rise of
-original minds. Probably not more than one in a thousand minds causes
-useful advance among the others. And the majority of men lead automatic
-lives, of which the reflexes have been trained by teaching and
-experience to do what is required, and the daily actions are performed
-without a single real thought, but only in response to external stimuli
-of sights and orders. It is therefore in the development of the able
-individuals, and in giving every chance to such whenever they arise,
-that the hopes of the great mass must lie.
-
-It is perhaps not too much to say that all general popular advance of
-the community at large is based on the prevention of waste. Wherever
-waste exists improvement is possible; and we need not trouble ourselves
-much about the construction of the social organism, so long as we can
-lay our finger on the waste and check it. As with a machine we know
-the amount of force that is put into it, and can see what percentage
-is yielded up usefully in its output, so it is with a community. The
-design of the nature and quality of work done by the community or the
-machine is another matter; though that again comes under the head of
-waste if the quality is bad. We will now look more precisely at the
-gains by prevention of waste in health, life, energy, and renewal.
-
-The saving of health is one of the greatest steps that has been made,
-as it has been suddenly performed within a generation. Man had
-unconsciously conquered bacteria to a great extent by the invention
-of cooking, and by the experimental learning of cleanliness; but the
-scientific attack on bacteria and protozoa has given the prospect
-of preventing all epidemic disease, and largely increasing the
-efficiency of man in the most fertile countries. This advance means
-the economic exploitation of the whole tropical regions, which—with
-cheap transport—will provide an immense fresh basis for the advantage
-of other lands. The gain in antiseptic surgery, giving safety for
-operation on all internal organs, as it only affects the small
-proportion of sick and injured, is not of so much general importance as
-the conquest of the microorganisms, which have hitherto ruled the best
-part of the world. It is in the complete domination over all forms of
-life, however minute, that we shall find one of the greatest lines for
-future advance. Only a small band of workers, about one in a hundred
-million of the world's population, has made this advance possible.
-
-The saving of life is another great step which will give man far higher
-power; not only in the mere hindrance of death, but far more in the
-increased power of work _per_ day. The power of continuity of work
-is a growth of civilisation; and it is obvious that a man who can do
-twelve hours' work _per_ day, instead of six hours, not only lives
-virtually twice as long, but costs the community only half as much
-for what he does. This continuity of work, or industry, is seen in
-both high and low classes of work. Some races can do more than twice
-as much agricultural work in the day as others. The same is true of
-scientific or commercial work. And there have been some of the highest
-minds which could only work for two hours a day, while others could
-work up to fourteen or sixteen hours daily. This power of continuity
-of work is obviously then a matter improvable by cultivation, both in
-the individual and in the race; and as it may easily double a man's
-effective life it is certainly a line of great promise for the future.
-
-Another direction for saving a portion of life is in the rapidity of
-thought and action. It is easy to find a difference of two or three
-times the amount of work _per_ hour between different men. All that we
-have just said about the continuity of work applies to its rapidity;
-and a large gain may be looked for in cultivating pace and vigour. We
-need hardly note that trades-union ideals would destroy instead of
-promoting these most promising and fruitful lines of advance.
-
-In transport from place to place the movement at fifty miles an hour
-instead of five means a gain of several years of life to most men.
-But here we have probably reached the useful limits, as any possible
-further saving would not yield much more time.
-
-The saving of energy is another form of the question of continuity of
-work. The ideal of work—as varied as possible, and as interesting as
-possible—being the joy of life and the greatest good, is an aim hardly
-yet grasped by more than a very few persons. To the majority, work is
-a hateful thing, to be done solely in order to get means for enjoyment
-in some other way. This essentially savage and uncultivated ideal
-needs to be steadily rooted out by the better adaptation of work to
-the individual. An education which started by cultivating the natural
-interests, using them for mental development, and only superadding
-what further knowledge was really requisite for life, would greatly
-help to eradicate the false and low idea of work which prevails. There
-is a common feeling that business cannot be interesting in itself; but
-there are few, if any, businesses which if intelligently followed will
-not yield scope for some real interest of observation and study. The
-greater application of mind to the work of life will leave far less
-scope for fruitless amusement and—as a great painter remarked—"there
-is nothing of interest in life to be compared with work."
-
-To minds which are incapable of continuity of work, or of relaxation
-by variation of work, mere amusements are needful. Darwin's health
-prevented more than two hours' work a day, and the flimsiest of
-novels was his needful relaxation. But the need of amusement for this
-purpose must be taken as the index of incapacity for continuity—as
-an unfortunate failure of mental and physical health—as a disastrous
-defect when it occurs along with great abilities which can only
-thus work at low speed. The same may be said of athletics; the need
-of physical exercise outside of work is an index of incapacity for
-physical health adapted to the work, an unfortunate failure of those
-who are of defective condition. The idea that no one can be too strong
-and robust is a wild exaggeration; physical strength needs to be
-proportioned to the nature of work, and a slender wiry man will do far
-better for indoor life than a plethoric mass of brawn and muscle which
-needs much exercise to keep in health. Unlimited robustness is not an
-absolute good, to be pursued at all costs, or else we should make
-every schoolboy a Hun, living without shelter, and feeding on flaps of
-raw meat which form the only saddle of his horse. In brief, the need
-of athletics shows a weakness of body to be remedied, or a physical
-over-development unsuited to the person's work in life; it is the mark
-of unfitness, and the need ceases so soon as a man is adapted to his
-work. The need of spending any considerable time on amusement is the
-sign of an incapacity, which has to be removed by strengthening the
-mind in the individual or in the race. The passion for amusement is
-the sure evidence of a defective education, which has left the mind
-incapable of continuity, or bare of interests. An important advance
-therefore lies in better use of the time which is at present wasted in
-fruitless action of mind or body; better adaptation and education for
-the work of life will gradually raise the standard so that this form
-of waste will be avoided. We do not expect a uniform type of horse to
-be equally adapted to draught or hunting or racing; and similarly we
-ought to specialise on different types of men fitted for agriculture,
-or mechanical work, or office work.
-
-The great subject of the waste by renewal of the population in each
-generation has an immense variety of aspects; but the essential
-importance of it is seen when we reflect that about half the labour of
-the world is swallowed up in this renewal. The burden of production, of
-rearing, of education, and the waste and loss in the process, exceeds
-that of any other activity, such as supply of food or shelter, for
-the adult. Hence any possible saving in this great mass of labour, or
-reduction of waste, is of the first importance to the individual and
-the race.
-
-Those who have proposed temporary marriage hardly seem to have
-considered that one of the most important economies adopted, perhaps
-dating from a pre-human period, was that of permanent marriage. This
-saved at a stroke the enormous loss of time and energy in the rivalries
-of repeated mating. The gain to the race by leaving the members free
-for continuous work is greater than the loss by reproducing inferior
-stocks. There is no need for the system to have been intentionally
-adopted for this purpose; but merely a race which economised the time
-of repeated mating would soon oust a race in which it was customary.
-For this reason any fancied reconstruction of society without permanent
-marriage is entirely futile; even if it could be universal, yet the
-advantage given to the lazy and emotional type of man above the
-continuous worker would soon pull down the race. One frequent argument
-for a more revocable union is the number of divorces effected or
-desired. But nearly all such are among people whose judgment in any
-other line of life would certainly not be trusted, and who habitually
-get into trouble over other communal obligations. To abolish marriage
-for their benefit would be as reasonable as allowing all debts to be
-repudiated because such people cannot pay their I.O.U.'s. There is
-moreover a great gain in permanent marriage when judiciously effected,
-by the new mental pivot of a sense of permanent ensurance of various of
-the conditions of life, which liberates the attention of both parties
-from a large number of points, and leaves each free to concentrate
-attention on a partial phase of feelings and duties. It is a far higher
-and a spiritual counterpart of a successful business partnership,
-where each member trusts the other to manage a different part of the
-affair. All this mental economy and help would be impossible without
-permanence.
-
-Another wastage which has been greatly reduced in modern times is that
-of high birth rate and high death rate. The allusions in mediaeval
-times show a state much like that now described among the Slovenes,
-where incessant maternity is only balanced by the reduction of children
-due to filth, neglect, and bad conditions. The modern ideal of a small
-family carefully tended is an immense advance, both for the individual
-life and for the saving of waste. But its benefits should be sought and
-not commanded. If the neglectful, dirty, and wasteful stocks of low
-type in our midst let their children die off, it is the only balance
-to their overgrowth, which would soon outnumber the better class of
-population. The right end to begin at is by insisting on hard work and
-tidy living, under penal enactments; the saving of the children may
-then be left to take care of itself. To begin at the sentimental end,
-as is now the fashion, is to degrade the whole race by swamping it with
-the worst stocks.
-
-The line of progress in invention is the remorseless "scrapping" of
-poorer machines. The more serious the progress becomes, the more
-scrapping needs to be done. We must not be surprised then if a sign
-of human progress of mind and body should be the large number of
-inefficients who are thrown out of work on the scrap heap of society.
-
-In another direction advance has been made by general lengthening of
-the stages of life. The early marriage and early deaths of past times
-brought the cost of renewal at every twenty years, which was a much
-severer tax on the community than renewal in thirty or forty years.
-There is probably also a great benefit in the higher development of
-parents before each generation. It is well recognised how the later
-children of a family are more able, and of a more finished quality than
-the earlier; great examples of such a view in older literature being
-Joseph and David, and in our own history, Alfred. The longer growth of
-mind before each generation appears to be a great gain of advance for
-the race. Among the lower races, by far the most advanced are those
-like the Zulu, which have a long period of hard training and active
-life before settling down to family duties.
-
-The often debated problem dealing with the human refuse of bad stocks
-is one which presses most on an advanced civilisation. We will not do
-like the Christian Norseman, when he put the ne'er-do-weel family into
-a wide grave in the churchyard, and wiped his hands of them. We will
-not even leave them to exterminate themselves by their own follies,
-vices, and ignorance. But if the state takes up the burden of such
-wastrels it must have an entire control of them. Responsibility without
-rule is worse than rule without responsibility. The only safe course
-is a rigorous enforcement of parental duties; with the alternative of
-penal servitude in state workshops, the mother and children together,
-the father elsewhere. There is no middle course, of semi-maintenance
-by school meals, which will not injure the children by their being
-correspondingly neglected at home, injure the parents by lowering the
-spur of necessity to work, and injure the state by flooding it with the
-worst types.
-
-Much more drastic treatment of the unfit has been advocated, as by
-Dr. Rentoul. In a future period of civilisation a logical course of
-treatment might have a chance of adoption; but in our age any serious
-changes of the habits of thought and action will not be tolerated,
-unless brought about very gradually under small influences, such as
-we have noticed as acting through taxation. What we need is to try to
-give effect to the gospel of giving to him that hath, and taking away
-from him that hath not. The most likely opening for such a line of
-advance would be giving partial state maintenance to the best stocks,
-so as to ensure large returns from them, and taxing down the worst
-stocks—exactly the opposite course to the present craze. Let us try to
-realise if there be a practical system for this advance.
-
-We should need a Board of Health in each area of about 10,000
-inhabitants, composed of three examining doctors. Every child on
-leaving school, or at about fifteen, should be examined, merely by a
-glance at the greater bulk of normal cases, but carefully in extreme
-cases. The finest 5 per cent. both mentally (shown by school-leaving
-certificates) and physically as well, should be premiated by assisted
-higher education of suitable type. The worst 10 per cent. should be
-remanded to a training school where physical and mental development
-would be scientifically carried out, and as much profit as possible
-made from their labour toward self-support. This would reclaim the
-hooligan class effectually before they run amuck, and help on those
-who need care and assistance to get a good footing in life. No course
-could possibly be kinder for the weaklings. At the age of twenty a
-further examination of both the best and the worst classes should
-ensue. The best half of the most able should receive a certificate
-granting them practically free support for all children they may have
-after they have reached the age of twenty-five. The worst half of the
-most incapable, or 5 per cent. of all, should be required to report
-residence during their lives to the Board of Health of their district,
-and informed that if they had any children they must pay a heavy fine,
-or else go into servitude. This would practically mean the segregation
-of the lowest class of the unfits under compulsory work. It would be
-cheaper to the state to keep them thus at work, than to pay poor rates
-to maintain this submerged twentieth and their helpless families.
-
-In all these proposals there would be no Socialistic constraint of the
-great majority, which is normal in mind and body. But such attention
-to the unfit would be merely adding a porch to the poorhouse, the
-hospital, and the asylum, and there sorting over the material which can
-be possibly saved from a bad end. The nine-tenths of people who were
-ordinary would be thus left even more free for individual growth than
-they now are, when hampered by the inefficient residue.
-
-We might not exclude the thought of another favourite idea of some
-reformers which in a modified shape might be allowed to gradually take
-root. Since Spencer Wells familiarised the world with an operation
-for which he will always be remembered, hundreds of women have
-gladly improved their health by a safe treatment, which, if anything,
-threatened to become too fashionable. Every woman who was, as above,
-required to report her residence as being unfit, and being liable to
-heavy penalties on having children, should be offered the option of
-perfect freedom if she chose the operation. The marriage of such women,
-with men who were condemned as unfit, would entirely free both parties
-from reporting and inspection in future, and give the best prospect
-of happy lives to the weakest and less capable of the community, free
-from what would be only too truly "encumbrances" to such people. This
-course might give a permanently safe line of improvement, without any
-consequent stigma or hardship in the world around; and so gentle a
-change—beneficial to the individual as well as the community—seems
-not outside of future possibilities. At least such a course would be
-the more practicable form of such a proposed change. Of course, no such
-legislation would be complete in its action, and evasions would often
-occur. But if it checked even one half of the growth of bad stock it
-would be an enormous gain.
-
-We now turn to other lines of advance from the communal point of view.
-The old system of community, in which all the nations of northern
-Europe lived, was based on each man being his brother's keeper;
-every one was liable to fines if any relative committed a crime, in
-proportion to their closeness of relation. To this succeeded individual
-responsibility, both in property and in penalties. This raises the
-question whether it is possible to separate property and penalty in
-communism. At present the tendency is to a state communism, begun
-by heavy death duties and taxation (for a variety of purposes which
-the taxed do not use or require), amounting to a quarter of all
-property. If this system is extended, and property becomes more largely
-hypothecated to public purposes, then when a man is condemned in
-heavy damages or fines his neighbours will suffer by reduction of the
-rateable property. Will it not be thought more fair for his relatives
-to be responsible for the public loss? And if so, we indirectly revert
-to the payment by relatives of a share of all fines.
-
-To anyone who has had experience of combined labour, it is obvious how
-two people working together do not perform twice as much as one alone.
-There is always a loss by one waiting on the action of another; and
-it appears as if the amount of work done only increased as the square
-root of the number of people working together. Hence the group-work
-of communistic taste is very wasteful. This is practically seen among
-the Slavs in Russia, where communal agriculture—which is extolled
-by its admirers—produces far less _per_ acre on fine land, than is
-obtained by individual agriculture on poor land in England. Again it is
-notorious how the Irishman who goes to work apart among individualist
-people, then flourishes as he never does when held down by the communal
-claims socially enforced among his own countrymen. This is the root
-of the success of the Irish out of their own land. Thus we see how
-communal action is the more wasteful form of labour; and how it was a
-great advance for man when he made individual success entirely depend
-upon individual labour.
-
-Another question is what form of government will most favour the
-strong breeds and the new strains of ability as they arise? Certainly
-any system which ties the actions of one person with those of others is
-detrimental to ability. The better man is held back by the co-operation
-with others, by their lower example, and by their direct disfavour. Any
-communistic tie is unfavourable to advance; and it was a great step
-in favour of new and improved variations when each individual stood
-entirely on his own resources, and was not bound by his inferior kin.
-In every way, therefore, individualism was a line of advance for men in
-the past; and the principles which are involved promise that it will
-yet likewise be the main line of future advance. If we look practically
-at which class of government is associated with advance of ideas, of
-inventions, and new types of thought, let us put on one hand the more
-individualist countries, America, England, Germany, and perhaps France,
-and on the other hand the more communist countries, Switzerland,
-Norway, Ireland, Greece, Australia, and especially New Zealand. Can
-we question for a moment which type of country is most advancing the
-intellect and abilities of man?
-
-But we must not forget that Union is strength, the motto that Belgium
-strangely took on separating from Holland; and combined action has
-great advantages. In this view the beneficial combination is that
-to which all contribute without one being a hindrance to the other.
-How far can these benefits be gained without loss to the improved
-individual? The main principle is that all combinations must be
-entirely voluntary, and have no suspicion of coercion about them.
-Where even "peaceful persuasion" comes in, ability is crushed, and
-the whole community is the loser by it. Coercive union of individuals
-is the unpardonable sin against human nature, because it kills the
-hopes of the future. The safe line of advance is combination by
-large clubs for every purpose, with healthy rivalry between similar
-institutions—benefit clubs, co-operative stores, co-operative works,
-holiday clubs, and insurance of all kinds. Every inducement should be
-held out to join in such combinations, giving them the assistance and
-security of official auditors, as is provided for friendly societies
-at present Every line in which any class can profitably unite for
-economic action, on an entirely voluntary basis, and without any tie
-on the individual beyond his share in the enterprise, is a clear gain
-to society. In this way the taxation for these ends would fall on
-those who benefit by them, and not on those who do not want them. Thus
-the individual would be free to take, or leave alone, the benefits
-provided; and many purposes to which taxation is now applied would
-be far better effected by gigantic clubs of those classes who want
-such assistance. Taxation must be strictly limited to those purposes
-in which all persons must necessarily share, such as protection and
-justice.
-
-Hence a future line of advance lies in a great development of purely
-voluntary co-operation in any one class, in order to obtain the
-advantages of combination. In one direction it is clear what immense
-savings might be thus effected. Co-operative purchase of supplies and
-cooking, with distribution of hot meals to subscribers, would save
-perhaps a third of the cost of living to the working classes. And if
-the prepaid weekly subscriptions might be deducted before wages were
-received, such a system would go far to solve the question of proper
-feeding of children. Again, the education of hand-workers in the
-subject of economics can be best furthered by the experience gained in
-co-operative works, and even on this ground alone every encouragement
-should be given to such combinations of workers.
-
-Another line of advance now coming into practical view is the use of
-various nationalities, according to their abilities for different
-kinds of works in foreign countries. We have seen, in Europe, Italian
-miners taken to many lands for tunnelling and submarine work, we have
-Norwegians largely employed in our shipping, and English engineers
-find many careers abroad. Of recent years the great mass of cheap
-skilled labour of China and Japan has been getting its due share of
-the world's work. The infamous manner in which the Chinese have been
-treated in America is apparently now nearly at an end; the Republic
-where all men are free and equal will be coerced into fairness by the
-reasonable refusal to take American goods as long as the Americans will
-not take Chinese labour. In British Columbia the Japanese are objected
-to because they are more industrious, more economical, more sober
-and quiet than the white, who, as their inferior in these principal
-respects, cannot bear their competition. The Americans are likewise
-trying to prevent their industry, while at the same time wishing to
-make the Panama Canal with Chinese labour; in this they will probably
-be rebuffed, unless the whole national position is put on a fair basis.
-The objections to Chinese labour in South Africa have never been put
-on the real fact—tacitly felt, though unexpressed—that the white
-dreads the competition of an economical people. First they were said to
-be tortured in slavery, a lie which served its big political purpose
-until it was found that they would not leave; then the danger of public
-crime and burglary was put forward, until it was shown that there
-were fewer criminals in proportion than among other inhabitants; then
-a cry of immorality was raised, until the Colonial Secretary stated
-that the Kaffirs who would replace them had just the same habits. Now
-the Transvaal refuses to destroy its own welfare by the falseness of
-playing with any of these cries; but such hatred to free labour has all
-served the political ends which were intended by an unscrupulous party
-that revels in keeping a conscience. Meanwhile the Prussian Board of
-Agriculture desires to import Chinese agriculturists into Germany; and
-it will be strange if the great German coalfields in South Wales are
-not run by the cheapest labour that can be obtained. We have no laws
-to prevent Chinese working freely in England, and we cannot afford to
-wreck our great China trade by starting a gross injustice of exclusion.
-
-If objections are felt—by a people so immoral as ourselves—to the
-toleration of any habit of foreign residents, let it be legislated upon
-equally for all nationalities in England. In this way the Canadians
-expelled the rowdy negroes who had taken refuge with them in the days
-of slavery. A rigid and impartial punishment of rowdyism cleared out
-the undesirable negro, and left the inoffensive behind. The only
-possible course of safety is not by any laws directed against any
-one race; for when such laws break down in the growth of the future
-there will be a terrible economic—if not political—catastrophe.
-Rigid laws to check evils of all inhabitants of a country alike are
-sound and safe, and will prevent most of the objectionable results of
-immigration, Jewish, Italian, Chinese, or any other. With such laws a
-great advance can be made by the free use of that kind of labour which
-is most adapted to the work, whatever source it may come from. Such
-must inevitably be the course of the distant future; and those who
-play with holding what they please to call a "white man's land" will
-find that "mean whites" of hot countries are wholly inferior to other
-races which are fitted for such a position. Bret Harte has well stated
-"the conscious hate and fear with which inferiority always regards the
-possibility of even-handed justice, and which is the key-note to the
-vulgar clamour about servile and degraded races."
-
-Another subject which has seemed to be a most promising line of advance
-is that of the reduction or abolition of warfare. We must not limit
-our view in this to open and direct violence, there are other forms of
-warfare quite as effective, and causing as much, or more, misery in the
-total. The warfare of trade is always going on, each nation is pushing
-its neighbours as much as it can for its own benefit. Some gain benefit
-by closed markets and bleeding a monopoly, others benefit by open
-markets, and each fights for what it wants by trade methods backed with
-force. The free trader honestly believes that all this can and should
-be abolished by each country producing what it is best fitted for, and
-a tacit or legal understanding that there is to be no trade rivalry on
-the various lines thus assigned to different countries. Such would be
-the only system which could abolish trade warfare. Under such a system
-advance would be greatly checked, if not killed. Look at the history
-of quinine; only twenty years ago it was 10_s._ an ounce, and the
-growers (though competing among themselves) did not think they could
-improve the process or reduce the price. The chemist in Europe stepped
-into the market and smashed the old system by much cheaper artificial
-quinine. But the growers, sooner than be ruined, invented extraction by
-petroleum, and brought down the price to 1_s._ 6_d._ an ounce. Now here
-were two acts of violent trade warfare between countries; the result
-being such an improvement that instead of one of the most life-saving
-medicines being a luxury, it can now be used six times more freely than
-before. Without trade war this would never have come about. Free trade
-implies free competition, and that is trade-warfare.
-
-Another form of trade war is holding a country for the sake of a
-monopoly of trade, thus enabling a group of manufacturers—say of
-France—to tax all the inhabitants under their government, especially
-in colonies—as Algiers, Madagascar, Tahiti, &c. This is simply a form
-of tribute, like the taxation levied by Rome on various conquered
-countries; it holds back the taxed countries. If other countries wish
-to get a share of that trade they will have to fight, by trade or by
-violence, to conquer the right to join in it. And a trade war which
-shut, say, all English markets to France, until all French markets
-were open to England, would not violate any economic principle. It
-is meeting force by force, exclusion by exclusion; and no shudder at
-our using trade war ourselves will prevent for an instant the trade
-war which is used against us. Our principles will not weigh a feather
-in other nations' practice. But warfare is a temporary measure, and
-retaliation must only be temporary. The great danger would be in
-establishing a permanent system of taxation of foreign productions,
-which would be worked to the utmost by trades unions at home, in order
-to enable them to bleed the country to death by high prices. This
-terrible danger of ruin is the main reason against protective duties,
-though seldom, if ever, noticed in public discussion of the subject.
-
-Another form of warfare is the relative burden of armaments. This may
-be called slow combustion, in contrast to the open flame of war. Now if
-there is no joint limitation—as at present—the most long-sighted and
-powerful nation stands to win at this game; the result is the same as
-if actual war were in progress, but the terrors and destruction of war
-are avoided. But if there be a joint limitation of armament—as some
-hope may be established—it must be on such a basis that no one state
-is left in a condition of clear superiority to another, otherwise it
-would tie the inferior state to be in a permanently inferior condition.
-And the qualities which will win will be subterfuge, evasion, and bad
-faith; whichever state contrives to be better prepared than another
-behind the agreement will stand to win when the war does come. In the
-unlimited condition the qualities win which are those best for mankind
-in all other respects; in the limited condition the qualities will
-win which are worst for mankind otherwise. The real fact is that great
-armaments are like great states, a needful condition of the new speed
-of communication. When it took two or three months to move an army
-from central Europe to England, we had two or three months to prepare;
-when it takes only two or three days we must be always prepared. No
-one can put the clock back, and steam is the end of small armaments.
-Within a generation of quick transport being started, big armaments
-were found needful, and will never cease to be needful. Great permanent
-combinations of states are the only line of relief under the new
-conditions, which bind mankind for ever in the future.
-
-Let us look now at direct war. What are the qualities which tell
-for success, looking to the wars of recent times with which we are
-familiar? In the brains of the army the main qualities have been (1)
-Foresight; (2) Combining power; (3) Honesty; (4) Imagination; (5)
-Skill; and in the muscle of the army (6) Physique; (7) Industry;
-(8) Tenacity. In short, success in war requires precisely the same
-qualities as success in peace. Even if the cause is bad, yet it is the
-best man all round that wins. In each case recently the winner has
-been the better power for future civilisation. War then may be defined
-as the concentration into a year of the same results which would take
-place by economic causes within perhaps a generation or a century. So
-far as violent changes are undesirable—as we have noticed before—so
-far war is undesirable. But on the purely humanitarian view it may be
-better to flee before one's enemies for three months than have three
-years' famine; it may be better to kill 100,000 in a brief campaign
-than starve a million during a whole generation by bad trade owing to
-slow economic changes. War strikes the imagination and impresses the
-thoughtless with its horror, but a starving peace may be a far more
-painful process.
-
-It is difficult to see that any of the causes of trade war, armament
-war, or open war are at all likely to be less in the future than they
-have been in the past; and if the causes are the same we must expect
-like effects. Nor do we see that any result of these different kinds of
-war is injurious to that character of man which is requisite for his
-advance in better lines. Each of these forms of competition tends to
-give an advantage to the best qualified race, and to promote the most
-beneficial strains of character. On the general principle that slow
-evolution is preferable to violent changes we must look for advance by
-intensified trade war rather than by armaments, and by the strain of
-armament rather than by open war.
-
-A direction in which great improvements of organisation may be
-attained would be in better adaptation of checks. So far as possible,
-checks should be abolished by establishing interests in the same
-direction between different parties. The profit-sharing movement is
-an excellent beginning of what needs to be fully and exactly carried
-out. The checks of inspection, which have been so greatly multiplied
-lately, are peculiarly liable to abuses; and a system of fewer and far
-superior inspectors, much less inspection, and much heavier penalties
-to correspond, would in the long run prove the safer line. The great
-check by popular election is very wasteful, a general election costing
-the country over a million pounds in various ways. Precisely as fair a
-check would be gained by summoning one in a hundred of the electors by
-lot at the day of election; and the nursing of a constituency would be
-much diminished.
-
-Lastly, let us look at the final type to which man will probably be
-led by natural survival. This enquiry is limited throughout to those
-qualities which are the product of external causes; and no attempt
-is made to estimate the more spiritual side of man or his higher
-mental development. For that we have not the same physical basis
-of research, and it would be a fruitless mixture to include such
-considerations—however important—in an enquiry which by its scope
-might be similarly applicable to lower organisms. We are therefore
-dealing here only with the physical basis of civilisation.
-
-For the sake of safety from aggression and prevention of small
-quarrels, federations of great size must prevail; while those
-federations which allow for the greatest diversity between the states
-will prove more adaptable and vigorous. Similarly, states which allow
-of the greatest diversity of life to the individual will succeed best,
-by the promotion of the most vigorous strains. More systematic law
-will be needed between states. This may perhaps be on the line of all
-contracts being on the seller's law, and all marriage on the husband's
-law, regardless of change of residence; and all contracts being suable
-on their own law in any state.
-
-The greatest empires have in the past allowed great diversity between
-states. Persia left each land to its own laws, and only required the
-control of a satrap, a small tribute, and unification of army and navy.
-Rome interfered very little with local law, and left the principal
-cities autonomous throughout the empire. Britain has carefully
-preserved local law where a system existed, as in India, the Cape,
-and many varieties nearer home, even in England itself. The United
-States have kept local laws of states and local legislatures. Hence
-it is likely that groups of states with great variety of type will
-prevail, only unified by a common system of defence and compulsory
-taxation for that purpose. It is even conceivable that such a system
-might be established in England, if the Privy Council was supplemented
-by Colonial ex-ministers of long standing, and was granted powers of
-assessment over all parliaments for the common defence.
-
-The type of man which must prevail is that of the greatest industry and
-greatest individuality; each man belonging to many voluntary societies
-for various united benefits. Agriculture, the main industry of man,
-will be far more elaborate and economical; as much so as the present
-Chinese system, or even carried to further detail with machinery. And
-the unlimited supply of atmospheric nitrates, now in sight, will also
-greatly increase production. Profit-sharing or the shareholding of
-all workers must gradually prevail in all industries. The growth of
-rapidity of thought and action, and the economy of organisation, will
-enable a living to be earned with perhaps half a day's labour, or less.
-The large balance of time, beyond that which will be needed for bare
-necessities, will be spent on a much greater development of natural
-resources and conveniences of life; each man will thus enjoy the result
-of an immense accumulated capital of improvements and benefits. In
-short, each one will be rich, either by the cheapness of articles or
-abundance of money, a merely relative question. The accumulated wealth
-of improvement will leave a smaller profit on labour, or in other words
-capital will command a very low interest. Therefore there will be
-less inducement to work for saving; and hence spare time will be more
-readily employed in the personal quest of knowledge, and enlargement
-of mental interests, in literature, in science, in history, and in the
-arts, or among the less capable in mere amusements. But the higher the
-social organisation and reward of ability, the more intense will be the
-weeding of the less capable, and the more highly sustained will be the
-general level of ability.
-
-That fluctuation will occur is inevitable; but it will be gradually
-understood that the utmost freedom of labour and communication is the
-only way to allow changes to be gradual, and so to avert the great and
-disgraceful catastrophes of forcible migration of hordes. Hence there
-will tend to be an incessant flow of labour from country to country,
-assisted by international labour bureaus: thus the wage of any given
-ability will be equalised over the world, and hence prices of all
-produce will equalise also. The whole of this action will further
-enforce the power of ability, and tend to end or mend the less capable.
-
-We must, then, look for a world with approximately equal civilisation
-and prices in all lands; but with each people developed in their
-own lines of ability, in accord with climate and conditions, to
-such a point that no other people can compete with them in their own
-conditions. The equatorial races tending to have less initiative
-and vigour than those of colder climates, the equatorial lands will
-therefore tend to be each attached to a temperate land which will
-supply more energy to their development; while a steady drift of
-population from colder to hotter lands will take place, as for a
-generation or two they will retain a greater vigour. Thus the tropics
-will be the seat of the keenest competition and extinction of races;
-while the borders of the arctic regions will always afford most room
-for human increase.
-
-So far as peoples turn their backs on the inevitable goal, they
-will have to painfully retrace their course, or else disappear by
-extinction; while the peoples who move toward the lines of success will
-be the fathers of the future. Will they be found in East or West?
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
- A.
-
- Ability, inherited, 4
- sporadic, not inherited, 5
- driven out, 3, 4, 8, 21
- favoured by war, 98
-
- Administration depends on character, 1
-
- Advance checked by communism, 20, 21
- checked by education, 73-75
- due to individual, 78, 80
- gained by saving waste, 79
-
- Agriculture, elaboration of, 101
- to be saved from townsmen, 54
-
- Amusement, passion for, 20, 82, 83
-
- Anarchism, product of great states, 67
-
- Armaments, big, needful, 98
- war by, 97
-
- Artificial conditions encourage variation, 5
-
- Athletics, needed by the unfit, 82
-
- Atrophy of mind, 7-9
-
- Aurelian, 36
-
- Automatic lives of majority, 79
-
-
- B.
-
- Barbaric society, complex, 21
-
- Bartholomew's Day, 1662, 41
-
- Benevolence, scope of, v.
-
- Betting, 19
-
- Birth rate, waste of high, 85
-
- Bricklayers' Union, influence of, 31
-
- Building, dear in England, 31
-
- Bye-laws, value of, 44
-
-
- C.
-
- Capacity, _see Ability_.
-
- Capital used for income, 47
-
- Capitalists, result of diminishing, 50
-
- Catastrophes produced by small causes, 42
-
- Cattle, competition among, 25
-
- Change, gradual, to be allowed, 43
- effect of, 13, 63
- violent, injurious, 41
-
- Character, the basis of society, 1
- production of, 2
- subject to natural law, 2
- low type at present, 15-19
- killed by municipalising, 26
- grown by experience, 74
-
- Checks, better use of, 99
-
- Children, later more able, 86
- maintenance of, 8, 60, 86-88
-
- Chinese labour, need for, 93-95
-
- Civil war, results of, 39-41
-
- Civilisation a means of diversity, 68
-
- Clubs, benefit of, 92
-
- Collections, dispersal of, 46
-
- Colonising result of primogeniture, 45, 46
-
- Combinations, must be voluntary, 91
-
- Combined labour, wasteful, 90
-
- Committees, mind of, 9
-
- Commons rule alone, 39-41
- weakness of, 43
-
- Communal organisation of early Europe, 22
-
- Communication, results of, 56, 66, 98
-
- Communism a bar to useful variation, 20, 21
- and early Christianity, 24
- and fatalism, 25, 26
- and labour, 90
-
- Compensation for accidents, 58
-
- Competition, necessity of, 3, 10
- dislike of, 10
- among cattle, 25
-
- Continuity of work, power of, 80, 81
-
- Co-operation a main line of advance, 92
-
- Cox, Mr. Harold, 55
-
- Crimes, survivals of early life, 73
-
- Criminals to be sorted into communities, 73
-
- Cromwell an arbitrary ruler, 40
- value of, in anarchy, 40, 41
-
-
- D.
-
- Death duties, effect of, 44, 46
-
- Despotism, a refuge from anarchy, 41
-
- Devolution of the Roman Empire, 36
-
- Diocletian, decree of prices, 37, 38
-
- Disciples, early, hard-weeded, 24
-
- Diseases of bodies politic, vi., 19
-
- Diversity, need of, 65-77, 100
- of moral standards, 67, 68
- of types required, 69
- dangerous form of, 70
- still existing, 71-3
- of marriage laws, 71, 72
-
- Dulness of observation, 16, 17
-
-
- E.
-
- Education, a bar to advance, 73-76
- experiments needed, 75
- variety of, needed, 75, 76
-
- Elections, waste by, 100
-
- Emigration beneficial, 13
- harmful, 13, 14
-
- Environment subject to man, 3
-
- Equatorial races, future of, 103
-
- Escape of the capable, 8
-
- Extremes of condition appear together, 5
-
-
- F.
-
- Factions of the Civil War, 39, 40
-
- Farm colonies, 8
-
- Fatalism and communism, 26
-
- Federations must prevail, 100
-
- Five-mile Act, 40
-
- France, ability drained from, 4
- cost of Revolution in, 41
-
- Free-trade only possible with bounties, 52
-
- Free-will a subject of normal variation, 2
-
-
- G.
-
- Gallienus, 35
-
- German immigration, 15
-
- Government cannot tax its own payments, 49
-
- Gracchus, cheap com of, 29
-
- Gradual changes to be allowed, 43
-
-
- H.
-
- Happiness based on character, 2
-
- Health, saving of, 79, 80
-
- Housing problem, cause of, 31
-
- Huguenots closely weeded, 24
- expulsion of, 4
-
-
- I.
-
- Illustrated papers, 18
-
- Immigration, 14, 15
-
- Income tax, effect on trade, 47-49
-
- Individual thought essential, 9
-
- Individualism a line of advance, 91
-
- Infant life, saving of, 60
-
- Inspection, abuse of, 99
-
- Intellect, limitations of, 17
-
- Intolerance of Puritans, 39-41, 70
- gain and loss of, 66
-
- Investments, foreign, demand for, 48
-
- Ireland, emigration injuring, 14
- land-holding in, 53
-
- Italian labour abroad, 93
-
-
- J.
-
- Janus, the peace bringer, vii.
-
- Japanese too industrious, 93
-
-
- L.
-
- Labour, combined, wasteful, 90
- in the tropics, 56
-
- Land in Ireland, 53
- state ownership of, 53-55
- equal values of, 56
-
- Laws impartial to all residents, 94
-
- Life, infant, saving of, 60
-
- Life-duties, effect of, 49
-
- Lighting system faulty, 17
-
- Little-Italy party, 35-37
-
- Loans, risks of, 55
-
- Local administration, variety in, 44
-
- London County Council, 17, 55
-
- Low races pass under higher, 1
-
-
- M.
-
- Malignants deprived, 41
-
- Man subjugates environment, 3
- permanence of type of, 10-12
- final type of, 100-102
-
- Marriage ceremony, period of, 72
- laws, diversity of, 71, 72
- temporary, 84
-
- Medical examination of children, 87
-
- Mencius quoted, 7
-
- Mental changes similar to physical, 2-7
- qualities inherited, 4
- growth encouraged by use, 6
- growth to old age, 6
-
- Merovings, degradation of, 7
-
- Middle-class waste, 61
-
- Mind subject to natural variation, 2-7
- variability induced, 6
- arrested at various ages, 6
- atrophy of, 7-9
- unchanged in nature, 11-12
-
- Monopolies, 9, 96
-
- Moral standard typical of a society, 68
-
- Morality, relative standard of, 67-68
-
- Municipalising enterprises, 26
-
-
- N.
-
-
- Nationalisation of land, 53-55
-
- Nationalities, use of various, 93
-
- New Testament teaching, 23, 24
-
- Norse poor law, 22, 86
-
-
- O.
-
- Officialism, 9
-
- Old age pensions, 59
-
- Oman, Prof., 29
-
-
- P.
-
- Pasts have all been present, vii.
-
- Patriotism killed by separate groups, 71
-
- Permanence of type of man, 10-12
-
- Peters, Carl, opinion of, 20
-
- Physical changes similar to mental, 2-7
-
- Pleasures, low type of, 17-19
-
- Polybius on history, iv.
-
- Poverty results from opportunity, 5
-
- Prayer, Book of Common, proscribed, 40
-
- Present time, apparent importance of, vii.
-
- Prices, consequence of regulating, 37, 38
-
- Primogeniture diminished, 45
- effect of, 45, 46
-
- Private enterprise most effective, 9
-
- Prodigal son, his rights, 24
-
- Profits to be earned from wealth, 30-32
-
- Profit-sharing, 92, 99
-
- Proletariat, support of, 30-32
-
- Property parted in life, 44, 49
-
- Proscriptions, disastrous effect of, 4
-
- Provinces parted from Rome, 36
-
-
- R.
-
- Radicalism contrary to evolution, 42
-
- Railway stations, faulty, 16
-
- Railways, effects of, 56, 66
-
- Rapidity, gain by, 81
-
- Reasoning interest obliterated, 74
-
- Regulation pattern men, 74
-
- Relatives, responsibility of, 22, 89
-
- Remedy for the incapable, 8
-
- Renewal of population, 83
-
- Rentoul, Dr., 87
-
- Responsibility without rule, 86
-
- Retaliation in trade war, 97
-
- Retrograde characters ruined by help, 7
-
- Ruling faculty of man, 3
-
-
- S.
-
- Scrapping of machines and men, 85
-
- Seebohm, Dr., 22
-
- Selection the means of elevation, 3, 20
- repressed by communism, 20-27
-
- Slavery not fatal to Rome, 34
-
- Sloth a deadly sin, 16
- now compulsory, 16
-
- Socialism, use of word, 23
-
- Society, barbaric complexity, 21
- a mixture of stages, 72
- final type of, 100-103
-
- Sport, 18, 19
-
- States, large, a result of speed, 66
-
- Submerged tenth, 6, 14, 69, 88
-
- Survivals of earlier stages, 72, 73
-
-
- T.
-
- Taxation in death duties, 44-46
- on capital, 47
- on trade, 47-50
- in life duties, 49
- immoral, 50, 51
- should be felt, 52
- limitations of, 92
-
- Taxation of extravagance, 52
-
- Tenth, submerged, 6, 14, 69
-
- Theologic morality, 68
-
- Thought, lack of, at present, 16
-
- Town, type of, 57
-
- Townsman favoured, 28
-
- Trade unionism and sloth, 16, 81
- in Rome, 29-34
- compulsory, 30-34
- and the poor, 30, 31
- assessment of tax, 32
-
- Transit, rapid, result of, 56-58
-
- Trust-man class, 62
-
- Trusts, creation of, 49
-
-
- U.
-
- Unfit, treatment of, 87-89
-
- Uniformity, evils of, 65, 67
-
- Unintellectual character, source of, 74
-
- Utilitarian morality, 67
-
-
- V.
-
- Variability induced, 6
-
- Variation produced by artificial conditions, 5
- needed for advance, 65, 69
- about one centre, 70
-
- Vice not fatal to Rome, 34
-
- Violent changes injurious, 39-41
-
-
- W.
-
- Wages, equality of, 8
-
- Waltzing quoted, 34
-
- War by trade, 95
- by armaments, 97
- by violence, 98
- favours best stocks, 98
- causes, permanent, 99
-
- Waste, taxation of, 52
- the bar to advance, 79
-
- Wealth held by different classes, 60
-
- White labour dreads competition, 94, 95
-
- Work, distaste for, 20, 81
- power of, 80, 81
- to be adapted to the person, 81, 82
-
- Workmen, atrophy among, 8
-
- Workmen's Compensation Act, 58
-
-
- BRADBURY, AGNEW & CO. LD., PRINTERS, LONDON AND TONBRIDGE.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note
-
- Obvious punctuation and spelling errors have been repaired.
-
- Pg. 108: Added missing sub-topic heading "I." of Index.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's Janus in Modern Life, by W. M. Flinders Petrie
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Janus in Modern Life, by W. M. Flinders Petrie
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
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-Title: Janus in Modern Life
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-Release Date: December 1, 2017 [EBook #56095]
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-
-<div class="figcenter newpage">
- <img src="images/i_title.jpg" alt="Title Page" />
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="half-title in0">JANUS IN MODERN LIFE</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr />
-
-<h1>JANUS<br />
-IN<br />
-MODERN LIFE</h1>
-
-<p class="center bold in0">BY<br />
-<span class="xlarge">W. M. FLINDERS PETRIE</span><br />
-D.C.L., LL.D., F.R.S., F.B.A., &amp;c.<br />
-<span class="vspace"> </span><br />
-<i>Fools only learn by their own experience,<br />
-Wise men learn by the experience of others.</i><br />
-<span class="vspace"> </span><br />
-LONDON:<br />
-<span class="large">ARCHIBALD CONSTABLE &amp; CO. LTD.</span><br />
-10 ORANGE STREET, LEICESTER SQUARE W.C.<br />
-1907.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">iv</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="newpage">"There are two roads to reformation for mankind&mdash;one
-through misfortunes of their own, the other through those
-of others; the former is the more unmistakable, the latter
-the less painful.... For it is history, and history alone,
-which, without involving us in actual danger, will mature
-our judgment, and prepare us to take right views, whatever
-may be the crisis or the posture of affairs."</p>
-
-<p class="sigright in0"><span class="smcap">Polybius.</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">v</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>These papers essay an understanding of some of
-the various principles which underlie the course of
-political movements in the present age. There is no
-attempt at introducing any considerations which are
-not familiar to every intelligent person, nor any
-comparisons with other instances which are not
-already well known in history. Why considerations
-which seem so obvious when stated, should yet not
-be familiar, may perhaps be due to the estrangement
-between science and corporate life, which is an
-unhappy feature of a time of transition both in education
-and in motives.</p>
-
-<p>The point of view here is that of public and
-general conditions and not of private variations of
-beliefs. Such moral factors, though all important to
-the individual, are not so much the subject of the
-direct physical causes and effects which are here considered.
-Similarly the beneficial result of private
-benevolence is not added to these considerations,
-because it is largely outside of the effects of conduct,
-and finds its good in amending or neutralising the
-evil consequences of various actions. It will always<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">vi</a></span>
-have its scope, but in opposition to, rather than in
-concert with, the direct effects which we are here to
-consider.</p>
-
-<p>Too often the objections to various new views are
-based upon some sentiment of one party, rather than
-upon the reason which is common to all parties.
-Here, on the contrary, the aim is to consider the
-natural consequences of various actions, apart from
-personal opinion, and therefore on a common ground
-which all readers can equally accept.</p>
-
-<p>The position of a partisan or an advocate has been
-avoided so far as possible. No doubt to many of the
-statements and deductions here, one party or another
-would cry, Anathema. As a whole the results are more
-in accord with Individualism than with Collectivism;
-but an attempt is made to trace what are the limits
-of a Collectivism that may not involve deleterious
-consequences. It may seem a fault to many minds
-that no cut and dried definite system or course of
-action is advocated; many people prefer a medicine
-which is guaranteed to relieve all their complaints,
-instead of a physiological research on the obscure
-causes of their troubles. But, if we are to advance,
-we must study the diseases of bodies politic with the
-same disinterestedness, and somewhat of the same
-unfeeling temper, as that of the physiologist in
-dealing with "animated nature." Such a line of
-study will be useless to the politician, so long as he
-is an opportunist or a placeman; and useless to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">vii&ndash;viii</a></span>
-socialist, so long as he refuses to learn by the
-experience of others.</p>
-
-<p>The present time seems to most people so infinitely
-more important to them than the past or future,
-that they are impatient at the introduction of comparisons
-which seem to reflect upon their immediate
-judgment, or of anticipations which would check
-their present gratification. They forget that it is
-only a fiction to speak of the present, an infinitely
-thin division between what has been and that which
-will be. Every step of the past has been a present,
-living, urgent, imperative, to the whole world; and
-every such present has been entirely conditioned
-by its past, just as the future to us is conditioned
-by our present. If any race now cares to learn
-somewhat from its own past, and that of others,
-it may benefit its own future; if it prefers a blind
-selfishness, a better race will be welcomed to its
-place.</p>
-
-<p>Janus, who looked to the past and to the future,
-was the god whose temple stood always open during
-war, that he might bring peace upon earth. And in
-our day it is only the view of the past and the
-future which can warn us of evils to come, and
-save us from violence and confusion.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">ix</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"> </td>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="xsmall">PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Preface</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_v">v</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc"><a href="#Page_1">CHAPTER I.</a><br />CHARACTER, THE BASIS OF SOCIETY.</td>
- <td class="tdr"> </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2" colspan="2">Production of character the most important object, p. <a href="#Page_1">1</a>. The
- known conditions of physical variation, p. <a href="#Page_2">2</a>. Mental equivalents
- of physical variation in (1) benefits of ability, p. <a href="#Page_4">4</a>; (2)
- Inheritance, p. <a href="#Page_4">4</a>; (3) Artificial increase of variation, p. <a href="#Page_5">5</a>;
- (4) Excitement of variation, p. <a href="#Page_6">6</a>; (5) Gain by use, p. <a href="#Page_6">6</a>;
- (6) Loss by atrophy, p. <a href="#Page_7">7</a>; (7) Variation made permanent by
- competition, p. <a href="#Page_10">10</a>. Immutability of general type, physical and
- mental, p. <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc"> <br /><a href="#Page_13">CHAPTER II.</a><br />PRESENT CHANGES OF CHARACTER.</td>
- <td class="tdr"> </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2" colspan="2">Loss of national character by emigration, p. <a href="#Page_13">13</a>; by promotion
- of sloth, p. <a href="#Page_16">16</a>. Lack of adaptability, p. <a href="#Page_16">16</a>. Low type of
- public pleasure, p. <a href="#Page_17">17</a>. Repression of character by communism,
- p. <a href="#Page_20">20</a>. Conditions of successful communism, p. <a href="#Page_20">20</a>. Communism
- in early Christianity, p. <a href="#Page_23">23</a>. Intense competition
- among herbivora, p. <a href="#Page_25">25</a>. Communism fatalistic, p. <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.
- Destruction of character by municipal communism, p. <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc"> <br /><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">x</a></span><a href="#Page_28">CHAPTER III.</a><br />TRADE UNIONISM, ITS FLOWER AND FRUITION.</td>
- <td class="tdr"> </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2" colspan="2">Town influence in Rome, p. <a href="#Page_28">28</a>. Decay of the country, p. <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.
- Growth of trade unions, p. <a href="#Page_30">30</a>. Trade unions compulsory, p. <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.
- Cheap production for the proletariat, p. <a href="#Page_32">32</a>. Sharing of proletariat
- burden by a trade, p. <a href="#Page_32">32</a>. All property hypothecated to
- the Trade Unions, p. <a href="#Page_33">33</a>. The social burden the destruction of
- Rome, p. <a href="#Page_34">34</a>. The growth of the little-Italy party, p. <a href="#Page_35">35</a>. Devolution
- of government, p. <a href="#Page_36">36</a>. The state regulation of prices and
- wages, p. <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc"> <br /><a href="#Page_39">CHAPTER IV.</a><br />REVOLUTION OR EVOLUTION?</td>
- <td class="tdr"> </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2" colspan="2">Great effects best produced by small causes, p. <a href="#Page_40">40</a>. Revolution
- leads to greater tyranny, p. <a href="#Page_40">40</a>; also leads to military
- despotism, p. <a href="#Page_41">41</a>. Radical changes show ignorance, p. <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.
- Scope to be allowed for gradual change, p. <a href="#Page_43">43</a>. Variability
- tolerated by bye-laws, p. <a href="#Page_44">44</a>. Effects of small changes as seen
- in Death Duties and reduced colonising power, p. <a href="#Page_44">44</a>. Income
- tax and expulsion of trade, p. <a href="#Page_47">47</a>; benefits of taxing extravagance,
- p. <a href="#Page_52">52</a>; Irish tenant right, p. <a href="#Page_53">53</a>; high interest on loans,
- p. <a href="#Page_55">55</a>; equalisation of land values, p. <a href="#Page_56">56</a>; growth of cities, p. <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.
- Effect of workmen's compensation, p. <a href="#Page_58">58</a>; of old age pensions,
- p. <a href="#Page_59">59</a>; of state help for children, p. <a href="#Page_60">60</a>. Effects of wealth in the
- hands of different classes, p. <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc"> <br /><a href="#Page_65">CHAPTER V.</a><br />THE NEED OF DIVERSITY.</td>
- <td class="tdr"> </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2" colspan="2">Variability needful for advance of a species, p. <a href="#Page_65">65</a>. Large
- states a necessary result of rapid communication, p. <a href="#Page_66">66</a>. Diversity
- needed therefore within the state, as well as between
- states, p. <a href="#Page_67">67</a>. No moral obligation to uniformity, p. <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.
- Separate states needed for a doubled-centred diversity, p. <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.
- Diversity as yet remaining in marriage-law and custom, p. <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.
- Society a mixture of many past stages of culture, p. <a href="#Page_72">72</a>. Present
- <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">xi</a></span>education a bar to progress by diversity, p. <a href="#Page_73">73</a>. Need of diversity
- in education, p. <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc"> <br /><a href="#Page_78">CHAPTER VI.</a><br />LINES OF ADVANCE.</td>
- <td class="tdr"> </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl2" colspan="2">Personal initiative essential, p. <a href="#Page_78">78</a>. Prevention of waste the
- main principle of advance, p. <a href="#Page_79">79</a>. Gain in health, p. <a href="#Page_79">79</a>. Gain
- in amount of activities of life, p. <a href="#Page_80">80</a>. Gain in rapidity, p. <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.
- Gain by working instead of playing, p. <a href="#Page_81">81</a>. Gain by saving
- waste in renewal, p. <a href="#Page_83">83</a>. Gain by permanent marriage, p. <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.
- Gain by high-tending of families, p. <a href="#Page_85">85</a>. Gain by improving or
- weeding of bad stocks, p. <a href="#Page_86">86</a>. Gain by individualism, p. <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.
- Gain by free combinations, p. <a href="#Page_92">92</a>. Gain by international
- labour, p. <a href="#Page_93">93</a>. The meaning of war, by trade, by armament,
- and by violence, p. <a href="#Page_95">95</a>. Improvement of checks, p. <a href="#Page_99">99</a>. The
- ultimate type of states, p. <a href="#Page_100">100</a>. The ultimate type of man,
- p. <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"> <br /><span class="smcap">Index</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"> <br /><a href="#Page_105">105</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-
-<hr />
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">1</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center bold in0 p3b"><span class="xxlarge">JANUS IN MODERN LIFE.</span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>CHAPTER I.<br />
-<span class="small">CHARACTER, THE BASIS OF SOCIETY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>In considering or designing any kind of work the
-first and most essential condition is the quality of
-material that has to be used. "You cannot make a
-silk purse out of a sow's ear." And what is true
-materially is true also mentally; the character of a
-people is the essential basis of all their institutions
-and government. If we intend to consider what
-improvements are possible, or what degradations may
-occur, we must treat the matter entirely as a question
-of character. "For forms of Government let fools
-contest, whate'er is best administered is best," and
-the administration depends upon the character of the
-people. We see on all sides that races of a low
-character necessarily pass, by the force of events,
-under the domination of other races who have a
-higher or stronger character. It is the quality of the
-race which is the most essential and determining
-factor in its history. That every nation has the kind
-of government which it deserves, is an old remark,
-which implies that its character determines its fate.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">2</a></span>
-The diligent but cautious Scot; the slovenly Slovene;
-the self-deceived Gaul; the tediously complete and
-logical German; these all show the manner in which
-their administration is the product of the individual
-character. Further, happiness is essentially dependent
-upon character, and is&mdash;by comparison&mdash;determined
-by character alone, almost apart from external
-circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>It is therefore a matter of the first importance to
-consider how character is produced or modified.
-Possibly to some it may appear presumptuous to
-apply to the mind those natural laws which it is now
-generally agreed apply to bodily development. Yet
-even the probabilities of chance distribution may be
-shown to apply to the varieties of mind; both by
-rough observation in general, and also by a test case
-quantitatively applied (see <i>Religion and Conscience in
-Ancient Egypt</i>). A feeling against this treatment of
-the mind by material law is based on the idea that it
-implies an absence of free-will. But, to take an
-illustration, a railway company may be certain of
-carrying very closely the same number of passengers
-each day, without in the least embarrassing the free-will
-of any passenger as to whether or no he will
-travel. Let us notice, therefore, how the various
-principles of physical modification are applicable also
-to mental change. Whether it may be that changes
-take place by the inheritance of acquired characteristics,
-or whether they occur solely by accidental
-variation which proves beneficial, is a much debated
-question which is not requisite for us to settle here.
-It is agreed that in the physical life of all animals it
-may be seen that: (1) Favourable variations give a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">3</a></span>
-determining advantage to one individual over another,
-or to one more than another against a common
-enemy; (2) Useful variations tend to be maintained
-in successive generations; (3) Artificial conditions
-tend to produce variation; (4) Greater variability
-accompanies unusual developments; (5) Growth is
-directed and encouraged by use; and (6), as the
-total activity is limited, therefore disuse causes
-atrophy and degradation, by favouring of parts more
-used. To these follows the important corollary (7):
-Variation being only of benefit where there is competition
-in which it gives an advantage, its improvements
-will cease to be maintained in the absence of
-competition; it is only competition which makes
-improved variations permanent. For instance, if
-there were no carnivora the swifter deer would not
-have found their pace a benefit, and there would be
-no sufficient cause for their attaining their present
-swiftness. In place of looking on selection as merely
-a struggle we must look on it as the sole physical
-means of permanent elevation, the motor which has
-raised every species to its present point of ability.</p>
-
-<p>To these principles common to all organic nature
-must be added another which is almost peculiar to
-man alone. We often hear that environment is the
-determinant of the nature of both animals and man.
-But the distinctive quality of man is the subjection of
-the environment to the ruling faculty; man is not
-necessarily conditioned by his environment, but a
-direct measure of his civilisation is the extent to which
-he creates his own conditions. Other communal
-animals, as the ant, the bee, or the beaver, have
-anticipated this to some extent; but in man alone can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">4</a></span>
-the ruling faculty rise to an entire reversal of almost
-every condition of environment.</p>
-
-<p>The mental equivalents of these physical modifications
-are obviously true in common experience and in
-historical example.</p>
-
-<p>(1) That a favourable variation of mind gives a
-determining advantage needs no illustration, as every
-sharp and able man of business has shown this in all
-ages.</p>
-
-<p>(2) That mental qualities are inherited has been
-pretty generally recognised, and the work of Galton
-on Hereditary Genius has enforced this by statistical
-example. But the historical consequences have not
-been sufficiently noticed; for it is obviously possible
-by selective action to increase or diminish not only
-the bodily activity but also the mental ability seen in
-the whole community. The series of proscriptions of
-all the leading men of Rome, alternately on one side
-and then on the other, from Marius down to Octavius,
-was so disastrous a drain of political ability, that only
-the Julian family was left; and there was never an
-able emperor of Roman ancestry after that line was
-extinct. The expulsion of the Huguenots from
-France drained it of the active middle class minds, and
-left the great gap in the continuity of sympathy
-which made the Revolution possible. The later
-expulsion or extermination also of the active upper
-class minds drained that land of nearly all the hereditary
-ability of the race: the consequence has been
-to leave at the present day a nation of mediocrities,
-among whom there is but a fraction of the genius seen
-in Germany and England on either side of it. Almost
-every leading name is that of a foreigner, as for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">5</a></span>
-instance Waddington, Zurlinden, Eiffel, Reinach,
-Rothschild, Gambetta, Maspero. Another very
-important consideration is that sporadic ability is
-not inherited in the same manner as long continued
-family ability. Not a single Roman Emperor who
-rose solely from his individual powers left a worthy
-and capable son. The Gordians were a good senatorial
-family, and ran through three generations on
-the throne. In England the same thing is seen. The
-main source of new men of ability is from sturdy
-Puritan or Quaker stocks that have long practised
-self-denial and hard work; old families with long
-traditions of public service continue usually on the
-same line of ability; but the <i>nouveaux riches</i> who
-have sprung forward on some lucky speculation or
-trade enterprise usually go hopelessly to pieces in the
-next generation. The longer a useful type has been
-maintained the more stable it is.</p>
-
-<p>(3) That artificial conditions tend to produce
-variation is obvious in every civilisation. The more
-intense is the artificiality of life, the greater are the
-extremes of ability and incompetence, of riches and
-poverty, accompanying it. It is often a problem to
-kind hearts that there should be such misery and
-degradation side by side with the ease and welfare of
-civilisation. The answer is that it is inevitable,
-because the very same artificiality which gives scope
-to the capable to rise, equally gives scope for the
-incapable to fall. Every chance, every opening,
-every benefit attainable by exertion, is a means of
-advance to him who uses it; but it is accompanied
-by equal chances of failure, equal openings to loss,
-equal injuries resulting from sloth, which are the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">6</a></span>
-equally sure means of degradation for those who have
-not the wit or energy to avoid them. The "submerged
-tenth" is the inevitable complement of the leading
-tenth.</p>
-
-<p>(4) Greater variability of mind accompanies unusual
-development; this is seen in the great outbursts of
-mental activity which have occurred along with
-external expansion in the times of Elizabeth and of
-Victoria. Or in earlier times the growth of Greek
-literature following the Periclean expansion, or of
-Roman literature with the Augustan settlement of
-the world.</p>
-
-<p>(5) Mental growth is directed and encouraged by
-use. This fact is so obvious that it is proverbial, as
-in the saying, "The mind grows by what it feeds
-upon." All mental training and teaching recognise
-this, but it is true in later life as well as in youth. It
-is well known how in the least civilised races small
-children are as advanced&mdash;or more so&mdash;than in higher
-races. The Australian is said to come to a standstill
-at ten or twelve years old. The Egyptian seldom
-advances mentally after sixteen. A low-class
-Englishman does not improve after twenty or so. A
-capable man will continue to expand till thirty or
-forty. And the man of the greatest capacity will
-continue to grow mentally, and assimilate new lines
-of thought, until seventy or eighty.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the greater the power of use and the activity
-of the mind, the longer will it continue to grow.
-This may well be regarded as one of the main tests of
-a great mind; and it is strictly in accord with the
-system of the well-known embryonic changes passing
-from lower to higher stages, and continuing to grow<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">7</a></span>
-in development into higher and higher types. The
-savage ceased to grow mentally even while in childhood;
-the sage continues the expansion of mind to
-extreme old age.</p>
-
-<p>(6) Disuse of mind causes atrophy and degradation.
-This principle is one of the most important of
-all in its practical bearings. The familiar figure of
-the later Merovings, the <i>rois fainéants</i>, is an historical
-example: freed from all necessity of thought by the
-assiduity of the mayors of the palace, the family mind
-atrophied further in each generation, until the king
-became a puppet without volition in royal affairs.
-The same working may be seen in the upper classes
-of many countries, where the spur of the necessity of
-action ceases. Within a century of the cessation of
-the Moorish wars the chivalry of Spain began to
-atrophy; the same was seen in a century after the
-cessation of civil war in France. In England the
-strong tradition of training for the public careers in
-the civil and military services and parliament, has
-saved the upper classes more than elsewhere. But a
-rich family without active interests almost always
-shows atrophy of mind. There is a fine saying of
-Mencius, "Those whom God destines for some great
-part, He first chastens by suffering and toil." The
-same tendency to atrophy is equally seen in the
-lower classes, when the necessity of self-help is
-removed. And many of the modern movements
-have been of a degrading tendency, leading to the
-holding back of the capable and the artificial help of the
-incapable. It is obvious that if persons have retrograded
-and got into difficulties, they are presumably
-less capable than those around them. If then they are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">8</a></span>
-relieved independently of their own exertions, their
-incapacity is fostered and they retrograde still further.
-To compensate them for their incapacity by relief
-works, by farm colonies, by outdoor relief doles, by
-maintenance of their children, will inevitably lead to
-further atrophy of mind. The doctrine of equality of
-wages in a trade is a double injury, it encourages the
-most incapable man that can possibly squeeze into
-the trade, and it discourages the capable man who is
-worth far more than the average. It must tend to
-drive capable men out of the trades which they might
-have raised by their example and stimulus, into other
-lines where capacity can still earn its value. The
-mental atrophy that has come over ordinary workmen
-is appalling, at least in the region of London. In case
-after case, the common sense and intelligence seems
-to have been entirely lost, and the grossest blunders
-will be made by well-paid men; and it is safe to say
-that in most business a really capable and active man
-can do from three to six times as much as the average
-workman, beside avoiding the loss of time by mistakes.
-In short a certified ease of conditions, and absence of
-direct penalties of incapacity, has atrophied the
-ordinary working mind to a point which is dangerously
-low in comparison with that of other races. The
-remedy lies in training the incapable by a stern
-discipline of gradually teaching them the maximum
-that they can perform in the day, with good direction
-and avoidance of bad conditions. After a couple of
-years of such intensive training they should be drafted
-into ordinary factories, with the warning that if they
-fall out of work again, another year's compulsory hard
-training will be the result.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">9</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In another way this atrophy of mind may be seen
-and felt as a temporary condition by members of
-boards and committees. What is everyone's business
-is nobody's business; and when each person feels
-that he is not personally responsible, a numbness and
-inaction ensues which is characteristic of such bodies.
-Men, any one of whom would act sensibly when alone,
-will succumb to the paralysing sense that they need
-not think because nine other men are doing so, and
-the results are well known as characterising these
-assemblies which have "neither a body to be kicked
-nor a soul to be damned." There are very few
-public bodies which are not really dependent on the
-individual thought and design of one person, criticised
-and amended by the collateral views of others. In
-short, all action and rule must be personal and not
-corporate, however much the person may be checked
-and controlled by general opinion of the public, or of
-a restricted body. Without personal initiative atrophy
-is the result.</p>
-
-<p>Another great theatre of mental atrophy is officialism,
-where a man is bound to follow certain rules and
-routine rather than to think. A German has remarked
-to me that a man who is perfectly reasonable and intelligent
-in private life becomes quite foolish as soon
-as he enters his office. This constant result is the
-strongest reason for not extending official control of
-affairs needlessly, or the management of public work
-by officials. Private enterprise will always be more
-effective than an official system, because it is solely
-the result of individual initiative. The enormous
-monopolies of railways in England are on the whole
-far more beneficial to the public than the State<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">10</a></span>
-railways of other countries. The evils of corporate
-monopoly, checked by law and supervision of the
-Board of Trade, are less than the evil of stagnation by
-official atrophy. In the Republic of France the principal
-line runs its best trains slower than, and at three
-times the cost of, the best trains on great English
-lines.</p>
-
-<p>(7) It is only competition which makes permanent
-the improved mental variations which occur. The
-evils of competition in physical things almost disappear
-in the mental field; and, unless misused as in
-a foolishly designed examination, there seems an unmixed
-benefit from unlimited competition of mind.
-It is only by such competition that higher types of
-ability have been established in the past, and it is to
-such that we must look for future improvement. It is
-true that in various directions we find a dislike of
-competition; but that is the surest sign that it is
-effective, and therefore beneficial to the whole body.</p>
-
-<p>We see then that each of those principles which
-rule in physical modification is equally true of mental
-modification.</p>
-
-<p>But though the modes of mental variation may be
-fairly clear, we must not be carried away by the view
-that therefore great changes in man are to be
-expected. The effects of various conditions upon the
-body are tolerably familiar, yet the average form of
-man has varied extraordinarily little during ten
-thousand years. The highest type of ancient man
-differs almost inappreciably from the highest type of
-modern man, certainly by not a tenth of the difference
-that may be seen between different types at present.
-It may be practically said that man is at a standstill<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">11</a></span>
-in physical development. Sanitary improvements
-and better feeding may do great things, but they leave
-the essential form and constitution unaltered. The
-same is true of mind. When we become familiar with
-details of early ages nothing is more astonishing
-than to see how unaltered the mind of man is in its
-essentials. In tales and maxims six thousand years
-old we see not only the common stock of primary
-instincts, but also the <i>finesse</i> of conduct in public life,
-the modes of ensuring respect in dealing with
-superiors and inferiors, the attention to very varied
-elements of character, and a fine suavity and kindliness
-pervading the whole. There is not a single class
-or a single public body at present that practically
-stands as high as the ideal of two hundred generations
-ago. And when we look at the material civilisation
-we see still farther back the appreciation of qualities
-of work which only a very small proportion of mankind
-care for now. The overwhelming zeal for
-minute accuracy was as perfect a mental state at
-4700 <span class="smcap">b.c.</span> as it is in a Royal Society paper of our
-day. The subject and the method have changed;
-but the mental attitude is the same in a man who
-demanded, and in those who executed, beautifully true
-plane surfaces, and long measurements exact to far
-within the variation of size caused by a hot or a cold
-day, and the men now who triangulate a continent
-and measure the world. The mind is the same, only
-the stock-in-trade of it has increased. At the
-beginning of history the palaces were adorned with
-table services cut in the hardest and most beautiful
-stones, exquisitely formed and polished; and such
-homes were assuredly inhabited by men whose tastes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">12</a></span>
-and artistic sense were closely the same as the best of
-ours, and who would, like us, have revolted at most of
-the products of the present time. Not only was there
-the body of highly skilled and intelligent men to do
-such work, but there must have been a widely spread
-standard of taste demanding this exquisite work as
-an aesthetic pleasure. The nature of mind is unchanged,
-its motives, its feelings, its sense of life;
-only in knowledge and the applications of it do we
-differ from the earliest civilisation that we can trace.</p>
-
-<p>It is, therefore, quite unreal for us to anticipate any
-change in the essential nature of man in the next few
-thousand years. The increase of knowledge and its
-applications will not alter that nature, or the relation
-of mind to mind. We shall still desire and admire
-the same things, and be moved by the same impulses;
-and we may neglect as ignorant dreams all speculations
-about any essential changes in the motives or
-constitution of man.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">13</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>CHAPTER II.<br />
-<span class="small">PRESENT CHANGES OF CHARACTER.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Having now seen how the fluctuations of amendment
-or deterioration of character, are subject to the
-same common laws as those of the variation of
-physical structure, we are in a position to see more
-clearly the effect of gradual changes around us in
-England. Emigration has been very active in the
-past three generations, and immigration has recently
-become important. The loss of the earliest emigrants
-who moved for religious and political reasons affected
-the national character very little; there was plenty of
-solid character remaining in England, and the
-removal of the more disputatious elements gave added
-strength to those who continued at home. The compulsory
-emigration of convicts was similarly a gain
-by removing those who were most out of harmony
-with the majority. Happily those whose characters
-made it most irksome to them to comply with the
-legal formulae of life at home, were just those best
-suited for the type of a new country, less restrained
-and more varied, with greater scope for enterprise.
-So far there had been a gain by removal of the two
-extreme types. But then succeeded a most serious
-movement of the voluntary selection of persons who
-thought that their energies would have a better and
-more remunerative scope in the colonies. This<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">14</a></span>
-implied a draining away of those who had intelligence
-to choose a more promising career, energy to break
-with their present life and start afresh, and who possessed
-most adaptability, self-reliance, and hopefulness.
-All of these qualities are greatly needed at
-home for a prosperous population; and the incessant
-natural selection from the general mass, and removal
-of those who had most of such qualities, must have
-produced a serious effect on the home population.
-We see in England undoubtedly a lessening of
-sturdiness as a whole, and the deficiency of the abilities
-which have been most exported. There is a
-general outcry about the lack of adaptability in
-business; and the general want of self-reliance is
-shown by all the grandmotherly legislation which is
-sought and granted. At first we succeeded in getting
-rid of some amount of less desirable stock along with
-the capable stock; but in later years most countries
-will not admit any but good stock, and we lose the
-valuable examples of national character without any
-compensation. The drain of capacity from the nation
-is a most serious feature of life in England; and how
-far the prominence of the "submerged tenth," and
-the large proportion who live only a week's remove
-from starvation, is due to the lowering of the standard
-of capacity by the emigration of the more capable, is
-a very important question. The same consideration
-applies to Ireland in a far more acute form, as the
-emigration has been of much larger proportions.</p>
-
-<p>A large immigration into England has recently
-grown up. So far as this is of more energetic men,
-who see their way to win over our heads, they should
-be welcomed. The German who comes to England<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">15</a></span>
-to establish factories and exploit the English market
-is at least a gain to the country, as it is far better he
-should do this in England rather than expend all that
-energy and management out of England. The trade
-and manufacture of England have been largely built
-up by immigrations of Flemings, Huguenots, Dutch,
-French, and now Germans, who have each contributed
-to our capacity for work. In commercial business
-the foreign influence is strong. In north-west London
-one-tenth of the private residents are of German
-origin. A movement is going on quite comparable
-to other great race movements of past history; but it
-only affects the upper classes, and not the hand-labourer.
-Beside this there is the large movement of
-the lowest and most depressed mass of European
-humanity, from the sink of poverty in Poland and
-Western Russia. It is essentially a bad stock, one of
-the lowest in Europe; and the large proportion of
-criminal cases arising among these immigrants shows
-how undesirable they are. To allow such a low type
-free settlement in England, after draining the capable
-Englishmen to the colonies, makes a serious danger
-of a national collapse under a sudden pressure of
-some new circumstances, which might arise by trade
-or warfare.</p>
-
-<p>Some other consequences which flow from recent
-changes will be dealt with in the fourth chapter in
-considering the effects of small causes.</p>
-
-<p>The low type of character prevailing in all classes
-in England at present needs to be fully recognised.
-No doubt there has been in past centuries more
-external coarseness, and this detail strikes the attention
-of many people because it differs from their own<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">16</a></span>
-present convention. But mere directness and plainness
-of speech is quite immaterial compared with the
-essentials of working power of mind and body, and
-the capacity for intelligent interests. Some centuries
-ago, when men thought more about the quality of
-their actions, sloth was ranked as one of the seven
-deadly sins. But now, in place of regarding it as
-anything wrong, there is an elaborate system of compulsory
-sloth; it is enforced by heavy penalties, and
-drilled into the character by example and self-interest.
-One man is forbidden to lay more than three
-hundred bricks a day, another forbidden to make
-more than so many glass dishes, another forbidden to
-attend to more than one machine. In every trade
-where a selfish short-sighted policy has gained its
-way, there is this system, which is doing inconceivable
-harm to character. The compulsory glorification of
-sloth is the most deleterious misfortune that can
-happen to a nation. The wreck of wars, pestilence
-and famine, will leave a more hopeful prospect than
-that of a people sunk in organised sloth.</p>
-
-<p>Connected with this is the strange lack of thought
-and adaptability in common matters of everyday life.
-The daily loss of time, and cost in trivial matters,
-which affects thousands of persons, makes a heavy tax
-on the whole. For instance, such a simple matter as
-putting the offices of a terminal station at the ends of
-the platforms is still ignored at many termini; the
-name of a station is often hard to find, and is never
-once put up in most termini; the price of a ticket is
-often not to be discovered; the right types of carriages
-are only now being tried, after persevering in a
-wrong form for two generations. In the streets the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">17</a></span>
-same lack of sense is seen in the immense omnibus
-system, which is difficult to use, especially for
-strangers, owing to the lack of numbered routes and
-conveyances. It has been officially decided that the
-numbering of routes and omnibuses is beyond the
-powers of the London County Council; and we must
-be compensated by the pleasing reflection that something
-at least is too hard for that body. The thoughtless
-edict however was enforced that every vehicle
-must carry a white light in front, and all the distinctive
-colours of the tram-car lights were abolished,
-causing great inconvenience at night. Even in the
-most recent appliances the same dulness is shown;
-electric fans are commonly placed where they only
-stir foul air, and not where they draw in fresh or expel
-used air. The whole lighting system still throws away
-two thirds of all its cost by lighting sky and walls as
-much as streets. In every direction it seems hard to
-believe that five minutes' thought has been given to
-matters costing thousands of pounds. If we traced
-such a mixture of design and of chance in any other
-subject it would lead to some curious speculations on
-the implied limitations of the directing Intellect. And
-in private matters it is the same; the extraordinary
-blunders and oversights in common trade work show
-that the most obvious details have not had a minute's
-real thought given to their arrangement. The result
-is an accumulation of difficulty and muddle which
-cripples, if not destroys, the purpose of the work.
-This persistent dulness, and incapacity for management
-and design, shows a defect of character which is
-a heavy detriment to the whole community.</p>
-
-<p>The pleasures of the public show the same low type<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">18</a></span>
-as their business. The illustrated papers that are
-read, apart from serious news, are a revelation of the
-vacuity of the public mind, as the advertisements are
-a testimony to its imbecility. The absence of any
-thoughts or information that can enlarge the mind, or
-give it fresh insight or understanding, and the fatuity
-of the illustrations, show the helpless little round of
-common ideas of the well-to-do classes: while the
-dishing up of legal filth for the lower classes, and the
-morbid love of trivial accidents and catastrophes,
-shows terribly the mere animalism which fills their
-horizon. The one subject on which most print is
-spent is that which is absolutely futile, sport and
-games. Whether one group of men, selected by mere
-accident, is a minute trifle more active than another
-accidental group, is a matter of such utter insignificance
-that it would seem impossible to suppose that
-anyone would turn the head to see the result decided.
-Yet such questions absorb most of the interests and
-spare thoughts and reading of a great part&mdash;perhaps
-the greater part&mdash;of the population, just as the races
-of the circus swamped all other interests of the decadent
-Roman. The results which they crave for cannot
-possibly mean anything to the present or to the
-future, as the selection is merely due to accidental
-causes. Even a lower depth is the relative excellence
-of two horses which are completely unknown to the
-persons who speculate on them. The utter waste of
-thought and print in such interests is a form of
-insanity which is worse than a drug habit, as it implies
-a hopeless atrophy of the mind to interests which
-would help it or develop it.</p>
-
-<p>The whole interest of betting on sport, and also<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">19</a></span>
-of gambling, is another evidence of an unwholesome
-condition. It implies a craving for excitement apart
-from personal exertion, which is always a bane to
-character; it involves the idea of gain apart from
-labour of mind or body, which is demoralising to the
-sense of work; it results in unearned fluctuations,
-which induce a wasteful habit; and it is based on the
-essentially ungentlemanly principle of benefiting by
-the loss of another, whereas all honourable gain is by
-the sharing of the benefits of labour. If a large part
-of the public are determined on deteriorating in this
-manner, it might be better for the community to
-satisfy it by public lottery, where one party is the
-government, which at least removes the last-named
-serious detriment to character. The gaming at
-Monte Carlo is moral compared with promiscuous
-betting.</p>
-
-<p>The objections to such forms of interest are perhaps
-too often urged by moralists who wish to cause an
-alteration in the customs around them. Even if we
-can care for the benefit of persons with such interests,
-certainly we are not likely to make any difference to
-them by talking on the subject. But as students of
-diseased society we may take a deep interest in such
-forms of aberration as a pathologist may in a case of
-cancer. And it is difficult to feel any particular wish
-to change habits which so obviously belong to a bad
-stock that is hardly worth improving. The best hope
-is that the unmitigated results of such mental disease
-may quickly have full effect on the type, and result in
-its extermination before a better class or better race.
-So far as cure is possible, the most hopeful direction
-is by an increase of useful and beneficial interests,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">20</a></span>
-which will make such vapid and senseless amusements
-decay by mere disgust.</p>
-
-<p>The distaste for work and craving for amusement
-extends beyond the above limits in a manner very
-deleterious to character. It is a feature of a decaying
-civilisation, as shown on the later Mykenaean frescoes,
-and the rage for the circus in later Roman times.
-Besides the waste of time and labour, it acts injuriously
-in producing a restless incapable type of
-mind, brought more forward lately in motoring; and
-also by creating a false social atmosphere, in which
-the business of life is contemned and treated as a
-drudgery, instead of being a main subject of interest
-and emulation. As the shrewd Carl Peters remarks
-on English society, "Nobody can fail to be struck
-by its utter recklessness and shallowness," and "an
-increasing objection to labour is noticeable right
-through the British nation."</p>
-
-<p>These various forms of a low type of character
-are on the increase, and it does not seem at all
-likely that they will be checked, except by great
-disasters which remove the less capable part of the
-population, and compel the rest to adopt a more
-energetic mode of life.</p>
-
-<p>Among the various movements which are by some
-expected to benefit character, the communistic ideals
-have enthusiastic support. But it must be remembered
-that all such types of society tend to repress
-ability. If any form of communism is to succeed
-there must be a fixed minimum of labour compulsory
-on each member; and it is certain that human
-nature will take the minimum limit as all that need
-be done. The tendency will be to drag down all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">21</a></span>
-energy to the speed of the weakest. Moreover, if
-there is to be any private <i>peculium</i> outside of the
-share of common produce, the able man will at once
-rise into a capitalist; if no private <i>peculium</i> is tolerated
-it is certain that ability will be driven out to
-other lands, or to other lines of life where communism
-cannot be enforced. It must always be kept in view
-that mediocrity hates ability, wherever it comes into
-comparison or competition; and in a uniform community,
-mediocrity must be dominant, and ability
-persecuted.</p>
-
-<p>Again the communistic type tends to repress variation
-and diversity by making everyone subject to the
-control of the dull average; and this repression is
-most fatal to due advance by natural selection of
-beneficial variation. We may see in France how a
-centralised management by the State accompanies
-the lack of enterprise in affairs. It is notorious that
-in business the French will not spend freely on creating
-new openings and encouraging new demand. Probably
-the habit of mind and the type of government
-act and react by one intensifying the other.</p>
-
-<p>Where we can study an actual working system of
-communism in such a climate as our own, we see that
-it only succeeded by some elaborate and very forcible
-regulations. To outsiders, ignorant of the machine,
-the less advanced states of society are generally supposed
-to be very simple, and to leave a large amount
-of liberty. On the contrary, whenever a barbaric or
-savage society is really understood, the complexity
-which is essential to its success is seen to be even
-greater than among ourselves. The movement of
-society has been from an earlier complexity of special<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">22</a></span>
-restriction, to a later generalised simplicity. The
-whole of northern Europe appears to have had a very
-similar system of communal organisation, which has
-been mainly brought to light by the researches of Dr.
-Seebohm. The peace was kept by making every
-relation of a man responsible for his actions; either
-wounding in any degree, or murder, had to be compounded
-for by fines extending even to distant
-cousins, which were payable to the similar relations
-of the injured or murdered man. The immediate
-male relatives, father, son, brother, and first cousin,
-were responsible for two-thirds of the blood money,
-and other relations to the fifteenth degree made up
-the remainder. Thus the criminal law was communal
-in a full sense; and injuries were fully compensated
-in a manner which made every man his brother's
-keeper in a real communism. How would modern
-admirers of communism like to undertake the responsibilities
-of making up for the misdeeds of every
-relative? Yet that is an essential part of communal
-duties.</p>
-
-<p>The poor-law system, as revealed in the Norse
-laws, was that all the poorer men were bound to do a
-certain amount of work for their chief, like the payment
-of taxes at present, which amounts now to more
-than a month's work in the year. In return the chief
-was bound to see that they were insured against
-extreme-poverty or distress. They were free to
-accumulate wealth if they had the ability to do so,
-but their bargains and marriages had to be ratified by
-the chief in order to safeguard them from the follies
-of incapacity. When a man wished to resign this
-position of insurance against misfortune there was no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">23</a></span>
-objection to his independence, and he could do so on
-paying a small fee, and having a feast with the chief
-and witnesses. But if after that he played the fool,
-and his family came to naught, no one was responsible
-for them, as he had resigned his insurance. There
-was but one course left, a wide grave in the churchyard
-received the whole family alive, and only the
-one who survived longest had the right to live at the
-cost of his chief afterwards. Such was the price of
-communal support; and this decisive treatment, even
-in Christian times, ensured the sturdiness of the hardy
-Norseman, by effectively weeding the incapable.
-This was the practical working of the communal
-system which did not check ability, and which succeeded
-in our climate in past times. It needed a
-fuller organisation of penalties and obligations than
-our present individualism; and whether any communism
-could permanently succeed with less compulsion
-may gravely be doubted. In using the terms
-Socialism and Communism they are taken here in
-their widest sense, as referring to all the courses
-opposed to individualism. Such is the general usage
-of our language at present, and we cannot restrict
-these terms solely to extreme views, as some of their
-advocates would wish. Moreover, it is the influence
-of views on practical life that we are considering, and
-not an ideal state which never has been realised, and
-probably never can be put in practice.</p>
-
-<p>A favourite idea has been that the New Testament
-teaching favours communism. To many such an
-authority would be decisive; and those who would
-not accept it as authoritative, must consider that the
-teaching is at least that of men who had such an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">24</a></span>
-instinctive knowledge of human nature, and such
-sympathy with the springs of action, that their views
-have held Western man more firmly than any other
-system. The first point to notice in looking at the
-teaching, is that it was given to a very severely
-selected group of persons. The early disciples were
-one of the hardest-weeded bodies of men that ever
-existed, like the Huguenots or the Quakers; ready
-perception, hearty conscientiousness, and a will to do
-right at all costs were the first qualifications, and
-incessant persecution from various sides weeded out
-all those who had no deep root of character. To such
-a body temporary communism was almost a need of
-existence at starting; all the causes and characters
-which would ordinarily make it a failure were weeded
-out, and such a highly selected group might safely
-benefit by a system which depended on self-abnegation.
-But so soon as the Church spread, no trace of
-communism remained; and even in general altruism
-the injunctions referred only to the Church and not
-to the world. The teaching was "Bear ye one
-another's burdens"; not, bear the burdens of the
-Roman rabble, but only those of the stringently
-weeded community. The one saying which survived
-most strongly of all the Gospel teaching, and is
-repeated oftenest, is, "To him that hath shall be given,
-and from him that hath not shall be taken away even
-that which he seemeth to have." The full benefit of
-capacity and its utmost gains, and the direst losses of
-incapacity, are the main principle that is inculcated.</p>
-
-<p>In another point of view the parable of the prodigal
-son is sometimes felt to inculcate the ignoring of
-failure in life, and the permitting of follies to have no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">25</a></span>
-effect on the position of a person. The prodigal son
-among us is too often allowed to go on draining the
-resources on which his brethren rightfully have a
-claim. But the father in the parable, who had divided
-the family property already, was not intending to give
-anything more to the prodigal, however penitent he
-might be; forgiveness might be his, but the other
-brother was reassured at once by the formal declaration,
-"All that I have is thine." The greatest penitence,
-and the fullest forgiveness after it, will not give
-the prodigal a farthing beyond those rights which he
-has already misused.</p>
-
-<p>Another appeal has been made, to a comparison
-with nature, in favour of communism. It is asked
-why we should be struggling like the carnivora,
-instead of peacefully browsing in amity like herbivora.
-But it would be hard to find a more intense example
-of competition than that among the cattle. Look at the
-skeleton of a bull, and see how every rib is broadened
-out into an armour plating for its vitals, each rib
-lapping over the other, so that no opening can be
-found for the point of its adversary's horn. None but
-those thus proof against goring have ever survived
-the desperate struggle of the strongest. In place of
-the artificial paddocks, where man has placed a single
-bull to lord the herd, look at the tragedy of the wild
-cattle, where the dispossessed chief of the Chillingham
-breed mopes apart in sullen anger, a Saturn dethroned
-and banished by the Jupiter who now leads the race.
-Then reflect how competition is more bitter and more
-intense in the bovine commune than among any
-individualistic carnivora.</p>
-
-<p>The communistic view appears to tend to fatalism.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">26</a></span>
-This is practically seen for instance in Tolstoi's
-<i>Peace and War</i>, where the gigantic movements of the
-French and Russian hosts are looked on as inherent
-in the millions of people, and not originating in the
-leaders. And the habit of looking to the commune
-as the source of action will naturally tend toward a
-sense of the impossibility of altering the determination
-of a whole people, and the powerlessness of the
-individual against such forces. Now nothing more
-surely undermines activity and initiative than a
-fatalistic view. It saps the whole springs of action,
-and destroys the spirit of advance and improvement.
-In this aspect therefore we again see how injurious
-the communistic ideal is to solid character.</p>
-
-<p>The recent growth of "municipalising" enterprises
-is another outcome of this spirit. The principle of it
-seems to be to absorb any public business which
-appears profitable, whether conveyance, supplies of
-material, or contracting for public work. Apart from
-the fact that only strong personal interest in management
-will make such enterprises profitable, there is
-also the inherent objection to the bad management
-which clings to the atrophy of mind of officials, as
-such; but there is also another serious influence upon
-character, which we should notice. The energy and
-initiative needed to start and work improvements,
-which is the essential source of profit in business, is
-easily suppressed or driven away. Many an enterprise
-which would succeed well is set aside because of
-the risks or the trouble of starting it, many another is
-left alone owing to little deterring causes; and if the
-great incentive of the possibility of large profits on
-some schemes, to compensate for the risks of many<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">27</a></span>
-failures, is cut away by a municipality having the
-right of seizure of whatever succeeds, the whole enterprising
-character is cut down at the roots, to the
-immense injury of the nation at large. Supposing
-that some public enterprise makes 20 per cent.
-profit to its shareholders, the people who use it are
-certainly better off, or they would leave it alone, and
-the profit is no loss to the community, as it merely
-means so much transferred from one pocket to
-another, and none wasted. But if such enterprises
-are choked at the roots by fear of seizure, the whole
-community suffers. Who will care to develop
-suburbs by starting electric trams when the whole
-can be seized in twenty-one years, so soon as it
-begins to repay the risks incurred? This short-sighted
-grasping system has held England back
-behind most civilised countries, and been a gigantic
-public loss, not only by hindering specific enterprises,
-but more by thwarting most valuable characteristics.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">28</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>CHAPTER III.<br />
-<span class="small">TRADE UNIONISM, ITS FLOWER AND FRUITION.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>When we are continually assured that there is a
-new and better way of doing anything, it is only
-reasonable to ask if anyone has tried it before. "The
-proof of the pudding is in the eating," and if some
-one has eaten such a pudding before us, we may be
-saved from using up good materials in a bad concoction.
-Until now the attention of historians has been
-so fixed upon the great military autocracy of Rome,
-that the growth of trade unionism and socialism
-under that government has been overlooked. Here
-we will trace and put together such facts as seem
-curiously parallel to the growth of modern unionism;
-and which, when they outstep our present position,
-may serve to show what further developments may be
-expected by us.</p>
-
-<p>The first great step, which bore centuries of bitter
-results, was the favouring of the townsman as against
-the countryman. The voter in Rome could push laws
-to his own advantage in the hurly-burly of the public
-assembly, while the countryman was working hard in
-his furrow miles away. The conquered provinces
-were a great temptation; they had to yield tribute,
-grain came pouring into Rome, and why should not
-this abundance benefit the citizen by being sold at a
-low price? They forgot the countryman. His toil<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">29</a></span>
-was none the less because Carthage or Sicily or
-Egypt were being plundered. But his pay was much
-the less if his produce lost its market value. The
-cheap corn of Gracchus was the knell of the honest
-agriculturist, as Professor Oman has pointed out.
-The only remedy was to try to cheapen production
-in Italy. This was done by giving up the small
-farmer altogether, and running only big estates by
-slave-labour, the human machine which was to
-Rome what machinery is to us. This staved off the
-evil somewhat. But soon the townsman demanded
-more and more, and at last free doles of corn were
-given to him, and agriculture became impossible in
-Italy. What tribute-corn did to Italy, cheap transport
-has done to England. The townsman is always
-favoured at the cost of the countryman, and the
-country is being depopulated. Not only cheap bread,
-but doles of every kind&mdash;hospitals, wash-houses,
-music, games, libraries&mdash;all are given to the townsman,
-while the countryman cannot possibly share in
-such doles. A large policy of equivalent benefits to
-the countryman would be the only corrective to this
-one-sided and deleterious favouritism. But the votes
-carry it, as they did in Rome.</p>
-
-<p>In the earlier part of the second century, under
-Trajan, two little statements show what was going
-on. A guild or trade union of firemen in Asia
-Minor wished to be incorporated: but the emperor
-forbade, because such trade guilds became political
-centres. There must have been some experience of
-such movement for it to be anticipated. The other
-statement is that the more able and wealthy men
-avoided entering the guild of permanent aldermen, or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">30</a></span>
-<i>curia</i>, because of the burdens which were thrown upon
-them. A century later, about 230 <span class="smcap">a.d.</span>, all trades
-were organised into corporations or trades unions,
-recognised by the government, instead of being only
-private societies as before. This seems to have been
-a compulsory unionism; but there was some difference
-in class between this trades unionism and our own.
-In Rome the trades were in the hands of smaller
-men, and not of large firms and companies as much
-as with us; and on the other hand the mere mechanic
-was usually a slave, this slave labour being economically
-the equivalent of machinery in our time. Hence
-the Roman trades unions were small employers of the
-status of our plumbers or upholsterers, more than, as
-with us, a large mass of crude labour organised
-against all capital. They were trade unions, rather
-than unions of the mechanics as against the managers.
-The compulsory entry of all the master employers
-into a union would no doubt be a step very welcome
-to modern unionism; and the compulsory extension
-of it, so as to leave no free labour, would be an ideal
-condition, in which picketing would be quite superseded
-by legal compulsion to join the union. The
-differences therefore were mainly such as our trades
-unions would desire, and aim at in future; in short
-unionism by 230 <span class="smcap">a.d.</span> was more developed than it is
-at present with us.</p>
-
-<p>But here came in a very difficult question, which is
-before us also whenever unionism becomes dominant
-in any trade. It is all very well to let unions pillage
-capital, or even pillage each other, but can they be
-allowed to pillage the poor? This at once clashes
-with the favouring of the proletariat. It has already<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">31</a></span>
-raised an acute difficulty in England. The Bricklayers'
-Union cannot be competed with from abroad,
-except very slightly by means of imported wooden
-houses. Hence this union has been able to close its
-grip firmly on the throat of the public; it has raised
-wages, and it has cut down work from eight hundred
-or nine hundred bricks laid daily to two hundred
-and seventy or three hundred and thirty in different
-standards now. By raising the cost of labour to about
-three times the amount, the cost of building as a
-whole must be nearly doubled. The dearness of
-lodging of the poor is really due to the remorseless
-extortion of the bricklayers, abetted by the extravagant
-building regulations locally in force in their
-interest, to increase the expenditure on a building.
-In the country there is disgraceful overcrowding for
-lack of cottage accommodation, and in towns miserable
-rooms fetch high rents. The ground-landlord,
-who is so much abused, has little to do with this; for
-ground-rents are seldom more than a tenth of the
-house rent and taxes. If all land were confiscated
-to-morrow it would not lower most rentals more than
-a fraction. If the Bricklayers' Union and all its
-results were abolished, rentals would descend to
-nearly half the present amounts.</p>
-
-<p>If we were to meet this difficulty in the way that
-Rome dealt with it, the Government would give the
-Bricklayers' Union an absolute monopoly of building,
-on condition that dwellings under a certain value were
-charged at a third of the cost of labour, that is on the
-old terms of a full day's work fifty years ago, leaving
-all later profits to be gained from the wealthier
-classes. In the present straits about housing it is by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">32</a></span>
-no means certain that this would not be a popular
-course.</p>
-
-<p>In Rome the grain importers and the bakers were
-the two trades which touched the proletariat most
-closely. And early in the third century these, and
-probably other essential trades, were organised as
-monopolist unions, on condition that the union was
-bound over to do a certain amount of work for the
-poor at a nominal rate. Thus the wastrel was
-favoured and protected, with his right to maintenance;
-and all profits of the business were to be made from
-work done for those who could afford to pay for it.
-This is unquestionably an ideal toward which a great
-deal of social legislation is tending at present. Railway
-companies and tramways are bound to carry
-workmen at nominal rates, while all their profits are
-to be earned from wealth. So far has this burden
-been imposed, that the construction of one railway
-line at least has been prevented by the heavy toll of
-cheap transport which was demanded before sanctioning
-it.</p>
-
-<p>If the trade is not in the hands of a single firm for
-a whole district, like a railway company, there arises
-the problem, how is the burden of cheap work for the
-poor to be distributed over the constituent firms?
-This was solved in Rome by the union, which was the
-sole body recognised in law. Each member of the
-union was assessed by his union, on the basis of both
-his capital and his trade returns, and he had to do so
-much of the cheap work in proportion. Hence the
-wealth of each firm determined the amount of their
-proletariat taxation. If they could withdraw temporarily
-part of the capital from the business, their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">33</a></span>
-assessment would be lighter. Hence to each person
-the aim was to work with the smallest amount of
-capital, and to remove from the business all spare
-capital, and invest it elsewhere. This naturally
-resulted in business being badly worked. The difficulty
-was met by the law that all capital once in the
-business could never be withdrawn; and all profits&mdash;and,
-later, all acquired wealth&mdash;must be kept in the
-business, so that the richer firms should do their full
-share of proletariat service. The results of these
-logical developments of unionism and help to the proletariat,
-were that many withdrew altogether from
-unions, retiring on a small competence rather than
-live under such a burden, and that there was a general
-decline of commerce and of industry.</p>
-
-<p>Property having thus become the gauge of responsibility
-in the union, the only way to prevent desertions
-was to declare that the property was attached to the
-union permanently, and whosoever acquired it did
-so under the implied covenant of supplying the share
-of union work out of it. The result of this law was
-that no one with capital would join a trade union,
-as their whole property became attached to the
-union; and poor persons were not desired on
-unions, as they could not take up a share of the
-proletariat service. This condition was met by the
-law forcibly enrolling capitalists in the unions, and
-demanding their personal service as well as the use
-of their capital.</p>
-
-<p>By 270 <span class="smcap">a.d.</span> Aurelian had made unionism compulsory
-for life so as to prevent the able men from
-withdrawing, to better themselves by free work
-individually. He also gave a wine dole, and gave<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">34</a></span>
-bread in place of corn, to save the wastrel the
-trouble of baking. In the fourth century every
-member, and all his sons, and all his property,
-belonged inalienably to the trades union. By
-369 <span class="smcap">a.d.</span> all property however acquired belonged
-to the union.</p>
-
-<p>Yet still men would leave all they had to get out
-of the hateful bondage, and so the unpopular trades&mdash;such
-as the moneyers in 380 <span class="smcap">a.d.</span> and the bakers
-in 408&mdash;were recruited by requiring that everyone
-who married the daughter of a unionist must join his
-father-in-law's business. And thus "the Empire was
-an immense gaol where all worked not according to
-taste but by force," as Waltzing remarks in his great
-work <i>Corporations Professionnelles</i>, where the foregoing
-facts are stated.</p>
-
-<p>There was but one end possible to this accumulation
-of move upon move, on the false basis of compulsory
-trade unionism, and work under cost for the
-proletariat. The whole system was so destructive of
-character and of wealth that it ruined the empire.
-Slavery was by no means the destruction of Rome,
-it flourished in the centuries when the Government
-was strongest, and diminished in advance of the social
-decay. Vice was by no means the destruction of
-Rome, it was worst when Rome was most powerful
-and was lessened in the decline. The one movement
-which grew steadily as Rome declined, and which
-was intimately connected with every stage of that
-decline, was the compulsion of labour and the maintenance
-of the wastrel as a burden on society. It
-was that which pulled down the greatest political
-organism, by the crushing of initiative and character,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">35</a></span>
-and by the steady drain on all forms of wealth. The
-free Goth was the welcome deliverer from social
-bondage. This growth of trade unionism has been
-followed here as a whole, without stopping to note other
-effects of the same type of mind, which are also very
-instructive to us. We now turn back to look at some
-earlier developments.</p>
-
-<p>The Empire had a long age of internal peace, from
-the accession of Vespasian to the rise of Severus, comprising
-four or five generations. Men had forgotten
-in Italy and the provinces what war meant, as the
-only troubles had been frontier fighting. They ceased
-to value the strength of unity, and the importance of
-keeping the empire bound together. The sayings
-attributed to Gallienus in the middle of the third
-century cannot be looked on as merely wild vagaries,
-contrary to all the public opinion around him. Had
-no one else advocated the subdivision of the empire,
-he would never have continued to jest about not
-needing the produce of Gaul or of Syria. Such
-phrases must have been familiar among a little-Italy
-party, of whom Gallienus was the agent and mouthpiece.
-And such a situation will help to explain his
-conduct regarding the captivity of Valerian his father
-in Persia. A glance at old Valerian shows him to
-have been a rigid gentleman of the old school, like
-Galba or Nerva. And, when he was captured, the
-little-Italy party who had hold of Gallienus were
-relieved rather than otherwise. Had George III been
-captured by the French, probably George IV and
-Charles James Fox would not have been very anxious
-for his return.</p>
-
-<p>The policy of the party seems to have been to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">36</a></span>
-encourage each province to start a separate government
-under its local ruler, in touch with the Roman
-Government, but with recognised independence.
-Britain was separated, and was only reunited to the
-empire at later times for short periods; Postumus,
-Victorinus, Tetricus, Carausius, Allectus, Constantius,
-Magnentius, Magnus Maximus, Jovinus, all ruled
-without any check from Italy. Syria was separated
-with such good will that the coinage for Zenobia was
-struck at the Imperial mint in Alexandria. In all,
-nineteen independent rulers are enumerated in this
-reign; and no attempt was made to reunite the provinces.
-There were gains in such a course; the
-heavy charge on Italy of keeping a great army was
-lessened; the risks of civil war seemed to be reduced,
-when each province was not tempted to set up its
-own ruler for the whole empire; and local feelings
-and variations could have free scope. It might be
-thought that three centuries of rule had fitted the
-provinces to hold their own in the world, and to be
-ruled independently. The result of the experiment
-in devolution, or home rule all round, was a time of
-such anarchy, misery and loss, as had not been
-known since a unified civilisation had existed in those
-lands.</p>
-
-<p>After the immediate catastrophes had been somewhat
-rectified by succeeding emperors, Aurelian took up the
-great task of reuniting the whole empire. He carried
-this out victoriously; Tetricus from Gaul and Zenobia
-from Syria adorned his triumph. But Rome was
-bitter at such a policy. A furious rebellion broke
-out, nominally called the revolt of the mint; that it
-was a great social movement was seen by Gibbon,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">37</a></span>
-though he confesses that it is mysterious how three
-senators, most of the senatorial families, and multitudes
-of minor people were involved in it. The
-fighting was so severe that five thousand of Aurelian's
-trained army were killed. That the mint workmen
-took part in it is certain: but probably the mint was
-adopted as headquarters of the movement owing to
-its strength. All this shows that, so far from the
-great victories making Aurelian popular in Rome,
-they were most bitterly opposed. The only ground
-for this must be that a very strong party clung to the
-little-Italy policy, and hated Aurelian in consequence.
-This movement gives good ground for interpreting
-the policy of Gallienus in the way we have done
-above, as being a great party policy and not merely
-an imperial freak.</p>
-
-<p>Within less than a generation later came the vast
-socialist decree of Diocletian, regulating all prices
-and wages throughout the empire. A maximum
-value was fixed for every kind of food&mdash;grain, wine,
-oil, meat, fish, vegetables and fruit. Hence such food
-would never be produced where the natural conditions
-prevented a profit within this maximum price; nor
-would it be transported beyond the distance within
-which the maximum yielded a profit. Whole districts
-must have been cut off from different kinds of
-supply by such legislation. Meanwhile the wages of
-labourers, of artizans, and of professions were all
-equally regulated, so that the best men could never
-have their superior ability rewarded. The prices of
-skins and leather, of all clothing, and of jewellery
-were likewise defined.</p>
-
-<p>The consequence must have been that the losses in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">38</a></span>
-bad years of supply, owing to weather and other
-circumstances, must have fallen wholly on the producer,
-who might be ruined by the whole brunt of
-the loss, instead of being partly compensated by a
-rise in prices which taxed the whole body of users.
-No wonder that after such a law the whole empire
-plunged ever deeper into poverty and confusion. The
-coinage depreciated even more rapidly than before;
-and the economic distress of such a fixed system with
-a falling currency must have been overwhelming.
-Such were the results of one of the great socialistic
-attempts to remedy the course of events by artificial
-legislation.</p>
-
-<p>We thus see how by the establishment of unionism,
-the feeding of paupers, the devolution of the empire,
-and the legislation on prices and wages, the socialistic
-policy brought to naught the greatest social organism
-that had yet appeared in the world.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">39</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>CHAPTER IV.<br />
-<span class="small">REVOLUTION OR EVOLUTION?</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Those persons who are unaccustomed to consider
-the great effects which flow from a continuous action
-of small causes, are too liable to suppose that a large
-result can only be obtained by a violent and immediate
-action. They suppose that only some mighty impulse
-can change the face of affairs; they pray that the
-mountains be rent, and look to the earthquake
-and the tempest, not thinking that it is the still small
-voice that really directs. They forget that it is the
-humble earthworms that plough the land, and the
-invisible bacteria that destroy nations and alter the
-face of politics.</p>
-
-<p>Ignoring the far-reaching after-effects of action,
-men are led to over-do all the changes which they
-attempt to carry out by direct and immediate means.
-This is like a child who asks to have its hand cut off
-because its finger aches.</p>
-
-<p>The bad effect of sudden and violent changes may
-best be observed in our own history. The great
-changes of the Civil War left England without any
-checks on the violence of parties. The King and
-Lords had been abolished, and the Commons ruled
-alone. The fierce factions of the Presbyterians and
-Independents would have wrecked the country, had
-not a ruler come forward far more arbitrary than the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">40</a></span>
-one already rejected. Charles had looked over the
-wall when he tried to arrest five members, but
-Cromwell stole the horse outright when he dismissed
-the parliament by armed force. Pride's Purge was a
-greater violation of popular liberties than anything
-done by Tudor or Stuart; and the effect of half a
-generation of such violence was that the nation was
-heartily glad to get back a worse king than the one
-they had beheaded. Cromwell's great service was,
-that he saved England from a fanatical and factious
-House of Commons, by exercising monarchical prerogatives
-which Charles never dared to assert. The
-needs of the time drove him, as a capable man, to act
-for the highest good outside the law. When we hear
-a faction lauding Cromwell now, it may be overlooked
-that he made short work of Fifth Monarchy men and
-other extremists; and that the great struggle of mind
-to him was the dire necessity of crushing the factions,
-and of using that compulsion which he clearly saw
-was the only alternative to anarchy. The bitter
-persecuting spirit of the factions was far more violent
-than any course of action which preceded or followed
-their rule. Neither Charles I nor Charles II touched
-the private religious actions of the people; but the
-factions proscribed even the private use of the Book of
-Common Prayer. The subsequent Five-mile Act
-regulating public meetings for worship was mild
-compared with the domiciliary visitations in search of
-the Prayer Book in 1645. But for the visits of the
-parliamentary soldiery, breaking into chapels and
-putting their swords to the breasts of the kneeling
-communicants, there would never have been the
-milder dispersions of the Restoration. But for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">41</a></span>
-bitter persecution of the so-called Malignants, and
-the deprivation of the clergy throughout the country
-by the parliament, there would never have been the
-milder reversion of Bartholomew's Day, 1662. In
-every point the violent changes of constitution
-wrought more tyranny and more personal hardship
-than was even caused by the revulsion which followed.</p>
-
-<p>In France the same effect was seen. The Revolution
-probably caused more bloodshed and more
-personal misery in ten years, than the old <i>régime</i> had
-done in a century. England has paid twenty-five
-millions a year for a century past as interest on the
-debt incurred for crushing Napoleon.</p>
-
-<p>Another result should be noted with care. A great
-popular ferment with a diminution of constitutional
-control, must result in establishing a military
-despotism as the lesser evil for the country. Caesar,
-Aurelian, Cromwell, Napoleon, all arose from the
-popular party, as the necessary substitutes, by
-arbitrary action, for the constitutionalism which had
-been abolished. In the place of the legally regulated
-courses, more or less unsuitable and corrupted, it
-proved absolutely necessary when they were abolished
-to have some other supreme authority with power to
-enforce obedience.</p>
-
-<p>We are not concerned at this point to consider the
-relative right or wrong of the various parties just
-mentioned; that has nothing to do with the matter.
-The lesson is that a violent and rapid change of
-constitution leads to worse evils than those which it
-is sought to remedy. Every existing order of things,
-however imperfect or bad, must have a certain balance
-of parts or it could not continue. And when that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">42</a></span>
-balance is destroyed the results can seldom be foreseen.
-It is exactly the same in nature; when any
-species of animal is exterminated suddenly&mdash;as by
-firearms&mdash;the far-reaching consequences of its disappearance
-cannot be anticipated; other species will
-increase or disappear, and even vegetable life will be
-modified.</p>
-
-<p>The phrase therefore of a "radical reform," or
-briefly "radicalism," is in defiance of natural science
-and of historical experience; it denies the principle
-of gradual evolution in the development of institutions
-and of character. A small amount of experience of
-different types is enough to show its fallacy, for
-radicals say that "travelling abroad always spoils a
-good radical."</p>
-
-<p>In order to avoid violent change it is needful to
-allow free scope for gradual change. The greatest
-catastrophes may be caused by the accumulation of
-small forces; when a tiny stream becomes dammed
-by a landslip it may form a lake, which in bursting
-will devastate a whole valley. So when the gradual
-movement of a people is checked, and an artificial
-condition is enforced by laws, the breaking down of
-such restrictions will cause wholesale disaster. Had
-the Romans allowed free immigration of Gothic
-settlers there would never have been the Gothic conquest
-of Italy. Were the Californians and Australians
-to allow a free immigration of Japanese, under fair
-and equal laws, they would not have to fear a
-squadron demanding justice in their ports. The
-necessity of violent changes is therefore always the
-fault of those who prevent gradual changes to fit new
-conditions. If the House of Commons tries again<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">43</a></span>
-the experiment of the Long Parliament, and by force
-or subterfuge abrogates the second chamber, it will be
-largely due to the House of Lords refusing changes
-in its mode of action. An Upper House which
-elected a legislative committee, like the election of
-Scotch and Irish Peers, would be in a far stronger
-position. The House of Commons at present is too
-much like an elephant picking up pins; and if the
-public become so much disgusted with its incapacity
-for business that at some crisis they throw the reins
-of power to an able man like Kitchener, it will be
-largely due to the fossilisation of the Rules of Procedure.
-A Lower House which allotted its time
-strictly according to the value of its votes of supply,
-or of the interests involved&mdash;which registered its
-decisions instantly, as by the electric signals which
-are now found in every hotel, and which employed
-diagrams in debate by means of the lantern and
-screen which are now found in every school&mdash;would
-stand a better chance of coping with its business in a
-creditable manner. The fault of violent change, and
-all its damaging consequences, rests in the first place
-on those who resist gradual change.</p>
-
-<p>It is therefore needful to leave the way open for
-gradual changes. In every new law, the changes of
-circumstance which are likely to arise should be
-anticipated, by leaving the way open for them to
-begin to act gently and gradually. The principle of
-fixed fines (based on income tax), regardless of any
-reflection on character, for various infractions of a
-civil law (or even of some criminal laws) should be
-always open, so that, as necessities arise, the prevalence
-of such fines would call attention to the need of some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">44</a></span>
-change. An excellent system has been found in
-allowing a department a large latitude in interpreting
-a law, or a dispensing power in administering it; and
-this system might well be extended so far as it was
-not seriously abused by favouritism. Another mode
-of change is to permit a variety of types in different
-places, as in local administration, and then allow a
-large latitude for the adoption of any type found to
-work well in another place. This is partly reached by
-varying bye-laws; but this might well be extended
-higher in the scale, and with local liberty to adopt
-any bye-law already sanctioned elsewhere. The ways
-would thus be open for gradual movements, which
-could extend until they produced such pressure on
-the larger and more organic laws as to cause a serious
-legislative step.</p>
-
-<p>We will now turn to observe the far-reaching actual
-and probable effects of various laws, which at first
-might seem quite inadequate to cause such changes.
-Some years have passed since the graduation of
-death-duties, and we can begin to see the effects.
-The simple action of a tax, without any compulsion,
-has produced a profound change in a family system
-which centuries or thousands of years had left unaltered.
-The notorious clinging to power and money
-among the aged, has given way before the screw of the
-State. The custom which left the control of large
-estates to men generally between fifty and eighty years
-of age, and hampered their development by the dying
-hand, has largely yielded to the Indian custom, of the
-division of property among sons on their marriage or
-entry on public life. It is becoming habitual for a
-father to establish his sons with the family property,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">45</a></span>
-and only to retain such a portion of the estate as he
-may wish to fill his declining activities. This is a
-very beneficial change, though by no means a grateful
-one to the Exchequer which has brought it about. In
-lesser properties the same action occurs; a father
-will buy an annuity for himself, and distribute the
-remaining capital, each son being at liberty either to
-place his portion at compound interest, so as to
-replace at the probable date of his father's death the
-full amount which he would have received otherwise,
-or else to trust to replacing the amount when he may
-be at his most remunerative age.</p>
-
-<p>Not only is this a great social change, with far-reaching
-consequences in the management of property,
-but it will also act in other lines. When a man deals
-with his property in the unchecked privacy of a will,
-he can neglect the pressure of personality of his
-children in favour of the sentiment of leaving a powerful
-family name in perpetuity. But primogeniture
-must more or less succumb before the obvious personal
-claims of those who are joining in the daily life.
-It requires not only a flinty heart but also a brazen
-face, to leave younger sons penniless when personally
-distributing the means of ensuring the happiness and
-the amenities of life. Hence it is probable that estates
-will be much more sub-divided, and sons encouraged
-to continue to live on corners of the paternal acres.
-In short it will be a step toward the French infinitesimal
-splitting of property.</p>
-
-<p>This again will act in a fundamental manner on our
-colonising ability. Primogeniture has made us a colonising
-race; no system is so perfect for ensuring a supply
-of fit colonists. When each wealthy house in the land<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">46</a></span>
-educated two or three sturdy sons, with every benefit
-of health and knowledge, and then sent them out to
-form new centres, with a small capital to start with,
-and a reserve of help at home for any dire emergencies,
-the most perfect colonising machine had been evolved.
-Without these conditions England could never have
-filled other continents as she has. When sons stay
-at home on portions of the old estate, and have not
-enough wealth for the high training of their families,
-all this colonising power will be at an end. France
-cannot colonise because her domestic system does not
-produce this type of man, fitted in person and in condition
-to take up such a life. Our high death-duties
-are a certain way to stop educated colonisation.</p>
-
-<p>Another change is also seen resulting from these
-duties. England, more than other lands, was rich in
-private treasure houses of precious things&mdash;pictures,
-statuary, libraries, and other collections. These represented
-a large amount of capital locked up, but it
-yielded a rich interest in the home education of the
-upper classes, in redeeming them from the dull,
-unimaginative, coarse, or sordid lives of wealthy
-classes in some other lands. So long as a duty only
-equal to a few months' or a year's interest was levied,
-the succession was not too burdensome, and the state
-reaped a steady small return. But when the possession
-of such means of amenity involves at each generation
-a crushing tax on the productive part of an
-estate, they must be sacrificed. The collections are
-vanishing to other lands, where such short-sighted
-policy is unknown, and England will be left bare. A
-far more profitable policy would have been to exempt
-all artistic or historical collections from death-duties,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">47</a></span>
-if they were thrown open to the public for a certain
-number of days in each year. They would thus have
-become partly public museums, provided free of all
-cost to the surrounding districts.</p>
-
-<p>Another serious consideration is that 10 or 15 per
-cent., or even 20 per cent. in case of bequests for public
-purposes, is taken off accumulated national capital
-and thrown into yearly income. The estate duty is
-incessantly eating up the national reserves, and using
-them for current expenses. We should call any
-family which did this shameless spendthrifts, yet
-this is the immoral fashion of our taxation.</p>
-
-<p>The effect of income tax is one of the most serious
-economic subjects, because it directly touches the production
-of wealth. There is little objection to income
-tax for emergencies of war, because if merely nominal
-(1<i>d.</i> in the pound) during peace, the true amount taxable
-will be well known, and a sudden increase will be
-truly collected and will not have distinct economic
-effects if only used for a year or two. But treating
-direct tax on incomes as a large source of revenue
-has very important effects on a commercial nation.
-A tax as high as 1<i>s.</i> in the pound is practically a tax
-on all English enterprise as compared with foreign.
-If a mill can be run at Calais to produce non-dutiable
-articles, free of income tax on its dividends, while a
-mill at Dover pays 5 per cent. tax on its dividends,
-that constitutes a discrimination of 5 per cent. against
-the English manufacturer's capital. The outcome of
-the whole is that all shares of English companies will
-stand permanently at 5 per cent. lower value than the
-shares of foreign companies. Or in other words £4
-interest will have to be paid by an English company<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">48</a></span>
-for £95 raised by debenture, while the foreign company
-will raise £100 for the same interest. The
-immediate result is that investments will increasingly
-be made in foreign governments and companies, whose
-dividends are payable <i>abroad</i>, instead of in London.
-This is not merely an evasion of tax, but it is perfectly
-legal if the dividends are spent abroad. No one
-need pay tax on any cost of foreign travel or residence
-if they draw the money from foreign sources, and do
-not let it be trapped in London. Thus there will be
-an ever increasing demand for purely foreign investment,
-according to the amount of tax on the investments
-in England. If the proposal was carried out to
-tax all investments much higher as "unearned income,"
-it would cripple all English manufacture for
-lack of the capital, which would be driven abroad to
-escape the tax. It might be thought that other
-governments will come into line, and tax equally with
-ours; but if they see their own commercial advantage
-they will be very loth to put this bar on English
-capital flowing into their land to gain freedom.
-Even if France and Germany did as we do, it
-might be well worth while for Monaco to become
-the financial centre of Europe by having no income
-tax on companies centred there. The recent De
-Beers decision illustrates this very clearly. A company
-with its work abroad, and its investors largely
-abroad, is taxed on all its income because it uses a
-few square yards of space in London as an office.
-Obviously it will not remain. London will no longer
-be the centre of commercial work of the world if
-5 per cent. or perhaps 10 per cent. is the price to
-be paid by all who use it. No company will remain in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">49</a></span>
-England that is not fixed by its works being here,
-and all those who are fixed here will work at a permanent
-disadvantage compared to the foreigner. It
-is doubtless thought that the large income yielded by
-the interest on the national debt is a safe and easy
-subject of taxation; Italy indeed raises 20 per cent.
-income tax on its debt interest. But this tax is purely
-nominal, as it is discounted in the price of stock, and
-such a government is merely paying with the left hand
-what it takes with the right. The case is seen clearly
-in Italian stock which stands at 20 per cent. lower
-value than it otherwise would; that is to say, that
-Italy pays say £4 for the loan of £80 now, instead
-of for the loan of £100 which it would receive if this
-tax was not imposed. The same is equally true of
-the tax as applied to government salaries; it cannot
-be evaded, and therefore it is merely a diminution of
-the salary, or a depreciation of the quality of men
-obtained for the nominal salary. A government cannot
-tax its own payments by any financial jugglery.
-Of course a government can cheat like a private
-person; promise a certain payment, and then break
-its word, and pay less by a tax. But that is only a
-transient profit raised by the sale of its character, and
-is not a permanent bargain.</p>
-
-<p>Another effect of income tax will be seen if the
-proposed higher grading of incomes is carried out.
-The same changes that we have traced owing to the
-death duties will be produced by the life duties.
-Property will be sub-divided wherever possible.
-Every child will have a trust created for its benefit,
-every member of a family will have a separate
-income, every large estate will be nominally the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">50</a></span>
-property of a group of independent persons&mdash;a family
-club. This will tend, like the death duties, toward
-equal shares, instead of the parent hive system of
-primogeniture; and it likewise marks the end of
-educated colonising. The effect of this may be good
-for family life, but it will be disastrous commercially.
-There will no longer be the large capitalists who can
-take the risks of great enterprises. To raise a large
-floating capital for great undertakings will require the
-co-operation of so many small capitalists, that it will
-not be worth while for any one investor to give time
-to the affair. The lack of personal concern and
-interest, and the cost of dealing with widely collected
-capital, will all be a detriment to enterprises of large
-extent.</p>
-
-<p>But the most disastrous as well as immoral kind of
-taxation will be that proposed as additional upon all
-permanent investments, under the guise of "unearned
-income." It is a fatally easy screw for a government
-to put on; but the effect of it will be to penalise all
-British manufacture in competition with foreign productions.
-All that we have noticed about the effect
-of a 5 per cent. tax will apply far more rapidly and
-decisively if a 10 per cent. tax should be put on.
-Shippers would sail under another flag and transfer
-their offices of registration; manufacturers would pass
-to a tax-free country; and a larger proportion of
-persons living on fixed income would spend it abroad.
-Beside the material disadvantages of such high
-taxation on enterprise, it would be a grave moral
-detriment.</p>
-
-<p>It is too often forgotten that in taxation the
-government wields one of the greatest means of moral<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">51</a></span>
-education. What does it say now by its taxation?
-Suppose a man to have saved £100, and to consider
-whether he will spend it on unremunerative pleasures,
-or on useful public works. The government says, "If
-you will spend your money on waste and luxury,
-paying for useless and monstrous rooms, making men
-stand idle in your hall, or decorate your extravagant
-food; if you will make women waste their eyes and
-lives on a fresh absurdity of fashion, or sell their
-souls; or if you will pay boys to become ne'er-do-weels
-on golf-links&mdash;in short if you will do as much
-mischief as possible, we will take 5 per cent. of your
-money. But if you spend it on benefiting the world,
-improving cultivation, building railways, opening the
-waste places and making them blossom, we will take
-18 per cent., and leave you only £82 out of your
-£100." That is to say 5 per cent. on the original
-earning of the capital, 5 per cent. tax on investment
-income, and 10 per cent. on death duties, as estimated
-on large capital by the Income Tax Commission,
-1906. And if the proposed higher taxing of so-called
-"unearned income" were carried out, this government
-claim would rise to 23 per cent. or even higher. In
-all reason, after money when earned has paid its tax of
-5 per cent. it should be free of all further claims, at
-least if employed for public utility, and there should
-be no tax on dividends whatever, nor any death duties
-on savings; all such taxation falls eventually on the
-capital of the useful undertakings, and directly
-cripples the industry of the country.</p>
-
-<p>The only way to escape the deadly effects of income
-tax upon home manufactures and produce would be
-to lay a countervailing duty on all imports, and a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">52</a></span>
-bounty on all exports. Then, and only then, would
-the manufacturer or farmer here be on exactly the
-same footing as one abroad. Then, and only then,
-would free trade be really carried out. So long as taxes
-fall on home production or home capital, which do
-not fall similarly abroad, so long free trade cannot exist.</p>
-
-<p>Another highly immoral view of taxation is that of
-"plucking the goose so that it feels it least." Such
-a maxim was appropriate and excellent for an opportunist
-minister of an autocratic sovereign. But the
-first necessity for the political health of a democracy
-is that the individual shall feel every tax; such is the
-only way to prevent the squandering of public money
-by the votes of ignorant taxpayers. It would be very
-wholesome if the national expenditure was presented
-as a series of personal bills, showing how much was
-spent on each department by an average £50, or
-£100, or £200 householder. He would then be as
-much ashamed of the smallness of some items as of
-the largeness of others.</p>
-
-<p>What is needed in place of the tax upon industry
-is a tax upon extravagance. We are accustomed to
-taxes which far exceed the prime cost upon tobacco
-and alcohol; and other luxuries should also be
-similarly taxed. If instead of taxing income (which
-is often requisite for reasonable living, or else usefully
-spent on improvements of the world), we had the
-luxuries taxed, the only people to complain (if the
-change were gradual) would be those who wasted
-instead of using their income. Let all ostentation
-be taxed very heavily, spacious rooms, large numbers
-of servants, costly food, motor cars (not professionally
-needed), entrance money for amusements, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">53</a></span>
-tailors' and milliners' bills; and then a much smaller
-amount of such extravagance will equally bespeak
-wealth, and gain as much social consideration as at
-present. Such would be a moral taxation in place
-of the present wholly immoral and indefensible
-system of taxing industry and leaving waste
-unchecked.</p>
-
-<p>We will now look to other eventual results of small
-continual action. The effect of transferring little by
-little the property in Irish land to the present
-occupiers has not been sufficiently noticed. For the
-present generation such a transference was merry
-enough to the tenant. But when he sells to another
-tenant what is to happen? Will a future tenant enter
-and gradually expropriate the present tenant, by
-treating him as a landlord? Certainly the present
-tenant will not be so foolish as to be thus trapped, he
-will demand money on the nail. How then is the
-future tenant to get his capital to buy the land? In
-most cases he will have to get it by borrowing on
-mortgage. And if the government is not prepared to
-always keep open a loan office for every incoming
-tenant to the end of time, a loan society or company
-must be his resort. Then if he should not pay this
-rent to the distant intangible society, his mortgage
-will be foreclosed. In place of a body of landlords,
-and landlords' agents who could always be personally
-approached, Ireland will fall into the hands of a
-landlordism of distant money-lenders without souls
-or feelings, and whom neither blandishments nor
-bullets can affect.</p>
-
-<p>The remedy for land difficulties and various ills,
-that has been so often proposed, namely the State<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">54</a></span>
-ownership of the land, is by no means promising.
-The greatest objection that can be flung at a landlord
-is that he is an absentee. No amount of agency, no
-excellence in the subordinate, is thought to compensate
-for the personal interest, the personal influence
-and care, of a good conscientious landlord spending
-his life among his tenants. Yet the State ownership
-would be worse than any absentee landlord. The
-agent would be that of an impersonal government,
-and responsible to nobody so long as he fulfilled a
-certain set of hard rules. He would have no personality
-more or less pliable behind him, but would
-blindly carry out the general dictates of a Parliament
-or a Revenue office, which neither knew nor cared
-about any personal exceptions or local details. We
-all know the ways of the Inland Revenue already;
-the extortions which have to be tediously reclaimed
-at a greater cost of time than the refunded money is
-worth; the starving of the Post Office in order to
-wring a profit of 50 per cent. on the whole correspondence
-of the country; the various illegal demands
-which have had to be resisted by legal trial, and
-appeal over appeal, at a ruinous cost to those who
-will not be cheated; we see in France and Italy the
-atrophy of a railway system which is ruled by
-government officials. And yet unobservant enthusiasts
-wish that every field should be under some
-petty official tied by red tape, and every farmer
-bound by laws and regulations which could never be
-applied to even a small district without individual
-hardship. The townsman cannot be allowed to play
-political experiments with the largest industry of
-England, of which he is profoundly ignorant: it must<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">55</a></span>
-rest with the farmer only, to decide if he prefer to be
-under the Inland Revenue or under his landlord. It
-is notorious that government lands are administered
-more wastefully and less remuneratively than any
-private property; and it would be ruinous to tie up
-the whole country to such administration. It is useless
-to say that these are mere abuses which must be
-rectified. Let them be rectified in the minor scale
-first, before the system can be applied in the major
-scale. There is no kind of government in the world
-that would not ruin this country if it introduced State
-ownership. Human nature does not allow of it, and
-only ignorance of human nature could propose it.</p>
-
-<p>Another large effect of trifles is seen in the cumulative
-character of borrowers. Mr. Harold Cox, M.P.,
-has reminded those who are in favour of rather
-confiscatory proposals, that a loss of character of a
-public body, so that their good faith is not certain,
-may easily mean that they have to pay 4 per cent.
-instead of 3 per cent. for loans: and hence that all
-rents of public works paid for by loans will have to be
-33 per cent. higher. This loss is far more than could
-be gained by entire confiscation of ground values,
-and entire ruin of all landlords. That this is by no
-means only a future risk may be seen in the stock
-list any day. India is not entirely safe; there are
-risks of financial ruin&mdash;by conquest, by ruinous wars
-against invasion, by ruin in insurrection, by ejectment,
-or by having to drop India owing to a collapse of the
-navy. Yet all these risks together are thought to be
-less than the risk of bad faith on the London County
-Council. Their stock stands at a lower price than
-India stock. Such is the large result of the many<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">56</a></span>
-little touches of folly and extravagance which have
-lowered the financial barometer.</p>
-
-<p>Another instance of remote changes is in the effects
-of the steam engine and other cheap and rapid communication.
-The full extent of the changes caused
-are yet far from being completed. Externally the
-great change is that of the equalisation of land values
-for agriculture all over the world, as the produce can
-be carried from land to land for a small part of its
-value. Hence tropical lands with rapid growth and
-high fertility will compete with others; and the
-cheapness of labour there, owing to the smaller
-requirements in a warmer climate, will react on all
-agricultural wages. There will also be a demand for
-cheap labour to work tropical lands to their full
-extent; and the facility for transportation of labourers
-will result in constantly shifting energetic people from
-rather cooler climates into the hotter land for a time,
-and withdrawing them again. The same system we
-already carry out for governing classes in India; and
-cheap transport will make it possible for an energetic
-race to hold hot countries continuously, without decay
-due to enervation by climate, as was the case in all
-earlier northern invaders.</p>
-
-<p>Internally the changes owing to cheap communication
-are that land of similar quality equalises in
-value; and hence the worst land will fall to bottom
-price all over the country, and cannot be locally of
-any higher value. Also it will be difficult to get
-people to live in unpleasant districts, as they can
-easily shift about; hence wages will need to be higher
-in such districts, and therefore the land will be
-still lower. Thus the mobility of the inhabitants<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">57</a></span>
-exaggerates the variation of land values already due
-to differing quality. The more bulky industries that
-need cheap land, and not much labour, will be fixed
-in the unpleasant districts; and peasant proprietors
-will tend to the worse land, as being abnormally low
-in value. Regarding movement of population only,
-as capable men can move about freely to get work
-that gives them full scope, the less capable will
-supplant the capable in all work that they are able
-to do. Hence we shall no longer find men of high
-quality leading simple lives in remote districts. The
-gain to the whole community is clear, but we lose one
-of the most interesting types of national character.
-The free and rapid transit in cities will cause them to
-be much less crowded in one mass. At Chicago men
-go to business from five miles out in five minutes.
-Our cumbrous stoppages along the whole route must
-be entirely given up for the outer districts of London.
-What is needed is a series of new centres twenty to
-thirty miles out of London; joined, some to the City,
-some to the West End, by non-stop trains, at sixty
-miles an hour. Such is certainly the type of great
-city which will finally be reached&mdash;a county covered
-with separate centres linked by trains at the highest
-speed. As we shall note further on, the development
-of great equatorial estates of European powers, and
-the growth of immense permanent armaments are
-both the inevitable result of rapid communication.
-We see thus how the whole type of human life and
-conditions has been altered, and the whole balance of
-circumstances readjusted, by the evolution of cheap
-motor power.</p>
-
-<p>We have already noticed another effect of this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">58</a></span>
-change, in the increase of emigration draining the
-more capable persons from England, and so leaving
-a residue inferior in energy, initiative and self-reliance.
-This deterioration of the occupants of
-England and Ireland is thus due to the purely
-mechanical contrivance of a steam engine.</p>
-
-<p>We have now traced the large effects of small
-economic causes, and we see how such apparently
-insignificant alterations may be far more effective and
-act far more beneficially than smashing the social
-machine with a sledge hammer because it does not
-run smoothly. We will now turn to look at some of
-the effects of favourite ideas of the present time.</p>
-
-<p>The compensation to workmen for accident seems
-at first sight a righteous charge upon capital for the
-benefit of those who are injured in their business. The
-immediate effect upon character is to save the careless,
-thoughtless, and incompetent from the results of
-their faults; this at once reduces largely the weeding
-and educational effects of the bad qualities. No man
-would ever have become careful if he did not find the
-necessity of being so. Even if a tendency to
-malingering can be avoided, yet the teaching effect is
-done away. It may be thought that it is better to
-save the individual from his indiscretions rather than
-cure the race. Like most sentimentalism it causes
-more misery in the long run. Another, and entirely
-separate, effect is to prevent the employment of those
-who by age or bodily defect are the more liable to
-accident; the immediate hardship of loss of employment
-to these classes is, in the total, probably greater
-than the hardship of loss of employment by accidents
-which it is sought to compensate. We injure the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">59</a></span>
-individual as well as the race by such grandmothering.
-A severe law demanding full and adequate protection
-of workers, where they can be mechanically protected,
-is the utmost that could be beneficially enforced.</p>
-
-<p>The provision of old age pensions is another
-pleasing scheme. In the first place it will diminish
-the need of foresight and of self-restraint; it will thus
-weaken character by removing the great driving force
-of self-interest. The burden will have to be borne by
-all, including those who are already at the last gasp,
-and will tend to push such over the border line. It
-will not discriminate between those who have borne
-a large share in the cost of national renewal by
-bringing up a family, and those who have selfishly
-squandered all they received. And like outdoor
-poor relief, it will be discounted in wages, and tend to
-lower the wage rate if no savings are to be expected.
-A sounder plan would be to revert to the kind of
-communal system of our forefathers, and make a
-legal demand for a pension of, say, £2 a year from
-every child, and 10<i>s.</i> a year from every grown up
-nephew or grandchild. Thus those who have done
-most for the State by renewal would receive most in
-return, and the greatest inducement would be given
-to bring up children to active and capable lives. The
-idea of a right to maintenance would be the knell of
-any State which undertook it. The endowment of
-wastrels, the taxing of all the capable for the propagation
-of the incapable, and the wholesale deterioration
-of character, would be utter ruin to a nation.
-Nature knows of no right to maintenance, but only
-the necessity of getting rid of those who need it by
-mending or ending them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">60</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There is another movement which seems most
-desirable and humane at first sight, and irreproachable
-in its economic aspect: the saving of infant life by
-greater care. A huge waste of life is going on, and
-it has been proved that it is preventable. But however
-much we must sympathise with it, we cannot
-shut our eyes to its meaning. England produces
-over 300,000 excess of births over deaths yearly,
-and perhaps a tenth more might be added to that
-by care of infant life. But would that tenth be of
-the best stock or the worst? We must agree that it
-would be of the lower, or lowest type of careless,
-thriftless, dirty, and incapable families that the increase
-would be obtained. Is it worth while to dilute
-our increase of population by 10 per cent. more of
-the most inferior kind? Will England be stronger
-for having one thirtieth more, and that of the worst
-stock, added to the population every year? This
-movement is doing away with one of the few remains
-of natural weeding out of the unfit that our civilisation
-has left to us. And it will certainly cause more
-misery than happiness in the course of a century.</p>
-
-<p>Lastly, let us look to the general question of the
-results of the accumulation of wealth in the hands of
-different classes. Roughly we may divide three
-classes of money-earners: the lower, who receive
-weekly pay, and are tempted to spend it all by the
-certainty of poor relief when needed; the middle,
-who receive yearly pay, and must save if they are
-to avoid losing caste in late life; the upper, who
-make large but uncertain profits by organising work,
-or by financial manipulation, regular or irregular.
-During the last century we have seen a great growth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">61</a></span>
-of wealth in England. At first it spread to workmen
-and manufacturers, then to the middle classes generally,
-and latterly much has accumulated in the hands
-of large operators with trusts and financial dealings.
-What has been the result of the wealth in the hands
-of each class, to that class, and to the whole community?
-The rise of workmen's pay has mainly
-been used up; there has been a great benefit by
-improving the conditions of life, but perhaps half of
-the increase has been lost in mere waste; very little
-has gone toward lifting families to a higher class,
-and but a very small proportion has been saved.
-The whole property of the poor is estimated now at
-nearly a year's income, the result of savings in a
-century, or less than 1 per cent. saved. When we
-turn to the middle classes there is a worse spectacle.
-There was, broadly speaking, but little need to raise
-the standard of expenditure among the middle classes.
-They were fairly comfortable, and need not have spent
-more on themselves; their gains might have been
-spent on profitable enterprises, or given for endowments
-to public purposes. On the contrary, but
-a small part of their gains have been saved or
-remuneratively spent, and far the greater part
-has disappeared in ever-increasing ostentation. It
-has been turned into a curse by creating an absurdly
-artificial standard of living and of sociality, so burdensome
-that every man is ashamed to ask a friend to
-the leg of mutton dinners of his grandfather's standard.
-It is thought mean to spend less per head on a single
-dinner than the amount which ought to keep a man
-in comfort for a couple of weeks. Real, genial
-sociality has been uprooted and killed in the senseless<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">62</a></span>
-race of ostentation. And practically nothing has
-been done for public benefits by endowments. As
-a manufacturer in a park, with a motor, remarked,
-"you cannot expect anyone not to spend up to his
-income." The idea of using what is really requisite
-for successful living, and not squandering money
-beyond that, is entirely forgotten. The simplicity of
-having nothing that is unnecessary, the pleasure of
-having a large balance to use beyond the needs of
-life, and the comfort of never needing to worry about
-money, are all unknown to those who spend up to
-the hilt, and who turn their money into a grinding
-curse of life. The distribution of surplus wealth
-among the middle classes has proved an entire failure
-in national economics.</p>
-
-<p>Now, lastly, the surplus is passing into a new class,
-the large business speculator, the financier, and trust-man.
-So far as we can yet see, this class is justifying
-itself far more than the middle class. In fifty years
-the middle classes have not given as much to endow
-education as the millionaires have given in five years.
-A man with a gigantic income cannot spend more
-than a few per cent. of it on himself. He must use it for
-large public enterprises which benefit mankind. To
-put it in another form, a great dealer has organised a
-method for taxing the community in such a way that
-they do not notice it. And if he spends the tax on
-public improvements or endowments&mdash;railways, new
-inventions, or universities&mdash;he is an active benefactor
-to the whole community. He sponges up the surplus
-which would otherwise be frittered away in ostentation
-or luxury, and drops it out where it is a permanent
-benefit. As a principle we may hate the trust-man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">63</a></span>
-and multi-millionaire, but he may be a lesser curse
-than the extravagant middle or lower-class man. War
-is hateful, but it may be a lesser curse than rotting
-in peace. So long as the average man shows by his
-selfish luxury that he is incapable of managing
-wealth, so long the private taxer&mdash;who prevents some
-of the waste&mdash;will be a positive blessing to the
-community. The evolution of the great money-manager
-type now going on is a distinct step forward
-in the prevention of waste, and the growth of a better
-system of expenditure. A million pounds a year
-scattered over a hundred thousand men will be all
-eaten up in luxuries or lost in folly; spread among a
-thousand men it will only swell their wasteful pride
-of life; but put it in the hands of ten men who have
-worked for it, and they will spend most of it in useful
-work that will bear fruit. Until the education, moral
-and intellectual, of the average man is on a higher
-plane, it will be well for the surplus wealth to be in
-the safer hands of those who have proved their
-capacity for avoiding waste. The evolution of society
-is not fitted at present for a wealthy middle-class, or a
-proletariat domination.</p>
-
-<p>We have now seen in many directions how great are
-the changes in the constitution of society, which are
-brought about by a succession of small movements,
-each of which imperceptibly bears its share in the
-change. We see thus how carefully small tendencies
-should be watched; and we learn how needless and
-often how futile is a violent uprooting of institutions
-instead of a gradual growth.</p>
-
-<p>Another lesson to note is that every attempt to
-interfere by legislation in the natural working of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">64</a></span>
-causes is more likely to do harm than good. The
-long lesson, which it took all the middle ages to
-teach, was that legislative interference with trade
-always did harm; we have come to believe that in a
-half-hearted way, but we are still perpetually longing
-to tinker society by interfering with natural cause and
-effect.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">65</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>CHAPTER V.<br />
-<span class="small">THE NEED OF DIVERSITY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>A large part of the aims of government in all
-ages has been the securing of uniformity, and much
-of the misery of mankind has been caused by the
-enforcing of it. But when we look at nature we see
-that a highly uniform species is the least likely to
-advance; and a seedsman or a breeder will try to
-break up too uniform a strain by exciting conditions
-which may lead to beneficial new varieties. It is only
-in a fluctuating species in which new "sports" easily
-arise, or are quickly developed by conditions, that
-we can expect to acquire new qualities or beneficial
-advance.</p>
-
-<p>It is therefore one of the essentials for an advancing
-species that it should have full scope for diversity, so
-that any new varieties may not be crushed out by a
-uniformity of conditions. Too uniform a type of
-government is a deadly thing. Compulsory orthodoxy
-killed the vitality of Spain, and&mdash;so far as it succeeded&mdash;that
-of France also. No state was more
-brilliant or vigorous than the Norman rule in
-Sicily, which equally patronised Muhammedan and
-Christian.</p>
-
-<p>Diversity may be secured in two ways, either by
-large varieties within a single great state, or by
-differences between homogeneous small states. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">66</a></span>
-diversity within a large state may be seen in England
-or America; diversity between small states was
-attained between the cities of ancient Greece or
-mediaeval Italy.</p>
-
-<p>But we meet with limiting conditions in the
-necessity of combination for mutual support; and in
-small states that can be carried out by a vigorous
-intolerance which weeds out those who are not conformable,
-and drives them into more congenial
-communities. Intolerance, therefore, is a gain to a
-small community, though detrimental to a large
-state where it excludes the neighbourhood of variety.</p>
-
-<p>In modern times it is with large states that we
-have mainly to deal. They are a necessary development
-where communication is sufficiently easy for the
-concentrated military pressure of the whole to be
-brought to bear on a single point. If states are so
-small that concentration on the border is too easy, the
-state will expand; if concentration is difficult owing
-to size, the state will tend to fall apart again. The
-size for states which is most successful is a function
-of the facility of internal communication. Let those
-who deplore the absorption of small states, and the
-growth of Imperialism in all countries, ponder the
-tale of the North American Indians, who resented the
-power of the white man, and considered how to rid
-themselves of him. Their great council was rejoiced,
-when one sage said that if they would do as he said,
-he would promise that no white man should remain.
-"If the white man is to go you must give up all that
-he brought, the horse, the gun, the blanket, the firewater;
-if you will do this you may be free." They thought&mdash;and
-then said, "No, he must stay." So, if we are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">67</a></span>
-willing to revert to nothing quicker than a cob, we
-might get back to a Heptarchy.</p>
-
-<p>The modern condition of great states being therefore
-forced upon us by the railway and telegraph, the only
-practical question is the form of life in such communities.
-Uniformity that is enforced, either by law,
-or by custom or fashion, is certainly a detriment, as
-it will suppress the useful variations when they arise.
-And the objection to it bursts out in the form of
-anarchism, which is specially a disease of great states.
-The amount of anarchism is very closely related to
-the size of the state; and it is probably an exact
-measure of the internal strain produced by repulsion
-of diverse types and the pressure needed to keep them
-together.</p>
-
-<p>It is only a very crude form of intolerance to
-expect many tens of millions of people to agree in
-religion, morals, and government. A degree of
-intolerance that may succeed, and even be useful, for
-some thousands, will be disastrous if applied to as
-many millions of men.</p>
-
-<p>But here we run against another guiding principle
-of many people. It is often assumed that possibly in
-government, probably in religion, and certainly in
-morals, there is an absolute standard of right and
-wrong, immutable and irremovable. To take the last
-subject&mdash;that of morals&mdash;to the utilitarian they are
-the conditions for the well-being of society, and may
-vary indefinitely with the variations of society, and
-he recognises that there is perhaps no action which
-may not belong to the best code of morality for
-certain possible conditions. To the theologian morals
-are the Divine dictates, which have varied immensely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">68</a></span>
-under different dispensations; and the Patriarchal,
-early Jewish, Prophetic, or Christian codes are represented
-as quite incompatible one with another. The
-subjects of sister-marriage, concubinage of captives,
-lapidation, private revenge, communal or individual
-responsibility, and others, all show how entirely
-variable the presentation of the moral standard is for
-different states of society. Hence we must always
-regard any given moral standard as being rightly
-associated with some particular condition of society
-and typical of it; much as the colour of red heat, or
-yellow heat, or white heat, is typical of particular
-temperatures. And instead of blindly reprobating
-those among us who do not conform to our present
-theoretical standard, or even the present normal
-standard, we should regard them as fragments
-of a different society gone astray in time or
-space.</p>
-
-<p>Thus we see that diversity should be tolerated up
-to the limits of the laws that are absolutely necessary
-to avoid confusion and misunderstanding between
-members of the same community: and there is no
-constraining principle which would narrow the variability
-allowable, short of permitting injustice, hardship,
-or unfair competition between those who need to
-work together in mutual confidence and good faith.
-It may truly be said that civilisation is the means for
-giving scope to diversity.</p>
-
-<p>Under stagnant and uniform conditions there may
-be a fossilised form of civilisation; but any living
-form must yield opportunities for individual effort,
-and every such opportunity is the making or
-marring of the man who rises to it or who falls before<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">69</a></span>
-it. The leading tenth and the submerged tenth are
-equally the proof that a living civilisation is doing its
-work of sorting out the best and getting rid of the
-worst stock.</p>
-
-<p>From another point of view, toleration is essential
-to completion. The enormous variety of character,
-and ability for special work, is all needed in a complete
-community. There are many "wrong paradises"
-in a whole society. We see the necessity for mental
-diversity, from the pure mathematician who is proud
-of the inapplicability of his results, through all the
-successive stages of research work, commercial work,
-administrative management, and mechanical work,
-even down to merely automatic work which needs no
-more mind than a cow's. And it is perfectly clear
-that such mental diversity must have corresponding
-variety of external life to accommodate it. The
-student or experimental worker finds the disturbances
-of communal life almost insufferable, while the
-mechanical worker would be miserable almost to
-suicide in the silence and lack of excitement of a life
-devoted to abstract thought or to millionths of an
-inch. If, therefore, the productions of the externals
-of life differ so profoundly in a complete society, we
-must expect and allow equally great differences in all
-the feelings, instincts, and requirements. One man
-may have a physical repulsion to affecting his mind
-and condition by stimulants and narcotics, a repulsion
-that extends more or less to every one addicted to
-such drugging of the senses. But it would be a
-misfortune to be without that variety, and the world
-would be poorer by losing Falstaff, or even Bardolph.
-The utmost we can say is that we should never be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">70</a></span>
-blind to the bad effects on the community of a low
-type if it be too widely diffused.</p>
-
-<p>So long as the extreme parties are but a small
-portion, and the distribution of variation is normal,
-most in the middle course and thinning away to the
-upper and lower limits, the society is stable and
-benefits by its variations. But if the curve of variation
-is irregular, and shows two large groups with fewer in
-the middle course between them, the condition is
-dangerous. We had such a condition in England in
-the seventeenth century, and after a long struggle of
-each group to capture the middle party, the separation
-into two communities took place. The spiritual
-ancestors of Clifford and Perks and Byles were happy
-in their paradise of intolerant puritanism in New
-England, while Old England had internal peace for a
-couple of centuries. Another such process of fission
-now seems growing imminent, and it is again the
-question as to which group will capture the middle
-party. The positive danger of a diversity running
-into two separate groups is notorious in history. The
-Copts invited the Arab invasion to rid them of
-Byzantine bondage; the Britons invited the Saxons
-to save them from their neighbours. The ideals of a
-County Council which will not tolerate a quiet square
-in London, or of labour members who promote
-marches of the unemployed and unlimited taxation
-at their will, may drive the best thought in England
-to the tranquillity of a well-governed capital abroad;
-and as there are many people now who would prefer in
-England a Boer domination to that of the party
-represented by Cecil, Halifax, and Riley, so there are
-many others who would rather submit to a German<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">71</a></span>
-government of London than to a sacking by a hungry
-mob. The segregation into two groups with an
-unstable link between them is fatal to the virtues
-classed as Patriotism. A studious Englishman would
-sooner have a Japanese or Russian professor for a
-neighbour, than have the average drinking workman
-and rowdy family who may be his distant cousins.
-And assuredly he would make no personal sacrifices
-to keep out of England any people who were proved
-to be the moral or intellectual superiors of the rest of
-his countrymen. We thus see that diversity, however
-great, must vary about a single centre, if it is to be
-favourable to society as a whole.</p>
-
-<p>Looking at the general domination of modern law
-it is truly astonishing how much uniformity is possible.
-But the fact of a uniform law being in force
-must not blind us to the existence of a great amount
-of diversity being now tolerated side by side with it.
-For instance, we are so accustomed to think of only
-one type of marriage that the various stages recognised
-in Roman law seem astonishing. Yet in legal
-status in England there are ten stages surviving, most
-of which are tolerated by the law. There is (1) royal
-assent, needful in the royal family, just as it is needful
-in every family in some African communities;
-(2) normal religious or civil marriage; (3) marriage of
-divorced persons, only civil; (4) within prohibited
-degrees, but tolerated socially, as deceased wife's
-sister, or (5) not tolerated, as uncle and niece;
-(6) quasi-permanent connection with full legal responsibility
-for children; (7) temporary license. Only in
-case of lack of full consent does the law step in to
-punish, in (8) marriage under age, (9) bigamy or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">72</a></span>
-(10) violence. Every one of these stages has been
-normal in some conditions of society, and most are
-normal in some countries even at present. We may,
-for example, instance (1) normal in Benin; (2) religious
-marriage only normal in England; (3) normal in
-Eastern Europe; (4) normal in our colonies;
-(5) normal in Italy; (6) normal in Islam; (7) normal
-in Madagascar in interregnum of sovereignty, and in
-other countries; (8) normal in India; (9) normal in
-Islam; (10) normal in most warfare. And each of
-these stages carries with it in England different legal
-and social conditions. Again, as regards the period
-of the marriage ceremony, the Church has had a long
-and hard fight to get it recognised as a hymeneal
-ceremony and not a maternity ceremony; yet the
-latter status is recognised in law as equal to the
-former, and it is still prevalent among a third of
-marriages in some Australian colonies, and very
-largely in England, both in the country from end to
-end and in town life. On the whole some fifteen
-hundred years of church pressure has not turned the
-scale very far against the older custom, which we
-might well call approximation by trial and error.
-Such is the diversity which is yet uncontrolled.</p>
-
-<p>We must regard society, therefore, as in the above
-definite subject, in the light of a mixture of many
-stages of evolution. We may still sit at table with
-palaeolithic man, put into modern dress and eating
-modern dishes it is true, but absolutely in the
-palaeolithic stage of thought and intellect; he is
-entirely absorbed in the interests of hunting wild
-animals, and devoted to his appliances for the chase,
-while incapable of making or improving anything<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">73</a></span>
-belonging to a higher kind of civilisation. Crime and
-illegalities are very largely merely survivals of different
-conditions of society, which the law of the majority
-has not succeeded in repressing. As such, the more
-reasonable and favourable mode of dealing with
-them would be deportation to communities where
-such actions are still normal. Instead of five years'
-sentence for bigamy, let us exile a man to a
-Muhammedan country. If we were seriously to
-establish island communities where theft, violence,
-anarchy, and other phases incompatible with any
-passable diversity, were still normal and unpunished,
-we might leave all those who preferred to practise
-such conditions to work out their own life and views
-with kindred minds.</p>
-
-<p>Regarding now the individual rather than the community,
-we see in modern education a very serious
-force acting against that diversity which is needful for
-progress. So far as it is a social force, owing to the
-herding together of large masses of children, and so
-destroying family types, it is mainly deleterious. The
-enforcement of trivial and senseless regulations by
-boys themselves is entirely a detriment to character,
-as destroying a habit of dealing with matters on their
-own merits, and creating a terrible bogey of senseless
-public opinion. The compulsory games and the
-ordering of the use of personal time, is another detriment,
-for it certainly destroys some ability which
-might find its footing in the character permanently.
-But beside the detriment of the system
-of herding, there is the more direct question of the
-influence of the teaching. Most children begin
-with a great curiosity concerning the world and their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">74</a></span>
-experience of it, a curiosity which when unguided
-leads to many unpleasant and inconvenient results.
-Hence, instead of guiding it aright, and encouraging
-the benefits of it, the selfish and lazy plan of elders
-is to destroy and obliterate the reasoning interest in
-things, and try to enforce in its place a knowledge of
-matters, which are generally less useful, and certainly
-less interesting, than those which a child wants to
-know about. The leading factor of character, the
-acquisition of knowledge of benefits and injuries, of
-good and of evil, is mainly rooted out; and the new
-plants of abstract ideas and bookwork require generally
-many years to take good root, if they do so at
-all. This system lies at the base of the unintellectual
-character of the average educated Englishman, who
-takes no useful interest in anything. As an example of
-this, there is a foreign land full of interest, scientific,
-historical, and social; for a quarter of a century
-hundreds of Englishmen have been there in comfortable
-official positions with reasonable leisure.
-Yet there is not a single good memoir produced, not
-even a hundred pages of original matter, outside of
-official work, by all this mass of educated minds
-during nearly a generation. The possibility of what
-might have been done in such grand opportunities
-has been stamped out by the education which they
-have suffered. They are all of regulation pattern,
-with as little variation as is possible between different
-temperaments&mdash;amiable upright men, who will leave
-no trace of anyone being the wiser in future for their
-existence. Such is the product of the numbing chill
-of uniformity, and the weeding out of the advancing
-power of diversity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">75</a></span></p>
-
-<p>We are all familiar with the epigram of England
-having a hundred religions but only one sauce; but
-we see a worse misfortune in the absurd incongruity
-of now having two hundred religions and only one
-system of elementary education. Amid the great
-variety of minds, which is illustrated by the free
-choice of religious belief and practice, we certainly
-require a great diversity of education to bring out
-the best development of each type. We require
-simultaneous experiment on a small scale, instead of
-vast experiments of Acts which apply to the whole
-country for a generation at a time. Every Act is
-only an experiment, and one which is usually spoiled
-by attempting too much in a compromise, which is
-neither fish, flesh, nor fowl. Had there been in 1870
-a hundred schools used for experiment, say five of
-twenty different types in different parts of the country,
-the life-history of the pupils would by now have given
-us a firm basis for rational adjustment of a system.
-It is fatuous to suppose it possible to make one
-Procrustean bed to fit children of the country, the
-mining centre, the manufacturing district, the commercial
-town, or the fisher folk&mdash;of the Yorkshire
-tyke, the Suffolk dumpling, or the Hampshire hog.
-Nor is it merely the success of a system in producing
-examination results that has to be attained. It is
-quite possible that the best workers in after life
-may not be the best to cram with temporary bookwork.
-Nothing short of twenty years of active life
-can test the value of the education on which it is
-based.</p>
-
-<p>Should we not at least try the effect of varying
-amount of control by the central board, the local<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">76</a></span>
-council, and the teacher himself? May not some
-latitude in subject be allowed to a teacher, to follow
-lines which his own mind is best capable of making
-useful? Should not a great difference be made
-between the town, where an infant school is needed,
-to keep children safe while parents are at work, and
-the country where they can be left to play in the
-open? Should not country teaching be adapted to
-making agriculturists? Might it not be possible to
-leave children entirely in the fields till sixteen, provided
-that they could pass in reading at nine, and in
-figures at twelve, however it was learned? A solid
-two years' half-timing from sixteen to eighteen, when
-they valued knowledge, might be worth all they
-gain in the present way. Such are a few of the
-questions to which answers are necessary, before we
-can begin to provide for the diversity of education,
-which is certainly requisite if we are to make
-it successful&mdash;a help instead of a detriment in after
-life.</p>
-
-<p>And in more detailed education is it not possible to
-let a child's mind grow on what is of interest to it&mdash;to
-further it on whatever subjects are most attractive
-and easy to that type of mind, until the habit of
-learning is so developed that it can be more easily
-levelled up on the subjects which have been neglected?
-The mere habit of learning and applying knowledge
-has to be acquired to begin with, and surely the
-easier subjects are the best on which to practise the
-power of concentration of mind. The trainer knows
-that his monkeys cannot be taught unless they can
-concentrate attention on the subject in hand. In
-every direction we need to gain diversity&mdash;in types<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">77</a></span>
-of society, in customs, in varieties of mind; and to
-gain this basis for useful variation we must begin by
-cultivating diversity and providing for its success,
-in place of attacking and crushing it wherever it
-appears.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">78</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>CHAPTER VI.<br />
-<span class="small">LINES OF ADVANCE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Before we can imagine what may be lines of
-possible advance, for the individual or the community,
-we should base our ideas on observing what have
-been the means of advance in the past. Many of
-the Utopian visions which have been sketched by
-different writers are in flagrant contradiction of all
-history and human nature. It is at least far more
-likely that gain in the future will be on similar lines
-to those which have been successful in the past, rather
-than on lines opposed to all previous growth.</p>
-
-<p>The personal, rather than the communal, advance
-is the main consideration, inasmuch as it is personal
-initiative of the most able which helps the rest of the
-community forward. The greatest improvements
-are the result of a single mind, animating perhaps
-a small group of similar minds. We all know how
-such great benefits as prison reform, the abolition of
-slavery, the restriction of child labour, and similar
-movements of which the public are now proud, were
-each originated by one mind, and worked by a small
-group in the teeth of the bitterest opposition to start
-with. It goes without saying that the same is the
-case in all inventions; it takes not only an inventor,
-but also a commercial organiser (seldom one and the
-same man), to help the public to any improvement.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">79</a></span>
-If ten thousand men could be picked out of any one
-country, so as to remove the most fruitful minds, that
-country would come to an entire standstill, and would
-continue in mechanical repetition until a fresh generation
-gave a chance of the rise of original minds.
-Probably not more than one in a thousand minds
-causes useful advance among the others. And the
-majority of men lead automatic lives, of which the
-reflexes have been trained by teaching and experience
-to do what is required, and the daily actions are performed
-without a single real thought, but only in
-response to external stimuli of sights and orders. It
-is therefore in the development of the able individuals,
-and in giving every chance to such whenever they
-arise, that the hopes of the great mass must lie.</p>
-
-<p>It is perhaps not too much to say that all general
-popular advance of the community at large is based
-on the prevention of waste. Wherever waste exists
-improvement is possible; and we need not trouble
-ourselves much about the construction of the social
-organism, so long as we can lay our finger on the
-waste and check it. As with a machine we know the
-amount of force that is put into it, and can see what
-percentage is yielded up usefully in its output, so it is
-with a community. The design of the nature and
-quality of work done by the community or the
-machine is another matter; though that again comes
-under the head of waste if the quality is bad. We
-will now look more precisely at the gains by
-prevention of waste in health, life, energy, and
-renewal.</p>
-
-<p>The saving of health is one of the greatest steps
-that has been made, as it has been suddenly performed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">80</a></span>
-within a generation. Man had unconsciously conquered
-bacteria to a great extent by the invention of
-cooking, and by the experimental learning of cleanliness;
-but the scientific attack on bacteria and protozoa
-has given the prospect of preventing all epidemic
-disease, and largely increasing the efficiency of man
-in the most fertile countries. This advance means
-the economic exploitation of the whole tropical regions,
-which&mdash;with cheap transport&mdash;will provide an immense
-fresh basis for the advantage of other lands. The
-gain in antiseptic surgery, giving safety for operation
-on all internal organs, as it only affects the small
-proportion of sick and injured, is not of so much
-general importance as the conquest of the microorganisms,
-which have hitherto ruled the best part of
-the world. It is in the complete domination over all
-forms of life, however minute, that we shall find one
-of the greatest lines for future advance. Only a small
-band of workers, about one in a hundred million of
-the world's population, has made this advance
-possible.</p>
-
-<p>The saving of life is another great step which will
-give man far higher power; not only in the mere
-hindrance of death, but far more in the increased
-power of work <i>per</i> day. The power of continuity of
-work is a growth of civilisation; and it is obvious that
-a man who can do twelve hours' work <i>per</i> day, instead
-of six hours, not only lives virtually twice as long, but
-costs the community only half as much for what he
-does. This continuity of work, or industry, is seen
-in both high and low classes of work. Some races
-can do more than twice as much agricultural work in
-the day as others. The same is true of scientific or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">81</a></span>
-commercial work. And there have been some of the
-highest minds which could only work for two hours
-a day, while others could work up to fourteen or
-sixteen hours daily. This power of continuity of
-work is obviously then a matter improvable by cultivation,
-both in the individual and in the race; and as
-it may easily double a man's effective life it is certainly
-a line of great promise for the future.</p>
-
-<p>Another direction for saving a portion of life is in
-the rapidity of thought and action. It is easy to find
-a difference of two or three times the amount of work
-<i>per</i> hour between different men. All that we have
-just said about the continuity of work applies to its
-rapidity; and a large gain may be looked for in
-cultivating pace and vigour. We need hardly note that
-trades-union ideals would destroy instead of promoting
-these most promising and fruitful lines of advance.</p>
-
-<p>In transport from place to place the movement at
-fifty miles an hour instead of five means a gain of
-several years of life to most men. But here we have
-probably reached the useful limits, as any possible
-further saving would not yield much more time.</p>
-
-<p>The saving of energy is another form of the
-question of continuity of work. The ideal of work&mdash;as
-varied as possible, and as interesting as possible&mdash;being
-the joy of life and the greatest good, is an aim
-hardly yet grasped by more than a very few persons.
-To the majority, work is a hateful thing, to be done
-solely in order to get means for enjoyment in some
-other way. This essentially savage and uncultivated
-ideal needs to be steadily rooted out by the better
-adaptation of work to the individual. An education
-which started by cultivating the natural interests,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">82</a></span>
-using them for mental development, and only superadding
-what further knowledge was really requisite
-for life, would greatly help to eradicate the false and
-low idea of work which prevails. There is a common
-feeling that business cannot be interesting in itself;
-but there are few, if any, businesses which if intelligently
-followed will not yield scope for some real
-interest of observation and study. The greater
-application of mind to the work of life will leave
-far less scope for fruitless amusement and&mdash;as a
-great painter remarked&mdash;"there is nothing of interest
-in life to be compared with work."</p>
-
-<p>To minds which are incapable of continuity of
-work, or of relaxation by variation of work, mere
-amusements are needful. Darwin's health prevented
-more than two hours' work a day, and the flimsiest of
-novels was his needful relaxation. But the need of
-amusement for this purpose must be taken as the
-index of incapacity for continuity&mdash;as an unfortunate
-failure of mental and physical health&mdash;as a disastrous
-defect when it occurs along with great abilities which
-can only thus work at low speed. The same may be
-said of athletics; the need of physical exercise outside
-of work is an index of incapacity for physical health
-adapted to the work, an unfortunate failure of those
-who are of defective condition. The idea that no one
-can be too strong and robust is a wild exaggeration;
-physical strength needs to be proportioned to the
-nature of work, and a slender wiry man will do far
-better for indoor life than a plethoric mass of brawn
-and muscle which needs much exercise to keep in
-health. Unlimited robustness is not an absolute
-good, to be pursued at all costs, or else we should<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">83</a></span>
-make every schoolboy a Hun, living without shelter,
-and feeding on flaps of raw meat which form the only
-saddle of his horse. In brief, the need of athletics
-shows a weakness of body to be remedied, or a
-physical over-development unsuited to the person's
-work in life; it is the mark of unfitness, and the need
-ceases so soon as a man is adapted to his work. The
-need of spending any considerable time on amusement
-is the sign of an incapacity, which has to be
-removed by strengthening the mind in the individual
-or in the race. The passion for amusement is the
-sure evidence of a defective education, which has left
-the mind incapable of continuity, or bare of interests.
-An important advance therefore lies in better use of
-the time which is at present wasted in fruitless action
-of mind or body; better adaptation and education for
-the work of life will gradually raise the standard so
-that this form of waste will be avoided. We do not
-expect a uniform type of horse to be equally adapted
-to draught or hunting or racing; and similarly we
-ought to specialise on different types of men fitted
-for agriculture, or mechanical work, or office work.</p>
-
-<p>The great subject of the waste by renewal of the
-population in each generation has an immense variety
-of aspects; but the essential importance of it is seen
-when we reflect that about half the labour of the
-world is swallowed up in this renewal. The burden
-of production, of rearing, of education, and the waste
-and loss in the process, exceeds that of any other
-activity, such as supply of food or shelter, for the
-adult. Hence any possible saving in this great mass
-of labour, or reduction of waste, is of the first
-importance to the individual and the race.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">84</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Those who have proposed temporary marriage
-hardly seem to have considered that one of the
-most important economies adopted, perhaps dating
-from a pre-human period, was that of permanent
-marriage. This saved at a stroke the enormous loss
-of time and energy in the rivalries of repeated mating.
-The gain to the race by leaving the members free for
-continuous work is greater than the loss by reproducing
-inferior stocks. There is no need for the
-system to have been intentionally adopted for this
-purpose; but merely a race which economised the
-time of repeated mating would soon oust a race in
-which it was customary. For this reason any fancied
-reconstruction of society without permanent marriage
-is entirely futile; even if it could be universal, yet
-the advantage given to the lazy and emotional type
-of man above the continuous worker would soon pull
-down the race. One frequent argument for a more
-revocable union is the number of divorces effected
-or desired. But nearly all such are among people
-whose judgment in any other line of life would
-certainly not be trusted, and who habitually get into
-trouble over other communal obligations. To abolish
-marriage for their benefit would be as reasonable as
-allowing all debts to be repudiated because such
-people cannot pay their I.O.U.'s. There is moreover
-a great gain in permanent marriage when judiciously
-effected, by the new mental pivot of a sense of permanent
-ensurance of various of the conditions of life,
-which liberates the attention of both parties from a
-large number of points, and leaves each free to concentrate
-attention on a partial phase of feelings and
-duties. It is a far higher and a spiritual counterpart<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">85</a></span>
-of a successful business partnership, where each
-member trusts the other to manage a different part
-of the affair. All this mental economy and help
-would be impossible without permanence.</p>
-
-<p>Another wastage which has been greatly reduced in
-modern times is that of high birth rate and high death
-rate. The allusions in mediaeval times show a state
-much like that now described among the Slovenes,
-where incessant maternity is only balanced by the
-reduction of children due to filth, neglect, and bad
-conditions. The modern ideal of a small family carefully
-tended is an immense advance, both for the
-individual life and for the saving of waste. But its
-benefits should be sought and not commanded. If
-the neglectful, dirty, and wasteful stocks of low type
-in our midst let their children die off, it is the only
-balance to their overgrowth, which would soon outnumber
-the better class of population. The right
-end to begin at is by insisting on hard work and tidy
-living, under penal enactments; the saving of the
-children may then be left to take care of itself. To
-begin at the sentimental end, as is now the fashion, is
-to degrade the whole race by swamping it with the
-worst stocks.</p>
-
-<p>The line of progress in invention is the remorseless
-"scrapping" of poorer machines. The more serious
-the progress becomes, the more scrapping needs to be
-done. We must not be surprised then if a sign of
-human progress of mind and body should be the
-large number of inefficients who are thrown out of
-work on the scrap heap of society.</p>
-
-<p>In another direction advance has been made by
-general lengthening of the stages of life. The early<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">86</a></span>
-marriage and early deaths of past times brought the
-cost of renewal at every twenty years, which was a
-much severer tax on the community than renewal
-in thirty or forty years. There is probably also a
-great benefit in the higher development of parents
-before each generation. It is well recognised how the
-later children of a family are more able, and of a more
-finished quality than the earlier; great examples of
-such a view in older literature being Joseph and
-David, and in our own history, Alfred. The longer
-growth of mind before each generation appears to be
-a great gain of advance for the race. Among the
-lower races, by far the most advanced are those like
-the Zulu, which have a long period of hard training
-and active life before settling down to family
-duties.</p>
-
-<p>The often debated problem dealing with the human
-refuse of bad stocks is one which presses most on an
-advanced civilisation. We will not do like the Christian
-Norseman, when he put the ne'er-do-weel family
-into a wide grave in the churchyard, and wiped his
-hands of them. We will not even leave them to
-exterminate themselves by their own follies, vices,
-and ignorance. But if the state takes up the burden
-of such wastrels it must have an entire control of
-them. Responsibility without rule is worse than rule
-without responsibility. The only safe course is a
-rigorous enforcement of parental duties; with the
-alternative of penal servitude in state workshops, the
-mother and children together, the father elsewhere.
-There is no middle course, of semi-maintenance by
-school meals, which will not injure the children by
-their being correspondingly neglected at home, injure<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">87</a></span>
-the parents by lowering the spur of necessity to work,
-and injure the state by flooding it with the worst
-types.</p>
-
-<p>Much more drastic treatment of the unfit has been
-advocated, as by Dr. Rentoul. In a future period of
-civilisation a logical course of treatment might have a
-chance of adoption; but in our age any serious
-changes of the habits of thought and action will not
-be tolerated, unless brought about very gradually
-under small influences, such as we have noticed as
-acting through taxation. What we need is to try to
-give effect to the gospel of giving to him that hath, and
-taking away from him that hath not. The most likely
-opening for such a line of advance would be giving
-partial state maintenance to the best stocks, so as to
-ensure large returns from them, and taxing down the
-worst stocks&mdash;exactly the opposite course to the
-present craze. Let us try to realise if there be a
-practical system for this advance.</p>
-
-<p>We should need a Board of Health in each area of
-about 10,000 inhabitants, composed of three examining
-doctors. Every child on leaving school, or at
-about fifteen, should be examined, merely by a glance
-at the greater bulk of normal cases, but carefully in
-extreme cases. The finest 5 per cent. both mentally
-(shown by school-leaving certificates) and physically
-as well, should be premiated by assisted higher education
-of suitable type. The worst 10 per cent. should
-be remanded to a training school where physical and
-mental development would be scientifically carried
-out, and as much profit as possible made from their
-labour toward self-support. This would reclaim the
-hooligan class effectually before they run amuck, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">88</a></span>
-help on those who need care and assistance to get a
-good footing in life. No course could possibly be
-kinder for the weaklings. At the age of twenty a
-further examination of both the best and the worst
-classes should ensue. The best half of the most able
-should receive a certificate granting them practically
-free support for all children they may have after they
-have reached the age of twenty-five. The worst half
-of the most incapable, or 5 per cent. of all, should be
-required to report residence during their lives to the
-Board of Health of their district, and informed that if
-they had any children they must pay a heavy fine, or
-else go into servitude. This would practically mean
-the segregation of the lowest class of the unfits under
-compulsory work. It would be cheaper to the state
-to keep them thus at work, than to pay poor rates to
-maintain this submerged twentieth and their helpless
-families.</p>
-
-<p>In all these proposals there would be no Socialistic
-constraint of the great majority, which is normal in
-mind and body. But such attention to the unfit
-would be merely adding a porch to the poorhouse, the
-hospital, and the asylum, and there sorting over the
-material which can be possibly saved from a bad end.
-The nine-tenths of people who were ordinary would
-be thus left even more free for individual growth than
-they now are, when hampered by the inefficient
-residue.</p>
-
-<p>We might not exclude the thought of another
-favourite idea of some reformers which in a modified
-shape might be allowed to gradually take root. Since
-Spencer Wells familiarised the world with an operation
-for which he will always be remembered, hundreds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">89</a></span>
-of women have gladly improved their health by a
-safe treatment, which, if anything, threatened to
-become too fashionable. Every woman who was, as
-above, required to report her residence as being unfit,
-and being liable to heavy penalties on having children,
-should be offered the option of perfect freedom if she
-chose the operation. The marriage of such women,
-with men who were condemned as unfit, would
-entirely free both parties from reporting and inspection
-in future, and give the best prospect of happy lives to
-the weakest and less capable of the community, free
-from what would be only too truly "encumbrances"
-to such people. This course might give a permanently
-safe line of improvement, without any consequent
-stigma or hardship in the world around; and so gentle
-a change&mdash;beneficial to the individual as well as the
-community&mdash;seems not outside of future possibilities.
-At least such a course would be the more practicable
-form of such a proposed change. Of course, no such
-legislation would be complete in its action, and
-evasions would often occur. But if it checked even
-one half of the growth of bad stock it would be an
-enormous gain.</p>
-
-<p>We now turn to other lines of advance from the
-communal point of view. The old system of community,
-in which all the nations of northern Europe
-lived, was based on each man being his brother's
-keeper; every one was liable to fines if any relative
-committed a crime, in proportion to their closeness of
-relation. To this succeeded individual responsibility,
-both in property and in penalties. This raises the
-question whether it is possible to separate property
-and penalty in communism. At present the tendency<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">90</a></span>
-is to a state communism, begun by heavy death
-duties and taxation (for a variety of purposes which
-the taxed do not use or require), amounting to a
-quarter of all property. If this system is extended,
-and property becomes more largely hypothecated to
-public purposes, then when a man is condemned in
-heavy damages or fines his neighbours will suffer by
-reduction of the rateable property. Will it not be
-thought more fair for his relatives to be responsible
-for the public loss? And if so, we indirectly revert
-to the payment by relatives of a share of all fines.</p>
-
-<p>To anyone who has had experience of combined
-labour, it is obvious how two people working together
-do not perform twice as much as one alone. There
-is always a loss by one waiting on the action of
-another; and it appears as if the amount of work
-done only increased as the square root of the number
-of people working together. Hence the group-work of
-communistic taste is very wasteful. This is practically
-seen among the Slavs in Russia, where communal agriculture&mdash;which
-is extolled by its admirers&mdash;produces
-far less <i>per</i> acre on fine land, than is obtained by individual
-agriculture on poor land in England. Again
-it is notorious how the Irishman who goes to work
-apart among individualist people, then flourishes as he
-never does when held down by the communal claims
-socially enforced among his own countrymen. This
-is the root of the success of the Irish out of their own
-land. Thus we see how communal action is the more
-wasteful form of labour; and how it was a great
-advance for man when he made individual success
-entirely depend upon individual labour.</p>
-
-<p>Another question is what form of government will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">91</a></span>
-most favour the strong breeds and the new strains of
-ability as they arise? Certainly any system which
-ties the actions of one person with those of others is
-detrimental to ability. The better man is held back
-by the co-operation with others, by their lower
-example, and by their direct disfavour. Any communistic
-tie is unfavourable to advance; and it was a
-great step in favour of new and improved variations
-when each individual stood entirely on his own
-resources, and was not bound by his inferior kin. In
-every way, therefore, individualism was a line of
-advance for men in the past; and the principles
-which are involved promise that it will yet likewise be
-the main line of future advance. If we look practically
-at which class of government is associated with
-advance of ideas, of inventions, and new types of
-thought, let us put on one hand the more individualist
-countries, America, England, Germany, and
-perhaps France, and on the other hand the more
-communist countries, Switzerland, Norway, Ireland,
-Greece, Australia, and especially New Zealand. Can
-we question for a moment which type of country is
-most advancing the intellect and abilities of man?</p>
-
-<p>But we must not forget that Union is strength, the
-motto that Belgium strangely took on separating from
-Holland; and combined action has great advantages.
-In this view the beneficial combination is that to
-which all contribute without one being a hindrance
-to the other. How far can these benefits be gained without
-loss to the improved individual? The main principle
-is that all combinations must be entirely voluntary,
-and have no suspicion of coercion about them.
-Where even "peaceful persuasion" comes in, ability<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">92</a></span>
-is crushed, and the whole community is the loser by
-it. Coercive union of individuals is the unpardonable
-sin against human nature, because it kills the hopes
-of the future. The safe line of advance is combination
-by large clubs for every purpose, with healthy rivalry
-between similar institutions&mdash;benefit clubs, co-operative
-stores, co-operative works, holiday clubs, and
-insurance of all kinds. Every inducement should be
-held out to join in such combinations, giving them
-the assistance and security of official auditors, as is
-provided for friendly societies at present Every line
-in which any class can profitably unite for economic
-action, on an entirely voluntary basis, and without
-any tie on the individual beyond his share in the
-enterprise, is a clear gain to society. In this way the
-taxation for these ends would fall on those who
-benefit by them, and not on those who do not want
-them. Thus the individual would be free to take, or
-leave alone, the benefits provided; and many purposes
-to which taxation is now applied would be far
-better effected by gigantic clubs of those classes who
-want such assistance. Taxation must be strictly
-limited to those purposes in which all persons must
-necessarily share, such as protection and justice.</p>
-
-<p>Hence a future line of advance lies in a great
-development of purely voluntary co-operation in any
-one class, in order to obtain the advantages of combination.
-In one direction it is clear what immense
-savings might be thus effected. Co-operative purchase
-of supplies and cooking, with distribution of hot
-meals to subscribers, would save perhaps a third of
-the cost of living to the working classes. And if the
-prepaid weekly subscriptions might be deducted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">93</a></span>
-before wages were received, such a system would go
-far to solve the question of proper feeding of children.
-Again, the education of hand-workers in the subject
-of economics can be best furthered by the experience
-gained in co-operative works, and even on this ground
-alone every encouragement should be given to such
-combinations of workers.</p>
-
-<p>Another line of advance now coming into practical
-view is the use of various nationalities, according to
-their abilities for different kinds of works in foreign
-countries. We have seen, in Europe, Italian miners
-taken to many lands for tunnelling and submarine
-work, we have Norwegians largely employed in our
-shipping, and English engineers find many careers
-abroad. Of recent years the great mass of cheap
-skilled labour of China and Japan has been getting
-its due share of the world's work. The infamous
-manner in which the Chinese have been treated in
-America is apparently now nearly at an end; the
-Republic where all men are free and equal will be
-coerced into fairness by the reasonable refusal to take
-American goods as long as the Americans will not
-take Chinese labour. In British Columbia the
-Japanese are objected to because they are more
-industrious, more economical, more sober and quiet
-than the white, who, as their inferior in these principal
-respects, cannot bear their competition. The Americans
-are likewise trying to prevent their industry,
-while at the same time wishing to make the Panama
-Canal with Chinese labour; in this they will
-probably be rebuffed, unless the whole national
-position is put on a fair basis. The objections to
-Chinese labour in South Africa have never been put<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">94</a></span>
-on the real fact&mdash;tacitly felt, though unexpressed&mdash;that
-the white dreads the competition of an economical
-people. First they were said to be tortured in slavery,
-a lie which served its big political purpose until it
-was found that they would not leave; then the
-danger of public crime and burglary was put forward,
-until it was shown that there were fewer criminals in
-proportion than among other inhabitants; then a cry
-of immorality was raised, until the Colonial Secretary
-stated that the Kaffirs who would replace them had
-just the same habits. Now the Transvaal refuses to
-destroy its own welfare by the falseness of playing
-with any of these cries; but such hatred to free
-labour has all served the political ends which were
-intended by an unscrupulous party that revels in
-keeping a conscience. Meanwhile the Prussian Board
-of Agriculture desires to import Chinese agriculturists
-into Germany; and it will be strange if the great
-German coalfields in South Wales are not run by the
-cheapest labour that can be obtained. We have no
-laws to prevent Chinese working freely in England,
-and we cannot afford to wreck our great China trade
-by starting a gross injustice of exclusion.</p>
-
-<p>If objections are felt&mdash;by a people so immoral as
-ourselves&mdash;to the toleration of any habit of foreign
-residents, let it be legislated upon equally for all
-nationalities in England. In this way the Canadians
-expelled the rowdy negroes who had taken refuge
-with them in the days of slavery. A rigid and
-impartial punishment of rowdyism cleared out the
-undesirable negro, and left the inoffensive behind.
-The only possible course of safety is not by any
-laws directed against any one race; for when such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">95</a></span>
-laws break down in the growth of the future there
-will be a terrible economic&mdash;if not political&mdash;catastrophe.
-Rigid laws to check evils of all inhabitants
-of a country alike are sound and safe, and will
-prevent most of the objectionable results of immigration,
-Jewish, Italian, Chinese, or any other. With
-such laws a great advance can be made by the free
-use of that kind of labour which is most adapted to
-the work, whatever source it may come from. Such
-must inevitably be the course of the distant future;
-and those who play with holding what they please to
-call a "white man's land" will find that "mean
-whites" of hot countries are wholly inferior to other
-races which are fitted for such a position. Bret Harte
-has well stated "the conscious hate and fear with
-which inferiority always regards the possibility of
-even-handed justice, and which is the key-note to
-the vulgar clamour about servile and degraded
-races."</p>
-
-<p>Another subject which has seemed to be a most
-promising line of advance is that of the reduction or
-abolition of warfare. We must not limit our view
-in this to open and direct violence, there are other
-forms of warfare quite as effective, and causing as
-much, or more, misery in the total. The warfare of
-trade is always going on, each nation is pushing its
-neighbours as much as it can for its own benefit.
-Some gain benefit by closed markets and bleeding a
-monopoly, others benefit by open markets, and each
-fights for what it wants by trade methods backed
-with force. The free trader honestly believes that all
-this can and should be abolished by each country
-producing what it is best fitted for, and a tacit or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">96</a></span>
-legal understanding that there is to be no trade
-rivalry on the various lines thus assigned to different
-countries. Such would be the only system which
-could abolish trade warfare. Under such a system
-advance would be greatly checked, if not killed.
-Look at the history of quinine; only twenty years
-ago it was 10<i>s.</i> an ounce, and the growers (though
-competing among themselves) did not think they
-could improve the process or reduce the price. The
-chemist in Europe stepped into the market and
-smashed the old system by much cheaper artificial
-quinine. But the growers, sooner than be ruined,
-invented extraction by petroleum, and brought down
-the price to 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> an ounce. Now here were two
-acts of violent trade warfare between countries; the
-result being such an improvement that instead of one
-of the most life-saving medicines being a luxury, it
-can now be used six times more freely than before.
-Without trade war this would never have come about.
-Free trade implies free competition, and that is
-trade-warfare.</p>
-
-<p>Another form of trade war is holding a country
-for the sake of a monopoly of trade, thus enabling a
-group of manufacturers&mdash;say of France&mdash;to tax all
-the inhabitants under their government, especially in
-colonies&mdash;as Algiers, Madagascar, Tahiti, &amp;c. This
-is simply a form of tribute, like the taxation levied
-by Rome on various conquered countries; it holds
-back the taxed countries. If other countries wish to
-get a share of that trade they will have to fight, by
-trade or by violence, to conquer the right to join in it.
-And a trade war which shut, say, all English markets
-to France, until all French markets were open to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">97</a></span>
-England, would not violate any economic principle.
-It is meeting force by force, exclusion by exclusion;
-and no shudder at our using trade war ourselves will
-prevent for an instant the trade war which is used
-against us. Our principles will not weigh a feather
-in other nations' practice. But warfare is a temporary
-measure, and retaliation must only be temporary.
-The great danger would be in establishing a permanent
-system of taxation of foreign productions, which
-would be worked to the utmost by trades unions at
-home, in order to enable them to bleed the country
-to death by high prices. This terrible danger of
-ruin is the main reason against protective duties,
-though seldom, if ever, noticed in public discussion
-of the subject.</p>
-
-<p>Another form of warfare is the relative burden of
-armaments. This may be called slow combustion, in
-contrast to the open flame of war. Now if there is no
-joint limitation&mdash;as at present&mdash;the most long-sighted
-and powerful nation stands to win at this game; the
-result is the same as if actual war were in progress,
-but the terrors and destruction of war are avoided.
-But if there be a joint limitation of armament&mdash;as
-some hope may be established&mdash;it must be on such a
-basis that no one state is left in a condition of clear
-superiority to another, otherwise it would tie the
-inferior state to be in a permanently inferior condition.
-And the qualities which will win will be subterfuge,
-evasion, and bad faith; whichever state contrives to
-be better prepared than another behind the agreement
-will stand to win when the war does come. In the
-unlimited condition the qualities win which are those
-best for mankind in all other respects; in the limited<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">98</a></span>
-condition the qualities will win which are worst for
-mankind otherwise. The real fact is that great
-armaments are like great states, a needful condition
-of the new speed of communication. When it took
-two or three months to move an army from central
-Europe to England, we had two or three months to
-prepare; when it takes only two or three days we
-must be always prepared. No one can put the clock
-back, and steam is the end of small armaments.
-Within a generation of quick transport being started,
-big armaments were found needful, and will never
-cease to be needful. Great permanent combinations
-of states are the only line of relief under the new
-conditions, which bind mankind for ever in the
-future.</p>
-
-<p>Let us look now at direct war. What are the
-qualities which tell for success, looking to the wars of
-recent times with which we are familiar? In the
-brains of the army the main qualities have been (1)
-Foresight; (2) Combining power; (3) Honesty;
-(4) Imagination; (5) Skill; and in the muscle of the
-army (6) Physique; (7) Industry; (8) Tenacity. In
-short, success in war requires precisely the same
-qualities as success in peace. Even if the cause is
-bad, yet it is the best man all round that wins. In
-each case recently the winner has been the better
-power for future civilisation. War then may be
-defined as the concentration into a year of the same
-results which would take place by economic causes
-within perhaps a generation or a century. So far as
-violent changes are undesirable&mdash;as we have noticed
-before&mdash;so far war is undesirable. But on the purely
-humanitarian view it may be better to flee before one's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">99</a></span>
-enemies for three months than have three years'
-famine; it may be better to kill 100,000 in a brief
-campaign than starve a million during a whole
-generation by bad trade owing to slow economic
-changes. War strikes the imagination and impresses
-the thoughtless with its horror, but a starving peace
-may be a far more painful process.</p>
-
-<p>It is difficult to see that any of the causes of trade
-war, armament war, or open war are at all likely to
-be less in the future than they have been in the past;
-and if the causes are the same we must expect like
-effects. Nor do we see that any result of these
-different kinds of war is injurious to that character of
-man which is requisite for his advance in better lines.
-Each of these forms of competition tends to give an
-advantage to the best qualified race, and to promote
-the most beneficial strains of character. On the
-general principle that slow evolution is preferable to
-violent changes we must look for advance by intensified
-trade war rather than by armaments, and by the
-strain of armament rather than by open war.</p>
-
-<p>A direction in which great improvements of organisation
-may be attained would be in better adaptation
-of checks. So far as possible, checks should be
-abolished by establishing interests in the same direction
-between different parties. The profit-sharing
-movement is an excellent beginning of what needs to
-be fully and exactly carried out. The checks of
-inspection, which have been so greatly multiplied
-lately, are peculiarly liable to abuses; and a system
-of fewer and far superior inspectors, much less inspection,
-and much heavier penalties to correspond, would
-in the long run prove the safer line. The great check<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">100</a></span>
-by popular election is very wasteful, a general election
-costing the country over a million pounds in various
-ways. Precisely as fair a check would be gained by
-summoning one in a hundred of the electors by lot at
-the day of election; and the nursing of a constituency
-would be much diminished.</p>
-
-<p>Lastly, let us look at the final type to which man
-will probably be led by natural survival. This
-enquiry is limited throughout to those qualities which
-are the product of external causes; and no attempt
-is made to estimate the more spiritual side of man or
-his higher mental development. For that we have
-not the same physical basis of research, and it would
-be a fruitless mixture to include such considerations&mdash;however
-important&mdash;in an enquiry which by its scope
-might be similarly applicable to lower organisms.
-We are therefore dealing here only with the physical
-basis of civilisation.</p>
-
-<p>For the sake of safety from aggression and prevention
-of small quarrels, federations of great size must
-prevail; while those federations which allow for the
-greatest diversity between the states will prove more
-adaptable and vigorous. Similarly, states which
-allow of the greatest diversity of life to the individual
-will succeed best, by the promotion of the most
-vigorous strains. More systematic law will be needed
-between states. This may perhaps be on the line of
-all contracts being on the seller's law, and all marriage
-on the husband's law, regardless of change of residence;
-and all contracts being suable on their own
-law in any state.</p>
-
-<p>The greatest empires have in the past allowed great
-diversity between states. Persia left each land to its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">101</a></span>
-own laws, and only required the control of a satrap, a
-small tribute, and unification of army and navy. Rome
-interfered very little with local law, and left the principal
-cities autonomous throughout the empire.
-Britain has carefully preserved local law where a
-system existed, as in India, the Cape, and many
-varieties nearer home, even in England itself. The
-United States have kept local laws of states and local
-legislatures. Hence it is likely that groups of states
-with great variety of type will prevail, only unified
-by a common system of defence and compulsory
-taxation for that purpose. It is even conceivable that
-such a system might be established in England, if the
-Privy Council was supplemented by Colonial ex-ministers
-of long standing, and was granted powers
-of assessment over all parliaments for the common
-defence.</p>
-
-<p>The type of man which must prevail is that of the
-greatest industry and greatest individuality; each
-man belonging to many voluntary societies for
-various united benefits. Agriculture, the main industry
-of man, will be far more elaborate and economical;
-as much so as the present Chinese system, or even
-carried to further detail with machinery. And the
-unlimited supply of atmospheric nitrates, now in
-sight, will also greatly increase production. Profit-sharing
-or the shareholding of all workers must
-gradually prevail in all industries. The growth of
-rapidity of thought and action, and the economy of
-organisation, will enable a living to be earned with
-perhaps half a day's labour, or less. The large
-balance of time, beyond that which will be needed for
-bare necessities, will be spent on a much greater<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">102</a></span>
-development of natural resources and conveniences of
-life; each man will thus enjoy the result of an
-immense accumulated capital of improvements and
-benefits. In short, each one will be rich, either by
-the cheapness of articles or abundance of money, a
-merely relative question. The accumulated wealth
-of improvement will leave a smaller profit on labour,
-or in other words capital will command a very low
-interest. Therefore there will be less inducement to
-work for saving; and hence spare time will be more
-readily employed in the personal quest of knowledge,
-and enlargement of mental interests, in literature, in
-science, in history, and in the arts, or among the less
-capable in mere amusements. But the higher the
-social organisation and reward of ability, the more
-intense will be the weeding of the less capable, and
-the more highly sustained will be the general level of
-ability.</p>
-
-<p>That fluctuation will occur is inevitable; but it will
-be gradually understood that the utmost freedom of
-labour and communication is the only way to allow
-changes to be gradual, and so to avert the great and
-disgraceful catastrophes of forcible migration of
-hordes. Hence there will tend to be an incessant
-flow of labour from country to country, assisted by
-international labour bureaus: thus the wage of any
-given ability will be equalised over the world, and
-hence prices of all produce will equalise also. The
-whole of this action will further enforce the power
-of ability, and tend to end or mend the less capable.</p>
-
-<p>We must, then, look for a world with approximately
-equal civilisation and prices in all lands; but with
-each people developed in their own lines of ability, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">103&ndash;104</a></span>
-accord with climate and conditions, to such a point
-that no other people can compete with them in their
-own conditions. The equatorial races tending to
-have less initiative and vigour than those of colder
-climates, the equatorial lands will therefore tend to
-be each attached to a temperate land which will
-supply more energy to their development; while a
-steady drift of population from colder to hotter lands
-will take place, as for a generation or two they will
-retain a greater vigour. Thus the tropics will be the
-seat of the keenest competition and extinction of
-races; while the borders of the arctic regions will
-always afford most room for human increase.</p>
-
-<p>So far as peoples turn their backs on the inevitable
-goal, they will have to painfully retrace their course,
-or else disappear by extinction; while the peoples
-who move toward the lines of success will be the
-fathers of the future. Will they be found in East or
-West?</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">105</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>INDEX.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<ul class="index table2">
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">A.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Ability, inherited, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">sporadic, not inherited, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">driven out, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">favoured by war, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Administration depends on character, <a href="#Page_1">1</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Advance checked by communism, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">checked by education, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">due to individual, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">gained by saving waste, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Agriculture, elaboration of, <a href="#Page_101">101</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">to be saved from townsmen, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Amusement, passion for, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Anarchism, product of great states, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Armaments, big, needful, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">war by, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Artificial conditions encourage variation, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Athletics, needed by the unfit, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Atrophy of mind, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Aurelian, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Automatic lives of majority, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">B.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Barbaric society, complex, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Bartholomew's Day, 1662, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Benevolence, scope of, <a href="#Page_v">v</a>.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Betting, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Birth rate, waste of high, <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Bricklayers' Union, influence of, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Building, dear in England, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Bye-laws, value of, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">C.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Capacity, <i>see Ability</i>.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Capital used for income, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Capitalists, result of diminishing, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
- <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">106</a></span>Catastrophes produced by small causes, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Cattle, competition among, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Change, gradual, to be allowed, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">effect of, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">violent, injurious, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Character, the basis of society, <a href="#Page_1">1</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">production of, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">subject to natural law, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">low type at present, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">killed by municipalising, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">grown by experience, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Checks, better use of, <a href="#Page_99">99</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Children, later more able, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">maintenance of, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Chinese labour, need for, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Civil war, results of, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Civilisation a means of diversity, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Clubs, benefit of, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Collections, dispersal of, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Colonising result of primogeniture, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Combinations, must be voluntary, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Combined labour, wasteful, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Committees, mind of, <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Commons rule alone, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">weakness of, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Communal organisation of early Europe, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Communication, results of, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Communism a bar to useful variation, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">and early Christianity, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">and fatalism, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">and labour, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Compensation for accidents, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Competition, necessity of, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">dislike of, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">among cattle, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Continuity of work, power of, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Co-operation a main line of advance, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Cox, Mr. Harold, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Crimes, survivals of early life, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Criminals to be sorted into communities, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Cromwell an arbitrary ruler, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">value of, in anarchy, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">D.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Death duties, effect of, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Despotism, a refuge from anarchy, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Devolution of the Roman Empire, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
- <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">107</a></span>Diocletian, decree of prices, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Disciples, early, hard-weeded, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Diseases of bodies politic, <a href="#Page_vi">vi</a>., <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Diversity, need of, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">of moral standards, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">of types required, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">dangerous form of, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">still existing, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">of marriage laws, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Dulness of observation, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">E.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Education, a bar to advance, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">experiments needed, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">variety of, needed, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Elections, waste by, <a href="#Page_100">100</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Emigration beneficial, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">harmful, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Environment subject to man, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Equatorial races, future of, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Escape of the capable, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Extremes of condition appear together, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">F.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Factions of the Civil War, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Farm colonies, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Fatalism and communism, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Federations must prevail, <a href="#Page_100">100</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Five-mile Act, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">France, ability drained from, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">cost of Revolution in, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Free-trade only possible with bounties, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Free-will a subject of normal variation, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">G.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Gallienus, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">German immigration, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Government cannot tax its own payments, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Gracchus, cheap com of, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Gradual changes to be allowed, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">H.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Happiness based on character, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Health, saving of, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
- <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">108</a></span>Housing problem, cause of, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Huguenots closely weeded, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">expulsion of, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">I.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Illustrated papers, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Immigration, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Income tax, effect on trade, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Individual thought essential, <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Individualism a line of advance, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Infant life, saving of, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Inspection, abuse of, <a href="#Page_99">99</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Intellect, limitations of, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Intolerance of Puritans, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">gain and loss of, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Investments, foreign, demand for, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Ireland, emigration injuring, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">land-holding in, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Italian labour abroad, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></li>
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">J.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Janus, the peace bringer, <a href="#Page_vii">vii</a>.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Japanese too industrious, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></li>
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">L.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Labour, combined, wasteful, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">in the tropics, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Land in Ireland, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">state ownership of, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">equal values of, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Laws impartial to all residents, <a href="#Page_94">94</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Life, infant, saving of, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Life-duties, effect of, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Lighting system faulty, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Little-Italy party, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Loans, risks of, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Local administration, variety in, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">London County Council, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Low races pass under higher, <a href="#Page_1">1</a></li>
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">M.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Malignants deprived, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Man subjugates environment, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">permanence of type of, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">final type of, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_102">102</a></li>
- <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">109</a></span>Marriage ceremony, period of, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">laws, diversity of, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">temporary, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Medical examination of children, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Mencius quoted, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Mental changes similar to physical, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">qualities inherited, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">growth encouraged by use, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">growth to old age, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Merovings, degradation of, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Middle-class waste, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Mind subject to natural variation, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">variability induced, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">arrested at various ages, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">atrophy of, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">unchanged in nature, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Monopolies, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Moral standard typical of a society, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Morality, relative standard of, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Municipalising enterprises, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">N.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Nationalisation of land, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Nationalities, use of various, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">New Testament teaching, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Norse poor law, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">O.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Officialism, <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Old age pensions, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Oman, Prof., <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">P.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Pasts have all been present, <a href="#Page_vii">vii</a>.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Patriotism killed by separate groups, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Permanence of type of man, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Peters, Carl, opinion of, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Physical changes similar to mental, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Pleasures, low type of, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Polybius on history, <a href="#Page_iv">iv</a>.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Poverty results from opportunity, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Prayer, Book of Common, proscribed, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Present time, apparent importance of, <a href="#Page_vii">vii</a>.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Prices, consequence of regulating, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Primogeniture diminished, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">effect of, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Private enterprise most effective, <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Prodigal son, his rights, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
- <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">110</a></span>Profits to be earned from wealth, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Profit-sharing, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Proletariat, support of, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Property parted in life, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Proscriptions, disastrous effect of, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Provinces parted from Rome, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">R.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Radicalism contrary to evolution, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Railway stations, faulty, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Railways, effects of, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Rapidity, gain by, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Reasoning interest obliterated, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Regulation pattern men, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Relatives, responsibility of, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Remedy for the incapable, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Renewal of population, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Rentoul, Dr., <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Responsibility without rule, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Retaliation in trade war, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Retrograde characters ruined by help, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Ruling faculty of man, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">S.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Scrapping of machines and men, <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Seebohm, Dr., <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Selection the means of elevation, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">repressed by communism, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Slavery not fatal to Rome, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Sloth a deadly sin, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">now compulsory, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Socialism, use of word, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Society, barbaric complexity, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">a mixture of stages, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">final type of, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_103">103</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Sport, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">States, large, a result of speed, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Submerged tenth, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Survivals of earlier stages, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">T.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Taxation in death duties, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">on capital, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">on trade, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">in life duties, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">immoral, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">should be felt, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">limitations of, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
- <li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">111</a></span>Taxation of extravagance, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Tenth, submerged, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Theologic morality, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Thought, lack of, at present, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Town, type of, <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Townsman favoured, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Trade unionism and sloth, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">in Rome, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">compulsory, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">and the poor, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">assessment of tax, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Transit, rapid, result of, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Trust-man class, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Trusts, creation of, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">U.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Unfit, treatment of, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_89">89</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Uniformity, evils of, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Unintellectual character, source of, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Utilitarian morality, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">V.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Variability induced, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Variation produced by artificial conditions, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">needed for advance, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">about one centre, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Vice not fatal to Rome, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Violent changes injurious, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>&ndash;<a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
- <li class="isub1_first center">W.</li>
- <li class="isub1">Wages, equality of, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Waltzing quoted, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">War by trade, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">by armaments, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">by violence, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">favours best stocks, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">causes, permanent, <a href="#Page_99">99</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Waste, taxation of, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">the bar to advance, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Wealth held by different classes, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">White labour dreads competition, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Work, distaste for, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">power of, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
- <li class="isub2">to be adapted to the person, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Workmen, atrophy among, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
- <li class="isub1">Workmen's Compensation Act, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class="center bold in0 p3t">BRADBURY, AGNEW &amp; CO. LD., PRINTERS, LONDON AND TONBRIDGE.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<h2 class="nobreak p1">Transcriber's Note</h2>
-
-<p>Obvious punctuation and spelling errors have been repaired.</p>
-
-<p>Pg. <a href="#Page_108">108</a>: Added missing sub-topic heading "I." of Index.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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