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+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64402 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64402)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Reign of Gilt, by David Graham Phillips
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The Reign of Gilt
-
-Author: David Graham Phillips
-
-Release Date: January 27, 2021 [eBook #64402]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The Internet
- Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE REIGN OF GILT ***
-
-
-
-
-THE REIGN OF GILT
-
-
-
-
- THE
- REIGN OF GILT
-
- BY
-
- DAVID GRAHAM PHILLIPS
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- New York
- JAMES POTT & CO.
- 1905
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1905, by JAMES POTT & CO.
-
- ENTERED AT STATIONERS’ HALL, LONDON
-
-
- First Impression, September, 1905
-
-
-
-
-TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
-PART I--PLUTOCRACY
-
-CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I WE ARE NOT ALL MONEY-CRAZED 1
-
- II THE MANIA FOR GILT 20
-
- III PLUTOCRACY AT HOME 32
-
- IV YOUTH AMONG THE MONEY-MANIACS 50
-
- V CASTE-COMPELLERS 72
-
- VI PAUPER-MAKING 91
-
- VII THE MADE-OVER WHITE HOUSE 105
-
- VIII AND EUROPE LAUGHS 122
-
-
- PART II--DEMOCRACY
-
- IX “WE, THE PEOPLE” 141
-
- X THE COMPELLER OF EQUALITY 159
-
- XI DEMOCRACY’S DYNAMO 183
-
- XII A NATION OF DREAMERS 202
-
- XIII NOT GENEROSITY, BUT JUSTICE 210
-
- XIV THE INEVITABLE IDEAL 226
-
- XV OUR ALLIES FROM ABROAD 239
-
- XVI THE REAL AMERICAN WOMAN 253
-
- XVII AS TO SUCCESS 274
-
- XVIII THE MAN OF TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW 288
-
-
-
-
-PART I.--PLUTOCRACY
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-WE ARE NOT ALL MONEY-CRAZED
-
-
-The eminent Bishop of the Episcopalian diocese of New York has spent
-practically his whole life among people of wealth and fashion and
-their associates. He has made some brief excursions, but his social
-relations, his intimacies have been altogether with what Parton calls
-“the triumphant classes.” He knows the plutocracy; his diocese lies in
-its stronghold, includes many of its most conspicuous and aggressive
-leaders both in making and spending money. There can be no question of
-his qualification to speak authoritatively of it, of its mode of living
-and thinking. He has said:
-
-“Hear a group of young girls whose fresh youth one would think ought,
-in the matter of their most tender and sacred affection, to be as free
-from sordid instinct as from the taint of a godless cynicism. You will
-find that they have their price, and are not to be had without it any
-more than a Circassian slave in the market of Bagdad.”
-
-Again:
-
-“If the first comers to these shores were to come back to-day and see
-the houses, the dress and the manners of their descendants, they would
-think themselves in London in the time of Charles, or in Versailles in
-the time of the Louises.”
-
-When he went on to urge the rich “to illustrate in their habit of
-life simplicity of attire, inexpensiveness in the appointments and
-chasteness in the aspect, proportions, furniture and decorations of
-their dwellings,” he could have meant only that he finds the Americans
-whom he knows best for the most part ostentatious and extravagant in
-dress, prodigal and vulgar and ignorantly profuse in their dwellings.
-And when he charged them with having “the buying of legislatures as
-their highest distinction” and with “appropriating the achievements
-of the scholar, the inventor, the pioneer in commerce or the arts,
-without rewarding them for the products of their genius,” he framed
-an indictment not on belief but on knowledge which becomes tremendous
-in view of the conservative character of his mind and his training,
-the dignity and responsibility of his position and the unequalled
-opportunity that is his to know whereof he speaks.
-
-Lord Methuen, felled in a trifling engagement in the Boer war by one of
-those flesh wounds that are most painful but not serious, telegraphed
-home, “This is the bloodiest battle in history.” His point of view was
-rather too personal. And somewhat so must it have been with the Bishop
-when he concluded his survey of the encompassing plutocracy with this
-wild, despairing cry:
-
-“The whole people are corrupted and corrupting! Moloch is god and his
-shrine is in almost every household in the republic!”
-
-Fifth avenue and Wall street are not all of Manhattan Island: Manhattan
-Island is not all of New York City; New York City is not the only city
-in America; and outside the cities in every direction stretch vast
-areas of American soil not without its population. The plutocracy is
-a phase, not the whole. If the distinguished Bishop were as competent
-to speak of the American people as he is of the plutocracy, we might
-well feel that it is all over with the republic--that we Americans have
-bartered our birthright for a few handfuls of yellow earth and richly
-deserve our fate of social, political and industrial serfdom.
-
-But----
-
-It is as exact a truth as any in chemistry or mechanics that
-Aristocracy is the natural, the inevitable sequence of widespread
-ignorance, and Democracy the natural, the inevitable sequence of
-widespread intelligence.
-
-An intelligent few may be, as in Russia to-day, crushed down by
-an unintelligent mass wielded by a tyrant or group of tyrants. An
-unintelligent mass may for a time get, as in modern England, some
-measure of liberty through the mutual jealousies of intelligent upper
-classes warring one with another for supremacy. But let intelligence
-be diffused, let the sluices be opened so that it flows through the
-social soil in every direction and the tendency toward Democracy
-becomes irresistible. Monarchs may plot. Venerable and long-venerated
-institutions of princely and priestly and property caste and privilege
-may thunder, “Thus far and no farther!” Schools and colleges may give
-an education of half-truths and prejudices. Philosophers may deplore
-and warn, may project subtle and alluring schemes for maintaining or
-rehabilitating the old tyrannies in a new form. New conditions may
-produce new and subtle tyrannies that seem stronger than the old. All
-in vain. As well might a concourse of parliaments and tongues resolve
-that the heat of the sun be reduced one-half.
-
-In face of any and all obstacles, in face even of the determination of
-a whole people, confused by false education, refusing to be free and
-rallying to the defense of some beloved tradition of caste, Democracy
-marches on hardly more hindered than an epidemic by the incantations of
-a “medicine man.”
-
-Inertia is characteristic of the great mass of human beings, whatever
-their stage of development. And if the combat against the instinctive,
-all but universal reluctance to change had no stronger weapons than the
-tongues and pens of “reformers,” men would still be huddled in caves,
-gnawing bones. It is by no effort of its own that a race or a nation
-moves. It is in obedience to conditions that cannot be resisted and
-that now gently and now rudely compel man to readjust himself or to
-perish.
-
-Democracy does not appreciably advance by the energy and enthusiasm
-of those who believe in it any more than it greatly lags because
-of the machinations of those who secretly or openly oppose it.
-Energy and enthusiasm may hasten its formal recognition, its formal
-embodiment in written laws. On the other hand, adroitness may obtain
-a lease of formal existence for the outgrown institutions. But in
-neither case is the great essential fact of the progress of Democracy
-altered. This progress depends upon the diffusion of intelligence; and
-intelligence is not a matter of individual choice or even of formal
-education. If the eyes and the ears are open, if the mental faculties
-are normal, then wherever intelligence is diffusing, there the mind
-must be drinking it in. A sponge thrown into the water must become
-saturated. When intelligence permeates the masses, then out of the
-action and reaction of the common and the conflicting interests of an
-ever-increasing multitude of intelligent men there must begin to issue
-a democratic compromise self-government.
-
-Thus Democracy is not a “cult” to rise and rage and perish. It is not
-a theory that may some day be discovered false. It is not a plant to
-be carefully watched and watered lest peradventure it die. It is a
-condition, an environment, an atmosphere. A force as irresistible
-as that which keeps the stars a-swinging is behind it. The story of
-history, rightly written, would be the story of the march of Democracy,
-now patiently wearing away obstacles, accelerated there, now sweeping
-along upon the surface, again flowing for centuries underground, but
-always in action, always the one continuous, inevitable force. There
-never has been any more danger of its defeat than there has been
-danger that the human brain would be smoothed of its thought-bearing
-convolutions and set in retreat through the stages of evolution back to
-protoplasm.
-
-Until this last half-century it was extremely difficult to study the
-operations of any great world-principle. But discovery and invention
-have now given us sight far more penetrating than that of the fabled
-giant who could see the grass grow. The difficulty now is to avoid
-seeing and knowing. And to shut out all but some relatively unimportant
-phenomenon--suddenly and suspiciously acquired wealth here, a corrupt
-and extravagant or degraded public administration there, a strike or
-a riot or a momentary moral convulsion yonder--and from it to predict
-the approach of chaos with tyranny upon its back, is as childish as the
-fantastic alarms of a tribe of savages during an eclipse or a thunder
-storm.
-
-That any in America should thus shut the eyes, say “It is night,” and
-grope and tremble, is more discreditable than a similar folly among
-Englishmen or Frenchmen or Germans. Democracy has been our familiar
-from the very beginning, and self-government and the absence of rule
-are as old as our oldest settlements.
-
-Those miserable first settlers, with minds as small and mean as their
-cabins, had no conception either of freedom or self-government. The
-tyrannies theological and tyrannies political which they set up to make
-life as hateful as it was squalid show that they had brought their
-European ideas with them. But fate was against them. They were of about
-the same low social rank. They were poor--and poverty is as potent a
-leveller as death itself. They were isolated. They had to shift each
-man for himself. So, deprived of rulers and forced to be free, since
-none cared to bind them, they began to govern each man himself. And
-they took the material tools which the civilization then current in
-Europe forced into their hands and, to save themselves from starvation,
-they set about the conquest of the land, not for a State as they
-imagined, but for themselves and their children.
-
-Freedom is not the American’s because constitutions or statutes assert
-it. The constitutions, the statutes are merely written records of
-a truth no more dependent upon them than the proportions in which
-elements combine are dependent upon the text-books of chemistry.
-Besides, constitutions and laws avail only through their interpreters.
-And interpretation varies with the honesty or open-mindedness of
-official interpreters, with the spirit of the time, with the caprice
-of the moment even--a popular outburst, an impulse of bad courage in
-the public administrations, a greedy fear or desire in some powerful
-class. Legal enactments affect the surface of a society more or less
-and for periods of varying brevity; but the society itself is formed
-by conditions over which man has no greater control than he has over
-his heart-action. Those conditions constitute what the religious call
-“God in history” and the unreligious call fate or destiny or natural
-evolution.
-
-America will remain in the highway to freedom because printing presses
-are whirling, because railway trains are moving, because news is
-streaming along the telegraph wires, because schools and colleges and
-libraries are open--because intelligence is diffused and is ever more
-widely diffusing. Rights may be and constantly are assailed in isolated
-instances. But each instance remains and must remain isolated. None has
-become or can become a precedent. And there must be precedent or there
-can be no tyranny. Prejudice, even wilful prejudice, still thrives;
-truth and error have not yet been divorced from their unholy alliance
-which seduces honest men to the purposes of rascals; passion still
-rules the heart and the heart still rules the reason. But America must
-be free, however hard it may struggle against freedom; Intelligence is
-striking off the shackles. It can no more be stopped or stayed than the
-law of gravitation can be suspended.
-
-The European, or the American returning from a visit to Europe,
-is always disagreeably impressed by the evidences of haste, of
-imperfection in detail, by “the ragged ends sticking out.” But after
-a moment’s consideration of the reasons for this slovenliness wise
-criticism is disarmed. In the busiest hundred years the world has ever
-seen the Americans have had to shape out of a trackless wilderness a
-complete civilization containing as many as possible of the good ideas
-of the world’s past and having also all the latest improvements. There
-has been no time to “gather up loose ends.” The filling in of gaps, the
-replacing of makeshifts with permanent structures, the finishing and
-the polishing, have been perforce left to posterity. And, thanks to the
-passing and the present generations, posterity will have the leisure
-and the resources, and also the finer qualifications, necessary to that
-part of the task of civilization-building.
-
-The shortcomings of to-day, as nationally characteristic as our energy
-and our mental alertness, are most obvious, of course, in the public
-administration--disagreeable in the national administration, painful
-in the state administration, shocking in the municipal administration.
-Because of these spectacles of sloth, incompetence and corruption
-in public officials, it is charged by many persons of reputation as
-“publicists” that Democracy is a breeder of public corruption. The
-truth is just the reverse. Democracy drags public corruption out of its
-mole-tunnels where it undermines society, drags it into the full light
-of day, draws its deadly fangs that fasten in fundamental human rights,
-cuts its fatal claws that sink deep into the throat of freedom. One
-sees and hears more of public corruption in a Democracy than in a
-State. An organism that is expelling disease at its surface _looks_
-worse than one which is hiding and fostering disease in its vitals.
-
-Corruption is no offspring of Democracy. It is co-existent with human
-passions and weaknesses. Society is but a conglomerate of individuals;
-the whole, with all the strength of all the parts, has also all their
-weakness. In a State the public administration is the parlor; in a
-Democracy it is the servants’ hall. Public corruption in a State means
-that the head of the house is corrupt; public corruption in a Democracy
-means that the servants need attention.
-
-Our serious public corruption--national, State and municipal--is of a
-kind unknown to the people of two generations ago. About the middle of
-the last century science developed to the point at which it was able
-to give man weapons adequate to the thorough conquest of nature and of
-natural difficulties. The American people at once seized these most
-timely tools and began the rapid conquest of their vast, undeveloped
-heritage. Forty years ago this was a sturdy but dull and monotonous
-agricultural nation. It was hindered in intercourse with the rest
-of civilization by the wide ocean, across which passage was slow,
-painful, dangerous. It had a sparse, scattered population leading a
-severe and sodden rural or semi-rural life. There were no cities in
-the modern sense, practically no railroads, few and wretched wagon
-roads, few factories, no great distributing agencies, no telegraphs.
-Each section was shut off from, was ignorant and suspicious of, the
-others. Opportunities for advancement, for individual elevation, did
-not, as now, press upon even the incompetent and unworthy through very
-profusion, but were rare, uncertain and narrow.
-
-From the recent great industrial-social revolution has emerged the
-America of to-day--a land undreamed by our forefathers, uncomprehended
-by ourselves. In every essential of life--in education, in comfort,
-in refinement--there has been an immeasurable advance. And, most
-important of all, intelligence and that divine, truly democratic
-spirit of discontent, which has ever been the harbinger of enlightened
-progress, have penetrated to the remotest farmhouses, and fight a
-valiant and a winning battle with the sloth and despair of our city
-slums. Incidental to this evolution, inseparable from it, logically
-and naturally a part of it, there have been myriad opportunities for
-a temptation to corruption. And our corruption has complied with
-corruption’s universal law. It has been in direct proportion to
-opportunity.
-
-As long as only old and familiar forms had to be combated the people
-did not feel, as they do now, the inadequacy, the utter unfitness of
-their electoral machinery for the work of selecting and controlling
-their public administrators. This machinery, with some slight changes,
-is the same that was used in Athens and that was borrowed by the Greeks
-from the Egyptians. It is the crudest and clumsiest device possible for
-registering the public will. It works fairly well in small communities
-where the people are not busy, where everybody knows everybody else,
-where public administrators can be held to strict personal account by
-their neighbors, their masters.
-
-Until the two last centuries the world had little use for electoral
-machinery. And until the last fifty years, at most, there were no
-conditions that forcibly demanded the invention of a new electoral
-machine--one that would permit a people to register their will
-quickly, without circumlocutions, and at the same time without the
-haste that makes right action an accident.
-
-In addition to this fundamental disadvantage our people are also
-contending against an almost equally unfortunate limitation. The
-industrial revolution presses into private service not merely all of
-the best minds of the nation, but also most of the minds in which
-large measures of both capacity and character are combined. Even the
-mediocres who would best fill public office--which in a Democracy
-should be obedient and never initiatory--have been impressed by high
-pecuniary rewards into private service. But demand creates supply.
-Give us a little time and our supply will once more equal the demands
-upon it. We are manufacturing competent, intelligent men and women
-workers by the tens and the hundreds of thousands now-a-days--faster
-than private enterprise can absorb them, in such vast numbers that not
-the richest plutocracy could seduce and silence all or even a large
-proportion of them. Give us a little time, another thirty years or
-so--at most.
-
-Meanwhile let us not forget:--
-
-First--That while we ought to be, and are, concerned about the purity
-and efficiency of our public administrations, our vital interest is in
-the projects and acts of the industrial leaders who here ignore, there
-cajole or bully, the public administration, now use and now defy it.
-
-Second--That the new form of public corruption is an
-incident--melancholy, deplorable, dreadful, but still only a necessary
-incident--in that swift yet permanent betterment of man’s condition
-which practically began in the childhood of men still young.
-
-Third--That while purchasers of inequality and of privilege to extort
-may evade the laws of the statute books, they cannot evade that law of
-Democracy which compels them to assist in raising the consuming and
-producing capacities of the people, the standards of enlightenment,
-of comfort, of refinement, of civilized desire--of intelligence! The
-plutocrats themselves are, in the quaint irony of fate, by no means the
-least efficient of our manufacturers of democrats.
-
-It is not rational, it is distinctly irrational, to assert that moral
-or mental or physical betterment can tend to disaster, that the growth
-of intelligence may make men seek to tear down and tear up the fabric
-of civilization. It is true that the people--not here only, but
-throughout civilization and wherever civilization touches--are growing
-more restless, ever less content, ever more inquisitive, ever less
-reverential to tradition and authority. But are not these the very
-qualities which, working in the minds of the few in the past, led the
-human race up from the caves? Newspapers, libraries, schools do not
-make Huns and Vandals. On the contrary, they tame and eradicate that
-savagery which is the largest part of the estate we have inherited from
-our ancestors; on the contrary, they destroy the Huns and Vandals of
-inequality and privilege who would wrest from man his heritage under
-Intelligence and Democracy.
-
-As for our own people, whose fate has been forecast in so many
-jeremiads, how would any man or body of men set about subjecting
-millions upon millions who are not merely educated but are also
-_intelligent_? The world has heretofore offered no opportunity for the
-trial of any such experiment in enslavement. The experiment if tried
-must be, indeed, original in conception and in execution. Is there
-hazard in the prophecy that no man now on earth will live to see it
-tried? Is there hazard even in the prophecy that it never will be
-tried? To assume that such an experiment could have any measure of
-success is to become involved in contradictions and absurdities. Make
-out the perils that beset our Democratic path as formidable as you
-please, and still it is less contradictory and absurd to assume that we
-shall triumph over them.
-
-How will we do it? It is not given to man to foresee even one minute
-of his own future. But, since triumph we must, rest assured that
-triumph we shall. If you wish to make a shrewd guess as to the how of
-it, watch the motions of that infant of yesterday, Science. Already
-Science has given to us all a thousand things that not the richest of
-our grandparents could afford, nor the most powerful command. Beyond
-question it will presently unlock the secrets of the composition of
-matter and show us how every object that now enters into private wealth
-or is rationally sought by human desire can be obtained so easily by a
-little effort on the part of any human being that a man would as soon
-think of devoting himself to bottling sunshine as to storing up what
-is now called wealth. Less than two human generations of scientific
-activity, and already what ominous groanings and crackings in the last
-remaining of the artificial barriers that have so long dammed up the
-riches of the earth as wealth to be withheld or doled out by the few.
-Science is the emancipator, the deliverer, the mighty equalizer and
-leveler--equalizing and leveling _up_. Not down, but up, always up. Not
-by making the rich poor, but by making the poor rich. Not by making the
-wise foolish, but by making the foolish wise. Not by enfeebling the
-powerful, but by making powerful the feeble.
-
-For signs of the world’s to-morrow, look not in the programs of
-political parties, not in the plottings of princes or plutocrats, but
-in the crucible of the chemist.
-
-We have reminded ourselves of the solid ground upon which rests our
-faith in ourselves as a democratic people with a democratic future.
-We can therefore proceed, with fairly tranquil minds, to view some
-of the “perils” to the republic. And of these the greatest, the one
-that includes them all, is the plutocracy, which fills so many of our
-thinkers with grim forebodings. Instead of lying awake o’ nights,
-worrying about it, let us go boldly and democratically forth in the
-broad day and gaze straight at it in all its grisly vulgarity.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE MANIA FOR GILT
-
-
-You stand in front of a huge dam. Its wall rises bare and sheer. You
-say to yourself: “There can be little water behind it.” But even as you
-think this, the dam becomes a waterfall, and the waterfall swells into
-a Niagara. You go round where you see the other side; you find a lake
-fathoms deep and extending miles up the valley.
-
-Precisely such a phenomenon occurred in this country a few years ago.
-Behind a dam of long-established customs of simplicity and frugality,
-concentrated private wealth had been rising for a generation with
-amazing rapidity. Suddenly it overflowed in a waterfall of luxurious
-living; and to-day the waterfall has become a Niagara.
-
-The dam that has pent and narrowed the streams of national wealth is
-the concentration of property that has come about through the imperfect
-working of the law of combination which steam and electricity
-established. That imperfection has produced the multi-millionaire, the
-plutocrat, as the crowning inequality in a succession of inequalities.
-First, the man with a million or so; then the man with ten millions
-or so; then the man with fifty millions or so; now, the man with a
-hundred, with five hundred, with nearly a thousand millions. Every
-city has its plutocrats. In New York is the capital of plutocracy. As
-businesses combine, as wealth concentrates, the directors of business,
-the masters of wealth, segregate. Thus, New York is denuding the rest
-of the country of its plutocrats. Most of them live in New York now;
-the rest must soon come.
-
-The mighty cataract of extravagant ostentation is continent-wide--from
-Boston to San Francisco. In New York, the high-curving centre of the
-down-pouring, glittering stream, the spectacle almost passes belief.
-There is not the least danger of exaggeration in description; the
-danger is lest they who have not seen with their own eyes may refuse
-to believe that men and women can be born under the American flag wild
-enough to indulge in such prodigality and pretense and folly.
-
-A score of years ago there were in New York only a few private houses
-that could accurately be spoken of as palaces; to-day there are more
-than two hundred private houses that are indeed palaces in size, in
-cost, and in showiness; and hardly a week passes without announcement
-of several new ones of equal or surpassing splendor. Twenty years
-ago there were not in all so many as a score of palace-like hotels,
-apartment houses and business buildings; to-day there are more than
-five hundred of these wonderful structures of marble and granite over
-iron, each costing, with its equipment, decorations and furnishings,
-from two to six millions.
-
-And the whole city--business quarters and industrial, rich quarters
-and poor--is in a state of chaotic upheaval, so furiously are they
-tearing down the New York that was new twenty years ago, and replacing
-it with a New York, in every quarter and every street significant of
-the presence of colossal wealth, of stupendous private fortunes, of an
-unprecedented and unbelievable number of great incomes.
-
-Fifteen years ago the number of private equipages on New York’s streets
-was noticeably small, considering the city’s size and wealth, and
-their appointments for the most part extremely modest. To-day Fifth
-avenue and Central Park, from September to mid-June, are thronged with
-handsome private carriages, notably costly in all details of harness
-and upholstery, the servants in expensive, often gaudy liveries; and
-the multitude of women thus swept along in state, in beautiful dresses
-and hats and wraps, frequently display fortunes in furs and jewels.
-
-As for the shops, it seems indeed only yesterday that you found the
-costly luxuries in a few fashionable places, and there in small
-quantities and almost reverently handled by clerks and customers.
-To-day the shops where the tens of thousands buy are more luxurious
-than were most of the best shops ten years ago. And in the best
-shops you are dazzled and overwhelmed by the careless torrent of
-luxury--enormous quantities, enormous prices, throngs of customers.
-Twenty-five dollars for a pair of shoes, fifteen dollars for a pair
-of stockings, two hundred dollars for a hat, one thousand dollars for
-a hat-pin or parasol, fifteen hundred for a small gold bottle for a
-woman’s dressing-table, thirty or forty thousand for a tiara, a hundred
-thousand for a string of pearls--these are prices which salesmen will
-give you with the air of one who tells an oft-told tale.
-
-Why has an income of ten thousand a year become a mere competence in
-New York City to-day? Why do the families with ten times ten thousand
-regard themselves as far from rich? Why do enough New Yorkers to make
-a populous city regard it as privation if they cannot keep at least
-three servants, one of them a man-servant, and ride in cabs and have a
-country place in summer?
-
-The explanation is--the multi-millionaire.
-
-There are in New York City to-day upward of a thousand fortunes of
-two or more millions. About one-fourth of these are of more than ten
-millions. There are no less than forty-eight fortunes of more than
-forty millions, about twenty of these being more than seventy-five
-millions, and half a dozen of them between seventy-five millions and
-the mountainous aggregations of the Oil King--three-quarters of a
-billion, with an income beyond forty-five millions a year.
-
-There is no way of estimating the number of fortunes of from
-three-quarters of a million to two millions. The income of a million
-dollars, safely invested, is about forty thousand a year. Many New
-York men--several thousands--have from their profession or their
-business annual incomes, available for living expenses, of forty
-thousand or thereabouts, yet their holdings of property are small. But
-they belong in the millionaire class because they spend money like the
-millionaires and are of the most strenuous part of the plutocracy.
-
-It is the multi-millionaires who set and force the pace--the families
-with incomes of more than a quarter of a million a year. “A man with a
-hundred thousand a year,” said the late Pierre Lorillard, with humorous
-seriousness, “is in the unhappy position where he can see what a good
-time he could have if he only had the money.” And he added that easy
-circumstances meant “a thousand dollars a day--and expenses.”
-
-Properly and comfortably to live in the style which New York most
-envies and admires and encourages, a family should have an income of
-three-quarters of a million at least. But by economy and abstention
-from too great self-indulgence, and by Spartan resistance to many
-fascinating temptations, they may keep up the appearances of a very
-high degree of luxury on a quarter of a million a year. Of course,
-they cannot have very many or very grand houses; they must not
-think of racing stables; they would do well to keep out of yachts;
-they must expect to be frequently and far outshone in jewels and in
-entertainments; they must keep down their largess, their benevolences.
-But they can have a small house in town, one or two more in the
-country, can entertain creditably if they do not entertain too often,
-and can live--if they are prudent--free from the harassments of money
-cares.
-
-The quickest way to get at the reason for this curious state of
-affairs, that may seem to many a flamboyant jest rather than
-conservatively presented reality, is to look at the life of the
-typical New York multi-millionaire of the extravagant class. There
-are multi-millionaires, scores of them, who do not belong in this
-extravagant class; but there are not so many outside of it now as there
-were five years ago.
-
-Our up-to-date, luxury-hunting, luxury-teaching Mr. Multi-Millionaire
-has a fortune which is estimated at thirty millions, but is ten
-millions more or less in the widest fluctuations of the stock market.
-His income is about a million and a half a year, but he usually spends
-three-quarters of a million, and relies upon speculation to put him in
-funds for extraordinary expenditures, such as a new house, a large gift
-to education or charity, a large purchase of pictures or jewels.
-
-As human beings compare themselves only with those in better
-circumstances, he counts himself poor rather than rich--his
-fellow-citizens, the Oil King, and the Copper King, and the Sugar King,
-and the Steel King, and the Telegraph King, and the Tobacco King, and
-the Real Estate King are what he calls rich. He thinks himself unlucky
-rather than lucky; he avoids intimacy with men of smaller fortunes and
-no fortunes unless he has known them long, because he suspects that he
-is usually sought with a view to exploitation--and he is not far from
-right. He thinks he is opposed to ostentation, severely criticises his
-richer neighbors and loudly applauds frugality.
-
-He has a wife who is forty-five years old and passes for “about
-thirty.” They have a son who has been out of college four years, and
-after learning enough of business to supervise a fortune, has settled
-down to the life of a “gentleman”; a daughter, who came out last winter
-and who is being guarded by her mother, her companion, her aunt and
-her sophisticated self against the wiles of fortune-hunters wearing
-Cupid’s livery; a son who was at Groton, is now a sophomore at Harvard;
-a daughter nine years old.
-
-They have three fixed and six or seven temporary residences.
-
-First, there is the palace in Fifth avenue, where the family is united
-for a few weeks in each year. It is closed from the first of June until
-the first of October, and when the various members of the family make
-flying trips into New York they take a suite at the St. Regis or at
-Sherry’s. Second, there is “the cottage” at Newport, about the same
-size as the palace on Fifth avenue. Most of the family usually spend
-the latter part of the summer here. Third, there is the large new house
-on Long Island, twenty-five miles from New York, where several members
-of the family spend part of the spring and fall. Luxurious New Yorkers
-are becoming more and more susceptible to the changes of the season.
-They are emulating, though as yet at a distance, the smart set of
-Juvenal’s Rome, with its summer and winter finger rings.
-
-Our family have a small house at a fashionable place in North
-Carolina; the mother and eldest son go there for a part of February
-and March. They have a thousand acres and a comfortable house in the
-Adirondacks--the head of the family likes to shoot and fish. They have
-a place in the Berkshire Hills--but they do not go there now and they
-are thinking of selling it. The wife has an apartment in Paris. She
-must be sure of comfort when she goes over for her shopping. Every
-few years they take a big house in Mayfair for the season, and go
-on to Scotland for the shooting. Then there is the steam yacht, an
-ocean greyhound--last year it cost them sixty thousand dollars for
-maintenance, a few repairs and refittings. The grown son has persuaded
-his father to start a racing stable--a small one with fifteen or twenty
-thoroughbreds. His trainer costs him ten thousand dollars a year, and
-his jockey five thousand more, as a retaining fee. The father estimates
-the cost of this addition to the family expense at one hundred thousand
-dollars a year--he hopes this will include betting losses. The son has
-long had a string of polo ponies that costs, with all its embroideries,
-fifteen to twenty thousand a year.
-
-Ten years ago this family had only a small house in town--small by
-comparison--and the beautiful palace on the Ocean Drive at Newport.
-But they do not feel that they are now extravagant. Wherever they go
-they find people of their own set and a good many “rank outsiders”
-doing the same things they are doing; and they find many doing things
-they would think far beyond their means.
-
-For example, a man has just paid two hundred and eighty thousand
-dollars for a string of pearls for his wife. Our multi-millionaire
-regards that as an extravagance. He thinks his own wife’s string, which
-cost one hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars, represents the limit
-of prudent expenditure for such a purpose. And those of their friends
-whom they regard as comparatively poor--the people with from fifty to
-a hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year--are pushing them on by
-concentrating where they scatter. They meet different groups of these
-moderately rich people at different points in their annual round; and
-each group is living almost as well as, in some respects better than,
-they are at that particular point. True, So-and-So’s house in town is a
-trivial twenty-room affair on a side street, but his place in Newport
-(he concentrates upon it) is far finer than their Newport place. Smith
-is decently housed in town and at Newport, but lives in a tiny doll’s
-house in Curzon street during the London season. Jones is modest in
-America and England, but how he does blaze on the Riviera!
-
-There must be no standing still. There must be progress. The standards,
-all the standards--house, dress, equipage, number and livery of
-servants, jewels, works of art, sports, gifts--are rising, rising,
-rising. Each year, more and ever more must be spent, unless one is to
-fall behind, lose one’s rank, be mingled with the crowd that is ever
-pressing on and trying to catch up.
-
-In the neighborhood of these plutocrats and their parasites and
-imitators, struggling thus desperately in gaudiness, it is all
-but impossible not at times to fear that prosperity, concentrated
-prosperity, has killed Democracy, has killed the republic. Foreigners
-look at New York and the galaxy of rich cities eagerly imitating it,
-and shrug their shoulders and sneer. Americans look, and try to keep
-their courage and their point of view.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-PLUTOCRACY AT HOME
-
-
-Let us glance at our typical Mr. Multi-Millionaire’s town house. It is
-a palace of white marble, in Fifth avenue, near Fifty-ninth street--the
-view across the Park from the upper windows is superb. This palace was
-the inaugural of the family’s recent fashionable career. It is the
-struggle to live up to it that is making them famous in New York.
-
-The palace was to have cost our family a million, including the site.
-Up to the present time it has cost them two and a half millions, and
-that does not include the one hundred and seventy-five thousand dollar
-set of tapestries for the dining-room which is on its way from Europe.
-The site cost half a million; the house three-quarters of a million;
-the rest went for furniture, and the house still looks bare to the
-family. “A wretched barn,” madame calls it. There are one hundred and
-fifty thousand dollars in paintings and statuary in the entrance-hall,
-fifty thousand dollars in paintings, statuary, and such matters in the
-rest of the house. Two hundred thousand dollars could easily be spent
-without overcrowding. The furniture, thinly scattered in the long and
-lofty salon, cost two hundred and fifty thousand dollars--it is amazing
-how fast the money disappears once one goes in for old furniture.
-
-As you look round these show rooms--the vast entrance-hall, the
-enormous dining-room, the great library, the salon which is used
-as ballroom, the comparatively small and exquisitely furnished
-reception-rooms--you are struck by the absence of individual taste. You
-are in a true palace--the dwelling-place, but in no sense the home, of
-people of great wealth, but of no marked æsthetic development. They
-have the money, and to a certain extent the faculty of appreciation.
-But others have supplied the active, the creative brains.
-
-You go up the grand stairway, and at the turn pause to look down at the
-magnificent rug which almost covers the floor of the entrance-hall, up
-at the splendid painting which adorns the ceiling. The owner--you know
-him well--tells you that each cost twenty-five thousand dollars.
-
-And then he takes you into the wife’s living-rooms. She is out of town.
-
-Madame lives in five great rooms--a sitting-room, a dressing-room,
-a bedroom, a room where her clothes in use--quantities of dresses,
-hats, wraps, boots, shoes, slippers, drawers full of the finest
-underclothing--are kept, and a bathroom. She is very crowded, she will
-tell you. For instance, where is her secretary to sit and work when
-she wishes to use her sitting-room for a private talk with her son or
-daughter, or some intimate friend?
-
-You look round these rooms and again you note the absence of individual
-taste. Madame is always on the wing; she has no time to impress herself
-on her immediate surroundings. But a very capable artist has been at
-work and has not neglected the opportunities which his freedom in the
-matter of money opened to him. He has created several marvelous color
-schemes through harmonious shadings in rugs, upholstery, the brocade
-coverings of the walls, the curtains, the woodwork and the ceilings.
-You are not surprised that a hundred thousand dollars went in making
-suitable surroundings for a lady of fashion and fortune. You know
-that there are several dozen suites more expensive than this within
-gun-shot, and scores almost as expensive within a radius of half a mile.
-
-If she were at home there would be on that dressing-table five or six
-thousand dollars in gold articles: brushes, combs, hand-mirrors--each
-gold and rock-crystal hand-mirror cost seven hundred and fifty
-dollars--bottles, button-hooks, and so forth, and so forth. If she
-were here, there would be in that safe at least fifty thousand dollars
-in jewelry--a small part of what she has, the rest being in the
-safe-deposit vaults.
-
-The two marvels of this suite of hers are the bed and bath-tub. The
-bed is on a raised platform in a sort of alcove. The canopy and
-curtains are of a wonderful shade of violet silk. The counter-pane and
-roll-cover are of costly lace. The head-board and foot-board are two
-splendid paintings--one of sleep, the other of awakening. You think
-nine thousand dollars was cheap for this bed, even without canopy, lace
-and other fineries.
-
-The bath-tub is cut from a solid block of white marble and is sunk in
-the marble floor of her huge bathroom. It is a small swimming-pool,
-and its plumbing is silver, plated with gold. On the floor of this
-room at the step down into the tub there is a great white bear-skin,
-and there is another in front of the beautiful little dressing-table.
-Three palms rise from the floor and tower--real trees--toward the lofty
-ceiling.
-
-Going on through the palace you discover that it is arranged in
-suites--somewhat like a very handsome and exclusive private hotel. And
-then you learn that here is not one establishment, but seven, each
-separate and distinct. Our multi-millionaire’s family have outgrown
-family life and are living upon the most aristocratic European plan.
-
-In a smaller, more plainly furnished suite of rooms than those occupied
-by his wife, lives the husband. In a third suite lives the grown
-son; in a fourth the grown daughter; in a fifth and sixth, these the
-smallest, live the young son and the young daughter. The seventh
-establishment consists of forty-two personal assistants and servants.
-
-Each member of the family has his or her own sitting-room and there
-receives callers from within or without the family--except that
-the daughter receives men callers in the smallest of the three
-reception-rooms on the ground floor. Each has his or her own personal
-attendants; each lives his or her separate social life. They rarely
-meet at breakfast--it is more comfortable to breakfast in one’s
-sitting-room; they rarely meet at luncheon--luncheon is the favorite
-time for going to one’s intimates; they rarely meet at dinner--one or
-more are sure to be dining out or the mother is giving a dinner for
-married people.
-
-It is with eyes on this lofty height that the New York family, just
-emerging from obscure poverty, with five or six thousand a year,
-anxiously ask themselves: “Now, can we at last afford a man to go to
-the door and wait on the table?”
-
-For the man-servant is the beginning of fashion, and its height can
-be measured--as certainly as in any other way--by the number of
-men-servants and the splendor of their liveries.
-
-Of course, our family of pacemakers have an “adequate” supply of
-secretaries, tutors, governesses, valets, maids; and the housekeeper
-has her staff, the chef his, the butler his, the head coachman his,
-the captain of the yacht his. Then there are caretakers, gardeners
-and farmers, the racing-stable staff, various and numerous occasional
-employees. At the request of Mr. Multi-Millionaire, his private
-secretary recently drew up a list of all persons in the family’s
-service. It contained--with the yacht out of commission and the Newport
-place not yet opened--seventy-nine names.
-
-Mr. Multi-Millionaire, becoming interested in statistics, went on to
-have his secretary take a census of the horses and carriages owned by
-the family. Of horses there were sixty-four, excluding the seventeen
-thoroughbreds in the racing stable at Saratoga, but including the
-hunters and the polo ponies. The little girl had the fewest. Poor
-child! She had only a pair of ponies and a saddle horse, and she
-complained that her sister was always loaning the hack to some friend
-whom she wished to have riding with her. The grown son had the
-most--thirteen; he must hunt and he must coach and he must play polo,
-or try to. The father himself was almost as badly off as his little
-daughter--he had only four.
-
-Of vehicles there were at the town stables a landau, two large
-victorias and a small one, two broughams, a hansom; an omnibus, seating
-six; four automobiles, a tandem cart, a pony cart. At the several
-country places--a coach, a drag, a surrey, a victoria phaeton, two
-dos-à-dos, two T-carts, four runabouts, three buggies, two breaking
-carts, making a total of thirty-one.
-
-The secretary remarked that these vehicles, assembled and
-properly distanced, would, with their animals, form a procession
-about three-quarters of a mile long. He then tried to read Mr.
-Multi-Millionaire some statistics of harness, saddles, and so forth,
-but was forbidden.
-
-In further pursuit of this statistical mania, Mr. Multi-Millionaire
-discovered that his family and their friends--and the servants--had
-drunk under his various roofs during the past year nearly two thousand
-quarts of red wine, about one thousand quarts of champagne, one
-hundred and fifty quarts of white wine, one hundred and fifty quarts
-of whiskey, one thousand eight hundred quarts of mineral water, and an
-amazing amount of brandy, chartreuse, and so forth. The family’s total
-bills for drink, food, cigars, and cigarettes had been of such a size
-that they represented an expenditure of about three hundred and seventy
-dollars a day--about one hundred and thirty-five thousand dollars a
-year. His wife became very angry when he showed her these last figures.
-She told him that he was meddling in her business and that she didn’t
-purpose to spend her whole life in watching servants.
-
-Our multi-millionaire did not make his fortune; he inherited it. But he
-has been very shrewd in managing it, for all his extravagance. Though
-he is cautious about expenses in one way, he shows by the allowances he
-makes to the various members of his family that he believes in carrying
-out to the uttermost the idea that his family must live in state. His
-wife has a million in her own name, but he makes her an allowance
-of three hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year to maintain
-herself and their households. The grown son has had an allowance of
-twenty-five thousand dollars a year, and when he marries it will be
-trebled--perhaps quadrupled. This is large for persons of their modest
-fortune, but many fathers of smaller means are doing as much for their
-children, and our multi-millionaire will not see his children suffer.
-His grown daughter has an allowance of fifteen thousand dollars--more
-than she needs, as she has only to buy her clothes and pay her small
-expenses out of it. The boy in college has five thousand dollars a
-year; he is always in debt, but his mother helps him. The youngest
-child has ten dollars a week--her clothes are bought for her, and she
-can always get money from her father or mother when she wishes to make
-handsome presents.
-
-The most interesting person in the family is the mother. She is its
-moving force, one of the moving forces in the extravagant life of New
-York City to-day. You see her name and her pictures in the newspapers
-very often, always in connection with the news that she is doing
-something. She was the first in New York to have huge flunkeys in
-gaudy knee-breeches and silk stockings in waiting at her front door.
-She was the first to have as an entertainment for a few people after
-dinner several of the grand opera stars and the finest orchestra in
-the country. She is a woman with ideas--ideas for new and not noisy
-or gaudy, but attractive ostentations of luxury. She spends money
-recklessly, but she gets what she wants.
-
-She is one of the busiest women in town. And the main part of her
-business is one which engages New York women, and men, too, ever more
-and more--the fight for prolonging youth.
-
-You would never suspect that she is the mother of a son twenty-five
-years old. Indeed, you would not suspect from her looks or her
-conversation that she is a mother. She is making her fight for youth
-most successfully. Of course, she uses no artifices--the New York women
-who care greatly about looks have long since abandoned artificiality,
-except as a fad. Her hair is thick and dark and fine. It is her own,
-kept vigorous by constant treatment. Her skin is clear and smooth
-and healthily pale--it costs her and her beauty assistants hours of
-labor to keep it thus. Her figure is tall and slender and girlish--her
-masseuse could tell you how that is done. She lives, eats, exercises,
-with the greatest regularity. And she eats little and drinks less.
-
-On dress she spends about fifty-five thousand dollars a year. You will
-not see her many times in the same hat or dress; and she has a passion
-for real lace underclothing and for those stockings which seem to have
-been woven on fairy looms of some substance so unsubstantial that only
-fairies could handle it. She bought twelve thousand dollars’ worth
-of underclothing when she was in Paris last spring. Her bills at the
-dressmaker’s of the Rue de la Paix were twenty-seven thousand dollars,
-and at the milliner’s twenty-four hundred dollars. She has about five
-thousand dollars invested in parasols. She has sixty-seven thousand
-dollars’ worth of wraps--sables, chinchillas and ermine cannot be
-got for small sums. She has many evening dresses that cost from eight
-hundred dollars to twelve hundred dollars each. She has few dresses
-that cost as little as one hundred and twenty-five dollars. The average
-price for her hats would be, perhaps, fifty dollars. She had one with
-fur on it last winter that cost two hundred and seventy-five dollars.
-
-The chief reason for her large expenditure for clothes is that
-now-a-days every detail of each costume must be in harmony. She must
-have slippers, stockings, skirt, dress, hat, parasol, all to match
-or in perfect harmony. For she is one of half a dozen New York women
-who are famous for style, and having established this reputation she
-must live up to it. When she ceases to fight for youth--which will be
-in about ten years--she will probably cut her expenditures for dress
-in half. By that time extravagance will have so far advanced that her
-successor will spend seventy-five thousand dollars or more on dress.
-The last season has seen a three-league advance. It is now the fashion
-to wear for a drive down the Avenue those delicate shades which are
-ruined so quickly. Next season the color scheme of the Avenue will be
-still more gorgeous and varied--and prodigiously more expensive.
-
-But it is her mode of keeping house and entertaining that makes the
-thousands and tens of thousands fly. Her establishments are maintained
-like so many luxurious hotel restaurants. Though her housekeeper is
-a capable person and she herself studies her accounts closely, it is
-impossible to be ready at all times to house and feed an indefinite
-number of people of exacting taste without spending great sums of
-money. It costs to be able to say to the butler at the last moment:
-“There will be ten for luncheon, instead of six,” or “There will be
-twelve for dinner, instead of four,” or “There will be four for dinner,
-not eight.”
-
-Our Mrs. Multi-Millionaire lives no better in respect of her table
-than scores of people in her set and around it. She pays her chef one
-hundred dollars a month and her butler seventy-five dollars a month,
-and so do they. She has no better supplies on hand than have they.
-Her bills at the shops where they sell things out of season--peaches
-at four dollars apiece, strawberries at fifty cents apiece, and peas
-at a dollar a small measure--show no different kinds of items from
-theirs. They, too, have Sèvres plates at five hundred dollars the
-dozen. They, too, have fruit plates and finger-bowls of gold plated
-on silver that cost twelve hundred dollars the dozen. They, too, have
-solid-gold after-dinner coffee cups at two thousand dollars the dozen,
-and solid-gold spoons at four hundred dollars the dozen. The difference
-between the dinners of those of her fortune and the dinners of those of
-fewer millions lies in quantity, not quality. Where they would have to
-make an effort in arranging an unusual dinner and could not have more
-than a dozen at table, her establishment and many more establishments
-like hers would easily and without effort expand to entertain, in a
-fashion once called royal, two or three scores of guests.
-
-The main and very conspicuous characteristic of this typical leader
-in New York’s extravagance is, naturally, restlessness. Like the
-other women of her set, like their imitators, down and down through
-the strata of New York’s wealth-scaled society, she wanders nervously
-about, spending money, inventing new ways of spending it, all because
-she is in search of something, she knows not what, that ever eludes
-her. And this restlessness, this nervousness, this hysteria, possesses
-the women and the men alike. Does it come uptown with the men from
-Wall street? Does it go downtown from the women and the fever of Fifth
-avenue? It is impossible to say. We only know that it possesses both
-and that it influences their every relation of life, public and private.
-
-A fashionable woman sails for Europe--more than five thousand
-dollars’ worth of flowers, jewels, books, things to eat and drink,
-go to the steamer on sailing day from her friends. A young couple
-are married--their intimates and relatives give them three-quarters
-of a million in wedding gifts. A brother meets his sister on her way
-downstairs on the morning of her birthday--“Here is a little gift for
-you,” he says, pausing just long enough to hand her a paper. It makes
-her the owner of a million in gilt-edged securities. A husband comes
-home from the office--“I’ve put through my deal,” he says. “You can
-have your new house, but I won’t stand for more than a million and a
-half.” A father calls his son into his study and says, “You will be
-twenty-one to-morrow. I fix your allowance at seventy-five thousand
-dollars a year.” A doctor goes to a banker to get a small subscription
-for a new hospital--“Why not build a new hospital?” asks the banker.
-“I’ll give a million. If that’s not enough I’ll give two.”
-
-It is amazing how many great and beautiful palaces of a kind such as is
-occupied by our multi-millionaire are being added yearly to New York’s
-fashionable quarter. And there is not a single palace in New York that
-is comfortable. No way has yet been devised for making them otherwise
-than chilly and draughty. The human animal is too small for such huge
-surroundings; and there are not enough competent servants or even
-competent available housekeepers to make the domestic machinery run
-smoothly.
-
-The new millionaires slip into New York, into their new palaces,
-attracting little attention. Men with a scant million or two are coming
-all the time unobserved. If it were not necessity that drove them here,
-many of them would doubtless become angry at their insignificance
-and would go where less money gives distinction. But the rapid
-concentration of the directing forces of the business of the country
-in Manhattan Island compels them to yield to the entreaties of their
-wives and daughters and remain.
-
-Scores of these palace owners have or seem to have no way of getting
-acquainted with anybody whatsoever. There are millionaires’ families
-that stare drearily out of the windows, bored to death in their
-isolation, and wishing they were back in the Western town where they
-used to have lots of fun. There are others who give entertainments in
-the vast rooms of their palaces at which you will find their clerks,
-a few nondescripts male and female, and no others--these standing or
-strolling awkwardly about, trying to forget that they are miserable in
-reflecting on the cost of the pictures and the decorations.
-
-In the surroundings above outlined, how could anyone, whether newly
-rich or long rich, lead other than a sordid life? Money is there
-necessarily the basis of all action, the determiner of the complexion
-of every thought.
-
-To the narrow vision of the palace dweller and of those who look only
-at palace dwellers, America seems like a greedy, ill-mannered child
-released upon a candy shop. In the wide, the true aspect it seems a
-man, intelligently developing himself, fevered by a sense of the
-shortness of life and the vastness of its opportunities.
-
-In the one aspect it suggests an express rushing along, with the
-engineer mad and the passengers drunk. In the other aspect it suggests
-its own miraculous sky-scrapers, rising swift as an exhalation, high as
-the clouds, yet securely founded upon the rock.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-YOUTH AMONG THE MONEY-MANIACS
-
-
-The typical young men of the America of fashion and high finance,
-created by the multi-millionaire, fall into two classes--the born
-successes, sons or heirs of rich men; the candidates for success. It is
-hardly necessary to say that in this connection success always means
-the accumulation of riches enough to enable one to make a stir even
-among the very rich.
-
-If the young man is a born success, all that is left for him to achieve
-is to devise some plan for making a stir--the simplest way being
-to marry some woman with a talent for doing original and striking
-things. No matter how great his income, if he is not to suffer the
-fate of being an obscure follower, a merely rich person, suspected
-of stinginess, stupidity and vulgarity to boot, he must do something
-out of the ordinary--assemble an astonishing establishment, have the
-finest pictures, give the finest dinners and dances, run the fastest
-horses or the most demoniac automobile, give large sums on some
-original plan to education and philanthropy.
-
-The chances are that the born success will marry in his own set--that
-is, the daughter or the heiress of some rich man. This will be due in
-large part to deliberation; also, neither is likely to know well many
-people who are not rich or of the rich. If he is the eldest son, the
-probabilities, the increasing probabilities are that he will inherit
-the bulk of the fortune, no matter how many brothers and sisters he
-may have. Some one in the next generation must maintain the family
-magnificence. Naturally, therefore, an unwritten law of primogeniture
-is rapidly growing in force and effect.
-
-And this custom, combined with the rapidity with which great wealth
-piles up in America for him who has great commercial skill, insures us
-a future of ever more dazzling splendor, of luxury and extravagance--an
-_immediate_ future; we will not here speculate as to that future which
-is more remote, but not less certain.
-
-A short time ago a young man--a “born success”--went to a beautiful
-country house near New York to make a Saturday-to-Monday visit. He
-brought with him two huge trunks. These were taken to the almost
-magnificent suite of rooms which had been assigned to him. His valet
-unlocked the trunks and summoned the chambermaid. The two servants
-stripped from the bed the sheets and pillow-cases and covers; then
-from the trunks they took the young man’s own wonderful bed-clothing,
-woven especially for him by the best looms in Europe. These creations
-were put on the bed in place of the silk and fine linen which the owner
-of the country house, a very rich man, regarded as fit for a king,
-but which this young man thought far too coarse for contact with his
-delicate skin.
-
-The host was given to extravagance, was used to and in sympathy with
-the eccentric efforts of too-rich people to attract attention to
-themselves. But this insulting refinement “got” on his nerves. As
-his guest was a very rich man, and was therefore entitled to that
-reverential deference which only the rich are capable of feeling for
-and giving to the rich, the host let no outward sign of his state
-of mind appear. But he confided the insult to his other guests as
-a “joke,” and had them privately laughing and jeering at his young
-friend.
-
-This young man is one of the small advance guard of the new generation
-of plutocrats--the generation that has about the same knowledge of life
-as it is lived by the great mass of Americans that we have of the mode
-of life in a Hottentot kraal. We shall soon be far better acquainted
-with these sons and grandsons of somebodies than we are at present.
-Soon the wealth and industrial energy of the country will be controlled
-by them, or, rather, through them by a clever and unscrupulous few. Let
-us therefore pause for a moment upon these American “born successes,”
-taking at random some one of them as a type--one we will call, for
-convenience, Jones.
-
-His father was a great business man, and in forty years of intelligent,
-incessant and unscrupulous effort amassed a vast fortune so invested
-that it gave the possessor control of an enormous financial and
-industrial area. The father was a self-made man; he had a profound
-reverence for book-learning; he was resolved that none of his own
-deficiencies should be reproduced in his son. His boy was to be a
-“cultured gentleman,” moving in the “best society.” Also, the boy
-should have all the “fun” which first poverty and then business cares
-had denied to the old man. He sent young Jones to the most famous
-schools both here and abroad; and he gave him plenty of money. It is
-not definitely known whether the old man was proud of the results of
-his method of bringing up a boy so far as he saw them before he died;
-but there is reason to believe that he was. Certainly, the boy was as
-different as it is possible to imagine from his plain, rather coarse,
-very manly if also very unscrupulous father. The boy had all his
-father’s supreme contempt for the ordinary moral code and for the mass
-of “weaklings” who live under it and suffer themselves to be plucked.
-There the resemblance between the two ends. In place of a brain, the
-boy acquired at college and elsewhere a lump of vanities, affectations
-and poses. Surrounded by hirelings from infancy, he became convinced
-that he was the handsomest in body and the most brilliant in mind that
-the world had in recent centuries produced. He thought, having been
-assured of it by shopkeepers and agents, that his taste was almost too
-fine for a coarse, commercial era, that his nerves were almost too
-delicate even for the works of the greatest musicians and painters and
-sculptors and poets, that he was living both within and without a sort
-of tone-poem.
-
-When he came into his own and descended to Wall street, he was
-gratified but not surprised to learn that Wall street entertained his
-own exalted opinion of himself. And when he heard on every side that,
-in addition to being such an exquisite as a Lucullus or a Louis XIV
-would have copied, he was the greatest financier that ever lived, a
-boy-wonder at high finance, a greater than his father, the brain of a
-Nathan Rothschild in the body of a young Apollo, he accepted it all
-as the matter-of-course. Like so many of our very rich, he had an
-economical streak in him--but this was a profound secret, hardly known
-even to himself. So, he readily fell in with Wall street’s pleasant
-way of saving its own money and living off the money of other people.
-He plunged into the wildest extravagances, imitating and striving to
-outdo the young scions of plutocracy with whom he associated uptown.
-And like them, he made the people of whose trust funds his wealth gave
-him control, pay the bills. It is vulgar to pay one’s own bills, but
-there is no objection to their being paid out of another’s pocket. It
-saves one from the degradation of counting the cost, of thinking about
-prices and limits of incomes and such low things.
-
-No sooner was he fairly launched than a half dozen of the great
-plutocrats, with wild shouts of adulation, proclaimed him their leader,
-put him in a commanding position in all their big swindling schemes
-called “finance” in Wall street. “You’re it, my lad,” they cried. “We
-take a back seat. Go up front where you belong. We’ll do whatever you
-say.”
-
-Is it strange that the young man went about as if he were Mercury of
-the winged feet? Is it strange that he got into the habit of greeting
-his fellow-men with that gracious sweetness which kings alone have--and
-they only on the stage or in novels? And when it is added that uptown
-the married women flattered him, all the girls languished upon him,
-everybody pronounced him a devil of a fellow, a heart-breaker, a real,
-twenty-four carat, all-wool “cuss,” is it not wonderful that he did not
-go quite mad and dress in purple and wear laces and a sword?
-
-Indeed, he did have those moments of absolute mental aberration, and
-had to go to or give fancy balls to hide his lunacy from the world. At
-those balls he always dressed in some ancient kingly costume; and so
-evident was it that he thought himself indeed a king, holding a grand
-levee, that a smirk followed in his wake as he stepped grandly about--a
-smirk that burst into a titter as soon as he was out of ear-shot. Yet
-really he was not the least bit more ridiculous than the other sons and
-daughters of plutocracy, all dressed up as kings and queens and nobles
-and grandees, and wondering if the imaginary were not the real and
-their moments in ordinary clothes a nightmare.
-
-On and on he went, madder and madder, so crazy about himself that even
-his plutocratic “lieutenants,” who were using him as a stool-pigeon,
-could hardly keep their faces straight. At last he got to the stage
-at which the old kings of France got just before the Revolution--the
-mental state superinduced by beginning their education by setting
-in their copy-books as a writing model, “Kings may do whatever they
-please.” He never had had any sense of trusteeship; he had been
-flattered into believing that the railway or manufactory in which he
-owned a large amount of stock was his very own, that wages and salaries
-paid and dividends declared were his royal and gracious largess. But
-he at first had a dim sense that this great truth must not be publicly
-aired, that it was prudent to let the common people believe they had
-some share in the enterprise. Now, however, this dim respect for, or,
-rather, tolerance of, a popular delusion vanished. With rolling eyes
-and haughty nose and lips and high-stepping legs he advanced boldly and
-publicly into his kingdom. A Russian grand-duke said of the Russian
-people, “These fleas imagine they are the dog.” Young Jones said in
-effect the same thing of the depositors and stockholders in “my”
-enterprises, and showed publicly that he thought it.
-
-Great excitement. His plutocrat “lieutenants,” seeing that their graft
-through this joyous young ass was imperiled, tried to quiet him.
-Failing there, they tried to cajole, then to cow the insurgent “fleas.”
-But all in vain. The ears of Jones, attuned only to adulatory sounds,
-were assailed by such shuddering rudenesses as “Petty larceny thief!
-Jackass! Swindler! Puller-in for the big gamblers! Crazy numskull!”
-
-Frightful, wasn’t it? Not that he was in the least disturbed in his own
-exalted opinion of himself. An angel come from heaven direct would
-have moved him only to light, incredulous laughter by telling him the
-plain truth about himself. Still, the clamor was unpleasant; the open
-sneers, the sly stabs. And, above all, the ingratitude! The ingratitude
-of his associates in “society” who had got so much expensive
-entertainment and so much inspiration from him. The ingratitude of the
-people, his vassals, whom he paid salaries and wages and dividends,
-whom he permitted to deposit in his banks and to invest in his
-enterprises!
-
-His soul is brave, as becomes the soul porphyrogenetic. But, as it is
-also a sensitive soul, how it is wrung!
-
-The trouble with our young Jones is that he was premature--not in
-thought, but in showing his thoughts. Only premature. The madness that
-ravaged him is in the plutocratic air. Many eyes are rolling, many
-fingers are twitching in the premonitory symptoms of the malady. A few
-years at our plutocracy’s present rate of progress, and Jones will be
-recognized as a martyr. “Jones was born a little too soon. Jones came
-to a climax a little before the season,” the dandies will say.
-
-June is the time for roses. Jones came in April. Poor Jones! Poor April
-rose!
-
-Such is the mode of the “born success”; now for the young man who is
-born with brains and appetites and ambitions only. He is determined to
-achieve a plutocratic success; looks about him for the road that leads
-to palaces, equipages, yachts--all that gives one title to a seat at
-the table of honor at this banquet of extravagant luxury. He sees at
-once that to become a multi-millionaire he must use his brains to force
-or to cajole the multi-millionaires to make him one of them.
-
-He must pattern after those who are far on the way to achieving
-his kind of success: this corporation lawyer earning his hundred
-thousand or more a year as the legal servant of rich men; that railway
-president with his fifty thousand a year and perquisites, earned as
-the commercial servant of rich men; that manager getting a salary of
-one hundred and twenty-five thousand as a seeker of safe investments
-for surplus millions of income--again a servant of rich men; that bank
-president with salary and opportunities together netting him upward
-of two hundred thousand a year--again a servant of the rich; that
-broker who put by half a million last year as a result of his skill
-and assiduity in the service of rich operators; that doctor who made
-seventy-five thousand in fees and two hundred thousand in Wall Street
-last year on “tips” from grateful patients--again the rewards of
-service to the rich.
-
-Our young candidate for success has brains to sell; he wants customers
-with money. He hopes ultimately to sell these brains at a very high
-price; he wants customers with lots of money, millions of money, in
-which he may presently share largely. He must ingratiate himself with
-the rich; must go where they are to be found, not only in business
-hours, but also in hours of relaxation. He must not only work hard; he
-must also play hard and high--must lead the life of the rich as far as
-possible. His air, his dress, his style of living, all must be such
-that he will be regarded as rich and progressive. To drudge and to
-economize and to keep away from the extravagance downtown and up will
-mean a small success, or at best one that will not lead to the lofty
-height of fashion and social position upon which he has fixed his eyes.
-
-He may have a streak of incurable folly in him. His effort to be “a man
-of the world” may draw him from discreet dissipation into that vortex
-which swallows up all weaklings not secured by great wealth. But let
-us suppose that he is not a weakling and that he keeps clearly in mind
-that at the basis of all success lies clear-headed, incessant industry.
-He works steadily at his business, commercial or professional; he shows
-capacity and is advanced; he is soon getting four or five thousand
-a year. At the same time he has prospered in what may be called the
-uptown end of his business; he has made acquaintances among the rich
-socially; several women of importance are interested in him and are
-telling their husbands and their husbands’ friends that he has brains.
-The men are seeing that the women are not mistaken.
-
-In any American city except New York or Chicago, our young man would
-now be regarded as a person of some consequence. In New York or Chicago
-he has merely reached the point at which he can, if he is sagacious,
-measure his insignificance. He has worked hard, but the real day’s toil
-has only begun. He has raised himself from the class that includes
-hundreds of thousands; but he is still in a class that includes tens of
-thousands.
-
-Perhaps this discourages him, makes him feel that he can never attain
-the paradise of multi-millionaires, or that, if he did attain it, he
-would be too exhausted to enjoy it. Perhaps experience has given him
-a clearer insight into the real meaning of his ambitions, and he is
-disgusted with their pettiness and sordidness, and begins to long for
-self-respect and decency and manhood. Perhaps his dream of success has
-been interrupted by a dream of sentiment. He may decide to marry and
-settle down--he has found New York drearily cold and lonely.
-
-In that event he gives up his bachelor apartments in the edge of the
-fashionable district; he is seen no more at his club--indeed, he has
-resigned from it; he is forgotten by his fashionable friends; he and
-his wife live obscurely in a flat or an apartment hotel far from the
-world of fashion, or in a cottage down in the country--a commuter’s
-cottage, as unlike as possible the multi-millionaire’s cottage of
-marble or limestone, of which he once dreamed. And as he is no longer
-of the world with which we are concerned, he drops out of sight--for
-the present.
-
-But, on the other hand, perhaps his discovery of his insignificance
-does not discourage him, but only serves to rouse him to greater
-efforts. His close inspection of the palaces and performances of
-the fashionable and extravagant rich has fired his imagination and
-energy. In that case he does not marry. “I am too poor,” he says, as
-he looks at his paltry income of five thousand a year and thinks on
-the humble ménage it would maintain, and remembers that his poorest
-married acquaintances up in the Fifth avenue or Lake Drive district
-have fifteen thousand a year and cannot afford to entertain or to keep
-a carriage, and are always fretting about money. He considers what a
-“decent” hat or dress for a woman costs, and--well, his tailor’s bill
-was seven hundred dollars last year and he has almost no clothes.
-He remembers his bills for the few small and very modest dinners
-he gave--a week’s earnings gone in a few minutes and the dinner a
-poor affair beside the poorest he has had at the houses of his rich
-acquaintances. To console himself for his heroic sacrifice of sentiment
-to ambition, he takes a somewhat better apartment for his bachelor
-self in a more fashionable apartment house--his rent is twelve hundred
-a year. He works hard downtown; he continues to work hard uptown. He
-works as cleverly in the one quarter as in the other. He is always
-seen with rich people; he belongs to fashionable clubs; he dines in
-palaces; he goes for Saturday-to-Monday visits at great, extravagantly
-maintained country houses; he is seen in boxes at the opera, at the
-horse show; he expands his tastes and his expenditures with his rapidly
-expanding income. His “fixed charges” are now fifteen thousand a
-year--very moderate for a man of his associations.
-
-In addition to these absolute necessities he spends about fifteen
-thousand more upon presents and entertaining. Half a dozen men living
-in the apartment house he lives in spend twice as much as he does and
-do not consider themselves, and are not considered, either extravagant
-or dissipated.
-
-He is making a great deal of money, but he feels--and is--poor.
-However, he is sustained and soothed by the certainty of riches
-immediately ahead. He has been spending, but it has been in the nature
-of an investment--a most judicious investment from the standpoint of
-his purposes. And presently his cleverness and audacity and “large
-ideas” have their reward; and then he marries.
-
-She has tastes which are exactly his. She is willing to marry him
-because she has not made the success she and her mother dreamed of and
-strove for. She has some money--their joint income, while not imposing
-as New York incomes go, is still large enough to enable them to make “a
-decent start in life,” as their “set” interprets life.
-
-Presently we find them installed in a “small” house or “little”
-apartment--the rent is more than ten thousand a year, and they have
-twelve servants. His skill as a money-maker is talked about; her
-dresses are admired and envied; their equipages, their surroundings,
-their dinners are models of luxurious good taste. As both are shrewd
-managers, their forty thousand a year enables them to seem to be
-spending twice that amount. They are in the high-road of plutocratic
-happiness and are creditably charioted. And as the years pass, their
-increasing wealth rolls up on itself as large wealth has a habit of
-doing. They annually tour the multi-millionaire circuit in great
-state--North Carolina, Hempstead, the Hudson, London, Paris, Newport.
-They have children.
-
-No healthier, rosier, more intelligent children can be found
-anywhere than theirs. They have the best care that competent nurses
-and governesses can give. They live by the clock, are fed the most
-expensive and at the same time the most sensible food. They are
-dressed in a manner that makes plain mothers blink and stare. There
-are only two of them and the elder is only seven, but their clothing
-bill last year was fourteen hundred. It will be less, much less, as
-they grow older, for it is not good form to dress boys and girls
-extravagantly--at least not yet. They speak French and German as
-fluently as they speak English, and far more correctly. They have
-everything for mind and body--except the direct constant care of their
-mother. They have everything--that money can buy.
-
-Let us go back to the cross-roads and take a candidate for success
-who, when he achieved his modest five thousand a year, married and
-went to live in a flat or small suite in an apartment hotel of the
-kind that would have been called luxurious a dozen years ago, but is
-now third-class. Let us assume that his wife, whether she came from
-out-of-town or from the city, is the typical present-day big-city
-woman of extravagant ideas--is, like her husband, wealth-crazy and
-luxury-crazy and society-mad.
-
-In all probability they will have no children. Children are not popular
-among the extravagant in New York--dogs are less expensive, less
-troublesome, fully as affectionate and far less unfashionable. The
-extravagant rich still tolerate children, possibly because of a quaint,
-made-in-England theory that aristocratic families should maintain the
-“family line.” But “climbers” cannot afford the necessary time and
-money. It was Swift--was it not?--who first called attention to the
-fact that the attitude in climbing and in crawling is the same.
-
-Our young climber is busy all day downtown--busy making money. His
-wife is busy uptown--busy spending the money he makes, or as much of
-it as she can threaten or wheedle away from him. She falls into a set
-of young married women with husbands and tastes like hers. They, like
-their husbands, think only of wealth and extravagance. And while they
-wait for their dreams to come true they invest every cent they can lay
-their hands upon in an imitative vain show.
-
-Our young man’s wife reads the fashionable intelligence with her
-coffee. She presently goes forth as fashionably dressed as if their
-income were three or four times what it is. She walks in fashionable
-streets or sits in some fashionable restaurant, there to view and study
-and envy the fashionable women she reads about. She “shops” in the
-fashionable millinery and dressmaking establishments--not to buy, but
-to steal hints for the use of her own cheaper milliner and dressmaker
-in getting together her imitation costumes. She strives to model her
-person, her dress, her walk, her conduct, her conversation upon the
-conception of what is fashionable in the multi-millionaire’s set.
-
-As our young man has the genius for money-getting, he gradually becomes
-rich. As his wealth grows he and his wife “drop” the “friends” of less
-income, gather about them “friends” of their own fortune, and reach
-out for “friends” who have fortunes greater than their own. And at
-last, perhaps by way of a season in London under the guidance of some
-impecunious woman of title, they arrive at the bliss of being able to
-tour the multi-millionaire’s circuit in good company all the way. And a
-crowd gapes at their palace doors and windows whenever they “entertain.”
-
-Those city crowds that pause to gape whenever more than one carriage
-halts before a palace!
-
-Fifteen years ago the most extravagant millionaire in New York--a great
-financier--spent upon his domestic establishment, everything included,
-eighty thousand a year. Very few people of his set spent half as much,
-and the most of them spent less than twenty-five thousand. To-day, for
-the fashionable extravagant set, eighty thousand a year would not be
-far from the average expenditure, taking rich and “poor” together. When
-that financier’s family were the leaders, the principal entertainments
-in fashionable society were modest affairs--though they were not then
-regarded as economical--and were given by association. To-day every
-palace has its great dining-hall and its huge ballroom. And the very
-rich who have not palaces give their big entertainments individually
-in hotels and restaurants, hiring a large part of the building for
-the exclusive use of their guests, and spending thirty or forty
-thousand dollars or more--in not a few instances far more--upon each
-entertainment.
-
-To-morrow--
-
-In this early twentieth century--which bids fair to be known as
-America’s century--New York, the capital of our plutocracy, blazes
-out a world-capital. Into it are pouring wealth and luxury, pictures,
-statuary and works of art of all kinds and periods; jewels and
-collections of rarities. In it are rising miles on miles of palaces,
-wonderful parks and driveways. It has begun to be a City Splendid. It
-has already won a place in the line of world-capitals back and back
-through the ages to the mighty, nameless, forgotten cities of the
-Valley of the Euphrates. And New York begins where the others reached
-their climax.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-CASTE-COMPELLERS
-
-
-It is still an open and anxious question whether this fashionable
-society, the growth, as we have seen, of the last two or three decades,
-constitutes a genuine aristocracy. The society itself hopes so and
-tries to believe so, and struggles to forget its uncertain tenure,
-its sordid basis and its humble ancestry. And it is encouraged in its
-pretensions by many thousands of agile and aggressive climbers who
-would not for worlds lose their delusion that their climbing has a
-goal, and a goal worth achieving. But uneasy doubts refuse to down,
-and whenever one of the fashionables says, with a brave essay at the
-careless, matter-of-course tone, “We of the upper classes,” he--or she,
-for it is more often she--can’t refrain from a furtive glance to see
-whether all faces within sight are perfectly sober, self-complacent and
-approving.
-
-No such uncertainty, however, exists in the case of the servants of
-wealth and fashion. They know that they themselves are an aristocracy,
-and they are determined that there shall be no doubt about their being
-dignified, if menial, bulwarks of an aristocracy of their employers.
-These servants, both male and female, are not Americans. Once in a
-while you will find among them a naturalized American; once in a long
-while you will find a shamefaced, apologetic American-born. But they
-are essentially an immigrant aristocracy, and nine-tenths of them are
-from England, where the iron caste-distinctions of feudalism have come
-down even unto the present day, not only merely intact, but monstrously
-exaggerated, where snobbishness is not only part of the statute law,
-but deeply imbedded in the vastly more potent customary law, and is
-even incorporated in the divine law, is read out from the pulpit each
-Sunday and piously echoed by reverent congregations.
-
-In Europe the “upper class” and its haughty servants are born to their
-lofty stations; here the “upper class” is manufactured, largely out
-of watered stock and bonds and stolen franchises, and its servants
-are imported. It is the natural instinct of small people, suddenly
-elevated in material wealth, to try to believe that the wealth which
-relieves them of the necessity for daily labor also produces a
-chemical change, a refining transformation, in the clay whereof their
-singularly human-looking bodies are composed. Against this instinct is
-the good old American sense of humor that recognizes in the unerasable
-physical and mental mint-marks of human brotherhood Nature’s mocking
-rebuke to the vanities of pose and pretense. But few people’s sense of
-humor extends to themselves; and if they get the least encouragement,
-off they go on a high horse. Our rich people get more than a little
-encouragement from certain of their fellow-citizens and from
-upper-class foreigners, who for obvious reasons cultivate and flatter
-them in the delusion that it is not their bank accounts but themselves
-that are superior. But the fashionable section would never have gone so
-fast or so far in this hallucination had it not been for this important
-menial aristocracy. Students of human development, in their passion
-for dealing only with the seemingly big, with the high-sounding, often
-reach conclusions ludicrously wide of the truth, often neglect those
-humble but mighty causes that really shape human destiny. They find
-in the great and burning thoughts of philosophers the explanations of
-revolutions which a glance at the prices of bread would more justly
-explain. Let us make no such mistake. In seeking the cause of our rich
-people’s sudden and furious craze for caste let us not be proud. Let us
-turn away from the bronze front doors and the magnificent drawing-room
-and go humbly to the area gate and the backstairs quarters, where the
-real cause of their curious, amusing and pitiful backsliding from the
-grand concepts of Democracy is to be found.
-
-When rich Americans first began to go abroad the servility of
-English servants offended. But custom soon changed that. Servility
-is insidious. The Americans, longing to feel themselves the equals
-of the complacent and secure upper class in England, and realizing
-that they could never hope to get deferential respect from their
-fellow-countrymen--even from those willing to go into domestic
-service--began to import servants. “The English servants are so much
-better, you know; understand their business and their place.” But the
-English servant’s “place” in the social hierarchy is dependent upon his
-master’s place. Whoever seeks to lower the master in the social scale
-seeks to lower the servant. On the other hand, whatever raises the
-master socially raises the servant. Your Englishman who is a servant
-born and bred is even more incapable of understanding and warming up
-to Democracy than his king would be. He loathes Democracy--does it not
-lower him in the social scale by putting all men on the same level;
-does it not take away his dear gods of rank and birth and leave him
-godless and adrift? He wants none of it. It may be good enough for
-foreigners, but not for an Englishman.
-
-Once the imported members of the servile aristocracy were among us in
-considerable numbers they began to plot and to compel an aristocracy
-above them. The general theory is that these rich Americans who have
-gone crazy about themselves were infected by associating with the
-aristocracies of the Old World, and no doubt that association is partly
-responsible. But the main cause of the malady is that every American
-family living ostentatiously, or even at all luxuriously, soon found
-established within its gates an aristocracy of caste that compelled the
-family to seem to put on airs. And any American family that assembles
-a household staff of these aristocrats will soon be strutting and
-posing, however hard it may strive to remain sensible. The servants
-simply won’t have “under-bred” Democracy; they would despise themselves
-if they found themselves working for men and women not their superiors.
-And it isn’t in human nature, weakened by the example of all around
-it, to resist the subtle and insinuating compulsion of the “well-bred”
-hints and innuendos of “well-bred” servants. A man and a woman are no
-longer master and mistress of themselves, not to speak of their house,
-when they have given way to the luxury and vanity of a real high-class
-English butler backed up by half a dozen English footmen, an English
-coachman and three or four English grooms. He and she will begin to cut
-pigeon-wings like a colored gentleman on the first warm day of Spring.
-He and she will do it because the servants expect it, because the
-servants have convinced them that it is the correct form, because the
-servants will not tolerate any departure from the pose of “my lord” and
-“my lady”--and because such posings are so titillating to the vanity.
-And from striving to seem a truly “my lord” and a truly “my lady”
-before the “well-bred” butler and coachman and their henchmen, the man
-and the woman pass on naturally and by imperceptible stages to making
-the same ludicrous struggle in all seriousness before their associates,
-all of whom are doing precisely the same silly thing from precisely the
-same silly cause.
-
-There is a woman in one of our big cities who is now a leader of
-fashion, very “classy” indeed, most glib on the subject of the
-“traditions of people of our station.” Her father was an excellent
-peddler, her mother a farmer’s daughter who could be induced to “help
-out” a neighbor in the rush of the harvest time. This typical American
-woman behaved very sensibly so long as her sensible father and mother
-were alive and until the craze for English households arose. She fell
-in line. But the haughty servants were most trying at first. For
-instance, she loved bread spread with molasses. She ate it before the
-butler once; his face told her what a hideous “break” she had made.
-She tried to conquer this low taste--never did weak woman fight harder
-against the gnawings of sinful appetite. At last she gave way, and in
-secret and in stealth indulged. She was not caught and, encouraged, she
-proceeded to add one low common habit to another until she was leading
-a double life. It had its terrors; it had its compensating joys. But
-before she had gone too far she was happily saved. One morning her maid
-caught her, and the whole household was agog. The miseries endured in
-the few following weeks completely cured her. She is now in private, as
-well as in public, as sound a snob as ever reveled in “exclusiveness.”
-
-This is no isolated case. For bread and molasses substitute any
-plain, natural human habit not tolerated in England, and you have a
-story in outline that would apply to hundreds. How contemptuously
-our fashionables would deny if accused! How indignantly the younger
-generations who have never known what it was to be free from the
-English strait-jacket would protest against such coarse insinuations
-about our aristocracy. But the laughable truth remains unshaken--and
-also the truth that our aristocracy is wofully servant-pecked.
-
-Fully to realize what a tremendous pressure this servile aristocracy
-entrenched in the privacy of the home can exert, let us glance at the
-composition of a fashionable household in America to-day. Take a family
-of some aspiring money-lender or stock swindler or franchise grabber
-who has got together in one way and another--principally another--a
-fortune of a dozen millions or so. There are himself, his wife with
-the longing to be “in it” or to keep “in it” gnawing at her, the grown
-son and the grown daughter. Papa is willing to have the family show
-off, but he is not quite ready to go the limit. So the establishment is
-what other fashionable people call modest, and what his wife and two
-children tell him is “mean.” Here is the schedule:
-
- _General Staff_--Housekeeper, a broken-down “gentlewoman”; butler,
- formerly with the Earl of Tyne and still with him in spirit; chef, a
- Frenchman, but thoroughly Anglicized in soul, though not in accent or
- cooking; coachman, an Englishman, recently with Her Grace the Dowager
- Duchess of Doodles; chauffeur, a Frenchman who speaks to nobody unless
- spoken to and keeps clear of the whole mess as much as possible.
-
- _Housekeeper’s Staff_--Two English parlor maids from the best English
- houses, most expert in handling bric-à-brac and such perishables; two
- very humble, very impudent English chambermaids; a French laundress,
- who disdains all but the butler and the coachman, and sighs for the
- haughty chauffeur; a seamstress, a great gossip and an authority on
- “fashionable intelligence”; a linen woman, daughter of an English
- tavern-keeper whose glory was that he had been valet to a duke; a
- useful woman, for packing, etc., etc., most “respectable,” most
- English; a useful man, for heavy work, windows, errands, etc., an
- Englishman who shows that he is spiritually prostrate whenever a
- superior speaks to him; three chambermaids, very English-Irish.
-
- _Butler’s Staff_--Two Englishmen to stand in the hall in immaculate
- livery, white silk stockings, etc., etc.; two Englishmen, equally
- immaculate, to assist at table, etc.; two other English assistants,
- not at all times immaculate.
-
- _Coachman’s Staff_--Four English grooms.
-
- _Chauffeur’s Staff_--One assistant, learning the profession.
-
- _Chef’s Staff_--An assistant, a Frenchwoman; two English kitchen maids
- or “scullions.”
-
- _Personal Servants_--Valet to the master, a quiet, well-bred, insolent
- Englishman; valet to the young master, an understudy to the other
- valet; maid to Madame (French); maid to Mademoiselle (French); valet
- to the upper caste men-servants (English); valet to the lower class
- men-servants (English); maids to the servants (three English-Irish);
- laundress to the servants (English).
-
-Quite a staff--and it does not include Madame’s private secretary, an
-American, a “gentlewoman,” thoroughly converted to the English system,
-or Mademoiselle’s visiting governess, a product of ten years’ training
-in a New York private school for the “young ladies of the upper class,”
-or extra servants of all kinds that are constantly coming and going.
-The total monthly pay-roll is never below one thousand seven hundred
-dollars; often, in the height of the winter season in New York or of
-the summer season at Newport, it climbs up to two thousand dollars.
-And, putting the feeding of all these people at twenty dollars apiece
-a month, which is exceedingly, ridiculously low, the board-bill would
-be more than eight hundred dollars a month. Then, naturally, all of
-them are as careless and as wasteful as they dare to be, and, wherever
-possible, corrupt in the taking of commissions from the “tradespeople.”
-This means a squandering of more than their wages and board together.
-But it is indeed a most “modest” establishment--there are at least a
-thousand in this country far more imposing. Why, our hero has not even
-provided servants for the servants of his servants! And, as everybody
-knows, that is always done in a really bang-up, swell, first-class
-establishment. Also, his liveries, although what the “tradespeople”
-would call elegant, are not nearly so sumptuous as those of the
-neighboring establishments.
-
-But, dissatisfied though the servants are, they do their best to keep
-up appearances and they fight strenuously for the caste system. They
-are, roughly speaking, divided into five ranks. At the top stand the
-private secretary, the visiting governess, and the housekeeper. They
-are almost “gentlefolk”; in fact, they are gentlefolk in abeyance, as
-it were, like cadets of a royal house which has been kicked out by
-its unfeeling subjects. Next come butler and coachman and chef. Each
-admits the right of the other two to high rank, but each feels toward
-the others as they fancy a marquis must feel toward an earl. Below
-these high haughtinesses is the main body of servants, with the lowest
-rank made up of stablemen, scullions, servants’ servants. Each servant
-fiercely insists upon his own station, and still more fiercely insists
-upon the lower station of those whom the code of caste has assigned
-there. And all the servants insist upon the aristocratic principle
-being enforced from top to bottom of the household. The “master” and
-his wife, the boy and the girl, know that if they for an instant
-drop the pose they will be the butt of ridicule and contempt in the
-servants’ hall.
-
-The effect of this incessant, subtle pressure upon the grown people
-is strong enough. But they retain some glimmerings of a sane point of
-view; at times they realize that there is not a little rotten nonsense
-in their mode of life. But think of the children! They were born
-into this noisome atmosphere; they are never allowed to breathe any
-other--for, even when they go away to school, it is to some “select,”
-“exclusive” institution, or to associate only with the “select” and
-“exclusive” in the big college. They know no more of the free and
-national and growing American life than a Mammoth Cave fish knows
-of the light and the radiant waters of the upper world. They regard
-Americanism as synonymous with demagoguery and anarchy. And they
-become sincere and, because of their wealth and display, successful
-missionaries of the gospel of snobbishness to all the children of the
-rich and the well-to-do brought into contact with them.
-
-Truly, the service is not the most important item that comes up the
-back stairs of the fine houses of our plutocracy. The ideas--they are
-the real item.
-
-English servants do not, as a rule, like to come to this country.
-Few of the best class, as yet, will consent to give up the splendor
-and assured aristocracy of England and go to live among a lot of
-vulgarians, hard though those vulgarians are striving to be worthy
-of the support of an aristocratic menialdom. Those few of the best
-who do condescend to exile themselves wear sad faces and show that
-they keenly feel the humiliation. For they cannot blind themselves
-to the truth that their masters and mistresses, striving hard to
-please and to delude, are still not really “ladies” and “gentlemen,”
-but just Americans. Have they titles? No. Do the common people doff
-the hat to them? No. Have they “ancestry”? They pretend to have, but
-the genealogical trees look about as much like real trees as the
-papier-mâché palm looks like the genuine thing; and Burke’s peerage and
-the Almanach de Gotha know them not. No, they are not aristocrats, and
-it pains the aristocratic servants to serve them much as it would pain
-a first gentleman of the bedchamber to King Edward to get on his knees
-to some “big nigger” who called himself Emperor of Ashanteeland. The
-commiseration of all sympathizers with sensitive souls belongs of right
-to these aristocrats of menialdom in exile.
-
-The great mass of these imported servants, excepting those who come
-here for the chance to become men and women and to shake off servitude,
-are a worthless lot, weedings from those perfect English gardens of
-menialdom. And a hard time their American masters have with them.
-Insolence, shiftlessness, drunkenness, petty thieving are tolerated
-to and beyond the most asinine patience; then, one furious day, the
-housekeeper, under orders from an outraged master or mistress, ejects
-the whole crew and gets in an entirely new lot. But this revolt of the
-downtrodden “upper classes” is rare and dangerous and often disastrous.
-For this servile aristocracy is a close corporation, very limited
-in numbers and fully awake to its own power over the plutocrats who
-must at any cost in money, manhood and discomfort have servility and
-an imitation of the English way of living. Woe, woe, woe unto the
-plutocrat who gets himself on the imported servants’ black-list! He may
-have actually to close in whole or in part his vast houses, and to
-cease from inviting in his hordes of rich friends to see how much more
-gaudily he is showing off than they are. He may have to call in colored
-or plain Irish or Swedish servants, mostly women, to save him and his
-family from the horrors of waiting on themselves. But one shrinks from
-pushing inquiry in so harrowing a direction.
-
-How long will it be before we have a home-grown menial aristocracy
-to bolster up and make strong our fashionable aristocracy? It may
-be longer than one might imagine. The educated people, the lawyers,
-superintendents, merchants, social, political and financial hangers-on,
-who serve the plutocracy, fall easily into servile habits. The big
-corporation lawyer and his family, the fifty thousand dollars a year
-dummy railway president and his family, eagerly pay court to the great
-plutocrat, bow and scrape and mould themselves to his and his family’s
-humors. But the “lower classes” here remain obstinately insolent. They
-go into plutocratic domestic service only under stress; they act in a
-manner that exasperates their servility-seeking employers; they leave
-as soon as they can get any sort of job anywhere. Also, they rouse the
-soundly sleeping or stunned manhood and womanhood of the imported
-aristocracy-adoring servants, and so compel the constant recruiting of
-the ranks of the menial aristocracy by fresh importations.
-
-True, among the mass of our immigrants, almost all from countries
-where a real caste system has prevailed always, there is a tendency
-toward a searching after an aristocracy in this country. They miss
-it; they cannot believe that a land in all its physical aspects like
-unto the lands from which they have fled should be without what has
-always seemed to them a natural and necessary part of the order of
-the universe. But they hunt for this aristocracy not with the idea
-of worshipping it, but with the idea of destroying it. And hence we
-find that the loudest angry assertion of the existence of a true
-aristocracy here comes from those of our democracy-loving citizens who
-are foreign-born. They see this monstrous pretense rearing itself as
-imposingly as the true aristocracies of Europe; and they do not pause
-to distinguish between marble and plaster painted to look like marble.
-They raise a wild shriek and demand that snickersnees be drawn and that
-heads begin to fall. A natural mistake, and highly gratifying to our
-would-be aristocrats. They are not terrified by the uncouth and futile
-clamors; though to make the thing more realistic to themselves, they
-sometimes pretend to be. But they are through and through pleased at
-hearing themselves in seriousness called what they would fain believe
-themselves to be; and they say delightedly: “At last, the lower classes
-begin to recognize themselves, and us!”
-
-But this rejoicing is premature. They are right in seeing that it
-takes a body of self-confessed peasantry to make a prince--that the
-prince proclaiming himself and proclaimed by hirelings and dependents
-only is no prince at all, but a laughing-stock. But they are wrong in
-seeing signs of a forming peasantry; what they see is an un-forming
-peasantry--a vastly different matter.
-
-The obstinacy of the American and thoroughly Americanized “lower
-classes” seems incurable. And until it is cured, until a body of
-citizens is created that will accept the aristocratic idea not as
-applying to themselves and making them superior, but as applying to
-a fixed class of superiors to whom they themselves must be and must
-remain inferiors--until then, the plutocracy will sigh in vain for
-transformation into an aristocracy. Imported servants and our own
-snob graduates of snob colleges with yearnings after the “cultured
-and refining influences of caste” will in vain crook the pregnant
-hinges of the knee. The plutocracy will be haunted and humiliated by
-the undignifying grin of the “proletariat,” incurably and militantly
-democratic.
-
-And the more excited about itself and eager to show off the plutocracy
-becomes, the more insistent and imperious will become the inquiry
-into the origin and the rightfulness of these vast fortunes that are
-being reaped where their owners have not sown and squandered after the
-proverbial manner of ill-gotten gains.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-PAUPER-MAKING
-
-
-There is a story of a rich woman--an Austrian, perhaps--who was chilled
-through by a long drive on a bitter winter day.
-
-“Make a huge fire in my sitting-room,” she said to a servant as she
-entered her country house, “and order wood distributed to the poor of
-the village.”
-
-She sat by the huge fire for ten minutes and then rang the bell. “Never
-mind about distributing that wood,” she said to the answering servant.
-“The weather seems to have moderated.”
-
-The theory back of this story is the popular one: that the great
-comfort of great wealth hardens the rich, makes them insensible to
-privation. The fact is the reverse--at least so far as America is
-concerned. Nowhere in the world is the value of wealth so grossly, so
-ludicrously over-estimated as among our plutocrats--not unnaturally,
-since their only title to distinction is their wealth, and a man
-cannot but reverence that which makes him distinguished. Nowhere,
-therefore, are the discomforts of poverty so exaggerated as in the
-palaces of our very rich. And so eager are the men as well as the
-women for opportunities to exercise their emotions over poverty and
-destitution that they are rapidly creating a huge pauper class. Demand
-is creating supply.
-
-The poor give to the poor through sympathy. The rich give to the poor
-through pity. The sympathetic poor are many, and so their pennies
-and food-donations, small in the single, pile up mountainously in
-the total. But they are sparsely and more or less judiciously,
-because intelligently, distributed. The very rich are, comparatively,
-though not absolutely, many; and they almost all give what seems to
-the ordinary run of well-to-do people very large sums. They give
-carelessly, freely. Though warned by often-exposed abuses, they never
-take warning. Each new fraud finds them credulous and eager. They want
-to give; they want to show that they are generous and helpful; to
-caution them is to irritate them.
-
-Thus pauperization is a vast and thriving industry. It is said, and
-there is no reason to doubt it, that there are several hundred families
-on Manhattan Island--enough to populate a small city--that have lived
-well for years wholly upon charity, no member of them ever doing any
-work beyond writing begging letters or patrolling begging routes. In
-addition there are thousands of families supported in large part by
-relief got from rich men and rich women. And the same state of affairs
-is found wherever the very rich, living exclusive and aloof lives, have
-built their palaces.
-
-To play Lord or Lady Bountiful is such a self-gratifying part. It is
-the traditional, the conventional part of the very rich toward the
-very poor. Beggars are so voluble in thanks. It sounds so well to
-talk of “my worthy poor,” of what “I am doing for charity.” So many
-hours that would otherwise be boresome can be filled with receiving
-and patronizing cringing, slathering paupers or with nosing about
-tenements, receiving on every floor noisy showers of blessings in
-exchange for less than the price of a supper after the theatre.
-
-The whole business lessens the vanity-disturbing doubts that
-sometimes will arise even among the very rich as to the validity of
-the distinctions in this Democracy between “upper class” and “lower
-classes.” In some cases the motive is higher. In many cases there is an
-admixture of the higher motive. But the persistence of the very rich
-in face of the plain showings of the harm they do makes it impossible
-entirely to acquit large numbers of them.
-
-The pauperization plants of plutocracy fall into three classes--the
-public, the semi-public and the private.
-
-The politicians have expanded, where they have not out and out
-established, the public plants. Instead of making the people realize
-the truth--that these plants are their property, paid for out of
-their wages and giving service to them not as charity, but as
-their hard-earned, paid-for right, the politicians turn them into
-favor-distributing centres, centres for the distribution of alms
-in exchange for political power. The semi-public plants for the
-manufacture of paupers are the gifts of very rich men, usually men
-who made their own money; after the first generation the very rich do
-not as a rule go in for large public gifts. It is never profitable or
-just to examine deep into motives; sufficient to say that, with a few
-exceptions, these semi-public philanthropic institutions for giving
-something in exchange for nothing are avoided by all but such of the
-poor as don’t mind thinking themselves paupers or being looked on and
-treated as paupers.
-
-Finally, there are the private pauperization plants. From them might be
-excepted those of the rich men and the rich women who have gone into
-the relief business in a systematic way and operate through thoroughly
-organized, carefully and competently conducted bureaus. Their theory
-of helping is not exactly consistent with the old American idea of
-“root hog or die,” but neither is it wholly exploitation of their own
-personal vanity without any regard to the merits of applicants. They
-give relief, but they try to make sure that relief is, according to
-their very liberal notion of necessity, needed.
-
-Probably all but a very few of the families that are famous throughout
-the country for wealth have organizations of this kind. But there are
-upward of ten thousand millionaires concentrated in a few cities,
-several hundred of them multi-millionaires. The overwhelming majority
-of these go in for philanthropy, not on the carefully organized
-system, but more or less haphazard giving, with never thorough
-investigation, often with no investigation whatever.
-
-It seems impossible to make people in the habit of keeping themselves
-clean believe that dirt is not necessarily or even frequently a proof
-positive of poverty overwhelmed by adversity against which it has made
-an honest struggle. And the rich people who like the “Bountiful” pose
-refuse to believe that almost all honest destitution is relieved by its
-neighbors and relatives, that nine out of ten cases of destitution are
-fraudulent, that all the street beggars are liars, that no one need
-go hungry or shelterless or cold if he will apply to the public or
-semi-public institutions ready to relieve. So, we have Lord and Lady
-Bountiful relieving grown people of the necessity of “hustling,” and,
-worst of all, encouraging them to bring up their children as paupers
-and beggars.
-
-So scandalous has this industry of pauper-making become that in
-every city’s highways there are now children openly begging,
-telling their whining lies of various more or less ingenious kinds,
-pretending to sell newspapers or pencils or shoe-strings to give a
-color of respectability to their shamelessness, or, rather, to the
-shamelessness of their parents.
-
-The passing generation--the rustling, hustling, money-grabbing
-generation--is usually rather shrewd in its philanthropies, as well as
-generous. The “old man” was a car-driver, or a brakeman, or a plow-boy,
-or a peasant’s son. He has poverty’s sympathy with poverty, but also
-poverty’s suspicion of the cause of poverty. Thus, our cities have got
-and are getting libraries, hospitals, free dispensaries, free technical
-schools of various kinds, model tenements, and the like. Millions on
-millions are given annually by “self-made” men, most of it as wisely as
-giving can be.
-
-But shrewd as these men are, they often fail to see the difference
-between the sympathetic, unselfish, man-to-man individual help they as
-poor boys got from people of their own kind in better circumstances,
-and this general, unequal, pitying, condescending charity which
-gives indiscriminatingly something that is of value only to the
-self-respecting, and too often takes away in exchange all, or nearly
-all, self-respect.
-
-Still, though these “self-made” men give and give largely and with many
-mistakes, they have the fear of pauper-making ever in mind. And when
-they give to individuals they try to be doubly careful.
-
-In the second generation--what used to be but is no longer the
-spendthrift generation--the very rich retrench in the matter of large
-benefactions. The family position is established. None of the members
-of it has ever known what it is to be hungry or cold without knowing
-just where to turn for food and warmth. Sympathy, which was the
-sentiment in the first generation, now becomes pity. Man-to-man is
-changed into “Bountiful” and his or her “worthy poor.” And we have the
-pauper-plant in full blast.
-
-Each day every rich man or woman who is at all well known receives
-large numbers of begging letters--from beggars in Maine and in
-Texas, in Florida and in Washington, in all parts of the Union. They
-want loans. They want notes or mortgages paid. They want pianos and
-trousseaus. They want pensions for crippled sons or daughters. Or they
-want anything from old clothes to several thousand dollars to buy a
-farm or a store. The apparent effrontery of these requests disappears
-as the letters are read and the amazing, even pathetic, simplicity of
-the writers stands out.
-
-Curiously enough, some of these requests, preposterous though they
-are, are granted. A skilfully written letter sent to a certain kind of
-rich person at just the right moment has been known to produce amazing
-results. No reader of this book, however, need advise a beggar of his
-acquaintance to try it. The two cents postage would be far more likely
-to bring a return if invested in stocks of the mines of the mountains
-in the moon. There are many of the rich who have every begging letter
-that is at all reasonable or plausible thoroughly investigated by
-a secretary--or by some local agent of a corporation in which the
-recipient happens to be interested. Pity for the “worthy poor” is an
-extremely potent force in the plutocracy.
-
-But it is local pauper-making that has the greatest fascination for the
-rich man or woman who does not care to go into charity on the Carnegie
-or Rockefeller or Armour scale, or to take the trouble to organize a
-bureau that works with precision and without any advertisement of its
-owner. The “agony stories” cooked up by the newspapers are noted,
-the slums are ransacked, the parasites on “charity,” both those who
-honestly deceive themselves and those who deliberately “graft,” are
-eagerly welcomed and listened to. Thus there are a good many thousands
-of rich city dwellers with incomes ranging from twenty thousand to
-several hundred thousands a year, each of whom has his or her circle
-of “worthy poor,” or gives regularly to those myriad petty enterprises
-of misdirected or barefacedly fraudulent charity which enlist the
-activities of so many “workers.”
-
-The women are the most persistent and unreasonable offenders in this
-respect. Partly through idleness, partly through a craving to have
-occupation and a sense of usefulness, partly through a profound pity
-for their apparently unfortunate sisters, they pour out capital for
-pauper-plants and search diligently for “worthy poor” to pauperize.
-
-Among the long-very-rich there is notable shyness of the larger kinds
-of giving. No doubt at bottom this is due to increasing selfishness,
-increasing absorption in amusements of the wholly selfish kinds. It
-costs more and more every year to play the rich man’s part; more and
-more imagination is brought to bear in developing it, both by rich
-men eager to find new ways of showing off and by ingenious poor men
-inventing new ways of making a living out of the rich upon whose
-extravagance they thrive. The rich man, even where his income is huge,
-is often pinched. He hates to give--he may find that his giving has
-compelled him to forego a most attractive investment or has compelled
-him to abstain from some new expensive luxury or pleasure. He hoards,
-to be ready for such emergencies. Then if he has several children, he
-wants to leave each of them as rich as possible so that they can all
-live in the style to which they have been accustomed, the style in
-which their friends and associates live. For worship of wealth you must
-look among the long-very-rich. Those who pass Mammon’s statue with a
-nod or a half-ashamed crook of a reluctant knee will have the pleasure
-of seeing very, very many of the rich “old families” flat in the dust,
-noses plowing it, and not a bit ashamed.
-
-Is this drying up of the charity of “philanthropy” wholly a matter for
-regret?
-
-Several years ago a few young Americans from various parts of
-the country began to spend their summer vacations at Woods Hole,
-Massachusetts. They were young; they were poor; they were obscure;
-they were hard-worked and hard-working as well; they were profoundly
-indifferent to money or money gain; they were not even bothering
-especially about fame. They had as their common bond a passion
-for science. They had as their common aim the satisfying of that
-divine curiosity which makes the man who has it toil incessantly and
-unweariedly over ways more arduous and through wildernesses more
-dangerous than those that baffled the seekers after the Holy Grail.
-They longed--these earnest, poor, obscure young Americans--to penetrate
-to Nature’s innermost laboratory, her workshop of workshops, her temple
-of temples, there to surprise her supreme secret--the mystery of the
-origin of life.
-
-Fifteen summers of this pursuit, free from self-seeking or sordidness
-or jealousy, free from fame’s flatteries, and the Marine Biological
-Laboratory of Woods Hole became famous wherever the human intellect is
-respected. Its Knights of Science have not reached their goal--their
-Holy Grail. But under the inspiration of the triple vow of Science for
-her Knights--poverty, self-immolation and obedience to truth--they
-have had adventures and have made discoveries so strange, so passing
-strange, so wonderful, that all Americans are intensely proud of this
-American institution, at once so small and so majestically great.
-
-Then came the proposal to endow this little laboratory with part of the
-Carnegie millions and to erect it into a rich and aristocratic palace
-of science. At first glance the proposal seemed as admirable as the
-purpose that prompted it. And yet----
-
-This is a day when the numerous newcomers among our multi-millionaires
-are so pouring out the millions that it looks as if presently the
-necessity for struggle, the incentive to struggle, in the development
-of brain power, would be almost wholly removed. In the progress of
-the race, wealth in possession has played a very small part--has more
-often interfered to blight than to bless. Wealth possessed means ease
-and power without effort, and a sense that the goal has been reached.
-It means the mind at rest, tending to sloth and slumber, with life’s
-greatest fears and greatest incentives removed. Above all, it means an
-atmosphere of self-complacency and satiety and languor that insensibly
-relaxes the strongest fibre.
-
-Carnegie millions may help to keep a-burning the light in that plain
-little temple of science at Woods Hole--_may_, if judiciously used. But
-not if they stifle the splendid, self-sacrificing, self-unconscious
-enthusiasm which set that light a-blazing. The lesson is wider than
-the instance--far wider. It was wealth and patronage that rotted the
-splendid intellect of Greece; wealth again, and patronage, that brought
-the Renaissance to an abrupt, inglorious end. And how much the English
-intellect in its long period of most brilliant achievement owed to the
-contempt of the English dominant classes--that of birth and that of
-commerce--for scientists, writers and “those kinds of cattle!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE MADE-OVER WHITE HOUSE
-
-
-We find plutocracy’s follies in full swing not alone in the great
-cities, East and West, where the money-caste must have outward signs of
-superiority to bolster up its pretensions, but in our national capital
-as well--in what ought to be the high-set citadel of democratic dignity.
-
-Few Americans have any adequate idea of the system of etiquette which
-has grown up there. The other day a newly appointed high officer of the
-Government said:
-
-“My daughter went to lunch with the daughter of Secretary ----
-yesterday. She did not come home until long after she was expected, and
-her mother asked her what was the matter.
-
-“‘Oh,’ she explained, ‘Secretary ----’s daughter was there, and none of
-us could go until she left, and we thought she never would go.’ And I
-find that precedent is carried out in the strictest possible way all
-through Washington society in all its sets, down to the very children.”
-
-If there are any persons in official life in Washington who do not
-attach importance to precedence, do not resent being seated out of
-rank at table, or being in all other ways given their exact official
-amount of deference, those persons keep extremely quiet. In Washington
-one ceases to be surprised at hearing men of national reputation
-complaining fiercely because they have been subjected to some trivial
-slight in this matter of precedence. It irritates a Cabinet officer
-to be put a shade out of his rank just as much as it irritates a
-Congressman from nowhere or a Government clerk.
-
-Precedence is killing Washington as a place of residence for sensible
-people. It is destroying its chief charm. If one thinks of going there
-to live it is because he expects to meet in the easy circumstance of
-social intercourse those who are interesting or amusing or curious.
-That sort of social intercourse is becoming practically impossible.
-No one giving any sort of entertainment, however informal, dares to
-arrange his or her guests according to congeniality. The same people
-must always be put next each other. The same man must take the same
-woman in to dinner. The same youth must dance with the same girl. And
-as official life expands the blight of precedence spreads.
-
-It is difficult for an outsider to listen without laughing or
-showing irritation as the Washingtonians discuss precedence and
-relate incidents of national and international catastrophes almost
-brought about by violation of it. But as some of the persons who most
-strenuously insist upon it are otherwise high above the human average,
-it would be well, before utterly condemning the Washingtonians, to
-reflect whether the craze for precedence is not a universal human
-weakness, latent--happily latent--in most of us because it has no
-chance to show itself.
-
-There is a certain officer who, in the official lists, is called
-Superintendent of Public Buildings and Grounds. In fact he is “Lord
-Great Chamberlain” to the President. Perhaps there was once a Lord
-Great Chamberlain who was merely Superintendent of Public Buildings and
-Grounds at the lower end of Pennsylvania avenue. But that was a long
-time ago.
-
-For many years the Major of Engineers assigned to that title with
-the rank and pay of Colonel has been actually the chief officer of
-the President’s court, the manager of what might be called his public
-household. Whenever the President entertains on a grand scale he is
-obviously in command, directing the ceremonials, superintending the
-evolutions of his staff of dancing and small-talk army men, overseeing
-the assiduities of the court retinue of servants. When a new ambassador
-or other eminent personage, domestic or foreign, arrives, he is the
-functionary who puts on a gorgeous uniform, drives in state in the
-President’s carriage to the visitor’s lodgings, escorts him to the
-President, introduces him, takes him away and escorts him back to his
-lodgings. Also, he in large measure directs the expenditures from the
-White House privy purse.
-
-The Constitution and the Statute Book make no provision for a Lord
-Great Chamberlain. But constitutions and institutions are vastly
-different. Part of the President’s time is given to matters contained
-or supposed to be contained in the written laws, the larger part to
-matters set down in the unwritten laws and nowhere else. When we broke
-away from Europe and European political and social ideas, we did
-not get rid of those customs for high executive officers which had
-been established among us by royal colonial governors, although they
-were simple compared with the growing dimensions of our present-day
-ceremonial.
-
-Thus the unwritten laws say that the President must have a court like a
-king or other royal reigning person. It must be disguised and modified,
-but it must be “the real thing” in its essence. A court involves a
-place to hold it, officers to conduct it, an etiquette to guide it, and
-money to keep it going. The written laws provide for a Presidential
-residence--they permit the President to sit rent-free. That provision
-readily stretches to cover a place to hold the court.
-
-Again, the written laws permit the President to detach certain public
-officers for rather indefinite purposes. There you have a Lord Great
-Chamberlain and a Lord High Steward, and so forth, provided with
-comparative ease.
-
-As for etiquette, that part of the unwritten law need not be reconciled
-to written law, because etiquette costs nothing but headaches and
-heart-burnings--and the only reason for attempting to reconcile written
-law and unwritten is, of course, the matter of money expense. Finally,
-the written laws provide, or can be stretched to provide, the money
-for all the bigger items of court expenses--furnishings and repairs
-and alterations, linen, china, flowers, cooks, scullions, butlers,
-coachmen, footmen, door-openers and door-closers, card-carriers, light,
-heat, everything except what is eaten and drunk. As yet no way has been
-found to stretch the written law or the good nature of Congress to
-cover the court appetite. It must be appeased out of the President’s
-salary.
-
-The most important, though by no means the most expensive, item in the
-court budget charged against the public, is the Lord Great Chamberlain
-who conducts the court and executes, either directly or indirectly,
-all that pertains to the social side of life at the White House. He is
-always an officer of engineers. He must be a person of knowledge, of
-tact, of good appearance.
-
-Lord Great Chamberlain has ever been a distinguished office. It was
-never so distinguished as now. And, unless there is some sort of
-extraordinary convulsion and revulsion, it is destined to become almost
-eminent. For the White House has entered a new and dazzling period of
-social splendor which may presently make it as little different from
-the residence of a monarch as is the Elysée Palace, where lives the
-President of France’s imperial Democracy.
-
-The newly evolved notion of the Presidential office is that it is
-the centre of political, intellectual and sociological authority
-and also of social honor. Not only must the democratic--or
-plutocratic--overlord, anointed with the new kind of divine oil, be the
-embodiment and exponent of the popular will; he must also be the source
-of honor, the recognizer of merit.
-
-Does one sing well? Does one paint well? Does one write well? Does
-one lead in education or literature or law or sociology or finance or
-commerce or trade--or fashion? Is one in the forefront in any line
-of activity not definitely declared criminal? Then the President of
-the American people must entertain him, must take his hand in that
-hand which is a sort of composite of eighty million right hands of
-fellowship. The approving accents of that voice which is now conceived
-to be the composite of eighty million approving voices must tickle his
-ravished ears; he must, at the Presidential board, eat and drink the
-composite hospitalities of the eighty millions’ dinner or luncheon
-tables.
-
-In a real plain-as-an-old-coat Democracy the President would be a
-business person only, keeping his official life and his social life
-separate and distinct. The one would be public, the other private.
-He would have no more to do privately with those with whom he is
-officially brought into contact than would the head of a big business
-with his assistants, employés and customers. Social life is in a
-democratic society altogether of and by the family; and theoretically
-the President’s wife and children, the wives and children of the
-other public officials, are left in private life when the man of the
-family takes office. Practically, however, they are all elected, and
-if the written law provides no honors for wife and children and other
-relatives of the successful candidate, unwritten law must be created to
-repair the grave, the intolerable omission.
-
-Hence the elaborate, the complex, the awe-inspiring system of
-precedence. Every one from the President and his family and their
-remotest connection visiting Washington, down through all the branches
-of official life to grand-niece of the scrubwoman who sees to the
-basement steps of the smallest public building, has his or her exactly
-defined and jealously guarded station in the social hierarchy.
-
-Naturally, the most interesting part of the imposing structure that
-descends tier on tier from the august and exalted Chief Magistrate, is
-the court--the President, his Cabinet (Cabinet “ministers,” to give
-them the fanciful title they love best), the ambassadors and ministers
-and staffs of the various embassies and legations, the families
-of all these, and this means the White House and the Lord Great
-Chamberlain--the White House, the stage; the Lord Great Chamberlain,
-the stage manager.
-
-The White House was always inadequate--it would have been inadequate
-only for carrying out the purely democratic idea of the Presidential
-office, the idea set forth in the written laws. For the splendid,
-imperial, democratic concept of the plutocracy, the White House was
-ridiculous. Many a previous President and his wife, conscious of the
-social possibilities of the Presidential office, and yearning to
-develop them, have sighed over and moaned over and hinted about the
-petty proportions of the “Executive Mansion.” But political timidity
-restrained them from insisting upon expansion and elaboration. Mr.
-Roosevelt, confident that the people understood and approved him, and
-full of enthusiasm for his exalted concept of a new Presidency to suit
-a new era of the republic, boldly ventured where other Presidents had
-shrunk back. He demanded adequate quarters for the imperial-democratic
-court. The result is a new White House, a fit theatre for plutocratic
-social activities, a fit field for the operations of an energetic and
-sympathetic Lord Great Chamberlain.
-
-The present President entertains, not occasionally but constantly,
-not exclusively but as democratically as an emperor, not meagrely but
-lavishly, not a score of guests, but hundreds and thousands. He has
-a multitude of guests to lunch, a multitude to dine, a multitude to
-hear music or to take part in various kinds of “drawing-rooms” and
-levees, a multitude to stay the night under his roof--not a multitude
-all at one time, but a multitude in the aggregate. Rich and poor, snob
-and democrat, plutocrat and proletarian, black and white, American
-and foreigner, Maine woods guide, Western scout, fashionable and
-frowzy--all equally welcome, all equal at his court. Morgan and Jacob
-Riis, Countess de Castellane and Booker Washington, Wild Bill and
-Bishop Potter, Duse and Rough Rider Rob, Alfred Henry Lewis and a New
-York cotillon leader.
-
-Not long ago when some one said in his hearing, “There’s no first-class
-hotel in Washington,” he replied, “You forget the White House.” He has
-made it indeed a national hotel, or rather a great national assembling
-place. And he is ever unsatisfied, ever reaching out for more “doers,”
-for more and more people of interest or importance. He wishes all
-people of mark to bask in the Presidential sunshine, to give him the
-benefit of their intellect or character, or whatever they may have
-that is worth seeing or hearing. For he wishes to receive as well as
-to give. And he is determined that his court shall be entirely and
-completely representative. The world has seen nothing like it in recent
-centuries; the Emperor of Germany, broad though his sympathies are, is
-a snob in comparison. For a parallel we must go back to the courts of
-the emperor-presidents of Rome, in the days when Rome thought itself
-a republic. And the exigencies of plutocratic politics and the new
-social conditions have combined to attract the leaders of plutocracy’s
-fashion in plutocracy’s capitals, New York and Chicago, to favor
-Washington more and more each winter with their presence and their
-patronage.
-
-The new White House, which is thus in a fair way to become the social
-centre of the republic, is in one sense the first step toward an
-entirely new Washington. In every street at all fit for Presidential
-purposes great houses are going up for the leisurely rich, and smaller
-but attractive houses for the leisurely well-to-do. It is obvious
-to the most casual observer that to-morrow will see a brilliant and
-numerous society seated at Washington, a society devoted to luxury
-and entertaining and revolving round the President, and dazzling and
-dominating the servants of the people. Of all the bribes, which is so
-seductive, so insidiously corrupting as the social bribe?
-
-At the Congressional Library are exhibited models of the Washington the
-public administration purposes to build, has already begun to build.
-It will be a city of magnificent boulevards and parks and drives, and
-public buildings and national monuments. It will be probably the most
-splendid and most beautiful city in the world. It will probably be the
-one great city on earth where all who are not servants and tradespeople
-think and talk chiefly politics, literature, art, science--when they
-are not talking gossip and envying each other’s rank or looks or
-clothes or establishments.
-
-The made-over White House, astounding though it is as a sudden
-development, is but the crude inaugural of this Washington of
-to-morrow. But it is a beginning--a most audacious move on the part
-of one of the most audacious men who ever rose to first place in the
-republic. It is indeed audacious to be a democratic President with the
-ceremonial of a king--“a ceremonial more rigid than that of the court
-of the Czar,” according to the wife of one of the ambassadors.
-
-The White House demand upon Congress for running expenses has leaped
-from the former twenty-five thousand dollars to sixty thousand dollars.
-As the President’s salary is just under a thousand dollars a week, and
-as he evidently believes the people expect the President to spend his
-salary upon the embellishment of the position, it appears that the
-new White House, the new court, is now on the average costing in the
-neighborhood of two thousand dollars a week, half from the pocket of
-the people, the other half from the President’s private pocket.
-
-As the heavy expense is crowded into five months of the year--December
-to April, inclusive--the probabilities are that the new White House is
-costing during the season not far from three thousand dollars a week.
-This means that the new departure has certainly doubled, and perhaps
-trebled, the cost of the White House court, for most Presidents have
-contributed about half their salary toward holding court and have
-called on Congress for a supplementary appropriation of twenty-five
-thousand dollars a year.
-
-A few years ago such imposing figures as these would have caused a
-great outcry. In every part of the land, in city as well as country,
-hands would have been thrown up, and “we, the people,” would have
-ejaculated: “Three thousand dollars a week! Mercy on us! The fellow
-must be crazy. What _are_ we coming to?”
-
-But we think in large sums these days, and the establishments of our
-multi-millionaires have accustomed us to big expenditures for what were
-less than half a generation ago universally regarded as prodigalities.
-Scores of millionaires spend several times two thousand dollars a
-week in “maintaining their dignity.” There were some faint, shamefaced
-mutterings in Congress against the alterations in the White House
-and the lively leap of the public share in the expenses. But these
-mutterings died away instead of growing stronger, and the project for
-raising the Presidential salary to one hundred thousand dollars a year
-has all but passed Congress.
-
-In the competition of display, of “splurge,” shall “we, the people” be
-distanced by private persons? Is not “blowing it in” the great test
-of dignity and worth, the test established by our most “successful”
-citizens? Yet a few years and the President will be getting one
-hundred thousand dollars in salary and will think himself moderate in
-calling upon the nation for twice sixty thousand a year to be spent
-in maintaining the Presidential dignity. Less than that will seem
-shabby in the new Washington under the spell of the new concept of
-the Presidency as a social font. Simplicity and quiet as a measure of
-dignity will belong to the past. It still remains true, as when Burke
-said it, that “the public is poor.” True, the nation has riches, but
-only a few have wealth. True, wages have not actually increased over
-what they were _thirty years ago_. True, the incomes of the great mass
-of Americans are just about where they used to be; true, taxation is
-to them still a burden, and “making the ends meet” is still an anxious
-problem. But our plutocrats and the representatives of kings and other
-tax-eaters and people-plunderers must feel at home when they honor our
-White House with their presence.
-
-There is not the slightest surface indication that the Lord Great
-Chamberlain will preside over a diminished office. Public business in
-the narrow, strictly legal, old-fashioned democratic sense has now for
-the first time wholly withdrawn from the White House and is seated in
-what is derisively and not inaptly called the “Executive Hen-coop”--a
-temporary office building near by. The White House has been definitely
-and apparently permanently transformed into a place devoted to that
-part of the Presidential office which is not recognized in written law
-and which has hitherto been kept in the background.
-
-And so rapidly is the White House developing that no one need be
-astonished if it almost immediately becomes the social Mecca of
-the whole American people. Any one who has studied the effect of
-social life upon political life, of social customs upon politics,
-will appreciate that that transformation might be of profound and
-far-reaching importance. It might be significant of a new kind of
-republic, of a fallen Democracy on this American continent. It
-might well mean that the dream of all aggressive, self-aggrandizing
-office-holders had at last been realized; that for the people-ruled
-public administration contemplated by the fathers and embodied in the
-Constitution had been substituted a real, a people-ruling government.
-
-For, more powerful than any written laws, are the unwritten laws that
-bind men in the slowly, noiselessly forged chains of Habit.
-
-And what a busy, big man the Lord Great Chamberlain would be then!
-
-But he would still be called Superintendent of Public Buildings and
-Grounds, and the Most Puissant Over-lord of the Imperial Plutocracy
-would still be called President of the United States. And so nobody
-would in the least mind. If the waffle is named “Hot Waffle,” only a
-carping, croaking pessimist notes that it is stone cold.
-
-Such are the _surface_ indications. But surface indications are
-not infallible; they have been known to be unimportant and wholly
-misleading.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-AND EUROPE LAUGHS
-
-
-An attaché of one of the Continental Embassies to the King of England
-was dining at the Carlton with an American, an old friend of his. The
-room was filled with English and Americans. Almost all the English
-were men and women of title or rank, or both. Almost all the Americans
-were well known both at home and abroad because of their wealth,
-their fondness for display, and their intimacies and relationships by
-marriage with the aristocratic caste of Europe.
-
-“You Americans are popular here,” said the diplomat.
-
-“Yes,” assented the American.
-
-“And on the Continent also,” said the diplomat.
-
-“Yes,” replied the American. “How the German Emperor does love us--he
-is almost as enthusiastic about us as is King Edward.”
-
-“You are popular,” went on the diplomat, “and very unpopular. You were
-never so popular nor so unpopular.”
-
-“You mean we are unpopular because of the American trade invasion?”
-
-“Not at all. That is a trifling matter. It concerns only the
-politicians and a few manufacturers and the farmers, and does not
-concern them very deeply. No--let me explain. Formerly we--and when I
-say ‘we’ I mean the upper classes of Europe, those which still rule,
-despite all this talk about the progress of Democracy--formerly we
-feared you; we pretended to despise you, but in fact we were afraid.
-You were the great experiment in Democracy, that is, in anarchy--in the
-rule of the masses, the mob. Your success meant serious trouble for
-us, if not the handwriting on the wall, because our masses were always
-thinking of you.”
-
-Here the diplomat smiled peculiarly and glanced round the room.
-
-“Now all that has been changed,” he went on. “Europe and America are
-better acquainted. We no longer fear you. Why should we?”
-
-And again he paused to let his glance travel round the room, finally
-to rest with good-humored satire upon the American’s face.
-
-“Yes--we understand you better. Our fears have been proved groundless,
-our suspicions have been justified. Your new path, after making a
-wide bend, has returned into the old historic highway of caste. And
-so our upper class, which hated you, now--well, it neither loves nor
-admires you, but it honors and courts you. It laughs a little at your
-pretensions to birth. But it respects the solid foundation of your
-aristocracy--wealth. For, no matter what we may pretend, not blood, but
-money, wealth, is the essence of aristocracy. As for our masses, that
-once looked up to you as their ideal----” He shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“They no longer look up to us?”
-
-“They look down upon you. They see that you, too, have your dominating
-class just as they have. And they prefer their own kind of upper
-class as less sordid, less vulgar, the embodiment of a more inspiring
-ideal. So long as they knew you only by report they believed in you;
-and that belief still makes them restless under us. But now that they
-have seen you, now that you are constantly in evidence, they see that
-their hopes--at least so far as they were based upon you--were a
-foolish dream. They prefer their own princes to ‘bosses’ and upstart
-newly-rich.”
-
-“But suppose these Americans whom you see over here and whom you read
-most about are not representative?”
-
-The diplomat smiled. “I have heard that before,” said he. “But, my dear
-friend, they are representative. Your country has changed and you do
-not realize it. You are deceived, not we. You are like the Romans who
-thought they had a republic when, in fact, the republic had been dead
-five hundred years. Think a moment. What sort of men did you formerly
-send to us as diplomats? And what sort of men do you send now? What
-has become of the old horror of court dress and rank and precedence
-which they used to exhibit? You cannot deny that your diplomats are
-representative. And are they not of the same class as these ladies and
-gentlemen about us here, so obviously delighted with themselves and
-their aristocratic company, with themselves because of their company?”
-
-There is much truth in the diplomat’s comments on the state of European
-public sentiment toward America. And the change is, as he said, due to
-better acquaintance. Europe thinks it has discovered that as soon as
-an American rises in prosperity above the mass of his fellow-citizens,
-he enters an actual ruling class that dictates and disdains the laws,
-uses them for enriching himself and for exploiting the mass of his
-fellow-countrymen. Europe thinks that as soon as he reaches this stage
-he turns his eyes longingly toward the Old World monarchies and begins
-to plan to become as nearly like the aristocrats as possible. He may
-not flaunt his power--he must respect republican forms. But he may, and
-does, flaunt his wealth. And in Europe he can get open recognition of
-his superior rank when such recognition as it gets at home is indirect
-and more or less secret.
-
-Thousands of Americans live in Europe. Every considerable city on the
-Continent has its American colony, and year by year these colonies
-grow apace. Americans--chiefly the women--have intermarried everywhere
-into the European nobility. Nearly all these expatriated Americans are
-people of means; many of them are rich. They lead lives of industrious
-idleness. Many of them frankly express their contempt for the country
-from which they draw their incomes, the country but for which they
-would be miserable peasants, sweating for the amusement of some
-European land-holder.
-
-It is fortunate that their dislike of their native land has been strong
-enough to take them away and to keep them away; it is a pity that the
-migrating impulse does not seize upon more of their kind. The world has
-room for idlers--it has room for all sorts of people. But America has
-no room for them. That great workshop wants no idlers obstructing the
-aisles and hindering the toilers at their tasks. That would be a sorry
-day for us when our rapidly growing leisure class should “civilize” and
-“refine” America into an agreeable place of residence for “ladies” and
-“gentlemen” of the European pattern.
-
-These Americans who have “outgrown” their country serve to confirm
-Europe in the suspicions raised by the news that has reached it of
-stupendous aristocratic changes in the American people, of rotten
-political machines ruled by the rich, of toll-gates set up on every
-highway of American trade and commerce for the tax-gatherers of
-plutocracy, of a people fatuously imagining that it is free because it
-can go to the polls and freely choose which of two sets of candidates
-shielded by the plutocracy shall make and execute the laws. This brings
-up the whole subject of our relations with “abroad”--and the social and
-political meaning and tendency of those relations.
-
-A few years ago Paris was the paradise of Americans, especially of the
-Americans of wealth. It is so no longer. It is now for them a mere
-stopping-place for buying clothes--a pause _en route_ to the true,
-fashionable, American Mecca, London. A few years ago Americans, except
-those of the ordinary sight-seeing, mind-improving kind, loathed
-London. They knew few people there--and, like Vienna, London is an
-impossible place for the stranger in search of amusement; if he does
-not know natives, is not invited to their houses, a soundless desert is
-a cheerful, companionable place in comparison. Further, such English as
-the rich, fashionable, amusement-hunting American knew--that is, such
-Englishmen “of the right sort”--were about as friendly and sociable
-as they are to their servants. But that was before the “Anglo-Saxon
-Alliance.”
-
-The change came with the British discovery that the American
-multi-millionaire and the American heiress were not, as had been
-supposed, rarities found only occasionally after long search through
-trackless and vast wildernesses of “unspeakable bounders,” but were
-deposited in “the States” in quantities, were easily accessible,
-were yearning for high society, for aristocracy, for titled friends,
-for titled alliances. This was tidings of great joy to the English
-aristocracy. For an aristocrat may not work; and no matter how heavily
-“endowed” a title may be, values will shrink as time passes--not to
-speak of those savage “death duties” which the rascally Liberals
-enacted to the infuriating of the upper classes, who yet dare not
-repeal them.
-
-The “Anglo-Saxon Alliance” began forthwith. Scores of English
-upper-class families opened their hearts and their hearths to their
-“cousins across the sea.” The more American friends one accumulated the
-more likely was one to find an American multi-millionaire or so among
-them, or at least to be by way of getting into touch with American
-multi-millionaires or within “touching” distance of them.
-
-To realize to what an extent the “Anglo-Saxon Alliance” was and is
-based upon this notion, one must realize how all-powerful the upper
-class is in England, and how inarticulate, how socially, politically
-and in every public way insignificant, are the English masses,
-including the bulk of the middle classes. When you speak of English
-public sentiment you mean the sentiment of the London drawing-rooms.
-They are filled with the governing class, which constitutes parliaments
-and ministries; they dominate the journalists, who are either of
-the upper class or desperately struggling to get into it; they also
-dominate the masses who have been trained by centuries of unbroken
-custom to bow before rank and title.
-
-There were excellent reasons in international politics for England’s
-turning favorable, friendly, even enthusiastic eyes upon America. But
-there could not have been this present passionate, personal love, this
-daily and hourly working of that toothless old saw, “blood is thicker
-than water,” had there not existed a reason which appealed directly to
-the personal and family self-interest of every member of nearly every
-upper-class family in England.
-
-And soon the German Emperor and those about him, all of a high and
-impoverishing nobility, began to work the same trusty, but never
-now-a-days rusty, old saw about the thickness of blood and water--are
-we not “Germanic,” we Americans? But the motive which is the less
-with the King and the upper classes of England is the stronger with
-our tempestuous German suitor--the motive of political, or, rather,
-industrial friendship. He feels that in dining and wining and
-treating, “just as if they were equals,” American owners of yachts and
-multi-millionaires, he is endearing himself to the American people.
-For, like practically the whole of Europe to-day, he thinks America
-is no longer a Democracy, but a thinly disguised plutocracy. And
-the more he reads and hears of the power and prestige of American
-multi-millionaires at home, the more firmly is he convinced that when
-he is tickling the vanity of these “dollar-swollen upstarts,” he is
-sending delicious thrills up and down the spine of the American eagle.
-
-Yes, European princes and potentates are rubbing noses and
-back-scratching in the friendliest, most democratic fashion in the
-world, with such of the American people as can afford to visit Europe
-in royal luxury and get themselves admitted to royal inclosures.
-The object of these condescensions to our fellow-countrymen is to
-improve the relations between sundry European monarchies and the
-American people. A worthy object, as is any which has at bottom the
-promoting of peace on honorable terms. But Europe is wasting energy in
-misdirected effort. It assumes that these American beneficiaries have
-the same “rank” at home that similarly fortuned Europeans have in their
-countries. And, not unnaturally, it is confirmed in its false notion by
-many a petty success through this courtship of snobbish plutocrats and
-plutocratic diplomats.
-
-The American multi-millionaire and his wife and his son and his
-daughter--again this does not mean all Europe-visiting Americans of
-wealth--are directly responsible for Europe’s present opinion of
-the American brand of Democracy. For they--not unnaturally--wish to
-make themselves out the relative equals of their titled and exalted
-friends. They begin to “talk tall”; and, being far away from home,
-they soon are thinking as tall as they talk. They confirm each other
-in the idea that they are really the “whole show” at home. They
-return with retinues of caste-trained, servile domestics; they live
-in colonies in our own cities into which none but dollar-hunters
-and dollar-worshipers penetrate. The political bosses court them,
-give them laws and senatorships and diplomatic posts in exchange for
-campaign contributions. Their infatuation grows apace.
-
-Thus the American fresh from America finds London--let us confine
-ourselves to the one capital as typical--a strange, humorous spectacle
-in the fashionable season. He can hardly believe his own eyes and ears.
-A week or two, and so persistent are the impressions of a true American
-nobility visiting Europe that he almost feels that he has been asleep
-with Rip Van Winkle and has awakened to a new country and a new order
-in which there is no American Republic.
-
-And we are only at the beginning. The “Anglo-Saxon Alliance” between
-the English upper class and the American aspirants to be thought “upper
-class,” the dragging in of the rich American pilgrim out of the fog
-to the cheeriest corner of the English fire, these are matters of
-yesterday. And already Paris gets but a glance from the rich Americans,
-and the most foresighted of Paris shopkeepers are establishing London
-branches for the “Anglo-Saxon” American who no longer can spare the
-time from his or her English social duties to make the outfitting trip
-across the English Channel. To-morrow--The English hearth is large;
-there is room on it for every presentable or hope-inspiring American
-who can afford to cross the Atlantic; and the news of the jollity
-of the London season and of the round of English house parties is
-spreading in America and is attracting the pretentious society of all
-the large American cities. The “Alliance” is indeed booming.
-
-It is not through English aversion to the Atlantic voyage that, though
-we are the sought, we go to the home of the seeker to be sought. The
-English upper classes would come to us if we insisted upon it, although
-the item of expense looks larger to them than to us. But we do not
-insist upon it. Our “leisure class” is made far more comfortable in
-England than it is at home. America has no such facilities as has
-England for amusing sheer idleness in ways that are not undisguisedly
-inane. Through several centuries, the filling in of the idle hours of
-professional idlers has been a study there; the houses, the streets,
-the theatres, the restaurants, the whole social system is adapted to it.
-
-Further, the American can feel so “tall,” can believe so thoroughly in
-his own aristocracy and aloofness above the general run of mankind
-when there are three thousand miles of barren water between him in his
-grandeur and the shop where he worked as a “clark,” or the cabin where
-his father was born, or the back yard where his mother, in gingham,
-hung out the wash. Thus, the Americans in search of “the high life” for
-which they yearn prefer to go to it rather than to have it brought to
-them.
-
-“As I study your countrymen here and get their views,” said an
-Englishman, famous as a lifelong admirer of America and of the
-democratic idea, “I become convinced against my will that your
-Democracy is dying. It seems the ideal of Democracy is too high to
-survive prosperity; apparently it can exist only in what one of your
-countrymen, writing in your simple days, called the atmosphere of plain
-living and high thinking. As soon as a man becomes prosperous he begins
-to ‘put on airs,’ as you Americans say. And the pity of it is that
-the less prosperous concede his superiority, and so make his ‘airs’
-significant where they would otherwise be ridiculous. The reason our
-monarchies, that is, our monarchical governments and our aristocratic
-classes, are becoming friendly to you, is that you are becoming like
-them. They concede something; but you--you concede your principles.
-They get something--cash dividends on their condescensions. But I’m
-blest if I can see what _you_ get.”
-
-To the stay-at-home American, or, for the matter of that, to the
-travelling American who retains his sense of proportion, the
-exaggerating of bumptious American “diplomats” and “dollarcrats” into
-a national phenomenon of peril, and the gloomy croakings or sardonic
-rejoicings in Europe over the decay of the American Republic may seem
-preposterous--as preposterous as an ambassador’s fancying that his
-ecstasies when a king claps him on the shoulder are the ecstasies of
-the entire American people. But it is a phenomenon that should not,
-that cannot wisely, be left out of account. Steam and electricity have
-bridged the chasm across which our ancestors fled to establish here a
-system based upon sanity, simplicity and justice. And at a peculiarly
-trying time there are crossing over to us European ideas and ideals
-that so dangerously disguise snobbishness and plundering and injustice
-under pretentious culture and such plausible frauds as the “natural
-leadership of the classes that have demonstrated their superiority by
-success.”
-
-The problem is often stated cart before the horse. “What will our
-plutocracy do with us?” men say in all seriousness. The question, in
-fact, is, “What shall we do with our plutocracy?” It has descended
-upon us swift as a cyclone, insidious as a plague. We had no adequate
-warning. We have not yet, as a people, grasped the situation in its
-fullness. Of all the cure-alls so confidently proposed by our political
-and sociological quacks, which one does not show on its very surface to
-any careful mind utter futility at best, disaster in the application as
-a highly probable event?
-
-The plutocracy itself shares in the delusion of so many of our
-“publicists.” “What shall we do with America?” it insolently says in
-effect.
-
-A little patience; a little time for our eighty millions, surcharged
-with Democracy, to weigh and measure and judge. Be sure, the dog will
-not be wagged by the tail. And before many decades European caste will
-see such a handwriting upon the western sky as has not terrified it
-since our Declaration of Independence.
-
-
-
-
-PART II.--DEMOCRACY
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-“WE, THE PEOPLE”
-
-
-It cannot, then, be denied that wealth, concentrated wealth--not so
-much the plutocrat himself as the vast masterful accumulation of which
-he is the appendage; one might with truth say, the victim--is not only
-the most conspicuous factor in American life to-day, but also one of
-the most potent factors. The plutocracy in politics, the plutocracy in
-business, the plutocracy in society, the plutocracy in the home--in its
-own homes--that is our “peril.”
-
-A great monster indeed, fully up to the harrowing descriptions of our
-radical orators and writers. But why does the average, common-sense
-American refuse to be terrified? Because he does not see it? Hardly
-that. No; the real reason is that the American is fundamentally
-incapable of those caste and class feelings, without which a plutocracy
-can never hope to erect itself into an aristocracy, and therefore a
-real “peril.”
-
-To see America--the America that was, and is, and shall be--we must
-leave the neighborhood of the palaces of the plutocracy with its
-servile parasites and imitators, its fawning menials and shopkeepers;
-we must also leave the neighboring slums, where the American is so
-sadly caricatured--not more sadly, in truth, than where the plutocracy
-flaunts. We must go to the smaller cities and the towns and villages
-and the farms, where in ten thousand homes a sane and sober life is led
-by a sane and sober people. And we find there no tendencies toward the
-development of caste, far-reaching though the poisonous influence of
-the plutocracy is.
-
-For our hopeful, yes, convincing comparisons, we need not bring forward
-the early days of the republic, when the surviving silly old Colonial
-aristocracy was strong enough to restrict the suffrage, to enforce
-rigid class distinctions, to threaten us with an official aristocracy
-of “birth.” We only need compare forty years ago with to-day to see the
-substantial progress of true Democracy. Proportionately, are there not
-vastly fewer people to-day lacking that high sense of self-respect
-which caused so much open, profuse and shamefaced apologies for
-electing to the Presidency a man of such “low origin” as Lincoln? At
-the time of the Civil War, and even thereafter, the rich men in every
-community had great political influence simply because they were rich,
-and property, as property, claimed and was conceded a right to a
-more potent voice in the public affairs. Is it so to-day? Is not the
-property influence exercised only in secrecy and stealth? Is the rich
-man a favorite for elective office, or are the people, roused by the
-frequent coincidence of wealth and corruption, jealously suspicious of
-the rich man in politics?
-
-Outside the umbra and penumbra of plutocracy we find the American with
-the inborn sense of equality, the American that rejoices in humble
-origin as proof of the personal worth of him who has risen. We are
-still a nation of working men and women, the sons and daughters of
-working people. And just as soon as one of us becomes ashamed of his
-birth or of his own past, becomes infected with the cheap and silly
-vulgarisms that Europe is always thrusting upon us, just so soon
-does he or she begin to fall behind in the procession. Influential
-relatives will not long save him or her, nor inherited property;
-misused opportunity to better education will only hasten the downfall.
-
-Never was country made up of more _kinds_ of people than the United
-States; but we have no classes. There is no condition to which one is
-born from which one may not escape. Class means such a condition. Now,
-were caste altogether a matter to be determined by the rich, by those
-“on top,” we might well tremble for the future of our social state.
-The rich of a thousand localities would not be slow to take advantage
-of the chance were it offered them. But fortunately _caste is made by
-those who look up, not by those who look down_.
-
-However many Americans there may be who would like to look _down_,
-there are few, there are ever fewer, with the quaint fancy for looking
-_up_. It is true that in our so-called “foreign element” there seems
-to lie the possibility of a dangerous influence. This vast mass of
-foreigners, coming from lands where class distinctions are centuries
-old, is regarded with hope, consciously and unconsciously, by our
-plutocratic with caste aspirations. But let us recall the facts about
-that other flood of immigration, the Irish and the Germans who came
-in the middle part of the last century--proportionately a greater
-flood than the one which has been sweeping in upon us for the last
-twenty years. In the fifties of the last century, as to-day, it was
-confidently predicted that the downfall of Democracy had already
-begun. The slavocracy of the South struck hands with the then existing
-manufacturing plutocracy of the North, and the basis of the Northern
-plutocracy was the hordes of ignorant immigrants. What happened?
-The war? More than that. Democracy absorbed away the basis of the
-rising Northern aristocracy just as the war swept away the basis of
-slavocracy. The children and grandchildren of the immigrants became the
-most strenuous of Americans.
-
-Our “foreign element” does not remain foreign. It comes here to become
-American, and it sets about the accomplishment of its purpose with an
-energy and a resolution that are unconquerable. When our plutocracy of
-to-day leans upon the “foreign element” it leans upon a breaking reed.
-And the more heavily it leans the worse will be the fall.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In manners more easily than any other way can we see Democracy in
-progress. There should be no confusing that respectful consideration
-for others, which in an honest way most of us have, with the European
-idea of deference. Whether at home or abroad, the big asset of the
-American is his lack of deference, his freedom from that which angered
-Walt Whitman into crying out haughtily:
-
-“By heaven, there has been about enough of doffing and deprecating. I
-find no sweeter fat than that which clings to my own bones.”
-
-Manners bespeak mental attitude; and mental attitude is the man.
-Americans should be careful how they permit themselves to trifle with
-their manners. We are hearing a great deal about “growing distinctions
-between class and mass” now-a-days. Many are “viewing with alarm” and
-“deeply deploring” such evidences of it as, to use the most often cited
-instance, the increasing tendency of well-to-do parents to send their
-children to private schools instead of, as formerly, to the public
-school.
-
-The viewers with alarm seem to miss the point. It is not the “mass”
-that is going to suffer by this imported passion for exclusiveness; it
-is the “class.” The “class” cuts itself off from the “mass,” from the
-full, strong currents of democratic life which alone give vitality and
-endurance. The mass remains vital and energetic and progressive; the
-class withers and shrivels and sloughs away.
-
-Nevertheless, the disposition on the part of some Americans to despise
-and forsake the splendid triumph-producing ideas of their country for
-the mean and petty, disaster and decay-producing ideas of the Old
-World, is a matter which should not be passed over without comment. Of
-necessity our snobs will be pushed aside and trampled in the resistless
-onrush of the Democratic idea. The nation would be feeble indeed if it
-could be halted or even slackened by such an obstacle. But the snobs
-ought to be noted and warned. Disobedience to the great laws which
-determine the evolution of mankind is important only to the disobedient
-individual. But it is part of our humanitarian duty as democrats to be
-patient with the ignorant, the weak and the erring, and to be helpful
-to them as far as we can. It is impossible for any one with the broad
-sympathies which Democracy engenders not to feel the impulses of pity
-when he sees fellow-beings, through vanity or ignorance, flinging
-themselves and their innocent young children across the very pathway of
-the mighty wave of Democracy.
-
-A snob is a person who feels inferior and wants company in his misery,
-and longs for the consolation of finding those even lower than himself.
-Snobism should be exterminated, just as, more and more scientifically,
-bodily disease is being stamped out. The snob is the only one who
-wants class distinctions, or who can encourage their existence. It is
-the snob who returns from abroad deeply impressed by courtesies shown
-him over there in expectation of and in exchange for tips. He uses
-his first intake of native air to fall afoul of the native manners.
-And no doubt our manners do need improving. We have always been in a
-great hurry under press of work, and there is still a great deal more
-to do than our competent doers can find time for. But in polishing
-our manners we must be careful to use a sound brand of democratic
-polish, not the English brand so much admired by those who yearn for a
-deference from others which they would not when alone venture to show
-themselves.
-
-Back of manners is instinct. Often a man’s lack of manners enables us
-to see whether his instincts are right or not. Aristocratic manners
-hide moral and mental defects, just as whiskers and clothes hide
-physical defects. What we ought to develop is sincere manners--not the
-bowings and scrapings of fear and cupidity and servility. Democratic
-manners!
-
-Good manners among the various kinds of public and semi-public servants
-in England would not be considered good manners here. Without disputing
-the point with those admirers of the English servant, we must insist
-that it would be ridiculous for a self-respecting American citizen to
-grovel and scrape and look and act “humble.” We want no servility here,
-much as we would like to please those persons who constantly feel the
-need of assurances from others that they are as grand folks as they
-would like to think themselves.
-
-Scraping and cringing, whether in a duke or in a domestic, are as bad
-manners for a human being as are arrogance and impertinence.
-
-The grotesque nature of the snob complaints against the manners of our
-everyday people is striking when one recognizes a certain criticism
-that can justly be made against us. It is among so-called well-bred
-people, a certain brand of them, our snobs, that bad manners are most
-prevalent. For out of them is left that on which alone good manners
-can be built--the proud, erect, democratic spirit.
-
-It is not difficult to have good manners in a graded social system. It
-is extremely difficult to have good manners in a Democracy. Any one can
-easily be a snob, a looker-up and a looker-down. But how very difficult
-it is to be a simple, unaffected man or woman, considerate, courteous,
-looking all other men and women straight in the eyes and saying: “You
-are certainly as good as I am. I hope I am as good as you are.”
-
-“I am your equal” is at the basis of democratic bad manners. “You are
-my equal” is the basis of democratic good manners.
-
-Again and again in fashionable society, frequently among those most
-prone to call their poorer countrymen and women ill-mannered, there are
-barbarities and repulsive lapses of good taste not merely tolerated,
-but approved as marks of fashion and refinement. For example: A rich
-woman gives a cotillon, provides many thousand dollars’ worth of
-handsome favors. You look about the ballroom--there sits a circle of
-girls, pretty and ugly and passable, attractive and unattractive. Some
-are loaded down with favors--you can hardly see their radiant faces
-for the mass of articles which testify to their popularity.
-
-Others have only a few favors, and those of the poorest. Yet there
-they must sit, acting as foils for the pretty and lucky girls who are
-emphasizing their homeliness and bad luck. Their sufferings do not show
-in their faces--at least not very plainly. But they would not be human
-if they did not feel the pangs of humiliated and wounded vanity at this
-most conspicuous advertisement of their inferiority in charm.
-
-Yet the cotillon is regarded as the very highest kind of refined social
-entertainment. And hostesses will beam upon this sorry scene with
-never a thought for the sufferings of their slighted and wounded girl
-guests. In a truly refined society would any one ever give any form of
-entertainment at which there would be frank discrimination among the
-guests?
-
-Again, a woman gives a dinner. You go to her house and find her
-receiving in a magnificent dress and displaying hundreds of thousands
-of dollars’ worth of jewelry. She is far and away the most gorgeously,
-the most expensively dressed person at her dinner. She outshines all
-her women guests. In a truly sensitively refined society would a
-hostess do this? Would she not rather dress simply, even plainly?
-Her dinner, and its service, should of course be the best she can
-provide--there she is honoring her guests. But in her own dress, in
-the one feature of her entertainment where invidious and humiliating
-comparisons could be instantly made, she would think not of gratifying
-her own vanity, but of putting her guests at their ease. And so she
-would save her best jewels and dresses for places other than her own
-house and eyes other than those of her own guests.
-
-The kinds of grossly bad manners of which these are fair and familiar
-examples would not surprise us in Europe, where the education is narrow
-and souls are shaped in pettiness and vulgarity by class distinctions.
-But they would and do surprise us in America.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is one trait in our national character that is a veritable
-Gibraltar against caste tendencies. It is that passion for
-up-to-dateness, which is so American, which is the cause of American
-progress, which is the secret of the ever rising plane of the comfort
-and intelligence of the American masses.
-
-A European landowner or manufacturer, filled with the spirit of
-conservatism, the spirit of “good enough” and “it will do” and “don’t
-destroy old landmarks,” clings to musty and rusty antiquities, hampers
-himself and his associates and neighbors, drags and makes them drag
-at the wheels of advance. With the American, how quickly is the new
-building, the new machine, the new method already improved into
-antiquity! Away with it! Replace it by the latest and best. Better
-one big item in the profit and loss account than steadily decreasing
-profits and wages and products, and steadily increasing losses through
-the triumphs of competitors. The new, always the new! The new, always
-hopeful of the new! Give the new a trial! To-day must be better than
-yesterday; to-morrow will surely be better still. That is America.
-
-And this same spirit wages incessant and successful war against caste.
-If the new man is the best man we put him to the front. Does our
-“irreverence” for things ancient sometimes offend a super-æsthetic
-few? It is a pity they are so enraptured by European picturesqueness
-of the antique that they fail to note the European peasant bending
-and groaning under the weight of the past. Does this disrespect for
-hampering tradition proclaim us “new”? That is well. When did youth
-become a calamity and a reproach? May we ever be “new,” looking at the
-problems of life with hopeful young eyes, confident that better, more
-beautiful things lie in the future than past suns ever shone upon.
-
-There are two kinds of stability--the stability of the ship rotting at
-its wharf; the stability of the ship, strong and steady, on its way
-through the midst of the sea.
-
-America is all for the latter. It abhors barnacles and rust. And it
-combats monopolistic tendencies most fiercely because, however adroitly
-disguised as “communities of interest,” they promote the stability of
-stagnation, blindfold the eager eyes of competition, bribe brain and
-muscle to sloth, hold up the heavy hands of sluggard and incompetent,
-and discourage individual ambition and hope. There should be no
-structure of any kind whatsoever, whether national or social, which,
-when it has clearly outlived its use, can be saved by sentiment or
-interest or bulwarks of brainless boodle-bags. And Democracy will have
-none such. Let those who tremble for our future be calmed. As for those
-who fancy they can in their own interest create such structures, let
-them read history and learn to laugh at their folly.
-
-The principle applies to those less tangible but more insidious
-structures--those ideas that would give permanence or prominence to
-people because of what some one else has been, or what they have been
-in the past--structures existent only in the minds of comparatively
-few, gone daft in their love of European imitation. But we tear down
-too quickly for them. While the fine building of class distinctions is
-constructing, changes occur that knock out the foundation stones.
-
-An old New York “aristocrat”--his grandfather came over in the
-steerage--glanced around the Metropolitan Opera House one night not
-long ago and said: “There are not a dozen families on the list of
-boxholders twenty years ago that are on that list to-day. All new
-people--and from heaven knows where.” Where were the new people from?
-Why, from whence this old “aristocrat’s” grandparents came, from where
-his grandchildren will be.
-
-Whenever a fence is put up by any group of people around themselves
-one of two things happens. Either those inside grow terribly weary of
-their exclusiveness, and, finding that no particular benefit seems to
-be coming from it, voluntarily let down the fence; or the society-mad
-herd, seeing the fence, makes a rush for it to get in. A coarse
-rattling of hoofs and horns, a discovery of a loose paling, a crash, a
-mad scramble, and there are more inside than out.
-
-Democracy is as much the law of our social order as gravitation is of
-our physical order. Those who don’t like it will, if they are wise,
-either leave the country or adjust themselves and their children to
-its conditions. For if they stay and bring up their children out of
-harmony with the existing and unalterable order, their children will
-be punished, even though they themselves, through obedience in their
-earlier lives, escape the worst consequences of their folly.
-
-The part of the coming generation that is trained in Democracy is the
-part that will survive and prosper and progress. The part that is bred
-in exclusiveness and caste feeling is going to be bitterly discontented
-and deplorably unprogressive certainly, and in all probability, except
-in a few rare cases, downright unprosperous.
-
-Why do not the plutocratic “exclusives” and aspirants to exclusiveness
-see these things and take warning? Because vanity is so much stronger
-in influence over the average human being than is reason. They pile up
-the millions, make safe investments, plot monopolies that will insure
-stability of property, and imagine that their family line will be
-secure. Then they educate their children to folly and superciliousness
-and economic helplessness or at best give them a training not in
-business, in useful labor, but in the truly aristocratic chicanery of
-high finance. Thus does Nature, abhorring permanence, craftily use them
-for their own undoing. Whom the gods wish to destroy they first make
-drunk on the fumes of vanity.
-
-The plutocracy and its imitators bring up their children in hot-houses.
-Some of the youngsters are ejected from the hot-house and exposed as
-soon as they are grown--or sooner; others remain in the hot-house
-and perhaps breed there. But the day of fate comes. The hot-house is
-emptied or destroyed.
-
-Fortunately for the masses and their children, fortunately for the
-prosperity and progress of the race, few can build these hot-houses;
-only a few can dwell in them. And with the swift progress of Democracy
-in these modern days, this cruel, mocking favoritism swiftly decreases.
-
-Manners there can be, but they must be democratic manners. Refinement,
-culture, there can be, but it must be democratic. Idealism there can
-be, but it must be true idealism, broad, deep and high, not a “class”
-matter, not a vanity, not a pretentious crushing down of millions to
-make luxurious holiday for a few.
-
-The aristocratic idealisms in manners, education, politics, religion,
-mode of life, are fleeing like shades of night before the bright
-daylight of Democracy. Only ignorance could ever have thought them
-fair.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE COMPELLER OF EQUALITY
-
-
-Ever since the first tall chimneys unfurled the sooty banners of the
-new, the industrial civilization, we have had the cry that the power
-machine is a monster whose reign means the debasement of the masses
-of mankind. And latterly, throughout the world, but most loudly in
-America, which has been foremost in promoting the new order, it has
-been charged that the men in control of the new order, the business
-men, are merciless and relentless; that in the struggle for markets and
-for profits they are trampling morality and all the other restraints
-and ideals. Now comes Thorstein Veblen, lately Assistant Professor of
-Political Economy at the University of Chicago, to formulate these
-charges upon a scientific basis. In his _Theory of Business Enterprise_
-he makes the following declarations of scientific principle:
-
-First: That “the machine is a leveller, a vulgarizer, whose ends seem
-to be the extirpation of all that is respectable, noble and dignified
-in human intercourse and ideals”; that “in the nature of the case the
-cultural growth dominated by the machine industry is of a skeptical,
-matter-of-fact complexion, materialistic, unmoral, unpatriotic,
-undevout”; that “the machine, their (the masses’) master, is no
-respecter of persons, and knows neither morality nor dignity, nor
-prescriptive right, divine or human.”
-
-Second: That “the machine methods which are corrupting the hearts and
-manners of the workmen are profitable to the business man.”
-
-Third: That “the economic welfare of the community at large is best
-secured by a facile and uninterrupted interplay of the various
-processes which make up the industrial system at large; but the
-pecuniary interests of the business men, in whose hands lies the
-discretion in the matter, are not necessarily best served by an
-unbroken maintenance of the industrial balance. Especially is this
-true as regards those greater business men whose interests are very
-extensive. Gain may come to them from a given disturbance of the
-system, whether the disturbance makes for heightened facility or for
-widespread hardship, very much as a speculator in grain futures may be
-either a bull or a bear.”
-
-Fourth: That, these being the facts, there has arisen a “class of
-pecuniary experts” who “have an interest in making the disturbances
-of the system large and frequent”; that, under the new civilization,
-industry being carried on for business, and not business for the sake
-of industry, such disturbances are as a matter of fact both large
-and frequent, are incident to a merciless struggle among business
-men for the supremacy which monopoly alone gives; that, while the
-business man, in common with other men, is moved by humane ideals,
-“motives of this kind detract from business efficiency, and an undue
-yielding to them on the part of business men is to be deprecated as an
-infirmity”; that, while sentiment has a certain force “in restraint
-upon pecuniary advantage, not in abrogation of it,” the “code of
-business ethics consists, after all, of mitigations of the maxim,
-_caveat emptor_ (let the buyer beware)”; that, “under the system of
-handicraft and neighborhood industry, the adage ‘Honesty is the best
-policy’ seems, on the whole, to have been accepted and to have been
-true. This adage has come down from the days before the machine’s
-régime and before modern business enterprise”; that, under modern
-circumstances of lack of personal contact between business man and
-customer, “business management has a chance to proceed on a temperate
-and sagacious calculation of profit and loss, untroubled by sentimental
-considerations of human kindness or irritation or of honesty.”
-
-Professor Veblen’s ideas have been given in his own language so far
-as has been permitted by his passionate professorial predilection for
-polysyllables--or, has he used long words and involved phrases from
-the prudent motive of screening from “the vulgar” the ferocity of his
-attack upon business men, rather than from the reactionary motive of
-scholastic snobbery? However this may be, to close study he makes it
-clear enough that, according to his reading of political economy:
-
-First: The machine is a monster.
-
-Second: It is making monsters of men--brutal serfs of the masses;
-bandits, liars, thieves and cheats of the managers and directors.
-
-A savage indictment that! A terrifying, topsy-turvying of the dearest
-beliefs and hopes of us who look upon steam and electricity as
-efficient agents of Democracy, the strong and inevitable unshacklers
-of the bodies and minds of mankind. But Professor Veblen has stated
-only the extreme of what is said without denial every day; he is simply
-the courageous spokesman of the majority of the classes who write and
-speak; he is putting into scientific formula the sneer of every snob
-who professes contempt of business and, indeed, of all other forms of
-modern democratic activity. His book, therefore, serves admirably as
-a provocation for presenting a few facts and suggestions on the other
-side.
-
-Is it true, either in whole or in part, that our industrial
-civilization is degrading the masses into mere appurtenances of the
-machine, mere mechanical aids to the heaping up of vast profits in the
-treasuries of the few? Is it true, either in whole or in part, that our
-business men, whether great or small, whether captains of industry or
-sub-officers, are degenerating into dishonesty and the short-sighted
-selfishness of the slave-master?
-
-A surface survey of our time reveals much that seems to compel a
-reluctant affirmative answer. To glance at a newspaper is to read
-of the cynical tyrannies of beef, oil, coal, iron, grain, railway
-magnates, who make their infamies nauseating by ardent professions of
-patriotism and piety. And from time to time the shameless adulterations
-of food and drink culminate in some sensational slaughter of people
-wholesale, suggesting vastly greater slaughters effected quietly from
-day to day.
-
-And we see persons grown enormously rich upon stolen privileges of
-various kinds exhibiting themselves in luxurious ostentation, offering
-tempting rewards to sycophancy and pauperizing those fighting on the
-poverty line by supercilious gifts and condescensions. We see rascality
-rewarded with wealth and honors, success bought with self-sale. We see
-corruption, conspicuous and hideous, everywhere upon the surface of the
-social body. And we turn away heartsick, convinced that the Veblens
-have stated the truth with moderation.
-
-But if we turn away to read history--not the fables and fancies, the
-poetical romances and romantic poems from which the Veblens draw their
-“facts,” but the true story of the mankind that was--if we read that
-painful recital, we turn again to the mankind of our day, and it is
-like a landscape from which the storms of winter are rolling away. The
-corruption which revolted us is still there, just as hideous as before;
-but we now see that it is the poison which was working in the veins and
-arteries of the patient and is now at the surface, on its way out of
-the body before the victorious legions of health.
-
-Professor Veblen, and his like, are prone to use, in writing and
-speaking, words of many meanings; they unconsciously play upon these
-words, and so fall into grievous error. For instance, Professor Veblen
-talks of ours as a “machine” civilization--as if the machine were its
-new and characteristic factor, determining its form and its destiny.
-In fact, civilization from its very inception has been “machine-made.”
-It began when our remotest ancestor snatched the bough of a tree
-and decided thenceforth to walk erect, using the bough as staff and
-club--that is, as a machine. Every tool of every kind has been a
-machine; and the progress of the race has been determined by the
-number and efficiency of its machines, both those designed to compel
-peace and those designed to further the arts of peace. If you wish
-to measure the actual value of any civilization--value in producing
-healthy minds in healthy bodies--you need only inquire into the kind
-and number and efficiency of its machines. Why? Because the machine
-represents the effort of man to adjust himself to his environment, his
-environment to himself. It gives power to him, whoever he may be, that
-learns to use it; it leaves him who does not avail himself of its aid,
-whether through idleness or ignorance or intemperance or incapacity,
-about where he would have been--certainly no worse off than he would
-have been--had mankind remained in the helpless, machineless “state of
-nature.”
-
-Evolution has so unevenly affected the human race that, fortunately for
-us in the foremost files of progress, we need not rely upon history
-and cautious conjecture for our encouraging and inspiring knowledge of
-the world of the past, which enables us to see how far and how high we
-have got, and that the journey is still swiftly, if steeply, upward.
-There is hardly a stage of human progress that is not now represented
-on the earth, inviting any man with a passion for the “glorious past,”
-to disillusionize himself and cheer his pessimism. And we are enabled
-easily to reconstruct any period of the past. Thus, we have visual
-confirmation of the truth about Athens which history can only suggest.
-We know that the Athens of Plato and Praxiteles was no more the true
-Athens than is the intellect and tradition of Booker Washington a true
-type of the intelligence and condition of the overwhelming mass of our
-eight million negroes. We come to understand what Athens’ twenty-five
-thousand free citizens and many hundred thousand slaves really meant;
-we penetrate into the profligacy of the Athenian rich, the degradation
-of the Athenian masses; we realize why Aristides was banished for being
-just and Alcibiades carried on the shoulders of the Athenian Democracy
-(!) because he was a degenerate and a debauchee. And so on through all
-the past.
-
-In like manner, we need not rely upon the poets and poetical
-historians, as Professor Veblen apparently does, for knowledge of what
-the “handicraft” civilization meant. We can study it, as it survives
-practically unchanged in the miserable hovels of Bohemian and Italian
-and Spanish peasants, where men and beasts rot together in conditions
-of sanitation that would not long be tolerated in any place where the
-“machine civilization” has inaugurated its high and ever higher moral
-and physical standards. We need not go so far from home. To get a
-picture of a prosperous handicraft city of the middle ages, go to New
-York’s East Side, where are the fast disappearing sweatshops that were
-transplanted from “handicraft neighborhoods” of Europe. The poets have
-it otherwise; and so do those historians who like to paint alluring
-pictures for their readers--and hate to grub for facts. But there is
-the grisly truth. Contrast the average sweatshop with the average
-factory. No; contrast the best sweatshop with the worst factory.
-
-Partly because some men are so much shrewder and more persistent and
-more far-sighted than the masses of their fellows, but chiefly because
-the mass of mankind has not been long enough emancipated by the power
-of the machine to learn how to work intelligently and efficiently,
-the power machine, become enormously beneficent through steam and
-electricity, has not yet done all, or even more than a very small part,
-of what it can do, and shall do, for mankind. But already--in less
-than ten decades, less than seven--what a forward stride! In place of
-a world where all but a handful toiled early and late--from dawn until
-far into the night--toiled that others might reap all and they only
-blows and the meagre bread of bitterness, we now have a world where
-millions upon millions are comfortable. And as for the masses and
-toilers still in the shackles of the old régime, are they not better
-off than they were under that régime where wages were alms, and alms
-of the scantiest; where the only lights in the black darkness of utter
-ignorance were the will-o’-the-wisps of Superstition, drawing man
-farther and farther into the morass of slavery to king and noble and
-priest?
-
-In writing works on political economy, professors should not study the
-conditions of labor before steam and electricity in poems and romances
-and from orchestra stalls at productions of “Die Meistersinger.” There
-is not a serf toiling in the deepest depth of the most hell-like mine
-in Siberia, upon whose shoulders, and upon whose soul, the burden is
-not lighter for the modern expansion of the civilization of the machine.
-
-The truth is, steam and electricity have made the human race suddenly
-and acutely self-conscious as a race for the first time in its
-existence. They have constructed a mighty mirror wherein humanity sees
-itself, with all its faults and follies, and diseases and deformities.
-And the sudden, unprecedented spectacle is so startling, is in such
-abhorrent contrast with poetical pictures of the past, painted in
-school and popular text-books, that men of defective perspective
-shrink, and shriek: “Mankind has become monstrous!” But not so. Man,
-rising, rising, rising through the ages, is not nearer to the dark and
-bloody and cruel place of his origin than to the promised land toward
-which his ideals are drawing him. His diseases and deformities are
-of the past; and virtues that were, up to a few decades ago, almost
-unattainable ideals, are now so nearly a part of his natural adornment
-that hope of the nearness of the luminous penumbra of the Golden Age
-seems not unjustified.
-
-What our grandfathers regarded as the natural and just demands of
-employer upon employé are now regarded as rigorous and tyrannous
-exactions of a brute. And in trying still to continue such exactions
-men slink behind the lawyer-constructed shield of the corporation, that
-they may be easier in conscience by trying to believe they are not
-“personally” responsible.
-
-This brings us, naturally, to the charges against business men.
-
-Professor Veblen does not, in so many words, assert that there was a
-time when business men were in business with other motives--presumably
-idealistic--more potent than profits. But he forces his readers to
-infer that this was the case--and that lofty view is always taken by
-the assailants of our present civilization. That is, man used to be an
-altruistic animal; Democracy and the machine--for you will find that
-these assailants are always hitting at Democracy over the shoulders of
-the machine--have made him a selfish and cruel rascal.
-
-False weights were found in the ruins of the oldest city that has
-yet been exhumed. And false weights will probably be consumed when
-the earth drops into the sun and the heavens are rolled together
-like a scroll. Ancient records and ancient statute books are full of
-evidence that every new plundering device--from capitalistic and labor
-monopolies, secret rebates and majority owners swindling minority
-owners, down to adulterations and crooked scales--was familiar to our
-ancestors of the plateau of Iran before the migrations. Vice is the
-old inhabitant; virtue is the newcomer, the immigrant, received with
-reluctance and compelled to fight for every inch of ground he gains.
-As for specific testimony as to past ages, we have the testimony of
-all the old writers that the mercantile classes, the business men,
-were “without honor,” mean of soul, oppressors of their employés,
-robbers of their customers. We happen to know, also, that as for the
-other classes--the proud kings and haughty nobles and the rest--they
-certainly had a very quaint interpretation of that word “honor” when a
-murderer, a tyrant, a gambler, a practitioner of every vice that rots
-its slave and ruins its victims could yet be a “gentleman of unsullied
-honor.” And we know, finally, that only with the rise of the business
-men to influence and authority did the standard of honor become what
-all the world now recognizes as “ideal.” The very Biblical phrases in
-which honesty is enjoined are altogether commercial, are the language
-of the business world, of business men.
-
-There are two vital facts about our new industrial civilization which
-its critics neglect:
-
-First--It has created an unprecedented and infinitely great number
-of opportunities to dishonesty of the kinds that are, to as yet but
-slightly enlightened human nature, potently tempting.
-
-Second--It has created new conditions of the moral, as well as of the
-material, relations of man to the masses of his fellow-men which are as
-yet imperfectly understood and constitute a debatable ground for even
-the fairest and rigidest consciences. Men now see that large action of
-any kind involves large evil as well as large good; and the balance of
-right and wrong is not easy to adjust, except in the tranquil studies
-of critics and theorists.
-
-To the first of these two facts may justly be attributed the
-unquestionably large amount of dishonesty--dishonesty clearly and
-generally recognized as such. To the second of these two facts is
-undoubtedly due the most of the wrong-doing by men who in their private
-relations are above reproach. These statements are not put forward to
-justify men for yielding to temptation to dishonesty and to justify
-men in acts, approval of which can be got from conscience by sophistry
-only, if at all. They are put forward simply to explain why it is that,
-when there are actually more honesty and conscientiousness, and they of
-a higher quality, than ever before in human history, there should be a
-seeming of more dishonesty and consciencelessness. Further in support
-of the same view, while wrongdoers of the past were hidden or veiled
-by the imperfect means of publicity, wrongdoers of to-day are at once
-searched out and pilloried by the press and by public opinion. Up to
-the middle of the last century men knew little of the large evil done
-them, and that little imperfectly; now, knowledge of individual acts
-of uprightness, once scattered everywhere by being immortalized in
-tradition, rhymed and prose, is lost in the vast revelations of huge
-and ancient wrongs persisting.
-
-It is no new thing for a man to be admired and envied for wealth and
-station, regardless of how he got them. But it is a new thing in
-the world for the public conscience to be so sensitive that a man
-in possession of wealth or station, got not by outright and open
-robbery--methods not long ago regarded without grave disapproval--but
-by means that are questionable and suspicious merely, should be in an
-apologetic attitude, should feel called upon to defend himself and
-to give large sums in philanthropy in the effort to justify and to
-rehabilitate himself. Steam and electricity have given to man a sudden,
-vast power. It is not strange that he should commit errors and crimes
-in working out its unfamiliar possibilities. It is not strange that
-abuses, as old as the selfish struggle for existence, should succeed in
-adapting themselves to the new conditions, should contrive to persist.
-But is it not strange that professors of political economy, supposedly
-familiar with the truth about the past, should be so narrow and twisted
-in historic and psychological perspective as to misunderstand these
-simple phenomena? And what must we think of them if, in support of
-their pessimistic and unwarranted jeremiads, they conjure the fantastic
-and preposterous and long-exploded myth of humanity’s past Golden Age?
-
-According to Professor Veblen, honesty is no longer the best _policy_.
-What an incredible misreading of the very sign-board of our time! Under
-the old régime of priest or soldier or prince, honesty was distinctly
-not the best policy. Strategy, dexterity, chicane, finesse, sophistry,
-cozening--these were the sure, the only ways to preferment. For, under
-those régimes preferment meant securing the right to live without work
-upon the toil of others. And, to confine ourselves to the mercantile
-classes, was not the successful business man he who got from prince or
-priest or tyrant the right to rob the people, he who got a monopoly or
-a license or a concession?
-
-How is it under the new régime, the democratic, the “vulgarizing”
-régime of the business man? Our chief troubles come from survivals
-into the present of the tenacious roots of the past’s methods to
-success, come from the persistence of the idea that by wit and not
-by wisdom and justice does the truly strong man truly prevail. But
-slowly--and surely!--the “vulgar” régime is enforcing the laws and
-sanctions of “vulgar” morality. Even our robber barons demand honesty,
-strict honesty, among themselves in their conspiracies to monopolize
-to their own profit the benefits intended for all. When they violate
-the law of honesty, they do it in secrecy and make haste to deny their
-crime and to return to their allegiance to the law. Honesty is the
-very ground upon which a commercial civilization must rest. That our
-business men are, as a class, and with rare exceptions, honest, keeping
-their bargains, giving and receiving the value agreed upon, is proved
-beyond question by the fact that we as a nation prosper, that our
-abject poverty is almost confined to newly arrived immigrants and to
-our only recently emancipated negroes.
-
-Where a prince is armed with power arbitrarily to suspend the natural
-laws governing the intercourse of human beings, lies and dishonesty
-may, for a time, prosper; but not where the sole basis of intercourse
-is the voluntary belief of men in each other’s integrity. And more
-than ninety per cent. of our business is done upon credit! Under the
-old order, the very laws and customs, the very morality taught by the
-church, was grounded upon the justice of the unjust distribution of the
-products of labor; under the new régime, under “business enterprise,”
-law and custom and religion teach only value for value received.
-
-Professor Veblen does well to criticise the misguided attempts of
-philanthropy and so-called charity to restore the old relations of
-superior and inferior. But his criticism that they are insufficient and
-not in keeping with the “machine civilization’s” merciless demand for
-economic efficiency does not go far enough. They are also unnecessary,
-and in large measure productive of greater ills--of pauperism and
-dependence--than those they seek to mitigate. The ills are not
-machine-created. They are inherent in the imperfect nature of man.
-They will tend wholly to disappear only when the machine’s “merciless”
-demand for efficiency is rigidly enforced. For, what is that
-“merciless” demand? What does the machine say to man? It says, “Work
-is not a curse, but a blessing. In a leisure class the only culture
-is of the germs of profligacy, superciliousness, snobbery and decay.
-All men must work, and must learn to work well. All men must serve
-that they may pay for service rendered. And where that order prevails,
-to the worker will come the full reward for his work. I, the machine,
-will make your burden into a blessing, your toil into labor, the noble,
-the dignified, the producer of civilization and self-respect. I will
-widen your horizon until you see that all men are brothers, brothers
-in the business of, by business enterprise, increasing and creating
-wants, and of, by business enterprise, satisfying them. I will give
-you ideals that are true and just--not loyalty to idle, thieving
-prince, not slavery to irrational superstition, not bondage to bloody
-soldier-tyrant, but intelligent loyalty to truth and justice and
-progress. I will make you master of nature and of yourself, servant of
-the true religion and the true morality.”
-
-Until now has been reserved the inquiry into how it happens that these
-critics of industrialism fall into their fatal errors. That inquiry
-will not long detain us. Professor Veblen naïvely gives himself and
-his fellow-critics away. He confesses why he hates the régime of
-the business man, what he means when he calls the machine industry
-“materialistic, unmoral, undevout.” “Business life,” he says, “does
-not further the growth of manners and breeding, pride of caste,
-punctilios of honor or even religious fervor.” And he finds his hope
-for the future in militarism and imperialism--which he, by the way,
-unjustly charges to the business men instead of to the politicians
-pandering to the still lively passions of man’s inheritance from the
-past when all the world was militaristic and imperialistic. “There can
-be no serious question,” says he, “but that a consistent return to
-the ancient virtues of allegiance, piety, servility, graded dignity,
-class prerogatives, and prescriptive authority would greatly conduce
-to popular content and to the facile management of affairs.” Nor does
-he conceal under the ponderous sarcasm lurking in that statement the
-truth of his own fixed belief in at least a measure of those “ancient
-virtues.” For his whole book, and the speeches and writings of
-practically all the critics of industrialism, show that these critics
-abhor the new virtues as “materialistic.”
-
-The motive in the mind of each critic is a little different from that
-of his fellow-critics. One wishes college professors and the like
-to be in control; another is for the supremacy of birth; another for
-the supremacy of culture, whatever that may mean. Another wants the
-preacher back at the helm, with mankind an open-mouthed, uncritical
-congregation. Each wants the particular class or condition to which
-he himself has the good fortune to belong, to have the chief say in
-affairs. But all agree in denouncing the business man who is actually
-in control--and will remain there. They profess to despise money, yet
-they hate him for his profits. They profess to prefer the intellectual
-and moral dividends which their own intellectual and moral enterprises
-declare; yet their dainty fingers twitch for the material dividends
-which his material enterprises naturally declare. They would deny him
-the gains which are the only--and, as they loudly profess, the poor
-enough--rewards for wasting his life upon the gross and sordid things.
-
-The business man--and that means the worker, the “toiler”--is in
-control, is there to stay, because the human animal is so constituted
-that its material affairs--proper food, proper clothing, proper
-shelter--must always be primal. Not of the _highest_ importance, but
-of the _first_ importance. And if those material matters are well
-attended to--as they will be when the worker’s instinct pervades the
-whole race--the spiritual matters, the growth of body and soul, must
-inevitably prosper. The worker, the worker’s instinct, provides the
-right soil for a soul to grow in--a real soil, full of the natural
-and nourishing substances, not a fanciful, unsubstantial soil of
-false ideals, fraudulent culture and barren fiddle-faddle of closet
-theorizings.
-
-For proof that the business instinct will provide the right soil we
-need only point to our own country as it is. In America, the great
-business nation of the nations, there lives a race of idealists,
-eighty millions earnest, dominated by the instincts for self-help and
-helpfulness to others, afire with the passion for improvement, for
-education, for knowledge of all kinds and from any and all sources.
-
-The world has wandered in the swamps of vain and sentimental imaginings
-long enough. By all means, let us have it established on the firm
-ground and in the straight, upward roads of science and business.
-The sun shines upon those roads by day, the moon and the stars light
-them by night; the flowers bloom beside them--and within reach of the
-humblest wayfarer.
-
-This gospel will not be attractive to _poseurs_ and to the lazy and
-the incompetent. But it is gospel, the gospel of Democracy, America’s
-gospel. In the cargo of merchandise, Enlightenment and Democracy always
-travel as stowaway missionaries; when the cargo is landed, they go
-ashore and begin to preach.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-DEMOCRACY’S DYNAMO
-
-
-Education is the huge dynamo which supplies power to the American
-people. Not in history or in legend is there recorded such an outburst
-of international curiosity as that about the real America, as
-distinguished from the America created in the minds of Europeans by
-our multi-millionaires, since it became not merely agricultural but
-also an industrial world-factor, inevitably dominant in an era whose
-civilization is the first based upon peace and indissolubly wedded to
-peaceful arts. Europe has not been satisfied with inspecting what comes
-to her. Such specimens only whetted her curiosity to an edge as fine
-as that which cut the home ties of adventurous spirits when Columbus
-exhibited his Indians and his gold at the court of his patrons.
-
-The Europeans, and the Asiatics, too, hastened to dispatch to us all
-manner of commissioners, semi-official and private, from princes of
-reigning houses to delegates from labor unions. And each of these
-spies--of the splendid modern kind--has been charged to seek and find
-and forthwith bring home an answer to the all-important question: “How
-_do_ they do it?”
-
-And these gentlemen have peeked and poked and peered in the
-friendliest, most flattering way imaginable. They have examined palace
-and tenement and cottage, and their tenants. They have eaten and drunk
-of all the products of the land, and have listened to speeches numerous
-and have read newspapers numberless. They have watched wheels go round
-in factories--and in heads as well. They have heard those who say “the
-captains of industry did it,” those who say “it was done in spite of
-the captains of industry and the high financiers.” And after tasting
-and seeing and smelling and touching and hearing, from Maine to the
-Golden Gate, these envoys have gone back, and with one accord have
-replied:
-
-“They do it by education.”
-
-From the end of the Civil War--an interruption of our progress to rid
-ourselves of a drag upon it--we have been educating as we never did
-before, as no other people ever did or now does. Immigrants have
-poured in; our great “infant industry” which protectionist and free
-trader alike believe in protecting and fostering, has been exceedingly
-expansive. And we have put home and foreign product into the great
-educational plant--from half to two-thirds of all between five years
-old and twenty going through school and academy and college. The
-average annual number who now receive formal education is one-fifth
-of our total population. And more than a million of our young men and
-women--one in every ten of both sexes of the higher education age, one
-in every six young men of that age--are annually in the universities,
-colleges, academies, business and professional schools. Not enough, not
-nearly enough; but in hopeful proportion to what used to be.
-
-“I think, therefore I am,” runs the Descartes formula. We teach our
-youth to think in order that they may really _be_--be individual, be
-proud and self-respecting and self-reliant, be free with the freedom no
-government or law can give or secure, or take away. In the educational
-institutions this impulse gets form and direction that it may develop
-efficient manhood. And against the thinking toiler all the forces
-of ignorance and passion and wasteful luxury, of base and foolish
-political, social, industrial ideas, cannot prevail.
-
-The first free school opened on these shores was in New York City on
-Manhattan Island. Of all the settlers who came to America the Dutch
-alone understood and believed in the free public school, offering free
-education not as alms but as a right. They had had it at home. They
-established it here, and set the example which was followed by the
-other colonists, first of all by those New Englanders who had lived in
-the Holland that fought Alva and Philip, and had there absorbed some
-democratic ideas. Holland was the godmother of modern Democracy, was
-the nursery of the modern public school.
-
-These words are from the pen of John of Nassau, the oldest brother of
-that friend of civil and religious liberty, William the Silent:
-
-“Soldiers and patriots thus educated (in free schools) are better than
-all armies, arsenals, armories, munitions, alliances and treaties that
-can be had or imagined in the world.”
-
-Those words, written three hundred years ago by a man who had devoted
-his life to the study of the rights and wrongs of the common man, sum
-up the whole story. How his eloquent common sense contrasts with the
-shrieking of those little Americans who think that a cannon shot can
-penetrate further than a noble idea! How this old friend of freedom
-rebukes the puny, alleged statesmen who fancy that the manhood of
-this republic was developed on the battlefields, instead of realizing
-that military prowess is only one matter-of-course evidence of its
-existence! Enlightenment and Democracy make men who _live_ for their
-country--and that is the new force in the world.
-
-Let the people who fear for the future of the democratic spirit
-of this people look upon the spectacle of our free schools, those
-millions of young heads bent over books, those millions of young
-brains learning to think, to reason, learning to use mind and body in
-the service of civilization, real civilization. Enlightenment has won
-all the victories of the republic in the past. Its eternal warfare
-upon ignorance and incompetence, upon craft of plutocrat and craft of
-demagogue, and plausible idealism of reactionary, is the safeguard of
-the republic’s future. And one of the great agents of enlightenment, of
-Democracy--not the only great agent, not the greatest agent--is formal
-education in school, academy and college.
-
-And more important even than the formal education of the boys is the
-formal education of the girls. The other means to enlightenment are
-more accessible to the men--indeed, they compel the men to become less
-ignorant and less prejudiced in spite of themselves. But to reach
-the women, the formal education is almost indispensable, for their
-ignorance and their prejudice are more sheltered, less open to the
-light of Democracy that floods the arenas and the market places.
-
-And educated, enlightened, democratic women are of the highest
-importance to America, whose mission seems to be to lead the world in
-the march upward to that Arcady where every human unit shall have the
-chance to count as one.
-
-Our extensive and our expanding system of higher education of women
-is often bitterly assailed by educated men, by educators. Bourbonism,
-especially when bulwarked by vanity, does not yield easily. And it will
-be many a day before death reaps the last man with the passion for
-looking down on his fellow-creatures. To avoid useless dispute, admit
-that woman should look up to man. Still there remains unimpaired the
-truth that woman’s two highest functions are to be the companion of
-man and the mother of men. The profitable companion for an educated
-man must be an educated woman--educated not merely for man’s “hours of
-ease,” nor for his happily infrequent hours “when pain and anguish rack
-the brow,” but also for the hours of development and endeavor.
-
-So long as so-called education consisted in a little Latin and less
-Greek, forgotten as speedily as the business of life could crowd it
-from the mind, higher education was as unimportant to women as--well,
-as it was to man. But now that education consists in teaching not how
-the Greeks and Romans lived, but how “you and I” must live to-day and
-to-morrow, the gap between the man who has had the higher education
-and the woman who has not had it and has not supplied the deficiency,
-is wide indeed and will grow wider. If as much attention were given to
-the relations between men and women from five years after marriage on
-to the end as is given to their relations during the purely sentimental
-and transitory mating season this difference would appear in its true
-importance.
-
-The same point of view applies to woman as a mother. So long as the
-training of children centred around the slipper and the switch, an
-ignorant mother was not at a great disadvantage--the best educated
-mothers knew little. But now-a-days the child of the highly educated
-mother has an enormous advantage, other things being equal, because
-such a mother applies science to the conduct of her home as her husband
-applies it to the conduct of his profession or business.
-
-No education in the mother will compensate for lack of character.
-Character without education is infinitely better than education without
-character. But character plus education is the true ideal--and it is
-attainable.
-
-If we are speedily to enter more fully into the rich promised land
-which Democracy opens to us, we must have not only the man who knows
-but the woman who knows. After all, is not our ultimate excuse for
-being alive that we are the parents of the next generation? And there
-the woman, with practically absolute control over the next generation
-at its vital, formative age, has the better of the man. If anything,
-does she not need the higher education more than does the man?
-
-Education for the men; education for the women. But it must be
-_enlightened and enlightening_ education.
-
-Our national ideal is not a powerful state, famed and feared for
-bluster and appetite, not a people welded by unthinking passion for
-military glory into an instrument to the greed and vanity of the few;
-but manhood and womanhood, a citizenship ever wiser and stronger and
-more civilized, with ever more and more individual units that cannot
-be controlled in the mass--the democratic man and the democratic
-woman--alert, enlightened, self-reliant, free.
-
-Now, there can be no difference of opinion as to the way to this ideal,
-the way to make the individual capable to work out his own salvation
-without hindrance from the aggressiveness of his neighbor or neighbors,
-without hindrance from the prejudices begotten in and of the darkness
-of his own ignorance.
-
-Against all these foes, those without, those within, there is just one
-effective weapon--education.
-
-It is impossible for an ignorant man to be free. No matter what
-constitutions you establish, no matter what laws you pass, no matter
-how assiduously you safeguard individual rights and liberties, the
-ignorant man will still be a slave. He rejoices in his chains, his
-prejudices and his superstitions. He clings to them. He beats off those
-who seek to deliver. He welcomes those who seek to bind. He shouts for
-chains, he votes for chains--chains for himself, chains for others. If
-he is ever in the right it is because he is mistaken. And you may be
-certain that a demagogue or other slave-hunter will soon recapture him
-and restore him to his beloved bondage of error.
-
-This is why the man who aspires to freedom instinctively reaches for
-the weapon of education. This is why the American people always have
-had as their dominant passion the passion for education. This is why on
-the frontier the schoolhouse is finished before the home is furnished;
-why the washerwoman and the drayman toil to keep their children in
-school and to send at least one son to college; why our self-made men
-pour out their wealth in educational endowments; why there are all
-these colossal public appropriations for schools, academies, colleges,
-universities.
-
-What is an ignorant man?
-
-Of course there are the illiterates and the almost illiterate. But,
-numerous though they are, they do not count for much in this republic.
-They do not decide elections. They do not select candidates. They do
-not propose and compel legislation. The so-called ignorant vote is not
-a national or a local peril. It is not a national, rarely even a local
-factor.
-
-The ignorance that counts in a Democracy is educated ignorance.
-Sometimes it has only been part of the way through the common schools.
-Sometimes it has one or more university degrees. Sometimes it struts
-and preens itself as “the scholar in politics.” Only too often it
-writes books, especially histories, and in the magazines and in the
-newspapers tells how and for whom we ought to vote. More often than
-not the very conspicuous members of this ignorant class are full to
-the overflowing with knowledge, knowledge from books, knowledge from
-experience, knowledge from travel.
-
-No, education--democratic education--is not knowledge. It is not even
-experience. Profound, deadly, dangerous ignorance is compatible with
-both.
-
-What, then, is ignorance?
-
-All its shades and kinds can be so classified as to exclude none who
-ought to be included, include none who has the right to go free. Is not
-the dangerous, ignorant man of the Democracy the man who cannot reason,
-cannot think for himself?
-
-What does it mean to think for one’s self?
-
-Fortunately, it does not mean original thinking. If that were so there
-would instantly arise in the world the most contracted and exclusive
-aristocracy it has ever known. To think for one’s self does not even
-mean correctly to reason out one’s own conclusions from given premises.
-That would involve an amount of mental labor from which many brains
-might shrink. It merely means to be able to follow reasoning that is
-laid before one; to hear both sides and suspend judgment until both are
-heard; to recognize which is sound and which fallacious, and upon that
-independent and clear judgment to accept the true, or rather, to reject
-the false.
-
-A Democracy must breed citizens who think for themselves. Without them
-it cannot live. With them it cannot die. Hence it follows that in a
-Democracy education means to cultivate the ability to think for one’s
-self. Democracy means the right of private judgment. Education in and
-for a Democracy means development of the capacity to form private
-judgment.
-
-So far as the Democracy is concerned, so far as the equable
-distribution of rights and liberties is concerned, no education that
-does not increase reasonableness is of the slightest value.
-
-The education that has for its chief aims, its only real aims, culture,
-refinement, knowledge, learning, may be useful to an aristocracy like
-Great Britain, to an empire like Germany, to an autocracy like Russia.
-But it is not only not helpful to but actually hostile to democratic
-ideas and ideals. It breeds contempt on the one hand, fear and
-suspicion and hate on the other--the few looking down upon the many,
-the many looking up at the few. It makes the powerful supercilious. It
-makes the weak, whether educated or uneducated, helpless. It fills the
-brain; it does not necessarily strengthen the brain. It _gives_ a man
-something; it does not compel him to make something of himself.
-
-The truth about democratic education is indirectly recognized in
-practice more and more as science and its rigidly logical methods have
-grown in educational importance. All our modern systems of education
-are based perforce, rather than by design, in part upon teaching the
-brain to reason. But do we realize fully as yet that for us, for our
-democratic purposes of self-development and self-government, teaching
-the brain to think is not only the whole foundation of education, but
-also the sustaining part of the superstructure?
-
-Take up any one of the great newspapers of the country, the great
-reflectors of the public mind and heart and taste. A few minutes’
-searching among the advertisements will discover columns on columns
-of notices of astrologers and palmists and clairvoyants, of mediums
-and crystal gazers and cure-all doctors with their cure-all medicines.
-To whom do these dealers in the secrets of life and death, the future
-and the beyond, appeal for their comfortable incomes? To those who
-cannot read? Manifestly not. To the people in the humbler walks of
-life? Certainly not. No, they are inviting the educated classes to
-call--merchants and bankers and artisans, their wives and their
-daughters, the “well-to-do,” the reading public, the “substantial,”
-the part of the people which is commonly called “the backbone of the
-republic.”
-
-Go on to the news columns. You find some account of the doings of
-a band of thieves who have got possession of some department or
-departments of the city or state government, and have substituted for
-the statute law the law of loot. Who turned over the keys to them?
-The illiterate, the dishonest, the criminal? Not at all. Look at the
-primary rolls of the organization whom these wretches disgrace, and
-you find a thoroughly respectable, in the main intelligent, certainly
-honest, body of voters. By no stretch of the meaning could you call
-them uneducated in the sense in which that term is commonly used.
-
-In the very next column, perhaps, you read how a statesman of pious
-mien and impressive manner has been assuring his fellow-countrymen
-that they have a commission from the Almighty (which he begs leave to
-execute) calling them from their peaceful and orderly occupations and
-sending them forth to slaughter certain other men of whom they had
-not heard until a few months ago, to seize persons and property and
-to administer upon them arbitrarily. And who cheered wildly as these
-tidings of morality and civilization were proclaiming? Illiterates?
-Certainly not; but educated men, many of them highly educated, men
-who would hardly characterize such performances in private life as
-“manifest destiny” and “plain duty.”
-
-A few columns further on and you read how one is wailing like a lost
-soul over heaps of scrap metal and rags and waste paper, because he
-cannot get permission to work them over into money and so make us
-all millionaires. And who is he? A college graduate. And who are his
-supporters? Millions who have gone to school and take in the newspapers
-and magazines.
-
-These few illustrations of the reign of illogic are cited from the
-multitude available with a double purpose. In the first place, they
-faintly suggest to what an extent the citizen of a Democracy is prey
-to charlatanism. In countries with other forms of government--in
-monarchies and the like--a few charlatans are licensed and erected into
-respectability and power, and given the range of the people, while all
-others are rigidly repressed. In a Democracy any charlatan may license
-himself. The people are prey to every and any form of charlatanism,
-fraudulent or both. They must protect themselves, or they will not be
-protected at all. And right education is the only means.
-
-The second point made obvious by these examples of superstition
-theological, superstition medical, superstition political, is that
-our education in the past must have been defective and must still be
-so. It has been seeking, it now seeks, as its chief object, to impart
-knowledge, not to cultivate the art of using knowledge, the art of
-thinking correctly.
-
-The ideal has been an education that is reminiscent and is only
-incidentally constructive. The democratic ideal is the education that
-is constructive and only incidentally reminiscent.
-
-There is only one way to this true education. Just as a child is taught
-to walk, to ride, to swim, just as it is taught to read, to write, to
-cipher, with just as much care, with just as much patience, with just
-as much deliberateness of purpose, must it be taught to reason.
-
-This is not in advocacy of courses in formal logic. Those courses do
-not teach men to think. They teach men what certain other men have
-thought about the processes of thinking. And too often they teach it
-in such a way as to discourage the exercise of the reasoning faculty.
-No; the education that will soundly educate must make of every kind
-of lesson a lesson in logic, an incessant pointing out of reasons,
-reasons, reasons why certain facts are so, certain allegations false;
-an incessant demand that reasons, reasons, reasons be given--always
-reasons. The interrogation point should be the symbol over the door
-of every school, high and low, as the indication of what is going on
-within.
-
-The average child starts in life with a question mark at the tip of
-every sense. Why does this inquisitiveness gradually disappear or
-become perverted into curiosity about trivialities? Why does going to
-school become a burden? Why are so many classes at college listless and
-inattentive? Why does the light, the frivolous, the thoughtless attract
-and hold, while that which is in reality far more interesting wearies
-and repels? Is it not because this reasoning faculty is allowed to grow
-up “any which way,” and is discouraged or suppressed wherever memory or
-some other form of some one’s else ideas can be substituted? Is it not
-because to reason comes to seem a burden, a bore, a pain? Would that be
-so if education were rightly based, rightly built?
-
-We Americans reason better, perhaps, than any other nation about a
-wider range of affairs; probably not with so much depth as some other
-peoples, but certainly with greater clearness. But this is due to a
-compulsory training almost altogether outside of the schoolroom. It is
-due to Democracy, that compels the mind to grow as Spring’s sunshine
-compels the seed. As our affairs, both public and private, have grown
-more complex, the defects due to this haphazard education of the
-reasoning faculty, this treatment of it almost as if it were a weed,
-become more and more apparent, more and more in need of correction.
-
-Common sense is looked upon as a gift of the gods, a sort of intuition.
-Is it not in reality merely the result of a somewhat better natural or
-acquired reasoning faculty? Ought not common sense to be the attainable
-possession of every American? And where but the schoolhouse is the
-place to obtain this possession, this means to self-rule, to freedom,
-to the full splendor of the noblest of human ideals, Democracy?
-
-In a Democracy the school should not be the temple of knowledge. It
-should be the temple of reason. And it shall be! And that day will be a
-sad one for charlatanism and for charlatans.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-A NATION OF DREAMERS
-
-
-Each year not far from fifty million dollars are spent in America in
-exploiting cures for digestion troubles; and no doubt we give the
-doctors and the druggists a thousand millions or so each year in
-seeking relief from the consequences of our ignorance and our folly
-in feeding ourselves. Some of us are too poor to get the right sort
-of food, even when we know what is the right kind; others are both
-ignorant and incapable of resisting the clamors of appetite. The
-problems of mental and physical food are not analogous; they are two
-parts of a whole. Our ignorance of chemistry and hygiene and our
-unguarded appetites lead us into gastronomic folly; our ignorance of
-the simple and easily learned laws of the mind and our vitiated and
-undiscriminating mental appetites, called passions and prejudices, lead
-us into educational follies as wild but no wilder than our gastronomic
-follies. The results of the one show in poor health; the results of
-the other show in confusion in the conduct of our affairs, private and
-public.
-
-Some of us have no means of getting good mental food, and would not
-know what to select and what to reject if we had. Others, and these are
-the overwhelming majority, have no power to discriminate between the
-true and the false, the rational and the irrational, between that which
-strengthens the powers of the mind and that which weakens or perverts
-them. We take in cheap or worthless mental food just as we put cheap or
-worthless stuff into our stomachs. We take in that which is easy and
-pleasant to the taste--that is, we patronize the intellectual pastry
-cooks and confectioners too liberally. Or, we go to the purveyors of
-the strong waters of passion and prejudice, and under the influence of
-such whiskies and brandies imagine ourselves beings of extraordinary
-and fine mentality.
-
-There is as much, indeed, there is greater, cause for alarm over the
-gastronomic than over the mental follies. But neither kind is evidence
-that we are on the down grade. We are more alert and wiser all the
-time in matters of physical health, despite our own appetites and
-foolish inclinations and lazy disinclinations, despite the pretentious
-ignorance of the medical profession and the shrewd chicanery of the
-quacks. In the same manner we are more and more alive to the importance
-of mental health, of the well-fed, well-exercised brain; and this
-improvement goes steadily forward, despite the harmful effects of
-alleged literature and drama, despite the pretentious ignorance of
-our regularly constituted teachers, despite the energetic educational
-quackeries of false learning, false culture and false taste.
-Intelligence will spread; Democracy will compel.
-
-A hundred years ago small indeed was the part of the human race that
-could be reached by an appeal to the reason. To-day in many parts of
-the civilized world advances begin to be made not alone by appeals
-to empty stomachs, by shouts about full and empty dinner pails, but
-by real intellectual force. There are even a few rare but highly
-significant instances of masses of men being induced to sacrifice a
-small immediate good to gain a remoter larger good. That is, the masses
-begin to show signs of that same intelligent foresight which created
-and maintained class rule in times past, which makes some successful
-far beyond their fellows. And those who are so greatly concerned by the
-vast concentration of machinery and capital in a few hands fail to give
-proper consideration to the two most important points, more important
-far than the evils of concentration of wealth and power:
-
-First: Concentrations of capital are at the mercy of brains. They are
-impotent unless they are administered by brains, administered by a
-multitude of brains working intelligently and harmoniously for a common
-end.
-
-Second: Their evil consequences result from lack of reasoning power,
-lack of far-sightedness, due to imperfect education in the managers;
-lack of knowledge how to protect their own interests on the part of the
-masses.
-
-On one hand we see an enormous increase in the brain power of the
-people--a multitude able to think, eager to think, not to be prevented
-from thinking, where only two or three generations ago the thinking was
-done exclusively by the few. On the other hand we see the necessity for
-more thinking, for vigorous stirring-up of the minds of the masses,
-for more and more education. And, year by year, the stirring-up process
-increases. The evils of the present day are as old as the race, as old
-as ignorance, as old as human frailty. The good, the benefits, are new,
-entirely new.
-
-The material and mental forces of modern civilization have already
-wrought wonders. Think of it! Less than a century and a half ago the
-world for the first time heard a plea for the freedom, the dignity,
-the individuality of man. To-day millions of minds have that gospel as
-their fundamental creed. And freedom of thought, freedom of action, is
-the realized ideal of many nations, the realizing ideal of almost all
-the others. Why should we fear that the idea of manhood will lose its
-charm; that the democratic ideal, which has real beauty, should prove
-less attractive than the old ideal of inequality and injustice and
-inhumanity, which is now seen to be in fact hideous? Why should we fear
-that as we grow in enlightenment, grow in capacity to think and act
-with freedom, we should care less and less about thinking and acting
-with freedom?
-
-What will come out of this vast, unbarriered flood of sunshine of
-enlightenment, out of these concentrations social called cities,
-these concentrations industrial called combinations? Who can say? Who
-would care to destroy life’s chief interest, the veiled future, by
-foreseeing? One thing we can be assured of--it will not be tyranny.
-It could not be tyranny, because the light of intellect, of real
-intelligence, is now in millions of minds, is kindling in millions more.
-
-Of the many misreadings of history perhaps the silliest is that which
-attributes to former times an idealism greater than that of our own
-day. And of the many misreadings of our own times certainly the
-silliest is that which attributes more idealism to such countries as
-Germany, Austria, and Italy than to these United States.
-
-The Middle Ages are generally cited as the period of intensest and
-loftiest idealism. But looking past the artistic and literary few
-of those centuries, looking at nations and peoples, what do we see?
-Ignorance, squalor, inconceivable physical and mental and moral
-wretchedness; ferocious tyrannies worse almost than anarchy itself and
-constantly producing it; stolid and heartless indifference in almost
-all to the welfare of their fellow-beings; “Every man for himself” the
-universal cry. No wonder there was a passionate yearning for the life
-beyond the grave with its promise of escape from a world made hideous
-by “man’s inhumanity to man.” And in these modern countries where
-so-called idealism is rampant, we find false and oppressive social and
-industrial conditions in the ascendant, we find a deplorable incapacity
-for dealing with the problems of life or an ignorant insensibility to
-them.
-
-If idealism means inanely beating the empty air, if it means the
-worship of the vague, the remote and the purely fanciful, then this
-age cannot be charged with idealism and our country must plead guilty
-to the charge of gross materialism; and for idealism we must look to
-seclusions and deserts, where a few surviving dirty and distracted
-hermits and yogis spend their time in fantastical imaginings. But if
-idealism means rational, realizable and realizing dreams of a to-morrow
-that shall be as much better than to-day as to-day is better than
-yesterday, then the world was never before so idealistic, and America
-is the chief prophet and chief apostle of idealism.
-
-In this sense the Declaration of Independence is the most idealistic
-literary product of the human mind; the so-called idealism of
-superstition, of chivalry, of kingship and aristocracy, of the
-divinely appointed few taking care of the many, of “never mind this
-world; all will be righted in the next,” has the cheap, dull glitter
-of “fool’s gold” and paste diamonds. These fallacies were, and
-still are, poisonous, because of their interference with the growth
-of true idealism--the idealism of self-help and helping others to
-help themselves. And to show them up and then to show them down and
-out--especially down and out of our colleges and universities--we need
-another Cervantes and a revised and enlarged Don Quixote.
-
-Never before was the true ideal, humanity, clear and universal. “Light
-from the East” was the old proverb; the new proverb is “Light from the
-West!” For ours is the dawn-land of the Golden Age. We are a nation,
-a race of idealists, of dreamers. Even our plutocrats, with their
-Americanism submerged and all but suffocated in their wealth, still
-dream fitfully of justice and equality and universal enlightenment and
-the brotherhood of man.
-
-We are a nation of dreamers who make their dreams come true!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-NOT GENEROSITY, BUT JUSTICE
-
-
-It is reasonable, and not unkind, to assume that the time will come
-when we shall no longer have John D. Rockefeller with us. He may not
-die; as a vindication and a reward he may be honored with the unique
-distinction of Enoch and Elijah. But, whether by the vulgar route or
-in fiery chariot with angel escort, go he will, and his son will reign
-in his stead. The word reign is here used in the metaphoric sense in
-which it is almost always used now-a-days. For, the son of Rockefeller
-will not be free literally to reign. He will be hedged about with
-a thousand and one restraints. His acts will be the result not of
-his own intellect and will, but of his training, his tradition, his
-environment. He will be little of the autocrat, a great deal of the
-agent and servant. But, suppose that he would be really free, really
-self-owned, really capable of the mastership of his vast inheritance,
-instead of its slave, doing its bidding, acting always as a son of John
-D. Rockefeller and a member of the class multi-millionaire. Suppose
-this possible. What could he do with his nearly a thousand millions,
-for the most part so massed that they control many of the great vital
-industries of the country? Imbued with a deep sense of trusteeship to
-humanity instead of to the quaint Rockefeller god, and endowed with the
-intelligence to act upon that sense, what could he do to make the world
-the better for his sojourn in it? What would be his opportunities?
-
-Of course, in the reality his opportunities will be small indeed. His
-limitations, through heredity, education and environment, are too
-narrow. But under our fanciful, even fantastic, “if,” there must be
-surely some way for a rich man to serve his fellow-men and demonstrate
-high qualities of mind and heart other than by these commonplace, more
-or less “cheap and nasty” schemes of so-called philanthropy. To all men
-in the past, and to the small man still--that is, to any man incapable
-of grasping the splendid and lofty idealism of Democracy--there
-could be nothing more captivating than playing the rôle of my Lord
-Bountiful. Not merely the paying of one’s just debts, not merely
-the doing of the commands of one’s own self-respect, but graciously
-condescending to part with one’s wealth for the gratification of
-one’s vanity and for the development of deference and humility in the
-recipients of the bounty. Philanthropy as it is practiced is more often
-than not a vice both in its origin and in its results. So, we will
-not make our imaginary young Rockefeller a philanthropist. We will
-not subject him to the temptation to make of himself a supercilious
-Pharisee and to make of others paupers and parasites and courtiers.
-
-He is free; he is young; he is fearless. He is absolute master of his
-colossal inheritance. He looks up at the vast structure his father
-built. He reads upon it the motto his father placed there--“I am a
-clamorer for dividends.” His face sobers as he reads, and out of his
-mind go his half-formed projects to endow missions and colleges and
-hospitals and libraries. “Perhaps I have not so much to give as I
-thought,” he says to himself. “I must first see. What are the sources
-of my income? Am I stealing from anybody? Should I be giving away that
-which is not rightfully mine to give?”
-
-And as a preliminary move he tears down the offensive “I am a clamorer
-for dividends,” and puts in its stead “I am a clamorer for justice.”
-
-“Let us first be just,” he says. “Perhaps we shall not be able to be
-generous. Perhaps we shall even, hat in hand, and upon our knees, be
-compelled to crave the generous forgiveness of our fellow-men.” All
-this time he has been standing at the rear or business end of the
-paternal structure. He now goes round to the front or philanthropic
-side of it. He closes the doors there with a sign, “Philanthropy
-suspended during the taking of the inventory.”
-
-And so we find our ideal young Rockefeller, his ears shut against
-the importunities of paupers and panderers and parasites, plunging
-deep and resolutely into the details of business--of the several vast
-enterprises which he, by inheritance, owns or controls. And soon all
-his father’s old friends, with the approval of all the leading men in
-finance and industry, are discussing whether a commission ought not
-to be obtained, and cannot be obtained, to inquire into the sanity of
-the young man. Not dividends, but honesty and justice! Why, the young
-fellow’s brain is turned! Denouncing business methods approved by the
-best lawyers at the bar, sanctified by the use of the greatest captains
-of industry? Insisting that commodities should be sold at only a fair
-profit over and above the cost of production? Dismissing men skilled in
-legal and business chicane? Insisting that no man in his employ shall
-have less than a decent living wage? Calling for the reorganization of
-great properties, not to increase but to decrease the bonds and stocks
-on whose interest and dividends a hundred of our best people are able
-to lead lives of elegant leisure and look down with amused pity on
-those who have to toil? There is no escape from the conclusion that the
-young man is mad, mad as a hatter, mad as a March hare.
-
-If he had established soup kitchens to tempt the hard-working to knock
-off and join the army of lusty beggars, if he had given millions to
-enable missionaries to live at ease while they gratified their abnormal
-passion for meddling in other people’s business, if he had subsidized
-faculties to teach only “safe and sane” doctrines, if he had set aside
-vast corruption funds for debauching legislatures to suffer the people
-to be despoiled, if he had poured rivers of water into the stocks and
-bonds of his enterprises, had cut down wages and raised prices, if he
-had built himself half a dozen palaces, and conducted himself like a
-monkey that has been given a red cap and a pink jacket--why, that would
-have been sane, eminently sane. But honesty and justice! And in his own
-affairs! A real, practical application! Hear the shouts of derisive
-laughter. See the winks, the tongues in derisive cheeks. “The man’s
-mad! The man’s mad!” cries a generation tainted with the coarse ideals
-of riches, show and condescension.
-
-But let us suppose that he is not strait-jacketed by his friends nor
-daunted by the hoots of the crowd. Let us suppose that he remains
-at large and has his way. And then, let us look at his first great
-“philanthropy.”
-
-At first glance there seems nothing to look at, no important change.
-The same old machinery of these several huge Rockefeller industries of
-manufacture, trade and transportation seems to be moving on in much the
-same old way. The only obvious change is in the fortune and the income
-of the young iconoclast and his fellow-stockholders. There is seen an
-enormous shrinkage--enough to have endowed hundreds of colleges, enough
-to have made millions of paupers. The difference between the old order
-and the new is chiefly in moral tone. An honest man and a criminal go
-through precisely the same routine each day--dressing, eating, talking,
-sleeping. The abysmal difference between the two is invisible to human
-eyes.
-
-Nor does the example of the new order seem to amount to much. Such
-doings are too expensive. Charity, donations, subscriptions, cost
-far less, do not interfere with dividends and interest, and bring
-returns in public applause. Why be honest and just when nobody else
-is--when nobody appreciates it--when the very victims of the system of
-dishonesty and injustice have less respect for you? Why refrain from
-“respectable” robbery when indulging in it gives power and prestige?
-
-But the young iconoclast is not discouraged. He keeps hammering
-away--establishing the new order where he has control, making a fierce
-and incessant and public fight for it in those corporations in which
-he is a director sitting for a minority interest. And gradually the
-fury of the “respectable” rises against him. He has outraged the great
-“respectable” lawyers, who fatten on fraud and crime; he has inflamed
-the stockholders and bondholders, great and small, who find their
-incomes cut down; he has exasperated all who, but for the pickings
-and stealings under the old system, would have to work instead of
-idling about, pitying and patronizing workers. He has stirred to awful
-fury the whole capitalistic class, the honest ones no less than the
-dishonest; for the honest capitalist, while he looks askance at his
-dishonest fellow-member of the capitalistic solidarity, yet regards him
-as a wronged brother whenever any one by criticising him seems to be
-criticising capitalism. And these cyclonic ragings against the young
-man slowly rouse the masses of the people, slowly waken the slumbering
-moral sense of a society that has yielded to the seductions of the
-practical maxim, “Put money in thy purse.” And he is greatly cheered by
-the swelling, stentorian applause of the people.
-
-He has cut down his income to less than one-twentieth what it was;
-but still a vast sum, far more than he can possibly spend, pours in
-upon him and demands investment. Further, many of the enterprises in
-which he is a large but not a controlling factor are of so suspicious
-a character, are so dependent for success upon roguery, that he feels
-he cannot continue in them. To abandon his holdings would be merely
-to add to the incomes of the rascals; he sensibly, but not without
-qualms, sells out at as large a price as he can get. Looking for new
-investments, he goes into the most crowded and squalid section of each
-of the cities and large towns in which he has interests--into those
-sections where the workers associated with his various enterprises
-are congregated. He buys up whole blocks and sections of unsanitary
-tenements. He tears them down and builds in place of them houses fit
-for human habitation. And he adjusts the scale of rents there, not on
-the familiar principle of robbing the poor because it is so easy to do,
-but on the same principles that he would apply to business property of
-the kinds used by people whose necessities are not so great that they
-are helpless before the robber. He is content with a decent profit;
-he takes no blood-money. He is a business-like, human landlord, not a
-bloody bandit, not a “clamorer for dividends.”
-
-In each of these neighborhoods he establishes a huge department store
-in which he sells everything; and he gives value, not sham and shoddy.
-These stores make a specialty of food. They sell only wholesome
-food--and they can easily afford to sell it at the same prices
-which the former purveyors to these poor got for vile, poisonous,
-rotten meat and vegetables. Then he buys up the street-car lines in
-his neighborhoods as far as he can, and establishes two-cent fares.
-He realizes the importance of the item of car-fare to the poor, the
-wickedness of stock and bond watering to keep up the cruelest of all
-taxes.
-
-And now he is in hot water! He has alienated a large and influential
-section of every one of the grand divisions of respectable society. He
-has against him, and purple with rage at the very mention of his name,
-all the men and all the women and all the families that directly or
-indirectly, consciously or unconsciously, live by exploiting the poor.
-Right and left he has cut into or cut entirely away incomes, sources of
-vast profit, those infamous yet “respectable” capitalizations of the
-industry of picking the pockets in the tattered dress of the working
-girl, in the ragged overalls of the laborer! What an uproar from all
-that is articulate! They cry in the newspapers that he is worse than
-his father, that he is impoverishing the “best citizens,” et cetera.
-They scream that he is doing it, is using the almost infinite power
-of his father’s massed millions, with an ulterior motive--solely to
-increase his income.
-
-As a matter of fact, his income has begun to increase. In a few years,
-the practice of honesty and justice on a scale that makes it impossible
-for the dishonest and the unjust to crush him, results in his having a
-vaster fortune than ever. Everything he touches turns to gold. In his
-main enterprise, the policy of low prices, honest wares and high wages
-causes business to flow in and to more than make up for the old profits
-lost by the abolition of the short-sighted tyrannies and monopolistic,
-pound-foolish, penny-wise policies. His tenements pay; his department
-stores can’t take care of the business offered; his street-car lines
-are crowded. The old business principle, time-honored, was: “Raise
-prices as the demand increases.” He acts on the new, the scientific
-business principle: “Lower prices as demand increases. Don’t kill that
-which you have been striving to create. Foster demand.”
-
-At first he was called a “well-meaning but wildly mistaken
-philanthropist.” Now he is called a shrewder business man than
-his father. Like his father, he is hated and envied by all the
-rich-but-not-so-rich. And, sad yet amusing to relate, he is profoundly
-suspected by those whom he is striving to benefit. Such few friends as
-he has left bring this to his attention. “What’s the use?” they say.
-“Look at the ingrates. If you had stolen ten millions from them and
-given back a hundred thousand in charity they would have cheered you to
-the echo. You pamper them, and they turn on you. If there was to be a
-revolution to-morrow your head would be the first to go off.”
-
-What does the young man reply? He might invite them to note the fact
-that he is making more money than his father did and is at least
-escaping the odium of being regarded as a hypocrite. But he does not.
-He is a peculiar young man. He simply smiles. “I am in business to
-please one customer first of all,” says he. “That customer is myself.
-What does it matter to me what other people think of me? I don’t have
-to live with them. But I do have to live with myself.”
-
-And he orders further reductions of prices, and further increases of
-wages, buys more street-car lines, builds more tenements, opens a
-half dozen other big stores. To supply these stores with meat, eggs,
-butter, vegetables, et cetera, he starts in the neighborhood of each
-of his cities and towns huge farms, to which he sends boys and girls
-as apprentices to learn the farming business. And he engages to set
-up in the farming business each boy or girl who works well. Those who
-cannot be got in love with farming are to have first call on the lower
-positions in his various manufacturing and distributing enterprises.
-
-He has now been twenty years at this business of applying old
-moral principles and policies to the vast modern opportunities for
-concentration and combination. Twenty years of hard work, and he is
-a happy, hated man of fifty and odd. He is richer than his father
-ever dreamed of being. Wonder of wonders, he at last has begun to
-drive the crooks and the rascals out of big business. There is just
-one competition in which a crook cannot survive--the competition
-with intelligent honesty. It is a competition which had never been
-tried until the coming of our fanciful, fantastic scion of Standard
-Oil, black sheep in the capitalistic fold. The crooked little farmer
-or merchant cannot survive against the straight little farmer or
-merchant. The crooked big “captain of industry” found that he couldn’t
-survive against our Rockefeller, inheriting his father’s business
-ability with his father’s wealth, but not inheriting his father’s
-convention-calloused moral sense.
-
-It is not until our young man is well on toward sixty that there begins
-to be any real appreciation of philanthropy by making money instead of
-by giving it away. The laughter at honesty and justice, in business as
-well as in personal relations, in practice as well as in theory, on
-week-days as well as on Sunday, toward the helpless and obscure and
-unknown as well as toward the powerful and “respectable,” gradually
-dies away before his ocular demonstration of its sound practical
-wisdom. And his activities have been an enormous educational factor,
-giving men that practical enlightenment which the school of life alone
-can give, but which, under the old system, it so rarely did give.
-His high wages have raised the general wage market. His tenements
-and dwelling houses have raised the standard of housekeeping. His
-department stores have raised the standard of food and clothing. And
-when the material foundations of life rose, the moral and æsthetic
-structure superimposed upon them of necessity rose also. To raise a
-house, raise its foundations; don’t try to separate it from them.
-
-As the laughter at iconoclastic business ceased, laughter at
-philanthropy burst out. The rich rascals, the smug feeders of their
-own vanity, the coy contributors to the conscience fund, who came in
-superciliousness and condescension with their pharisaical offerings,
-were greeted with hoots and jeers. Our young man of many millions,
-dauntless through all those trying years, had taught the people to look
-at the true inwardness of things. “Go back to your business,” they
-would shout at each of these astonished almsgivers. “Go back, and take
-with you this pittance of your filchings from your workmen and your
-customers. You are the real object of pity and charity. Look at the
-tainted sources of your income! Repent, reform, give us our rights, our
-just dues. Don’t pose as a philanthropist when you are giving away our
-money--and only a meagre part of the vast sums you have taken from us.
-Give justice. Generosity will take care of itself!”
-
-And in those days our young iconoclast came into his own, so everybody
-said. But when his friends, wholly changed in their opinion now,
-approached him with enthusiastic flattery, he smiled his old peculiar
-smile. “I came into my own, years ago,” said he. “I came into it on the
-day I tore down the motto ‘I am a clamorer for dividends’ and set up
-‘I am a clamorer for justice’, in its place.” And when he died he did
-not leave his vast fortune to his children to tempt them to forget his
-training and example and become soft, idle, foolish and unhappy. He
-left it to his enterprises, its income to be divided between those who
-made themselves most valuable and those who, having worked well, had
-earned the right to a peaceful old age.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Of all sad words of tongue or pen,” sang the poet, “the saddest are
-these: ‘It might have been.’” Not so. It is the vain might-have-been
-that gives birth to the bright shall-be!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-THE INEVITABLE IDEAL
-
-
-“Our ancestors who migrated hither were laborers,” wrote Jefferson.
-And again: “My new trade of nail-making is to me in this country what
-an additional title of nobility is or the ensigns of a new order are
-in Europe.” The dignity of labor, the prizes to the laborer--these
-ideals of a century ago, ideals born no doubt of a vanity which sought
-to make a virtue of necessity, are still our ideals. But, where in
-Jefferson’s day his broad and sympathetic mind was almost alone in the
-belief in the loftier basis for the ideal, to-day millions of us see
-that the laborer is the only good citizen, that his estate is the only
-estate of dignity. No people ever had such a conception of work as we
-have to-day. It is an evolution under Democracy. No previous nation
-could have understood it; our ancestors did not have it, for they were
-still influenced by caste ideas, hard and nobly though they strove
-to outgrow them. There are vestiges of the old ideas concerning work
-remaining. The class that does not work and the class that emulates it
-and envies it still look down on work, still hug the vulgar, ignorant
-fancy that work is a curse. But that is not important. Once more let us
-remind ourselves that caste is made not by him who looks down but by
-him who looks up. The vital fact is that the laborer is himself aware
-of his own sovereign dignity. And, excepting a few black sheep, the
-American flock still bears the ancestral markings; this is a nation
-of laborers. And the markings of which our ancestors tried hard, but
-with dubious success, not to be ashamed, have become the markings of
-honor--not to an occasional Jefferson, but to the overwhelming mass of
-our eighty millions.
-
-This concept of labor is the first-fruit of Democracy and Enlightenment.
-
-When sons of men of vast wealth go to work, there is much excitement
-among the idlers, rich and poor. The agitation shows how hard dies
-the theory that work is wholly a curse and, to a great extent, a
-degradation; that the only sensible, or noble even, ideal of life is
-to idle about; that there must be something of the freak in a human
-being who labors when he might sit at his ease amusing himself by
-counting the drops of sweat as they roll from the brows of his toiling
-fellow-men.
-
-This is indeed the old, old theory. It has the sanction of many
-venerable authorities. But, like almost everything else that has come
-down to us from the ignorant far past, it will not stand examination.
-
-There was a time when work undoubtedly was both a curse and a
-degradation. When the many labored under the lash that the few might
-reap, when the toilers got only the toil and the idlers got all the
-results, when the highest ideals of the human race were a full stomach
-and fine raiment and the gratification of other crude desires and
-appetites--then work was justly regarded as degrading drudgery. But not
-now, hard though laziness and cheap vanity strive to keep alive such
-fictitious distinctions as are given an air of actuality by phrases
-like “master and servant,” “employer and employé,” “capital and labor,”
-“gentleman,” “lady,” et cetera, et cetera. The truth of the dignity
-of labor, the dishonesty and degradation of every form of parasitism,
-however gaudily tricked out, appears despite the subtleties of snobism.
-
-The political ideal of a barbarian is to rule others; the political
-ideal of a highly civilized man is to rule himself and let his
-fellow-men alone. The industrial ideal of a barbarian is to live in
-empty-headed and ambitionless idleness upon the labor of others. The
-industrial ideal of a civilized man is to work, and work incessantly in
-conditions that permit him to reap the full reward of his efforts and
-to make those efforts in the direction best suited to his capacities.
-And he has a deepening scorn of all the tricks by which some men live,
-taking all and giving nothing. Nor is his scorn the less when those
-tricks happen to be made “respectable” by law or by custom.
-
-Is it any wonder that a man with the brain of an Æsop or an Epictetus
-should have revolted against compulsory labor that could much better
-have been performed by an ox or an ass? On the other hand, is it not
-amazing that any man with a thinking machine in his skull and vital
-force flowing along his nerves can be content to lead a life that would
-bore a grasshopper? The “curse and degradation” theory of work adapts
-itself to climates. Man began in the tropics, where idleness is least
-difficult; therefore for a long time absolute idleness was the ideal of
-this theory. But when man moved up into the colder parts of the earth,
-where to idle was to be physically miserable, the theory was slightly
-modified. The curse and the degradation of work were thought to lie in
-the doing of useful work. To tilt with iron-pointed sticks, to stab
-and jab and cut, to spend days and weeks chasing little foxes that
-could not even be eaten if by chance they were caught, to hit little
-balls with little sticks, to sit all night matching monotonous picture
-cards--all such “amusements,” the hardest kind of work, work at which
-the thinking part of any human being might well balk, were regarded as
-“worthy of a gentleman.” To plough, to sow, to reap, to manufacture
-something that might be used, to perform any kind of useful labor,
-mental or manual, was “low” and “menial.”
-
-Toward the middle of the last century, with our growing wealth and the
-rise of a leisure class through false education, the Old World ideas
-found their way across the Atlantic. And in every community there
-began to be at least a few persons who took on the supercilious and
-contemptuous attitude toward work. Fortunately for the good sense and
-happiness of the American people, at about that time modern industrial
-conditions changed the whole system of getting and keeping prosperous.
-
-In the old days, idle and brainless barbarians could hold on to and
-even add to their possessions--agricultural land. But in the new days
-of intense energy, of rapidly changing values, of trade, commerce, and
-competition, of rise in the price of labor and fall in the price of
-money, property is always growing wings that must be clipped daily and
-often hourly to keep it from taking flight. It is getting harder and
-harder to reap where one has not sown, to induce men to work without
-a proper return, or, after wealth has been acquired, to hold on to it
-without the use of brains and energy. And so, the old theory is dying
-out, chiefly for the usual reason for any human advancement--changed
-conditions compelling men to change their point of view.
-
-The reason the rich men’s sons are going to work is that they, or at
-least their sagacious fathers, know that if they don’t work, the men
-who do work will get their wealth away from them. And this reason of
-necessity is going to bring about a revolution where all the shrieking
-of the reformers, all the logic of the moral philosophers, all the
-talk about the dignity of labor and “happiness only in hard work” make
-no headway worth the measuring. Maxims of good sense and good morals
-can’t be pounded or preached into poor short-sighted, irrational,
-shadow-chasing humanity. Nature and the laws of environment do not
-preach. They quietly but relentlessly compel. And sad wrecks they make
-of the pretensions and pomposities of the conceited human animal.
-
-It is in vain that aristocracy-worshiping mothers of America dream
-of an Old World upper class for their sons and daughters. It is in
-vain that silly sociologists prattle about the necessity and the
-advantages of a “leisure class.” Modern environment says “Work; work
-hard! Be a somebody or I will make you a nobody!” And work we must.
-And presently we shall hear the last of the notions that idleness or
-useless employment is “noble” and “dignified” and “aristocratic.” And
-only in mad-houses will be found men and women who continue in their
-grown-up periods of life the pastimes of childhood--playing with blocks
-and soldiers and toy tools. What of the old notions of property rights
-and distribution of wealth will go by the board and what will remain,
-no one can foresee. Nor does it in the least matter, since we can be
-certain that no conditions will arise in which the idler will be more
-comfortable or the worker less comfortable than in the past or at
-present.
-
-The change in the attitude toward work is coming from both sides of
-the world. The rich are more and more forced to work. The not-rich are
-demanding and compelling better opportunities to work. Look at our
-national life in the broad, and you see all elements concentrating on
-the democratic platform--Work! Beyond question the “workingman” is
-discontented. Nor will his discontent decrease. On the contrary, the
-more he has, the more he’ll want. His appetite will grow with what it
-feeds on. This Republic was started by just such men, was started for
-the purpose of creating ever more and more of them. The eagerness for
-better pay, for better treatment, for better surroundings, whether
-that eagerness be in the capitalist or in the street-cleaner, is proof
-that the Republic is still doing business at the old stand in the old
-way. And the more or less turbulent wrangling over the division of the
-rewards will never cease. If there were any signs of its ceasing or of
-its abating, then indeed might we justly despair of Democracy. Content
-means caste; discontent means Democracy.
-
-Work is democratic, not because all kinds of men engage in it and so
-make it common, but because of its effect on the individual worker.
-Every impulse toward Democracy is fostered by it, just as every impulse
-toward caste is encouraged by leniency toward the idea of the value of
-a leisure class.
-
-The sooner ambition is roused in every man, woman and child, the sooner
-they learn that by work alone can their ambitions be gratified, the
-sooner will an ideal democratic condition evolve. America is ahead of
-all the great nations in the race toward this ideal Democracy, because
-there is the nearest approach in America in every walk of life to a
-condition in which idlers are few and toilers many.
-
-In a previous chapter the efforts of plutocratic philanthropists to
-relieve a certain part of each community from the “stern and cruel
-necessity to work” have been noted. But the pauper-making plutocrats
-and lords and ladies Bountiful are not the only missionaries of
-idleness and incompetence. Our legislatures, national, state,
-municipal, are voting large sums of money for free something or other
-for somebody or other, or for bolstering up some real or reputed
-neglected or defective class. And leading citizens, themselves
-toilers at businesses, trade and professions, are, through mistaken
-sentimentality, urging the legislatures to vote still larger sums for
-indiscriminate--_necessarily_ indiscriminate--alms.
-
-If Democracy were dependent upon conscious human effort, we should
-be moving rapidly and far from the old ideas of independence, of
-self-reliance, of individuality; we should be hastening toward a
-re-establishment of the aristocratic ideal of “molly-coddling,” of
-making the citizen a hot-house plant sheltered under government
-glass from the rude but invigorating forces of nature--but exposed
-to withering and denuding paternalism. Everybody who did not do for
-himself--whether because he would not or because he could not, we
-should not stop to ask--would be provided with education, ideas,
-food, clothing, shelter, amusements, baths, in short, everything but
-self-respect and the power to produce self-respecting progeny. And
-these things would be provided, not by private philanthropy, not by
-the rich giving of their surplus, but by taxation.
-
-Taxation simply means taking from one part of the community, chiefly
-from the poor and those of moderate means, and giving to another part,
-after an army of officials have had their “rake-off” in salaries and
-perquisites. Taxation, therefore, means levying upon those who have
-little to spare; it means crippling those who are trying to fight the
-hard battle of life.
-
-There is nothing democratic, nothing economically sound, in these
-alluring schemes for making men sleek and comfortable and wise by
-public bounty. They result in coddling incompetents, and in breaking
-down those who are now just able to get along and who need only the
-push of additional taxation to send them fairly over the precipice from
-self-reliance to dependence.
-
-A wise man once said: “Most legislation consists of A and B getting
-together and deciding what C shall do for D.” We mustn’t forget C. He
-pays the bills. And his name is “the people.”
-
-The work that saves is the work of a man, by himself, for himself,
-work chosen by him, mastered by him, work by which he is sometimes
-mastered. He must stand or fall on the results of his efforts. This is
-no programme for the timid or the halting, but it is the programme for
-all grades of intelligence and opportunity, each doing for himself just
-as well as he possibly can, under his circumstances.
-
-Work--not as a means to leisure, but as in itself the aim and end. No
-thought of “retiring.” No thought of social distractions that breed
-only boredom, or of useless activities that dissipate manhood and
-womanhood. The main thought--work. Work is _the_ ideal of the Republic.
-The central point in the Old World theory which our plutocracy would
-make our theory of life is that a man or woman ought to aspire not
-to be a worker, but a person of leisure, to become not a doer of
-useful things, but a doer of useless things. The central point of
-the democratic theory of life is just the reverse. It is the worker
-exalted, and his work also. Europe clings to precedent; America insists
-upon judgment. Europe tends to act as “father and grandfather did”;
-America has acted and should tend to act as the new situation, ever
-changing, may require at any given moment.
-
-Europe, bound by precedents, by false ideals, by traditions of class
-distinctions and the nobility of idleness, simply cannot compete with
-us. For the cause of Democracy, for the uplifting of the common man,
-for the increase in the application of human energy to human needs,
-America’s competition with Europe is more helpful than centuries of
-theorizing and preaching and political maneuvering. The Great Republic
-is presenting to Europe the stern alternative: Democracy or Decay.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-OUR ALLIES FROM ABROAD
-
-
-The European “hordes” continue to pour in upon us, and the agitation
-over, and against, the “foreign devil” increases. We shall soon be
-“welcoming to our shores” upwards of a million strangers a year, all
-of them with no “capital”--except their muscles and the potentialities
-of their minds and hearts. If Washington and Jefferson could have
-looked forward to this time, they would have lifted jubilant prayers of
-thankfulness that their hopes that this land would become “the refuge
-of the poor and oppressed of all nations” were being superbly realized.
-But many of our statesmen view the tidal-wave incursions with anything
-but joy; and their woful cries find echo everywhere among those who do
-not take the trouble to put facts into proper perspective. Russian and
-Finn, Polack, Hun and Lithuanian, Sicilian and Greek and Syrian and
-Bohemian, on they come, streaming from the noisome steerages of great
-ocean liners, pouring through the gates of the immigration offices.
-They are obviously poor, obviously the descendants of generations of
-toilers. And with them are their wives and their children. Myriads of
-anxious, troubled faces, in which hope and fear alternately triumph in
-the struggle for expression. Indeed, a disquieting spectacle to those
-who cannot or will not look beneath surfaces at universal human nature
-with its powerful instincts for and resolves toward progress. But let
-us watch this incoming flood with American eyes. Let us see what the
-facts plead--the facts, as distinguished from prejudices.
-
-What is our so-called foreign-population problem?
-
-According to the latest census there were in the United States, of
-our 76,300,000 population, no less than 26,200,000 persons of foreign
-birth or parentage. Of these, ten and a half millions were born
-abroad, while 11,000,000 more were born in this country of parents who
-were foreign-born. Since 1880 and up to 1901 no less than 18,000,000
-foreigners have come to us. That is to say, counting in arrivals and
-births since the taking of our latest census, and making due mortality
-allowance, we have to-day a population more than one-fourth of which
-was born abroad or is of foreign parentage.
-
-The anti-immigration crusade based upon these figures insists that
-the foreigners come too fast for Americanism to digest and assimilate
-them, that they will undermine and destroy free institutions. Also,
-there is the cry that these recent comers are of peoples less desirable
-than those that used to send their millions to us. The newcomers are
-impossible in point of numbers, undesirable in point of quality.
-
-As to numbers--Our first, and last previous, great flood of
-immigration was between 1840 and 1861. In those twenty years about
-13,000,000 immigrants came. Our population in 1840 was 17,000,000.
-Thus, the immigration was about 80 per cent. Between 1880 and 1901,
-the immigration was about 18,000,000. Our population in 1880 was
-50,000,000. Thus, the immigration was not much above 35 per cent.
-Clearly, the present “horde” is numerically not imposing or alarming
-in comparison with the foreign invasion of half a century ago.
-Our country is still sparsely inhabited; one-third of its area is
-still absolutely undeveloped. If half a century ago, with the then
-comparatively limited and crude means of transforming the foreigner
-into the American, thirteen million foreigners did not “swamp”
-seventeen million Americans, how can the present lesser immigration
-seriously or permanently hinder the alert, democratically militant
-America of to-day?
-
-Then, there is the matter of distribution. Let us take New York City by
-way of illustration. There the “congestion” of immigration is greater
-than anywhere else; and the advocates of exclusion always point to
-it as the crowning “awful example.” In the ’40s and ’50s that city
-grew almost altogether by immigration from abroad. Between 1840 and
-1861 New York City increased from 312,000 to 814,000--502,000. The
-rate of growth, then, was just over 160 per cent. Between 1880 and
-1901 the same territory increased in population from 1,200,000 to
-2,050,000--850,000, and a large part of that increase was from the
-smaller cities, the towns and the rural districts of the United States.
-The ratio of increase was about 70 per cent., less than half what it
-was during the preceding great immigration. Further, the charitable
-and corrective forces, official and unofficial, at work in New York are
-not much occupied with the immigrants who have come in the last twenty
-years. The crime, the abject poverty, the destitution are among the
-earlier immigrants and their descendants. The later immigration is not
-from peoples given to excess in drink--and drunkenness is the chief
-cause of the miseries of crime and pauperism.
-
-Looking at the immigration problem thus numerically, we see that the
-pessimists and the panic-stricken are afflicted with the narrowness
-of geographic and historical vision which is responsible for so many
-jeremiads. The shriek that the nation, and especially its cities, are
-being “swamped” has no basis in mathematics.
-
-“But the quality! The quality!” they cry. Well, what of the quality?
-Turn to the files of the publications in the middle of the last
-century; read what the “good Americans” then said and wrote and thought
-of the vast in-marching armies of “foreign devils,” whose grandchildren
-are a valuable part of our citizenship to-day. They were “the scum
-of Ireland and Germany.” They were “incapable of receiving American
-ideas.” They were “welcomed by the rich employers because their coming
-meant cheap labor.” And loudest in lamentation and fiercest in demand
-for bars and barriers were the people who had themselves just arrived!
-
-But, that was a false alarm, say the anti-immigrationists; this is
-the real thing. Again a lamentable lack of historical perspective,
-a pitiful narrowness of human sympathy. The truth is that man, from
-whatever clime or nation, is first of all man, the materials of
-progress and civilization. If the present millions of newcomers are
-ignorant, so much the less will they have to unlearn. If they have
-been savagely oppressed, so much the more brightly will burn hatred of
-inequality and injustice, love of equality and justice. If they are
-poor--and poor they are--then, Heaven be praised! They will work hard;
-and hard work and a passionate eagerness to get on in the world, and
-the prospect of being able to rise by work instead of, as at home,
-toiling that others might reap all, will make them hasten to become the
-best possible Americans.
-
-From poverty and experience of oppression comes the most militant
-Democracy. Let us not be afraid of this our brother-man. Let us not
-judge him by the superficial and unimportant differences between him
-and us. Let us welcome him. He needs us, but not more than we need
-him, and his familiarity with hard work, and his nature unspoiled by
-over-prosperity. Above all, we need his children. They will be American
-through and through. They will help us to outvote and to over-balance
-and to counteract the supercilious breed of falsely educated who have
-fallen away from the high and noble ideal of the equality and the
-brotherhood of man. These newcomers are the descendants of the peoples
-that built the splendid civilization of the past--the civilization
-around the Mediterranean and in Eastern Europe. For centuries the
-immense energy and imagination of those peoples have been forcibly
-suppressed and repressed. But they are there, and in free America they
-will burst forth again. Indeed, they are already bursting forth.
-
-We hear so much about the glories of the Civil War that we are apt to
-overlook its fearful cost. One item is important here:
-
-In the Southern States, practically all the white males able to bear
-arms went to the war. In the Northern States the two and three-quarter
-millions who served were, on the average, under rather than over twenty
-years of age.
-
-That is to say, to the war the South gave all its manhood; the North
-gave the fathers of its present native-born generation. So abounding is
-our vitality as a people that we cannot clearly see the full results of
-this fearful sacrifice. But let us remember that war kills only a few;
-it returns to peaceful pursuits the vast majority poisoned and weakened
-by all kinds of diseases.
-
-What is the connection between these facts and immigration? Look at
-the South, which sent all its manhood to camp and march and battle;
-at the South, into which almost no immigration has gone to make good
-the enormous losses. The trouble with the South to-day is not the
-destruction or abolition of property, not the failure of natural
-resources, but the depletion, the decay, the destruction of so large
-a part of the splendid stock that made the South great in ante-bellum
-days. Despite its abounding natural resources, despite the valiant
-efforts it has made and is making, the South advances slowly and
-with difficulty. And while the North had to make no such complete
-sacrifice to war, still even there, in the few places to which foreign
-immigration has not penetrated, the effects of the impairment of the
-sources of the best manhood are plainly visible. Not infrequently you
-find a Northern town with all the natural opportunities to progress,
-yet with retrogression and decay eating it away. What’s the matter? The
-war; the Civil War. The best young men, the most vigorous, the most
-enterprising, the most ambitious, went to the war. Many of them came
-back; but they had left at the war their best--their health, their
-energy. And the present generation shows it, suffers for it.
-
-It is indeed inspiring to see young men eager to die gloriously for
-their country. We also need young men eager to _live_ gloriously for
-their country. And war, the arch-enemy of progress, the great trickster
-of man through his finest instincts, how many of those who would have
-lived most gloriously for their country has it cost us!
-
-Do we not owe to the “hordes” from Europe, to immigration, the good
-fortune that our nation has pushed on apparently almost unaffected in
-its manhood by the great calamity of ’61-’64? Is it unwarranted to
-suggest that but for these inpourings of vigor and vitality, the losses
-in that frightful catastrophe might have all but cost us our national
-greatness, would certainly have set us back several generations?
-
-As to the political effect of immigration: Among our cities the
-two most conspicuous examples of misgovernment are New York and
-Philadelphia. In each the dominant political machine is scandalously
-corrupt. But it is far more audacious, far more cynically and openly
-contemptuous of public opinion in Philadelphia than in New York.
-Philadelphia is an “American” city; New York is a “foreign” city. In
-Philadelphia the corruption seems almost hopeless; in New York the
-element to which every movement for betterment looks--not in vain--is
-the “foreign” element. The weakness of Tammany’s control over the
-masses of “German-Americans” and “Italian-Americans” and “Jewish
-Russian-Americans” is the chief reason why it does not feel easy and
-secure in the enjoyment of plunder. Cities where the “foreign vote”
-is preponderant may be corrupt; but so also are cities where the
-native American rules undisputed. Manifestly, the causes of political
-corruption are deeper than immigration, are not aggravated by it. And
-since our most hopeful States politically are for the most part those
-into which immigration from abroad has been pouring in a vast and
-steady stream for fifteen years, is there not sufficient ground for the
-confident assertion that the newcomer with his untainted passion for
-Democracy and his new-born hope of rising in the world is one of our
-tremendous political assets?
-
-As to the industrial effect. The overwhelming mass are farmers or
-unskilled laborers. But the wages of unskilled labor cannot be much
-depressed. In all ages and in all countries the unskilled laborer has
-got just about enough to keep him alive--never much more, often a
-little less. In America, as a whole, the condition of unskilled labor
-to-day is better than it ever has been. The fact that we have so much
-rough work to do in developing our vast raw resources makes America the
-best market for unskilled labor the world has ever seen; and it will
-be many generations before that rough work is completed, so inadequate
-is our supply of unskilled labor in proportion to the demand. In the
-trades the competition of the immigrant has not lowered wages. There
-again we have more work to do than there are workers. _The forces
-that have operated unfavorably upon wages are notoriously not forces
-of competition among wage-earners, but forces tending to abolish
-competition among employers for the services of the skilled laborer._
-And in combating these forces, is the immigrant a help or a hindrance?
-Does his vote go for tyranny or for freedom?
-
-The disposition of prosperity to look down on poverty, to drift out
-of _brotherly_ sympathy with it, to misunderstand it, is as old as
-property rights. The disposition of the so-called educated to look down
-on the less educated, to mistake knowledge for intellect, absurdly
-to exaggerate the practical and even the æsthetic value of “polite
-learning,” to under-estimate the all-round importance of that real
-education which is got only in the school of rude experience--this
-supercilious disposition is as old as human vanity. It insinuates
-itself into the sanest characters; it makes fools and incompetents
-and snobs of many promising young men. And these two errors--the one,
-through prosperity; the other, through false education--are responsible
-for the failure of such a large section of our “elegantly articulate”
-to appreciate that we are to-day getting from abroad the best in brain
-and in vitality that we have ever got.
-
-What differentiates the immigrant from those he left behind him? Why,
-he had the enterprise, the courage to protest against the slavery in
-which militarism and despotism were enwrapping all. He left; he made
-the long and arduous journey into this remote and unknown land. He did
-not give up when conditions became too hard, did not sink into serfdom;
-he boldly made a hazard of new fortunes.
-
-Away back in the centuries, Asia’s most vigorous fled from her into
-Europe--and Asia sank into the slough of despotism and Europe became
-great and strong, advancing in all the arts. Now-a-days--to-day no less
-than when Salem and Jamestown and New Amsterdam and New Orleans were
-founding--Europe is causing her best to fly to us. Her best, indeed!
-We must be American enough, democratic enough, to disregard the snob
-standards of our weak wanderers off after European caste and culture;
-we must look at men in the true American fashion--must look at men as
-_men_.
-
-From the common people our Democracy--like all Democracy--sprang;
-by the common people is it nourished; by the common people will it
-prevail. And these newcomers are of the common people, the custodians
-of the highest ideals that irradiate the human imagination. Unimportant
-indeed is the traffic of individuals and ideas that goes first-class
-between America and Europe, in the comparison with the traffic that
-goes steerage.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-THE REAL AMERICAN WOMAN
-
-
-The American woman is regarded both here and abroad as the strongest
-and subtlest enemy of the American Democracy. She is pictured in
-the imaginations of students of our life as ignorant of politics,
-interested only in her own sovereignty over the American man, or,
-rather, over his pocketbook, a snob and a climber and a worshiper
-of European aristocratic institutions; a poor housekeeper and a
-reluctant mother, and a very vampire for luxury and show, she hides
-her superficiality and cold-heartedness under a mask that is fair and
-fascinating. She is a born caste-worshiper, an instinctive hater of
-Democracy.
-
-What truth, if any, is there in these hardy criticisms?
-
-We have noted how, under the leadership and inspiration of the capital
-of plutocracy, New York, every city in the country is, with true
-American rapidity, developing its individual fashionable society. It
-is directed by the wives and daughters of rich men; it is, as we have
-seen, devoted chiefly to spending time and money in unproductive and
-more or less frivolous forms of self-amusement. The character of this
-“set” varies slightly for each locality--but only slightly. In the
-West the wealth-worship is franker; in the East more hypocritical,
-more beslimed and bemessed with cant about birth and culture. But
-whether Mammon is naked and unashamed or is draped and decorated, he
-is still Mammon. The monotonous sameness of the people comprising each
-division of the set, the sameness of their opportunities and aims,
-the world-neighborliness which railways and telegraph and printing
-press have brought about, prevent any notable differences. To dress,
-to talk, to eat, to drive, to entertain, to bring up one’s children,
-all in accord with the standards of “good form” established by the
-aristocratic societies of Europe; to spend each day in pleasures
-that permit one to shift most of the labor and all the thinking and
-providing to hirelings of divers degrees, from lawyers and industrial
-managers to secretaries, housekeepers, butlers, valets and maids; to
-live worthlessly without useful work--these are the aims, East, West,
-and South. And in rapidly increasing measure the aims are accomplished.
-
-Universal freedom, universal opportunity, all but universal toil, have
-indeed very suddenly brought vast riches to America, vast wealth to a
-few. This sudden wealth, coming to a people whose characteristics are
-energy, restlessness and lightning-like adaptability, has all in a day
-relieved a relatively small but, in another aspect, very numerous and
-most influential part of each large community from the necessity to
-labor. Many, a great many, of these continue to strive to cherish the
-ideals of a life of useful labor, continue to strive to set a worthy
-example to their children and to their fellow-citizens--that is, to
-remain sane and American. But a great many others have eagerly adopted
-those alien ideals of the aristocracy of idleness and the vulgarity
-of toil which appeal so strongly to the vanity and other ancient
-weaknesses of the human animal the world over.
-
-For this state of affairs women, imperfectly educated, wrongly,
-sillily educated, in fact, practically uneducated, are in the main
-responsible. Our women, like our men, inherit the American energy and
-restlessness. Where circumstances compel, they work in the home, the
-shop, the factory, the office, in the fine American way. But where
-circumstances do not compel they seek other outlets for their restless
-energy. And thus we find rich wives and daughters organizing elaborate
-establishments and fashionable sets and international circuits, and
-devoting themselves to erecting the life of frivolity and show into a
-career that will at once fill their idle hours, gratify their vanity,
-and give them the sense of doing something ambitious, of “getting on in
-the world.”
-
-Among a people who have always yielded a commanding position to
-women, the power of this new American woman--attractive in dress
-and in surroundings, so often fascinating in personality, usually
-clever and so plausible that she deceives no one more completely than
-herself--could not but be enormous. Is it strange that she weakens
-the hold of the old ideals upon her husband and upon the men who are
-drawn to her attractive house? Is it strange that they persuade their
-consciences to let them neglect to-day’s duties while they help her
-amuse them and herself? Is it strange that she has sons and daughters
-devoted to her ideals? Is it strange that she gathers about her more
-and more backsliders from the democratic conception of life?
-
-Organized as we are, there is absolutely no useful place for a leisure
-class. We do not purpose to be ruled, but, on the contrary, insist
-that our public administrators shall be chosen from the main body
-of toilers and shall execute, not direct, the popular will. Since
-leadership in public and private activity thus falls to the toiler in
-a Democracy, these fashionable “sets” provided by the women of the
-rich class are wholly alien and hostile to us as a democratic people.
-And they inevitably become a menace as their influence extends over
-the men and women of superior education or natural endowments who
-should be the leading exemplars of the American ideal. And this menace
-threatens to erect itself into what pessimists would call a “peril,”
-as the “community of interest” creates monopolies so intertwined with
-our individual structure that to assail them is to jeopardize it, and
-perpetuates wealth in certain families and groups.
-
-Such is the anti-democratic woman. But over against her set the
-American woman. The plutocratic American man, being gaudy and
-conspicuous, distracts attention from the democratic American man, who
-outnumbers and outvotes and out-influences him into insignificance,
-except as an awful warning against flying in the face of the world’s
-democratic destiny. The plutocratic American woman is even more
-conspicuous than the plutocratic American man. But contrast her with
-the rest of the women, especially with the women who go forth from the
-homes to work. Great as is the influence against Democracy exerted by
-the women of the leisure class, it is weak in comparison with that
-exerted for Democracy by the professional and business women of the
-United States.
-
-Ten years ago about one-fifth of all the wage and salary earners in the
-United States were women and girls. When these figures were published
-there was a great outcry of wonder and alarm--wonder at the changed
-conditions, alarm lest those changed conditions might be permanent
-and the old-fashioned woman of the fireside and the stoveside and the
-cradleside might be passing away. To-day about one-third of all the
-women in the United States not on farms earn their own living outside
-their own homes, and these women constitute more than one-fourth of
-all the persons in the United States engaged in gainful occupations
-other than agriculture.
-
-It is evident that the changed conditions are not passing, but
-permanent; that the “new woman” is the woman of the future. Yet we
-still hear the old order talked of as if it were not a departing order,
-and the new order criticised as if it were abnormal, a fad of a few
-“freak” women.
-
-Obviously, this change is most intimately associated with Democracy.
-Democracy, work, women; women, work, Democracy. Did any of those
-ancient republics we hear so much about, those whose decline and fall
-Europe and our own pessimists say we must inevitably imitate, ever
-number among its inhabitants a company of women wage and salary earners
-such as has been so swiftly evolved in democratic, work-compelling,
-work-exalting America?
-
-In face of this army of women who work outside the home, the theory
-still is that man bears the brunt of the battle for food, clothing and
-shelter, while woman is sheltered and comparatively at her ease. This
-theory never was sound. It never would have been accepted had writers
-and thinkers kept clearly before their minds the fact that the human
-race does not consist of a luxuriously comfortable class, but of vast
-masses of laborious millions. From time immemorial, among the masses of
-the people everywhere, the men and the women have worked equally for
-the support of the family. But latterly, under the pressure of modern
-conditions, which are forcing all into the general service of society,
-the women have been drawn from the obscure toil of occupations within
-and around the household; and also into the ranks of women toilers
-have gone hundreds of thousands of women from the classes which, until
-recently, did try to keep their women at home. Is it illogical to say
-that we may presently see practically all the capable members of our
-society, regardless of sex, self-supporting? And in such circumstances,
-would not the family relations, the relations of mother to father, and
-both to children, necessarily undergo a radical transformation?
-
-To-day the women vote in four States and hold public office in all the
-States and under the National Government. There are women policemen and
-firemen, women locomotive engineers, women masons and plasterers and
-gunsmiths, women street-car drivers and conductors, women blacksmiths
-and coopers and steel and iron workers, and even women sailors--to take
-only a few occupations which, on the face, would seem to exclude women.
-In fact, there is not in this country a single department of skilled or
-unskilled labor, except only soldier and man-o’-war’s man, which has
-not its women workers in swiftly increasing numbers. In the professions
-there are thousands of women doctors, lawyers, authors, professors,
-musicians, artists, decorators, journalists, public speakers, and
-more than a hundred thousand women teachers. In the trades there
-are thousands of women hotel and restaurant keepers, insurance and
-real estate agents, bookkeepers, clerks, merchants, officers in
-corporations, saleswomen, stenographers, telegraph and telephone
-operators. In manufactories the women operatives almost equal the men
-in numbers. There are thousands of women who hold responsible positions
-in the management of manufacturing corporations. All these occupations,
-with the exception of such as nursing and teaching school and music,
-were once exclusively in the hands of men.
-
-The cause of the change is the same as that which has revolutionized
-every part of modern society--the amazing discoveries of science,
-creating an enormous number of new occupations and revolutionizing
-the method of all the old occupations, from housekeeping to national
-administration.
-
-War was the department of human endeavor which not only excluded women
-from itself, but also kept her fast anchored at home. Until the second
-quarter of the last century war was the chief thought, the chief
-pursuit of the human animal. He was either just going to war or just
-coming home from war, or engaged in war or preparing for imminent war.
-Obviously, so long as war occupied this position in human affairs woman
-was inevitably in the background, in the secondary places, a household
-drudge or plaything. But war is no longer the principal business of the
-race, with peace tolerated as a breathing spell now and then. Peace and
-its arts have become the serious business of civilization, the settled
-order, with war as a dreadful nightmare. The wars, if not fewer, are
-briefer and are carefully concentrated and confined. Civilization has
-been forced upon a peace basis not by enlightenment, but by commerce
-growing out of discovery and invention. It clamors for skilled hands,
-not for brutal hands. Hence the vast opening for women and the
-vast inrush of women. It is a democratic tide. Out of discovery and
-invention comes commerce; out of commerce and its intercourse, which is
-death to all forms of provincialism, both mental and physical, comes
-enlightenment; in the train of enlightenment, as day in the train of
-the sun, comes Democracy.
-
-This country was remote from other great nations and, therefore, from
-the ever present threat of the actuality of war. It was--perhaps
-through its freedom from war and war alarms--eagerest in seizing
-upon and using the mighty industrial machinery which science gave to
-the race. Thus it has come to pass with us that the abolition of the
-non-worker, the progress toward the industrial equality of the two
-sexes, has been most rapid.
-
-Where European societies had a very complex organization, our society
-had from the beginning simplicity as its chief characteristic. We were
-really all toilers--until recently almost all toilers at occupations
-close to manual labor. The women and the men were throughout on that
-equal basis which in Europe was, and to a great extent is yet, found
-only among the peasant and shopkeeping classes. And as the new era--the
-era of steam and electricity--developed with us, our women and our men
-naturally remained side by side.
-
-Our government was founded in war. Its founders assumed, from the
-history of all other nations, that offense and defense were to be
-its main functions. And the barbaric theory is still ignorantly or
-carelessly assented to. This explains the lagging of the political
-rights of women behind their industrial and civil rights--or,
-rather, industrial and civil necessities; for no right has ever
-been, or probably ever will be, recognized until recognition becomes
-a necessity. The development with us of a class of women who are
-housekeepers only and are most of the time idle or half idle, is
-foreign to the spirit of our democratic era. That development cannot,
-therefore, long survive, any more than an equatorial plant can long
-survive in our zone. The new departures are in harmony with Democracy;
-they mean increased efficiency and usefulness of the human race; they
-must persist and expand and prevail.
-
-To three causes we owe the American woman of the class that only
-pretends to contribute, or at best half-heartedly contributes, toward
-the support of our social system:
-
-First, to the survival of the Old World, old era ideas of “woman’s
-sphere,” of the coarsening effect of labor upon her “finer nature,”
-of the “aristocratic flavor” and “high breeding” of uselessness and
-idleness.
-
-Second, to the simpler tastes of our ancestors, and the comparative
-ease with which at an early period in our national life the labor of
-the men in the family could provide money enough to satisfy those
-tastes.
-
-Third, to the very tardy development of the domestic laborers and
-providers that now relieve woman of the confining cares of household
-and nursery.
-
-As a result of these three causes a class of idle women sprang up--not
-only among the rich and well-to-do, but even among artisans, small
-farmers and shopkeepers. And this class came to be regarded as typical
-and exemplary. In reality it is neither. It has no place in our
-tradition of mothers and grandmothers who spun and made preserves, did
-their own housework, and were busy every waking moment about matters
-which are now attended to in shops and factories. It has no place in
-common sense--the women who insist most strenuously that child-bearing
-and home-making are woman’s whole duty are the women who, as a class,
-leave the care of the home to servants and bear few children and
-consign them to nurses at the earliest possible moment. And manifestly
-it has no place in our future; it must inevitably go the way of all
-else that is undemocratic and parasitic. Our society is founded upon
-the two ideas--work and equal opportunity to all to work. It abhors
-the idler as nature abhors a vacuum. And as the old-time occupations
-of woman are carried on in a different way, she must find other
-occupations. Must, because man will be unable both to support himself
-in the comfort he ever more exactingly demands and also to support her
-in idleness as well as she insists upon being supported. Must, because
-her own increasing aversion to restraint will not let her rest content
-with the slavish and shameful position of a cajoler and dependent.
-
-The sex instinct is powerful enough to triumph over even the instinct
-of self-preservation for a time; but it cannot withstand the steady,
-day-by-day, month-by-month, year-by-year pressure of that instinct of
-self-preservation incessantly stimulated by the operations of economic
-forces. The old order, bulwarked by tradition and by the sex-passion
-and by woman’s ingenuity and man’s weakness where women are concerned,
-will survive long, will disintegrate gradually. But how can it be saved?
-
-Thus we have a social organization which is in process of revolutionary
-change. The women are rapidly pushing out or are rapidly being pushed
-out into occupations which have been transferred from the domestic to
-the general sphere; they are entering upon occupations new and old
-which it was thought a few years ago would be for the men only. The men
-on their part not only are working as formerly, but also are entering
-occupations once followed exclusively by women. Some of the new
-employments of women have already been enumerated. The new employments
-of men in this country include laundry work, cooking, general
-housework, nursing, keeping boarding-houses, teaching primary and
-kindergarten pupils, dressmaking, millinery. The list is far shorter
-and, from the old viewpoint where the equal dignity of all honorable
-labor was denied, seems far less dignified than the women’s list. The
-reason for this is of course that the men had small room to expand
-their already multiform activities, while the women had all the room in
-the world.
-
-The underlying principle of this redistribution of activities is the
-common-sense principle that every unit in a society should do the work
-at hand for which it is best fitted. This principle explains every
-case. Where we find a man dusting, scrubbing and doing laundry work
-it is because he could find nothing more remunerative to do and could
-outbid the women applying for that particular task. Wherever we find
-a woman plastering, or keeping books, or driving a street-car, or
-managing a store or corporation, it is for the same reason. And this
-modern principle wholly ignores sex and looks only at the work to be
-done and at the comparative fitness of the male and female applicants
-for it. We are being taught by destiny that parasitism and dependence
-are no more essentials of the feminine than the brands and manacles
-which at one time most men wore were essentials of the masculine.
-
-It is not prophecy to say that, as more and more millions of women
-enter the industrial fields, these readjustments and redivisions, this
-absorption of some occupations by women and of other occupations by
-men, will go on apace. We may not like it; but we can no more stop it
-than we can stop the physical and mental development of woman, or the
-use of steam and electricity.
-
-The missionary work for Democracy done by the women already
-understanding the values of work will undoubtedly eventually reach the
-“exclusive,” most distinctly leisure class. Its influence is seen on
-every hand, among the girls and young women of the very well-to-do,
-in families where the daughters are still persuaded to remain idly at
-home against their own inclinations. Probably every woman earning her
-own living, who has associates among women more or less comfortably
-supported in idleness, and in restraint, by men, is envied by not a
-few of them, by all not hopelessly corrupted by laziness and caste.
-And eventually they will be following her example. As the number
-of educated, valuable women forced to work for a living increases,
-the number of the same kind of women voluntarily going to work will
-increase.
-
-And finally the richer women will be reached and impelled. Their
-yearning to do something will take tangible form. We may live to see
-the discontented, folly-chasing daughters of the rich stepping not
-down to, but up to a place beside the woman wage-earner, because they
-are sick and tired of having no sensible employment, tired of the
-pitiful wait for some man with the right qualifications of personal and
-pecuniary attractiveness; because they have sufficiently developed in
-intelligence to have not a theoretic but a practical envy of the joys
-of the woman who is absolute mistress of herself and is waiting for the
-right man only as a man now waits for the right woman.
-
-There is no such simplifier of life as work. Its effect upon the dress,
-the home surroundings, the very expression and manners of women once
-accustomed to leisure, is enormous. It tends to make them far more
-attractive to their own sex and also to such men as are not afraid
-an intelligent, competent woman would at close range discover the
-shallowness of their posings and pretenses. Finally, it makes them
-democratic--all of them that have the wisdom to look on their work
-not as a sentence to drudgery from which they hope they can presently
-cajole some man into releasing them, but as a high dispensation of
-destiny in their favor. The “emancipation of woman” is no mere sonorous
-phrase. The new woman can, indeed must, retain all the virtues of
-the “old-fashioned” woman. Feminine is as eternal and immutable
-as masculine; and the other virtues of the old were the virtues
-inseparable from a life of busy usefulness. The new woman can and must,
-and therefore will, free herself from the vices of the old-fashioned
-woman--the vices of narrowness and irrationality, of artifice that
-harks back to the days when woman was the servant of man’s appetites
-and had to pander to them.
-
-The decisive advantage the men have had in the fifty years since
-Democracy set its powerful forces to work upon woman has been not their
-superior strength or skill or faithfulness or industry, but that woman
-has worked merely as a temporary expedient. She has tenaciously assumed
-that she would presently “quit work” and be supported by some man.
-This dream has been largely fanciful, though none the less potent for
-that. The woman, married, has usually found that she has not stopped
-working, but has undertaken a far more laborious and ever grudgingly
-paid occupation. The delusion has made her wages smaller. Who will not
-pay more to a worker who expects to go on working than to a worker who
-expects presently to stop work, and is meanwhile giving at least half
-her energy to another occupation, that of catching a husband? The
-delusion has also destroyed or impaired her ambition. Why struggle to
-rise in an occupation which one hopes and intends presently to abandon
-for another that is wholly different?
-
-But latterly a host of women have been coming into conspicuous
-positions because ambition drove them there. They have begun to work
-for work’s sake. They have seen the fraud in the silly and shallow
-twaddle about “woman and the home”--as if for centuries the mothers of
-the men most useful to society had not been for the most part working
-women who could not, if they would, have pleaded child-bearing and
-nursery and housework in excuse for doing nothing to add to the family
-income. The “new woman” is not a slovenly drudge waiting irritably for
-the advent of a husband that she may become a tenement “sill-warmer”
-or a palace parasite. She works until she is married; she continues
-to work after she is married. And there is no shadow of a taint of
-pecuniary interest in the love and affection she gives.
-
-Disregard the negligible few women of the plutocracy and its environs,
-as we have disregarded the unimportant few men of the same class,
-and looking at all over eight millions, you find that the American
-woman, like the American man, is developing in harmony with the ideal
-of Democracy. Democracy is no discriminator either among persons
-or between sexes. It respects the mothers of future generations as
-profoundly as it respects the fathers. And it has the same gifts for
-all--freedom, intelligence, the joy of work.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-AS TO SUCCESS
-
-
-It has often been said, and written, that we are about the most unhappy
-people on the face of the earth, that our unhappiness increases with
-our Democracy. That our unhappiness is caused by our Democracy.
-Democracy and discontent, despotism and discontent, constitutional
-monarchy and content--so runs the argument.
-
-If this were true, we as Americans would say, “Happiness bought at
-the price of self-respect is far too dear. Heaven itself would be
-too dear at that price. And, however it may be with some Europeans,
-to an American the admission that he was not the equal of any man
-would be a degradation like that of the slave.” But it is not true
-that we are an unhappy people. Not to be sunk in a bucolic stupor
-like the peasants of Europe does not mean unhappiness. To know when
-one is uncomfortable, to think how to become less uncomfortable, to
-be alive, alert, aspiring, to love work as other people love play,
-to love progress as other people love stagnation--that does not mean
-unhappiness. There are other standards of happiness than the bucolic or
-than the self-complacence of the constricted devotees of caste. Indeed,
-we in America continue to doubt whether those states of mind are truly
-happy. Content may or may not mean happiness. It may be the calm, numb
-resignation of despair. It may be the fat, swine-like stupor of an
-established aristocracy. We have our own ideas of happiness--and it is
-interesting to note that these restless, forever unsatisfied longings
-of ours tend to long life.
-
-We are not unhappy; but neither are we happy, nor likely to become so,
-until our corner of the world, at least, is in far better order than it
-is at present or likely to be soon.
-
-There are two kinds of optimism. There is the optimism of retreat--the
-kind our critics set up as the harbinger of happiness. Our plutocrats
-preach this optimism, and those of our politicians who are fattening
-on the honors, salaries and spoils of office. “We are a great
-people,” they say. “Look at our national wealth. Look at our per
-capita circulation of money. Look at the totals of our production of
-everything for man and beast. Let us rejoice and do nothing to disturb
-our national prosperity. Let us stop thinking--or, rather, let the
-masses of the people give the plutocrats and the politicians in power a
-free hand to do the thinking and acting for the nation. Enough of this
-vulgar and irritating discontent! Enough of the coarse, low talk about
-wealth! Let us discuss art and literature and glory and grandeur!”
-
-All this with the most serious face in the world. All this with perfect
-honesty and a heart full of patriotism!
-
-The answer of the American people is cruel. “Rubbish!” they say. They
-are not optimists of retreat--for what but retreat is a progress that
-advances a class at the expense of the mass?
-
-Theirs is the optimism of advance--the advance of all. “We are indeed
-great,” they reply to the optimists of retreat. “Let us be greater.
-What Democracy we have had has carried us far. Let us have more
-Democracy. The masses are better off than they used to be, thanks to
-the sweeping away of some of the obstacles of class and caste. Let us
-sweep away the rest of those obstacles. What we have is good. It is the
-promise of better. Let us see that that promise is redeemed!”
-
-Happiness--in the customary, narrow sense--the sense put into the word
-by the long past with its reign of class and caste--that happiness we
-have not. But the joy of life--the vigorous, bounding hope that beats
-in the heart and throbs in the veins of the strong man growing in
-strength--that we have in ever fuller measure. Such happiness never has
-been in the past? Such happiness cannot be in a world of such abysmal
-natural inequalities? We deny it. We are here not to live by the past,
-by precedent, but to make a mockery of past and precedent. We are the
-children of Democracy, not the wards of aristocracy. We propose a
-wholly new world--and we are putting our proposals into effect. We have
-done well, though we have barely begun. We shall do better. Another
-century or so! We envy our grandchildren, not our grandfathers.
-
-If happiness of the kind our ancestors of the world’s aristocratic
-days dreamed had been the objective of the human race, man would have
-retained his hairy coat, his taste for raw meat, his pleasure in
-cave-dwelling. Every once in awhile we see in America people whose
-object is happiness. Sooner or later they arrive at the bottom.
-Sometimes they are happy there. But, happy or not, they are not to be
-envied or imitated. The dominant note of the real slums is happiness.
-Don’t be deceived by the squalor and rags into thinking it misery. The
-unhappy slum-dwellers do not remain, but restlessly and resolutely
-fight against the bestial stupor, fight their way back to the light and
-the joy of life.
-
-The joy of life is the exaltation that comes through a sense of
-a life lived to the very limit of its possibilities; a life of
-self-development, self-expansion, self-devotion to the emancipation
-of man. Whoever you are, this joy of life can be yours. Money has
-nothing to do with it, either in aiding or retarding. Money cannot
-buy the essentials--health and love. It cannot avert the essential
-evils--illness, bereavement. The world keeps finding this out from
-generation to generation--and forgetting as soon as it rediscovers.
-Solomon mentioned the matter many centuries ago, when he wrote:
-
- “I made me great works; I builded me houses; I planted me vineyards;
- I made me gardens and orchards, and I planted trees in them of all
- kinds of fruits; I made me pools of water to water therewith the wood
- that bringeth forth trees; I got me servants and maidens, and had
- servants born in my house; also I had great possessions of great and
- small cattle above all that were in Jerusalem before me; I gathered
- me also silver and gold, and the peculiar treasure of kings and of
- the provinces;....
-
- “Then I looked on all these works that my hands had wrought and on
- the labour that I had laboured to do; and, behold, all was vanity and
- vexation of spirit, and there was no profit under the sun.”
-
-Our rich men are largely responsible for the misconception that the
-American people have no ideal higher than that of money-making. The
-following remarks once made by a rich philanthropist are interesting
-because they are typical of the thought of a great number of persons
-who speak in public to-day:
-
- “In contributing to the education of the suffrage the rich are but
- building for their own protection. If they neglect so to build,
- barbarism, anarchy, plunder will be the inevitable result. If the
- spirit of commercialism and greed continues to grow stronger, then
- the Twentieth Century will witness a social cataclysm unparalleled in
- history.”
-
-Is all this true? Does the future of civilization depend upon the
-generosity of rich men? If the rich men do not awaken as a class and
-give more largely to the uplifting of their fellow-men, shall we have
-a carnival of barbarism, anarchy and plunder?
-
-The speaker and his kind of social students mean well. They are right
-in arousing the rich to a deeper sense of duty to mankind. But they
-think so intently upon their pet theory that they lose their point of
-view. They exaggerate to hysteria the importance of the rich. They are
-infected with the dollar-worshiping craze which they profess to abhor.
-They vastly over-estimate concentrated wealth as a factor in human
-progress. They erect money into a powerful deity, just as do all other
-worshipers of the dollar. The difference is that they wish to make it a
-benevolent deity.
-
-It is an excellent thing that the rich should be aroused. A rich man
-who does nothing for his brother-man is a contemptible fellow--almost
-as contemptible as a poor man who does nothing for his brother-man.
-The selfish rich man can plead in extenuation that temptations,
-beyond human nature’s power to combat, have narrowed and chilled and
-withered him. But, save ignorance, what excuse has the poor man for
-selfishness? However, if by chance the selfish rich man become aroused
-and give--give manlily, democratically--of his riches, he must not be
-excited about the importance to others of what he has done. Its main
-importance is purely personal. He is a better man for doing it and has
-a stronger title to self-respect. But if he had not done it, the poor,
-old, stupid, blundering human race would have managed to stagger along
-somehow.
-
-By all means let the rich give. For their own self-respect, for their
-own self-satisfaction, they ought to give largely and intelligently.
-Let the honest rich give in sympathy--let the dishonest give in
-humility. But we must remember that all such gifts put together are
-as a mere drop in the ocean so far as the effect upon civilization is
-concerned.
-
-We have not reached our present estate through the generosity of
-any class of men. And we shall not advance to our destined higher
-estate because of the generosity and benevolence of any class. The
-benevolence of the rich may earn for them an honorable place in the
-procession of humanity ever toiling upward, and may enable laggards or
-the too heavily handicapped to keep in line. But this procession, that
-has marched on over kings and emperors, over tyrants and oppressors
-and false teachers, that has met and swept away army after army of
-embattled wrong, is not to be perceptibly retarded or accelerated by
-the errors or the virtues of a class of men who are merely rich.
-
-Rich men did not implant in the human heart the all but universal
-passion for progress. Rich men did not put into the human skull the
-marvelous mechanism of the human mind. Rich men did not endow that
-mind with the body to carry out its will. Wealth has not made the
-great pictures or paintings, has not written the great books nor
-achieved the great discoveries, nor erected the great institutions,
-nor evolved any of the glories of the emancipation of man, social,
-political, industrial, intellectual. _All_ these we owe to men in whom
-the wealth-getting instinct was at most a shriveled rudiment. Wealth
-did not build this Republic in its present majesty; Pliny the younger
-said--and said truly--that wealth had ruined Rome. Concentrated wealth,
-breeder of parasitism and patronage, has shriveled and rotted--always,
-everywhere. If history had not been written by snobs and persons
-tainted with aristocratic error, this fact would be as clear as print
-could make it.
-
-The real wealth, the real riches of humanity are these capable minds
-and capable bodies, the creators of intelligent, progress-producing
-thought and action.
-
-The value of civilization, of an orderly social system, is great to,
-and is keenly felt by, the rich. But that value is just as great to,
-just as keenly felt by, the masses. Are they not wholly dependent upon
-it for well-being, just as are the rich--no more, no less?
-
-And the work of preparing the oncoming generation for the preservation
-and improvement of the social structure is done in each generation
-not by the rich, not by generosity and benevolence, but by the masses
-themselves in a myriad of homes, in a myriad of schoolhouses, in the
-hourly personal and helpful intercourse of a myriad intelligent,
-aspiring men, women and children. It is not concentrated wealth that
-places the resources of the world at the disposal of the masses. It is
-the intelligence of the masses, demanding those resources, that enables
-concentrated wealth to gain its too often hideously unjust demands.
-Concentrated wealth may to a limited extent promote progress; but that
-is overbalanced by the fact that concentrated wealth still more heavily
-penalizes progress.
-
-If civilization, freedom, love of order, were dependent for their
-existence or spread in any large degree upon the rich philanthropist
-and his fellow-millionaires, cataclysm would be a mild word for what
-would be about to befall us.
-
-As for the “spirit of commercialism and greed,” what reason is there to
-suppose it stronger now than in the past? Because the wealth-producing
-capacity of the masses has enormously increased, because the
-opportunities for earning comfort have infinitely multiplied, because
-millions are striving for prosperity now where the few once monopolized
-it all--are these reasons for accusing us to-day of being greedy and
-growing greedier?
-
-Was there ever a time or a place in history where mere money was so
-powerless and brains so mighty as the present day in the American
-Republic? Was there ever a time or place where the individual man was
-at once so powerful to protect his own rights to life, liberty and the
-pursuit of happiness, and so powerless to snatch away those rights from
-others?
-
-The conscientious rich man does well to try to whip his
-fellow-millionaires into line with the procession. But he need not
-torment his declining years with horrid visions of coming anarchy
-if these rich men do not stop groveling and grasping and begin to
-entertain worthy ambitions. Let the rich do their part; but let every
-man, rich or poor, high or humble, remember that his first duty is to
-see that he is doing his own part.
-
-One loses patience with the constant precedence given the idea that
-riches alone mean success. Why is it that the only men who are eagerly
-interviewed and importuned to write articles on “the secret of success”
-are multi-millionaires?
-
-Are there no successful men but multi-millionaires? There are not more
-than five thousand of them in the country. Carlyle once described
-England as “inhabited by thirty millions, mostly fools.” And our own
-country, if none has succeeded in it but the multi-millionaires, may be
-described as inhabited by “eighty millions, mostly failures.”
-
-Success is a glittering word, capable of many meanings. A man is not
-necessarily a failure because he has not made money--a million dollars
-or a hundred. Some very successful men have never tried to make money.
-They preferred to make _something_, and if they achieved their desires
-they succeeded--from their own viewpoint, at least.
-
-Agassiz would not accept five thousand dollars a night to lecture. “I
-have no time to make money,” he said. Scientific inquiry and discovery
-were the objects of his life, and he succeeded in his pursuit of them.
-Wellington, after conquering Mysore, was proffered a gift of five
-hundred thousand dollars by the corrupt East Indian Company. He refused
-to touch it. Piling up “big money” was not his idea of success, either.
-
-When John Hancock, one of the signers of our great Declaration, was
-sitting in the Continental Congress a letter was read from Washington
-suggesting the destruction of Boston by bombardment. Hancock was one
-of Boston’s largest property owners, but he instantly said: “All my
-property is in Boston; but if the expulsion of the British from it
-require that Boston be burnt to ashes, issue the order immediately.”
-There was another man who didn’t believe that “success” was only
-another name for millions.
-
-Charles Sumner refused to lecture at any price. “My time belongs to
-Massachusetts and the nation,” he said. Big money was not his idol.
-Thomas Jefferson died insolvent. Was he therefore a failure? Abraham
-Lincoln died a poor man. Was he also a failure? Grant died so poor
-that his opinion on “how to succeed” would have been of no value to the
-money-mad, even if he had left it.
-
-Finally, can you imagine any of the great real benefactors of mankind
-plotting to make the service they rendered a heavy tax upon posterity
-for maintaining their descendants in foolish idleness and luxury?
-
-Sooner or later there will be a reaction from this search for “the
-secret of success” among the trust kings and the sudden-rich heroes
-of the stock ticker. “I know of no great men,” says Voltaire, “except
-those who have rendered great service to the human race.” Judged by
-that true standard, the mere makers of “big money” cannot tell our
-young men the “secret of success.” They do not know it themselves.
-
-The money success is blatant and strong. It flaunts itself and tries
-to absorb all attention. But it ought not to deceive any but the
-superficial observers of the American people. Our ideals still centre
-in the affections, not in the appetites. To be free, to love, to think,
-to grow--the joy of life. That sums up America. Gilt may for the moment
-reign; but gilt does not rule.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-THE MAN OF TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW
-
-
-In Chicago, in Lincoln Park, there is a wonderful statue. A big,
-slouching form, loose yet powerful; ungraceful, yet splendid because
-it seems to be able to bear upon its Atlantean shoulders the burdens
-of a mighty people. The big hands, the big feet, the great, stooped
-shoulders tell the same story of commonness and strength.
-
-Then you look at the face. You find it difficult to keep your hat upon
-your head.
-
-What a countenance! How homely, yet how beautiful; how stern, yet how
-gentle; how inflexible, yet how infinitely merciful; how powerful, yet
-how tender; how common, yet how sublime!
-
-Search the world through and you will find no greater statue than
-this--the statue of Abraham Lincoln, by St. Gaudens. It is Lincoln; but
-it is also a great deal more. It is the glorification of the Common
-Man--the apotheosis of Democracy.
-
-As you look at that face and that figure you feel the history of the
-human race, the long, the bloody, the agonized struggle of the masses
-of mankind for freedom and light. You see the whole history of your
-own country, founded by common men for the common people, founded upon
-freedom and equality and justice.
-
-Here is no vain haughtiness, no arrogance, no supercilious looking
-down, no cringing looking upward, nothing that suggests class or rank
-or aristocracy. Here is Democracy, the Common Man exalted in the
-dignity of his own rights, in the splendor of the recognition of the
-equal rights of all others; the Common Man, free and enlightened,
-strong and just.
-
-The statue is in the attitude of preparation to speak. What is that
-brain formulating for those lips to utter?
-
-The expression of brow and eyes and lips leaves no doubt. It is
-some thought of freedom and justice, some one of those many mighty
-democratic thoughts which will echo forever in the minds and hearts of
-men.
-
-Let us recall three of those thoughts:
-
- “The authors of the Declaration of Independence meant it to be a
- stumbling block to those who in after times might seek to turn a free
- people back into the hateful paths of despotism.”
-
- “That this nation under God shall have a new birth of freedom and
- that government of the people, by the people, and for the people
- shall not perish from the earth.”
-
- “I say that no man is good enough to govern another man without that
- other man’s consent. I say that this is the leading principle, the
- sheet-anchor.”
-
-These were the ideas that found this country a few ragged settlements
-trembling between a hostile sea and a hostile wilderness and built
-it up to its present estate of democratic grandeur. Not tyranny,
-not murder disguised as war, not robbery disguised as “benevolent
-guidance,” not any of the false and foolish ideas of imperialism
-and aristocracy. But ideas of peace, of equal rights for all, of
-self-government.
-
-Our era, conscious of the mighty works that can be wrought, conscious
-that we are all under sentence of speedy death, eagerly seeks out
-the young man, the obscure man. It has need of all powers and all
-talents, especially of the talents for creating, organizing, directing.
-Instead of it being true that a good man doesn’t have a chance any
-more, the reverse is true--inferior men have chances greatly beyond
-their powers, and immature men are forced into important commands, and
-discredited and ruined, so impatient is the pressure for men to do the
-world’s important work. This is the day of the man who wants a chance.
-
-It is also a day in which we hear a great deal about the “unruly
-class.” This phrase is employed to designate some vague element in the
-masses of the people that is naturally turbulent and ever looking about
-for an excuse to “rise” and “burn, slay, kill.”
-
-You may search through history page by page, line by line, and you
-will find no trace of the doings of this alleged “unruly class.” The
-more you read the more you will be struck by the universal and most
-tenacious love of quiet and order in the masses of mankind. You will
-see them robbed, oppressed, murdered wholesale upon mere caprice, the
-victims of all manner of misery. Your cheeks will burn and your blood
-run hot as you read. And you will note with wonder that they endured
-with seemingly limitless patience until they were eating grass by the
-wayside. Then, once in a while, but only once in a while, they “rose.”
-All the machinery of law and order was in the hands of the oppressors,
-so they were compelled to resort to violence. But even then they
-established new machinery or patched up the old as quickly as possible.
-
-_Every society that has been overturned from, within has been
-overturned by misrule; never by the unruly._
-
-No; the real “unruly classes” are these “respectabilities” with the
-“pulls,” and these governmental officers who are “pulled”;--they
-violate the laws; they purchase or enact or enforce unjust legislation;
-they abuse the confidence and the tolerant good nature of the people;
-they misuse the machinery of justice.
-
-Turn to your history again. You find that every once in a while the
-dominant element has begun to talk about the “unruly class,” to express
-fear of “risings,” of mob violence. And in every instance you find
-that the real reason for this denunciation and dread was that the
-dominant element had begun to be acutely conscious of its own misdeeds.
-It feared that its own weapons of injustice would be turned against
-itself by outraged justice. It feared that its punishment would be in
-proportion to its crimes.
-
-Gladstone said that the Nineteenth century was summed up in the phrase,
-“Unhand me!” Its science struck off the shackles of ignorance upon the
-intellect--shackles of error, of false reverence, of superstitions
-about the causes of the inequalities of men. Thus, the Nineteenth
-century made it possible for this to be the Age of the Common Man. Not
-to states, not to institutions, not to class-made law, not to castes
-and orders and rank belongs the Twentieth century. It belongs to the
-Common Man--to you. You with your stout heart and your willing and
-capable hands. You with your active, intelligent brain, impatient of
-traditional nonsense, however poetically or plausibly englamoured.
-You with your enlightened sense of the equal rights of all men. You
-with your passionate resolve scientifically to correct the stupid and
-cruel inequalities of opportunity, that are as intolerable in an era of
-science as a cannibal feast in the temple of the Most High.
-
-What is the watchword of this new day? From lip to lip, from land to
-land, from race to race, flies the “password eternal”--Democracy.
-
-How the Nineteenth century did belie all the prophecies of pessimism!
-And how the Twentieth century will belie all the prophecies of its
-pessimists!
-
-To realize this you must penetrate the dust and noise and clamor
-that are the surface of things. You must discard prejudice and
-that narrowness which makes you exaggerate the importance of the
-things immediately at hand--the things that are mere details of the
-great pattern which time is weaving in the loom of history--details
-incomprehensible unless you look at the pattern as a whole. Disregard
-tradition and egotism; free yourself of the small silliness that leads
-you to confuse intelligence with etiquette and clothes, with formal
-education which may or may not affect the intellect. Look deep into the
-realities and see there the lines of the Common Man--the toiler at the
-desk and bench and lever and plow, his mind bent upon his work, his
-work the improvement of his own condition and the handing down of the
-heritage of life richer and better in every way than he received it.
-
-Through the ages this Common Man has been building like the coral
-insect--silently, secretly, steadily, strongly. History has little to
-say about him or his work, and that little misleading; the historians
-have been unable to get away from courts and battlefields and the
-legislation halls where fierce but futile and evanescent class
-struggles rage. But the real story of the past of the human race as
-an interpreter and prophet of the future is the story of the building
-of the coral continent founded broadly and deeply upon freedom and
-justice, upon Intelligence and Democracy. And now at last this
-continent of enduring civilization begins to emerge not here and there,
-not merely above the ebbtides of ignorance and tyranny, but everywhere
-and for all time.
-
-Let us read the past aright. Its departed civilizations are not a
-gloomy warning, but a bright promise. If limited intelligence in a
-small class produced such gleams of glory in the black sky of history,
-what a day must be now dawning!
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
-
-
- Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
-
- Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
-
- Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.
-
- Archaic or alternate spelling has been retained from the original.
-
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-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Reign of Gilt</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: David Graham Phillips</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 27, 2021 [eBook #64402]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE REIGN OF GILT ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" width="40%" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<h1>THE REIGN OF GILT</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-<p><span class="xlarge">THE</span><br />
-<span class="xxlarge">REIGN OF GILT</span></p>
-
-<p>BY<br />
-
-<span class="large">DAVID GRAHAM PHILLIPS</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_publogo.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p><span class="antiqua">New York</span><br />
-<span class="large">JAMES POTT &amp; CO.</span><br />
-1905</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p class="center">Copyright, 1905, by <span class="smcap">James Pott &amp; Co.</span><br />
-<br />
-ENTERED AT STATIONERS&#8217; HALL, LONDON<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-First Impression, September, 1905</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">TABLE OF CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="3">PART I&mdash;PLUTOCRACY</td></tr>
-
-
-<tr><td class="tdr"><small>CHAPTER</small></td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">I</td><td> WE ARE NOT ALL MONEY-CRAZED</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1"> 1</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">II</td><td> THE MANIA FOR GILT</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_20"> 20</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">III</td><td> PLUTOCRACY AT HOME</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_32"> 32</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IV</td><td> YOUTH AMONG THE MONEY-MANIACS</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_50"> 50</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">V</td><td> CASTE-COMPELLERS</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_72"> 72</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VI</td><td> PAUPER-MAKING</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_91"> 91</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VII</td><td> THE MADE-OVER WHITE HOUSE</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_105"> 105</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VIII</td><td> AND EUROPE LAUGHS</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_122"> 122</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="3">PART II&mdash;DEMOCRACY</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IX</td><td> &#8220;WE, THE PEOPLE&#8221; </td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_141"> 141</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">X</td><td> THE COMPELLER OF EQUALITY</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_159"> 159</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XI</td><td> DEMOCRACY&#8217;S DYNAMO</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_183"> 183</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XII</td><td> A NATION OF DREAMERS</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_202"> 202</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIII</td><td> NOT GENEROSITY, BUT JUSTICE</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_210"> 210</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIV</td><td> THE INEVITABLE IDEAL</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_226"> 226</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XV</td><td> OUR ALLIES FROM ABROAD</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_239"> 239</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVI</td><td> THE REAL AMERICAN WOMAN</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_253"> 253</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVII</td><td> AS TO SUCCESS</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_274"> 274</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVIII</td><td> THE MAN OF TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_288"> 288</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="ph1">PART I.&mdash;PLUTOCRACY</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1"></a>[Pg 1]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I<br />
-
-
-<small>WE ARE NOT ALL MONEY-CRAZED</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> eminent Bishop of the Episcopalian diocese
-of New York has spent practically his whole life
-among people of wealth and fashion and their associates.
-He has made some brief excursions, but his
-social relations, his intimacies have been altogether
-with what Parton calls &#8220;the triumphant classes.&#8221;
-He knows the plutocracy; his diocese lies in its
-stronghold, includes many of its most conspicuous
-and aggressive leaders both in making and spending
-money. There can be no question of his qualification
-to speak authoritatively of it, of its mode
-of living and thinking. He has said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hear a group of young girls whose fresh youth
-one would think ought, in the matter of their most
-tender and sacred affection, to be as free from sordid
-instinct as from the taint of a godless cynicism.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2"></a>[Pg 2]</span>
-You will find that they have their price, and are
-not to be had without it any more than a Circassian
-slave in the market of Bagdad.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Again:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If the first comers to these shores were to come
-back to-day and see the houses, the dress and the
-manners of their descendants, they would think
-themselves in London in the time of Charles, or in
-Versailles in the time of the Louises.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>When he went on to urge the rich &#8220;to illustrate
-in their habit of life simplicity of attire, inexpensiveness
-in the appointments and chasteness in the
-aspect, proportions, furniture and decorations of
-their dwellings,&#8221; he could have meant only that he
-finds the Americans whom he knows best for the
-most part ostentatious and extravagant in dress,
-prodigal and vulgar and ignorantly profuse in their
-dwellings. And when he charged them with having
-&#8220;the buying of legislatures as their highest distinction&#8221;
-and with &#8220;appropriating the achievements of
-the scholar, the inventor, the pioneer in commerce
-or the arts, without rewarding them for the products
-of their genius,&#8221; he framed an indictment not
-on belief but on knowledge which becomes tremendous
-in view of the conservative character of his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[Pg 3]</span>
-mind and his training, the dignity and responsibility
-of his position and the unequalled opportunity
-that is his to know whereof he speaks.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Methuen, felled in a trifling engagement in
-the Boer war by one of those flesh wounds that are
-most painful but not serious, telegraphed home,
-&#8220;This is the bloodiest battle in history.&#8221; His point
-of view was rather too personal. And somewhat
-so must it have been with the Bishop when he concluded
-his survey of the encompassing plutocracy
-with this wild, despairing cry:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The whole people are corrupted and corrupting!
-Moloch is god and his shrine is in almost
-every household in the republic!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Fifth avenue and Wall street are not all of Manhattan
-Island: Manhattan Island is not all of New
-York City; New York City is not the only city in
-America; and outside the cities in every direction
-stretch vast areas of American soil not without its
-population. The plutocracy is a phase, not the
-whole. If the distinguished Bishop were as competent
-to speak of the American people as he is of the
-plutocracy, we might well feel that it is all over
-with the republic&mdash;that we Americans have bartered
-our birthright for a few handfuls of yellow<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4"></a>[Pg 4]</span>
-earth and richly deserve our fate of social, political
-and industrial serfdom.</p>
-
-<p>But&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>It is as exact a truth as any in chemistry or
-mechanics that Aristocracy is the natural, the inevitable
-sequence of widespread ignorance, and
-Democracy the natural, the inevitable sequence of
-widespread intelligence.</p>
-
-<p>An intelligent few may be, as in Russia to-day,
-crushed down by an unintelligent mass wielded by
-a tyrant or group of tyrants. An unintelligent mass
-may for a time get, as in modern England, some
-measure of liberty through the mutual jealousies
-of intelligent upper classes warring one with another
-for supremacy. But let intelligence be diffused,
-let the sluices be opened so that it flows
-through the social soil in every direction and the
-tendency toward Democracy becomes irresistible.
-Monarchs may plot. Venerable and long-venerated
-institutions of princely and priestly and property
-caste and privilege may thunder, &#8220;Thus far and no
-farther!&#8221; Schools and colleges may give an education
-of half-truths and prejudices. Philosophers
-may deplore and warn, may project subtle and
-alluring schemes for maintaining or rehabilitating<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[Pg 5]</span>
-the old tyrannies in a new form. New conditions
-may produce new and subtle tyrannies that seem
-stronger than the old. All in vain. As well might
-a concourse of parliaments and tongues resolve that
-the heat of the sun be reduced one-half.</p>
-
-<p>In face of any and all obstacles, in face even of
-the determination of a whole people, confused by
-false education, refusing to be free and rallying
-to the defense of some beloved tradition of caste,
-Democracy marches on hardly more hindered than
-an epidemic by the incantations of a &#8220;medicine
-man.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Inertia is characteristic of the great mass of
-human beings, whatever their stage of development.
-And if the combat against the instinctive,
-all but universal reluctance to change had no
-stronger weapons than the tongues and pens of
-&#8220;reformers,&#8221; men would still be huddled in caves,
-gnawing bones. It is by no effort of its own that a
-race or a nation moves. It is in obedience to conditions
-that cannot be resisted and that now gently
-and now rudely compel man to readjust himself or
-to perish.</p>
-
-<p>Democracy does not appreciably advance by the
-energy and enthusiasm of those who believe in it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[Pg 6]</span>
-any more than it greatly lags because of the machinations
-of those who secretly or openly oppose it.
-Energy and enthusiasm may hasten its formal
-recognition, its formal embodiment in written laws.
-On the other hand, adroitness may obtain a lease of
-formal existence for the outgrown institutions. But
-in neither case is the great essential fact of the
-progress of Democracy altered. This progress depends
-upon the diffusion of intelligence; and intelligence
-is not a matter of individual choice or even of
-formal education. If the eyes and the ears are
-open, if the mental faculties are normal, then
-wherever intelligence is diffusing, there the mind
-must be drinking it in. A sponge thrown into the
-water must become saturated. When intelligence
-permeates the masses, then out of the action and
-reaction of the common and the conflicting interests
-of an ever-increasing multitude of intelligent men
-there must begin to issue a democratic compromise
-self-government.</p>
-
-<p>Thus Democracy is not a &#8220;cult&#8221; to rise and rage
-and perish. It is not a theory that may some day
-be discovered false. It is not a plant to be carefully
-watched and watered lest peradventure it die.
-It is a condition, an environment, an atmosphere.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[Pg 7]</span>
-A force as irresistible as that which keeps the stars
-a-swinging is behind it. The story of history,
-rightly written, would be the story of the march of
-Democracy, now patiently wearing away obstacles,
-accelerated there, now sweeping along upon the surface,
-again flowing for centuries underground, but
-always in action, always the one continuous, inevitable
-force. There never has been any more danger
-of its defeat than there has been danger that the
-human brain would be smoothed of its thought-bearing
-convolutions and set in retreat through the
-stages of evolution back to protoplasm.</p>
-
-<p>Until this last half-century it was extremely difficult
-to study the operations of any great world-principle.
-But discovery and invention have now
-given us sight far more penetrating than that of
-the fabled giant who could see the grass grow.
-The difficulty now is to avoid seeing and knowing.
-And to shut out all but some relatively unimportant
-phenomenon&mdash;suddenly and suspiciously acquired
-wealth here, a corrupt and extravagant or degraded
-public administration there, a strike or a riot or a
-momentary moral convulsion yonder&mdash;and from it
-to predict the approach of chaos with tyranny upon
-its back, is as childish as the fantastic alarms of a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[Pg 8]</span>
-tribe of savages during an eclipse or a thunder
-storm.</p>
-
-<p>That any in America should thus shut the eyes,
-say &#8220;It is night,&#8221; and grope and tremble, is more
-discreditable than a similar folly among Englishmen
-or Frenchmen or Germans. Democracy has
-been our familiar from the very beginning, and
-self-government and the absence of rule are as old
-as our oldest settlements.</p>
-
-<p>Those miserable first settlers, with minds as
-small and mean as their cabins, had no conception
-either of freedom or self-government. The tyrannies
-theological and tyrannies political which they
-set up to make life as hateful as it was squalid show
-that they had brought their European ideas with
-them. But fate was against them. They were of
-about the same low social rank. They were poor&mdash;and
-poverty is as potent a leveller as death itself.
-They were isolated. They had to shift each man
-for himself. So, deprived of rulers and forced to
-be free, since none cared to bind them, they began
-to govern each man himself. And they took the
-material tools which the civilization then current in
-Europe forced into their hands and, to save themselves
-from starvation, they set about the conquest<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[Pg 9]</span>
-of the land, not for a State as they imagined, but
-for themselves and their children.</p>
-
-<p>Freedom is not the American&#8217;s because constitutions
-or statutes assert it. The constitutions, the
-statutes are merely written records of a truth no
-more dependent upon them than the proportions in
-which elements combine are dependent upon the
-text-books of chemistry. Besides, constitutions and
-laws avail only through their interpreters. And
-interpretation varies with the honesty or open-mindedness
-of official interpreters, with the spirit of the
-time, with the caprice of the moment even&mdash;a popular
-outburst, an impulse of bad courage in the public
-administrations, a greedy fear or desire in some
-powerful class. Legal enactments affect the surface
-of a society more or less and for periods of
-varying brevity; but the society itself is formed by
-conditions over which man has no greater control
-than he has over his heart-action. Those conditions
-constitute what the religious call &#8220;God in history&#8221;
-and the unreligious call fate or destiny or natural
-evolution.</p>
-
-<p>America will remain in the highway to freedom
-because printing presses are whirling, because railway
-trains are moving, because news is streaming<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[Pg 10]</span>
-along the telegraph wires, because schools and colleges
-and libraries are open&mdash;because intelligence is
-diffused and is ever more widely diffusing. Rights
-may be and constantly are assailed in isolated instances.
-But each instance remains and must remain
-isolated. None has become or can become a
-precedent. And there must be precedent or there
-can be no tyranny. Prejudice, even wilful prejudice,
-still thrives; truth and error have not yet been
-divorced from their unholy alliance which seduces
-honest men to the purposes of rascals; passion still
-rules the heart and the heart still rules the reason.
-But America must be free, however hard it may
-struggle against freedom; Intelligence is striking
-off the shackles. It can no more be stopped or
-stayed than the law of gravitation can be suspended.</p>
-
-<p>The European, or the American returning from
-a visit to Europe, is always disagreeably impressed
-by the evidences of haste, of imperfection in detail,
-by &#8220;the ragged ends sticking out.&#8221; But after a
-moment&#8217;s consideration of the reasons for this
-slovenliness wise criticism is disarmed. In the
-busiest hundred years the world has ever seen the
-Americans have had to shape out of a trackless<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[Pg 11]</span>
-wilderness a complete civilization containing as
-many as possible of the good ideas of the world&#8217;s
-past and having also all the latest improvements.
-There has been no time to &#8220;gather up loose ends.&#8221;
-The filling in of gaps, the replacing of makeshifts
-with permanent structures, the finishing and the
-polishing, have been perforce left to posterity. And,
-thanks to the passing and the present generations,
-posterity will have the leisure and the resources,
-and also the finer qualifications, necessary to that
-part of the task of civilization-building.</p>
-
-<p>The shortcomings of to-day, as nationally characteristic
-as our energy and our mental alertness,
-are most obvious, of course, in the public administration&mdash;disagreeable
-in the national administration,
-painful in the state administration, shocking
-in the municipal administration. Because of these
-spectacles of sloth, incompetence and corruption in
-public officials, it is charged by many persons of
-reputation as &#8220;publicists&#8221; that Democracy is a
-breeder of public corruption. The truth is just the
-reverse. Democracy drags public corruption out of
-its mole-tunnels where it undermines society, drags
-it into the full light of day, draws its deadly fangs
-that fasten in fundamental human rights, cuts its<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[Pg 12]</span>
-fatal claws that sink deep into the throat of freedom.
-One sees and hears more of public corruption
-in a Democracy than in a State. An organism
-that is expelling disease at its surface <i>looks</i> worse
-than one which is hiding and fostering disease in its
-vitals.</p>
-
-<p>Corruption is no offspring of Democracy. It is
-co-existent with human passions and weaknesses.
-Society is but a conglomerate of individuals; the
-whole, with all the strength of all the parts, has also
-all their weakness. In a State the public administration
-is the parlor; in a Democracy it is the servants&#8217;
-hall. Public corruption in a State means that
-the head of the house is corrupt; public corruption
-in a Democracy means that the servants need attention.</p>
-
-<p>Our serious public corruption&mdash;national, State
-and municipal&mdash;is of a kind unknown to the people
-of two generations ago. About the middle of the
-last century science developed to the point at which
-it was able to give man weapons adequate to the
-thorough conquest of nature and of natural difficulties.
-The American people at once seized these most
-timely tools and began the rapid conquest of their
-vast, undeveloped heritage. Forty years ago this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[Pg 13]</span>
-was a sturdy but dull and monotonous agricultural
-nation. It was hindered in intercourse with the rest
-of civilization by the wide ocean, across which passage
-was slow, painful, dangerous. It had a sparse,
-scattered population leading a severe and sodden
-rural or semi-rural life. There were no cities in
-the modern sense, practically no railroads, few and
-wretched wagon roads, few factories, no great distributing
-agencies, no telegraphs. Each section
-was shut off from, was ignorant and suspicious of,
-the others. Opportunities for advancement, for
-individual elevation, did not, as now, press upon
-even the incompetent and unworthy through very
-profusion, but were rare, uncertain and narrow.</p>
-
-<p>From the recent great industrial-social revolution
-has emerged the America of to-day&mdash;a land
-undreamed by our forefathers, uncomprehended by
-ourselves. In every essential of life&mdash;in education,
-in comfort, in refinement&mdash;there has been an immeasurable
-advance. And, most important of all,
-intelligence and that divine, truly democratic spirit
-of discontent, which has ever been the harbinger of
-enlightened progress, have penetrated to the remotest
-farmhouses, and fight a valiant and a winning
-battle with the sloth and despair of our city<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[Pg 14]</span>
-slums. Incidental to this evolution, inseparable
-from it, logically and naturally a part of it, there
-have been myriad opportunities for a temptation
-to corruption. And our corruption has complied
-with corruption&#8217;s universal law. It has been in
-direct proportion to opportunity.</p>
-
-<p>As long as only old and familiar forms had to
-be combated the people did not feel, as they do
-now, the inadequacy, the utter unfitness of their
-electoral machinery for the work of selecting and
-controlling their public administrators. This machinery,
-with some slight changes, is the same that
-was used in Athens and that was borrowed by the
-Greeks from the Egyptians. It is the crudest and
-clumsiest device possible for registering the public
-will. It works fairly well in small communities
-where the people are not busy, where everybody
-knows everybody else, where public administrators
-can be held to strict personal account by their
-neighbors, their masters.</p>
-
-<p>Until the two last centuries the world had little
-use for electoral machinery. And until the last
-fifty years, at most, there were no conditions that
-forcibly demanded the invention of a new electoral
-machine&mdash;one that would permit a people to register<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[Pg 15]</span>
-their will quickly, without circumlocutions, and
-at the same time without the haste that makes right
-action an accident.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to this fundamental disadvantage
-our people are also contending against an almost
-equally unfortunate limitation. The industrial
-revolution presses into private service not merely
-all of the best minds of the nation, but also most of
-the minds in which large measures of both capacity
-and character are combined. Even the mediocres
-who would best fill public office&mdash;which in a Democracy
-should be obedient and never initiatory&mdash;have
-been impressed by high pecuniary rewards into private
-service. But demand creates supply. Give us
-a little time and our supply will once more equal the
-demands upon it. We are manufacturing competent,
-intelligent men and women workers by the
-tens and the hundreds of thousands now-a-days&mdash;faster
-than private enterprise can absorb them, in
-such vast numbers that not the richest plutocracy
-could seduce and silence all or even a large proportion
-of them. Give us a little time, another thirty
-years or so&mdash;at most.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile let us not forget:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>First&mdash;That while we ought to be, and are, concerned<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[Pg 16]</span>
-about the purity and efficiency of our public
-administrations, our vital interest is in the projects
-and acts of the industrial leaders who here ignore,
-there cajole or bully, the public administration,
-now use and now defy it.</p>
-
-<p>Second&mdash;That the new form of public corruption
-is an incident&mdash;melancholy, deplorable, dreadful,
-but still only a necessary incident&mdash;in that
-swift yet permanent betterment of man&#8217;s condition
-which practically began in the childhood of men
-still young.</p>
-
-<p>Third&mdash;That while purchasers of inequality and
-of privilege to extort may evade the laws of the
-statute books, they cannot evade that law of Democracy
-which compels them to assist in raising the
-consuming and producing capacities of the people,
-the standards of enlightenment, of comfort, of refinement,
-of civilized desire&mdash;of intelligence! The
-plutocrats themselves are, in the quaint irony of
-fate, by no means the least efficient of our manufacturers
-of democrats.</p>
-
-<p>It is not rational, it is distinctly irrational, to
-assert that moral or mental or physical betterment
-can tend to disaster, that the growth of intelligence
-may make men seek to tear down and tear up the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[Pg 17]</span>
-fabric of civilization. It is true that the people&mdash;not
-here only, but throughout civilization and wherever
-civilization touches&mdash;are growing more restless,
-ever less content, ever more inquisitive, ever
-less reverential to tradition and authority. But are
-not these the very qualities which, working in the
-minds of the few in the past, led the human race
-up from the caves? Newspapers, libraries, schools
-do not make Huns and Vandals. On the contrary,
-they tame and eradicate that savagery which is the
-largest part of the estate we have inherited from
-our ancestors; on the contrary, they destroy the
-Huns and Vandals of inequality and privilege who
-would wrest from man his heritage under Intelligence
-and Democracy.</p>
-
-<p>As for our own people, whose fate has been forecast
-in so many jeremiads, how would any man or
-body of men set about subjecting millions upon millions
-who are not merely educated but are also
-<i>intelligent</i>? The world has heretofore offered no
-opportunity for the trial of any such experiment
-in enslavement. The experiment if tried must be,
-indeed, original in conception and in execution. Is
-there hazard in the prophecy that no man now on
-earth will live to see it tried? Is there hazard<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[Pg 18]</span>
-even in the prophecy that it never will be tried?
-To assume that such an experiment could have any
-measure of success is to become involved in contradictions
-and absurdities. Make out the perils that
-beset our Democratic path as formidable as you
-please, and still it is less contradictory and absurd
-to assume that we shall triumph over them.</p>
-
-<p>How will we do it? It is not given to man to
-foresee even one minute of his own future. But,
-since triumph we must, rest assured that triumph
-we shall. If you wish to make a shrewd guess as
-to the how of it, watch the motions of that infant of
-yesterday, Science. Already Science has given to us
-all a thousand things that not the richest of our
-grandparents could afford, nor the most powerful
-command. Beyond question it will presently unlock
-the secrets of the composition of matter and show
-us how every object that now enters into private
-wealth or is rationally sought by human desire can
-be obtained so easily by a little effort on the part of
-any human being that a man would as soon think
-of devoting himself to bottling sunshine as to storing
-up what is now called wealth. Less than two
-human generations of scientific activity, and already
-what ominous groanings and crackings in the last<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[Pg 19]</span>
-remaining of the artificial barriers that have so long
-dammed up the riches of the earth as wealth to be
-withheld or doled out by the few. Science is the
-emancipator, the deliverer, the mighty equalizer
-and leveler&mdash;equalizing and leveling <i>up</i>. Not
-down, but up, always up. Not by making the rich
-poor, but by making the poor rich. Not by making
-the wise foolish, but by making the foolish wise.
-Not by enfeebling the powerful, but by making
-powerful the feeble.</p>
-
-<p>For signs of the world&#8217;s to-morrow, look not in
-the programs of political parties, not in the plottings
-of princes or plutocrats, but in the crucible of
-the chemist.</p>
-
-<p>We have reminded ourselves of the solid ground
-upon which rests our faith in ourselves as a democratic
-people with a democratic future. We can
-therefore proceed, with fairly tranquil minds, to
-view some of the &#8220;perils&#8221; to the republic. And
-of these the greatest, the one that includes them
-all, is the plutocracy, which fills so many of our
-thinkers with grim forebodings. Instead of lying
-awake o&#8217; nights, worrying about it, let us go boldly
-and democratically forth in the broad day and gaze
-straight at it in all its grisly vulgarity.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[Pg 20]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II<br />
-
-
-<small>THE MANIA FOR GILT</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">You</span> stand in front of a huge dam. Its wall
-rises bare and sheer. You say to yourself: &#8220;There
-can be little water behind it.&#8221; But even as you
-think this, the dam becomes a waterfall, and the
-waterfall swells into a Niagara. You go round
-where you see the other side; you find a lake
-fathoms deep and extending miles up the valley.</p>
-
-<p>Precisely such a phenomenon occurred in this
-country a few years ago. Behind a dam of long-established
-customs of simplicity and frugality,
-concentrated private wealth had been rising for a
-generation with amazing rapidity. Suddenly it
-overflowed in a waterfall of luxurious living; and
-to-day the waterfall has become a Niagara.</p>
-
-<p>The dam that has pent and narrowed the streams
-of national wealth is the concentration of property
-that has come about through the imperfect working<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[Pg 21]</span>
-of the law of combination which steam and electricity
-established. That imperfection has produced
-the multi-millionaire, the plutocrat, as the
-crowning inequality in a succession of inequalities.
-First, the man with a million or so; then the man
-with ten millions or so; then the man with fifty
-millions or so; now, the man with a hundred, with
-five hundred, with nearly a thousand millions.
-Every city has its plutocrats. In New York is the
-capital of plutocracy. As businesses combine, as
-wealth concentrates, the directors of business, the
-masters of wealth, segregate. Thus, New York
-is denuding the rest of the country of its plutocrats.
-Most of them live in New York now; the rest must
-soon come.</p>
-
-<p>The mighty cataract of extravagant ostentation
-is continent-wide&mdash;from Boston to San Francisco.
-In New York, the high-curving centre of the down-pouring,
-glittering stream, the spectacle almost
-passes belief. There is not the least danger of
-exaggeration in description; the danger is lest they
-who have not seen with their own eyes may refuse
-to believe that men and women can be born under
-the American flag wild enough to indulge in such
-prodigality and pretense and folly.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[Pg 22]</span>A score of years ago there were in New York
-only a few private houses that could accurately be
-spoken of as palaces; to-day there are more than
-two hundred private houses that are indeed palaces
-in size, in cost, and in showiness; and hardly a
-week passes without announcement of several new
-ones of equal or surpassing splendor. Twenty years
-ago there were not in all so many as a score of
-palace-like hotels, apartment houses and business
-buildings; to-day there are more than five hundred
-of these wonderful structures of marble and granite
-over iron, each costing, with its equipment, decorations
-and furnishings, from two to six millions.</p>
-
-<p>And the whole city&mdash;business quarters and industrial,
-rich quarters and poor&mdash;is in a state of
-chaotic upheaval, so furiously are they tearing
-down the New York that was new twenty years
-ago, and replacing it with a New York, in every
-quarter and every street significant of the presence
-of colossal wealth, of stupendous private fortunes,
-of an unprecedented and unbelievable number of
-great incomes.</p>
-
-<p>Fifteen years ago the number of private equipages
-on New York&#8217;s streets was noticeably small,
-considering the city&#8217;s size and wealth, and their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[Pg 23]</span>
-appointments for the most part extremely modest.
-To-day Fifth avenue and Central Park, from September
-to mid-June, are thronged with handsome
-private carriages, notably costly in all details of
-harness and upholstery, the servants in expensive,
-often gaudy liveries; and the multitude of women
-thus swept along in state, in beautiful dresses
-and hats and wraps, frequently display fortunes in
-furs and jewels.</p>
-
-<p>As for the shops, it seems indeed only yesterday
-that you found the costly luxuries in a few fashionable
-places, and there in small quantities and almost
-reverently handled by clerks and customers. To-day
-the shops where the tens of thousands buy are
-more luxurious than were most of the best shops
-ten years ago. And in the best shops you are dazzled
-and overwhelmed by the careless torrent of
-luxury&mdash;enormous quantities, enormous prices,
-throngs of customers. Twenty-five dollars for a
-pair of shoes, fifteen dollars for a pair of stockings,
-two hundred dollars for a hat, one thousand dollars
-for a hat-pin or parasol, fifteen hundred for a
-small gold bottle for a woman&#8217;s dressing-table,
-thirty or forty thousand for a tiara, a hundred
-thousand for a string of pearls&mdash;these are prices<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[Pg 24]</span>
-which salesmen will give you with the air of one
-who tells an oft-told tale.</p>
-
-<p>Why has an income of ten thousand a year become
-a mere competence in New York City to-day?
-Why do the families with ten times ten thousand
-regard themselves as far from rich? Why do
-enough New Yorkers to make a populous city regard
-it as privation if they cannot keep at least
-three servants, one of them a man-servant, and
-ride in cabs and have a country place in summer?</p>
-
-<p>The explanation is&mdash;the multi-millionaire.</p>
-
-<p>There are in New York City to-day upward of
-a thousand fortunes of two or more millions.
-About one-fourth of these are of more than ten
-millions. There are no less than forty-eight fortunes
-of more than forty millions, about twenty of
-these being more than seventy-five millions, and
-half a dozen of them between seventy-five millions
-and the mountainous aggregations of the Oil King&mdash;three-quarters
-of a billion, with an income beyond
-forty-five millions a year.</p>
-
-<p>There is no way of estimating the number of
-fortunes of from three-quarters of a million to two
-millions. The income of a million dollars, safely
-invested, is about forty thousand a year. Many<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[Pg 25]</span>
-New York men&mdash;several thousands&mdash;have from
-their profession or their business annual incomes,
-available for living expenses, of forty thousand or
-thereabouts, yet their holdings of property are
-small. But they belong in the millionaire class because
-they spend money like the millionaires and
-are of the most strenuous part of the plutocracy.</p>
-
-<p>It is the multi-millionaires who set and force the
-pace&mdash;the families with incomes of more than a
-quarter of a million a year. &#8220;A man with a hundred
-thousand a year,&#8221; said the late Pierre Lorillard,
-with humorous seriousness, &#8220;is in the unhappy
-position where he can see what a good time he could
-have if he only had the money.&#8221; And he added
-that easy circumstances meant &#8220;a thousand dollars
-a day&mdash;and expenses.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Properly and comfortably to live in the style
-which New York most envies and admires and encourages,
-a family should have an income of three-quarters
-of a million at least. But by economy
-and abstention from too great self-indulgence, and
-by Spartan resistance to many fascinating temptations,
-they may keep up the appearances of a very
-high degree of luxury on a quarter of a million a
-year. Of course, they cannot have very many or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[Pg 26]</span>
-very grand houses; they must not think of racing
-stables; they would do well to keep out of yachts;
-they must expect to be frequently and far outshone
-in jewels and in entertainments; they must
-keep down their largess, their benevolences. But
-they can have a small house in town, one or two
-more in the country, can entertain creditably if they
-do not entertain too often, and can live&mdash;if they
-are prudent&mdash;free from the harassments of money
-cares.</p>
-
-<p>The quickest way to get at the reason for this
-curious state of affairs, that may seem to many a
-flamboyant jest rather than conservatively presented
-reality, is to look at the life of the typical
-New York multi-millionaire of the extravagant
-class. There are multi-millionaires, scores of them,
-who do not belong in this extravagant class; but
-there are not so many outside of it now as there
-were five years ago.</p>
-
-<p>Our up-to-date, luxury-hunting, luxury-teaching
-Mr. Multi-Millionaire has a fortune which is estimated
-at thirty millions, but is ten millions more
-or less in the widest fluctuations of the stock market.
-His income is about a million and a half a
-year, but he usually spends three-quarters of a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[Pg 27]</span>
-million, and relies upon speculation to put him in
-funds for extraordinary expenditures, such as a
-new house, a large gift to education or charity, a
-large purchase of pictures or jewels.</p>
-
-<p>As human beings compare themselves only with
-those in better circumstances, he counts himself
-poor rather than rich&mdash;his fellow-citizens, the Oil
-King, and the Copper King, and the Sugar King,
-and the Steel King, and the Telegraph King, and
-the Tobacco King, and the Real Estate King are
-what he calls rich. He thinks himself unlucky
-rather than lucky; he avoids intimacy with men
-of smaller fortunes and no fortunes unless he has
-known them long, because he suspects that he is
-usually sought with a view to exploitation&mdash;and he
-is not far from right. He thinks he is opposed to
-ostentation, severely criticises his richer neighbors
-and loudly applauds frugality.</p>
-
-<p>He has a wife who is forty-five years old and
-passes for &#8220;about thirty.&#8221; They have a son who
-has been out of college four years, and after learning
-enough of business to supervise a fortune, has
-settled down to the life of a &#8220;gentleman&#8221;; a daughter,
-who came out last winter and who is being
-guarded by her mother, her companion, her aunt<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[Pg 28]</span>
-and her sophisticated self against the wiles of fortune-hunters
-wearing Cupid&#8217;s livery; a son who
-was at Groton, is now a sophomore at Harvard;
-a daughter nine years old.</p>
-
-<p>They have three fixed and six or seven temporary
-residences.</p>
-
-<p>First, there is the palace in Fifth avenue, where
-the family is united for a few weeks in each year.
-It is closed from the first of June until the first of
-October, and when the various members of the
-family make flying trips into New York they take
-a suite at the St. Regis or at Sherry&#8217;s. Second,
-there is &#8220;the cottage&#8221; at Newport, about the same
-size as the palace on Fifth avenue. Most of the
-family usually spend the latter part of the summer
-here. Third, there is the large new house on Long
-Island, twenty-five miles from New York, where
-several members of the family spend part of the
-spring and fall. Luxurious New Yorkers are becoming
-more and more susceptible to the changes
-of the season. They are emulating, though as yet
-at a distance, the smart set of Juvenal&#8217;s Rome, with
-its summer and winter finger rings.</p>
-
-<p>Our family have a small house at a fashionable
-place in North Carolina; the mother and eldest son<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[Pg 29]</span>
-go there for a part of February and March. They
-have a thousand acres and a comfortable house in
-the Adirondacks&mdash;the head of the family likes to
-shoot and fish. They have a place in the Berkshire
-Hills&mdash;but they do not go there now and they are
-thinking of selling it. The wife has an apartment
-in Paris. She must be sure of comfort when she
-goes over for her shopping. Every few years they
-take a big house in Mayfair for the season, and
-go on to Scotland for the shooting. Then there is
-the steam yacht, an ocean greyhound&mdash;last year it
-cost them sixty thousand dollars for maintenance,
-a few repairs and refittings. The grown son has
-persuaded his father to start a racing stable&mdash;a
-small one with fifteen or twenty thoroughbreds.
-His trainer costs him ten thousand dollars a year,
-and his jockey five thousand more, as a retaining
-fee. The father estimates the cost of this addition
-to the family expense at one hundred thousand
-dollars a year&mdash;he hopes this will include betting
-losses. The son has long had a string of polo
-ponies that costs, with all its embroideries, fifteen
-to twenty thousand a year.</p>
-
-<p>Ten years ago this family had only a small house
-in town&mdash;small by comparison&mdash;and the beautiful<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[Pg 30]</span>
-palace on the Ocean Drive at Newport. But they
-do not feel that they are now extravagant. Wherever
-they go they find people of their own set and
-a good many &#8220;rank outsiders&#8221; doing the same
-things they are doing; and they find many doing
-things they would think far beyond their means.</p>
-
-<p>For example, a man has just paid two hundred
-and eighty thousand dollars for a string of pearls
-for his wife. Our multi-millionaire regards that
-as an extravagance. He thinks his own wife&#8217;s
-string, which cost one hundred and twenty-five
-thousand dollars, represents the limit of prudent
-expenditure for such a purpose. And those of their
-friends whom they regard as comparatively poor&mdash;the
-people with from fifty to a hundred and fifty
-thousand dollars a year&mdash;are pushing them on by
-concentrating where they scatter. They meet different
-groups of these moderately rich people at
-different points in their annual round; and each
-group is living almost as well as, in some respects
-better than, they are at that particular point. True,
-So-and-So&#8217;s house in town is a trivial twenty-room
-affair on a side street, but his place in Newport
-(he concentrates upon it) is far finer than their
-Newport place. Smith is decently housed in town<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[Pg 31]</span>
-and at Newport, but lives in a tiny doll&#8217;s house in
-Curzon street during the London season. Jones
-is modest in America and England, but how he
-does blaze on the Riviera!</p>
-
-<p>There must be no standing still. There must be
-progress. The standards, all the standards&mdash;house,
-dress, equipage, number and livery of servants,
-jewels, works of art, sports, gifts&mdash;are
-rising, rising, rising. Each year, more and ever
-more must be spent, unless one is to fall behind,
-lose one&#8217;s rank, be mingled with the crowd that is
-ever pressing on and trying to catch up.</p>
-
-<p>In the neighborhood of these plutocrats and
-their parasites and imitators, struggling thus desperately
-in gaudiness, it is all but impossible not
-at times to fear that prosperity, concentrated prosperity,
-has killed Democracy, has killed the republic.
-Foreigners look at New York and the galaxy
-of rich cities eagerly imitating it, and shrug their
-shoulders and sneer. Americans look, and try to
-keep their courage and their point of view.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[Pg 32]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III<br />
-
-
-<small>PLUTOCRACY AT HOME</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Let</span> us glance at our typical Mr. Multi-Millionaire&#8217;s
-town house. It is a palace of white
-marble, in Fifth avenue, near Fifty-ninth street&mdash;the
-view across the Park from the upper windows
-is superb. This palace was the inaugural of the
-family&#8217;s recent fashionable career. It is the struggle
-to live up to it that is making them famous in
-New York.</p>
-
-<p>The palace was to have cost our family a million,
-including the site. Up to the present time it
-has cost them two and a half millions, and that
-does not include the one hundred and seventy-five
-thousand dollar set of tapestries for the dining-room
-which is on its way from Europe. The site
-cost half a million; the house three-quarters of a
-million; the rest went for furniture, and the house
-still looks bare to the family. &#8220;A wretched barn,&#8221;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[Pg 33]</span>
-madame calls it. There are one hundred and fifty
-thousand dollars in paintings and statuary in the
-entrance-hall, fifty thousand dollars in paintings,
-statuary, and such matters in the rest of the house.
-Two hundred thousand dollars could easily be
-spent without overcrowding. The furniture, thinly
-scattered in the long and lofty salon, cost two hundred
-and fifty thousand dollars&mdash;it is amazing how
-fast the money disappears once one goes in for old
-furniture.</p>
-
-<p>As you look round these show rooms&mdash;the vast
-entrance-hall, the enormous dining-room, the great
-library, the salon which is used as ballroom, the
-comparatively small and exquisitely furnished
-reception-rooms&mdash;you are struck by the absence of
-individual taste. You are in a true palace&mdash;the
-dwelling-place, but in no sense the home, of people
-of great wealth, but of no marked &aelig;sthetic development.
-They have the money, and to a certain extent
-the faculty of appreciation. But others have
-supplied the active, the creative brains.</p>
-
-<p>You go up the grand stairway, and at the turn
-pause to look down at the magnificent rug which
-almost covers the floor of the entrance-hall, up at
-the splendid painting which adorns the ceiling.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[Pg 34]</span>
-The owner&mdash;you know him well&mdash;tells you that
-each cost twenty-five thousand dollars.</p>
-
-<p>And then he takes you into the wife&#8217;s living-rooms.
-She is out of town.</p>
-
-<p>Madame lives in five great rooms&mdash;a sitting-room,
-a dressing-room, a bedroom, a room where
-her clothes in use&mdash;quantities of dresses, hats,
-wraps, boots, shoes, slippers, drawers full of the
-finest underclothing&mdash;are kept, and a bathroom.
-She is very crowded, she will tell you. For instance,
-where is her secretary to sit and work when
-she wishes to use her sitting-room for a private talk
-with her son or daughter, or some intimate friend?</p>
-
-<p>You look round these rooms and again you note
-the absence of individual taste. Madame is always
-on the wing; she has no time to impress herself on
-her immediate surroundings. But a very capable
-artist has been at work and has not neglected the
-opportunities which his freedom in the matter of
-money opened to him. He has created several
-marvelous color schemes through harmonious shadings
-in rugs, upholstery, the brocade coverings of
-the walls, the curtains, the woodwork and the ceilings.
-You are not surprised that a hundred thousand
-dollars went in making suitable surroundings<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[Pg 35]</span>
-for a lady of fashion and fortune. You know that
-there are several dozen suites more expensive than
-this within gun-shot, and scores almost as expensive
-within a radius of half a mile.</p>
-
-<p>If she were at home there would be on that
-dressing-table five or six thousand dollars in gold
-articles: brushes, combs, hand-mirrors&mdash;each gold
-and rock-crystal hand-mirror cost seven hundred
-and fifty dollars&mdash;bottles, button-hooks, and so
-forth, and so forth. If she were here, there would
-be in that safe at least fifty thousand dollars in
-jewelry&mdash;a small part of what she has, the rest
-being in the safe-deposit vaults.</p>
-
-<p>The two marvels of this suite of hers are the
-bed and bath-tub. The bed is on a raised platform
-in a sort of alcove. The canopy and curtains are
-of a wonderful shade of violet silk. The counter-pane
-and roll-cover are of costly lace. The head-board
-and foot-board are two splendid paintings&mdash;one
-of sleep, the other of awakening. You think
-nine thousand dollars was cheap for this bed, even
-without canopy, lace and other fineries.</p>
-
-<p>The bath-tub is cut from a solid block of white
-marble and is sunk in the marble floor of her
-huge bathroom. It is a small swimming-pool,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[Pg 36]</span>
-and its plumbing is silver, plated with gold. On
-the floor of this room at the step down into the tub
-there is a great white bear-skin, and there is another
-in front of the beautiful little dressing-table.
-Three palms rise from the floor and tower&mdash;real
-trees&mdash;toward the lofty ceiling.</p>
-
-<p>Going on through the palace you discover that
-it is arranged in suites&mdash;somewhat like a very handsome
-and exclusive private hotel. And then you
-learn that here is not one establishment, but seven,
-each separate and distinct. Our multi-millionaire&#8217;s
-family have outgrown family life and are living
-upon the most aristocratic European plan.</p>
-
-<p>In a smaller, more plainly furnished suite of
-rooms than those occupied by his wife, lives the
-husband. In a third suite lives the grown son; in
-a fourth the grown daughter; in a fifth and sixth,
-these the smallest, live the young son and the young
-daughter. The seventh establishment consists of
-forty-two personal assistants and servants.</p>
-
-<p>Each member of the family has his or her own
-sitting-room and there receives callers from within
-or without the family&mdash;except that the daughter
-receives men callers in the smallest of the three
-reception-rooms on the ground floor. Each has his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[Pg 37]</span>
-or her own personal attendants; each lives his or
-her separate social life. They rarely meet at
-breakfast&mdash;it is more comfortable to breakfast in one&#8217;s
-sitting-room; they rarely meet at luncheon&mdash;luncheon
-is the favorite time for going to one&#8217;s intimates;
-they rarely meet at dinner&mdash;one or more are sure
-to be dining out or the mother is giving a dinner
-for married people.</p>
-
-<p>It is with eyes on this lofty height that the New
-York family, just emerging from obscure poverty,
-with five or six thousand a year, anxiously ask
-themselves: &#8220;Now, can we at last afford a man to
-go to the door and wait on the table?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For the man-servant is the beginning of fashion,
-and its height can be measured&mdash;as certainly as in
-any other way&mdash;by the number of men-servants
-and the splendor of their liveries.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, our family of pacemakers have an
-&#8220;adequate&#8221; supply of secretaries, tutors, governesses,
-valets, maids; and the housekeeper has her
-staff, the chef his, the butler his, the head coachman
-his, the captain of the yacht his. Then there are
-caretakers, gardeners and farmers, the racing-stable
-staff, various and numerous occasional employees.
-At the request of Mr. Multi-Millionaire,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[Pg 38]</span>
-his private secretary recently drew up a list of all
-persons in the family&#8217;s service. It contained&mdash;with
-the yacht out of commission and the Newport place
-not yet opened&mdash;seventy-nine names.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Multi-Millionaire, becoming interested in
-statistics, went on to have his secretary take a
-census of the horses and carriages owned by the
-family. Of horses there were sixty-four, excluding
-the seventeen thoroughbreds in the racing stable
-at Saratoga, but including the hunters and the polo
-ponies. The little girl had the fewest. Poor child!
-She had only a pair of ponies and a saddle horse,
-and she complained that her sister was always loaning
-the hack to some friend whom she wished to
-have riding with her. The grown son had the
-most&mdash;thirteen; he must hunt and he must coach and
-he must play polo, or try to. The father himself
-was almost as badly off as his little daughter&mdash;he
-had only four.</p>
-
-<p>Of vehicles there were at the town stables a
-landau, two large victorias and a small one, two
-broughams, a hansom; an omnibus, seating six;
-four automobiles, a tandem cart, a pony cart. At
-the several country places&mdash;a coach, a drag, a surrey,
-a victoria phaeton, two dos-&agrave;-dos, two T-carts,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[Pg 39]</span>
-four runabouts, three buggies, two breaking carts,
-making a total of thirty-one.</p>
-
-<p>The secretary remarked that these vehicles, assembled
-and properly distanced, would, with their
-animals, form a procession about three-quarters of
-a mile long. He then tried to read Mr. Multi-Millionaire
-some statistics of harness, saddles, and
-so forth, but was forbidden.</p>
-
-<p>In further pursuit of this statistical mania, Mr.
-Multi-Millionaire discovered that his family and
-their friends&mdash;and the servants&mdash;had drunk under
-his various roofs during the past year nearly two
-thousand quarts of red wine, about one thousand
-quarts of champagne, one hundred and fifty quarts
-of white wine, one hundred and fifty quarts of
-whiskey, one thousand eight hundred quarts of
-mineral water, and an amazing amount of brandy,
-chartreuse, and so forth. The family&#8217;s total bills
-for drink, food, cigars, and cigarettes had been of
-such a size that they represented an expenditure of
-about three hundred and seventy dollars a day&mdash;about
-one hundred and thirty-five thousand dollars
-a year. His wife became very angry when he
-showed her these last figures. She told him that
-he was meddling in her business and that she didn&#8217;t<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[Pg 40]</span>
-purpose to spend her whole life in watching servants.</p>
-
-<p>Our multi-millionaire did not make his fortune;
-he inherited it. But he has been very shrewd in
-managing it, for all his extravagance. Though
-he is cautious about expenses in one way, he shows
-by the allowances he makes to the various members
-of his family that he believes in carrying out
-to the uttermost the idea that his family must live
-in state. His wife has a million in her own name,
-but he makes her an allowance of three hundred
-and fifty thousand dollars a year to maintain herself
-and their households. The grown son has had
-an allowance of twenty-five thousand dollars a year,
-and when he marries it will be trebled&mdash;perhaps
-quadrupled. This is large for persons of their
-modest fortune, but many fathers of smaller means
-are doing as much for their children, and our multi-millionaire
-will not see his children suffer. His
-grown daughter has an allowance of fifteen thousand
-dollars&mdash;more than she needs, as she has only
-to buy her clothes and pay her small expenses out
-of it. The boy in college has five thousand dollars
-a year; he is always in debt, but his mother helps
-him. The youngest child has ten dollars a week&mdash;her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[Pg 41]</span>
-clothes are bought for her, and she can always
-get money from her father or mother when she
-wishes to make handsome presents.</p>
-
-<p>The most interesting person in the family is the
-mother. She is its moving force, one of the moving
-forces in the extravagant life of New York City
-to-day. You see her name and her pictures in the
-newspapers very often, always in connection with
-the news that she is doing something. She was
-the first in New York to have huge flunkeys in
-gaudy knee-breeches and silk stockings in waiting
-at her front door. She was the first to have as an
-entertainment for a few people after dinner several
-of the grand opera stars and the finest orchestra in
-the country. She is a woman with ideas&mdash;ideas
-for new and not noisy or gaudy, but attractive ostentations
-of luxury. She spends money recklessly,
-but she gets what she wants.</p>
-
-<p>She is one of the busiest women in town. And
-the main part of her business is one which engages
-New York women, and men, too, ever more and
-more&mdash;the fight for prolonging youth.</p>
-
-<p>You would never suspect that she is the mother
-of a son twenty-five years old. Indeed, you would
-not suspect from her looks or her conversation that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[Pg 42]</span>
-she is a mother. She is making her fight for youth
-most successfully. Of course, she uses no artifices&mdash;the
-New York women who care greatly about
-looks have long since abandoned artificiality, except
-as a fad. Her hair is thick and dark and fine. It
-is her own, kept vigorous by constant treatment.
-Her skin is clear and smooth and healthily pale&mdash;it
-costs her and her beauty assistants hours of labor
-to keep it thus. Her figure is tall and slender and
-girlish&mdash;her masseuse could tell you how that is
-done. She lives, eats, exercises, with the greatest
-regularity. And she eats little and drinks less.</p>
-
-<p>On dress she spends about fifty-five thousand
-dollars a year. You will not see her many times
-in the same hat or dress; and she has a passion for
-real lace underclothing and for those stockings
-which seem to have been woven on fairy looms of
-some substance so unsubstantial that only fairies
-could handle it. She bought twelve thousand dollars&#8217;
-worth of underclothing when she was in Paris
-last spring. Her bills at the dressmaker&#8217;s of the
-Rue de la Paix were twenty-seven thousand dollars,
-and at the milliner&#8217;s twenty-four hundred dollars.
-She has about five thousand dollars invested in
-parasols. She has sixty-seven thousand dollars<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[Pg 43]</span>&#8217;
-worth of wraps&mdash;sables, chinchillas and ermine
-cannot be got for small sums. She has many evening
-dresses that cost from eight hundred dollars to
-twelve hundred dollars each. She has few dresses
-that cost as little as one hundred and twenty-five
-dollars. The average price for her hats would
-be, perhaps, fifty dollars. She had one with fur on
-it last winter that cost two hundred and seventy-five
-dollars.</p>
-
-<p>The chief reason for her large expenditure for
-clothes is that now-a-days every detail of each costume
-must be in harmony. She must have slippers,
-stockings, skirt, dress, hat, parasol, all to match or
-in perfect harmony. For she is one of half a dozen
-New York women who are famous for style, and
-having established this reputation she must live up
-to it. When she ceases to fight for youth&mdash;which
-will be in about ten years&mdash;she will probably cut
-her expenditures for dress in half. By that time
-extravagance will have so far advanced that her
-successor will spend seventy-five thousand dollars
-or more on dress. The last season has seen a three-league
-advance. It is now the fashion to wear for
-a drive down the Avenue those delicate shades
-which are ruined so quickly. Next season the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[Pg 44]</span>
-color scheme of the Avenue will be still more gorgeous
-and varied&mdash;and prodigiously more expensive.</p>
-
-<p>But it is her mode of keeping house and entertaining
-that makes the thousands and tens of thousands
-fly. Her establishments are maintained like
-so many luxurious hotel restaurants. Though her
-housekeeper is a capable person and she herself
-studies her accounts closely, it is impossible to be
-ready at all times to house and feed an indefinite
-number of people of exacting taste without spending
-great sums of money. It costs to be able to
-say to the butler at the last moment: &#8220;There will
-be ten for luncheon, instead of six,&#8221; or &#8220;There will
-be twelve for dinner, instead of four,&#8221; or &#8220;There
-will be four for dinner, not eight.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Our Mrs. Multi-Millionaire lives no better in
-respect of her table than scores of people in her set
-and around it. She pays her chef one hundred
-dollars a month and her butler seventy-five dollars
-a month, and so do they. She has no better supplies
-on hand than have they. Her bills at the
-shops where they sell things out of season&mdash;peaches
-at four dollars apiece, strawberries at fifty cents
-apiece, and peas at a dollar a small measure&mdash;show<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[Pg 45]</span>
-no different kinds of items from theirs. They, too,
-have S&egrave;vres plates at five hundred dollars the
-dozen. They, too, have fruit plates and finger-bowls
-of gold plated on silver that cost twelve hundred
-dollars the dozen. They, too, have solid-gold
-after-dinner coffee cups at two thousand dollars
-the dozen, and solid-gold spoons at four hundred
-dollars the dozen. The difference between
-the dinners of those of her fortune and the dinners
-of those of fewer millions lies in quantity, not quality.
-Where they would have to make an effort in
-arranging an unusual dinner and could not have
-more than a dozen at table, her establishment
-and many more establishments like hers would easily
-and without effort expand to entertain, in a
-fashion once called royal, two or three scores of
-guests.</p>
-
-<p>The main and very conspicuous characteristic of
-this typical leader in New York&#8217;s extravagance is,
-naturally, restlessness. Like the other women of
-her set, like their imitators, down and down
-through the strata of New York&#8217;s wealth-scaled society,
-she wanders nervously about, spending
-money, inventing new ways of spending it, all because
-she is in search of something, she knows not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[Pg 46]</span>
-what, that ever eludes her. And this restlessness,
-this nervousness, this hysteria, possesses the women
-and the men alike. Does it come uptown with the
-men from Wall street? Does it go downtown from
-the women and the fever of Fifth avenue? It is
-impossible to say. We only know that it possesses
-both and that it influences their every relation of
-life, public and private.</p>
-
-<p>A fashionable woman sails for Europe&mdash;more
-than five thousand dollars&#8217; worth of flowers, jewels,
-books, things to eat and drink, go to the steamer
-on sailing day from her friends. A young couple
-are married&mdash;their intimates and relatives give
-them three-quarters of a million in wedding gifts.
-A brother meets his sister on her way downstairs
-on the morning of her birthday&mdash;&#8220;Here is a little
-gift for you,&#8221; he says, pausing just long enough
-to hand her a paper. It makes her the owner of
-a million in gilt-edged securities. A husband comes
-home from the office&mdash;&#8220;I&#8217;ve put through my deal,&#8221;
-he says. &#8220;You can have your new house, but I
-won&#8217;t stand for more than a million and a
-half.&#8221; A father calls his son into his study
-and says, &#8220;You will be twenty-one to-morrow. I
-fix your allowance at seventy-five thousand dollars<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[Pg 47]</span>
-a year.&#8221; A doctor goes to a banker to get a
-small subscription for a new hospital&mdash;&#8220;Why not
-build a new hospital?&#8221; asks the banker. &#8220;I&#8217;ll
-give a million. If that&#8217;s not enough I&#8217;ll give
-two.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It is amazing how many great and beautiful
-palaces of a kind such as is occupied by our multi-millionaire
-are being added yearly to New York&#8217;s
-fashionable quarter. And there is not a single
-palace in New York that is comfortable. No way
-has yet been devised for making them otherwise
-than chilly and draughty. The human animal is
-too small for such huge surroundings; and there
-are not enough competent servants or even competent
-available housekeepers to make the domestic
-machinery run smoothly.</p>
-
-<p>The new millionaires slip into New York, into
-their new palaces, attracting little attention. Men
-with a scant million or two are coming all the time
-unobserved. If it were not necessity that drove
-them here, many of them would doubtless become
-angry at their insignificance and would go where
-less money gives distinction. But the rapid concentration
-of the directing forces of the business
-of the country in Manhattan Island compels them<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[Pg 48]</span>
-to yield to the entreaties of their wives and daughters
-and remain.</p>
-
-<p>Scores of these palace owners have or seem to
-have no way of getting acquainted with anybody
-whatsoever. There are millionaires&#8217; families that
-stare drearily out of the windows, bored to death
-in their isolation, and wishing they were back in
-the Western town where they used to have lots of
-fun. There are others who give entertainments in
-the vast rooms of their palaces at which you will
-find their clerks, a few nondescripts male and female,
-and no others&mdash;these standing or strolling
-awkwardly about, trying to forget that they are
-miserable in reflecting on the cost of the pictures
-and the decorations.</p>
-
-<p>In the surroundings above outlined, how could
-anyone, whether newly rich or long rich, lead other
-than a sordid life? Money is there necessarily the
-basis of all action, the determiner of the complexion
-of every thought.</p>
-
-<p>To the narrow vision of the palace dweller and
-of those who look only at palace dwellers, America
-seems like a greedy, ill-mannered child released
-upon a candy shop. In the wide, the true aspect it
-seems a man, intelligently developing himself, fevered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[Pg 49]</span>
-by a sense of the shortness of life and the vastness
-of its opportunities.</p>
-
-<p>In the one aspect it suggests an express rushing
-along, with the engineer mad and the passengers
-drunk. In the other aspect it suggests its own
-miraculous sky-scrapers, rising swift as an exhalation,
-high as the clouds, yet securely founded upon
-the rock.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[Pg 50]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-
-<small>YOUTH AMONG THE MONEY-MANIACS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> typical young men of the America of fashion
-and high finance, created by the multi-millionaire,
-fall into two classes&mdash;the born successes, sons
-or heirs of rich men; the candidates for success. It
-is hardly necessary to say that in this connection
-success always means the accumulation of riches
-enough to enable one to make a stir even among the
-very rich.</p>
-
-<p>If the young man is a born success, all that is left
-for him to achieve is to devise some plan for making
-a stir&mdash;the simplest way being to marry some
-woman with a talent for doing original and striking
-things. No matter how great his income, if he is
-not to suffer the fate of being an obscure follower,
-a merely rich person, suspected of stinginess, stupidity
-and vulgarity to boot, he must do something
-out of the ordinary&mdash;assemble an astonishing establishment,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[Pg 51]</span>
-have the finest pictures, give the finest
-dinners and dances, run the fastest horses or the
-most demoniac automobile, give large sums on some
-original plan to education and philanthropy.</p>
-
-<p>The chances are that the born success will marry
-in his own set&mdash;that is, the daughter or the heiress
-of some rich man. This will be due in large part
-to deliberation; also, neither is likely to know well
-many people who are not rich or of the rich.
-If he is the eldest son, the probabilities, the increasing
-probabilities are that he will inherit the
-bulk of the fortune, no matter how many brothers
-and sisters he may have. Some one in the next
-generation must maintain the family magnificence.
-Naturally, therefore, an unwritten law of primogeniture
-is rapidly growing in force and effect.</p>
-
-<p>And this custom, combined with the rapidity
-with which great wealth piles up in America for
-him who has great commercial skill, insures us a
-future of ever more dazzling splendor, of luxury
-and extravagance&mdash;an <i>immediate</i> future; we will
-not here speculate as to that future which is more
-remote, but not less certain.</p>
-
-<p>A short time ago a young man&mdash;a &#8220;born success&#8221;&mdash;went
-to a beautiful country house near New<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[Pg 52]</span>
-York to make a Saturday-to-Monday visit. He
-brought with him two huge trunks. These were
-taken to the almost magnificent suite of rooms
-which had been assigned to him. His valet unlocked
-the trunks and summoned the chambermaid.
-The two servants stripped from the bed the sheets
-and pillow-cases and covers; then from the trunks
-they took the young man&#8217;s own wonderful bed-clothing,
-woven especially for him by the best looms
-in Europe. These creations were put on the bed
-in place of the silk and fine linen which the owner
-of the country house, a very rich man, regarded
-as fit for a king, but which this young man thought
-far too coarse for contact with his delicate skin.</p>
-
-<p>The host was given to extravagance, was used
-to and in sympathy with the eccentric efforts of too-rich
-people to attract attention to themselves. But
-this insulting refinement &#8220;got&#8221; on his nerves. As
-his guest was a very rich man, and was therefore
-entitled to that reverential deference which only
-the rich are capable of feeling for and giving to
-the rich, the host let no outward sign of his state
-of mind appear. But he confided the insult to his
-other guests as a &#8220;joke,&#8221; and had them privately
-laughing and jeering at his young friend.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[Pg 53]</span>This young man is one of the small advance
-guard of the new generation of plutocrats&mdash;the
-generation that has about the same knowledge of
-life as it is lived by the great mass of Americans
-that we have of the mode of life in a Hottentot
-kraal. We shall soon be far better acquainted with
-these sons and grandsons of somebodies than we
-are at present. Soon the wealth and industrial
-energy of the country will be controlled by them,
-or, rather, through them by a clever and unscrupulous
-few. Let us therefore pause for a moment
-upon these American &#8220;born successes,&#8221; taking at
-random some one of them as a type&mdash;one we will
-call, for convenience, Jones.</p>
-
-<p>His father was a great business man, and in
-forty years of intelligent, incessant and unscrupulous
-effort amassed a vast fortune so invested that
-it gave the possessor control of an enormous
-financial and industrial area. The father was a
-self-made man; he had a profound reverence for
-book-learning; he was resolved that none of his
-own deficiencies should be reproduced in his son.
-His boy was to be a &#8220;cultured gentleman,&#8221; moving
-in the &#8220;best society.&#8221; Also, the boy should have all
-the &#8220;fun&#8221; which first poverty and then business<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[Pg 54]</span>
-cares had denied to the old man. He sent young
-Jones to the most famous schools both here and
-abroad; and he gave him plenty of money. It is
-not definitely known whether the old man was
-proud of the results of his method of bringing up
-a boy so far as he saw them before he died; but
-there is reason to believe that he was. Certainly,
-the boy was as different as it is possible to imagine
-from his plain, rather coarse, very manly if also
-very unscrupulous father. The boy had all his
-father&#8217;s supreme contempt for the ordinary moral
-code and for the mass of &#8220;weaklings&#8221; who live
-under it and suffer themselves to be plucked.
-There the resemblance between the two ends. In
-place of a brain, the boy acquired at college and
-elsewhere a lump of vanities, affectations and poses.
-Surrounded by hirelings from infancy, he became
-convinced that he was the handsomest in body and
-the most brilliant in mind that the world had in
-recent centuries produced. He thought, having
-been assured of it by shopkeepers and agents, that
-his taste was almost too fine for a coarse, commercial
-era, that his nerves were almost too delicate
-even for the works of the greatest musicians and
-painters and sculptors and poets, that he was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[Pg 55]</span>
-living both within and without a sort of tone-poem.</p>
-
-<p>When he came into his own and descended to
-Wall street, he was gratified but not surprised to
-learn that Wall street entertained his own exalted
-opinion of himself. And when he heard on every
-side that, in addition to being such an exquisite as a
-Lucullus or a Louis XIV would have copied, he
-was the greatest financier that ever lived, a boy-wonder
-at high finance, a greater than his father,
-the brain of a Nathan Rothschild in the body of
-a young Apollo, he accepted it all as the matter-of-course.
-Like so many of our very rich, he had
-an economical streak in him&mdash;but this was a profound
-secret, hardly known even to himself. So,
-he readily fell in with Wall street&#8217;s pleasant way
-of saving its own money and living off the money
-of other people. He plunged into the wildest extravagances,
-imitating and striving to outdo the
-young scions of plutocracy with whom he associated
-uptown. And like them, he made the people of
-whose trust funds his wealth gave him control, pay
-the bills. It is vulgar to pay one&#8217;s own bills, but
-there is no objection to their being paid out of
-another&#8217;s pocket. It saves one from the degradation<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[Pg 56]</span>
-of counting the cost, of thinking about prices
-and limits of incomes and such low things.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner was he fairly launched than a half
-dozen of the great plutocrats, with wild shouts of
-adulation, proclaimed him their leader, put him in
-a commanding position in all their big swindling
-schemes called &#8220;finance&#8221; in Wall street. &#8220;You&#8217;re
-it, my lad,&#8221; they cried. &#8220;We take a back seat. Go
-up front where you belong. We&#8217;ll do whatever
-you say.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Is it strange that the young man went about as if
-he were Mercury of the winged feet? Is it strange
-that he got into the habit of greeting his fellow-men
-with that gracious sweetness which kings alone
-have&mdash;and they only on the stage or in novels?
-And when it is added that uptown the married
-women flattered him, all the girls languished upon
-him, everybody pronounced him a devil of a fellow,
-a heart-breaker, a real, twenty-four carat, all-wool
-&#8220;cuss,&#8221; is it not wonderful that he did not go quite
-mad and dress in purple and wear laces and a
-sword?</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, he did have those moments of absolute
-mental aberration, and had to go to or give fancy
-balls to hide his lunacy from the world. At those<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[Pg 57]</span>
-balls he always dressed in some ancient kingly costume;
-and so evident was it that he thought himself
-indeed a king, holding a grand levee, that a smirk
-followed in his wake as he stepped grandly about&mdash;a
-smirk that burst into a titter as soon as he was
-out of ear-shot. Yet really he was not the least bit
-more ridiculous than the other sons and daughters
-of plutocracy, all dressed up as kings and queens
-and nobles and grandees, and wondering if the
-imaginary were not the real and their moments in
-ordinary clothes a nightmare.</p>
-
-<p>On and on he went, madder and madder, so
-crazy about himself that even his plutocratic &#8220;lieutenants,&#8221;
-who were using him as a stool-pigeon,
-could hardly keep their faces straight. At last he
-got to the stage at which the old kings of France
-got just before the Revolution&mdash;the mental state
-superinduced by beginning their education by setting
-in their copy-books as a writing model, &#8220;Kings
-may do whatever they please.&#8221; He never had had
-any sense of trusteeship; he had been flattered into
-believing that the railway or manufactory in which
-he owned a large amount of stock was his very
-own, that wages and salaries paid and dividends
-declared were his royal and gracious largess. But<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[Pg 58]</span>
-he at first had a dim sense that this great truth
-must not be publicly aired, that it was prudent to let
-the common people believe they had some share in
-the enterprise. Now, however, this dim respect
-for, or, rather, tolerance of, a popular delusion
-vanished. With rolling eyes and haughty nose
-and lips and high-stepping legs he advanced boldly
-and publicly into his kingdom. A Russian grand-duke
-said of the Russian people, &#8220;These fleas
-imagine they are the dog.&#8221; Young Jones said in
-effect the same thing of the depositors and stockholders
-in &#8220;my&#8221; enterprises, and showed publicly
-that he thought it.</p>
-
-<p>Great excitement. His plutocrat &#8220;lieutenants,&#8221;
-seeing that their graft through this joyous young
-ass was imperiled, tried to quiet him. Failing
-there, they tried to cajole, then to cow the insurgent
-&#8220;fleas.&#8221; But all in vain. The ears of Jones,
-attuned only to adulatory sounds, were assailed by
-such shuddering rudenesses as &#8220;Petty larceny thief!
-Jackass! Swindler! Puller-in for the big gamblers!
-Crazy numskull!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Frightful, wasn&#8217;t it? Not that he was in the
-least disturbed in his own exalted opinion of himself.
-An angel come from heaven direct would<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[Pg 59]</span>
-have moved him only to light, incredulous laughter
-by telling him the plain truth about himself. Still,
-the clamor was unpleasant; the open sneers, the sly
-stabs. And, above all, the ingratitude! The ingratitude
-of his associates in &#8220;society&#8221; who had
-got so much expensive entertainment and so much
-inspiration from him. The ingratitude of the
-people, his vassals, whom he paid salaries and
-wages and dividends, whom he permitted to deposit
-in his banks and to invest in his enterprises!</p>
-
-<p>His soul is brave, as becomes the soul porphyrogenetic.
-But, as it is also a sensitive soul, how it is
-wrung!</p>
-
-<p>The trouble with our young Jones is that he was
-premature&mdash;not in thought, but in showing his
-thoughts. Only premature. The madness that
-ravaged him is in the plutocratic air. Many eyes
-are rolling, many fingers are twitching in the
-premonitory symptoms of the malady. A few
-years at our plutocracy&#8217;s present rate of progress,
-and Jones will be recognized as a martyr. &#8220;Jones
-was born a little too soon. Jones came to a climax
-a little before the season,&#8221; the dandies will say.</p>
-
-<p>June is the time for roses. Jones came in April.
-Poor Jones! Poor April rose!</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[Pg 60]</span>Such is the mode of the &#8220;born success&#8221;; now
-for the young man who is born with brains and
-appetites and ambitions only. He is determined
-to achieve a plutocratic success; looks about him for
-the road that leads to palaces, equipages, yachts&mdash;all
-that gives one title to a seat at the table of honor
-at this banquet of extravagant luxury. He sees
-at once that to become a multi-millionaire he must
-use his brains to force or to cajole the multi-millionaires
-to make him one of them.</p>
-
-<p>He must pattern after those who are far on the
-way to achieving his kind of success: this corporation
-lawyer earning his hundred thousand or more
-a year as the legal servant of rich men; that railway
-president with his fifty thousand a year and
-perquisites, earned as the commercial servant of
-rich men; that manager getting a salary of one
-hundred and twenty-five thousand as a seeker of
-safe investments for surplus millions of income&mdash;again
-a servant of rich men; that bank president
-with salary and opportunities together netting him
-upward of two hundred thousand a year&mdash;again
-a servant of the rich; that broker who put by half
-a million last year as a result of his skill and assiduity
-in the service of rich operators; that doctor who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[Pg 61]</span>
-made seventy-five thousand in fees and two hundred
-thousand in Wall Street last year on &#8220;tips&#8221;
-from grateful patients&mdash;again the rewards of service
-to the rich.</p>
-
-<p>Our young candidate for success has brains to
-sell; he wants customers with money. He hopes
-ultimately to sell these brains at a very high price;
-he wants customers with lots of money, millions
-of money, in which he may presently share largely.
-He must ingratiate himself with the rich; must go
-where they are to be found, not only in business
-hours, but also in hours of relaxation. He must
-not only work hard; he must also play hard and
-high&mdash;must lead the life of the rich as far as possible.
-His air, his dress, his style of living, all
-must be such that he will be regarded as rich and
-progressive. To drudge and to economize and to
-keep away from the extravagance downtown and
-up will mean a small success, or at best one that
-will not lead to the lofty height of fashion and
-social position upon which he has fixed his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>He may have a streak of incurable folly in him.
-His effort to be &#8220;a man of the world&#8221; may draw
-him from discreet dissipation into that vortex which
-swallows up all weaklings not secured by great<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[Pg 62]</span>
-wealth. But let us suppose that he is not a weakling
-and that he keeps clearly in mind that at the
-basis of all success lies clear-headed, incessant industry.
-He works steadily at his business, commercial
-or professional; he shows capacity and is
-advanced; he is soon getting four or five thousand
-a year. At the same time he has prospered in what
-may be called the uptown end of his business; he
-has made acquaintances among the rich socially;
-several women of importance are interested in him
-and are telling their husbands and their husbands&#8217;
-friends that he has brains. The men are seeing
-that the women are not mistaken.</p>
-
-<p>In any American city except New York or Chicago,
-our young man would now be regarded as a
-person of some consequence. In New York or
-Chicago he has merely reached the point at which
-he can, if he is sagacious, measure his insignificance.
-He has worked hard, but the real day&#8217;s toil has
-only begun. He has raised himself from the class
-that includes hundreds of thousands; but he is still
-in a class that includes tens of thousands.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps this discourages him, makes him feel
-that he can never attain the paradise of multi-millionaires,
-or that, if he did attain it, he would<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[Pg 63]</span>
-be too exhausted to enjoy it. Perhaps experience
-has given him a clearer insight into the real meaning
-of his ambitions, and he is disgusted with their
-pettiness and sordidness, and begins to long for
-self-respect and decency and manhood. Perhaps his
-dream of success has been interrupted by a dream
-of sentiment. He may decide to marry and settle
-down&mdash;he has found New York drearily cold and
-lonely.</p>
-
-<p>In that event he gives up his bachelor apartments
-in the edge of the fashionable district; he is seen
-no more at his club&mdash;indeed, he has resigned from
-it; he is forgotten by his fashionable friends; he
-and his wife live obscurely in a flat or an apartment
-hotel far from the world of fashion, or in a
-cottage down in the country&mdash;a commuter&#8217;s cottage,
-as unlike as possible the multi-millionaire&#8217;s
-cottage of marble or limestone, of which he once
-dreamed. And as he is no longer of the world
-with which we are concerned, he drops out of sight&mdash;for
-the present.</p>
-
-<p>But, on the other hand, perhaps his discovery of
-his insignificance does not discourage him, but only
-serves to rouse him to greater efforts. His close
-inspection of the palaces and performances of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[Pg 64]</span>
-fashionable and extravagant rich has fired his
-imagination and energy. In that case he does not
-marry. &#8220;I am too poor,&#8221; he says, as he looks at
-his paltry income of five thousand a year and thinks
-on the humble m&eacute;nage it would maintain, and remembers
-that his poorest married acquaintances up
-in the Fifth avenue or Lake Drive district have fifteen
-thousand a year and cannot afford to entertain
-or to keep a carriage, and are always fretting about
-money. He considers what a &#8220;decent&#8221; hat or dress
-for a woman costs, and&mdash;well, his tailor&#8217;s bill was
-seven hundred dollars last year and he has almost
-no clothes. He remembers his bills for the few
-small and very modest dinners he gave&mdash;a week&#8217;s
-earnings gone in a few minutes and the dinner
-a poor affair beside the poorest he has had at the
-houses of his rich acquaintances. To console himself
-for his heroic sacrifice of sentiment to ambition,
-he takes a somewhat better apartment for his
-bachelor self in a more fashionable apartment
-house&mdash;his rent is twelve hundred a year. He
-works hard downtown; he continues to work hard
-uptown. He works as cleverly in the one quarter
-as in the other. He is always seen with rich people;
-he belongs to fashionable clubs; he dines in palaces;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[Pg 65]</span>
-he goes for Saturday-to-Monday visits at great, extravagantly
-maintained country houses; he is seen
-in boxes at the opera, at the horse show; he expands
-his tastes and his expenditures with his rapidly expanding
-income. His &#8220;fixed charges&#8221; are now
-fifteen thousand a year&mdash;very moderate for a man
-of his associations.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to these absolute necessities he spends
-about fifteen thousand more upon presents and entertaining.
-Half a dozen men living in the apartment
-house he lives in spend twice as much as he
-does and do not consider themselves, and are not
-considered, either extravagant or dissipated.</p>
-
-<p>He is making a great deal of money, but he feels&mdash;and
-is&mdash;poor. However, he is sustained and
-soothed by the certainty of riches immediately
-ahead. He has been spending, but it has been in
-the nature of an investment&mdash;a most judicious investment
-from the standpoint of his purposes. And
-presently his cleverness and audacity and &#8220;large
-ideas&#8221; have their reward; and then he marries.</p>
-
-<p>She has tastes which are exactly his. She is
-willing to marry him because she has not made the
-success she and her mother dreamed of and strove
-for. She has some money&mdash;their joint income,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[Pg 66]</span>
-while not imposing as New York incomes go, is
-still large enough to enable them to make &#8220;a decent
-start in life,&#8221; as their &#8220;set&#8221; interprets life.</p>
-
-<p>Presently we find them installed in a &#8220;small&#8221;
-house or &#8220;little&#8221; apartment&mdash;the rent is more than
-ten thousand a year, and they have twelve servants.
-His skill as a money-maker is talked about; her
-dresses are admired and envied; their equipages,
-their surroundings, their dinners are models of luxurious
-good taste. As both are shrewd managers,
-their forty thousand a year enables them to seem
-to be spending twice that amount. They are in the
-high-road of plutocratic happiness and are creditably
-charioted. And as the years pass, their increasing
-wealth rolls up on itself as large wealth
-has a habit of doing. They annually tour the multi-millionaire
-circuit in great state&mdash;North Carolina,
-Hempstead, the Hudson, London, Paris, Newport.
-They have children.</p>
-
-<p>No healthier, rosier, more intelligent children
-can be found anywhere than theirs. They have the
-best care that competent nurses and governesses can
-give. They live by the clock, are fed the most
-expensive and at the same time the most sensible
-food. They are dressed in a manner that makes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[Pg 67]</span>
-plain mothers blink and stare. There are only two
-of them and the elder is only seven, but their
-clothing bill last year was fourteen hundred. It
-will be less, much less, as they grow older, for it
-is not good form to dress boys and girls
-extravagantly&mdash;at least not yet. They speak French and
-German as fluently as they speak English, and far
-more correctly. They have everything for mind
-and body&mdash;except the direct constant care of their
-mother. They have everything&mdash;that money can
-buy.</p>
-
-<p>Let us go back to the cross-roads and take a candidate
-for success who, when he achieved his modest
-five thousand a year, married and went to live
-in a flat or small suite in an apartment hotel of the
-kind that would have been called luxurious a dozen
-years ago, but is now third-class. Let us assume
-that his wife, whether she came from out-of-town
-or from the city, is the typical present-day big-city
-woman of extravagant ideas&mdash;is, like her husband,
-wealth-crazy and luxury-crazy and society-mad.</p>
-
-<p>In all probability they will have no children.
-Children are not popular among the extravagant in
-New York&mdash;dogs are less expensive, less troublesome,
-fully as affectionate and far less unfashionable.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[Pg 68]</span>
-The extravagant rich still tolerate children,
-possibly because of a quaint, made-in-England
-theory that aristocratic families should maintain
-the &#8220;family line.&#8221; But &#8220;climbers&#8221; cannot afford the
-necessary time and money. It was Swift&mdash;was it
-not?&mdash;who first called attention to the fact that the
-attitude in climbing and in crawling is the same.</p>
-
-<p>Our young climber is busy all day downtown&mdash;busy
-making money. His wife is busy uptown&mdash;busy
-spending the money he makes, or as much of
-it as she can threaten or wheedle away from him.
-She falls into a set of young married women with
-husbands and tastes like hers. They, like their
-husbands, think only of wealth and extravagance.
-And while they wait for their dreams to come true
-they invest every cent they can lay their hands upon
-in an imitative vain show.</p>
-
-<p>Our young man&#8217;s wife reads the fashionable intelligence
-with her coffee. She presently goes forth
-as fashionably dressed as if their income were three
-or four times what it is. She walks in fashionable
-streets or sits in some fashionable restaurant, there
-to view and study and envy the fashionable women
-she reads about. She &#8220;shops&#8221; in the fashionable
-millinery and dressmaking establishments&mdash;not to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[Pg 69]</span>
-buy, but to steal hints for the use of her own
-cheaper milliner and dressmaker in getting together
-her imitation costumes. She strives to model her
-person, her dress, her walk, her conduct, her conversation
-upon the conception of what is fashionable
-in the multi-millionaire&#8217;s set.</p>
-
-<p>As our young man has the genius for money-getting,
-he gradually becomes rich. As his wealth
-grows he and his wife &#8220;drop&#8221; the &#8220;friends&#8221; of less
-income, gather about them &#8220;friends&#8221; of their own
-fortune, and reach out for &#8220;friends&#8221; who have fortunes
-greater than their own. And at last, perhaps
-by way of a season in London under the guidance
-of some impecunious woman of title, they arrive at
-the bliss of being able to tour the multi-millionaire&#8217;s
-circuit in good company all the way. And a crowd
-gapes at their palace doors and windows whenever
-they &#8220;entertain.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Those city crowds that pause to gape whenever
-more than one carriage halts before a palace!</p>
-
-<p>Fifteen years ago the most extravagant millionaire
-in New York&mdash;a great financier&mdash;spent upon
-his domestic establishment, everything included,
-eighty thousand a year. Very few people of his
-set spent half as much, and the most of them spent<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[Pg 70]</span>
-less than twenty-five thousand. To-day, for the
-fashionable extravagant set, eighty thousand a year
-would not be far from the average expenditure,
-taking rich and &#8220;poor&#8221; together. When that financier&#8217;s
-family were the leaders, the principal entertainments
-in fashionable society were modest affairs&mdash;though
-they were not then regarded as economical&mdash;and
-were given by association. To-day every
-palace has its great dining-hall and its huge ballroom.
-And the very rich who have not palaces give
-their big entertainments individually in hotels and
-restaurants, hiring a large part of the building for
-the exclusive use of their guests, and spending thirty
-or forty thousand dollars or more&mdash;in not a few
-instances far more&mdash;upon each entertainment.</p>
-
-<p>To-morrow&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>In this early twentieth century&mdash;which bids fair
-to be known as America&#8217;s century&mdash;New York,
-the capital of our plutocracy, blazes out a world-capital.
-Into it are pouring wealth and luxury,
-pictures, statuary and works of art of all kinds and
-periods; jewels and collections of rarities. In it
-are rising miles on miles of palaces, wonderful
-parks and driveways. It has begun to be a City
-Splendid. It has already won a place in the line<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[Pg 71]</span>
-of world-capitals back and back through the ages
-to the mighty, nameless, forgotten cities of the
-Valley of the Euphrates. And New York begins
-where the others reached their climax.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[Pg 72]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V<br />
-
-
-<small>CASTE-COMPELLERS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is still an open and anxious question whether
-this fashionable society, the growth, as we have
-seen, of the last two or three decades, constitutes
-a genuine aristocracy. The society itself hopes so
-and tries to believe so, and struggles to forget its
-uncertain tenure, its sordid basis and its humble
-ancestry. And it is encouraged in its pretensions
-by many thousands of agile and aggressive climbers
-who would not for worlds lose their delusion that
-their climbing has a goal, and a goal worth achieving.
-But uneasy doubts refuse to down, and whenever
-one of the fashionables says, with a brave
-essay at the careless, matter-of-course tone, &#8220;We of
-the upper classes,&#8221; he&mdash;or she, for it is more often
-she&mdash;can&#8217;t refrain from a furtive glance to see
-whether all faces within sight are perfectly sober,
-self-complacent and approving.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[Pg 73]</span>No such uncertainty, however, exists in the case
-of the servants of wealth and fashion. They know
-that they themselves are an aristocracy, and they
-are determined that there shall be no doubt about
-their being dignified, if menial, bulwarks of an
-aristocracy of their employers. These servants,
-both male and female, are not Americans. Once
-in a while you will find among them a naturalized
-American; once in a long while you will find a
-shamefaced, apologetic American-born. But they
-are essentially an immigrant aristocracy, and nine-tenths
-of them are from England, where the iron
-caste-distinctions of feudalism have come down
-even unto the present day, not only merely intact,
-but monstrously exaggerated, where snobbishness
-is not only part of the statute law, but deeply imbedded
-in the vastly more potent customary law,
-and is even incorporated in the divine law, is read
-out from the pulpit each Sunday and piously echoed
-by reverent congregations.</p>
-
-<p>In Europe the &#8220;upper class&#8221; and its haughty
-servants are born to their lofty stations; here the
-&#8220;upper class&#8221; is manufactured, largely out of watered
-stock and bonds and stolen franchises, and its
-servants are imported. It is the natural instinct of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[Pg 74]</span>
-small people, suddenly elevated in material wealth,
-to try to believe that the wealth which relieves them
-of the necessity for daily labor also produces a
-chemical change, a refining transformation, in the
-clay whereof their singularly human-looking bodies
-are composed. Against this instinct is the good old
-American sense of humor that recognizes in the
-unerasable physical and mental mint-marks of human
-brotherhood Nature&#8217;s mocking rebuke to the
-vanities of pose and pretense. But few people&#8217;s
-sense of humor extends to themselves; and if they
-get the least encouragement, off they go on a high
-horse. Our rich people get more than a little encouragement
-from certain of their fellow-citizens
-and from upper-class foreigners, who for obvious
-reasons cultivate and flatter them in the delusion
-that it is not their bank accounts but themselves
-that are superior. But the fashionable section
-would never have gone so fast or so far in this
-hallucination had it not been for this important
-menial aristocracy. Students of human development,
-in their passion for dealing only with the
-seemingly big, with the high-sounding, often reach
-conclusions ludicrously wide of the truth, often
-neglect those humble but mighty causes that really<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[Pg 75]</span>
-shape human destiny. They find in the great and
-burning thoughts of philosophers the explanations
-of revolutions which a glance at the prices of bread
-would more justly explain. Let us make no such
-mistake. In seeking the cause of our rich people&#8217;s
-sudden and furious craze for caste let us not be
-proud. Let us turn away from the bronze front
-doors and the magnificent drawing-room and go
-humbly to the area gate and the backstairs quarters,
-where the real cause of their curious, amusing and
-pitiful backsliding from the grand concepts of Democracy
-is to be found.</p>
-
-<p>When rich Americans first began to go abroad
-the servility of English servants offended. But
-custom soon changed that. Servility is insidious.
-The Americans, longing to feel themselves the
-equals of the complacent and secure upper class in
-England, and realizing that they could never hope
-to get deferential respect from their fellow-countrymen&mdash;even
-from those willing to go into domestic
-service&mdash;began to import servants. &#8220;The
-English servants are so much better, you know;
-understand their business and their place.&#8221; But the
-English servant&#8217;s &#8220;place&#8221; in the social hierarchy
-is dependent upon his master&#8217;s place. Whoever<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[Pg 76]</span>
-seeks to lower the master in the social scale seeks
-to lower the servant. On the other hand, whatever
-raises the master socially raises the servant. Your
-Englishman who is a servant born and bred is even
-more incapable of understanding and warming up
-to Democracy than his king would be. He loathes
-Democracy&mdash;does it not lower him in the social
-scale by putting all men on the same level; does it
-not take away his dear gods of rank and birth and
-leave him godless and adrift? He wants none of
-it. It may be good enough for foreigners, but not
-for an Englishman.</p>
-
-<p>Once the imported members of the servile aristocracy
-were among us in considerable numbers
-they began to plot and to compel an aristocracy
-above them. The general theory is that these rich
-Americans who have gone crazy about themselves
-were infected by associating with the aristocracies
-of the Old World, and no doubt that association is
-partly responsible. But the main cause of the malady
-is that every American family living ostentatiously,
-or even at all luxuriously, soon found established
-within its gates an aristocracy of caste that
-compelled the family to seem to put on airs. And
-any American family that assembles a household<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[Pg 77]</span>
-staff of these aristocrats will soon be strutting and
-posing, however hard it may strive to remain sensible.
-The servants simply won&#8217;t have &#8220;under-bred&#8221;
-Democracy; they would despise themselves if they
-found themselves working for men and women
-not their superiors. And it isn&#8217;t in human nature,
-weakened by the example of all around it, to resist
-the subtle and insinuating compulsion of the &#8220;well-bred&#8221;
-hints and innuendos of &#8220;well-bred&#8221; servants.
-A man and a woman are no longer master and mistress
-of themselves, not to speak of their house,
-when they have given way to the luxury and
-vanity of a real high-class English butler backed
-up by half a dozen English footmen, an English
-coachman and three or four English grooms. He
-and she will begin to cut pigeon-wings like a colored
-gentleman on the first warm day of Spring. He
-and she will do it because the servants expect it,
-because the servants have convinced them that it is
-the correct form, because the servants will not tolerate
-any departure from the pose of &#8220;my lord&#8221;
-and &#8220;my lady&#8221;&mdash;and because such posings are so
-titillating to the vanity. And from striving to seem
-a truly &#8220;my lord&#8221; and a truly &#8220;my lady&#8221; before
-the &#8220;well-bred&#8221; butler and coachman and their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[Pg 78]</span>
-henchmen, the man and the woman pass on naturally
-and by imperceptible stages to making the
-same ludicrous struggle in all seriousness before
-their associates, all of whom are doing precisely the
-same silly thing from precisely the same silly cause.</p>
-
-<p>There is a woman in one of our big cities who is
-now a leader of fashion, very &#8220;classy&#8221; indeed, most
-glib on the subject of the &#8220;traditions of people of
-our station.&#8221; Her father was an excellent peddler,
-her mother a farmer&#8217;s daughter who could be induced
-to &#8220;help out&#8221; a neighbor in the rush of the
-harvest time. This typical American woman behaved
-very sensibly so long as her sensible father
-and mother were alive and until the craze for English
-households arose. She fell in line. But the
-haughty servants were most trying at first. For
-instance, she loved bread spread with molasses.
-She ate it before the butler once; his face told her
-what a hideous &#8220;break&#8221; she had made. She tried
-to conquer this low taste&mdash;never did weak woman
-fight harder against the gnawings of sinful appetite.
-At last she gave way, and in secret and in
-stealth indulged. She was not caught and, encouraged,
-she proceeded to add one low common habit
-to another until she was leading a double life. It<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[Pg 79]</span>
-had its terrors; it had its compensating joys. But
-before she had gone too far she was happily saved.
-One morning her maid caught her, and the whole
-household was agog. The miseries endured in the
-few following weeks completely cured her. She
-is now in private, as well as in public, as sound a
-snob as ever reveled in &#8220;exclusiveness.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This is no isolated case. For bread and molasses
-substitute any plain, natural human habit not tolerated
-in England, and you have a story in outline
-that would apply to hundreds. How contemptuously
-our fashionables would deny if accused!
-How indignantly the younger generations who
-have never known what it was to be free from the
-English strait-jacket would protest against such
-coarse insinuations about our aristocracy. But the
-laughable truth remains unshaken&mdash;and also the
-truth that our aristocracy is wofully servant-pecked.</p>
-
-<p>Fully to realize what a tremendous pressure this
-servile aristocracy entrenched in the privacy of the
-home can exert, let us glance at the composition of
-a fashionable household in America to-day. Take
-a family of some aspiring money-lender or stock
-swindler or franchise grabber who has got together
-in one way and another&mdash;principally another&mdash;a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[Pg 80]</span>
-fortune of a dozen millions or so. There are himself,
-his wife with the longing to be &#8220;in it&#8221; or to
-keep &#8220;in it&#8221; gnawing at her, the grown son and the
-grown daughter. Papa is willing to have the family
-show off, but he is not quite ready to go the
-limit. So the establishment is what other fashionable
-people call modest, and what his wife and two
-children tell him is &#8220;mean.&#8221; Here is the schedule:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>General Staff</i>&mdash;Housekeeper, a broken-down
-&#8220;gentlewoman&#8221;; butler, formerly with the Earl of
-Tyne and still with him in spirit; chef, a Frenchman,
-but thoroughly Anglicized in soul, though
-not in accent or cooking; coachman, an Englishman,
-recently with Her Grace the Dowager Duchess
-of Doodles; chauffeur, a Frenchman who speaks
-to nobody unless spoken to and keeps clear of the
-whole mess as much as possible.</p>
-
-<p><i>Housekeeper&#8217;s Staff</i>&mdash;Two English parlor maids
-from the best English houses, most expert in handling
-bric-&agrave;-brac and such perishables; two very
-humble, very impudent English chambermaids; a
-French laundress, who disdains all but the butler
-and the coachman, and sighs for the haughty chauffeur;
-a seamstress, a great gossip and an authority<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[Pg 81]</span>
-on &#8220;fashionable intelligence&#8221;; a linen woman,
-daughter of an English tavern-keeper whose glory
-was that he had been valet to a duke; a useful
-woman, for packing, etc., etc., most &#8220;respectable,&#8221;
-most English; a useful man, for heavy work, windows,
-errands, etc., an Englishman who shows that
-he is spiritually prostrate whenever a superior
-speaks to him; three chambermaids, very English-Irish.</p>
-
-<p><i>Butler&#8217;s Staff</i>&mdash;Two Englishmen to stand in the
-hall in immaculate livery, white silk stockings, etc.,
-etc.; two Englishmen, equally immaculate, to assist
-at table, etc.; two other English assistants, not at
-all times immaculate.</p>
-
-<p><i>Coachman&#8217;s Staff</i>&mdash;Four English grooms.</p>
-
-<p><i>Chauffeur&#8217;s Staff</i>&mdash;One assistant, learning the
-profession.</p>
-
-<p><i>Chef&#8217;s Staff</i>&mdash;An assistant, a Frenchwoman;
-two English kitchen maids or &#8220;scullions.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><i>Personal Servants</i>&mdash;Valet to the master, a quiet,
-well-bred, insolent Englishman; valet to the young
-master, an understudy to the other valet; maid to
-Madame (French); maid to Mademoiselle
-(French); valet to the upper caste men-servants
-(English); valet to the lower class men-servants<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[Pg 82]</span>
-(English); maids to the servants (three English-Irish);
-laundress to the servants (English).</p></div>
-
-<p>Quite a staff&mdash;and it does not include Madame&#8217;s
-private secretary, an American, a &#8220;gentlewoman,&#8221;
-thoroughly converted to the English system, or
-Mademoiselle&#8217;s visiting governess, a product of ten
-years&#8217; training in a New York private school for
-the &#8220;young ladies of the upper class,&#8221; or extra servants
-of all kinds that are constantly coming and
-going. The total monthly pay-roll is never below
-one thousand seven hundred dollars; often, in the
-height of the winter season in New York or of the
-summer season at Newport, it climbs up to two
-thousand dollars. And, putting the feeding of all
-these people at twenty dollars apiece a month,
-which is exceedingly, ridiculously low, the board-bill
-would be more than eight hundred dollars a
-month. Then, naturally, all of them are as careless
-and as wasteful as they dare to be, and, wherever
-possible, corrupt in the taking of commissions from
-the &#8220;tradespeople.&#8221; This means a squandering of
-more than their wages and board together. But it
-is indeed a most &#8220;modest&#8221; establishment&mdash;there
-are at least a thousand in this country far more imposing.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[Pg 83]</span>
-Why, our hero has not even provided servants
-for the servants of his servants! And, as
-everybody knows, that is always done in a really
-bang-up, swell, first-class establishment. Also, his
-liveries, although what the &#8220;tradespeople&#8221; would
-call elegant, are not nearly so sumptuous as those of
-the neighboring establishments.</p>
-
-<p>But, dissatisfied though the servants are, they
-do their best to keep up appearances and they fight
-strenuously for the caste system. They are, roughly
-speaking, divided into five ranks. At the top stand
-the private secretary, the visiting governess, and
-the housekeeper. They are almost &#8220;gentlefolk&#8221;;
-in fact, they are gentlefolk in abeyance, as it were,
-like cadets of a royal house which has been kicked
-out by its unfeeling subjects. Next come butler
-and coachman and chef. Each admits the right of
-the other two to high rank, but each feels toward
-the others as they fancy a marquis must feel toward
-an earl. Below these high haughtinesses is the
-main body of servants, with the lowest rank made
-up of stablemen, scullions, servants&#8217; servants. Each
-servant fiercely insists upon his own station, and
-still more fiercely insists upon the lower station of
-those whom the code of caste has assigned there.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[Pg 84]</span>
-And all the servants insist upon the aristocratic
-principle being enforced from top to bottom of the
-household. The &#8220;master&#8221; and his wife, the boy
-and the girl, know that if they for an instant drop
-the pose they will be the butt of ridicule and contempt
-in the servants&#8217; hall.</p>
-
-<p>The effect of this incessant, subtle pressure upon
-the grown people is strong enough. But they retain
-some glimmerings of a sane point of view; at times
-they realize that there is not a little rotten nonsense
-in their mode of life. But think of the children!
-They were born into this noisome atmosphere; they
-are never allowed to breathe any other&mdash;for, even
-when they go away to school, it is to some &#8220;select,&#8221;
-&#8220;exclusive&#8221; institution, or to associate only with the
-&#8220;select&#8221; and &#8220;exclusive&#8221; in the big college. They
-know no more of the free and national and growing
-American life than a Mammoth Cave fish knows
-of the light and the radiant waters of the upper
-world. They regard Americanism as synonymous
-with demagoguery and anarchy. And they become
-sincere and, because of their wealth and display,
-successful missionaries of the gospel of snobbishness
-to all the children of the rich and the well-to-do
-brought into contact with them.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[Pg 85]</span>Truly, the service is not the most important item
-that comes up the back stairs of the fine houses of
-our plutocracy. The ideas&mdash;they are the real item.</p>
-
-<p>English servants do not, as a rule, like to come
-to this country. Few of the best class, as yet, will
-consent to give up the splendor and assured aristocracy
-of England and go to live among a lot of
-vulgarians, hard though those vulgarians are striving
-to be worthy of the support of an aristocratic
-menialdom. Those few of the best who do condescend
-to exile themselves wear sad faces and show
-that they keenly feel the humiliation. For they
-cannot blind themselves to the truth that their masters
-and mistresses, striving hard to please and to
-delude, are still not really &#8220;ladies&#8221; and &#8220;gentlemen,&#8221;
-but just Americans. Have they titles? No.
-Do the common people doff the hat to them? No.
-Have they &#8220;ancestry&#8221;? They pretend to have, but
-the genealogical trees look about as much like real
-trees as the papier-m&acirc;ch&eacute; palm looks like the
-genuine thing; and Burke&#8217;s peerage and the Almanach
-de Gotha know them not. No, they are
-not aristocrats, and it pains the aristocratic servants
-to serve them much as it would pain a first gentleman
-of the bedchamber to King Edward to get on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[Pg 86]</span>
-his knees to some &#8220;big nigger&#8221; who called himself
-Emperor of Ashanteeland. The commiseration of
-all sympathizers with sensitive souls belongs of
-right to these aristocrats of menialdom in exile.</p>
-
-<p>The great mass of these imported servants, excepting
-those who come here for the chance to
-become men and women and to shake off servitude,
-are a worthless lot, weedings from those perfect
-English gardens of menialdom. And a hard time
-their American masters have with them. Insolence,
-shiftlessness, drunkenness, petty thieving are tolerated
-to and beyond the most asinine patience;
-then, one furious day, the housekeeper, under
-orders from an outraged master or mistress, ejects
-the whole crew and gets in an entirely new lot.
-But this revolt of the downtrodden &#8220;upper classes&#8221;
-is rare and dangerous and often disastrous. For
-this servile aristocracy is a close corporation, very
-limited in numbers and fully awake to its own
-power over the plutocrats who must at any cost in
-money, manhood and discomfort have servility
-and an imitation of the English way of living.
-Woe, woe, woe unto the plutocrat who gets himself
-on the imported servants&#8217; black-list! He may have
-actually to close in whole or in part his vast houses,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[Pg 87]</span>
-and to cease from inviting in his hordes of rich
-friends to see how much more gaudily he is showing
-off than they are. He may have to call in colored
-or plain Irish or Swedish servants, mostly women,
-to save him and his family from the horrors of
-waiting on themselves. But one shrinks from pushing
-inquiry in so harrowing a direction.</p>
-
-<p>How long will it be before we have a home-grown
-menial aristocracy to bolster up and make
-strong our fashionable aristocracy? It may be
-longer than one might imagine. The educated
-people, the lawyers, superintendents, merchants,
-social, political and financial hangers-on, who serve
-the plutocracy, fall easily into servile habits. The
-big corporation lawyer and his family, the fifty
-thousand dollars a year dummy railway president
-and his family, eagerly pay court to the great plutocrat,
-bow and scrape and mould themselves to his
-and his family&#8217;s humors. But the &#8220;lower classes&#8221;
-here remain obstinately insolent. They go into
-plutocratic domestic service only under stress; they
-act in a manner that exasperates their servility-seeking
-employers; they leave as soon as they can
-get any sort of job anywhere. Also, they rouse the
-soundly sleeping or stunned manhood and womanhood<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[Pg 88]</span>
-of the imported aristocracy-adoring servants,
-and so compel the constant recruiting of the ranks
-of the menial aristocracy by fresh importations.</p>
-
-<p>True, among the mass of our immigrants, almost
-all from countries where a real caste system
-has prevailed always, there is a tendency toward a
-searching after an aristocracy in this country. They
-miss it; they cannot believe that a land in all its
-physical aspects like unto the lands from which they
-have fled should be without what has always
-seemed to them a natural and necessary part of the
-order of the universe. But they hunt for this aristocracy
-not with the idea of worshipping it, but
-with the idea of destroying it. And hence we find
-that the loudest angry assertion of the existence of
-a true aristocracy here comes from those of our
-democracy-loving citizens who are foreign-born.
-They see this monstrous pretense rearing itself as
-imposingly as the true aristocracies of Europe; and
-they do not pause to distinguish between marble
-and plaster painted to look like marble. They
-raise a wild shriek and demand that snickersnees
-be drawn and that heads begin to fall. A natural
-mistake, and highly gratifying to our would-be
-aristocrats. They are not terrified by the uncouth<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[Pg 89]</span>
-and futile clamors; though to make the thing more
-realistic to themselves, they sometimes pretend to
-be. But they are through and through pleased at
-hearing themselves in seriousness called what they
-would fain believe themselves to be; and they say
-delightedly: &#8220;At last, the lower classes begin to
-recognize themselves, and us!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But this rejoicing is premature. They are right
-in seeing that it takes a body of self-confessed peasantry
-to make a prince&mdash;that the prince proclaiming
-himself and proclaimed by hirelings and dependents
-only is no prince at all, but a laughing-stock.
-But they are wrong in seeing signs of a
-forming peasantry; what they see is an un-forming
-peasantry&mdash;a vastly different matter.</p>
-
-<p>The obstinacy of the American and thoroughly
-Americanized &#8220;lower classes&#8221; seems incurable.
-And until it is cured, until a body of citizens is
-created that will accept the aristocratic idea not as
-applying to themselves and making them superior,
-but as applying to a fixed class of superiors to whom
-they themselves must be and must remain inferiors&mdash;until
-then, the plutocracy will sigh in vain for
-transformation into an aristocracy. Imported servants
-and our own snob graduates of snob colleges<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[Pg 90]</span>
-with yearnings after the &#8220;cultured and refining influences
-of caste&#8221; will in vain crook the pregnant
-hinges of the knee. The plutocracy will be
-haunted and humiliated by the undignifying grin
-of the &#8220;proletariat,&#8221; incurably and militantly democratic.</p>
-
-<p>And the more excited about itself and eager to
-show off the plutocracy becomes, the more insistent
-and imperious will become the inquiry into the
-origin and the rightfulness of these vast fortunes
-that are being reaped where their owners have not
-sown and squandered after the proverbial manner
-of ill-gotten gains.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[Pg 91]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI<br />
-
-
-<small>PAUPER-MAKING</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">There</span> is a story of a rich woman&mdash;an Austrian,
-perhaps&mdash;who was chilled through by a long drive
-on a bitter winter day.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Make a huge fire in my sitting-room,&#8221; she said
-to a servant as she entered her country house, &#8220;and
-order wood distributed to the poor of the village.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She sat by the huge fire for ten minutes and then
-rang the bell. &#8220;Never mind about distributing that
-wood,&#8221; she said to the answering servant. &#8220;The
-weather seems to have moderated.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The theory back of this story is the popular one:
-that the great comfort of great wealth hardens the
-rich, makes them insensible to privation. The fact
-is the reverse&mdash;at least so far as America is concerned.
-Nowhere in the world is the value of
-wealth so grossly, so ludicrously over-estimated as
-among our plutocrats&mdash;not unnaturally, since their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[Pg 92]</span>
-only title to distinction is their wealth, and a man
-cannot but reverence that which makes him distinguished.
-Nowhere, therefore, are the discomforts
-of poverty so exaggerated as in the palaces of our
-very rich. And so eager are the men as well as
-the women for opportunities to exercise their emotions
-over poverty and destitution that they are
-rapidly creating a huge pauper class. Demand is
-creating supply.</p>
-
-<p>The poor give to the poor through sympathy.
-The rich give to the poor through pity. The sympathetic
-poor are many, and so their pennies and
-food-donations, small in the single, pile up mountainously
-in the total. But they are sparsely and
-more or less judiciously, because intelligently, distributed.
-The very rich are, comparatively,
-though not absolutely, many; and they almost all
-give what seems to the ordinary run of well-to-do
-people very large sums. They give carelessly,
-freely. Though warned by often-exposed abuses,
-they never take warning. Each new fraud finds
-them credulous and eager. They want to give;
-they want to show that they are generous and helpful;
-to caution them is to irritate them.</p>
-
-<p>Thus pauperization is a vast and thriving industry.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[Pg 93]</span>
-It is said, and there is no reason to doubt
-it, that there are several hundred families on Manhattan
-Island&mdash;enough to populate a small city&mdash;that
-have lived well for years wholly upon charity,
-no member of them ever doing any work beyond
-writing begging letters or patrolling begging
-routes. In addition there are thousands of families
-supported in large part by relief got from rich men
-and rich women. And the same state of affairs is
-found wherever the very rich, living exclusive and
-aloof lives, have built their palaces.</p>
-
-<p>To play Lord or Lady Bountiful is such a self-gratifying
-part. It is the traditional, the conventional
-part of the very rich toward the very poor.
-Beggars are so voluble in thanks. It sounds so
-well to talk of &#8220;my worthy poor,&#8221; of what &#8220;I am
-doing for charity.&#8221; So many hours that would
-otherwise be boresome can be filled with receiving
-and patronizing cringing, slathering paupers or
-with nosing about tenements, receiving on every
-floor noisy showers of blessings in exchange for less
-than the price of a supper after the theatre.</p>
-
-<p>The whole business lessens the vanity-disturbing
-doubts that sometimes will arise even among the
-very rich as to the validity of the distinctions in this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[Pg 94]</span>
-Democracy between &#8220;upper class&#8221; and &#8220;lower
-classes.&#8221; In some cases the motive is higher. In
-many cases there is an admixture of the higher
-motive. But the persistence of the very rich in
-face of the plain showings of the harm they do
-makes it impossible entirely to acquit large numbers
-of them.</p>
-
-<p>The pauperization plants of plutocracy fall into
-three classes&mdash;the public, the semi-public and the
-private.</p>
-
-<p>The politicians have expanded, where they have
-not out and out established, the public plants. Instead
-of making the people realize the truth&mdash;that
-these plants are their property, paid for out of
-their wages and giving service to them not as
-charity, but as their hard-earned, paid-for right,
-the politicians turn them into favor-distributing
-centres, centres for the distribution of alms in exchange
-for political power. The semi-public plants
-for the manufacture of paupers are the gifts of very
-rich men, usually men who made their own money;
-after the first generation the very rich do not as a
-rule go in for large public gifts. It is never profitable
-or just to examine deep into motives; sufficient
-to say that, with a few exceptions, these semi-public<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[Pg 95]</span>
-philanthropic institutions for giving something
-in exchange for nothing are avoided by all
-but such of the poor as don&#8217;t mind thinking themselves
-paupers or being looked on and treated as
-paupers.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, there are the private pauperization
-plants. From them might be excepted those of the
-rich men and the rich women who have gone into
-the relief business in a systematic way and operate
-through thoroughly organized, carefully and competently
-conducted bureaus. Their theory of helping
-is not exactly consistent with the old American
-idea of &#8220;root hog or die,&#8221; but neither is it wholly
-exploitation of their own personal vanity without
-any regard to the merits of applicants. They give
-relief, but they try to make sure that relief is, according
-to their very liberal notion of necessity,
-needed.</p>
-
-<p>Probably all but a very few of the families that
-are famous throughout the country for wealth have
-organizations of this kind. But there are upward
-of ten thousand millionaires concentrated in a few
-cities, several hundred of them multi-millionaires.
-The overwhelming majority of these go in for
-philanthropy, not on the carefully organized system,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[Pg 96]</span>
-but more or less haphazard giving, with never
-thorough investigation, often with no investigation
-whatever.</p>
-
-<p>It seems impossible to make people in the habit
-of keeping themselves clean believe that dirt is not
-necessarily or even frequently a proof positive of
-poverty overwhelmed by adversity against which
-it has made an honest struggle. And the rich
-people who like the &#8220;Bountiful&#8221; pose refuse to believe
-that almost all honest destitution is relieved
-by its neighbors and relatives, that nine out of ten
-cases of destitution are fraudulent, that all the
-street beggars are liars, that no one need go hungry
-or shelterless or cold if he will apply to the public
-or semi-public institutions ready to relieve. So,
-we have Lord and Lady Bountiful relieving grown
-people of the necessity of &#8220;hustling,&#8221; and, worst of
-all, encouraging them to bring up their children as
-paupers and beggars.</p>
-
-<p>So scandalous has this industry of pauper-making
-become that in every city&#8217;s highways there
-are now children openly begging, telling their whining
-lies of various more or less ingenious kinds, pretending
-to sell newspapers or pencils or shoe-strings
-to give a color of respectability to their shamelessness,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[Pg 97]</span>
-or, rather, to the shamelessness of their
-parents.</p>
-
-<p>The passing generation&mdash;the rustling, hustling,
-money-grabbing generation&mdash;is usually rather
-shrewd in its philanthropies, as well as generous.
-The &#8220;old man&#8221; was a car-driver, or a brakeman,
-or a plow-boy, or a peasant&#8217;s son. He has poverty&#8217;s
-sympathy with poverty, but also poverty&#8217;s
-suspicion of the cause of poverty. Thus, our cities
-have got and are getting libraries, hospitals, free
-dispensaries, free technical schools of various kinds,
-model tenements, and the like. Millions on millions
-are given annually by &#8220;self-made&#8221; men, most
-of it as wisely as giving can be.</p>
-
-<p>But shrewd as these men are, they often fail to
-see the difference between the sympathetic, unselfish,
-man-to-man individual help they as poor
-boys got from people of their own kind in better
-circumstances, and this general, unequal, pitying,
-condescending charity which gives indiscriminatingly
-something that is of value only to the self-respecting,
-and too often takes away in exchange
-all, or nearly all, self-respect.</p>
-
-<p>Still, though these &#8220;self-made&#8221; men give and
-give largely and with many mistakes, they have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[Pg 98]</span>
-the fear of pauper-making ever in mind. And
-when they give to individuals they try to be doubly
-careful.</p>
-
-<p>In the second generation&mdash;what used to be but
-is no longer the spendthrift generation&mdash;the very
-rich retrench in the matter of large benefactions.
-The family position is established. None of the
-members of it has ever known what it is to be
-hungry or cold without knowing just where to turn
-for food and warmth. Sympathy, which was the
-sentiment in the first generation, now becomes pity.
-Man-to-man is changed into &#8220;Bountiful&#8221; and his
-or her &#8220;worthy poor.&#8221; And we have the pauper-plant
-in full blast.</p>
-
-<p>Each day every rich man or woman who is at all
-well known receives large numbers of begging letters&mdash;from
-beggars in Maine and in Texas, in
-Florida and in Washington, in all parts of the
-Union. They want loans. They want notes or
-mortgages paid. They want pianos and trousseaus.
-They want pensions for crippled sons or
-daughters. Or they want anything from old
-clothes to several thousand dollars to buy a farm
-or a store. The apparent effrontery of these requests
-disappears as the letters are read and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[Pg 99]</span>
-amazing, even pathetic, simplicity of the writers
-stands out.</p>
-
-<p>Curiously enough, some of these requests, preposterous
-though they are, are granted. A skilfully
-written letter sent to a certain kind of rich
-person at just the right moment has been known
-to produce amazing results. No reader of this
-book, however, need advise a beggar of his acquaintance
-to try it. The two cents postage would
-be far more likely to bring a return if invested in
-stocks of the mines of the mountains in the moon.
-There are many of the rich who have every begging
-letter that is at all reasonable or plausible
-thoroughly investigated by a secretary&mdash;or by some
-local agent of a corporation in which the recipient
-happens to be interested. Pity for the &#8220;worthy
-poor&#8221; is an extremely potent force in the plutocracy.</p>
-
-<p>But it is local pauper-making that has the greatest
-fascination for the rich man or woman who does
-not care to go into charity on the Carnegie or Rockefeller
-or Armour scale, or to take the trouble to
-organize a bureau that works with precision and
-without any advertisement of its owner. The
-&#8220;agony stories&#8221; cooked up by the newspapers are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[Pg 100]</span>
-noted, the slums are ransacked, the parasites on
-&#8220;charity,&#8221; both those who honestly deceive themselves
-and those who deliberately &#8220;graft,&#8221; are
-eagerly welcomed and listened to. Thus there are
-a good many thousands of rich city dwellers with
-incomes ranging from twenty thousand to several
-hundred thousands a year, each of whom has his or
-her circle of &#8220;worthy poor,&#8221; or gives regularly to
-those myriad petty enterprises of misdirected or
-barefacedly fraudulent charity which enlist the
-activities of so many &#8220;workers.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The women are the most persistent and unreasonable
-offenders in this respect. Partly through
-idleness, partly through a craving to have occupation
-and a sense of usefulness, partly through a
-profound pity for their apparently unfortunate sisters,
-they pour out capital for pauper-plants and
-search diligently for &#8220;worthy poor&#8221; to pauperize.</p>
-
-<p>Among the long-very-rich there is notable shyness
-of the larger kinds of giving. No doubt at bottom
-this is due to increasing selfishness, increasing
-absorption in amusements of the wholly selfish
-kinds. It costs more and more every year to play
-the rich man&#8217;s part; more and more imagination is
-brought to bear in developing it, both by rich men<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[Pg 101]</span>
-eager to find new ways of showing off and by ingenious
-poor men inventing new ways of making
-a living out of the rich upon whose extravagance
-they thrive. The rich man, even where his income
-is huge, is often pinched. He hates to give&mdash;he
-may find that his giving has compelled him to
-forego a most attractive investment or has compelled
-him to abstain from some new expensive
-luxury or pleasure. He hoards, to be ready for
-such emergencies. Then if he has several children,
-he wants to leave each of them as rich as possible
-so that they can all live in the style to which they
-have been accustomed, the style in which their
-friends and associates live. For worship of wealth
-you must look among the long-very-rich. Those
-who pass Mammon&#8217;s statue with a nod or a half-ashamed
-crook of a reluctant knee will have the
-pleasure of seeing very, very many of the rich &#8220;old
-families&#8221; flat in the dust, noses plowing it, and not
-a bit ashamed.</p>
-
-<p>Is this drying up of the charity of &#8220;philanthropy&#8221;
-wholly a matter for regret?</p>
-
-<p>Several years ago a few young Americans from
-various parts of the country began to spend their
-summer vacations at Woods Hole, Massachusetts.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[Pg 102]</span>
-They were young; they were poor; they were obscure;
-they were hard-worked and hard-working
-as well; they were profoundly indifferent to money
-or money gain; they were not even bothering especially
-about fame. They had as their common
-bond a passion for science. They had as their
-common aim the satisfying of that divine curiosity
-which makes the man who has it toil incessantly
-and unweariedly over ways more arduous and
-through wildernesses more dangerous than those
-that baffled the seekers after the Holy Grail. They
-longed&mdash;these earnest, poor, obscure young Americans&mdash;to
-penetrate to Nature&#8217;s innermost laboratory,
-her workshop of workshops, her temple of
-temples, there to surprise her supreme secret&mdash;the
-mystery of the origin of life.</p>
-
-<p>Fifteen summers of this pursuit, free from self-seeking
-or sordidness or jealousy, free from fame&#8217;s
-flatteries, and the Marine Biological Laboratory
-of Woods Hole became famous wherever the
-human intellect is respected. Its Knights of
-Science have not reached their goal&mdash;their Holy
-Grail. But under the inspiration of the triple vow
-of Science for her Knights&mdash;poverty, self-immolation
-and obedience to truth&mdash;they have had adventures<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[Pg 103]</span>
-and have made discoveries so strange, so
-passing strange, so wonderful, that all Americans
-are intensely proud of this American institution, at
-once so small and so majestically great.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the proposal to endow this little
-laboratory with part of the Carnegie millions and
-to erect it into a rich and aristocratic palace of
-science. At first glance the proposal seemed as
-admirable as the purpose that prompted it. And
-yet&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>This is a day when the numerous newcomers
-among our multi-millionaires are so pouring out the
-millions that it looks as if presently the necessity for
-struggle, the incentive to struggle, in the development
-of brain power, would be almost wholly removed.
-In the progress of the race, wealth in possession
-has played a very small part&mdash;has more
-often interfered to blight than to bless. Wealth
-possessed means ease and power without effort, and
-a sense that the goal has been reached. It means
-the mind at rest, tending to sloth and slumber, with
-life&#8217;s greatest fears and greatest incentives removed.
-Above all, it means an atmosphere of self-complacency
-and satiety and languor that insensibly
-relaxes the strongest fibre.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[Pg 104]</span>Carnegie millions may help to keep a-burning
-the light in that plain little temple of science at
-Woods Hole&mdash;<i>may</i>, if judiciously used. But not
-if they stifle the splendid, self-sacrificing, self-unconscious
-enthusiasm which set that light a-blazing.
-The lesson is wider than the instance&mdash;far wider.
-It was wealth and patronage that rotted the splendid
-intellect of Greece; wealth again, and patronage,
-that brought the Renaissance to an abrupt, inglorious
-end. And how much the English intellect
-in its long period of most brilliant achievement
-owed to the contempt of the English dominant
-classes&mdash;that of birth and that of commerce&mdash;for
-scientists, writers and &#8220;those kinds of cattle!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[Pg 105]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII<br />
-
-
-<small>THE MADE-OVER WHITE HOUSE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> find plutocracy&#8217;s follies in full swing not
-alone in the great cities, East and West, where the
-money-caste must have outward signs of superiority
-to bolster up its pretensions, but in our national
-capital as well&mdash;in what ought to be the high-set
-citadel of democratic dignity.</p>
-
-<p>Few Americans have any adequate idea of the
-system of etiquette which has grown up there. The
-other day a newly appointed high officer of the
-Government said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My daughter went to lunch with the daughter
-of Secretary &mdash;&mdash; yesterday. She did not come
-home until long after she was expected, and her
-mother asked her what was the matter.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;Oh,&#8217; she explained, &#8216;Secretary &mdash;&mdash;&#8217;s
-daughter was there, and none of us could go until
-she left, and we thought she never would go.&#8217; And<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[Pg 106]</span>
-I find that precedent is carried out in the strictest
-possible way all through Washington society in all
-its sets, down to the very children.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>If there are any persons in official life in Washington
-who do not attach importance to precedence,
-do not resent being seated out of rank at table, or
-being in all other ways given their exact official
-amount of deference, those persons keep extremely
-quiet. In Washington one ceases to be surprised
-at hearing men of national reputation complaining
-fiercely because they have been subjected to some
-trivial slight in this matter of precedence. It irritates
-a Cabinet officer to be put a shade out of his
-rank just as much as it irritates a Congressman
-from nowhere or a Government clerk.</p>
-
-<p>Precedence is killing Washington as a place of
-residence for sensible people. It is destroying its
-chief charm. If one thinks of going there to live
-it is because he expects to meet in the easy circumstance
-of social intercourse those who are interesting
-or amusing or curious. That sort of social
-intercourse is becoming practically impossible. No
-one giving any sort of entertainment, however informal,
-dares to arrange his or her guests according
-to congeniality. The same people must always<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[Pg 107]</span>
-be put next each other. The same man must take
-the same woman in to dinner. The same youth
-must dance with the same girl. And as official life
-expands the blight of precedence spreads.</p>
-
-<p>It is difficult for an outsider to listen without
-laughing or showing irritation as the Washingtonians
-discuss precedence and relate incidents of
-national and international catastrophes almost
-brought about by violation of it. But as some of
-the persons who most strenuously insist upon it are
-otherwise high above the human average, it would
-be well, before utterly condemning the Washingtonians,
-to reflect whether the craze for precedence
-is not a universal human weakness, latent&mdash;happily
-latent&mdash;in most of us because it has no chance to
-show itself.</p>
-
-<p>There is a certain officer who, in the official lists,
-is called Superintendent of Public Buildings and
-Grounds. In fact he is &#8220;Lord Great Chamberlain&#8221;
-to the President. Perhaps there was once a
-Lord Great Chamberlain who was merely Superintendent
-of Public Buildings and Grounds at the
-lower end of Pennsylvania avenue. But that was
-a long time ago.</p>
-
-<p>For many years the Major of Engineers assigned<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[Pg 108]</span>
-to that title with the rank and pay of Colonel
-has been actually the chief officer of the President&#8217;s
-court, the manager of what might be called
-his public household. Whenever the President entertains
-on a grand scale he is obviously in command,
-directing the ceremonials, superintending
-the evolutions of his staff of dancing and small-talk
-army men, overseeing the assiduities of the court
-retinue of servants. When a new ambassador or
-other eminent personage, domestic or foreign, arrives,
-he is the functionary who puts on a gorgeous
-uniform, drives in state in the President&#8217;s carriage
-to the visitor&#8217;s lodgings, escorts him to the President,
-introduces him, takes him away and escorts
-him back to his lodgings. Also, he in large measure
-directs the expenditures from the White House
-privy purse.</p>
-
-<p>The Constitution and the Statute Book make no
-provision for a Lord Great Chamberlain. But
-constitutions and institutions are vastly different.
-Part of the President&#8217;s time is given to matters contained
-or supposed to be contained in the written
-laws, the larger part to matters set down in the unwritten
-laws and nowhere else. When we broke
-away from Europe and European political and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[Pg 109]</span>
-social ideas, we did not get rid of those customs for
-high executive officers which had been established
-among us by royal colonial governors, although
-they were simple compared with the growing dimensions
-of our present-day ceremonial.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the unwritten laws say that the President
-must have a court like a king or other royal reigning
-person. It must be disguised and modified,
-but it must be &#8220;the real thing&#8221; in its essence. A
-court involves a place to hold it, officers to conduct
-it, an etiquette to guide it, and money to keep it
-going. The written laws provide for a Presidential
-residence&mdash;they permit the President to sit rent-free.
-That provision readily stretches to cover a
-place to hold the court.</p>
-
-<p>Again, the written laws permit the President to
-detach certain public officers for rather indefinite
-purposes. There you have a Lord Great Chamberlain
-and a Lord High Steward, and so forth,
-provided with comparative ease.</p>
-
-<p>As for etiquette, that part of the unwritten law
-need not be reconciled to written law, because etiquette
-costs nothing but headaches and heart-burnings&mdash;and
-the only reason for attempting to reconcile
-written law and unwritten is, of course, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[Pg 110]</span>
-matter of money expense. Finally, the written laws
-provide, or can be stretched to provide, the money
-for all the bigger items of court expenses&mdash;furnishings
-and repairs and alterations, linen, china,
-flowers, cooks, scullions, butlers, coachmen, footmen,
-door-openers and door-closers, card-carriers,
-light, heat, everything except what is eaten and
-drunk. As yet no way has been found to stretch
-the written law or the good nature of Congress to
-cover the court appetite. It must be appeased out
-of the President&#8217;s salary.</p>
-
-<p>The most important, though by no means the
-most expensive, item in the court budget charged
-against the public, is the Lord Great Chamberlain
-who conducts the court and executes, either directly
-or indirectly, all that pertains to the social side of
-life at the White House. He is always an officer
-of engineers. He must be a person of knowledge,
-of tact, of good appearance.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Great Chamberlain has ever been a distinguished
-office. It was never so distinguished as
-now. And, unless there is some sort of extraordinary
-convulsion and revulsion, it is destined to
-become almost eminent. For the White House has
-entered a new and dazzling period of social splendor<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[Pg 111]</span>
-which may presently make it as little different
-from the residence of a monarch as is the Elys&eacute;e
-Palace, where lives the President of France&#8217;s imperial
-Democracy.</p>
-
-<p>The newly evolved notion of the Presidential
-office is that it is the centre of political, intellectual
-and sociological authority and also of social honor.
-Not only must the democratic&mdash;or plutocratic&mdash;overlord,
-anointed with the new kind of divine oil,
-be the embodiment and exponent of the popular
-will; he must also be the source of honor, the recognizer
-of merit.</p>
-
-<p>Does one sing well? Does one paint well? Does
-one write well? Does one lead in education or
-literature or law or sociology or finance or commerce
-or trade&mdash;or fashion? Is one in the forefront
-in any line of activity not definitely declared
-criminal? Then the President of the American
-people must entertain him, must take his hand in
-that hand which is a sort of composite of eighty
-million right hands of fellowship. The approving
-accents of that voice which is now conceived to be
-the composite of eighty million approving voices
-must tickle his ravished ears; he must, at the Presidential
-board, eat and drink the composite hospitalities<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[Pg 112]</span>
-of the eighty millions&#8217; dinner or luncheon
-tables.</p>
-
-<p>In a real plain-as-an-old-coat Democracy the
-President would be a business person only, keeping
-his official life and his social life separate and distinct.
-The one would be public, the other private.
-He would have no more to do privately with
-those with whom he is officially brought into contact
-than would the head of a big business with his
-assistants, employ&eacute;s and customers. Social life is
-in a democratic society altogether of and by the
-family; and theoretically the President&#8217;s wife and
-children, the wives and children of the other public
-officials, are left in private life when the man of the
-family takes office. Practically, however, they are
-all elected, and if the written law provides no
-honors for wife and children and other relatives of
-the successful candidate, unwritten law must be
-created to repair the grave, the intolerable
-omission.</p>
-
-<p>Hence the elaborate, the complex, the awe-inspiring
-system of precedence. Every one from
-the President and his family and their remotest
-connection visiting Washington, down through all
-the branches of official life to grand-niece of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[Pg 113]</span>
-scrubwoman who sees to the basement steps of the
-smallest public building, has his or her exactly defined
-and jealously guarded station in the social
-hierarchy.</p>
-
-<p>Naturally, the most interesting part of the imposing
-structure that descends tier on tier from the
-august and exalted Chief Magistrate, is the court&mdash;the
-President, his Cabinet (Cabinet &#8220;ministers,&#8221; to
-give them the fanciful title they love best), the
-ambassadors and ministers and staffs of the various
-embassies and legations, the families of all
-these, and this means the White House and the
-Lord Great Chamberlain&mdash;the White House, the
-stage; the Lord Great Chamberlain, the stage
-manager.</p>
-
-<p>The White House was always inadequate&mdash;it
-would have been inadequate only for carrying out
-the purely democratic idea of the Presidential office,
-the idea set forth in the written laws. For
-the splendid, imperial, democratic concept of the
-plutocracy, the White House was ridiculous. Many
-a previous President and his wife, conscious of the
-social possibilities of the Presidential office, and
-yearning to develop them, have sighed over and
-moaned over and hinted about the petty proportions<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[Pg 114]</span>
-of the &#8220;Executive Mansion.&#8221; But political
-timidity restrained them from insisting upon expansion
-and elaboration. Mr. Roosevelt, confident
-that the people understood and approved him, and
-full of enthusiasm for his exalted concept of a new
-Presidency to suit a new era of the republic, boldly
-ventured where other Presidents had shrunk back.
-He demanded adequate quarters for the imperial-democratic
-court. The result is a new White
-House, a fit theatre for plutocratic social activities,
-a fit field for the operations of an energetic and
-sympathetic Lord Great Chamberlain.</p>
-
-<p>The present President entertains, not occasionally
-but constantly, not exclusively but as democratically
-as an emperor, not meagrely but lavishly, not
-a score of guests, but hundreds and thousands. He
-has a multitude of guests to lunch, a multitude to
-dine, a multitude to hear music or to take part in
-various kinds of &#8220;drawing-rooms&#8221; and levees, a
-multitude to stay the night under his roof&mdash;not a
-multitude all at one time, but a multitude in the
-aggregate. Rich and poor, snob and democrat, plutocrat
-and proletarian, black and white, American
-and foreigner, Maine woods guide, Western scout,
-fashionable and frowzy&mdash;all equally welcome, all<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[Pg 115]</span>
-equal at his court. Morgan and Jacob Riis, Countess
-de Castellane and Booker Washington, Wild
-Bill and Bishop Potter, Duse and Rough Rider
-Rob, Alfred Henry Lewis and a New York cotillon
-leader.</p>
-
-<p>Not long ago when some one said in his hearing,
-&#8220;There&#8217;s no first-class hotel in Washington,&#8221; he replied,
-&#8220;You forget the White House.&#8221; He has
-made it indeed a national hotel, or rather a great
-national assembling place. And he is ever unsatisfied,
-ever reaching out for more &#8220;doers,&#8221; for more
-and more people of interest or importance. He
-wishes all people of mark to bask in the Presidential
-sunshine, to give him the benefit of their intellect
-or character, or whatever they may have that
-is worth seeing or hearing. For he wishes to receive
-as well as to give. And he is determined that
-his court shall be entirely and completely representative.
-The world has seen nothing like it in
-recent centuries; the Emperor of Germany, broad
-though his sympathies are, is a snob in comparison.
-For a parallel we must go back to the courts of the
-emperor-presidents of Rome, in the days when
-Rome thought itself a republic. And the exigencies
-of plutocratic politics and the new social conditions<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[Pg 116]</span>
-have combined to attract the leaders of plutocracy&#8217;s
-fashion in plutocracy&#8217;s capitals, New York and Chicago,
-to favor Washington more and more each
-winter with their presence and their patronage.</p>
-
-<p>The new White House, which is thus in a fair
-way to become the social centre of the republic,
-is in one sense the first step toward an entirely new
-Washington. In every street at all fit for Presidential
-purposes great houses are going up for the
-leisurely rich, and smaller but attractive houses for
-the leisurely well-to-do. It is obvious to the most
-casual observer that to-morrow will see a brilliant
-and numerous society seated at Washington, a society
-devoted to luxury and entertaining and revolving
-round the President, and dazzling and
-dominating the servants of the people. Of all the
-bribes, which is so seductive, so insidiously corrupting
-as the social bribe?</p>
-
-<p>At the Congressional Library are exhibited models
-of the Washington the public administration
-purposes to build, has already begun to build. It
-will be a city of magnificent boulevards and parks
-and drives, and public buildings and national monuments.
-It will be probably the most splendid and
-most beautiful city in the world. It will probably<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[Pg 117]</span>
-be the one great city on earth where all who are
-not servants and tradespeople think and talk chiefly
-politics, literature, art, science&mdash;when they are not
-talking gossip and envying each other&#8217;s rank or
-looks or clothes or establishments.</p>
-
-<p>The made-over White House, astounding
-though it is as a sudden development, is but the
-crude inaugural of this Washington of to-morrow.
-But it is a beginning&mdash;a most audacious move on
-the part of one of the most audacious men who
-ever rose to first place in the republic. It is indeed
-audacious to be a democratic President with the
-ceremonial of a king&mdash;&#8220;a ceremonial more rigid
-than that of the court of the Czar,&#8221; according to
-the wife of one of the ambassadors.</p>
-
-<p>The White House demand upon Congress for
-running expenses has leaped from the former twenty-five
-thousand dollars to sixty thousand dollars.
-As the President&#8217;s salary is just under a thousand
-dollars a week, and as he evidently believes the
-people expect the President to spend his salary upon
-the embellishment of the position, it appears that
-the new White House, the new court, is now on
-the average costing in the neighborhood of two
-thousand dollars a week, half from the pocket of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[Pg 118]</span>
-the people, the other half from the President&#8217;s private
-pocket.</p>
-
-<p>As the heavy expense is crowded into five months
-of the year&mdash;December to April, inclusive&mdash;the
-probabilities are that the new White House is costing
-during the season not far from three thousand
-dollars a week. This means that the new departure
-has certainly doubled, and perhaps trebled,
-the cost of the White House court, for most Presidents
-have contributed about half their salary toward
-holding court and have called on Congress
-for a supplementary appropriation of twenty-five
-thousand dollars a year.</p>
-
-<p>A few years ago such imposing figures as these
-would have caused a great outcry. In every part
-of the land, in city as well as country, hands would
-have been thrown up, and &#8220;we, the people,&#8221; would
-have ejaculated: &#8220;Three thousand dollars a week!
-Mercy on us! The fellow must be crazy. What
-<i>are</i> we coming to?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But we think in large sums these days, and the
-establishments of our multi-millionaires have accustomed
-us to big expenditures for what were less
-than half a generation ago universally regarded as
-prodigalities. Scores of millionaires spend several<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[Pg 119]</span>
-times two thousand dollars a week in &#8220;maintaining
-their dignity.&#8221; There were some faint, shamefaced
-mutterings in Congress against the alterations
-in the White House and the lively leap of
-the public share in the expenses. But these mutterings
-died away instead of growing stronger, and
-the project for raising the Presidential salary to
-one hundred thousand dollars a year has all but
-passed Congress.</p>
-
-<p>In the competition of display, of &#8220;splurge,&#8221; shall
-&#8220;we, the people&#8221; be distanced by private persons?
-Is not &#8220;blowing it in&#8221; the great test of dignity
-and worth, the test established by our most &#8220;successful&#8221;
-citizens? Yet a few years and the President
-will be getting one hundred thousand dollars
-in salary and will think himself moderate in calling
-upon the nation for twice sixty thousand a year to
-be spent in maintaining the Presidential dignity.
-Less than that will seem shabby in the new Washington
-under the spell of the new concept of the
-Presidency as a social font. Simplicity and quiet as
-a measure of dignity will belong to the past. It
-still remains true, as when Burke said it, that &#8220;the
-public is poor.&#8221; True, the nation has riches, but
-only a few have wealth. True, wages have not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[Pg 120]</span>
-actually increased over what they were <i>thirty years
-ago</i>. True, the incomes of the great mass of Americans
-are just about where they used to be; true,
-taxation is to them still a burden, and &#8220;making the
-ends meet&#8221; is still an anxious problem. But our
-plutocrats and the representatives of kings and
-other tax-eaters and people-plunderers must feel at
-home when they honor our White House with their
-presence.</p>
-
-<p>There is not the slightest surface indication that
-the Lord Great Chamberlain will preside over a
-diminished office. Public business in the narrow,
-strictly legal, old-fashioned democratic sense has
-now for the first time wholly withdrawn from the
-White House and is seated in what is derisively
-and not inaptly called the &#8220;Executive Hen-coop&#8221;&mdash;a
-temporary office building near by. The White
-House has been definitely and apparently permanently
-transformed into a place devoted to that
-part of the Presidential office which is not recognized
-in written law and which has hitherto been
-kept in the background.</p>
-
-<p>And so rapidly is the White House developing
-that no one need be astonished if it almost immediately
-becomes the social Mecca of the whole
-American people. Any one who has studied the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[Pg 121]</span>
-effect of social life upon political life, of social customs
-upon politics, will appreciate that that transformation
-might be of profound and far-reaching
-importance. It might be significant of a new kind
-of republic, of a fallen Democracy on this American
-continent. It might well mean that the dream
-of all aggressive, self-aggrandizing office-holders
-had at last been realized; that for the people-ruled
-public administration contemplated by the fathers
-and embodied in the Constitution had been substituted
-a real, a people-ruling government.</p>
-
-<p>For, more powerful than any written laws, are
-the unwritten laws that bind men in the slowly,
-noiselessly forged chains of Habit.</p>
-
-<p>And what a busy, big man the Lord Great
-Chamberlain would be then!</p>
-
-<p>But he would still be called Superintendent of
-Public Buildings and Grounds, and the Most Puissant
-Over-lord of the Imperial Plutocracy would
-still be called President of the United States. And
-so nobody would in the least mind. If the waffle
-is named &#8220;Hot Waffle,&#8221; only a carping, croaking
-pessimist notes that it is stone cold.</p>
-
-<p>Such are the <i>surface</i> indications. But surface
-indications are not infallible; they have been known
-to be unimportant and wholly misleading.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[Pg 122]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-
-
-<small>AND EUROPE LAUGHS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">An</span> attach&eacute; of one of the Continental Embassies
-to the King of England was dining at the Carlton
-with an American, an old friend of his. The room
-was filled with English and Americans. Almost
-all the English were men and women of title or
-rank, or both. Almost all the Americans were
-well known both at home and abroad because of
-their wealth, their fondness for display, and their
-intimacies and relationships by marriage with the
-aristocratic caste of Europe.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You Americans are popular here,&#8221; said the
-diplomat.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; assented the American.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And on the Continent also,&#8221; said the diplomat.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; replied the American. &#8220;How the German
-Emperor does love us&mdash;he is almost as enthusiastic
-about us as is King Edward.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[Pg 123]</span>&#8220;You are popular,&#8221; went on the diplomat, &#8220;and
-very unpopular. You were never so popular nor
-so unpopular.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mean we are unpopular because of the
-American trade invasion?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not at all. That is a trifling matter. It concerns
-only the politicians and a few manufacturers
-and the farmers, and does not concern them very
-deeply. No&mdash;let me explain. Formerly we&mdash;and
-when I say &#8216;we&#8217; I mean the upper classes of
-Europe, those which still rule, despite all this talk
-about the progress of Democracy&mdash;formerly we
-feared you; we pretended to despise you, but in fact
-we were afraid. You were the great experiment
-in Democracy, that is, in anarchy&mdash;in the rule of
-the masses, the mob. Your success meant serious
-trouble for us, if not the handwriting on the
-wall, because our masses were always thinking of
-you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Here the diplomat smiled peculiarly and glanced
-round the room.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now all that has been changed,&#8221; he went on.
-&#8220;Europe and America are better acquainted. We
-no longer fear you. Why should we?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And again he paused to let his glance travel<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[Pg 124]</span>
-round the room, finally to rest with good-humored
-satire upon the American&#8217;s face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;we understand you better. Our fears
-have been proved groundless, our suspicions have
-been justified. Your new path, after making a
-wide bend, has returned into the old historic highway
-of caste. And so our upper class, which hated
-you, now&mdash;well, it neither loves nor admires you,
-but it honors and courts you. It laughs a little at
-your pretensions to birth. But it respects the solid
-foundation of your aristocracy&mdash;wealth. For, no
-matter what we may pretend, not blood, but money,
-wealth, is the essence of aristocracy. As for our
-masses, that once looked up to you as their
-ideal&mdash;&mdash;&#8221; He shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They no longer look up to us?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They look down upon you. They see that you,
-too, have your dominating class just as they have.
-And they prefer their own kind of upper class as
-less sordid, less vulgar, the embodiment of a more
-inspiring ideal. So long as they knew you only
-by report they believed in you; and that belief
-still makes them restless under us. But now that
-they have seen you, now that you are constantly in
-evidence, they see that their hopes&mdash;at least so<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[Pg 125]</span>
-far as they were based upon you&mdash;were a foolish
-dream. They prefer their own princes to &#8216;bosses&#8217;
-and upstart newly-rich.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But suppose these Americans whom you see
-over here and whom you read most about are not
-representative?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The diplomat smiled. &#8220;I have heard that before,&#8221;
-said he. &#8220;But, my dear friend, they are
-representative. Your country has changed and you
-do not realize it. You are deceived, not we. You
-are like the Romans who thought they had a republic
-when, in fact, the republic had been dead
-five hundred years. Think a moment. What sort
-of men did you formerly send to us as diplomats?
-And what sort of men do you send now? What
-has become of the old horror of court dress and
-rank and precedence which they used to exhibit?
-You cannot deny that your diplomats are representative.
-And are they not of the same class as
-these ladies and gentlemen about us here, so obviously
-delighted with themselves and their aristocratic
-company, with themselves because of their
-company?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There is much truth in the diplomat&#8217;s comments
-on the state of European public sentiment toward<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[Pg 126]</span>
-America. And the change is, as he said, due to
-better acquaintance. Europe thinks it has discovered
-that as soon as an American rises in prosperity
-above the mass of his fellow-citizens, he enters an
-actual ruling class that dictates and disdains the
-laws, uses them for enriching himself and for exploiting
-the mass of his fellow-countrymen. Europe
-thinks that as soon as he reaches this stage
-he turns his eyes longingly toward the Old World
-monarchies and begins to plan to become as nearly
-like the aristocrats as possible. He may not flaunt
-his power&mdash;he must respect republican forms. But
-he may, and does, flaunt his wealth. And in
-Europe he can get open recognition of his superior
-rank when such recognition as it gets at home is
-indirect and more or less secret.</p>
-
-<p>Thousands of Americans live in Europe. Every
-considerable city on the Continent has its American
-colony, and year by year these colonies grow apace.
-Americans&mdash;chiefly the women&mdash;have intermarried
-everywhere into the European nobility. Nearly
-all these expatriated Americans are people of
-means; many of them are rich. They lead lives
-of industrious idleness. Many of them frankly
-express their contempt for the country from which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[Pg 127]</span>
-they draw their incomes, the country but for which
-they would be miserable peasants, sweating for the
-amusement of some European land-holder.</p>
-
-<p>It is fortunate that their dislike of their native
-land has been strong enough to take them away
-and to keep them away; it is a pity that the migrating
-impulse does not seize upon more of their kind.
-The world has room for idlers&mdash;it has room for
-all sorts of people. But America has no room for
-them. That great workshop wants no idlers obstructing
-the aisles and hindering the toilers at their
-tasks. That would be a sorry day for us when our
-rapidly growing leisure class should &#8220;civilize&#8221; and
-&#8220;refine&#8221; America into an agreeable place of residence
-for &#8220;ladies&#8221; and &#8220;gentlemen&#8221; of the European
-pattern.</p>
-
-<p>These Americans who have &#8220;outgrown&#8221; their
-country serve to confirm Europe in the suspicions
-raised by the news that has reached it of stupendous
-aristocratic changes in the American people, of
-rotten political machines ruled by the rich, of toll-gates
-set up on every highway of American trade
-and commerce for the tax-gatherers of plutocracy,
-of a people fatuously imagining that it is free because
-it can go to the polls and freely choose which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[Pg 128]</span>
-of two sets of candidates shielded by the plutocracy
-shall make and execute the laws. This brings up
-the whole subject of our relations with &#8220;abroad&#8221;&mdash;and
-the social and political meaning and tendency
-of those relations.</p>
-
-<p>A few years ago Paris was the paradise of Americans,
-especially of the Americans of wealth. It is
-so no longer. It is now for them a mere stopping-place
-for buying clothes&mdash;a pause <i>en route</i> to the
-true, fashionable, American Mecca, London. A
-few years ago Americans, except those of the ordinary
-sight-seeing, mind-improving kind, loathed
-London. They knew few people there&mdash;and, like
-Vienna, London is an impossible place for the
-stranger in search of amusement; if he does not
-know natives, is not invited to their houses, a soundless
-desert is a cheerful, companionable place in
-comparison. Further, such English as the rich,
-fashionable, amusement-hunting American knew&mdash;that
-is, such Englishmen &#8220;of the right sort&#8221;&mdash;were
-about as friendly and sociable as they are to their
-servants. But that was before the &#8220;Anglo-Saxon
-Alliance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The change came with the British discovery that
-the American multi-millionaire and the American<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[Pg 129]</span>
-heiress were not, as had been supposed, rarities
-found only occasionally after long search through
-trackless and vast wildernesses of &#8220;unspeakable
-bounders,&#8221; but were deposited in &#8220;the States&#8221; in
-quantities, were easily accessible, were yearning for
-high society, for aristocracy, for titled friends, for
-titled alliances. This was tidings of great joy to
-the English aristocracy. For an aristocrat may
-not work; and no matter how heavily &#8220;endowed&#8221;
-a title may be, values will shrink as time passes&mdash;not
-to speak of those savage &#8220;death duties&#8221; which
-the rascally Liberals enacted to the infuriating of
-the upper classes, who yet dare not repeal them.</p>
-
-<p>The &#8220;Anglo-Saxon Alliance&#8221; began forthwith.
-Scores of English upper-class families opened their
-hearts and their hearths to their &#8220;cousins across
-the sea.&#8221; The more American friends one accumulated
-the more likely was one to find an American
-multi-millionaire or so among them, or at
-least to be by way of getting into touch with American
-multi-millionaires or within &#8220;touching&#8221; distance
-of them.</p>
-
-<p>To realize to what an extent the &#8220;Anglo-Saxon
-Alliance&#8221; was and is based upon this notion, one
-must realize how all-powerful the upper class is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[Pg 130]</span>
-in England, and how inarticulate, how socially, politically
-and in every public way insignificant, are
-the English masses, including the bulk of the
-middle classes. When you speak of English public
-sentiment you mean the sentiment of the London
-drawing-rooms. They are filled with the governing
-class, which constitutes parliaments and ministries;
-they dominate the journalists, who are either
-of the upper class or desperately struggling to get
-into it; they also dominate the masses who have
-been trained by centuries of unbroken custom to
-bow before rank and title.</p>
-
-<p>There were excellent reasons in international
-politics for England&#8217;s turning favorable, friendly,
-even enthusiastic eyes upon America. But there
-could not have been this present passionate, personal
-love, this daily and hourly working of that
-toothless old saw, &#8220;blood is thicker than water,&#8221;
-had there not existed a reason which appealed directly
-to the personal and family self-interest of
-every member of nearly every upper-class family
-in England.</p>
-
-<p>And soon the German Emperor and those about
-him, all of a high and impoverishing nobility, began
-to work the same trusty, but never now-a-days<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[Pg 131]</span>
-rusty, old saw about the thickness of blood and
-water&mdash;are we not &#8220;Germanic,&#8221; we Americans?
-But the motive which is the less with the King and
-the upper classes of England is the stronger with
-our tempestuous German suitor&mdash;the motive of
-political, or, rather, industrial friendship. He feels
-that in dining and wining and treating, &#8220;just as if
-they were equals,&#8221; American owners of yachts and
-multi-millionaires, he is endearing himself to the
-American people. For, like practically the whole
-of Europe to-day, he thinks America is no longer
-a Democracy, but a thinly disguised plutocracy.
-And the more he reads and hears of the power and
-prestige of American multi-millionaires at home,
-the more firmly is he convinced that when he is
-tickling the vanity of these &#8220;dollar-swollen upstarts,&#8221;
-he is sending delicious thrills up and down
-the spine of the American eagle.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, European princes and potentates are rubbing
-noses and back-scratching in the friendliest,
-most democratic fashion in the world, with such of
-the American people as can afford to visit Europe
-in royal luxury and get themselves admitted to
-royal inclosures. The object of these condescensions
-to our fellow-countrymen is to improve the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[Pg 132]</span>
-relations between sundry European monarchies and
-the American people. A worthy object, as is any
-which has at bottom the promoting of peace on
-honorable terms. But Europe is wasting energy
-in misdirected effort. It assumes that these American
-beneficiaries have the same &#8220;rank&#8221; at home
-that similarly fortuned Europeans have in their
-countries. And, not unnaturally, it is confirmed in
-its false notion by many a petty success through
-this courtship of snobbish plutocrats and plutocratic
-diplomats.</p>
-
-<p>The American multi-millionaire and his wife and
-his son and his daughter&mdash;again this does not mean
-all Europe-visiting Americans of wealth&mdash;are directly
-responsible for Europe&#8217;s present opinion of
-the American brand of Democracy. For they&mdash;not
-unnaturally&mdash;wish to make themselves out the
-relative equals of their titled and exalted friends.
-They begin to &#8220;talk tall&#8221;; and, being far away
-from home, they soon are thinking as tall as they
-talk. They confirm each other in the idea that they
-are really the &#8220;whole show&#8221; at home. They return
-with retinues of caste-trained, servile domestics;
-they live in colonies in our own cities into which
-none but dollar-hunters and dollar-worshipers<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[Pg 133]</span>
-penetrate. The political bosses court them, give
-them laws and senatorships and diplomatic posts
-in exchange for campaign contributions. Their
-infatuation grows apace.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the American fresh from America finds
-London&mdash;let us confine ourselves to the one capital
-as typical&mdash;a strange, humorous spectacle in the
-fashionable season. He can hardly believe his
-own eyes and ears. A week or two, and so persistent
-are the impressions of a true American nobility
-visiting Europe that he almost feels that he
-has been asleep with Rip Van Winkle and has
-awakened to a new country and a new order in
-which there is no American Republic.</p>
-
-<p>And we are only at the beginning. The &#8220;Anglo-Saxon
-Alliance&#8221; between the English upper class
-and the American aspirants to be thought &#8220;upper
-class,&#8221; the dragging in of the rich American pilgrim
-out of the fog to the cheeriest corner of the
-English fire, these are matters of yesterday. And
-already Paris gets but a glance from the rich
-Americans, and the most foresighted of Paris shopkeepers
-are establishing London branches for the
-&#8220;Anglo-Saxon&#8221; American who no longer can spare
-the time from his or her English social duties to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[Pg 134]</span>
-make the outfitting trip across the English Channel.
-To-morrow&mdash;The English hearth is large;
-there is room on it for every presentable or hope-inspiring
-American who can afford to cross the
-Atlantic; and the news of the jollity of the London
-season and of the round of English house parties
-is spreading in America and is attracting the pretentious
-society of all the large American cities.
-The &#8220;Alliance&#8221; is indeed booming.</p>
-
-<p>It is not through English aversion to the Atlantic
-voyage that, though we are the sought, we go to
-the home of the seeker to be sought. The English
-upper classes would come to us if we insisted upon
-it, although the item of expense looks larger to
-them than to us. But we do not insist upon it.
-Our &#8220;leisure class&#8221; is made far more comfortable
-in England than it is at home. America has no
-such facilities as has England for amusing sheer
-idleness in ways that are not undisguisedly inane.
-Through several centuries, the filling in of the
-idle hours of professional idlers has been a study
-there; the houses, the streets, the theatres, the restaurants,
-the whole social system is adapted to it.</p>
-
-<p>Further, the American can feel so &#8220;tall,&#8221; can
-believe so thoroughly in his own aristocracy and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[Pg 135]</span>
-aloofness above the general run of mankind when
-there are three thousand miles of barren water between
-him in his grandeur and the shop where he
-worked as a &#8220;clark,&#8221; or the cabin where his father
-was born, or the back yard where his mother, in
-gingham, hung out the wash. Thus, the Americans
-in search of &#8220;the high life&#8221; for which they yearn
-prefer to go to it rather than to have it brought
-to them.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As I study your countrymen here and get their
-views,&#8221; said an Englishman, famous as a lifelong
-admirer of America and of the democratic idea,
-&#8220;I become convinced against my will that your
-Democracy is dying. It seems the ideal of Democracy
-is too high to survive prosperity; apparently it
-can exist only in what one of your countrymen,
-writing in your simple days, called the atmosphere
-of plain living and high thinking. As soon as a
-man becomes prosperous he begins to &#8216;put on airs,&#8217;
-as you Americans say. And the pity of it is that
-the less prosperous concede his superiority, and so
-make his &#8216;airs&#8217; significant where they would otherwise
-be ridiculous. The reason our monarchies,
-that is, our monarchical governments and our aristocratic
-classes, are becoming friendly to you, is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[Pg 136]</span>
-that you are becoming like them. They concede
-something; but you&mdash;you concede your principles.
-They get something&mdash;cash dividends on their condescensions.
-But I&#8217;m blest if I can see what <i>you</i>
-get.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>To the stay-at-home American, or, for the matter
-of that, to the travelling American who retains
-his sense of proportion, the exaggerating of bumptious
-American &#8220;diplomats&#8221; and &#8220;dollarcrats&#8221; into a
-national phenomenon of peril, and the gloomy
-croakings or sardonic rejoicings in Europe over
-the decay of the American Republic may seem preposterous&mdash;as
-preposterous as an ambassador&#8217;s
-fancying that his ecstasies when a king claps him on
-the shoulder are the ecstasies of the entire American
-people. But it is a phenomenon that should not,
-that cannot wisely, be left out of account. Steam
-and electricity have bridged the chasm across which
-our ancestors fled to establish here a system based
-upon sanity, simplicity and justice. And at a peculiarly
-trying time there are crossing over to us
-European ideas and ideals that so dangerously
-disguise snobbishness and plundering and injustice
-under pretentious culture and such plausible
-frauds as the &#8220;natural leadership of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[Pg 137]</span>
-classes that have demonstrated their superiority by
-success.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The problem is often stated cart before the
-horse. &#8220;What will our plutocracy do with us?&#8221;
-men say in all seriousness. The question, in fact,
-is, &#8220;What shall we do with our plutocracy?&#8221; It
-has descended upon us swift as a cyclone, insidious
-as a plague. We had no adequate warning. We
-have not yet, as a people, grasped the situation in
-its fullness. Of all the cure-alls so confidently proposed
-by our political and sociological quacks,
-which one does not show on its very surface to any
-careful mind utter futility at best, disaster in the
-application as a highly probable event?</p>
-
-<p>The plutocracy itself shares in the delusion of
-so many of our &#8220;publicists.&#8221; &#8220;What shall we do
-with America?&#8221; it insolently says in effect.</p>
-
-<p>A little patience; a little time for our eighty millions,
-surcharged with Democracy, to weigh and
-measure and judge. Be sure, the dog will not be
-wagged by the tail. And before many decades
-European caste will see such a handwriting upon
-the western sky as has not terrified it since our
-Declaration of Independence.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[Pg 138]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[Pg 139]</span>
-<p class="ph1">PART II.&mdash;DEMOCRACY</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[Pg 140]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[Pg 141]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX<br />
-
-
-<small>&#8220;WE, THE PEOPLE&#8221;</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> cannot, then, be denied that wealth, concentrated
-wealth&mdash;not so much the plutocrat himself
-as the vast masterful accumulation of which he is
-the appendage; one might with truth say, the victim&mdash;is
-not only the most conspicuous factor in American
-life to-day, but also one of the most potent factors.
-The plutocracy in politics, the plutocracy in
-business, the plutocracy in society, the plutocracy in
-the home&mdash;in its own homes&mdash;that is our &#8220;peril.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A great monster indeed, fully up to the harrowing
-descriptions of our radical orators and writers.
-But why does the average, common-sense American
-refuse to be terrified? Because he does not see it?
-Hardly that. No; the real reason is that the
-American is fundamentally incapable of those caste
-and class feelings, without which a plutocracy can<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[Pg 142]</span>
-never hope to erect itself into an aristocracy, and
-therefore a real &#8220;peril.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>To see America&mdash;the America that was, and is,
-and shall be&mdash;we must leave the neighborhood of
-the palaces of the plutocracy with its servile parasites
-and imitators, its fawning menials and shopkeepers;
-we must also leave the neighboring slums,
-where the American is so sadly caricatured&mdash;not
-more sadly, in truth, than where the plutocracy
-flaunts. We must go to the smaller cities and the
-towns and villages and the farms, where in ten
-thousand homes a sane and sober life is led by a
-sane and sober people. And we find there no tendencies
-toward the development of caste, far-reaching
-though the poisonous influence of the plutocracy
-is.</p>
-
-<p>For our hopeful, yes, convincing comparisons,
-we need not bring forward the early days of the
-republic, when the surviving silly old Colonial aristocracy
-was strong enough to restrict the suffrage,
-to enforce rigid class distinctions, to threaten us
-with an official aristocracy of &#8220;birth.&#8221; We only
-need compare forty years ago with to-day to see
-the substantial progress of true Democracy. Proportionately,
-are there not vastly fewer people to-day<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[Pg 143]</span>
-lacking that high sense of self-respect which
-caused so much open, profuse and shamefaced
-apologies for electing to the Presidency a man of
-such &#8220;low origin&#8221; as Lincoln? At the time of the
-Civil War, and even thereafter, the rich men in
-every community had great political influence
-simply because they were rich, and property, as
-property, claimed and was conceded a right to a
-more potent voice in the public affairs. Is it so
-to-day? Is not the property influence exercised
-only in secrecy and stealth? Is the rich man a favorite
-for elective office, or are the people, roused
-by the frequent coincidence of wealth and corruption,
-jealously suspicious of the rich man in politics?</p>
-
-<p>Outside the umbra and penumbra of plutocracy
-we find the American with the inborn sense of
-equality, the American that rejoices in humble origin
-as proof of the personal worth of him who has
-risen. We are still a nation of working men and
-women, the sons and daughters of working people.
-And just as soon as one of us becomes ashamed of
-his birth or of his own past, becomes infected with
-the cheap and silly vulgarisms that Europe is always
-thrusting upon us, just so soon does he or she
-begin to fall behind in the procession. Influential<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[Pg 144]</span>
-relatives will not long save him or her, nor inherited
-property; misused opportunity to better education
-will only hasten the downfall.</p>
-
-<p>Never was country made up of more <i>kinds</i> of
-people than the United States; but we have no
-classes. There is no condition to which one is born
-from which one may not escape. Class means such
-a condition. Now, were caste altogether a matter
-to be determined by the rich, by those &#8220;on top,&#8221;
-we might well tremble for the future of our social
-state. The rich of a thousand localities would not
-be slow to take advantage of the chance were it
-offered them. But fortunately <i>caste is made by
-those who look up, not by those who look down</i>.</p>
-
-<p>However many Americans there may be who
-would like to look <i>down</i>, there are few, there are
-ever fewer, with the quaint fancy for looking <i>up</i>. It
-is true that in our so-called &#8220;foreign element&#8221; there
-seems to lie the possibility of a dangerous influence.
-This vast mass of foreigners, coming from lands
-where class distinctions are centuries old, is regarded
-with hope, consciously and unconsciously, by our
-plutocratic with caste aspirations. But let us recall
-the facts about that other flood of immigration, the
-Irish and the Germans who came in the middle<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[Pg 145]</span>
-part of the last century&mdash;proportionately a greater
-flood than the one which has been sweeping in upon
-us for the last twenty years. In the fifties of the
-last century, as to-day, it was confidently predicted
-that the downfall of Democracy had already begun.
-The slavocracy of the South struck hands with the
-then existing manufacturing plutocracy of the
-North, and the basis of the Northern plutocracy
-was the hordes of ignorant immigrants. What
-happened? The war? More than that. Democracy
-absorbed away the basis of the rising Northern
-aristocracy just as the war swept away the basis of
-slavocracy. The children and grandchildren of the
-immigrants became the most strenuous of
-Americans.</p>
-
-<p>Our &#8220;foreign element&#8221; does not remain foreign.
-It comes here to become American, and it sets about
-the accomplishment of its purpose with an energy
-and a resolution that are unconquerable. When
-our plutocracy of to-day leans upon the &#8220;foreign
-element&#8221; it leans upon a breaking reed. And the
-more heavily it leans the worse will be the fall.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In manners more easily than any other way can
-we see Democracy in progress. There should be no<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[Pg 146]</span>
-confusing that respectful consideration for others,
-which in an honest way most of us have, with the
-European idea of deference. Whether at home or
-abroad, the big asset of the American is his lack
-of deference, his freedom from that which angered
-Walt Whitman into crying out haughtily:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;By heaven, there has been about enough of
-doffing and deprecating. I find no sweeter fat
-than that which clings to my own bones.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Manners bespeak mental attitude; and mental
-attitude is the man. Americans should be careful
-how they permit themselves to trifle with their
-manners. We are hearing a great deal about
-&#8220;growing distinctions between class and mass&#8221;
-now-a-days. Many are &#8220;viewing with alarm&#8221; and
-&#8220;deeply deploring&#8221; such evidences of it as, to use
-the most often cited instance, the increasing tendency
-of well-to-do parents to send their children to
-private schools instead of, as formerly, to the public
-school.</p>
-
-<p>The viewers with alarm seem to miss the point.
-It is not the &#8220;mass&#8221; that is going to suffer by this
-imported passion for exclusiveness; it is the &#8220;class.&#8221;
-The &#8220;class&#8221; cuts itself off from the &#8220;mass,&#8221; from
-the full, strong currents of democratic life which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[Pg 147]</span>
-alone give vitality and endurance. The mass remains
-vital and energetic and progressive; the class
-withers and shrivels and sloughs away.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, the disposition on the part of
-some Americans to despise and forsake the splendid
-triumph-producing ideas of their country for
-the mean and petty, disaster and decay-producing
-ideas of the Old World, is a matter which should
-not be passed over without comment. Of necessity
-our snobs will be pushed aside and trampled in the
-resistless onrush of the Democratic idea. The nation
-would be feeble indeed if it could be halted or
-even slackened by such an obstacle. But the snobs
-ought to be noted and warned. Disobedience to
-the great laws which determine the evolution of
-mankind is important only to the disobedient individual.
-But it is part of our humanitarian duty as
-democrats to be patient with the ignorant, the weak
-and the erring, and to be helpful to them as far
-as we can. It is impossible for any one with the
-broad sympathies which Democracy engenders not
-to feel the impulses of pity when he sees fellow-beings,
-through vanity or ignorance, flinging themselves
-and their innocent young children across the
-very pathway of the mighty wave of Democracy.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[Pg 148]</span>A snob is a person who feels inferior and wants
-company in his misery, and longs for the consolation
-of finding those even lower than himself.
-Snobism should be exterminated, just as, more and
-more scientifically, bodily disease is being stamped
-out. The snob is the only one who wants class distinctions,
-or who can encourage their existence. It
-is the snob who returns from abroad deeply impressed
-by courtesies shown him over there in expectation
-of and in exchange for tips. He uses his
-first intake of native air to fall afoul of the native
-manners. And no doubt our manners do need improving.
-We have always been in a great hurry
-under press of work, and there is still a great deal
-more to do than our competent doers can find time
-for. But in polishing our manners we must be
-careful to use a sound brand of democratic polish,
-not the English brand so much admired by those
-who yearn for a deference from others which
-they would not when alone venture to show themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Back of manners is instinct. Often a man&#8217;s
-lack of manners enables us to see whether his instincts
-are right or not. Aristocratic manners hide
-moral and mental defects, just as whiskers and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[Pg 149]</span>
-clothes hide physical defects. What we ought to
-develop is sincere manners&mdash;not the bowings and
-scrapings of fear and cupidity and servility. Democratic
-manners!</p>
-
-<p>Good manners among the various kinds of public
-and semi-public servants in England would not be
-considered good manners here. Without disputing
-the point with those admirers of the English
-servant, we must insist that it would be ridiculous
-for a self-respecting American citizen to grovel
-and scrape and look and act &#8220;humble.&#8221; We want
-no servility here, much as we would like to please
-those persons who constantly feel the need of assurances
-from others that they are as grand folks as
-they would like to think themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Scraping and cringing, whether in a duke or in a
-domestic, are as bad manners for a human being as
-are arrogance and impertinence.</p>
-
-<p>The grotesque nature of the snob complaints
-against the manners of our everyday people is striking
-when one recognizes a certain criticism that can
-justly be made against us. It is among so-called
-well-bred people, a certain brand of them, our
-snobs, that bad manners are most prevalent. For
-out of them is left that on which alone good manners<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[Pg 150]</span>
-can be built&mdash;the proud, erect, democratic
-spirit.</p>
-
-<p>It is not difficult to have good manners in a
-graded social system. It is extremely difficult to
-have good manners in a Democracy. Any one can
-easily be a snob, a looker-up and a looker-down.
-But how very difficult it is to be a simple, unaffected
-man or woman, considerate, courteous, looking
-all other men and women straight in the eyes
-and saying: &#8220;You are certainly as good as I am.
-I hope I am as good as you are.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am your equal&#8221; is at the basis of democratic
-bad manners. &#8220;You are my equal&#8221; is the basis of
-democratic good manners.</p>
-
-<p>Again and again in fashionable society, frequently
-among those most prone to call their poorer
-countrymen and women ill-mannered, there are barbarities
-and repulsive lapses of good taste not
-merely tolerated, but approved as marks of fashion
-and refinement. For example: A rich woman gives
-a cotillon, provides many thousand dollars&#8217; worth
-of handsome favors. You look about the ballroom&mdash;there
-sits a circle of girls, pretty and ugly
-and passable, attractive and unattractive. Some are
-loaded down with favors&mdash;you can hardly see their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[Pg 151]</span>
-radiant faces for the mass of articles which testify
-to their popularity.</p>
-
-<p>Others have only a few favors, and those of the
-poorest. Yet there they must sit, acting as foils for
-the pretty and lucky girls who are emphasizing
-their homeliness and bad luck. Their sufferings do
-not show in their faces&mdash;at least not very plainly.
-But they would not be human if they did not feel
-the pangs of humiliated and wounded vanity at
-this most conspicuous advertisement of their inferiority
-in charm.</p>
-
-<p>Yet the cotillon is regarded as the very highest
-kind of refined social entertainment. And hostesses
-will beam upon this sorry scene with never a
-thought for the sufferings of their slighted and
-wounded girl guests. In a truly refined society
-would any one ever give any form of entertainment
-at which there would be frank discrimination
-among the guests?</p>
-
-<p>Again, a woman gives a dinner. You go to
-her house and find her receiving in a magnificent
-dress and displaying hundreds of thousands of dollars&#8217;
-worth of jewelry. She is far and away the
-most gorgeously, the most expensively dressed person
-at her dinner. She outshines all her women<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[Pg 152]</span>
-guests. In a truly sensitively refined society would
-a hostess do this? Would she not rather dress
-simply, even plainly? Her dinner, and its service,
-should of course be the best she can provide&mdash;there
-she is honoring her guests. But in her own
-dress, in the one feature of her entertainment where
-invidious and humiliating comparisons could be instantly
-made, she would think not of gratifying her
-own vanity, but of putting her guests at their ease.
-And so she would save her best jewels and dresses
-for places other than her own house and eyes other
-than those of her own guests.</p>
-
-<p>The kinds of grossly bad manners of which
-these are fair and familiar examples would not surprise
-us in Europe, where the education is narrow
-and souls are shaped in pettiness and vulgarity by
-class distinctions. But they would and do surprise
-us in America.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is one trait in our national character that
-is a veritable Gibraltar against caste tendencies.
-It is that passion for up-to-dateness, which is so
-American, which is the cause of American progress,
-which is the secret of the ever rising plane of the
-comfort and intelligence of the American masses.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[Pg 153]</span>A European landowner or manufacturer, filled
-with the spirit of conservatism, the spirit of &#8220;good
-enough&#8221; and &#8220;it will do&#8221; and &#8220;don&#8217;t destroy old
-landmarks,&#8221; clings to musty and rusty antiquities,
-hampers himself and his associates and neighbors,
-drags and makes them drag at the wheels of advance.
-With the American, how quickly is the new
-building, the new machine, the new method already
-improved into antiquity! Away with it! Replace
-it by the latest and best. Better one big item in
-the profit and loss account than steadily decreasing
-profits and wages and products, and steadily increasing
-losses through the triumphs of competitors.
-The new, always the new! The new, always
-hopeful of the new! Give the new a trial! To-day
-must be better than yesterday; to-morrow will
-surely be better still. That is America.</p>
-
-<p>And this same spirit wages incessant and successful
-war against caste. If the new man is the best
-man we put him to the front. Does our &#8220;irreverence&#8221;
-for things ancient sometimes offend a super-&aelig;sthetic
-few? It is a pity they are so enraptured
-by European picturesqueness of the antique that
-they fail to note the European peasant bending and
-groaning under the weight of the past. Does this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[Pg 154]</span>
-disrespect for hampering tradition proclaim us
-&#8220;new&#8221;? That is well. When did youth become a
-calamity and a reproach? May we ever be &#8220;new,&#8221;
-looking at the problems of life with hopeful young
-eyes, confident that better, more beautiful things
-lie in the future than past suns ever shone upon.</p>
-
-<p>There are two kinds of stability&mdash;the stability
-of the ship rotting at its wharf; the stability of the
-ship, strong and steady, on its way through the
-midst of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>America is all for the latter. It abhors barnacles
-and rust. And it combats monopolistic tendencies
-most fiercely because, however adroitly disguised
-as &#8220;communities of interest,&#8221; they promote the
-stability of stagnation, blindfold the eager eyes of
-competition, bribe brain and muscle to sloth, hold
-up the heavy hands of sluggard and incompetent,
-and discourage individual ambition and hope.
-There should be no structure of any kind whatsoever,
-whether national or social, which, when it has
-clearly outlived its use, can be saved by sentiment
-or interest or bulwarks of brainless boodle-bags.
-And Democracy will have none such. Let those
-who tremble for our future be calmed. As for
-those who fancy they can in their own interest create<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[Pg 155]</span>
-such structures, let them read history and learn
-to laugh at their folly.</p>
-
-<p>The principle applies to those less tangible but
-more insidious structures&mdash;those ideas that would
-give permanence or prominence to people because
-of what some one else has been, or what they have
-been in the past&mdash;structures existent only in the
-minds of comparatively few, gone daft in their
-love of European imitation. But we tear down too
-quickly for them. While the fine building of class
-distinctions is constructing, changes occur that
-knock out the foundation stones.</p>
-
-<p>An old New York &#8220;aristocrat&#8221;&mdash;his grandfather
-came over in the steerage&mdash;glanced around
-the Metropolitan Opera House one night not long
-ago and said: &#8220;There are not a dozen families on
-the list of boxholders twenty years ago that are on
-that list to-day. All new people&mdash;and from heaven
-knows where.&#8221; Where were the new people from?
-Why, from whence this old &#8220;aristocrat&#8217;s&#8221; grandparents
-came, from where his grandchildren
-will be.</p>
-
-<p>Whenever a fence is put up by any group of
-people around themselves one of two things happens.
-Either those inside grow terribly weary of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[Pg 156]</span>
-their exclusiveness, and, finding that no particular
-benefit seems to be coming from it, voluntarily let
-down the fence; or the society-mad herd, seeing the
-fence, makes a rush for it to get in. A coarse
-rattling of hoofs and horns, a discovery of a loose
-paling, a crash, a mad scramble, and there are
-more inside than out.</p>
-
-<p>Democracy is as much the law of our social order
-as gravitation is of our physical order. Those who
-don&#8217;t like it will, if they are wise, either leave the
-country or adjust themselves and their children to
-its conditions. For if they stay and bring up their
-children out of harmony with the existing and unalterable
-order, their children will be punished,
-even though they themselves, through obedience in
-their earlier lives, escape the worst consequences of
-their folly.</p>
-
-<p>The part of the coming generation that is trained
-in Democracy is the part that will survive and prosper
-and progress. The part that is bred in exclusiveness
-and caste feeling is going to be bitterly discontented
-and deplorably unprogressive certainly,
-and in all probability, except in a few rare cases,
-downright unprosperous.</p>
-
-<p>Why do not the plutocratic &#8220;exclusives&#8221; and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[Pg 157]</span>
-aspirants to exclusiveness see these things and take
-warning? Because vanity is so much stronger in
-influence over the average human being than is
-reason. They pile up the millions, make safe investments,
-plot monopolies that will insure stability
-of property, and imagine that their family line will
-be secure. Then they educate their children to
-folly and superciliousness and economic helplessness
-or at best give them a training not in business,
-in useful labor, but in the truly aristocratic chicanery
-of high finance. Thus does Nature, abhorring
-permanence, craftily use them for their own undoing.
-Whom the gods wish to destroy they first
-make drunk on the fumes of vanity.</p>
-
-<p>The plutocracy and its imitators bring up their
-children in hot-houses. Some of the youngsters are
-ejected from the hot-house and exposed as soon
-as they are grown&mdash;or sooner; others remain in
-the hot-house and perhaps breed there. But the
-day of fate comes. The hot-house is emptied or
-destroyed.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately for the masses and their children,
-fortunately for the prosperity and progress of the
-race, few can build these hot-houses; only a few
-can dwell in them. And with the swift progress of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[Pg 158]</span>
-Democracy in these modern days, this cruel, mocking
-favoritism swiftly decreases.</p>
-
-<p>Manners there can be, but they must be democratic
-manners. Refinement, culture, there can be,
-but it must be democratic. Idealism there can be,
-but it must be true idealism, broad, deep and high,
-not a &#8220;class&#8221; matter, not a vanity, not a pretentious
-crushing down of millions to make luxurious holiday
-for a few.</p>
-
-<p>The aristocratic idealisms in manners, education,
-politics, religion, mode of life, are fleeing like
-shades of night before the bright daylight of
-Democracy. Only ignorance could ever have
-thought them fair.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[Pg 159]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER X<br />
-
-
-<small>THE COMPELLER OF EQUALITY</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Ever</span> since the first tall chimneys unfurled the
-sooty banners of the new, the industrial civilization,
-we have had the cry that the power machine is a
-monster whose reign means the debasement of the
-masses of mankind. And latterly, throughout the
-world, but most loudly in America, which has been
-foremost in promoting the new order, it has been
-charged that the men in control of the new order,
-the business men, are merciless and relentless; that
-in the struggle for markets and for profits they
-are trampling morality and all the other restraints
-and ideals. Now comes Thorstein Veblen, lately
-Assistant Professor of Political Economy at the
-University of Chicago, to formulate these charges
-upon a scientific basis. In his <i>Theory of Business
-Enterprise</i> he makes the following declarations of
-scientific principle:</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[Pg 160]</span>First: That &#8220;the machine is a leveller, a vulgarizer,
-whose ends seem to be the extirpation of
-all that is respectable, noble and dignified in human
-intercourse and ideals&#8221;; that &#8220;in the nature of
-the case the cultural growth dominated by the machine
-industry is of a skeptical, matter-of-fact complexion,
-materialistic, unmoral, unpatriotic, undevout&#8221;;
-that &#8220;the machine, their (the masses&#8217;)
-master, is no respecter of persons, and knows neither
-morality nor dignity, nor prescriptive right,
-divine or human.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Second: That &#8220;the machine methods which are
-corrupting the hearts and manners of the workmen
-are profitable to the business man.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Third: That &#8220;the economic welfare of the community
-at large is best secured by a facile and uninterrupted
-interplay of the various processes which
-make up the industrial system at large; but the
-pecuniary interests of the business men, in whose
-hands lies the discretion in the matter, are not necessarily
-best served by an unbroken maintenance
-of the industrial balance. Especially is this true
-as regards those greater business men whose interests
-are very extensive. Gain may come to them
-from a given disturbance of the system, whether<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[Pg 161]</span>
-the disturbance makes for heightened facility or
-for widespread hardship, very much as a speculator
-in grain futures may be either a bull or a bear.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Fourth: That, these being the facts, there has
-arisen a &#8220;class of pecuniary experts&#8221; who &#8220;have
-an interest in making the disturbances of the system
-large and frequent&#8221;; that, under the new civilization,
-industry being carried on for business, and
-not business for the sake of industry, such disturbances
-are as a matter of fact both large and frequent,
-are incident to a merciless struggle among
-business men for the supremacy which monopoly
-alone gives; that, while the business man, in common
-with other men, is moved by humane ideals,
-&#8220;motives of this kind detract from business efficiency,
-and an undue yielding to them on the part
-of business men is to be deprecated as an infirmity&#8221;;
-that, while sentiment has a certain force &#8220;in restraint
-upon pecuniary advantage, not in abrogation
-of it,&#8221; the &#8220;code of business ethics consists,
-after all, of mitigations of the maxim, <i>caveat
-emptor</i> (let the buyer beware)&#8221;; that, &#8220;under the
-system of handicraft and neighborhood industry,
-the adage &#8216;Honesty is the best policy&#8217; seems, on the
-whole, to have been accepted and to have been true.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[Pg 162]</span>
-This adage has come down from the days before
-the machine&#8217;s r&eacute;gime and before modern business
-enterprise&#8221;; that, under modern circumstances of
-lack of personal contact between business man and
-customer, &#8220;business management has a chance to
-proceed on a temperate and sagacious calculation of
-profit and loss, untroubled by sentimental considerations
-of human kindness or irritation or of
-honesty.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Professor Veblen&#8217;s ideas have been given in his
-own language so far as has been permitted by his
-passionate professorial predilection for polysyllables&mdash;or,
-has he used long words and involved
-phrases from the prudent motive of screening from
-&#8220;the vulgar&#8221; the ferocity of his attack upon business
-men, rather than from the reactionary motive
-of scholastic snobbery? However this may be, to
-close study he makes it clear enough that, according
-to his reading of political economy:</p>
-
-<p>First: The machine is a monster.</p>
-
-<p>Second: It is making monsters of men&mdash;brutal
-serfs of the masses; bandits, liars, thieves and
-cheats of the managers and directors.</p>
-
-<p>A savage indictment that! A terrifying, topsy-turvying
-of the dearest beliefs and hopes of us who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[Pg 163]</span>
-look upon steam and electricity as efficient agents
-of Democracy, the strong and inevitable unshacklers
-of the bodies and minds of mankind. But
-Professor Veblen has stated only the extreme of
-what is said without denial every day; he is simply
-the courageous spokesman of the majority of the
-classes who write and speak; he is putting into
-scientific formula the sneer of every snob who professes
-contempt of business and, indeed, of all other
-forms of modern democratic activity. His book,
-therefore, serves admirably as a provocation for
-presenting a few facts and suggestions on the other
-side.</p>
-
-<p>Is it true, either in whole or in part, that our
-industrial civilization is degrading the masses into
-mere appurtenances of the machine, mere mechanical
-aids to the heaping up of vast profits in the
-treasuries of the few? Is it true, either in whole
-or in part, that our business men, whether great or
-small, whether captains of industry or sub-officers,
-are degenerating into dishonesty and the short-sighted
-selfishness of the slave-master?</p>
-
-<p>A surface survey of our time reveals much that
-seems to compel a reluctant affirmative answer. To
-glance at a newspaper is to read of the cynical tyrannies<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[Pg 164]</span>
-of beef, oil, coal, iron, grain, railway magnates,
-who make their infamies nauseating by ardent
-professions of patriotism and piety. And
-from time to time the shameless adulterations of
-food and drink culminate in some sensational
-slaughter of people wholesale, suggesting vastly
-greater slaughters effected quietly from day to day.</p>
-
-<p>And we see persons grown enormously rich upon
-stolen privileges of various kinds exhibiting themselves
-in luxurious ostentation, offering tempting
-rewards to sycophancy and pauperizing those fighting
-on the poverty line by supercilious gifts and
-condescensions. We see rascality rewarded with
-wealth and honors, success bought with self-sale.
-We see corruption, conspicuous and hideous, everywhere
-upon the surface of the social body. And we
-turn away heartsick, convinced that the Veblens
-have stated the truth with moderation.</p>
-
-<p>But if we turn away to read history&mdash;not the
-fables and fancies, the poetical romances and romantic
-poems from which the Veblens draw their
-&#8220;facts,&#8221; but the true story of the mankind that was&mdash;if
-we read that painful recital, we turn again to
-the mankind of our day, and it is like a landscape
-from which the storms of winter are rolling away.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[Pg 165]</span>
-The corruption which revolted us is still there, just
-as hideous as before; but we now see that it is the
-poison which was working in the veins and arteries
-of the patient and is now at the surface, on its way
-out of the body before the victorious legions of
-health.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Veblen, and his like, are prone to use,
-in writing and speaking, words of many meanings;
-they unconsciously play upon these words, and so
-fall into grievous error. For instance, Professor
-Veblen talks of ours as a &#8220;machine&#8221; civilization&mdash;as
-if the machine were its new and characteristic
-factor, determining its form and its destiny. In fact,
-civilization from its very inception has been &#8220;machine-made.&#8221;
-It began when our remotest ancestor
-snatched the bough of a tree and decided thenceforth
-to walk erect, using the bough as staff and
-club&mdash;that is, as a machine. Every tool of every
-kind has been a machine; and the progress of the
-race has been determined by the number and efficiency
-of its machines, both those designed to compel
-peace and those designed to further the arts of
-peace. If you wish to measure the actual value of
-any civilization&mdash;value in producing healthy minds
-in healthy bodies&mdash;you need only inquire into the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[Pg 166]</span>
-kind and number and efficiency of its machines.
-Why? Because the machine represents the effort
-of man to adjust himself to his environment, his
-environment to himself. It gives power to him,
-whoever he may be, that learns to use it; it leaves
-him who does not avail himself of its aid, whether
-through idleness or ignorance or intemperance or
-incapacity, about where he would have been&mdash;certainly
-no worse off than he would have been&mdash;had
-mankind remained in the helpless, machineless
-&#8220;state of nature.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Evolution has so unevenly affected the human
-race that, fortunately for us in the foremost files of
-progress, we need not rely upon history and cautious
-conjecture for our encouraging and inspiring
-knowledge of the world of the past, which enables
-us to see how far and how high we have got, and
-that the journey is still swiftly, if steeply, upward.
-There is hardly a stage of human progress that is
-not now represented on the earth, inviting any man
-with a passion for the &#8220;glorious past,&#8221; to disillusionize
-himself and cheer his pessimism. And we
-are enabled easily to reconstruct any period of the
-past. Thus, we have visual confirmation of the
-truth about Athens which history can only suggest.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[Pg 167]</span>
-We know that the Athens of Plato and Praxiteles
-was no more the true Athens than is the intellect
-and tradition of Booker Washington a true type
-of the intelligence and condition of the overwhelming
-mass of our eight million negroes. We come
-to understand what Athens&#8217; twenty-five thousand
-free citizens and many hundred thousand slaves
-really meant; we penetrate into the profligacy of
-the Athenian rich, the degradation of the Athenian
-masses; we realize why Aristides was banished for
-being just and Alcibiades carried on the shoulders
-of the Athenian Democracy (!) because he was a
-degenerate and a debauchee. And so on through
-all the past.</p>
-
-<p>In like manner, we need not rely upon the poets
-and poetical historians, as Professor Veblen apparently
-does, for knowledge of what the &#8220;handicraft&#8221;
-civilization meant. We can study it, as it survives
-practically unchanged in the miserable hovels of
-Bohemian and Italian and Spanish peasants, where
-men and beasts rot together in conditions of sanitation
-that would not long be tolerated in any place
-where the &#8220;machine civilization&#8221; has inaugurated
-its high and ever higher moral and physical standards.
-We need not go so far from home. To get<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[Pg 168]</span>
-a picture of a prosperous handicraft city of the
-middle ages, go to New York&#8217;s East Side, where
-are the fast disappearing sweatshops that were
-transplanted from &#8220;handicraft neighborhoods&#8221; of
-Europe. The poets have it otherwise; and so do
-those historians who like to paint alluring pictures
-for their readers&mdash;and hate to grub for facts. But
-there is the grisly truth. Contrast the average
-sweatshop with the average factory. No; contrast
-the best sweatshop with the worst factory.</p>
-
-<p>Partly because some men are so much shrewder
-and more persistent and more far-sighted than the
-masses of their fellows, but chiefly because the
-mass of mankind has not been long enough emancipated
-by the power of the machine to learn how to
-work intelligently and efficiently, the power machine,
-become enormously beneficent through steam
-and electricity, has not yet done all, or even more
-than a very small part, of what it can do, and shall
-do, for mankind. But already&mdash;in less than ten
-decades, less than seven&mdash;what a forward stride!
-In place of a world where all but a handful toiled
-early and late&mdash;from dawn until far into the night&mdash;toiled
-that others might reap all and they only
-blows and the meagre bread of bitterness, we now<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[Pg 169]</span>
-have a world where millions upon millions are comfortable.
-And as for the masses and toilers still
-in the shackles of the old r&eacute;gime, are they not
-better off than they were under that r&eacute;gime where
-wages were alms, and alms of the scantiest; where
-the only lights in the black darkness of utter
-ignorance were the will-o&#8217;-the-wisps of Superstition,
-drawing man farther and farther into the morass
-of slavery to king and noble and priest?</p>
-
-<p>In writing works on political economy, professors
-should not study the conditions of labor before
-steam and electricity in poems and romances and
-from orchestra stalls at productions of &#8220;Die Meistersinger.&#8221;
-There is not a serf toiling in the deepest
-depth of the most hell-like mine in Siberia, upon
-whose shoulders, and upon whose soul, the burden
-is not lighter for the modern expansion of the
-civilization of the machine.</p>
-
-<p>The truth is, steam and electricity have made the
-human race suddenly and acutely self-conscious as
-a race for the first time in its existence. They have
-constructed a mighty mirror wherein humanity sees
-itself, with all its faults and follies, and diseases
-and deformities. And the sudden, unprecedented
-spectacle is so startling, is in such abhorrent contrast<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[Pg 170]</span>
-with poetical pictures of the past, painted in
-school and popular text-books, that men of defective
-perspective shrink, and shriek: &#8220;Mankind
-has become monstrous!&#8221; But not so. Man, rising,
-rising, rising through the ages, is not nearer to
-the dark and bloody and cruel place of his origin
-than to the promised land toward which his ideals
-are drawing him. His diseases and deformities are
-of the past; and virtues that were, up to a few
-decades ago, almost unattainable ideals, are now
-so nearly a part of his natural adornment that hope
-of the nearness of the luminous penumbra of the
-Golden Age seems not unjustified.</p>
-
-<p>What our grandfathers regarded as the natural
-and just demands of employer upon employ&eacute; are
-now regarded as rigorous and tyrannous exactions
-of a brute. And in trying still to continue such
-exactions men slink behind the lawyer-constructed
-shield of the corporation, that they may be easier
-in conscience by trying to believe they are not &#8220;personally&#8221;
-responsible.</p>
-
-<p>This brings us, naturally, to the charges against
-business men.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Veblen does not, in so many words,
-assert that there was a time when business men<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[Pg 171]</span>
-were in business with other motives&mdash;presumably
-idealistic&mdash;more potent than profits. But he forces
-his readers to infer that this was the case&mdash;and that
-lofty view is always taken by the assailants of our
-present civilization. That is, man used to be an
-altruistic animal; Democracy and the machine&mdash;for
-you will find that these assailants are always
-hitting at Democracy over the shoulders of the
-machine&mdash;have made him a selfish and cruel rascal.</p>
-
-<p>False weights were found in the ruins of the
-oldest city that has yet been exhumed. And false
-weights will probably be consumed when the earth
-drops into the sun and the heavens are rolled together
-like a scroll. Ancient records and ancient
-statute books are full of evidence that every new
-plundering device&mdash;from capitalistic and labor monopolies,
-secret rebates and majority owners swindling
-minority owners, down to adulterations and
-crooked scales&mdash;was familiar to our ancestors of
-the plateau of Iran before the migrations. Vice
-is the old inhabitant; virtue is the newcomer, the
-immigrant, received with reluctance and compelled
-to fight for every inch of ground he gains. As for
-specific testimony as to past ages, we have the testimony
-of all the old writers that the mercantile<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[Pg 172]</span>
-classes, the business men, were &#8220;without honor,&#8221;
-mean of soul, oppressors of their employ&eacute;s, robbers
-of their customers. We happen to know, also,
-that as for the other classes&mdash;the proud kings and
-haughty nobles and the rest&mdash;they certainly had a
-very quaint interpretation of that word &#8220;honor&#8221;
-when a murderer, a tyrant, a gambler, a practitioner
-of every vice that rots its slave and ruins its
-victims could yet be a &#8220;gentleman of unsullied
-honor.&#8221; And we know, finally, that only with the
-rise of the business men to influence and authority
-did the standard of honor become what all the
-world now recognizes as &#8220;ideal.&#8221; The very Biblical
-phrases in which honesty is enjoined are altogether
-commercial, are the language of the business
-world, of business men.</p>
-
-<p>There are two vital facts about our new industrial
-civilization which its critics neglect:</p>
-
-<p>First&mdash;It has created an unprecedented and infinitely
-great number of opportunities to dishonesty
-of the kinds that are, to as yet but slightly
-enlightened human nature, potently tempting.</p>
-
-<p>Second&mdash;It has created new conditions of the
-moral, as well as of the material, relations of man
-to the masses of his fellow-men which are as yet<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[Pg 173]</span>
-imperfectly understood and constitute a debatable
-ground for even the fairest and rigidest consciences.
-Men now see that large action of any kind involves
-large evil as well as large good; and the balance of
-right and wrong is not easy to adjust, except in the
-tranquil studies of critics and theorists.</p>
-
-<p>To the first of these two facts may justly be attributed
-the unquestionably large amount of dishonesty&mdash;dishonesty
-clearly and generally recognized
-as such. To the second of these two facts
-is undoubtedly due the most of the wrong-doing
-by men who in their private relations are above
-reproach. These statements are not put forward
-to justify men for yielding to temptation to dishonesty
-and to justify men in acts, approval of
-which can be got from conscience by sophistry only,
-if at all. They are put forward simply to explain
-why it is that, when there are actually more honesty
-and conscientiousness, and they of a higher quality,
-than ever before in human history, there should be
-a seeming of more dishonesty and consciencelessness.
-Further in support of the same view, while
-wrongdoers of the past were hidden or veiled by
-the imperfect means of publicity, wrongdoers of
-to-day are at once searched out and pilloried by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[Pg 174]</span>
-the press and by public opinion. Up to the middle
-of the last century men knew little of the large evil
-done them, and that little imperfectly; now, knowledge
-of individual acts of uprightness, once scattered
-everywhere by being immortalized in tradition,
-rhymed and prose, is lost in the vast revelations
-of huge and ancient wrongs persisting.</p>
-
-<p>It is no new thing for a man to be admired and
-envied for wealth and station, regardless of how
-he got them. But it is a new thing in the world
-for the public conscience to be so sensitive that a
-man in possession of wealth or station, got not by
-outright and open robbery&mdash;methods not long ago
-regarded without grave disapproval&mdash;but by
-means that are questionable and suspicious merely,
-should be in an apologetic attitude, should feel
-called upon to defend himself and to give large
-sums in philanthropy in the effort to justify and to
-rehabilitate himself. Steam and electricity have
-given to man a sudden, vast power. It is not
-strange that he should commit errors and crimes
-in working out its unfamiliar possibilities. It is
-not strange that abuses, as old as the selfish struggle
-for existence, should succeed in adapting themselves
-to the new conditions, should contrive to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[Pg 175]</span>
-persist. But is it not strange that professors of
-political economy, supposedly familiar with the
-truth about the past, should be so narrow and
-twisted in historic and psychological perspective
-as to misunderstand these simple phenomena? And
-what must we think of them if, in support of their
-pessimistic and unwarranted jeremiads, they conjure
-the fantastic and preposterous and long-exploded
-myth of humanity&#8217;s past Golden Age?</p>
-
-<p>According to Professor Veblen, honesty is no
-longer the best <i>policy</i>. What an incredible misreading
-of the very sign-board of our time! Under
-the old r&eacute;gime of priest or soldier or prince, honesty
-was distinctly not the best policy. Strategy,
-dexterity, chicane, finesse, sophistry, cozening&mdash;these
-were the sure, the only ways to preferment.
-For, under those r&eacute;gimes preferment meant securing
-the right to live without work upon the toil of
-others. And, to confine ourselves to the mercantile
-classes, was not the successful business man he who
-got from prince or priest or tyrant the right to
-rob the people, he who got a monopoly or a license
-or a concession?</p>
-
-<p>How is it under the new r&eacute;gime, the democratic,
-the &#8220;vulgarizing&#8221; r&eacute;gime of the business man?<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[Pg 176]</span>
-Our chief troubles come from survivals into the
-present of the tenacious roots of the past&#8217;s methods
-to success, come from the persistence of the idea
-that by wit and not by wisdom and justice does the
-truly strong man truly prevail. But slowly&mdash;and
-surely!&mdash;the &#8220;vulgar&#8221; r&eacute;gime is enforcing the laws
-and sanctions of &#8220;vulgar&#8221; morality. Even our
-robber barons demand honesty, strict honesty,
-among themselves in their conspiracies to monopolize
-to their own profit the benefits intended for all.
-When they violate the law of honesty, they do it in
-secrecy and make haste to deny their crime and to
-return to their allegiance to the law. Honesty is
-the very ground upon which a commercial civilization
-must rest. That our business men are, as a
-class, and with rare exceptions, honest, keeping
-their bargains, giving and receiving the value
-agreed upon, is proved beyond question by the fact
-that we as a nation prosper, that our abject poverty
-is almost confined to newly arrived immigrants and
-to our only recently emancipated negroes.</p>
-
-<p>Where a prince is armed with power arbitrarily
-to suspend the natural laws governing the intercourse
-of human beings, lies and dishonesty may,
-for a time, prosper; but not where the sole basis<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[Pg 177]</span>
-of intercourse is the voluntary belief of men in each
-other&#8217;s integrity. And more than ninety per cent.
-of our business is done upon credit! Under the old
-order, the very laws and customs, the very morality
-taught by the church, was grounded upon the justice
-of the unjust distribution of the products of
-labor; under the new r&eacute;gime, under &#8220;business enterprise,&#8221;
-law and custom and religion teach only
-value for value received.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Veblen does well to criticise the misguided
-attempts of philanthropy and so-called
-charity to restore the old relations of superior and
-inferior. But his criticism that they are insufficient
-and not in keeping with the &#8220;machine civilization&#8217;s&#8221;
-merciless demand for economic efficiency
-does not go far enough. They are also unnecessary,
-and in large measure productive of greater
-ills&mdash;of pauperism and dependence&mdash;than those
-they seek to mitigate. The ills are not machine-created.
-They are inherent in the imperfect nature
-of man. They will tend wholly to disappear only
-when the machine&#8217;s &#8220;merciless&#8221; demand for
-efficiency is rigidly enforced. For, what is that
-&#8220;merciless&#8221; demand? What does the machine say
-to man? It says, &#8220;Work is not a curse, but a blessing.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[Pg 178]</span>
-In a leisure class the only culture is of the
-germs of profligacy, superciliousness, snobbery and
-decay. All men must work, and must learn to work
-well. All men must serve that they may pay for
-service rendered. And where that order prevails,
-to the worker will come the full reward for his
-work. I, the machine, will make your burden into
-a blessing, your toil into labor, the noble, the dignified,
-the producer of civilization and self-respect.
-I will widen your horizon until you see that all men
-are brothers, brothers in the business of, by business
-enterprise, increasing and creating wants, and of,
-by business enterprise, satisfying them. I will give
-you ideals that are true and just&mdash;not loyalty to
-idle, thieving prince, not slavery to irrational superstition,
-not bondage to bloody soldier-tyrant, but
-intelligent loyalty to truth and justice and progress.
-I will make you master of nature and of yourself,
-servant of the true religion and the true morality.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Until now has been reserved the inquiry into how
-it happens that these critics of industrialism fall
-into their fatal errors. That inquiry will not long
-detain us. Professor Veblen na&iuml;vely gives himself
-and his fellow-critics away. He confesses why he
-hates the r&eacute;gime of the business man, what he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[Pg 179]</span>
-means when he calls the machine industry &#8220;materialistic,
-unmoral, undevout.&#8221; &#8220;Business life,&#8221; he
-says, &#8220;does not further the growth of manners and
-breeding, pride of caste, punctilios of honor or even
-religious fervor.&#8221; And he finds his hope for the
-future in militarism and imperialism&mdash;which he,
-by the way, unjustly charges to the business men
-instead of to the politicians pandering to the still
-lively passions of man&#8217;s inheritance from the past
-when all the world was militaristic and imperialistic.
-&#8220;There can be no serious question,&#8221; says he,
-&#8220;but that a consistent return to the ancient virtues
-of allegiance, piety, servility, graded dignity, class
-prerogatives, and prescriptive authority would
-greatly conduce to popular content and to the facile
-management of affairs.&#8221; Nor does he conceal under
-the ponderous sarcasm lurking in that statement
-the truth of his own fixed belief in at least
-a measure of those &#8220;ancient virtues.&#8221; For his
-whole book, and the speeches and writings of practically
-all the critics of industrialism, show that
-these critics abhor the new virtues as &#8220;materialistic.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The motive in the mind of each critic is a little
-different from that of his fellow-critics. One<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[Pg 180]</span>
-wishes college professors and the like to be in control;
-another is for the supremacy of birth; another
-for the supremacy of culture, whatever that may
-mean. Another wants the preacher back at the
-helm, with mankind an open-mouthed, uncritical
-congregation. Each wants the particular class or
-condition to which he himself has the good fortune
-to belong, to have the chief say in affairs. But
-all agree in denouncing the business man who is
-actually in control&mdash;and will remain there. They
-profess to despise money, yet they hate him for his
-profits. They profess to prefer the intellectual and
-moral dividends which their own intellectual and
-moral enterprises declare; yet their dainty fingers
-twitch for the material dividends which his material
-enterprises naturally declare. They would
-deny him the gains which are the only&mdash;and, as
-they loudly profess, the poor enough&mdash;rewards for
-wasting his life upon the gross and sordid things.</p>
-
-<p>The business man&mdash;and that means the worker,
-the &#8220;toiler&#8221;&mdash;is in control, is there to stay, because
-the human animal is so constituted that its material
-affairs&mdash;proper food, proper clothing, proper shelter&mdash;must
-always be primal. Not of the <i>highest</i> importance,
-but of the <i>first</i> importance. And if those<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[Pg 181]</span>
-material matters are well attended to&mdash;as they will
-be when the worker&#8217;s instinct pervades the whole
-race&mdash;the spiritual matters, the growth of body and
-soul, must inevitably prosper. The worker, the
-worker&#8217;s instinct, provides the right soil for a soul
-to grow in&mdash;a real soil, full of the natural and
-nourishing substances, not a fanciful, unsubstantial
-soil of false ideals, fraudulent culture and barren
-fiddle-faddle of closet theorizings.</p>
-
-<p>For proof that the business instinct will provide
-the right soil we need only point to our own country
-as it is. In America, the great business nation
-of the nations, there lives a race of idealists, eighty
-millions earnest, dominated by the instincts for
-self-help and helpfulness to others, afire with the
-passion for improvement, for education, for knowledge
-of all kinds and from any and all sources.</p>
-
-<p>The world has wandered in the swamps of vain
-and sentimental imaginings long enough. By all
-means, let us have it established on the firm ground
-and in the straight, upward roads of science and
-business. The sun shines upon those roads by day,
-the moon and the stars light them by night; the
-flowers bloom beside them&mdash;and within reach of
-the humblest wayfarer.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[Pg 182]</span>This gospel will not be attractive to <i>poseurs</i> and
-to the lazy and the incompetent. But it is gospel,
-the gospel of Democracy, America&#8217;s gospel. In
-the cargo of merchandise, Enlightenment and Democracy
-always travel as stowaway missionaries;
-when the cargo is landed, they go ashore and begin
-to preach.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[Pg 183]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XI<br />
-
-
-<small>DEMOCRACY&#8217;S DYNAMO</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Education</span> is the huge dynamo which supplies
-power to the American people. Not in history or
-in legend is there recorded such an outburst of international
-curiosity as that about the real America,
-as distinguished from the America created in the
-minds of Europeans by our multi-millionaires, since
-it became not merely agricultural but also an industrial
-world-factor, inevitably dominant in an era
-whose civilization is the first based upon peace and
-indissolubly wedded to peaceful arts. Europe has
-not been satisfied with inspecting what comes to
-her. Such specimens only whetted her curiosity
-to an edge as fine as that which cut the home ties
-of adventurous spirits when Columbus exhibited
-his Indians and his gold at the court of his patrons.</p>
-
-<p>The Europeans, and the Asiatics, too, hastened
-to dispatch to us all manner of commissioners, semi-official<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[Pg 184]</span>
-and private, from princes of reigning houses
-to delegates from labor unions. And each of these
-spies&mdash;of the splendid modern kind&mdash;has been
-charged to seek and find and forthwith bring home
-an answer to the all-important question: &#8220;How <i>do</i>
-they do it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And these gentlemen have peeked and poked
-and peered in the friendliest, most flattering way
-imaginable. They have examined palace and tenement
-and cottage, and their tenants. They have
-eaten and drunk of all the products of the land,
-and have listened to speeches numerous and have
-read newspapers numberless. They have watched
-wheels go round in factories&mdash;and in heads as well.
-They have heard those who say &#8220;the captains of
-industry did it,&#8221; those who say &#8220;it was done in
-spite of the captains of industry and the high
-financiers.&#8221; And after tasting and seeing and
-smelling and touching and hearing, from Maine to
-the Golden Gate, these envoys have gone back, and
-with one accord have replied:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They do it by education.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>From the end of the Civil War&mdash;an interruption
-of our progress to rid ourselves of a drag upon it&mdash;we
-have been educating as we never did before,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[Pg 185]</span>
-as no other people ever did or now does. Immigrants
-have poured in; our great &#8220;infant industry&#8221;
-which protectionist and free trader alike believe in
-protecting and fostering, has been exceedingly expansive.
-And we have put home and foreign product
-into the great educational plant&mdash;from half to
-two-thirds of all between five years old and twenty
-going through school and academy and college.
-The average annual number who now receive
-formal education is one-fifth of our total population.
-And more than a million of our young men
-and women&mdash;one in every ten of both sexes of the
-higher education age, one in every six young men
-of that age&mdash;are annually in the universities, colleges,
-academies, business and professional schools.
-Not enough, not nearly enough; but in hopeful proportion
-to what used to be.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think, therefore I am,&#8221; runs the Descartes
-formula. We teach our youth to think in order
-that they may really <i>be</i>&mdash;be individual, be proud
-and self-respecting and self-reliant, be free with
-the freedom no government or law can give or secure,
-or take away. In the educational institutions
-this impulse gets form and direction that it may
-develop efficient manhood. And against the thinking<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[Pg 186]</span>
-toiler all the forces of ignorance and passion
-and wasteful luxury, of base and foolish political,
-social, industrial ideas, cannot prevail.</p>
-
-<p>The first free school opened on these shores was
-in New York City on Manhattan Island. Of all
-the settlers who came to America the Dutch alone
-understood and believed in the free public school,
-offering free education not as alms but as a right.
-They had had it at home. They established it here,
-and set the example which was followed by the
-other colonists, first of all by those New Englanders
-who had lived in the Holland that fought
-Alva and Philip, and had there absorbed some
-democratic ideas. Holland was the godmother of
-modern Democracy, was the nursery of the modern
-public school.</p>
-
-<p>These words are from the pen of John of Nassau,
-the oldest brother of that friend of civil and
-religious liberty, William the Silent:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Soldiers and patriots thus educated (in free
-schools) are better than all armies, arsenals, armories,
-munitions, alliances and treaties that can
-be had or imagined in the world.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Those words, written three hundred years ago
-by a man who had devoted his life to the study of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[Pg 187]</span>
-the rights and wrongs of the common man, sum
-up the whole story. How his eloquent common
-sense contrasts with the shrieking of those little
-Americans who think that a cannon shot can penetrate
-further than a noble idea! How this old
-friend of freedom rebukes the puny, alleged statesmen
-who fancy that the manhood of this republic
-was developed on the battlefields, instead of realizing
-that military prowess is only one matter-of-course
-evidence of its existence! Enlightenment
-and Democracy make men who <i>live</i> for their country&mdash;and
-that is the new force in the world.</p>
-
-<p>Let the people who fear for the future of the
-democratic spirit of this people look upon the spectacle
-of our free schools, those millions of young
-heads bent over books, those millions of young
-brains learning to think, to reason, learning to use
-mind and body in the service of civilization, real
-civilization. Enlightenment has won all the victories
-of the republic in the past. Its eternal warfare
-upon ignorance and incompetence, upon craft
-of plutocrat and craft of demagogue, and plausible
-idealism of reactionary, is the safeguard of the
-republic&#8217;s future. And one of the great agents of
-enlightenment, of Democracy&mdash;not the only great<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[Pg 188]</span>
-agent, not the greatest agent&mdash;is formal education
-in school, academy and college.</p>
-
-<p>And more important even than the formal education
-of the boys is the formal education of the
-girls. The other means to enlightenment are more
-accessible to the men&mdash;indeed, they compel the men
-to become less ignorant and less prejudiced in spite
-of themselves. But to reach the women, the formal
-education is almost indispensable, for their ignorance
-and their prejudice are more sheltered, less
-open to the light of Democracy that floods the
-arenas and the market places.</p>
-
-<p>And educated, enlightened, democratic women
-are of the highest importance to America, whose
-mission seems to be to lead the world in the march
-upward to that Arcady where every human unit
-shall have the chance to count as one.</p>
-
-<p>Our extensive and our expanding system of
-higher education of women is often bitterly assailed
-by educated men, by educators. Bourbonism, especially
-when bulwarked by vanity, does not yield
-easily. And it will be many a day before death
-reaps the last man with the passion for looking
-down on his fellow-creatures. To avoid useless
-dispute, admit that woman should look up to man.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[Pg 189]</span>
-Still there remains unimpaired the truth that woman&#8217;s
-two highest functions are to be the companion
-of man and the mother of men. The profitable
-companion for an educated man must be an educated
-woman&mdash;educated not merely for man&#8217;s
-&#8220;hours of ease,&#8221; nor for his happily infrequent
-hours &#8220;when pain and anguish rack the brow,&#8221; but
-also for the hours of development and endeavor.</p>
-
-<p>So long as so-called education consisted in a little
-Latin and less Greek, forgotten as speedily as the
-business of life could crowd it from the mind,
-higher education was as unimportant to women as&mdash;well,
-as it was to man. But now that education
-consists in teaching not how the Greeks and Romans
-lived, but how &#8220;you and I&#8221; must live to-day
-and to-morrow, the gap between the man who has
-had the higher education and the woman who has
-not had it and has not supplied the deficiency, is
-wide indeed and will grow wider. If as much attention
-were given to the relations between men and
-women from five years after marriage on to the
-end as is given to their relations during the purely
-sentimental and transitory mating season this difference
-would appear in its true importance.</p>
-
-<p>The same point of view applies to woman as a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[Pg 190]</span>
-mother. So long as the training of children centred
-around the slipper and the switch, an ignorant
-mother was not at a great disadvantage&mdash;the best
-educated mothers knew little. But now-a-days the
-child of the highly educated mother has an enormous
-advantage, other things being equal, because
-such a mother applies science to the conduct of her
-home as her husband applies it to the conduct of
-his profession or business.</p>
-
-<p>No education in the mother will compensate for
-lack of character. Character without education is
-infinitely better than education without character.
-But character plus education is the true ideal&mdash;and
-it is attainable.</p>
-
-<p>If we are speedily to enter more fully into the
-rich promised land which Democracy opens to us,
-we must have not only the man who knows but the
-woman who knows. After all, is not our ultimate
-excuse for being alive that we are the parents of
-the next generation? And there the woman, with
-practically absolute control over the next generation
-at its vital, formative age, has the better of the
-man. If anything, does she not need the higher
-education more than does the man?</p>
-
-<p>Education for the men; education for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[Pg 191]</span>
-women. But it must be <i>enlightened and enlightening</i>
-education.</p>
-
-<p>Our national ideal is not a powerful state, famed
-and feared for bluster and appetite, not a people
-welded by unthinking passion for military glory
-into an instrument to the greed and vanity of the
-few; but manhood and womanhood, a citizenship
-ever wiser and stronger and more civilized, with
-ever more and more individual units that cannot
-be controlled in the mass&mdash;the democratic man and
-the democratic woman&mdash;alert, enlightened, self-reliant,
-free.</p>
-
-<p>Now, there can be no difference of opinion as to
-the way to this ideal, the way to make the individual
-capable to work out his own salvation without
-hindrance from the aggressiveness of his neighbor
-or neighbors, without hindrance from the prejudices
-begotten in and of the darkness of his own
-ignorance.</p>
-
-<p>Against all these foes, those without, those
-within, there is just one effective weapon&mdash;education.</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible for an ignorant man to be free.
-No matter what constitutions you establish, no matter
-what laws you pass, no matter how assiduously<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[Pg 192]</span>
-you safeguard individual rights and liberties,
-the ignorant man will still be a slave. He rejoices
-in his chains, his prejudices and his superstitions.
-He clings to them. He beats off those who seek
-to deliver. He welcomes those who seek to bind.
-He shouts for chains, he votes for chains&mdash;chains
-for himself, chains for others. If he is ever in the
-right it is because he is mistaken. And you may
-be certain that a demagogue or other slave-hunter
-will soon recapture him and restore him to his beloved
-bondage of error.</p>
-
-<p>This is why the man who aspires to freedom
-instinctively reaches for the weapon of education.
-This is why the American people always have had
-as their dominant passion the passion for education.
-This is why on the frontier the schoolhouse
-is finished before the home is furnished; why the
-washerwoman and the drayman toil to keep their
-children in school and to send at least one son to
-college; why our self-made men pour out their
-wealth in educational endowments; why there are
-all these colossal public appropriations for schools,
-academies, colleges, universities.</p>
-
-<p>What is an ignorant man?</p>
-
-<p>Of course there are the illiterates and the almost<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[Pg 193]</span>
-illiterate. But, numerous though they are, they do
-not count for much in this republic. They do not
-decide elections. They do not select candidates.
-They do not propose and compel legislation. The
-so-called ignorant vote is not a national or a local
-peril. It is not a national, rarely even a local
-factor.</p>
-
-<p>The ignorance that counts in a Democracy is
-educated ignorance. Sometimes it has only been
-part of the way through the common schools.
-Sometimes it has one or more university degrees.
-Sometimes it struts and preens itself as &#8220;the scholar
-in politics.&#8221; Only too often it writes books, especially
-histories, and in the magazines and in the
-newspapers tells how and for whom we ought to
-vote. More often than not the very conspicuous
-members of this ignorant class are full to the overflowing
-with knowledge, knowledge from books,
-knowledge from experience, knowledge from
-travel.</p>
-
-<p>No, education&mdash;democratic education&mdash;is not
-knowledge. It is not even experience. Profound,
-deadly, dangerous ignorance is compatible with
-both.</p>
-
-<p>What, then, is ignorance?</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[Pg 194]</span>All its shades and kinds can be so classified as
-to exclude none who ought to be included, include
-none who has the right to go free. Is not the
-dangerous, ignorant man of the Democracy the
-man who cannot reason, cannot think for himself?</p>
-
-<p>What does it mean to think for one&#8217;s self?</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately, it does not mean original thinking.
-If that were so there would instantly arise in the
-world the most contracted and exclusive aristocracy
-it has ever known. To think for one&#8217;s self does not
-even mean correctly to reason out one&#8217;s own conclusions
-from given premises. That would involve
-an amount of mental labor from which many brains
-might shrink. It merely means to be able to follow
-reasoning that is laid before one; to hear both sides
-and suspend judgment until both are heard; to
-recognize which is sound and which fallacious, and
-upon that independent and clear judgment to accept
-the true, or rather, to reject the false.</p>
-
-<p>A Democracy must breed citizens who think for
-themselves. Without them it cannot live. With
-them it cannot die. Hence it follows that in a
-Democracy education means to cultivate the ability
-to think for one&#8217;s self. Democracy means the right
-of private judgment. Education in and for a Democracy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[Pg 195]</span>
-means development of the capacity to
-form private judgment.</p>
-
-<p>So far as the Democracy is concerned, so far as
-the equable distribution of rights and liberties is
-concerned, no education that does not increase reasonableness
-is of the slightest value.</p>
-
-<p>The education that has for its chief aims, its
-only real aims, culture, refinement, knowledge,
-learning, may be useful to an aristocracy like Great
-Britain, to an empire like Germany, to an autocracy
-like Russia. But it is not only not helpful to but
-actually hostile to democratic ideas and ideals. It
-breeds contempt on the one hand, fear and suspicion
-and hate on the other&mdash;the few looking down
-upon the many, the many looking up at the few.
-It makes the powerful supercilious. It makes the
-weak, whether educated or uneducated, helpless.
-It fills the brain; it does not necessarily strengthen
-the brain. It <i>gives</i> a man something; it does not
-compel him to make something of himself.</p>
-
-<p>The truth about democratic education is indirectly
-recognized in practice more and more as
-science and its rigidly logical methods have grown
-in educational importance. All our modern systems
-of education are based perforce, rather than by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[Pg 196]</span>
-design, in part upon teaching the brain to reason.
-But do we realize fully as yet that for us, for our
-democratic purposes of self-development and self-government,
-teaching the brain to think is not only
-the whole foundation of education, but also the sustaining
-part of the superstructure?</p>
-
-<p>Take up any one of the great newspapers of the
-country, the great reflectors of the public mind and
-heart and taste. A few minutes&#8217; searching among
-the advertisements will discover columns on columns
-of notices of astrologers and palmists and
-clairvoyants, of mediums and crystal gazers and
-cure-all doctors with their cure-all medicines. To
-whom do these dealers in the secrets of life and
-death, the future and the beyond, appeal for their
-comfortable incomes? To those who cannot read?
-Manifestly not. To the people in the humbler
-walks of life? Certainly not. No, they are inviting
-the educated classes to call&mdash;merchants and
-bankers and artisans, their wives and their daughters,
-the &#8220;well-to-do,&#8221; the reading public, the &#8220;substantial,&#8221;
-the part of the people which is commonly
-called &#8220;the backbone of the republic.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Go on to the news columns. You find some
-account of the doings of a band of thieves who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[Pg 197]</span>
-have got possession of some department or departments
-of the city or state government, and have
-substituted for the statute law the law of loot.
-Who turned over the keys to them? The illiterate,
-the dishonest, the criminal? Not at all. Look at
-the primary rolls of the organization whom these
-wretches disgrace, and you find a thoroughly respectable,
-in the main intelligent, certainly honest,
-body of voters. By no stretch of the meaning could
-you call them uneducated in the sense in which that
-term is commonly used.</p>
-
-<p>In the very next column, perhaps, you read how
-a statesman of pious mien and impressive manner
-has been assuring his fellow-countrymen that they
-have a commission from the Almighty (which he
-begs leave to execute) calling them from their
-peaceful and orderly occupations and sending them
-forth to slaughter certain other men of whom they
-had not heard until a few months ago, to seize
-persons and property and to administer upon them
-arbitrarily. And who cheered wildly as these tidings
-of morality and civilization were proclaiming?
-Illiterates? Certainly not; but educated men,
-many of them highly educated, men who would
-hardly characterize such performances in private<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[Pg 198]</span>
-life as &#8220;manifest destiny&#8221; and &#8220;plain
-duty.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A few columns further on and you read how
-one is wailing like a lost soul over heaps of scrap
-metal and rags and waste paper, because he cannot
-get permission to work them over into money
-and so make us all millionaires. And who is he?
-A college graduate. And who are his supporters?
-Millions who have gone to school and take in the
-newspapers and magazines.</p>
-
-<p>These few illustrations of the reign of illogic
-are cited from the multitude available with a
-double purpose. In the first place, they faintly
-suggest to what an extent the citizen of a Democracy
-is prey to charlatanism. In countries with
-other forms of government&mdash;in monarchies and
-the like&mdash;a few charlatans are licensed and erected
-into respectability and power, and given the range
-of the people, while all others are rigidly repressed.
-In a Democracy any charlatan may license
-himself. The people are prey to every and any
-form of charlatanism, fraudulent or both. They
-must protect themselves, or they will not be protected
-at all. And right education is the only
-means.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[Pg 199]</span>The second point made obvious by these examples
-of superstition theological, superstition
-medical, superstition political, is that our education
-in the past must have been defective and must still
-be so. It has been seeking, it now seeks, as its
-chief object, to impart knowledge, not to cultivate
-the art of using knowledge, the art of thinking
-correctly.</p>
-
-<p>The ideal has been an education that is reminiscent
-and is only incidentally constructive. The
-democratic ideal is the education that is constructive
-and only incidentally reminiscent.</p>
-
-<p>There is only one way to this true education.
-Just as a child is taught to walk, to ride, to swim,
-just as it is taught to read, to write, to cipher, with
-just as much care, with just as much patience, with
-just as much deliberateness of purpose, must it be
-taught to reason.</p>
-
-<p>This is not in advocacy of courses in formal
-logic. Those courses do not teach men to think.
-They teach men what certain other men have
-thought about the processes of thinking. And too
-often they teach it in such a way as to discourage
-the exercise of the reasoning faculty. No; the
-education that will soundly educate must make of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[Pg 200]</span>
-every kind of lesson a lesson in logic, an incessant
-pointing out of reasons, reasons, reasons why certain
-facts are so, certain allegations false; an incessant
-demand that reasons, reasons, reasons be
-given&mdash;always reasons. The interrogation point
-should be the symbol over the door of every school,
-high and low, as the indication of what is going
-on within.</p>
-
-<p>The average child starts in life with a question
-mark at the tip of every sense. Why does this
-inquisitiveness gradually disappear or become perverted
-into curiosity about trivialities? Why does
-going to school become a burden? Why are so
-many classes at college listless and inattentive?
-Why does the light, the frivolous, the thoughtless
-attract and hold, while that which is in reality far
-more interesting wearies and repels? Is it not because
-this reasoning faculty is allowed to grow up
-&#8220;any which way,&#8221; and is discouraged or suppressed
-wherever memory or some other form of some
-one&#8217;s else ideas can be substituted? Is it not because
-to reason comes to seem a burden, a bore, a
-pain? Would that be so if education were rightly
-based, rightly built?</p>
-
-<p>We Americans reason better, perhaps, than any<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[Pg 201]</span>
-other nation about a wider range of affairs; probably
-not with so much depth as some other peoples,
-but certainly with greater clearness. But this is
-due to a compulsory training almost altogether
-outside of the schoolroom. It is due to Democracy,
-that compels the mind to grow as Spring&#8217;s sunshine
-compels the seed. As our affairs, both public and
-private, have grown more complex, the defects due
-to this haphazard education of the reasoning faculty,
-this treatment of it almost as if it were a weed,
-become more and more apparent, more and more in
-need of correction.</p>
-
-<p>Common sense is looked upon as a gift of the
-gods, a sort of intuition. Is it not in reality merely
-the result of a somewhat better natural or acquired
-reasoning faculty? Ought not common sense to
-be the attainable possession of every American?
-And where but the schoolhouse is the place to obtain
-this possession, this means to self-rule, to freedom,
-to the full splendor of the noblest of human
-ideals, Democracy?</p>
-
-<p>In a Democracy the school should not be the
-temple of knowledge. It should be the temple of
-reason. And it shall be! And that day will be a
-sad one for charlatanism and for charlatans.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[Pg 202]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XII<br />
-
-
-<small>A NATION OF DREAMERS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Each</span> year not far from fifty million dollars are
-spent in America in exploiting cures for digestion
-troubles; and no doubt we give the doctors and
-the druggists a thousand millions or so each year
-in seeking relief from the consequences of our ignorance
-and our folly in feeding ourselves. Some
-of us are too poor to get the right sort of food,
-even when we know what is the right kind; others
-are both ignorant and incapable of resisting the
-clamors of appetite. The problems of mental
-and physical food are not analogous; they are two
-parts of a whole. Our ignorance of chemistry and
-hygiene and our unguarded appetites lead us into
-gastronomic folly; our ignorance of the simple and
-easily learned laws of the mind and our vitiated
-and undiscriminating mental appetites, called passions
-and prejudices, lead us into educational follies<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[Pg 203]</span>
-as wild but no wilder than our gastronomic follies.
-The results of the one show in poor health; the results
-of the other show in confusion in the conduct
-of our affairs, private and public.</p>
-
-<p>Some of us have no means of getting good mental
-food, and would not know what to select and
-what to reject if we had. Others, and these are
-the overwhelming majority, have no power to discriminate
-between the true and the false, the rational
-and the irrational, between that which
-strengthens the powers of the mind and that which
-weakens or perverts them. We take in cheap or
-worthless mental food just as we put cheap or
-worthless stuff into our stomachs. We take in that
-which is easy and pleasant to the taste&mdash;that is,
-we patronize the intellectual pastry cooks and confectioners
-too liberally. Or, we go to the purveyors
-of the strong waters of passion and prejudice, and
-under the influence of such whiskies and brandies
-imagine ourselves beings of extraordinary and fine
-mentality.</p>
-
-<p>There is as much, indeed, there is greater, cause
-for alarm over the gastronomic than over the mental
-follies. But neither kind is evidence that we
-are on the down grade. We are more alert and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[Pg 204]</span>
-wiser all the time in matters of physical health,
-despite our own appetites and foolish inclinations
-and lazy disinclinations, despite the pretentious ignorance
-of the medical profession and the shrewd
-chicanery of the quacks. In the same manner we
-are more and more alive to the importance of mental
-health, of the well-fed, well-exercised brain; and
-this improvement goes steadily forward, despite
-the harmful effects of alleged literature and drama,
-despite the pretentious ignorance of our regularly
-constituted teachers, despite the energetic educational
-quackeries of false learning, false culture
-and false taste. Intelligence will spread; Democracy
-will compel.</p>
-
-<p>A hundred years ago small indeed was the part
-of the human race that could be reached by an
-appeal to the reason. To-day in many parts of
-the civilized world advances begin to be made not
-alone by appeals to empty stomachs, by shouts
-about full and empty dinner pails, but by real intellectual
-force. There are even a few rare but
-highly significant instances of masses of men being
-induced to sacrifice a small immediate good to gain
-a remoter larger good. That is, the masses begin
-to show signs of that same intelligent foresight<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[Pg 205]</span>
-which created and maintained class rule in times
-past, which makes some successful far beyond their
-fellows. And those who are so greatly concerned
-by the vast concentration of machinery and capital
-in a few hands fail to give proper consideration
-to the two most important points, more important
-far than the evils of concentration of wealth and
-power:</p>
-
-<p>First: Concentrations of capital are at the mercy
-of brains. They are impotent unless they are administered
-by brains, administered by a multitude
-of brains working intelligently and harmoniously
-for a common end.</p>
-
-<p>Second: Their evil consequences result from lack
-of reasoning power, lack of far-sightedness, due to
-imperfect education in the managers; lack of
-knowledge how to protect their own interests on
-the part of the masses.</p>
-
-<p>On one hand we see an enormous increase in the
-brain power of the people&mdash;a multitude able to
-think, eager to think, not to be prevented from
-thinking, where only two or three generations ago
-the thinking was done exclusively by the few. On
-the other hand we see the necessity for more thinking,
-for vigorous stirring-up of the minds of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[Pg 206]</span>
-masses, for more and more education. And, year
-by year, the stirring-up process increases. The
-evils of the present day are as old as the race, as
-old as ignorance, as old as human frailty. The
-good, the benefits, are new, entirely new.</p>
-
-<p>The material and mental forces of modern civilization
-have already wrought wonders. Think of
-it! Less than a century and a half ago the world
-for the first time heard a plea for the freedom, the
-dignity, the individuality of man. To-day millions
-of minds have that gospel as their fundamental
-creed. And freedom of thought, freedom of action,
-is the realized ideal of many nations, the
-realizing ideal of almost all the others. Why
-should we fear that the idea of manhood will lose
-its charm; that the democratic ideal, which has real
-beauty, should prove less attractive than the old
-ideal of inequality and injustice and inhumanity,
-which is now seen to be in fact hideous? Why
-should we fear that as we grow in enlightenment,
-grow in capacity to think and act with freedom,
-we should care less and less about thinking and acting
-with freedom?</p>
-
-<p>What will come out of this vast, unbarriered
-flood of sunshine of enlightenment, out of these<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[Pg 207]</span>
-concentrations social called cities, these concentrations
-industrial called combinations? Who can
-say? Who would care to destroy life&#8217;s chief interest,
-the veiled future, by foreseeing? One thing
-we can be assured of&mdash;it will not be tyranny. It
-could not be tyranny, because the light of intellect,
-of real intelligence, is now in millions of minds,
-is kindling in millions more.</p>
-
-<p>Of the many misreadings of history perhaps the
-silliest is that which attributes to former times an
-idealism greater than that of our own day. And
-of the many misreadings of our own times certainly
-the silliest is that which attributes more idealism
-to such countries as Germany, Austria, and Italy
-than to these United States.</p>
-
-<p>The Middle Ages are generally cited as the
-period of intensest and loftiest idealism. But looking
-past the artistic and literary few of those centuries,
-looking at nations and peoples, what do we
-see? Ignorance, squalor, inconceivable physical
-and mental and moral wretchedness; ferocious tyrannies
-worse almost than anarchy itself and constantly
-producing it; stolid and heartless indifference
-in almost all to the welfare of their fellow-beings;
-&#8220;Every man for himself&#8221; the universal<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[Pg 208]</span>
-cry. No wonder there was a passionate yearning
-for the life beyond the grave with its promise of
-escape from a world made hideous by &#8220;man&#8217;s inhumanity
-to man.&#8221; And in these modern countries
-where so-called idealism is rampant, we find false
-and oppressive social and industrial conditions in
-the ascendant, we find a deplorable incapacity for
-dealing with the problems of life or an ignorant
-insensibility to them.</p>
-
-<p>If idealism means inanely beating the empty air,
-if it means the worship of the vague, the remote
-and the purely fanciful, then this age cannot be
-charged with idealism and our country must plead
-guilty to the charge of gross materialism; and for
-idealism we must look to seclusions and deserts,
-where a few surviving dirty and distracted hermits
-and yogis spend their time in fantastical imaginings.
-But if idealism means rational, realizable
-and realizing dreams of a to-morrow that shall be
-as much better than to-day as to-day is better than
-yesterday, then the world was never before so
-idealistic, and America is the chief prophet and
-chief apostle of idealism.</p>
-
-<p>In this sense the Declaration of Independence is
-the most idealistic literary product of the human<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[Pg 209]</span>
-mind; the so-called idealism of superstition, of
-chivalry, of kingship and aristocracy, of the divinely
-appointed few taking care of the many, of
-&#8220;never mind this world; all will be righted in the
-next,&#8221; has the cheap, dull glitter of &#8220;fool&#8217;s gold&#8221;
-and paste diamonds. These fallacies were, and still
-are, poisonous, because of their interference with
-the growth of true idealism&mdash;the idealism of self-help
-and helping others to help themselves. And
-to show them up and then to show them down and
-out&mdash;especially down and out of our colleges and
-universities&mdash;we need another Cervantes and a revised
-and enlarged Don Quixote.</p>
-
-<p>Never before was the true ideal, humanity, clear
-and universal. &#8220;Light from the East&#8221; was the
-old proverb; the new proverb is &#8220;Light from
-the West!&#8221; For ours is the dawn-land of the
-Golden Age. We are a nation, a race of idealists,
-of dreamers. Even our plutocrats, with their
-Americanism submerged and all but suffocated in
-their wealth, still dream fitfully of justice and
-equality and universal enlightenment and the brotherhood
-of man.</p>
-
-<p>We are a nation of dreamers who make their
-dreams come true!</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[Pg 210]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIII<br />
-
-
-<small>NOT GENEROSITY, BUT JUSTICE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is reasonable, and not unkind, to assume that
-the time will come when we shall no longer have
-John D. Rockefeller with us. He may not die; as
-a vindication and a reward he may be honored
-with the unique distinction of Enoch and Elijah.
-But, whether by the vulgar route or in fiery chariot
-with angel escort, go he will, and his son will reign
-in his stead. The word reign is here used in the
-metaphoric sense in which it is almost always used
-now-a-days. For, the son of Rockefeller will not be
-free literally to reign. He will be hedged about
-with a thousand and one restraints. His acts will
-be the result not of his own intellect and will, but
-of his training, his tradition, his environment. He
-will be little of the autocrat, a great deal of the
-agent and servant. But, suppose that he would be
-really free, really self-owned, really capable of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[Pg 211]</span>
-mastership of his vast inheritance, instead of its
-slave, doing its bidding, acting always as a son of
-John D. Rockefeller and a member of the class
-multi-millionaire. Suppose this possible. What
-could he do with his nearly a thousand millions,
-for the most part so massed that they control many
-of the great vital industries of the country? Imbued
-with a deep sense of trusteeship to humanity
-instead of to the quaint Rockefeller god, and endowed
-with the intelligence to act upon that sense,
-what could he do to make the world the better for
-his sojourn in it? What would be his opportunities?</p>
-
-<p>Of course, in the reality his opportunities will
-be small indeed. His limitations, through heredity,
-education and environment, are too narrow.
-But under our fanciful, even fantastic, &#8220;if,&#8221; there
-must be surely some way for a rich man to serve
-his fellow-men and demonstrate high qualities of
-mind and heart other than by these commonplace,
-more or less &#8220;cheap and nasty&#8221; schemes of so-called
-philanthropy. To all men in the past, and to the
-small man still&mdash;that is, to any man incapable of
-grasping the splendid and lofty idealism of Democracy&mdash;there
-could be nothing more captivating than<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[Pg 212]</span>
-playing the r&ocirc;le of my Lord Bountiful. Not
-merely the paying of one&#8217;s just debts, not merely
-the doing of the commands of one&#8217;s own self-respect,
-but graciously condescending to part with
-one&#8217;s wealth for the gratification of one&#8217;s vanity
-and for the development of deference and humility
-in the recipients of the bounty. Philanthropy as
-it is practiced is more often than not a vice both in
-its origin and in its results. So, we will not make
-our imaginary young Rockefeller a philanthropist.
-We will not subject him to the temptation to make
-of himself a supercilious Pharisee and to make of
-others paupers and parasites and courtiers.</p>
-
-<p>He is free; he is young; he is fearless. He is
-absolute master of his colossal inheritance. He
-looks up at the vast structure his father built. He
-reads upon it the motto his father placed there&mdash;&#8220;I
-am a clamorer for dividends.&#8221; His face sobers as
-he reads, and out of his mind go his half-formed
-projects to endow missions and colleges and hospitals
-and libraries. &#8220;Perhaps I have not so much
-to give as I thought,&#8221; he says to himself. &#8220;I must
-first see. What are the sources of my income?
-Am I stealing from anybody? Should I be giving
-away that which is not rightfully mine to give?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[Pg 213]</span>And as a preliminary move he tears down the
-offensive &#8220;I am a clamorer for dividends,&#8221; and
-puts in its stead &#8220;I am a clamorer for justice.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let us first be just,&#8221; he says. &#8220;Perhaps we
-shall not be able to be generous. Perhaps we shall
-even, hat in hand, and upon our knees, be compelled
-to crave the generous forgiveness of our fellow-men.&#8221;
-All this time he has been standing at
-the rear or business end of the paternal structure.
-He now goes round to the front or philanthropic
-side of it. He closes the doors there with a sign,
-&#8220;Philanthropy suspended during the taking of the
-inventory.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And so we find our ideal young Rockefeller, his
-ears shut against the importunities of paupers and
-panderers and parasites, plunging deep and resolutely
-into the details of business&mdash;of the several
-vast enterprises which he, by inheritance, owns or
-controls. And soon all his father&#8217;s old friends,
-with the approval of all the leading men in finance
-and industry, are discussing whether a commission
-ought not to be obtained, and cannot be obtained,
-to inquire into the sanity of the young man. Not
-dividends, but honesty and justice! Why, the
-young fellow&#8217;s brain is turned! Denouncing business<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214"></a>[Pg 214]</span>
-methods approved by the best lawyers at the
-bar, sanctified by the use of the greatest captains
-of industry? Insisting that commodities should be
-sold at only a fair profit over and above the cost
-of production? Dismissing men skilled in legal
-and business chicane? Insisting that no man in his
-employ shall have less than a decent living wage?
-Calling for the reorganization of great properties,
-not to increase but to decrease the bonds and stocks
-on whose interest and dividends a hundred of our
-best people are able to lead lives of elegant leisure
-and look down with amused pity on those who have
-to toil? There is no escape from the conclusion
-that the young man is mad, mad as a hatter, mad
-as a March hare.</p>
-
-<p>If he had established soup kitchens to tempt the
-hard-working to knock off and join the army of
-lusty beggars, if he had given millions to enable
-missionaries to live at ease while they gratified their
-abnormal passion for meddling in other people&#8217;s
-business, if he had subsidized faculties to teach only
-&#8220;safe and sane&#8221; doctrines, if he had set aside vast
-corruption funds for debauching legislatures to
-suffer the people to be despoiled, if he had poured
-rivers of water into the stocks and bonds of his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[Pg 215]</span>
-enterprises, had cut down wages and raised prices,
-if he had built himself half a dozen palaces, and
-conducted himself like a monkey that has been
-given a red cap and a pink jacket&mdash;why, that would
-have been sane, eminently sane. But honesty and
-justice! And in his own affairs! A real, practical
-application! Hear the shouts of derisive laughter.
-See the winks, the tongues in derisive cheeks. &#8220;The
-man&#8217;s mad! The man&#8217;s mad!&#8221; cries a generation
-tainted with the coarse ideals of riches, show and
-condescension.</p>
-
-<p>But let us suppose that he is not strait-jacketed
-by his friends nor daunted by the hoots of the
-crowd. Let us suppose that he remains at large
-and has his way. And then, let us look at his first
-great &#8220;philanthropy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At first glance there seems nothing to look at,
-no important change. The same old machinery
-of these several huge Rockefeller industries of
-manufacture, trade and transportation seems to be
-moving on in much the same old way. The only
-obvious change is in the fortune and the income
-of the young iconoclast and his fellow-stockholders.
-There is seen an enormous shrinkage&mdash;enough to
-have endowed hundreds of colleges, enough to have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[Pg 216]</span>
-made millions of paupers. The difference between
-the old order and the new is chiefly in moral tone.
-An honest man and a criminal go through precisely
-the same routine each day&mdash;dressing, eating,
-talking, sleeping. The abysmal difference between
-the two is invisible to human eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Nor does the example of the new order seem to
-amount to much. Such doings are too expensive.
-Charity, donations, subscriptions, cost far less, do
-not interfere with dividends and interest, and bring
-returns in public applause. Why be honest and
-just when nobody else is&mdash;when nobody appreciates
-it&mdash;when the very victims of the system of dishonesty
-and injustice have less respect for you?
-Why refrain from &#8220;respectable&#8221; robbery when indulging
-in it gives power and prestige?</p>
-
-<p>But the young iconoclast is not discouraged. He
-keeps hammering away&mdash;establishing the new
-order where he has control, making a fierce and
-incessant and public fight for it in those corporations
-in which he is a director sitting for a minority
-interest. And gradually the fury of the &#8220;respectable&#8221;
-rises against him. He has outraged the great
-&#8220;respectable&#8221; lawyers, who fatten on fraud and
-crime; he has inflamed the stockholders and bondholders,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217"></a>[Pg 217]</span>
-great and small, who find their incomes
-cut down; he has exasperated all who, but for the
-pickings and stealings under the old system, would
-have to work instead of idling about, pitying and
-patronizing workers. He has stirred to awful fury
-the whole capitalistic class, the honest ones no less
-than the dishonest; for the honest capitalist, while
-he looks askance at his dishonest fellow-member
-of the capitalistic solidarity, yet regards him as a
-wronged brother whenever any one by criticising
-him seems to be criticising capitalism. And these
-cyclonic ragings against the young man slowly rouse
-the masses of the people, slowly waken the slumbering
-moral sense of a society that has yielded to
-the seductions of the practical maxim, &#8220;Put money
-in thy purse.&#8221; And he is greatly cheered by the
-swelling, stentorian applause of the people.</p>
-
-<p>He has cut down his income to less than one-twentieth
-what it was; but still a vast sum, far more
-than he can possibly spend, pours in upon him and
-demands investment. Further, many of the enterprises
-in which he is a large but not a controlling
-factor are of so suspicious a character, are so dependent
-for success upon roguery, that he feels he
-cannot continue in them. To abandon his holdings<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[Pg 218]</span>
-would be merely to add to the incomes of the rascals;
-he sensibly, but not without qualms, sells out
-at as large a price as he can get. Looking for
-new investments, he goes into the most crowded
-and squalid section of each of the cities and large
-towns in which he has interests&mdash;into those sections
-where the workers associated with his various
-enterprises are congregated. He buys up whole
-blocks and sections of unsanitary tenements. He
-tears them down and builds in place of them
-houses fit for human habitation. And he adjusts
-the scale of rents there, not on the familiar principle
-of robbing the poor because it is so easy to do,
-but on the same principles that he would apply to
-business property of the kinds used by people whose
-necessities are not so great that they are helpless
-before the robber. He is content with a decent
-profit; he takes no blood-money. He is a business-like,
-human landlord, not a bloody bandit, not a
-&#8220;clamorer for dividends.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In each of these neighborhoods he establishes a
-huge department store in which he sells everything;
-and he gives value, not sham and shoddy. These
-stores make a specialty of food. They sell only
-wholesome food&mdash;and they can easily afford to sell<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[Pg 219]</span>
-it at the same prices which the former purveyors to
-these poor got for vile, poisonous, rotten meat and
-vegetables. Then he buys up the street-car lines
-in his neighborhoods as far as he can, and establishes
-two-cent fares. He realizes the importance
-of the item of car-fare to the poor, the wickedness
-of stock and bond watering to keep up the cruelest
-of all taxes.</p>
-
-<p>And now he is in hot water! He has alienated
-a large and influential section of every one of the
-grand divisions of respectable society. He has
-against him, and purple with rage at the very mention
-of his name, all the men and all the women
-and all the families that directly or indirectly, consciously
-or unconsciously, live by exploiting the
-poor. Right and left he has cut into or cut entirely
-away incomes, sources of vast profit, those infamous
-yet &#8220;respectable&#8221; capitalizations of the industry
-of picking the pockets in the tattered dress
-of the working girl, in the ragged overalls of the
-laborer! What an uproar from all that is articulate!
-They cry in the newspapers that he is worse
-than his father, that he is impoverishing the &#8220;best
-citizens,&#8221; et cetera. They scream that he is doing
-it, is using the almost infinite power of his father&#8217;s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220"></a>[Pg 220]</span>
-massed millions, with an ulterior motive&mdash;solely to
-increase his income.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, his income has begun to
-increase. In a few years, the practice of honesty
-and justice on a scale that makes it impossible for
-the dishonest and the unjust to crush him, results
-in his having a vaster fortune than ever. Everything
-he touches turns to gold. In his main enterprise,
-the policy of low prices, honest wares and
-high wages causes business to flow in and to more
-than make up for the old profits lost by the abolition
-of the short-sighted tyrannies and monopolistic,
-pound-foolish, penny-wise policies. His tenements
-pay; his department stores can&#8217;t take care of the
-business offered; his street-car lines are crowded.
-The old business principle, time-honored, was:
-&#8220;Raise prices as the demand increases.&#8221; He acts
-on the new, the scientific business principle: &#8220;Lower
-prices as demand increases. Don&#8217;t kill that which
-you have been striving to create. Foster demand.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At first he was called a &#8220;well-meaning but wildly
-mistaken philanthropist.&#8221; Now he is called a
-shrewder business man than his father. Like his
-father, he is hated and envied by all the rich-but-not-so-rich.
-And, sad yet amusing to relate, he is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221"></a>[Pg 221]</span>
-profoundly suspected by those whom he is striving
-to benefit. Such few friends as he has left bring
-this to his attention. &#8220;What&#8217;s the use?&#8221; they say.
-&#8220;Look at the ingrates. If you had stolen ten millions
-from them and given back a hundred thousand
-in charity they would have cheered you to the
-echo. You pamper them, and they turn on you.
-If there was to be a revolution to-morrow your
-head would be the first to go off.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>What does the young man reply? He might
-invite them to note the fact that he is making more
-money than his father did and is at least escaping
-the odium of being regarded as a hypocrite. But
-he does not. He is a peculiar young man. He
-simply smiles. &#8220;I am in business to please one customer
-first of all,&#8221; says he. &#8220;That customer is myself.
-What does it matter to me what other people
-think of me? I don&#8217;t have to live with them. But
-I do have to live with myself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And he orders further reductions of prices, and
-further increases of wages, buys more street-car
-lines, builds more tenements, opens a half dozen
-other big stores. To supply these stores with meat,
-eggs, butter, vegetables, et cetera, he starts in the
-neighborhood of each of his cities and towns huge<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[Pg 222]</span>
-farms, to which he sends boys and girls as apprentices
-to learn the farming business. And he engages
-to set up in the farming business each boy or girl
-who works well. Those who cannot be got in love
-with farming are to have first call on the lower
-positions in his various manufacturing and distributing
-enterprises.</p>
-
-<p>He has now been twenty years at this business
-of applying old moral principles and policies to the
-vast modern opportunities for concentration and
-combination. Twenty years of hard work, and he
-is a happy, hated man of fifty and odd. He is
-richer than his father ever dreamed of being.
-Wonder of wonders, he at last has begun to drive
-the crooks and the rascals out of big business.
-There is just one competition in which a crook cannot
-survive&mdash;the competition with intelligent honesty.
-It is a competition which had never been
-tried until the coming of our fanciful, fantastic
-scion of Standard Oil, black sheep in the capitalistic
-fold. The crooked little farmer or merchant cannot
-survive against the straight little farmer or
-merchant. The crooked big &#8220;captain of industry&#8221;
-found that he couldn&#8217;t survive against our Rockefeller,
-inheriting his father&#8217;s business ability with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[Pg 223]</span>
-his father&#8217;s wealth, but not inheriting his father&#8217;s
-convention-calloused moral sense.</p>
-
-<p>It is not until our young man is well on toward
-sixty that there begins to be any real appreciation
-of philanthropy by making money instead of by
-giving it away. The laughter at honesty and justice,
-in business as well as in personal relations, in practice
-as well as in theory, on week-days as well as on
-Sunday, toward the helpless and obscure and unknown
-as well as toward the powerful and &#8220;respectable,&#8221;
-gradually dies away before his ocular demonstration
-of its sound practical wisdom. And his
-activities have been an enormous educational factor,
-giving men that practical enlightenment which
-the school of life alone can give, but which, under
-the old system, it so rarely did give. His high
-wages have raised the general wage market. His
-tenements and dwelling houses have raised the standard
-of housekeeping. His department stores have
-raised the standard of food and clothing. And
-when the material foundations of life rose, the
-moral and &aelig;sthetic structure superimposed upon
-them of necessity rose also. To raise a house, raise
-its foundations; don&#8217;t try to separate it from them.</p>
-
-<p>As the laughter at iconoclastic business ceased,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[Pg 224]</span>
-laughter at philanthropy burst out. The rich rascals,
-the smug feeders of their own vanity, the coy
-contributors to the conscience fund, who came in
-superciliousness and condescension with their pharisaical
-offerings, were greeted with hoots and jeers.
-Our young man of many millions, dauntless
-through all those trying years, had taught the
-people to look at the true inwardness of things.
-&#8220;Go back to your business,&#8221; they would shout at
-each of these astonished almsgivers. &#8220;Go back,
-and take with you this pittance of your filchings
-from your workmen and your customers. You are
-the real object of pity and charity. Look at the
-tainted sources of your income! Repent, reform,
-give us our rights, our just dues. Don&#8217;t pose as
-a philanthropist when you are giving away our
-money&mdash;and only a meagre part of the vast sums
-you have taken from us. Give justice. Generosity
-will take care of itself!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And in those days our young iconoclast came
-into his own, so everybody said. But when his
-friends, wholly changed in their opinion now, approached
-him with enthusiastic flattery, he smiled
-his old peculiar smile. &#8220;I came into my own, years
-ago,&#8221; said he. &#8220;I came into it on the day I tore<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[Pg 225]</span>
-down the motto &#8216;I am a clamorer for dividends&#8217; and
-set up &#8216;I am a clamorer for justice&#8217;, in its place.&#8221;
-And when he died he did not leave his vast fortune
-to his children to tempt them to forget his training
-and example and become soft, idle, foolish and unhappy.
-He left it to his enterprises, its income to
-be divided between those who made themselves
-most valuable and those who, having worked well,
-had earned the right to a peaceful old age.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>&#8220;Of all sad words of tongue or pen,&#8221; sang the
-poet, &#8220;the saddest are these: &#8216;It might have
-been.&#8217;&#8221; Not so. It is the vain might-have-been
-that gives birth to the bright shall-be!</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[Pg 226]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIV<br />
-
-
-<small>THE INEVITABLE IDEAL</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">&#8220;Our</span> ancestors who migrated hither were laborers,&#8221;
-wrote Jefferson. And again: &#8220;My new
-trade of nail-making is to me in this country what
-an additional title of nobility is or the ensigns of a
-new order are in Europe.&#8221; The dignity of labor,
-the prizes to the laborer&mdash;these ideals of a century
-ago, ideals born no doubt of a vanity which sought
-to make a virtue of necessity, are still our ideals.
-But, where in Jefferson&#8217;s day his broad and sympathetic
-mind was almost alone in the belief in the
-loftier basis for the ideal, to-day millions of us see
-that the laborer is the only good citizen, that his
-estate is the only estate of dignity. No people ever
-had such a conception of work as we have to-day.
-It is an evolution under Democracy. No previous
-nation could have understood it; our ancestors did
-not have it, for they were still influenced by caste<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227"></a>[Pg 227]</span>
-ideas, hard and nobly though they strove to outgrow
-them. There are vestiges of the old ideas
-concerning work remaining. The class that does
-not work and the class that emulates it and envies
-it still look down on work, still hug the vulgar,
-ignorant fancy that work is a curse. But that is not
-important. Once more let us remind ourselves that
-caste is made not by him who looks down but by
-him who looks up. The vital fact is that the laborer
-is himself aware of his own sovereign dignity.
-And, excepting a few black sheep, the American
-flock still bears the ancestral markings; this is a
-nation of laborers. And the markings of which
-our ancestors tried hard, but with dubious success,
-not to be ashamed, have become the markings of
-honor&mdash;not to an occasional Jefferson, but to the
-overwhelming mass of our eighty millions.</p>
-
-<p>This concept of labor is the first-fruit of Democracy
-and Enlightenment.</p>
-
-<p>When sons of men of vast wealth go to work,
-there is much excitement among the idlers, rich
-and poor. The agitation shows how hard dies the
-theory that work is wholly a curse and, to a great
-extent, a degradation; that the only sensible, or
-noble even, ideal of life is to idle about; that there<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228"></a>[Pg 228]</span>
-must be something of the freak in a human being
-who labors when he might sit at his ease amusing
-himself by counting the drops of sweat as they roll
-from the brows of his toiling fellow-men.</p>
-
-<p>This is indeed the old, old theory. It has the
-sanction of many venerable authorities. But, like
-almost everything else that has come down to us
-from the ignorant far past, it will not stand examination.</p>
-
-<p>There was a time when work undoubtedly was
-both a curse and a degradation. When the many
-labored under the lash that the few might reap,
-when the toilers got only the toil and the idlers got
-all the results, when the highest ideals of the
-human race were a full stomach and fine raiment
-and the gratification of other crude desires and appetites&mdash;then
-work was justly regarded as degrading
-drudgery. But not now, hard though laziness
-and cheap vanity strive to keep alive such fictitious
-distinctions as are given an air of actuality by
-phrases like &#8220;master and servant,&#8221; &#8220;employer and
-employ&eacute;,&#8221; &#8220;capital and labor,&#8221; &#8220;gentleman,&#8221;
-&#8220;lady,&#8221; et cetera, et cetera. The truth of the
-dignity of labor, the dishonesty and degradation
-of every form of parasitism, however gaudily<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229"></a>[Pg 229]</span>
-tricked out, appears despite the subtleties of snobism.</p>
-
-<p>The political ideal of a barbarian is to rule
-others; the political ideal of a highly civilized man
-is to rule himself and let his fellow-men alone. The
-industrial ideal of a barbarian is to live in empty-headed
-and ambitionless idleness upon the labor of
-others. The industrial ideal of a civilized man is
-to work, and work incessantly in conditions that
-permit him to reap the full reward of his efforts
-and to make those efforts in the direction best
-suited to his capacities. And he has a deepening
-scorn of all the tricks by which some men live,
-taking all and giving nothing. Nor is his scorn
-the less when those tricks happen to be made &#8220;respectable&#8221;
-by law or by custom.</p>
-
-<p>Is it any wonder that a man with the brain of
-an &AElig;sop or an Epictetus should have revolted
-against compulsory labor that could much better
-have been performed by an ox or an ass? On the
-other hand, is it not amazing that any man with a
-thinking machine in his skull and vital force flowing
-along his nerves can be content to lead a life that
-would bore a grasshopper? The &#8220;curse and degradation&#8221;
-theory of work adapts itself to climates.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230"></a>[Pg 230]</span>
-Man began in the tropics, where idleness is least
-difficult; therefore for a long time absolute idleness
-was the ideal of this theory. But when man
-moved up into the colder parts of the earth, where
-to idle was to be physically miserable, the theory
-was slightly modified. The curse and the degradation
-of work were thought to lie in the doing of
-useful work. To tilt with iron-pointed sticks, to
-stab and jab and cut, to spend days and weeks
-chasing little foxes that could not even be eaten if
-by chance they were caught, to hit little balls with
-little sticks, to sit all night matching monotonous
-picture cards&mdash;all such &#8220;amusements,&#8221; the hardest
-kind of work, work at which the thinking part of
-any human being might well balk, were regarded
-as &#8220;worthy of a gentleman.&#8221; To plough, to sow,
-to reap, to manufacture something that might be
-used, to perform any kind of useful labor, mental
-or manual, was &#8220;low&#8221; and &#8220;menial.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Toward the middle of the last century, with our
-growing wealth and the rise of a leisure class
-through false education, the Old World ideas found
-their way across the Atlantic. And in every community
-there began to be at least a few persons who
-took on the supercilious and contemptuous attitude<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231"></a>[Pg 231]</span>
-toward work. Fortunately for the good sense and
-happiness of the American people, at about that
-time modern industrial conditions changed the
-whole system of getting and keeping prosperous.</p>
-
-<p>In the old days, idle and brainless barbarians
-could hold on to and even add to their possessions&mdash;agricultural
-land. But in the new days of intense
-energy, of rapidly changing values, of trade,
-commerce, and competition, of rise in the price
-of labor and fall in the price of money, property is
-always growing wings that must be clipped daily
-and often hourly to keep it from taking flight. It
-is getting harder and harder to reap where one has
-not sown, to induce men to work without a proper
-return, or, after wealth has been acquired, to hold
-on to it without the use of brains and energy. And
-so, the old theory is dying out, chiefly for the usual
-reason for any human advancement&mdash;changed conditions
-compelling men to change their point of
-view.</p>
-
-<p>The reason the rich men&#8217;s sons are going to work
-is that they, or at least their sagacious fathers,
-know that if they don&#8217;t work, the men who do work
-will get their wealth away from them. And this
-reason of necessity is going to bring about a revolution<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232"></a>[Pg 232]</span>
-where all the shrieking of the reformers, all
-the logic of the moral philosophers, all the talk
-about the dignity of labor and &#8220;happiness only in
-hard work&#8221; make no headway worth the measuring.
-Maxims of good sense and good morals can&#8217;t
-be pounded or preached into poor short-sighted,
-irrational, shadow-chasing humanity. Nature and
-the laws of environment do not preach. They
-quietly but relentlessly compel. And sad wrecks
-they make of the pretensions and pomposities of
-the conceited human animal.</p>
-
-<p>It is in vain that aristocracy-worshiping mothers
-of America dream of an Old World upper class
-for their sons and daughters. It is in vain that
-silly sociologists prattle about the necessity and
-the advantages of a &#8220;leisure class.&#8221; Modern environment
-says &#8220;Work; work hard! Be a somebody
-or I will make you a nobody!&#8221; And work
-we must. And presently we shall hear the last of
-the notions that idleness or useless employment is
-&#8220;noble&#8221; and &#8220;dignified&#8221; and &#8220;aristocratic.&#8221; And
-only in mad-houses will be found men and women
-who continue in their grown-up periods of life the
-pastimes of childhood&mdash;playing with blocks and
-soldiers and toy tools. What of the old notions<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[Pg 233]</span>
-of property rights and distribution of wealth will
-go by the board and what will remain, no one can
-foresee. Nor does it in the least matter, since we
-can be certain that no conditions will arise in which
-the idler will be more comfortable or the worker
-less comfortable than in the past or at present.</p>
-
-<p>The change in the attitude toward work is coming
-from both sides of the world. The rich are
-more and more forced to work. The not-rich are
-demanding and compelling better opportunities to
-work. Look at our national life in the broad, and
-you see all elements concentrating on the democratic
-platform&mdash;Work! Beyond question the
-&#8220;workingman&#8221; is discontented. Nor will his discontent
-decrease. On the contrary, the more he
-has, the more he&#8217;ll want. His appetite will grow
-with what it feeds on. This Republic was started
-by just such men, was started for the purpose of
-creating ever more and more of them. The eagerness
-for better pay, for better treatment, for better
-surroundings, whether that eagerness be in the
-capitalist or in the street-cleaner, is proof that the
-Republic is still doing business at the old stand in
-the old way. And the more or less turbulent wrangling
-over the division of the rewards will never<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[Pg 234]</span>
-cease. If there were any signs of its ceasing or of
-its abating, then indeed might we justly despair of
-Democracy. Content means caste; discontent
-means Democracy.</p>
-
-<p>Work is democratic, not because all kinds of
-men engage in it and so make it common, but because
-of its effect on the individual worker. Every
-impulse toward Democracy is fostered by it, just
-as every impulse toward caste is encouraged by
-leniency toward the idea of the value of a leisure
-class.</p>
-
-<p>The sooner ambition is roused in every man,
-woman and child, the sooner they learn that by
-work alone can their ambitions be gratified, the
-sooner will an ideal democratic condition evolve.
-America is ahead of all the great nations in the race
-toward this ideal Democracy, because there is the
-nearest approach in America in every walk of life
-to a condition in which idlers are few and toilers
-many.</p>
-
-<p>In a previous chapter the efforts of plutocratic
-philanthropists to relieve a certain part of each
-community from the &#8220;stern and cruel necessity to
-work&#8221; have been noted. But the pauper-making
-plutocrats and lords and ladies Bountiful are not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[Pg 235]</span>
-the only missionaries of idleness and incompetence.
-Our legislatures, national, state, municipal, are
-voting large sums of money for free something or
-other for somebody or other, or for bolstering up
-some real or reputed neglected or defective class.
-And leading citizens, themselves toilers at businesses,
-trade and professions, are, through mistaken
-sentimentality, urging the legislatures to vote
-still larger sums for indiscriminate&mdash;<i>necessarily</i> indiscriminate&mdash;alms.</p>
-
-<p>If Democracy were dependent upon conscious
-human effort, we should be moving rapidly and far
-from the old ideas of independence, of self-reliance,
-of individuality; we should be hastening toward a
-re-establishment of the aristocratic ideal of &#8220;molly-coddling,&#8221;
-of making the citizen a hot-house plant
-sheltered under government glass from the rude
-but invigorating forces of nature&mdash;but exposed to
-withering and denuding paternalism. Everybody
-who did not do for himself&mdash;whether because he
-would not or because he could not, we should not
-stop to ask&mdash;would be provided with education,
-ideas, food, clothing, shelter, amusements, baths,
-in short, everything but self-respect and the power
-to produce self-respecting progeny. And these<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[Pg 236]</span>
-things would be provided, not by private philanthropy,
-not by the rich giving of their surplus, but
-by taxation.</p>
-
-<p>Taxation simply means taking from one part of
-the community, chiefly from the poor and those of
-moderate means, and giving to another part, after
-an army of officials have had their &#8220;rake-off&#8221; in
-salaries and perquisites. Taxation, therefore,
-means levying upon those who have little to spare;
-it means crippling those who are trying to fight the
-hard battle of life.</p>
-
-<p>There is nothing democratic, nothing economically
-sound, in these alluring schemes for making
-men sleek and comfortable and wise by public
-bounty. They result in coddling incompetents, and
-in breaking down those who are now just able to
-get along and who need only the push of additional
-taxation to send them fairly over the precipice from
-self-reliance to dependence.</p>
-
-<p>A wise man once said: &#8220;Most legislation consists
-of A and B getting together and deciding what
-C shall do for D.&#8221; We mustn&#8217;t forget C. He
-pays the bills. And his name is &#8220;the people.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The work that saves is the work of a man, by
-himself, for himself, work chosen by him, mastered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[Pg 237]</span>
-by him, work by which he is sometimes mastered.
-He must stand or fall on the results of his
-efforts. This is no programme for the timid or the
-halting, but it is the programme for all grades of
-intelligence and opportunity, each doing for himself
-just as well as he possibly can, under his circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>Work&mdash;not as a means to leisure, but as in itself
-the aim and end. No thought of &#8220;retiring.&#8221; No
-thought of social distractions that breed only boredom,
-or of useless activities that dissipate manhood
-and womanhood. The main thought&mdash;work.
-Work is <i>the</i> ideal of the Republic. The central
-point in the Old World theory which our plutocracy
-would make our theory of life is that a man or
-woman ought to aspire not to be a worker, but a
-person of leisure, to become not a doer of useful
-things, but a doer of useless things. The central
-point of the democratic theory of life is just the
-reverse. It is the worker exalted, and his work
-also. Europe clings to precedent; America insists
-upon judgment. Europe tends to act as &#8220;father
-and grandfather did&#8221;; America has acted and
-should tend to act as the new situation, ever
-changing, may require at any given moment.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238"></a>[Pg 238]</span>Europe, bound by precedents, by false ideals, by
-traditions of class distinctions and the nobility of
-idleness, simply cannot compete with us. For the
-cause of Democracy, for the uplifting of the common
-man, for the increase in the application of
-human energy to human needs, America&#8217;s competition
-with Europe is more helpful than centuries of
-theorizing and preaching and political maneuvering.
-The Great Republic is presenting to Europe
-the stern alternative: Democracy or Decay.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239"></a>[Pg 239]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XV<br />
-
-
-<small>OUR ALLIES FROM ABROAD</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> European &#8220;hordes&#8221; continue to pour in
-upon us, and the agitation over, and against, the
-&#8220;foreign devil&#8221; increases. We shall soon be &#8220;welcoming
-to our shores&#8221; upwards of a million strangers
-a year, all of them with no &#8220;capital&#8221;&mdash;except
-their muscles and the potentialities of their minds
-and hearts. If Washington and Jefferson could
-have looked forward to this time, they would have
-lifted jubilant prayers of thankfulness that their
-hopes that this land would become &#8220;the refuge of
-the poor and oppressed of all nations&#8221; were being
-superbly realized. But many of our statesmen view
-the tidal-wave incursions with anything but joy;
-and their woful cries find echo everywhere among
-those who do not take the trouble to put facts into
-proper perspective. Russian and Finn, Polack,
-Hun and Lithuanian, Sicilian and Greek and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240"></a>[Pg 240]</span>
-Syrian and Bohemian, on they come, streaming
-from the noisome steerages of great ocean liners,
-pouring through the gates of the immigration offices.
-They are obviously poor, obviously the descendants
-of generations of toilers. And with them
-are their wives and their children. Myriads of
-anxious, troubled faces, in which hope and fear
-alternately triumph in the struggle for expression.
-Indeed, a disquieting spectacle to those who cannot
-or will not look beneath surfaces at universal
-human nature with its powerful instincts for and
-resolves toward progress. But let us watch this
-incoming flood with American eyes. Let us see
-what the facts plead&mdash;the facts, as distinguished
-from prejudices.</p>
-
-<p>What is our so-called foreign-population problem?</p>
-
-<p>According to the latest census there were in the
-United States, of our 76,300,000 population, no
-less than 26,200,000 persons of foreign birth or
-parentage. Of these, ten and a half millions were
-born abroad, while 11,000,000 more were born in
-this country of parents who were foreign-born.
-Since 1880 and up to 1901 no less than 18,000,000
-foreigners have come to us. That is to say, counting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241"></a>[Pg 241]</span>
-in arrivals and births since the taking of our
-latest census, and making due mortality allowance,
-we have to-day a population more than one-fourth
-of which was born abroad or is of foreign
-parentage.</p>
-
-<p>The anti-immigration crusade based upon these
-figures insists that the foreigners come too fast for
-Americanism to digest and assimilate them, that
-they will undermine and destroy free institutions.
-Also, there is the cry that these recent comers are
-of peoples less desirable than those that used to
-send their millions to us. The newcomers are impossible
-in point of numbers, undesirable in point
-of quality.</p>
-
-<p>As to numbers&mdash;Our first, and last previous,
-great flood of immigration was between 1840 and
-1861. In those twenty years about 13,000,000
-immigrants came. Our population in 1840 was
-17,000,000. Thus, the immigration was about 80
-per cent. Between 1880 and 1901, the immigration
-was about 18,000,000. Our population in
-1880 was 50,000,000. Thus, the immigration was
-not much above 35 per cent. Clearly, the present
-&#8220;horde&#8221; is numerically not imposing or alarming in
-comparison with the foreign invasion of half a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242"></a>[Pg 242]</span>
-century ago. Our country is still sparsely inhabited;
-one-third of its area is still absolutely undeveloped.
-If half a century ago, with the then comparatively
-limited and crude means of transforming
-the foreigner into the American, thirteen million
-foreigners did not &#8220;swamp&#8221; seventeen million
-Americans, how can the present lesser immigration
-seriously or permanently hinder the alert, democratically
-militant America of to-day?</p>
-
-<p>Then, there is the matter of distribution. Let
-us take New York City by way of illustration.
-There the &#8220;congestion&#8221; of immigration is greater
-than anywhere else; and the advocates of exclusion
-always point to it as the crowning &#8220;awful example.&#8221;
-In the &#8217;40s and &#8217;50s that city grew almost
-altogether by immigration from abroad. Between
-1840 and 1861 New York City increased from
-312,000 to 814,000&mdash;502,000. The rate of
-growth, then, was just over 160 per cent. Between
-1880 and 1901 the same territory increased in population
-from 1,200,000 to 2,050,000&mdash;850,000,
-and a large part of that increase was from the
-smaller cities, the towns and the rural districts of
-the United States. The ratio of increase was about
-70 per cent., less than half what it was during the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[Pg 243]</span>
-preceding great immigration. Further, the charitable
-and corrective forces, official and unofficial,
-at work in New York are not much occupied with
-the immigrants who have come in the last twenty
-years. The crime, the abject poverty, the destitution
-are among the earlier immigrants and their
-descendants. The later immigration is not from
-peoples given to excess in drink&mdash;and drunkenness
-is the chief cause of the miseries of crime and
-pauperism.</p>
-
-<p>Looking at the immigration problem thus numerically,
-we see that the pessimists and the panic-stricken
-are afflicted with the narrowness of geographic
-and historical vision which is responsible
-for so many jeremiads. The shriek that the nation,
-and especially its cities, are being &#8220;swamped&#8221; has
-no basis in mathematics.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But the quality! The quality!&#8221; they cry. Well,
-what of the quality? Turn to the files of the publications
-in the middle of the last century; read
-what the &#8220;good Americans&#8221; then said and wrote
-and thought of the vast in-marching armies of
-&#8220;foreign devils,&#8221; whose grandchildren are a valuable
-part of our citizenship to-day. They were
-&#8220;the scum of Ireland and Germany.&#8221; They were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[Pg 244]</span>
-&#8220;incapable of receiving American ideas.&#8221; They
-were &#8220;welcomed by the rich employers because
-their coming meant cheap labor.&#8221; And loudest in
-lamentation and fiercest in demand for bars and
-barriers were the people who had themselves just
-arrived!</p>
-
-<p>But, that was a false alarm, say the anti-immigrationists;
-this is the real thing. Again a lamentable
-lack of historical perspective, a pitiful narrowness
-of human sympathy. The truth is that man,
-from whatever clime or nation, is first of all man,
-the materials of progress and civilization. If the
-present millions of newcomers are ignorant, so
-much the less will they have to unlearn. If they
-have been savagely oppressed, so much the more
-brightly will burn hatred of inequality and injustice,
-love of equality and justice. If they are poor&mdash;and
-poor they are&mdash;then, Heaven be praised!
-They will work hard; and hard work and a passionate
-eagerness to get on in the world, and the
-prospect of being able to rise by work instead of,
-as at home, toiling that others might reap all, will
-make them hasten to become the best possible
-Americans.</p>
-
-<p>From poverty and experience of oppression<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245"></a>[Pg 245]</span>
-comes the most militant Democracy. Let us not be
-afraid of this our brother-man. Let us not judge
-him by the superficial and unimportant differences
-between him and us. Let us welcome him. He
-needs us, but not more than we need him, and his
-familiarity with hard work, and his nature unspoiled
-by over-prosperity. Above all, we need his
-children. They will be American through and
-through. They will help us to outvote and to over-balance
-and to counteract the supercilious breed of
-falsely educated who have fallen away from the
-high and noble ideal of the equality and the
-brotherhood of man. These newcomers are the
-descendants of the peoples that built the splendid
-civilization of the past&mdash;the civilization around the
-Mediterranean and in Eastern Europe. For centuries
-the immense energy and imagination of those
-peoples have been forcibly suppressed and repressed.
-But they are there, and in free America
-they will burst forth again. Indeed, they are already
-bursting forth.</p>
-
-<p>We hear so much about the glories of the Civil
-War that we are apt to overlook its fearful cost.
-One item is important here:</p>
-
-<p>In the Southern States, practically all the white<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246"></a>[Pg 246]</span>
-males able to bear arms went to the war. In the
-Northern States the two and three-quarter millions
-who served were, on the average, under rather than
-over twenty years of age.</p>
-
-<p>That is to say, to the war the South gave all its
-manhood; the North gave the fathers of its present
-native-born generation. So abounding is our vitality
-as a people that we cannot clearly see the full
-results of this fearful sacrifice. But let us remember
-that war kills only a few; it returns to peaceful
-pursuits the vast majority poisoned and weakened
-by all kinds of diseases.</p>
-
-<p>What is the connection between these facts and
-immigration? Look at the South, which sent all
-its manhood to camp and march and battle; at the
-South, into which almost no immigration has gone
-to make good the enormous losses. The trouble
-with the South to-day is not the destruction or
-abolition of property, not the failure of natural
-resources, but the depletion, the decay, the destruction
-of so large a part of the splendid stock that
-made the South great in ante-bellum days. Despite
-its abounding natural resources, despite the valiant
-efforts it has made and is making, the South advances
-slowly and with difficulty. And while the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247"></a>[Pg 247]</span>
-North had to make no such complete sacrifice to
-war, still even there, in the few places to which
-foreign immigration has not penetrated, the effects
-of the impairment of the sources of the best manhood
-are plainly visible. Not infrequently you
-find a Northern town with all the natural opportunities
-to progress, yet with retrogression and
-decay eating it away. What&#8217;s the matter? The
-war; the Civil War. The best young men, the
-most vigorous, the most enterprising, the most ambitious,
-went to the war. Many of them came
-back; but they had left at the war their best&mdash;their
-health, their energy. And the present generation
-shows it, suffers for it.</p>
-
-<p>It is indeed inspiring to see young men eager to
-die gloriously for their country. We also need
-young men eager to <i>live</i> gloriously for their country.
-And war, the arch-enemy of progress, the
-great trickster of man through his finest instincts,
-how many of those who would have lived most gloriously
-for their country has it cost us!</p>
-
-<p>Do we not owe to the &#8220;hordes&#8221; from Europe, to
-immigration, the good fortune that our nation has
-pushed on apparently almost unaffected in its manhood
-by the great calamity of &#8217;61-&#8217;64? Is it unwarranted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248"></a>[Pg 248]</span>
-to suggest that but for these inpourings
-of vigor and vitality, the losses in that frightful
-catastrophe might have all but cost us our national
-greatness, would certainly have set us back several
-generations?</p>
-
-<p>As to the political effect of immigration: Among
-our cities the two most conspicuous examples of
-misgovernment are New York and Philadelphia.
-In each the dominant political machine is scandalously
-corrupt. But it is far more audacious, far
-more cynically and openly contemptuous of public
-opinion in Philadelphia than in New York. Philadelphia
-is an &#8220;American&#8221; city; New York is a
-&#8220;foreign&#8221; city. In Philadelphia the corruption
-seems almost hopeless; in New York the element
-to which every movement for betterment looks&mdash;not
-in vain&mdash;is the &#8220;foreign&#8221; element. The weakness
-of Tammany&#8217;s control over the masses of
-&#8220;German-Americans&#8221; and &#8220;Italian-Americans&#8221;
-and &#8220;Jewish Russian-Americans&#8221; is the chief
-reason why it does not feel easy and secure in the
-enjoyment of plunder. Cities where the &#8220;foreign
-vote&#8221; is preponderant may be corrupt; but so also
-are cities where the native American rules undisputed.
-Manifestly, the causes of political corruption<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249"></a>[Pg 249]</span>
-are deeper than immigration, are not aggravated
-by it. And since our most hopeful States
-politically are for the most part those into which
-immigration from abroad has been pouring in a
-vast and steady stream for fifteen years, is there not
-sufficient ground for the confident assertion that
-the newcomer with his untainted passion for
-Democracy and his new-born hope of rising in the
-world is one of our tremendous political assets?</p>
-
-<p>As to the industrial effect. The overwhelming
-mass are farmers or unskilled laborers. But the
-wages of unskilled labor cannot be much depressed.
-In all ages and in all countries the unskilled laborer
-has got just about enough to keep him alive&mdash;never
-much more, often a little less. In America,
-as a whole, the condition of unskilled labor to-day
-is better than it ever has been. The fact that
-we have so much rough work to do in developing
-our vast raw resources makes America the best
-market for unskilled labor the world has ever seen;
-and it will be many generations before that rough
-work is completed, so inadequate is our supply of
-unskilled labor in proportion to the demand. In
-the trades the competition of the immigrant has
-not lowered wages. There again we have more<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250"></a>[Pg 250]</span>
-work to do than there are workers. <i>The forces
-that have operated unfavorably upon wages are
-notoriously not forces of competition among wage-earners,
-but forces tending to abolish competition
-among employers for the services of the skilled
-laborer.</i> And in combating these forces, is the
-immigrant a help or a hindrance? Does his vote
-go for tyranny or for freedom?</p>
-
-<p>The disposition of prosperity to look down on
-poverty, to drift out of <i>brotherly</i> sympathy with it,
-to misunderstand it, is as old as property rights.
-The disposition of the so-called educated to look
-down on the less educated, to mistake knowledge
-for intellect, absurdly to exaggerate the practical
-and even the &aelig;sthetic value of &#8220;polite learning,&#8221;
-to under-estimate the all-round importance of that
-real education which is got only in the school of
-rude experience&mdash;this supercilious disposition is as
-old as human vanity. It insinuates itself into the
-sanest characters; it makes fools and incompetents
-and snobs of many promising young men. And
-these two errors&mdash;the one, through prosperity; the
-other, through false education&mdash;are responsible for
-the failure of such a large section of our &#8220;elegantly
-articulate&#8221; to appreciate that we are to-day getting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251"></a>[Pg 251]</span>
-from abroad the best in brain and in vitality that
-we have ever got.</p>
-
-<p>What differentiates the immigrant from those
-he left behind him? Why, he had the enterprise,
-the courage to protest against the slavery in which
-militarism and despotism were enwrapping all. He
-left; he made the long and arduous journey into
-this remote and unknown land. He did not give
-up when conditions became too hard, did not sink
-into serfdom; he boldly made a hazard of new
-fortunes.</p>
-
-<p>Away back in the centuries, Asia&#8217;s most vigorous
-fled from her into Europe&mdash;and Asia sank into the
-slough of despotism and Europe became great and
-strong, advancing in all the arts. Now-a-days&mdash;to-day
-no less than when Salem and Jamestown and
-New Amsterdam and New Orleans were founding&mdash;Europe
-is causing her best to fly to us. Her
-best, indeed! We must be American enough, democratic
-enough, to disregard the snob standards of
-our weak wanderers off after European caste and
-culture; we must look at men in the true American
-fashion&mdash;must look at men as <i>men</i>.</p>
-
-<p>From the common people our Democracy&mdash;like
-all Democracy&mdash;sprang; by the common people is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252"></a>[Pg 252]</span>
-it nourished; by the common people will it prevail.
-And these newcomers are of the common people,
-the custodians of the highest ideals that irradiate
-the human imagination. Unimportant indeed is the
-traffic of individuals and ideas that goes first-class
-between America and Europe, in the comparison
-with the traffic that goes steerage.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253"></a>[Pg 253]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVI<br />
-
-
-<small>THE REAL AMERICAN WOMAN</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> American woman is regarded both here
-and abroad as the strongest and subtlest enemy of
-the American Democracy. She is pictured in the
-imaginations of students of our life as ignorant of
-politics, interested only in her own sovereignty over
-the American man, or, rather, over his pocketbook,
-a snob and a climber and a worshiper of European
-aristocratic institutions; a poor housekeeper and a
-reluctant mother, and a very vampire for luxury
-and show, she hides her superficiality and cold-heartedness
-under a mask that is fair and fascinating.
-She is a born caste-worshiper, an instinctive
-hater of Democracy.</p>
-
-<p>What truth, if any, is there in these hardy
-criticisms?</p>
-
-<p>We have noted how, under the leadership and
-inspiration of the capital of plutocracy, New York,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[Pg 254]</span>
-every city in the country is, with true American
-rapidity, developing its individual fashionable society.
-It is directed by the wives and daughters of
-rich men; it is, as we have seen, devoted chiefly to
-spending time and money in unproductive and more
-or less frivolous forms of self-amusement. The
-character of this &#8220;set&#8221; varies slightly for each
-locality&mdash;but only slightly. In the West the wealth-worship
-is franker; in the East more hypocritical,
-more beslimed and bemessed with cant about birth
-and culture. But whether Mammon is naked and
-unashamed or is draped and decorated, he is still
-Mammon. The monotonous sameness of the
-people comprising each division of the set, the
-sameness of their opportunities and aims, the
-world-neighborliness which railways and telegraph
-and printing press have brought about, prevent any
-notable differences. To dress, to talk, to eat, to
-drive, to entertain, to bring up one&#8217;s children, all
-in accord with the standards of &#8220;good form&#8221; established
-by the aristocratic societies of Europe; to
-spend each day in pleasures that permit one to
-shift most of the labor and all the thinking and
-providing to hirelings of divers degrees, from lawyers
-and industrial managers to secretaries, housekeepers,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255"></a>[Pg 255]</span>
-butlers, valets and maids; to live worthlessly
-without useful work&mdash;these are the aims,
-East, West, and South. And in rapidly increasing
-measure the aims are accomplished.</p>
-
-<p>Universal freedom, universal opportunity, all
-but universal toil, have indeed very suddenly
-brought vast riches to America, vast wealth to
-a few. This sudden wealth, coming to a people
-whose characteristics are energy, restlessness and
-lightning-like adaptability, has all in a day relieved
-a relatively small but, in another aspect, very numerous
-and most influential part of each large community
-from the necessity to labor. Many, a great
-many, of these continue to strive to cherish the
-ideals of a life of useful labor, continue to strive
-to set a worthy example to their children and to
-their fellow-citizens&mdash;that is, to remain sane and
-American. But a great many others have eagerly
-adopted those alien ideals of the aristocracy of idleness
-and the vulgarity of toil which appeal so
-strongly to the vanity and other ancient weaknesses
-of the human animal the world over.</p>
-
-<p>For this state of affairs women, imperfectly educated,
-wrongly, sillily educated, in fact, practically
-uneducated, are in the main responsible. Our<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256"></a>[Pg 256]</span>
-women, like our men, inherit the American energy
-and restlessness. Where circumstances compel,
-they work in the home, the shop, the factory, the
-office, in the fine American way. But where circumstances
-do not compel they seek other outlets
-for their restless energy. And thus we find rich
-wives and daughters organizing elaborate establishments
-and fashionable sets and international
-circuits, and devoting themselves to erecting the
-life of frivolity and show into a career that will at
-once fill their idle hours, gratify their vanity, and
-give them the sense of doing something ambitious,
-of &#8220;getting on in the world.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Among a people who have always yielded a commanding
-position to women, the power of this new
-American woman&mdash;attractive in dress and in surroundings,
-so often fascinating in personality,
-usually clever and so plausible that she deceives no
-one more completely than herself&mdash;could not but
-be enormous. Is it strange that she weakens the
-hold of the old ideals upon her husband and upon
-the men who are drawn to her attractive house?
-Is it strange that they persuade their consciences
-to let them neglect to-day&#8217;s duties while they help
-her amuse them and herself? Is it strange that she<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257"></a>[Pg 257]</span>
-has sons and daughters devoted to her ideals? Is
-it strange that she gathers about her more and
-more backsliders from the democratic conception
-of life?</p>
-
-<p>Organized as we are, there is absolutely no useful
-place for a leisure class. We do not purpose
-to be ruled, but, on the contrary, insist that our
-public administrators shall be chosen from the main
-body of toilers and shall execute, not direct, the
-popular will. Since leadership in public and private
-activity thus falls to the toiler in a Democracy,
-these fashionable &#8220;sets&#8221; provided by the women of
-the rich class are wholly alien and hostile to us as
-a democratic people. And they inevitably become
-a menace as their influence extends over the men
-and women of superior education or natural endowments
-who should be the leading exemplars of the
-American ideal. And this menace threatens to
-erect itself into what pessimists would call a
-&#8220;peril,&#8221; as the &#8220;community of interest&#8221; creates
-monopolies so intertwined with our individual
-structure that to assail them is to jeopardize it, and
-perpetuates wealth in certain families and groups.</p>
-
-<p>Such is the anti-democratic woman. But over
-against her set the American woman. The plutocratic<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258"></a>[Pg 258]</span>
-American man, being gaudy and conspicuous,
-distracts attention from the democratic American
-man, who outnumbers and outvotes and out-influences
-him into insignificance, except as an awful
-warning against flying in the face of the world&#8217;s
-democratic destiny. The plutocratic American
-woman is even more conspicuous than the plutocratic
-American man. But contrast her with the
-rest of the women, especially with the women who
-go forth from the homes to work. Great as is the
-influence against Democracy exerted by the women
-of the leisure class, it is weak in comparison with
-that exerted for Democracy by the professional and
-business women of the United States.</p>
-
-<p>Ten years ago about one-fifth of all the wage
-and salary earners in the United States were women
-and girls. When these figures were published there
-was a great outcry of wonder and alarm&mdash;wonder
-at the changed conditions, alarm lest those changed
-conditions might be permanent and the old-fashioned
-woman of the fireside and the stoveside and
-the cradleside might be passing away. To-day
-about one-third of all the women in the United
-States not on farms earn their own living outside
-their own homes, and these women constitute more<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259"></a>[Pg 259]</span>
-than one-fourth of all the persons in the United
-States engaged in gainful occupations other than
-agriculture.</p>
-
-<p>It is evident that the changed conditions are not
-passing, but permanent; that the &#8220;new woman&#8221; is
-the woman of the future. Yet we still hear the
-old order talked of as if it were not a departing
-order, and the new order criticised as if it were abnormal,
-a fad of a few &#8220;freak&#8221; women.</p>
-
-<p>Obviously, this change is most intimately associated
-with Democracy. Democracy, work, women;
-women, work, Democracy. Did any of those ancient
-republics we hear so much about, those whose
-decline and fall Europe and our own pessimists
-say we must inevitably imitate, ever number among
-its inhabitants a company of women wage and
-salary earners such as has been so swiftly evolved
-in democratic, work-compelling, work-exalting
-America?</p>
-
-<p>In face of this army of women who work outside
-the home, the theory still is that man bears the
-brunt of the battle for food, clothing and shelter,
-while woman is sheltered and comparatively at her
-ease. This theory never was sound. It never
-would have been accepted had writers and thinkers<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260"></a>[Pg 260]</span>
-kept clearly before their minds the fact that the
-human race does not consist of a luxuriously comfortable
-class, but of vast masses of laborious millions.
-From time immemorial, among the masses
-of the people everywhere, the men and the women
-have worked equally for the support of the family.
-But latterly, under the pressure of modern conditions,
-which are forcing all into the general service
-of society, the women have been drawn from the
-obscure toil of occupations within and around the
-household; and also into the ranks of women toilers
-have gone hundreds of thousands of women
-from the classes which, until recently, did try to
-keep their women at home. Is it illogical to say
-that we may presently see practically all the capable
-members of our society, regardless of sex, self-supporting?
-And in such circumstances, would not the
-family relations, the relations of mother to father,
-and both to children, necessarily undergo a radical
-transformation?</p>
-
-<p>To-day the women vote in four States and hold
-public office in all the States and under the National
-Government. There are women policemen and firemen,
-women locomotive engineers, women masons
-and plasterers and gunsmiths, women street-car<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261"></a>[Pg 261]</span>
-drivers and conductors, women blacksmiths and
-coopers and steel and iron workers, and even
-women sailors&mdash;to take only a few occupations
-which, on the face, would seem to exclude women.
-In fact, there is not in this country a single department
-of skilled or unskilled labor, except only
-soldier and man-o&#8217;-war&#8217;s man, which has not its
-women workers in swiftly increasing numbers. In
-the professions there are thousands of women doctors,
-lawyers, authors, professors, musicians,
-artists, decorators, journalists, public speakers, and
-more than a hundred thousand women teachers.
-In the trades there are thousands of women hotel
-and restaurant keepers, insurance and real estate
-agents, bookkeepers, clerks, merchants, officers in
-corporations, saleswomen, stenographers, telegraph
-and telephone operators. In manufactories the
-women operatives almost equal the men in numbers.
-There are thousands of women who hold responsible
-positions in the management of manufacturing
-corporations. All these occupations, with the exception
-of such as nursing and teaching school and
-music, were once exclusively in the hands of men.</p>
-
-<p>The cause of the change is the same as that
-which has revolutionized every part of modern society&mdash;the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262"></a>[Pg 262]</span>
-amazing discoveries of science, creating
-an enormous number of new occupations and revolutionizing
-the method of all the old occupations,
-from housekeeping to national administration.</p>
-
-<p>War was the department of human endeavor
-which not only excluded women from itself, but
-also kept her fast anchored at home. Until the
-second quarter of the last century war was the chief
-thought, the chief pursuit of the human animal.
-He was either just going to war or just coming
-home from war, or engaged in war or preparing for
-imminent war. Obviously, so long as war occupied
-this position in human affairs woman was inevitably
-in the background, in the secondary places, a household
-drudge or plaything. But war is no longer
-the principal business of the race, with peace tolerated
-as a breathing spell now and then. Peace
-and its arts have become the serious business of
-civilization, the settled order, with war as a dreadful
-nightmare. The wars, if not fewer, are briefer
-and are carefully concentrated and confined. Civilization
-has been forced upon a peace basis not by
-enlightenment, but by commerce growing out of
-discovery and invention. It clamors for skilled
-hands, not for brutal hands. Hence the vast opening<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263"></a>[Pg 263]</span>
-for women and the vast inrush of women. It
-is a democratic tide. Out of discovery and invention
-comes commerce; out of commerce and its intercourse,
-which is death to all forms of provincialism,
-both mental and physical, comes enlightenment;
-in the train of enlightenment, as day in the
-train of the sun, comes Democracy.</p>
-
-<p>This country was remote from other great nations
-and, therefore, from the ever present threat
-of the actuality of war. It was&mdash;perhaps through
-its freedom from war and war alarms&mdash;eagerest
-in seizing upon and using the mighty industrial
-machinery which science gave to the race. Thus
-it has come to pass with us that the abolition of
-the non-worker, the progress toward the industrial
-equality of the two sexes, has been most rapid.</p>
-
-<p>Where European societies had a very complex
-organization, our society had from the beginning
-simplicity as its chief characteristic. We were
-really all toilers&mdash;until recently almost all toilers
-at occupations close to manual labor. The women
-and the men were throughout on that equal basis
-which in Europe was, and to a great extent is yet,
-found only among the peasant and shopkeeping
-classes. And as the new era&mdash;the era of steam<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264"></a>[Pg 264]</span>
-and electricity&mdash;developed with us, our women and
-our men naturally remained side by side.</p>
-
-<p>Our government was founded in war. Its founders
-assumed, from the history of all other nations,
-that offense and defense were to be its main functions.
-And the barbaric theory is still ignorantly
-or carelessly assented to. This explains the lagging
-of the political rights of women behind their industrial
-and civil rights&mdash;or, rather, industrial and
-civil necessities; for no right has ever been, or probably
-ever will be, recognized until recognition becomes
-a necessity. The development with us of
-a class of women who are housekeepers only and
-are most of the time idle or half idle, is foreign
-to the spirit of our democratic era. That development
-cannot, therefore, long survive, any more than
-an equatorial plant can long survive in our zone.
-The new departures are in harmony with Democracy;
-they mean increased efficiency and usefulness
-of the human race; they must persist and expand
-and prevail.</p>
-
-<p>To three causes we owe the American woman
-of the class that only pretends to contribute, or at
-best half-heartedly contributes, toward the support
-of our social system:</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265"></a>[Pg 265]</span>First, to the survival of the Old World, old era
-ideas of &#8220;woman&#8217;s sphere,&#8221; of the coarsening effect
-of labor upon her &#8220;finer nature,&#8221; of the &#8220;aristocratic
-flavor&#8221; and &#8220;high breeding&#8221; of uselessness
-and idleness.</p>
-
-<p>Second, to the simpler tastes of our ancestors,
-and the comparative ease with which at an early
-period in our national life the labor of the men
-in the family could provide money enough to satisfy
-those tastes.</p>
-
-<p>Third, to the very tardy development of the domestic
-laborers and providers that now relieve
-woman of the confining cares of household and
-nursery.</p>
-
-<p>As a result of these three causes a class of idle
-women sprang up&mdash;not only among the rich and
-well-to-do, but even among artisans, small farmers
-and shopkeepers. And this class came to be
-regarded as typical and exemplary. In reality it is
-neither. It has no place in our tradition of mothers
-and grandmothers who spun and made preserves,
-did their own housework, and were busy every
-waking moment about matters which are now attended
-to in shops and factories. It has no place in
-common sense&mdash;the women who insist most strenuously<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266"></a>[Pg 266]</span>
-that child-bearing and home-making are
-woman&#8217;s whole duty are the women who, as a class,
-leave the care of the home to servants and bear few
-children and consign them to nurses at the earliest
-possible moment. And manifestly it has no place
-in our future; it must inevitably go the way of all
-else that is undemocratic and parasitic. Our society
-is founded upon the two ideas&mdash;work and equal opportunity
-to all to work. It abhors the idler as
-nature abhors a vacuum. And as the old-time occupations
-of woman are carried on in a different way,
-she must find other occupations. Must, because
-man will be unable both to support himself in the
-comfort he ever more exactingly demands and also
-to support her in idleness as well as she insists upon
-being supported. Must, because her own increasing
-aversion to restraint will not let her rest content
-with the slavish and shameful position of a cajoler
-and dependent.</p>
-
-<p>The sex instinct is powerful enough to triumph
-over even the instinct of self-preservation for a
-time; but it cannot withstand the steady, day-by-day,
-month-by-month, year-by-year pressure of that
-instinct of self-preservation incessantly stimulated
-by the operations of economic forces. The old<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267"></a>[Pg 267]</span>
-order, bulwarked by tradition and by the sex-passion
-and by woman&#8217;s ingenuity and man&#8217;s weakness
-where women are concerned, will survive long,
-will disintegrate gradually. But how can it be
-saved?</p>
-
-<p>Thus we have a social organization which is in
-process of revolutionary change. The women are
-rapidly pushing out or are rapidly being pushed
-out into occupations which have been transferred
-from the domestic to the general sphere; they are
-entering upon occupations new and old which it was
-thought a few years ago would be for the men
-only. The men on their part not only are working
-as formerly, but also are entering occupations once
-followed exclusively by women. Some of the new
-employments of women have already been enumerated.
-The new employments of men in this
-country include laundry work, cooking, general
-housework, nursing, keeping boarding-houses,
-teaching primary and kindergarten pupils, dressmaking,
-millinery. The list is far shorter and,
-from the old viewpoint where the equal dignity of
-all honorable labor was denied, seems far less dignified
-than the women&#8217;s list. The reason for this
-is of course that the men had small room to expand<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268"></a>[Pg 268]</span>
-their already multiform activities, while the women
-had all the room in the world.</p>
-
-<p>The underlying principle of this redistribution
-of activities is the common-sense principle that
-every unit in a society should do the work at hand
-for which it is best fitted. This principle explains
-every case. Where we find a man dusting, scrubbing
-and doing laundry work it is because he could
-find nothing more remunerative to do and could
-outbid the women applying for that particular task.
-Wherever we find a woman plastering, or keeping
-books, or driving a street-car, or managing a store
-or corporation, it is for the same reason. And this
-modern principle wholly ignores sex and looks only
-at the work to be done and at the comparative fitness
-of the male and female applicants for it. We
-are being taught by destiny that parasitism and dependence
-are no more essentials of the feminine
-than the brands and manacles which at one time
-most men wore were essentials of the masculine.</p>
-
-<p>It is not prophecy to say that, as more and more
-millions of women enter the industrial fields, these
-readjustments and redivisions, this absorption of
-some occupations by women and of other occupations
-by men, will go on apace. We may not like<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269"></a>[Pg 269]</span>
-it; but we can no more stop it than we can stop the
-physical and mental development of woman, or the
-use of steam and electricity.</p>
-
-<p>The missionary work for Democracy done by the
-women already understanding the values of work
-will undoubtedly eventually reach the &#8220;exclusive,&#8221;
-most distinctly leisure class. Its influence is seen on
-every hand, among the girls and young women
-of the very well-to-do, in families where the daughters
-are still persuaded to remain idly at home
-against their own inclinations. Probably every
-woman earning her own living, who has associates
-among women more or less comfortably supported
-in idleness, and in restraint, by men, is envied by
-not a few of them, by all not hopelessly corrupted
-by laziness and caste. And eventually they will
-be following her example. As the number of educated,
-valuable women forced to work for a living
-increases, the number of the same kind of women
-voluntarily going to work will increase.</p>
-
-<p>And finally the richer women will be reached
-and impelled. Their yearning to do something will
-take tangible form. We may live to see the discontented,
-folly-chasing daughters of the rich stepping
-not down to, but up to a place beside the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270"></a>[Pg 270]</span>
-woman wage-earner, because they are sick and tired
-of having no sensible employment, tired of the pitiful
-wait for some man with the right qualifications
-of personal and pecuniary attractiveness; because
-they have sufficiently developed in intelligence to
-have not a theoretic but a practical envy of the joys
-of the woman who is absolute mistress of herself
-and is waiting for the right man only as a man
-now waits for the right woman.</p>
-
-<p>There is no such simplifier of life as work. Its
-effect upon the dress, the home surroundings, the
-very expression and manners of women once accustomed
-to leisure, is enormous. It tends to make
-them far more attractive to their own sex and also
-to such men as are not afraid an intelligent, competent
-woman would at close range discover the shallowness
-of their posings and pretenses. Finally, it
-makes them democratic&mdash;all of them that have the
-wisdom to look on their work not as a sentence to
-drudgery from which they hope they can presently
-cajole some man into releasing them, but as a high
-dispensation of destiny in their favor. The &#8220;emancipation
-of woman&#8221; is no mere sonorous phrase.
-The new woman can, indeed must, retain all the
-virtues of the &#8220;old-fashioned&#8221; woman. Feminine<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271"></a>[Pg 271]</span>
-is as eternal and immutable as masculine; and the
-other virtues of the old were the virtues inseparable
-from a life of busy usefulness. The new woman
-can and must, and therefore will, free herself from
-the vices of the old-fashioned woman&mdash;the vices of
-narrowness and irrationality, of artifice that harks
-back to the days when woman was the servant of
-man&#8217;s appetites and had to pander to them.</p>
-
-<p>The decisive advantage the men have had in the
-fifty years since Democracy set its powerful forces
-to work upon woman has been not their superior
-strength or skill or faithfulness or industry, but
-that woman has worked merely as a temporary expedient.
-She has tenaciously assumed that she
-would presently &#8220;quit work&#8221; and be supported by
-some man. This dream has been largely fanciful,
-though none the less potent for that. The woman,
-married, has usually found that she has not stopped
-working, but has undertaken a far more laborious
-and ever grudgingly paid occupation. The delusion
-has made her wages smaller. Who will not
-pay more to a worker who expects to go on working
-than to a worker who expects presently to stop
-work, and is meanwhile giving at least half her
-energy to another occupation, that of catching a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272"></a>[Pg 272]</span>
-husband? The delusion has also destroyed or impaired
-her ambition. Why struggle to rise in an
-occupation which one hopes and intends presently
-to abandon for another that is wholly different?</p>
-
-<p>But latterly a host of women have been coming
-into conspicuous positions because ambition drove
-them there. They have begun to work for work&#8217;s
-sake. They have seen the fraud in the silly and
-shallow twaddle about &#8220;woman and the home&#8221;&mdash;as
-if for centuries the mothers of the men most
-useful to society had not been for the most part
-working women who could not, if they would, have
-pleaded child-bearing and nursery and housework
-in excuse for doing nothing to add to the family
-income. The &#8220;new woman&#8221; is not a slovenly drudge
-waiting irritably for the advent of a husband that
-she may become a tenement &#8220;sill-warmer&#8221; or a
-palace parasite. She works until she is married;
-she continues to work after she is married. And
-there is no shadow of a taint of pecuniary interest
-in the love and affection she gives.</p>
-
-<p>Disregard the negligible few women of the plutocracy
-and its environs, as we have disregarded
-the unimportant few men of the same class, and
-looking at all over eight millions, you find that the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273"></a>[Pg 273]</span>
-American woman, like the American man, is developing
-in harmony with the ideal of Democracy.
-Democracy is no discriminator either among persons
-or between sexes. It respects the mothers of
-future generations as profoundly as it respects the
-fathers. And it has the same gifts for all&mdash;freedom,
-intelligence, the joy of work.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274"></a>[Pg 274]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVII<br />
-
-
-<small>AS TO SUCCESS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> has often been said, and written, that we are
-about the most unhappy people on the face of the
-earth, that our unhappiness increases with our
-Democracy. That our unhappiness is caused by our
-Democracy. Democracy and discontent, despotism
-and discontent, constitutional monarchy and content&mdash;so
-runs the argument.</p>
-
-<p>If this were true, we as Americans would say,
-&#8220;Happiness bought at the price of self-respect is
-far too dear. Heaven itself would be too dear at
-that price. And, however it may be with some
-Europeans, to an American the admission that he
-was not the equal of any man would be a degradation
-like that of the slave.&#8221; But it is not true that
-we are an unhappy people. Not to be sunk in a
-bucolic stupor like the peasants of Europe does not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275"></a>[Pg 275]</span>
-mean unhappiness. To know when one is uncomfortable,
-to think how to become less uncomfortable,
-to be alive, alert, aspiring, to love work as
-other people love play, to love progress as other
-people love stagnation&mdash;that does not mean unhappiness.
-There are other standards of happiness
-than the bucolic or than the self-complacence
-of the constricted devotees of caste. Indeed, we in
-America continue to doubt whether those states of
-mind are truly happy. Content may or may not
-mean happiness. It may be the calm, numb resignation
-of despair. It may be the fat, swine-like
-stupor of an established aristocracy. We have our
-own ideas of happiness&mdash;and it is interesting to
-note that these restless, forever unsatisfied longings
-of ours tend to long life.</p>
-
-<p>We are not unhappy; but neither are we happy,
-nor likely to become so, until our corner of the
-world, at least, is in far better order than it is at
-present or likely to be soon.</p>
-
-<p>There are two kinds of optimism. There is the
-optimism of retreat&mdash;the kind our critics set up as
-the harbinger of happiness. Our plutocrats preach
-this optimism, and those of our politicians who are
-fattening on the honors, salaries and spoils of office.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276"></a>[Pg 276]</span>
-&#8220;We are a great people,&#8221; they say. &#8220;Look at our
-national wealth. Look at our per capita circulation
-of money. Look at the totals of our production
-of everything for man and beast. Let us rejoice
-and do nothing to disturb our national prosperity.
-Let us stop thinking&mdash;or, rather, let the
-masses of the people give the plutocrats and the
-politicians in power a free hand to do the thinking
-and acting for the nation. Enough of this vulgar
-and irritating discontent! Enough of the coarse,
-low talk about wealth! Let us discuss art and
-literature and glory and grandeur!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>All this with the most serious face in the world.
-All this with perfect honesty and a heart full of
-patriotism!</p>
-
-<p>The answer of the American people is cruel.
-&#8220;Rubbish!&#8221; they say. They are not optimists of
-retreat&mdash;for what but retreat is a progress
-that advances a class at the expense of the
-mass?</p>
-
-<p>Theirs is the optimism of advance&mdash;the advance
-of all. &#8220;We are indeed great,&#8221; they reply to the
-optimists of retreat. &#8220;Let us be greater. What
-Democracy we have had has carried us far. Let us
-have more Democracy. The masses are better off<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277"></a>[Pg 277]</span>
-than they used to be, thanks to the sweeping away
-of some of the obstacles of class and caste. Let
-us sweep away the rest of those obstacles.
-What we have is good. It is the promise of
-better. Let us see that that promise is redeemed!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Happiness&mdash;in the customary, narrow sense&mdash;the
-sense put into the word by the long past with its
-reign of class and caste&mdash;that happiness we have
-not. But the joy of life&mdash;the vigorous, bounding
-hope that beats in the heart and throbs in the veins
-of the strong man growing in strength&mdash;that we
-have in ever fuller measure. Such happiness never
-has been in the past? Such happiness cannot be
-in a world of such abysmal natural inequalities?
-We deny it. We are here not to live by the past,
-by precedent, but to make a mockery of past and
-precedent. We are the children of Democracy, not
-the wards of aristocracy. We propose a wholly new
-world&mdash;and we are putting our proposals into
-effect. We have done well, though we have barely
-begun. We shall do better. Another century or
-so! We envy our grandchildren, not our grandfathers.</p>
-
-<p>If happiness of the kind our ancestors of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278"></a>[Pg 278]</span>
-world&#8217;s aristocratic days dreamed had been the objective
-of the human race, man would have retained
-his hairy coat, his taste for raw meat, his
-pleasure in cave-dwelling. Every once in awhile
-we see in America people whose object is happiness.
-Sooner or later they arrive at the bottom. Sometimes
-they are happy there. But, happy or not,
-they are not to be envied or imitated. The dominant
-note of the real slums is happiness. Don&#8217;t
-be deceived by the squalor and rags into thinking
-it misery. The unhappy slum-dwellers do not remain,
-but restlessly and resolutely fight against the
-bestial stupor, fight their way back to the light and
-the joy of life.</p>
-
-<p>The joy of life is the exaltation that comes
-through a sense of a life lived to the very limit of
-its possibilities; a life of self-development, self-expansion,
-self-devotion to the emancipation of
-man. Whoever you are, this joy of life can be
-yours. Money has nothing to do with it, either in
-aiding or retarding. Money cannot buy the essentials&mdash;health
-and love. It cannot avert the essential
-evils&mdash;illness, bereavement. The world keeps
-finding this out from generation to generation&mdash;and
-forgetting as soon as it rediscovers. Solomon<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279"></a>[Pg 279]</span>
-mentioned the matter many centuries ago, when
-he wrote:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;I made me great works; I builded me houses; I planted me vineyards; I
-made me gardens and orchards, and I planted trees in them of all kinds of
-fruits; I made me pools of water to water therewith the wood that bringeth
-forth trees; I got me servants and maidens, and had servants born in my house;
-also I had great possessions of great and small cattle above all that were in Jerusalem
-before me; I gathered me also silver and gold, and the peculiar treasure
-of kings and of the provinces;....</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then I looked on all these works that my hands had wrought and on the
-labour that I had laboured to do; and, behold, all was vanity and vexation of
-spirit, and there was no profit under the sun.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<p>Our rich men are largely responsible for the
-misconception that the American people have no
-ideal higher than that of money-making. The following
-remarks once made by a rich philanthropist
-are interesting because they are typical of the
-thought of a great number of persons who speak
-in public to-day:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;In contributing to the education of the suffrage the rich are but building
-for their own protection. If they neglect so to build, barbarism, anarchy,
-plunder will be the inevitable result. If the spirit of commercialism and greed
-continues to grow stronger, then the Twentieth Century will witness a social
-cataclysm unparalleled in history.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<p>Is all this true? Does the future of civilization
-depend upon the generosity of rich men? If the
-rich men do not awaken as a class and give more
-largely to the uplifting of their fellow-men, shall<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280"></a>[Pg 280]</span>
-we have a carnival of barbarism, anarchy and
-plunder?</p>
-
-<p>The speaker and his kind of social students mean
-well. They are right in arousing the rich to a
-deeper sense of duty to mankind. But they think
-so intently upon their pet theory that they lose their
-point of view. They exaggerate to hysteria the
-importance of the rich. They are infected with the
-dollar-worshiping craze which they profess to abhor.
-They vastly over-estimate concentrated wealth
-as a factor in human progress. They erect money
-into a powerful deity, just as do all other worshipers
-of the dollar. The difference is that they wish
-to make it a benevolent deity.</p>
-
-<p>It is an excellent thing that the rich should be
-aroused. A rich man who does nothing for his
-brother-man is a contemptible fellow&mdash;almost as
-contemptible as a poor man who does nothing for
-his brother-man. The selfish rich man can plead in
-extenuation that temptations, beyond human nature&#8217;s
-power to combat, have narrowed and chilled
-and withered him. But, save ignorance, what excuse
-has the poor man for selfishness? However,
-if by chance the selfish rich man become aroused
-and give&mdash;give manlily, democratically&mdash;of his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281"></a>[Pg 281]</span>
-riches, he must not be excited about the importance
-to others of what he has done. Its main importance
-is purely personal. He is a better man for
-doing it and has a stronger title to self-respect.
-But if he had not done it, the poor, old, stupid,
-blundering human race would have managed to
-stagger along somehow.</p>
-
-<p>By all means let the rich give. For their own
-self-respect, for their own self-satisfaction, they
-ought to give largely and intelligently. Let the
-honest rich give in sympathy&mdash;let the dishonest
-give in humility. But we must remember that all
-such gifts put together are as a mere drop in the
-ocean so far as the effect upon civilization is concerned.</p>
-
-<p>We have not reached our present estate through
-the generosity of any class of men. And we shall
-not advance to our destined higher estate because
-of the generosity and benevolence of any class.
-The benevolence of the rich may earn for them an
-honorable place in the procession of humanity ever
-toiling upward, and may enable laggards or the
-too heavily handicapped to keep in line. But this
-procession, that has marched on over kings and
-emperors, over tyrants and oppressors and false<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282"></a>[Pg 282]</span>
-teachers, that has met and swept away army after
-army of embattled wrong, is not to be perceptibly
-retarded or accelerated by the errors or the virtues
-of a class of men who are merely rich.</p>
-
-<p>Rich men did not implant in the human heart
-the all but universal passion for progress. Rich
-men did not put into the human skull the marvelous
-mechanism of the human mind. Rich men
-did not endow that mind with the body to carry
-out its will. Wealth has not made the great pictures
-or paintings, has not written the great books
-nor achieved the great discoveries, nor erected the
-great institutions, nor evolved any of the glories of
-the emancipation of man, social, political, industrial,
-intellectual. <i>All</i> these we owe to men in
-whom the wealth-getting instinct was at most a
-shriveled rudiment. Wealth did not build this Republic
-in its present majesty; Pliny the younger said&mdash;and
-said truly&mdash;that wealth had ruined Rome.
-Concentrated wealth, breeder of parasitism and
-patronage, has shriveled and rotted&mdash;always,
-everywhere. If history had not been written by
-snobs and persons tainted with aristocratic error,
-this fact would be as clear as print could make it.</p>
-
-<p>The real wealth, the real riches of humanity are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283"></a>[Pg 283]</span>
-these capable minds and capable bodies, the creators
-of intelligent, progress-producing thought
-and action.</p>
-
-<p>The value of civilization, of an orderly social
-system, is great to, and is keenly felt by, the rich.
-But that value is just as great to, just as keenly
-felt by, the masses. Are they not wholly dependent
-upon it for well-being, just as are the rich&mdash;no
-more, no less?</p>
-
-<p>And the work of preparing the oncoming generation
-for the preservation and improvement of
-the social structure is done in each generation not
-by the rich, not by generosity and benevolence, but
-by the masses themselves in a myriad of homes,
-in a myriad of schoolhouses, in the hourly personal
-and helpful intercourse of a myriad intelligent,
-aspiring men, women and children. It is not concentrated
-wealth that places the resources of the
-world at the disposal of the masses. It is the intelligence
-of the masses, demanding those resources,
-that enables concentrated wealth to gain its too
-often hideously unjust demands. Concentrated
-wealth may to a limited extent promote progress;
-but that is overbalanced by the fact that concentrated
-wealth still more heavily penalizes progress.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_284"></a>[Pg 284]</span>If civilization, freedom, love of order, were dependent
-for their existence or spread in any large
-degree upon the rich philanthropist and his fellow-millionaires,
-cataclysm would be a mild word for
-what would be about to befall us.</p>
-
-<p>As for the &#8220;spirit of commercialism and greed,&#8221;
-what reason is there to suppose it stronger now
-than in the past? Because the wealth-producing
-capacity of the masses has enormously increased,
-because the opportunities for earning comfort have
-infinitely multiplied, because millions are striving
-for prosperity now where the few once monopolized
-it all&mdash;are these reasons for accusing us to-day
-of being greedy and growing greedier?</p>
-
-<p>Was there ever a time or a place in history where
-mere money was so powerless and brains so mighty
-as the present day in the American Republic? Was
-there ever a time or place where the individual man
-was at once so powerful to protect his own rights
-to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, and so
-powerless to snatch away those rights from others?</p>
-
-<p>The conscientious rich man does well to try to
-whip his fellow-millionaires into line with the procession.
-But he need not torment his declining
-years with horrid visions of coming anarchy if these<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285"></a>[Pg 285]</span>
-rich men do not stop groveling and grasping and
-begin to entertain worthy ambitions. Let the rich
-do their part; but let every man, rich or poor, high
-or humble, remember that his first duty is to see
-that he is doing his own part.</p>
-
-<p>One loses patience with the constant precedence
-given the idea that riches alone mean success. Why
-is it that the only men who are eagerly interviewed
-and importuned to write articles on &#8220;the secret of
-success&#8221; are multi-millionaires?</p>
-
-<p>Are there no successful men but multi-millionaires?
-There are not more than five thousand of
-them in the country. Carlyle once described England
-as &#8220;inhabited by thirty millions, mostly fools.&#8221;
-And our own country, if none has succeeded in it
-but the multi-millionaires, may be described as inhabited
-by &#8220;eighty millions, mostly failures.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Success is a glittering word, capable of many
-meanings. A man is not necessarily a failure because
-he has not made money&mdash;a million dollars or
-a hundred. Some very successful men have never
-tried to make money. They preferred to make
-<i>something</i>, and if they achieved their desires they
-succeeded&mdash;from their own viewpoint, at least.</p>
-
-<p>Agassiz would not accept five thousand dollars<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286"></a>[Pg 286]</span>
-a night to lecture. &#8220;I have no time to make
-money,&#8221; he said. Scientific inquiry and discovery
-were the objects of his life, and he succeeded in his
-pursuit of them. Wellington, after conquering
-Mysore, was proffered a gift of five hundred thousand
-dollars by the corrupt East Indian Company.
-He refused to touch it. Piling up &#8220;big money&#8221;
-was not his idea of success, either.</p>
-
-<p>When John Hancock, one of the signers of our
-great Declaration, was sitting in the Continental
-Congress a letter was read from Washington suggesting
-the destruction of Boston by bombardment.
-Hancock was one of Boston&#8217;s largest property owners,
-but he instantly said: &#8220;All my property is in
-Boston; but if the expulsion of the British from
-it require that Boston be burnt to ashes, issue the
-order immediately.&#8221; There was another man who
-didn&#8217;t believe that &#8220;success&#8221; was only another name
-for millions.</p>
-
-<p>Charles Sumner refused to lecture at any price.
-&#8220;My time belongs to Massachusetts and the nation,&#8221;
-he said. Big money was not his idol.
-Thomas Jefferson died insolvent. Was he therefore
-a failure? Abraham Lincoln died a poor
-man. Was he also a failure? Grant died so poor<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287"></a>[Pg 287]</span>
-that his opinion on &#8220;how to succeed&#8221; would have
-been of no value to the money-mad, even if he had
-left it.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, can you imagine any of the great real
-benefactors of mankind plotting to make the service
-they rendered a heavy tax upon posterity for
-maintaining their descendants in foolish idleness
-and luxury?</p>
-
-<p>Sooner or later there will be a reaction from this
-search for &#8220;the secret of success&#8221; among the trust
-kings and the sudden-rich heroes of the stock ticker.
-&#8220;I know of no great men,&#8221; says Voltaire, &#8220;except
-those who have rendered great service to the human
-race.&#8221; Judged by that true standard, the
-mere makers of &#8220;big money&#8221; cannot tell our young
-men the &#8220;secret of success.&#8221; They do not know it
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p>The money success is blatant and strong. It
-flaunts itself and tries to absorb all attention. But
-it ought not to deceive any but the superficial observers
-of the American people. Our ideals still
-centre in the affections, not in the appetites. To
-be free, to love, to think, to grow&mdash;the joy of life.
-That sums up America. Gilt may for the moment
-reign; but gilt does not rule.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288"></a>[Pg 288]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVIII<br />
-
-
-<small>THE MAN OF TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> Chicago, in Lincoln Park, there is a wonderful
-statue. A big, slouching form, loose yet powerful;
-ungraceful, yet splendid because it seems to
-be able to bear upon its Atlantean shoulders the
-burdens of a mighty people. The big hands, the
-big feet, the great, stooped shoulders tell the same
-story of commonness and strength.</p>
-
-<p>Then you look at the face. You find it difficult
-to keep your hat upon your head.</p>
-
-<p>What a countenance! How homely, yet how
-beautiful; how stern, yet how gentle; how inflexible,
-yet how infinitely merciful; how powerful, yet
-how tender; how common, yet how sublime!</p>
-
-<p>Search the world through and you will find no
-greater statue than this&mdash;the statue of Abraham
-Lincoln, by St. Gaudens. It is Lincoln; but it is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289"></a>[Pg 289]</span>
-also a great deal more. It is the glorification of
-the Common Man&mdash;the apotheosis of Democracy.</p>
-
-<p>As you look at that face and that figure you
-feel the history of the human race, the long, the
-bloody, the agonized struggle of the masses of
-mankind for freedom and light. You see the whole
-history of your own country, founded by common
-men for the common people, founded upon freedom
-and equality and justice.</p>
-
-<p>Here is no vain haughtiness, no arrogance, no
-supercilious looking down, no cringing looking upward,
-nothing that suggests class or rank or aristocracy.
-Here is Democracy, the Common Man exalted
-in the dignity of his own rights, in the splendor
-of the recognition of the equal rights of all
-others; the Common Man, free and enlightened,
-strong and just.</p>
-
-<p>The statue is in the attitude of preparation to
-speak. What is that brain formulating for those
-lips to utter?</p>
-
-<p>The expression of brow and eyes and lips leaves
-no doubt. It is some thought of freedom and justice,
-some one of those many mighty democratic
-thoughts which will echo forever in the minds and
-hearts of men.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290"></a>[Pg 290]</span>Let us recall three of those thoughts:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;The authors of the Declaration of Independence meant it to be a stumbling
-block to those who in after times might seek to turn a free people back
-into the hateful paths of despotism.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That this nation under God shall have a new birth of freedom and that
-government of the people, by the people, and for the people shall not perish
-from the earth.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I say that no man is good enough to govern another man without that
-other man&#8217;s consent. I say that this is the leading principle, the sheet-anchor.&#8221;</p></div>
-
-<p>These were the ideas that found this country a
-few ragged settlements trembling between a hostile
-sea and a hostile wilderness and built it up to its
-present estate of democratic grandeur. Not tyranny,
-not murder disguised as war, not robbery
-disguised as &#8220;benevolent guidance,&#8221; not any of the
-false and foolish ideas of imperialism and aristocracy.
-But ideas of peace, of equal rights for all,
-of self-government.</p>
-
-<p>Our era, conscious of the mighty works that can
-be wrought, conscious that we are all under sentence
-of speedy death, eagerly seeks out the young
-man, the obscure man. It has need of all powers
-and all talents, especially of the talents for creating,
-organizing, directing. Instead of it being true
-that a good man doesn&#8217;t have a chance any more,
-the reverse is true&mdash;inferior men have chances<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291"></a>[Pg 291]</span>
-greatly beyond their powers, and immature men
-are forced into important commands, and discredited
-and ruined, so impatient is the pressure for
-men to do the world&#8217;s important work. This is
-the day of the man who wants a chance.</p>
-
-<p>It is also a day in which we hear a great deal
-about the &#8220;unruly class.&#8221; This phrase is employed
-to designate some vague element in the masses of
-the people that is naturally turbulent and ever looking
-about for an excuse to &#8220;rise&#8221; and &#8220;burn, slay,
-kill.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>You may search through history page by page,
-line by line, and you will find no trace of the doings
-of this alleged &#8220;unruly class.&#8221; The more you read
-the more you will be struck by the universal and
-most tenacious love of quiet and order in the masses
-of mankind. You will see them robbed, oppressed,
-murdered wholesale upon mere caprice, the victims
-of all manner of misery. Your cheeks will burn
-and your blood run hot as you read. And you will
-note with wonder that they endured with seemingly
-limitless patience until they were eating grass
-by the wayside. Then, once in a while, but only
-once in a while, they &#8220;rose.&#8221; All the machinery
-of law and order was in the hands of the oppressors,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292"></a>[Pg 292]</span>
-so they were compelled to resort to violence.
-But even then they established new machinery
-or patched up the old as quickly as possible.</p>
-
-<p><i>Every society that has been overturned from,
-within has been overturned by misrule; never by
-the unruly.</i></p>
-
-<p>No; the real &#8220;unruly classes&#8221; are these &#8220;respectabilities&#8221;
-with the &#8220;pulls,&#8221; and these governmental
-officers who are &#8220;pulled&#8221;;&mdash;they violate the laws;
-they purchase or enact or enforce unjust legislation;
-they abuse the confidence and the tolerant
-good nature of the people; they misuse the machinery
-of justice.</p>
-
-<p>Turn to your history again. You find that every
-once in a while the dominant element has begun
-to talk about the &#8220;unruly class,&#8221; to express fear of
-&#8220;risings,&#8221; of mob violence. And in every instance
-you find that the real reason for this denunciation
-and dread was that the dominant element had begun
-to be acutely conscious of its own misdeeds.
-It feared that its own weapons of injustice would
-be turned against itself by outraged justice. It
-feared that its punishment would be in proportion
-to its crimes.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293"></a>[Pg 293]</span>Gladstone said that the Nineteenth century was
-summed up in the phrase, &#8220;Unhand me!&#8221; Its
-science struck off the shackles of ignorance upon
-the intellect&mdash;shackles of error, of false reverence,
-of superstitions about the causes of the inequalities
-of men. Thus, the Nineteenth century made it possible
-for this to be the Age of the Common Man.
-Not to states, not to institutions, not to class-made
-law, not to castes and orders and rank belongs the
-Twentieth century. It belongs to the Common Man&mdash;to
-you. You with your stout heart and your willing
-and capable hands. You with your active, intelligent
-brain, impatient of traditional nonsense,
-however poetically or plausibly englamoured. You
-with your enlightened sense of the equal rights of
-all men. You with your passionate resolve scientifically
-to correct the stupid and cruel inequalities
-of opportunity, that are as intolerable in an era of
-science as a cannibal feast in the temple of the
-Most High.</p>
-
-<p>What is the watchword of this new day? From
-lip to lip, from land to land, from race to race,
-flies the &#8220;password eternal&#8221;&mdash;Democracy.</p>
-
-<p>How the Nineteenth century did belie all the
-prophecies of pessimism! And how the Twentieth<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294"></a>[Pg 294]</span>
-century will belie all the prophecies of its pessimists!</p>
-
-<p>To realize this you must penetrate the dust and
-noise and clamor that are the surface of things.
-You must discard prejudice and that narrowness
-which makes you exaggerate the importance of the
-things immediately at hand&mdash;the things that are
-mere details of the great pattern which time is
-weaving in the loom of history&mdash;details incomprehensible
-unless you look at the pattern as a whole.
-Disregard tradition and egotism; free yourself of
-the small silliness that leads you to confuse intelligence
-with etiquette and clothes, with formal education
-which may or may not affect the intellect.
-Look deep into the realities and see there the lines
-of the Common Man&mdash;the toiler at the desk and
-bench and lever and plow, his mind bent upon his
-work, his work the improvement of his own condition
-and the handing down of the heritage of life
-richer and better in every way than he received it.</p>
-
-<p>Through the ages this Common Man has been
-building like the coral insect&mdash;silently, secretly,
-steadily, strongly. History has little to say about
-him or his work, and that little misleading; the
-historians have been unable to get away from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295"></a>[Pg 295]</span>
-courts and battlefields and the legislation halls
-where fierce but futile and evanescent class struggles
-rage. But the real story of the past of the
-human race as an interpreter and prophet of the
-future is the story of the building of the coral continent
-founded broadly and deeply upon freedom
-and justice, upon Intelligence and Democracy. And
-now at last this continent of enduring civilization
-begins to emerge not here and there, not merely
-above the ebbtides of ignorance and tyranny, but
-everywhere and for all time.</p>
-
-<p>Let us read the past aright. Its departed civilizations
-are not a gloomy warning, but a bright
-promise. If limited intelligence in a small class
-produced such gleams of glory in the black sky of
-history, what a day must be now dawning!</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">THE END</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2">TRANSCRIBER&#8217;S NOTES:</p>
-</div>
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-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
-
-<p>Archaic or alternate spelling has been retained from the original.</p>
-</div>
-
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