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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67648 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67648)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Forty Years of It, by Brand Whitlock
-
-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: Forty Years of It
-
-Author: Brand Whitlock
-
-Release Date: March 17, 2022 [eBook #67648]
-
-Language: English
-
-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/American Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FORTY YEARS OF IT ***
-
-
-
-
-
-FORTY YEARS OF IT
-
-
-
-
-BY RALPH HENRY BARBOUR.
-
- Benton’s Venture.
- Around the End.
- The Junior Trophy.
- Change Signals!
- For Yardley.
- Finkler’s Field.
- Winning His “Y.”
- The New Boy at Hilltop.
- Double Play.
- Forward Pass!
- The Spirit of the School.
- Four in Camp.
- Four Afoot.
- Four Afloat.
- The Arrival of Jimpson.
- Behind the Line.
- Captain of the Crew.
- For the Honor of the School.
- The Half-Back.
- On Your Mark.
- Weatherby’s Inning.
-
-D. APPLETON & COMPANY, NEW YORK.
-
-
-
-
- FORTY
- YEARS OF IT
-
- BY
- BRAND WHITLOCK
-
- [Illustration]
-
- NEW YORK AND LONDON
- D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
- MCMXIV
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1914, BY
- D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
-
- Copyright, 1913, by THE PHILLIPS PUBLISHING COMPANY
-
- Printed in the United States of America
-
-
-
-
- TO THE MEMORY OF
- MY FATHER
-
- ELIAS D. WHITLOCK
-
- WHO DIED DECEMBER 23, 1913
-
- A MINISTER OF THE SANCTUARY, AND
- OF THE TRUE TABERNACLE, WHICH
- THE LORD PITCHED, AND NOT MAN
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-
-The history of democracy’s progress in a mid-Western city--so, to
-introduce this book in specific terms, one perhaps inevitably must
-call it. Yet in using the word _democracy_, one must plead for a
-distinction, or, better, a reversion, indicated by the curious
-anchylosis that, at a certain point in their maturity, usually sets in
-upon words newly put in use to express some august and large spiritual
-reality. We all know how this materializing tendency, if one may
-call it that, has affected our notion and our use of the commonest
-religious terms like _faith_, _grace_, _salvation_, for instance.
-Their connotation, originally fluid, spiritual and subjective, has
-become concrete, limited, partial, ignoble. So, too, in our common
-speech, even above the catchpenny vocabulary of the demagogue or
-politician, the word _democracy_ has taken on the limited, partial and
-ignoble connotation of more or less incidental and provisional forms
-of democracy’s practical outcome; or even of by-products not directly
-traceable to the action of democracy itself. How often, for example, do
-we see direct primaries, the single tax, the initiative and referendum
-posed in a kind of sacramental relation to “fundamental democracy”; or
-the “essential movement of democracy” measured, say, by the increased
-returns on the Socialist ticket at some local election!
-
-The permanent value of this book is that it proceeds out of a truly
-adequate and philosophical conception of democracy. That the collective
-human spirit should know itself, καταμαθεῖν τὴν φύσιν καὶ ταύτη
-ἕπεσθαι, that the state, the communal unit, should be, in Mr. Arnold’s
-phrase, “the expression of our best self, which is not manifold and
-vulgar and unstable and contentious and ever varying, but one and noble
-and secure and peaceful and the same for all mankind”; here we have
-in outline the operation of democracy. One could not give this volume
-higher praise than to say, as in justice one must say, that it clearly
-discerns and abundantly conveys the spirit which works in human nature
-toward this end.
-
-How important it is to maintain this fluid, philosophical and spiritual
-view of democracy may be seen when we look about us and consider
-the plight of those--especially the many now concerned in politics,
-whether professionally or as eager amateurs--who for lack of it confuse
-various aspects of the political problem of liberty with the social
-problem of equality. With political liberty or with self-expression
-of the individual in politics, democracy has, and ever has had, very
-little to do. It is our turbid thought about democracy that prevents
-our seeing this. The aristocratic and truculent barons did more for
-the political freedom of Englishmen than was ever done by democracy;
-a selfish and sensual king did more to gain the individual Englishman
-his freedom of self-expression in politics. In our own country it is
-matter of open and notorious fact that a political party whose every
-sentiment and tendency is aristocratic has been the one to bring about
-the largest measures of political enfranchisement. Now, surely, one
-may heartily welcome every enlargement of political liberty, but if
-one attributes them to a parentage which is not theirs, if one relates
-them under _democracy_, the penalty which nature inexorably imposes
-upon error is sure to follow. If, therefore, in the following pages
-the author seems occasionally lukewarm toward certain enfranchising
-measures, I do not understand that he disparages them, but only that
-he sees--as their advocates, firmly set in the confusion we speak
-of, cannot see--that their connection with democracy is extremely
-indistinct and remote. _Equality_--a social problem, not to be worked
-out by the mechanics of politics, but appealing wholly to the best
-self, the best reason and spirit of man,--this is democracy’s concern,
-democracy’s chief interest. It is to our author’s praise, again, that
-he sees this clearly and expresses it convincingly.
-
-By far the most admirable and impressive picture in this book appears
-to me to be that which the author has all unconsciously drawn of
-himself. It reveals once more that tragedy--the most profound, most
-common and most neglected of all the multitude of useless tragedies
-that our weak and wasteful civilization by sheer indifference
-permits--the tragedy of a richly gifted nature denied the opportunity
-of congenial self-expression. What by comparison is the tragedy of
-starvation, since so very many willingly starve, if haply they may find
-this opportunity? The author is an artist, a born artist. His natural
-place is in a world unknown and undreamed of by us children of an age
-commissioned to carry out the great idea of industrial and political
-development. He belongs by birthright in the eternal realm of divine
-impossibilities, of sublime and delightful inconsistencies. Greatly
-might he have fulfilled his destiny in music, in poetry, in painting
-had he been born at one of those periods when spiritual activity was
-all but universal, when spiritual ideas were popular and dominant,
-_volitantes per ora virum_, part of the very air one breathed--in the
-Greece of Pericles, the England of Elizabeth, or on the Tuscan hills
-at the time of the Florentine Renaissance! But this was not to be. An
-admirer, jealous of every possible qualification, reminds me that I
-should call him at least a philosophical artist; yes, but not by nature
-even that. The toga did not drop upon him readymade from a celestial
-loom. It was woven and fitted laboriously by his own hands. He sought
-philosophical consistency and found it and established himself in it;
-but only as part of the difficult general discipline of an alien life.
-
-What an iron discipline, and how thoroughly alien a life, stands
-revealed to the eye of poetic insight and the spirit of sympathetic
-delicacy, on every page of these memoirs. For the over-refined (as
-we say), the oversensitive soul of a born artist--think of the
-experience, think of the achievement! The very opposite of all that
-makes a politician, appraising politics always at their precise value,
-yet patiently spending all the formative years of his life in the
-debilitating air of politics for the sake of what he might indirectly
-accomplish. Not an executive, yet incessantly occupied with tedious
-details of administrative work, for the satisfaction of knowing them
-well done. Not a philosopher, yet laboriously making himself what
-Glanvil quaintly calls “one of those larger souls who have traveled the
-divers climates of opinion” until he acquired a social philosophy that
-should meet his own exacting demands.
-
-Is it too much, then, that I invite the reader’s forbearance with
-these paragraphs to show why our author should himself take rank and
-estimation with the great men whom he reverently pictures? He tells
-the story of Altgeld and of Johnson, energetic champions of the newer
-political freedom. He tells the story of Jones, the incomparable true
-democrat, one of the children of light and sons of the Resurrection,
-such as appear but once in an era. And in the telling of these men
-and of himself as the alien and, in his own view, largely accidental
-continuator of their work, it seems to me that he indicates the process
-by which he too has worked out his own position among them as “one
-of those consoling and hope-inspiring marks which stand forever to
-remind our weak and easily discouraged race how high human goodness and
-perseverance have once been carried and may be carried again.”
-
- ALBERT JAY NOCK.
-
- THE AMERICAN MAGAZINE,
- NEW YORK.
-
-
-
-
-FORTY YEARS OF IT
-
-
-
-
-FORTY YEARS OF IT
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-One hot afternoon in the summer of my tenth year, my grandfather,
-having finished the nap he was accustomed to take after the heavy
-dinner which, in those days, was served at noon in his house, told
-me that I might go up town with him. This was not only a relief, but
-a prospect of adventure. It was a relief to have him finish his nap,
-because while he was taking his nap, my grandmother drew down at all
-the windows the heavy green shades, which, brought home by the family
-after a residence in Nuremberg, were decorated at the bottom with a
-frieze depicting scenes along the Rhine, and a heavy and somnolent
-silence was imposed on all the house. When my grandfather took his nap,
-life seemed to pause, all activities were held in suspense.
-
-And the prospect was as a pleasant adventure, because whenever my
-grandfather let me go up town with him he always made me a present,
-which was sure to be more valuable, more expensive, than those little
-gifts at home, bestowed as rewards of various merits and sacrifices
-related to that institution of the afternoon nap, and forthcoming if he
-got through the nap satisfactorily, that is, without being awakened.
-They consisted of mere money, the little five or ten cent notes of
-green scrip; “shin-plasters” they were called, I believe, in those days.
-
-When my grandfather had rearranged his toilet, combing his thick white
-hair and then immediately running his fingers through it to rumple it
-up and give him a savage aspect, we set forth.
-
-He wore broad polished shoes, low, and fastened with buckles, and
-against the black of his attire his stiffly starched, immaculate white
-waistcoat was conspicuous. Only a few of its lower buttons of pearl
-were fastened; above that it was open, and from one of the buttonholes,
-the second from the top, his long gold watch-chain hung from its large
-gold hook. The black cravat was not hidden by his white beard, which
-he did not wear as long as many Ohio gentlemen of that day, and he was
-crowned by a large Panama hat, yellowed by years of summer service, and
-bisected by a ridge that began at the middle of the broad brim directly
-in front, ran back, climbed and surmounted the large high crown, and
-then, descending, ended its impressive career at the middle of the
-broad brim behind.
-
-I was walking on his left hand, near the fence, but as we entered the
-shade of the elms and shrubbery of the Swedenborgian churchyard, I went
-around to his other side, because a ghost dwelt in the Swedenborgian
-churchyard. My cousin had pointed it out to me, and once I had seen it
-distinctly.
-
-The precaution was unnecessary, for I had long known my grandfather for
-a brave man. He had been a soldier, and many persons in Urbana still
-saluted him as major, though at that time he was mayor; going up town,
-in fact, meant to go to the town hall before going anywhere else. In
-the shade he removed his hat, and taking out a large silk handkerchief,
-passed it several times over his red, perspiring face.
-
-It was, as I have said, a hot afternoon, even for an August afternoon
-in Ohio, and it was the hottest hour of the afternoon. Main Street,
-when we turned into it presently, was deserted, and wore an unreal
-appearance, like the street of the dead town that was painted on
-the scene at the “opera-house.” Far to the south it stretched its
-interminable length in white dust, until its trees came together in
-that mysterious distance where the fairgrounds were, and to the north
-its vista was closed by the bronze figure of the cavalryman standing
-on his pedestal in the Square, his head bowed in sad meditation, one
-gauntleted hand resting on his hip, the other on his saber-hilt. Out
-over the thick dust of the street the heat quivered and vibrated, and
-if you squinted in the sun at the cavalryman, he seemed to move, to
-tremble, in the shimmer of that choking atmosphere.
-
-The town hall stood in Market Square; for, in addition to _the_ Square,
-where the bronze cavalryman stood on his pedestal, there was Market
-Square, the day of civic centers not having dawned on Urbana in that
-time, nor, doubtless, in this.
-
-Market Square was not a square, however, but a parallelogram, and
-on one side of it, fronting Main Street, was the town hall, a low
-building of brick, representing in itself an amazing unity of municipal
-functions--the germ of the group plan, no doubt, and, after all, in
-its little way, a civic center indeed. For there, in an auditorium,
-plays were staged before a populace innocent of the fact that it had
-a municipal theater, and in another room the city council sat, with
-representatives from Lighttown, and Gooseville, and Guinea, and the
-other _faubourgs_ of our little municipality. Under that long low roof,
-too, were the “calaboose” and the headquarters of the fire department.
-Back of these the structure sloped away into a market-house of some
-sort, with a public scales, and broad, low, overhanging eaves, in the
-shade of which firemen, and the city marshal, and other officials, in
-the dim retrospect, seem to have devoted their leisure to the game of
-checkers.
-
-On the opposite side of Market Square there was a line of brick
-buildings, painted once, perhaps, and now of a faint pink or cerise
-which certain of the higher and more artistic grades of calcimining
-assume, and there seems to have been a series, almost interminable, of
-small saloons--declining and fading away somewhere to the east, in the
-dark purlieus of Guinea.
-
-Here, along this line of saloons, if it was a line of saloons, or, if
-it was not, along the side of the principal saloon which in those wet
-days commanded that corner, there were always several carts, driven
-by Irishmen from Lighttown, smoking short clay pipes, and two-wheeled
-drays driven by negroes from Guinea or Gooseville. These negro drivers
-were burly men with shining black skins and gleaming eyes and teeth,
-whose merry laughter was almost belied by the ferocious, brutal whips
-they carried--whips precisely like that _Simon Legree_ had wielded in
-the play in the theater just across the Square, now, by a stroke of
-poetic justice, in the hands of _Uncle Tom_ himself. But on this day
-the firemen were not to be seen under the eaves of the market-house;
-their checker-boards were quite abandoned. The mules between the
-shafts of these two-wheeled drays hung their heads and their long ears
-drooped under the heat, and their black masters were curled up on the
-sidewalk against the wall of the saloon, asleep. The Irishmen were
-nowhere to be seen, and Market Square was empty, deserted, and sprawled
-there reflecting the light in a blinding way, while from the yellow,
-dusty level of its cobbled surface rose, wave on wave, palpably, that
-trembling, shimmering, vibrating heat. And yet, there was one waking,
-living thing in sight. There, out in the middle of the Square he stood,
-a dusty, drab figure, with an old felt hat on a head that must have
-ached and throbbed in that implacable heat, with a mass of rags upon
-him, his frayed trousers gathered at his ankles and bound about by
-irons, and a ball and chain to bind him to that spot. He had a broom in
-his hands, and was aimlessly making a little smudge of dust, doing his
-part in the observance of an old, cruel, and hideous superstition.
-
-I knew, of course, that he was a prisoner. Usually there were three or
-four, sometimes half a dozen, such as he. They were the chain-gang,
-and they were Bad--made so by Rum. I knew that they were brought
-out of the calaboose, that damp, dark place under the roof of the
-market-house, somewhere between the office of the mayor and the
-headquarters of the fire department; and glimpses were to be caught now
-and then of their faces pressed against those bars.
-
-When, under the shade of the broad eaves, we were about to enter the
-mayor’s office, my grandfather motioned to the prisoner out there in
-the center of the Square, who with a new alacrity dropped his broom,
-picked up his ball, and lugging it in his arms, came up close to us,
-so very close that I could see the sweat that drenched his forehead,
-stood in great beads on his upper lip, matted the hair on his forearms,
-stained with dark splashes his old shirt, and glistened on his throat
-and breast, burned red by the sun. He dropped his ball, took off that
-rag of a hat, raised eyelids that were powdered with dust, and looked
-at my grandfather.
-
-“How many days did I give you?” my grandfather asked him.
-
-“Fifteen, your honor,” he said.
-
-“How long have you been in?”
-
-“Three days, your honor.”
-
-“Are you the only one in there?”
-
-“Yes, your honor.”
-
-My grandfather paused and looked at him.
-
-“Pretty hot out there, isn’t it?” asked my grandfather.
-
-The prisoner smiled, a smile exactly like that anyone would have for
-such a question, but the smile flickered from his face, as he said:
-
-“Yes, your honor.”
-
-My grandfather looked out over the Square and up and down. There was no
-one anywhere to be seen.
-
-“Well, come on into the office.”
-
-The prisoner picked up his ball, and followed my grandfather into the
-mayor’s office. My grandfather went to a desk, drew out a drawer,
-fumbled in it, found a key, and with this he stooped and unlocked the
-irons on the prisoner’s ankles. But he did not remove the irons--he
-seated himself in the large chair, and leaned comfortably against its
-squeaking cane back.
-
-“Now,” my grandfather said, “you go out there in the Square--be careful
-not to knock the leg irons off as you go,--and you sweep around for a
-little while, and when the coast is clear you kick them off and light
-out.”
-
-The creature in the drab rags looked at my grandfather a moment, opened
-his lips, closed them, swallowed, and then....
-
-“You’d better hurry,” said my grandfather, “I don’t know what minute
-the marshal----”
-
-The prisoner gathered up his ball, hugged it carefully, almost
-tenderly, in his arms, and, with infinity delicacy as to the irons on
-his feet, he shuffled carefully, yet somehow swiftly out. I saw him an
-instant in the brilliant glittering sunlight framed by the door; he
-looked back, and then he disappeared, leaving only the blank surface
-of the cobblestones with the heat trembling over them.
-
-My grandfather put on his glasses, turned to his desk, and took up some
-papers there. And I waited, in the still, hot room. The minutes were
-ticked off by the clock. I wondered at each loud tick if it was the
-minute in which it would be proper for the prisoner to kick off those
-irons from his ankles and start to run. And then, after a few minutes,
-a man appeared in the doorway, and said breathlessly:
-
-“Joe, he has escaped!”
-
-It was Uncle John, a brother of my grandfather, one of the Brands of
-Kentucky, then on a visit--one of those long visits by which he and my
-grandfather sought to make up the large arrears of the differences, the
-divisions, and the separations of the great war. He was nearly of my
-grandfather’s age, and like him a large man, with a white though longer
-beard. At his entrance my grandfather did not turn, nor speak, and
-Uncle John Brand cried again:
-
-“Joe, he’s gone, I tell you; he’s getting away!”
-
-My grandfather looked up then from his papers and said:
-
-“John, you’d better come in out of that heat and sit down. You’re
-excited.”
-
-“But he’s getting away, I tell you! Don’t you understand?”
-
-“Who is getting away?”
-
-“Why, that prisoner.”
-
-“What prisoner?”
-
-“The prisoner out there in the Square. He has escaped! He’s gone!”
-
-“But how do you know?”
-
-“I just saw him running down Main Street like a streak of lightning.”
-
-My grandfather took out his silk handkerchief, passed it over his brow,
-and said:
-
-“To think of anyone running on a day like this!”
-
-And Uncle John Brand stood there and gazed at his brother with an
-expression of despair.
-
-“Can’t you understand,” he said, speaking in an intense tone, as if
-somehow to impress my grandfather with the importance of this event
-in society, “can’t you understand that the prisoner out there in the
-Square has broken away, has escaped, and at this minute is running down
-Main Street, and that he’s getting farther and farther away with each
-moment that you sit there?”
-
-I had a vivid picture of the man running with long strides, in the soft
-dust of Main Street; he must even then, I fancied, be far down the
-street; he must indeed be down by Bailey’s, and perhaps Bailey’s dog
-was rushing out at him, barking. And I hoped he would run faster, and
-faster, and get away, though I felt it was wrong to hope this. Uncle
-John Brand seemed to be right; though I did not like him as I liked my
-grandfather.
-
-“But how could he get away?” my grandfather was asking. “He was in
-irons.”
-
-“He got the irons off somehow,” Uncle John Brand said, exasperated; “I
-don’t know how. He didn’t stop to explain!” He found a relief in this
-fine sarcasm, and then said:
-
-“Aren’t you going to do anything?”
-
-“Well,” said my grandfather, with an irresolution quite uncommon in
-him, “I suppose I really ought to do something. But I don’t know just
-what to do.” He sat up, and looked about all over the room. “You don’t
-see the marshal, do you?”
-
-Uncle John Brand was looking at him now in disgust.
-
-“Just look outside there, will you, John,” my grandfather went on, “and
-see if you can find him? If you do, send him in, and I’ll speak to him
-and have him go after the prisoner.”
-
-Uncle John Brand of Kentucky stood a moment in the doorway, finding no
-words with which to express himself, and then went out. And when he had
-gone my grandfather leaned back in his chair and laughed and laughed;
-laughed until his ruddy face became much redder than it was even from
-the heat of that day.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-Now that I have set down, with such particularity, an incident which I
-could not wholly understand nor reconcile with the established order
-of things until many years after, I am not so sure after all that I
-witnessed it in that Urbana of reality; it may have been in that Urbana
-of the memory, wherein related scenes and incidents have coalesced with
-the witnessed event, or in that Macochee of certain of my attempts in
-fiction, though I have always hoped that the fiction was the essential
-reality of life, and have tried to make it so.
-
-I am certain, however, that the incident as related is entirely
-authentic, for I have recently made inquiries and established it
-beyond a reasonable doubt, as the lawyers say, in all its details as
-here given. I say in all its details, save possibly as to that of
-my own corporeal presence on the scene, at the actual moment of the
-occurrence. Only the other day I asked a favorite aunt of mine, and
-she remembered the incident perfectly, and many another similar to it.
-“It was just like him,” she added, with a dubious, though tolerant
-fondness. But when, like the insistent, questioning child in one of
-Riley’s Hoosier poems, I asked her if I had been there, she said she
-could not remember.
-
-But whether I was there in the flesh or not, or whether the whole
-reality of that scene, so poignant, and insistent, and indelible,
-with its denial of the grounds of authority, its challenge to the
-bases of society, its shock to the orthodox mind (like that of John
-Brand of Kentucky, a strict constructionist, who believed in the old
-Constitution, and even then, in slavery), remains in my memory as the
-result of one of those tricks of a mind that has always dramatized
-scenes for its own amusement, I was there in spirit, and, indeed, at
-many another scene in the life of Joseph Carter Brand, whose name
-my mother gave me as a good heritage. Whatever the bald and banal
-physical fact may have been, I was either present at the actual or in
-imagination at the described scene to such purpose that from it I
-derived an impression never to be erased from my mind.
-
-It is not given to all of us to say with such particularity and
-emphasis, just what we learned from each person who has touched our
-existences and affected the trend of our lives, as it was given to
-Marcus Aurelius, for instance, so that one may say that from Rusticus
-one received this impression, or that from Apollonius one learned this
-and from Alexander the Platonic that; we must rather ascribe our little
-store of knowledge generally to the gods. But I am sure that no one was
-ever long with Joseph Carter Brand, or came to know him well, without
-learning that rarest and most beautiful of all the graces or of all the
-virtues--Pity.
-
- He, too, had tears for all souls in trouble
- Here, and in hell.
-
-Perhaps it is not so much pity as sympathy that I mean, but whether it
-was pity or sympathy, it was that divine quality in man which enables
-him to imagine the sorrows of others, to understand what they feel, to
-suffer with them; in a word, the ability to put himself in the other
-fellow’s place--the hallmark, I believe, of true culture, far more than
-any degree or doctor’s hood could possibly be.
-
-It may have been some such feeling as this for the negroes that led
-him, when a young man in Kentucky, to renounce a patrimony of slaves
-and come north. It was not, to be sure, a very large patrimony, for
-his father was a farmer in a rather small way in Bourbon County, and
-owned a few slaves, but whatever the motive, he refused to own human
-chattels and left Bourbon County, where his branch of the Brands had
-lived since their emigration from Virginia, to which colony, so long
-before, their original had come as a Jacobite exile from Forfarshire in
-Scotland.
-
-My grandfather came north into Ohio and Champaign County, and he had
-not been there very long before he went back to Virginia and married
-Lavina Talbott, and when they went to live on the farm he called
-“Pretty Prairie,” he soon found himself deep in Ohio politics, as it
-seems the fate of most Ohioans to be, and continued in that element
-all his life. He had his political principles from Henry Clay,--he had
-been to Ashland and had known the family,--and he was elected as a Whig
-to the legislature in 1842 and to the State Senate of Ohio in 1854.
-There he learned to know and to admire Salmon P. Chase, then governor
-of Ohio, and it was not long until he was in the Abolitionist movement,
-and he got into it so deeply that nothing less than the Civil War could
-ever have got him out, for he was in open defiance, most of the time,
-to the Fugitive Slave Law.
-
-One of the accomplishments in which he took pride, perhaps next to
-his ability as a horseman, was his skill with the rifle, acquired in
-Kentucky at the expense of squirrels in the tops of tall trees (he
-could snuff a candle with a rifle), and this ability he placed at the
-service of a negro named Ad White, who had run away from his master
-in the South, and was hidden in a corn-crib near Urbana when overtaken
-by United States marshals from Cincinnati. The negro was armed, and
-was defending himself, when my grandfather and his friend Ichabod
-Corwin, of a name tolerably well known in Ohio history, went to his
-assistance, and drove the marshals off by the hot fire of their rifles.
-The marshals retreated, and came up later with reinforcements, strong
-enough to overpower Judge Corwin and my grandfather, but the negro had
-escaped.
-
-The scrape was an expensive one; there were proceedings against them
-in the United States court in Cincinnati, and they only got out of it
-years after when the Fugitive Slave Law was rapidly becoming no law,
-and Ad White could live near Urbana in peace during a long life, and be
-pointed out as an interesting relic of the great conflict.
-
-This adventure befell my grandfather in 1858, when he had been
-a Republican for two years, having been a delegate to the first
-convention of the party in 1856, the one that met in Pittsburgh, before
-the nominating convention which named Frémont had met in Philadelphia.
-He had attended that convention with Cassius M. Clay of Kentucky, and
-shared quarters with him at the hotel.
-
-In 1908, in the Coliseum at Chicago, when the Republican National
-Convention was in session, there were conducted to the stage one
-morning, and introduced to the delegates, two old gentlemen who had
-been delegates to that first convention of the party, and after they
-had been presented and duly celebrated by the chairman and cheered
-by the delegates they were assiduously given seats in large chairs,
-and there, throughout the session, side by side they sat, their hands
-clasped over the crooks of their heavy canes, their white old heads
-unsteady, peering out in a certain purblind, bewildered, aged way over
-that mighty assembly of the power and the wealth, the respectability
-and the authority, of the nation--far other than that revolutionary
-gathering they had attended half a century before!
-
-All through the session, now and then, I would look at them; there was
-a certain indefinable pathos in them, they sat so still, they were
-so old, there was in their attitude the acquiescence of age--and I
-would recall my grandfather’s stories of the days when they were the
-force in the Republic, and the runaway “niggers,” and the rifles, and
-the great blazing up of liberty in the land, and it seemed to me that
-Time, or what Thomas Hardy calls the Ironic Spirit, or perhaps it was
-only the politicians who were managing the convention, had played some
-grotesque, stupendous joke on those patriarchs. Did their old eyes,
-gazing so strangely on that scene, behold its implications? Did they
-descry the guide-post that told them how far away they really were from
-that first convention and its ideals?
-
-But whatever the reflections of those two aboriginal Republicans, or
-whatever emotions or speculations they may have inspired in those who
-saw them,--the torch of liberty being ever brandished somewhere in
-this world and tossed from hand to hand,--they had done their part in
-their day, and might presumably be allowed to look on at the antics
-of men wherever they chose, in peace. They had known Lincoln, no
-inconsiderable distinction in itself!
-
-Out of that first convention my grandfather, like them, had gone, and
-he had done his part to help elect Lincoln after Lincoln had defeated
-Chase in the Chicago convention of 1860, and had been nominated for the
-presidency. And then, with his man elected, my grandfather had gone
-into the war that broke upon the land.
-
-He went in with the 66th Ohio Volunteer Infantry, a regiment which he
-was commissioned by Governor Dennison to recruit at Urbana, and when
-it was marshaled in camp near Urbana its command was offered him,
-an honor and a responsibility he declined because, he said, he knew
-nothing of the art of war, if it is an art, or of its science, if it is
-a science, and so was content with the shoulder-straps of a captain.
-One of his sons, a lieutenant in the regular army, was already at the
-front with his regiment, and another son was a captain in the 66th, and
-later on, when my grandfather had been transferred to the Department
-of Subsistence, he took his youngest son with him in the capacity of
-a clerk, so that the men of his family were away to the war for those
-four years, and the women remained behind, making housewives and
-scraping lint, and watching, and waiting, and praying, and enduring all
-those hardships and making all those sacrifices which are so lauded by
-the poetic and the sentimental and yet are not enough to entitle them
-to a voice in that government in whose cause they are made.
-
-The situation was made all the more poignant because the great issue
-had separated the family, and there were brothers and cousins on the
-other side, though one of these, in the person of Aunt Lucretia,
-chose that inauspicious time to come over from the other side all the
-way from Virginia, to pay a visit, and celebrated the report of a
-Confederate victory by parading up town with a butternut badge on her
-bosom. She sailed several times about the Square, with her head held
-high and her crinolines rustling and standing out, and her butternut
-badge in evidence, and was rescued by my grandmother, who, hearing
-of her temerity, went up town in desperation and in fear that she
-might arrive too late. It was a story I was fond of hearing, and as I
-pictured the lively scene I always had the statue of the cavalryman as
-a figure in the picture--though of course the statue could not have
-been in existence during the war, since it was erected as a memorial
-to the 66th and a monument to its fallen heroes and their deeds. The
-cavalryman, an officer wearing a romantic cloak and the old plumed hat
-of the military fashion of that date, and leaning on his saber in a
-gloomy way, I always thought was a figure of my uncle, that Captain
-Brand who went out with the 66th, just as I thought for a long time
-that the Civil War was practically fought out on the northern side
-by the 66th, which was not so strange perhaps, since nearly every
-family in Urbana had been represented in the regiment, and they all
-talked of little else than the war for many years. They called the
-66th the “Bloody Sixty-sixth,” a name I have since heard applied to
-other regiments, but the honorable epithet was not undeserved by that
-legion, for it had a long and most gallant record, beginning with the
-Army of the Potomac and fighting in all that army’s battles until after
-Gettysburg, and then with the 11th and 12th corps it was transferred,
-under Hooker, to the Army of the Tennessee, at Chattanooga, in time for
-Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge, after which it went with Sherman
-to the sea, and thus completed the circuit of the Confederacy.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-My grandfather, however, did not go with his regiment to the West. He
-had been transferred to the Commissary Department, and he remained with
-the Army of the Potomac until the close of the war, and it was on some
-detail connected with his duties in that department that, in 1865, he
-went into Washington and had the interview with President Lincoln I
-so much liked to hear him tell about. It was not in the course of his
-military duty that he went to see the Commander-in-Chief; whatever
-those duties were they were quickly discharged at the War Department,
-so that, in the hours of freedom remaining to him before he went back
-to the front, he did what everyone likes to do in Washington,--he
-went to see the President. But he went in no military capacity; he
-went rather in that political capacity he so much preferred to the
-military, and he went as to the chief he had so long known and loved
-and followed.
-
-It would be his old friend Chase who presented him to the President,
-but their conversation was soon interrupted by the entrance of an aide
-who announced the arrival in the White House grounds of an Indiana
-regiment passing through Washington, which, as seems to have been the
-case with most regiments passing through the Capital, demanded a speech
-from the President. And Lincoln complied, and as he arose to go out he
-asked my grandfather to accompany him, and they continued their talk
-on the way. But when they stood in the White House portico, and the
-regiment beheld the President and saluted him with its lifted cheer,
-the aide stepped to my grandfather’s side, and much to his chagrin--for
-he had been held by the President while he finished a story--told him
-that it would be necessary for him to drop a few paces to the rear.
-It was a little _contretemps_ that embarrassed my grandfather, but
-Lincoln, with his fine and delicate perceptions, divined the whole
-situation, and met it with that kindness which was so great a part of
-the humor and humanness in him, by saying:
-
-“You see, Mr. Brand, they might not know which was the President.”
-
-It was not long after that he was at Appomattox and the first to issue
-rations to the hungry Confederates who had just surrendered, and no
-act of his life gave him quite as much satisfaction as to have been
-the first to pour his whole supply of hardtack into the blankets of
-those whom still and always he remembered as of his own blood. And that
-done, after they had ridden into Richmond, he was relieved and was
-soon back in Washington calling on Chase again. Chase asked him what
-he could do for him, and my grandfather said there was but one thing
-in the world he wanted: namely, to go home; and a request so simple
-was granted with that alacrity with which politicians grant requests
-that, in their scope, fall so short of what might have been expected.
-But it was not long until Chase’s influence was requested in a more
-substantial matter, and in 1870 my grandfather, with his wife and two
-younger daughters, was on his way across the Atlantic to Nuremberg,
-where President Grant had appointed him consul.
-
-It was not, of course, until after his return from the foreign
-experience that my conscious acquaintance with him began. But when they
-returned and opened the old house, and filled it with the spoil of
-their European travel,--some wonderful mahogany furniture and Dresden
-china, and other objects of far more delight to us children,--he and
-I began a friendship which lasted until his death, and was marred by
-no misunderstanding, except, perhaps, as to the number of hours his
-saddle-horse should be ridden on the gallop, and the German he wished
-me to read to him out of the little black-bound volumes of Schiller and
-Goethe, which for years were his companions. He held, no doubt with
-some show of reason on his side, that if he could master the language
-after he was sixty, I might learn at least to read it before I was
-sixteen. The task had its discouragements, not lightened, even in
-after years, when I read in their famous and delightful correspondence
-Carlyle’s advice to Emerson to possess himself of the German language;
-it could be done, wrote Carlyle, in six weeks! But, like Emerson, I was
-afflicted with the postponement and debility of the blond constitution,
-and I observed that, except in great moments of unappreciated
-sacrifice, my grandfather preferred to read his German himself rather
-than to listen to my renditions.
-
-I have spoken of the house as the old house, and I do that as viewing
-it from the point of disadvantage of the years that have gone since it
-grew out of that haze and mist and darkness of early recollections into
-a place that was ablaze with light at evening and full of the constant
-wonder and delight of the company of a large family. It was, indeed,
-an old house then, with a high-gabled roof at one wing, that made an
-attic which we called, with a sense of its mystery, the “dark room,”--a
-room, however, not so dark that I could not see to read the old bound
-volumes of a newspaper an uncle had once edited;--one could lie under
-the little gable windows and pore over the immense quartos, or more
-than quartos, and exercise the imagination by reading of some long dead
-event, and, with a great effort, project one’s self back to that time,
-and pretend to read with none other than its contemporary impressions.
-
-The cellar of the house was not so interesting, though it was
-mysterious, and far more terrifying. There was a vast fireplace in the
-cellar, in which, as Jane, the old colored woman who was sometimes a
-cook and sometimes a nurse, once solemnly told my cousin and me, the
-devil dwelt, so that I visited it only once, and there so plainly saw
-the ugly horns of that dark deity that we fled upstairs and into the
-sunlight again. It may have been that the crane and the andirons of
-the old fireplace helped out the impression, though after the original
-suggestion little was required to strengthen it, and we never went down
-there again, except to lure a younger cousin as far as the door to
-shudder in the awful pleasure of witnessing her fear.
-
-This gabled wing had been the original house, and additions had been
-built to it in two directions, with a wide hall, somewhat after the
-southern fashion in which so many houses in that part of Ohio were
-built in those days.
-
-It seems larger in the retrospect than it is in the reality, and I am
-not endowing it with the spaciousness of a mansion; it was, in fact, a
-modest dwelling of a dozen rooms, with an atmosphere that was imparted
-to it by the furniture that had been brought back from Europe, and the
-personality that filled it.
-
-My grandfather conducted his establishment on a scale of prodigality
-that had a certain patriarchal air; he had a large family, and he loved
-to have them all about him, and in the evenings they gathered there
-at the piano they had bought in Berlin, and when the candles in their
-curious brass sconces had been lighted, there was music, for the whole
-family possessed some of that talent which, as President Eliot rightly
-declares in his lecture on “The Happy Life,” contributes so much real
-pleasure. My grandfather did not himself sing; or, at least, he sang
-rarely, and then only one or two Scotch songs, but when he could be
-induced to do this, the event took on the festal air of a celebration.
-
-His two younger daughters had been educated in music in Germany, and
-there was something more of music in the house than the mere classic
-portraits of Mozart and Beethoven which hung on the wall near the
-painting of the old castle at Nuremberg. They played duets, and once,
-at least, at a recital given in the town, we achieved the distinction
-of a number played on two pianos by my mother and her three sisters.
-
-The May festivals in “the City,” as we called Cincinnati in those days,
-were a part of existence, and my first excursion into the larger world
-was when my father took me to Cincinnati to hear Theodore Thomas’s
-Orchestra, which proved to be an excursion not only into a larger
-world, but eventually into a larger life,--that life of music, that
-life of a love of all the arts, which provides a consolation that would
-be complete could I but express myself in any one of them. I did,
-indeed, attempt some expression of the joys of that experience, for
-with more pretension than I could dare to-day, I wrote a composition,
-or paper, on Music which was printed in a child’s publication, and won
-for me a little prize. It was twenty-two years before I was able again
-to have any writing of mine accepted and published by a magazine.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-Urbana in those days was not without its atmosphere of culture,
-influenced in a degree by the presence of the Urbana University, a
-Swedenborgian college which in the days before the war had flourished,
-because so many of its students came from the southern states. It
-declined after the war, but even after that event, the presence of so
-many persons of the Swedenborgian persuasion, with their gentle manners
-and intellectual appreciation, kept the traditions alive, and the
-college itself continued, though not so flourishingly, on its endowed
-foundation.
-
-One of the tutors in it was a young, brown-haired man who several
-times a day passed by my grandfather’s home on his way to and from his
-classes, whom afterwards I came to admire for those writings to which
-was signed the name of Hjalmar Hjorth Boyesen. He did not remain long
-in Urbana, not longer it seems than he could help, and to judge from
-some of his pictures of various phases of its life, he did not like the
-town as well as the Urbana folk themselves liked it. It was a rather
-self-sufficient town, I fancy, and it cared so little for change that
-it has scarcely changed at all, save as one misses the faces and the
-forms one used to see there in other days. It was the home of the
-distinguished family, and the birthplace, too, of John Quincy Adams
-Ward, the sculptor, and the possession of a personality in itself
-distinguishes a town.
-
-I was walking with my father across Market Square not long ago; it
-had shrunk in size and seemed little and mean and sordid, despite the
-new city hall that has replaced the old, and there was no miserable
-prisoner idly sweeping the cobblestones, though the negro drivers with
-their bull whips were snoozing there as formerly.
-
-“They have been there ever since eighteen sixty-six,” said my father,
-who had gone there in the year he had mentioned on his coming out of
-college.
-
-His home was in Piqua, a town not far away, where his father had
-retired to rest after his lifelong labors on a farm he had himself
-“cleared” in Montgomery County many years before. This paternal
-grandfather was a large, gaunt, silent man, who spoke little, and then
-mostly in a sardonic humor, as when, during that awful pioneer work of
-felling a forest to make a little plantation, he said to his grown sons
-who were helping to clear away the underbrush of a walnut wood:
-
-“Boys, what little you cut, pile here.”
-
-Few other of his sayings have been preserved, and it may be that he
-has left behind an impression that he never talked at all because
-he never talked politics, and not to do that in Ohio dooms one to
-a silence almost perpetual. He had once been a Democrat, and had
-participated with such enthusiasm in the campaign of 1856 that he had
-kept his horses’ tails and manes braided for a month that they might
-roll forth in noble curls when they were loosened, and the horses
-harnessed to a carriage containing four veterans of the Revolution,
-who were to be thus splendidly drawn to the raising of a tall hickory
-pole in honor of James Buchanan, that year a candidate for president.
-But the old diplomatist made such a miserable weakling failure of his
-administration that his Piqua partizan became disgusted and renounced
-forever his interest in political affairs, and, like Henry I., never
-smiled again.
-
-But my Grandfather Brand, when he was not talking about poetry or
-the war, was talking about politics; sometimes world politics, for
-he was interested in that; sometimes European politics, which he had
-followed ever since in Paris he had witnessed the outbreak of the
-Franco-Prussian War, or national politics, or state politics, or, in
-default of a larger interest, local politics, which in Ohio, as no
-doubt elsewhere, sometimes looms largest and most important of all,
-because, perhaps, as De Tocqueville says, local assemblies constitute
-the strength of free institutions.
-
-My grandfather was then, at the time of which I am thinking even if
-I am not very specifically writing about it, mayor--and continued
-to be mayor for four terms. It was an office that was suited, no
-doubt, to the leisure of his retirement, and while it gave him the
-feeling of being occupied in public affairs, it nevertheless left him
-opportunities enough for his German poets, and for his horses and his
-farm out at Cable, and the strawberries he was beginning to cultivate
-with the enthusiasm of an amateur.
-
-In such an atmosphere as that in the Ohio of those days it was natural
-to be a Republican; it was more than that, it was inevitable that one
-should be a Republican; it was not a matter of intellectual choice, it
-was a process of biological selection. The Republican party was not
-a faction, not a group, not a wing, it was an institution like those
-Emerson speaks of in his essay on Politics, rooted like oak-trees in
-the center around which men group themselves as best they can. It was
-a fundamental and self-evident thing, like life, and liberty, and the
-pursuit of happiness, or like the flag, or the federal judiciary. It
-was elemental, like gravity, the sun, the stars, the ocean. It was
-merely a synonym for patriotism, another name for the nation. One
-became, in Urbana and in Ohio for many years, a Republican just as the
-Eskimo dons fur clothes. It was inconceivable that any self-respecting
-person should be a Democrat. There were, perhaps, Democrats in
-Lighttown; but then there were rebels in Alabama, and in the Ku-klux
-Klan, about which we read in the evening, in the Cincinnati _Gazette_.
-
-One of the perplexing and confounding anomalies of existence was the
-fact that our neighbor, Mr. L----, was a Democrat. That fact perhaps
-explained to me why he walked so modestly, so unobtrusively, in the
-shade, so close to the picket fences of Reynolds Street, with his head
-bowed. I supposed that, being a Democrat, it was only natural for him
-to slink along. He was a lawyer and a gentleman; my grandfather spoke
-with him, but from my mind I could never banish the fact that he was
-a Democrat, and to explain his bent, thoughtful attitude I imagined
-another reason than the fact that he was a meditative, studious man.
-
-Lawyers, of course, were Republicans, else how could they deliver
-patriotic addresses on Decoration Day and at the reunions of the 66th
-regiment? It was natural for a young man to be a lawyer, then to be
-elected prosecuting attorney, then to go to the legislature, then
-to congress, then--governor, senator, president. They could not, of
-course, go any more to war and fight for liberty; that distinction was
-no longer, unhappily, possible, but they could be Republicans. The
-Republican party had saved the Union, won liberty for all men, and
-there was nothing left for the patriotic to do but to extol that party,
-and to see to it that its members held office under the government.
-
-In those days the party had many leaders in Ohio who had served the
-nation in military or civil capacity during the great crisis; scarcely
-a county that had not some colonel or general whose personality
-impressed the popular imagination; they were looked up to, and revered,
-and in the political campaigns their faces, pale or red in the flare
-of the torches of those vast and tumultuous processions that still
-staged the political contest in the terms of war, looked down from the
-festooned platforms in every public square. And yet they were already
-remote, statuesque, oracular, and there was the reverent sense that
-somehow placed them in the ideal past, whose problems had all been
-happily solved, rather than in the real present.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-But up in the northwestern part of the state, still referred to, even
-in days so late as those, with something of the humorous contempt that
-attached to the term, as the Black Swamp, there had risen a young,
-fiery, and romantic figure who ignored the past and flung himself with
-fierce ardor into a new campaign for liberty. His words fell strangely
-on ears that were accustomed to the reassurance that liberty was at
-last conquered, and his doctrines perplexed and irritated minds that
-had sunk into the shallow optimism of a belief that there were no more
-liberations needed in the world. It was not a new cry, indeed, that he
-raised, but an old one thought to have been stilled, and the standard
-he lifted in the Black Swamp was looked upon by many Ohioans as much
-askance as though it were another secession flag of stars and bars.
-Indeed, it had long been associated with the cause of the conquered
-South, because that section, by reason of its economic conditions, had
-long espoused the principle of Free Trade.
-
-This young man was Frank Hunt Hurd, then the congressman from the
-Toledo district, and in that city, where my father was the pastor of a
-church, he had won many followers and adherents, though not enough to
-keep him continually in his seat in the House of Representatives.
-
-He served for several alternate terms, the interims being filled by
-some orthodox nonentity, who was so speedily forgotten that there must
-have been an impression that for years our district was represented by
-this one man.
-
-I had heard of him with that dim sense of his position which a boy has
-of any public character, but I had a real vivid conception of him after
-that Fourth of July when, during a citizens’ celebration which must
-have been so far patriotic as to forget, for a time, partizanism, and
-to remember patriotism sufficiently to include the Democrats, I saw him
-conducted to the platform by our distinguished citizen, David R. Locke,
-whom the world knew as “Petroleum V. Nasby.”
-
-He delivered a patriotic oration, and anyone,--even though he were
-but a wondering boy quite by chance in attendance, standing on the
-outskirts of the crowd, following some whim which for a while kept him
-from his sports,--anyone who ever heard Frank Hurd deliver an oration
-never forgot it afterward.
-
-I have no idea now what it was he said, perhaps I had as little then,
-but his black hair, his handsome face, his beautiful voice, and the
-majestic music of his rolling phrases were wholly and completely
-charming. He was explicitly an orator, a student of the great art,
-and he formed his orations on the ancient Greek models, writing them
-out with exordium, proposition, and peroration, and while he did not
-perhaps exactly commit them to memory, he, nevertheless, in the process
-of preparing them, so completely possessed himself of them that he
-poured forth his polished sentences without a flaw.
-
-His speech on Free Trade, delivered in the House of Representatives,
-February 18, 1881, remains the classic on that subject, ranking with
-Henry Clay’s speech on “The American System,” delivered in the Senate
-in 1832. In that address Frank Hurd began with the phrase, “The tariff
-is a tax,” which acquired much currency years after when Grover
-Cleveland used it.
-
-Everyone, or nearly everyone, told me of course that Frank Hurd was
-wrong, if he was not, indeed, wicked, and the subject possessed a kind
-of fascination for me. In thinking of it, or in trying to think of
-it, I only perplexed myself more deeply, until at last I reached the
-formidable, the momentous decision of taking my perplexities to Frank
-Hurd himself, and of laying them before him.
-
-I was by this time a youth of eighteen, and in the summer when he had
-come home from Washington I somehow found courage enough to go to the
-hotel where he lived, and to inquire for him. He was there in the
-lobby, standing by the cigar-stand, talking to some men, and I hung on
-the outskirts of the little group until it broke up, and then the fear
-I had felt vanished when he turned and smiled upon me. I told him that
-I wished to know about Free Trade, and since there was nothing he liked
-better to talk about, and too, since there were few who could talk
-better about anything than he could talk about the tariff, we sat in
-the big leather chairs while he discoursed simply on the subject. It
-was the first at several of these conversations, or lessons, which we
-had in the big leather chairs in the lobby of the old Boody House, and
-it was not long until I was able, with a solemn pride, to announce at
-home that I was a Free-Trader and a Democrat.
-
-It could hardly have been worse had I announced that I had been
-visiting Ingersoll, and was an atheist. Cleveland was president, and in
-time he sent his famous tariff reform message to Congress, and though I
-could not vote, I was preparing to give him my moral support, to wear
-his badge, and even, if I could do no more, to refuse to march in the
-Republican processions with the club of young men and boys organized in
-our neighborhood.
-
-For the first time in my life I went on my vacation trip to Urbana
-that summer with reluctance, for the first time in my life I shrank
-from seeing my grandfather. The wide front door opened, and from the
-heat without to the dark and cool interior of the hall I stepped; I
-prolonged the preliminaries, I went through the familiar apartments,
-and out into the garden to see how it grew that summer, and down to
-the stable to see the horses; but the inevitable hour drew on, and at
-last, with all the trivial things said, all the personal questions
-asked, we sat in the living-room, cool in the half-light produced
-by its drawn shades, the soft air of summer blowing through it, the
-odd old Nuremberg furniture, the painting of the Nuremberg castle
-presented to my grandfather by the American artist whom he had rescued
-from a scrape, the tall pier glass, with the little vase of flowers
-on its marble base, and my grandfather in his large chair, his white
-waistcoat half unbuttoned and one side sagging with the weight of
-the heavy watch-chain that descended from its large hook, his white
-beard trimmed a little more closely, his white hair bristling as
-aggressively as ever--all the same, all as of old, like the reminders
-of the old life and all its traditions now to be broken and rendered
-forever and tragically different from all it had been and meant. He
-sat there looking at me, the blue eyes twinkling under their shaggy
-brows, and stretched forth his long white hand in the odd gesture with
-which he began his conversations. Conversations with him, it suddenly
-developed, were not easy to sustain; he pursued the Socratic method. If
-you disagreed with him, he lifted three fingers toward you, whether in
-menace or in benediction it was difficult at times to determine, and
-said:
-
-“Let me instruct you.”
-
-For instance:
-
-“Do you know why Napoleon III. lost the battle of Sedan?” he might
-abruptly inquire.
-
-“No, sir,” you were expected to say. (You always addressed him as
-“sir.”)
-
-“Let me instruct you.”
-
-Or:
-
-“Do you know who was the greatest English poet?”
-
-“No, sir,” you would say, or, perhaps, in those days you might
-venture, “Was it Shakespeare, sir?”
-
-Then he would look at you and say:
-
-“Let me instruct you.”
-
-This afternoon then, after I had inspected the premises, noticed how
-much taller my cousin’s fir-tree was than the one I called mine (we
-had planted them one day, as little boys, years before), and after I
-had had a drink at the old pump, which in those days, before germs,
-brought up such cold, clear water, and after I had ascended to my cool
-room upstairs, and come downstairs again, and we had idly talked for
-a little while, as I said, he sat and looked at me a moment, and then
-said:
-
-“Do you understand this tariff question?”
-
-In those days I might have made the due, what I might term with
-reference to that situation, the conventional reply, and so have said:
-
-“No, sir.”
-
-In these days I am sure I should. But I hesitated. He had already
-stretched forth his hand.
-
-“Yes, sir,” I said.
-
-He drew in his hand, and for an instant touched with his long fingers
-the end of his large nose. I plunged ahead.
-
-“I am in favor of Free Trade, sir.”
-
-He did not extend his hand. He looked at me a moment, and then he said:
-
-“You are quite right; we must support Mr. Cleveland in the coming
-contest.”
-
-And then he sank back in his chair and laughed.
-
-He was always like that, following the truth as he saw it, wherever
-it led him. But his active days were not many after that; ere long he
-was kicked by one of his horses, a vicious animal, half bronco, which
-he insisted on riding, and he was invalided for the rest of his days.
-He spent them in a wheel-chair, pushed about by a negro boy. It was a
-cross he bore bravely enough, without complaint, spending his hours
-in reading of politics, now that he could no longer participate in
-them, and more and more in reading verse, and even in committing it
-to memory, so that to the surprise of his family he soon replaced the
-grace he had always said at table with some recited stanza of poetry,
-and he took to cultivating, or to sitting in his chair while there was
-cultivated, under his direction, a little rose garden. He knew all
-those roses as though they were living persons: when a lady called,--if
-the roses were in bloom,--he would say to his colored house-boy:
-
-“Go cut off Madame Maintenon, and bring her here.”
-
-Then he would present Madame Maintenon to the caller with such a bow
-as he could make in his chair, and an apology for not rising. He was
-patient and brave, yet he did not like to feel the scepter passing
-from him, and he resented what he considered interferences with his
-liberties. One day when he had returned from a visit to an old friend,
-to whose home his colored boy had wheeled him, one of his daughters
-asked, in a somewhat exaggerated tone of propitiation:
-
-“Well, Father, how did you find Mr. Hovey?”
-
-“I found him master of his own house!” he blazed.
-
-In 1896 he supported Mr. Bryan, and his Republican neighbors said:
-
-“Poor old Major Brand! His mind must be affected!”
-
-It was an effort for him to get out to the polls, but he went,
-beholding in that conflict, as he could in any conflict however
-confused and clouded, the issue of free men above any other issue. He
-did not get out much after that, even when that last summer the few
-remnants of the 66th regiment gathered in Urbana to hold the annual
-reunion. He could not so much as get up town to greet his old comrades,
-and they sent word that in the afternoon they would march in review
-before his home. He was wheeled out on the veranda, and there he sat
-while his old regiment, the fifty or sixty gray, broken men, marched
-past. They saluted as they went by, and he returned the salutes with
-tears streaming down the cheeks where I had never seen tears before.
-And he said with a little choking laugh:
-
-“Why, look at the boys!”
-
-It was not long after, that six of us, his grandsons, bore him out
-of the old home forever. And on his coffin were the two things that
-expressed him best, I think--his roses and his flag.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-The incalculable influence of the spoken word and the consequent
-responsibility that weighs upon the lightest phrase have so long
-been urged that men might well go about with their fingers on their
-lips, oracular as presidential candidates, deliberating each thought
-before giving it wing. And yet, as Carlyle said of French speech, the
-immeasurable tide flows on and ebbs only toward the small hours of
-the morning. Though even then in certain quarters, the tide does not
-ebb, and in those hours truths are sometimes spoken--for instance, by
-newspaper reporters, who, their night’s work done, turn to each other
-for relaxation and speak those thoughts they have not dared to write in
-their chronicles of the day that is done. The thought itself is only
-a vagrant, encountered along the way back to such an evening, when
-a reporter uttered two little words that acquired for me a profound
-significance.
-
-“Oh, nothing.” Those were the exact words, just those two, and yet a
-negative so simple contained within itself such an affirmation of an
-awful truth, that I have never been able to forget them, though for a
-time I tried. Charlie R---- and I had gone one night, after the paper
-had gone to press, into a little restaurant in Chicago to get some
-supper. It was sometime in the year 1891, and, in our idle gossip, the
-hanging of the anarchists, then an event so recent that the reporters
-now and then spoke of it, had come up in our talk.
-
-“Where were you when that occurred?” he asked.
-
-“In Toledo,” I answered.
-
-“What did people think of it there?”
-
-“Of the hanging?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-I looked at him, I suppose, in some astonishment. What did people
-in Toledo think of the hanging of the Chicago anarchists! Could any
-question have been more stupid, more banal? What did any people,
-anywhere, think of it? What was customary, what was proper and
-appropriate and indispensable under such circumstances? In a word, what
-was there to do with anarchists except to hang them? Really, I was
-quite at a loss what to say. It seemed so superfluous, so ridiculous,
-as though he had asked what the people in Toledo thought of the world’s
-being round, or of the force of gravity. More than superfluous, it was
-callous; he might as well have asked what Toledo people thought of the
-hanging of Haman, the son of Hammedatha the Agagite, or of the suicide
-of Judas Iscariot. And I answered promptly in their defense:
-
-“Why, they thought it was right, of course.”
-
-He had his elbows on the table and was lighting a cigarette, and as
-he raised the match, his dark face, with its closely trimmed pointed
-beard, was suddenly and vividly illuminated by the yellow flame. His
-eyes were lowered, their vision fixed just then on the interesting
-process of igniting the end of the cigarette. But about his puckered
-lips, about his narrowed eyes there played a little smile, faint,
-elusive, and yet of a meaning so indubitable that it was altogether
-disconcerting. And in that instant I wondered--it could not be! It was
-preposterous, absurd!
-
-“Why?” I asked.
-
-“Oh, nothing,” he said.
-
-The end of the cigarette was glowing, little coils of fire in the tiny
-particles of tobacco; he blew out the match and the smile disappeared
-from his face with its ruddy illumination, and he tossed the charred
-stick into his coffee cup.
-
-Were there, then, two opinions? Was it possible that anyone doubted?
-When _anarchists_ were in question! Still, on that kindly face
-before me there lingered the shadow of that strange expression,
-inscrutable, perplexing, piquing curiosity. And yet by some strange,
-almost clairvoyant process, it had gradually acquired the effect of a
-persistent, irresistible and implacable authority, in the presence of
-which one felt--well, cheap, as though there were secrets from which
-one had been excluded, as though there were somewhere in this universe
-a stupendous joke which alone of all others one lacked the wit to see.
-It gave one a disturbed, uneasy sensation, a _mauvaise honte_.
-
-The innate sense of personal dignity, the instinct to retire into
-one’s self, the affectation of repose and self-sufficiency which leads
-one lightly to wave aside a subject one does not understand, to pass
-it over for other and more familiar topics--these were ineffectual.
-Curiosity perhaps in a sense much less refined than that in which
-Matthew Arnold considered it when he exalted it to the plane of the
-higher virtues, broke down reticence, and, at last I asked, and even
-begged my companion to tell me what he meant. But he was implacable; he
-had reached, it appeared, a stage of development in which the opinions
-of others were of no consequence; an altitude from which he could
-regard the race of men impersonally, and permit them to stumble on in
-error, without the desire to set them right. It was quite useless to
-question him, and in the end the only satisfaction he would give me was
-to say, with an effort of dismissing the subject:
-
-“Ask some of the boys.”
-
-For a young citizen to whom society is yet an illusion, lying, in
-Emerson’s figure, before him in rigid repose, with certain names, men
-and institutions rooted like oak-trees to the center, round which all
-arrange themselves the best they can, to have one of those oak-trees
-torn violently up by the roots, is to experience a distinct shock. And
-by two words, and an expression that played for an instant in lowered
-eyes, and about lips that were more concerned just then with the
-flattened end of a fresh cigarette than the divulgence of great truths!
-Yes, decidedly a shock, to leave one shaken for days. If there were any
-doubt as to what to do with anarchists, what was the use of going on
-with the study of the law? I went out from that cheap little restaurant
-in Fifth Avenue, into Chicago’s depressing midnight streets--and the
-oak tree never took root again. For, as Charlie R---- had lightly
-suggested, I asked the boys, and by the boys he meant, of course, the
-reporters.
-
-They were boys in spirit, though in the knowledge of this world they
-were as aged men, some of whom had seen so much of life that they
-were able to dwell with it only by refusing any longer to accept it
-seriously. They formed in that day an unusual group, gathered in the
-old Whitechapel Club, and many of their names have since become known
-to literature. They, or most of them, had worked on the anarchist
-cases, from the days of the strike in McCormick’s reaper works, down
-to the night when the vivid pen of Charlie Seymour could describe the
-spark that soared in a parabolic curve from the alley into Haymarket
-Square, and then to the black morning of the hanging; and they knew.
-
-It was all very simple, too. If it were not for the tragedy, and the
-wrong that is so much worse than any tragedy, one might almost laugh at
-the simplicity. It shows the power of words, the force of phrases, the
-obdurate and terrible tyranny of a term. The men who had been hanged
-were called anarchists, when, as it happens, they were men, just men.
-And out of that original error in terminology there was evolved that
-overmastering fear which raved and slew in a frenzy of passion that
-decades hence will puzzle the psychologist who studies the mind of
-the crowd. And the student of ethics will find in the event another
-proof of the inerrancy and power of that old law of moral action and
-reaction, according to which hatred ceaseth not by hatred, but by love
-alone. It may be found stated accurately and simply in the Sermon on
-the Mount, and there is still hope that Christendom, after another
-thousand years or so, may discover it, and drawing therefrom the law of
-social relations, apply it to human affairs, and so solve the problems
-that trouble and perplex mankind.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-In speaking of the group of newspaper writers who formed the
-Whitechapel Club, augmented as they were by artists, and musicians
-and physicians and lawyers, I would not give the impression that they
-were in any sense reformers, or actuated by the smug and forbidding
-spirit which too often inspires that species. They were, indeed,
-wisely otherwise, and they were, I think, wholly right minded in their
-attitude toward what are called public questions, and of these they had
-a deep and perspicacious understanding, and it will be easy to imagine
-that the cursory comments on passing phases of the human spectacle of
-such minds as those of Charles Goodyear Seymour, Finley Peter Dunne,
-George Ade, Ben King, Opie Reed, Alfred Henry Lewis, and his brother
-William E. Lewis, Frederick Upham Adams, Thomas E. Powers, Horace
-Taylor, Wallace Rice, Arthur Henry, and a score of others were apt to
-be entertaining and instructive, though they were uttered with such wit
-and humor that they were never intended to be instructive.
-
-The club had been founded late in the eighties, and although it endured
-less than ten years, it still lives in the minds of newspaper and
-literary men as one of the most remarkable of Bohemian clubs. It had
-its rooms in the rear of a little saloon, conducted by Henry Koster in
-“newspaper alley,” as Calhoun Place was more generally called, near
-the buildings of the _Chicago News_ and the _Chicago Herald_, and it
-somehow gathered to itself many of the clever men of Chicago who were
-writing for the press, and a few intimate spirits in other lines of
-work, but of sympathetic spirit. For a while the club was nameless, but
-one afternoon a group were sitting in one of the rooms when a newsboy
-passed through the alley and cried: “All about the latest Whitechapel
-murder!” Seymour paused with a stein of beer half lifted, and said:
-“We’ll call the new club the ‘Whitechapel Club.’”
-
-I suppose the grewsome connotations of the name led to our practice
-of collecting relics of the tragedies we were constantly reporting.
-When he came back from the Dakotas, where he had been reporting the
-Sioux War, Seymour brought back from the battles a number of skulls of
-Indians, and blankets drenched in blood, which were hung on the walls
-of the club. From that time on it became the practice of sheriffs
-and newspaper men everywhere to send anything of that kind to the
-Whitechapel Club. The result was that within a few years it had a large
-collection of skulls of criminals, and some physicians discovered,
-or thought they discovered, differences between these skulls and the
-skulls of those who were not criminals, or, if they were, had not been
-caught at it.
-
-These and the ropes of hangmen and the various mementos of crimes were
-the decorations of the club rooms, and on Saturday nights the hollow
-eyes of those skulls looked down on many a lively scene.
-
-Admission to the club was obtained in a peculiar way. An applicant
-for membership had his name proposed, and it was then posted on a
-bulletin-board. He was on probation for thirty days, during which he
-had to be at the club at least five days in the week, in order to
-become acquainted with the members. Within that time any member could
-tear his name down, and that ended his candidacy. When his name finally
-came up for voting it required the full vote of the club to get him in.
-
-And then we grew prosperous, and acquiring a building farther down the
-alley, we had it decorated in a somber manner, with a notable table,
-shaped like a coffin, around which we gathered. But the prosperity and
-the fame of the club led to its end. Rich and important men of Chicago
-sought membership. Some were admitted, then more, and as a result the
-club lost its Bohemian character, and finally disbanded.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-Those who are able to recall the symposium of these minds will no doubt
-always see the humorous face of Charlie Seymour as the center of the
-coterie, a young man with such a _flair_ for what was news, with such
-an instinct for word values, such real ability as a writer, and such
-a quaint and original strain of humor as to make him the peer of any,
-a young man who would have gone far and high could he have lived. An
-early fate overtook him, as it overtook Charlie Perkins and Charlie
-Almy and Ben King, but their fate had the mellowing kindness of the
-fact that all who knew them can never think of them, with however much
-regret, without a smile at some remembered instance of their unfailing
-humor.
-
-When I mentioned them, I had fully intended to give some instances of
-that humor, but when it was not of a raciness, it was of such a rare
-and delicate charm, such a fleeting, evanescent quality, that it is
-impossible to separate it from all that was going on about it. It is
-easy enough to recall if not to evoke again the scene in which Ben
-King and Charlie Almy, sitting for three hours at a stretch, gave a
-wholly impromptu impersonation of two solemn missionaries just returned
-from some unmapped wilderness and recounting their deeds in order to
-inspire contributions; it is not difficult either to recall the slight
-figure of Charlie Seymour, with his red hair, his comedian’s droll
-face, and to listen to him recounting those adventures which life
-was ever offering him, whether on one of his many journeys as a war
-correspondent to the region of the Dakotas when his friends among the
-Ogallalla and Brûlé Sioux were on the war-path again, or in some less
-picturesque tragedy he had been reporting nearer home--say a murder in
-South Clark Street; but, like so many of the keener joys of life, the
-charm of his stories was fleeting and gone with the moment that gave
-them.
-
-His humor colored everything he wrote, as the humor of Finley Peter
-Dunne colored everything he wrote; and both were skilled in the art
-of the news story. We were all reading Kipling in those days, and
-Mr. Dunne was so clever in adapting his terse style to the needs
-of the daily reportorial life that when one night a private shot a
-comrade in the barracks at Fort Sheridan, and Mr. Dunne was detailed
-to report the tragedy, he found it in every detail so exactly like
-Kipling’s story “In the Matter of a Private,” that he was overcome by
-the despair of having to write a tale that had already been told. He
-resisted the temptation, if there was any temptation, nobly and wrote
-the tale with a bald simplicity that no doubt enhanced its effect.
-He had not then begun to report the Philosophy of Mr. Dooley, though
-there was a certain Irishman in Chicago responsive to the name of
-Colonel Thomas Jefferson Dolan, whom, in his capacity of First Ward
-Democrat, Mr. Dunne frequently interviewed for his paper without the
-cramping influences of a previous visitation on the Colonel, and these
-interviews showed much of the color and spirit of those Dooley articles
-which later were to make him famous. He already knew, of course,
-and frequently enjoyed communion with the prototype of Mr. Dooley,
-Mr. James McGarry, who had a quaint philosophy of his own which Mr.
-Dunne one day rendered in a little article entitled “Mr. McGarry’s
-Philosophy.” The familiarity so wounded Mr. McGarry, however (he
-was a man of simple dignity and some sensitiveness), that Mr. Dunne
-thereafter adopted another name for the personage through which he was
-so long and so brilliantly to express himself, though it was not until
-after the Spanish War that the wide public was to recognize the talent
-which was already so abundantly recognized by Mr. Dunne’s friends.
-
-Charlie Seymour did not read as much as some of his companions;
-perhaps it was that fact that gave such an original flavor to what he
-wrote. His elder brother, Mr. Horatio W. Seymour, was the editor of
-the _Herald_, a newspaper famed for the taste and even beauty of its
-typographical appearance. It looked somewhat like the New York _Sun_,
-and under Mr. Seymour was as carefully edited. It was the organ of
-the Democracy in the northwest, and I suppose no direct or immediate
-influence was more potent in bringing on the wide Democratic victory in
-the congressional election of 1890 than the brilliant editorials on the
-tariff which Mr. Horatio Seymour wrote. They were, I remember, one of
-the delights of Frank Hurd, and it was through Hurd’s influence that I
-was on the staff of that paper, reporting political events.
-
-We were all more or less employed in reporting political events in
-that stirring year, and were kept busy in following and recording the
-sayings of the orators of both parties. It was characteristic of Mr.
-Dunne that after a sober column giving the gist of a speech by Joseph
-B. Foraker, then lately governor, and afterward senator of Ohio, in
-which he waved the bloody shirt in the fiery manner which in those
-days characterized him, Mr. Dunne should have concluded his article
-sententiously: “Then the audience went out to get the latest news of
-the battle of Gettysburg.”
-
-But it was typical of Charlie Seymour that when he was detailed to
-accompany Thomas B. Reed, Speaker of the Billion Dollar Congress, he
-should have been so fascinated by the whiskers of the Illinois farmers
-who crowded about the rear platform of the Speaker’s train, that he
-devoted half a column to a description of those adornments which long
-was celebrated as a classic in the traditions of Chicago reporters, to
-be recalled by them as they would recall, for instance, certain of the
-sayings of the late Joseph Medill.
-
-Mr. Medill, of course, moved in an element far above that which was
-natural to the reporters, and the figure of the great editor of the
-_Tribune_ filled the imagination completely. I used to like his
-low-tariff editorials, though they became high-tariff editorials during
-national campaigns, the rate of percentage of protection rising like a
-thermometer in the heat of political excitement,--a tendency the rate
-invariably reveals the nearer its objective is approached.
-
-Mr. Medill, as was well known, was not an admirer of President
-Harrison, and there came down into our world an evidence of the
-fact in a story which Mr. Frank Brooks, a political writer on the
-_Tribune_, told us. It was at the time that President Harrison made
-one of those speaking tours which, beginning with President Johnson’s
-“swing around the circle,” have grown increasingly familiar to those
-of the electorate who observe their presidents and rush to the railway
-station to hear them speaking as they flash by. His managing editor had
-assigned Mr. Brooks to go to Galesburg, catch the President’s special
-and make the journey with him, and just as he was giving directions as
-to the column or two which Mr. Brooks was to send in daily, Mr. Medill
-went shuffling through the editorial room, bearing a great pile of
-those foreign exchanges he was so fond of reading. The managing editor
-explained to Mr. Medill the mission he was committing to Mr. Brooks,
-and the old editor stood a moment looking at them, then raised his
-ear-trumpet and said in his queer voice:
-
-“What did you say?”
-
-“I said, I’d just been telling Mr. Brooks to go down to Galesburg
-to-night, catch the President’s special, and send us a column or so
-each night of his speeches.”
-
-“Uh-huh,” said Mr. Medill, and then he drily added: “_What for?_”
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-It was, of course, for a young correspondent who hod an eager curiosity
-about life, an interesting experience to go on a journey like that, and
-it was with delight that, one snowy morning in the late autumn of that
-year, I left Chicago to go on a little trip down through Indiana with
-James G. Blaine. He was the secretary of state in President Harrison’s
-cabinet, a position in which, as it turned out, he was unhappy, as most
-men are apt to be in public positions, though a sort of cruel and evil
-fascination will not let them give up the vain pursuit of them, vainest
-perhaps when they are won. When I reached the station that morning,
-Mr. Blaine was already there, walking up and down the platform arm in
-arm with his son Emmons. He was a gray man, dressed in gray clothes,
-with spats made of the cloth of his habit, and there was about him
-an air of vague sadness, which in his high countenance became almost
-a pain, though just then, in the companionship of the son he loved,
-there was, for a little while, the expression of a mild happiness,
-maybe a solace. His face was of a grayish, almost luminous pallor, and
-his silver hair and beard were in the same key. William Walter Phelps,
-then our minister to Germany, was traveling with him, and on our way
-down to South Bend the constant entrance of plain citizens from the
-other coaches into our car filled Mr. Phelps with a kind of wonder.
-Commercial travelers, farmers, all sorts and conditions of men, entered
-and introduced themselves to Mr. Blaine, and he sat and talked with
-them all in that simplicity which marks the manners, even if it has
-departed the spirit of the republic.
-
-“It is a remarkable sight you are witnessing,” said Mr. Phelps to us
-reporters, “a sight you could witness in no other country in the world.
-There is the premier of a great government, and yet the commonest man
-may approach him without ceremony, and talk to him as though he were
-nobody.”
-
-Fresh from his life at a foreign court, he was viewing events from
-that foreign point of view, perhaps thinking just then in European
-sequences, and since there was such simplicity, it was not hard for
-any of us to have conversation with our premier. Mr. Blaine had just
-come from Ohio where he had been speaking in McKinley’s district, and
-he understood the political situation so perfectly that he said, in the
-frankness of a conversation that was not to be reported, that McKinley
-was certain to be defeated; indeed he foresaw, though it required no
-very great vision to do that, the reverse that was to overtake his
-party in the congressional elections.
-
-With my interest in the tariff question, which then seemed to me so
-fundamental, I did not lose the opportunity to ask Mr. Blaine about
-his reciprocity project: but after a while the conversation turned
-to more personal subjects. When he learned that I was from Ohio, he
-asked me suddenly if I could name the counties that formed the several
-congressional districts of the state. I could not, of course, do that,
-and I supposed no one in the world could do it or ever wish to do it;
-but he could, and with a naïve pride in the accomplishment he did, and
-then astounded me by saying that he could almost match the feat with
-any state in the Union.
-
-It was the only enthusiasm the poor man showed all that day, and
-when we reached South Bend, there was a _contretemps_ that might
-have afforded Mr. Phelps further food for reflection on the lack of
-ceremony in America. When the premier stepped off the train into the
-wet mass of snow that covered the dirty platform of the ugly little
-station, there was nowhere to be seen any evidence of a reception
-for the distinguished guest. There was an old hack, or ’bus, one of
-those rattling, shambling, moth-eaten vehicles that await the incoming
-train at every small town in our land, with a team of forlorn horses
-depressed by the weather or by life, but there was no committee of
-eminent citizens, no band, nothing. The scene was bare and bleak and
-cold, and the premier was plainly disgusted.
-
-He stood there a moment and looked about him undecided, while Mr.
-Phelps with sympathetic concern displayed great willingness to serve,
-but was as helpless as his chief. The American sovereigns who were
-loafing by the station shed looked on with the reticent detachment
-which characterizes the rural American. And then the train slowly
-pulled out and left us, and Mr. Blaine cast at it a glance of longing
-and of reproach, as though in its sundering of the last tie with the
-world of comfort, he had suffered the final indignity. There seemed to
-be no course other than to take the ’bus, when suddenly a committee
-rushed up, out of breath and out of countenance, and with a chorus
-of apologies explained that they had met the wrong train, or gone to
-another station, and so bore the premier off in triumph to dine at some
-rich man’s house.
-
-The day seemed to grow worse as it progressed, as days ill begun have
-a way of doing, and when the premier in the afternoon appeared at the
-meeting he was to address, his spirits had not improved, and even if
-they had, the meeting was one to depress the spirits of any man. It
-assembled in a barren hall, a kind of skating rink, or something of the
-sort, that would have served better for a boxing match. The audience
-was small, and standing about in the mud and slush they had “tramped
-in,” to use our midwestern phrase, they displayed that bucolic
-indifference which can daunt the most exuberant speaker. It was in no
-way worthy of the man, and Mr. Blaine spoke with evident difficulty,
-and so wholly lacked spirit and enthusiasm that it was impossible for
-him to warm up to his subject. The speech was of that perfunctory sort
-which such an atmosphere compels, one of those speeches the speaker
-drags out, a word at a time, and is glad to be done with, and Mr.
-Blaine bore with his fates a little while, and then almost abruptly
-closed. He spoke on the tariff issue, and in defense of the McKinley
-Bill, and in marshaling the evidences of our glory and prosperity,
-all of which he attributed to the direct influence of the protective
-tariff system, he mentioned the number of miles of railroad that had
-been built, and even the increase in the nation’s population! The
-speech and the occasion afforded an opportunity to a newspaper of the
-opposition, which in those days of silly partizanship, was not to be
-overlooked. I went back to the little hotel and wrote my story, and
-since I had all the while in my mind not only partizan advantage, but
-the smiles that would break out on the countenances of Charlie Seymour
-and Peter Dunne and the other boys gathered in the Whitechapel Club I
-did not minimise the effect of all those babies who had come to life as
-a result of the protective tariff, nor all those ironical difficulties
-the day had heaped upon the great man. It was not, perhaps, quite fair,
-nor quite nice, but it was as fair and as nice as newspaper ethics
-and political etiquette--if there are such things--require, and Mr.
-Blaine himself most have had some consciousness of his partial failure,
-some dissatisfaction with his effort, for I was just about to put my
-story on the wire at six o’clock when he appeared, with his rich host,
-and asked for me. I talked to him through the little wicket of the
-telegraph office, and the conversation began inauspiciously by the rich
-man’s peremptorily commanding me to let him see my stuff; he wished,
-he said, to “look it over”! I was not as patient with his presumption
-then as I think I could be now, for I had not learned that it was the
-factory system that produces such types, men who bully the women at
-home and the women and clerks and operatives in their shops, and I
-denied him the right, of course. He became very angry, and blustered
-through the little window, while the operator, an old telegrapher I
-had known in Toledo, sat behind me waiting to send the story clicking
-into Chicago on _The Herald’s_ wire. After the rich man had exhausted
-himself, Mr. Blaine took his place at the window and in a mild and calm
-manner, asked me for my copy, saying that he was not well, and that
-he had made some slips in his speech which he did not care to have go
-to the country. It was those unfortunate or fortunate babies of the
-protective tariff system, and he said that the correspondent of a press
-association had agreed to make the excisions if I would do so, and he
-would consider it a favor if I would oblige him.
-
-The charm of his manner had been on me all that day, and I had been
-feeling sorry for him all day, too, and I was sorrier for him then
-than ever, and half ashamed of some of the things I had written, but
-I explained to him that I had been sent by my paper in the hope that
-he might say something to the disadvantage of his own cause, and that
-my duty was to report, at least, what he had said. It was one of the
-hardest “noes” I ever had to say, and at last as he turned away, I
-regretted, perhaps more than he, and certainly more than he ever knew,
-that I could not let him revise his speech--since that is what most of
-us desire to do with most of our speeches.
-
-When that campaign ended in the overthrow of the Republican majority in
-Congress, and I was sent to interview Ben Butterworth on the result,
-he said, in his humorous way: “The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken
-away; blessed be the name of the Lord.” He was not altogether cast
-down by the result; in his place in Congress as a representative from
-a Cincinnati district he had risen to denounce the tariff, and so had
-his consolation. To me it seemed as if the people had at last entered
-the promised land, that that was the day the Lord had made for his
-people, but Mr. Butterworth could point out that our government was not
-so democratic as the British government, for instance, since it was
-not so responsive to the people’s will. Over there, of course, after
-such a reverse the government would have retired, and a new one would
-have been formed, but here the existing administration would remain in
-power two years longer, and then, even if it lost in the presidential
-election over a year must elapse before a new Congress would convene,
-so that the millennium was postponed a good three years at least.
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-
-However, there were other interests and other delights with which to
-occupy one’s self meanwhile, not the least of which was Mr. Butterworth
-himself. He was then out of Congress and in Chicago as Solicitor
-General of the World’s Columbian Exposition, for which Chicago was
-preparing. For a while I was relieved from writing about politics, and
-assigned to the World’s Fair, and there were so many distinguished men
-from all over the nation associated in that enterprise that it was
-very much like politics in its superficial aspects. There was, for
-instance, the World’s Columbian Commission, a body created under the
-authority of Congress, composed of two commissioners from each state,
-appointed by its governor, and that body exactly the size of the senate
-was like it in personnel and character. The witty Thomas E. Palmer of
-Michigan was its president, and there were among its membership such
-men as Judge Lindsay, later senator from Kentucky, Judge Harris of
-Virginia, who looked like George Washington, and many other delightful
-and pungent characters. But no personality among them all was more
-interesting than Colonel James A. McKenzie, Judge Lindsay’s colleague
-from Kentucky. He was tall and spare of frame, and his long moustache
-and goatee, and the great black slouch hat he wore made him in
-appearance the typical southerner of the popular imagination. He was
-indeed the typical southerner by every right and tradition, by birth,
-by his services in the Confederate army, by his stately courtesy, by
-his love of sentiment and the picturesque, by his wit and humor and
-eloquence, and his fondness for phrases. His humor sparkled in his kind
-blue eyes, and it overflowed in that brilliant conversation with which
-he delighted everyone about him; he could entertain you by the hour
-with his comments on all phases of that life in which he found such
-zest. He had been known as “Quinine Jim,” because as congressman he
-had secured the reduction or the abolition of the duty on that drug,
-so indispensable in malarial lands. He was fond of striking phrases;
-he it was who had referred to Blaine as a Florentine mosaic; and his
-reference to Mrs. Cleveland as “the uncrowned queen of America” had
-delighted the Democratic convention at St. Louis which renominated her
-husband for the presidency. And again at Chicago, on that memorable
-night of oratory in 1892 in seconding the nomination of Cleveland on
-behalf of Kentucky he stood on a chair and referred to his state as the
-commonwealth “in which, thank God, the damned lie is the first lick,
-where the women are so beautiful that the aurora borealis blushes with
-shame, where the whiskey is so good as to make intoxication a virtue,
-and the horses so fleet that lightning in comparison is but a puling
-paralytic.”
-
-During one of many pleasant afternoons in the old Grand Pacific Hotel
-he began to tell us something about the chronic office holders to
-be found in the capital of his state, as in most states, and said:
-“If God in a moment of enthusiasm should see fit to snatch them to
-His bosom I should regard it as a dispensation of divine providence
-in which I could acquiesce with a fervor that would be turbulent and
-even riotous.” It was in this stream of exaggeration and hyperbole
-that he talked all the time, but with the coming of the winter of that
-year my opportunities of listening to him were cut off. I was sent to
-Springfield to report the sessions of the legislature. In the spring
-a bill was under discussion for the appropriation of a large sum in
-aid of the World’s Fair, and when the usual opposition developed among
-those country members who have so long governed our cities in dislike
-and distrust of the people in them, a delegation came down from Chicago
-to lobby for the measure. It was not long until it was evident that
-they were not making much headway; the difference, the distinction
-in their dress and manner, their somewhat too lofty style were only
-making matters worse. I took it upon myself to telegraph to James W.
-Scott, the publisher of _The Herald_, apprising him of the situation,
-and suggesting that Colonel McKenzie be sent down to reënforce them.
-I felt that he would perhaps understand the country members better
-because he understood humanity better, and besides, I wished to see
-him again and hear his stories and funny sayings. He came, and after
-he had associated with the members a day or so, and they had seen him
-draw Kentucky “twist” from the deep pocket of the long tails of his
-coat, and on one or two occasions had watched him gently pinch into a
-julep the tender sprigs of mint the spring had brought to Springfield,
-the appropriation for some reason was made. While he was there he said
-he wished to visit the tomb of Lincoln, and it was with pride that I
-got an open carriage and drove him, on an incomparable morning in June,
-out to Oak Ridge cemetery. He was in a solemn mood that morning; the
-visit had a meaning for him; he had fought on the other side in the
-great war, but he had a better conception of the character of the noble
-martyr than many a northerner, especially of the day when that tomb
-was built, certainly a nobler conception of that lofty character than
-is expressed in Mead’s cruel war groups--as though Lincoln had been
-merely some shoulder-strapped murderer of his fellow men! The Colonel
-had never been there before, and it was an occasion for him, and for
-me, too, though every time I went there it was for me an occasion, as
-my sojourn in Springfield was an opportunity, to induce those who had
-known Lincoln to talk about him.
-
-The tomb has a chamber in its base where there were stored a number of
-things; the place, indeed, was a sort of cheap museum, and you paid to
-enter there and listen to an aged custodian lecture on the “relics,”
-and thrill the gaping onlooker with the details of the attempt to
-steal the body, and buy a book about it, if you were morbid and silly
-enough. The custodian began his lecture in that chamber, and then led
-you out into the sunlight again, and up on the base of the monument,
-and showed you the bronze fighters, and at last, took you down into the
-crypt, on the brow of the little down that overlooks the cemetery.
-
-There at last Colonel McKenzie stood beside the sarcophagus and after
-a while the custodian came to the end of his rigmarole, and, by some
-mercy, was still. And I stood aside and looked at the old Confederate
-officer, standing there in that cool entrance, beside the very tomb of
-Lincoln. He stood with his arms folded on his breast, his tall form
-slightly bent, his big hat in his hand, and his white head bowed; he
-stood there a long time, in the perfect silence of that June morning,
-with thoughts, I suppose, that might have made an epic.
-
-When at last he turned away and went around to the front of the
-monument, and we were about to enter our carriage, he turned, and still
-uncovered, over the little gate in the low fence that enclosed the
-spot, he paused and gave his hand to the old custodian, and said:
-
-“Colonel, I wish to express to you my appreciation of the privilege
-I have had this morning of paying my respects at the shrine of the
-greatest American that ever lived.”
-
-He said it solemnly and sincerely, and then, still holding the
-delighted old fellow’s hand, he went on in profound gravity:
-
-“And I cannot go away without expressing my sense of satisfaction
-in the eloquent oration you have delivered on this occasion. I was
-particularly impressed, sir, by its evident lack of previous thought
-and preparation.”
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-
-That was the legislature which elected John M. Palmer to the United
-States Senate from Illinois. The election was accomplished only after a
-memorable deadlock of two months in which the Democrats of the general
-assembly stood so nobly, shoulder to shoulder, that they were called
-“The Immortal 101.” When they were finally reënforced by the votes of
-two members elected as representatives of the Farmers’ Alliance, and
-elected their man, they had a gold medal struck to commemorate their
-own heroism. They were not, perhaps, exactly immortal, but they did
-stand for their principles so stanchly that when they came to celebrate
-their victory, some of their orators compared them to those other
-immortals who held Thermopylæ.
-
-Their principle was the popular election of United States senators, and
-they had a fine exemplar of democracy in their candidate. He had been
-nominated by a state convention, as had Lincoln, whom General Palmer
-had known intimately and had supported both for senator and president.
-He was the last of those great figures of Illinois whom the times
-immediately preceding the Civil War had so abundantly brought forth.
-He had commanded an army corps, he had been governor of his state, and
-in 1872 a presidential possibility in the Republican party. But he had
-turned to the Democrats, and after he became their senator, the first
-Illinois had known since Douglas, he became a presidential possibility
-in the Democratic party; that was in 1892, and whatever chances he had
-he destroyed himself by coming on from Washington and declaring for
-Grover Cleveland.
-
-Four years later he was nominated for the presidency by the
-conservative faction of his party. He told me, when I was finishing
-my law studies under him, that he had never lost anything politically
-by bolting any of the several parties he had been in, but had usually
-gained in self respect by doing so; and if to the politician his whole
-career presented inconsistencies, to the man of principle he must seem
-wholly consistent and sincere. Certain it is that he followed that
-inward spirit which alone can guide a man through the perplexities of
-life, and so the principle with him came ever before the party.
-
-He was a simple man with simple tastes, and his very simplicity was
-an element of that dignity which seemed to belong to other times than
-ours. The familiar figure of him along the quiet streets of Springfield
-was pleasing to men and to children alike; he would go along erectly
-and slowly under his great broad hat, a striking figure with his
-plentiful white hair, his closely trimmed chin whiskers, the broad,
-smoothly shaven upper lip distinguishing a countenance that was of
-a type associated with the earlier ideals of the republic, and the
-market basket he carried on his arm helped this effect. At home he was
-delightful; he had a viol, and used to play it, if there were not too
-many about to hear him, and if he were alone, sing a few staves of
-old songs, like “Darling Nelly Gray,” and “Rosie Lee, Courting Down
-in Tennessee,” and some of the old tunes he had learned in Kentucky
-as a boy. He liked poetry, if it were not of the introspective modern
-mood, and while I have heard of such extraordinary characters, I never
-believed the stories of their endurance, until I was able to discover
-in him one man who actually did read Sir Walter Scott’s novels through
-every year. For the most part he had some member of his family read
-them to him, and he found in them the naïve pleasure of a child. I
-used to think I would remember the things he was always saying, and
-the stories he was always telling about Lincoln or Douglas or Grant,
-but I never could keep note-books and the more imposing sayings have
-departed. Yet there flashes before the memory with the detail of a
-cinematograph that scene of a winter’s evening when I entered the big
-living-room in his home and there found him with his wife before the
-great open fire. She was reading aloud to him from “Ivanhoe.”
-
-“Come in, Mr. Brand,” he always addressed me by prefixing “Mr.” to my
-Christian name. “Come in,” he called in his hearty voice. “We are just
-storming a castle.”
-
-He lived on to the century’s end, with a sort of gusto in life that
-never failed, I think, until that day when he attended the funeral
-of the last of his old contemporaries, General John M. McClernand,
-that fierce old warrior who had quarreled with Grant and lived on in
-Springfield until he could fight no more with anyone. Senator Palmer
-came home from his funeral amused by the fact that McClernand had
-been buried in the full uniform of a major-general, which he had not
-worn, I suppose, since Vicksburg. When some member of Senator Palmer’s
-household asked him if he should like to be buried in his uniform, he
-shook his head against it, but added:
-
-“It was all right for Mac; it was like him.”
-
-But the end was in his thoughts; Oglesby was gone, and now McClernand
-as the last of the men with whom he had fought in the great crisis, and
-he went, pretty soon after that, himself. He had participated in two
-great revolutionary epochs of his nation, going through the one and
-penetrating though not so far into the second, a long span of life and
-experience.
-
-It was perhaps natural that he should not have divined the implications
-of the second phase as clearly as he did those of the first; and though
-he had helped to inaugurate the new movement, the latest urge toward
-democracy in this land, he could not go so far. He was young in ’56 and
-old in ’96, and as we grow old we grow conservative, whether we would
-or not, and much, I suppose, in the same way.
-
-
-
-
-XII
-
-
-Senator Palmer’s victory in 1891, however, had raised the hopes of the
-Illinois Democracy for 1892, and it was early in that year that I came
-to know one of the most daring pioneers of the neo-democratic movement
-in America, and the most courageous spirit of our times.
-
-It was on a cold raw morning that I met Joseph P. Mahony, then a
-Democratic member of the State Senate, who said:
-
-“Come with me and I’ll introduce you to the next governor of Illinois.”
-
-It was the time of year when one was meeting the next governor of
-Illinois in most of the hotel corridors, or men who were trying to look
-like potential governors of Illinois, so that such a remark was not to
-be taken too literally; but I went, and after ascending to an upper
-floor of a narrow little building in Adams Street, we entered a suite
-of law offices, and there in a very much crowded, a very much littered
-and a rather dingy little private room, at an odd little walnut desk,
-sat John P. Altgeld.
-
-The figure was not prepossessing; he wore his hair close-clipped in
-ultimate surrender to an obstinate cowlick; his beard was closely
-trimmed, too, and altogether the countenance was one made for the hands
-of the cartoonists, who in the brutal fury that was so soon to blaze
-upon him and to continue to blaze until it had consumed him quite,
-could easily contort the features to the various purposes of an ugly
-partizanship; they gave it a peculiarly sinister quality, and it is one
-of the countless ironies of life that a face, sad with all the utter
-woe of humanity, should have become for a season, and in some minds
-remained forever, the type and symbol of all that is most abhorrent.
-There was a peculiar pallor in the countenance, and the face was such
-a blank mask of suffering and despair that, had it not been for the
-high intelligence that shone from his eyes, it must have impressed
-many as altogether lacking in expression. Certainly it seldom or never
-expressed enthusiasm, or joy, or humor, though he had humor of a
-certain mordant kind, as many a political opponent was to know.
-
-He had been a judge of the Circuit Court, and was known by his
-occasional addresses, his interviews and articles, as a publicist of
-radical and humanitarian tendencies. He was known especially to the
-laboring classes and to the poor, who, by that acute sympathy they
-possess, divined in him a friend, and in the circles of sociological
-workers and students, then so small and obscure as to make their views
-esoteric, he was recognized as one who understood and sympathized with
-their tendencies and ideals. He was accounted in those days a wealthy
-man,--he was just then building one of those tall and ugly structures
-of steel called “sky-scrapers,”--and now that he was spoken of for
-governor this fact made him seem “available” to the politicians. Also
-he had a German name, another asset in Illinois just then, when Germans
-all over the state felt themselves outraged by legislation concerning
-the “little red school-house,” which the Republicans had enacted when
-they were in full power in the state.
-
-But my paper did not share this enthusiasm about him; it happened to
-be owned by John R. Walsh, and between Walsh and Altgeld there was a
-feud, a feud that cost Altgeld his fortune, and lasted until the day
-that death found him poor and crushed by all the tragedy which a closer
-observer, one with a keener prescience of destiny than I, might have
-read in his face from the first.
-
-The feeling of the paper, if one may so personalize a corporation as
-to endow it with emotion, was not corrected by his nomination, and
-_The Herald_ had little to say of him, and what it did say was given
-out in the perfunctory tone of a party organ. But as the summer wore
-on, and I was able to report to my editors that all the signs pointed
-to Altgeld’s election, I was permitted to write an article in which
-I tried to describe his personality and to give some impression of
-the able campaign he was making. Horace Taylor drew some pictures to
-illustrate it, and I had the satisfaction of knowing that it gave
-Altgeld pleasure, while at the same time to me at least it revealed for
-an instant the humanness of the man.
-
-He sent for me--he was then in offices in his new sky-scraper--and
-asked if I could procure for him Horace Taylor’s pictures; he hesitated
-a moment, and then, as though it were a weakness his Spartan nature was
-reluctant to reveal, he told me that he intended to have my article
-republished in a newspaper in Mansfield, Ohio, the town whence he had
-come, where he had taught school, and where he had met the gracious
-lady who was his wife. He talked for a while that afternoon about his
-youth, about his poverty and his struggles, and then suddenly lapsed
-into a silence, with his eyes fastened on me. I wondered what he was
-looking at; his gaze was disconcerting, and it made me self-conscious
-and uneasy, till he said:
-
-“Where could one get a cravat like the one you have on?”
-
-It was, I remember--because of the odd incident--an English scarf of
-blue, quite new. I had tried to knot it as Ben Cable of the Democratic
-National Committee knotted his, and it seemed that such a little
-thing should not be wanting to the happiness of a man who, by all the
-outward standards, had so much to gratify him as Altgeld had, and I
-said--with some embarrassment, and some doubt as to the taste I was
-exhibiting--“Why, you may have this one.”
-
-In a moment his face changed, the mask fell, and he shook his head and
-said: “No, it would not look like that on me.”
-
-After his election it was suggested to me that I might become
-his secretary, but I declined; in my travels over the state as a
-political correspondent I was always meeting aged men, seemingly quite
-respectable and worthy and entirely well meaning, who were introduced
-not so much by name as such and such a former governor’s private
-secretary; though like the moor which Browning crossed, they had
-
- ... names of their own,
- And a certain use in the world, no doubt.
-
-But I did take a position in the office of the secretary of state that
-offered the opportunity I had been longing for; I wished to finish
-my law studies, and, deeper down than any ambition for the bar, I was
-nourishing a desire to write, or if it does not seem too pretentious,
-an ambition in literature; and neither of these aims could well be
-accomplished, say from midnight on, after working all day on a morning
-newspaper.
-
-It was a pleasant change. Springfield was lovely in the spring, which
-came to it earlier than it visited Chicago, and it was a relief to
-escape the horrid atmosphere of a great brutal city which as a reporter
-it had seemed my fate to behold for the most part at night. There was a
-sense of spaciousness in the green avenues of the quiet town, and there
-was pleasant society, and better perhaps than all there were two big
-libraries in the Capitol, the law library of the Supreme Court and the
-state library; and after the noisy legislature had adjourned a peace
-fell on the great, cool stone pile that was almost academic.
-
-Twice or thrice a day Governor Altgeld was to be seen passing
-through its vast corridors, his head bent thoughtfully, rapt afar
-from the things about him in those dreams of social amelioration
-which had visited him so much earlier than they came to most of his
-contemporaries. He had read much, and during his residence there the
-executive mansion had the atmosphere of intellectual culture. Whenever
-I went over there, which I did now and then with his secretary for
-luncheon or for an evening at cards, our talk was almost always of
-books.
-
-We were all reading George Meredith in those days, and Meredith’s
-greater contemporary, Thomas Hardy. “Tess” had just appeared, and
-it would be about that time that “Jude” was running as a serial in
-_Harper’s Magazine_, though with many elisions and under its tentative
-titles of “The Simpleton” and “Hearts Insurgent”; and we all fell
-completely under a fascination which has never failed of its weird
-and mysterious charm, so that I have read all his works, down to his
-latest poems, over and over again. Hardy is, perhaps, the greatest
-intelligence on our planet now that Tolstoy, from whom he so vastly
-differed, is gone, and Altgeld’s whole career might have served him,
-had he ever chosen to write of those experiences that are less implicit
-in human nature, and more explicit in the superficial aspects of public
-careers, as an example of his own pagan theory of the contrariety of
-human affairs and the spite of the Ironic Spirits.
-
-I was reading, too, the novels of Mr. William Dean Howells, as I always
-have been whenever there was a moment to spare, and it was with a shock
-of peculiar delight and a sense of corroboration almost authoritative
-that I learned that Mr. Howells also had given voice to those very same
-profound and troubling convictions which Charlie R---- had set me on
-the track of two years before.
-
-
-
-
-XIII
-
-
-It was not in any one of Mr. Howells’s novels or essays, except
-inferentially, that I learned this, but among some musty documents the
-worms were eating up away down in the foundations of the State House.
-
-My work in the office of the secretary of state involved the care of
-the state’s archives. The oldest of these were stored in a vault in
-the cellar of the huge pile, and the discovery had just been made that
-some kind of insect, which the state entomologist knew all about,
-was riddling those records with little holes,--piercing them through
-and through. In consequence a new vault was prepared, and steel
-filing cases were set up in it, and the records removed to this safer
-sanctuary.
-
-It was a tedious and stupid task, until we came one day to file what
-were called the papers in the anarchist case. Officially they related
-to the application for the commutation of the sentences of the four
-men, Spies, Engel, Fischer, and Parsons, who had been hanged, and for
-the pardon of the three who were then confined in the penitentiary
-at Joliet, Fielden and Schwab for life, and old Oscar Neebe for
-fifteen years. Fielden and Schwab had been sentenced to death with
-the four who had been killed, but Governor Oglesby had commuted their
-sentences to imprisonment for life; Neebe’s original sentence had
-been for the fifteen years he was then serving. The papers consisted
-of communications to the governor, great petitions, and letters and
-telegrams, many sent in mercy, and some in the spirit of reason, asking
-for clemency, many in a wild hysteria of fear, and the hideous hate
-that is born of fear, begging the governor to let “justice” take its
-course.
-
-There were the names of many prominent men and women signed to these
-communications; among them was a request signed by many authors in
-England requesting clemency, but there was no appeal stronger, and no
-protest braver, than that in the letter which Mr. Howells had written
-to a New York newspaper analyzing the case and showing the amazing
-injustice of the whole proceeding. Mr. Howells had first gone, so
-he told me in after years, to the aged poet Whittier, whose gentle
-philosophy might have moved him to a mood against that public wrong,
-and then to George William Curtis, but they had advised him to write
-the protest himself, and he had done so, and he had done it better
-and more bravely than either of them could have done out of the great
-conscience and the great heart that have always been on the side of
-the weak and the oppressed, with a mercy which when it is practised
-by mankind is always so much nearer the right and the divine than our
-crude and generally cruel attempts at justice can ever be.
-
-But all these prayers had fallen on official ears that--to use a
-grotesque figure--were so closely pressed to the ground that they could
-not hear; and there was nothing to do, since they were so many and so
-bulky that no latest-improved and patented steel filing-case could hold
-them, but to have a big box made and lock them up in that for all time,
-forgotten, like so many other records of injustice, out of the minds of
-men.
-
-But not entirely; injustice was never for long out of the mind of John
-P. Altgeld, and during all those first months of his administration he
-had been brooding over this notable instance of injustice, and he had
-come to his decision. He knew the cost to him; he had just come to the
-governorship of his state, and to the leadership of his party, after
-its thirty years of defeat, and he realized what powerful interests
-would be frightened and offended if he were to turn three forgotten men
-out of prison; he understood how partizanship would turn the action to
-its advantage.
-
-It mattered not that most of the thoughtful men in Illinois would tell
-you that the “anarchists” had been improperly convicted, that they
-were not only entirely innocent of the murder of which they had been
-accused, but were not even anarchists; it was simply that the mob had
-convicted them in one of the strangest frenzies of fear that ever
-distracted a whole community, a case which all the psychologists of all
-the universities in the world might have tried, without getting at the
-truth of it--much less a jury in a criminal court.
-
-And so, one morning in June, very early, I was called to the governor’s
-office, and told to make out pardons for Fielden, Neebe, and Schwab.
-“And do it yourself,” said the governor’s secretary, “and don’t say
-anything about it to anybody.”
-
-I cannot tell in what surprise, in what a haze, or with what emotions
-I went about that task. I got the blanks and the records, and, before
-the executive clerk, whose work it was, had come down, I made out those
-three pardons, in the largest, roundest hand I could command, impressed
-them with the Great Seal of State, had the secretary of state sign
-them, and took them over to the governor’s office. I was admitted to
-his private room, and there he sat, at his great flat desk. The only
-other person in the room was Dreier, a Chicago banker, who had never
-wearied, it seems, in his efforts to have those men pardoned. He was
-standing, and was very nervous; the moment evidently meant much to him.
-The Governor took the big sheets of imitation parchment, glanced over
-them, signed his name to each, laid down the pen, and handed the papers
-across the table to Dreier. The banker took them, and began to say
-something. But he only got as far as----
-
-“Governor, I hardly”--when he broke down and wept. Altgeld made an
-impatient gesture; he was gazing out of the window in silence, on the
-elm-trees in the yard. He took out his watch, told Dreier he would miss
-his train--Dreier was to take the Alton to Joliet, deliver the pardons
-to the men in person, and go on into Chicago with them that night--and
-Dreier nervously rolled up the pardons, took up a little valise, shook
-hands, and was gone.
-
-On the table was a high pile of proofs of the document in which
-Governor Altgeld gave the reasons for his action. It was an able paper;
-one might well rank it among state papers, and I suppose no one now, in
-these days, when so many of Altgeld’s democratic theories are popular,
-would deny that his grounds were just and reasonable, or that he had
-done what he could to right a great wrong; though he would regret that
-so great a soul should have permitted itself to mar the document by
-expressions of hatred of the judge who tried the case. But perhaps it
-is not so easy to be calm and impersonal in the midst of the moving
-event, as it is given to others to be long afterward.
-
-But whatever feelings he may have had, he was calm and serene ever
-after. I saw him as I was walking down to the Capitol the next morning.
-It was another of those June days which now and then are so perfect
-on the prairies. The Governor was riding his horse--he was a gallant
-horseman--and he bowed and smiled that faint, wan smile of his, and
-drew up to the curb a moment. There was, of course, but one subject
-then, and I said:
-
-“Well, the storm will break now.”
-
-“Oh, yes,” he replied, with a not wholly convincing air of throwing off
-a care, “I was prepared for that. It was merely doing right.”
-
-I said something to him then to express my satisfaction in the great
-deed that was to be so wilfully, recklessly, and cruelly misunderstood.
-I did not say all I might have said, for I felt that my opinions could
-mean so little to him. I have wished since that I had said more,--said
-something, if that might have been my good fortune, that could perhaps
-have made a great burden a little easier for that brave and tortured
-soul. But he rode away with that wan, persistent smile. And the storm
-did break, and the abuse it rained upon him broke his heart; but I
-never again heard him mention the anarchist case.
-
-
-
-
-XIV
-
-
-The newspapers were so extravagant in their abuse of Governor Altgeld
-for his pardon of the anarchists that one not knowing the facts might
-have received the impression that the Governor had already pardoned
-most of the prisoners in the penitentiary, and would presently pardon
-those that remained, provided the crimes they had committed, or were
-said to have committed, had been heinous enough. The fact was that he
-issued no more pardons, proportionately at least, than the governors
-who preceded him, since notwithstanding the incessant grinding of
-society’s machinery of vengeance the populations of prisons grow with
-the populations outside of them.
-
-But partizanship was intense in those days; and the fact that Governor
-Altgeld was responsible for such a hegira from the Capitol at
-Springfield as Colonel McKenzie had longed to behold in the Capitol
-at Frankfort exacerbated the bitter feeling. The sentiment thus
-created, however, did increase the hopes of convicts, and the Governor
-was continually importuned by their friends--those of them that had
-friends, which was apt to be a pitifully small percentage of the whole
-number--to give them back their liberty. A few weeks after the pardons
-had been issued to the anarchists, George Brennan of Braidwood, then a
-clerk in the State House, told me a moving story of a young man of his
-acquaintance, who was then confined in the penitentiary at Joliet. The
-young man was dying of tuberculosis, and his mother, having no other
-hope than that he might be released to die at home, had made her appeal
-to Brennan, and he had seen to the filing of an application in due
-form, and now he asked me if I would not call the Governor’s attention
-to it. I got out the great blue envelope containing the thin papers in
-the case--they were as few as the young man’s friends--and took them
-over to the Governor, but no sooner had I laid them on his desk and
-made the first hesitating and tentative approach to the subject, than I
-divined the moment to be wholly inauspicious. The Governor did not even
-look at the papers, he did not even touch the big blue linen envelope,
-but shook his head and said:
-
-“No, no, I will not pardon any more. The people are opposed to it; they
-do not believe in mercy; they love revenge; they want the prisoners
-punished to the bitterest extremity.”
-
-I did not then know how right he was in his cynical generalization,
-though I did know that his decision was so far from his own heart
-that it was no decision at all, but merely the natural human reaction
-against all the venom that had been voided upon him, and I went away
-then, and told Brennan that we must wait until the Governor was in
-another mood.
-
-Three or four days afterward I met the Governor one morning as he
-was passing through the rotunda of the State House, his head bent
-in habitual abstraction, and seeing me in what seemed always some
-subconscious way he stopped and said:
-
-“Oh, by the way: that pardon case you spoke of the other morning--I
-was somewhat hasty I fear, and out of humor. If you’ll get the papers
-I’ll see what can be done.”
-
-I knew of course what could be done, and knew then that it would be
-done, and I made haste to get the papers, which had been kept on my
-desk awaiting that propitious season which I had the faith to feel
-would come sooner or later, though I had not expected it to come quite
-so soon as that. I already anticipated the gladness that would light up
-Brennan’s good Irish face when I handed him the pardon for his friend,
-and I could dramatize the scene in that miner’s cottage in Braidwood
-when the pardoned boy flew to his mother’s arms. I intended to say
-nothing then to Brennan, however, but to wait until the pardon, signed
-and sealed, could be delivered into his hands, but as I was going
-across the hall to the Governor’s chambers I encountered Brennan, and
-then of course could not hold back the good news. And so I told him,
-looking into his blue eyes to behold the first ripple of the smile
-I expected to see spread over his face; but there was no smile. He
-regarded me quite soberly, shook his head, and said:
-
-“It’s too late now.”
-
-And he drew from his pocket a telegram, and, without any need to read
-it, said:
-
-“He died last night.”
-
-I took the papers back and had them filed away among those cases that
-had been finally disposed of, though that formality could not dispose
-of the case for me. The Governor was waiting for the papers, and at
-last when the morning had almost worn away I went over to his chambers
-to add another fardel to that heavy load which I had thought it was to
-be my lot that day to see lightened in the doing of an act of grace and
-pity. I told him as he sat alone at his desk, and the shade of sorrow
-deepened a moment on his pale face; but he said nothing, and I was glad
-to go.
-
-The poor little tragedy had its impressions for me, and it was not
-long until I thought I saw in it the motive of a story, which at once
-I began to write. The theme was the embarrassment which a governor’s
-conscience created for him because during a critical campaign he knew
-it to be his duty to pardon a notorious convict,--and I invented the
-situations and expedients to bear the tale along to that thrilling
-climax in which the governor was delivered out of his difficulty by
-the most opportune death of the convict, whom a higher hand could
-dramatically be said to have pardoned. I worked very hard on the story,
-and thought it pretty fine, and I sent it away at last to an eastern
-magazine. And then I waited, and at length a letter came saying that
-the story was well enough thought of in that editorial room to hold
-it until the editor-in-chief should return from Europe and hand down
-a final decision. I waited for weeks, and then one morning there on
-my desk was an envelope, ominous in its bigness; it was one of those
-letters you do not have to open in order to read them, because you
-know what they say; I knew my manuscript had come back. But when I
-opened the package, instead of the familiar slip of rejection, there
-was a letter; the editor liked the story, saw much in it, he said,
-but felt--and quite rightly I am sure--that its ending, with the
-convict dying in the very nick of time to save the governor from his
-embarrassment, was an evasion of the whole moral issue; besides, the
-conclusion was too melodramatic,--that was the word he used,--and would
-I change it?
-
-The day after all was bright and cheerful; I remember it well, the
-sun lying on the State House lawns, their green dotted with the gold
-of dandelions, and the trees twisting their leaves almost rapturously
-in a sparkling air we did not often breathe on those humid prairies.
-And--though this has nothing whatever to do with the case, and enters
-it only as one of those incidents that linger in the memory--William
-Jennings Bryan was there that day, calling on the Governor and the
-Secretary of State. He was then a young congressman from Nebraska, and
-he made a speech; but I was interested in the story far more than in
-politics or any speech about it, even the brilliant speech of a man
-who so soon, and with such remarkable _élan_, was to charge across the
-country on the hosts of privilege.
-
-And I changed the story; I made that poor harried governor drain
-his bitter cup of duty to the lees, and gave the story an ending
-so remorselessly logical, so true to the facts and fates of human
-experience, that it might have been as depressing as one of Hardy’s
-“Little Ironies”--could it have resembled them in any other way,
-which of course it could not, unless it were in that imitation with
-which the last author I had been reading was pretty sure though all
-unconsciously to be flattered. I changed the story, and sent the MS.
-back to the waiting editor; and it was returned as the string snaps
-back to the bow, with a letter that showed plainly that his interest in
-the tale had all evaporated. He had no regrets, it appeared, save one
-perhaps, since he concluded his letter by saying:
-
-“Besides, you have destroyed the fine dramatic ending which the story
-possessed in its first draft.”
-
-The experience uprooted another of society’s oak-trees for me, and
-it has continued to lie there, with the roots of its infallibility
-withering whitely in the air, though humanity still somehow continues
-to arrange itself about the institution as best it can. This process
-of uprooting, I suppose, goes on in life to the very end; but it is
-wholesome after all, since life grows somehow easier after one has
-learned that human beings are all pretty human and pretty much alike
-in their humanness, and the great service of literature to mankind has
-been, and more and more will be, I hope, to teach human beings this
-salutary and consoling lesson.
-
-But, in no way despairing, I kept the manuscript by me, and when I
-was not trying to write other stories I was retouching it, until in
-the end its fate was almost that of the portrait which the artist in
-one of Balzac’s stories kept on trying to improve until it was but
-a meaningless scumble of gray, with no likeness to anything in this
-universe. Its fate was not quite that bad, however, since it made for
-me a friend.
-
-
-
-
-XV
-
-
-The incident, like that on which the story itself was founded, occurred
-in the course of another effort to induce the Governor to save a poor
-wretch from the gallows. The autumn preceding, just when the World’s
-Fair at Chicago was at its apogee, a half-crazed boy had assassinated
-Carter Harrison, the old mayor of that city, and had been promptly
-tried and condemned to death. The time for the execution of the
-sentence drew on, and two or three days before the black event I had a
-telegram from Peter Dunne and other newspaper friends in Chicago asking
-me to urge the governor, or the acting governor as it happened at that
-time to be, to commute the sentence to one of imprisonment for life.
-The boy, so the telegrams said, was clearly insane, and had been at the
-time of his crazy and desperate deed; his case had not been presented
-with the skill that might have saved him, or at least might have saved
-another in such a plight; there had been the customary hue and cry, the
-most cherished process of the English law, “and,” Dunne concluded, “do
-get Joe Gill to let him off.”
-
-Joe Gill was Joseph B. Gill, the young Lieutenant-Governor of the
-state, and because Governor Altgeld was just then out of the state he
-was on the bridge as acting governor. Gill had been one of the Immortal
-101, and as a representative had made a record in support of certain
-humane measures in behalf of the miners of the state. The newspaper
-correspondents had had pleasure in celebrating him and his work in
-their despatches, and because of his popularity among the miners, to
-say nothing of his popularity among the newspaper men, he had been
-nominated for lieutenant-governor on the ticket with Altgeld. There was
-in our relations a _camaraderie_ which put any thought of presumption
-out of the question; besides, I was always so much opposed to the
-killing of human beings, especially to that peculiarly horrible form of
-killing which the state deliberately and in cold blood commits under
-the euphemism of “capital punishment,” that I was always ready to ask
-any governor to commute a sentence of death that had been pronounced
-against anybody; so that it seemed a simple matter to ask Joe Gill,
-himself the heart of kindness, to save the life of this boy whose soul
-had wandered so desperately astray in the clouds which darkened it.
-
-Early the next morning--the telegrams had come at night--I went over
-to the governor’s office, and the governor’s private secretary told
-me that Lieutenant-Governor Gill had not yet appeared, and as a good
-secretary, anxious to protect his chief, he asked:
-
-“What do you want to see him about?”
-
-“This Prendergast they’re going to hang in Chicago next Friday.”
-
-At this a man sitting in the room near the secretary’s desk looked up
-with a sudden access of intense interest; and, starting from his chair
-and transfixing me with a sharp glance, he asked:
-
-“What interest have you in the Prendergast case?”
-
-“None,” I said, “except that I don’t want to have him, or anybody,
-hanged.”
-
-On the man’s face, tired, with the expression of world-weariness life
-gives to the countenance behind which there has been too much serious
-contemplation of life, a face that seemed prematurely wrinkled, there
-suddenly appeared a smile as winning as a woman’s, and he said in a
-voice that had the timbre of human sympathy and the humor of a peculiar
-drawl:
-
-“Well, you’re all right, then.”
-
-It thereupon occurred to the governor’s secretary to introduce us, and
-so I made the acquaintance of Clarence Darrow. He had taken it upon
-himself to neglect his duties as the attorney of some of the railroads
-and other large corporations in Chicago long enough to come down to
-Springfield on his own initiative and responsibility to plead with the
-Governor for this lad’s life (he was always going on some such Quixotic
-errand of mercy for the poor and the friendless), and we retired to the
-governor’s ante-chamber to await the coming of Gill. We talked for a
-while about the Prendergast case, which might have had more sympathetic
-consideration had it not persisted as the Carter Harrison case in
-the mind of that public, which when its latent spirit of vengeance
-is aroused can so easily become the mob, but it was not long until I
-discovered that Darrow had read books other than those of the law,
-and for an hour we talked of Tolstoy and the other great Russians,
-and of Thomas Hardy and of Mr. Howells, to enumerate no more of the
-long catalogue of those realists whom we liked in common, and when I
-discovered that he actually knew Mr. Howells, knew him personally, as
-the saying is, I could feel that poor Prendergast, though I had never
-seen him in my life, or scarcely ever thought of him until the night
-before, had done me one service at least, and it made me all the more
-anxious to save him.
-
-When Joe Gill’s tall Egyptian form came swinging into the room our
-talk of books was interrupted long enough to arrange for a hearing
-that afternoon, and then we resumed our talk, and it endured through
-luncheon and after, and I left him only long enough to have a
-conversation with Gill and to ask him as a sort of personal favor to an
-old friend to spare the boy’s life.
-
-At two o’clock the hearing was called. The reporters and the governor’s
-secretary and George Brennan and I made the audience, and Gill sat
-up erectly in the governor’s chair to hear the appeal. Darrow asked
-me the proper address for a governor, and I said since this was the
-lieutenant-governor I thought “Your Excellency” would be propitiative,
-and Darrow made one of those eloquent appeals for mercy of which he
-is the complete master. It moved us all, but the Lieutenant-Governor
-gathered himself together and refused it, and Darrow went back to
-Chicago to unfold those legal technicalities which make our law
-so superior to other forms in that they can stay the hand of its
-vengeance. He did not succeed in the end, and the boy was hanged, and
-murder has gone on in Chicago since, I understand, the same as before.
-But Darrow could not leave Springfield until midnight of that day, and
-we talked about books all the evening, and when he boarded his train
-he had in his valise the MS. of my story about another governor and
-another pardon, concerning which he was charged to answer a certain
-question to which all my doubts and perplexities could be reduced,
-namely: “Is it worth while, and if not, is there any use in going on
-and trying to write one that is?”
-
-I had to wait almost as long for his decision as though he had been an
-editor himself, but when I called at his office in Chicago one morning
-in the autumn to get the MS., and he told me that his answer to my
-question was “yes,” and that he would, if I agreed, send the story to
-Mr. Howells, I was as happy as though he had been an editor and had
-accepted it for publication. I could not agree to its being sent on to
-weary Mr. Howells, but took it back with me to Springfield, in hope, if
-not in confidence.
-
-
-
-
-XVI
-
-
-However, it has seemed to be my fate, or my weakness, which we too
-often confuse with fate, to vacillate between an interest in letters
-and an interest in politics, and after that year, whose days and nights
-were almost wholly given to studying law, I was admitted to the bar,
-and thereupon felt qualified to go out on the stump in the campaign
-that autumn and speak in behalf of the Democratic ticket. It was fun to
-drive out over Sangamon County in those soft autumn evenings, over the
-soft roads,--though if it rained they became too soft,--and to speak
-in schoolhouses to the little audiences of farmers, or of miners, on
-the iniquities of the tariff. If we had been a little more devoted to
-principle, perhaps, than we were to party, we might better have spoken
-of the iniquities of that Democratic minority in the Senate which had
-just completed its betrayal of us all and helped to perpetrate those
-iniquities, but when you belong to a party you are presumed to adjust
-yourself to what your representatives do, and to make the best of what
-generally is a pretty bad bargain. The bargain of those senators had
-been particularly bad, and so, instead of speaking in the tones of
-righteous indignation, we had to adopt the milder accents of apology
-and explanation, and it was difficult to explain to some of those
-audiences. There was more or less heckling, and now and then impromptu
-little debates, and sometimes when the meeting was done, and we started
-on the long ride back to town, we would find that the nuts had been
-removed from the axles of our carriage-wheels. Perhaps that argument
-was as good as any we had made, and it could not matter much anyway,
-since partizan speeches never convince anybody, and if they could,
-if they could do anything but deepen and intensify prejudice, whole
-batteries of the world’s best orators in that year could not have
-overcome the vicious effects of that high betrayal, even though they
-had been led to the charge by Phocion and Demosthenes.
-
-I suppose no greater moral wrong was ever committed in America. It
-had been bad enough that a policy of favoritism and advantage which
-appealed to so many because of the good luck of its reassuring name,
-had endured so long, as a sort of necessity in the development of a new
-continent; it had been bad enough that labor had first been lied to and
-then subjugated by the lie, that women had been driven into mills, and
-children had been fed to the Moloch of the machines, and that on these
-sacrifices there had been reared in America an insolent plutocracy with
-the ideals of a gambler and the manners of a wine-agent. But when the
-workingmen had learned at last that the system did not “protect” them,
-and when thousands of young men in the land, filled with the idealism
-of youth, had recognized the lie and the hypocrisy, and hated them with
-a fine moral abhorrence, and had turned to the Democratic party and
-trusted it to redeem its promise to reform this evil, and had put it in
-power in the nation, only to have its leaders in the Senate betray them
-with the brutal cynicism such a cause as theirs demands, then there was
-committed a deed little short of dastardly. If that seems too strong
-a word, the deed was surely contemptible, and base enough to fill
-anyone with despair of the party and of the party system as it had been
-developed in America, though it has been understood by only two men
-so far as I know--M. Ostrogorski and Golden Rule Jones. It was enough
-to disgust anyone with politics altogether, and to forswear them and
-parties, too, although I never quite understood the philosophy of the
-attitude until, a few years later, Golden Rule Jones made it clear. He
-made many things clear, for he dropped the plummet of his original mind
-down, down, down, more profoundly into fundamental life than anyone I
-can think of.
-
-To me, in those days, the tariff question had seemed entirely
-fundamental. I used to think that if we could but have civil-service
-reform, and tariff for revenue only, the world would go very well.
-The tariff question is not considered fundamental in these days, of
-course, so fast and so far past the Mugwumps has the world run, though
-everybody realizes its evil, and knows, or should know, that the notion
-of privilege on which tariffs are founded is quite fundamentally wrong,
-and every political party promises to reduce its rates, or revise them,
-or at least to take some measures against the lie.
-
-The Democratic party, to be sure, redeemed itself later under the
-splendid leadership of President Wilson, but at that time, while we
-recognized the evil of the theory, we seemed to have sunk into a
-sordid acquiescence in the fact; everybody thought the tariff wrong,
-but nobody wished to have it done away with so long as there was a
-chance, to speak in modern American, for him to get in on the graft.
-The word “graft” was unknown in those days, by all save those thieves
-in whose argot it was found and devoted to its present general use in
-the vocabulary. I suppose it is in the dictionary by this time. In any
-event, it is not strange that the word should have become so current,
-since for a while we made a national institution of the very thing it
-connotes.
-
-There was, however, then and always, the labor question, and we were
-beginning to discover that that is fundamental, perhaps the one great
-fundamental,--aside from the complication of evil and good that is
-inherent and implicit in humanity itself,--since the burning question
-is and always will be how the work of the world is to be got done, and,
-what is a much more embarrassing problem, who is to do it. Many of the
-men who had been doing that work, or the heaviest of it, were striking
-in Illinois in those years.
-
-The shots the Pinkertons had fired at Homestead echoed in the state;
-Senator Palmer had made a great speech about it in the Senate; and
-perhaps the tariff had something to do with that, since tariffs on
-steel have not been unknown. But there were shots fired nearer home,
-first in the strike among the men who were digging the drainage canal,
-then among the miners in the soft coal fields of the state, then the
-strike in the model town of Pullman, and the great railroad strike that
-grew out of it.
-
-They called it the Debs Rebellion, and for a while it assumed some of
-the proportions of a rebellion, or at least it frightened many people
-in Illinois as much as a rebellion might have done. We were in the
-midst of all its alarms during that whole spring and summer, and down
-in the adjutant-general’s office at the State House there was the stir
-almost of war itself, with troops being ordered here and there about
-the state, and the Governor harried and worried by a situation that
-presented to him the abhorrent necessity of using armed force. I was
-reading over the other day the report made to the War Department by
-my friend Major Jewett Baker, then a lieutenant in the Twelfth U. S.
-Infantry, detailed with the National Guard of Illinois; and in his
-clear and excellent account of all those confused events the scenes of
-those times came back: the long lines of idle freight cars, charred
-by incendiary flames; the little groups of men standing about wearing
-the white ribbons of the strike sympathizers, and the colonel of the
-regular army, in his cups at his club, who wished he might order a
-whole regiment to shoot them, “each man to take aim at a dirty white
-ribbon”; the regulars encamped on the lake front, their sentinels
-pacing their posts at the quickstep in the rain; and then that morning
-conference in the mayor’s office in Chicago, at which I was permitted
-to look on--what an interesting life it is to look on at!--when there
-appeared Eugene V. Debs, tall, lithe, nervous, leader of the strikers,
-his hair, what there was of it, sandy, but his head mostly bald, his
-eyes flashing, his mouth ready to smile, soon to go to Woodstock Jail,
-to emerge a Socialist, and become the leader of that party.
-
-Major Baker’s report shows, indirectly and by inference, that much of
-the criticism which the Governor endured was not justified, since he
-turned out all his troops as fast as local authorities asked for them.
-At any rate, he acted according to his democratic principles and to his
-conception of his duty. His principles were in a sense different from
-those of President Cleveland, with whom he disagreed in that notable
-instance when the President in his vigorous, practical way sent federal
-troops into Chicago; the Governor protested, as one of his predecessors
-in the governor’s office, Senator Palmer, had protested when President
-Grant sent federal troops under Phil Sheridan into Chicago at the time
-of the great fire. Almost everybody who had any way of making his voice
-heard sided with President Cleveland, and the end of the strike was
-accredited to him. Doubtless the grim presence of those regular troops
-did overawe the hoodlums who had taken advantage of the strike to
-create disorder, but if the credit must go to armed force, the report
-by Major, or, as he was in those days, Lieutenant, Baker shows that
-that little company of the Illinois National Guard which ruthlessly
-fired into the mob at Loomis Street one night virtually ended the
-disorder.
-
-Perhaps Governor Altgeld was willing to forego any “credit” for an act,
-which, however necessary to the preservation of order, demanded so many
-lives. I do not know as to that, but I do recall the expression which
-clouded his face that afternoon we arrived at Lemont, during the strike
-at the drainage canal. It occurred a year before the railway strike,
-and the Governor had gone to Lemont himself to make an investigation.
-He had asked Lieutenant Baker and me to go with him, and when we got
-off the train at Lemont, on the afternoon of a cheerless day, the
-crowds were standing aimlessly about, watching with a sullen curiosity
-the arrival of the militia. The soldiers were just then going into
-camp on the level rocks by a bridge across the canal and the Desplaines
-River--the bridge, according to the military scientists, was, I
-believe, considered, for some mysterious reason, to be a strategic
-point.
-
-The picture was one for the brush of Remington--those young blue-clad
-soldiers (it was before the days of our imperialism, and of the khaki
-our soldiers now imitate the British in wearing)--and Baker and I stood
-and gazed at it a moment, affected by the fascination there always is
-in the superficial military spectacle; and then, suddenly, we were
-aware that there was another and more dramatic point of interest,
-where a group stood about the body of a workman who had been shot in
-the riots of that morning. He was a foreigner, the clothes he wore
-doubtless those he had had on when he passed under the Statue of
-Liberty, coming to this land with what hopes of freedom in his breast
-no one can ever know. The wife who had come with him was on her knees
-beside him, rocking back and forth in her grief, dumb as to any words
-in a strange land whose tongue she could not speak or understand.
-
-The reporters from the Chicago newspapers were there, and among them
-Eddie Bernard, an old Whitechapeler, who told us that the man had
-reached Lemont only a few days before, and had been happy in the job
-he had so promptly found in the new land of promise. And now, there he
-lay, shot dead. Bernard looked a moment, and then in the irony of a
-single phrase he expressed the whole drama as he said:
-
-“The land of the free and the home of the brave!”
-
-That was fundamental, anyhow, and politics were not going deeply into
-the question, except as such men as Altgeld did so, and even they were
-criticized sharply for attempting it. And one might well be disgusted
-with politics, then and always, and think of something that has the
-consolation of literature. The traffic of politicians, as Mr. George
-Moore somewhere says, is with the things of this world, while art is
-concerned with the dreams, the visions and the aspirations of a world
-beyond this. Though literature must some day in this land concern
-itself with that very question of labor, since it is with fundamental
-life that art must deal, and be true in its dealing.
-
-
-
-
-XVII
-
-
-Politics in those days--and not alone in those days either--were mean,
-and while I do not intend to say that this meanness bowed me with
-despair, it did fill me with disgust, and made the whole business
-utterly distasteful. Politics were almost wholly personal, there was
-then no conception of them as related to social life. An awakening was
-coming, to be sure, and the signs were then apparent, even if but few
-saw them. They were to most quite dim; but there were here and there in
-the land dreamers of a sort, who had caught a new vision. The feeling
-of it, the emotion, was to find expression in Mr. Bryan’s great
-campaign in 1896; but there was then in Chicago a little group, men who
-had read Henry George, or, without reading him, had looked out on life
-intelligently and gained a concept of it, or perhaps had merely felt
-in themselves the stirrings of a new social instinct, and these saw,
-or thought they saw, the way to a better social order. They could not
-in those days gain so patient a hearing for their views as they have
-since, if any hearing they have had may after all be called patient;
-they were not so very patient themselves, perhaps, as men are quite apt
-not to be when they think they see as clearly as though a perpetual
-lightning blazed in the sky exactly what is the matter with the world,
-and have a simple formula, which, were it but tried, would instantly
-and infallibly make everything all right.
-
-But these men were not in politics; some of them were too impractical
-ever to be, and the only man in politics who understood them at all
-was Altgeld. Generally, the moral atmosphere of politics was foul and
-heavy with the feculence of all the debauchery that is inseparable
-from privilege. The personnel of politics was generally low; and in
-city councils and state legislatures there was a cynical contempt of
-all the finer sentiments. It was not alone that provincialism and
-philistinism which stand so obdurately and with such bovine stupidity
-in the way of progress; there was a positive scorn of the virtues,
-and the alliance between the lobbyists and the lawyers of the great
-corporation interests on the one hand, and the managers of both the
-great political parties on the other, was a fact, the worst feature of
-which was that no one seemed to care, or if a few did care, they did
-not know what to do about it. It was a joke among the newspaper men,
-who had little respect for the men who filled the positions of power
-and responsibility; the wonder was, indeed, after such association,
-that they had any respect left for anything in the world. Only the
-other day, reading Walt Whitman’s terrific arraignment of the powers
-that were in control of the government of the nation in Buchanan’s
-time, his awful catalogue of the sorts of men who composed the
-directorate of affairs,--it may be read in his prose works by those
-who wish,--I was struck by the similarity in this respect of that time
-with that which immediately preceded the newer and better time of the
-moral awakening in America. Altgeld was one of the forerunners of this
-time; and, in accordance with the universal law of human nature, it was
-his fate to be misunderstood and ridiculed and hated, even by many in
-his own party. He was far in the van in most ways, so far that it was
-impossible for his own party to follow him. It did not follow him in
-his opposition to a bill which was passed in the General Assembly to
-permit of the consolidation of gas companies in Chicago; the machines
-of the two parties were working well together in the legislature--in
-one of those bipartizan alliances which were not to be understood until
-many years later, and even then not to be understood so very clearly,
-since most of our cities have been governed since by such alliances,
-in the interest of similar gas companies and other public utility
-corporations--and when the Governor vetoed their evil measure, this
-same bipartizan machine sought to pass it over his veto, and none was
-more active in the effort than were the leaders of his own party in the
-House.
-
-The supreme effort was made on the last night of the session, amidst
-one of those riots which mark the dissolution of our deliberative
-legislative bodies. The lobbyists for the measure were quite shameless
-that night, as they were on most nights, no doubt; almost as shameless
-as the legislators themselves. The House was in its shirt-sleeves; and
-there was the rude horse-play of country bumpkins; paper wads were
-flying, now and then some member sent hurtling through the hot air
-his file of printed legislative bills, and all the while there was
-that confusion of sound, laughter, and oaths and snatches of song,
-a sort of bedlam, in which laws were being enacted--laws that must
-be respected and even revered, because of their sacred origin. The
-leaders were serious, but worried; the expressions of their drawn,
-tense, nervous faces were unhappy in suspicion and fear, and, perhaps,
-because of uneasy consciences. The speaker sat above them, pale and
-haggard, rapping his splintered sounding-board with a broken gavel,
-rapping persistently and futilely. And as the time drew near when the
-gas bill was to come on for consideration, the nervous tension was
-intensified, and evil hung almost palpably in the hot, close air of
-that chamber. Those who have had experience of legislative bodies, and
-have by practice learned something of political aëroscopy, can always
-tell when “something is coming off”; political correspondents have
-cultivated the sense, and that night they could have divined nothing
-good or pure or beautiful in that chamber (where the portraits of
-Lincoln and of Douglas hung), unless it were the mellow music, now and
-then, of the glass prisms of the chandeliers hanging high from the
-garish ceiling, as they tinkled and chimed whenever some little breeze
-wandered in from the June night.
-
-And yet there was beauty there, moral beauty, as there ever is
-somewhere in man. Out on the edge of that bedlam, standing under the
-gallery on the Democratic side, near the cloak-room, stood a tall, lank
-man. You would have known him at once, anywhere, as an Egyptian, as we
-called those who had come from the Illinois land south of the old O. &
-M. railroad. He was uncouth in appearance; he wore drab, ill-fitting
-clothes, and at his wrinkled throat there was no collar. He was a
-member, sent there from some rural district far down in the southern
-end of the state; and all through the session he had been silent,
-taking no part, except to vote, and to vote, on most occasions, with
-his party, which, in those days, was the whole duty of man. This night
-would see the end of his political career, if his brief experience
-in an obscure position could be called a career, and he stood there,
-silently looking on, plucking now and then at his chin, his long,
-wrinkled face brown and solemn and inscrutable.
-
-The old Egyptian stood there while the long roll was being called, and
-the crisis approached, and the nervous tension was a keen pain. And
-suddenly one of the gas lobbyists went up to him, there on the verge
-of the House, and began to talk with him. I had the story a good while
-afterwards from one of the whips, who, it seemed, knew all that had
-gone on that night. The lobbyist of course knew about the man, knew
-especially about his necessities, as lobbyists do; and he began to
-talk to the old fellow about them--about his poverty and his children,
-and he used the old argument which has been employed so long and so
-successfully with the rural members of all our legislatures, and has
-been the source of so much evil in our city governments, that is, the
-argument that the bill concerned only Chicago, and that the folks down
-home would neither know nor care how he voted on it, and then--how
-much two thousand dollars would mean to him. As the lobbyist talked,
-there were various eyes that looked at him, waiting for a sign; they
-needed only a few votes then, and the roll-call was being delayed by
-one pretense and another, and the clock on the wall, inexorably ticking
-toward the hour of that legislature’s dissolution, was turned back. The
-old fellow listened and stroked his chin, and then presently, when the
-lobbyist had done, he turned his old blue eyes on him and said:
-
-“I reckon you’re right: I’m poor, and I’ve got a big family. And you’re
-right, too, when you say my people won’t know nor care: they won’t;
-they don’t know nor care a damn; they won’t send me back here, of
-course. And God knows what’s to come of my wife and my children; I am
-going home to them to-morrow and on Monday I’m going to hunt me a job
-in the harvest-field; I reckon I’ll die in the poorhouse. Yes, I’m
-going home--but”--he stopped and looked the lobbyist in the eye--“I’m
-going home an honest man.”
-
-My friend the whip told me the story as a curious and somewhat
-confusing flaw in his theory that every man is for sale,--“most of
-them damned cheap,” he said,--and he thought it might make a plot for
-a story; like many men I have known he was incorrigibly romantic, and
-was always giving me plots for stories. Well, they failed to pass the
-bill over the Governor’s veto, and it was not long until another story
-was pretty well known in Illinois, about that Governor who that night
-was sitting up over in the executive mansion, awaiting the action of
-the general assembly. The story was that a large quantity of the bonds
-of the gas company had been placed at his disposal in a security vault
-in Chicago, in a box to which a man was to deliver him the key; all he
-had to do was to go take the bonds--and permit the bill to become a
-law. His answer, of course, was the veto--an offense as unpardonable
-as the pardoning of the anarchists; and no doubt many such offenses
-against the invisible power in the land were more potent in bringing
-down on his head that awful hatred than his mercy had been--though this
-was made to serve as reason for the hatred. Privilege, of course, hates
-mercy, too.
-
-The old Egyptian went back home, and I have always hoped that he found
-a better job than he went to seek in the harvest-fields, and that he
-did not die at last to the poorhouse; but he was never heard of more,
-and it was not long until the Governor was driven from his office
-amid the hoots and jeers and the hissing of a venomous hatred such as
-nothing but political rancor knows, unless it be religious rancor. Yes,
-politics had got pretty low in those days, and its utter meanness,
-gradually revealed, was enough to cause one to despair of his country
-and his kind. Perhaps the old Egyptian in the legislature and the
-idealist in the governor’s chair should have been enough to keep one
-from despairing altogether, though one honest old peasant cannot save a
-legislature any more than one swallow can make a summer. I do not mean
-to say that he was the only honest man in the legislature: there were
-many others, of course, but partizan politics prevented their honesty
-from being of much avail; or, at any rate, they did not control events.
-With the measurable advance in thought since that time, and the general
-progress of the species, we know now that men do not control events
-half so much as events control men; we do not know exactly what it is
-that does control men--that is, those of us who are not Socialists do
-not know.
-
-Altgeld, at any rate, was disgusted with politics, as well he might
-have been, since they wrecked his fortune and broke his heart. And it
-was with relief, I know, that he said that morning,--almost the last
-he passed in the governor’s chair,--as he and I were going up the long
-walk to the State House steps:
-
-“Well, we’re rid of this, anyway.”
-
-
-
-
-XVIII
-
-
-That peculiar form of human activity, or inactivity, known as getting a
-law practice, has been so abundantly treated on the printed page that
-I have not the temerity to add to the literature on the interesting
-subject. The experience is never dramatic, even if it is sometimes
-tragic, and it is so often tragic that there has seemed no other
-recourse for mankind than, by one of those tacit understandings on
-which our race gets through life, to view it as a comedy. It is no
-comedy, of course, to the chief actor, who is sustained only by his
-dreams, his illusions, and his ideals, and he may count himself
-successful perhaps, if, when he has lost his illusions, he can retain
-at least some of his ideals, though the law is too apt to strip him
-of both. However that may be, in my own experience in that sort there
-was an incident which made its peculiar impressions; indeed, there
-were several such incidents, but the one which I have in mind involves
-the perhaps commonplace story of Maria R----, which ran like a serial
-during those trying years.
-
-I had intended to take up the practice of law in Chicago; I was quite
-certain that there I should set up my little enterprise, and this
-self-same certainty is perhaps the reason why I found myself back in
-Toledo, in a lonely little office in one of the new office buildings;
-sky-scrapers they were called in the new sense of metropolitan life
-that then began to pervade the town; they were not so very high, but
-they seemed high enough to scrape the low skies which arch so many
-of the grey days in the lake region. It was as long ago, I believe,
-as the time of Pythagoras that the law of the certain uncertainty of
-certainty was deduced for the humbling of human pride, and when my
-certainties with regard to Chicago proved all to be broken reeds,
-there were more gray days in that region of the intemperate zone than
-the meteorological records show. The little law office had a portrait
-of William Dean Howells on its walls, and in time the portraits of
-other writers, differing from those other law offices which prefer to
-be adorned with pictures of Chief Justice Marshall--a strong man, of
-course, who wrote some strong fiction, too, in his day--and of Hamilton
-and of Jefferson, indicating either a catholicity or a confusion of
-principle on the part of the occupying proprietor, of which usually he
-is not himself aware. There were a few law-books, too, and on the desk
-a little digest of the law of evidence as affected by the decisions
-of the Ohio courts. I had the noble intention of mastering it, but
-I did not read in it very much, since for a long while there was no
-one to pay me for doing so, and I spent most of my hours at my desk
-over a manuscript of “The 13th District,” a novel of politics I was
-then writing, looking up now and then and gazing out of the window at
-the blank rear walls of certain brick buildings which made a dreary
-prospect, even if one of them did bear, as I well remember, the bright
-and reassuring legend, “Money to Loan at 6 per cent.”
-
-There were not many interruptions at first, but after a while, when I
-had been appointed as attorney to a humane society, there were times
-when I had to lay my manuscripts aside. I felt it to be, in a way, my
-duty to long for such interruptions, but they usually came just at
-those times when I was most absorbed in my manuscript, so that their
-welcome, while affectedly polite, was not wholly from the heart. One
-of these intrusions resulted in a long trial before a justice of the
-peace; it was a case that grew out of a neighborhood quarrel, and all
-the inhabitants of the _locus in quo_ were subpœnaed as witnesses.
-Such a case of course always affords an opportunity to study human
-nature; but this one, too, had the effect ultimately of bringing in
-many clients--and, as Altgeld had said, by way of advice to me, got
-people in the habit of coming to my office. Those witnesses acquired
-that habit, and since human nature seemed to run pretty high in that
-neighborhood most of the time, they got into a good deal of trouble;
-they were most of them so poor that they seldom got into anything else,
-unless it were the jail or the workhouse, and some of them were always
-ready to help send others of them to those places. Out of the long file
-of poor miserable creatures there emerged one day that Maria R---- of
-whom I spoke. She was a buxom young German emigrant, not long over from
-Pomerania, and her fair skin and yellow hair, and a certain manner she
-had, marked her out from all the rest. She came with her children one
-morning to complain of her husband’s neglect of them; and to her, as to
-the whole body of society which thinks no more deeply than she did,
-it seemed the necessary, proper, and even indispensable thing to put
-Rheinhold--that was her husband’s name--in jail (You should have heard
-her speak the name Rheinhold, with that delicious note in which she
-_grasséyéd_ her r’s.) There she sat, on the little chair by the window,
-with her stupidly staring boy and girl at her knees, but in her arms
-the brightest, prettiest, flaxen-haired baby in the world, a little elf
-who was always smiling, and picking at her mother’s nose or cheeks with
-her fat little fingers, and when she smiled, her mother smiled, too; it
-was the only time she ever did.
-
-Rheinhold of course drank; he “mistreated” his children--that is, he
-did not buy them food. And since the Humane Society was organized and
-maintained for the explicit purpose of forcing people to be humane,
-even though it had to be inhumane to accomplish its purpose, the duty
-of its attorney was clear.
-
-Its attorney just then felt in himself a rising indignation, moral of
-course, yet very much like a vulgar anger. To look at those children,
-especially at that baby of which Maria was so fond, much fonder it
-was plain to be seen than of the other two, and to think of a man
-not providing for them, was to have a rage against him, the rage
-which society, so remorselessly moral in the mass, bears against all
-offenders--the rage a good prosecutor must keep alive and flaming in
-his breast if he would nerve himself to his task and earn his fees and
-society’s gratitude. And whom does society reward so lavishly as her
-prosecutors?
-
-However, that is not the strain I would adopt just now. I felt that
-very rage in myself at that moment, and straightway went and had
-Rheinhold arrested and haled before a judge in the Municipal Court,
-charged with the crime of neglecting his children. I can remember
-his wild and bewildered look as he was arraigned that morning. The
-information was read to him, and he moved his head in such instant
-acquiescence that the judge, looking down from his bench, asked him if
-he wished to plead guilty, and he said “Yes.” It seemed then that the
-case was to be quite easily disposed of, and the prosecutor might feel
-gratified by this instant success of his work; and yet Rheinhold stood
-there so confused, so frightened, with the court-room loungers looking
-on, that I said:
-
-“He doesn’t understand a word of all you are saying.”
-
-And so the judge entered a plea of “not guilty.”
-
-I knew a young lawyer with rather large leisure, and I asked him to
-defend Rheinhold. He was glad to do so, and we empaneled a jury and
-went at what Professor Wigmore calls the “high-class sport.” We became
-desperately interested of course, and for days wrangled according to
-the rules of the game over the liberty of the bewildered little German
-who scarcely knew what it was all about. Now and then he made some
-wild, inarticulate protest, but was of course promptly silenced by his
-own lawyer, or by the judge, or by the rules of evidence, which could
-be invoked--with a deep sense of satisfaction when the court ruled
-your way--to prevent him from telling something he had on his mind,
-something that to him seemed entirely exculpatory, something that would
-make the whole clouded situation clear if it could only find its way to
-the light and to the knowledge of mankind.
-
-There was a witness against him, a tall, slender young German
-shoemaker, and it was against him that Rheinhold’s outcries were
-directed. It was not clear just what he was trying to say, and there
-was small disposition to help him make it clear. His lawyer indeed
-seemed embarrassed, as though in making his incoherent interruptions
-Rheinhold were committing a _contretemps_; he must wait for his turn to
-testify, that all might be done in order and according to the ancient
-rules and precedents, and, in a word, as it should be done. Under the
-rules of evidence, of course, Rheinhold could not be allowed to express
-his opinion of the shoemaker; that was not permissible. The court could
-not be concerned with the passions of the human heart; this man before
-the court had a family, and he had neglected to provide food for it,
-and for such a condition it was written and printed in a book that
-the appropriate remedy was a certain number of days or months in the
-workhouse.
-
-And so while Rheinhold silently and philosophically acquiesced, we
-tried him during one whole day, we argued nearly all the next day to
-the jury, and the jury stayed out all that night and in the morning
-returned a verdict of guilty. And Rheinhold was sent to the workhouse
-for nine months.
-
-
-
-
-XIX
-
-
-It was regarded as a triumph for the Humane Society,--the newspapers
-had printed accounts of the trial,--but it was a victory of which I
-felt pretty much ashamed; it all seemed so useless, so absurd, so
-barbarous, when you came to think of it, and what good it had done
-Maria, or anyone, it was difficult to determine. And so, before very
-long, I went to the workhouse board and had Rheinhold paroled, and he
-disappeared, vanished toward the West, and was never heard of more.
-
-Meanwhile Maria lived on in her little house as best she could, and
-with what assistance we could provide her. The Humane Society helped a
-little, and my wife made some clothes for the baby, and a good-natured
-doctor in the neighborhood attended them when they were sick, which was
-a good deal of the time; and Maria seemed happy enough and contented,
-relying with such entire confidence on her friends that one cold night
-she sent for me in great urgency, and when I arrived she pointed to
-the stove, which was smoking and not doing its work in a satisfactory
-manner at all. I mended it and got the fire going, and they managed to
-survive the winter; and when spring came Maria appeared at the office
-and wished to apply to the courts for a divorce. It seemed as good a
-thing to do as any, and the evidence of Rheinhold’s cruel neglect was
-by this time so conclusive that it was not much trouble to obtain a
-decree, especially as the case came before a delightful old bachelor
-judge who felt that if people were not divorced they ought to be; and
-after listening to two of the five or six witnesses I had subpœnaed he
-granted Maria her freedom.
-
-And the next day she got married again. The bridegroom was that very
-shoemaker who had testified in Rheinhold’s trial; he lived not far from
-Maria’s late residence, and the happy event, as I learned then, was the
-culmination of a romance which had disturbed Rheinhold to such a degree
-that he had preferred to be anywhere rather than at home; and it seemed
-now--it was now indeed quite clear--that what he had been trying to
-explain at the time of the trial was that his fate was involved in the
-eternal triangle.
-
-I do not know where Rheinhold is now; as I said, he was never heard
-of more, but I should like to present my apologies to him and to
-inform him that as a result of that expedition into the jungle of the
-law in search of justice I discovered that whatever other men might
-do, I could never again prosecute anyone for anything; and I never
-did. And I think that most of the attempts men make to do justice in
-their criminal courts are about as mistaken, about as absurd, about
-as ridiculous, as that solemn and supremely silly effort we made to
-deal with such a human complication by means of calf-bound law-books,
-and wrangling lawyers, and twelve stupid jurors ranged behind twelve
-spittoons. The whole experience revealed to me the beauty and the
-truth in that wise passage in Mr. Howells’s charming book, “A Boy’s
-Town”:
-
-“In fact, it seems best to be very careful how we try to do justice in
-this world, and mostly to leave retribution of all kinds to God, who
-really knows about things; and content ourselves as much as possible
-with mercy, whose mistakes are not so irreparable.”
-
-That passage, I think, contains a whole and entirely adequate
-philosophy of life; but I suppose that those who shake their heads at
-such heresies will be equally shocked to learn that Maria’s second
-venture proved to be a remarkable success.
-
-The shoemaker was a frugal chap,--the evidence discloses, I think, that
-he had been an unusually frugal lover,--and he had saved some money,
-which, it seems, he was determined not to spend on his fair one until
-he could develop some legal claim to her, but he treated her handsomely
-then, according to his taste and ability. He bought a house in another
-and better part of town, and he furnished it in a way that dazzled
-the eyes of those children who had been accustomed to bare floors and
-had never known the glories of golden oak and blue and yellow and red
-plush, ingrain carpets, and chenille hangings; and he clothed them all
-and sent them to school, and finally they all took his name, and, I
-think, forgot poor Rheinhold altogether. And so, in their new-found
-prosperity, they vanished out of my sight, and I heard of them no more
-for years. Then one day Maria’s little daughter, grown into a tall
-young girl by that time, came to tell me that her mother was dead.
-Maria had started down town with her husband, on Christmas Eve, to buy
-the gifts for her children, and in the heavy snow that was falling a
-defective sidewalk was hidden, and Maria was thrown to the ground and
-so hurt that she died. Her last words to her daughter had been, so the
-girl said, “See Mr. Whitlock; he’ll do what should be done.” Her heirs
-had a clear case against the city, but I had just been elected mayor
-that autumn and could not prosecute such a claim. Another lawyer did
-so, and got damages for the children, and even for the husband, and
-with these funds in a trust company’s keeping the shoemaker educated
-all the children. And he wore about his hat the thickest hand of heavy
-crêpe that I ever saw.
-
-It seemed to annoy, and in some cases even to anger, those whom I
-told of my resolution not to prosecute anyone any more. They would
-argue about it with me as if it made some real difference to them; if
-every lawyer and every man were so to decide, they said, who was to
-proceed against the criminals, who was to do the work of purifying and
-regenerating society? It has always been, of course, a most interesting
-and vital question as to who is to do the dirty work of all kinds in
-this world; but their apprehensions, as I could assure them, were all
-unfounded, since there are always plenty of lawyers, and always plenty
-of them who are not only willing but anxious to act as prosecutors, and
-to put into their work that energy and enthusiasm which the schools of
-efficiency urge upon the youth of the land, and to prosecute with a
-ferocity that could be no more intense if they had suffered some injury
-in their own persons from the accused. And there are even men who are
-willing, for the most meager salaries, to act as guards and wardens
-in prisons, and to do all manner of things, even to commit crimes, or
-at least moral wrongs, in order to put men into prison and keep them
-there, unless they can kill them, and there are plenty who are willing
-to do that, if only society provides them with a rope or a wire to do
-it with.
-
-
-
-
-XX
-
-
-There was, however, in Toledo one man who could sympathize with my
-attitude; and that was a man whose determination to accept literally
-and to try to practice the fundamental philosophy of Christianity
-had so startled and confounded the Christians everywhere that he at
-once became famous throughout Christendom as “Golden Rule Jones.” I
-had known of him only as the eccentric mayor of our city, and nearly
-everyone whom I had met since my advent in Toledo spoke of him only
-to say something disparaging of him. The most charitable thing they
-said was that he was crazy. All the newspapers were against him,
-and all the preachers. My own opinion, of course, could have been
-of no consequence, but I had learned in the case of Altgeld that
-almost universal condemnation of a man is to be examined before it is
-given entire credit. I do not mean to say that there was universal
-condemnation of Golden Rule Jones in Toledo in those days: it was
-simply that the institutional voices of society, the press and the
-pulpit, were thundering in condemnation of him. When the people came to
-vote for his reëlection his majorities were overwhelming, so that he
-used to say that everybody was against him but the people. But that is
-another story.
-
-In those days I had not met him. I might have called at his office, to
-be sure, but I did not care to add to his burdens. One day, suddenly,
-as I was working on a story in my office, in he stepped with a
-startling, abrupt manner, wheeled a chair up to my desk, and sat down.
-He was a big Welshman with a sandy complexion and great hands that
-had worked hard in their time, and he had an eye that looked right
-into the center of your skull. He wore, and all the time he was in the
-room continued to wear, a large cream-colored slouch hat, and he had
-on the flowing cravat which for some inexplicable reason artists and
-social reformers wear; their affinity being due, no doubt, to the fact
-that the reformer must be an artist of a sort, else he could not dream
-his dreams. I was relieved, however, to find that Jones wore his hair
-clipped short, and there was still about him that practical air of the
-very practical business man he had been before he became mayor. He had
-been such a practical business man that he was worth half a million, a
-fairly good fortune for our town; but he had not been in office very
-long before all the business men were down on him, and saying that what
-the town needed was a business man for mayor, a statement that was
-destined to ring in my ears for a good many years. They disliked him of
-course because he would not do just what they told him to,--that being
-the meaning and purpose of a business man for mayor,--but insisted that
-there were certain other people in the city who were entitled to some
-of his service and consideration--namely, the working people and the
-poor. The politicians and the preachers objected to him on the same
-grounds: the unpardonable sin being to express in any but a purely
-ideal and sentimental form sympathy for the workers or the poor. It
-seemed to be particularly exasperating that he was doing all this in
-the name of the Golden Rule, which was for the Sunday-school; and they
-even went so far as to bring to town another Sam Jones, the Reverend
-Sam Jones, to conduct a “revival” and to defeat the Honorable Sam
-Jones. The Reverend Sam Jones had big meetings, and said many clever
-things, and many true ones, the truest among them being his epigram,
-“I am for the Golden Rule myself, up to a certain point, and then I
-want to take the shotgun and the club.” I think that expression marked
-the difference between him and our Sam Jones, in whose philosophy
-there was no place at all for the shotgun or the club. The preachers
-were complaining that Mayor Jones was not using shotguns, or at least
-clubs, on the “bad” people in the town; I suppose that since their own
-persuasions had in a measure failed, they felt that the Mayor with such
-instruments might have made the “bad” people look as if they had been
-converted anyway.
-
-It was when he was undergoing such criticism as this that he came to
-see me, to ask me to speak at Golden Rule Park. This was a bit of green
-grass next to his factory; he had dedicated it to the people’s use,
-and there under a large willow-tree, on Sunday afternoons, he used to
-speak to hundreds. There was a little piano which two men could carry,
-and with that on the platform to play the accompaniments the people
-used to sing songs that Jones had written--some of them of real beauty,
-and breathing the spirit of poetry, if they were not always quite in
-its form. In the winter these meetings were held in Golden Rule Hall,
-a large room that served very well as an auditorium, in his factory
-hard by. On the walls of Golden Rule Hall was the original tin sign
-he had hung up in his factory as the only rule to be known there,
-“Therefore whatsoever things ye would that men should do to you, do ye
-even so to them.” In the course of time every reformer, every radical,
-in the country had spoken in that hall or under that willow-tree,
-and the place developed an atmosphere that was immensely impressive.
-The hall had the portraits of many liberal leaders and humanitarians
-on its walls, and a number of paintings; and in connection with the
-settlement which Jones established across the street the institution
-came to be, as a reporter wrote one day in his newspaper, the center of
-intelligence in Toledo.
-
-Well then, on that morning when first he called, Jones said to me:
-
-“I want you to come out and speak.”
-
-“On what subject?” I asked.
-
-“There’s only one subject,” he said,--“life.” And his face was radiant
-with a really beautiful smile, warmed with his rich humor. I began to
-say that I would prepare something, but he would not let me finish my
-sentence.
-
-“Prepare!” he exclaimed. “Why prepare? Just speak what’s in your heart.”
-
-He was always like that. Once, a good while after, in one of his
-campaigns, he called me on the telephone one evening just at dinner
-time, and said:
-
-“I want you to go to Ironville and speak to-night.”
-
-I was tired, and, as I dislike to confess, somewhat reluctant,--I had
-always to battle so for a little time to write,--so that I hesitated,
-asked questions, told him, as usual, that I had no speech prepared.
-
-“But you know it is written,” he said, “that ‘in that hour it shall be
-given you what ye shall say.’”
-
-I could assure him that the prophecy had somewhat failed in my case,
-and that what was given me to say was not always worth listening to
-when it was said; and then I inquired:
-
-“What kind of crowd will be there?”
-
-“Oh, a good crowd!” he said.
-
-“But what kind of people?”
-
-“What kind of people?” he asked in a tone of great and genuine
-surprise. “What kind of people? Why, there’s only one kind of
-people--just people, just folks.”
-
-I went of course, and I went as well to Golden Rule Park and to Golden
-Rule Hall, and there was never such a school for public speaking as
-that crowded park afforded, with street cars grinding and scraping by
-one side of it and children laughing at their play on the swings and
-poles which Jones had put there for them; or else standing below the
-speaker and looking curiously up into his face, and filling him with
-the fear of treading any moment on their little fingers which, as they
-clung to the edge, made a border all along the front of the platform.
-And for a year or so after his death I spoke there every Sunday: we
-were trying so hard to keep his great work alive.
-
-
-
-
-XXI
-
-
-It was our interest in the disowned, the outcast, the poor, and the
-criminal that drew us first together; that and the fact that we are
-gradually assuming the same attitude toward life. He was full of
-Tolstoy at that time, and we could talk of the great Russian, and I
-could introduce him to the other great Russians. He was then a little
-past fifty, and had just made the astounding discovery that there was
-such a thing as literature in the world: he had been so busy working
-all his life that he had never had time to read, and the whole world of
-letters burst upon his vision all suddenly, and the glorious prospect
-fairly intoxicated him, so that he stood like stout Cortez, though not
-so silent, upon a peak in Darien.
-
-He was reading Mazzini also, and William Morris and Emerson, who
-expressed his philosophy fully, or as fully as one man can express
-anything for another, and it was not long before Jones discovered
-an unusual facility for expressing himself, both with his voice and
-with his pen. The letters he wrote to the men in his shops--putting
-them in their pay-envelopes--are models of simplicity and sincerity,
-which show a genuine culture and have that beauty which is the despair
-of conscious art.[A] He had just learned of Oscar Wilde’s “Ballad
-of Reading Gaol,” and he committed it to memory, or got it into his
-memory somehow, so that he would recite stanzas of it to anyone. He
-read Burns, too, with avidity, and I can see him now standing on the
-platform in one of his meetings, snapping his fingers as he recited:
-
- A fig for those by law protected!
- Liberty’s a glorious feast!
-
-But it was Walt Whitman whom he loved most, and his copy of “Leaves of
-Grass” was underscored in heavy lines with a red pencil until nearly
-every striking passage in the whole work had become a rubric. When
-anything struck him, he would have to come and tell me of it; sometimes
-he would not wait, but would call me up on the telephone and read it to
-me. I remember that occasion when his voice, over the wire, said:
-
-“Listen to this [and he read]:
-
- “The snag-tooth’d hostler with red hair, redeeming sins past and to
- come,
- Selling all he possesses, traveling on foot to fee lawyers for his
- brother and sit by him while he is tried for forgery.”
-
-Then he laughed, and his chuckle died away on the wire. That expressed
-him; that was exactly what he would have done for a brother, exactly
-what he did do for many a brother, since he regarded all men as his
-brothers, and treated them as such if they would let him. He was always
-going down to the city prisons, or to the workhouses, and talking to
-the poor devils there, quite as if he were one of them, which indeed
-he felt he was, and as all of us are, if we only knew it. And he was
-working all the time to get them out of prison, and finally he and I
-entered into a little compact by which he paid the expenses incident to
-their trials--the fees for stenographers and that sort of thing--if I
-would look after their cases. Hard as the work was, and sad as it was,
-and grievously as my law partners complained of the time it took, and
-of its probable effect on business (since no one wished to be known as
-a criminal lawyer!), it did pay in the satisfaction there was in doing
-a little to comfort and console--and, what was so much more, to compel
-in one city, at least, a discussion of the grounds and the purpose of
-our institutions. For instance, if some poor girl were arrested, and a
-jury trial were demanded for her, and her case were given all the care
-and attention it would have received had she been some wealthy person,
-the police, when they found they could not convict, were apt to be a
-little more careful of the liberties of individuals: they began to have
-a little regard for human rights and for human life.
-
-We completely broke up the old practice of arresting persons “on
-suspicion” and holding them at the will and pleasure of the police
-without any charge having been lodged against them; two or three trials
-before juries, the members of which could very easily be made to see,
-when it was pointed out to them a few times in the course of a three
-days’ trial, that there is nothing more absurd than that policemen
-should make criminals of people merely by suspecting them, and sending
-them to prison on that sole account, wrought a change. It annoyed the
-officials of course, because it interfered with their routine. It was
-no doubt exasperating to be compelled to stay in court two or three
-days and try some wretch according to the forms of law, just as if he
-were somebody of importance and consequence in the world, when they
-would so much rather have been out at the ball-game, or fishing, or
-playing pinochle in the guard-room at police headquarters with the
-detail that had been relieved. Jones managed to get himself fined for
-contempt one day, and he immediately turned the incident to his own
-advantage and made his point by drawing out his check-book with a
-flourish, writing his check for the amount of his fine, and declaring
-that this proved his contention that the only crime our civilization
-punishes is the crime of being poor.
-
-But he was most in his element when the police judge was absent, as
-he was now and then. In that exigency the law gave Jones, as mayor,
-the power to appoint the acting police judge; and when Jones did
-not go down and sit as magistrate himself, he appointed me; and we
-always found some reason or other for letting all the culprits go. The
-foundations of society were shaken of course, and the editorials and
-sermons were heavy with all the predictions of disaster; one might have
-supposed that the whole wonderful and beautiful fabric of civilization
-which man had been so long in rearing was to fall forever into the
-awful abyss because a few miserable outcasts had not been put in
-prison. But nothing happened after all; the poor _misérables_ were back
-again in a few days, and made to resume their hopeless rounds through
-the prison doors; but the policemen of Toledo had their clubs taken
-away from them, and they became human, and learned to help people, and
-not to hurt them if they could avoid it; and that police judge who once
-fined Jones became in time one of the leaders in our city of the new
-social movement that has marked the last decade in America.
-
-I learned to know a good many people in that underworld, many of whom
-were professed criminals, and there were some remarkable characters
-among them. I learned that, just as Jones had said, they were all
-people, just folks, and that they had so much more good than bad in
-them, that if some way could be devised whereby they might have a
-little better opportunity to develop the good, there was hope for all
-of them. Of course, in any effort to help them,--and our efforts were
-not always perhaps wholly wise,--we encountered that most formidable
-and fundamental obstacle to prison reform, the desire in the human
-breast for revenge, the savage hatred which is perhaps some obscure
-instinct of protection against the anti-social members of society: it
-stands forever in the way of all prison reform, and of ameliorations of
-the lot of the poor. It is that which keeps the barbarity of capital
-punishment alive in the world; it is that which makes every prison in
-the land a hell, where from time to time the most revolting atrocities
-are practiced. Out of those experiences, out of the contemplation of
-the misery, the pathos, the hopelessness of the condition of those
-victims, I wrote “The Turn of the Balance.” I was very careful of my
-facts; I was purposely conservative, and, forgetting the advice of
-Goethe, softened things down; as for instance, where I had known of
-cases in which prisoners had been hung up in the bull-rings for thirty
-days,--being lowered to the floor each night of course,--I put it
-down as eight days, and so on. And the wise and virtuous judges and
-the preachers and the respectable people all said it was untrue, that
-such things could not be. Since then there have been investigations of
-prisons in most of the states, with revelations of conditions far worse
-than any I tried to portray. And such things have gone on, and are
-going on to-day; but nobody cares.
-
-
-
-
-XXII
-
-
-And yet somebody after all did care about all those miserable souls
-who are immured in the terrible prisons which society maintains as
-monuments to the strange and implacable hatred in the breast of
-mankind; perhaps, in the last chapter of these vagrant memories, I
-allowed to creep into my utterance some of the old bitterness which
-now and then would taint our efforts, do what we might. And that is
-not at all the note I would adopt, though it used at times to be very
-difficult not to do so; one cannot, day after day, beat against the old
-and solid and impregnable wall of human institutions without becoming
-sore and sick in one’s soul.
-
-And there is no institution which society so cherishes as she does
-her penal institutions, and most sacrosanct of these are the ax, the
-guillotine, the garrote, the gibbet, the electric chair. We tried
-at each session of the legislature to secure the passage of a bill
-abolishing capital punishment, but the good people, those who felt that
-they held in their keeping the morals of the state, always opposed
-it and defeated it. Beloved and sacred institution! No wonder the
-ship-wrecked sailor, cast upon an unknown shore, on looking up and
-beholding a gallows, fell on his knees and said; “Thank God, I’m in a
-Christian land!”
-
-Travelers visit prisons and places of execution, those historic spots
-where humanity made red blots on its pathway in the notion that it was
-doing justice, and always they sigh and shake their heads, beholding
-in those events only a supreme folly and a supreme cruelty.
-
-All the executions, all the imprisonments of the past are seen to
-have been mistakes made by savages; there is not one for which to-day
-a word is uttered in excuse. All the Golgothas of the world have
-become Calvaries, where men go in pity and in tears in the hope that
-their regret may somehow work a retroactive expiation of the guilt of
-their cruel ancestors--and they rise from their knees and go forth
-and acquiesce in brutalities that are to-day different only in the
-slightest of degrees from those they bemoan.
-
-And so all the other executions of death sentences, on subjects less
-distinguished, with no glimmer of the halo of romance, no meed of
-martyrdom to illumine them, are seen to have been huge and grotesque
-mistakes of a humanity that at times gives itself over to the elemental
-savage lust of the blood of its fellows.
-
-I do not say, of course, that there was any similarity between the
-offenses of those whom Jones and I were concerned about in those days
-and those striking figures who illustrate the history of the world
-and mark the slow spiral path of the progress of mankind; these were
-the commonest of common criminals, poor, mistaken, misshapen beings,
-somehow marred in the making.
-
-It was my lot to defend a number of those who had committed murders,
-some of them murders so foul that there was nothing to say in their
-behalf. All one could say was in behalf of those whom one would save
-from committing another murder. But when you have come to know even
-a murderer, when day after day you have visited him in his cell, and
-have talked with him, and have seen him laugh and cry, and have had
-him tell you about his family, and that amazing complexity which he
-calls his life, when gradually you come to know him, no matter how
-undeserving he may be in the abstract, he undergoes a strange and
-subtle metamorphosis; slowly and gradually, without your being aware,
-he ceases to be a murderer, and becomes a human being, very much like
-all those about you. Thus, there is no such thing as a human being in
-the abstract; they are all thoroughly and essentially concrete.
-
-I have wandered far in these speculations, but I hope I have not
-wandered too far to make it clear that Jones’s point of view was always
-and invariably the human point of view; he knew no such thing as
-murderers, or even criminals, or “good” people, or “bad” people, they
-were all to him men and, indeed, brothers. And if society did not care
-about them, except in its desire to make way with them, Jones did care,
-and there were others who cared; the poor cared, the working people
-cared,--though they might themselves at times give way to the same
-elemental social rage,--they always endorsed Jones’s leniency whenever
-they had the opportunity. They had this opportunity at the polls every
-two years, and they never failed him.
-
-They did not fail him even in that last campaign of his, though every
-means known to man was tried to win them away from their peculiar
-allegiance. It was a strange campaign; I suppose there was never
-another like it in America. As I think of it there come back the
-recollections of those raw spring nights; we held our municipal
-elections in the spring in those days, that is, spring as we know
-it in the region of the Great Lakes. It is not so much spring as
-it is a final summing-up and recapitulation of winter, a coda to a
-monstrous meteorological concerto as doleful as the allegro lamentoso
-of Tschaikovsky’s “Sixth Symphony.” There is nowhere in the world, so
-far as I know, or care to know, such an abominable manifestation of the
-meanness of nature; it is meaner than the meanness of human nature,
-entailing a constant struggle with winds, a perpetual bending to gusts
-of snow that is rain, or a rain that is hail, with an east wind that
-blows persistently off Lake Erie for two months, with little stinging
-barbs of ice on its breath--and then, suddenly, it is summer without
-any gentle airs at all to introduce its heat.
-
-Jones was not very well that spring; and his throaty ailment was the
-very one that should have been spared such dreadful exposures as he
-was subjected to in that campaign. It was in the days before motor
-cars, and he and I drove about every night from one meeting to another
-in a little buggy he had, drawn by an old white mare named Molly,
-whose shedding of her coat was the only vernal sign to be detected
-anywhere. But Jones was so full of humor that he laughed at nearly
-everything--even his enemies, whom he never would call enemies. I can
-see him now--climbing down out of the buggy, carefully blanketing old
-Molly against the raw blasts, then brushing the white hairs from his
-front with his enormous hands, and running like a boy up the stairway
-to the dim little hall in the Polish quarter where the crowd had
-gathered. The men set up a shout when they saw him, and he leaped on
-the stage and, without waiting for the chairman to introduce him,--he
-scorned every convention that obtruded itself,--he leaned over the
-front of the platform and said:
-
-“What is the Polish word for liberty?”
-
-The crowd of Poles, huddling about a stove in the middle of the hall,
-their caps on, their pipes going furiously, their bodies covered with
-the strange garments they had brought with them across the sea, shouted
-in reply.
-
-“_Wolność!_”
-
-And Jones paused and listened, cocked his head, wrinkled his brows, and
-said:
-
-“What was that? Say it again!”
-
-Again they shouted it.
-
-“Say it again--once more!” he demanded. And again they shouted it in a
-splendid chorus. And then----
-
-“Well,” said Golden Rule Jones, “I can’t pronounce it, but it sounds
-good, and that is what we are after in this campaign.”
-
-Now that I have written it down, I have a feeling that I have utterly
-failed to give an adequate sense of the entire spontaneity and
-simplicity with which this was done. It was, of course, tremendously
-effective as a bit of campaigning, but only because it was so wholly
-sincere. Five minutes later he was hotly debating with a working man
-who had interrupted him to accuse him of being unfair to union labor in
-his shops, and there was no coddling, no truckling, no effort to win or
-to please on his part, though he would take boundlessly patient pains
-to explain to anyone who really wanted to know anything about him or
-his official acts.
-
-He was natural, simple and unspoiled, as naïve as a child, and “except
-ye become as little children ye cannot enter the kingdom of heaven.”
-He fully realized that the kingdom of heaven is within one’s self; he
-was not looking for it, or expecting it anywhere outside of himself,
-certainly he was not expecting it in a political campaign, or in the
-mere process of being elected to an office. He regarded his office,
-indeed, only as an opportunity to serve, and he had been in that office
-long enough to have lost any illusions he may ever have had concerning
-it; one term will suffice to teach a man that lesson, even though he
-seek the office again.
-
-He was like an evangelist, in a way, and his meetings were in the broad
-sense religious, though he had long since left his church, not because
-its ministers were always condemning him, but for the same reasons
-that Tolstoy left his church. His evangel was that of liberty. He had
-written a number of little songs. One of them, set to the tune of an
-old hymn he had heard in Wales as a boy, had a noble effect when
-the crowd sang it. It was the _Gad im Deimle_. His wife, who is an
-accomplished musician, had transposed its minors into majors, and in
-its strains, as they were sung by the men in his shops,--and there was
-singing for you!--or by the people in his political meetings, there was
-all the Welsh love of music, all the Welsh love of liberty, and a high
-and pure emotion in the chorus:
-
- Ever growing, swiftly flowing,
- Like a mighty river
- Sweeping on from shore to shore,
- Love will rule this wide world o’er.
-
-It was his Welsh blood, this Celtic strain in him, that accounted for
-much that was in his temperament, his wit, his humor, his instinctive
-appreciation of art, his contempt for artificial distinctions, his
-love of liberty, his passionate democracy. Sitting one evening not
-long ago in the visitor’s gallery of the House of Commons I saw the
-great Welsh radical, David Lloyd George, saw him enter and take his
-seat on the government bench. And as I looked at him I was impressed by
-his resemblance to someone I had known; there was a strange, haunting
-likeness, not in any physical characteristic, though there was the same
-Welsh ruddiness, and the hair was something like--but when Mr. Lloyd
-George turned and whispered to the prime minister and smiled I started,
-and said to myself: “It is Jones!”
-
-
-
-
-XXIII
-
-
-There was something pathetic in that last campaign, the pathos,
-perhaps, of the last phase. The long years of opposition had begun
-to tell: there was a strong determination to defeat him. He had not
-wished to stand again for the office, but, after the Toledo custom,
-there had been presented to him an informal petition, signed by several
-thousand citizens, asking him to do so, and he had consented. But when
-he wrote a statement setting forth his position--it was a document with
-the strong flavor of his personality in it--the newspapers refused to
-publish it; some of them would not publish it even as advertising, and
-he opened his campaign on the post-office corner, standing bare-headed
-in the March wind, his son Paul blowing a saxophone to attract a crowd.
-Many of his old supporters were falling away; it seemed for a time that
-he alone would have to make the campaign without any to speak for him
-on the stump; far otherwise than in that second campaign, when, after
-having been counted out in the Republican convention, he had run for
-the first time independently, a “Man Without a Party,” as he called
-himself; and thousands, themselves outraged by the treatment his own
-party had accorded him, in the spirit of fair play had rallied to his
-standard.
-
-But now things had changed, and an incident which occurred at the
-beginning of this campaign was significant of the feeling toward him,
-though in all kindness it most not be told in detail. There was a
-prominent man in town who had publicly reviled him and criticized him
-and persecuted him, who had done that which cut him more deeply than
-all else, that is, he had impugned his motives and questioned his
-sincerity. In some human hunger for understanding, I suppose, Jones
-went to this man with his written statement of his position and asked
-him to read it, merely to read it. The fellow’s answer was to snatch
-the paper from Jones’s hand and tear it up in his face. It is easy to
-imagine what a man ordinarily would do in the face of such an amazing
-insult; surely, if ever, the time had come for the “shotgun and the
-club.” Mayor Jones was large and powerful, he had been reared in the
-oil fields, where blows are quick as tempers; he was athletic, always
-in training, for he took constant physical exercise (one of the counts
-against him, indeed, was that he slept out of doors on the roof of his
-back porch, a bit of radicalism in those days, grown perfectly orthodox
-in these progressive times), and he was a Celt, naturally quick to
-resent insult, of a temperament prompt to take fire. But he turned away
-from the fellow, without a word.
-
-He came to my office immediately afterward, and I saw that he was
-trying hard to master some unusual emotion. I shall never forget him as
-he sat there, telling me of his experience. After a little while his
-face broke into that beautiful smile of his, more beautiful than I had
-ever seen it, and he said:
-
-“Well, I’ve won the greatest victory of my life; I have won at last
-a victory over myself, over my own nature. I have done what it has
-always been hardest for me to do.”
-
-“What?” I asked.
-
-He sat in silence for a moment, and then he said:
-
-“You know, it has always seemed to me that the most remarkable thing
-that was ever said of Jesus was that when he was reviled, he reviled
-not again. It is the hardest thing in the world to do.”
-
-The struggle over the renewal of the franchise grants to the street
-railway company had already begun, and the council had attempted to
-grant it the franchise it wished, renewing its privileges for another
-twenty-five years. When Mayor Jones vetoed the bill, the council
-prepared to pass it over his veto, and would have done so that Monday
-night had it not been for two men--Mayor Jones and Mr. Negley D.
-Cochran, the editor of the _News-Bee_, a newspaper which has always
-taken the democratic viewpoint of public questions. Mr. Cochran, with
-his brilliant gift in the writing of editorials, had called out the
-whole populace, almost, to attend the meeting of the council and to
-protest. The demonstration was so far effective that the council was
-too frightened to pass the street railway ordinance. The attorney for
-the street railway company was there, and when there was a lull in the
-noise, he sneered:
-
-“I suppose, Mr. Mayor, that this is an example of government under the
-Golden Rule.”
-
-“No,” replied Jones in a flash, “it is an example of government under
-the rule of gold.”
-
-Unless it were because of his interference with the nefarious
-privileges of a few, one can see no reason why the press and pulpit
-should have opposed him. What had he done? He had only preached that
-the fundamental doctrine of Christianity was sound, and, as much as a
-man may in so complex a civilization, he had tried to practice it. He
-had taught kindness and tolerance, and pity and mercy; he had visited
-the sick, and gone to those that were in prison; he had said that all
-men are free and equal, that they have been endowed by their Creator
-with certain inalienable rights. He had said that it is wrong to kill
-people, even in the electric chair, that it is wrong to take from the
-poor, without giving them in return. He had not said these things in
-anger, or in bitterness; he had never been personal, he had always been
-explicit in saying that he, as a part of society, was equally to blame
-with all the rest for social wrongs. The only textbooks he ever used in
-his campaigns were the New Testament, the Declaration of Independence,
-and, of course, his beloved Walt Whitman. And yet the pulpits rang
-every Sunday with denunciations of him, and the newspapers opposed
-him. Why was it, because a man endorsed these old doctrines upon which
-society claims to rest, that society should denounce him?
-
-I think it was because he was so utterly and entirely sincere, and
-because he believed these things, and tried to put them into practice
-in his life, and wished them to be more fully incorporated in the life
-of society. Society will forgive anything in a man, except sincerity.
-If he be sincere in charity, in pity, in mercy, in sympathy for the
-outcast, the despised, the imprisoned, all that vast horde of the
-denied and proscribed, still less will it forgive him, for it knows
-instinctively that the privileges men have or seek could not exist in a
-system where these principles were admitted as vital, inspiring force.
-
-There was nothing, of course, for one who believed in the American
-doctrines to do but to support such a man, and when he appeared to be
-so utterly without supporters it seemed to be one’s duty more than
-ever, though I own to having shrunk from such unconventional methods as
-Jones employed. That meeting at the post-office corner, for instance;
-someone might laugh, and in the great American self-consciousness and
-fear of the ridiculous, what was one to do? The opposition, that is,
-the two old parties, the Republican and Democratic, had nominated
-excellent men against Jones; the Republican nominee, indeed, Mr. John
-W. Dowd, was a man to whom I had gone to school, an old and very dear
-friend of our family, a charming gentleman of cultivated tastes. It
-was not easy to be in the attitude of opposing him, but my duty seemed
-clear, and I went into the campaign with Jones, and we spoke together
-every night.
-
-It was a campaign in which were discussed most of the fundamental
-problems of social life. A stranger, coming to Toledo at that time,
-might have thought us a most unsophisticated people, for there were
-speculations about the right of society to inflict punishment, the
-basis of property, and a rather searching inquiry into the subject of
-representative government. This was involved in the dispute as to the
-propriety of political machines, for the Republicans by that time had a
-party organization so strong that it was easily denominated a machine;
-it was so strong that it controlled every branch of the city government
-except the executive; it never could defeat Jones. There was a good
-deal said, too, about the enforcement of law, a subject which has its
-fascination for the people of my town.
-
-
-
-
-XXIV
-
-
-Besides these interesting topics there was the subject of municipal
-home rule. This had already become vital in Toledo because, a year or
-so before, the Republican party organization through its influence
-in the state, without having to strain its powers of persuasion, had
-induced the legislature to pass a special law which deprived the Mayor
-of Toledo of his control of the police force and vested the government
-of that body in a commission appointed by the governor of the state.
-
-It had been, of course, a direct offense to Jones, and it was intended
-to take from him the last of his powers. He had been greatly roused
-by it; the morning after the law had been enacted he had appeared
-at my house before breakfast to discuss this latest assault upon
-liberty. The law was an exact replica of a law that had been passed for
-Cincinnati many years before, and that law had been sustained by the
-Supreme Court in a decision which had made it the leading case on that
-subject of constitutional law for a whole generation. Time and again
-it had been attacked and always it had been sustained; to contest the
-constitutionality of this new act seemed the veriest folly.
-
-But Jones was determined to resist; like some stout burgomaster of an
-old free city of Germany he determined to stand out against the city’s
-overlords from the rural districts, and he insisted on my representing
-him in the litigation which his resistance would certainly provoke.
-I had no hope of winning, and told him so; I explained the precedent
-in the Cincinnati case, and that only made him more determined; if
-there was one thing more than another for which he had a supreme and
-sovereign contempt it was a legal precedent. My brethren at the bar all
-laughed at me, as I knew they would; but I went to work, and after a
-few days’ investigation became convinced that the doctrine laid down in
-that leading case was not at all sound.
-
-When I came to this conviction, I induced Jones to retain additional
-counsel, one of the most brilliant lawyers at our bar, Mr. Clarence
-Brown, a man who, in addition to his knowledge of the law, could bring
-to the forum a charming personality, a wit and an eloquence that were
-irresistible. He, too, set to work, and in a few days he was convinced,
-as I, that the precedent should be overthrown. Jones refused to turn
-over the command of the police to the new commissioners whom the
-governor appointed; they applied to the Supreme Court for a writ of
-mandamus, we tried the case, and we won, overthrowing not only the
-doctrine at the Cincinnati case, but the whole fabric of municipal
-legislation in the state, so that a special session of the legislature
-was necessary to enact new codes for the government of the cities.
-
-Our satisfaction and our pride in our legal achievement was somewhat
-modified by the fact that the application of the same rule to
-conditions in our sister city of Cleveland had the effect, in certain
-cases then pending, of pulling down the work which another great mayor,
-Tom L. Johnson, was then doing in that city. It was even said that the
-Supreme Court had been influenced by the desire of Mark Hanna, Tom
-Johnson’s ancient enemy in Cleveland, to see his old rival defeated.
-Some were unkind enough to say that Mark Hanna’s influence was more
-powerful with the court, as at that time constituted, than was the
-logic of the attorneys who were representing Golden Rule Jones.
-
-But however that may have been, the decision in that case had ultimate
-far-reaching effects in improving the conditions in Ohio cities, and
-was the beginning of a conflict that did not end until they were free
-and autonomous. In my own case it was the beginning of a study of
-municipal government that has grown more fascinating as the years have
-fled, a study that has led me to see, or to think that I see, the large
-hope of our democracy in the cities of America.
-
-I regard it as Jones’s supreme contribution to the thought of his time
-that, by the mere force of his own original character and personality,
-he compelled a discussion of fundamental principles of government.
-Toledo to-day is a community which has a wider acquaintance with all
-the abstract principles of social relations than any other city in the
-land, or in the world, since, when one ventures into generalities, one
-might as well make them as sweeping as one can.
-
-Jones’s other great contribution to the science of municipal government
-was that of non-partizanship in local affairs. That is the way he used
-to express it; what he meant was that the issues of national politics
-must not be permitted to obtrude themselves into municipal campaigns,
-and that what divisions there are should be confined to local issues.
-There is, of course, in our cities, as in our land or any land, only
-one issue, that which is presented by the conflict of the aristocratic,
-or plutocratic, spirit and the spirit of democracy.
-
-Jones used to herald himself as “a Man Without a Party,” but he was
-a great democrat, the most fundamental I ever knew or imagined; he
-summed up in himself, as no other figure of our time since Lincoln,
-all that the democratic spirit is and hopes to be. Perhaps in this
-characterization I seem to behold his figure larger than it was in
-relation to the whole mass, but while his work may appear at first
-glance local, it was really general and universal. No one can estimate
-the peculiar and lively force of such a personality; certainly no one
-can presume to limit his influence, for such a spirit is illimitable
-and irresistible.
-
-He was elected in that last campaign for the fourth time, but he did
-not live very long. He had never, it seemed to me, been quite the same
-after the day when he had that experience of insult which he did not
-resent. “Draw the sting,” he used to counsel us when, in our campaign
-harangues, we became bitter, or sarcastic, or merely smart. He had
-supreme reliance on the simple truth, on the power of reasonableness.
-He never reviled again; he never sought to even scores. When he died
-the only wounds he left in human hearts were because he was no more.
-They understood him at last, those who had scoffed and sneered and
-abused and vilified, and I, who had had the immense privilege of his
-friendship, and thought I knew him,--when I stood that July afternoon,
-on the veranda of his home, beside his bier to speak at his funeral,
-and looked out over the thousands who were gathered on the wide lawn
-before his home,--I realized that I, too, had not wholly understood him.
-
-I know not how many thousands were there; they were standing on the
-lawns in a mass that extended across the street and into the yards
-on the farther side. Down to the corner, and into the side streets,
-they were packed, and they stood in long lines all the way out to the
-cemetery. In that crowd there were all sorts of that one sort he knew
-as humanity without distinction,--judges, and women of prominence
-and women whom he alone would have included in humanity, there were
-thieves, and prize-fighters,--and they all stood there with the tears
-streaming down their faces.
-
-There is no monument to Golden Rule Jones in Toledo; and since St.
-Gaudens is gone I know of no one who could conceive him in marble
-or in bronze. There is not a public building which he erected, no
-reminder of him which the eye can see or the hands touch. But his name
-is spoken here a thousand times a day, and always with the reverence
-that marks the passage of a great man upon the earth. And I am sure
-that his influence did not end here. Did not a letter come from Yasnaya
-Polyana in the handwriting of the great Tolstoy, who somehow had heard
-of this noble and simple soul who was, in his own way, trying the same
-experiment of life which the great Russian was making?
-
-
-
-
-XXV
-
-
-In the beginning, of course, it was inevitable that Jones should have
-been called a Socialist. I suppose he did not care much himself, but
-the Socialists cared, and promptly disowned him, and were at one with
-the capitalists in their hatred and abuse of him. He shared, no doubt,
-the Socialists’ great dream of an ordered society, though he would not
-have ordered it by any kind of force or compulsion, but in that spirit
-which they sneer at as mere sentimentalism. He was patient with them;
-he saw their point of view; he had, indeed, the immense advantage of
-being in advance of them in his development. He saw Socialism not,
-as most see it, from the hither side, but from the farther side, as
-one who has passed through it; he was like a man who having left the
-dusty highway and entered a wood which he thinks his journey’s end,
-suddenly emerges and from a hill beholds the illimitable prospect that
-lies beyond. Of course he could never endure anything so doctrinaire as
-Socialism, in the form in which he was accustomed to see it exemplified
-in the Socialists about him. He could not endure their orthodoxy, any
-more than he could endure the orthodoxy they were contending against.
-Their sectarianism was to him quite as impossible as that sectarianism
-he had known in other fields. Their bigotry was as bad as any. He saw
-no good to come from a substitution of their tyranny for any other of
-the many old tyrannies in the world. And naturally to one of his spirit
-the class hatred they were always inciting under the name of class
-consciousness was as abhorrent to him as all hatred was.
-
-Sometimes the Socialists, with their passion for generalization, for
-labeling and pigeonholing everything in the universe, said he was
-an anarchist. The more charitable of them, wishing to sterilize the
-term and rid it of its sinister implication, but still insistently
-scientific, said he was a “philosophic” anarchist. That is a term
-too vague to use, though in one sense, I suppose, all good men are
-anarchists, in that they would live their lives as well without laws as
-with them. Jones himself would have scorned those classifications as
-readily as he would had anyone said he was a duke or an earl. “No title
-is higher than Man,” he wrote once in a little campaign song. And he
-was that--a Man.
-
-He would not join any society or, as he said, “belong” to anything. I
-have thought so often of what he said to a book agent one day. We were
-just on the point of leaving the Mayor’s office for luncheon, and the
-individual who wishes “just a minute” was inevitably there, blocking
-the way out of the office. He was indubitably a book agent; anyone
-who has a rudimentary knowledge of human nature can identify them at
-once, but this one had as his insinuating disguise some position as a
-representative of a Thomas Jefferson Memorial Association, and he was
-there to confer on the Mayor the honor of a membership in that society.
-
-“And what books am I required to buy?” asked Jones.
-
-“Well,” the agent said, “you are not required to buy any books,
-but, of course, a member of the association would naturally want
-Mr. Jefferson’s complete works.” Jones’s eyes were twinkling; “Mr.”
-Jefferson amused him immensely, of course.
-
-“They are very popular,” the man went on, “many persons are buying
-them.”
-
-“I don’t find the ideas in them very popular; certainly those in Mr.
-Jefferson’s greatest work are not popular; no one wants to see them
-adopted.”
-
-“To which one of his works do you refer?” asked the agent.
-
-“Why, the one that is best known,” said Jones, “its title is ‘The
-Declaration of Independence.’ I already have a copy of that.”
-
-The poor fellow was conscious that his enterprise was not going very
-well, but he said, with a flourish of magnanimity:
-
-“Oh, well, it’s immaterial to me whether you take the books or not, but
-of course you will wish to belong to the association?”
-
-“But I already belong to the association in which Mr. Jefferson was
-chiefly interested,” said Jones.
-
-“What is that, may I ask?” said the agent.
-
-“The United States of America,” said Jones, “and as I am a member of
-that, I see no reason why I should join anything smaller.”
-
-And then he laughed, and if there had been any uneasiness because of
-his gentle guying, it disappeared when he laid his hand on the agent’s
-shoulder and looked into his eyes in that spirit of friendliness which
-enveloped him like an aureole.
-
-He had a conception of unity that was far beyond his contemporaries,
-a conception that will be beyond humanity for many years. It was that
-conception which enabled him to see through the vast superstition of
-war, and the superstition of partizanship, and all the other foolish
-credulities that have misled the people in all times.
-
-One evening, it was just at dark, we were leaving the mayor’s office
-to walk home--we walked home together nearly every evening--and in the
-dusk a tramp, a negro, came up and asked him for the price of a night’s
-lodging. The Mayor fumbled in his pockets, but he had no small change,
-he had only a five-dollar bill, but he gave this to the tramp and said:
-
-“Go get it changed, and bring it back.”
-
-The tramp took it and disappeared, and we waited. Jones talked on about
-other things, but I was interested in the tramp; my expectation of his
-return was far more uncertain than Jones’s. But after a while the tramp
-did come back, and he poured out into the Mayor’s hand the change in
-silver coin. The Mayor complained humanly of the heavy silver which
-the Secretary of the Treasury always sends out to us, so that the new
-one-dollar bills may go to New York City, and tumbled the money into
-his trousers pocket.
-
-“But ain’t you goin’ to count it?” asked the negro in surprise.
-
-“Did you count it?” asked Jones.
-
-“Yes, suh, I counted it.”
-
-“Was it all there, wasn’t it all right?”
-
-“Yes, suh.”
-
-“Well, then, there’s no need for me to count it, is there?”
-
-The negro looked in wide white-eyed surprise.
-
-“Did you take out what you wanted?” asked the Mayor.
-
-“No, suh, I didn’t take any.”
-
-“Here, then,” said Jones, and he gave the man a half-dollar and went on.
-
-There was no possible ostentation in this; it was perfectly natural; he
-was doing such things every hour of the day.
-
-He had no need to stop there, in the dark, to impress me, his friend
-and intimate. I do him wrong even to stoop to explain so much. But I
-wonder how much good his confidence did that wandering outcast? How
-much good did it do to me? By the operation of the same law which
-brought that vagrant back to Jones’s side with all the money, I with my
-distrust, might have been treated far differently.
-
-Or so, at least, it seems to me, and I tell this incident as one which
-proves the reverence Jones had for the great natural law of love.
-For the chief count in the indictment respectability brought against
-him was that he had no reverence for law. To see and hear them when
-they said this, one would have supposed that a council or legislature
-had never been corrupted in the land. It used to amuse Jones to
-reflect that his literal acceptance of the fundamental principle of
-Christianity should have been such a novel and unprecedented thing that
-it instantly marked him out from all the other Christians and made him
-famous in Christendom.
-
-
-
-
-XXVI
-
-
-I say famous, and perhaps I mean only notorious, for in the beginning
-many of his townsmen meant it as a reflection, and not a tribute. Some
-of them said it was but an advertising dodge, a bit of demagogism, but
-as Jones applied the rule to everybody, other explanations had soon to
-be adopted, and after he had employed it about the City Hall for two
-years the situation became so desperate that something had to be done.
-Controversy was provoked, and for almost a decade, Toledo presented
-the unique spectacle of a modern city in which this principle was
-discussed as though it were something newly discovered. Some seemed
-to think that Jones had invented it; they said it was absurd, that
-it really would not work. Of course most regarded it, as most now
-regard the Golden Rule, as a pretty sentiment merely, something for
-the children in Sunday-school. It is considered, of course, as any
-sophisticated person knows, as altogether impractical, and even silly
-and absurd.
-
-To be sure, the clergymen were under some sort of professional
-necessity of treating it seriously, and they used to prepare profound
-papers, arranged in heads and subheads, with titles and subtitles, and
-after all the usual ostentatious preliminary examination of the grounds
-and the authorities, and with the appearance of academic fairness,
-in discussions that were formal, exact, redolent of the oil, bearing
-the hallmark of the schools, they would show that Jesus meant there
-were only certain exigencies in which, and certain persons to whom,
-this rule was to be applied. It was all very learned and impressive,
-but one was apt to develop a disturbing doubt as to whether one was
-of those to whom it was to be applied. It was certainly not to be
-applied to criminals, or perhaps even to politicians. It was not to be
-applied to poor people, or to the working people, unless they were in
-Sunday-school as conscious inferiors, in devout and penitent attitudes.
-And as these people were so seldom in church or Sunday-school, and as
-those who were there apparently needed no such consideration, these
-discourses left one rather uncertain as to what to do with the Golden
-Rule.
-
-All men of course believe in the Golden Rule, or say they do, but they
-believe in it only “up to a certain point,” and with each individual
-this point differs; the moment in which to abandon the Rule and take
-to “the shotgun and the club” comes to some soon, to others late, and
-to some oftener than others; but to most, if not to all of us, it
-inevitably arrives. That is why, no doubt, the world is no farther
-along in the solution of the many distressing problems it has on its
-mind.
-
-According to the standards of conduct and of “honor” inherited from
-the feudal ages, while personal violence may be conceded to be
-illegal, one is, nevertheless, still generally taught that it is wrong
-and unmanly not to resent an insult or an injury, by violence, if
-necessary,--fighting and killing, by individuals, states and nations,
-are thought to be not only honorable and worthy, but, in many cases,
-indispensable. Society has an obsession similar to that strange
-superstition of the feud, which affects the Kentucky mountaineers.
-Generally we are less afraid to fight than we are not to fight. Our
-system is based on force, our faith is placed in force, so that nearly
-all of the proposals of reform, for the correction of abuses, involve
-the use of violence in some form. We have erected a huge idol in the
-figure of the beadle, who, assisted by the constable, is to make
-society over, to make men “good.” Jones came upon the scene in America
-at a time when there was undoubtedly a new and really splendid impetus
-toward a better and higher conception of life and conduct, both in
-public and private. Yet even then no other thought seemed to possess
-the public mind than that someone should be put in prison and made to
-suffer.
-
-Men did not and do not see what Jones saw so much more clearly than
-any other reformer of his time, namely that, above all the laws men
-make with their political machines in their legislatures, there is a
-higher law, and that the Golden Rule is a rule of conduct deduced from
-that law. He saw that men, whether they knew it or not, liked it or
-not, or were conscious of it or not, had in all times been living, and
-must forever go on living, under the principle on which the Golden Rule
-is based. That is, Jones saw that this great law had always existed
-in the universe, just as the law of gravitation existed before Newton
-discovered it. It is inherent in the very constitution of things, as
-one of that body of laws which govern the universe and always act and
-react equally among men. And Jones felt that men should for their
-comfort, if for no higher motive, respect this law and get the best
-out of life by observing it; and that it should be the business of men
-through their governments to seek out this law and the rules that might
-scientifically be deduced from it, instead of putting their faith in
-their own contrivances of statutes, resolutions, orders, and decrees,
-and, when these would not work, trying to make them effective through
-grand juries and petit juries, and all the hideous machinery of jails
-and prisons, and scaffolds and electric chairs. And because he had no
-superstitious reverence for policemen or their clubs, or for soldiers
-and their bayonets and machine guns, they said he had no reverence for
-law.
-
-He had, of course, been to the legislature; he had seen the midnight
-sessions there, when statutes were enacted amid scenes of drunken
-riot and confusion, and he saw no reason why he should have reverence
-for the acts of these men. Perhaps he was wrong; I am only trying
-to tell how it appeared to him. He was not a lawyer, but he knew
-what many lawyers have never learned, that there is sometimes a vast
-difference between a statute and a law. He saw that not all statutes
-are laws; that they are laws only when, by accident or design, they
-are in conformity with those rules by which the universe is governed,
-whether in the physical or the spiritual world, and these laws, eternal
-and immutable, are invariable, self-executing, instant in operation,
-without judges to declare them, or executives to enforce them, or
-courts to say whether they are unconstitutional or not.
-
-He saw that the law on which the Golden Rule is founded, the law of
-moral action and reaction, is the one most generally ignored. Its
-principle he felt to be always at work, so that men lived by it whether
-they wished to or not, whether they knew it or not. According to this
-law, hate breeds hate and love produces love in return; and all force
-begets resistance, and the result is the general disorder and anarchy
-in which we live so much of the time.
-
-It may be that in this view of life some dangerous apothegms are
-involved; as we grow older we grow conservative, and conservatism is
-a kind of cynicism, a kind of fear, the trembling distrust of age.
-But I know that in the life concept to which Jones came in his study
-of this principle, every act of his life, no matter how trifling and
-insignificant it may have seemed, suddenly took on a vast and vital
-significance; so that the hasty glance, the unkind word, the very
-spirit in which a thing is said or done, were seen to have an effect
-which may reach farther than the imagination can go, an effect not
-only on one’s own life and character, but on the lives and characters
-of all those about him. He was always human; I say that to prevent any
-impression that he was solemn or priggish; he deliberately took up
-smoking, for instance, toward the end of his days, because, he said
-with a chuckle, one must have some vices. And sometimes when the Golden
-Rule seemed not to “work,” he would truly say it was only because he
-didn’t know how to work it. And he used to quote Walt Whitman:
-
- The song is to the singer and comes back most to him;
-
- * * * * *
-
- The love is to the lover and comes back most to him;
- The gift is to the giver, and comes back most to him--it cannot fail.
-
-
-
-
-XXVII
-
-
-I first saw Tom Johnson in the early nineties in Cleveland, at a
-Democratic state convention, where one naturally might have expected
-to see him. I had gone to Cleveland to report the convention for the
-Chicago _Herald_, and since it was summer, and summer in Ohio, it was
-a pleasant thing to be back again among the Democrats of my own state,
-many of whom I had known, some of whom I honored. And that morning--I
-think it was the morning after some frenzied members of the Hamilton
-county delegation had been shooting at one another in Banks Street
-in an effort to settle certain of those differences in the science
-of statecraft which then were apt, as they are now, to trouble the
-counsels of the Cincinnati politicians--I was walking along Superior
-Street when I heard a band playing the sweet and somehow pathetic
-strains of “Home Again, Home Again.” There were other bands playing
-that morning, but the prevailing tune was “The Campbells are Coming”;
-for we might as well have been Scotchmen at the siege of Lucknow in
-Ohio during those years that James E. Campbell was Governor of our
-state. We grew to love the tune and we grew to love him, he was so
-brilliant and human and affable; but he could not pose very well in a
-frock coat, and after he had been renominated at that very convention,
-McKinley defeated him for governor.
-
-But as I was saying, it was not “The Campbells are Coming” which
-the band was playing that morning, but “Home Again,” and along the
-wide street, with an intimate sense of proprietorship that excluded
-strangers from this particular demonstration, people were saying:
-
-“It’s Tom Johnson, home from Europe!”
-
-It was his own employees who had gone forth to meet him, the men who
-worked for him in the street railway system he owned in Cleveland in
-those days, and I thought it rather a pretty compliment that a man’s
-employees should like him so well that they would turn out to welcome
-him with a band when he came home from his holiday abroad. I could
-understand their feeling when an hour later I saw Tom Johnson in the
-Hollenden Hotel, the center of a group of political friends; he seemed
-as glad as any of them to be back among so many Democrats. He still
-had his youth, and there was in his manner a peculiar, subtle charm, a
-gift with which the gods are rather stingy among the sons of men. I can
-see him now, his curly hair moist with the heat of the summer day, his
-profile, clear enough for a Greek coin, and the smile that never failed
-him, or failed a situation, to the end. He was, I think, in Congress in
-those days of which I am writing, or if he was not, he went to Congress
-soon after from one of the Cleveland districts. And while he was there
-he wrote a remarkable letter in response to a communication he had
-received from some girls who worked in a cloak factory in Cleveland,
-asking him to vote against the Wilson tariff bill when it was amended
-by adding a specific duty to the _ad valorem_ duty on women’s cloaks.
-The girls, of course, poor things, had not written the communication;
-it was written by the editor of a protectionist newspaper in Cleveland,
-and the response which Johnson sent was one of the simplest and
-clearest expositions of the evils of protection I ever read. I had read
-it when it was published, and had been delighted, but it was not for a
-dozen years that I was able to tell Johnson of my delight, and then one
-day as he and Dr. Frederic C. Howe and I were at luncheon I spoke of
-the letter. He laughed.
-
-“It was a great letter, wasn’t it?” he said.
-
-“Indeed it was,” I replied.
-
-“A wonderful letter,” he went on. “You know, it completely shut them up
-around here. The editor of that paper tried for weeks to reply to it,
-and then he gave it up, and he told me privately some time afterward
-that he was sure the theory of protection was right, but that it
-wouldn’t work on women’s cloaks. Yes, it was a great letter.” And then
-with a sigh, he added: “I wish I could have written such a letter.
-Henry George worked on that letter for days and nights before we got
-it to suit us; I’d think and think, and he’d write and write, and then
-tear up what he had written, but finally we got it down.”
-
-Henry George was the great influence in his life, as he has been the
-influence in the lives of so many in this world. Johnson had been a
-plutocrat; he had made, or to use a distinction Golden Rule Jones
-used to insist upon, he had “gathered,” by the time he was thirty,
-an immense fortune, through legal privileges. Johnson’s privileges
-had been tariffs on steel, and street railway franchises in several
-cities, and thus early in life he was almost ready for that most
-squalid of all poverty, mere possession. And then suddenly he had a
-marvelous experience, one that comes to few men; he caught a vision of
-a new social order.
-
-He was on a railway train going from Indianapolis to New York, and the
-news agent on the train importuned him to buy a novel. Johnson waved
-him aside--I can imagine with what imperious impatience. But this agent
-was not to be waved aside; he persisted after the manner of his kind;
-he had that weird occult power by which the book agent weaves his spell
-and paralyses the will, even such a superior will as Tom Johnson’s,
-and the agent sold to him, not a novel, but Henry George’s “Social
-Problems.” He was not given to reading; he read only for information,
-and even then he usually had someone else read to him. Once during his
-last illness he asked me what I was reading, and I told him Ferrero’s
-“Rome,” and tried to give him some notion of Ferrero’s description of
-the political machine which Cæsar and Pompey had organized, and of
-the private fire department of Crassus, and he said: “Well, I’ll have
-Newton read it to me.” He used to wonder sometimes half wistfully,
-as though he were missing some good in life, how it was that I loved
-poetry so, and it was somehow consoling when Mr. Richard McGhee, that
-fine Irish member of Parliament, told me one night in the House of
-Commons that when Johnson made that last journey to England he had read
-Burns to him, and that Johnson had loved and even recited certain
-passages from them. Well then, Johnson bought his book, and idly
-turning the pages began to read, became interested, finally enthralled,
-and read on and on. Later he bought “Progress and Poverty,” and as he
-read that wonderful book, as there dawned upon his consciousness the
-awful realization that notwithstanding all the amazing progress mankind
-has made in the world, poverty has kept even pace with it, stalking
-ever at its side, that with all of man’s inventions, labor-saving
-devices, and all that, there has been no such amelioration of the
-human lot, no such improvement in society as should have come from so
-much effort and achievement, he had a spiritual awakening, experienced
-within him something that was veritably, as the Methodists would say, a
-“conversion.” There was an instant revolution in his nature, or in his
-purpose; he turned to confront life in an entirely new attitude, and he
-began to have that which so many, rich and poor, utterly lack, so many
-to whom existence is but a meaningless confusion of the senses, a life
-concept. And with this new concept there came a new ideal.
-
-He at once sought out Henry George, the two became fast friends, and
-the friendship lasted until George’s dramatic death in the midst of his
-campaign for the mayoralty of New York. George used to do much of his
-work at the Johnson home in Cleveland--and used to forget to fasten his
-collar when he was called from that spell of concentration over his
-desk to the dinner table. The Johnsons were aristocrats from Kentucky,
-descended from a long line of southern ancestors. And yet Tom Johnson
-was a Democrat, from conviction and principle. In fact it seems almost
-as though the cause of democracy would never have got on at all if
-now and then it had not had aristocrats to lead it, as ever it has
-had, from the times of the Gracchi to those of the Mirabeaus and the
-Lafayettes and the Jeffersons.
-
-Tom Johnson made an instant impression when he went into politics, and
-he went in on the explicit advice of Henry George. When he arose in the
-House of Representatives at Washington to make his first speech, no one
-paid the least attention. It is, I suppose, the most difficult place in
-the world to speak, not so much because of the audience, but because of
-the arrangement; that scattered expanse of desks is not conducive to
-dramatic effect, or to any focusing of interest. The British Parliament
-is the only one in the world that is seated properly; there the old
-form of the lists is maintained, opponents meet literally face to face
-across that narrow chamber. But when Johnson arose at Washington, there
-were those scattered desks, and the members--lolling at their desks,
-writing letters, reading newspapers, clapping their hands for pages,
-gossiping, sauntering about, arising and going out, giving no heed
-whatever. But Tom Johnson had not spoken many words before Tom Reed,
-then the leader on the Republican side, suddenly looked up, listened,
-put his hand behind his ear, and leaning forward intently said: “Sh!”
-and thus brought his followers to attention before the new and strong
-personality whose power he had so instantly recognized.
-
-It was a power that was felt in that House. They tried to shelve
-him; they put him on the committee for the District of Columbia, and
-no shelf could have pleased him more, or been better suited to his
-peculiar genius, for it gave him a city to deal with. The very first
-thing he did was to investigate the revenues of the District, and he
-made a report on the subject, based on the theories underlying the
-proposition of the single tax. He tried to have the single tax adopted
-for the District, and while he failed in that design his report is a
-classic on the whole subject of municipal taxation, even if, like most
-classics, it is little read. He made some splendid speeches, too, on
-the tariff, and by a clever device, under the rule giving members leave
-to print what no one is willing to hear, he contrived, with the help
-of several colleagues, to distribute over the land more than a million
-copies of Henry George’s “Protection and Free Trade,” giving that work
-a larger circulation than all the six best sellers among the romantic
-novels.
-
-It is one of the peculiar weaknesses of our political system that
-our strongest men cannot be kept very long in Congress, and it was
-Johnson’s fate to be defeated after his second term, but he then
-entered a field of political activity which was not only thoroughly
-congenial to him, but one in which for the present the struggle for
-democracy must be carried on. That field is the field of municipal
-politics which he entered just at the time of the awakening which
-marked the first decade of the new century.
-
-
-
-
-XXVIII
-
-
-When I think of the beginning of that period my thought goes back to
-an afternoon in New York, when, sitting in the editorial rooms of
-_McClure’s Magazine_, Lincoln Steffens said to me:
-
-“I’m going to do a series of articles for the magazine on municipal
-government.”
-
-“And what do you know about municipal government?” I asked in the tone
-a man may adopt with his friend.
-
-“Nothing,” he replied. “That’s why I’m going to write about it.”
-
-We smiled in the pleasure we both had in his fun, but we did not talk
-long about municipal government as we were to do in the succeeding
-years; we had more interesting subjects to discuss just then.
-
-I had been on a holiday to New England with my friend John D. Barry,
-and had just come from Maine where I had spent a week at Kittery Point,
-in the delight of long summer afternoons in the company of Mr. William
-Dean Howells, whom, indeed, in my vast admiration, and I might say,
-my reverence for him, I had gone there to see. He had introduced me
-to Mark Twain, and I had come away with feelings that were no less
-in intensity I am sure than those with which Moses came down out of
-Mount Horeb. And Steffens and I celebrated them and their writings and
-that quality of right-mindedness they both got into their writings,
-and we had our joy in their perfect Americanism. The word had a
-definite meaning for us; it occurred to us at that time because of
-some tremendous though unavailing blows which Mark Twain had delivered
-against our government’s policy in the Philippines, the time falling
-in that era of khaki imperialism which opened in this land with the
-Spanish war and too much reading of Kipling, who, if I could bring
-myself to think that literature has any influence in America, might
-be said to have induced us to imitate England in her colonial policy.
-There comes back the picture of Mark Twain as he sat on the veranda of
-the home he had that summer at Sewell’s Bridge, a cottage on a hill
-all hidden among the pines; he sat there in his picturesque costume
-of white trousers and blue jacket, with his splendid plume of white
-hair, and he smoked cigar after cigar--he was an “end to end smoker”
-as George Ade says--and as he sat and smoked he drawled a delightful
-monologue about some of his experiences with apparitions and telepathy
-and that weird sort of thing; he said they were not to be published
-during his life, and since his death I have been waiting to see them
-in print. He had just been made a Doctor of Laws by some university
-in June of that year, a distinguishing fact known to a caller from
-the fashionable resort of York near by, who, though somewhat hazy as
-to Mark Twain’s performances in literature, nevertheless scrupulously
-addressed him as “Doctor,” and every time he was thus recognized in
-his new and scholarly dignity, he winked at us from under his shaggy
-brows. Perhaps that was part of his Americanism, too, unless it were a
-part of that universality which made him the great humorist he was,
-and philosopher, too; an universality that makes Mr. Howells a humorist
-as well as a novelist and a philosopher--the elements are scarcely
-inseparable--though Mr. Howells’s humor is of a more delicate quality
-than that of his great friend, and, as one might say, colleague, a
-quality so rare and delicate and delightful that some folk seem to
-miss it altogether. Perhaps it was the Americanism of these two great
-men and their democracy that have won them such recognition in Europe,
-where they have represented the best that is in us.
-
-I speak of their democracy for the purpose of likening it in its
-very essence to that of Golden Rule Jones and of Johnson, too, and
-of all the others who have struggled in the human cause. We owe Mr.
-Howells especially a debt in this land. He jeopardized his standing
-as an artist, perhaps, by his polemics in the cause of realism in the
-literary art, but he was the first to look about him and recognize his
-own land and his own people in his fiction; that is why it is so very
-much the life of our land as we know it, and to me there came long ago
-a wonderful and consoling lesson, when in reading after him, and after
-Tolstoy and Tourgenieff, and Flaubert, and Zola, and Valdez, and Thomas
-Hardy, I discovered that people are all alike, and like all those about
-us in every essential.
-
-Lincoln Steffens did not miss the humor in Mr. Howells’s writing,
-because he could not miss the humor in anything, though there was
-not so much humor perhaps in another writer whom we had just then
-discovered and were celebrating that day in the joy of our discovery.
-It was to me a discovery of the greatest charm, a charm that lasts to
-this day in everything the man has written, that charm of the sea and
-of ships, the romance and poetry of it all which I had felt ever since
-as a boy I found a noble friend in Gus Wright, an old sailor whose name
-I cannot speak even now without a quickening of the spirit because of
-the glamour that invested him when I sat and looked at him and realized
-that he had hunted whales in the South Pacific and had sailed the Seven
-Seas. I wish I had written him into the first of these papers, where he
-belongs; he made two miniature vessels for me, one a full rigged ship,
-the other a bark--dismantled now, both of them, alas, and long since
-out of commission....
-
-“You go down to the wharves along the East River,” Steffens was saying,
-“and you’ll see a ship come in, and after she has been made fast to
-her wharf, an old man will come out of the cabin, light his pipe, and
-lean over the taffrail; he’ll have a brown, weather-beaten face, and
-as he leans there smoking slowly and peacefully, his voyage done, his
-eye roving calmly about here and there, you’ll look at him, and say to
-yourself, ‘Those eyes have seen everything in this world!’”
-
-It was a rather big thought when you dwelt on it.
-
-“He’s seen everything in the world,” Steffens went on, “but he can’t
-tell what he’s seen. Now Conrad has those eyes, he has seen everything,
-and he can tell it.”
-
-It was Joseph Conrad, of course, of whom we were talking, the great
-Pole who even then had come to a mastery of our language that might
-shame most of his contemporary writers in it. I would not give “Lord
-Jim” for all the other sea stories that were ever written, not even
-if all the novels of Cooper and Scott and Stevenson and Dickens were
-thrown in. For Joseph Conrad can see all that the old sailor Steffens
-was imagining that day could see, and far more besides; he can see
-into the human soul. He had not written “Lord Jim” at that time, or if
-he had, I had not read it, nor had Steffens written his books about
-municipal government, to get back to the subject; too often, I fear,
-have I been thinking about some book of Joseph Conrad when I should
-have been thinking of municipal government.
-
-I did not know much about municipal government in those days, except
-what I had learned in Jones’s campaigns and that theoretical knowledge
-I had obtained in the courts as his attorney, and I had, I fear, the
-same indifference to the subject most of our citizens have. I should
-have preferred any time to talk about literature and I should prefer to
-do so now, since that is really so much more interesting and important.
-But the fact that we knew nothing about it in those days was not
-unusual; nobody knew much about it except that Mr. James Bryce had said
-that it was the most conspicuous failure of the American Commonwealth,
-and we quoted this observation so often that one might have supposed we
-were proud of the distinction. Certainly few in America in those days
-understood the subject in the sense in which it is understood in some
-of the British cities, like Glasgow, for instance, whose municipal
-democracy is so far ahead of ours, or in the German cities where
-municipal administration is veritably a science. But in Steffens’s case
-a lack of knowledge was in itself a qualification, since he had eyes,
-like the old sailor, and, like Joseph Conrad, the power to tell what he
-saw. That is, Steffens had vision, imagination, and if the history of
-the city in America is ever written he will fill a large place on its
-page.
-
-I marvel when I reflect that he could see so clearly what most had
-not even the sensitiveness to feel. He went at his task quite in the
-scientific spirit, isolating first that elementary germ or microbe, the
-partizan, the man who always voted the straight ticket in municipal
-elections, the most virulent organism that ever infested the body
-politic and as unconscious of its toxic power as the bacillus of yellow
-fever. Then he discovered the foul culture this organism blindly
-breeds--the political machine, with its boss. But he went on and his
-quest led him to the public service corporation, the street railway
-company, the gas company, the electricity company, and then his trail
-led him out into the state, and he produced a series of studies of
-politics in the American cities which has never been equaled, and so
-had a noble and splendid part in the great awakening of our time.
-
-As long as his writings exposed only the low and the vulgar
-politicians, ward heelers and bosses, and the like, he was quite
-popular; I believe he was even asked to deliver addresses before clubs
-of the _dilettante_, and even in churches, for the righteous were
-terrible in their wrath. But when he went more deeply, when he exposed
-the respectable connections of the machine politicians, some of his
-admirers fell away, and stood afar off, like certain disciples of old.
-The citizen was delighted when some city other than his own was under
-the scrutiny of the sharp eyes that gleamed behind those round glasses,
-but when he drew near for a local study, there was an uplifting of
-the hands in pious horror. Cincinnati applauded the exposure of
-Minneapolis, and St. Louis was pleased to have Philadelphia reformed.
-Reform is popular so long as someone else is to be reformed.
-
-
-
-
-XXIX
-
-
-Steffens came to Toledo occasionally, and I recall an evening when we
-sat in my library and he told me of a certain editor with whom he had
-been talking; the editor had been praising his work with a fervor that
-filled Steffens with despair.
-
-“Must I write up every city in the United States before they will see?”
-he said. “If I were to do Toledo, how that chap would berate me!”
-
-He came to Toledo early in his investigations, and I took him to see
-Jones, and as we left the City Hall in the late afternoon of that
-spring day, Steffens was somehow depressed; we had walked a block in
-St. Clair Street in silence when he said:
-
-“Why, that man’s program will take a thousand years!”
-
-It did seem long to wait. There was a time when I thought it might be
-done in a shorter period, but I have found myself under the necessity
-of extending the term from time to time. I fear now that Steffens’s
-estimate of the length of Jones’s program was rather short, but I know
-of no other way that the program can be carried out. Steffens himself
-is not so impatient now; he learned much more about our cities than he
-ever wrote or dared to write, much no doubt that he could not write.
-Great as was the data he collected, before all the conclusions could
-be drawn, all the general rules deduced, it would be necessary to have
-the data of all life, of which the cities are microcosms. The subject,
-after all, is rather large.
-
-But to some it seemed simple enough; were there not policemen patroling
-their beats ready to arrest the bad people? Thus in the early days of
-the awakening in America impatience took on the form it always takes
-with us, and men flew to the old idols of our race, the constable and
-the policeman; someone must be hounded down, someone must be put in
-prison. This was the form which the awakening took in many places, and
-many reputations were built up in that wretched work, and perhaps the
-inadequacy of the work is best demonstrated by the instability of the
-reputations. I suppose that such efforts do accomplish something, even
-though it be at such fearful cost; they may educate some, but mostly
-they seem to me to gratify a taste for cheap sensation and reward that
-prurient curiosity which has always made the contemplation of sin so
-very fascinating to our race. The reformer was abroad, seeking to make
-mankind over, but since he has no model more attractive than himself to
-offer, his work never goes very far, and he returns to his warfare on
-the cigarette, or in moments of greater courage, on the poor girl whose
-figure flits by in the darkness, followed by the reformer’s devouring
-eye.
-
-But Steffens did not write us up, as the reporters phrase it. I think
-Jones perplexed him in those first days, though he knows now that
-Jones was wholly and I had almost said solely right. Jones indeed
-perplexed most of us. A man with a program of a thousand years could
-not be expected to interest so vitally our impatient democracy, as
-would one with a program so speedy and simple that it involved nothing
-more complex than putting all the bad people in jail; and there was
-always someone ready to point out the bad people, so that it seemed
-simple, as well it might to those who had forgotten that even that
-program is six thousand years old, at least, according to Archbishop
-Ussher’s chronology. Steffens, however, was seeking types and in the
-two leading cities of Ohio he found them so perfect that he need
-never have gone further--had it not been for people like that fellow
-citizen of ours who filled Steffens with such despair. But while he
-was gathering his data on Cincinnati and on Cleveland he came to see
-us often, to our delight, and continued to come, so that he knew our
-city and our politics almost better than we knew them ourselves. He
-went to Cleveland, I remember, with some distinct prejudice against
-Tom Johnson; the prejudice so easily imbibed in gentlemen’s clubs. But
-I was delighted when, after his investigation, he wrote that story
-in _McClure’s_ which characterized Tom Johnson as the best mayor of
-the best governed city in the United States. I was delighted because
-I was flattered in my own opinion, because I was fond of Tom Johnson,
-and because it appeared just in the nick of time to turn the tide in
-Johnson’s third campaign.
-
-Jones was delighted, too; he had said almost immediately after Johnson
-became mayor of Cleveland that he “loved him” because, in appointing
-the Reverend Harris R. Cooley as Director of Charities and Corrections,
-Johnson selected a man who began at once to parole prisoners from the
-workhouse, and Jones and Johnson became friends as Johnson and Pingree
-had been friends. It was a peculiar instance of the whimsical and
-profligate generosity of the fates that the three cities grouped at the
-western end of Lake Erie like those cities Walt Whitman saw, or thought
-he saw, “as sisters with their arms around each others’ necks” should
-have had about the same time three such mayors as Pingree in Detroit,
-Johnson in Cleveland and Jones in Toledo, though the three men were
-different in everything except their democracy.
-
-Johnson’s success in Cleveland, obtained nominally as a Democrat,
-though in his campaign he was as non-partizan as Jones himself, made
-him the “logical” candidate of the Democrats in the state for governor,
-and when he was nominated for that office he burst upon the old
-Republican state like a new planet flaming in the heavens. Many of the
-Democrats found that he was entirely too logical in his democracy,
-since he was as like as not to denounce a Democratic office holder as
-any other. He went forth to his campaign that year in his big French
-touring car, a way entirely new to us, and in the car he went from
-town to town, holding his immense meetings in a circus tent which was
-taken down and sent on ahead each night. In this way he was entirely
-independent of local committees, and they did not like that very well;
-it had been his wealth more than his democracy that had made him seem
-so logical as a candidate to some of the Democrats. Such a spectacle
-had not been seen on our country roads as that great touring car
-made; it was a red car, and the newspapers called it “the red devil”;
-sometimes they were willing to apply the epithet to its occupant. It
-was inevitable, of course, that provincialism should criticize him for
-having bought his car in France instead of the home market, and I shall
-never forget, so irresistible in retort was he, the instant reply he
-made:
-
-“That complaint comes in very bad grace from you protectionists. I
-bought my car in France it is true and paid $5,000 for it, but I paid
-you $3,000 more in tariff duties to let me bring it home. You made me
-pay for it twice and I think I own it now.”
-
-Few have ever been vilified or abused as Johnson was abused in our
-state that year; his red car might have been a chariot of flame driven
-by an anarchist, from the way some of the people talked. Strange,
-inexplicable hatred in humanity for those who love it most! Tom Johnson
-campaigned that year on a platform which demanded a two-cent-a-mile
-railway fare and the taxation of railroad property at something like
-its value, or at least, he said the railroads should pay in taxes as
-much, relatively, as a man paid on his home; the poor man was paying on
-more than a sixty per cent. valuation while the railways were valued
-at eighteen or twenty per cent. This was dangerous, even revolutionary
-doctrine, of course, and Johnson was a single-taxer, supposed in
-Ohio to be a method of taxation whereby everybody would be relieved
-of taxation except the farmers who were to be taxed according to the
-superficial area of their farms. And of course Johnson was defeated,
-and yet within two years the legislature enacted the first of these
-proposals into law with but one dissenting vote. Thus heresy becomes
-orthodoxy. The proposal for taxation reform still waits, and will wait,
-I fancy, for years, since it is so fundamental, and mankind never
-attacks fundamental problems until it has exhausted all the superficial
-ones. And yet, while many other changes he contended for in his day
-have been made, while many of his heresies have become orthodoxies,
-the fear of him possessed the rural mind in the legislature until his
-death, and almost any measure could be defeated by merely uttering the
-formula “Tom Johnson.”
-
-
-
-
-XXX
-
-
-One remembers one’s friends in various attitudes, and I see Tom
-Johnson now standing on the platform in the old tent, under the
-flaring lights, with the eager crowd before him--there were never
-such intelligent audiences to speak to as those in Cleveland, unless
-it were those in Toledo--and he was at his best when the crowd was
-heckling him. He was like Severus Cassius, who, as Montaigne says,
-“spoke best extempore, and stood more obliged to fortune than his own
-diligence; it was an advantage to him to be interrupted in speaking,
-and his adversaries were afraid to nettle him, lest his anger redouble
-his eloquence.” He voluntarily introduced the custom of heckling so
-prevalent in England and Scotland, because at first he was not a
-proficient speaker; he was so simple, so direct, so positive, that
-he could state his position in a very few words. Thus, as he told me
-once, his speeches were too short for the customary political meeting
-in a state where political oratory flowed on and on indefinitely, and
-he asked the crowd to put questions to him. This stirred him up, put
-him on his mettle, stimulated his thought, and he was best at this
-short range. And no one ever got the better of him. Once an opponent
-triumphantly demanded, in a campaign in which Johnson’s administration
-was charged with extravagance:
-
-“Mr. Johnson, is it not a fact that under your administration the
-Cleveland workhouse has lost money?”
-
-“Yes, sir,” the Mayor replied promptly.
-
-“How do you explain that?”
-
-“We are not trying to make money in the Cleveland workhouse,” the Mayor
-replied instantly, “we are trying to make MEN!”
-
-Or again I see him, superintending the tearing up of street railway
-tracks, on streets where the franchises of the private company had
-expired, to make room for the rails of the city company, calmly smoking
-a cigar, and with a gesture of his expressive delicate white hand
-waving aside the latest of the many injunctions that were sued out
-against him. The battle was never lost to him, though his followers
-were often discouraged. He might have said of court injunctions as
-Napoleon said of bullets at the battle of Krasnoi:
-
-“Bah! They have been whistling about our legs these forty years!”
-
-But I see him best I think in the great hall of his home in Euclid
-Avenue, one short, fat leg tucked comfortably under him, his cigar
-in his aristocratic hand, his friends and admirers about him. It was
-a remarkable coterie of brilliant young men. One of them had been
-originally an opponent, one of those who heckled him in the tent, a
-fiery young radical not long since a blacklisted mechanic who had
-gone hungry when on strike, Peter Witt, one of the most picturesque
-personalities in Ohio politics; he became one of Johnson’s intimate
-friends and strongest supporters, and a splendid speaker on the stump.
-He was city clerk of Cleveland under all the Johnson administrations
-and is now the street railway commissioner of that city under Mayor
-Newton D. Baker, who, as city solicitor, was another of the group of
-those happy days. Mr. Baker was like a boy in appearance, with his
-sensitive face and the ideals of a poet, and a brilliant lawyer. He
-carried all the legal burden of the long street railway controversy in
-Cleveland,--it was almost a civil war--and did it all with such skill
-and ability, and withal with such grace and courtesy and good nature
-that he never offended his opponents, who were the leading corporation
-lawyers of the city. Frederic C. Howe had been elected to the council
-in Cleveland as a Republican from one of the most aristocratic wards,
-but he was won over by Johnson’s personality, was renominated by
-Johnson on the Democratic ticket, afterwards sent to the state senate
-and became one of the foremost men in the liberal movement in America;
-his books on municipal government are authorities. And Dr. Cooley; he
-was a Disciple preacher, and Johnson placed him at the head of the
-department of charities and corrections, so that, as Johnson used
-to say, instead of a preacher Dr. Cooley became a minister. It was
-delightful to be with them in those gatherings. The genuine reform of
-conditions in that city possessed them all like a passion; they were
-stimulated by a common ambition, which was, as Johnson used to say,
-to make Cleveland a city set on a hill, and though he was not a poet
-nor a maker of phrases everyone instinctively knew what he meant when
-he spoke of his city set on a hill. I do not know how much of history
-he had read, but he knew intuitively that the city in all ages has
-been the outpost of civilization, and that if the problem of democracy
-is to be solved at all it is to be solved first in the city. That
-was why he struggled for the free city, struggled to make the city
-democratic; he knew that the cure for the ills of democracy is not
-less democracy, as so many were always preaching, but more democracy.
-And how delighted he was when Fred Howe brought out his book “The City
-the Hope of Democracy.” He had the joy of seeing marshaled there in the
-thesis of a scholar all the arguments he had apprehended but had never
-reduced to terms; there they were, all in their logical order--and
-Johnson straightway sent a copy of the book to every member of the Ohio
-legislature, to their amazement no doubt, if not to their amusement.
-
-I used to like to go over to Cleveland and meet that charming group
-Johnson had gathered about him. There was in them a spirit I never saw
-in such fullness elsewhere; they were all working for the city, they
-thought only of the success of the whole. They had the city sense, a
-love of their town like that love which undergraduates have for their
-university, the _esprit de corps_ of the crack regiment.
-
-But Johnson used to set me to work with the rest of them. I went over
-there once to spend the week’s end, for rest and relaxation, and he had
-me working far into three nights on amendments to the municipal code.
-He had terrible energy, but it was a joy to work with him. I wish I had
-gone oftener.
-
-I have said enough I hope to make it clear that Tom Johnson was one
-of those mortals who have somehow been lifted above their fellows far
-enough to catch a vision of the social order which people generally
-as yet do not see. It was inevitable, of course, that such a man,
-especially since he was a rich man, should have his motives impugned,
-and I recall now with what a confidential chuckle he said to me one
-time when he had been accused of I know not what vaulting and wicked
-ambition:
-
-“I am politically ambitious; I have just one ambition; I want to be the
-mayor of a free city, and if I were, the very first thing I should do
-would be to appoint a corps of assessors who couldn’t see a building,
-or an improvement; they would assess for taxation nothing but the value
-of the land, and we would try out the single tax.”
-
-He did not realize that ambition of course; no one ever realizes his
-ambition. But he did perhaps more than any other man in America to make
-possible the coming of the free city in this land.
-
-His struggle for three-cent railway fares in Cleveland, which was but a
-roundabout method of securing municipal ownership in a state where the
-legislature in those days would not permit cities to own their public
-utilities was his great work. He lived to see that successful in a way,
-though not exactly in the way he had expected; that is another irony
-which the fates visit on the head of ambitious men.
-
-And yet that irony of the fates is not always, after all, unkind.
-Somehow, after a while, in the lengthened perspective, the broadened
-vision that reveals a larger segment of the arc, the event is seen in
-better proportion. It requires faith in one’s cause to see this always,
-and Johnson always had that faith. I shall not forget how when the
-people at last voted against him, he still could smile, and say to me:
-“The people are probably right.” It was the last time I saw him. He
-was sick then, and dying, and sadly changed; the hair that had been
-so black and curly that summer morning long before, had grown thin and
-white; the face, sadly lined with weariness, was sublimated by a new
-expression. There was the same courage in the classic profile, and the
-old smile was there. He was writing his memoirs with a courage as grim
-as that of General Grant--and he had the equanimity of Antoninus Pius.
-And on his countenance there was the expression of a purified ideal. So
-he had won; his was the victory after all.
-
-
-
-
-XXXI
-
-
-The best of life, no doubt, is made up of memories, as M. George Cain
-says, and perhaps that is why I have lingered so long over these little
-incidents of Sam Jones and Tom Johnson. I have told them in no sort of
-related order; Jones died years before Johnson; but somehow they seem
-to me to have appeared simultaneously, like twin stars in our northern
-sky, to have blazed a while and then gone out together. Different as
-their personalities were, different as two such great originals must
-have been, they were one in ideal, and even in their last words they
-expressed the vast toil and strain of the efforts they put forth to
-attain it.
-
-“Was it worth while?” asked Tom Johnson of his friend Newton Baker, a
-day or two before he died. And Sam Jones on that last day turned to his
-sister Nell, the noble spirit who had conducted the settlement work at
-Golden Rule House, and said:
-
-“‘He that endureth to the end----’ What does it say?”
-
-She repeated the Scripture to him.
-
-“Say it in Welsh,” he said, his thought returning in those ultimate
-moments to the speech they had used as children. But before she could
-direct her mind into the old sequences, the end had come.
-
-At least, there were those in town who thought it was the end. The
-stock of the street railway company went up twenty-four points the
-next morning, and some brokers issued a letter saying now that
-Jones had died the securities of that enterprise offered a golden
-investment--about the most authentic extant illustration, I suppose, of
-the utter contemptibility of privilege in these states. The politicians
-often had been heard to say that when Jones retired the non-partizan
-movement in Toledo would come to an end; in their professional analyses
-they had pronounced it a personal following not governed by principle,
-and that with the passing of the leader it would disappear and the
-voters become tractable and docile partizan automata again. And now
-that Jones was dead and one of their organization, the president of the
-council, was to succeed to the mayor’s office, the hopes they had so
-long entertained seemed at last on the point of realisation. Within a
-few weeks, therefore, an ordinance granting the street railway company
-a renewal of its rights was passed by the council.
-
-Then, instantly, the old spirit flamed anew; there were editorials,
-mass meetings, and all sorts of protest against the action, and in
-response to this indignant public feeling, the acting mayor, Mr.
-Robert H. Finch, very courageously vetoed the ordinance. But the
-machine “had the votes,” and on the following Monday night the council
-met to pass the ordinance over the veto. The members of the Republican
-organization were there, favored with seats in the office of the city
-clerk; lobbyists and the legal representatives of the street railway
-company were there. The chamber was crowded; the hot air of the small,
-low-ceiled room was charged with a nervous tension; there was in it an
-eager expectant quality, not unmixed with dread and fear and guilt. The
-atmosphere was offensive to the moral sense--a condition remarked in
-other halls in this land when councils and legislatures have been about
-to take action that was inimical to the public good.
-
-But the machine councilmen bore themselves jauntily enough; the windows
-were open to the soft night of the early autumn, and now and then some
-one sauntered in nonchalance over to the windows, and looked down
-into St. Clair Street, garish in the white and brilliant light of
-the electric signs of theaters, restaurants and saloons. The theater
-crowds were already going by, but it was to be noted that they loitered
-that evening, and were reënforced by other saunterers, as though the
-entertainment of the pavement might surpass that of the painted scene
-within. And above all the noises of the street, clanged the gongs of
-the street cars gliding by, and, for the moment, as a dramatic center
-of the scene, a squad of policemen was stationed in the lobby of the
-council chamber.
-
-This nervous, sinister mood was somehow abroad in the whole city that
-night. Mr. Negley D. Cochran had written another editorial, published
-that evening in heavy type, in the _News-Bee_, calling on the citizens
-to come out and protect their rights in the streets of their city, so
-that there were apprehensions of all sorts of danger and disaster.
-
-The council proceeded with its business; the voice of the reading
-clerk droned on in the resolutions and ordinances that represented the
-normal municipal activities of that hour, and then, suddenly, a sound
-of a new and unaccustomed sort arose from St. Clair Street, the sound
-of the tramp of marching men. Those at the windows, looking out, saw
-a strange spectacle--not without its menace; the newspaper reporters,
-some of them, embellished their reports with old phrases about faces
-blanching. Perhaps they did; they might well have done so, for the men
-came down St. Clair Street not as a mob; they were silent, marching in
-column, by sets of fours, with an orderly precision and a discipline
-almost military. And at their head there was a man whose square, broad
-shoulders and firm stride were the last expression of determination.
-He wore a slouch hat, under which his gray hair showed; his closely
-trimmed beard was grizzled; he looked, as many noted, not unlike the
-conventional portraits of General Grant. The man was Mr. Johnson
-Thurston, and he was as grim as General Grant, as brave, as determined,
-and as cool. He was widely known in Toledo as a lawyer, however, not
-as a politician; he had never been in politics, indeed, but he was in
-politics that night, surely, and destined to remain in politics for
-years to come.
-
-He brought his column to a halt under the windows of the council
-chamber. There was no room in that small chamber for such a delegation,
-or seemingly for any delegation of the people, however small. Johnson
-Thurston’s son marched beside him as an aide, bearing a soap box--the
-modern tribune of our democracy--and he placed it on the pavement for
-his father. A street car, just then halting, clanged its gong for the
-throng to make way, and at this perfect symbol of the foe they were
-opposing, Johnson Thurston shook his fist, and shouted:
-
-“Stand there! The people are attending to their business to-night!”
-
-The street car stood, and Johnson Thurston mounted his soap box,
-produced a paper and read from it in a loud voice that section of
-the Constitution in which the people retain to themselves the right
-peaceably to assemble and petition for a redress of grievances. And
-this done, he turned to his followers, gave them a signal, and there
-went up from their throats in perfect unison a mighty cry: “Let the
-franchise alone!”
-
-Three times they voiced their imperative mandate, and then, at a
-signal, they wheeled about, and marched away in the excellent order
-in which they had come. Such a demonstration, in the streets, at
-night, before a legislative body, had it occurred in a capital or in a
-metropolis, would have been historic. As it was, the cry that went up
-from those men was heard in the council chamber; and it was destined
-to ring through the town for the better part of a decade. The council
-did not pass the ordinance over the Mayor’s veto; half an hour later
-the councilmen were escorted from their chamber by the police they had
-summoned; and a sadly shaken body they were, poor fellows.
-
-Meanwhile the men who had marched with Johnson Thurston had retired
-to a vacant storeroom in Superior Street, three blocks away, over
-the door of which there was a canvas sign bearing the inscription
-“INDEPENDENT HEADQUARTERS.” There they had assembled and been drilled
-by Johnson Thurston, as college men are drilled by a leader in their
-yells, and with a solemn sense of civic duty they had marched to the
-council chamber to save their city from a quarter of a century more
-of shameful vassalage to a privileged public utility corporation. The
-threat of their presence had been sufficient, but had that proved
-unavailing, they had provided other resources. There had been all the
-while, from the hour of the opening of the doors that night, twelve
-men in the council chamber, armed with bombs, not of dynamite or any
-such anarchist explosive, but of asafœtida and sulphureted hydrogen
-and I know not what other overpowering fumes and odors, confidently
-relied upon to prevail against even so foul a stench as that which a
-privileged plutocracy can make in any of the halls of government when
-it has determined to secure another lease of its tenure.
-
-At Independent Headquarters, then, that autumn, political meetings were
-held, in which local affairs--the street-car situation especially
-and the relation it bore to the machines of political parties--were
-discussed. Because of those changes the legislature was always
-making in the government of cities, three councilman at large were
-to be elected. This was in the year 1904, in the midst of a national
-campaign. Roosevelt was running for president for his second--or his
-first term, depending on the point of view--and three of those men who
-had voted for that street railway ordinance, and were ready to vote to
-pass it over the mayor’s veto, were candidates on the Republican ticket
-for councilmen at large. The Independents who had marched with Johnson
-Thurston determined to nominate a city ticket, and they honored me by
-offering me the place at the head of that ticket as their candidate
-for councilman at large. I was writing another novel just then and
-battling as usual against interruptions, and so I begged off; it was
-not the campaign I feared, but, as I told them, the fear that I should
-be elected. We nominated a ticket, and went into the campaign, speaking
-every night, and in November, though Roosevelt carried the city by
-fifteen thousand, our candidates for councilmen at large were elected.
-Clearly, then, the non-partizan movement had not wholly died with
-Golden Rule Jones; his soul, like the soul of John Brown, was marching
-on, and still somehow led by him, and inspired by his spirit, there had
-sprung forth, like Greek soldiers from the dragon’s teeth, in Toledo
-a democratic municipal movement. First of all the cities in America,
-she had taken the initial step in freeing herself, the step all
-cities in America must take if they would free themselves from their
-masters--that of non-partizan municipal elections.
-
-
-
-
-XXXII
-
-
-The predilection of the Ohio man for politics, I believe, is well
-known in this land, where it is generally identified with a love for
-office. There is a reproach implied in the reputation which we perhaps
-deserve. An Ohio man goes into politics as naturally as a Nova Scotian
-goes to sea, and yet not all Nova Scotians go to sea. They all love
-the sea perhaps, but they do not all care to become sailors. And so
-with us Ohioans. We all love politics, though fortunately we do not
-all care to hold office, even if most people do smile indulgently
-when the modest disinclination is expressed. Perhaps such scepticism
-is quite natural in a land so saturated in privilege that even office
-holding is regarded in that light--or was until recently, for now a
-new conception is expanding in the public consciousness and there is
-hope that ere long public office will be regarded as a responsibility.
-I was quite sure that I did not care to be a councilman--that weekly
-wrangle, by night, in a room choking with the fumes of cheap tobacco,
-known as the session of the common council, was far from my tastes. And
-when the mayoralty was suggested to me I was quite as certain that I
-did not wish that. For it was not long after the death of Jones that
-it was suggested; by Tom Johnson for one, who, in his blunt way, told
-me that I should run for the place; and by Steffens, who, just then in
-Cleveland, was writing the article in which Tom Johnson was celebrated
-as “the best mayor of the best governed city in America,” and Steffens
-found time now and then to come over to Toledo to see us. “And another
-thing,” he wrote to me after one of these visits, “you’ll have to run
-for mayor.” He reached this conclusion, I believe, by a process of
-inversion. He had been talking with some of the machine politicians,
-and it was their objection to me as a candidate that caused him to
-see my duty in that light. I was at one with them on that point, at
-any rate; they could have been no more reluctant to have me run than
-I myself was. Tom Johnson, when the Democrats met in their state
-convention at Columbus that year, might propose me for governor, and
-the delegation of his county, Cuyahoga, and the delegation from my own
-county of Lucas vote for my nomination, but that stroke of political
-lightning was easily arrested by rods that had been more accurately and
-carefully adjusted, so that I could take the manuscript of “The Turn of
-the Balance” and go to Wequetonsing on the shores of Little Traverse
-Bay, where the days are blue and gold, and there is sparkling sunshine,
-and a golf links where one may find happiness, if he is on his game,
-or if he is not, consolation in that noble view from the hill--the tee
-at the old fourth and the new twelfth hole--when he may, if he wish,
-imagine himself in Italy overlooking the Bay of Naples--which is no
-more beautiful. Meredith Nicholson, a hale old Hoosier friend, as James
-Whitcomb Riley used to phrase it, was there, too, near the spot where
-he wrote that excellent novel, “The Main Chance,” and in that country
-place with him and other charming friends near by I spent the summer.
-But when I came home in the autumn the campaign was already on, and the
-Independents had all but nominated me as their candidate for mayor.
-
-They were forced to make their nominations by petition, and on the
-petitions proposing me for the office there were many thousands of
-names, pages that were stained with the grime and dust and grease of
-factories and shops--a diploma in its way, which might have made one
-proud, had not the prospect been one to make one so very unhappy. For
-I knew what the mayoralty had done to Jones. I had come to realize in
-my association with him that there is no position more difficult than
-that of the mayor of a large city in the America of our times, for
-the city is a kind of microcosm where are posited in miniature all
-the problems of a democracy, and the fact that they are in miniature
-only increases the difficulty. My ambitions lay in another field,
-and besides I had a feeling against it, dim and vague, though since
-adequately expressed in one of those fine generalizations which Señor
-Guglielmo Ferrero makes on his brilliant page; “there is no sphere of
-activity,” he says, writing of the perils of political life, “which is
-so much at the mercy of unforeseen accidents or where the effort put
-out is so incommensurable with the result obtained.” It is, of course,
-one of the privileges of the citizen in a democracy to be “mentioned”
-for public office; if no one else mentions him he can mention himself,
-and whenever someone else does mention him there are many who ascribe
-to his originality the credit for the suggestion.
-
-It seems difficult for our people to understand any man who really does
-not desire public office in a land where it has so long been regarded
-purely as a privilege to be bestowed or a prize to be contested. I
-suppose that even the blunt and grim old warrior Sherman caused the
-people to smile when he said that if nominated for the presidency he
-would not accept and if elected he would not serve. They wondered what
-he meant, and for a time it never occurred to them that he meant just
-what he said.
-
-But the day came at last when I must decide, and to a committee of the
-Independents I said that I should give them an answer in the morning.
-I thought it all over again in the watches of the night,--and the
-unfinished manuscript on my library table--and at last, since somebody
-had to do it, since somebody had to point out at least the danger of
-risking the community rights in the hands of a political machine, I
-said I would accept. I suppose that it is but an expression of that
-ironic mood in which the Fates delight to deal with mortals that it
-should be so easy to get that which one does not want; the Independents
-insisted on my standing for the office, but the only humor in that
-fact was just then too grim for pleasure, though there is always a
-compensation somewhere after all, and gloomy as I was that morning at
-the prospect of the bitter campaign and the difficulties that would
-follow if I were elected, I could laugh when “Dad” McCullough, the
-old Scotsman whom we all loved for himself and for his devotion to
-our movement, leaned forward in his chair, stroked his whiskers in a
-mollifying way and, as though he preferred even the other members of
-his committee not to hear him, said:
-
-“Would it be out of place if I suggested that in the campaign you bear
-down as lightly as possible on the infirmities of the law?”
-
-His shrewd sense even then warned him of the herring that would be
-drawn across the trail of privilege as soon as we struck it!
-
-And he was right. We had not opened our campaign at Golden Rule Hall,
-before privilege did what it always does when it is pursued, it tried
-to divert attention from itself by pointing out a smaller evil. All
-the old and conventional complaints about the morals of the city to
-which we had been used in Jones’s campaigns were revived and repeated
-with embellishments and improvements; no city was ever reviled as was
-ours by those who had failed in their efforts to control it and absorb
-the product of its communal toil. My attitude, conceived by “Dad”
-McCullough as “bearing down on the infirmities of the law,” was now
-represented as evidence of an intention to ignore the law, to enforce
-none of the statutes, and it was predicted that the election of the
-Independent ticket meant nothing but anarchy and chaos.
-
-To this “moral” issue that had served for so many years, the “good”
-people responded immediately, as they always do, and with certain
-of the clergy to lead them rallied instantly about the machine, and
-for six weeks reveled in an inspection of all the city’s vices, and
-mouseled in the slums and stews of the tenderloin for examples of the
-depravity which they declared it was the purpose and design of the
-Independents to intensify and perpetuate. Their own candidate had
-been in power for a year and a half and these conditions had existed
-unmolested, but when some of our speakers indicated this inconsistency
-in their attitude they only raged the more.
-
-But notwithstanding all this, the issue was clear; the machine had
-helped to make it clear, not only by its long opposition to Jones, but
-more recently by its efforts for the street railway company. It was the
-old issue between privilege and democracy, that has marked the cleavage
-in society in all ages. The people were trying to take back their own
-government, for the purpose, first, of preventing the street railway
-company from securing another lease of the city’s streets for a quarter
-of a century, by which, incidentally, the company would realize profits
-on about twenty-five million dollars of watered stock. But the people
-were not to be deceived; they were not to be turned off the trail so
-easily; and the entire ticket was elected, so that at the beginning of
-that new year the Independents were in control of every branch of the
-government, not only in the city, but in the county as well.
-
-
-
-
-XXXIII
-
-
-I have spoken of the Independents as though they were an authentic
-political party, when it was one of their basic principles to be
-no party at all. They were Republicans and Democrats who, in the
-revelation of Jones’s death, had come to see that it was the partizan
-that was responsible for the evil political machines in American
-cities; they saw that by dividing themselves arbitrarily into parties,
-along national lines, by voting, almost automatically, their party
-tickets, ratifying nominations made for them they knew not how, they
-were but delivering over their city to the spoiler. As Republicans,
-proud of the traditions of that party, they had voted under the
-impression that they were voting for Lincoln; as Democrats they thought
-they were voting for Jefferson, or at least for Jackson, but they had
-discovered that they had been voting principally for the street railway
-company and the privileges allied with it in interest.
-
-And more than all, they saw that in the amazing superstition of party
-regularity by which the partizan mind in that day was obsessed, they
-were voting for these interests no matter which ticket they supported,
-for the machine was not only partizan, it was bipartizan, and the
-great conflict they waged at the polls was the most absurd sham battle
-that ever was fought. It seems almost incredible now that men’s minds
-were ever so clouded, strange that they did not earlier discover
-how absurd was a system which, in order to enable them the more
-readily to subjugate themselves, actually printed little wood-cuts of
-birds--roosters and eagles--at the heads of the tickets, so that they
-might the more easily and readily recognize their masters and deliver
-their suffrages over to them. It is an absurdity that is pretty well
-recognized in this country to-day, and the principle of separating
-municipal politics from national politics is all but established in
-law. Mr. James Bryce had pointed it out long before, but Jones seemed
-to be almost the first among us to recognize it, and he probably
-had not read from Mr. Bryce; he deduced the principle from his own
-experience, and from his own consciousness, if not his own conscience,
-perhaps he had some intimation of it from the Genius of These States,
-whose scornful laugh at that and other absurdities his great exemplar
-Walt Whitman could hear, echoed as from some mountain peak afar in the
-west. But it was no laughing matter in Toledo in those days. Men were
-accused of treason and sedition for deserting their parties; it made
-little difference which party a man belonged to; the insistence was on
-his belonging to a party; any party would suffice.
-
-I have no intention, however, of discussing that principle now, but it
-was the point from which we had to start in our first campaign, the
-point from which all cities will have to start if they wish to be free.
-The task we faced was relatively greater than that which Jones had
-faced; we had a full ticket in the field, a candidate for every city
-office and a man running for the council in every ward in town. Jones
-had run alone, and though he succeeded there was always a council and
-a coterie of municipal officials who represented the other interest in
-the community. Of course he had made our work possible by the labor
-he had done, great pioneer that he was. He had been his own platform,
-as any candidate after all must be, but with our large movement it
-was necessary to reduce our principles to some form and we tried to
-do this as simply as we could. We put forth our belief that local
-affairs should be separate from, and independent of, party politics,
-and that public officers should be selected on account of their honesty
-and efficiency, regardless of political affiliations; that the people
-should be more active in selecting their officials, and should not
-allow an office-seeker to bring about his own nomination; that the
-prices charged by public service corporations should be regulated by
-the council at stated intervals; and that all franchises for public
-utilities should first be submitted to a vote of the people, that the
-city should possess the legal right to acquire and maintain any public
-utility, when authorized so to do by direct vote of its people, that
-every franchise granted to public service corporations should contain
-an agreement that the city might purchase and take over its property
-at a fair price, whenever so voted by the people, and that no street
-railway franchise should be extended or granted, permitting more than
-three-cent fares, and unless it includes provision for universal
-transfers, satisfactory service, and reasonable compensation for the
-use of bridges, and we demanded from the legislature home rule, the
-initiative and referendum and the recall.
-
-Perhaps it was not such a little platform after all, but big indeed,
-I think, when one comes to consider its potentialities, and if anyone
-thinks it was easy to put its principles into practice, let him try it
-and see! It was drawn by that Johnson Thurston of whom I spoke, and
-by Oren Dunham and by Elisha B. Southard and others, citizens devoted
-to their town, and already with a prescience of the city spirit. They
-succeeded in compressing into those few lines all we know or need to
-know about municipal government, and ages hence our cities will still
-be falling short of the ideal they expressed on that little card. There
-were many who went with us in that first campaign who did not see all
-the implications of that statement of principles; none of us saw all
-of them of course. The movement had not only the strength but the
-weaknesses of all so-called reform movements in their initial stages.
-Those who were disappointed or disaffected or dissatisfied for personal
-reasons with the old party machines, no doubt found an opportunity for
-expression of their not too lofty sentiments, although later on when
-they saw that it was merely a tendency toward democracy they fell away,
-not because the movement had deserted its original ideals but because
-they at last understood them.
-
-As I now look back on that first campaign, on the experience I had so
-much dreaded, the perspective has worked its magic, and the hardships
-and difficulties have faded away, even, I hope, as its enmities have
-faded away, though remembering Jones’s admonition to “draw the sting”
-I tried to keep enmities out of it. Since I could not bring myself
-to discuss myself, I resolved not to discuss my opponents, and I
-went through the campaign without once mentioning the name of one of
-them--there were four candidates for mayor against me--without making
-one personal reference to them. And never in any political campaign
-since have I attacked an opponent. It was enough to discuss the
-principles of our little platform; and the first task was to get the
-electors to see the absurdity of their partizanship and to make clear
-the necessity of having a city government that represented the people
-or, since that phrase is perhaps indefinite, one that did not represent
-the privileged interests of the city.
-
-The campaign was like the old Jones campaigns, though not altogether
-like them.
-
-The legislature, which is always interfering as much as possible with
-the cities, had changed the time of holding the municipal elections
-from the spring to the autumn, one change wrought by a legislature in
-cities that the people approved, since instead of those raw spring
-winds we now have the glorious weather the autumn usually brings us
-in the lake regions, with a sparkling air and a warm sun, and a long
-procession of golden days, on which one really should be playing golf,
-if one could play golf in the midst of a political campaign, which one
-could not, since art and politics, or at least the practice of them,
-are wholly incompatible.
-
-There was no old gray Molly to jog about from one meeting to another,
-and if there had been, she could not have jogged fast enough for the
-necessities of that hour; and we established new precedents when Percy
-Jones, the son of the Golden Rule Mayor, drove me about at furious
-speed in his big touring car, the “Grey Ghost” the reporters called
-it, and it streaked through the night, with its siren singing, from
-place to place until I had spoken at half a dozen meetings. Every day
-at noon it wheeled up to the entrance of the factories and shops as the
-men were coming out for their noon hour. And such meetings I believe
-were never held anywhere; there was an inspiration as the men crowded
-about the car to hear the speeches; they were not politicians, they
-were seeking nothing, they were interested in their city; and in their
-faces, what is far above any of these considerations, there was an
-eager interest in life, perhaps a certain hunger of life which in so
-many of them, such were the conditions of their toil, was not satisfied.
-
-
-
-
-XXXIV
-
-
-As I sat and looked out over the crowds that poured from the shops and
-stood, sometimes for the whole of the noon hour, in discomfort perhaps
-if the wind was off the lake, and saw the veritable hunger for life
-that was in their faces, a hunger surely which no political or economic
-system, however wise and perfect, could satisfy, I could not help
-thinking that it was a pity the clergy did not understand these people
-better, for, after all, the message of the Carpenter who came out of
-Nazareth was for the workers and the poor, and He had passionately
-thrown Himself on their side. It might have been suggested to that
-pastor who complained bitterly that his own pews were empty on Sunday
-evenings while the streets outside his church were crowded with people
-who for one evening at least were joyous and free from care, that the
-Master whom he served would have asked no better congregation than they
-and no better auditorium than the street.
-
-But this pastor was used to making suggestions, not to receiving
-them; he was not of a mind as open as that one who actually came to
-me once to ask me how he could get the workingmen to hear him preach.
-He had not failed, he said, to go to them; he had advertised on a
-placard hung at the entrance of a factory where two thousand men were
-working that on a Monday at noon he would speak to them. They had
-known of him, for he had recently been celebrated in the newspapers as
-having inaugurated a crusade to close the cheap theaters, whose lurid
-melodramas,--I believe lurid is the word in that connection unless
-the melodramas are “novelized” and sold for a dollar and a half,--he
-said, were detrimental to morals, as no doubt they were. And so when
-he appeared, punctually, on that Monday noon, at the rendezvous
-appointed by his poster, the workingmen were ready and, when he stood
-up to preach to them, they received him with a deafening din, made by
-pounding on pieces of metal they had brought from the shop, so that
-the poor fellow could not speak at all, and when, with roars of awful
-laughter they unfurled some ribald banner fresh from the paint shop of
-their establishment, advising him to go to hell where he was always
-consigning so many of his fellow human beings, he went away quite
-broken-hearted. It was in that mood and perhaps a little chastened
-by his experience that he came to see me. I could agree with him, of
-course, that the men had acted like the perfect barbarians they could
-be at times, but there was nothing I could do for him, nothing I could
-tell him. I learned long ago that you cannot tell a man anything unless
-he knows it already!
-
-And yet that preacher’s case was perfectly simple. He had come to
-the city not long before, and of course, had come from the country.
-His training and his experience had all been rural, he knew nothing
-whatever of the life of our cities or of their problems; he thought
-only in agrarian sequences. He had a little code of conduct consisting
-of a few perfectly simple negatives, namely, men should not use
-tobacco, or liquor, or attend theaters or circuses, or play with
-colored cards, or violate (that is, do anything pleasant on) the
-Sabbath day. And whenever he saw people doing any of these things it
-was his duty to dissuade them from doing them, and if he could not
-dissuade them, then it was the duty of the authorities to force the
-people to stop doing these things by sending policemen after them.
-Poverty was caused either by drink, or by idleness, though usually by
-drink, and if the saloons were closed, drinking would cease!
-
-This was the man’s conception. Of the condition of the workingmen in
-the cities he had literally no notion. He knew they worked, and that
-working made them tired, of course, just as it made farmers tired.
-He saw no difference between the labor in the agricultural field and
-that in the industrial field. That men who had been shut up in dusty
-factories for six days, working intently at whirling machines, under
-the bulb of an electric light, felt, when they came to the one day of
-rest, that they should like to go outdoors and breathe the air, and
-have some relaxation, some fun, had never occurred to him. That they
-had to work so hard, too, that stimulants were perhaps a necessity,
-never occurred to him, just as it had never occurred to him that
-when one of these workers left home there was no place for him to go
-unless he went to a saloon, where there were light and warmth and
-companionship, and, above all, liberty; or to a cheap theatre or in the
-summer to a baseball game. And he could not understand why these men
-resented his suggestion that they give up all these things, and instead
-do as farmers do on Sunday, or as they pretend to do, that is, stay
-indoors, or, if they do go out, go out to attend church.
-
-And what was most curious of all, he had not the slightest notion of
-what we meant when we spoke of the street railway problem. He knew,
-of course, that it was proposed to reduce the fare a cent or two
-cents, but that was not important; what were two cents? That there
-was anything immoral in watering stock, in seizing millions of the
-communal value, had never occurred to him, and in the midst of all
-the complexities of city life he remained utterly naïve, bound up in
-his little code, with not the glimmer of a ray of light on social
-conditions or problems, or of economics, or, in a word, of life. To
-him there were no social problems that the Anti-Saloon League could
-not solve in a week, if wicked officials would only give them enough
-policemen and a free rein to do it.
-
-And so he wondered why the workingmen would not come to hear him
-preach, or at least would not listen to him at the door of their shop!
-
-And most of the parsons in the town--at that time, though it is not
-so any more, so rapidly have changes come in our thought--were of
-this frame of mind. Not one of them supported our cause; many of them
-denounced it, and continued to denounce it, for years. Now and then
-there was one who might whisper to me privately that he understood
-and favored our efforts, but not one ever spoke out publicly, unless
-it were to denounce us. And several times they attacked me in their
-prayers. For instance, if--after I became mayor--I went to deliver
-an address of welcome, and a preacher was there to open the assembly
-with prayer, he sometimes would take advantage of the situation and,
-in the pretense of asking a blessing on the “chief magistrate of our
-beloved city,” point out my short-comings and read me a lecture on
-my duties with his eyes shut and his hands folded. To that attack it
-would have been necessary, I presume, though I am not quite sure of
-the ecclesiastical etiquette, to reply with my eyes shut and my hands
-folded, but Jones had said: “When He was reviled, He reviled not
-again,” and “He that endureth to the end.” It seemed as good a plan
-as any. I never replied to these or any other of their attacks. Some
-of the leaders of our movement always insisted that the preachers
-opposed us because they were influenced, according to the historical
-precedents, by their economic dependence on the privileged class. But
-if that is true I am sure the influence was unconscious in most cases,
-and that they simply did not understand. They were all desperately
-sincere. That was the chief difficulty with them.
-
-Indeed, I found it better never to reply to any criticisms or attacks
-whatever. The philosophy of that attitude has been pretty well set
-forth I think by Emerson, though it has been so long since I have read
-it that I do not now know in which of his essays or his poems or his
-lectures he revealed it, though probably it would be found in all three
-since, shrewd Yankee that he was, he cast every thought he had in three
-forms. Had he lived in our day he might in addition have dramatized
-each one of them. But from his advice never to apologize, one may
-proceed to the virtue of never explaining. It saves an immense amount
-of time and energy, for since a politician’s enemies are legion, and
-are constantly increasing in number, and can attack him, as it were, in
-relays, he must have enormous energy if he is to reply in detail to all
-of them; he will find himself after a while more desperately involved
-than was the man in Kipling’s story, who through the Indian Government
-kept his enemy toiling night and day to answer foolish questions about
-pigs, and, what was worse, explaining his previous answers.
-
-Telling what one is going to do is equally as foolish as explaining
-what one has done, or denying what one has not done, and so promises
-could be dispensed with as easily as retorts and explanations. Long
-catalogues of promised prodigies and miracles are of course absurd,
-and the bawling and blowing politician (as Walt Whitman called him)
-can make them as fluently in his evil cause as can the purest of the
-reformers. I had been disgusted too often with such performances to
-be able to enter into competition of that sort, and so let our little
-platform speak for itself and did not even promise to be good. And the
-people understood.
-
-I have often heard men complain of the strain and fatigue of political
-campaigning, and I sometimes think much of their distress arises from
-the fact that they campaign in ways that are not necessary, if nothing
-more derogatory is to be said of them. There is of course the fatigue
-that comes of nervous strain and anxiety, and this is very great, but
-the haggard visage and the husky voice are all unnecessary. It is no
-wonder to be sure that some men break down in campaigns, since their
-cause is so bad that anyone might well be expected to sicken in its
-advocacy, and in furthering it it is perhaps inevitable that their
-efforts partake in a measure of its corruption. There is no exercise
-that is physically more beneficial than speaking, especially speaking
-in the open air, provided one knows how to use his voice and does not
-attempt to shout up the wind; and two or three speeches at noon, just
-before luncheon and four or five more in the evening after dinner may
-be recommended as an excellent course in physical culture, if when
-one is done one’s speeches for the evening one will go home and, for
-an hour, read, say “Huckleberry Finn” or “Tom Sawyer” before he goes
-to bed. I can recommend these two great American novels with entire
-confidence in their power to refresh, and in their deep and true and
-delightful philosophy to correct aberrations in the point of view--of
-one’s self, in the first place, and of some other things of much more
-importance than one’s self. If the cause be one in which one believes
-there is an incomparable exhilaration in it all. And it was with some
-pride that I came through that first campaign without having lost
-either my temper or my voice.
-
-There must always remain the memory of those throngs in the meetings,
-those workingmen who came pouring out of the shops and factories at
-noon, glad as school boys to be released for a little while from
-toil, laughing, whistling, engaging in rude pleasantries, jostling,
-teasing and joking each other, and then, suddenly, pausing, gathering
-about the motor car, drawing closer, pressing up to the foot-board,
-and listening, with eager, intent faces, in which there was such
-instant appreciation of a joke, a pleasantry, anything to make them
-laugh, and yet somehow the adumbration of a yearning and a hope. Lyman
-Wachenheimer--who as judge of the police court once had fined Jones
-for contempt of court, but had come later to agree with him and now
-was candidate for prosecuting attorney of the county--would stand up
-in the car, lean over, and speak to them out of the splendid new faith
-in democracy that had come to him, and the rest of us in our turn
-would speak. We did not ask them to vote for us; our message was at
-least higher than that old foolish and selfish appeal. First of all we
-wished them to vote for themselves, we wished them to vote their own
-convictions, and not merely to follow with the old partizan blindness
-the boss or the employer or someone else who told them how to vote.
-And all too soon for the orators warming to their work--they must
-speak rapidly, they must speak simply and come to the point, for the
-demands of the street meeting are obdurate and out under the open sky
-there is short shrift for insincerity or any of the old pretense and
-buncombe--the whistle blows, the men turn and scatter, the crowd melts
-away, a few linger to the last minute to catch the last word, and then
-they turn and run, and as they go they lift high the perpendicular
-hand--Walt Whitman’s sign of democracy.... Do you know it? Sometimes
-one of the section gang working on the railroad, pausing in his labor
-while the Limited sweeps by, looks up and to the idle one on the rear
-platform of the observation car, going for his long holiday, he waves
-his hand in a gesture instinct with grace and the sincere greeting
-of a fellow human being, and perhaps because--alas!--the moment of
-their swift and instantly passing communication is isolated from all
-the complexities of our civilized life, because it is to vanish too
-soon for the differences men have made between themselves to assert
-their distinction, there is that one instant of perfect understanding.
-Sometimes a man in a boat sailing by will hail you with this gesture
-from his passing craft; he is safe from long contact, he can run a
-risk and for that little moment yield to the adventure of picking up
-an acquaintance. Sometimes it is the engineer of a locomotive leaning
-out of his cab window, giving you perhaps a droll wink, and there are
-tramps who from a box car will exchange a friendly greeting. And I
-shall never forget the little Irish sailor up on the boat deck with
-whom I talked in the early darkness of an autumn evening in the middle
-of the Atlantic, with the appalling loneliness of the sea as night came
-down to meet it in mystery, and the smoke from the funnels trailed up
-off to the southwest on a rising and sinister wind; he told me of his
-mother and his uncle--“who makes his five guineas a week and doesn’t
-know the taste of liquor”--and of his little ambitions, and so, after
-a bit, of the mysteries of life, with a perfect _camaraderie_, as we
-stood there leaning over the rail, and then, suddenly, when we parted,
-invested himself with a wholly different manner, and touched his cap in
-a little salute and left me to the inanities of the smoking-room.
-
-It was something like that, those intimacies, vouchsafed for a moment
-in our early meetings, whether those at noon or those at night, in the
-suffocating little halls, or the cold tent, with the torches tossing
-their flames in your eyes as you spoke, and it was even that way in
-those curious meetings down in the darker quarter of the town, where
-the waste of the city lifted up faces that were seared and scarred with
-the appalling catastrophes of the soul that had somehow befallen them,
-and there was unutterable longing there.
-
-The one thing that marred these contacts was not only that one was
-so powerless to help these men, but that one stood before them in an
-attitude that somehow suggested to them, inevitably, from long habit
-and the pretense of men who sought power for themselves, that one
-needed only to be placed in a certain official relation to them, and
-to be addressed by a certain title, to be able to help them. It was
-enough to make one ashamed, almost enough to cause one to prefer that
-they should vote for someone else, and relieve one from this dreadful
-self-consciousness, this dreadful responsibility.
-
-And these were the people! These were they who had been so long
-proscribed and exploited; they had borne a few of the favored of the
-fates on their backs, and yet, bewildered, they were somehow expectant
-of that good to come to them which had been promised in the words
-and phrases by which their very acquiescence and subjugation had so
-mysteriously been wrought--“Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”
-
-Where? And for them, when? Not through the efforts of those who
-employed cold phrases about “good” government, and “reform,” and
-“business” administrations, and efficiency methods, and enforcement
-of the laws, and law and order, and all that sort of thing, and class
-consciousness, and economic, or any other interpretation of history,
-or through initiatives, referendums and recalls. What good would any
-of these cold and precise formulæ do them? Better perhaps the turkey
-at Thanksgiving, and the goose at Christmas time which the old machine
-councilman from the ward gave them; of course they themselves paid for
-them, but they did not know it, and the councilman did not know it; he
-had bestowed them with the voice of kindness, in the same hearty human
-spirit in which he came to the wedding or the wake, or got the father
-a job, or the oldest son a parole from the workhouse, and rendered a
-thousand other little personal services. Perhaps Bath House John and
-Hinky Dink were more nearly right after all than the cold and formal
-and precise gentleman who denounced their records in the council. For
-they were human, and the great problem is to make the government of a
-city human.
-
-There were many, of course, even in our own movement, who were not
-concerned about that; I was strongly rebuked by one of them once in
-that very first campaign for declaring that we were no better than
-anyone else, and that all the “good” men of the world could not do the
-people much good even if they were elected to the city government for
-life. No, we may have efficient governments in our cities, and honest
-governments, as we are beginning to have everywhere, and, happily,
-are more and more to have, but the great emancipations will not come
-through the formulæ of Independents, Socialists, or single-taxers,
-nor through Law and Order Leagues, nor Civic Associations. Down
-in their hearts these are not what the people want. What they want
-is a life that is fuller, more beautiful, more splendid and, above
-all, more human. And nobody can prepare it and hand it over to them.
-They must get it themselves; it must come up through them and out of
-them, through long and toilsome processes of development; for such is
-democracy.
-
-“That man’s program will take a thousand years!” Lincoln Steffens had
-said in despair that day I introduced him to Jones. Yes--or a hundred
-thousand. But there is no other way.
-
-
-
-
-XXXV
-
-
-The most efficient executive of which there is any record in history is
-clearly that little centurion who could say: “For I also am a man set
-under authority, having under me soldiers; and I say unto one, go, and
-he goeth; and to another, come, and he cometh; and to my servant, do
-this, and he doeth it.”
-
-In my experience as an executive I learned that it was easy to say
-“Go,” but that the fellows did not go promptly; I could say “Come,”
-and he came--after a while, perhaps, when I had said “Come” again, and
-that sometimes, having said “Do this,” I had to go myself and do it, or
-leave it undone.
-
-Executive ability is a mysterious quality inhering in personality, and
-partaking of its mysteries.
-
-I had gone into the mayor’s office feeling that I was about the most
-ill-prepared man for such a job in the town. Naturally I had turned to
-Tom Johnson, who had a tremendous reputation as an executive; even his
-worst enemy, as the saying is, would not deny his wonderful executive
-ability. I went to him in a sort of despair, and he laughed and leaned
-over and whispered----
-
-But perhaps after all I should not tell. It was spoken in confidence.
-And it is ungenerous and unkind to destroy the cherished illusions of
-the world, almost as unkind, I was about to say, as it is difficult,
-since there is nothing the world so cherishes and hugs to its sad
-old withered bosom as it does its illusions. It may be that they
-are entirely necessary to it, it may be that it could not get along
-without them. What would this nation have done, after all, if it had
-not been for executive ability and the judicial temperament? The
-judicial temperament consists, of course, in nothing more than the calm
-assurance which enables one to put off till to-morrow problems that
-should be decided to-day, for if allowed to go long enough problems
-will solve themselves, just as letters unanswered long enough despatch
-their own replies.
-
-I had deduced that generalization for myself long ago, while waiting
-for judges to hand down opinions, and then in decisions reading the
-well-known formula: “The court does not find it necessary to pass on
-this particular point at this time.” Why, I applied one time to the
-Supreme Court, on a Wednesday morning, for a stay of execution on
-behalf of a man who was to be burned alive in our electric chair on
-the following Friday, and the judicial temperament who at that time
-happened to be chief justice calmly said that the application would be
-taken under advisement and a decision handed down in due course, which,
-at the earliest, was the following Tuesday morning. But the governor
-half an hour afterward said, “Oh, well, don’t worry; if the court
-doesn’t act, I’ll reprieve him,” an example, perhaps, of what I had in
-mind when I was writing those vague thoughts about making government
-human. But executive ability! I had, and still have, great admiration
-and reverence for that----
-
-But Tom Johnson leaned over that afternoon, as we sat there in the
-committee room of the House at Columbus, and laughed and whispered:
-
-“It’s the simplest thing in the world; decide every question quickly
-and be right half the time. And get somebody who can do the work.
-That’s all there is to executive ability.”
-
-I looked at him in amazement. He had grown quite serious.
-
-“There’s another thing,” he added. “Don’t spend too much time in your
-office. A quarter of an hour each day is generally too long, unless
-there are a whole lot of letters. Of course,” he went on reflectively,
-“you can get clerks who can sign your name better than you can.”
-
-
-
-
-XXXVI
-
-
-The first thing was to get men who could do the work, a difficulty
-made greater because we have been accustomed to bestow public offices
-as rewards for political service; the office is for the man, not the
-man for the office. I had a friend, a young man, who had never been
-in politics in his life, though he had been born and reared in Ohio.
-He was of an old, wealthy and aristocratic family, a graduate of an
-eastern university. His name was Franklin Macomber. I appointed him a
-member of the Board of Public Safety--we still had the board plan of
-government then--and the appointment to office of a young aristocrat
-afforded the newspapers and cartoonists an opportunity for ridicule
-which they did not overlook. But I knew the boy. I had seen him play
-football, for one thing, and I knew how he managed his own business.
-The vigor and the nerve he had displayed on the football field at once
-showed in his duties, and the ability and devotion he displayed in his
-own affairs he applied in the public service. The criticism to which
-the administration was constantly subjected distressed him; he heard
-so much of it at the fashionable club where he had his luncheons. One
-afternoon he came into City Hall with an expression more somber than
-usual, and as he sat down in my office he began:
-
-“They are saying----”
-
-“Who are saying?” I asked.
-
-“The people,” he replied.
-
-He had come, of course, from his luncheon at the club. His motor car
-was at the door of the city hall, and I asked him to take me for a
-drive, and I suggested certain parts of town through which, for a
-change, we might go. We ignored the avenues and the boulevards, and for
-two hours drove about through quiet streets far from the life of the
-town as we knew it and as all men down in the business section knew
-it--the old third ward, where the Poles lived, and around to the upper
-end of the old seventh where the shops and factories were, and then on
-over through the eighth and the ninth, and so up to the Hill, and after
-we had passed by all those blocks and blocks of humble little homes,
-cottages of one story, and all that, I asked him if he knew what the
-folk who lived in them were saying about the administration.
-
-“Why, no,” he answered. “I never talk with any of them.”
-
-“Well,” I ventured to say, “they are the people, they who live in those
-little houses with the low roofs. It is important to know how they
-feel, too.”
-
-I always felt that he had a new vision after that; he saw that if
-government was to mean anything to these persons, it must be made
-human, and the reforms in the police and fire departments he wrought
-out in that spirit were such that when he died, in not quite four
-years, when he was just turned thirty, the cartoonist had long since
-ceased to caricature him as an idle fop, and the newspaper editorials
-mourned him, in common with most of the community, as one of the best
-public servants our city, or any city, ever had.
-
-
-
-
-XXXVII
-
-
-I went into the mayor’s office, as I said, all unprepared. My equipment
-was what the observations of a political reporter, a young lawyer’s
-participation in the politics of his state, and an intimacy with Golden
-Rule Jones could make it. It was not much, though it was as much
-perhaps as have most men who become municipal officials in our land,
-where in all branches of the civil service, training and experience,
-when they are considered at all, seem to be the last requisites. The
-condition I suppose is implicit in democracy, which has the defects of
-its own virtues, and founds its institutions in distrust. They order
-these things better in Germany, by committing the administration of
-municipal affairs to trained men as to a learned profession, though the
-German cities have the disadvantage of having so reformed their civil
-service that it is a monstrous bureaucracy. I had been chosen chiefly
-because I had been the friend of my distinguished predecessor, and
-for a long time I was so inveterately referred to as of that honored
-relation, so invariably introduced as the successor of Golden Rule
-Jones, that I was haunted by the disquieting dread that I was expected
-to be, if not a replica of him, at least some sort of measurable
-imitation of his manners and methods, the most impossible achievement
-in the world, since his was a personality wholly original and unique.
-And then besides, a man prefers to be himself. But of all those, and
-they were many and respectable, who doubted my ability, there was none
-whose distrust could exceed my own. I knew one thing, at any rate, and
-that was, that I did not know.
-
-Aside from my political principles, which I presume may as well be
-called liberal, and certain theories which were called radical, though
-even then I knew enough of human nature to know that they could not be
-realized, especially in one small city in the American Middle West,
-I had been able to make, or at least to recognize when others made
-them, as Mr. Bryce and most of the students of municipal government in
-America had done, two or three generalizations which, upon the whole,
-after four terms in a mayor’s office testing them, I still believe
-to be sound. The first was that, whatever the mere form of local
-government, our cities were directly ruled by those small coteries we
-had come to call political machines; the second, that these machines
-ruled the cities for the benefit of public utility corporations; and
-the third, that the legal power through which this was accomplished
-was derived from legislatures controlled by the same persons in the
-same interest. That is, the people had no voice in their own affairs;
-representative government itself had disappeared. Therefore these
-remedies seemed to be indicated, as the doctors say--non-partizan city
-elections, municipal ownership, and home rule for cities. This was the
-task, this was the program.
-
-We had already defeated the machines; Jones had made that victory
-possible by his great pioneer work in destroying the superstition of
-party regularity. I say defeated the machines, when perhaps I should
-say checked the machines, since the bosses remained and the partizans
-who made them possible. And the public utilities were in private
-hands, the street railway company still was there, desperate because
-its franchises were about to expire, and its securities, through
-the financiering too familiar to America in these latter days, six
-times the amount of its actual investment. And down at Columbus, the
-legislature still was sitting, controlled by rural members who knew
-nothing of cities or of city life or city problems, farmers and country
-lawyers and the politicians of small towns, who, in the historic
-opposition of the ruralite to the urbanite, could not only favor their
-party confreres and conspirators from the city--machine politicians
-to whom they turned for advice--but gain a cheap _réclame_ at home
-by opposing every measure designed to set the cities free. Thus the
-bosses in both parties, the machine politicians, the corporations, and
-their lawyers, promoters, lobbyists, kept editors, ward heelers, office
-holders, spies, and parasites of every kind were lying in wait on
-every hand. And besides, though inspired by other motives, the “good”
-people were always insisting on the “moral” issue; urging us to turn
-aside from our larger immediate purpose, and concentrate our official
-attention on the “bad” people--and wreck our movement. Our immediate
-purpose was to defeat the effort of the street railway company to
-obtain a franchise, to prevent it from performing the miracle of
-transmuting twenty-five millions in green paper into twenty-five
-millions in gold, and thereby absorb the commercial values of half a
-century. To do this it was necessary to win elections for years, and
-to win elections, one must have votes, and “bad” people have votes,
-equally with “good” people, and if one is to judge from the comment of
-the “good” people on the election returns, the “bad” people in most
-cities are in the majority. On that point, I believe, the reformers and
-the politicians at least are agreed. More than this, we had to obtain
-from reluctant legislatures the powers that would put the city at least
-on equal terms with the corporations which had always proved so much
-more potent than the city. Such was the struggle our movement faced,
-such was the victory to be won before our city could be free from the
-triumvirate that so long had exploited it, the political boss, the
-franchise promoter, and the country politician. The Free City! That was
-the noble dream.
-
-Well might the wise and sophisticated laugh at their mayor and call him
-dreamer! It was, and, alas, it is a dream. But youth is so sublimely
-confident, and counts so little on opposition. Not the opposition of
-those who array themselves against it--that was to be expected, of
-course, that was part of the glorious conflict--but the opposition from
-within the ranks, the opposition on the hither side of the barricade.
-For youth thinks, sometimes, that even opponents may be won, if only
-they can be brought to that vantage ground whence one inevitably
-beholds the fair and radiant vision. It had not expected the falling
-away of followers, of supporters, even of friends--the strangely
-averted eye on the street, the suddenly abandoned weekly call, the
-cessation of little notes of encouragement, the amazing revelations of
-malignity and bitterness at election times, and the flood increasing in
-volume at each succeeding election. One man, thought to be devoted to
-a cause, fails in his desire to secure an office; another you refuse a
-contract; he whom you neglected to favor in January punctually appears
-in the opposition ranks in November, one by one they drop away, and
-multiply into an army. Even in the official group in the City Hall and
-in the council, there are jealousies, and childish spites, and pitiable
-little ambitions and with them misunderstanding, gossip, slander,
-anonymous attacks, lies, abuse, hatred, until youth makes the awful
-discovery that there is, after all, in human nature, pure malice, and
-youth must fight hard to retain its ideals, so continually are all the
-old lovely illusions stripped away in this bewildering complication of
-little tragedies and comedies we call life.
-
-To be sure, youth might have known, having read the like in books from
-infancy, and having made some reflections of its own on the irony of
-things, and indulged from time to time in philosophizings. But that was
-about the experience of others, from which none of us is wise enough
-to learn. Most of us indeed are not wise enough to learn from our own.
-It is all a part of life. What a thing human life is, to be sure, and
-human nature! _Ay di mi!_ as Carlyle used to say. Patience, and shuffle
-the cards!...
-
-... I had no intention of recalling such things. Did not Jones say that
-when the Golden Rule would not work, it was not the fault of the Rule,
-but because one did not quite know how to work it? I have no intention
-of setting down the failures or the little successes of four terms as
-mayor. Nor shall I write a little history of those terms in office;
-I could not, and it would not be worth while if I could. I shall not
-attempt in these pages a treatise on municipal government, for if the
-task were rightly executed, it would be a history of civilization.
-Non-partizanship in municipal elections, municipal ownership, home
-rule for cities,--who is interested in these? I have discussed them
-in interviews--(“Is there to be a statement for us this morning, Mr.
-Mayor?”)--and speeches numerous as autumn leaves, and like them, lost
-now in the winds to which they were given.
-
-After all, it is life in which we are all interested. And one sees a
-deal of life in a mayor’s office, and in it one may learn to envisage
-it as--just life. Then one can have a philosophy about it, though one
-cannot discover a panacea, some sort of sociological patent medicine
-to be administered to the community, like Socialism, or Prohibition,
-or absolute law enforcement, or the commission form of government. One
-indeed may open one’s eyes and look at one’s city and presently behold
-its vast antitheses, its boulevards and marble palaces at one end, and
-its slums, its tenements and tenderloins at the other. He may discern
-there the operations of universal and inexorable laws, and realize the
-tremendous conflict that everywhere and in all times goes on between
-privilege and the people. Such a view may simplify life for him; it may
-make easy the peroration to the campaign speech; it may provide a glib
-and facile answer to any question. But he should have a care lest it
-make him the slave of its own _clichés_, as Socialists for instance,
-when they become purely scientific, explain every human impulse,
-emotion and deed by simply repeating the formula “Economic determinism.”
-
-But it will not do; it will not suffice. This view of life is simple
-only because it is narrow and confined; in far perspectives there
-appear curious and perplexing contradictions. And even then, the most
-exhaustive analysis of life and of human society, however immense and
-comprehensive, however logical and inevitable its generalizations, must
-always fall short simply because no human mind and no assembly of human
-minds can ever wholly envisage the vast and bewildering complexity
-of human life. Each man views life from that angle where he happens
-to have been placed by forces he cannot comprehend. All of which no
-doubt is a mere repetition in feebler terms of what has heretofore
-been spoken of the inherent vice of the sectarian mind. There are no
-rigid distinctions of good and bad, of proletarians and capitalists, of
-privileged and proscribed; there are just people, just folks, as Jones
-said, with their human weaknesses, follies, and mistakes, their petty
-ambitions, their miserable jealousies and envies, their triumphs, and
-glories and boundless dreams, and all tending somewhither, they know
-not where nor how, and all pretty much alike. And government, be its
-form what it may, is but the reflection of all these qualities. The
-city, said Coriolanus, is the people, and as Jones used to say, with
-those strange embracing gestures, “I believe in _all_ the people.”
-
-
-
-
-XXXVIII
-
-
-However, all these confused elements make the task of a mayor
-exceedingly difficult, especially in America where there are, not so
-many kinds of people, but so many different standards and customs and
-habits. When one gets down into humanity, one beholds not two classes,
-separate and distinct as the sexes, but innumerable classes. In Toledo
-something more than twenty languages and dialects are spoken every
-day, and as the mayor is addressed the chorus becomes a very babel,
-a confusion of tongues, all counseling him to his duty. The result
-is apt to be perplexing at times. The rights of “business” in the
-streets and to the public property, the proper bounds within which
-strikers and strike breakers are to be confined, the limitations of the
-activities of pickets, the hours in which it is proper to drink beer,
-who in the community should gamble, whether Irishmen or Germans make
-the better policemen; the exact proportion of public jobs which Poles
-and Hungarians should hold; whether Socialists on their soap boxes are
-obstructing traffic or merely exercising the constitutional right of
-free speech, whether there are more Catholics than Protestants holding
-office; whether the East Side is receiving its due consideration in
-comparison with the West Side; whether boys have the right to play ball
-in the streets, and lovers to spoon in parks, and whose conceptions of
-morals is to prevail--these, like the sins of the Psalmist, are ever
-before him.
-
-And with it all there is a strange, inexplicable belief in the almost
-supernatural power of a mayor. I have been waited on by committees--of
-aged men--demanding that I stop at once those lovers who sought the
-public park on moonlit nights in June, I have been roused from bed
-at two o’clock in the morning, with a demand that a team of horses
-in a barn four miles on the other side of town be fed; innumerable
-ladies have appealed to me to compel their husbands to show them
-more affectionate attention, others have asked me to prohibit their
-neighbors from talking about them. One Jewish resident was so devout
-that he emigrated to Jerusalem, and his family insisted that I recall
-him; a Christian missionary asked me to detail policemen to assist
-him in converting the Jews to his creed; and pathetic mothers were
-ever imploring me to order the release of their sons and husbands from
-prisons and penitentiaries, over which I had no possible jurisdiction.
-I have recalled I know not how many times a remark Jones made one
-evening after one of those weary days I afterward came to know so well;
-“I could wash my hands every day in women’s tears.”
-
-Of course, the main thing was not to wash one’s hands of them or their
-difficulties. I remember one poor soul whose husband was in the
-penitentiary. She came to me in a despair that was almost frantic, and
-showed me a letter she had received from her husband. A new governor
-had been elected in that state wherein he was imprisoned, and he urged
-his wife, in the letter she gave me to read, to secure a pardon for him
-before the new governor was inaugurated. “They say,” he wrote, “that
-the new governor is a good church member, which is a bad sign for being
-good to prisoners.”
-
-Poor soul! It was impossible to explain to her that I was wholly
-powerless. She stood and humbly shook her sorrowful head, and to each
-new attempt at explanation she said:
-
-“You are the father of all.”
-
-It was a phrase which most of the women of the foreign born population
-employed; they repeated it as though it were some charmed formula.
-This exaggerated notion of the mayoral power was not confined to
-those citizens of the foreign quarters; it was shared by many of the
-native Americans, who held the mayor responsible for all the vices of
-the community, and I was never more sharply criticized than when, in
-refusing to sanction the enactment of a curfew ordinance, I tentatively
-advanced the suggestion that, if it did not seem too outrageously
-radical, the rearing and training of children was the duty, not so much
-of the police as of parents, pastors and teachers.
-
-It may have been because, in some way, it had got abroad that I was
-a reformer myself. It was at a time when there was new and searching
-inquiry, and a new sense of public decency, the result of a profound
-impulse in the public consciousness, and I had been of those who in
-my town had opposed the political machines. Constructive thinking and
-constructive work being the hardest task in the world, one of which
-our democracy in its present development is not yet fully capable, the
-impulse spent itself largely in destructive work. That was natural;
-it is a quality inherent in humanity. My friend Kermode F. Gill, the
-artist-builder and contractor of Cleveland, once told me that while
-it is difficult to get men to carry on any large construction, and
-carry it on well, and necessary to set task masters over them to have
-the work done at all, there is a wholly different spirit in evidence
-when the work is one of demolition. If a great building is to be torn
-down, the men need no task masters, no speeding up, they fly at it in a
-perfect frenzy, with a veritable passion, and tear it down so swiftly
-that the one difficulty is to get the salvage. And in the course of
-building public works I have observed the same phenomenon. While the
-forces are tearing down, while they are excavating, that black fringe
-of spectators, the “crow line” the builders call it, is always there.
-But when once the work is above ground, and construction begins, when
-the structure lifts itself, when it aspires,--the crow line dissolves
-and melts quite away. This, in a sense, is true of man in any of his
-operations. When the great awakening came, after the first shock of
-surprise, after the first resolve to do better, the public went at the
-work of demolition, all about the arena the thumbs of the multitude
-were turned down, and we witnessed the tragedy of men who but a short
-while before had been praised and lauded for their possessions, and
-used as models for little boys in Sunday-school, suddenly stripped of
-all their coveted garments, and held up to the hatred and ridicule
-of a world that can yet think of nothing better than the stocks, the
-pillory, the jail, and the scaffold.
-
-In Edinburgh I was shown a little church of which Sir Walter Scott was
-once a vestryman, or deacon or elder or some such official, and in the
-door still hung the irons in which offenders were fastened on Sunday
-mornings so that the righteous, as they went to pray, might comfort
-themselves with a consoling sense of their own goodness by spitting in
-the face of the sinner. Many of our reforms are still carried on in
-this spirit, and are no more sensible or productive of good.
-
-The word “reformer,” like the word “politician” has degenerated,
-and, in the mind of the common man, come to connote something very
-disagreeable. In four terms as mayor I came to know both species
-pretty well, and, in the later connotations of the term, I prefer the
-politician. He, at least, is human. The reformers, as Emerson said,
-affect one as the insane do; their motives may be pious, but their
-methods are profane. They are a buzz in the ear.
-
-I had read this in Emerson in my youth, when for a long time I had
-a veritable passion for him, just as in a former stage, and another
-mood, I had had a veritable passion for books about Napoleon, and, at
-another, for the works of Carlyle, and the controversy excited by the
-reckless Froude; but the truth--as it appears to me, or at any rate,
-the part of a truth--was not borne in upon me until I came to know and
-to regard, with dread, the possibility that I might be included in
-their number, which I should not like, unless it were as a mere brother
-in humanity, somewhat estranged in spirit though we should be.
-
-
-
-
-XXXIX
-
-
-The disadvantages of being classed as a reformer are not, I am sure,
-sufficiently appreciated; if they were the peace of the world would
-not be troubled as constantly as it is by those who would make mankind
-over on a model of which they present themselves as the unattractive
-example. One of those advantages is that each reformer thinks that all
-the other reformers are in honor committed to his reform; he writes
-them letters asking for expressions of sympathy and support, and,
-generally, when he finds that each of the others has some darling
-reform of his own which he is determined to try on an unwilling public,
-he is at once denounced as a traitor to the whole scheme of reform
-in the universe. Another disadvantage is that reformers never are
-reëlected, and I might set forth others, were it my intention to embark
-on that interesting subject.
-
-I am moved to these observations, however, by the recollection of an
-experience, exasperating at the time, though now of no moment, since
-it has cured itself as will most exasperations if left long enough
-to themselves. Its importance, if it have any importance at all, may
-be ascribed to its effect of having saved me from any such fatal
-classification, unless I were far enough away from home, where almost
-anyone may be regarded as a reformer. To be sure, as I was just saying,
-in the days immediately following my first election, I was regarded
-by many of the sacred and illuminated host of reformers in the land
-as one of them, since I was asked to join in all sorts of movements
-for all sorts of prohibitions,--of the use of intoxicating liquors
-and tobacco and cigarettes, and I know not what other vices abhorred
-by those who are not addicted to them,--but it was my good luck, as
-it seems now to have been, to be saved from that fate by as good and
-faithful an enemy as ever helped a politician along. The Democrats had
-been placed in power that year in Ohio, and with Tom Johnson, many of
-us felt that it was an opportunity to secure certain changes in the
-laws of Ohio relating to the government of cities, that is, we felt
-it was time to secure our own reforms; everyone else, of course, felt
-the same way about his reforms. We had organized late in the previous
-year an association of the mayors of the cities in the state for the
-purpose of making changes in the municipal code that would give the
-cities a more mobile form of government and greater powers, in other
-words, it was the first definite movement in favor of home rule for
-cities, a liberation for which we struggled for almost a decade before
-we achieved any measure of success. We had drafted a new municipal
-code and had met at Columbus early in that January in which I took my
-office, to put the finishing touches to our code before presenting it
-to the legislature, and one morning I strolled into the hall of the
-House of Representatives before the daily session had been convened.
-
-There was in the House at that time a newly elected member whom Johnson
-had supported for election and no sooner was he in his seat than he
-opposed every measure Johnson espoused, and, under the warming applause
-his disloyalty won from Johnson’s enemies, he became an opponent of
-the mayor more vociferous than effective. He was exactly, I think, of
-that type described by Emerson, who in the course of saying everything
-worth saying, or that will be worth saying for the next two hundred
-years, said: “Republics abound in young civilians who believe that
-the laws make the city, that grave modifications of the policy and
-modes of living and employments of the population, that commerce,
-education and religion, may be voted in or out; and that any measure,
-though it were absurd, may be imposed on a people if only you can get
-sufficient voices to make it a law. But the wise know that foolish
-legislation is a rope of sand which perishes in the twisting; that
-the state must follow and not lead the character and progress of the
-citizen; the strongest usurper is quickly got rid of; and they only
-who build on Ideas build for eternity; and that the form of government
-which prevails is the expression of what cultivation exists in the
-population which permits it. The law is only a memorandum. We are
-superstitious, and esteem the statute somewhat; so much life as it has
-in the character of living men is its force.”
-
-I knew this young civilian then only as one of the Johnson group and
-as that was sufficient introduction, in the _camaraderie_ that existed
-between those of us who were devoted to the same cause, I stopped, at
-his salutation, and chatted with him for a moment. He had asked my
-opinion on a bill he had introduced, a measure to prohibit or regulate
-public dances in cities, or some such thing, and when I failed to
-evince the due degree of interest in the young man’s measure, he was at
-once displeased and tried to heat me to the proper degree of warmth in
-the holy cause of reform. He began, of course, by an indignant demand
-to know if I was in favor of the evils that were connected with public
-dances, and when I tried to show him that my inability to recognize his
-measure as the only adequate method of dealing with those evils did
-not necessarily indicate approval of them, he struck the prescribed
-attitude, held up his right hand and said something in the melodramatic
-style, about the oath of office I had taken not many days before. I saw
-at once then that I was dealing with a member in high standing of the
-order of the indurated sectarian mind, whose fanaticism makes them the
-most impossible persons in the world, and having never been certain
-which of the advice in the Proverbs should be accepted, I yielded to a
-fatal habit of joking--the history of the Republic is strewn with the
-wrecks of careers that were broken by a jest--and told him that I had
-taken my oath of office before a notary public, and that perhaps it had
-not been of full efficacy on that account.
-
-And then I went away, and forgot the incident. It was revived in my
-memory, however, and intensified in its interest for me the next
-morning, when on getting back home, I saw in the newspapers a despatch
-from Columbus, under the most ominous of black headlines, stating that
-I had told the distinguished representative, on the very floor of the
-House, under the aegis, one almost might say, of the state, that I had
-no reverence for my oath of office, and did not intend to respect it.
-Here was anarchy for you, indeed, from the old pupil of Altgeld!
-
-It was, of course, useless to explain, since any statement I might make
-would be but one more welcome knot to the tangle of misrepresentation
-in which the unhappy incident was being so gladly snarled, and I tried
-to forget it, though that was impossible, since it provided the text
-for many a sanctimonious editorial in the land, in each one of which
-some addition was made to the original report. Herbert Spencer says
-somewhere that for every story told in the world there is some basis
-of truth, and I suppose he is right, but I have always felt that he
-did not, at least in my reading of him, sufficiently characterize
-that worst vice of the human mind, intellectual dishonesty. Perhaps
-if he had associated less with scientists and more with professional
-reformers of the morals of other persons he would not have omitted this
-curious specimen from his philosophic analysis, if he did omit it;
-and if that experience of the young civilian at Columbus had not been
-sufficient, I could have supplied him with another out of an episode in
-which I had borne a part some years before, one which should have been
-sufficient to warn me against the type for the rest of my life.
-
-It concerns another young civilian, though this one was so old that
-he should have known better, and relates to a time years before when
-I happened to be running for the state senate. I say happened, for it
-was precisely of that fortuitous nature, since I had not been concerned
-in the circumstances which nominated me, so entirely negative in their
-character that I might as well have been said not to be running at
-all. I was a young lawyer, just beginning to practice, and in my wide
-leisure was out of town that summer, economically spending a holiday at
-my father’s house, and, since the Democrats had no hope in this world
-of carrying the district, and could get no one who was on the ground to
-defend himself to accept their nomination, they had nominated me. It
-was an honor, perhaps, but so empty and futile that when I came home
-again it seemed useless even to decline it, and best to forget it, and
-so I tried to do that, and made no campaign at all. But one afternoon
-I had a caller, a tall, dark visaged man, in black clerical garb, who
-came softly into my office, carefully closed the door, and, fixing
-his strange, intense eyes on me, said that he came to talk politics.
-He represented a reform league and he came, he said, to discuss my
-candidature for the state senate, and to offer me the support of his
-organization. “Of course,” he went on to explain, “we should impose
-certain conditions.” He fixed on me again and very intently, those
-strange, fanatic eyes.
-
-I knew very well what the conditions were; it was hardly necessary for
-him to explain that I should be expected to sign a pledge to support
-the bills proposed by his organization, some of which, no doubt, were
-excellent measures.
-
-I explained to him that I was under no illusions as to the campaign,
-that there was no possible chance of my election that year, that if
-there had been I never would have been nominated, and nothing short
-of a miracle could elect me. “But,” I added, “even if that miracle
-happens, though it will not, and I should be elected, I should go down
-to Columbus and to the Senate able to say that I had made no promises
-whatever.”
-
-He looked at me a moment, with those strange, cold eyes peering
-narrowly out of his somber visage, and as he gazed they seemed to
-contract, and with the faint shadow of a smile that was wholly without
-humor, he said:
-
-“Well, you can say that.”
-
-“What do you mean?” I asked.
-
-The smile raised the man’s cheeks a little higher until they enclosed
-the little eyes in minute wrinkles, and invested them with an
-expression of the deepest cunning.
-
-“Why, since you are opposed to signing our pledge, we will waive that
-in your case, and you and I can have a little private understanding--no
-one need ever know, and you can say----” he was gently tapping the ends
-of his fingers together, and the last terms of his proposal seemed to
-be absorbed by an expression of vulpine significance so eloquent and
-plain in its meaning that mere words were superfluous.
-
-I sat there and looked at him; I had known of him, he spoke nearly
-every Sunday in some church, and took up collections for the reform to
-which, quite sincerely, I believe, he was devoting his life. Then I
-said:
-
-“But that isn’t my idea even of politics, to say nothing of ethics.”
-
-I believe now that he had no conception of the moral significance of
-his suggestion that we have an implied understanding which I was to
-be at liberty to deny if the exigencies of politics suggested it. He
-was a reformer, belonging to the order of the indurated mind. He was
-possessed by a theory, which held his mind in the relentless mould of
-its absolutism, and there his mind had hardened, and, alas, his heart,
-too, no doubt--so that its original impressions were all fixed and
-immutable, and not subject to change; they could not be erased nor
-could any new impressions be superimposed. He was convinced that his
-particular theory was correct, and that if only it could be imposed on
-mankind, the world would be infinitely better off; and that hence any
-means, no matter what, were permissible in effecting this imposition,
-because of the good that would follow. It is an old mental attitude in
-this world, well treated of in books, and understood and recognized by
-everyone except those who adopt it, and in its spirit every new reform
-is promulgated by its avatar. But the reformer never thinks of himself
-in any such light, of course, he does not understand it any more than
-he understands mankind’s distrust of him. It is the instinctive fear of
-the theorist that has been felt for every one of them from Robespierre,
-the archtype, and impossibilist par excellence, down to the latest man
-haranguing his little idle crowd on the street corner.
-
-
-
-
-XL
-
-
-These observations come with the recollection of those days of my first
-term in the mayor’s office when I had so much to do with reformers
-that I earnestly desired that no one would ever include me in their
-category. They came to see me so often and in such numbers that my
-whole view of life was quite in danger of distortion. It seemed that
-half the populace had set forth in a rage to reform mankind, and their
-first need was to get the mayor to use the police force to help them.
-When they did not call at the office, they were writing letters. The
-favorite day for these expressions of the reforming spirit was Monday.
-I had been many months in the office however, before I was able to make
-this generalization, though from the first I could observe that Monday
-took on something of that dismal and somber tone which has given it
-its name of blue Monday. In the early days of a simpler life in our
-country, when the customs of the pioneer had not been superseded by the
-complexities of modern existence, its color used to be ascribed to the
-fact that it was wash day, and perhaps it has remained a sort of moral
-wash day ever since. At any rate we soon discovered that everyone who
-had a grievance or a complaint or a suggestion about his neighbor or
-some larger scheme of reforming whole groups of the population was most
-likely to be heavily charged with it on Monday, and since the almost
-universal conception among us is that all reforms can be wrought by the
-mayor, by the simple process of issuing an order to the police, these
-complaints were of course lodged at the mayor’s office.
-
-They were of a curious variety, expressing, I suppose, not only all
-the moral yearnings of mankind, but all the meaner moods of human
-nature, and each new Monday morning seemed to have in reserve, for a
-nature that was trying to keep its faith in humanity, some fresh and
-theretofore unimagined instance of the depths of little meannesses to
-which human nature is capable of sinking. Many of them came in person
-with their criticism, others sent anonymous letters. Then there were
-those who came to repeat ugly things they had heard about me; “I
-wouldn’t tell you this if I were not your friend. I think you ought
-to know it.” Later in the afternoon the evenings’ newspapers, with
-the criticisms marked, were laid on my desk. All this made Monday
-the hardest day of the week, especially as the day closed with the
-hebdominal session of the council, where one might find now and then
-some pretty discouraging examples of human meanness. Tuesday was not
-quite so bad, though it was trying; human nature seemed to run pretty
-high, or pretty low, on that day, too. By Wednesday, the atmosphere
-began to clear, and by Thursday and Friday, everyone seemed to be
-attending to his own business and letting the faults of his neighbors
-go unnoted or at least unreported, and Saturday was a day of such calm
-that one’s whole faith in humanity was miraculously restored; if the
-weather was fine one might almost discover human nature as to be good
-as that nature which would reveal herself on the golf links.
-
-As a result of it all we finally made the deduction--my secretary
-Bernard Dailey, the stenographers in the office and the reporters who
-formed so pleasant an element of the life there--that it was all due
-to the effects of the Sunday that had intervened. In the first place,
-people had leisure on that day and in that leisure they could whet up
-their consciences and set them to the congenial task of dissecting the
-characters of other people, or they could contemplate the evils in the
-world and resolve highly to make the mayor do away with them, and then
-after the custom of our land they could gorge on the huge Sunday noon
-dinner of roast beef, and then lie about all afternoon like pythons in
-a torpor which produced an indigestion so acute and lasting that for
-three days it passed very well for pious fervor and zeal for reform.
-Such at least was our theory, offered here solely in the scientific
-spirit, and not by any means as final. It was acquiesced in by all of
-us at the time, and has been supported by an unvarying series of data
-on the Monday mornings since then.
-
-We submitted it to Henry Frisch, the police sergeant who had been
-detailed for duty in the mayor’s office for many years, a dear and
-comfortable soul, who had served under several mayors, and had
-developed a philosophy of life that was a very Nirvana of comfort
-and repose. Long ago, so it seemed when he smiled indulgently on the
-discomfiture of blue Monday, he had given up humanity as a bad job; to
-him the race was utterly and irredeemably hopeless, and without the
-need of saying a word he could shake his honest head at the suggestion
-of a new reform with a motion that was eloquent of all negation. He was
-very tolerant, however, and made no argument in rebuttal, he simply
-refused to accept humanity on any general plane; regarding the race as
-a biological species merely, he would confide to you that his years of
-experience at that post and as a policeman who had paced his beat and
-afterward commanded a sergeant’s squad, had convinced him that it was
-altogether depraved, dishonest and disgusting, but with any individual
-specimen of the species he was not that way at all. He was really
-kindness itself. The next minute, with tears in his eyes, he would go
-to any extremes to help some poor devil out of trouble. Unless it were
-reformers; for these he had no use, he said, and if his advice had been
-accepted he would have been permitted to expel them from the City Hall
-by their own beloved weapons of violence and force of arms. On Sundays
-he went fishing.
-
-Perhaps at the time of which I am thinking, if not very specifically
-writing, there was more of this Monday spirit of reform than is
-usual. In the first place, much is expected of a new official and
-because he does not promptly work those miracles which are confidently
-expected whether he was foolish enough to promise them or not, he is
-so generally complained of that it may be set down as an axiom of
-practical politics that any elected official, in the executive branch
-of the government, could be recalled at any time during the first year
-of his incumbency of his office. Just then, too, there had been elected
-to the governorship a gentleman who had been very deeply devoted to
-the interests of the Methodist Church, the strongest denomination
-numerically in Ohio--the first governor of Ohio, indeed, was a
-Methodist preacher--and because of that fact and because of the use in
-his inaugural message of the magic phrase “law and order,” it was at
-once announced in the most sensational manner of the sensational press
-that, unless all the sumptuary laws in Ohio were drastically enforced,
-all the mayors of the cities would be removed. Governor Pattison had
-been elected as a Democrat, and during his campaign Tom Johnson and
-I had supported him, and it was while we were in Columbus at his
-inauguration that this sensation was exploited in the newspapers. I
-remember how Tom Johnson received it when one of his coterie brought
-the extra editions into the hotel and pointed out to him the dreadful
-predictions of the headlines; the white, aristocratic hand waved the
-suggestion imperiously aside, and he said:
-
-“Four days, and it’ll all be over. That’s the life of a newspaper
-sensation.”
-
-I believe that newspaper editors themselves place the limit of the
-effectiveness of a sensation at about that time, though some of them
-are so shrewd that they drop the sensation the day before the people
-begin to lose interest in it, instead of waiting for the day on which
-they actually tire of it. Which may be an explanation of the fact that
-the beginnings of things are always treated so much more fully in the
-press than their endings; one always reads of the opening of the trial,
-and the awful charge, but is never told how it all came out in the end,
-unless the end was catastrophic. The theory of the press is, I believe,
-that good news is no news.
-
-I do not know that poor Governor Pattison ever had any intention of
-raising the issue of local self-government, and of raising it in such
-a direct and positive way as by attempting to remove all the mayors
-of Ohio towns and cities in which it could be shown that some little
-enactment of the legislature had failed of absolute enforcement; I
-suppose he had no such intention, since the law gave him no such power,
-though that made no difference to the professional reverencers and
-enforcers of law. The poor man never saw the governor’s office after
-that night of his brilliant inauguration, when he stood, very dark and
-weary, with features drawn, but resolutely smiling, at his levee in the
-senate chamber, a tragic figure in a way, the first Democratic governor
-in a long while, and the fates treating him with their customary irony
-and indignity by setting their seal upon him in the very hour of his
-triumph. He died in a few months, but there remained many of course who
-could prophesy in his name and cast out devils with each extra edition
-of the newspapers, and the discussion of law enforcement has gone on
-pretty steadily from that time to this.
-
-
-
-
-XLI
-
-
-I suppose the discussion is one which must go on always in any land
-where the people of our race and tradition dwell. A more objective,
-natural and naïve people would not be so interested in sin, and
-when the late Mayor Gaynor of New York spoke of the difficulty of
-administering the affairs of a modern city according to “the standard
-of exquisite morals” held aloft by some persons for others, he
-designated in his clear and clever way a class of citizens familiar to
-every mayor by the curiously doctrinaire order of indurated mind with
-which they are endowed. They begin with the naïve assumption that their
-standard is the one and only correct standard, and that since men have
-repeatedly refused to adopt it on mere inspection they must be forced
-to do so by the use of violence, a process which they call maintaining
-“law and order.” They believe that any wrong, any abuse, may be stopped
-instantly by the passage of a law, and if one venture to question the
-efficacy of any plan they propose, he is said at once to be opposed to
-morality and to religion, and is set down as a profane and sacrilegious
-person.
-
-It is, of course, inconvenient to argue with a person who has the
-supreme refuge of the irrelevant conclusion; as inconvenient as it
-would be were one to be offered carbolic acid as a toilet article,
-and, upon refusal, be accused of not believing in cleanliness. This
-order of mind imagines that every phase of human conduct can be ordered
-and regulated by the enactment of statutes; that the industries,
-occupations, clothing, amusements, appetites, passions, prejudices,
-opinions, ambitions, aspirations and devotions of man can be changed,
-moulded and regulated by city councils and state legislatures. Every
-inconvenience, every difficulty, every disagreeable feature of modern
-life, is to be done away by the passage of a law.
-
-That our race is saturated with this curious and amazing superstition
-of the power of written enactments is shown by the common terminology.
-The mental reactions of a large portion of mankind against the
-irritation of opposing opinion and conduct habitually express
-themselves in the phrase, “There ought to be a law.” It is heard as
-often every day as the stereotyped references to the weather. Not a
-disagreeable incident in life is complained of without that expression;
-no one has a pet aversion or a darling prejudice that he does not
-cherish the desire of having a law passed to bring the rest of the
-world around to his way of feeling. And when a trust is formed, or a
-strike interrupts business, or the sheets on the hotel bed are too
-short, or the hatpin of a woman in a crowded street car is too long,
-or a new dance is introduced, or a boor preëmpts a seat in a train,
-or a cat howls on the back-yard fence in the night time, or a waiter
-is impertinent, or the cook leaves, the indignant citizen lifts his
-eyes hopefully toward that annual calamity known as the session of the
-state legislature, and repeats the formula: “There ought to be a law.”
-And when the legislature assembles, a whole body of foolish bills is
-introduced regulating everything in the earth, and some things that
-are outside of the earth. If a deed is disapproved of by a group of
-people, an agitation is begun to make it a criminal offense; by means
-of pains and penalties the whole of life is to be regulated, and
-government is to become a vast bureaucracy of policemen, catch-polls,
-inspectors, beadles, censors, mentors, monitors and spies. As the
-session draws toward its close, the haste to enact all these measures
-becomes frantic. I shall never forget those scenes of riot, the howling
-and drunkenness and confusion and worse I have witnessed in the
-legislatures of Illinois and of Ohio the last night of the session.
-And all this delirium goes on in every state of the Union, every
-winter--and all these enactments must be revered. It is the phase of
-the apotheosis of the policeman, who is to replace nurse and parent and
-teacher and pastor, and, relieving all these of their responsibilities,
-undertake to remould man into a being of absolute perfection, in whom
-character may be dispensed with, since he is to dwell forever under
-the crystal dome of a moral vacuum from which temptation has been
-scientifically exhausted.
-
-The reason is simple, and obvious; it inheres in the belief in the
-absolute. Your true reformer is not only without humor, without pity,
-without mercy, but he is without knowledge of life or of human nature,
-and without very much of any sort of sweetness and light. The more
-moral he is, the harder he is, and the more amazingly ready with cruel
-judgments; and he seldom smiles except with the unction that comes
-with the thought of his own moral superiority. He thinks there is an
-absolute good and an absolute bad, and hence absolutely good people and
-absolutely bad people.
-
-The peculiar and distinguishing feature of his mind is that life is
-presented to it in stark and rigid outline. He is blandly unconscious
-of distinctions; he has no perception of proportions, no knowledge of
-values, in a word, no sense of humor. His world is made up of wholly
-unrelated antitheses. There are no shades or shadows, no gradations,
-no delicate and subtle relativities. A thing is either black or white,
-good or bad. A deed is either moral or immoral, a virtue or a crime.
-It is all very simple. All acts of which he does not himself approve
-are evil; all who do not think and act as he thinks and acts, are bad.
-If you do not know when a deed, or an opinion is wrong, he will tell
-you; and if you doubt him or differ with him, you are bad, and it is
-time to call in the police. “Whenever the Commons has nothing else
-to do,” said the wise old member of Parliament, “it can always make
-a new crime.” Statutes are thus enacted, as the saying is, against
-all evils, great and small, and the greater the evil, of course, the
-greater the moral triumph expressed by the mere enactment. But because
-of certain contrarieties in nature and a certain obstreperous quality
-in human nature and a general complexity in life as a whole these legal
-fulminations are frequently triumphs only in theory, and in practice
-often intensify the very ills they seek to cure. As the witty Remy de
-Gourmont says: _Quand la morale triomphe il se passes des choses très
-vilaines._
-
-The more intensively developed specimen of the type will not overtly
-sin himself, but he loves to inspect those who do, and to peer at
-them, and to wonder how they could ever have the courage to do it; he
-likes to imagine their sensations, and to note each one of them as it
-was developed in the interesting experience. And hence the psychic
-lasciviousness of those who are constantly reporting plays and pictures
-as fit for the censor they are always clamoring for. Sometimes they
-go slumming as students of the evils of society. They are like pious
-uncles who never swear themselves under any circumstances, but relate
-stories of other men who do, recite their delightful experiences and
-roll out the awful oaths with which the profane gave vent to their
-feelings with a relish that is no doubt a relief to their own.
-
-It is, I suppose, our inheritance from the Puritans, or the worst of
-our inheritance from the Puritans, and it is possible that it is worth
-while to have paid the penalty as a price for the best we derived from
-them, since one has to take the bad with the good, though in those
-days I often wished that the bequest had gone to some other of the
-heirs. Perhaps in thus speaking of the good we had from them, I am
-merely yielding to the fear of saying openly what I have often thought,
-namely, that the good we had from the Puritans has been immensely
-overestimated and exaggerated, and is not one whit better or greater
-in quantity or influence than that we had from the Cavaliers, or for
-that matter from the latest emigrant on Ellis Island. They themselves
-appreciated their own goodness, and we have always taken their words
-for granted. I have often thought that some day, when I had the elegant
-leisure necessary to such a task, I should like to write “A History of
-Puritanism,” or, since I should have to place the beginnings of the
-monumental work in Rome as far back at least as the reign of the first
-Emperor, perhaps I should be less ambitious and content myself with
-writing “A History of Puritanism in the United States of America.” I
-should have to begin the larger work at that interesting period of
-the history of Rome when the weary Augustus was being elected and
-reëlected president against his will and trying to gratify the spirit
-of Puritanism that was even in such people as those Romans, by enacting
-all sorts of sumptuary laws and foolish prohibitions, and trying out to
-miserable failures every single one of the proposals that have since
-that time been made over and over again in the hope of regenerating
-mankind. The story of how the Emperor’s own daughter was almost the
-first to disobey his regulations is dramatic enough to conclude rather
-than to begin any history, and yet I could write it with much more
-pity than I could the story of those Puritans who abounded in my own
-locality in my own time. To write fairly and philosophically of them
-I should have to wait not only for a leisure so large and so elegant
-that I am certain never to have it, but I should have to cultivate a
-philosophic calm which I own with shame is far from me when I think
-of some of the things they, or some of them, did in their efforts to
-force their theories on others. I should not recall such things now,
-and if I were to put them in that monumental and scholarly work of
-my imagination, it should be, of course, only in the cold scientific
-spirit, and as specimens, say in nonpariel type, at the foot of the
-page with the learned annotations.
-
-
-
-
-XLII
-
-
-Speaking of this passion for laws and regulations and how some of the
-zealous would order even the most private and personal details of life
-in these states, Mr. Havelock Ellis, in a brilliant chapter of his
-work, “The Task of Social Hygiene,” takes occasion to observe that
-“nowhere in the world is there so great an anxiety to place the moral
-regulation of social affairs in the hands of police,” and that “nowhere
-are the police more incapable of carrying out such regulation.” The
-difficulty is due of course to the fact that the old medieval confusion
-of crime and vice persists in a community where the Puritan tradition
-still strongly survives. The incapability, as has been pointed out, is
-not so much in the policemen as in that _bêtisse humaine_ which expects
-such superhuman work of them.
-
-This insistent confusion of vice with crime has not only had the effect
-of fostering both, but is the cause of the corruption of the police.
-Their proper function is to protect life and property and maintain the
-public peace, and this the police of American cities perform as well
-as policemen anywhere. But when, by a trick of the sectarian mind, the
-term _crime_ is made to include all the follies and weaknesses and
-vices of humanity, where there is added the duty of enforcing statutes
-against a multitude of acts, some of which only Puritanical severity
-classes as crimes, others of which are regarded by the human beings in
-the community with indifference, tolerance or sympathy, while still
-others are inherent in mysterious and imperative instincts which balk
-all efforts at general control, the task becomes wholly impossible and
-beyond human ability.
-
-The police know it, and everybody knows it, and it is the hypocrisy of
-society that corrupts them. The police know, intuitively, and without
-any process of ratiocination, that people are human, and subject to
-human frailties; they are pretty human themselves, and, in common
-with most of the people in the community, see no great wrong in some
-of the things that are done which the sumptuary laws condemn. Most
-of them, for instance, drink a glass of beer now and then, or play a
-game of cards, or go to a baseball game on Sunday. They are not apt
-to be gentlemen of the most refined and exquisite tastes. And it is
-difficult to induce men to take much interest in punishing acts their
-own consciences do not condemn. This, with the situation at its best;
-at its worst, knowing that, despite all the enactments of legislatures,
-people will continue in their hardened ways, they are apt to abuse
-their power. For they know, too, that the statutes prohibiting the
-merely venial of those acts oftentimes run counter to the urban custom
-and that the community regards it as of no great consequence if they
-are not enforced. Thus a wide discretion is permitted the police by the
-public conscience in the discharge of their duties, and this discretion
-is one which quite humanly they proceed to abuse. If they choose, they
-may enforce the sumptuary laws against certain persons or refrain
-from doing so, and the opportunity for corruption is presented. The
-opportunity widens, opens into a larger field, and not only does the
-corruption spread, but it is not long before the police are employing
-extra legal methods in other directions, and at last in many instances
-establish an actual tyranny that would not be tolerated in a monarchy.
-The result is that we read every day of arbitrary interferences by
-policemen with most of the constitutional rights, such as free speech,
-the right of assembly and petition, etc. They even set up a censorship
-and condemn paintings, or prohibit the performance of plays, or assume
-to banish women from the streets because they are dressed in a style
-which the police do not consider _comme il faut_.
-
-And while the corruption is deplored and everywhere causes indignation
-and despair, this tyranny does not seem to excite resistance or even
-remark; the press, the paladium of our liberties, does not often
-protest against it, and few seem to have sufficient grasp of the
-principle to care anything about it.
-
-There is a story somewhere of a little girl, homeless, supperless,
-shivering in rags in the cold rain of the streets of New York, and of a
-passer-by observing in a kind of sardonic sympathy:
-
-“And she is living under the protection of sixteen thousand laws!”
-
-“Ah, yes,” said his friend, perhaps a professional reformer of third
-persons, who naturally lacked a sense of humor; “but they were not
-enforced!”
-
-It is not altogether inconceivable that if all the laws had been
-enforced the little girl’s condition would have been even worse than it
-was, considering how haphazard had been the process of making all those
-laws, and how, if set in motion, many of them would have clashed with
-each other.
-
-If they were effective, the whole of human kind would have been
-translated, like Enoch, long ago. Of course, the assertion that they
-had not been enforced was the obvious retort. And it was true, because
-it is impossible to enforce all of them. And what is more no one
-believes that all the laws should be enforced, all the time,--that is,
-no one believes in absolute law enforcement, since no one believes that
-the laws should be enforced against _him_. Everybody hates a policeman
-just as everybody loves a fireman. And yet the fire department and the
-police department are composed of the same kind of men, paid the same
-salaries, and responsible to the same authorities. The duty of the
-fireman is, of course, the simpler, because there is no disagreement
-among men about the thing to be done. When a fire breaks out in the
-city, the fire department is expected to rush to the spot, to pour
-water on the fire, and to continue pouring water on the fire until it
-ceases to burn. The reforming mind seems to think that the duty of the
-policeman is of equal simplicity, and that when a wrong is done, the
-sole duty of the police consists in rushing immediately to that spot,
-seizing the wrongdoer, and, by confining him in a prison, thereby
-eradicate his tendency to do wrong, and, by holding him up as an
-example to others who are considering the commission of that wrong, to
-deter them from it.
-
-As far as crimes are concerned, the policemen, indeed, do fairly well.
-Though that they succeed in any measure at all in discharging their
-functions is a wonder when one considers the contumely and abuse that
-are constantly heaped upon them in all our cities. The newspapers, when
-there are no accounts of crime to print--and the assumption is that
-crimes and casualties, if they are horrid enough, are the principal
-events in the annals of mankind worth chronicling--can always print
-suggestions of the crimes of the police. The reporter, a human being
-himself, dissatisfied because the policemen cannot gratify his hunger
-for sensation, is not to blame, perhaps; he views life from the
-standpoint of his own necessities, and his conception of life is of a
-series of exciting tragedies enacted with a view to making the first
-edition interesting, so that the ears of the populace may be assaulted
-in the gloom of each evening’s dusk by that hideous bellowing of the
-news “boy,” whose heavy voice booms through the shade like some mighty
-portent of disaster in the world.
-
-This all sounds pretty hopeless, but if morals are to be wrought by
-and through policemen, I am sure we shall have to pay higher salaries,
-and procure men who are themselves so moral that their consciences are
-troubled only by the sins of others; there is no other way. Unless,
-of course, anything is left in these modern days of the theory of the
-development of individual character. But that is the program of a
-thousand years.
-
-As for the future of municipal government in this land, I venture to
-set down this prediction: That no appreciable advance will be made, no
-appreciable advance can be made in any fundamental sense, so long as
-the so-called moral issue is the pivot on which municipal elections
-turn, or so long as it is allowed to remain to bedevil officials, to
-monopolize their time and to exhaust their energies, so that they have
-little of either left for their proper work of administration.
-
-Either cities must have home rule, including the local police power,
-with the right to regulate amusements and resorts and even vices
-according to the will of the people in that city, whatever the rural
-view may be, or some authority other than the mayor, and far wiser and
-nobler than any mayor I ever knew or heard of, must be raised up by
-the state in whom may be united the powers and functions of a beadle,
-a censor, and a dictator. I have not the slightest idea where one so
-wise and pure is to be found, but doubtless there are plenty who do, if
-their modesty would permit them to speak.
-
-
-
-
-XLIII
-
-
-I used to recall, during the early and acute phase of this discussion,
-an incident that occurred in the old Springfield days in Loami, down
-in the Sangamon country. The little village in those days could boast
-an institution unlike any, perhaps, in the land, unless it were to
-be found in some small hamlet in the South. In the public square, on
-a space worn smooth and hard as asphalt, a great circle was drawn,
-and here, every day when the weather was fine, a company of old
-men gathered and played marbles. What the game was I do not know;
-some development of one of the boys’ games, no doubt, but with what
-improvements and embellishments only the old men who understood and
-played it could say. Its enthralled votaries played with large marbles,
-which spun from their gnarled and horny knuckles all day long, with a
-shifting crowd of onlookers gaping at their prowess. The players were
-old and dignified, and took their sport seriously. There were to be
-seen, about that big ring, sages who had sat on juries and been swayed
-by the arguments of Lincoln; there were gray veterans who had gone with
-Sherman to the sea and had been with Grant at Appomattox; and now, in
-their declining years, they found pleasure and a mildly stimulating
-excitement in this exercise. The skill they developed in the game is
-said by those who have studied the subject on the ground to have been
-considerable; some testify that these elders had raised their sport to
-the point of scientific dignity, and that the ability they displayed
-ranked them as the equals of golfers or of billiardists.
-
-The exciting tournaments went on for years, the old gentlemen were
-happy, the little village was peaceful and contented, when suddenly
-the town was shocked by a new sensation. Loami elected a reform
-administration. How it came about I do not know; some local muckraker
-may have practiced his regenerating art, or perhaps some little rivulet
-of the reform wave just then inundating the larger world outside
-may have trickled down into Loami. What privilege in the town was
-menaced I do not know; what portion of eminent respectability felt
-its perquisites in danger I cannot say; but Privilege seems to have
-done what it always does when pursued--namely, it began to cry for the
-reformation of persons instead of conditions. The new reform mayor,
-like many another mayor, was influenced; and, looking about for someone
-to reform, his eye wandered out of the window of the town hall one May
-morning and lighted on the grizzled marble-players, and he ordered the
-constable into action.
-
-Upon what legal grounds he based his edict I cannot say. It is not
-vital for, as there were about sixteen thousand laws then running in
-his jurisdiction, it would not have been difficult to justify his
-action on legal grounds. It will be remembered that the old men were
-playing in the public square; perhaps they played “for keeps,” and
-it may have been that there were certain little understandings of a
-speculative nature on the side. Above all, the old men were enjoying
-themselves, and if this were not a sufficient offense what could be?
-And if a constable’s highest duty were not to interfere with the
-enjoyment of other folks what would become of the constitution and the
-law?
-
-At any rate the old men were forbidden to play, their game was rudely
-interrupted, their ring obliterated, their marbles confiscated. There
-was, of course, resistance; some skirmishing and scrimmaging; a heated,
-acrimonious proceeding in the mayor’s court, and afterward hatred and
-strife and bad feeling, the formation of factions, and other conditions
-catalogued under law and order. But at length the space worn so smooth
-under the trees near the bandstand was sodded, and the old fellows
-might gather in silent contemplation of a new sign, “Keep off the
-Grass,” and reflect upon this supreme vindication of authority.
-
-But Loami is a democracy, or as much of a democracy as the state will
-permit it to be, and when the next election rolled around the old men
-were alert, and after an exciting contest they elected a mayor of their
-own, a liberal. The reform mayor was relegated to the political limbo
-of one-termers, the privileged few preserved their privileges, and
-the old men, skinning the sod off that portion of the public square,
-drew anew their huge bull-ring, resumed their game, and everybody was
-happy and unreformed except, of course, the reformers; though perhaps
-they were happy, too, in their restored misery of having something to
-complain about and to wag their heads over.
-
-In relating this veracious little tale of the lid of Loami, perhaps
-I have not sufficiently revealed that attitude of moral sympathy
-toward the good characters in the story which Tolstoy insists a writer
-should always assume and maintain. But this has not been due to any
-want of that sympathy. In the shadows of the scene the figure of the
-mayor, for instance, has ever been present--the keenest sufferer, the
-most unhappy man of them all. He was the one of all of them who was
-burdened with official responsibility; the marble-playing faction was
-happy in that it had no responsibility save of that light, artificial
-sort imposed by the rules of its game; its conscience, indeed, was
-untroubled. The other faction--the goo-goos, or whatever they were
-called in Loami--felt responsible primarily for the short-comings of
-others; their consciences were troubled only by the sins of other
-people, the easiest and most comfortable, because it is the most
-normal, position that the human conscience can assume. But the mayor
-was held responsible for everything and everybody, and in seeking to
-do his duty he found that difficulty which must everywhere increase
-in a society and a civilization which, in casting off some of its old
-moorings, recognizes less the responsibility of parent and teacher, not
-to mention personal responsibility, and is more and more disposed to
-look to the law and its administrators as the regulators and mentors of
-conduct.
-
-
-
-
-XLIV
-
-
-It is an axiom of municipal politics that a reform administration,
-or an administration elected as a protest against the evils of
-machine government, boss rule, and the domination of public service
-corporations, is immediately confronted by the demand of those who call
-themselves the good people to enforce all the sumptuary laws and to
-exterminate vice. That is, the privileged interests and their allies
-and representatives seek to divert the attention of the administration
-from themselves and their larger and more complex immoralities to the
-small and uninfluential offenders, an old device, always, in the hope
-of escape, inspired by privilege when pursued, just as friends of the
-fox might turn aside the hounds by drawing the aniseed bag across the
-trail. Many a progressive administration in this land has been led
-into that _cul de sac_, and as Mr. Carl Hovey observed recently of the
-neat saying to the effect that the way to get rid of a bad law is to
-enforce it, the process usually proves to be merely the way to get rid
-of a good administration. The effort had been made by the opponents
-of Golden Rule Jones and it had failed. It had been attempted in the
-case of Tom Johnson and it had failed, though curiously enough the
-effort was never made in Toledo or in Cleveland or in Cincinnati,
-or elsewhere for that matter, in the days of machine domination. The
-Puritan never lets his religion interfere with business.
-
-I used often to recall, in those days, a witty saying of Mr. William
-Travers Jerome, when he was District Attorney in New York. He said he
-often wished that there were two volumes of the Revised Statutes, one
-to contain the laws enacted for human beings, and the other to embalm
-the moral yearnings of rural communities.
-
-It was disturbing and discouraging, of course, to feel that out there
-in the community there was this shadowy mass of well intentioned
-people, the most of whom no doubt, in common with all the rest of
-us, did wish to see moral improvement, and yet so misconstrued and
-misinterpreted our efforts. It was saddening, too, because in the
-work we were trying to do we should have liked their sympathy, their
-interest and their support. Because of their wider opportunity of
-enlightenment much better and nobler things might have been demanded
-of them, but as Johnson Thurston one night pointed out, they did not
-show as much civic spirit, as much concern for the common weal as
-those of smaller opportunities, those bad people as they called them
-of whom much less would naturally have been expected. I made a rule,
-as I have already said somewhere in these pages, not to talk back,
-or to argue with them. They viewed life from the Puritan standpoint,
-and I suppose that I viewed it from the pagan standpoint. The sins of
-others and their mistakes and failures never did excite in me that
-moral indignation which exists in the breasts of some; perhaps the old
-distinction between bad people and good people had been blurred in my
-consciousness. I could see that the bad people did many good things
-in their lives, and that the good people thought many dark and evil
-thoughts. I had seen indeed so much more kindness and consideration,
-so much more pity and mercy shown by the bad that I felt strengthened
-in my philosophy and in my belief that if their environment could be
-improved, if they could have a better chance in life, they would be as
-good as anybody. It seemed to me that most of the crime in the world
-was the result of involuntary poverty, and the tremendous, perhaps
-insuperable task, was to make involuntary poverty impossible. But in
-the meantime there was other work to be done. Aside from the problem of
-transportation which was but one phase of the great struggle between
-privilege and the people, of plutocracy with democracy, there were
-civic centers, city halls, markets, swimming pools, bridges to be
-built, parks to be improved, boulevards and parkways to be laid out,
-a filtration plant to be installed, improvements in all of the other
-departments, a great mass of wonderful work for the promotion of the
-public amenities, the public health, and the adornment of the city,
-in a word, there was a city to be built, and strangely enough this
-group of objectors of whom I have been speaking, were so intensely
-preoccupied with moral considerations that they never had even the
-slightest interest in these improvements. I think it is this spirit of
-Puritanism that has made the cities of America so ugly, or permitted
-them to be ugly; such conceptions as beauty and ugliness are perhaps
-impossible to minds that know no distinction but good and bad, and for
-this reason it has been difficult to make an æsthetic appeal with any
-effectiveness.
-
-During three of my four terms in that office the nasty quarrel about
-morals raged. As I look back and think now with what virulence it did
-rage, it appeals to me as a remarkable psychological phenomenon. Of
-course it was bad for those who engaged in it, and bad for the town
-as well, for such an exaggerated idea of conditions was given that
-the police in neighboring cities, clever rogues that they were, could
-always excuse and exculpate themselves for any of their delinquencies
-by saying that the thieves that had come to town hailed from Toledo, or
-that those they could not catch had gone and taken refuge there. But I
-did not engage in the discussion nor permit the police officials to do
-so. There was no time, since there was so much other work to do, and
-we went on as well as we could with what Tom Johnson used to call the
-policy of administrative repression, improving moral conditions with
-such means as we had. We did succeed in eliminating the wine rooms,
-in closing the saloons at midnight, and finally, after a tremendous
-effort, in extirpating professional gambling. It was of no consequence
-that it did not have any effect upon criticism, for we did not do it
-to stop criticism, and the discussion went on until I had been elected
-for the third time, and immediately after that election when a large
-majority of the people had again spoken their minds on the subject, it
-was considered the proper time to reopen the discussion and to hold a
-so-called civic revival. The young, uncultured man they brought to town
-to conduct that revival, could have known nothing whatever of life, and
-was wholly unconscious of the great economic forces which, with so much
-complexity and friction, were building the modern city. He came to call
-on me before he opened his revival that he might have, as he said, a
-personal, private and confidential talk. When I asked him how the city
-could be regenerated, he said he did not know, but this fact did not
-prevent him from telling the audiences he addressed that week just what
-should be done, and that he, for instance, could nobly do it, and in
-the end they sent a committee to me to tell me what to do, if not how
-to do it. I asked the committee to reduce their complaints to writing,
-to point out those evils which they considered most objectionable,
-and to propose means of combating them. The committee went away and
-I confess I did not expect to see them again because I had no notion
-that they could ever agree as to the particular evils, but after some
-weeks they had come to terms on a few heads, and filed their complaint
-pointing out several specific vices in town, and as a remedy proposed
-that they be “prevented.” I replied to them in a letter in which I
-said all I could think of at that time or all I could think of now on
-this whole vexed problem. It was printed in pamphlet form and rather
-widely circulated, and finally published as a little book.[B] I do not
-know that it convinced anybody who was not convinced already. I think
-we got along a little better afterward than we had before, and by the
-time my fourth term was done the phenomenon of the discussion, if not
-the vice, had disappeared. After my letter was sent to the committee,
-it was said that they would reply to it, but they never did, and
-instead invited the Reverend William A. Sunday to come to the city to
-conduct a revival. It was announced by some that he came to assault our
-position, but when he arrived Captain Anson, the old Chicago baseball
-player, under whom Mr. Sunday had played baseball in his younger days,
-happened to be giving his monologue at a variety theater that week,
-and he and Mr. Sunday together called on me. I do not know when I have
-had a pleasanter hour than that we spent talking about the old days in
-Chicago when Anson had been playing first base and I had been reporting
-the baseball games for the old _Herald_. That, to be sure, was after
-the days of Billy Sunday’s services in right field, but it was not too
-late for me to have known and celebrated the prowess of that famous
-infield, Anson, Pfeffer, Williamson and Burns, and we could celebrate
-them again and speculate as to whether there were really giants in
-those days whose like was known on earth no more.
-
-Mr. Sunday conducted his revival with the success that usually attends
-his efforts in that direction, but he did not mention me or the
-administration until the very close of his visit, when he said that
-we were doing as well as anybody could be expected to do under all the
-circumstances.
-
-
-
-
-XLV
-
-
-When I referred to the general rule that policemen are disliked and
-condemned I should have noticed certain exceptions. The traffic squad
-for instance is generally held in a respect and affection that is part
-of the civic pride of the community. Those fine big fellows on the
-corner, waving this way or that with a gesture the flowing traffic
-of the street, are greeted with smiles, and, as they assist in the
-perilous passage of the thoroughfares, sometimes with thanks and
-benedictions. The reason, of course, is simple; they are not engaged
-in hurting people, but in helping people, and so by the operation of
-the immutable law, they attract to themselves the best feelings of the
-people.
-
-And this is what we tried from the first to have all our policemen
-do, to help people and not to hurt them. It was what Jones had tried
-to do, and he had begun with one of the most interesting experiments
-in policing a city that has been made in our country. He took away
-the clubs from the policemen. He could have made at first no greater
-sensation if he had taken away the police altogether, the protest was
-so loud, so indignant, above all so righteous. What sense of security
-could a community feel if the policemen were to have no clubs, how
-would the unruly and the lawless be kept in check when they no longer
-beheld this insignia of authority in the hands of the guardians of the
-peace? And perhaps to reassure the righteous and truly good Jones gave
-the policemen canes and ran the great risk of making them ridiculous.
-
-I am not sure that he would have cared much if he had, since he had
-so little respect for the police idea, and of course he had as little
-regard for organization. I remember once that at a session of the
-old police board he opposed the creation of new sergeants; he said a
-sergeant always seemed as superfluous to him as a presiding elder in
-the Methodist Church. With an elected board of police commissioners
-over it the police force was pretty certain to be demoralized, of
-course, as is any executive department of government which is directed
-by a board, for with a board, unless all the members save one are
-either dead or incapacitated, discipline and efficiency are impossible.
-We got rid of the board system in Ohio after two or three sessions of
-the legislature had been wrestled with, and though the “mayor’s code”
-was never enacted, many of its ideas were adopted in amendments to the
-municipal code, so that we approached the most efficient form of city
-government yet devised in our rather close resemblance to the federal
-plan.
-
-The time came, however, when the old elected board of public service
-was succeeded by a director of public service appointed by the mayor,
-and the old board of public safety by a director of public safety
-appointed by the same authority, though that was not until I had
-entered on my third term in the mayor’s office. When that time came
-I appointed as Director of Public Service Mr. John Robert Cowell, a
-Manxman who managed the department of public works admirably, and to
-the post of Director of Public Safety Mr. John Joseph Mooney, whose
-services and assistance I had already had on the board of public safety
-when that was appointed by the mayor. And Mr. Mooney was able to work
-out many of the improvements we hoped to make in the police department.
-
-And as Jones had taken the clubs away from the policemen and given
-them canes, we took away the canes and sent them forth with empty
-hands. Jones had the idea of doing away with clubs from London where
-he observed the bobbies who control the mighty traffic in the streets
-of London. We were therefore able to realize the whole of his ideal in
-that respect, and our city, I think alone of all American cities, could
-not merit the reproach that a Liverpool man once made to me when we
-were discussing superficial appearances in the two nations. “The most
-offensive thing in America to me,” he said, “is the way in which the
-policemen parade their truncheons.” The public made no complaint at
-the disappearance of the canes, but the policemen did; they felt lost,
-they reported, without something to twirl in their hands. We thought of
-letting them have swagger sticks, but finally decided that they should
-be induced to bear themselves gracefully with their white gloved hands
-unoccupied. The white gloves were the subject of amusement to the boors
-in town, who could always be amused at any effort at improvement, but
-with them on, and the new uniforms we had patterned after the uniform
-worn by the New York policemen, the members of the department soon
-began to have a pride in themselves.
-
-And that was exactly what we were trying to inculcate, though it was
-difficult to do, and almost impossible, one might think, since for
-generations policemen have been the target for the sarcasms and abuse
-of every voice of the community. The wonder is, with such an universal
-conspiracy as exists in America to give policemen a bad name, that they
-have any character left at all. Surely each community in various ways
-has done everything it could to strip its policemen of every shred of
-reputation and self respect and with these gone, character might be
-expected shortly to follow. Of course the new uniforms were ridiculed
-too, but we did not let that discourage us.
-
-There was the civil-service law to help, and we were of old devoted
-to the spirit and even to the letter of that, though once the letter
-of that law compelled us to an injustice, as the letter of any law
-must do now and then. We had reorganized the police department on a
-metropolitan basis, and had done the same with the fire department, and
-in this department there were accordingly created three new positions
-of battalion chiefs, for which captains were eligible. The oldest
-ranking captain in the department was Dick Lawler, by everyone in the
-department from the chief down conceded to be the best fireman in the
-department, with a long and untarnished record of devoted duty and
-quiet, unassuming bravery. And it was his natural ambition to round out
-that career as one of the chiefs. The examining board held a written
-test, and as Lawler was more accomplished in extinguishing, or, as his
-comrades expressed it, in fighting fire, and much more comfortable and
-at home on the roof of a burning building than he was at a desk with a
-pen in his hand, he did not do very well. When, for instance, he read a
-long hypothetical question, setting forth certain conditions at a fire
-and asking the applicant where, under such circumstances, he would lay
-the hose, Lawler wrote down as his answer, “Where it would do the most
-good,” and on that answer the board marked him zero. The board marked
-him zero on so many answers indeed that the net result was almost zero,
-and he failed.
-
-It was a kind of tragedy, in its little way, as he stood in my office
-that morning on which he came to appeal from the board, with tears in
-his eyes. But the law was obdurate and I was helpless. But I did point
-out to the examining board the absurdity of such methods of testing a
-man’s ability, and after that they allowed a man’s record to count for
-fifty per cent. And it was not long until a vacancy occurred among the
-chiefs--and Lawler was appointed.
-
-
-
-
-XLVI
-
-
-The questions put to Lawler were perhaps no more absurd than many
-a one framed by civil-service examiners. In any event the written
-examination is apt to do as much harm as good, and for policemen and
-firemen we came to the conclusion that it was almost wholly worthless,
-once it had been determined that an applicant could write well enough
-to turn in an intelligible report. The initial qualification on which
-we came to rely and to regard as most important was the physical
-qualification. There is no way to tell by asking a man questions
-whether he will be a good policeman or not; the only way to find
-that out is to try him for a year. But his physical condition can be
-determined, and on this basis we began to build the police force, under
-the direction of Dr. Peter Donnelly, one of the ablest surgeons in the
-country, whose tragic early death was seemingly but a part of that
-fate which took from us in a few short years so many of the best and
-brightest of the young men in our movement. The death of Peter Donnelly
-left us desolate because he had a genius for friendship equal to that
-genius as a surgeon which enabled him to render a great social service.
-
-He was perfectly rigid in the examinations to which he subjected
-applicants for positions in the department, and wholly inaccessible to
-any sort of influence in favor of the unfit. In the old days, which
-by many were regretted as the good old days, the only qualification
-an applicant needed was a friend on the police board, and as a result
-the force was encumbered with the lame, the halt, and the blind; there
-were drinkers if not drunkards among them, and the paunches which some
-bore before them were so great that when they took their belts off
-and hung them up in those resorts where they accepted the hospitality
-of a midnight meal, the belts seemed to be as large as the hoops of
-the Heidelberg tun. We rid the force of these as quickly as it could
-be done, and the recruits who replaced them were, because of Dr.
-Donnelly’s care and service, superb young fellows, lithe and clean, who
-bore themselves with self respect and an ardent pride in that _esprit
-de corps_ we were enabled to develop.
-
-But before that spirit could exist there were defects other than
-physical that must be removed; there were old jealousies and
-animosities, some of a religious, or rather a theological nature--relic
-of an old warfare between the sects that once devastated the town with
-its unreasoning and remorseless and ignorant hatred; a St. Patrick’s
-day had once been celebrated by dismissing a score or more of Irishmen
-from the police department. There were other differences of race
-origin, and in doing away with all these, so far as it could be done,
-Mr. Mooney, the Director of Public Safety, had to his assistance the
-ability and the tact of two crusted old characters on the force, one
-of them the Chief of Police, Perry D. Knapp, and the other Inspector
-John Carew, whose hair had so whitened in the days he served the city
-as a detective that he was called Silver Jack. He was one of the ablest
-detectives anywhere, though prejudice and jealousy had kept him down
-for a long time. I had known him in my youth, and later in the courts,
-and now that I had the chance I put him at the head of the detective
-department, and when I was tired of the troubles which harassed him
-and me during the day, I tried sometimes to forget them at night by
-writing stories in which he figured as the clever detective he was.
-
-And as for Perry Knapp, I suppose there was not another chief of
-police like him anywhere. Over his desk was a picture of Walt Whitman,
-and in his heart was the love for humanity that Whitman had, and in
-his library were well read copies of Emerson and a collection of
-Lincolniana I have often envied him. He had served in close association
-with Jones, who had made his position difficult by promoting him over
-the heads of others in the department who ranked him, and he was
-the heir of all the old distrust of Jones’s attitude toward life.
-Nevertheless, he found a way to apply Jones’s theories to the policing
-of a city without any of that ostentation which in some cases has
-brought such methods into disfavor. I cannot, of course, describe his
-whole method, but he was always trying to help people and not to hurt
-them. He established a system by which drunken men were no longer
-arrested, but, when they could not be taken home as were those club
-members with whom he tried in that respect at least to put them on a
-parity, they were cared for at police headquarters until morning, and
-then with a bath and a breakfast, allowed to go without leaving behind
-to dog their footsteps that most dreadful of all fates, a “police
-record.” No one will ever know how many poor girls picked up in police
-raids he saved from the life to which they had been tempted or driven,
-by sending them back to their homes when they had homes, or in some
-manner finding for them a way out of their troubles. And I shall always
-remember with a pleasure that there is such good in humanity after all,
-when I recall that boy in the workhouse whom a father in a far-off
-city was seeking. The boy was working with other prisoners on a bit
-of public work in one of the parks that winter morning, and after he
-had secured a parole, the Chief drove out to the park, and got the
-boy, clothed him with garments he had bought himself, bought a railway
-ticket and sent the boy away to Chicago and his home. If he had waited
-until the lad was brought in at night, he explained, the old man would
-have lost a whole day of his son’s companionship!
-
-That is what I mean when I say that a government should be made human,
-or part of what I mean; such incidents are specifically noticeable
-because they stand out in such contrast against the hard surface of
-that inhuman institutionalism the reformers with their everlasting
-repressions and denials and negatives are trying to make so much
-harder. Charley Stevens, the old circus man whom I appointed as
-Superintendent of the Workhouse, very successfully applied the some
-principle to the management of that institution, which he conducted
-with his humor and quaint philosophy more than by any code of rules.
-He usually referred to his prison as the Temple of Thought, and he
-abolished from it all the marks of a prison, such as stripes and
-close cropped polls, and all that sort of thing. He was criticized,
-of course, since the conventional notion is that prisoners should be
-made to appear as hideous as possible; I am pretty sure that reformer
-disapproved who one Sunday afternoon went down there and asked the
-superintendent if he would permit him to preach to the inmates and was
-told by Stevens that he would like to accommodate him, but that he
-could not just then break up the pedro game. There were those who said
-that he was making it too easy for the prisoners, and yet every now
-and then some of them would escape, and when they were brought back,
-as they usually were, they were met only with reproaches and asked why
-they could not leave their addresses when they went away so that their
-mail could be forwarded. There were, however, two escaping prisoners
-who never were returned. They got away just in time to make a sensation
-for the noon editions of the newspapers, and as I was on my way to
-luncheon I met Stevens, standing on the street corner, very calmly,
-while the newsboys were crying in our ears the awful calamity that had
-befallen society. When I asked what he was doing, he said that he was
-hunting the escaped prisoners. “I’ve been to the Secor and the Boody
-House,” he said, naming two leading hotels, “and they’re not there. I’m
-going over to the Toledo Club now, and if they’re not there, I don’t
-know where to look for them.”
-
-It may be that in these little incidents I give the impression that he
-was a trifler, but that is not the case. He knew, of course, that so
-far as doing any good whatever in the world is concerned, our whole
-penal system is a farce at which one might laugh if it did not cause
-so many tears to be shed in the world. But he did try to be kind to
-the inmates, and by the operation of the parole system succeeded to
-an extent commensurate with that attained by Dr. Cooley of Cleveland.
-Of course it was all done under the supervision of Mr. Mooney, the
-Director of Public Safety, who rightly characterized our whole penal
-system when he said:
-
-“Whenever you send one to prison you send four or five; you send a
-man’s wife and his mother, and his sister and his children, who are all
-innocent, and you never do him any good.”
-
-But the workhouse, though under Mr. Mooney’s direction, was not
-connected with the police department, except in the archaic minds of
-those who thought if we were only harsh and hard enough in our use of
-both, we could drive evil, or at least the appearance of evil, out
-of the city, and leave it, standing like a rock of morality, in the
-weltering waste of immorality all about us.
-
-
-
-
-XLVII
-
-
-In no respect has the utter impotence of medieval machinery in
-suppressing vice been more definitely proved than in the great failure
-of society in dealing with what is called the social evil. Whenever
-my mind runs on this subject, as anyone’s mind must in the present
-recrudescence of that Puritanism which never had its mind on anything
-else, I invariably think of Golden Rule Jones and the incidents in
-that impossible warfare which worried him into a premature grave. He
-was an odd man, born so far out of his time that the sins of others
-never troubled his conscience. He was so great, and knew so much of
-life, more perhaps than he did of history, on every page of which he
-would have found the confirmations of the opinions life had taught him,
-that he divined all lewdness, all obscenity to be subjective and not
-objective, so that he found less to abhor in the sins of the vicious
-than in the state of mind of their indefatigable accusers and pursuers.
-And he had his own way of meeting their complaints. Once a committee of
-ladies and gentlemen called upon him with the demand that he obliterate
-the social evil, off-hand and instantly. They were simple, brief and to
-the point. They informed him that the laws providing for chastity were
-being broken, that there were prostitutes in the city, and in short,
-urged him to put a stop to it.
-
-“But what am I to do?” he inquired. “These women are here.”
-
-“Have the police,” they said, a new, simple and happy device suddenly
-occurring to them, “drive them out of town and close up their houses!”
-They sat and looked at him, triumphantly.
-
-“But where shall I have the police drive them? Over to Detroit or to
-Cleveland, or merely out into the country? They have to go somewhere,
-you know.”
-
-It was a detail that had escaped them, and presently, with his great
-patience, and his great sincerity, he said to them:
-
-“I’ll make you a proposition. You go and select two of the worst of
-these women you can find, and I’ll agree to take them into my home and
-provide for them until they can find some other home and some other way
-of making a living. And then you, each one of you, take one girl into
-your home, under the same conditions, and together we’ll try to find
-homes for the rest.”
-
-They looked at him, then looked at each other, and seeing how utterly
-hopeless this strange man was, they went away.
-
-
-
-
-XLVIII
-
-
-To be sure, that was in another day. Prostitution had not become a
-subject for polite conversation at the dinner table; pornographic vice
-commissions had not been organized and provided with appropriations so
-that their hearings might be stenographically reported and published
-along with the filthy details gathered in the stews and slums of
-cities by trained smut hunters; it had not yet been discovered that
-the marriage ceremony required a new introduction, based upon the
-scientific investigations of the clinical laboratory, and on the same
-brilliant thought that centuries ago struck the wise men of Bohemia,
-who, when the population increased too rapidly, prohibited marriages
-for a number of years that proved, of course, to be the most prolific
-the land had ever known.
-
-The new conception was created in a moment, in the twinkling of an
-eye, by the necromancy of a striking phrase. I do not know who it is
-that had the felicity to employ it first in its present relation. I
-remember that long years ago, when as a boy I used to frequent the
-gallery of the theater, I sat rapt afar in the mystery and romance
-of life on the Mississippi while gazing on the scenes of Bartley
-Campbell’s melodrama “The White Slave.” I can call back now, with
-only a little effort of the imagination and the will, that wonderful
-pageant--the _Natchez_, the _Robert E. Lee_, the great steamboats I
-knew so well from Mark Twain’s book, the plantation hands, the darkies
-singing on the levee, the moonlight and the jasmine flower--and there
-was no David Belasco in those days to set the scene either, nor, for
-the imagination of youth, any need of one! And then the beautiful
-octoroon, so lily white and fragile that it should have been patent to
-all, save perhaps an immoral slave-holder, from the very first scene,
-that she had no drop of negro blood! And the handsome and cruel owner
-and master, with his slouch hat and top boots, and fierce mustache and
-imperial, taking her to her awful fate down the river! It was an old
-story Bartley Campbell used for his plot, a story which had for me an
-added interest, because my grandfather had told it to me out of his
-own southern experiences, in those far-off days when he had business
-that took him down the river to New Orleans. And it was a story which,
-for a while, in many variants of its original form, was told all over
-the land to illustrate the immorality of slavery. I suspect that it
-was not altogether true in its dramatic details; surely no such number
-of lovely and innocent creatures were permitted to fling themselves
-into the Mississippi from the hurricane decks of steamboats as the
-repetitions and variations of that tale would indicate; it would have
-been altogether too harrowing to the voyagers, some few of whom at
-least must have been virtuous, and journeyed up and down on peaceful
-moral missions of one sort and another. No doubt it was symbolic of
-a very wrong condition, and I suppose that is what justified it in
-the minds of those who told it over and over without the trouble of
-verifying its essential details. It was a good story, and in the
-hands of Mr. Howells it made a good poem, and it made surely a pretty
-good play, which, could it enthrall me now as once it did by its
-enchantments, I should like to see again to-night!
-
-But I doubt if I could sit through any one of the plays that have
-been written or assuredly are to be written about the white slaves of
-to-day. The plot has been right at hand in the tale that has gone the
-rounds of two continents, and resembles that elder story so closely in
-its incidents of abduction that I presume the adapter of its striking
-title to the exigencies of current reform must have been old enough to
-recognize its essential similarity to the parent tradition. It was told
-in books, it served to ornament sermons and addresses on sociological
-subjects, and it has, I believe, already been done in novels that are
-among the best sellers. The newspapers printed it with all its horrific
-details; it was so precisely the sort of pornography to satisfy the
-American sense of news--a tale of salacity for the prurient, palliated
-and rendered aseptic by efforts of officials, heated to the due
-degree of moral indignation, to bring the concupiscent to justice.
-I had been in England, too, when the subject was under discussion
-there, and this same story was told to such effect that Parliament,
-as hysterical as one of our own state legislatures, had been led to
-restore the brutality of flogging. It was always the same: some poor
-girl had been abducted, borne off to a brothel, ruined by men employed
-for that purpose, turned over to aged satyrs, and never heard of more.
-Of course there were variations; sometimes the girl was lured away
-in a motor car, sometimes by a request for assistance to some lady
-who had fainted, sometimes by other ruses. The story was always told
-vehemently, but on the authority of some inaccessible third person,
-to doubt or question whom was to be suspected of sympathy with the
-outrage. But however high the station, or unimpeachable the character
-of the informants, anyone who had the slightest knowledge of the rules
-of evidence, unless he were especially credulous, would have reason
-to doubt the tales. In Toledo it had its vogue. It went the rounds of
-gentlemen’s clubs and the tea tables of the town, and in the curious
-way stories have, it went on and on with new embellishments at each
-repetition. I had a curiosity about it, not because I cared for the
-realistic details that might as Pooh Bah used to say, “lend an air
-of artistic verisimilitude to an otherwise bald and unconvincing
-narrative,” but because here was a chance to test it at first hand,
-and so I asked the person most heroically concerned to come and tell
-me of an experience that had earned for him the plaudits of many of
-his fellow citizens and citizenesses. And so he came. He was a social
-worker, as they are called, and had had the training in settlement work
-which is said to qualify young persons to deal professionally with the
-poor and wicked. He was a rather good looking young chap, with a smile
-about his full red lips, who lifted his mild eyes to yours with perhaps
-an effort at frankness too pronounced. He spoke well and fluently.
-
-One night (he said) at the close of a hard day’s work in his mission,
-a man came to him in evident distress. The man was a business man, in
-comfortable though modest circumstances, with a family of which perhaps
-the most interesting member was a beautiful girl of seventeen. The
-girl was attending a high school, where she was in one of the advanced
-classes, and the evening before had gone from school to spend the night
-at the home of a friend, a girl of her own age. The next evening, on
-her failure to return home, the parents became alarmed, and after
-unavailing inquiry at her schoolmate’s house, and in other quarters,
-the distraught father had appealed to the social worker. The social
-worker at once caused an investigation to be made, and by a process
-of elimination (as he said, though unlike Sherlock Holmes, he did not
-detail the successive steps of his logic), he concluded that the girl
-was in a certain quarter of the city, in fact in a certain street. He
-then sent for the father, told him to supply himself with sufficient
-money, instructed him in the part he was to play, and was careful to
-stipulate that if he, the social worker, were to feign drunkenness or
-to indulge in conduct out of keeping with his character, the father was
-patiently and trustingly to await results. Thereupon they set forth,
-and before midnight visited some thirty houses of ill fame. In the
-thirty-first house the suspicions of the social worker were confirmed,
-and, pretending to be intoxicated, he invited an inmate to accompany
-him, and ascended to the upper floor. He tried the doors along the
-hall, and finding them all open but one, and that locked, he lurched
-against it, broke it open, and on entering the room surprised a young
-woman, entirely nude, who screamed--until he muttered some word of
-understanding and encouragement. Meanwhile the inmate had summoned
-madame the proprietress, who flew up the stairs, burst into the room
-and emptied her revolver at the social worker.
-
-The social worker, at this supreme moment in his recital, paused, and
-with a weary but reassuring smile, as who should say such adventures
-were diurnal monotonies in his life, remarked: “with no damage,
-however, to anything but the furniture and the woodwork.”
-
-But he had the girl in his arms, and, thrusting aside foiled madame
-and the inmate, bore his charge downstairs, snatched a raincoat from
-the hall rack, wrapped it about her, called to the father to come, and
-escaped into the street.
-
-After the rescued girl had been restored to her home, and sufficiently
-recovered from her terrible experience to give a connected account
-of herself, she related the following incidents: Leaving school on
-that night she had started for the home of the girl whom she was to
-visit--the girl not having attended school that day--and while passing
-a house in a respectable residential district, about five o’clock of
-the winter evening, darkness already having fallen, a woman came to the
-door and in great distress told the girl that a baby was sick, that she
-was alone, and implored the girl to come in and care for the baby while
-she ran for a doctor. The girl complied, and on reaching the door, was
-immediately seized, drawn into the hallway, her cries smothered by a
-hand in which there was a handkerchief saturated with chloroform, and
-she knew no more until she regained consciousness in the place where
-the social worker had rescued her.
-
-Here his direct recital ended. I put to him two or three questions:
-Who is the girl? Where is she now? Where is the house into which she
-was beguiled? Where is the brothel in which she was imprisoned? He had
-answers for all these. The girl’s name could not be divulged, even in
-official confidence, for the family could not risk publicity; the house
-where she had been summoned to care for the ailing baby was the home of
-wealthy and respectable people, who had been out of town at the time,
-and their residence had been broken into and used temporarily by the
-white slavers. As for the brothel, the social worker, by methods he did
-not disclose, had compelled the proprietress to leave the city, and the
-place was closed.
-
-Such was the amazing adventure of the social worker. It was easy to
-imagine the effect of it when related to neurotic women, to prurient
-and sentimental men, and in country churches to gaping yokels curious
-about “life” in the city. It was easy to understand the effect it
-would have on minds starved and warped by Puritanism, ready for any
-sensation, especially one that might stimulate their moral emotions,
-and give them one more excuse for condemning the police. No wonder
-certain of the elect brethren in gratitude for having been told just
-what they wished to hear had contributed hundreds of dollars, that the
-“work” might go on!
-
-I determined, therefore, that in one instance, at least, the truth as
-to this stock story should be discovered, and I requested Mr. Mooney,
-the Director of Public Safety, to make a complete investigation. He
-detailed to the task the best of his detectives; the inspectors of the
-federal government under the white slave laws were called in, and I
-asked two clergymen of my acquaintance who knew the social worker and
-said they believed him, to give what aid they could. Together they
-worked for weeks. They made an exhaustive investigation, and their
-conclusion, in which the clergymen joined, was that there was not the
-slightest ground for the silly tale.
-
-It was, of course, simply another variant of the story that had gone
-the rounds of the two continents, a story which had been somehow
-psychologically timed to meet the hysteria which the pulpit, the press,
-and the legislatures had displayed, as had the people, in one of those
-strange moral movements which now and then seize upon the public mind,
-and, in effect, make the whole population into a mob, which is, of
-coarse, the most moral thing in the world. The subject was investigated
-in England and it was shown that not one of the stories told in this
-cause there had any foundation in fact.[C] So far as I know, no
-authentic verification of the story in any of its forms has ever been
-made. And yet it was the stock in trade of the professional moralists
-and was employed by them in two continents to generate that hysteria
-without which they cannot carry on their reforms. It was repeated and
-accepted--that is all, and to doubt it was to make oneself _particeps
-criminis_, a sort of accessory after the fact.
-
-
-
-
-XLIX
-
-
-It is a subject which only the student of morbid psychology, I
-suppose, can illuminate properly, but I fancy he would find somewhere
-a significance in the phrase “white slave,” when acted upon by minds
-that had never been refined enough to imagine any but the grossest of
-objective crimes, and out of all this there arose a new conception of
-the prostitute quite as grotesque as that which it replaced. She was no
-longer the ruined and abandoned thing she once was, too vile for any
-contact with the virtuous and respectable; she no longer occupied even
-the sacrificial pose in which Cato centuries ago and Lecky in our own
-time figured her; she was not even that daughter of joy whose dalliance
-is the secret despair of moralists too prudent to imitate her abandon;
-she became the white slave, a shanghaied innocent kept under lock
-and key. And thousands and thousands of her sisters were said to be
-trapped every year in precisely the same way by the minions of a huge
-system, organized like any modern combination of rapacity and evil,
-with luxurious headquarters, presumably in some sky-scraper in New
-York, and its own attorneys, agents, kidnappers, crimpers, seducers,
-panderers and procuresses all over the land, a vast and complicated
-organization, with baffling ramifications in all the high and low
-places of the earth. The sensational newspapers referred to it as “the
-white slave syndicate,” as though it were as authentic as the steel
-trust or Standard Oil. It was even said that somewhere in New York
-the trust conducted a daily auction! With such a bizarre notion, the
-victims of their own psychic lasciviousness became obsessed. Raids and
-“revivals” must be inaugurated, a body of new laws enacted, and a horde
-of official inspectors, agents and detectives turned loose on the land,
-empowered to arrest any man and woman traveling together, and hold the
-man guilty of a felony.
-
-To be sure, it was something to have the conception change. It was
-something that the prostitute should at last be regarded with some
-touch of human pity. And it was something, a great deal, indeed,
-that there was, with all the fanatical and zealous law making, some
-quiet study of the problem. The word “economic,” so long scorned
-by the proponents of an absolute morality, somehow penetrated the
-public consciousness, and at last it dawned on the human mind that
-prostitution is related to economic pressure. But, unfortunately, by
-the familiar human process, the mind leaped to extremes; it was assumed
-that all prostitutes were girls who did not receive sufficient wages,
-and the simple and all sufficient cure was to be the minimum wage;
-instead of receiving eight dollars a week and going to the bad, all
-working girls were to be paid nine dollars a week and remain virtuous.
-And of course new work for the constable was cut out; if the employers
-of girls did not pay them that much, they were all to go to jail, and
-if the girls did not remain chaste after they had been assured of that
-splendid income, they must go to the pillory for the godly to spit at.
-This, with the laws against white slavery, was to be the panacea, and
-prostitution, a problem which had perplexed the thoughtful for thirty
-centuries, was to be solved before the autumn primaries, so that those
-who solved it might get their political rewards promptly.
-
-I used to wish, when it was presented to me as mayor, that some of
-these cock-sure persons who would solve the problem off-hand by
-issuing a general order to the police, could get themselves elected
-to the opportunity. Of course I issued no general order on the
-subject; perhaps I was too skeptical, too much lacking in faith in the
-miraculous powers of the constabulary. Our city was like all cities;
-there were prostitutes in brothels, prostitutes in saloons, prostitutes
-in flats, prostitutes on the streets at night. There were, for
-instance, a score or more of disorderly saloons where men and women
-congregated. But we found that merely by posting a policeman in uniform
-before such a place, its patronage was discouraged, and in a few days
-discontinued. Of course it was a dangerous and preposterous power to
-wield; in the hands of unscrupulous police it might have appalling
-possibilities of evil. I had the idea of stationing a policeman before
-a disorderly house from Tom Johnson, who told me he had it from his
-father--who was Chief of Police in Louisville. And so we adopted it,
-and after a while the wine rooms were no more. And that was something.
-But the girls in them, of course, had to go somewhere, just as Jones
-said.
-
-Then we found that the police, if they were brutal enough, could drive
-the girls off the streets. It seemed to me always a despicable sort
-of business--the actions of the police I mean; I didn’t like to hear
-the reports of it; I don’t like to think of it, or write of it even
-now. It is not very creditable to make war on women, whatever the
-Puritans may say. But the streets would show an improvement, even they
-would admit; much as they might linger and loiter and leer, the most
-seductively pure of them could not get himself “accosted” anywhere
-down town at night. Of course, after a while, the poor things would
-come back, or others exactly like them would come. Then the police
-would have to practice their brutalities all over again. Perhaps they
-were not brutal enough; I am not certain. To be sure they were not
-as brutal as Augustus with his sumptuary laws, or as Theodosius, or
-Valentinian, or Justinian, or Karl the Great, or Peter the Great, or
-St. Louis, or Frederick Barbarossa, or the Empress Maria Theresa in
-Vienna, or as John Calvin in Geneva, or Cotton Mather in Massachusetts,
-with all their tortures and floggings and rackings and brandings
-and burnings; or as the English Puritans who used to have bawds
-whipped, pilloried, branded and imprisoned and for a second offense
-put to death. And even they were not brutal enough, it seems, since
-prostitution went right on down the centuries to our times. I suppose
-that we might have learned from their failures that prostitution could
-not be ended by physical force and brutality. However, when the girls
-were driven from the streets, inasmuch as the police did not despatch
-them, they still had to go somewhere, and the brothels remained. They
-had their own quarter and if it was not a segregated quarter it was
-something very like it, since the police bent their efforts to rid
-other portions of the city of such places. It was perhaps a tolerated
-rather than a segregated district, and after a while the Director of
-Public Safety wished to try the experiment of making it a regulated
-district as well. I felt that the world was too old and I found myself
-too much of its mood to hope that any good could come from any of the
-efforts of policemen to dispose of such a problem, but I was glad of
-any experiment conducted in sincerity that might make for the better,
-and accordingly the Director of Safety put his scheme into operation.
-It was not _reglementation_ in the exact European sense, since the
-temper of our American people will not acquiesce in that, and, as
-I discovered by some inquiries of my own in the principal cities of
-Europe, it is not of very valid effect over there. But the Director
-adopted most of the familiar requirements of the Parisian _reglement_,
-except the examinations, and the registration of those not _en maison_;
-he required the proprietresses to report at police headquarters the
-presence of new inmates; he forbade them to have minors or male
-parasites in the houses, and as far as possible he separated the
-business from the saloon business. Any house which ignored his orders
-found a policeman posted before it; then it came to time. The result
-was, as Mr. Mooney could report in the course of a year, that the
-number of brothels had been reduced from over two hundred to thirty and
-the number of prostitutes of whom the police had any knowledge, in an
-equal proportion. He was very proud when General Bingham complimented
-his policemen and their policing, as he was at similar compliments from
-the government’s white slave agents.
-
-Superficially this was a very gratifying report, but only
-superficially. Five-sixths of the brothels had been closed, but their
-inmates had to go somewhere, just as Jones said, and the police found
-that clandestine prostitution had proportionately increased; the women
-had gone into flats, or hotels, or residences which on occasion could
-be made to serve as assignation houses. It may perhaps have improved
-the life of the prostitute, made it freer and more human, or perhaps it
-indicated that prostitution in America is showing a decadent tendency
-toward refinement. But while they had reduced the number of houses
-of prostitution, the police discovered that they had not reduced
-prostitution in the least, and when, after a trial of four years, I
-asked the Director and the Chief of Police what the result of the
-experiment had been, they said that, aside from the fact that it seemed
-to make for order in the city, and simplified the work of policing, it
-had done no good.
-
-The experience was like that of Chicago, where after a police
-order prohibiting the sale of liquor in houses of prostitution, it
-was found--according to the report of the vice commission--to be
-“undoubtedly true that the result of the order has been to scatter
-the prostitutes over a wide territory and to transfer the sale of
-liquor carried on heretofore in houses to the near-by saloon keepers,
-and to flats and residential sections, but it is an open question
-whether it has resulted in the lessening of either of the two evils of
-prostitution and drink.”
-
-The experience, I think, is probably universal. I used to hear the
-systems of regulation used in European cities held up as models by the
-pessimistic as the only practical method of dealing with the problem.
-Paris was commonly considered as the ideal in this respect; latterly
-it is apt to be Berlin. But the fact is that the _reglementation_
-which for years and years has been in force in Paris is a failure; the
-experience there was precisely what it was in our little city. And from
-Berlin, which the well-known German genius for organization has made
-the most efficiently governed city in the world, the same failure has
-been reported.
-
-In England, on the other hand, there is no regulation; any evening
-along Piccadilly, one may see street walkers whom the police never
-dream of molesting. It is in part due to the traditional Puritanic
-attitude of our northern race, and partly to the respect for personal
-liberty that exists in England. There the principle is much more
-scrupulously respected than with us, with whom individual liberty
-indeed, is hardly a principle at all. With us the phrase “personal
-liberty” is regarded merely as a shibboleth of brewers and distillers,
-an evidence on the part of him who employs it that he is a besotted
-slave to drink and an unscrupulous minion of the rum power. The
-interferences practiced daily by our policemen are unknown there,
-and if, for instance, it should even be proposed that an enactment
-like that in Oklahoma limiting the amount of liquor a man may keep in
-his own house, and providing that agents of the state may enter his
-domicile at will and make a search, and especially if in the remotest
-region of the British Isles there should be an instance of what Walt
-Whitman calls “the never ending audacity of elected persons,” such as
-is of daily occurrence in that state where these agents enter railway
-trains and slit open the valises of travelers in their quest of the
-stuff, the whole of the question hour the next afternoon in the House
-of Commons would be occupied with indignant interpellations of the home
-secretary and the _Times_ could not contain all the letters that would
-be written.
-
-Other lands have made other experiments, but everywhere and in all
-times the same failure has been recorded, from the efforts of Greece to
-control the _hetaerae_ and _dicteriades_ and the severe regulations of
-ancient Rome, down to the latest reform administration in an American
-city. Nothing that mankind has ever tried has been of the slightest
-avail. And now come the vice commissions with their pornographic
-reports, and no doubt feeling that they have to propose something
-after all the trouble they have gone to, when they have set forth in
-tabulated statistics what everybody in the world already knows, they
-repeat the old ineptitudes. That is, more law, more hounding by the
-police.
-
-The Chicago product is the classic and the model for all of these, and
-as the latest and loftiest triumph of the Puritan mind in the realm of
-morals and of law, a triumph for which three centuries of innocence
-of nothing save humor alone could have prepared it, its own great
-masterpiece in morals was at once forbidden circulation in the mails
-because of its immorality!
-
-The problem cannot be solved by policemen, even if--as is now
-recommended--they be called “morals” police. The word has a reassuring
-note of course, possibly by some confused with “moral” police, but
-policemen are policemen still. I have seen the _police des moeurs_
-in European cities, and they look quite like other policemen. And
-all cities in America have had morals police; that is exactly what
-our policemen have been, and that is exactly what is the matter with
-them. That is, all cities have had detectives especially detailed to
-supervise the conduct of the vicious, and they always fail. We had such
-a squad in Toledo for years, though it was not called morals police.
-It was composed of men, mere men, because we had nothing else but men
-to detail to the work. They were honest, decent, self-respecting men
-for the most part, who on the whole did very well considering the
-salaries they were paid and the task imposed on them. They regulated
-vice as well as anybody anywhere could regulate it. But of course they
-failed to solve the problem, just as the world for thousands of years
-has failed to solve it, with all the machinery of all the laws of all
-the lawgivers in history. Solon in Athens tried every known device,
-including segregation. He established a state monopoly of houses of
-prostitution, confined the _dicteriades_ to a certain quarter of the
-city, and compelled them to wear a distinctive dress, but all his
-stringent laws had broken down long before Hyperides dramatically
-bared the breast of Phryne to the Areopagus. In Rome there was the
-most severe regulation in the ancient world and yet--it may be read in
-Gibbon--the successive experiments of the law under Augustus, Tiberius,
-Caligula, Valerian, Theodosius and Justinian were all failures, and
-when the laws were most rigorous and the most rigorously enforced,
-immorality was at its height. Charlemagne tried and failed, and though
-the sentiment of the age of chivalry and the rise of Christianity
-for a while softened the law, under the English Puritans, bawds were
-whipped, pilloried, branded and imprisoned, and for a second offense
-put to death. France was not behind; under Louis IX., prostitutes
-were exiled, and in 1635 an edict in Paris condemned men concerned in
-the traffic to the galleys for life, while the women and girls were
-whipped, shaved and banished for life. Charles V. in the monastery
-at Yuste, trying to make two clocks tick in union, found his efforts
-no more vain than his attempts to regulate human conduct, and Philip
-II. tried again to do what his father had been unable to accomplish.
-Peter the Great was a grim enforcer of the laws, and in Vienna Maria
-Theresa was most rigorous with prostitutes, putting them in a certain
-garb, and then in handcuffs; she was almost as remorseless in her
-treatment of them as was John Calvin in Geneva, which came to have more
-prostitutes proportionately than any other city in Europe. Several
-modern attempts at annihilation have been made. Saxony tried to do
-away with prostitutes, but they exist in Dresden and other cities of
-the Kingdom and Hamburg claims to have banished them, but in that Free
-and Hanseatic city I was told by an American who was investigating the
-subject that there were as many there as elsewhere.
-
-
-
-
-L
-
-
-And these laws have not only failed, they have not only stimulated and
-intensified the evil, but they themselves have created a white slavery
-worse than that of the preposterous tales and sentimental twaddle
-that circulate among the neurotic, a white slavery worse than any ever
-imagined by the most romanticistic of the dime novelists or by the most
-superheated of the professional reformers. Every one of these laws has
-been devised, written and enacted in the identical spirit with which
-the Puritans in Massachusetts branded the red letter on the scarlet
-woman. Every one of them is an element of that brutal and amazing
-conspiracy by which society makes of the girl who once “goes wrong,”
-to use the lightest of our animadversions, a pariah more abhorred and
-shunned than if she were a rotting leper on the cliffs of Molokai. She
-may be human, alive, with the same feelings that all the other girls
-in the world have; she may have within her the same possibilities,
-life may mean exactly the same thing to her, she may have youth with
-all its vague and beautiful longings, but society thunders at her
-such final and awful words as “lost,” “abandoned,” thrusts her beyond
-its pale, and causes her to feel that thereafter forever and forever,
-there is literally no chance of redemption for her; home, society,
-companionship, hope itself, all shut their obdurate doors in her face.
-In all the world there are just two places she may go, the brothel, or
-the river, and even if she choose the latter, that choice, too, is a
-sin. She is “lost” and the awful and appalling lie is thundered in her
-astonished ears by the united voices of a prurient and hypocritical
-society with such indomitable force and persistence that she must
-believe it herself, and acquiesce in its dread finality. And there is
-no course open to her but to go on in sin to the end of days whose
-only mercy is that they are apt to be brief. No off-hand moralist,
-even by exercising his imagination to the last degree of cruelty, has
-ever been able to devise such a prison as that. White slave, indeed,
-shackled by the heaviest chains the Puritan conscience has yet been
-able to forge for others!
-
-Strange, too, since the attitude is assumed by a civilization which
-calls itself Christian and preaches that the old law, with its eye for
-an eye and its tooth for a tooth, was done away with and lost in a new
-and beautiful dispensation. “Neither do I condemn thee; go, and sin no
-more.” If the world is ever to solve this problem, it must first of
-all apprehend the spirit of this simple and gracious expression, do
-away with its old laws, its old cruelties, its old brutalities, its
-old stupidities, and approach the problem in that human spirit which I
-suspect is so very near the divine. Once in this attitude, this spirit,
-society will be in position to learn something from history and from
-human experience, something from life itself, and what it will learn
-first is that Puritanical laws, the hounding of the police, and all
-that sort of thing have never lessened prostitution in the world, but
-on the contrary have increased it.
-
-What! Let them go and not do anything to them? Well, yes, if we can’t
-think of anything better to do to them than to hurt them a little
-more, push them a little farther along the road to that abyss toward
-which we have been hustling them. Why is it constantly necessary to do
-something _to_ people? If we can’t do anything for them, when are we
-going to learn to let them alone? Or must this incessant interference,
-this meddling, this mauling and manhandling, go on in the world forever
-and ever?
-
-As to what is to be done about it, since all that ever has been
-attempted has been so much worse in its effect than if we had never
-done anything, I suppose I need not feel so very much ashamed of
-confessing my ignorance and saying that I do not know. If it were left
-to me I think the first thing I should do is to repeal all the criminal
-laws on the subject, beginning with that most savage enactment the
-Puritan conscience ever devised, namely, the law declaring certain
-children “illegitimate,” a piece of stupid brutality and cruelty that
-would make a gorilla blush with shame if it were even suggested in the
-African jungle.
-
-Yes, the first thing to do is to repeal all the criminal laws on the
-subject. They do no good, and even when it is attempted to enforce
-them, the result is worse than futile. I myself, with my own eyes, in
-the old police court where I have witnessed so many squalid tragedies,
-have seen a magistrate fine a street walker and then suspend the fine
-so that, as he explained to her in all judicial seriousness, she
-might go out and “earn” enough money to come back and pay it! And not
-a person in the court room, so habituated and conventionalized are
-we all, ever cracked a smile or apparently saw anything out of the
-way--least of all the street walker!
-
-But it would not be enough simply to repeal these laws from the
-statute books of the state; it will be necessary to accomplish the
-immensely more difficult task of repealing them from the human heart,
-where they were written long ago in anger, and hatred, and jealousy and
-cruelty and fear, that is in the heat of all the baser passions. What I
-am trying to say is that the first step in any reasonable and effective
-reform is an entire change of attitude on the subject, and about the
-only good to be expected from the agitation about white slavery, with
-all its preposterous exaggeration and absurd sensationalism is that
-it is perhaps making for a changed attitude, a new conception; if it
-will accomplish nothing more than to get the public mind--if there is
-a public mind, and not a mere public passion--to view the prostitute
-as a human being, very much like all the other human beings in the
-world, it will have been worth all it has cost in energy and emotion
-and credulity. If this sort of repeal can be made effective, if the
-prostitute can be assured of some chance in life outside the dead line
-which society so long ago drew for her, the first step will have been
-taken.
-
-The next step possibly will be the erection of a single standard of
-morals. And this cannot be done by passing a law, or by turning in an
-alarm for the police. That means thinking, too, and education, and
-evolution, and all the other slow and toilsome processes of which the
-off-hand reformers are so impatient. This single standard will have to
-be raised first in each individual heart; after that it will become the
-attitude of the general mind.
-
-And then the commerce in vice will have to be stopped. I do not mean
-prohibited by penal laws alone. Policemen cannot stop it, and policemen
-should have no more to do with it than firemen. In fact much of the
-commerce has proceeded from the fact that its regulation has been
-entrusted to the police. It should be a subject for the fiscal laws. It
-is, I assume, known by most persons that the owners of the dilapidated
-tenements in which for the most part prostitution is carried on,
-because of the “risk,” extort exorbitant rentals for them, and then
-on the ground that they can rent them to no one of respectability,
-they hold them to be so worthless that they pay little if any taxes on
-them. Our present tax laws of course have the effect of rewarding the
-slothful, the lazy and the idle, and of punishing the energetic and
-the enterprising producer in business, and it would be quite possible
-to revise the tax laws so that tenderloins would be economically
-impossible, because they would cease to be profitable.
-
-In the next place, or some place in the program, there should be some
-sort of competent and judicious sex education. I do not know just who
-would impart it, since no one as yet knows very much about it, but with
-the earnest, sincere and devoted work that is being carried on all over
-the world by the scientific men and women who are studying eugenics and
-social hygiene, there is hope in this direction, even if it is probable
-that the world will not be saved by the new race of athletes that are
-scientifically to be bred, and may still have some use in its affairs
-for the minds of its cripples who in all times have contributed so much
-to its advancement.
-
-The marvelous phenomenon known as the feminist movement which the
-students and historians of the next two hundred years will be busy
-elucidating will play its part, too, for in its vast impulse toward the
-equality of the sexes it must not only bring the single standard of
-morals, but it should somehow be the means of achieving for women their
-economic independence. This perhaps would be the most important of all
-the steps to be taken in the solution of the problem. The economic
-environment of course is in the lives of many girls a determining
-factor and in this connection the minimum wage indeed has its bearing.
-The old Puritan laws were conceived in minds intensely preoccupied
-with the duty of punishing people for their sins. Prostitutes were
-prostitutes because they were “bad,” and when people were bad they must
-be punished. But now we see, or begin to see, if vaguely, that, except
-in metaphysics, there is no such thing in our complex human life as an
-absolute good or an absolute bad; we begin to discern dimly the causes
-of some of the conduct called bad, and to the problem of evil we begin
-to apply the conception of economic influences, social influences,
-pathological influences, and other influences most of us know little or
-nothing about.
-
-Thus we begin to see that a girl’s wages, for instance, may have
-something to do with what we call her morals; not everything, but
-something. The wages of a girl’s father have something to do with
-them, too, and the wages of her great grandfather for the matter of
-that. So the dividends on which live the delicate and charming ladies
-she beholds alighting from their motor cars every morning in the
-shopping district may have something to do with them, though she is as
-unconscious and as innocent of the relation as they, as ignorant as all
-of us are. Rents have something to do with them, and so do taxes.
-
-But after the whole economic system has been re-adjusted and perfected
-and equalized, after we have the minimum wage, and the single tax, and
-industrial democracy, and every man gets what he produces, and economic
-pressure has been as scientifically adjusted as the atmospheres
-in a submarine torpedo boat, there is always the great law of the
-contrariety of things to be reckoned with, according to which the
-more carefully planned the event, the less it resembles the original
-conception. The human vision is so weak, and the great circle of
-life so prodigious! The solution will come, if it ever comes at all,
-by slow, patient, laborious, drudging study, far from the midnight
-session of the legislature, far from the ear and the pencil of the
-eager reporter, far from the platform of the sweating revivalist, far
-from the head office of the police. Our fondly perused pornography
-might expose the whole of the underworld to the light of day, the
-general assembly might enact successive revisions of the revised
-statutes for a hundred years, we might develop the most superb police
-organization in all history, achieving the apotheosis of the Puritan
-ideal with a dictagraph in every bedroom and closet in the town, and
-it all would be of no avail. The study must survey the whole field
-of social and domestic relations, until the vast mystery of life is
-understood, and the relation between its wide antitheses established
-as Tolstoy presents them in his story of the poor mother who took her
-daughter to the public house in the village, and the rich mother who,
-at the same time, took her daughter to the court at St. Petersburg.
-It will be found perhaps in the long run, for which so few are ever
-willing to remain, that the eradicable causes of prostitution are
-due to involuntary poverty, and the awful task is to get involuntary
-poverty out of the world. It is a task which has all the tremendous
-difficulties of constructive social labor and it is as deliberate as
-evolution itself. And even if it is ever accomplished, there will
-remain a residuum in the problem inhering in the mysteries of sex,
-concerning which even the wisest and most devoted of our scientists
-will confess they know very little as yet and have not much to tell us
-that will do us any good.
-
-
-
-
-LI
-
-
-In taking the present occasion to say so much about the work in morals
-which a mayor is expected to perform, I have a disquieting sense that
-I have fallen into a tone too querulous for the subject, and perhaps
-taken a mean advantage of the reader in telling of my troubles. It is
-rather a troubled life that a mayor leads in one of these turbulent
-American cities, since so much of his time is taken up by reformers who
-seem to expect him somehow to do their holy work for them, and yet that
-is doubtless the business of reformers in this world, and since it is
-their mission to trouble someone, perhaps it is the business of a mayor
-to be troubled by them in his vicarious and representative capacity. I
-should not deny reformers their rights in this respect, or their uses
-in this world, and I should be the last to question their virtues.
-John Brown was beyond doubt a strong character and an estimable man,
-who did a great and heroic work in the world, even if he did do it in
-opposition to the law, and by the law was killed at last for doing it,
-but by all accounts he must have been a terrible person to live with,
-and I have often been glad that I was not mayor of Ossawattomie when
-he was living and reforming there. I would as soon have had Peter the
-Hermit for a constituent.
-
-I shall not go quite so far as to admit that our reformers were as
-strong in character as either of these great models I have mentioned,
-but they were as persistent, or in combination they were as persistent;
-when one tired or desisted, another promptly took his place; there
-were so many that they could spell each other, and work in relays, and
-thus keep the torch ever alive and brandishing. It was not only the
-social evil with which they were concerned, but the evil of drink, and
-the evil of gambling, and the evil of theaters, and the evil of moving
-pictures, and post cards, and of the nude in art, and of lingerie in
-show windows, and of boys swimming in the river, and playing in the
-streets, and scores of other conditions which seemed to inspire in them
-the fear or the thought of evil.
-
-With the advent of spring, the mayor must put a stop to lovers
-wandering in the parks; when summer comes he must put an end instantly
-to baseball; in the winter he must close the theaters and the dance
-halls; in short, as I said before, whenever it was reported from any
-quarter that there were people having fun, the police must instantly be
-despatched to put a stop to it.
-
-And strangely enough, even when we did succeed in doing away with
-some of the evils of the town, when we closed the saloons promptly at
-midnight, the hour fixed by ordinance, when we did away with many evil
-resorts, when wine rooms were extirpated, and the number of _maisons
-de tolerance_ were reduced by eighty-five per cent., when gambling was
-stamped out, their complaints did not subside, but went on, unabated,
-the same as before. They could not be satisfied because the whole of
-their impossible program was not adopted, and more because there was
-no public recognition of their infallibility and no admission of their
-righteousness. What that type of mind desires is not, after all, any
-reasonable treatment of those conditions, or any honest and sincere
-endeavor to deal with them. It demands intellectual surrender, the
-acknowledgment of its infallibility, and a protesting hypocrite can
-more easily meet its views than anyone else.
-
-No wonder then that even such a strong man as Tom Johnson, one evening,
-when the day was done, should fling himself back in the motor car, with
-the dark shadow of utter weariness and despair on his face, and say:
-
-“I wish I could take a train to the end of the longest railway in the
-world, then go as far as wagons could draw me and then walk and crawl
-as far as I could, and then in the midst of the farthest forest lie
-down and rest.”
-
-We all have such moments, of course, but we should have fewer of them
-if we had a national trait of which I have read, in a book by Mr.
-Fielding Hall in relation to Burma. He says the Burmese have a vast
-unwillingness to interfere in other people’s affairs.
-
-“A foreigner may go and live in a Burman village,” he says, “may
-settle down there and live his own life and follow his own customs in
-perfect freedom; may dress and eat and drink and pray and die as he
-likes. No one will interfere. No one will try to correct him; no one
-will be forever insisting to him that he is an outcast, either from
-civilization or from religion. The people will accept him for what
-he is and leave the matter there. If he likes to change his ways and
-conform to Burmese habits and Buddhist forms, so much the better; but
-if not, never mind.”
-
-What a hell Burma would be for the Puritan! And what a heaven for
-everybody else! Perhaps we would all better go live there.
-
-These things, however, should be no part of a mayor’s business,
-and perhaps I may justify my speaking of them by saying that I
-spoke of them principally to make that point clear. They and some
-other problems that may or may not be foreign to his duties, have
-the effect of keeping a mayor from his real work which is or should
-be, the administration of the communal affairs of the city, and
-not the regulation of the private affairs of the people in it.
-It is quite impossible to imagine any work more delightful than
-this administration. Hampered in it as one is by politicians, who
-regard every question from the viewpoint of the parish pump, it
-is nevertheless inspiring to be concerned about great works of
-construction regarding the public comfort and convenience, the public
-health and the public amenities. It is in such work that one may catch
-a glimpse of the vast possibilities of our democracy, of which our
-cities are the models and the hope.
-
-I have observed in Germany that the mayors of the cities there are
-not burdened by these extraneous issues, and I think that that is
-the reason the German cities are the most admirably administered in
-the world. Perhaps I should say governed, too, though that is hardly
-correct, since the governing there is done by the state through its own
-officials. I have not been in Germany often enough or remained long
-enough to be able to assert that government, in its effect for good,
-is quite as much a superstition as it is everywhere; mere political
-government, I mean, which seems to be so implicitly for the selfish
-benefit of those who do the governing. But the administration of
-public affairs is so entirely another matter, that it is as beautiful,
-at least in its possibilities as government is ugly in its actualities,
-and it is precisely because there has been so much insistence on
-government in our cities that there is as yet so little administration,
-and that so inefficient.
-
-In Germany the burgomeister is not chosen for his political views,
-or for his theories of any sort, or for his popularity; he is chosen
-because of his ability for the work he is to perform, and he is
-retained in office as long as he performs that work properly. It is so
-with all municipal departments and the result is order and efficient
-administration. When a German city wants a mayor, it seeks one by
-inquiring among other cities; sometimes it advertises for him. It
-would be quite impossible, of course, for our cities to advertise for
-mayors, not that there would be any lack of applicants, since everyone
-is considered capable of directing the affairs of a city in this
-country. Of course everyone is not capable; few of the persons chosen
-are capable at the time they are chosen. Many of them become very
-capable after they have had experience, but they gain this experience
-at the expense of the public, and about the time they have gained it,
-their services are dispensed with, and a new incompetent accidentally
-succeeds them.
-
-The condition is due partly to the fact that we are of a tradition that
-is concerned with governing exclusively, and not administering; our
-conception is of an executive, a kind of lieutenant or subaltern of
-the sovereign power, and in our proverbial fear and jealousy of kings
-we see that he does not have too much power or develop those powers he
-has by a long tenure of office.
-
-The officials of a German city are pure administrators, and nothing
-else; they are not governors or censors. They are not charged in fact
-with police powers at all. And if they were, they would not have
-questions of such delicacy to meet, for the police there are for the
-purpose of protecting life and property, and they are not expected to
-regulate the personal conduct and refine the morals of the community,
-or to rear the young. They have not confused their functions with
-the _censores mores_ of old Rome, or like us, with the beadles of
-New England villages of colonial times. That is, the Puritan spirit
-is not known there, at least in the intensified acerbity in which it
-exists with us; moral problems, oddly enough, are left to parents,
-teachers or pastors. The police over there are generally a part of
-the military organizations. It would be better of course, to bear the
-ills we have than to transplant any military system to our soil, for
-state police in America would become mere Cossacks employed to keep the
-laboring population in subjection. But if the state is to undertake
-to regulate the moral conduct of the inhabitants of cities, it should
-provide all the means of regulation and take all the responsibility,
-including the onus of violating the democratic principle. If the state
-is to regenerate the land by the machinery of morals police, it should
-have its own morals police, tell them just how to proceed to compel
-the inhabitants of cities to be moral, and pay them out of the state
-treasury.
-
-
-
-
-LII
-
-
-It is, however, a curious characteristic of our people, or of the vocal
-minority of them, that while they insist on every possible interference
-with every private and personal right, in the field of moral conduct,
-they nevertheless will tolerate no interference whatever with property
-rights. Thus it was precisely as Cossacks that many employers of labor
-insisted on my using the police to cow their workmen whenever there was
-a strike.
-
-During my first term it befell that our city was torn by strikes,
-all the union machinists in town walked out, then the moulders, and
-at last a great factory wherein automobiles were made was “struck,”
-as the workingmen say. It is impossible to give an idea of the worry
-such a condition causes officials. It is more than that sensation
-of weariness, of irritation, even of disgust, which it causes the
-general public. This is due partly to the resentment created by the
-interference with physical comfort, and even peace of mind, since there
-is in us all something more than a fear of disorder and tumult, in that
-innate love of harmony which exists potentially in humanity. But to the
-official there is a greater difficulty because of the responsibility to
-which he is held. People intuitively regard strikers as public enemies,
-and while the blame for the irritation caused by strikes is visited
-on the direct and apparent cause, that is, the strikers themselves; it
-is visited, too, on the official head of the local government, who is
-supposed to be able somehow to put a stop to such things. The general
-or mass intelligence will not as yet go much deeper than the superfices
-of the problem, or seek to understand the causes of economic unrest and
-disorder; it still thinks in old sequences and puts its trust in the
-weapons of the flesh.
-
-I think I shall never forget the first call I had from a delegation
-of manufacturers during the early days of those strikes. They came in
-not too friendly spirit, but rather in their capacity of “citizens
-and tax-payers,” standing on their rights, as they understood them,
-though they in common with most of us and with the law as well, had
-only the most hazy notions as to what those rights were, and perhaps
-still hazier notions as to their duties. “We come,” said the spokesman,
-“representing two millions of dollars’ worth of property.”
-
-They could not have put their case more frankly. But I, as I was able
-to recall in that moment, represented two hundred thousand people,
-themselves among them of course. And here at the very outset was the
-old conflict in its simplest terms, of man against property. Now,
-in that old struggle, while I had made no sacrifices in the cause
-and have been of no especial service in it, I had nevertheless given
-intellectual assent to the general propositions advanced in favor of
-the human side, the side of man. By prejudice, or perversity, or
-constitutionally, I considered men of more value than factories. I had
-perhaps never heard of a strike, for instance, in which my sympathies
-were not impulsively with the strikers. I could always see that poor
-foreigner, whose body had lain there on the cold damp rocks at Lemont
-so many years before, and somehow I could not get out of my mind’s eye
-the figures of the workmen on strike, many of them hungry and desperate
-as their wives and children were; they seemed to me to be in straits
-more dire than their harried and harassed and worried employers, though
-I could feel sorry for them, too, since even if they were not hungry,
-they, too, were the victims of the anarchy of our industrial system.
-They had of course no social conscience whatever, but perhaps they
-could not help that. But there they were, bringing their troubles to
-the mayor, whom perhaps they did not wholly regard as their mayor,
-since they had some prescience of the fact that in that mayor’s mind
-was always the memory of those throngs of workingmen who had looked up
-to him with some of the emotions of confidence and hope. There was alas
-little enough that he could do for those workingmen, but, especially in
-such an hour, he must at least not forget them. Of the relative rights
-of their present quarrel he had little knowledge; but he had envisaged
-enough of life to know, without too much sentimentalizing them, that,
-while they were often wrong, they were somehow right when they were
-wrong. That is, their eternal cause was right.
-
-What the manufacturers wanted, as they put it, was “protection,” a
-term with vague and varying connotations. As was the case in all the
-strikes of all the years of my experience in the mayoralty, they felt
-that the police were not sufficiently aggressive, or that the Chief of
-Police had not detailed sufficient men to afford them protection. I
-did not raise the question, though it occurred to me, as to what the
-police were doing to protect the strikers, who were citizens, too, and
-tax-payers, or at least rent-payers and so indirect tax-payers, but
-when I asked the Chief, the big-hearted Perry Knapp reported that the
-strikers were complaining, too, and out of his collection of works
-on Lincoln, he brought me one which contained a letter the great
-president wrote to General John M. Schofield, when he assigned that
-officer to the command of the Department of the Missouri, in May, 1863,
-to succeed General Curtis. Curtis had been the head of one party as
-Governor Gamble had been the head of the other, in what Lincoln called
-the pestilent factional quarrel into which the Union men had entered.
-“Now that you are in the position,” wrote Lincoln, “I wish you to undo
-nothing merely because General Curtis or Governor Gamble did it, but to
-exercise your own judgment, and do right for the public interest. Let
-your military measures be strong enough to repel the invader and keep
-the peace, and not so strong as to unnecessarily harass and persecute
-the people. It is a difficult rôle, and so much the greater will be the
-honor if you perform it well. If both factions, or neither, shall abuse
-you, you will probably be about right. Beware of being assailed by one
-and praised by the other.”
-
-How Lincoln knew human nature! It seemed as good a model as one
-might find, since we, too, were in the midst of a little civil war,
-and we always tried to pursue that course. What the manufacturing
-employers wished, of course, was for us to use the police to break
-the strike; that we did not deem it our duty to do. What we tried to
-do was to preserve the public peace and--since our industry in its
-present status is war--to let them fight it out. We tried to see to
-it that they fought it out along the lines laid down, in fixing the
-relative rights of the industrial belligerents, by the Courts of Great
-Britain, and this policy had the virtual approval of our own courts
-when in an ancillary way it came under discussion there. But we had
-difficulty in maintaining the peace, not only because the strikers,
-or more likely their sympathizers, broke it now and then, but because
-when the strikers were not breaking it, the employers seemed bent
-on doing something to make them. They did not intend it for that
-purpose of course; they simply thought in old feudal sequences. They
-hired mercenaries, bullies provided as “guards” by private detective
-agencies. It kept the police pretty busy disarming these guards, and
-greatly added to their labors because the guards were always on the
-point of hurting some one.
-
-
-
-
-LIII
-
-
-There was one of the employers, indeed, who grew so alarmed that he
-came one morning to the office predicting a riot at his plant, that
-very afternoon at five o’clock, when the works were to shut down for
-the day. This man was just then operating his factory with strike
-breakers and he was concerned for their safety. Indeed his concern was
-expressed in the form of a personal sympathy and love for them which
-was far more sentimental than any I had ever been accused of showing
-toward workingmen. He was concerned about their inalienable right
-to work, and about their wives and little children, and about their
-comfort and peace of mind; indeed it was such a concern, such a love,
-that, had he but shown the moiety of it to his former employees, they
-never could have gone out on strike at all.
-
-At five o’clock that day then, with the Chief of Police, I visited
-the plant to observe, and if possible to prevent the impending riot.
-The works had not yet closed for the day, but in the street before
-the black and haggard and ugly buildings where they had toiled, the
-strikers were gathered, and with them their wives, with bare and brawny
-forearms rolled in their aprons, and their children clinging timorously
-about their skirts. It was a gray and somber afternoon in spring,
-but there was in the crowd a kind of nervous excitement that might
-have passed for gayety, a mood that strangely travestied the holiday
-spirit; perhaps they regarded the strike as an opportunity for the
-sensation lacking in their monotonous lives. There were several hulking
-fellows loafing about whom the Chief of Police recognized as private
-detectives, and as a first step in preventing disorder, he ordered
-these away. Presently the whistle blew its long, lugubrious blast, the
-crowd gathered in closer groups, and a silence fell. Sitting there with
-the Chief in his official buggy, I waited; the great gates of the high
-stockade swung slowly open, and then there issued forth a vehicle,
-the like of which I had never seen before, a sort of huge van, made
-of rough boards, that might have moved the impedimenta of an embassy.
-In the rear there was a door, fastened with a padlock; the sides were
-pierced with loop holes, and on the high seat beside the driver sat an
-enormous guard, with a rifle across his knees. This van, this moving
-arsenal containing within its mysterious interior the strike breakers,
-and I was told other guards ready to thrust rifles through those loop
-holes, moved slowly out of those high gates, lurched across the gutter
-into the street, and rumbled away, and as it went it was followed by
-a shout of such ridicule that even the guard on the front seat lost
-his menacing gravity and smiled himself, perhaps with some dawning
-recognition of the absurdity of the whole affair.
-
-There was no riot, though when the employer came to see me the next day
-I could assure him of my surprise that there had been none, since there
-was an invitation to disorder almost irresistible in that solemn and
-absurd vehicle, with its rifles and loop holes and guards and cowering
-mystery within. And I could urge upon him too a belated recognition of
-the immutable and unwritten law by which such an invitation to trouble
-is sure to be accepted. I almost felt, I told him, like heaving a stone
-after it myself to see what would happen. He finally agreed with me,
-dismissed his guards, and dismantled his rolling arsenal, and not long
-afterward was using its gear to haul the commodities they were soon
-manufacturing in those shops again.
-
-And the strikes in the other plants were settled or compromised, or
-wore themselves out, or in some way got themselves ended, though not
-the largest and most ominous of them, that in the automobile works,
-until my friend Mr. Marshall Sheppey and I had worked seventy-two
-hours continuously to get the leaders of the opposing sides together.
-It was an illuminating experience for both of us, and not without its
-penalties, since thereafter we were called upon to arbitrate a dozen
-other strikes. We found both sides rather alike in their humanness, and
-one as unreasonable as the other, but we found too that if we could
-keep them together long enough, their own reason somehow prevailed and
-they reached those fragile compromises which are the most we may expect
-in the present status of productive industry in this world.
-
-The old shop of Golden Rule Jones had its strike with the rest of them,
-and yet a strange and significant fate befell it. Alone of all the
-other shops and factories in the city involved in that strike, it was
-not picketed by the strikers, they did not even visit it, so far as I
-know. There were no guards and no policemen needed. And when I asked
-one of the labor leaders to account for this strange oversight, this
-surprising lack of solidarity and discipline in their ranks, he said,
-as though he must exculpate himself: “Oh well, you know--Mayor Jones.
-We haven’t forgotten him and what he was.”
-
-
-
-
-LIV
-
-
-It was because of this attitude toward workingmen, and their cause,
-that I was accused, now and then, by those who knew nothing about
-Socialism, of being a Socialist; by those who did know about it I was
-condemned for not being one. Our movement indeed had no opponents in
-the town more bitter than the Socialists, that is the authentic and
-orthodox Socialists of the class-conscious Marxist order, and they
-opposed me so insistently that I might as well have been the capitalist
-class and had done with it. I do not intend to confuse myself with
-the movement of which I, for a while, was but the merest and weakest
-of human instruments; I speak in that personal sense only because the
-opposition was of a personal quality so intense that it could hardly
-have been expected of an attitude that was always insisted upon as so
-entirely impersonal, the cold and scientific attitude of minds that had
-comprehended the whole of human history, analyzed the whole amazing
-complexity of human life, and reduced its problems to that degree
-in which they were all to be solved by a formula so brief that it
-could be printed on a visiting card. The complaint these scientists
-made of our movement was that its ameliorations in city life were
-retarding that evolution of which they were the inspired custodians and
-conservators; some of them spoke of it as though it were but a darkling
-part of that vast conspiracy against mankind in which the capitalists
-were so shamelessly engaged. If we had only let things alone, it was
-urged, they might grow so desperate that no one but the Socialists
-would be capable of dealing with the appalling situation.
-
-But this was the attitude only of that coterie which, unselfishly,
-no doubt, with the purest of motives, and only until the industrial
-democracy could be organized and rendered sufficiently class-conscious
-to take over the work, was directing the destinies of the Socialist
-party, very much to the fleshly eye in the same manner that the
-Republican machine controlled that party or the Democratic machine its
-party, or, before we were done, certain persons attempted to control
-the Independent movement. So far as I could discern, there was not
-much difference in them all; the Socialists seemed to rely on all the
-old weapons that had so long been employed in the world, and so long
-failed; they seemed to contemplate nothing more than replacement of old
-orthodoxies with new, old tyrannies with new tyrannies; in a word, to
-preserve the old vicious circle in which humanity has been revolving
-impotently and stupidly down all the grooves of time.
-
-I could not have been a Socialist because life had somehow taught me
-that this is a world of relativities, in which the absolute is the
-first impossibility. I could share, of course, their hope, or the
-hope of some of them in a well ordered society, though with many of
-them the dream seemed to be beautiful chiefly because they expected
-to order it themselves; they who felt themselves so long to have been
-the slaves were to become the masters; their hard and too logical
-theory of classes circumscribed their vision so that they could imagine
-nothing more clearly, and possibly nothing more delightful than a
-bouleversement which would leave them on top.
-
-I could recognize with them the masters under whom we all alike were
-serving in this land, and respect them as little as we might, or
-detest them as we would, they presented whatever advantage there is in
-familiarity; if nothing more inviting than a change in masters were
-proposed, one would prefer those one had to others whose habits and
-whims he did not know. One could be pretty sure that the new masters
-would use the same old whips and scorpions, or if new ones, with a
-sting more bitter. They proposed as much, indeed, in their rigid form
-of organization, with a discipline more irksome and relentless, what
-with their signing of pledges, and their visitations and committees
-of inspection, and trials for heresy and excommunications. They
-reminded me of those prosecutors who could behold no defect in the
-penal machinery save that it had not been sufficiently drastic; they
-would replace all old intolerances and ancient tyrannies by others no
-different save that they were employed in the opposing cause, and were
-to be even more intolerant and tyrannical.
-
-That is, the Socialists provided for everything in the world except
-liberty, and to one whose dissolving illusions had left nothing but the
-dream of liberty in a world where liberty was not and probably never
-was to be, there was no allure in the proposal to take away even the
-dream of liberty.
-
-None of them of course would be impressed by these objections--was not
-the great cure for social ill written and printed on a card?--nor would
-they consider them even until they had been submitted to the prescribed
-test of a joint debate, about the most futile device ever adopted
-by mankind, and a nuisance as offensive as any that ever disturbed
-society. It was of course the only amusement they had, as popular as
-running the gauntlet was with the Indians, and they liked to torture a
-capitalist to make a Socialist holiday. It is of course quite useless
-to argue with one who is always right, one whose utterances have the
-authority of revealed truth, but inasmuch as society had not yet been
-developed to a point of communal efficiency sufficient to keep the
-streets clean, it seemed idle to undertake the communal control of
-production and distribution. And however wrong I may be in every other
-thing, I am quite sure that I am right in this, that in their analysis
-of society they have failed utterly to take into account that classic
-of the ironic spirit, the great law of the contrariety of things,
-according to which the expected never happens, at least in the way
-it was expected to happen, and nothing ever turns out the way it was
-planned.
-
-But there is a more fundamental law--that of the destructive power
-of force, which always defeats itself. For their reliance was on
-force--and how quietly they, or the most virile of them, entered upon
-their last phase in their acceptance of the doctrine of force as
-preached now everywhere by the I. W. W. agitator on the curbstone!
-Sometimes after all the law does not take a thousand years to work
-itself out.
-
-It seemed to me that the single-taxers had a scheme far better
-than that of the Socialists, since they suggested a reliance on
-the democratic, and not on the authoritarian theory, though in its
-mysterious progress, in its constant development of new functions,
-democracy may be expected to modify even that theory. I fear at least
-that it would not do away with mosquitoes; possibly not even with
-reformers.
-
-
-
-
-LV
-
-
-But I would not be unfair, and I counted many friends among the
-Socialists of my town and time whose best ideals one could gladly
-share. They were immensely intelligent, or immensely informed; they had
-made a fairly valid indictment against society as it is organized, or
-disorganized. But like Mr. H. G. Wells, who calls himself a Socialist,
-these exceptions, in Mr. Wells’s words, were by no means fanatical or
-uncritical adherents. To them as to him Socialism was a noble, and yet
-a very human and fallible system of ideas. To them, as, again to him,
-it was an intellectual process, a project for the reshaping of human
-society upon new and better lines--the good will of the race struggling
-to make things better. This broad and tolerant view was the one to
-which they held, though they seemed too closely to identify all the
-good will in the race, operating, as I believe it to be, in many ways
-and through many agencies, as Socialism, and the pontifical Socialism
-taught in our town, at least, was so explicitly a class hatred that
-most of the time it was anything in the world rather than good will.
-Anyone with a good heart could be a Socialist on Mr. Wells’s terms,
-if it were not his inevitable fate to be assured by the orthodox
-custodians of the party faith, the high priests who alone could enter
-the holy of holies and bear forth, as occasion required, the ark of the
-covenant, that Mr. Wells’s Socialism is no Socialism at all and that he
-is no man to consult or accept.
-
-My friends among them were like him in the condemnation they had to
-hear from the machine, or, perhaps I should say, the governing or
-directing committee--whatever the euphemism that cloaks the familiar
-phenomenon with them--they too were said to be no Socialists at all;
-they were mere “intellectuals” or “sentimentalists,” or easily fell
-into some other of the categories the Socialists have provided for
-every manifestation of life. They have doubtless rendered society a
-service by their minute classification; which seems complete if they
-would only recognize the order of the sectarian mind, and since the
-orthodox among them afford so typical an example, include themselves
-in it. I am not sure that it is not quite as distinct a species as the
-capitalist class itself, at least it causes as much trouble in the
-world as the Socialists say the capitalist class creates. Socialists,
-at least of the impossibilist wing, evangelists, prohibitionists,
-Puritans, policemen and most of the rest of the reformers are endowed
-with this order of mind. While they all form subdivisions of a distinct
-intellectual class of humanity these are generally the same. That is,
-they are, all of them, always under all circumstances, right. All of
-these classes, fundamentally, follow the same sequences of thought.
-They differ of course in minor details, but they always meet on that
-narrow strip of ground upon which they have erected their inflexible
-model for humanity, with just room enough by its side for the scaffold
-upon which to hang those who do not accept it.
-
-Now, when, by any coincidence, the representatives of any two of
-these species meet in the mistaken supposition that there is any
-disagreement between them, there is bound to be trouble of course, and
-whenever say a Socialist of the impossibilist wing of the party, and
-a policeman--and all good policemen are impossibilists--meet, we have
-posited the old problem in physics of an irresistible body meeting an
-impenetrable substance.
-
-This phenomenon occurred on two or three occasions when policemen
-interfered with Socialists speaking in the streets. I am sure the
-Socialists in question could have regretted the circumstance no
-more than I, for if there was one right which I tried to induce the
-police to respect, it was the right of free speech. On the whole they
-did fairly well, and at a time when there seemed to be an epidemic
-of ferocity among municipal officials in the land that led them to
-all sorts of unwarranted interferences with human and constitutional
-rights, we had folk of all sorts preaching their strange doctrines
-in our streets--Republicans, Democrats, Socialists, of their several
-sorts, I. W. W.’s, evangelists, anarchists, suffragists, Mormons,
-Salvationists, to say nothing of all the religious sects; wisdom was
-veritably crying in the streets. Emma Goldman, during that period of
-hysteria when the advent of that little woman in a city precipitated a
-siege of fear, delivered her course of lectures in Toledo to audiences
-that were very small, since there were no police to insure the
-attendance of those who were interested more in sensations than in her
-philosophic discussions of the German drama. And we tried to respect
-the rights of all.
-
-But it is one thing to give orders, and another to have them implicitly
-obeyed. Those of the indurated sectarian mind, who would order all
-life by mechanism, are given to saying that if they were in authority
-the police would do so and so, and would not do such and such a thing,
-that they would have the police see to this and that, etc., etc.,
-etc. After they had been in power a while they would grow humble,
-if not discouraged, and, like me, be gratified if they succeeded in
-accomplishing about one-third of what they had hoped and planned
-to accomplish. Thus I, who had tried to give everybody the right of
-free speech, was now and then chagrined to find that someone had been
-interfered with for preaching some new heresy.
-
-The right of free speech cherished by all and exercised by none, since,
-owing to a disposition on the part of humanity to apply the hemlock
-or the noose in such cases, few say what they actually think, is one
-which certain of the Socialists preferred to have honored in the breach
-rather than in the observance. They would be never so happy, never
-so much in their element as when their address was interrupted; the
-greater the interference, the more acute the suffering for the cause,
-and when a man begins to feel that there is in him the blood of the
-martyrs, which, as he has heard somewhere, is the seed of the churches,
-why, of course, he is in such an exalted state of mind that there is no
-human way of dealing with him.
-
-And then that strange human spark, that mysterious thing we call
-personality, is always there--that element which makes impossible
-any perfectly or ideally organized state, social or otherwise. It is
-assumed by those of the order of mind under notice that it is possible
-so to organize human affairs that they will work automatically, with
-the precision of a machine, that they will work just as they are
-intended to work and in no other way, that it is, indeed, impossible
-for them to work in any other way, and that it may be predicted long in
-advance exactly how they will work at any given instant and under any
-exigency, or circumstance. This, of course, is impossible, as everybody
-knows, except the impossibilists. That is why they are impossibilists.
-
-These speakers, however, who would dehumanize everything yet cannot
-after all dehumanize themselves, would frequently court arrest in the
-belief that the meed of pseudo-martyrdom thereby made possible was
-an ornament to their cause, and they would often try the patience
-of officers, who like the speakers themselves and all of us, are
-unfortunately, or perhaps fortunately, only human. Thus a Socialist
-speaker standing on his soap box, in the course of his remarks,
-indulged in certain reflections on the police as an institution.
-His sentiments in that respect were not perhaps heterodox, from the
-standpoint of my own orthodoxy, but we had been trying to create
-_esprit de corps_ in the police department, and the policeman on that
-beat chancing to arrive at that inauspicious moment, and viewing life
-from an altitude less lofty and impersonal than the Socialist claimed
-for his outlook, took the scientific statements of the Socialist not in
-the academic sense, but as a personal reflection upon the body of which
-he, it seems, was growing rather proud of being a member, and at the
-conclusion of the effort he privately informed the speaker that if he
-said anything more against the Toledo Police Department he would “knock
-his block off.” He was reprimanded by his lieutenant, even after he had
-explained that he intended to execute his rude intention in his private
-and not in his official capacity.
-
-The incident could be represented by the Socialists as a veritable
-reflection of the views of the administration on the important subject
-of Socialism, but they could not derive quite the satisfaction from
-it they had in another incident, or accident, which befell the most
-prominent and authoritative of their local leaders. He was speaking
-one evening in a crowded street, when he had the good fortune to be
-arrested by a captain of police. He made the occasion the opportunity
-for an edifying debate, and lingered as long as the captain would let
-him; but, in the end, was led to the police headquarters. This was the
-irresistible meeting the impenetrable. While everybody had a right to
-speak his mind in the streets, everybody else, we felt, had an equal
-right not to listen, even to free speech, and the police had orders to
-keep the streets and sidewalks clear for traffic. Now this captain was
-a chap who carried out orders given to him, and, as he was in command
-of the traffic squad, traffic was his specialty. If streets were to
-be cleared, then, in his philosophy, they were to be cleared, and no
-little thing like a constitutional inhibition against the abridgment
-of human speech would stand in his way. And then, after all, police
-are more apt to arrest people they do not like than those they do,
-and no one likes those who disagree with him. But after the arrest,
-the offender is turned out without chances of reparation. In this
-instance, feeling that the Socialist had had an indignity put upon
-him by his arrest, while I could not undo what had been done, I could
-order his release and tender him an official apology in writing, which
-was accepted, though not acknowledged. And an order was issued that
-a policemen who thereafter interfered with any voice crying in the
-wilderness should be dismissed from the department.
-
-
-
-
-LVI
-
-
-As a boy, thirty years ago, I used to observe, with a boy’s interest,
-the little bob-tailed street cars that went teetering and tinkling, at
-intervals of half an hour, out a long street that ran within a block
-of my home. I watched the cars intently, and so intently that the
-impressions of their various colors, sounds and smells have remained
-with me to this day, speaking, in a way, of the conditions of a small
-American city of that time, and affording a means by which to measure
-that progress in material efficiency which is so often mistaken for
-progress in speculative thought.
-
-It may have been that my interest was intensified by the fact that down
-in Urbana Street cars were unknown, though they were not unimagined,
-since we used to see them when we went to Cincinnati, and I could then,
-and I can still, recall, though time has softened the poignancy of that
-hour, the pain of parting with a certain noble horse which my father
-sold to a man of dark and hateful aspect, and of the morsel of comfort
-I derived from the stipulation, invalid enough to be sure, my father
-made with the dealer, that the horse was not to be put to street-car
-service. That, by my father, and so by me myself, was held to be the
-most cruel, degrading and ignoble fate that could befall a horse.
-But another reason for my interest was the possession of a curiosity
-to which the passing show has always been novel, generally amusing,
-sometimes pleasing and often saddening, too--a curiosity in life which
-I hope will endure fresh and wholesome until life’s largest curiosity
-shall be satisfied at the end of life.
-
-The progress of the little street car under notice was leisurely and
-deliberate, sometimes it would wait obligingly for a woman, half a
-block away, who hurried puffing, and fluttering, and waving, to reach
-the street corner, and when she had clambered aboard, the driver
-would slowly unwind his brake, cluck to his horse, the rope traces
-would strain and the car would bowl along. Ten blocks away from the
-business section, or a few blocks further on, the little car with its
-five windows and small hooded platform would enter upon a bare, though
-expectant scene of vacant lots, and about a mile out, where there
-was some lonely dwelling staring blankly and reproachfully as though
-it had been misled, and then abandoned, and further on a few small,
-expectant cottages, the long, low street-car barn was reached, the car
-was driven on to a little turntable, slowly turned about and started
-back. Sometimes, if I was lucky, I had a chance to witness the change
-of horses, and to experience a nebulous pity for the nag that ambled
-contentedly into the stable, and did not seem to be very tired after
-all.
-
-On Summit Street there were grander cars, each drawn by two horses,
-and there were other lines in town, each with its cars painted a
-distinguishing color. There was one line that went out Collingwood
-Avenue, far to the very country itself; its cars bowled under noble
-trees and even past a stately mansion or two, or what in those days
-seemed stately mansions, and it was pleasant, it was even musical,
-to hear the tinkle of the bell on the horse’s collar. Then there
-was still another line that ran down the broad Maumee River, almost
-to Maumee Bay and the “marsh” where the French _habitants_ lived,
-and spoke delightfully like the people in Dr. Drummond’s poems. On
-Saturday mornings my father was likely to send me on an errand to a
-superannuated clergyman who lived down there, and this involved a long,
-irritating journey. The journey occupied the whole morning, and spoiled
-a holiday. And then it was always cold, for, in the not too clear
-retrospect, I seem to have been sent on this particular errand only
-in winter, and the car was the coldest place in the world, especially
-when it got down where the winds from the icy lake could strike it.
-Its floor was strewn recklessly with yellow straw, in some ironical
-pretense of keeping the car warm, and I would sit there with feet
-slowly freezing in the rustling straw, and after I had inspected the
-two or three passengers, there was nothing to do but to read the notice
-over the fare-box in the front end of the car, until I had it quite by
-heart:
-
-“The driver will furnish change to the amount of Two Dollars, returning
-the full amount, thus enabling the passenger to put the exact fare in
-the box.”
-
-Then I could peer up toward the fare-box and look at the one nickel
-stranded half-way down its zig-zag chute, and look at the driver,
-standing on the front platform, slowly rocking from one foot to the
-other, bundled up in old overcoats, with his cap pulled down and his
-throat and chin muffled in a repulsive woolen scarf, hoary with the
-frost of his breath, and nothing of him visible except the shining
-red point of his frosted nose. His hands, one holding the reins, the
-other the brake-handle, were lost in the various strata of mittens that
-marked epochs co-extensive with those of the several overcoats. I had
-read once in a newspaper of a street-car driver in Indianapolis who, at
-the end of his run, never moved, but kept right on standing there, and
-when the barn-boss swore at him, it was found that he was dead, frozen
-at his post. And I sometimes wondered, as I dwelt on that fascinating
-horror, if it were possible that sometime, when the car reached the
-bay, this driver would not be found frozen. Sometimes I expected to
-be found frozen myself, but nothing exciting ever happened on that
-journey, and so, somehow, the trips out other streets and other avenues
-in other cars, remain more pleasantly in the memory, associated with
-the sunshine and the leafy arch of green overhead, with something of
-the romance and mystery of untraveled roads in the long vista ahead,
-while the winter trip down to the superannuated clergyman’s is cold and
-bleak and desolate, perhaps because it had no more interesting result
-than the few minutes I begrudged in that stiff little “parlor,” where
-the preacher received me with the not unkindly regard of eyes that
-had the dazed expression of the very old. I can expiate the perfectly
-patent and impolite reluctance with which I visited the aged man,
-and the thoughtless contempt youth has for age itself, only by the
-hope that those dim eyes have since brightened at the realization of
-those glories they had so long foreseen, which formed perhaps the only
-consolation of a life that must have had little to gladden it on that
-forbidding spot.
-
-All these lines, and others like them in the sprawling young town,
-belonged each to different men, and once I happened to hear that the
-man who owned the line first mentioned say that every new family that
-moved into that thoroughfare or built a house there, meant $73.00 a
-year to him. A good many families moved out into that street, enough
-indeed to make a settlement that was a town in itself, growing and
-spreading at the end of the line. Gradually the gaunt vacancies
-between were built up, though not, it appears, until the man had grown
-discouraged and sold out, and so suffered the universal fate of the
-pioneer. One by one the other lines in town were sold, and finally
-a day came when all the lines were owned by a certain few men, who
-under our purely individualistic legal system, formed a company and
-thus could jointly rejoice in all the individual rights and privileges
-of a person, without any of his embarrassing moral duties and
-responsibilities.
-
-I ceased to hear of the individual owner any more; I never saw him in
-his shirt-sleeves in his little office at the end of the line counting
-up the nickels of those new families which each meant $73.00 per
-annum to him, and it must have been about the same time that I began
-to hear of the traction company. There had been probably intervening
-experiments with tough mules, whom no one pitied, as everyone had
-pitied the horses they replaced, and there were, in other cities,
-astounding miracles of cable cars and elevated railways. And then
-electricity came as a motive power, and the streets were made hideous
-by the gaunt poles and makeshifts of wires, and the trolley cars came,
-and increased in size and numbers, and families swarmed, until out
-on those streets and avenues the great yellow cars went rushing and
-clanging by, with multitudes of people clinging to the straps and,
-toward evening, swarming like flies on the broad rear platforms, and
-the conductors in their blue uniforms shouting “Step lively!” with a
-voice as authoritative as that which the company spoke in the city
-councils. And the families continued to arrive, and to build houses,
-and to toil and to contribute each its $73.00 a year, though they did
-it with human reluctance and complaint, and grew dimly conscious that
-somewhere in the whole complicated transaction an injustice lurked.
-And finally this hidden injustice became the chief public concern of
-the people of the town, and an issue in local politics for more than a
-decade.
-
-
-
-
-LVII
-
-
-It had been an issue, as I have more than once said in Jones’s time and
-in his campaigns, though the issues his tremendous personality raised
-were so vast and so general and so fundamental that they included all
-issues, as Emerson said his reform included all reforms. It ran like a
-scarlet thread through the warp and woof of our communal life; it was
-somehow associated with the ambitions of the meanest politician, it
-affected the fortunes of every man in business, and it was the means
-whereby the community came to have an ideal. The long story of it, like
-the story of the same interest in any town, would include triumphs
-and tragedies--and the way of politics through the town was strewn
-with the pitiable wrecks of character and of life itself that had been
-ruthlessly sacrificed to the insatiable greed of privilege. Only the
-other day one such wreck, once in a position of honor and trust in the
-municipality, was waiting in the outer office; he wanted half a dollar
-and a place to sleep. And another like him, most desperate of all,
-asked to be committed to a city hospital or even to the asylum for the
-insane; he had no other refuge, and as for the poorhouse, he said, not
-yet, not yet! And these were the sacrifices privilege demanded of its
-parasites; though their case morally, at least, could be no worse than
-that of privilege’s principal beneficiaries; not half so bad indeed,
-since they had lost the power of appreciation of spiritual values.
-
-I knew a reporter, an Irish lad, whom one of the attorneys of privilege
-sought to “befriend.”
-
-“You work pretty hard, don’t you?” asked the attorney.
-
-“Yes,” said the Irish lad.
-
-“And your salary is small?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“And a mortgage on your mother’s home?” The agents of privilege always
-know a man’s necessities!
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Well, now, I can tell you how things can be eased up a bit for you.
-For instance----”
-
-After the proposal had been artfully made, the Irish lad thought a
-moment, and then he raised those blue eyes to the old lawyer.
-
-“Your wife is prominent socially, isn’t she?”
-
-“Why, yes.”
-
-“President of--this and that, eh?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“And your daughters just home from a finishing school in Europe, aren’t
-they?”
-
-“Yes--but what----?”
-
-“I was wondering,” said the Irish lad, rising, “how you dared go home
-at night and look ’em in the face.”
-
-Not all men though have the character, the moral resistance of that
-Irish lad, and the scores of the weak and erring ones are the tragic
-figures in the long drama of the traction company in the city, in any
-city--the drama that cannot be written.
-
-
-
-
-LVIII
-
-
-Meanwhile, the education of the general mind went on, and we were,
-after all, tending somewhither. Our experience in the greatest of our
-tasks demonstrated that, and in the change that gradually took place in
-sentiment concerning the street railway problem, there was an evidence
-of the development of a mass consciousness, a mass will, which some
-time in these cities of ours will justify democracy. It is of course
-the most difficult process in the world, for a mass of two hundred
-thousand people to unite in the expression of a will concerning a
-single abstract proposition. The mass to be sure can now and then as it
-were rear its head and blaze forth wrath and accomplish some instant
-work of destruction; even if it be nothing more than the destruction
-of an individual reputation. That is why the recall is so popular and
-so generously and frequently employed in those cities that have it.
-In such elections, with their personal and human center of interest,
-the people all turn out, while in a referendum involving some abstract
-principle, the vote cast is always small. That is why the referendum is
-so important, and the recall, relatively, so unimportant; the use of
-the first in the long run will afford a fine schooling for the people.
-
-The most familiar expression of this rage of course was the clamor
-for the indictment and imprisonment of someone connected in sinister
-ways with the company, a demand with which I never had the slightest
-sympathy, to which I could never yield the slightest acquiescence. What
-good, though all the poor and miserable servitors of privilege were put
-in prison, while privilege itself remained? Such clamors have had their
-results; a few more broken lives, a little more sorrow and shame in the
-world, and the clamor ceases, and things go on the same as before.
-
-It is this instability, this variableness, this weariness of the
-public mind, on which privilege depends, with a cynical trust so often
-justified that it might breed cynicism in all observant and reflective
-natures. The street railway proprietors in Toledo expected each
-election to demonstrate this weariness in the people, and to restore
-them to, or at least confirm them in, the privileges they had enjoyed
-under the old régime.
-
-For a people to assume and for a decade consistently to maintain an
-attitude toward a public question therefore was a triumph of the
-democratic principle. That is what the people of Cleveland did; that is
-what the people of Detroit did; that is what the people of Toledo did.
-The successive stages of this process were most interesting to observe,
-the more especially since they caught in the movement even some of the
-street railway group and its political confreres themselves.
-
-In its origin the public will was destructive no doubt, that was the
-inarticulate disgust born of the long endurance of inadequate service,
-all the miseries of that contemptuous exploitation of the people so
-familiar in all the cities of America. To this, on the customary
-revelations of a corrupt domination of the political machinery of the
-city by the street railway company, there was added a moral rage--the
-one element needed to provide the spark for the mine. At first this
-rage against the company was such that any action taken by officials
-was popular so long as it injured or harassed or was somehow inimical
-to the company. And in consequence there was developed a kind of local
-jingoism or chauvinism; whenever popularity slackened or it was felt
-necessary to remind the electorate back in the ward of the sleepless
-vigilance of their representative in the council, a councilman had
-only to introduce some resolution that would be against the company’s
-interest. It was unfortunate, and had its evil phase, as any suggestion
-of intellectual dishonesty must ever have, and it made serious dealing
-with the subject extremely difficult and hazardous. It was difficult to
-recognize any of the company’s rights; and it was always at the risk
-of misunderstanding, and with the certainty of misrepresentation that
-this was done. But of course it was necessary to do this, in the course
-of the long and complicated transaction, that constant and inflexible
-opposition of the public with the private interest which now assumed
-the aspect of a noisy and furious war, and now the softer phases of
-diplomatic negotiations. Of course there were always those in town
-who knew exactly what was to be done; they could settle the vexatious
-problem with a facile gesture, between the whiffs of a cigarette on the
-back platform of a street car, or in an after dinner speech between
-the puffs of a cigar. The one was apt to advise that the “traction
-company be brought to time at once,” the other that an “equitable”
-settlement be “arranged” by conservative business men. Meanwhile the
-problem obviously consisted in the necessity of recognizing the private
-right in the proprietors and of securing the public right to the
-people, and to do this it was necessary to search out, and isolate,
-like some malignant organism, the injustice that somewhere lurked in
-this complex and irritating association.
-
-In my first campaign we proposed to grant no renewal of franchises at
-a rate of fare higher than three cents. Jones had advised it, and I
-had been committed to it long before. It was Tom Johnson’s old slogan,
-and it was popular. I used to explain to the crowds my own conviction
-that the problem never would be settled until we had municipal
-ownership, but there was in Toledo in those days very little sentiment
-for municipal ownership, and my conviction met with no applause, and
-was received only with mild toleration. In the second campaign, there
-was more indorsement; in the third there was a certain enthusiasm for
-the principle, in the fourth it seemed to be almost unanimous, and
-now the principle has become one of the cardinal articles of faith. I
-do not wish it to appear that I had converted all these people to my
-view; I had not tried to do that, and doubtless could not have done so
-had I tried, but the conviction came by the very necessities of the
-situation.
-
-
-
-
-LIX
-
-
-Those men who ventured early into the street-car business were
-pioneers; they assumed large risks, and they rendered a public service.
-They had the courage to undertake experiments; they had faith that the
-town would grow and become in time a city. And they staked all on the
-chance. They had little difficulty, if they had any at all, in securing
-franchises from the city to use the streets, for the people of the city
-were glad to have the convenience of transportation. Indeed many of
-the lines were community enterprises, organized by the men of a given
-neighborhood for the sake of the transportation merely, and not with
-any notion of personal profit.
-
-Franchise ordinances then were loosely drawn; men had no conception of
-what changes the future was to bring about, they lacked the imagination
-to prefigure it, the faith to believe it, and so the street-car
-promoters who came along a little later were the heirs of advantages
-which otherwise they would not have obtained. Under these advantages,
-these privileges, they or their immediate grantees were enabled to take
-over for their own use and profit the enormous social values that were
-being created in cities, not by them, but by all those families who
-moved in, and toiled, and wrought and built the modern city.
-
-This was the first phase of the street-car business, its experimental
-stage, commensurate with the rapid, disordered growth of the city in
-the middle and western states of America. Few indeed of the pioneers
-in the business became wealthy; many no doubt lost their money, though
-they tried in vain to vary or improve their fortunes through the
-changes that were rapidly developing the mighty problem of transporting
-the crowded populations of our cities. There were, for instance, the
-days when mules were substituted for horses, and sacrificed rapidly and
-ruthlessly on the principle that it was cheaper to replace them than
-to care for them, a system about as bad in its consuming cruelty as
-that adopted by some factories with reference to their human employees.
-Then, in a few of the larger cities, there were the cable cars, but the
-second phase came with the adoption of electricity as a motive power,
-and the coincident development, almost a miracle, of the towns of
-middle and western America into real cities.
-
-With electricity as a motive power, and the consequent cheapening of
-operation, the street-car business entered upon its second phase, and
-it ushered in at once the era of speculation in franchises and social
-values, watered stocks and bonds. The era of exploitation came upon us,
-and out of these privileges, out of other privileges to conduct other
-public utilities, i. e., privileges to absorb social values, enormous
-fortunes were made, with all the evils that come with a vulgar,
-newly-rich plutocracy. To keep, and extend, and renew these privileges,
-they must have their lawyers, and their newspapers to mislead and
-debauch the public mind; they must go into politics, organize and
-control the machines of both parties, bribe councilmen and legislators
-and jurors, and even have judges on the bench subservient to their
-will, so that the laws of the state and the grants of the municipality
-might be construed in their favor. The sordid, tragic tale of their
-domination of municipal politics is now universally known, and in
-the tale may be read the causes of most of our municipal misrule. It
-happened in Toledo as it happened everywhere, such is the inexorability
-of the general law, and the popular reaction was the same.
-
-And so we came upon a new, the third stage, since I have set out to be
-scientific in analysis of tractions, and the very name by which these
-big enterprises have latterly been called, that is, public service
-corporations, suggests the meaning and indicates the significance of
-that era. Two facts, or principles, had become perfectly apparent;
-first, that transportation, the primal necessity of a modern city, is
-a natural monopoly, and must be treated as such. Second, that if these
-public utility corporations are to continue to hold these monopolies,
-they must become public service corporations indeed, that is, they must
-serve the public. No more, then, the old corporation contempt of the
-people, at least outwardly expressed, but a softer voice in addressing
-them, and a new respect, perhaps grown sincere. Their old lobbyists
-disappeared from the council chamber and the city hall--for eight years
-they were not seen there. The companies had been primarily profit
-making institutions and only incidentally for public service, they were
-operated for the private benefit of their owners in contempt of public
-right; the service was secondary.
-
-We may say that this third era is the era of regulation, or, as it
-is more apt to be, attempted regulation, by the city, in which the
-principle of the public interest as paramount to the private interest
-is to be the basis on which a private company shall be permitted to
-operate. This era will endure long enough to demonstrate itself a
-failure, the general mind will continue to learn, to inform itself,
-democracy will develop new functions, and we shall enter on the fourth,
-and perhaps the final stage, that of municipal ownership.
-
-
-
-
-LX
-
-
-We came upon the scene just when the discussion was emerging from the
-second into the third of those phases into which I have divided the
-development of the problem. The franchises granted almost a generation
-before were about to expire, and new arrangements between the city
-and the traction company, the Big Con, as the newspaper argot would
-have it. Chicago had already, or almost, gone through her settlement;
-and though the settlement was pretty bad, it nevertheless recognized
-the principle that the value of a street railway franchise is a
-public, social, or communal value, produced by the community, and
-therefore belonged to the community. In Toledo the company had but
-about $5,000,000 of actual investment, while it had a capitalization
-in stocks and bonds of nearly $30,000,000, and the difference of
-$25,000,000 was the community value which the magnates had been
-exploiting for their own benefit. We simply proposed that this value
-should be returned to the people. We proposed, then, that the rate
-of fare to be charged by the company should be large enough and only
-large enough to pay a reasonable return on the actual investment and
-to provide good service, a service that was to be dictated, regulated
-and controlled by the city. This principle had been established, or
-at least admitted in the Chicago settlement, and the same thing had
-been done, though on a sounder and more scientific basis in Cleveland,
-where Tom Johnson’s long and gallant and intelligent contest already
-in effect had been won. Over in Detroit the same principles had been
-deduced, though the discussion there was so prolonged, as proved
-ultimately to be the case in Toledo, that the people demanded municipal
-ownership, without passing through the intervening experimental stage
-of regulation and control.
-
-There is of course nothing sacrosanct in three-cent fares. The movement
-of the people, which at the same time, in the old Russian phrase of
-Kropotkin, was a movement toward the people, had become an agitation
-for this rate. It had been begun years before by Mayor Pingree in
-Detroit, and was taken up in Cleveland by Tom Johnson, whose whole
-career in a romantic manner, at once embodied and illustrated the
-history of the street railway problem in the American city. The
-adoption of the phrase as a shibboleth or slogan of the progressive
-forces was simply and easily explained, for in the mind of Johnson and
-in the minds of those who were like him or were influenced by him, the
-difference between the prevailing fare of five cents and the proposed
-fare of three cents somehow measured the franchise value, or that
-social value which belonged to the people. Tom Johnson, indeed, used
-often to say that he favored a three-cent fare simply because it was
-two cents nearer nothing, thereby revealing a glimpse of his dream of
-a social order in which the municipality would provide transportation
-just as it provides sidewalks, sewers, bridges, etc., all of which are
-paid for at the treasury in taxes. It was believed and held by all of
-us, that this franchise value should be reclaimed or retained by the
-people in this direct and simple manner of lowering the fare.
-
-There was never any notion, of course, of interfering in any way with
-the existing rights of the company; it was to have all that to which it
-was entitled under its old franchises or contracts. But it was proposed
-that when we came to draw a new contract, the political relations
-of the city and the company were to be considered as of paramount
-importance, using the word “political,” of course in its old authentic
-sense, and not as expressing in any wise the sinister thing it has come
-to connote in the popular mind. We were determined to meet not only the
-conditions of the present, but to do what our forerunners in office
-had never done, that is, to protect the interests of the people of the
-future. I suppose this sounds very much like the trite generalities
-of the politician, but we sincerely tried to express the theory with
-definiteness and particularity. We sought not only a reduction of
-the fare and a regulation of the service in the public interest, but
-we wished to provide for that future day when, as a result of the
-certain growth of the city, the sure improvement in transportation
-facilities, and the inevitable development of the democratic function,
-the municipality is to undertake these enterprises as a proper public
-function.
-
-It was these principles we tried to bear in mind in those long
-negotiations which we held all during the months of one spring and
-summer over that big table in the council chamber. We were nervous when
-we entered upon this work, nervous as are those who enter the finals
-in some tournament of sport; we did not know much about the subject,
-and we were confronted by the street railway magnates and their clever
-lawyers. But we could learn as we went along, and we always had to our
-assistance Newton Baker over in Cleveland, and Peter Witt, and Carl
-Nau, whom we had employed as the city’s accountant when the time came
-at last when we could examine the company’s books; they had all gone
-through the long civil war in Cleveland, as had Professor Edward W.
-Bemis, whom we afterwards engaged in his quality of expert adviser on
-valuations.
-
-Perhaps at first we laid too great stress on three-cent fares, though
-I do not know how we could have done otherwise. Dr. Delos F. Wilcox,
-who has written an excellent work on the whole subject, had advised us
-indeed that a disproportionate amount of energy and effort had already
-been expended--not by us, only, but by all those in other cities who
-were in similar struggles--in the direction of low fares. He pointed
-out, I remember, that five cents in that day was worth little more
-than three cents or three and a half cents had been a decade before,
-according to the scale of prices then current; he thought that in
-terms of general prices the public had already secured three-cent
-fares without knowing it. It was a question of some subtlety and
-some intricacy, to be left to economists; we could not feel that our
-battle had been won so easily, and we did not undertake to console
-the people with the recondite theory. We had before us, in vision,
-and sometimes in their corporeal reality, the weary and exasperated
-strap-hangers, and the human sardines on the rear platform with their
-valid complaints; they all wanted low fares, good service, and seats.
-An old street-car man once said that to provide seats for everybody is
-an impossibility, and to prove this assertion he humorously classified
-humanity into three groups: “workers, clerkers and shirkers.” Each
-morning, he said, the workers go down at seven, the clerkers at eight,
-and the shirkers at nine, and that therefore it is easy to provide them
-all with seats in the morning hours; but that as all three classes
-wish to go home at the same hour in the evening, it is then physically
-impossible to provide them all with seats.
-
-But whether or not too great stress was three-cent fares we learned
-during those months of wearisome and futile negotiations, that the
-theory was not scientific. The people were entitled to their money’s
-worth in service, the company to adequate pay for the service it
-rendered, and as the basis of the whole transaction was a public
-necessity, the city had the right to control the service, to dictate
-what it should be. The old theory was that the people existed for
-the street-car company; the new principle was quite the reverse; the
-street-car company was but a temporary instrument of social service,
-and the social right was paramount to all others.
-
-The company therefore was entitled to a fare sufficient to enable
-it to provide the service thus demanded, and to do this it must
-charge enough to pay its operating expenses, taxes, and interest,
-enough to meet the cost of improvements and depreciation, and to
-pay a reasonable return on its investment. It was not entitled to
-any speculative return. There was no longer on the company’s part
-that risk its predecessors in interest, the pioneers or promoters or
-whatever they were, had been compelled to take; its investment was no
-longer precarious; nothing, indeed, could be more certain than the
-stability of street railway investments. Their securities, based upon
-a public necessity, supported by the diurnal comings and goings of all
-those thousands and hundreds of thousands of people, had become in a
-certain very real sense, a fixed burden upon the people of the city,
-a burden as fixed and inevitable as taxes. In the hands of private
-owners such securities, under a franchise ordinance properly drawn,
-partake largely of the character of municipal bonds, which indeed
-they resemble in fundamentals and ends. The issue of securities was
-therefore to be as jealously guarded as an issue of municipal bonds,
-and overcapitalization, the prolific source of so much evil, was to be
-prevented. The enterprise had become as stable as any human institution
-can be, and with the limited risk there was to be applied the
-familiar principle of limited profit. The principle was recognized in
-Cleveland, where the return fixed as reasonable was 6 per cent., which
-is but little more than municipal bonds pay. And when this principle
-is established, municipal ownership almost automatically follows;
-investors used to large speculative profits, are ready to sell out to
-the municipality; thus, by indirection, democracy comes into her own.
-
-It was easy enough to fix most of the elements of this return; the
-accountants could do that, in their intricate discussions of car-miles
-and curves and straight lines of depreciation and points of saturation
-in traffic, and all that, but the tremendous difficulty was to
-determine just what the investment was and what was a reasonable return
-on that investment.
-
-It is this pass to which all such negotiations, conducted in sincerity,
-come at last; it is this on which the whole question hinges, it is
-this that might as well be done first as last, namely, to evaluate
-the property of the company. It is necessary not only to get at the
-investment and the return thereon, but to ascertain what the city must
-pay when it comes to take over the street railway system.
-
-But we did not do it at first, and we did not do it at last. At first
-it was impossible to get it into the councilmanic head that it was at
-all necessary, especially since it cost money to retain the “experts,”
-as they are called, to do the work. They were prone to that old vice
-of the human mind which leads it to imagine that when it has stated
-the end to be achieved it has at the same time stated the means of
-achieving it,--like the advice to the bashful man “to assume an easy
-and graceful attitude, especially in the presence of ladies”--and
-when council was finally convinced and had provided the funds for the
-experts, we could not agree as to who should be employed. That is, the
-human equation was apparent. There was unhappily nobody but men to make
-evaluations, and all the engineers who were competent were employed
-by street railway companies, and expected or hoped to continue to be
-employed by street railway companies, and they had evolved so many
-fantastic notions of “intangible” value that they could account for
-almost any excess in artificial capitalization, and make the grossest
-exhibition of corporate greed in watering stocks appear like veritable
-self denial in frugality and economy. We selected Professor Bemis to
-represent the city, because he was one of the few of the “experts”
-committed to the people’s cause; he had advised Tom Johnson throughout
-his long war. But the company never could be brought to select anybody,
-or to agree upon the third arbiter--even to accept the Judge of the
-United States Circuit Court when, against the advice of the whole
-administrative circle, I proposed him.
-
-Again and again in our prolonged negotiations we returned, as in a
-vicious circle, to this point; again and again we reached this impasse.
-
-
-
-
-LXI
-
-
-Meanwhile, the franchises were expiring, and the time drew on when
-the company would have no rights left in the streets. And here was
-the opportunity for the mind that had the power, or the defect, of
-isolating propositions, of regarding them as absolute, of ignoring
-the intricate relativity of life. “Put the company off the streets,”
-was the cry; “make it stop running its cars; bring it to its knees.”
-However, we could not bring the company to its knees without bringing
-the riders to their feet; we could not put the company off the streets,
-without at the same time and by the same process, putting the people on
-the streets; when the cars stopped running the people began walking.
-The public convenience was paramount.
-
-Then Mr. Cornell Schreiber, the City Solicitor, hit upon a plan. He
-drew an ordinance providing that the company could use the streets
-wherein its rights had expired, only on the condition that it carry
-passengers at a three-cent fare, and the ordinance was at once passed
-by the council. It was of doubtful legality, but it had its effect in
-a world of human beings. Before it was effective even, people were
-tendering three cents as fare; and in the face of the difficulty of
-dealing with a whole populace in this mood, the company agreed to put
-in force a temporary rate of three cents during the rush hours of the
-morning and evening, and it lowered fares in the other hours and made
-further concessions. And there we let the matter rest.
-
-And, since the education of the general mind never stops, the people
-were learning. Their patience was time and again exhausted by the
-unavoidable length of the franchise dispute, for the problem was
-to them, as to most Americans, new, the legal questions in which
-the whole subject was prolific had not been settled, there was the
-interruption of business and convenience and pleasure attending long
-continued negotiations, and perhaps more than all that irritation
-of the public temper which proceeds from all communal disputes. The
-company’s representatives counted on all this to tire the people out;
-and since the controversy assumed a political complexion, and there was
-as always the difficulty of sustaining the mass will, they had hopes
-that by delay the people in weariness would surrender. The time came
-when the sentiment in favor of municipal ownership was so strong that
-the Independents adopted the view I had expressed and declared it to be
-their purpose to grant no renewals of franchises at all, but to let the
-company operate on sufferance until the city itself could take over the
-lines.
-
-During the course of the long struggle a change had come over the
-spirit of the people, and this change had been reflected in the laws.
-The greatest difficulty had been found in the city’s want of autonomy;
-the cities of Ohio not only lacked the power to own and operate public
-utilities, but they even had few rights in contracting with the private
-companies. The street-car companies had always been more ably and
-assiduously represented in the state legislature than had the people
-themselves; the people had not had the strength to wrest these powers
-from the legislature, and indeed, in their patience and toryism, they
-had not made many efforts to do so. Thus our campaign led us out into
-the state, and the end, toward which we had to struggle, was the free
-city; the last of our demands was home rule. In the relations between
-public utility corporations and the municipality, our cities were a
-whole generation behind the cities of Great Britain, Germany, France
-and Belgium. Indeed, in relation to all social functions we were not
-much further advanced than was Rome in the second century.
-
-As to the medieval cities of Italy, the free cities of Germany and the
-cities of Great Britain, struggling all of them against some overlord,
-some king, noble or bishop, so at last there came to our cities a
-realization of the vassalage they were under. Their destinies were in
-the hands of the country politicians in the state legislature who had
-no sympathy with city problems, because they had no understanding of
-them. Oftenest indeed they had a contempt for them, they all held to
-the Puritan ideal. But a demand for freedom went up from Cleveland,
-from Cincinnati, from Columbus, from Toledo. The legislature began
-to make its reluctant concessions; it gave cities, for instance, the
-right to have street railway franchises referred to the people for
-approval or rejection. And at last in the great awakening, the state
-constitution was ultimately amended and cities were given home rule. It
-was the irony of life that Golden Rule Jones and Tom Johnson could not
-have lived to see that day!
-
-
-
-
-LXII
-
-
-A few weeks after my election to a fourth term I wrote out and gave
-to the reporters a statement in which I said that I would not be
-again a candidate for the office of mayor. I had been thinking of my
-old ambition in letters, and of those novels I had planned to write.
-Already I had been six years in office and I had not written a novel
-in all that time. And here I was, just entering upon another term. If
-ever I were to write those novels I would better be about it, before
-I grew too old and too tired. The politicians, regarding all such
-statements as but the professional insincerities of their trade, could
-not consider my decision seriously of course, or credit its intention.
-They were somewhat like my friends in the literary world, or like
-some of them at least, who were unable to understand why I should not
-continue indefinitely to run for mayor, though the politicians were not
-so innocent and credulous, since they did not believe that I could as
-inevitably continue to be elected. I suppose it was the life of action
-that appealed to my literary friends or to their literary imaginations;
-they had the human habit of disparaging their own calling, and, if they
-did not hold my performance in that field as lightly as the politicians
-held it, they wondered why I did not prefer politics. The politicians
-in their harangues spoke of my writings bitterly, as though they were
-a personal affront to their intelligences, and urged the electorate to
-rebuke me for spending my time upon such nonsense. If I had not known
-that they had never read my books, or any books, all this might have
-been chilling to the literary aspiration, but I knew them to their
-heart’s core, where there was nothing but contempt for books, and, as I
-sometimes thought, yielding too much to cynicism and despair, nothing
-but contempt for any sort of beauty or goodly impulse. Of course, they
-were not so bad as that; out of politics they were as good as anyone or
-as anything; we instinctively recognize the vitiating quality of the
-political atmosphere in our constant use of the phrase “if it could
-only be taken out of politics,” as with the tariff, the currency,
-municipal government, etc. But my friends in the political line could
-join my friends in the literary line in the surprise they felt at my
-decision to retire at the end of that last term. The politicians did
-not think I meant what I said, of course; it is quite impossible for a
-politician to imagine a man’s meaning what he says, since politicians
-so seldom mean what they say themselves; they considered it merely
-as bad politics to have said such a thing at all. “It’ll embarrass
-you when you run again,” they would warn me in their bland _naïveté_.
-It did not embarrass me, however, because I would not and did not
-run again, though I had to decline a nomination or two before they
-were convinced, but their own lack of faith, those who were still
-Independents, at least, proved an ultimate embarrassment to them, for
-they neglected to agree upon a candidate to succeed me, and by the next
-election they had grouped themselves in factions, each with its own
-candidate. Perhaps this untoward result came to pass as much because
-the independent movement by that time had become the Independent party,
-as for any other reason discernible to the mind of man; at least, it
-was disparaged by the use of that term, which implied its own reproach
-in Toledo, and its sponsors conducted themselves so much after the
-historic precedents of faction in political parties, by separating into
-the inevitable right and left wing, that they managed to get themselves
-soundly beaten.
-
-Eight years is a long time to serve in any office. My grandfather
-had given four years to the Civil War, and I had found the mayor’s
-office as trying, as difficult, and as alien as he had found his
-martial experience. The truth is, that long before the eight years
-were over the irritation of constant, persistent, nagging criticism
-had got on my nerves, and, besides the pain of misunderstanding and
-misrepresentation, I grew to have a perfect detestation for those
-manipulations which are the technic of politics. And, then, one cannot
-be a mayor always, and it were better to retire than to be dismissed.
-
-“But I thought you didn’t mind criticism?” a man said to me one day. “I
-always supposed that after a while one became callous.”
-
-My dear friend Bishop Williams of Detroit was at the table, and I shall
-ever be grateful to him for the smile of instant comprehension and
-sympathy with which he illuminated the reply he made before I had time
-to speak.
-
-“Yes, callous,” he remarked, “or--raw.”
-
-It was precisely that. There were those who were always saying to me:
-“I know you don’t mind what they say about you, but I never could stand
-it; I’m too sensitive.” It was a daily experience, almost as difficult
-to endure as the visits of those who came to report the latest
-ill-natured comment; they did it because they were friends and felt
-that I should know it. But Bishop Williams knows life and understands
-human nature more completely and more tolerantly than any clergyman I
-ever knew.
-
-And then politics have the dreadful effect of beating all the freshness
-out of a man; if they do not make him timid, they make him hesitant
-and cautious, provident of his opinion; he goes about with his finger
-on his lips, fearful of utterance, and, when he does speak, it is
-in guarded syllables which conceal his true thought; he cultivates
-solemnity and the meretricious art of posing; humor is to be avoided,
-since the crowd is perplexed by humor and so resents it, and will have
-only the stale rudimentary wit of those stories which men, straining to
-be funny, match at the banquet board. And when he indulges himself in
-public speech it is to pour forth a tide of words,
-
- Full of sound and fury,
- Signifying nothing.
-
-I used to be haunted continually by a horrid fear that I should lose
-the possibility of ever winning the power of utterance, since no such
-prudence is at all compatible with the practice of any art. For art
-must, first of all, be utter sincerity, the artist’s business is to
-think out his thoughts about life to the very end, and to speak them
-as plainly as the power and the ability to speak them have been given
-to him; he must not be afraid to offend; indeed, if he succeed at all,
-he must certainly offend in the beginning. I am quite aware that I may
-seem inconsistent in this notion, since I have intimated my belief
-that Jones was an artist; and so he was, in a way, and, if I do not
-fly to the refuge of trite sayings and allege him as the exception
-that proves the rule, I am sure that I may say, and, if I have in the
-least been able to convey any distinct conception of his personality,
-the reader will agree with me when I say, that he was _sui generis_.
-And besides it was not as a politician that he won his success. Had
-he ventured outside the political jurisdiction of his own city the
-politicians instantly would have torn him asunder because he had not
-been “regular.” And, that, I find, when I set it down, is precisely
-what I am trying to say about the artist; he must not be regular.
-Every great artist in the world has been irregular, as irregular as
-Corot, going forth in the early morning in search of the elusive and
-ineffable light of dawn as it spread over the earth and stole through
-the greenwoods at Barbizon, or as Manet, or Monet, or any other man who
-never knew appreciation in his lifetime. And Jones and all like him are
-brothers of those incomparable artists; they are not kin in any way to
-the world’s politicians.
-
-And then so many of the old guard were dead. A strange and tragic fate
-had pursued us, overtaking, one after another, our very best--Jones,
-first of all, and then Oren Dunham, E. B. Southard, Dad McCullough,
-Franklin Macomber, Lyman Wachenheimer, Dr. Donnelly, William H. Maher.
-These brave, true souls were literally burned out in the fires of that
-fierce and relentless conflict, and then there came that soft autumn
-night when seven of our young men in a launch were run down by a
-freighter on Maumee Bay and drowned, every one of them.
-
-I shall never forget Johnson Thurston as he sat in my office during
-that last campaign, recalling these men who had been to him as comrades
-in arms, and, what affected him more sorely, the fact that in our
-overabundant political success the ideals that had beckoned them on had
-become blurred in the vision of those who came after them. I detected
-him in the act of drawing his handkerchief furtively from his pocket,
-and hastily pressing it to his eyes, as he stammered something in
-apology for his emotion....
-
-Thus there came the irresistible conviction that the work of the
-politician was not for me. There was other work I wished to do. I
-doubt whether the politician’s work is ever permanent, though it is
-too much to say that it lacks real value; I have never been able to
-think it out. The work of few men, of course, is permanent, sometimes
-the work of the artist least of any. But, however ephemeral, if the
-artist’s work is done in sincerity, it is of far greater worth than the
-work of the politician, if for no other reason, than because, to recall
-again those words of George Moore which can never lose their charm or
-their consolation, the traffic of the politician is with the affairs of
-this world, while the artist is concerned with the dreams, the visions,
-and the aspirations of a world that is beyond this. I have quoted them
-before in these pages, I know; they cannot be quoted too often, or too
-often read by us Americans, if, by pondering them, we may plumb their
-profound depths. For we all read human history too superficially. Kings
-and emperors, princes and dukes, prime ministers and generals may
-fascinate the imagination for a while, but if life is ever to unfold
-its possibilities to the later consciousness, these become but the
-phantoms of vanished realms, and there emerge more gracious figures,
-Phidias and Theocritus; Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio; Raphael,
-Leonardo da Vinci, Titian, and Correggio; Donatello and Michelangelo;
-Sidney, Spenser, Tyndale, Shakespeare, and Ben Jonson. These and the
-other artists and humanists of their times are veritable personalities
-in our world, far more than Elizabeth, or the dukes of the Medici,
-or even Pericles. For from periods such as these their names made
-illustrious, from the Revival of Learning, the Renaissance, the
-Reformation, man emerged as Man, clothed with the beauty and power of
-an emancipated spirit. In the freedom of the mind, the spontaneous
-outburst of ecstasy and delight, the new-born possibility of loveliness
-and harmony and joyous existence, they not only exalted life with
-art, but gained the courage to undertake sterner examinations of its
-mystery. And this same perennial spirit of humanism built, not only the
-proud and voluptuous cities of Tuscany and Lombardy, but the wealthy
-free cities of Flanders and Germany--and it discovered America, not the
-America of the senses alone, but the larger, nobler America of the mind.
-
-And, surely, this America is not always to bear the reproach of having
-no music, and so little painting and literature of her own. Surely
-the aspirations of this new land, with the irresistible impulse of
-the democratic spirit and humanistic culture are to find emotional
-expression in the terms and forms of enduring beauty. It was this
-sublime adventure that interested me far more than the trivial and
-repulsive wrangles of the politicians....
-
-Our opponents had never known how wholly right they were in their
-reiterated charge that I was but a dreamer; incorrigible dreamer
-indeed, and nothing more!
-
-But in these years I had given my city the best there was in me,
-little as that was, and when the legislature made provision for the
-constitutional convention, which met at Columbus, and, after months of
-deliberation, submitted a long list of amendments to the fundamental
-law of the state, among them that one which granted home rule to
-cities, I felt, for it was an emotion deeper than thought, that if
-the people could only be induced to approve that amendment the long
-anticipated and happy release was at hand. We had been engaged on an
-impossible task; we had been trying to regenerate the city by means
-of electing to office persons who in themselves would reflect the
-communal aspiration, but this could not be continued indefinitely; the
-cities could achieve no genuine reform until they were autonomous.
-With home rule democracy would have the means of development, and the
-people the opportunity of self-expression; they would have to depend on
-themselves; they could no longer, with an Oriental fatalism, neglect
-their own destiny and then lay the blame for the inevitable catastrophe
-on the mayor, or the political boss, or the country members of the
-legislature.
-
-There were, if I remember well, about fifty of these amendments, among
-them provisions for the initiative and referendum, woman suffrage,
-and many other progressive and radical doctrines, in addition to our
-beloved home rule for cities, and, when the campaign opened in behalf
-of their adoption, Newton Baker, who a year before had been elected
-mayor of Cleveland, proposed that he and I make a tour of the state in
-a motor car and speak for the home rule amendment, since all the others
-had their devoted proponents.
-
-Nothing more delightful than a campaign tour in company with Newton
-Baker could be imagined, and I had visions of our little caravan,
-out on the country roads of Ohio, going from town to town, and of
-our standing up in the car and speaking to the crowds of farmers who
-had come into the town to hear us, or having come for their Saturday
-marketing, would pause while we told them of the needs of cities. I had
-always believed that if the farmers could only be brought to understand
-the cities they would not be so obdurate with us, but would enlarge our
-opportunities of self-expression and self-government. I could fancy
-myself standing up and leaning over the side of the car and talking to
-them, while they stood there in their drab garments, their faces drawn
-in mental concentration, looking at us out of eyes around which were
-little wrinkles of suspicion, wondering what designs we had upon them;
-at first they would stand afar off, perhaps on the other side of the
-street, as they used to do when we went out to speak to them in the
-judicial campaigns; but then presently they would draw a little closer,
-until at last they crowded about the car, staying on to the end, and
-then perhaps even vouchsafing us the conservative approval of scattered
-applause. Or I would dramatize Baker as speaking, while I sat there
-utterly charmed with his manner, his clear and polished expression,
-and envied him his ability to speak with such surprising fluency,
-such ease and grace, as if the fact of putting words together so that
-they would form clear, logical and related sentences were nothing
-at all, and wondering why it was that everyone that heard was not
-instantly converted to his plan, whatever it was.... And then, between
-times, Baker would not be talking politics at all; he would not be
-indulging in politician’s low gossip, slandering every one he knew--the
-ineradicable and, I suppose, inevitable habit of politicians, because
-in public they are obliged to be so suave in utterance and so smiling
-and ingratiating in manner. Baker was not like them at all; he knew a
-vast deal of literature and could talk about books with comprehension;
-if you mentioned a passage from John Eglinton, or a scene from
-Tourgenieff, or a poem of Yeats or Masefield, he would know what you
-were talking about; he is not one of those who, by the little deceit of
-a thin, factitious smile of appreciation, pretend an acquaintance they
-have never enjoyed. Baker has been able to keep the habit of reading,
-even in politics, a singular achievement. Only he would not read novels
-that were in the somber or tragic manner; I used to tell him that this
-was a sign he was growing old, since only the buoyancy of youth can
-risk its spirit in such darkened paths. For instance, he would never
-read my novel about prisons, “The Turn of the Balance”; he said he knew
-it was too terrible. But I did not reproach or blame him. I no longer
-like to read terrible books myself, since life is....
-
-But that pretty scheme fell through, our tour was abandoned, and we
-went separate ways, though we did have the joy of speaking together on
-several occasions, once here in Toledo, where we opened the campaign
-in old Memorial Hall, and again in a town down the state, and at last
-in two great meetings in Cleveland, where they got out the old tent
-Johnson had used in his campaigns, and the audiences its canvas walls
-sheltered, there under the flaring torches, were inspired by his
-spirit as once they had been by his presence, and with the enthusiasm
-of them fresh in my heart I set out from Cleveland that last week of
-the campaign for the long drive to Columbus, where the campaign was to
-close.
-
-It was a hot day in early September; the clouds were piled high in
-the west as we started, and the air was suffocating in its dense
-humidity; plainly it was to be a day of thunder and lightning and
-tropical showers. My friend, Henry W. Ashley, who understands democracy
-to the fundamentals (his father was the friend of Lincoln and wrote
-the Fifteenth Amendment), was with us, for he was ever an interested
-spectator of our politics. We went by the way of Oberlin because
-Ashley wished to see the college campus and indulge some sentimental
-reflections in a scene that had been so vitally associated with the old
-struggle of the abolitionists. The storm which had been so ominously
-threatening all the morning broke upon us as we slowly made our way
-through the country south of Oberlin, as desolate a tract as one could
-find, and we were charged as heavily with depression as were the clouds
-with rain as we thought of the futility of attempting to convince
-the inhabitants of such a land that they had any responsibility for
-the problems that were vexing the people in the cities of the state.
-I remember a village through which we passed; it was about noon,
-according to our watches, though, since in the country the people
-reject Standard time and regulate their leisurely affairs by “God’s
-time,” noon was half an hour gone, and, after their dinners, they were
-seeking the relaxation they did not seem to need. The rain had ceased,
-and on the village green under the clearing sky the old men had come
-out to pitch horseshoes. Among them was a patriarch whose long white
-beard, stained with the juice of the tobacco he resolutely chewed,
-swept the belt of his slack trousers; he was in bare feet. The human
-foot after it has trod this earth for three score years and ten is not
-a thing of beauty, and Ashley joked me, as we labored in the mud of
-those deplorable roads, for my temerity in hoping that we could convert
-that antediluvian to our way of thinking.
-
-Had the task been wholly mine I should not have undertaken it, and, of
-course, in that instance I did not attempt it; the old barefoot quoit
-player stood to us a symbol of the implicit and stubborn conservatism
-of the rural districts. But there were others in the field, an army of
-them, indeed; Herbert Bigelow, the radical preacher of Cincinnati, who
-had been president of the constitutional convention; Henry T. Hunt,
-Cincinnati’s young mayor; and, most influential of all of them perhaps,
-James M. Cox, destined that autumn to be elected governor of Ohio.
-And, besides all these, there was the spirit of the times, penetrating
-at last with its inspiring ideas even the conservatism of the country
-people. I was confident that the old man could be counted upon to vote
-for the initiative and referendum at any rate, since one so free and
-democratic in costume and manner must be of the democratic spirit
-as well, though I had my doubts of him in that moment when he should
-put on his spectacles and examine the amendments abolishing capital
-punishment, and granting home rule to cities.
-
-But the sun came out again as we climbed the hills that overlook
-Mansfield, to command a lovely scene, broad fertile valleys all renewed
-by the rain and flooded with sunshine, and I remembered that Altgeld
-had once lived there, and beheld this same landscape, that he had
-taught school in that town and from there had gone away with a regiment
-to fight in the Civil War. The chauffeur got out and took the chains
-off the tires, while we sat silent under the influences of the beauty
-of those little Ohio hills. And then, as we started on, the clouds
-returned, the scene darkened, and it began to rain again, and, before
-we knew, the car skidded and we were in the ditch. The wife of the
-farmer whose garden fence we had broken in our accident revealed all
-the old rural dislike of the urbanite; she said she was glad of our
-fate, since motorists were forever racing by and killing her chickens,
-and with this difficulty I left Ashley to deal, since he had been
-president of a railroad and was experienced in adjusting claims, and,
-after he had parleyed a while, I saw him take out his pocketbook, and
-then the chauffeur got the car out of the ditch and we were on our way
-again.
-
-The scenes and the experiences of that journey remain with me in a
-distinctness that is keen in my senses still; because I suppose I felt
-that in the race with time we were then engaged upon, if we were to
-reach Columbus that evening for the meeting which was to close the
-campaign, I was in a symbolic manner racing with my own fate; that
-campaign a success and I should be free. I should have liked to linger
-a while in Delaware, where I had spent a portion of my boyhood when my
-father was a pastor there, and where in the University my uncle William
-F. Whitlock had been a professor of Latin and literature for half a
-century, dean of the faculty, and, for a while, president. As we passed
-by the chapel in the shade of the old elms on the campus I felt that I
-could still hear the solemn strains of the noble hymn they sang at his
-funeral, the lusty young voices of a thousand students, united with
-the quivering trebles of some old clergymen, in “Faith of Our Fathers,
-Living Still.”
-
-My eyes could pierce the walls of the chapel, closed and silent that
-afternoon for the autumn term had not opened, and I could see myself
-sitting there in the pew with our family, and looking at the portrait
-in oil of my uncle on the wall, among the portraits of the other
-presidents of the University, faintly adumbrating on his great smoothly
-shaven face the smile of quizzical humor which he wears in my memory. I
-sat there,
-
- by these tears a little boy again,
-
-and thought of those days so long before when at evening he would
-come to our house and stand spreading his hands before the fire for a
-while; he generally brought under his arm a book for my father to read.
-I remembered that he used to carry papers in his high hat, and that
-his coat stood away from his neck, round which he wore a low standing
-collar, with a black cravat. He seemed to carry in the pocket of his
-waistcoat an endless succession of eyeglasses; he would use a pair,
-take them down from his high nose, lay them on the table, forget them,
-and, when he wished to read again, draw another pair from his waistcoat
-pocket. And I went on thinking of him as he looked over his glasses on
-that evening when I had gone late into his study and found him bent
-over his desk with the “Satires” of Juvenal before him, studying his
-lesson for the morrow, he said. I thought he knew all the Latin there
-was left in this world, but, “Oh, no,” he said, and added: “If you
-would sometimes study at this hour of the night perhaps----” He did
-not finish his sentence, since it finished itself.... “I don’t exactly
-know how to render that passage, Professor,” a student, blundering
-through an unmastered lesson, said in conciliatory accents one morning.
-“Ah, that has been evident for some time,” my uncle replied.... And
-now there he lay in his coffin, on the spot in that dim chapel where
-he had so often stood up to address the students; he was gone with all
-those others whose portraits hung on the wall, men who had stood to
-me in my boyhood as the great figures of the world. I should see him
-walking under those trees no more, his tall form stooped in habitual
-meditation.... They were all big, those Whitlock forbears of mine,
-six feet tall every one of them, grim Puritans, I think, when they
-first came to this country three centuries ago.... And I had a vision
-of my uncle as walking that afternoon in other groves with all these
-dark ministerial figures that towered over my boyhood. They were all
-Puritans, too, strong and rugged men, inflexible, obdurate, much
-enduring, stern pioneers whose like is known no more. And I, who could
-join in the lofty strains of that old hymn, as a memorial to my uncle,
-could find unavailing regret in my reverence.... But all changes,
-and it was a time of change, one of those periods which make up the
-whelming tragedy of this life. And, as they had gone, so all the old
-combinations had disappeared with them, resolved into the elements that
-make up that shadowy vale we call the past.... But we were driving
-on, racing away from that past as fast as we could go, on by the
-cemetery where my uncle lies in his grave, on by the rocky ledges of
-the Olentangy, the little stream where we boys used to swim, and, just
-as darkness was falling, besmattered with mud, we drove into Columbus,
-and along High Street, hideous in the crazy decorations that were hung
-out in honor of the State Fair, and up to the Neil House--and across
-the street on the steps of the old state house four or five thousand
-people already gathered for the meeting at which I was to be the only
-speaker. A bath and a bite of supper, and then across the street to the
-meeting, and I was standing there before that vast crowd, and over us
-the shadowy mass of the old capitol, in which my grandfather had made
-the first motion that was ever put in it as a member of the senate half
-a century before; he told me that his two sons danced all night at the
-ball with which its opening was celebrated....
-
-And so, on that brilliant Sunday morning in September, as we entered
-the motor car in Columbus, with the impressions of the great meeting
-of that Saturday night still fresh and vivid in the mind, I could
-settle myself for the long drive back to Toledo over the white pikes
-that wound northward between the fair fields of our beautiful Ohio,
-and say to myself, over and over, with the delicious sensations of a
-secret, that the relief had almost come at last, and that now I could
-do the thing I loved to do--if only the people would approve the
-constitutional amendments at the election on Tuesday. There were the
-happiest of auguries in the sky; it was without a cloud to fleck its
-blue expanse, and the sun blazed and its light sparkled in the fresh
-air, and as we rode the fields swept by, the pastures still green, the
-ripening corn tall in maturity, nodding its heavy tassels and waving
-its broad leaves of dark green, the mown fields yellow with their
-stubble, and the wide land, somnolent and heavy with fecundity, already
-rich with the gold of autumn.
-
-And the people did approve, with vast majorities, and among all the
-principles of democracy they wrote in their fundamental law that day
-was that of municipal home rule, so that all those cities, undreamed of
-when the old constitution had been written, and all those little towns,
-silent and sleepy in the drowse of that Sunday afternoon, might own and
-operate their public utilities, might draft their own charters, have
-what form of government they pleased, in short, become free. And so
-the great dream of Johnson and of Jones came true at last.
-
-
-
-
-LXIII
-
-
-It was of the Free City they had dreamed and that they had not lived
-to behold the fulfillment of their dream was, in its way, the final
-certification of the validity of their services as pioneers. It is an
-old rule of life, or an old trick of the fates that seem so casually
-to govern life, that the dreams of mortals are seldom destined to
-come true, though mortals sometimes thwart the fates by finding their
-dreams in themselves sufficient. In this sense Jones and Johnson had
-already been rewarded. It had been a dream of wonder and of beauty,
-the vision of a city stately with towers, above which there hung the
-glow which poor Jude used to see at evening when he climbed to the
-roof of the Brown House on the ridgeway near Marygreen. It was a city
-in which there were the living conceptions of justice, pity, mercy,
-consideration, toleration, beauty, art, all those graces which mankind
-so long has held noblest and most dear. It was a city wherein human
-life was precious, and therefore gracious, a city which the citizen
-loved as a graduate loves his alma mater, a city with a communal
-spirit. There the old ideas of privilege had given way to the ideals of
-service, public property was held as sacred as private property, power
-was lightly wielded, the people’s voice was intelligent and omnipotent,
-for they had learned the wisdom that confuses demagogues, and amid the
-interplay of myriad forces, the democratic spirit was ever at work,
-performing its noble functions. You might have said that the people
-were inspired, since they united so readily in great constructive work,
-reducing to order and scientific arrangement all the manifold needs and
-expressions of the daily life, conquering in the old struggle against
-nature, providing against all that casualty and accident which make
-life to-day such a snarl of squalid tragedies and ridiculous comedies
-that it well may seem to be ruled by none other than the most whimsical
-and spiteful of irresponsible spirits. It was more than a city indeed,
-it was a realm of reason, wherein the people at last in good will
-were living a social life. The eternal negative, the everlasting no,
-had given way to a new affirmation; each morning should ordain new
-emancipations, and each evening behold new reconciliations among men.
-It was a city wherein the people were achieving more and more of
-leisure, that life in all her splendor and her beauty and her glory
-might not pass by unhailed, unrecognized even, by so many toiling
-thousands. It was the vision of a city set upon a hill, with happy
-people singing in the streets.
-
-These words I know but vaguely express the vision that had come to
-those two men with the unpoetic names of Johnson and Jones. When I
-speak of a city where people sing in the streets I am perfectly well
-aware of the smile that touches the lips of sophistication, though the
-smile would have been none the less cynical had I mentioned merely
-a city in which there were happy people at all. I am perfectly well
-aware that such a thing in all literalness is perhaps impossible to the
-weary, preoccupied crowds in the streets of any of our cities; it would
-be too absurd, too ridiculous, and probably against the law, if not
-indeed quite wicked. In Mr. Housman’s somber lines:
-
- These are not in plight to bear,
- If they would, another’s care.
- They have enough as ’tis: I see
- In many an eye that measures me
- The mortal sickness of a mind
- Too unhappy to be kind.
- Undone with misery, all they can
- Is to hate their fellow man;
- And till they drop they needs must still
- Look at you and wish you ill.
-
-And yet, it is not wholly impossible after all. One evening in
-Brussels, hearing the strains of a band I looked out of my hotel
-window, and saw a throng of youth and maidens dancing in a mist of rain
-down an asphalt pavement that glistened under the electric lights. It
-was a sight of such innocence, of such simple joy and gayety as one
-could never behold in our cities, and it occasioned no more remark,
-was considered no more out of place or unbecoming than it would be for
-a man to sprawl on one of our sidewalks and look for a dime he had
-dropped. But I happened to use that phrase about singing in the streets
-simply because it was one Jones used to employ, just as Johnson used
-forever to be talking about his city set on a hill. If Johnson’s phrase
-was in an old poetic strain Jones meant literally what he said. He used
-to talk of the crowds he had seen along the boulevards of Paris, and
-the gayety, impossible to us, in which they had celebrated the 14th of
-July, and he talked of all this to such purpose that Toledo became the
-first city in America to have a “sane” Fourth of July.
-
-Jones and Johnson, because they had vision, were thinking in sequences
-far beyond the material conceptions of the communities about them, and
-utterly impossible to skulking city politicians, with their miserable
-little treacheries and contemptible and selfish ambitions. They were
-imagining a spirit which might and perhaps some day will possess a
-whole people. And when I intimated the pity it was that they had not
-lived to see that silvery September day when the people of Ohio voted
-for municipal autonomy, I did not mean in the least to aver that their
-dream had been realized for us, simply because we had secured an
-amendment to our fundamental law. Memoranda to this effect had been
-noted on the roll of the constitution, but these after all were but the
-cold, formal and unlovely terms that expressed concepts which had been
-evolving slowly in the public consciousness.
-
-They realized, what all intelligent men must ere long apprehend, that
-too great stress has been laid on mere political activity. We have
-counted it as of controlling force in human affairs, the energy behind
-human activities, the cause, instead of the effect, the motive,
-instead of a mere expression of our complex life. They saw more deeply
-than politics, they recognized other and mightier influences at work,
-affecting the interests and the emotions of men. They knew that there
-is after all, an unconscious, subtle wisdom in the general neglect of
-politics by the masses of citizens, who intuitively know that other
-things are of more importance. They were but seeking to clear the way
-for the more fundamental expressions of human interest, human emotions,
-human fervors, human liberties. For of course it is not the city that
-makes the people free, but the people that make the city free; and
-the city cannot be free until the people have been freed from all
-their various bondages, free above all from themselves, from their own
-ignorances, littlenesses, superstitions, jealousies, envies, suspicions
-and fears. And it is not laws that can set them free, nor political
-parties, nor organizations, nor commissions, nor any sort of legalistic
-machinery. They must themselves set themselves free, and themselves
-indeed find out the way.
-
-Nor is that freedom to be defined; its chief value lies, as does
-that of any concept of truth, in the fact that it is largely
-impressionistic, subject to the alterations and corrections of that
-mysterious system of incessant change which is life itself. The value
-and even the permanence of many ideals and many truths--for truths
-are not always permanent, but are subject to the flux of life--lie in
-the fact that they are impressionistic. Reduced to formal lines and
-hardened into rigid detail they become something quite otherwise than
-that which they were at first or were intended to be.
-
-No, neither for them, nor for us, had the dream come true. But it had
-come nearer. It had become possible. Many obstacles had been removed;
-many purifications had been wrought, many deliverances achieved. To
-Cleveland and to Toledo, those two cities by the lake, the years
-had brought their changes. Not objectively, perhaps; outwardly they
-were much the same--without form, inharmonious, ugly, with the awful
-antitheses of our economic system, and what is worse, the vast welter
-of mediocrity and banality between. But there had been ameliorations.
-In each of them there were plans traced for beautiful civic centers
-with groups of buildings and other public amenities, which, when
-realized, would render them comparable in that respect to those old
-cities of Europe where the benison of art has descended on the people
-from the hands of kings. And these things were coming up out of the
-people, despite provincialism and philistinism and politics; there
-was a new understanding of sovereignty, not as a menace descending
-from above, but as an aspiration coming up from below. And this new
-aspiration in the people, pressing with the irresistible urge of
-moral sentiment against old institutions will renovate the cities and
-recreate the lives in them.
-
-For after all the world grows better. Not as rapidly as we should
-like, but yet, in a way, better. The immense sophistication of the
-modern mood, to be sure, is apt to cast contemporary thought in the
-mould of multifold negation; and sensibilities, long distressed by the
-contemplation of life in aspects it would not wear were this more of a
-realm of reason, find their only solace in that pessimism which makes
-charming so much of modern poetry. Doubtless this is the mood most
-congenial to the agnosticism of the reflective, contemplative mind in
-the present phase of its philosophy. It has its undoubted fascinations,
-its uses, and, indeed, its truth, part reaction though it be from
-the excessive strain of contemporary life in cities, and the dull
-orthodoxies of the Victorian age. To one, indeed, who, in eight years’
-participation in municipal politics might in that respect have been
-compared to that character in one of Anatole France’s novels who never
-opened a door without coming upon some hitherto unsuspected depth of
-infamy in mankind, it was difficult to avoid that strain. And yet, bad
-as municipal government has been in this land, it is everywhere better
-to-day. The level of moral sentiment, like the level of intelligence,
-mounts slowly, in wide spirals, but it mounts steadily all the time. In
-not every city has the advance been so marked, for not every city has
-had such personalities as Johnson and Jones, and without personalities,
-democracies seem unable to function. The old corruptions, once so
-flagrant, are growing less and less, and there is left only the
-residuum of meanness and pettiness and spite, the crimes that require
-no courage and entail no fear of the law, committed by beings who
-never could attain the robust stature of the old and brazen and robust
-offenders. The strain is running out, attenuating, and ere long will
-be extinct.
-
-Those gentle pessimists of such congenial culture may indeed point
-to other ages that excel ours, say in speculative thought, and all
-the five arts, but I think it is demonstrable that upon the whole,
-and employing long epochs for the comparison, things are growing
-better. Notwithstanding all the ignorance and all the woe in the world
-to-night, never before has there been such widespread opportunity for
-enlightenment, never such widespread comfort, never so much kindness,
-so much pity for animals, for children, and, above all, never have
-women been shown such consideration. It needs no very powerful
-imagination, peering into the shadowy background of human history,
-to appreciate the tremendous implications of this fact. Indeed the
-great feminist movement of our time, a movement which in the histories
-of mankind centuries hence will be given the sectional mark of the
-beginning of a new age, is in itself the proof of a great advance, in
-which the ballot will be the very least important of all the liberties
-to be won.
-
-With all the complications of this vast and confusing interplay of
-the forces of this age, the city is inextricably bound by its awful
-responsibility for so much that is bad, for so much that is good, in
-our time. And in the cities, now as always, the struggle for liberty
-will go on. The old leaders will pass, and the new will pass, and pass
-swiftly, for they are quickly consumed in the stress and heat of the
-passionate and savage struggle. To them must ever come the fatigue of
-long drawn opposition, of the repeated and unavailing assaults on the
-cold, solid and impregnable walls of institutions. In this fatigue they
-may grow conservative after a while, and they should pray to be spared
-the acquiescence of the middle years, the base capitulation of age.
-
-But always the people remain, pressing onward in a great stream up
-the slopes, and always somehow toward the light. For the great dream
-beckons, leads them on, the dream of social harmony always prefigured
-in human thought as the city. This radiant vision of the city is the
-oldest dream in the world. All literature is saturated with it. It
-has been the ideal of human achievement since the day when the men on
-the plains of Shinar sought to build a city whose towers should reach
-unto heaven. It was the angelic vision of the mystic on Patmos, the
-city descending out of heaven, and lying foursquare, the city where
-there was to be no more sorrow nor crying. It has been the goal of
-civilization down to this hour of the night, when, however vaguely and
-dimly, the ideal stirs the thousands in this feverish town going about
-their strange and various businesses, pleasures, devotions, sacrifices,
-sins. It has been the everlasting dream of humanity. And humanity will
-continue to struggle for it, to struggle toward it. And some day,
-somewhere, to the sons of men the dream will come true.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[A] These have been collected and published under the title, “Letters
-of Labor and Love,” by Samuel M. Jones, The Bobbs-Merrill Co.,
-Indianapolis.
-
-[B] “On the Enforcement of Law in Cities,” Bobbs-Merrill, Indianapolis,
-1913.
-
-[C] “The Truth About the White Slave Traffic,” by Teressa
-Billington-Greig. _The English Review_, June, 1913.
-
-
-
-
-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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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Forty Years of It, by Brand Whitlock</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Forty Years of It</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Brand Whitlock</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: March 17, 2022 [eBook #67648]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>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/American Libraries.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FORTY YEARS OF IT ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" width="40%" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<h1>FORTY YEARS OF IT</h1>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="bbox">
-<p class="ph1">BY RALPH HENRY BARBOUR.</p>
-
-
-<div class="indent">Benton&#8217;s Venture.</div>
-<div class="indent">Around the End.</div>
-<div class="indent">The Junior Trophy.</div>
-<div class="indent">Change Signals!</div>
-<div class="indent">For Yardley.</div>
-<div class="indent">Finkler&#8217;s Field.</div>
-<div class="indent">Winning His &#8220;Y.&#8221;</div>
-<div class="indent">The New Boy at Hilltop.</div>
-<div class="indent">Double Play.</div>
-<div class="indent">Forward Pass!</div>
-<div class="indent">The Spirit of the School.</div>
-<div class="indent">Four in Camp.</div>
-<div class="indent">Four Afoot.</div>
-<div class="indent">Four Afloat.</div>
-<div class="indent">The Arrival of Jimpson.</div>
-<div class="indent">Behind the Line.</div>
-<div class="indent">Captain of the Crew.</div>
-<div class="indent">For the Honor of the School.</div>
-<div class="indent">The Half-Back.</div>
-<div class="indent">On Your Mark.</div>
-<div class="indent">Weatherby&#8217;s Inning.</div>
-
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<p class="center">D. APPLETON &amp; COMPANY, NEW YORK.</p>
-</div></div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-
-<p class="ph2">FORTY<br />
-YEARS OF IT</p>
-
-<p>BY<br />
-<span class="large">BRAND WHITLOCK</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_title.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p><span class="large">NEW YORK AND LONDON<br />
-D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br />
-MCMXIV</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center">
-<span class="smcap">Copyright, 1914, by</span><br />
-D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br />
-<br />
-Copyright, 1913, by <span class="smcap">The Phillips Publishing Company</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Printed in the United States of America</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center">
-TO THE MEMORY OF<br />
-MY FATHER<br />
-<br />
-<span class="large">ELIAS D. WHITLOCK</span><br />
-<br />
-WHO DIED DECEMBER 23, 1913<br />
-<br />
-A MINISTER OF THE SANCTUARY, AND<br />
-OF THE TRUE TABERNACLE, WHICH<br />
-THE LORD PITCHED, AND NOT MAN</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">[vii]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">INTRODUCTION</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The history of democracy&#8217;s progress in a mid-Western
-city&mdash;so, to introduce this book in specific
-terms, one perhaps inevitably must call it. Yet in
-using the word <i>democracy</i>, one must plead for a distinction,
-or, better, a reversion, indicated by the
-curious anchylosis that, at a certain point in their
-maturity, usually sets in upon words newly put in
-use to express some august and large spiritual reality.
-We all know how this materializing tendency,
-if one may call it that, has affected our notion and
-our use of the commonest religious terms like <i>faith</i>,
-<i>grace</i>, <i>salvation</i>, for instance. Their connotation,
-originally fluid, spiritual and subjective, has become
-concrete, limited, partial, ignoble. So, too, in our
-common speech, even above the catchpenny vocabulary
-of the demagogue or politician, the word <i>democracy</i>
-has taken on the limited, partial and ignoble
-connotation of more or less incidental and
-provisional forms of democracy&#8217;s practical outcome;
-or even of by-products not directly traceable to
-the action of democracy itself. How often, for example,
-do we see direct primaries, the single tax,
-the initiative and referendum posed in a kind of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">[viii]</span>
-sacramental relation to &#8220;fundamental democracy&#8221;;
-or the &#8220;essential movement of democracy&#8221; measured,
-say, by the increased returns on the Socialist
-ticket at some local election!</p>
-
-<p>The permanent value of this book is that it proceeds
-out of a truly adequate and philosophical conception
-of democracy. That the collective human
-spirit should know itself, &#954;&#945;&#964;&#945;&#956;&#945;&#952;&#949;&#8150;&#957; &#964;&#8052;&#957; &#966;&#8059;&#963;&#953;&#957; &#954;&#945;&#8054; &#964;&#945;&#8059;&#964;&#951;
-&#7957;&#960;&#949;&#963;&#952;&#945;&#953;, that the state, the communal unit, should be,
-in Mr. Arnold&#8217;s phrase, &#8220;the expression of our best
-self, which is not manifold and vulgar and unstable
-and contentious and ever varying, but one and noble
-and secure and peaceful and the same for all mankind&#8221;;
-here we have in outline the operation of
-democracy. One could not give this volume higher
-praise than to say, as in justice one must say, that
-it clearly discerns and abundantly conveys the
-spirit which works in human nature toward this end.</p>
-
-<p>How important it is to maintain this fluid, philosophical
-and spiritual view of democracy may be
-seen when we look about us and consider the plight
-of those&mdash;especially the many now concerned in
-politics, whether professionally or as eager amateurs&mdash;who
-for lack of it confuse various aspects of
-the political problem of liberty with the social problem
-of equality. With political liberty or with self-expression
-of the individual in politics, democracy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">[ix]</span>
-has, and ever has had, very little to do. It is our
-turbid thought about democracy that prevents our
-seeing this. The aristocratic and truculent barons
-did more for the political freedom of Englishmen
-than was ever done by democracy; a selfish and
-sensual king did more to gain the individual Englishman
-his freedom of self-expression in politics.
-In our own country it is matter of open and notorious
-fact that a political party whose every sentiment
-and tendency is aristocratic has been the one
-to bring about the largest measures of political enfranchisement.
-Now, surely, one may heartily welcome
-every enlargement of political liberty, but if
-one attributes them to a parentage which is not
-theirs, if one relates them under <i>democracy</i>, the
-penalty which nature inexorably imposes upon error
-is sure to follow. If, therefore, in the following
-pages the author seems occasionally lukewarm
-toward certain enfranchising measures, I do not
-understand that he disparages them, but only that
-he sees&mdash;as their advocates, firmly set in the confusion
-we speak of, cannot see&mdash;that their connection
-with democracy is extremely indistinct and remote.
-<i>Equality</i>&mdash;a social problem, not to be
-worked out by the mechanics of politics, but appealing
-wholly to the best self, the best reason and
-spirit of man,&mdash;this is democracy&#8217;s concern, democracy&#8217;s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_x">[x]</span>
-chief interest. It is to our author&#8217;s
-praise, again, that he sees this clearly and expresses
-it convincingly.</p>
-
-<p>By far the most admirable and impressive picture
-in this book appears to me to be that which the
-author has all unconsciously drawn of himself. It
-reveals once more that tragedy&mdash;the most profound,
-most common and most neglected of all the multitude
-of useless tragedies that our weak and wasteful
-civilization by sheer indifference permits&mdash;the
-tragedy of a richly gifted nature denied the opportunity
-of congenial self-expression. What by comparison
-is the tragedy of starvation, since so very
-many willingly starve, if haply they may find this
-opportunity? The author is an artist, a born artist.
-His natural place is in a world unknown and
-undreamed of by us children of an age commissioned
-to carry out the great idea of industrial and political
-development. He belongs by birthright in the
-eternal realm of divine impossibilities, of sublime
-and delightful inconsistencies. Greatly might he
-have fulfilled his destiny in music, in poetry, in painting
-had he been born at one of those periods when
-spiritual activity was all but universal, when spiritual
-ideas were popular and dominant, <i>volitantes per
-ora virum</i>, part of the very air one breathed&mdash;in
-the Greece of Pericles, the England of Elizabeth, or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xi">[xi]</span>
-on the Tuscan hills at the time of the Florentine
-Renaissance! But this was not to be. An admirer,
-jealous of every possible qualification, reminds me
-that I should call him at least a philosophical artist;
-yes, but not by nature even that. The toga did not
-drop upon him readymade from a celestial loom. It
-was woven and fitted laboriously by his own hands.
-He sought philosophical consistency and found it
-and established himself in it; but only as part of
-the difficult general discipline of an alien life.</p>
-
-<p>What an iron discipline, and how thoroughly alien
-a life, stands revealed to the eye of poetic insight
-and the spirit of sympathetic delicacy, on every
-page of these memoirs. For the over-refined (as we
-say), the oversensitive soul of a born artist&mdash;think
-of the experience, think of the achievement! The
-very opposite of all that makes a politician, appraising
-politics always at their precise value, yet patiently
-spending all the formative years of his life
-in the debilitating air of politics for the sake of what
-he might indirectly accomplish. Not an executive,
-yet incessantly occupied with tedious details of administrative
-work, for the satisfaction of knowing
-them well done. Not a philosopher, yet laboriously
-making himself what Glanvil quaintly calls &#8220;one of
-those larger souls who have traveled the divers climates
-of opinion&#8221; until he acquired a social philosophy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xii">[xii]</span>
-that should meet his own exacting demands.</p>
-
-<p>Is it too much, then, that I invite the reader&#8217;s
-forbearance with these paragraphs to show why our
-author should himself take rank and estimation with
-the great men whom he reverently pictures? He
-tells the story of Altgeld and of Johnson, energetic
-champions of the newer political freedom. He tells
-the story of Jones, the incomparable true democrat,
-one of the children of light and sons of the Resurrection,
-such as appear but once in an era. And in
-the telling of these men and of himself as the alien
-and, in his own view, largely accidental continuator
-of their work, it seems to me that he indicates the
-process by which he too has worked out his own
-position among them as &#8220;one of those consoling
-and hope-inspiring marks which stand forever to
-remind our weak and easily discouraged race how
-high human goodness and perseverance have once
-been carried and may be carried again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Albert Jay Nock.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The American Magazine,<br />
-<span class="indentleft">New York.</span></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="ph2">FORTY YEARS OF IT</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span>
-<p class="ph2">FORTY YEARS OF IT</p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">I</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>One hot afternoon in the summer of my tenth
-year, my grandfather, having finished the nap he was
-accustomed to take after the heavy dinner which, in
-those days, was served at noon in his house, told me
-that I might go up town with him. This was not
-only a relief, but a prospect of adventure. It was
-a relief to have him finish his nap, because while he
-was taking his nap, my grandmother drew down
-at all the windows the heavy green shades, which,
-brought home by the family after a residence in Nuremberg,
-were decorated at the bottom with a frieze
-depicting scenes along the Rhine, and a heavy and
-somnolent silence was imposed on all the house.
-When my grandfather took his nap, life seemed to
-pause, all activities were held in suspense.</p>
-
-<p>And the prospect was as a pleasant adventure,
-because whenever my grandfather let me go up
-town with him he always made me a present, which
-was sure to be more valuable, more expensive, than
-those little gifts at home, bestowed as rewards of
-various merits and sacrifices related to that institution
-of the afternoon nap, and forthcoming if he
-got through the nap satisfactorily, that is, without<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span>
-being awakened. They consisted of mere money, the
-little five or ten cent notes of green scrip; &#8220;shin-plasters&#8221;
-they were called, I believe, in those days.</p>
-
-<p>When my grandfather had rearranged his toilet,
-combing his thick white hair and then immediately
-running his fingers through it to rumple it up and
-give him a savage aspect, we set forth.</p>
-
-<p>He wore broad polished shoes, low, and fastened
-with buckles, and against the black of his attire
-his stiffly starched, immaculate white waistcoat was
-conspicuous. Only a few of its lower buttons of
-pearl were fastened; above that it was open, and
-from one of the buttonholes, the second from the
-top, his long gold watch-chain hung from its large
-gold hook. The black cravat was not hidden by
-his white beard, which he did not wear as long as
-many Ohio gentlemen of that day, and he was
-crowned by a large Panama hat, yellowed by years
-of summer service, and bisected by a ridge that began
-at the middle of the broad brim directly in front,
-ran back, climbed and surmounted the large high
-crown, and then, descending, ended its impressive
-career at the middle of the broad brim behind.</p>
-
-<p>I was walking on his left hand, near the fence,
-but as we entered the shade of the elms and shrubbery
-of the Swedenborgian churchyard, I went
-around to his other side, because a ghost dwelt in
-the Swedenborgian churchyard. My cousin had
-pointed it out to me, and once I had seen it distinctly.</p>
-
-<p>The precaution was unnecessary, for I had long
-known my grandfather for a brave man. He had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>
-been a soldier, and many persons in Urbana still saluted
-him as major, though at that time he was
-mayor; going up town, in fact, meant to go to the
-town hall before going anywhere else. In the shade
-he removed his hat, and taking out a large silk
-handkerchief, passed it several times over his red,
-perspiring face.</p>
-
-<p>It was, as I have said, a hot afternoon, even for
-an August afternoon in Ohio, and it was the hottest
-hour of the afternoon. Main Street, when we
-turned into it presently, was deserted, and wore an
-unreal appearance, like the street of the dead
-town that was painted on the scene at the &#8220;opera-house.&#8221;
-Far to the south it stretched its interminable
-length in white dust, until its trees came together
-in that mysterious distance where the fairgrounds
-were, and to the north its vista was closed
-by the bronze figure of the cavalryman standing
-on his pedestal in the Square, his head bowed in sad
-meditation, one gauntleted hand resting on his hip,
-the other on his saber-hilt. Out over the thick dust
-of the street the heat quivered and vibrated, and
-if you squinted in the sun at the cavalryman, he
-seemed to move, to tremble, in the shimmer of that
-choking atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>The town hall stood in Market Square; for, in
-addition to <i>the</i> Square, where the bronze cavalryman
-stood on his pedestal, there was Market Square,
-the day of civic centers not having dawned on Urbana
-in that time, nor, doubtless, in this.</p>
-
-<p>Market Square was not a square, however, but
-a parallelogram, and on one side of it, fronting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span>
-Main Street, was the town hall, a low building of
-brick, representing in itself an amazing unity of
-municipal functions&mdash;the germ of the group plan,
-no doubt, and, after all, in its little way, a civic
-center indeed. For there, in an auditorium, plays
-were staged before a populace innocent of the fact
-that it had a municipal theater, and in another room
-the city council sat, with representatives from
-Lighttown, and Gooseville, and Guinea, and the
-other <i>faubourgs</i> of our little municipality. Under
-that long low roof, too, were the &#8220;calaboose&#8221; and
-the headquarters of the fire department. Back of
-these the structure sloped away into a market-house
-of some sort, with a public scales, and broad, low,
-overhanging eaves, in the shade of which firemen,
-and the city marshal, and other officials, in the dim
-retrospect, seem to have devoted their leisure to the
-game of checkers.</p>
-
-<p>On the opposite side of Market Square there was
-a line of brick buildings, painted once, perhaps, and
-now of a faint pink or cerise which certain of the
-higher and more artistic grades of calcimining assume,
-and there seems to have been a series, almost
-interminable, of small saloons&mdash;declining and fading
-away somewhere to the east, in the dark purlieus of
-Guinea.</p>
-
-<p>Here, along this line of saloons, if it was a line
-of saloons, or, if it was not, along the side of the
-principal saloon which in those wet days commanded
-that corner, there were always several carts, driven
-by Irishmen from Lighttown, smoking short clay
-pipes, and two-wheeled drays driven by negroes from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
-Guinea or Gooseville. These negro drivers were
-burly men with shining black skins and gleaming
-eyes and teeth, whose merry laughter was almost belied
-by the ferocious, brutal whips they carried&mdash;whips
-precisely like that <i>Simon Legree</i> had wielded
-in the play in the theater just across the Square,
-now, by a stroke of poetic justice, in the hands of
-<i>Uncle Tom</i> himself. But on this day the firemen
-were not to be seen under the eaves of the market-house;
-their checker-boards were quite abandoned.
-The mules between the shafts of these two-wheeled
-drays hung their heads and their long ears drooped
-under the heat, and their black masters were curled
-up on the sidewalk against the wall of the saloon,
-asleep. The Irishmen were nowhere to be seen, and
-Market Square was empty, deserted, and sprawled
-there reflecting the light in a blinding way, while
-from the yellow, dusty level of its cobbled surface
-rose, wave on wave, palpably, that trembling, shimmering,
-vibrating heat. And yet, there was one
-waking, living thing in sight. There, out in the middle
-of the Square he stood, a dusty, drab figure, with
-an old felt hat on a head that must have ached and
-throbbed in that implacable heat, with a mass of
-rags upon him, his frayed trousers gathered at his
-ankles and bound about by irons, and a ball and
-chain to bind him to that spot. He had a broom in
-his hands, and was aimlessly making a little smudge
-of dust, doing his part in the observance of an old,
-cruel, and hideous superstition.</p>
-
-<p>I knew, of course, that he was a prisoner. Usually
-there were three or four, sometimes half a dozen,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>
-such as he. They were the chain-gang, and they
-were Bad&mdash;made so by Rum. I knew that they
-were brought out of the calaboose, that damp, dark
-place under the roof of the market-house, somewhere
-between the office of the mayor and the headquarters
-of the fire department; and glimpses were to be
-caught now and then of their faces pressed against
-those bars.</p>
-
-<p>When, under the shade of the broad eaves, we
-were about to enter the mayor&#8217;s office, my grandfather
-motioned to the prisoner out there in the
-center of the Square, who with a new alacrity
-dropped his broom, picked up his ball, and lugging
-it in his arms, came up close to us, so very close
-that I could see the sweat that drenched his forehead,
-stood in great beads on his upper lip, matted
-the hair on his forearms, stained with dark splashes
-his old shirt, and glistened on his throat and breast,
-burned red by the sun. He dropped his ball,
-took off that rag of a hat, raised eyelids that
-were powdered with dust, and looked at my grandfather.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How many days did I give you?&#8221; my grandfather
-asked him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Fifteen, your honor,&#8221; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How long have you been in?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Three days, your honor.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are you the only one in there?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, your honor.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>My grandfather paused and looked at him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Pretty hot out there, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221; asked my grandfather.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>The prisoner smiled, a smile exactly like that
-anyone would have for such a question, but the
-smile flickered from his face, as he said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, your honor.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>My grandfather looked out over the Square and
-up and down. There was no one anywhere to be seen.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, come on into the office.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The prisoner picked up his ball, and followed my
-grandfather into the mayor&#8217;s office. My grandfather
-went to a desk, drew out a drawer, fumbled in it,
-found a key, and with this he stooped and unlocked
-the irons on the prisoner&#8217;s ankles. But he did not
-remove the irons&mdash;he seated himself in the large
-chair, and leaned comfortably against its squeaking
-cane back.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Now,&#8221; my grandfather said, &#8220;you go out there
-in the Square&mdash;be careful not to knock the leg irons
-off as you go,&mdash;and you sweep around for a little
-while, and when the coast is clear you kick them
-off and light out.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The creature in the drab rags looked at my
-grandfather a moment, opened his lips, closed them,
-swallowed, and then....</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;d better hurry,&#8221; said my grandfather, &#8220;I
-don&#8217;t know what minute the marshal&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The prisoner gathered up his ball, hugged it carefully,
-almost tenderly, in his arms, and, with infinity
-delicacy as to the irons on his feet, he shuffled carefully,
-yet somehow swiftly out. I saw him an instant
-in the brilliant glittering sunlight framed by
-the door; he looked back, and then he disappeared,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
-leaving only the blank surface of the cobblestones
-with the heat trembling over them.</p>
-
-<p>My grandfather put on his glasses, turned to his
-desk, and took up some papers there. And I waited,
-in the still, hot room. The minutes were ticked
-off by the clock. I wondered at each loud tick if
-it was the minute in which it would be proper for
-the prisoner to kick off those irons from his ankles
-and start to run. And then, after a few minutes,
-a man appeared in the doorway, and said breathlessly:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Joe, he has escaped!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was Uncle John, a brother of my grandfather,
-one of the Brands of Kentucky, then on a visit&mdash;one
-of those long visits by which he and my grandfather
-sought to make up the large arrears of the
-differences, the divisions, and the separations of the
-great war. He was nearly of my grandfather&#8217;s
-age, and like him a large man, with a white though
-longer beard. At his entrance my grandfather did
-not turn, nor speak, and Uncle John Brand cried
-again:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Joe, he&#8217;s gone, I tell you; he&#8217;s getting
-away!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>My grandfather looked up then from his papers
-and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;John, you&#8217;d better come in out of that heat and
-sit down. You&#8217;re excited.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But he&#8217;s getting away, I tell you! Don&#8217;t you
-understand?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who is getting away?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, that prisoner.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>&#8220;What prisoner?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The prisoner out there in the Square. He has
-escaped! He&#8217;s gone!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But how do you know?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I just saw him running down Main Street like
-a streak of lightning.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>My grandfather took out his silk handkerchief,
-passed it over his brow, and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To think of anyone running on a day like this!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And Uncle John Brand stood there and gazed at
-his brother with an expression of despair.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Can&#8217;t you understand,&#8221; he said, speaking in
-an intense tone, as if somehow to impress my grandfather
-with the importance of this event in society,
-&#8220;can&#8217;t you understand that the prisoner out there
-in the Square has broken away, has escaped, and at
-this minute is running down Main Street, and that
-he&#8217;s getting farther and farther away with each
-moment that you sit there?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I had a vivid picture of the man running with long
-strides, in the soft dust of Main Street; he must
-even then, I fancied, be far down the street; he
-must indeed be down by Bailey&#8217;s, and perhaps
-Bailey&#8217;s dog was rushing out at him, barking. And
-I hoped he would run faster, and faster, and get
-away, though I felt it was wrong to hope this.
-Uncle John Brand seemed to be right; though I
-did not like him as I liked my grandfather.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But how could he get away?&#8221; my grandfather
-was asking. &#8220;He was in irons.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He got the irons off somehow,&#8221; Uncle John
-Brand said, exasperated; &#8220;I don&#8217;t know how. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>
-didn&#8217;t stop to explain!&#8221; He found a relief in this
-fine sarcasm, and then said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Aren&#8217;t you going to do anything?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; said my grandfather, with an irresolution
-quite uncommon in him, &#8220;I suppose I really
-ought to do something. But I don&#8217;t know just what
-to do.&#8221; He sat up, and looked about all over the
-room. &#8220;You don&#8217;t see the marshal, do you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Uncle John Brand was looking at him now in
-disgust.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just look outside there, will you, John,&#8221; my
-grandfather went on, &#8220;and see if you can find him?
-If you do, send him in, and I&#8217;ll speak to him and
-have him go after the prisoner.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Uncle John Brand of Kentucky stood a moment
-in the doorway, finding no words with which to express
-himself, and then went out. And when he
-had gone my grandfather leaned back in his chair
-and laughed and laughed; laughed until his ruddy
-face became much redder than it was even from the
-heat of that day.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">II</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Now that I have set down, with such particularity,
-an incident which I could not wholly understand
-nor reconcile with the established order of things
-until many years after, I am not so sure after all
-that I witnessed it in that Urbana of reality; it
-may have been in that Urbana of the memory,
-wherein related scenes and incidents have coalesced
-with the witnessed event, or in that Macochee of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>
-certain of my attempts in fiction, though I have always
-hoped that the fiction was the essential reality
-of life, and have tried to make it so.</p>
-
-<p>I am certain, however, that the incident as related
-is entirely authentic, for I have recently made inquiries
-and established it beyond a reasonable doubt,
-as the lawyers say, in all its details as here given. I
-say in all its details, save possibly as to that of my
-own corporeal presence on the scene, at the actual
-moment of the occurrence. Only the other day I
-asked a favorite aunt of mine, and she remembered
-the incident perfectly, and many another similar
-to it. &#8220;It was just like him,&#8221; she added, with a
-dubious, though tolerant fondness. But when, like
-the insistent, questioning child in one of Riley&#8217;s
-Hoosier poems, I asked her if I had been there, she
-said she could not remember.</p>
-
-<p>But whether I was there in the flesh or not, or
-whether the whole reality of that scene, so poignant,
-and insistent, and indelible, with its denial of the
-grounds of authority, its challenge to the bases of
-society, its shock to the orthodox mind (like that
-of John Brand of Kentucky, a strict constructionist,
-who believed in the old Constitution, and even
-then, in slavery), remains in my memory as the result
-of one of those tricks of a mind that has always
-dramatized scenes for its own amusement, I was
-there in spirit, and, indeed, at many another scene
-in the life of Joseph Carter Brand, whose name my
-mother gave me as a good heritage. Whatever the
-bald and banal physical fact may have been, I was
-either present at the actual or in imagination at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
-described scene to such purpose that from it I derived
-an impression never to be erased from my
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>It is not given to all of us to say with such particularity
-and emphasis, just what we learned from
-each person who has touched our existences and
-affected the trend of our lives, as it was given to
-Marcus Aurelius, for instance, so that one may say
-that from Rusticus one received this impression, or
-that from Apollonius one learned this and from
-Alexander the Platonic that; we must rather ascribe
-our little store of knowledge generally to the gods.
-But I am sure that no one was ever long with Joseph
-Carter Brand, or came to know him well, without
-learning that rarest and most beautiful of all
-the graces or of all the virtues&mdash;Pity.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">He, too, had tears for all souls in trouble</div>
-<div class="verse">Here, and in hell.</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Perhaps it is not so much pity as sympathy that
-I mean, but whether it was pity or sympathy, it
-was that divine quality in man which enables him
-to imagine the sorrows of others, to understand
-what they feel, to suffer with them; in a word, the
-ability to put himself in the other fellow&#8217;s place&mdash;the
-hallmark, I believe, of true culture, far more
-than any degree or doctor&#8217;s hood could possibly be.</p>
-
-<p>It may have been some such feeling as this for
-the negroes that led him, when a young man in Kentucky,
-to renounce a patrimony of slaves and come
-north. It was not, to be sure, a very large patrimony,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
-for his father was a farmer in a rather small
-way in Bourbon County, and owned a few slaves, but
-whatever the motive, he refused to own human chattels
-and left Bourbon County, where his branch of
-the Brands had lived since their emigration from
-Virginia, to which colony, so long before, their original
-had come as a Jacobite exile from Forfarshire
-in Scotland.</p>
-
-<p>My grandfather came north into Ohio and Champaign
-County, and he had not been there very long
-before he went back to Virginia and married Lavina
-Talbott, and when they went to live on the farm he
-called &#8220;Pretty Prairie,&#8221; he soon found himself deep
-in Ohio politics, as it seems the fate of most Ohioans
-to be, and continued in that element all his life. He
-had his political principles from Henry Clay,&mdash;he
-had been to Ashland and had known the family,&mdash;and
-he was elected as a Whig to the legislature in
-1842 and to the State Senate of Ohio in 1854. There
-he learned to know and to admire Salmon P. Chase,
-then governor of Ohio, and it was not long until
-he was in the Abolitionist movement, and he got into
-it so deeply that nothing less than the Civil War
-could ever have got him out, for he was in open
-defiance, most of the time, to the Fugitive Slave
-Law.</p>
-
-<p>One of the accomplishments in which he took
-pride, perhaps next to his ability as a horseman,
-was his skill with the rifle, acquired in Kentucky at
-the expense of squirrels in the tops of tall trees (he
-could snuff a candle with a rifle), and this ability
-he placed at the service of a negro named Ad White,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
-who had run away from his master in the South,
-and was hidden in a corn-crib near Urbana when
-overtaken by United States marshals from Cincinnati.
-The negro was armed, and was defending
-himself, when my grandfather and his friend Ichabod
-Corwin, of a name tolerably well known in Ohio history,
-went to his assistance, and drove the marshals
-off by the hot fire of their rifles. The marshals retreated,
-and came up later with reinforcements,
-strong enough to overpower Judge Corwin and my
-grandfather, but the negro had escaped.</p>
-
-<p>The scrape was an expensive one; there were
-proceedings against them in the United States
-court in Cincinnati, and they only got out of it
-years after when the Fugitive Slave Law was rapidly
-becoming no law, and Ad White could live near Urbana
-in peace during a long life, and be pointed
-out as an interesting relic of the great conflict.</p>
-
-<p>This adventure befell my grandfather in 1858,
-when he had been a Republican for two years, having
-been a delegate to the first convention of the
-party in 1856, the one that met in Pittsburgh, before
-the nominating convention which named Fr&eacute;mont had
-met in Philadelphia. He had attended that convention
-with Cassius M. Clay of Kentucky, and shared
-quarters with him at the hotel.</p>
-
-<p>In 1908, in the Coliseum at Chicago, when the
-Republican National Convention was in session,
-there were conducted to the stage one morning, and
-introduced to the delegates, two old gentlemen who
-had been delegates to that first convention of the
-party, and after they had been presented and duly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
-celebrated by the chairman and cheered by the delegates
-they were assiduously given seats in large
-chairs, and there, throughout the session, side by
-side they sat, their hands clasped over the crooks of
-their heavy canes, their white old heads unsteady,
-peering out in a certain purblind, bewildered, aged
-way over that mighty assembly of the power and the
-wealth, the respectability and the authority, of the
-nation&mdash;far other than that revolutionary gathering
-they had attended half a century before!</p>
-
-<p>All through the session, now and then, I would
-look at them; there was a certain indefinable pathos
-in them, they sat so still, they were so old, there
-was in their attitude the acquiescence of age&mdash;and
-I would recall my grandfather&#8217;s stories of the days
-when they were the force in the Republic, and the
-runaway &#8220;niggers,&#8221; and the rifles, and the great
-blazing up of liberty in the land, and it seemed to me
-that Time, or what Thomas Hardy calls the Ironic
-Spirit, or perhaps it was only the politicians who
-were managing the convention, had played some
-grotesque, stupendous joke on those patriarchs. Did
-their old eyes, gazing so strangely on that scene,
-behold its implications? Did they descry the guide-post
-that told them how far away they really were
-from that first convention and its ideals?</p>
-
-<p>But whatever the reflections of those two aboriginal
-Republicans, or whatever emotions or speculations
-they may have inspired in those who saw them,&mdash;the
-torch of liberty being ever brandished somewhere
-in this world and tossed from hand to hand,&mdash;they
-had done their part in their day, and might<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
-presumably be allowed to look on at the antics of
-men wherever they chose, in peace. They had
-known Lincoln, no inconsiderable distinction in
-itself!</p>
-
-<p>Out of that first convention my grandfather, like
-them, had gone, and he had done his part to help
-elect Lincoln after Lincoln had defeated Chase in
-the Chicago convention of 1860, and had been nominated
-for the presidency. And then, with his man
-elected, my grandfather had gone into the war that
-broke upon the land.</p>
-
-<p>He went in with the 66th Ohio Volunteer Infantry,
-a regiment which he was commissioned by Governor
-Dennison to recruit at Urbana, and when it
-was marshaled in camp near Urbana its command
-was offered him, an honor and a responsibility he declined
-because, he said, he knew nothing of the art
-of war, if it is an art, or of its science, if it is a
-science, and so was content with the shoulder-straps
-of a captain. One of his sons, a lieutenant in the
-regular army, was already at the front with his
-regiment, and another son was a captain in the 66th,
-and later on, when my grandfather had been transferred
-to the Department of Subsistence, he took
-his youngest son with him in the capacity of a
-clerk, so that the men of his family were away to
-the war for those four years, and the women remained
-behind, making housewives and scraping lint,
-and watching, and waiting, and praying, and enduring
-all those hardships and making all those
-sacrifices which are so lauded by the poetic and the
-sentimental and yet are not enough to entitle them<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>
-to a voice in that government in whose cause they
-are made.</p>
-
-<p>The situation was made all the more poignant
-because the great issue had separated the family,
-and there were brothers and cousins on the other
-side, though one of these, in the person of Aunt Lucretia,
-chose that inauspicious time to come over
-from the other side all the way from Virginia, to
-pay a visit, and celebrated the report of a Confederate
-victory by parading up town with a butternut
-badge on her bosom. She sailed several times about
-the Square, with her head held high and her crinolines
-rustling and standing out, and her butternut
-badge in evidence, and was rescued by my grandmother,
-who, hearing of her temerity, went up town
-in desperation and in fear that she might arrive
-too late. It was a story I was fond of hearing,
-and as I pictured the lively scene I always had the
-statue of the cavalryman as a figure in the picture&mdash;though
-of course the statue could not have been
-in existence during the war, since it was erected as
-a memorial to the 66th and a monument to its fallen
-heroes and their deeds. The cavalryman, an officer
-wearing a romantic cloak and the old plumed hat
-of the military fashion of that date, and leaning on
-his saber in a gloomy way, I always thought was a
-figure of my uncle, that Captain Brand who went
-out with the 66th, just as I thought for a long time
-that the Civil War was practically fought out on
-the northern side by the 66th, which was not so
-strange perhaps, since nearly every family in Urbana
-had been represented in the regiment, and they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
-all talked of little else than the war for many years.
-They called the 66th the &#8220;Bloody Sixty-sixth,&#8221; a
-name I have since heard applied to other regiments,
-but the honorable epithet was not undeserved by that
-legion, for it had a long and most gallant record,
-beginning with the Army of the Potomac and fighting
-in all that army&#8217;s battles until after Gettysburg,
-and then with the 11th and 12th corps it was transferred,
-under Hooker, to the Army of the Tennessee,
-at Chattanooga, in time for Lookout Mountain and
-Missionary Ridge, after which it went with Sherman
-to the sea, and thus completed the circuit of the
-Confederacy.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">III</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>My grandfather, however, did not go with his
-regiment to the West. He had been transferred to
-the Commissary Department, and he remained with
-the Army of the Potomac until the close of the war,
-and it was on some detail connected with his duties
-in that department that, in 1865, he went into Washington
-and had the interview with President Lincoln
-I so much liked to hear him tell about. It was not
-in the course of his military duty that he went to
-see the Commander-in-Chief; whatever those duties
-were they were quickly discharged at the War Department,
-so that, in the hours of freedom remaining
-to him before he went back to the front, he did
-what everyone likes to do in Washington,&mdash;he went
-to see the President. But he went in no military
-capacity; he went rather in that political capacity<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>
-he so much preferred to the military, and he went as
-to the chief he had so long known and loved and
-followed.</p>
-
-<p>It would be his old friend Chase who presented
-him to the President, but their conversation was
-soon interrupted by the entrance of an aide who
-announced the arrival in the White House grounds
-of an Indiana regiment passing through Washington,
-which, as seems to have been the case with most
-regiments passing through the Capital, demanded a
-speech from the President. And Lincoln complied,
-and as he arose to go out he asked my grandfather
-to accompany him, and they continued their talk on
-the way. But when they stood in the White House
-portico, and the regiment beheld the President and
-saluted him with its lifted cheer, the aide stepped
-to my grandfather&#8217;s side, and much to his chagrin&mdash;for
-he had been held by the President while he
-finished a story&mdash;told him that it would be necessary
-for him to drop a few paces to the rear. It
-was a little <i>contretemps</i> that embarrassed my grandfather,
-but Lincoln, with his fine and delicate perceptions,
-divined the whole situation, and met it
-with that kindness which was so great a part of
-the humor and humanness in him, by saying:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You see, Mr. Brand, they might not know which
-was the President.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was not long after that he was at Appomattox
-and the first to issue rations to the hungry Confederates
-who had just surrendered, and no act of
-his life gave him quite as much satisfaction as to
-have been the first to pour his whole supply of hardtack<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
-into the blankets of those whom still and always
-he remembered as of his own blood. And that
-done, after they had ridden into Richmond, he was
-relieved and was soon back in Washington calling
-on Chase again. Chase asked him what he could
-do for him, and my grandfather said there was but
-one thing in the world he wanted: namely, to go
-home; and a request so simple was granted with
-that alacrity with which politicians grant requests
-that, in their scope, fall so short of what
-might have been expected. But it was not long until
-Chase&#8217;s influence was requested in a more substantial
-matter, and in 1870 my grandfather, with his wife
-and two younger daughters, was on his way across
-the Atlantic to Nuremberg, where President Grant
-had appointed him consul.</p>
-
-<p>It was not, of course, until after his return from
-the foreign experience that my conscious acquaintance
-with him began. But when they returned and
-opened the old house, and filled it with the spoil of
-their European travel,&mdash;some wonderful mahogany
-furniture and Dresden china, and other objects of
-far more delight to us children,&mdash;he and I began a
-friendship which lasted until his death, and was
-marred by no misunderstanding, except, perhaps,
-as to the number of hours his saddle-horse should
-be ridden on the gallop, and the German he wished
-me to read to him out of the little black-bound
-volumes of Schiller and Goethe, which for years
-were his companions. He held, no doubt with some
-show of reason on his side, that if he could master
-the language after he was sixty, I might learn at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
-least to read it before I was sixteen. The task had
-its discouragements, not lightened, even in after
-years, when I read in their famous and delightful
-correspondence Carlyle&#8217;s advice to Emerson to possess
-himself of the German language; it could be
-done, wrote Carlyle, in six weeks! But, like Emerson,
-I was afflicted with the postponement and debility
-of the blond constitution, and I observed that,
-except in great moments of unappreciated sacrifice,
-my grandfather preferred to read his German himself
-rather than to listen to my renditions.</p>
-
-<p>I have spoken of the house as the old house, and I
-do that as viewing it from the point of disadvantage
-of the years that have gone since it grew out
-of that haze and mist and darkness of early recollections
-into a place that was ablaze with light at
-evening and full of the constant wonder and delight
-of the company of a large family. It was, indeed,
-an old house then, with a high-gabled roof at
-one wing, that made an attic which we called, with
-a sense of its mystery, the &#8220;dark room,&#8221;&mdash;a room,
-however, not so dark that I could not see to read
-the old bound volumes of a newspaper an uncle had
-once edited;&mdash;one could lie under the little gable
-windows and pore over the immense quartos, or more
-than quartos, and exercise the imagination by reading
-of some long dead event, and, with a great effort,
-project one&#8217;s self back to that time, and pretend
-to read with none other than its contemporary
-impressions.</p>
-
-<p>The cellar of the house was not so interesting,
-though it was mysterious, and far more terrifying.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>
-There was a vast fireplace in the cellar, in which,
-as Jane, the old colored woman who was sometimes
-a cook and sometimes a nurse, once solemnly told
-my cousin and me, the devil dwelt, so that I visited
-it only once, and there so plainly saw the ugly horns
-of that dark deity that we fled upstairs and into
-the sunlight again. It may have been that the crane
-and the andirons of the old fireplace helped out
-the impression, though after the original suggestion
-little was required to strengthen it, and we
-never went down there again, except to lure a
-younger cousin as far as the door to shudder in the
-awful pleasure of witnessing her fear.</p>
-
-<p>This gabled wing had been the original house,
-and additions had been built to it in two directions,
-with a wide hall, somewhat after the southern fashion
-in which so many houses in that part of Ohio were
-built in those days.</p>
-
-<p>It seems larger in the retrospect than it is in
-the reality, and I am not endowing it with the
-spaciousness of a mansion; it was, in fact, a modest
-dwelling of a dozen rooms, with an atmosphere that
-was imparted to it by the furniture that had been
-brought back from Europe, and the personality that
-filled it.</p>
-
-<p>My grandfather conducted his establishment on
-a scale of prodigality that had a certain patriarchal
-air; he had a large family, and he loved to have
-them all about him, and in the evenings they gathered
-there at the piano they had bought in Berlin,
-and when the candles in their curious brass sconces
-had been lighted, there was music, for the whole<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>
-family possessed some of that talent which, as President
-Eliot rightly declares in his lecture on &#8220;The
-Happy Life,&#8221; contributes so much real pleasure.
-My grandfather did not himself sing; or, at
-least, he sang rarely, and then only one or two
-Scotch songs, but when he could be induced to
-do this, the event took on the festal air of a celebration.</p>
-
-<p>His two younger daughters had been educated
-in music in Germany, and there was something more
-of music in the house than the mere classic portraits
-of Mozart and Beethoven which hung on the
-wall near the painting of the old castle at Nuremberg.
-They played duets, and once, at least, at a
-recital given in the town, we achieved the distinction
-of a number played on two pianos by my mother
-and her three sisters.</p>
-
-<p>The May festivals in &#8220;the City,&#8221; as we called Cincinnati
-in those days, were a part of existence, and
-my first excursion into the larger world was when
-my father took me to Cincinnati to hear Theodore
-Thomas&#8217;s Orchestra, which proved to be an excursion
-not only into a larger world, but eventually
-into a larger life,&mdash;that life of music, that life of a
-love of all the arts, which provides a consolation
-that would be complete could I but express myself
-in any one of them. I did, indeed, attempt some
-expression of the joys of that experience, for with
-more pretension than I could dare to-day, I wrote
-a composition, or paper, on Music which was printed
-in a child&#8217;s publication, and won for me a little
-prize. It was twenty-two years before I was able<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
-again to have any writing of mine accepted and
-published by a magazine.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">IV</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Urbana in those days was not without its atmosphere
-of culture, influenced in a degree by the
-presence of the Urbana University, a Swedenborgian
-college which in the days before the war had
-flourished, because so many of its students came
-from the southern states. It declined after the
-war, but even after that event, the presence of so
-many persons of the Swedenborgian persuasion,
-with their gentle manners and intellectual appreciation,
-kept the traditions alive, and the college
-itself continued, though not so flourishingly, on its
-endowed foundation.</p>
-
-<p>One of the tutors in it was a young, brown-haired
-man who several times a day passed by my grandfather&#8217;s
-home on his way to and from his classes,
-whom afterwards I came to admire for those writings
-to which was signed the name of Hjalmar Hjorth
-Boyesen. He did not remain long in Urbana, not
-longer it seems than he could help, and to judge
-from some of his pictures of various phases of its
-life, he did not like the town as well as the Urbana
-folk themselves liked it. It was a rather self-sufficient
-town, I fancy, and it cared so little for change
-that it has scarcely changed at all, save as one misses
-the faces and the forms one used to see there in
-other days. It was the home of the distinguished<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
-family, and the birthplace, too, of John Quincy
-Adams Ward, the sculptor, and the possession of
-a personality in itself distinguishes a town.</p>
-
-<p>I was walking with my father across Market
-Square not long ago; it had shrunk in size and
-seemed little and mean and sordid, despite the new
-city hall that has replaced the old, and there was
-no miserable prisoner idly sweeping the cobblestones,
-though the negro drivers with their bull whips were
-snoozing there as formerly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They have been there ever since eighteen sixty-six,&#8221;
-said my father, who had gone there in the
-year he had mentioned on his coming out of college.</p>
-
-<p>His home was in Piqua, a town not far away,
-where his father had retired to rest after his lifelong
-labors on a farm he had himself &#8220;cleared&#8221; in Montgomery
-County many years before. This paternal
-grandfather was a large, gaunt, silent man, who
-spoke little, and then mostly in a sardonic humor,
-as when, during that awful pioneer work of felling
-a forest to make a little plantation, he said to his
-grown sons who were helping to clear away the underbrush
-of a walnut wood:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Boys, what little you cut, pile here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Few other of his sayings have been preserved, and
-it may be that he has left behind an impression that
-he never talked at all because he never talked politics,
-and not to do that in Ohio dooms one to a
-silence almost perpetual. He had once been a Democrat,
-and had participated with such enthusiasm in
-the campaign of 1856 that he had kept his horses&#8217;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>
-tails and manes braided for a month that they
-might roll forth in noble curls when they were loosened,
-and the horses harnessed to a carriage containing
-four veterans of the Revolution, who were to
-be thus splendidly drawn to the raising of a tall
-hickory pole in honor of James Buchanan, that year
-a candidate for president. But the old diplomatist
-made such a miserable weakling failure of his
-administration that his Piqua partizan became
-disgusted and renounced forever his interest in
-political affairs, and, like Henry I., never smiled
-again.</p>
-
-<p>But my Grandfather Brand, when he was not
-talking about poetry or the war, was talking about
-politics; sometimes world politics, for he was interested
-in that; sometimes European politics, which
-he had followed ever since in Paris he had witnessed
-the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War, or national
-politics, or state politics, or, in default of a
-larger interest, local politics, which in Ohio, as no
-doubt elsewhere, sometimes looms largest and most
-important of all, because, perhaps, as De Tocqueville
-says, local assemblies constitute the strength of
-free institutions.</p>
-
-<p>My grandfather was then, at the time of which
-I am thinking even if I am not very specifically
-writing about it, mayor&mdash;and continued to be mayor
-for four terms. It was an office that was suited, no
-doubt, to the leisure of his retirement, and while it
-gave him the feeling of being occupied in public affairs,
-it nevertheless left him opportunities enough
-for his German poets, and for his horses and his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>
-farm out at Cable, and the strawberries he was beginning
-to cultivate with the enthusiasm of an amateur.</p>
-
-<p>In such an atmosphere as that in the Ohio of those
-days it was natural to be a Republican; it was more
-than that, it was inevitable that one should be a Republican;
-it was not a matter of intellectual choice,
-it was a process of biological selection. The Republican
-party was not a faction, not a group, not a
-wing, it was an institution like those Emerson speaks
-of in his essay on Politics, rooted like oak-trees in
-the center around which men group themselves as
-best they can. It was a fundamental and self-evident
-thing, like life, and liberty, and the pursuit of
-happiness, or like the flag, or the federal judiciary.
-It was elemental, like gravity, the sun, the stars, the
-ocean. It was merely a synonym for patriotism, another
-name for the nation. One became, in Urbana
-and in Ohio for many years, a Republican just as the
-Eskimo dons fur clothes. It was inconceivable that
-any self-respecting person should be a Democrat.
-There were, perhaps, Democrats in Lighttown; but
-then there were rebels in Alabama, and in the Ku-klux
-Klan, about which we read in the evening, in
-the Cincinnati <i>Gazette</i>.</p>
-
-<p>One of the perplexing and confounding anomalies
-of existence was the fact that our neighbor, Mr.
-L&mdash;&mdash;, was a Democrat. That fact perhaps explained
-to me why he walked so modestly, so unobtrusively,
-in the shade, so close to the picket fences
-of Reynolds Street, with his head bowed. I supposed that,
-being a Democrat, it was only natural<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
-for him to slink along. He was a lawyer and a
-gentleman; my grandfather spoke with him, but
-from my mind I could never banish the fact that
-he was a Democrat, and to explain his bent, thoughtful
-attitude I imagined another reason than the
-fact that he was a meditative, studious man.</p>
-
-<p>Lawyers, of course, were Republicans, else how
-could they deliver patriotic addresses on Decoration
-Day and at the reunions of the 66th regiment?
-It was natural for a young man to be a lawyer, then
-to be elected prosecuting attorney, then to go to the
-legislature, then to congress, then&mdash;governor, senator,
-president. They could not, of course, go any
-more to war and fight for liberty; that distinction
-was no longer, unhappily, possible, but they could
-be Republicans. The Republican party had saved
-the Union, won liberty for all men, and there was
-nothing left for the patriotic to do but to extol that
-party, and to see to it that its members held office
-under the government.</p>
-
-<p>In those days the party had many leaders in
-Ohio who had served the nation in military or civil
-capacity during the great crisis; scarcely a county
-that had not some colonel or general whose personality
-impressed the popular imagination; they
-were looked up to, and revered, and in the political
-campaigns their faces, pale or red in the flare of
-the torches of those vast and tumultuous processions
-that still staged the political contest in the
-terms of war, looked down from the festooned platforms
-in every public square. And yet they were
-already remote, statuesque, oracular, and there was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
-the reverent sense that somehow placed them in the
-ideal past, whose problems had all been happily
-solved, rather than in the real present.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">V</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>But up in the northwestern part of the state,
-still referred to, even in days so late as those, with
-something of the humorous contempt that attached
-to the term, as the Black Swamp, there had risen
-a young, fiery, and romantic figure who ignored the
-past and flung himself with fierce ardor into a new
-campaign for liberty. His words fell strangely on
-ears that were accustomed to the reassurance that
-liberty was at last conquered, and his doctrines perplexed
-and irritated minds that had sunk into the
-shallow optimism of a belief that there were no more
-liberations needed in the world. It was not a new
-cry, indeed, that he raised, but an old one thought
-to have been stilled, and the standard he lifted in
-the Black Swamp was looked upon by many Ohioans
-as much askance as though it were another secession
-flag of stars and bars. Indeed, it had long
-been associated with the cause of the conquered
-South, because that section, by reason of its economic
-conditions, had long espoused the principle of
-Free Trade.</p>
-
-<p>This young man was Frank Hunt Hurd, then
-the congressman from the Toledo district, and in
-that city, where my father was the pastor of a
-church, he had won many followers and adherents,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
-though not enough to keep him continually in his
-seat in the House of Representatives.</p>
-
-<p>He served for several alternate terms, the interims
-being filled by some orthodox nonentity, who
-was so speedily forgotten that there must have been
-an impression that for years our district was represented
-by this one man.</p>
-
-<p>I had heard of him with that dim sense of his
-position which a boy has of any public character,
-but I had a real vivid conception of him after that
-Fourth of July when, during a citizens&#8217; celebration
-which must have been so far patriotic as to forget,
-for a time, partizanism, and to remember patriotism
-sufficiently to include the Democrats, I saw
-him conducted to the platform by our distinguished
-citizen, David R. Locke, whom the world knew as
-&#8220;Petroleum V. Nasby.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He delivered a patriotic oration, and anyone,&mdash;even
-though he were but a wondering boy quite by
-chance in attendance, standing on the outskirts of
-the crowd, following some whim which for a while
-kept him from his sports,&mdash;anyone who ever heard
-Frank Hurd deliver an oration never forgot it afterward.</p>
-
-<p>I have no idea now what it was he said, perhaps
-I had as little then, but his black hair, his handsome
-face, his beautiful voice, and the majestic music
-of his rolling phrases were wholly and completely
-charming. He was explicitly an orator, a
-student of the great art, and he formed his orations
-on the ancient Greek models, writing them out with
-exordium, proposition, and peroration, and while he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
-did not perhaps exactly commit them to memory,
-he, nevertheless, in the process of preparing them,
-so completely possessed himself of them that he
-poured forth his polished sentences without a flaw.</p>
-
-<p>His speech on Free Trade, delivered in the House
-of Representatives, February 18, 1881, remains the
-classic on that subject, ranking with Henry Clay&#8217;s
-speech on &#8220;The American System,&#8221; delivered in the
-Senate in 1832. In that address Frank Hurd began
-with the phrase, &#8220;The tariff is a tax,&#8221; which acquired
-much currency years after when Grover
-Cleveland used it.</p>
-
-<p>Everyone, or nearly everyone, told me of course
-that Frank Hurd was wrong, if he was not, indeed,
-wicked, and the subject possessed a kind of fascination
-for me. In thinking of it, or in trying to think
-of it, I only perplexed myself more deeply, until at
-last I reached the formidable, the momentous decision
-of taking my perplexities to Frank Hurd himself,
-and of laying them before him.</p>
-
-<p>I was by this time a youth of eighteen, and in
-the summer when he had come home from Washington
-I somehow found courage enough to go to
-the hotel where he lived, and to inquire for him. He
-was there in the lobby, standing by the cigar-stand,
-talking to some men, and I hung on the outskirts of
-the little group until it broke up, and then the
-fear I had felt vanished when he turned and smiled
-upon me. I told him that I wished to know about
-Free Trade, and since there was nothing he liked
-better to talk about, and too, since there were few
-who could talk better about anything than he could<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>
-talk about the tariff, we sat in the big leather chairs
-while he discoursed simply on the subject. It was
-the first at several of these conversations, or lessons,
-which we had in the big leather chairs in the
-lobby of the old Boody House, and it was not long
-until I was able, with a solemn pride, to announce
-at home that I was a Free-Trader and a Democrat.</p>
-
-<p>It could hardly have been worse had I announced
-that I had been visiting Ingersoll, and was an atheist.
-Cleveland was president, and in time he sent
-his famous tariff reform message to Congress, and
-though I could not vote, I was preparing to give
-him my moral support, to wear his badge, and even,
-if I could do no more, to refuse to march in the Republican
-processions with the club of young men
-and boys organized in our neighborhood.</p>
-
-<p>For the first time in my life I went on my vacation
-trip to Urbana that summer with reluctance,
-for the first time in my life I shrank from seeing
-my grandfather. The wide front door opened, and
-from the heat without to the dark and cool interior
-of the hall I stepped; I prolonged the preliminaries,
-I went through the familiar apartments, and out
-into the garden to see how it grew that summer,
-and down to the stable to see the horses; but the
-inevitable hour drew on, and at last, with all the
-trivial things said, all the personal questions asked,
-we sat in the living-room, cool in the half-light produced
-by its drawn shades, the soft air of summer
-blowing through it, the odd old Nuremberg furniture,
-the painting of the Nuremberg castle presented<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
-to my grandfather by the American artist whom he
-had rescued from a scrape, the tall pier glass, with
-the little vase of flowers on its marble base, and my
-grandfather in his large chair, his white waistcoat
-half unbuttoned and one side sagging with the weight
-of the heavy watch-chain that descended from its
-large hook, his white beard trimmed a little more
-closely, his white hair bristling as aggressively as
-ever&mdash;all the same, all as of old, like the reminders of
-the old life and all its traditions now to be broken
-and rendered forever and tragically different from
-all it had been and meant. He sat there looking at
-me, the blue eyes twinkling under their shaggy
-brows, and stretched forth his long white hand in
-the odd gesture with which he began his conversations.
-Conversations with him, it suddenly developed,
-were not easy to sustain; he pursued the
-Socratic method. If you disagreed with him, he
-lifted three fingers toward you, whether in menace
-or in benediction it was difficult at times to determine,
-and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let me instruct you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For instance:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you know why Napoleon III. lost the battle
-of Sedan?&#8221; he might abruptly inquire.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, sir,&#8221; you were expected to say. (You always
-addressed him as &#8220;sir.&#8221;)</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let me instruct you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Or:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you know who was the greatest English
-poet?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, sir,&#8221; you would say, or, perhaps, in those<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
-days you might venture, &#8220;Was it Shakespeare,
-sir?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Then he would look at you and say:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let me instruct you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This afternoon then, after I had inspected the
-premises, noticed how much taller my cousin&#8217;s fir-tree
-was than the one I called mine (we had planted
-them one day, as little boys, years before), and
-after I had had a drink at the old pump, which in
-those days, before germs, brought up such cold,
-clear water, and after I had ascended to my cool
-room upstairs, and come downstairs again, and
-we had idly talked for a little while, as I said, he
-sat and looked at me a moment, and then said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you understand this tariff question?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In those days I might have made the due, what I
-might term with reference to that situation, the
-conventional reply, and so have said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, sir.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In these days I am sure I should. But I hesitated.
-He had already stretched forth his hand.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, sir,&#8221; I said.</p>
-
-<p>He drew in his hand, and for an instant touched
-with his long fingers the end of his large nose. I
-plunged ahead.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am in favor of Free Trade, sir.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He did not extend his hand. He looked at me
-a moment, and then he said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are quite right; we must support Mr. Cleveland
-in the coming contest.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And then he sank back in his chair and laughed.</p>
-
-<p>He was always like that, following the truth as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
-he saw it, wherever it led him. But his active days
-were not many after that; ere long he was kicked by
-one of his horses, a vicious animal, half bronco,
-which he insisted on riding, and he was invalided for
-the rest of his days. He spent them in a wheel-chair,
-pushed about by a negro boy. It was a cross
-he bore bravely enough, without complaint, spending
-his hours in reading of politics, now that he could
-no longer participate in them, and more and more
-in reading verse, and even in committing it to memory,
-so that to the surprise of his family he soon
-replaced the grace he had always said at table with
-some recited stanza of poetry, and he took to cultivating,
-or to sitting in his chair while there was
-cultivated, under his direction, a little rose garden.
-He knew all those roses as though they were living
-persons: when a lady called,&mdash;if the roses were in
-bloom,&mdash;he would say to his colored house-boy:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Go cut off Madame Maintenon, and bring her
-here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Then he would present Madame Maintenon to
-the caller with such a bow as he could make in his
-chair, and an apology for not rising. He was patient
-and brave, yet he did not like to feel the
-scepter passing from him, and he resented what he
-considered interferences with his liberties. One day
-when he had returned from a visit to an old friend,
-to whose home his colored boy had wheeled him,
-one of his daughters asked, in a somewhat exaggerated
-tone of propitiation:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, Father, how did you find Mr. Hovey?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I found him master of his own house!&#8221; he blazed.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>In 1896 he supported Mr. Bryan, and his Republican
-neighbors said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Poor old Major Brand! His mind must be affected!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was an effort for him to get out to the polls,
-but he went, beholding in that conflict, as he could
-in any conflict however confused and clouded, the
-issue of free men above any other issue. He did
-not get out much after that, even when that last
-summer the few remnants of the 66th regiment gathered
-in Urbana to hold the annual reunion. He
-could not so much as get up town to greet his old
-comrades, and they sent word that in the afternoon
-they would march in review before his home. He
-was wheeled out on the veranda, and there he sat
-while his old regiment, the fifty or sixty gray,
-broken men, marched past. They saluted as they
-went by, and he returned the salutes with tears
-streaming down the cheeks where I had never seen
-tears before. And he said with a little choking
-laugh:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, look at the boys!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was not long after, that six of us, his grandsons,
-bore him out of the old home forever. And
-on his coffin were the two things that expressed him
-best, I think&mdash;his roses and his flag.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">VI</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The incalculable influence of the spoken word and
-the consequent responsibility that weighs upon the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>
-lightest phrase have so long been urged that men
-might well go about with their fingers on their lips,
-oracular as presidential candidates, deliberating
-each thought before giving it wing. And yet, as
-Carlyle said of French speech, the immeasurable
-tide flows on and ebbs only toward the small hours
-of the morning. Though even then in certain quarters,
-the tide does not ebb, and in those hours truths
-are sometimes spoken&mdash;for instance, by newspaper
-reporters, who, their night&#8217;s work done, turn to each
-other for relaxation and speak those thoughts they
-have not dared to write in their chronicles of the
-day that is done. The thought itself is only a
-vagrant, encountered along the way back to such
-an evening, when a reporter uttered two little words
-that acquired for me a profound significance.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, nothing.&#8221; Those were the exact words, just
-those two, and yet a negative so simple contained
-within itself such an affirmation of an awful truth,
-that I have never been able to forget them, though
-for a time I tried. Charlie R&mdash;&mdash; and I had
-gone one night, after the paper had gone to press,
-into a little restaurant in Chicago to get some supper.
-It was sometime in the year 1891, and, in
-our idle gossip, the hanging of the anarchists, then
-an event so recent that the reporters now and then
-spoke of it, had come up in our talk.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Where were you when that occurred?&#8221; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In Toledo,&#8221; I answered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What did people think of it there?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of the hanging?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>I looked at him, I suppose, in some astonishment.
-What did people in Toledo think of the hanging
-of the Chicago anarchists! Could any question have
-been more stupid, more banal? What did any
-people, anywhere, think of it? What was customary,
-what was proper and appropriate and indispensable
-under such circumstances? In a word,
-what was there to do with anarchists except to
-hang them? Really, I was quite at a loss what to
-say. It seemed so superfluous, so ridiculous, as
-though he had asked what the people in Toledo
-thought of the world&#8217;s being round, or of the force
-of gravity. More than superfluous, it was callous;
-he might as well have asked what Toledo people
-thought of the hanging of Haman, the son of Hammedatha
-the Agagite, or of the suicide of Judas Iscariot.
-And I answered promptly in their defense:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, they thought it was right, of course.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He had his elbows on the table and was lighting
-a cigarette, and as he raised the match, his dark
-face, with its closely trimmed pointed beard, was
-suddenly and vividly illuminated by the yellow flame.
-His eyes were lowered, their vision fixed just then
-on the interesting process of igniting the end of
-the cigarette. But about his puckered lips, about
-his narrowed eyes there played a little smile, faint,
-elusive, and yet of a meaning so indubitable that it
-was altogether disconcerting. And in that instant
-I wondered&mdash;it could not be! It was preposterous,
-absurd!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why?&#8221; I asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, nothing,&#8221; he said.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>The end of the cigarette was glowing, little coils
-of fire in the tiny particles of tobacco; he blew out
-the match and the smile disappeared from his face
-with its ruddy illumination, and he tossed the
-charred stick into his coffee cup.</p>
-
-<p>Were there, then, two opinions? Was it possible
-that anyone doubted? When <i>anarchists</i> were
-in question! Still, on that kindly face before me
-there lingered the shadow of that strange expression,
-inscrutable, perplexing, piquing curiosity.
-And yet by some strange, almost clairvoyant process,
-it had gradually acquired the effect of a persistent,
-irresistible and implacable authority, in the
-presence of which one felt&mdash;well, cheap, as though
-there were secrets from which one had been excluded,
-as though there were somewhere in this universe
-a stupendous joke which alone of all others
-one lacked the wit to see. It gave one a disturbed,
-uneasy sensation, a <i>mauvaise honte</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The innate sense of personal dignity, the instinct
-to retire into one&#8217;s self, the affectation of repose
-and self-sufficiency which leads one lightly to wave
-aside a subject one does not understand, to pass it
-over for other and more familiar topics&mdash;these were
-ineffectual. Curiosity perhaps in a sense much less
-refined than that in which Matthew Arnold considered
-it when he exalted it to the plane of the higher
-virtues, broke down reticence, and, at last I asked,
-and even begged my companion to tell me what he
-meant. But he was implacable; he had reached, it
-appeared, a stage of development in which the
-opinions of others were of no consequence; an altitude<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>
-from which he could regard the race of men
-impersonally, and permit them to stumble on in
-error, without the desire to set them right. It was
-quite useless to question him, and in the end the
-only satisfaction he would give me was to say, with
-an effort of dismissing the subject:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ask some of the boys.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For a young citizen to whom society is yet an
-illusion, lying, in Emerson&#8217;s figure, before him in
-rigid repose, with certain names, men and institutions
-rooted like oak-trees to the center, round
-which all arrange themselves the best they can, to
-have one of those oak-trees torn violently up by
-the roots, is to experience a distinct shock. And
-by two words, and an expression that played for
-an instant in lowered eyes, and about lips that were
-more concerned just then with the flattened end of
-a fresh cigarette than the divulgence of great
-truths! Yes, decidedly a shock, to leave one shaken
-for days. If there were any doubt as to what to
-do with anarchists, what was the use of going on
-with the study of the law? I went out from that
-cheap little restaurant in Fifth Avenue, into Chicago&#8217;s
-depressing midnight streets&mdash;and the oak tree
-never took root again. For, as Charlie R&mdash;&mdash;
-had lightly suggested, I asked the boys, and by the
-boys he meant, of course, the reporters.</p>
-
-<p>They were boys in spirit, though in the knowledge
-of this world they were as aged men, some of whom
-had seen so much of life that they were able to dwell
-with it only by refusing any longer to accept it seriously.
-They formed in that day an unusual group,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>
-gathered in the old Whitechapel Club, and many of
-their names have since become known to literature.
-They, or most of them, had worked on the anarchist
-cases, from the days of the strike in McCormick&#8217;s
-reaper works, down to the night when the
-vivid pen of Charlie Seymour could describe the
-spark that soared in a parabolic curve from the alley
-into Haymarket Square, and then to the black
-morning of the hanging; and they knew.</p>
-
-<p>It was all very simple, too. If it were not for
-the tragedy, and the wrong that is so much worse
-than any tragedy, one might almost laugh at the
-simplicity. It shows the power of words, the force
-of phrases, the obdurate and terrible tyranny of
-a term. The men who had been hanged were called
-anarchists, when, as it happens, they were men, just
-men. And out of that original error in terminology
-there was evolved that overmastering fear which
-raved and slew in a frenzy of passion that decades
-hence will puzzle the psychologist who studies the
-mind of the crowd. And the student of ethics will
-find in the event another proof of the inerrancy
-and power of that old law of moral action and reaction,
-according to which hatred ceaseth not by
-hatred, but by love alone. It may be found stated
-accurately and simply in the Sermon on the Mount,
-and there is still hope that Christendom, after another
-thousand years or so, may discover it, and
-drawing therefrom the law of social relations, apply
-it to human affairs, and so solve the problems that
-trouble and perplex mankind.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">VII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>In speaking of the group of newspaper writers
-who formed the Whitechapel Club, augmented as
-they were by artists, and musicians and physicians
-and lawyers, I would not give the impression that
-they were in any sense reformers, or actuated by
-the smug and forbidding spirit which too often inspires
-that species. They were, indeed, wisely otherwise,
-and they were, I think, wholly right minded
-in their attitude toward what are called public questions,
-and of these they had a deep and perspicacious
-understanding, and it will be easy to imagine that
-the cursory comments on passing phases of the human
-spectacle of such minds as those of Charles
-Goodyear Seymour, Finley Peter Dunne, George
-Ade, Ben King, Opie Reed, Alfred Henry Lewis, and
-his brother William E. Lewis, Frederick Upham Adams,
-Thomas E. Powers, Horace Taylor, Wallace
-Rice, Arthur Henry, and a score of others were
-apt to be entertaining and instructive, though they
-were uttered with such wit and humor that they
-were never intended to be instructive.</p>
-
-<p>The club had been founded late in the eighties,
-and although it endured less than ten years, it still
-lives in the minds of newspaper and literary men
-as one of the most remarkable of Bohemian clubs.
-It had its rooms in the rear of a little saloon, conducted
-by Henry Koster in &#8220;newspaper alley,&#8221; as
-Calhoun Place was more generally called, near the
-buildings of the <i>Chicago News</i> and the <i>Chicago<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>
-Herald</i>, and it somehow gathered to itself many of
-the clever men of Chicago who were writing for
-the press, and a few intimate spirits in other lines
-of work, but of sympathetic spirit. For a while the
-club was nameless, but one afternoon a group were
-sitting in one of the rooms when a newsboy passed
-through the alley and cried: &#8220;All about the latest
-Whitechapel murder!&#8221; Seymour paused with a
-stein of beer half lifted, and said: &#8220;We&#8217;ll call the
-new club the &#8216;Whitechapel Club.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I suppose the grewsome connotations of the name
-led to our practice of collecting relics of the tragedies
-we were constantly reporting. When he came
-back from the Dakotas, where he had been reporting
-the Sioux War, Seymour brought back from the
-battles a number of skulls of Indians, and blankets
-drenched in blood, which were hung on the walls
-of the club. From that time on it became the practice
-of sheriffs and newspaper men everywhere to
-send anything of that kind to the Whitechapel Club.
-The result was that within a few years it had a
-large collection of skulls of criminals, and some
-physicians discovered, or thought they discovered,
-differences between these skulls and the skulls of
-those who were not criminals, or, if they were, had
-not been caught at it.</p>
-
-<p>These and the ropes of hangmen and the various
-mementos of crimes were the decorations of the club
-rooms, and on Saturday nights the hollow eyes of
-those skulls looked down on many a lively scene.</p>
-
-<p>Admission to the club was obtained in a peculiar
-way. An applicant for membership had his name<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
-proposed, and it was then posted on a bulletin-board.
-He was on probation for thirty days, during
-which he had to be at the club at least five days
-in the week, in order to become acquainted with the
-members. Within that time any member could tear
-his name down, and that ended his candidacy.
-When his name finally came up for voting it required
-the full vote of the club to get him in.</p>
-
-<p>And then we grew prosperous, and acquiring a
-building farther down the alley, we had it decorated
-in a somber manner, with a notable table, shaped like
-a coffin, around which we gathered. But the prosperity
-and the fame of the club led to its end. Rich
-and important men of Chicago sought membership.
-Some were admitted, then more, and as a result the
-club lost its Bohemian character, and finally disbanded.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">VIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Those who are able to recall the symposium of
-these minds will no doubt always see the humorous
-face of Charlie Seymour as the center of the coterie,
-a young man with such a <i>flair</i> for what was news,
-with such an instinct for word values, such real
-ability as a writer, and such a quaint and original
-strain of humor as to make him the peer of any,
-a young man who would have gone far and high
-could he have lived. An early fate overtook him,
-as it overtook Charlie Perkins and Charlie Almy
-and Ben King, but their fate had the mellowing kindness<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>
-of the fact that all who knew them can never
-think of them, with however much regret, without
-a smile at some remembered instance of their unfailing
-humor.</p>
-
-<p>When I mentioned them, I had fully intended to
-give some instances of that humor, but when it was
-not of a raciness, it was of such a rare and delicate
-charm, such a fleeting, evanescent quality, that it is
-impossible to separate it from all that was going on
-about it. It is easy enough to recall if not to evoke
-again the scene in which Ben King and Charlie Almy,
-sitting for three hours at a stretch, gave a wholly
-impromptu impersonation of two solemn missionaries
-just returned from some unmapped wilderness
-and recounting their deeds in order to inspire contributions;
-it is not difficult either to recall the
-slight figure of Charlie Seymour, with his red hair,
-his comedian&#8217;s droll face, and to listen to him recounting
-those adventures which life was ever offering
-him, whether on one of his many journeys as
-a war correspondent to the region of the Dakotas
-when his friends among the Ogallalla and Br&ucirc;l&eacute;
-Sioux were on the war-path again, or in some less
-picturesque tragedy he had been reporting nearer
-home&mdash;say a murder in South Clark Street; but,
-like so many of the keener joys of life, the charm
-of his stories was fleeting and gone with the moment
-that gave them.</p>
-
-<p>His humor colored everything he wrote, as the
-humor of Finley Peter Dunne colored everything he
-wrote; and both were skilled in the art of the news
-story. We were all reading Kipling in those days,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
-and Mr. Dunne was so clever in adapting his terse
-style to the needs of the daily reportorial life that
-when one night a private shot a comrade in the
-barracks at Fort Sheridan, and Mr. Dunne was detailed
-to report the tragedy, he found it in every
-detail so exactly like Kipling&#8217;s story &#8220;In the Matter
-of a Private,&#8221; that he was overcome by the
-despair of having to write a tale that had already
-been told. He resisted the temptation, if there was
-any temptation, nobly and wrote the tale with a
-bald simplicity that no doubt enhanced its effect.
-He had not then begun to report the Philosophy of
-Mr. Dooley, though there was a certain Irishman
-in Chicago responsive to the name of Colonel
-Thomas Jefferson Dolan, whom, in his capacity of
-First Ward Democrat, Mr. Dunne frequently interviewed
-for his paper without the cramping influences
-of a previous visitation on the Colonel, and these
-interviews showed much of the color and spirit of
-those Dooley articles which later were to make him
-famous. He already knew, of course, and frequently
-enjoyed communion with the prototype of
-Mr. Dooley, Mr. James McGarry, who had a quaint
-philosophy of his own which Mr. Dunne one day
-rendered in a little article entitled &#8220;Mr. McGarry&#8217;s
-Philosophy.&#8221; The familiarity so wounded Mr.
-McGarry, however (he was a man of simple dignity
-and some sensitiveness), that Mr. Dunne thereafter
-adopted another name for the personage
-through which he was so long and so brilliantly to
-express himself, though it was not until after the
-Spanish War that the wide public was to recognize<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>
-the talent which was already so abundantly recognized
-by Mr. Dunne&#8217;s friends.</p>
-
-<p>Charlie Seymour did not read as much as some
-of his companions; perhaps it was that fact that
-gave such an original flavor to what he wrote. His
-elder brother, Mr. Horatio W. Seymour, was the
-editor of the <i>Herald</i>, a newspaper famed for the
-taste and even beauty of its typographical appearance.
-It looked somewhat like the New York <i>Sun</i>,
-and under Mr. Seymour was as carefully edited.
-It was the organ of the Democracy in the northwest,
-and I suppose no direct or immediate influence was
-more potent in bringing on the wide Democratic
-victory in the congressional election of 1890 than the
-brilliant editorials on the tariff which Mr. Horatio
-Seymour wrote. They were, I remember, one of the
-delights of Frank Hurd, and it was through Hurd&#8217;s
-influence that I was on the staff of that paper, reporting
-political events.</p>
-
-<p>We were all more or less employed in reporting
-political events in that stirring year, and were kept
-busy in following and recording the sayings of the
-orators of both parties. It was characteristic of
-Mr. Dunne that after a sober column giving the gist
-of a speech by Joseph B. Foraker, then lately governor,
-and afterward senator of Ohio, in which he
-waved the bloody shirt in the fiery manner which in
-those days characterized him, Mr. Dunne should
-have concluded his article sententiously: &#8220;Then the
-audience went out to get the latest news of the battle
-of Gettysburg.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But it was typical of Charlie Seymour that when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
-he was detailed to accompany Thomas B. Reed,
-Speaker of the Billion Dollar Congress, he should
-have been so fascinated by the whiskers of the Illinois
-farmers who crowded about the rear platform
-of the Speaker&#8217;s train, that he devoted half a column
-to a description of those adornments which long
-was celebrated as a classic in the traditions of Chicago
-reporters, to be recalled by them as they
-would recall, for instance, certain of the sayings of
-the late Joseph Medill.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Medill, of course, moved in an element far
-above that which was natural to the reporters, and
-the figure of the great editor of the <i>Tribune</i> filled
-the imagination completely. I used to like his low-tariff
-editorials, though they became high-tariff editorials
-during national campaigns, the rate of percentage
-of protection rising like a thermometer in
-the heat of political excitement,&mdash;a tendency the
-rate invariably reveals the nearer its objective is
-approached.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Medill, as was well known, was not an admirer
-of President Harrison, and there came down
-into our world an evidence of the fact in a story
-which Mr. Frank Brooks, a political writer on the
-<i>Tribune</i>, told us. It was at the time that President
-Harrison made one of those speaking tours which,
-beginning with President Johnson&#8217;s &#8220;swing around
-the circle,&#8221; have grown increasingly familiar to those
-of the electorate who observe their presidents and
-rush to the railway station to hear them speaking
-as they flash by. His managing editor had assigned
-Mr. Brooks to go to Galesburg, catch the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>
-President&#8217;s special and make the journey with him,
-and just as he was giving directions as to the column
-or two which Mr. Brooks was to send in daily, Mr.
-Medill went shuffling through the editorial room,
-bearing a great pile of those foreign exchanges he
-was so fond of reading. The managing editor explained
-to Mr. Medill the mission he was committing
-to Mr. Brooks, and the old editor stood a moment
-looking at them, then raised his ear-trumpet and
-said in his queer voice:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What did you say?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I said, I&#8217;d just been telling Mr. Brooks to go
-down to Galesburg to-night, catch the President&#8217;s
-special, and send us a column or so each night of
-his speeches.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Uh-huh,&#8221; said Mr. Medill, and then he drily
-added: &#8220;<i>What for?</i>&#8221;</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="IX">IX</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>It was, of course, for a young correspondent who
-hod an eager curiosity about life, an interesting
-experience to go on a journey like that, and it was
-with delight that, one snowy morning in the late
-autumn of that year, I left Chicago to go on a little
-trip down through Indiana with James G. Blaine.
-He was the secretary of state in President Harrison&#8217;s
-cabinet, a position in which, as it turned out,
-he was unhappy, as most men are apt to be in public
-positions, though a sort of cruel and evil fascination
-will not let them give up the vain pursuit of
-them, vainest perhaps when they are won. When<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>
-I reached the station that morning, Mr. Blaine was
-already there, walking up and down the platform
-arm in arm with his son Emmons. He was a gray
-man, dressed in gray clothes, with spats made of the
-cloth of his habit, and there was about him an air
-of vague sadness, which in his high countenance became
-almost a pain, though just then, in the companionship
-of the son he loved, there was, for a
-little while, the expression of a mild happiness, maybe
-a solace. His face was of a grayish, almost luminous
-pallor, and his silver hair and beard were in
-the same key. William Walter Phelps, then our
-minister to Germany, was traveling with him, and
-on our way down to South Bend the constant entrance
-of plain citizens from the other coaches into
-our car filled Mr. Phelps with a kind of wonder.
-Commercial travelers, farmers, all sorts and conditions
-of men, entered and introduced themselves to
-Mr. Blaine, and he sat and talked with them all in
-that simplicity which marks the manners, even if it
-has departed the spirit of the republic.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is a remarkable sight you are witnessing,&#8221; said
-Mr. Phelps to us reporters, &#8220;a sight you could witness
-in no other country in the world. There is the
-premier of a great government, and yet the commonest
-man may approach him without ceremony,
-and talk to him as though he were nobody.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Fresh from his life at a foreign court, he was
-viewing events from that foreign point of view, perhaps
-thinking just then in European sequences, and
-since there was such simplicity, it was not hard for
-any of us to have conversation with our premier.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>
-Mr. Blaine had just come from Ohio where he had
-been speaking in McKinley&#8217;s district, and he understood
-the political situation so perfectly that he said,
-in the frankness of a conversation that was not to be
-reported, that McKinley was certain to be defeated;
-indeed he foresaw, though it required no very great
-vision to do that, the reverse that was to overtake
-his party in the congressional elections.</p>
-
-<p>With my interest in the tariff question, which then
-seemed to me so fundamental, I did not lose the
-opportunity to ask Mr. Blaine about his reciprocity
-project: but after a while the conversation turned
-to more personal subjects. When he learned that I
-was from Ohio, he asked me suddenly if I could name
-the counties that formed the several congressional
-districts of the state. I could not, of course, do
-that, and I supposed no one in the world could do
-it or ever wish to do it; but he could, and with a
-na&iuml;ve pride in the accomplishment he did, and then
-astounded me by saying that he could almost match
-the feat with any state in the Union.</p>
-
-<p>It was the only enthusiasm the poor man showed
-all that day, and when we reached South Bend, there
-was a <i>contretemps</i> that might have afforded Mr.
-Phelps further food for reflection on the lack of ceremony
-in America. When the premier stepped off
-the train into the wet mass of snow that covered the
-dirty platform of the ugly little station, there was
-nowhere to be seen any evidence of a reception for
-the distinguished guest. There was an old hack, or
-&#8217;bus, one of those rattling, shambling, moth-eaten
-vehicles that await the incoming train at every small<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>
-town in our land, with a team of forlorn horses depressed
-by the weather or by life, but there was no
-committee of eminent citizens, no band, nothing.
-The scene was bare and bleak and cold, and the
-premier was plainly disgusted.</p>
-
-<p>He stood there a moment and looked about him
-undecided, while Mr. Phelps with sympathetic concern
-displayed great willingness to serve, but was as
-helpless as his chief. The American sovereigns who
-were loafing by the station shed looked on with the
-reticent detachment which characterizes the rural
-American. And then the train slowly pulled out and
-left us, and Mr. Blaine cast at it a glance of longing
-and of reproach, as though in its sundering of the
-last tie with the world of comfort, he had suffered
-the final indignity. There seemed to be no course
-other than to take the &#8217;bus, when suddenly a committee
-rushed up, out of breath and out of countenance,
-and with a chorus of apologies explained
-that they had met the wrong train, or gone to another
-station, and so bore the premier off in triumph
-to dine at some rich man&#8217;s house.</p>
-
-<p>The day seemed to grow worse as it progressed, as
-days ill begun have a way of doing, and when the
-premier in the afternoon appeared at the meeting
-he was to address, his spirits had not improved, and
-even if they had, the meeting was one to depress the
-spirits of any man. It assembled in a barren hall,
-a kind of skating rink, or something of the sort, that
-would have served better for a boxing match. The
-audience was small, and standing about in the mud
-and slush they had &#8220;tramped in,&#8221; to use our midwestern<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
-phrase, they displayed that bucolic indifference
-which can daunt the most exuberant speaker.
-It was in no way worthy of the man, and Mr. Blaine
-spoke with evident difficulty, and so wholly lacked
-spirit and enthusiasm that it was impossible for
-him to warm up to his subject. The speech was of
-that perfunctory sort which such an atmosphere
-compels, one of those speeches the speaker drags
-out, a word at a time, and is glad to be done with,
-and Mr. Blaine bore with his fates a little while, and
-then almost abruptly closed. He spoke on the tariff
-issue, and in defense of the McKinley Bill, and in
-marshaling the evidences of our glory and prosperity,
-all of which he attributed to the direct influence
-of the protective tariff system, he mentioned
-the number of miles of railroad that had been built,
-and even the increase in the nation&#8217;s population!
-The speech and the occasion afforded an opportunity
-to a newspaper of the opposition, which in
-those days of silly partizanship, was not to be overlooked.
-I went back to the little hotel and wrote
-my story, and since I had all the while in my mind
-not only partizan advantage, but the smiles that
-would break out on the countenances of Charlie
-Seymour and Peter Dunne and the other boys gathered
-in the Whitechapel Club I did not minimise
-the effect of all those babies who had come to life
-as a result of the protective tariff, nor all those
-ironical difficulties the day had heaped upon the
-great man. It was not, perhaps, quite fair, nor quite
-nice, but it was as fair and as nice as newspaper ethics
-and political etiquette&mdash;if there are such things&mdash;require,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>
-and Mr. Blaine himself most have had
-some consciousness of his partial failure, some dissatisfaction
-with his effort, for I was just about
-to put my story on the wire at six o&#8217;clock when he
-appeared, with his rich host, and asked for me. I
-talked to him through the little wicket of the telegraph
-office, and the conversation began inauspiciously
-by the rich man&#8217;s peremptorily commanding
-me to let him see my stuff; he wished, he said, to
-&#8220;look it over&#8221;! I was not as patient with his presumption
-then as I think I could be now, for I had
-not learned that it was the factory system that produces
-such types, men who bully the women at home
-and the women and clerks and operatives in their
-shops, and I denied him the right, of course. He
-became very angry, and blustered through the little
-window, while the operator, an old telegrapher I had
-known in Toledo, sat behind me waiting to send the
-story clicking into Chicago on <i>The Herald&#8217;s</i> wire.
-After the rich man had exhausted himself, Mr.
-Blaine took his place at the window and in a mild
-and calm manner, asked me for my copy, saying
-that he was not well, and that he had made some
-slips in his speech which he did not care to have go
-to the country. It was those unfortunate or fortunate
-babies of the protective tariff system, and he
-said that the correspondent of a press association
-had agreed to make the excisions if I would do so,
-and he would consider it a favor if I would oblige
-him.</p>
-
-<p>The charm of his manner had been on me all that
-day, and I had been feeling sorry for him all day,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>
-too, and I was sorrier for him then than ever, and
-half ashamed of some of the things I had written, but
-I explained to him that I had been sent by my paper
-in the hope that he might say something to the disadvantage
-of his own cause, and that my duty was
-to report, at least, what he had said. It was one of
-the hardest &#8220;noes&#8221; I ever had to say, and at last as
-he turned away, I regretted, perhaps more than
-he, and certainly more than he ever knew, that I
-could not let him revise his speech&mdash;since that is
-what most of us desire to do with most of our
-speeches.</p>
-
-<p>When that campaign ended in the overthrow of
-the Republican majority in Congress, and I was sent
-to interview Ben Butterworth on the result, he said,
-in his humorous way: &#8220;The Lord gave, and the
-Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name of the
-Lord.&#8221; He was not altogether cast down by the result;
-in his place in Congress as a representative
-from a Cincinnati district he had risen to denounce
-the tariff, and so had his consolation. To me it
-seemed as if the people had at last entered the promised
-land, that that was the day the Lord had made
-for his people, but Mr. Butterworth could point out
-that our government was not so democratic as the
-British government, for instance, since it was not so
-responsive to the people&#8217;s will. Over there, of
-course, after such a reverse the government would
-have retired, and a new one would have been formed,
-but here the existing administration would remain in
-power two years longer, and then, even if it lost in
-the presidential election over a year must elapse before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
-a new Congress would convene, so that the millennium
-was postponed a good three years at least.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">X</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>However, there were other interests and other delights
-with which to occupy one&#8217;s self meanwhile, not
-the least of which was Mr. Butterworth himself.
-He was then out of Congress and in Chicago as Solicitor
-General of the World&#8217;s Columbian Exposition,
-for which Chicago was preparing. For a while
-I was relieved from writing about politics, and assigned
-to the World&#8217;s Fair, and there were so many
-distinguished men from all over the nation associated
-in that enterprise that it was very much like politics
-in its superficial aspects. There was, for instance,
-the World&#8217;s Columbian Commission, a body created
-under the authority of Congress, composed of two
-commissioners from each state, appointed by its
-governor, and that body exactly the size of the
-senate was like it in personnel and character. The
-witty Thomas E. Palmer of Michigan was its president,
-and there were among its membership such
-men as Judge Lindsay, later senator from Kentucky,
-Judge Harris of Virginia, who looked like George
-Washington, and many other delightful and pungent
-characters. But no personality among them all was
-more interesting than Colonel James A. McKenzie,
-Judge Lindsay&#8217;s colleague from Kentucky. He was
-tall and spare of frame, and his long moustache
-and goatee, and the great black slouch hat he wore<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>
-made him in appearance the typical southerner of
-the popular imagination. He was indeed the typical
-southerner by every right and tradition, by birth,
-by his services in the Confederate army, by his
-stately courtesy, by his love of sentiment and the
-picturesque, by his wit and humor and eloquence,
-and his fondness for phrases. His humor sparkled in
-his kind blue eyes, and it overflowed in that brilliant
-conversation with which he delighted everyone
-about him; he could entertain you by the hour with
-his comments on all phases of that life in which he
-found such zest. He had been known as &#8220;Quinine
-Jim,&#8221; because as congressman he had secured the
-reduction or the abolition of the duty on that drug,
-so indispensable in malarial lands. He was fond of
-striking phrases; he it was who had referred to
-Blaine as a Florentine mosaic; and his reference to
-Mrs. Cleveland as &#8220;the uncrowned queen of America&#8221;
-had delighted the Democratic convention at St.
-Louis which renominated her husband for the presidency.
-And again at Chicago, on that memorable
-night of oratory in 1892 in seconding the nomination
-of Cleveland on behalf of Kentucky he stood on a
-chair and referred to his state as the commonwealth
-&#8220;in which, thank God, the damned lie is the first
-lick, where the women are so beautiful that the
-aurora borealis blushes with shame, where the
-whiskey is so good as to make intoxication a virtue,
-and the horses so fleet that lightning in comparison
-is but a puling paralytic.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>During one of many pleasant afternoons in the
-old Grand Pacific Hotel he began to tell us something<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
-about the chronic office holders to be found in
-the capital of his state, as in most states, and said:
-&#8220;If God in a moment of enthusiasm should see fit
-to snatch them to His bosom I should regard it as a
-dispensation of divine providence in which I could
-acquiesce with a fervor that would be turbulent and
-even riotous.&#8221; It was in this stream of exaggeration
-and hyperbole that he talked all the time, but with
-the coming of the winter of that year my opportunities
-of listening to him were cut off. I was sent to
-Springfield to report the sessions of the legislature.
-In the spring a bill was under discussion for the
-appropriation of a large sum in aid of the World&#8217;s
-Fair, and when the usual opposition developed
-among those country members who have so long
-governed our cities in dislike and distrust of the
-people in them, a delegation came down from Chicago
-to lobby for the measure. It was not long
-until it was evident that they were not making
-much headway; the difference, the distinction in
-their dress and manner, their somewhat too lofty
-style were only making matters worse. I took it
-upon myself to telegraph to James W. Scott, the
-publisher of <i>The Herald</i>, apprising him of the situation,
-and suggesting that Colonel McKenzie be sent
-down to re&euml;nforce them. I felt that he would perhaps
-understand the country members better because
-he understood humanity better, and besides, I
-wished to see him again and hear his stories and
-funny sayings. He came, and after he had associated
-with the members a day or so, and they had
-seen him draw Kentucky &#8220;twist&#8221; from the deep<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
-pocket of the long tails of his coat, and on one or
-two occasions had watched him gently pinch into a
-julep the tender sprigs of mint the spring had
-brought to Springfield, the appropriation for some
-reason was made. While he was there he said he
-wished to visit the tomb of Lincoln, and it was with
-pride that I got an open carriage and drove him, on
-an incomparable morning in June, out to Oak Ridge
-cemetery. He was in a solemn mood that morning;
-the visit had a meaning for him; he had fought on
-the other side in the great war, but he had a better
-conception of the character of the noble martyr than
-many a northerner, especially of the day when that
-tomb was built, certainly a nobler conception of
-that lofty character than is expressed in Mead&#8217;s
-cruel war groups&mdash;as though Lincoln had been
-merely some shoulder-strapped murderer of his fellow
-men! The Colonel had never been there before,
-and it was an occasion for him, and for me, too,
-though every time I went there it was for me an occasion,
-as my sojourn in Springfield was an opportunity,
-to induce those who had known Lincoln to
-talk about him.</p>
-
-<p>The tomb has a chamber in its base where there
-were stored a number of things; the place, indeed,
-was a sort of cheap museum, and you paid to enter
-there and listen to an aged custodian lecture on the
-&#8220;relics,&#8221; and thrill the gaping onlooker with the
-details of the attempt to steal the body, and buy a
-book about it, if you were morbid and silly enough.
-The custodian began his lecture in that chamber,
-and then led you out into the sunlight again, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>
-up on the base of the monument, and showed you the
-bronze fighters, and at last, took you down into the
-crypt, on the brow of the little down that overlooks
-the cemetery.</p>
-
-<p>There at last Colonel McKenzie stood beside the
-sarcophagus and after a while the custodian came
-to the end of his rigmarole, and, by some mercy, was
-still. And I stood aside and looked at the old Confederate
-officer, standing there in that cool entrance,
-beside the very tomb of Lincoln. He stood with
-his arms folded on his breast, his tall form
-slightly bent, his big hat in his hand, and his
-white head bowed; he stood there a long time, in
-the perfect silence of that June morning, with
-thoughts, I suppose, that might have made an
-epic.</p>
-
-<p>When at last he turned away and went around to
-the front of the monument, and we were about to
-enter our carriage, he turned, and still uncovered,
-over the little gate in the low fence that enclosed
-the spot, he paused and gave his hand to the old
-custodian, and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Colonel, I wish to express to you my appreciation
-of the privilege I have had this morning of
-paying my respects at the shrine of the greatest
-American that ever lived.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He said it solemnly and sincerely, and then, still
-holding the delighted old fellow&#8217;s hand, he went on
-in profound gravity:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And I cannot go away without expressing my
-sense of satisfaction in the eloquent oration you have
-delivered on this occasion. I was particularly impressed,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>
-sir, by its evident lack of previous thought
-and preparation.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XI</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>That was the legislature which elected John M.
-Palmer to the United States Senate from Illinois.
-The election was accomplished only after a memorable
-deadlock of two months in which the Democrats
-of the general assembly stood so nobly, shoulder to
-shoulder, that they were called &#8220;The Immortal 101.&#8221;
-When they were finally re&euml;nforced by the votes of
-two members elected as representatives of the Farmers&#8217;
-Alliance, and elected their man, they had a gold
-medal struck to commemorate their own heroism.
-They were not, perhaps, exactly immortal, but they
-did stand for their principles so stanchly that when
-they came to celebrate their victory, some of their
-orators compared them to those other immortals who
-held Thermopyl&aelig;.</p>
-
-<p>Their principle was the popular election of United
-States senators, and they had a fine exemplar of
-democracy in their candidate. He had been nominated
-by a state convention, as had Lincoln, whom
-General Palmer had known intimately and had supported
-both for senator and president. He was the
-last of those great figures of Illinois whom the times
-immediately preceding the Civil War had so abundantly
-brought forth. He had commanded an army
-corps, he had been governor of his state, and in
-1872 a presidential possibility in the Republican
-party. But he had turned to the Democrats, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
-after he became their senator, the first Illinois had
-known since Douglas, he became a presidential possibility
-in the Democratic party; that was in 1892,
-and whatever chances he had he destroyed himself
-by coming on from Washington and declaring for
-Grover Cleveland.</p>
-
-<p>Four years later he was nominated for the presidency
-by the conservative faction of his party. He
-told me, when I was finishing my law studies under
-him, that he had never lost anything politically by
-bolting any of the several parties he had been in, but
-had usually gained in self respect by doing so; and
-if to the politician his whole career presented inconsistencies,
-to the man of principle he must seem
-wholly consistent and sincere. Certain it is that he
-followed that inward spirit which alone can guide a
-man through the perplexities of life, and so the principle
-with him came ever before the party.</p>
-
-<p>He was a simple man with simple tastes, and his
-very simplicity was an element of that dignity which
-seemed to belong to other times than ours. The
-familiar figure of him along the quiet streets of
-Springfield was pleasing to men and to children
-alike; he would go along erectly and slowly under
-his great broad hat, a striking figure with his plentiful
-white hair, his closely trimmed chin whiskers,
-the broad, smoothly shaven upper lip distinguishing a
-countenance that was of a type associated with the
-earlier ideals of the republic, and the market basket
-he carried on his arm helped this effect. At home
-he was delightful; he had a viol, and used to play it,
-if there were not too many about to hear him, and if<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>
-he were alone, sing a few staves of old songs, like
-&#8220;Darling Nelly Gray,&#8221; and &#8220;Rosie Lee, Courting
-Down in Tennessee,&#8221; and some of the old tunes he
-had learned in Kentucky as a boy. He liked poetry,
-if it were not of the introspective modern mood, and
-while I have heard of such extraordinary characters,
-I never believed the stories of their endurance, until
-I was able to discover in him one man who actually
-did read Sir Walter Scott&#8217;s novels through every
-year. For the most part he had some member of his
-family read them to him, and he found in them the
-na&iuml;ve pleasure of a child. I used to think I would
-remember the things he was always saying, and the
-stories he was always telling about Lincoln or Douglas
-or Grant, but I never could keep note-books and
-the more imposing sayings have departed. Yet
-there flashes before the memory with the detail of a
-cinematograph that scene of a winter&#8217;s evening when
-I entered the big living-room in his home and there
-found him with his wife before the great open fire.
-She was reading aloud to him from &#8220;Ivanhoe.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Come in, Mr. Brand,&#8221; he always addressed me
-by prefixing &#8220;Mr.&#8221; to my Christian name. &#8220;Come
-in,&#8221; he called in his hearty voice. &#8220;We are just
-storming a castle.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He lived on to the century&#8217;s end, with a sort of
-gusto in life that never failed, I think, until that
-day when he attended the funeral of the last of his
-old contemporaries, General John M. McClernand,
-that fierce old warrior who had quarreled with Grant
-and lived on in Springfield until he could fight no
-more with anyone. Senator Palmer came home from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>
-his funeral amused by the fact that McClernand had
-been buried in the full uniform of a major-general,
-which he had not worn, I suppose, since Vicksburg.
-When some member of Senator Palmer&#8217;s household
-asked him if he should like to be buried in his uniform,
-he shook his head against it, but added:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It was all right for Mac; it was like him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But the end was in his thoughts; Oglesby was
-gone, and now McClernand as the last of the men
-with whom he had fought in the great crisis, and
-he went, pretty soon after that, himself. He had
-participated in two great revolutionary epochs of
-his nation, going through the one and penetrating
-though not so far into the second, a long span of
-life and experience.</p>
-
-<p>It was perhaps natural that he should not have
-divined the implications of the second phase as
-clearly as he did those of the first; and though he
-had helped to inaugurate the new movement, the latest
-urge toward democracy in this land, he could
-not go so far. He was young in &#8217;56 and old in &#8217;96,
-and as we grow old we grow conservative, whether
-we would or not, and much, I suppose, in the same
-way.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Senator Palmer&#8217;s victory in 1891, however, had
-raised the hopes of the Illinois Democracy for 1892,
-and it was early in that year that I came to know
-one of the most daring pioneers of the neo-democratic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
-movement in America, and the most courageous
-spirit of our times.</p>
-
-<p>It was on a cold raw morning that I met Joseph
-P. Mahony, then a Democratic member of the State
-Senate, who said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Come with me and I&#8217;ll introduce you to the next
-governor of Illinois.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was the time of year when one was meeting
-the next governor of Illinois in most of the hotel
-corridors, or men who were trying to look like potential
-governors of Illinois, so that such a remark
-was not to be taken too literally; but I went, and
-after ascending to an upper floor of a narrow little
-building in Adams Street, we entered a suite of law
-offices, and there in a very much crowded, a very
-much littered and a rather dingy little private room,
-at an odd little walnut desk, sat John P. Altgeld.</p>
-
-<p>The figure was not prepossessing; he wore his
-hair close-clipped in ultimate surrender to an obstinate
-cowlick; his beard was closely trimmed, too, and
-altogether the countenance was one made for the
-hands of the cartoonists, who in the brutal fury that
-was so soon to blaze upon him and to continue to
-blaze until it had consumed him quite, could easily
-contort the features to the various purposes of an
-ugly partizanship; they gave it a peculiarly sinister
-quality, and it is one of the countless ironies of life
-that a face, sad with all the utter woe of humanity,
-should have become for a season, and in some minds
-remained forever, the type and symbol of all that is
-most abhorrent. There was a peculiar pallor in the
-countenance, and the face was such a blank mask of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>
-suffering and despair that, had it not been for
-the high intelligence that shone from his eyes, it must
-have impressed many as altogether lacking in expression.
-Certainly it seldom or never expressed enthusiasm,
-or joy, or humor, though he had humor of a
-certain mordant kind, as many a political opponent
-was to know.</p>
-
-<p>He had been a judge of the Circuit Court, and
-was known by his occasional addresses, his interviews
-and articles, as a publicist of radical and
-humanitarian tendencies. He was known especially
-to the laboring classes and to the poor, who, by
-that acute sympathy they possess, divined in him
-a friend, and in the circles of sociological workers
-and students, then so small and obscure as to make
-their views esoteric, he was recognized as one who
-understood and sympathized with their tendencies
-and ideals. He was accounted in those days a
-wealthy man,&mdash;he was just then building one of those
-tall and ugly structures of steel called &#8220;sky-scrapers,&#8221;&mdash;and
-now that he was spoken of for governor
-this fact made him seem &#8220;available&#8221; to the politicians.
-Also he had a German name, another asset in
-Illinois just then, when Germans all over the state
-felt themselves outraged by legislation concerning
-the &#8220;little red school-house,&#8221; which the Republicans
-had enacted when they were in full power in the
-state.</p>
-
-<p>But my paper did not share this enthusiasm about
-him; it happened to be owned by John R. Walsh, and
-between Walsh and Altgeld there was a feud, a feud
-that cost Altgeld his fortune, and lasted until the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>
-day that death found him poor and crushed by all
-the tragedy which a closer observer, one with a
-keener prescience of destiny than I, might have read
-in his face from the first.</p>
-
-<p>The feeling of the paper, if one may so personalize
-a corporation as to endow it with emotion, was not
-corrected by his nomination, and <i>The Herald</i> had
-little to say of him, and what it did say was given out
-in the perfunctory tone of a party organ. But as
-the summer wore on, and I was able to report to my
-editors that all the signs pointed to Altgeld&#8217;s election,
-I was permitted to write an article in which I
-tried to describe his personality and to give some
-impression of the able campaign he was making.
-Horace Taylor drew some pictures to illustrate it,
-and I had the satisfaction of knowing that it gave
-Altgeld pleasure, while at the same time to me at
-least it revealed for an instant the humanness of the
-man.</p>
-
-<p>He sent for me&mdash;he was then in offices in his new
-sky-scraper&mdash;and asked if I could procure for him
-Horace Taylor&#8217;s pictures; he hesitated a moment,
-and then, as though it were a weakness his Spartan
-nature was reluctant to reveal, he told me that he
-intended to have my article republished in a newspaper
-in Mansfield, Ohio, the town whence he had
-come, where he had taught school, and where he
-had met the gracious lady who was his wife. He
-talked for a while that afternoon about his youth,
-about his poverty and his struggles, and then suddenly
-lapsed into a silence, with his eyes fastened
-on me. I wondered what he was looking at; his gaze<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
-was disconcerting, and it made me self-conscious and
-uneasy, till he said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Where could one get a cravat like the one you
-have on?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was, I remember&mdash;because of the odd incident&mdash;an
-English scarf of blue, quite new. I had tried to
-knot it as Ben Cable of the Democratic National
-Committee knotted his, and it seemed that such a
-little thing should not be wanting to the happiness
-of a man who, by all the outward standards, had so
-much to gratify him as Altgeld had, and I said&mdash;with
-some embarrassment, and some doubt as to the
-taste I was exhibiting&mdash;&#8220;Why, you may have this
-one.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In a moment his face changed, the mask fell, and
-he shook his head and said: &#8220;No, it would not look
-like that on me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>After his election it was suggested to me that I
-might become his secretary, but I declined; in my
-travels over the state as a political correspondent I
-was always meeting aged men, seemingly quite respectable
-and worthy and entirely well meaning, who
-were introduced not so much by name as such
-and such a former governor&#8217;s private secretary;
-though like the moor which Browning crossed, they
-had</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="indent">... names of their own,</div>
-<div class="verse">And a certain use in the world, no doubt.</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>But I did take a position in the office of the secretary
-of state that offered the opportunity I had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
-been longing for; I wished to finish my law studies,
-and, deeper down than any ambition for the bar, I
-was nourishing a desire to write, or if it does not
-seem too pretentious, an ambition in literature; and
-neither of these aims could well be accomplished,
-say from midnight on, after working all day on a
-morning newspaper.</p>
-
-<p>It was a pleasant change. Springfield was lovely
-in the spring, which came to it earlier than it visited
-Chicago, and it was a relief to escape the horrid
-atmosphere of a great brutal city which as a reporter
-it had seemed my fate to behold for the most
-part at night. There was a sense of spaciousness in
-the green avenues of the quiet town, and there was
-pleasant society, and better perhaps than all there
-were two big libraries in the Capitol, the law library
-of the Supreme Court and the state library; and
-after the noisy legislature had adjourned a peace
-fell on the great, cool stone pile that was almost
-academic.</p>
-
-<p>Twice or thrice a day Governor Altgeld was to be
-seen passing through its vast corridors, his head
-bent thoughtfully, rapt afar from the things about
-him in those dreams of social amelioration which had
-visited him so much earlier than they came to most
-of his contemporaries. He had read much, and
-during his residence there the executive mansion
-had the atmosphere of intellectual culture. Whenever
-I went over there, which I did now and then with
-his secretary for luncheon or for an evening at cards,
-our talk was almost always of books.</p>
-
-<p>We were all reading George Meredith in those<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>
-days, and Meredith&#8217;s greater contemporary, Thomas
-Hardy. &#8220;Tess&#8221; had just appeared, and it would
-be about that time that &#8220;Jude&#8221; was running as a
-serial in <i>Harper&#8217;s Magazine</i>, though with many elisions
-and under its tentative titles of &#8220;The Simpleton&#8221;
-and &#8220;Hearts Insurgent&#8221;; and we all fell completely
-under a fascination which has never failed of
-its weird and mysterious charm, so that I have read
-all his works, down to his latest poems, over and
-over again. Hardy is, perhaps, the greatest intelligence
-on our planet now that Tolstoy, from whom
-he so vastly differed, is gone, and Altgeld&#8217;s whole
-career might have served him, had he ever chosen to
-write of those experiences that are less implicit in
-human nature, and more explicit in the superficial
-aspects of public careers, as an example of his own
-pagan theory of the contrariety of human affairs
-and the spite of the Ironic Spirits.</p>
-
-<p>I was reading, too, the novels of Mr. William
-Dean Howells, as I always have been whenever there
-was a moment to spare, and it was with a shock of
-peculiar delight and a sense of corroboration almost
-authoritative that I learned that Mr. Howells also
-had given voice to those very same profound and
-troubling convictions which Charlie R&mdash;&mdash; had set
-me on the track of two years before.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>It was not in any one of Mr. Howells&#8217;s novels or
-essays, except inferentially, that I learned this, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>
-among some musty documents the worms were eating
-up away down in the foundations of the State
-House.</p>
-
-<p>My work in the office of the secretary of state
-involved the care of the state&#8217;s archives. The oldest
-of these were stored in a vault in the cellar of the
-huge pile, and the discovery had just been made
-that some kind of insect, which the state entomologist
-knew all about, was riddling those records with
-little holes,&mdash;piercing them through and through.
-In consequence a new vault was prepared, and steel
-filing cases were set up in it, and the records removed
-to this safer sanctuary.</p>
-
-<p>It was a tedious and stupid task, until we came
-one day to file what were called the papers in the
-anarchist case. Officially they related to the application
-for the commutation of the sentences of the
-four men, Spies, Engel, Fischer, and Parsons, who
-had been hanged, and for the pardon of the three
-who were then confined in the penitentiary at Joliet,
-Fielden and Schwab for life, and old Oscar Neebe
-for fifteen years. Fielden and Schwab had been sentenced
-to death with the four who had been killed,
-but Governor Oglesby had commuted their sentences
-to imprisonment for life; Neebe&#8217;s original sentence
-had been for the fifteen years he was then serving.
-The papers consisted of communications to the governor,
-great petitions, and letters and telegrams,
-many sent in mercy, and some in the spirit of reason,
-asking for clemency, many in a wild hysteria of fear,
-and the hideous hate that is born of fear, begging
-the governor to let &#8220;justice&#8221; take its course.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>There were the names of many prominent men
-and women signed to these communications; among
-them was a request signed by many authors in England
-requesting clemency, but there was no appeal
-stronger, and no protest braver, than that in the
-letter which Mr. Howells had written to a New
-York newspaper analyzing the case and showing the
-amazing injustice of the whole proceeding. Mr.
-Howells had first gone, so he told me in after years,
-to the aged poet Whittier, whose gentle philosophy
-might have moved him to a mood against that public
-wrong, and then to George William Curtis, but they
-had advised him to write the protest himself, and he
-had done so, and he had done it better and more
-bravely than either of them could have done out of
-the great conscience and the great heart that have
-always been on the side of the weak and the oppressed,
-with a mercy which when it is practised by
-mankind is always so much nearer the right and the
-divine than our crude and generally cruel attempts
-at justice can ever be.</p>
-
-<p>But all these prayers had fallen on official ears
-that&mdash;to use a grotesque figure&mdash;were so closely
-pressed to the ground that they could not hear; and
-there was nothing to do, since they were so many
-and so bulky that no latest-improved and patented
-steel filing-case could hold them, but to have a big
-box made and lock them up in that for all time, forgotten,
-like so many other records of injustice, out
-of the minds of men.</p>
-
-<p>But not entirely; injustice was never for long out
-of the mind of John P. Altgeld, and during all those<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>
-first months of his administration he had been brooding
-over this notable instance of injustice, and he
-had come to his decision. He knew the cost to him;
-he had just come to the governorship of his state,
-and to the leadership of his party, after its thirty
-years of defeat, and he realized what powerful interests
-would be frightened and offended if he were
-to turn three forgotten men out of prison; he understood
-how partizanship would turn the action to its
-advantage.</p>
-
-<p>It mattered not that most of the thoughtful men
-in Illinois would tell you that the &#8220;anarchists&#8221; had
-been improperly convicted, that they were not only
-entirely innocent of the murder of which they had
-been accused, but were not even anarchists; it was
-simply that the mob had convicted them in one of
-the strangest frenzies of fear that ever distracted a
-whole community, a case which all the psychologists
-of all the universities in the world might have tried,
-without getting at the truth of it&mdash;much less a jury
-in a criminal court.</p>
-
-<p>And so, one morning in June, very early, I was
-called to the governor&#8217;s office, and told to make out
-pardons for Fielden, Neebe, and Schwab. &#8220;And do
-it yourself,&#8221; said the governor&#8217;s secretary, &#8220;and
-don&#8217;t say anything about it to anybody.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I cannot tell in what surprise, in what a haze, or
-with what emotions I went about that task. I got
-the blanks and the records, and, before the executive
-clerk, whose work it was, had come down, I
-made out those three pardons, in the largest, roundest
-hand I could command, impressed them with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>
-Great Seal of State, had the secretary of state sign
-them, and took them over to the governor&#8217;s office.
-I was admitted to his private room, and there he
-sat, at his great flat desk. The only other person in
-the room was Dreier, a Chicago banker, who had
-never wearied, it seems, in his efforts to have
-those men pardoned. He was standing, and was
-very nervous; the moment evidently meant much to
-him. The Governor took the big sheets of imitation
-parchment, glanced over them, signed his name to
-each, laid down the pen, and handed the papers
-across the table to Dreier. The banker took them,
-and began to say something. But he only got as
-far as&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Governor, I hardly&#8221;&mdash;when he broke down and
-wept. Altgeld made an impatient gesture; he was
-gazing out of the window in silence, on the elm-trees
-in the yard. He took out his watch, told Dreier he
-would miss his train&mdash;Dreier was to take the Alton
-to Joliet, deliver the pardons to the men in person,
-and go on into Chicago with them that night&mdash;and
-Dreier nervously rolled up the pardons, took up a
-little valise, shook hands, and was gone.</p>
-
-<p>On the table was a high pile of proofs of the document
-in which Governor Altgeld gave the reasons for
-his action. It was an able paper; one might well
-rank it among state papers, and I suppose no one
-now, in these days, when so many of Altgeld&#8217;s democratic
-theories are popular, would deny that his
-grounds were just and reasonable, or that he had
-done what he could to right a great wrong; though
-he would regret that so great a soul should have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>
-permitted itself to mar the document by expressions
-of hatred of the judge who tried the case. But perhaps
-it is not so easy to be calm and impersonal in
-the midst of the moving event, as it is given to others
-to be long afterward.</p>
-
-<p>But whatever feelings he may have had, he was
-calm and serene ever after. I saw him as I was
-walking down to the Capitol the next morning. It
-was another of those June days which now and then
-are so perfect on the prairies. The Governor was
-riding his horse&mdash;he was a gallant horseman&mdash;and
-he bowed and smiled that faint, wan smile of his, and
-drew up to the curb a moment. There was, of
-course, but one subject then, and I said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, the storm will break now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, yes,&#8221; he replied, with a not wholly convincing
-air of throwing off a care, &#8220;I was prepared
-for that. It was merely doing right.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I said something to him then to express my satisfaction
-in the great deed that was to be so wilfully,
-recklessly, and cruelly misunderstood. I did not say
-all I might have said, for I felt that my opinions
-could mean so little to him. I have wished since that
-I had said more,&mdash;said something, if that might have
-been my good fortune, that could perhaps have
-made a great burden a little easier for that brave
-and tortured soul. But he rode away with that wan,
-persistent smile. And the storm did break, and the
-abuse it rained upon him broke his heart; but I
-never again heard him mention the anarchist case.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The newspapers were so extravagant in their
-abuse of Governor Altgeld for his pardon of the
-anarchists that one not knowing the facts might have
-received the impression that the Governor had already
-pardoned most of the prisoners in the penitentiary,
-and would presently pardon those that
-remained, provided the crimes they had committed,
-or were said to have committed, had been
-heinous enough. The fact was that he issued no
-more pardons, proportionately at least, than the
-governors who preceded him, since notwithstanding
-the incessant grinding of society&#8217;s machinery
-of vengeance the populations of prisons grow
-with the populations outside of them.</p>
-
-<p>But partizanship was intense in those days; and
-the fact that Governor Altgeld was responsible for
-such a hegira from the Capitol at Springfield as
-Colonel McKenzie had longed to behold in the Capitol
-at Frankfort exacerbated the bitter feeling. The
-sentiment thus created, however, did increase the
-hopes of convicts, and the Governor was continually
-importuned by their friends&mdash;those of them that had
-friends, which was apt to be a pitifully small percentage
-of the whole number&mdash;to give them back
-their liberty. A few weeks after the pardons had
-been issued to the anarchists, George Brennan of
-Braidwood, then a clerk in the State House, told me
-a moving story of a young man of his acquaintance,
-who was then confined in the penitentiary at Joliet.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
-The young man was dying of tuberculosis, and his
-mother, having no other hope than that he might be
-released to die at home, had made her appeal to
-Brennan, and he had seen to the filing of an application
-in due form, and now he asked me if I would not
-call the Governor&#8217;s attention to it. I got out the
-great blue envelope containing the thin papers in the
-case&mdash;they were as few as the young man&#8217;s friends&mdash;and
-took them over to the Governor, but no sooner
-had I laid them on his desk and made the first hesitating
-and tentative approach to the subject, than I
-divined the moment to be wholly inauspicious. The
-Governor did not even look at the papers, he did not
-even touch the big blue linen envelope, but shook
-his head and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, no, I will not pardon any more. The people
-are opposed to it; they do not believe in mercy; they
-love revenge; they want the prisoners punished to
-the bitterest extremity.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I did not then know how right he was in his cynical
-generalization, though I did know that his decision
-was so far from his own heart that it was no decision
-at all, but merely the natural human reaction against
-all the venom that had been voided upon him, and I
-went away then, and told Brennan that we must wait
-until the Governor was in another mood.</p>
-
-<p>Three or four days afterward I met the Governor
-one morning as he was passing through the rotunda
-of the State House, his head bent in habitual abstraction,
-and seeing me in what seemed always some
-subconscious way he stopped and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, by the way: that pardon case you spoke of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>
-the other morning&mdash;I was somewhat hasty I fear,
-and out of humor. If you&#8217;ll get the papers I&#8217;ll see
-what can be done.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I knew of course what could be done, and knew
-then that it would be done, and I made haste to get
-the papers, which had been kept on my desk awaiting
-that propitious season which I had the faith to
-feel would come sooner or later, though I had not
-expected it to come quite so soon as that. I already
-anticipated the gladness that would light up Brennan&#8217;s
-good Irish face when I handed him the pardon
-for his friend, and I could dramatize the scene in
-that miner&#8217;s cottage in Braidwood when the pardoned
-boy flew to his mother&#8217;s arms. I intended to
-say nothing then to Brennan, however, but to wait
-until the pardon, signed and sealed, could be delivered
-into his hands, but as I was going across the
-hall to the Governor&#8217;s chambers I encountered Brennan,
-and then of course could not hold back the good
-news. And so I told him, looking into his blue eyes
-to behold the first ripple of the smile I expected to
-see spread over his face; but there was no smile.
-He regarded me quite soberly, shook his head, and
-said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s too late now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And he drew from his pocket a telegram, and,
-without any need to read it, said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He died last night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I took the papers back and had them filed away
-among those cases that had been finally disposed of,
-though that formality could not dispose of the case
-for me. The Governor was waiting for the papers,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>
-and at last when the morning had almost worn away
-I went over to his chambers to add another fardel
-to that heavy load which I had thought it was to be
-my lot that day to see lightened in the doing of an
-act of grace and pity. I told him as he sat alone
-at his desk, and the shade of sorrow deepened a
-moment on his pale face; but he said nothing, and
-I was glad to go.</p>
-
-<p>The poor little tragedy had its impressions for
-me, and it was not long until I thought I saw in it
-the motive of a story, which at once I began to write.
-The theme was the embarrassment which a governor&#8217;s
-conscience created for him because during a
-critical campaign he knew it to be his duty to pardon
-a notorious convict,&mdash;and I invented the situations
-and expedients to bear the tale along to that thrilling
-climax in which the governor was delivered out
-of his difficulty by the most opportune death of the
-convict, whom a higher hand could dramatically be
-said to have pardoned. I worked very hard on the
-story, and thought it pretty fine, and I sent it away
-at last to an eastern magazine. And then I waited,
-and at length a letter came saying that the story
-was well enough thought of in that editorial room
-to hold it until the editor-in-chief should return
-from Europe and hand down a final decision. I
-waited for weeks, and then one morning there on my
-desk was an envelope, ominous in its bigness; it was
-one of those letters you do not have to open in order
-to read them, because you know what they say; I
-knew my manuscript had come back. But when I
-opened the package, instead of the familiar slip of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>
-rejection, there was a letter; the editor liked the
-story, saw much in it, he said, but felt&mdash;and quite
-rightly I am sure&mdash;that its ending, with the convict
-dying in the very nick of time to save the governor
-from his embarrassment, was an evasion of the whole
-moral issue; besides, the conclusion was too melodramatic,&mdash;that
-was the word he used,&mdash;and would I
-change it?</p>
-
-<p>The day after all was bright and cheerful; I
-remember it well, the sun lying on the State House
-lawns, their green dotted with the gold of dandelions,
-and the trees twisting their leaves almost rapturously
-in a sparkling air we did not often breathe
-on those humid prairies. And&mdash;though this has
-nothing whatever to do with the case, and enters it
-only as one of those incidents that linger in the
-memory&mdash;William Jennings Bryan was there that
-day, calling on the Governor and the Secretary of
-State. He was then a young congressman from
-Nebraska, and he made a speech; but I was interested
-in the story far more than in politics or any
-speech about it, even the brilliant speech of a man
-who so soon, and with such remarkable <i>&eacute;lan</i>, was to
-charge across the country on the hosts of privilege.</p>
-
-<p>And I changed the story; I made that poor harried
-governor drain his bitter cup of duty to the lees,
-and gave the story an ending so remorselessly logical,
-so true to the facts and fates of human experience,
-that it might have been as depressing as one of
-Hardy&#8217;s &#8220;Little Ironies&#8221;&mdash;could it have resembled
-them in any other way, which of course it could not,
-unless it were in that imitation with which the last<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>
-author I had been reading was pretty sure though
-all unconsciously to be flattered. I changed the
-story, and sent the MS. back to the waiting editor;
-and it was returned as the string snaps back to the
-bow, with a letter that showed plainly that his interest
-in the tale had all evaporated. He had no regrets,
-it appeared, save one perhaps, since he concluded
-his letter by saying:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Besides, you have destroyed the fine dramatic
-ending which the story possessed in its first draft.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The experience uprooted another of society&#8217;s oak-trees
-for me, and it has continued to lie there, with
-the roots of its infallibility withering whitely in the
-air, though humanity still somehow continues to arrange
-itself about the institution as best it can. This
-process of uprooting, I suppose, goes on in life to the
-very end; but it is wholesome after all, since life
-grows somehow easier after one has learned that
-human beings are all pretty human and pretty much
-alike in their humanness, and the great service of
-literature to mankind has been, and more and more
-will be, I hope, to teach human beings this salutary
-and consoling lesson.</p>
-
-<p>But, in no way despairing, I kept the manuscript
-by me, and when I was not trying to write other
-stories I was retouching it, until in the end its fate
-was almost that of the portrait which the artist in
-one of Balzac&#8217;s stories kept on trying to improve
-until it was but a meaningless scumble of gray, with
-no likeness to anything in this universe. Its fate
-was not quite that bad, however, since it made for me
-a friend.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XV</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The incident, like that on which the story itself
-was founded, occurred in the course of another effort
-to induce the Governor to save a poor wretch from
-the gallows. The autumn preceding, just when the
-World&#8217;s Fair at Chicago was at its apogee, a half-crazed
-boy had assassinated Carter Harrison, the old
-mayor of that city, and had been promptly tried and
-condemned to death. The time for the execution of
-the sentence drew on, and two or three days before
-the black event I had a telegram from Peter Dunne
-and other newspaper friends in Chicago asking me to
-urge the governor, or the acting governor as it
-happened at that time to be, to commute the sentence
-to one of imprisonment for life. The boy, so
-the telegrams said, was clearly insane, and had been
-at the time of his crazy and desperate deed; his case
-had not been presented with the skill that might have
-saved him, or at least might have saved another in
-such a plight; there had been the customary hue and
-cry, the most cherished process of the English law,
-&#8220;and,&#8221; Dunne concluded, &#8220;do get Joe Gill to let
-him off.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Joe Gill was Joseph B. Gill, the young Lieutenant-Governor
-of the state, and because Governor Altgeld
-was just then out of the state he was on the
-bridge as acting governor. Gill had been one of the
-Immortal 101, and as a representative had made a
-record in support of certain humane measures in
-behalf of the miners of the state. The newspaper<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>
-correspondents had had pleasure in celebrating him
-and his work in their despatches, and because of his
-popularity among the miners, to say nothing of his
-popularity among the newspaper men, he had been
-nominated for lieutenant-governor on the ticket
-with Altgeld. There was in our relations a <i>camaraderie</i>
-which put any thought of presumption out of
-the question; besides, I was always so much opposed
-to the killing of human beings, especially to that
-peculiarly horrible form of killing which the state
-deliberately and in cold blood commits under the
-euphemism of &#8220;capital punishment,&#8221; that I was always
-ready to ask any governor to commute a sentence
-of death that had been pronounced against
-anybody; so that it seemed a simple matter to
-ask Joe Gill, himself the heart of kindness, to
-save the life of this boy whose soul had wandered
-so desperately astray in the clouds which darkened
-it.</p>
-
-<p>Early the next morning&mdash;the telegrams had come
-at night&mdash;I went over to the governor&#8217;s office, and
-the governor&#8217;s private secretary told me that Lieutenant-Governor
-Gill had not yet appeared, and as a
-good secretary, anxious to protect his chief, he
-asked:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What do you want to see him about?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This Prendergast they&#8217;re going to hang in Chicago
-next Friday.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At this a man sitting in the room near the secretary&#8217;s
-desk looked up with a sudden access of intense
-interest; and, starting from his chair and
-transfixing me with a sharp glance, he asked:</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>&#8220;What interest have you in the Prendergast
-case?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;None,&#8221; I said, &#8220;except that I don&#8217;t want to
-have him, or anybody, hanged.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>On the man&#8217;s face, tired, with the expression of
-world-weariness life gives to the countenance behind
-which there has been too much serious contemplation
-of life, a face that seemed prematurely
-wrinkled, there suddenly appeared a smile as winning
-as a woman&#8217;s, and he said in a voice that had
-the timbre of human sympathy and the humor of
-a peculiar drawl:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, you&#8217;re all right, then.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It thereupon occurred to the governor&#8217;s secretary
-to introduce us, and so I made the acquaintance
-of Clarence Darrow. He had taken it upon
-himself to neglect his duties as the attorney of
-some of the railroads and other large corporations
-in Chicago long enough to come down to Springfield
-on his own initiative and responsibility to plead
-with the Governor for this lad&#8217;s life (he was always
-going on some such Quixotic errand of mercy for
-the poor and the friendless), and we retired to the
-governor&#8217;s ante-chamber to await the coming of
-Gill. We talked for a while about the Prendergast
-case, which might have had more sympathetic consideration
-had it not persisted as the Carter Harrison
-case in the mind of that public, which when
-its latent spirit of vengeance is aroused can so
-easily become the mob, but it was not long until I
-discovered that Darrow had read books other than
-those of the law, and for an hour we talked of Tolstoy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>
-and the other great Russians, and of Thomas
-Hardy and of Mr. Howells, to enumerate no more
-of the long catalogue of those realists whom we
-liked in common, and when I discovered that he
-actually knew Mr. Howells, knew him personally, as
-the saying is, I could feel that poor Prendergast,
-though I had never seen him in my life, or scarcely
-ever thought of him until the night before, had done
-me one service at least, and it made me all the more
-anxious to save him.</p>
-
-<p>When Joe Gill&#8217;s tall Egyptian form came swinging
-into the room our talk of books was interrupted
-long enough to arrange for a hearing that afternoon,
-and then we resumed our talk, and it endured
-through luncheon and after, and I left him only
-long enough to have a conversation with Gill and
-to ask him as a sort of personal favor to an old
-friend to spare the boy&#8217;s life.</p>
-
-<p>At two o&#8217;clock the hearing was called. The reporters
-and the governor&#8217;s secretary and George
-Brennan and I made the audience, and Gill sat up
-erectly in the governor&#8217;s chair to hear the appeal.
-Darrow asked me the proper address for a governor,
-and I said since this was the lieutenant-governor
-I thought &#8220;Your Excellency&#8221; would be propitiative,
-and Darrow made one of those eloquent
-appeals for mercy of which he is the complete master.
-It moved us all, but the Lieutenant-Governor
-gathered himself together and refused it, and Darrow
-went back to Chicago to unfold those legal
-technicalities which make our law so superior to
-other forms in that they can stay the hand of its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>
-vengeance. He did not succeed in the end, and the
-boy was hanged, and murder has gone on in Chicago
-since, I understand, the same as before. But Darrow
-could not leave Springfield until midnight of
-that day, and we talked about books all the evening,
-and when he boarded his train he had in his valise
-the MS. of my story about another governor and
-another pardon, concerning which he was charged
-to answer a certain question to which all my doubts
-and perplexities could be reduced, namely: &#8220;Is it
-worth while, and if not, is there any use in going on
-and trying to write one that is?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I had to wait almost as long for his decision as
-though he had been an editor himself, but when I
-called at his office in Chicago one morning in the
-autumn to get the MS., and he told me that his answer
-to my question was &#8220;yes,&#8221; and that he would,
-if I agreed, send the story to Mr. Howells, I was as
-happy as though he had been an editor and had accepted
-it for publication. I could not agree to its
-being sent on to weary Mr. Howells, but took it
-back with me to Springfield, in hope, if not in confidence.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>However, it has seemed to be my fate, or my
-weakness, which we too often confuse with fate, to
-vacillate between an interest in letters and an interest
-in politics, and after that year, whose days
-and nights were almost wholly given to studying
-law, I was admitted to the bar, and thereupon felt<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>
-qualified to go out on the stump in the campaign that
-autumn and speak in behalf of the Democratic ticket.
-It was fun to drive out over Sangamon County in
-those soft autumn evenings, over the soft roads,&mdash;though
-if it rained they became too soft,&mdash;and to
-speak in schoolhouses to the little audiences of farmers,
-or of miners, on the iniquities of the tariff. If we
-had been a little more devoted to principle, perhaps,
-than we were to party, we might better have spoken
-of the iniquities of that Democratic minority in
-the Senate which had just completed its betrayal
-of us all and helped to perpetrate those iniquities,
-but when you belong to a party you are presumed
-to adjust yourself to what your representatives do,
-and to make the best of what generally is a pretty
-bad bargain. The bargain of those senators had
-been particularly bad, and so, instead of speaking
-in the tones of righteous indignation, we had to
-adopt the milder accents of apology and explanation,
-and it was difficult to explain to some of those
-audiences. There was more or less heckling, and
-now and then impromptu little debates, and sometimes
-when the meeting was done, and we started on
-the long ride back to town, we would find that the
-nuts had been removed from the axles of our carriage-wheels.
-Perhaps that argument was as good
-as any we had made, and it could not matter much
-anyway, since partizan speeches never convince anybody,
-and if they could, if they could do anything
-but deepen and intensify prejudice, whole batteries
-of the world&#8217;s best orators in that year could not
-have overcome the vicious effects of that high betrayal,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
-even though they had been led to the charge
-by Phocion and Demosthenes.</p>
-
-<p>I suppose no greater moral wrong was ever committed
-in America. It had been bad enough that
-a policy of favoritism and advantage which appealed
-to so many because of the good luck of its
-reassuring name, had endured so long, as a sort of
-necessity in the development of a new continent; it
-had been bad enough that labor had first been lied to
-and then subjugated by the lie, that women had
-been driven into mills, and children had been fed to
-the Moloch of the machines, and that on these sacrifices
-there had been reared in America an insolent
-plutocracy with the ideals of a gambler and the
-manners of a wine-agent. But when the workingmen
-had learned at last that the system did not
-&#8220;protect&#8221; them, and when thousands of young men
-in the land, filled with the idealism of youth, had
-recognized the lie and the hypocrisy, and hated them
-with a fine moral abhorrence, and had turned to the
-Democratic party and trusted it to redeem its promise
-to reform this evil, and had put it in power in
-the nation, only to have its leaders in the Senate
-betray them with the brutal cynicism such a cause
-as theirs demands, then there was committed a deed
-little short of dastardly. If that seems too strong a
-word, the deed was surely contemptible, and base
-enough to fill anyone with despair of the party and
-of the party system as it had been developed in
-America, though it has been understood by only two
-men so far as I know&mdash;M. Ostrogorski and Golden
-Rule Jones. It was enough to disgust anyone with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>
-politics altogether, and to forswear them and
-parties, too, although I never quite understood the
-philosophy of the attitude until, a few years later,
-Golden Rule Jones made it clear. He made many
-things clear, for he dropped the plummet of his original
-mind down, down, down, more profoundly into
-fundamental life than anyone I can think of.</p>
-
-<p>To me, in those days, the tariff question had
-seemed entirely fundamental. I used to think that
-if we could but have civil-service reform, and tariff
-for revenue only, the world would go very well. The
-tariff question is not considered fundamental in
-these days, of course, so fast and so far past the
-Mugwumps has the world run, though everybody realizes
-its evil, and knows, or should know, that the
-notion of privilege on which tariffs are founded is
-quite fundamentally wrong, and every political party
-promises to reduce its rates, or revise them, or at
-least to take some measures against the lie.</p>
-
-<p>The Democratic party, to be sure, redeemed itself
-later under the splendid leadership of President Wilson,
-but at that time, while we recognized the evil of
-the theory, we seemed to have sunk into a sordid
-acquiescence in the fact; everybody thought the
-tariff wrong, but nobody wished to have it done away
-with so long as there was a chance, to speak in modern
-American, for him to get in on the graft. The
-word &#8220;graft&#8221; was unknown in those days, by all save
-those thieves in whose argot it was found and devoted
-to its present general use in the vocabulary.
-I suppose it is in the dictionary by this time. In
-any event, it is not strange that the word should<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>
-have become so current, since for a while we made
-a national institution of the very thing it connotes.</p>
-
-<p>There was, however, then and always, the labor
-question, and we were beginning to discover that
-that is fundamental, perhaps the one great fundamental,&mdash;aside
-from the complication of evil and
-good that is inherent and implicit in humanity itself,&mdash;since
-the burning question is and always will
-be how the work of the world is to be got done, and,
-what is a much more embarrassing problem, who is
-to do it. Many of the men who had been doing that
-work, or the heaviest of it, were striking in Illinois
-in those years.</p>
-
-<p>The shots the Pinkertons had fired at Homestead
-echoed in the state; Senator Palmer had made a
-great speech about it in the Senate; and perhaps
-the tariff had something to do with that, since tariffs
-on steel have not been unknown. But there were
-shots fired nearer home, first in the strike among
-the men who were digging the drainage canal, then
-among the miners in the soft coal fields of the state,
-then the strike in the model town of Pullman, and
-the great railroad strike that grew out of it.</p>
-
-<p>They called it the Debs Rebellion, and for a while
-it assumed some of the proportions of a rebellion,
-or at least it frightened many people in Illinois as
-much as a rebellion might have done. We were in
-the midst of all its alarms during that whole spring
-and summer, and down in the adjutant-general&#8217;s
-office at the State House there was the stir almost
-of war itself, with troops being ordered here and
-there about the state, and the Governor harried<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>
-and worried by a situation that presented to him
-the abhorrent necessity of using armed force. I was
-reading over the other day the report made to the
-War Department by my friend Major Jewett Baker,
-then a lieutenant in the Twelfth U. S. Infantry,
-detailed with the National Guard of Illinois; and
-in his clear and excellent account of all those confused
-events the scenes of those times came back:
-the long lines of idle freight cars, charred by incendiary
-flames; the little groups of men standing
-about wearing the white ribbons of the strike sympathizers,
-and the colonel of the regular army, in
-his cups at his club, who wished he might order a
-whole regiment to shoot them, &#8220;each man to take
-aim at a dirty white ribbon&#8221;; the regulars encamped
-on the lake front, their sentinels pacing
-their posts at the quickstep in the rain; and then
-that morning conference in the mayor&#8217;s office in Chicago,
-at which I was permitted to look on&mdash;what an
-interesting life it is to look on at!&mdash;when there appeared
-Eugene V. Debs, tall, lithe, nervous, leader of
-the strikers, his hair, what there was of it, sandy, but
-his head mostly bald, his eyes flashing, his mouth
-ready to smile, soon to go to Woodstock Jail, to
-emerge a Socialist, and become the leader of that
-party.</p>
-
-<p>Major Baker&#8217;s report shows, indirectly and by inference,
-that much of the criticism which the Governor
-endured was not justified, since he turned out
-all his troops as fast as local authorities asked for
-them. At any rate, he acted according to his democratic
-principles and to his conception of his duty.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>
-His principles were in a sense different from those
-of President Cleveland, with whom he disagreed in
-that notable instance when the President in his vigorous,
-practical way sent federal troops into Chicago;
-the Governor protested, as one of his predecessors
-in the governor&#8217;s office, Senator Palmer, had
-protested when President Grant sent federal troops
-under Phil Sheridan into Chicago at the time of the
-great fire. Almost everybody who had any way of
-making his voice heard sided with President Cleveland,
-and the end of the strike was accredited to
-him. Doubtless the grim presence of those regular
-troops did overawe the hoodlums who had taken advantage
-of the strike to create disorder, but if the
-credit must go to armed force, the report by Major,
-or, as he was in those days, Lieutenant, Baker shows
-that that little company of the Illinois National
-Guard which ruthlessly fired into the mob at Loomis
-Street one night virtually ended the disorder.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps Governor Altgeld was willing to forego
-any &#8220;credit&#8221; for an act, which, however necessary
-to the preservation of order, demanded so many
-lives. I do not know as to that, but I do recall the
-expression which clouded his face that afternoon
-we arrived at Lemont, during the strike at the drainage
-canal. It occurred a year before the railway
-strike, and the Governor had gone to Lemont himself
-to make an investigation. He had asked Lieutenant
-Baker and me to go with him, and when we
-got off the train at Lemont, on the afternoon of
-a cheerless day, the crowds were standing aimlessly
-about, watching with a sullen curiosity the arrival<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>
-of the militia. The soldiers were just then going
-into camp on the level rocks by a bridge across the
-canal and the Desplaines River&mdash;the bridge, according
-to the military scientists, was, I believe, considered,
-for some mysterious reason, to be a strategic
-point.</p>
-
-<p>The picture was one for the brush of Remington&mdash;those
-young blue-clad soldiers (it was before the
-days of our imperialism, and of the khaki our soldiers
-now imitate the British in wearing)&mdash;and
-Baker and I stood and gazed at it a moment, affected
-by the fascination there always is in the
-superficial military spectacle; and then, suddenly,
-we were aware that there was another and more
-dramatic point of interest, where a group stood
-about the body of a workman who had been shot in
-the riots of that morning. He was a foreigner,
-the clothes he wore doubtless those he had had on
-when he passed under the Statue of Liberty, coming
-to this land with what hopes of freedom in his
-breast no one can ever know. The wife who had
-come with him was on her knees beside him, rocking
-back and forth in her grief, dumb as to any words
-in a strange land whose tongue she could not speak
-or understand.</p>
-
-<p>The reporters from the Chicago newspapers were
-there, and among them Eddie Bernard, an old
-Whitechapeler, who told us that the man had
-reached Lemont only a few days before, and had
-been happy in the job he had so promptly found
-in the new land of promise. And now, there he
-lay, shot dead. Bernard looked a moment, and then<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>
-in the irony of a single phrase he expressed the
-whole drama as he said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The land of the free and the home of the brave!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>That was fundamental, anyhow, and politics were
-not going deeply into the question, except as such
-men as Altgeld did so, and even they were criticized
-sharply for attempting it. And one might well
-be disgusted with politics, then and always, and
-think of something that has the consolation of literature.
-The traffic of politicians, as Mr. George Moore
-somewhere says, is with the things of this world,
-while art is concerned with the dreams, the visions
-and the aspirations of a world beyond this. Though
-literature must some day in this land concern itself
-with that very question of labor, since it is with fundamental
-life that art must deal, and be true in its
-dealing.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Politics in those days&mdash;and not alone in those days
-either&mdash;were mean, and while I do not intend to say
-that this meanness bowed me with despair, it did fill
-me with disgust, and made the whole business utterly
-distasteful. Politics were almost wholly personal,
-there was then no conception of them as related to
-social life. An awakening was coming, to be sure,
-and the signs were then apparent, even if but few saw
-them. They were to most quite dim; but there were
-here and there in the land dreamers of a sort, who
-had caught a new vision. The feeling of it, the emotion,
-was to find expression in Mr. Bryan&#8217;s great<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>
-campaign in 1896; but there was then in Chicago a
-little group, men who had read Henry George, or,
-without reading him, had looked out on life intelligently
-and gained a concept of it, or perhaps had
-merely felt in themselves the stirrings of a new social
-instinct, and these saw, or thought they saw, the way
-to a better social order. They could not in those
-days gain so patient a hearing for their views as they
-have since, if any hearing they have had may after
-all be called patient; they were not so very patient
-themselves, perhaps, as men are quite apt not to be
-when they think they see as clearly as though a perpetual
-lightning blazed in the sky exactly what is the
-matter with the world, and have a simple formula,
-which, were it but tried, would instantly and infallibly
-make everything all right.</p>
-
-<p>But these men were not in politics; some of them
-were too impractical ever to be, and the only man
-in politics who understood them at all was Altgeld.
-Generally, the moral atmosphere of politics was foul
-and heavy with the feculence of all the debauchery
-that is inseparable from privilege. The personnel
-of politics was generally low; and in city councils
-and state legislatures there was a cynical contempt
-of all the finer sentiments. It was not alone that
-provincialism and philistinism which stand so obdurately
-and with such bovine stupidity in the way
-of progress; there was a positive scorn of the virtues,
-and the alliance between the lobbyists and the lawyers
-of the great corporation interests on the one hand,
-and the managers of both the great political parties
-on the other, was a fact, the worst feature of which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>
-was that no one seemed to care, or if a few did care,
-they did not know what to do about it. It was a
-joke among the newspaper men, who had little respect
-for the men who filled the positions of power
-and responsibility; the wonder was, indeed, after
-such association, that they had any respect left for
-anything in the world. Only the other day, reading
-Walt Whitman&#8217;s terrific arraignment of the powers
-that were in control of the government of the nation
-in Buchanan&#8217;s time, his awful catalogue of the sorts
-of men who composed the directorate of affairs,&mdash;it
-may be read in his prose works by those who wish,&mdash;I
-was struck by the similarity in this respect of that
-time with that which immediately preceded the newer
-and better time of the moral awakening in America.
-Altgeld was one of the forerunners of this time; and,
-in accordance with the universal law of human nature,
-it was his fate to be misunderstood and ridiculed
-and hated, even by many in his own party. He
-was far in the van in most ways, so far that it was
-impossible for his own party to follow him. It did
-not follow him in his opposition to a bill which was
-passed in the General Assembly to permit of the
-consolidation of gas companies in Chicago; the machines
-of the two parties were working well together
-in the legislature&mdash;in one of those bipartizan alliances
-which were not to be understood until many
-years later, and even then not to be understood so
-very clearly, since most of our cities have been governed
-since by such alliances, in the interest of similar
-gas companies and other public utility corporations&mdash;and
-when the Governor vetoed their evil<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>
-measure, this same bipartizan machine sought to
-pass it over his veto, and none was more active in
-the effort than were the leaders of his own party in
-the House.</p>
-
-<p>The supreme effort was made on the last night
-of the session, amidst one of those riots which mark
-the dissolution of our deliberative legislative bodies.
-The lobbyists for the measure were quite shameless
-that night, as they were on most nights, no doubt;
-almost as shameless as the legislators themselves.
-The House was in its shirt-sleeves; and there was
-the rude horse-play of country bumpkins; paper
-wads were flying, now and then some member
-sent hurtling through the hot air his file of
-printed legislative bills, and all the while there was
-that confusion of sound, laughter, and oaths and
-snatches of song, a sort of bedlam, in which laws
-were being enacted&mdash;laws that must be respected
-and even revered, because of their sacred origin.
-The leaders were serious, but worried; the expressions
-of their drawn, tense, nervous faces were unhappy
-in suspicion and fear, and, perhaps, because
-of uneasy consciences. The speaker sat above them,
-pale and haggard, rapping his splintered sounding-board
-with a broken gavel, rapping persistently and
-futilely. And as the time drew near when the gas bill
-was to come on for consideration, the nervous tension
-was intensified, and evil hung almost palpably
-in the hot, close air of that chamber. Those who
-have had experience of legislative bodies, and have
-by practice learned something of political a&euml;roscopy,
-can always tell when &#8220;something is coming off&#8221;;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>
-political correspondents have cultivated the sense,
-and that night they could have divined nothing good
-or pure or beautiful in that chamber (where the
-portraits of Lincoln and of Douglas hung), unless
-it were the mellow music, now and then, of the glass
-prisms of the chandeliers hanging high from the
-garish ceiling, as they tinkled and chimed whenever
-some little breeze wandered in from the June night.</p>
-
-<p>And yet there was beauty there, moral beauty, as
-there ever is somewhere in man. Out on the edge
-of that bedlam, standing under the gallery on the
-Democratic side, near the cloak-room, stood a tall,
-lank man. You would have known him at once, anywhere,
-as an Egyptian, as we called those who had
-come from the Illinois land south of the old O. &amp; M.
-railroad. He was uncouth in appearance; he wore
-drab, ill-fitting clothes, and at his wrinkled throat
-there was no collar. He was a member, sent there
-from some rural district far down in the southern end
-of the state; and all through the session he had been
-silent, taking no part, except to vote, and to vote,
-on most occasions, with his party, which, in those
-days, was the whole duty of man. This night would
-see the end of his political career, if his brief experience
-in an obscure position could be called a
-career, and he stood there, silently looking on,
-plucking now and then at his chin, his long, wrinkled
-face brown and solemn and inscrutable.</p>
-
-<p>The old Egyptian stood there while the long roll
-was being called, and the crisis approached, and
-the nervous tension was a keen pain. And suddenly
-one of the gas lobbyists went up to him, there on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>
-the verge of the House, and began to talk with him.
-I had the story a good while afterwards from one
-of the whips, who, it seemed, knew all that had gone
-on that night. The lobbyist of course knew about
-the man, knew especially about his necessities, as
-lobbyists do; and he began to talk to the old fellow
-about them&mdash;about his poverty and his children,
-and he used the old argument which has been employed
-so long and so successfully with the rural
-members of all our legislatures, and has been the
-source of so much evil in our city governments, that
-is, the argument that the bill concerned only Chicago,
-and that the folks down home would neither
-know nor care how he voted on it, and then&mdash;how
-much two thousand dollars would mean to him. As
-the lobbyist talked, there were various eyes that
-looked at him, waiting for a sign; they needed only
-a few votes then, and the roll-call was being delayed
-by one pretense and another, and the clock on the
-wall, inexorably ticking toward the hour of that
-legislature&#8217;s dissolution, was turned back. The old
-fellow listened and stroked his chin, and then presently,
-when the lobbyist had done, he turned his
-old blue eyes on him and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I reckon you&#8217;re right: I&#8217;m poor, and I&#8217;ve got a
-big family. And you&#8217;re right, too, when you say
-my people won&#8217;t know nor care: they won&#8217;t; they
-don&#8217;t know nor care a damn; they won&#8217;t send me
-back here, of course. And God knows what&#8217;s to
-come of my wife and my children; I am going home
-to them to-morrow and on Monday I&#8217;m going to
-hunt me a job in the harvest-field; I reckon I&#8217;ll die<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
-in the poorhouse. Yes, I&#8217;m going home&mdash;but&#8221;&mdash;he
-stopped and looked the lobbyist in the eye&mdash;&#8220;I&#8217;m
-going home an honest man.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>My friend the whip told me the story as a curious
-and somewhat confusing flaw in his theory that
-every man is for sale,&mdash;&#8220;most of them damned
-cheap,&#8221; he said,&mdash;and he thought it might make a
-plot for a story; like many men I have known he
-was incorrigibly romantic, and was always giving
-me plots for stories. Well, they failed to pass the
-bill over the Governor&#8217;s veto, and it was not long
-until another story was pretty well known in Illinois,
-about that Governor who that night was sitting up
-over in the executive mansion, awaiting the action
-of the general assembly. The story was that a
-large quantity of the bonds of the gas company had
-been placed at his disposal in a security vault in
-Chicago, in a box to which a man was to deliver
-him the key; all he had to do was to go take the
-bonds&mdash;and permit the bill to become a law. His
-answer, of course, was the veto&mdash;an offense as unpardonable
-as the pardoning of the anarchists; and
-no doubt many such offenses against the invisible
-power in the land were more potent in bringing down
-on his head that awful hatred than his mercy had
-been&mdash;though this was made to serve as reason for
-the hatred. Privilege, of course, hates mercy, too.</p>
-
-<p>The old Egyptian went back home, and I have
-always hoped that he found a better job than he
-went to seek in the harvest-fields, and that he did
-not die at last to the poorhouse; but he was never
-heard of more, and it was not long until the Governor<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>
-was driven from his office amid the hoots and
-jeers and the hissing of a venomous hatred such as
-nothing but political rancor knows, unless it be religious
-rancor. Yes, politics had got pretty low in
-those days, and its utter meanness, gradually revealed,
-was enough to cause one to despair of his
-country and his kind. Perhaps the old Egyptian
-in the legislature and the idealist in the governor&#8217;s
-chair should have been enough to keep one from despairing
-altogether, though one honest old peasant
-cannot save a legislature any more than one swallow
-can make a summer. I do not mean to say that
-he was the only honest man in the legislature: there
-were many others, of course, but partizan politics
-prevented their honesty from being of much avail;
-or, at any rate, they did not control events. With
-the measurable advance in thought since that time,
-and the general progress of the species, we know
-now that men do not control events half so much
-as events control men; we do not know exactly what
-it is that does control men&mdash;that is, those of us who
-are not Socialists do not know.</p>
-
-<p>Altgeld, at any rate, was disgusted with politics,
-as well he might have been, since they wrecked his
-fortune and broke his heart. And it was with relief,
-I know, that he said that morning,&mdash;almost the
-last he passed in the governor&#8217;s chair,&mdash;as he and
-I were going up the long walk to the State House
-steps:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, we&#8217;re rid of this, anyway.&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>That peculiar form of human activity, or inactivity,
-known as getting a law practice, has been
-so abundantly treated on the printed page that I
-have not the temerity to add to the literature on
-the interesting subject. The experience is never
-dramatic, even if it is sometimes tragic, and it is
-so often tragic that there has seemed no other recourse
-for mankind than, by one of those tacit understandings
-on which our race gets through life, to
-view it as a comedy. It is no comedy, of course,
-to the chief actor, who is sustained only by his
-dreams, his illusions, and his ideals, and he may
-count himself successful perhaps, if, when he has lost
-his illusions, he can retain at least some of his ideals,
-though the law is too apt to strip him of both.
-However that may be, in my own experience in that
-sort there was an incident which made its peculiar
-impressions; indeed, there were several such incidents,
-but the one which I have in mind involves the
-perhaps commonplace story of Maria R&mdash;&mdash;, which
-ran like a serial during those trying years.</p>
-
-<p>I had intended to take up the practice of law
-in Chicago; I was quite certain that there I should
-set up my little enterprise, and this self-same certainty
-is perhaps the reason why I found myself
-back in Toledo, in a lonely little office in one of the
-new office buildings; sky-scrapers they were called
-in the new sense of metropolitan life that then began
-to pervade the town; they were not so very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
-high, but they seemed high enough to scrape the
-low skies which arch so many of the grey days in
-the lake region. It was as long ago, I believe, as
-the time of Pythagoras that the law of the certain
-uncertainty of certainty was deduced for the humbling
-of human pride, and when my certainties with
-regard to Chicago proved all to be broken reeds,
-there were more gray days in that region of the
-intemperate zone than the meteorological records
-show. The little law office had a portrait of William
-Dean Howells on its walls, and in time the portraits
-of other writers, differing from those other
-law offices which prefer to be adorned with pictures
-of Chief Justice Marshall&mdash;a strong man, of course,
-who wrote some strong fiction, too, in his day&mdash;and
-of Hamilton and of Jefferson, indicating either a
-catholicity or a confusion of principle on the part
-of the occupying proprietor, of which usually he is
-not himself aware. There were a few law-books, too,
-and on the desk a little digest of the law of evidence
-as affected by the decisions of the Ohio courts. I
-had the noble intention of mastering it, but I did
-not read in it very much, since for a long while
-there was no one to pay me for doing so, and I
-spent most of my hours at my desk over a manuscript
-of &#8220;The 13th District,&#8221; a novel of politics I
-was then writing, looking up now and then and gazing
-out of the window at the blank rear walls of certain
-brick buildings which made a dreary prospect,
-even if one of them did bear, as I well remember, the
-bright and reassuring legend, &#8220;Money to Loan at 6
-per cent.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>There were not many interruptions at first, but
-after a while, when I had been appointed as attorney
-to a humane society, there were times when I
-had to lay my manuscripts aside. I felt it to be, in
-a way, my duty to long for such interruptions, but
-they usually came just at those times when I was
-most absorbed in my manuscript, so that their welcome,
-while affectedly polite, was not wholly from
-the heart. One of these intrusions resulted in a
-long trial before a justice of the peace; it was a
-case that grew out of a neighborhood quarrel, and
-all the inhabitants of the <i>locus in quo</i> were subp&#339;naed
-as witnesses. Such a case of course always
-affords an opportunity to study human nature; but
-this one, too, had the effect ultimately of bringing
-in many clients&mdash;and, as Altgeld had said, by way
-of advice to me, got people in the habit of coming
-to my office. Those witnesses acquired that habit,
-and since human nature seemed to run pretty high
-in that neighborhood most of the time, they got into
-a good deal of trouble; they were most of them so
-poor that they seldom got into anything else, unless
-it were the jail or the workhouse, and some of them
-were always ready to help send others of them to
-those places. Out of the long file of poor miserable
-creatures there emerged one day that Maria R&mdash;&mdash;
-of whom I spoke. She was a buxom young German
-emigrant, not long over from Pomerania, and her
-fair skin and yellow hair, and a certain manner she
-had, marked her out from all the rest. She came
-with her children one morning to complain of her
-husband&#8217;s neglect of them; and to her, as to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>
-whole body of society which thinks no more deeply
-than she did, it seemed the necessary, proper, and
-even indispensable thing to put Rheinhold&mdash;that was
-her husband&#8217;s name&mdash;in jail (You should have
-heard her speak the name Rheinhold, with that delicious
-note in which she <i>grass&eacute;y&eacute;d</i> her r&#8217;s.) There
-she sat, on the little chair by the window, with her
-stupidly staring boy and girl at her knees, but in
-her arms the brightest, prettiest, flaxen-haired baby
-in the world, a little elf who was always smiling,
-and picking at her mother&#8217;s nose or cheeks with
-her fat little fingers, and when she smiled, her
-mother smiled, too; it was the only time she ever
-did.</p>
-
-<p>Rheinhold of course drank; he &#8220;mistreated&#8221; his
-children&mdash;that is, he did not buy them food. And
-since the Humane Society was organized and maintained
-for the explicit purpose of forcing people to
-be humane, even though it had to be inhumane to
-accomplish its purpose, the duty of its attorney was
-clear.</p>
-
-<p>Its attorney just then felt in himself a rising indignation,
-moral of course, yet very much like a
-vulgar anger. To look at those children, especially
-at that baby of which Maria was so fond, much
-fonder it was plain to be seen than of the other
-two, and to think of a man not providing for them,
-was to have a rage against him, the rage which society,
-so remorselessly moral in the mass, bears
-against all offenders&mdash;the rage a good prosecutor
-must keep alive and flaming in his breast if he
-would nerve himself to his task and earn his fees<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>
-and society&#8217;s gratitude. And whom does society reward
-so lavishly as her prosecutors?</p>
-
-<p>However, that is not the strain I would adopt
-just now. I felt that very rage in myself at that
-moment, and straightway went and had Rheinhold
-arrested and haled before a judge in the Municipal
-Court, charged with the crime of neglecting his children.
-I can remember his wild and bewildered look
-as he was arraigned that morning. The information
-was read to him, and he moved his head in
-such instant acquiescence that the judge, looking
-down from his bench, asked him if he wished to plead
-guilty, and he said &#8220;Yes.&#8221; It seemed then that
-the case was to be quite easily disposed of, and the
-prosecutor might feel gratified by this instant success
-of his work; and yet Rheinhold stood there so
-confused, so frightened, with the court-room loungers
-looking on, that I said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He doesn&#8217;t understand a word of all you are
-saying.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And so the judge entered a plea of &#8220;not guilty.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I knew a young lawyer with rather large leisure,
-and I asked him to defend Rheinhold. He was glad
-to do so, and we empaneled a jury and went at what
-Professor Wigmore calls the &#8220;high-class sport.&#8221; We
-became desperately interested of course, and for
-days wrangled according to the rules of the game
-over the liberty of the bewildered little German who
-scarcely knew what it was all about. Now and then
-he made some wild, inarticulate protest, but was
-of course promptly silenced by his own lawyer, or
-by the judge, or by the rules of evidence, which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>
-could be invoked&mdash;with a deep sense of satisfaction
-when the court ruled your way&mdash;to prevent him
-from telling something he had on his mind, something
-that to him seemed entirely exculpatory, something
-that would make the whole clouded situation
-clear if it could only find its way to the light and
-to the knowledge of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>There was a witness against him, a tall, slender
-young German shoemaker, and it was against him
-that Rheinhold&#8217;s outcries were directed. It was
-not clear just what he was trying to say, and there
-was small disposition to help him make it clear.
-His lawyer indeed seemed embarrassed, as though in
-making his incoherent interruptions Rheinhold were
-committing a <i>contretemps</i>; he must wait for his
-turn to testify, that all might be done in order and
-according to the ancient rules and precedents, and,
-in a word, as it should be done. Under the rules
-of evidence, of course, Rheinhold could not be allowed
-to express his opinion of the shoemaker; that
-was not permissible. The court could not be concerned
-with the passions of the human heart; this
-man before the court had a family, and he had neglected
-to provide food for it, and for such a condition
-it was written and printed in a book that the
-appropriate remedy was a certain number of days
-or months in the workhouse.</p>
-
-<p>And so while Rheinhold silently and philosophically
-acquiesced, we tried him during one whole day,
-we argued nearly all the next day to the jury, and
-the jury stayed out all that night and in the
-morning returned a verdict of guilty. And<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>
-Rheinhold was sent to the workhouse for nine
-months.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>It was regarded as a triumph for the Humane
-Society,&mdash;the newspapers had printed accounts of
-the trial,&mdash;but it was a victory of which I felt pretty
-much ashamed; it all seemed so useless, so absurd,
-so barbarous, when you came to think of it, and
-what good it had done Maria, or anyone, it was
-difficult to determine. And so, before very long, I
-went to the workhouse board and had Rheinhold
-paroled, and he disappeared, vanished toward the
-West, and was never heard of more.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Maria lived on in her little house as
-best she could, and with what assistance we could
-provide her. The Humane Society helped a little,
-and my wife made some clothes for the baby, and
-a good-natured doctor in the neighborhood attended
-them when they were sick, which was a good
-deal of the time; and Maria seemed happy enough
-and contented, relying with such entire confidence
-on her friends that one cold night she sent for me
-in great urgency, and when I arrived she pointed
-to the stove, which was smoking and not doing its
-work in a satisfactory manner at all. I mended it
-and got the fire going, and they managed to survive
-the winter; and when spring came Maria appeared
-at the office and wished to apply to the courts
-for a divorce. It seemed as good a thing to do as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
-any, and the evidence of Rheinhold&#8217;s cruel neglect
-was by this time so conclusive that it was not much
-trouble to obtain a decree, especially as the case
-came before a delightful old bachelor judge who felt
-that if people were not divorced they ought to be;
-and after listening to two of the five or six witnesses
-I had subp&#339;naed he granted Maria her freedom.</p>
-
-<p>And the next day she got married again. The
-bridegroom was that very shoemaker who had testified
-in Rheinhold&#8217;s trial; he lived not far from Maria&#8217;s
-late residence, and the happy event, as I
-learned then, was the culmination of a romance
-which had disturbed Rheinhold to such a degree that
-he had preferred to be anywhere rather than at
-home; and it seemed now&mdash;it was now indeed quite
-clear&mdash;that what he had been trying to explain at
-the time of the trial was that his fate was involved in
-the eternal triangle.</p>
-
-<p>I do not know where Rheinhold is now; as I said,
-he was never heard of more, but I should like to
-present my apologies to him and to inform him that
-as a result of that expedition into the jungle of the
-law in search of justice I discovered that whatever
-other men might do, I could never again prosecute
-anyone for anything; and I never did. And I think
-that most of the attempts men make to do justice
-in their criminal courts are about as mistaken, about
-as absurd, about as ridiculous, as that solemn and
-supremely silly effort we made to deal with such
-a human complication by means of calf-bound law-books,
-and wrangling lawyers, and twelve stupid
-jurors ranged behind twelve spittoons. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>
-whole experience revealed to me the beauty and the
-truth in that wise passage in Mr. Howells&#8217;s charming
-book, &#8220;A Boy&#8217;s Town&#8221;:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In fact, it seems best to be very careful how we
-try to do justice in this world, and mostly to leave
-retribution of all kinds to God, who really knows
-about things; and content ourselves as much as possible
-with mercy, whose mistakes are not so irreparable.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>That passage, I think, contains a whole and entirely
-adequate philosophy of life; but I suppose
-that those who shake their heads at such heresies
-will be equally shocked to learn that Maria&#8217;s second
-venture proved to be a remarkable success.</p>
-
-<p>The shoemaker was a frugal chap,&mdash;the evidence
-discloses, I think, that he had been an unusually
-frugal lover,&mdash;and he had saved some money, which,
-it seems, he was determined not to spend on his fair
-one until he could develop some legal claim to her,
-but he treated her handsomely then, according to his
-taste and ability. He bought a house in another
-and better part of town, and he furnished it in a
-way that dazzled the eyes of those children who
-had been accustomed to bare floors and had never
-known the glories of golden oak and blue and yellow
-and red plush, ingrain carpets, and chenille
-hangings; and he clothed them all and sent them
-to school, and finally they all took his name, and, I
-think, forgot poor Rheinhold altogether. And so,
-in their new-found prosperity, they vanished out of
-my sight, and I heard of them no more for years.
-Then one day Maria&#8217;s little daughter, grown into a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>
-tall young girl by that time, came to tell me that
-her mother was dead. Maria had started down town
-with her husband, on Christmas Eve, to buy the gifts
-for her children, and in the heavy snow that was
-falling a defective sidewalk was hidden, and Maria
-was thrown to the ground and so hurt that she died.
-Her last words to her daughter had been, so the
-girl said, &#8220;See Mr. Whitlock; he&#8217;ll do what should
-be done.&#8221; Her heirs had a clear case against the
-city, but I had just been elected mayor that autumn
-and could not prosecute such a claim. Another lawyer
-did so, and got damages for the children, and
-even for the husband, and with these funds in a
-trust company&#8217;s keeping the shoemaker educated
-all the children. And he wore about his hat the
-thickest hand of heavy cr&ecirc;pe that I ever saw.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to annoy, and in some cases even to
-anger, those whom I told of my resolution not to
-prosecute anyone any more. They would argue
-about it with me as if it made some real difference
-to them; if every lawyer and every man were so to
-decide, they said, who was to proceed against the
-criminals, who was to do the work of purifying and
-regenerating society? It has always been, of course,
-a most interesting and vital question as to who is
-to do the dirty work of all kinds in this world; but
-their apprehensions, as I could assure them, were
-all unfounded, since there are always plenty of lawyers,
-and always plenty of them who are not only
-willing but anxious to act as prosecutors, and to
-put into their work that energy and enthusiasm
-which the schools of efficiency urge upon the youth<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>
-of the land, and to prosecute with a ferocity that
-could be no more intense if they had suffered some injury
-in their own persons from the accused. And
-there are even men who are willing, for the most
-meager salaries, to act as guards and wardens in
-prisons, and to do all manner of things, even to commit
-crimes, or at least moral wrongs, in order to put
-men into prison and keep them there, unless they
-can kill them, and there are plenty who are willing
-to do that, if only society provides them with a rope
-or a wire to do it with.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XX</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>There was, however, in Toledo one man who could
-sympathize with my attitude; and that was a man
-whose determination to accept literally and to try to
-practice the fundamental philosophy of Christianity
-had so startled and confounded the Christians
-everywhere that he at once became famous throughout
-Christendom as &#8220;Golden Rule Jones.&#8221; I had
-known of him only as the eccentric mayor of our city,
-and nearly everyone whom I had met since my advent
-in Toledo spoke of him only to say something disparaging
-of him. The most charitable thing they
-said was that he was crazy. All the newspapers
-were against him, and all the preachers. My own
-opinion, of course, could have been of no consequence,
-but I had learned in the case of Altgeld that
-almost universal condemnation of a man is to be
-examined before it is given entire credit. I do not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span>
-mean to say that there was universal condemnation
-of Golden Rule Jones in Toledo in those days: it
-was simply that the institutional voices of society,
-the press and the pulpit, were thundering in condemnation
-of him. When the people came to vote
-for his re&euml;lection his majorities were overwhelming,
-so that he used to say that everybody was against
-him but the people. But that is another story.</p>
-
-<p>In those days I had not met him. I might have
-called at his office, to be sure, but I did not care to
-add to his burdens. One day, suddenly, as I was
-working on a story in my office, in he stepped with
-a startling, abrupt manner, wheeled a chair up to
-my desk, and sat down. He was a big Welshman
-with a sandy complexion and great hands that had
-worked hard in their time, and he had an eye that
-looked right into the center of your skull. He wore,
-and all the time he was in the room continued to
-wear, a large cream-colored slouch hat, and he had
-on the flowing cravat which for some inexplicable
-reason artists and social reformers wear; their affinity
-being due, no doubt, to the fact that the reformer
-must be an artist of a sort, else he could not dream
-his dreams. I was relieved, however, to find that
-Jones wore his hair clipped short, and there was
-still about him that practical air of the very practical
-business man he had been before he became
-mayor. He had been such a practical business man
-that he was worth half a million, a fairly good fortune
-for our town; but he had not been in office very
-long before all the business men were down on him,
-and saying that what the town needed was a business<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>
-man for mayor, a statement that was destined
-to ring in my ears for a good many years. They
-disliked him of course because he would not do just
-what they told him to,&mdash;that being the meaning
-and purpose of a business man for mayor,&mdash;but insisted
-that there were certain other people in the
-city who were entitled to some of his service and
-consideration&mdash;namely, the working people and the
-poor. The politicians and the preachers objected
-to him on the same grounds: the unpardonable sin
-being to express in any but a purely ideal and sentimental
-form sympathy for the workers or the poor.
-It seemed to be particularly exasperating that he
-was doing all this in the name of the Golden Rule,
-which was for the Sunday-school; and they even
-went so far as to bring to town another Sam Jones,
-the Reverend Sam Jones, to conduct a &#8220;revival&#8221; and
-to defeat the Honorable Sam Jones. The Reverend
-Sam Jones had big meetings, and said many clever
-things, and many true ones, the truest among them
-being his epigram, &#8220;I am for the Golden Rule myself,
-up to a certain point, and then I want to take
-the shotgun and the club.&#8221; I think that expression
-marked the difference between him and our Sam
-Jones, in whose philosophy there was no place at
-all for the shotgun or the club. The preachers were
-complaining that Mayor Jones was not using shotguns,
-or at least clubs, on the &#8220;bad&#8221; people in the
-town; I suppose that since their own persuasions
-had in a measure failed, they felt that the Mayor
-with such instruments might have made the &#8220;bad&#8221;
-people look as if they had been converted anyway.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>It was when he was undergoing such criticism as
-this that he came to see me, to ask me to speak at
-Golden Rule Park. This was a bit of green grass
-next to his factory; he had dedicated it to the
-people&#8217;s use, and there under a large willow-tree,
-on Sunday afternoons, he used to speak to hundreds.
-There was a little piano which two men could
-carry, and with that on the platform to play the
-accompaniments the people used to sing songs that
-Jones had written&mdash;some of them of real beauty, and
-breathing the spirit of poetry, if they were not always
-quite in its form. In the winter these meetings
-were held in Golden Rule Hall, a large room
-that served very well as an auditorium, in his factory
-hard by. On the walls of Golden Rule Hall
-was the original tin sign he had hung up in his
-factory as the only rule to be known there, &#8220;Therefore
-whatsoever things ye would that men should
-do to you, do ye even so to them.&#8221; In the course
-of time every reformer, every radical, in the country
-had spoken in that hall or under that willow-tree,
-and the place developed an atmosphere that was
-immensely impressive. The hall had the portraits of
-many liberal leaders and humanitarians on its walls,
-and a number of paintings; and in connection
-with the settlement which Jones established across
-the street the institution came to be, as a reporter
-wrote one day in his newspaper, the center of intelligence
-in Toledo.</p>
-
-<p>Well then, on that morning when first he called,
-Jones said to me:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I want you to come out and speak.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>&#8220;On what subject?&#8221; I asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s only one subject,&#8221; he said,&mdash;&#8220;life.&#8221; And
-his face was radiant with a really beautiful smile,
-warmed with his rich humor. I began to say that I
-would prepare something, but he would not let me
-finish my sentence.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Prepare!&#8221; he exclaimed. &#8220;Why prepare? Just
-speak what&#8217;s in your heart.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He was always like that. Once, a good while
-after, in one of his campaigns, he called me on the
-telephone one evening just at dinner time, and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I want you to go to Ironville and speak to-night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I was tired, and, as I dislike to confess, somewhat
-reluctant,&mdash;I had always to battle so for a little
-time to write,&mdash;so that I hesitated, asked questions,
-told him, as usual, that I had no speech prepared.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you know it is written,&#8221; he said, &#8220;that &#8216;in
-that hour it shall be given you what ye shall say.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I could assure him that the prophecy had somewhat
-failed in my case, and that what was given
-me to say was not always worth listening to when
-it was said; and then I inquired:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What kind of crowd will be there?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, a good crowd!&#8221; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But what kind of people?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What kind of people?&#8221; he asked in a tone of
-great and genuine surprise. &#8220;What kind of people?
-Why, there&#8217;s only one kind of people&mdash;just people,
-just folks.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I went of course, and I went as well to Golden
-Rule Park and to Golden Rule Hall, and there was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>
-never such a school for public speaking as that
-crowded park afforded, with street cars grinding
-and scraping by one side of it and children laughing
-at their play on the swings and poles which
-Jones had put there for them; or else standing below
-the speaker and looking curiously up into his
-face, and filling him with the fear of treading any
-moment on their little fingers which, as they clung to
-the edge, made a border all along the front of the
-platform. And for a year or so after his death I
-spoke there every Sunday: we were trying so hard to
-keep his great work alive.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXI</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>It was our interest in the disowned, the outcast,
-the poor, and the criminal that drew us first together;
-that and the fact that we are gradually
-assuming the same attitude toward life. He was full
-of Tolstoy at that time, and we could talk of the
-great Russian, and I could introduce him to the
-other great Russians. He was then a little past
-fifty, and had just made the astounding discovery
-that there was such a thing as literature in the
-world: he had been so busy working all his life that
-he had never had time to read, and the whole world
-of letters burst upon his vision all suddenly, and the
-glorious prospect fairly intoxicated him, so that he
-stood like stout Cortez, though not so silent, upon
-a peak in Darien.</p>
-
-<p>He was reading Mazzini also, and William Morris<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>
-and Emerson, who expressed his philosophy fully, or
-as fully as one man can express anything for another,
-and it was not long before Jones discovered
-an unusual facility for expressing himself, both with
-his voice and with his pen. The letters he wrote
-to the men in his shops&mdash;putting them in their pay-envelopes&mdash;are
-models of simplicity and sincerity,
-which show a genuine culture and have that beauty
-which is the despair of conscious art.<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a> He had just
-learned of Oscar Wilde&#8217;s &#8220;Ballad of Reading Gaol,&#8221;
-and he committed it to memory, or got it into his
-memory somehow, so that he would recite stanzas of
-it to anyone. He read Burns, too, with avidity,
-and I can see him now standing on the platform in
-one of his meetings, snapping his fingers as he
-recited:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">A fig for those by law protected!</div>
-<div class="verse">Liberty&#8217;s a glorious feast!</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>But it was Walt Whitman whom he loved most,
-and his copy of &#8220;Leaves of Grass&#8221; was underscored
-in heavy lines with a red pencil until nearly every
-striking passage in the whole work had become a
-rubric. When anything struck him, he would have
-to come and tell me of it; sometimes he would not
-wait, but would call me up on the telephone and
-read it to me. I remember that occasion when his
-voice, over the wire, said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Listen to this [and he read]:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">
-&#8220;The snag-tooth&#8217;d hostler with red hair, redeeming sins past and to come,</div>
-<div class="verse">Selling all he possesses, traveling on foot to fee lawyers for his
-brother and sit by him while he is tried for forgery.&#8221;</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Then he laughed, and his chuckle died away on
-the wire. That expressed him; that was exactly
-what he would have done for a brother, exactly what
-he did do for many a brother, since he regarded all
-men as his brothers, and treated them as such if
-they would let him. He was always going down to
-the city prisons, or to the workhouses, and talking
-to the poor devils there, quite as if he were one of
-them, which indeed he felt he was, and as all of us
-are, if we only knew it. And he was working all
-the time to get them out of prison, and finally he
-and I entered into a little compact by which he paid
-the expenses incident to their trials&mdash;the fees for
-stenographers and that sort of thing&mdash;if I would
-look after their cases. Hard as the work was, and
-sad as it was, and grievously as my law partners
-complained of the time it took, and of its probable
-effect on business (since no one wished to be known
-as a criminal lawyer!), it did pay in the satisfaction
-there was in doing a little to comfort and console&mdash;and,
-what was so much more, to compel in one
-city, at least, a discussion of the grounds and the
-purpose of our institutions. For instance, if some
-poor girl were arrested, and a jury trial were demanded
-for her, and her case were given all the care
-and attention it would have received had she been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span>
-some wealthy person, the police, when they found
-they could not convict, were apt to be a little more
-careful of the liberties of individuals: they began to
-have a little regard for human rights and for human
-life.</p>
-
-<p>We completely broke up the old practice of arresting
-persons &#8220;on suspicion&#8221; and holding them at the
-will and pleasure of the police without any charge
-having been lodged against them; two or three trials
-before juries, the members of which could very easily
-be made to see, when it was pointed out to them
-a few times in the course of a three days&#8217; trial, that
-there is nothing more absurd than that policemen
-should make criminals of people merely by suspecting
-them, and sending them to prison on that
-sole account, wrought a change. It annoyed the
-officials of course, because it interfered with their
-routine. It was no doubt exasperating to be compelled
-to stay in court two or three days and try
-some wretch according to the forms of law, just as
-if he were somebody of importance and consequence
-in the world, when they would so much rather have
-been out at the ball-game, or fishing, or playing
-pinochle in the guard-room at police headquarters
-with the detail that had been relieved. Jones managed
-to get himself fined for contempt one day, and
-he immediately turned the incident to his own advantage
-and made his point by drawing out his
-check-book with a flourish, writing his check for
-the amount of his fine, and declaring that this
-proved his contention that the only crime our civilization
-punishes is the crime of being poor.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>But he was most in his element when the police
-judge was absent, as he was now and then. In
-that exigency the law gave Jones, as mayor, the
-power to appoint the acting police judge; and
-when Jones did not go down and sit as magistrate
-himself, he appointed me; and we always found some
-reason or other for letting all the culprits go. The
-foundations of society were shaken of course, and
-the editorials and sermons were heavy with all the
-predictions of disaster; one might have supposed
-that the whole wonderful and beautiful fabric of
-civilization which man had been so long in rearing
-was to fall forever into the awful abyss because a
-few miserable outcasts had not been put in prison.
-But nothing happened after all; the poor <i>mis&eacute;rables</i>
-were back again in a few days, and made to resume
-their hopeless rounds through the prison doors; but
-the policemen of Toledo had their clubs taken away
-from them, and they became human, and learned
-to help people, and not to hurt them if they could
-avoid it; and that police judge who once fined Jones
-became in time one of the leaders in our city of the
-new social movement that has marked the last decade
-in America.</p>
-
-<p>I learned to know a good many people in that
-underworld, many of whom were professed criminals,
-and there were some remarkable characters among
-them. I learned that, just as Jones had said, they
-were all people, just folks, and that they had so
-much more good than bad in them, that if some
-way could be devised whereby they might have a
-little better opportunity to develop the good, there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>
-was hope for all of them. Of course, in any effort
-to help them,&mdash;and our efforts were not always
-perhaps wholly wise,&mdash;we encountered that most
-formidable and fundamental obstacle to prison reform,
-the desire in the human breast for revenge,
-the savage hatred which is perhaps some obscure
-instinct of protection against the anti-social members
-of society: it stands forever in the way of all
-prison reform, and of ameliorations of the lot of
-the poor. It is that which keeps the barbarity of
-capital punishment alive in the world; it is that
-which makes every prison in the land a hell, where
-from time to time the most revolting atrocities are
-practiced. Out of those experiences, out of the contemplation
-of the misery, the pathos, the hopelessness
-of the condition of those victims, I wrote &#8220;The
-Turn of the Balance.&#8221; I was very careful of my
-facts; I was purposely conservative, and, forgetting
-the advice of Goethe, softened things down; as for
-instance, where I had known of cases in which prisoners
-had been hung up in the bull-rings for thirty
-days,&mdash;being lowered to the floor each night of
-course,&mdash;I put it down as eight days, and so on.
-And the wise and virtuous judges and the preachers
-and the respectable people all said it was untrue,
-that such things could not be. Since then there
-have been investigations of prisons in most of the
-states, with revelations of conditions far worse than
-any I tried to portray. And such things have gone
-on, and are going on to-day; but nobody cares.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>And yet somebody after all did care about all
-those miserable souls who are immured in the terrible
-prisons which society maintains as monuments
-to the strange and implacable hatred in the breast
-of mankind; perhaps, in the last chapter of these
-vagrant memories, I allowed to creep into my utterance
-some of the old bitterness which now and then
-would taint our efforts, do what we might. And
-that is not at all the note I would adopt, though
-it used at times to be very difficult not to do so;
-one cannot, day after day, beat against the old and
-solid and impregnable wall of human institutions
-without becoming sore and sick in one&#8217;s soul.</p>
-
-<p>And there is no institution which society so cherishes
-as she does her penal institutions, and most
-sacrosanct of these are the ax, the guillotine, the
-garrote, the gibbet, the electric chair. We tried
-at each session of the legislature to secure the passage
-of a bill abolishing capital punishment, but
-the good people, those who felt that they held in
-their keeping the morals of the state, always opposed
-it and defeated it. Beloved and sacred institution!
-No wonder the ship-wrecked sailor, cast
-upon an unknown shore, on looking up and beholding
-a gallows, fell on his knees and said; &#8220;Thank
-God, I&#8217;m in a Christian land!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Travelers visit prisons and places of execution,
-those historic spots where humanity made red blots
-on its pathway in the notion that it was doing justice,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span>
-and always they sigh and shake their heads,
-beholding in those events only a supreme folly and
-a supreme cruelty.</p>
-
-<p>All the executions, all the imprisonments of the
-past are seen to have been mistakes made by savages;
-there is not one for which to-day a word is
-uttered in excuse. All the Golgothas of the world
-have become Calvaries, where men go in pity and in
-tears in the hope that their regret may somehow
-work a retroactive expiation of the guilt of their
-cruel ancestors&mdash;and they rise from their knees and
-go forth and acquiesce in brutalities that are to-day
-different only in the slightest of degrees from
-those they bemoan.</p>
-
-<p>And so all the other executions of death sentences,
-on subjects less distinguished, with no glimmer of
-the halo of romance, no meed of martyrdom to illumine
-them, are seen to have been huge and grotesque
-mistakes of a humanity that at times gives
-itself over to the elemental savage lust of the blood
-of its fellows.</p>
-
-<p>I do not say, of course, that there was any similarity
-between the offenses of those whom Jones
-and I were concerned about in those days and those
-striking figures who illustrate the history of the
-world and mark the slow spiral path of the progress
-of mankind; these were the commonest of common
-criminals, poor, mistaken, misshapen beings, somehow
-marred in the making.</p>
-
-<p>It was my lot to defend a number of those who
-had committed murders, some of them murders so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>
-foul that there was nothing to say in their behalf.
-All one could say was in behalf of those whom one
-would save from committing another murder. But
-when you have come to know even a murderer, when
-day after day you have visited him in his cell, and
-have talked with him, and have seen him laugh and
-cry, and have had him tell you about his family, and
-that amazing complexity which he calls his life, when
-gradually you come to know him, no matter how
-undeserving he may be in the abstract, he undergoes
-a strange and subtle metamorphosis; slowly
-and gradually, without your being aware, he ceases
-to be a murderer, and becomes a human being, very
-much like all those about you. Thus, there is no
-such thing as a human being in the abstract; they
-are all thoroughly and essentially concrete.</p>
-
-<p>I have wandered far in these speculations, but I
-hope I have not wandered too far to make it clear
-that Jones&#8217;s point of view was always and invariably
-the human point of view; he knew no such thing
-as murderers, or even criminals, or &#8220;good&#8221; people,
-or &#8220;bad&#8221; people, they were all to him men and, indeed,
-brothers. And if society did not care about
-them, except in its desire to make way with them,
-Jones did care, and there were others who cared;
-the poor cared, the working people cared,&mdash;though
-they might themselves at times give way to the
-same elemental social rage,&mdash;they always endorsed
-Jones&#8217;s leniency whenever they had the opportunity.
-They had this opportunity at the polls every two
-years, and they never failed him.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>They did not fail him even in that last campaign
-of his, though every means known to man was tried
-to win them away from their peculiar allegiance.
-It was a strange campaign; I suppose there was
-never another like it in America. As I think of it
-there come back the recollections of those raw spring
-nights; we held our municipal elections in the spring
-in those days, that is, spring as we know it in the
-region of the Great Lakes. It is not so much spring
-as it is a final summing-up and recapitulation of
-winter, a coda to a monstrous meteorological concerto
-as doleful as the allegro lamentoso of Tschaikovsky&#8217;s
-&#8220;Sixth Symphony.&#8221; There is nowhere in
-the world, so far as I know, or care to know, such an
-abominable manifestation of the meanness of nature;
-it is meaner than the meanness of human nature,
-entailing a constant struggle with winds, a perpetual
-bending to gusts of snow that is rain, or a rain
-that is hail, with an east wind that blows persistently
-off Lake Erie for two months, with little stinging
-barbs of ice on its breath&mdash;and then, suddenly, it is
-summer without any gentle airs at all to introduce
-its heat.</p>
-
-<p>Jones was not very well that spring; and his
-throaty ailment was the very one that should have
-been spared such dreadful exposures as he was subjected
-to in that campaign. It was in the days before
-motor cars, and he and I drove about every
-night from one meeting to another in a little buggy
-he had, drawn by an old white mare named Molly,
-whose shedding of her coat was the only vernal sign
-to be detected anywhere. But Jones was so full<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span>
-of humor that he laughed at nearly everything&mdash;even
-his enemies, whom he never would call enemies.
-I can see him now&mdash;climbing down out of the buggy,
-carefully blanketing old Molly against the raw
-blasts, then brushing the white hairs from his front
-with his enormous hands, and running like a boy up
-the stairway to the dim little hall in the Polish
-quarter where the crowd had gathered. The men
-set up a shout when they saw him, and he leaped
-on the stage and, without waiting for the chairman
-to introduce him,&mdash;he scorned every convention that
-obtruded itself,&mdash;he leaned over the front of the
-platform and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What is the Polish word for liberty?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The crowd of Poles, huddling about a stove in
-the middle of the hall, their caps on, their pipes
-going furiously, their bodies covered with the
-strange garments they had brought with them across
-the sea, shouted in reply.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Wolno&#347;&#263;!</i>&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And Jones paused and listened, cocked his head,
-wrinkled his brows, and said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What was that? Say it again!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Again they shouted it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Say it again&mdash;once more!&#8221; he demanded. And
-again they shouted it in a splendid chorus. And
-then&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; said Golden Rule Jones, &#8220;I can&#8217;t pronounce
-it, but it sounds good, and that is what we
-are after in this campaign.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Now that I have written it down, I have a feeling
-that I have utterly failed to give an adequate sense<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>
-of the entire spontaneity and simplicity with which
-this was done. It was, of course, tremendously effective
-as a bit of campaigning, but only because it
-was so wholly sincere. Five minutes later he was
-hotly debating with a working man who had interrupted
-him to accuse him of being unfair to union
-labor in his shops, and there was no coddling, no
-truckling, no effort to win or to please on his part,
-though he would take boundlessly patient pains to
-explain to anyone who really wanted to know anything
-about him or his official acts.</p>
-
-<p>He was natural, simple and unspoiled, as na&iuml;ve as
-a child, and &#8220;except ye become as little children
-ye cannot enter the kingdom of heaven.&#8221; He fully
-realized that the kingdom of heaven is within one&#8217;s
-self; he was not looking for it, or expecting it anywhere
-outside of himself, certainly he was not expecting
-it in a political campaign, or in the mere
-process of being elected to an office. He regarded
-his office, indeed, only as an opportunity to serve,
-and he had been in that office long enough to have
-lost any illusions he may ever have had concerning
-it; one term will suffice to teach a man that lesson,
-even though he seek the office again.</p>
-
-<p>He was like an evangelist, in a way, and his meetings
-were in the broad sense religious, though he
-had long since left his church, not because its ministers
-were always condemning him, but for the same
-reasons that Tolstoy left his church. His evangel
-was that of liberty. He had written a number of
-little songs. One of them, set to the tune of an old
-hymn he had heard in Wales as a boy, had a noble<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span>
-effect when the crowd sang it. It was the <i>Gad im
-Deimle</i>. His wife, who is an accomplished musician,
-had transposed its minors into majors, and in its
-strains, as they were sung by the men in his shops,&mdash;and
-there was singing for you!&mdash;or by the people
-in his political meetings, there was all the Welsh
-love of music, all the Welsh love of liberty, and a
-high and pure emotion in the chorus:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">Ever growing, swiftly flowing,</div>
-<div class="verse">Like a mighty river</div>
-<div class="verse">Sweeping on from shore to shore,</div>
-<div class="verse">Love will rule this wide world o&#8217;er.</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>It was his Welsh blood, this Celtic strain in him,
-that accounted for much that was in his temperament,
-his wit, his humor, his instinctive appreciation
-of art, his contempt for artificial distinctions, his
-love of liberty, his passionate democracy. Sitting
-one evening not long ago in the visitor&#8217;s gallery of
-the House of Commons I saw the great Welsh radical,
-David Lloyd George, saw him enter and take his
-seat on the government bench. And as I looked at
-him I was impressed by his resemblance to someone I
-had known; there was a strange, haunting likeness,
-not in any physical characteristic, though there
-was the same Welsh ruddiness, and the hair was
-something like&mdash;but when Mr. Lloyd George turned
-and whispered to the prime minister and smiled I
-started, and said to myself: &#8220;It is Jones!&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>There was something pathetic in that last campaign,
-the pathos, perhaps, of the last phase. The
-long years of opposition had begun to tell: there was
-a strong determination to defeat him. He had not
-wished to stand again for the office, but, after the
-Toledo custom, there had been presented to him an
-informal petition, signed by several thousand citizens,
-asking him to do so, and he had consented.
-But when he wrote a statement setting forth his position&mdash;it
-was a document with the strong flavor of his
-personality in it&mdash;the newspapers refused to publish
-it; some of them would not publish it even as advertising,
-and he opened his campaign on the post-office
-corner, standing bare-headed in the March wind, his
-son Paul blowing a saxophone to attract a crowd.
-Many of his old supporters were falling away; it
-seemed for a time that he alone would have to make
-the campaign without any to speak for him on the
-stump; far otherwise than in that second campaign,
-when, after having been counted out in the Republican
-convention, he had run for the first time independently,
-a &#8220;Man Without a Party,&#8221; as he called
-himself; and thousands, themselves outraged by the
-treatment his own party had accorded him, in the
-spirit of fair play had rallied to his standard.</p>
-
-<p>But now things had changed, and an incident
-which occurred at the beginning of this campaign
-was significant of the feeling toward him, though in
-all kindness it most not be told in detail. There<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>
-was a prominent man in town who had publicly reviled
-him and criticized him and persecuted him, who
-had done that which cut him more deeply than all
-else, that is, he had impugned his motives and questioned
-his sincerity. In some human hunger for understanding,
-I suppose, Jones went to this man
-with his written statement of his position and asked
-him to read it, merely to read it. The fellow&#8217;s answer
-was to snatch the paper from Jones&#8217;s hand
-and tear it up in his face. It is easy to imagine
-what a man ordinarily would do in the face of such
-an amazing insult; surely, if ever, the time had come
-for the &#8220;shotgun and the club.&#8221; Mayor Jones was
-large and powerful, he had been reared in the oil
-fields, where blows are quick as tempers; he was athletic,
-always in training, for he took constant physical
-exercise (one of the counts against him, indeed,
-was that he slept out of doors on the roof of his
-back porch, a bit of radicalism in those days, grown
-perfectly orthodox in these progressive times), and
-he was a Celt, naturally quick to resent insult, of
-a temperament prompt to take fire. But he turned
-away from the fellow, without a word.</p>
-
-<p>He came to my office immediately afterward, and
-I saw that he was trying hard to master some unusual
-emotion. I shall never forget him as he sat
-there, telling me of his experience. After a little
-while his face broke into that beautiful smile of
-his, more beautiful than I had ever seen it, and he
-said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;ve won the greatest victory of my life;
-I have won at last a victory over myself, over my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span>
-own nature. I have done what it has always been
-hardest for me to do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What?&#8221; I asked.</p>
-
-<p>He sat in silence for a moment, and then he said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You know, it has always seemed to me that the
-most remarkable thing that was ever said of Jesus
-was that when he was reviled, he reviled not again.
-It is the hardest thing in the world to do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The struggle over the renewal of the franchise
-grants to the street railway company had already
-begun, and the council had attempted to grant it the
-franchise it wished, renewing its privileges for another
-twenty-five years. When Mayor Jones vetoed
-the bill, the council prepared to pass it over his
-veto, and would have done so that Monday night
-had it not been for two men&mdash;Mayor Jones and Mr.
-Negley D. Cochran, the editor of the <i>News-Bee</i>,
-a newspaper which has always taken the democratic
-viewpoint of public questions. Mr. Cochran, with
-his brilliant gift in the writing of editorials, had
-called out the whole populace, almost, to attend the
-meeting of the council and to protest. The demonstration
-was so far effective that the council was
-too frightened to pass the street railway ordinance.
-The attorney for the street railway company was
-there, and when there was a lull in the noise, he
-sneered:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose, Mr. Mayor, that this is an example
-of government under the Golden Rule.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; replied Jones in a flash, &#8220;it is an example
-of government under the rule of gold.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Unless it were because of his interference with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span>
-nefarious privileges of a few, one can see no reason
-why the press and pulpit should have opposed him.
-What had he done? He had only preached that
-the fundamental doctrine of Christianity was sound,
-and, as much as a man may in so complex a civilization,
-he had tried to practice it. He had taught
-kindness and tolerance, and pity and mercy; he had
-visited the sick, and gone to those that were in
-prison; he had said that all men are free and equal,
-that they have been endowed by their Creator with
-certain inalienable rights. He had said that it is
-wrong to kill people, even in the electric chair, that
-it is wrong to take from the poor, without giving
-them in return. He had not said these things in
-anger, or in bitterness; he had never been personal,
-he had always been explicit in saying that he, as a
-part of society, was equally to blame with all the
-rest for social wrongs. The only textbooks he ever
-used in his campaigns were the New Testament, the
-Declaration of Independence, and, of course, his beloved
-Walt Whitman. And yet the pulpits rang
-every Sunday with denunciations of him, and the
-newspapers opposed him. Why was it, because a
-man endorsed these old doctrines upon which society
-claims to rest, that society should denounce
-him?</p>
-
-<p>I think it was because he was so utterly and entirely
-sincere, and because he believed these things,
-and tried to put them into practice in his life, and
-wished them to be more fully incorporated in the
-life of society. Society will forgive anything in a
-man, except sincerity. If he be sincere in charity,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span>
-in pity, in mercy, in sympathy for the outcast, the
-despised, the imprisoned, all that vast horde of the
-denied and proscribed, still less will it forgive him,
-for it knows instinctively that the privileges men
-have or seek could not exist in a system where
-these principles were admitted as vital, inspiring
-force.</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing, of course, for one who believed
-in the American doctrines to do but to support
-such a man, and when he appeared to be so utterly
-without supporters it seemed to be one&#8217;s duty more
-than ever, though I own to having shrunk from such
-unconventional methods as Jones employed. That
-meeting at the post-office corner, for instance; someone
-might laugh, and in the great American self-consciousness
-and fear of the ridiculous, what was
-one to do? The opposition, that is, the two old
-parties, the Republican and Democratic, had nominated
-excellent men against Jones; the Republican
-nominee, indeed, Mr. John W. Dowd, was a man
-to whom I had gone to school, an old and very dear
-friend of our family, a charming gentleman of cultivated
-tastes. It was not easy to be in the attitude
-of opposing him, but my duty seemed clear, and I
-went into the campaign with Jones, and we spoke
-together every night.</p>
-
-<p>It was a campaign in which were discussed most
-of the fundamental problems of social life. A
-stranger, coming to Toledo at that time, might have
-thought us a most unsophisticated people, for there
-were speculations about the right of society to inflict
-punishment, the basis of property, and a rather<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span>
-searching inquiry into the subject of representative
-government. This was involved in the dispute as to
-the propriety of political machines, for the Republicans
-by that time had a party organization so strong
-that it was easily denominated a machine; it was so
-strong that it controlled every branch of the city
-government except the executive; it never could defeat
-Jones. There was a good deal said, too, about
-the enforcement of law, a subject which has its fascination
-for the people of my town.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Besides these interesting topics there was the subject
-of municipal home rule. This had already become
-vital in Toledo because, a year or so before,
-the Republican party organization through its influence
-in the state, without having to strain its
-powers of persuasion, had induced the legislature
-to pass a special law which deprived the Mayor of
-Toledo of his control of the police force and vested
-the government of that body in a commission appointed
-by the governor of the state.</p>
-
-<p>It had been, of course, a direct offense to Jones,
-and it was intended to take from him the last of his
-powers. He had been greatly roused by it; the
-morning after the law had been enacted he had
-appeared at my house before breakfast to discuss
-this latest assault upon liberty. The law was an
-exact replica of a law that had been passed for Cincinnati
-many years before, and that law had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span>
-sustained by the Supreme Court in a decision which
-had made it the leading case on that subject of constitutional
-law for a whole generation. Time and
-again it had been attacked and always it had been
-sustained; to contest the constitutionality of this
-new act seemed the veriest folly.</p>
-
-<p>But Jones was determined to resist; like some
-stout burgomaster of an old free city of Germany
-he determined to stand out against the city&#8217;s overlords
-from the rural districts, and he insisted on my
-representing him in the litigation which his resistance
-would certainly provoke. I had no hope of
-winning, and told him so; I explained the precedent
-in the Cincinnati case, and that only made him more
-determined; if there was one thing more than another
-for which he had a supreme and sovereign
-contempt it was a legal precedent. My brethren at
-the bar all laughed at me, as I knew they would; but
-I went to work, and after a few days&#8217; investigation
-became convinced that the doctrine laid down in
-that leading case was not at all sound.</p>
-
-<p>When I came to this conviction, I induced Jones
-to retain additional counsel, one of the most brilliant
-lawyers at our bar, Mr. Clarence Brown, a man
-who, in addition to his knowledge of the law, could
-bring to the forum a charming personality, a wit and
-an eloquence that were irresistible. He, too, set to
-work, and in a few days he was convinced, as I, that
-the precedent should be overthrown. Jones refused
-to turn over the command of the police to the new
-commissioners whom the governor appointed; they
-applied to the Supreme Court for a writ of mandamus,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span>
-we tried the case, and we won, overthrowing
-not only the doctrine at the Cincinnati case, but the
-whole fabric of municipal legislation in the state, so
-that a special session of the legislature was necessary
-to enact new codes for the government of the
-cities.</p>
-
-<p>Our satisfaction and our pride in our legal
-achievement was somewhat modified by the fact that
-the application of the same rule to conditions in
-our sister city of Cleveland had the effect, in certain
-cases then pending, of pulling down the work
-which another great mayor, Tom L. Johnson, was
-then doing in that city. It was even said that the
-Supreme Court had been influenced by the desire of
-Mark Hanna, Tom Johnson&#8217;s ancient enemy in
-Cleveland, to see his old rival defeated. Some were
-unkind enough to say that Mark Hanna&#8217;s influence
-was more powerful with the court, as at that time
-constituted, than was the logic of the attorneys
-who were representing Golden Rule Jones.</p>
-
-<p>But however that may have been, the decision in
-that case had ultimate far-reaching effects in improving
-the conditions in Ohio cities, and was the
-beginning of a conflict that did not end until they
-were free and autonomous. In my own case it was
-the beginning of a study of municipal government
-that has grown more fascinating as the years have
-fled, a study that has led me to see, or to think that
-I see, the large hope of our democracy in the cities of
-America.</p>
-
-<p>I regard it as Jones&#8217;s supreme contribution to
-the thought of his time that, by the mere force of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>
-his own original character and personality, he compelled
-a discussion of fundamental principles of government.
-Toledo to-day is a community which has
-a wider acquaintance with all the abstract principles
-of social relations than any other city in the land,
-or in the world, since, when one ventures into generalities,
-one might as well make them as sweeping
-as one can.</p>
-
-<p>Jones&#8217;s other great contribution to the science of
-municipal government was that of non-partizanship
-in local affairs. That is the way he used to express
-it; what he meant was that the issues of national
-politics must not be permitted to obtrude themselves
-into municipal campaigns, and that what divisions
-there are should be confined to local issues. There
-is, of course, in our cities, as in our land or any
-land, only one issue, that which is presented by the
-conflict of the aristocratic, or plutocratic, spirit and
-the spirit of democracy.</p>
-
-<p>Jones used to herald himself as &#8220;a Man Without
-a Party,&#8221; but he was a great democrat, the most
-fundamental I ever knew or imagined; he summed
-up in himself, as no other figure of our time since
-Lincoln, all that the democratic spirit is and hopes
-to be. Perhaps in this characterization I seem to
-behold his figure larger than it was in relation to the
-whole mass, but while his work may appear at first
-glance local, it was really general and universal. No
-one can estimate the peculiar and lively force of such
-a personality; certainly no one can presume to limit
-his influence, for such a spirit is illimitable and
-irresistible.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>He was elected in that last campaign for the
-fourth time, but he did not live very long. He had
-never, it seemed to me, been quite the same after the
-day when he had that experience of insult which
-he did not resent. &#8220;Draw the sting,&#8221; he used to
-counsel us when, in our campaign harangues, we became
-bitter, or sarcastic, or merely smart. He had
-supreme reliance on the simple truth, on the power
-of reasonableness. He never reviled again; he never
-sought to even scores. When he died the only
-wounds he left in human hearts were because he was
-no more. They understood him at last, those who
-had scoffed and sneered and abused and vilified, and
-I, who had had the immense privilege of his friendship,
-and thought I knew him,&mdash;when I stood that
-July afternoon, on the veranda of his home, beside
-his bier to speak at his funeral, and looked out over
-the thousands who were gathered on the wide lawn
-before his home,&mdash;I realized that I, too, had not
-wholly understood him.</p>
-
-<p>I know not how many thousands were there; they
-were standing on the lawns in a mass that extended
-across the street and into the yards on the farther
-side. Down to the corner, and into the side streets,
-they were packed, and they stood in long lines all the
-way out to the cemetery. In that crowd there were
-all sorts of that one sort he knew as humanity without
-distinction,&mdash;judges, and women of prominence
-and women whom he alone would have included in
-humanity, there were thieves, and prize-fighters,&mdash;and
-they all stood there with the tears streaming
-down their faces.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span>There is no monument to Golden Rule Jones in
-Toledo; and since St. Gaudens is gone I know of no
-one who could conceive him in marble or in bronze.
-There is not a public building which he erected, no
-reminder of him which the eye can see or the hands
-touch. But his name is spoken here a thousand
-times a day, and always with the reverence that
-marks the passage of a great man upon the earth.
-And I am sure that his influence did not end here.
-Did not a letter come from Yasnaya Polyana in
-the handwriting of the great Tolstoy, who somehow
-had heard of this noble and simple soul who was, in
-his own way, trying the same experiment of life
-which the great Russian was making?</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXV</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>In the beginning, of course, it was inevitable that
-Jones should have been called a Socialist. I suppose
-he did not care much himself, but the Socialists
-cared, and promptly disowned him, and were at one
-with the capitalists in their hatred and abuse of
-him. He shared, no doubt, the Socialists&#8217; great
-dream of an ordered society, though he would not
-have ordered it by any kind of force or compulsion,
-but in that spirit which they sneer at as mere sentimentalism.
-He was patient with them; he saw their
-point of view; he had, indeed, the immense advantage
-of being in advance of them in his development.
-He saw Socialism not, as most see it, from the hither
-side, but from the farther side, as one who has passed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span>
-through it; he was like a man who having left the
-dusty highway and entered a wood which he thinks
-his journey&#8217;s end, suddenly emerges and from a hill
-beholds the illimitable prospect that lies beyond. Of
-course he could never endure anything so doctrinaire
-as Socialism, in the form in which he was accustomed
-to see it exemplified in the Socialists about
-him. He could not endure their orthodoxy, any more
-than he could endure the orthodoxy they were contending
-against. Their sectarianism was to him
-quite as impossible as that sectarianism he had known
-in other fields. Their bigotry was as bad as any. He
-saw no good to come from a substitution of their
-tyranny for any other of the many old tyrannies in
-the world. And naturally to one of his spirit the
-class hatred they were always inciting under the
-name of class consciousness was as abhorrent to him
-as all hatred was.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes the Socialists, with their passion for
-generalization, for labeling and pigeonholing everything
-in the universe, said he was an anarchist. The
-more charitable of them, wishing to sterilize the term
-and rid it of its sinister implication, but still insistently
-scientific, said he was a &#8220;philosophic&#8221; anarchist.
-That is a term too vague to use, though in
-one sense, I suppose, all good men are anarchists,
-in that they would live their lives as well without
-laws as with them. Jones himself would have scorned
-those classifications as readily as he would had anyone
-said he was a duke or an earl. &#8220;No title is
-higher than Man,&#8221; he wrote once in a little campaign
-song. And he was that&mdash;a Man.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span>He would not join any society or, as he said,
-&#8220;belong&#8221; to anything. I have thought so often of
-what he said to a book agent one day. We were
-just on the point of leaving the Mayor&#8217;s office for
-luncheon, and the individual who wishes &#8220;just a
-minute&#8221; was inevitably there, blocking the way out
-of the office. He was indubitably a book agent; anyone
-who has a rudimentary knowledge of human nature
-can identify them at once, but this one had as
-his insinuating disguise some position as a representative
-of a Thomas Jefferson Memorial Association,
-and he was there to confer on the Mayor the
-honor of a membership in that society.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And what books am I required to buy?&#8221; asked
-Jones.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; the agent said, &#8220;you are not required
-to buy any books, but, of course, a member of
-the association would naturally want Mr. Jefferson&#8217;s
-complete works.&#8221; Jones&#8217;s eyes were twinkling;
-&#8220;Mr.&#8221; Jefferson amused him immensely, of
-course.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They are very popular,&#8221; the man went on, &#8220;many
-persons are buying them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t find the ideas in them very popular; certainly
-those in Mr. Jefferson&#8217;s greatest work are
-not popular; no one wants to see them adopted.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To which one of his works do you refer?&#8221; asked
-the agent.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, the one that is best known,&#8221; said Jones, &#8220;its
-title is &#8216;The Declaration of Independence.&#8217; I already
-have a copy of that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The poor fellow was conscious that his enterprise<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span>
-was not going very well, but he said, with a flourish
-of magnanimity:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, well, it&#8217;s immaterial to me whether you take
-the books or not, but of course you will wish to
-belong to the association?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I already belong to the association in which
-Mr. Jefferson was chiefly interested,&#8221; said Jones.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What is that, may I ask?&#8221; said the agent.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The United States of America,&#8221; said Jones,
-&#8220;and as I am a member of that, I see no reason why
-I should join anything smaller.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>And then he laughed, and if there had been any
-uneasiness because of his gentle guying, it disappeared
-when he laid his hand on the agent&#8217;s shoulder
-and looked into his eyes in that spirit of friendliness
-which enveloped him like an aureole.</p>
-
-<p>He had a conception of unity that was far beyond
-his contemporaries, a conception that will be
-beyond humanity for many years. It was that conception
-which enabled him to see through the vast
-superstition of war, and the superstition of partizanship,
-and all the other foolish credulities that
-have misled the people in all times.</p>
-
-<p>One evening, it was just at dark, we were leaving
-the mayor&#8217;s office to walk home&mdash;we walked home
-together nearly every evening&mdash;and in the dusk a
-tramp, a negro, came up and asked him for the price
-of a night&#8217;s lodging. The Mayor fumbled in his
-pockets, but he had no small change, he had only a
-five-dollar bill, but he gave this to the tramp and
-said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Go get it changed, and bring it back.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span>The tramp took it and disappeared, and we
-waited. Jones talked on about other things, but I
-was interested in the tramp; my expectation of his
-return was far more uncertain than Jones&#8217;s. But
-after a while the tramp did come back, and he poured
-out into the Mayor&#8217;s hand the change in silver coin.
-The Mayor complained humanly of the heavy
-silver which the Secretary of the Treasury always
-sends out to us, so that the new one-dollar bills
-may go to New York City, and tumbled the money
-into his trousers pocket.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But ain&#8217;t you goin&#8217; to count it?&#8221; asked the negro
-in surprise.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Did you count it?&#8221; asked Jones.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, suh, I counted it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Was it all there, wasn&#8217;t it all right?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, suh.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, then, there&#8217;s no need for me to count it,
-is there?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The negro looked in wide white-eyed surprise.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Did you take out what you wanted?&#8221; asked the
-Mayor.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, suh, I didn&#8217;t take any.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Here, then,&#8221; said Jones, and he gave the man a
-half-dollar and went on.</p>
-
-<p>There was no possible ostentation in this; it was
-perfectly natural; he was doing such things every
-hour of the day.</p>
-
-<p>He had no need to stop there, in the dark, to impress
-me, his friend and intimate. I do him wrong
-even to stoop to explain so much. But I wonder how
-much good his confidence did that wandering outcast?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span>
-How much good did it do to me? By the
-operation of the same law which brought that vagrant
-back to Jones&#8217;s side with all the money, I
-with my distrust, might have been treated far differently.</p>
-
-<p>Or so, at least, it seems to me, and I tell this
-incident as one which proves the reverence Jones
-had for the great natural law of love. For the chief
-count in the indictment respectability brought
-against him was that he had no reverence for law.
-To see and hear them when they said this, one would
-have supposed that a council or legislature had never
-been corrupted in the land. It used to amuse Jones
-to reflect that his literal acceptance of the fundamental
-principle of Christianity should have been
-such a novel and unprecedented thing that it instantly
-marked him out from all the other Christians
-and made him famous in Christendom.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>I say famous, and perhaps I mean only notorious,
-for in the beginning many of his townsmen meant
-it as a reflection, and not a tribute. Some of them
-said it was but an advertising dodge, a bit of demagogism,
-but as Jones applied the rule to everybody,
-other explanations had soon to be adopted, and
-after he had employed it about the City Hall for
-two years the situation became so desperate that
-something had to be done. Controversy was provoked,
-and for almost a decade, Toledo presented<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span>
-the unique spectacle of a modern city in which this
-principle was discussed as though it were something
-newly discovered. Some seemed to think that Jones
-had invented it; they said it was absurd, that it
-really would not work. Of course most regarded it,
-as most now regard the Golden Rule, as a pretty
-sentiment merely, something for the children in Sunday-school.
-It is considered, of course, as any
-sophisticated person knows, as altogether impractical,
-and even silly and absurd.</p>
-
-<p>To be sure, the clergymen were under some sort
-of professional necessity of treating it seriously, and
-they used to prepare profound papers, arranged in
-heads and subheads, with titles and subtitles, and
-after all the usual ostentatious preliminary examination
-of the grounds and the authorities, and with
-the appearance of academic fairness, in discussions
-that were formal, exact, redolent of the oil, bearing
-the hallmark of the schools, they would show that
-Jesus meant there were only certain exigencies in
-which, and certain persons to whom, this rule was
-to be applied. It was all very learned and impressive,
-but one was apt to develop a disturbing doubt
-as to whether one was of those to whom it was
-to be applied. It was certainly not to be applied to
-criminals, or perhaps even to politicians. It was not
-to be applied to poor people, or to the working
-people, unless they were in Sunday-school as conscious
-inferiors, in devout and penitent attitudes.
-And as these people were so seldom in church or
-Sunday-school, and as those who were there apparently
-needed no such consideration, these discourses<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span>
-left one rather uncertain as to what to do with the
-Golden Rule.</p>
-
-<p>All men of course believe in the Golden Rule, or
-say they do, but they believe in it only &#8220;up to a
-certain point,&#8221; and with each individual this point
-differs; the moment in which to abandon the Rule
-and take to &#8220;the shotgun and the club&#8221; comes to
-some soon, to others late, and to some oftener than
-others; but to most, if not to all of us, it inevitably
-arrives. That is why, no doubt, the world is no
-farther along in the solution of the many distressing
-problems it has on its mind.</p>
-
-<p>According to the standards of conduct and of
-&#8220;honor&#8221; inherited from the feudal ages, while personal
-violence may be conceded to be illegal, one is,
-nevertheless, still generally taught that it is wrong
-and unmanly not to resent an insult or an injury, by
-violence, if necessary,&mdash;fighting and killing, by individuals,
-states and nations, are thought to be not
-only honorable and worthy, but, in many cases, indispensable.
-Society has an obsession similar to that
-strange superstition of the feud, which affects the
-Kentucky mountaineers. Generally we are less
-afraid to fight than we are not to fight. Our system
-is based on force, our faith is placed in force, so that
-nearly all of the proposals of reform, for the correction
-of abuses, involve the use of violence in some
-form. We have erected a huge idol in the figure of
-the beadle, who, assisted by the constable, is to make
-society over, to make men &#8220;good.&#8221; Jones came upon
-the scene in America at a time when there was undoubtedly
-a new and really splendid impetus toward<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span>
-a better and higher conception of life and conduct,
-both in public and private. Yet even then no other
-thought seemed to possess the public mind than that
-someone should be put in prison and made to suffer.</p>
-
-<p>Men did not and do not see what Jones saw so
-much more clearly than any other reformer of his
-time, namely that, above all the laws men make with
-their political machines in their legislatures, there
-is a higher law, and that the Golden Rule is a rule
-of conduct deduced from that law. He saw that
-men, whether they knew it or not, liked it or not, or
-were conscious of it or not, had in all times been
-living, and must forever go on living, under the principle
-on which the Golden Rule is based. That is,
-Jones saw that this great law had always existed
-in the universe, just as the law of gravitation existed
-before Newton discovered it. It is inherent in the
-very constitution of things, as one of that body of
-laws which govern the universe and always act and
-react equally among men. And Jones felt that men
-should for their comfort, if for no higher motive,
-respect this law and get the best out of life by observing
-it; and that it should be the business of men
-through their governments to seek out this law and
-the rules that might scientifically be deduced from
-it, instead of putting their faith in their own contrivances
-of statutes, resolutions, orders, and decrees,
-and, when these would not work, trying to make them
-effective through grand juries and petit juries, and
-all the hideous machinery of jails and prisons, and
-scaffolds and electric chairs. And because he had no
-superstitious reverence for policemen or their clubs,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span>
-or for soldiers and their bayonets and machine guns,
-they said he had no reverence for law.</p>
-
-<p>He had, of course, been to the legislature; he
-had seen the midnight sessions there, when statutes
-were enacted amid scenes of drunken riot and confusion,
-and he saw no reason why he should have reverence
-for the acts of these men. Perhaps he was
-wrong; I am only trying to tell how it appeared to
-him. He was not a lawyer, but he knew what many
-lawyers have never learned, that there is sometimes
-a vast difference between a statute and a law. He
-saw that not all statutes are laws; that they are laws
-only when, by accident or design, they are in conformity
-with those rules by which the universe is
-governed, whether in the physical or the spiritual
-world, and these laws, eternal and immutable, are
-invariable, self-executing, instant in operation, without
-judges to declare them, or executives to enforce
-them, or courts to say whether they are unconstitutional
-or not.</p>
-
-<p>He saw that the law on which the Golden Rule is
-founded, the law of moral action and reaction, is the
-one most generally ignored. Its principle he felt to
-be always at work, so that men lived by it whether
-they wished to or not, whether they knew it or not.
-According to this law, hate breeds hate and love produces
-love in return; and all force begets resistance,
-and the result is the general disorder and anarchy
-in which we live so much of the time.</p>
-
-<p>It may be that in this view of life some dangerous
-apothegms are involved; as we grow older we grow
-conservative, and conservatism is a kind of cynicism,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span>
-a kind of fear, the trembling distrust of age. But I
-know that in the life concept to which Jones came
-in his study of this principle, every act of his life,
-no matter how trifling and insignificant it may have
-seemed, suddenly took on a vast and vital significance;
-so that the hasty glance, the unkind word,
-the very spirit in which a thing is said or done, were
-seen to have an effect which may reach farther than
-the imagination can go, an effect not only on one&#8217;s
-own life and character, but on the lives and characters
-of all those about him. He was always human;
-I say that to prevent any impression that he was
-solemn or priggish; he deliberately took up smoking,
-for instance, toward the end of his days, because, he
-said with a chuckle, one must have some vices. And
-sometimes when the Golden Rule seemed not to
-&#8220;work,&#8221; he would truly say it was only because he
-didn&#8217;t know how to work it. And he used to quote
-Walt Whitman:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">The song is to the singer and comes back most to him;</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="verse">The love is to the lover and comes back most to him;</div>
-<div class="verse">The gift is to the giver, and comes back most to him&mdash;it cannot fail.</div>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>I first saw Tom Johnson in the early nineties in
-Cleveland, at a Democratic state convention, where
-one naturally might have expected to see him. I
-had gone to Cleveland to report the convention for
-the Chicago <i>Herald</i>, and since it was summer, and
-summer in Ohio, it was a pleasant thing to be back
-again among the Democrats of my own state, many
-of whom I had known, some of whom I honored.
-And that morning&mdash;I think it was the morning
-after some frenzied members of the Hamilton county
-delegation had been shooting at one another in
-Banks Street in an effort to settle certain of those
-differences in the science of statecraft which then
-were apt, as they are now, to trouble the counsels
-of the Cincinnati politicians&mdash;I was walking along
-Superior Street when I heard a band playing the
-sweet and somehow pathetic strains of &#8220;Home Again,
-Home Again.&#8221; There were other bands playing that
-morning, but the prevailing tune was &#8220;The Campbells
-are Coming&#8221;; for we might as well have been
-Scotchmen at the siege of Lucknow in Ohio during
-those years that James E. Campbell was Governor
-of our state. We grew to love the tune and we grew
-to love him, he was so brilliant and human and affable;
-but he could not pose very well in a frock coat,
-and after he had been renominated at that very
-convention, McKinley defeated him for governor.</p>
-
-<p>But as I was saying, it was not &#8220;The Campbells
-are Coming&#8221; which the band was playing that morning,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span>
-but &#8220;Home Again,&#8221; and along the wide street,
-with an intimate sense of proprietorship that excluded
-strangers from this particular demonstration,
-people were saying:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s Tom Johnson, home from Europe!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was his own employees who had gone forth to
-meet him, the men who worked for him in the street
-railway system he owned in Cleveland in those days,
-and I thought it rather a pretty compliment that a
-man&#8217;s employees should like him so well that they
-would turn out to welcome him with a band when he
-came home from his holiday abroad. I could understand
-their feeling when an hour later I saw Tom
-Johnson in the Hollenden Hotel, the center of a
-group of political friends; he seemed as glad as any
-of them to be back among so many Democrats. He
-still had his youth, and there was in his manner a
-peculiar, subtle charm, a gift with which the gods
-are rather stingy among the sons of men. I can see
-him now, his curly hair moist with the heat of the
-summer day, his profile, clear enough for a Greek
-coin, and the smile that never failed him, or failed
-a situation, to the end. He was, I think, in Congress
-in those days of which I am writing, or if he was
-not, he went to Congress soon after from one of the
-Cleveland districts. And while he was there he wrote
-a remarkable letter in response to a communication
-he had received from some girls who worked in a
-cloak factory in Cleveland, asking him to vote
-against the Wilson tariff bill when it was amended
-by adding a specific duty to the <i>ad valorem</i> duty on
-women&#8217;s cloaks. The girls, of course, poor things,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span>
-had not written the communication; it was written
-by the editor of a protectionist newspaper in Cleveland,
-and the response which Johnson sent was one
-of the simplest and clearest expositions of the evils
-of protection I ever read. I had read it when it was
-published, and had been delighted, but it was not
-for a dozen years that I was able to tell Johnson
-of my delight, and then one day as he and Dr.
-Frederic C. Howe and I were at luncheon I spoke
-of the letter. He laughed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It was a great letter, wasn&#8217;t it?&#8221; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Indeed it was,&#8221; I replied.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A wonderful letter,&#8221; he went on. &#8220;You know, it
-completely shut them up around here. The editor of
-that paper tried for weeks to reply to it, and then
-he gave it up, and he told me privately some time
-afterward that he was sure the theory of protection
-was right, but that it wouldn&#8217;t work on women&#8217;s
-cloaks. Yes, it was a great letter.&#8221; And then with
-a sigh, he added: &#8220;I wish I could have written such
-a letter. Henry George worked on that letter for
-days and nights before we got it to suit us; I&#8217;d
-think and think, and he&#8217;d write and write, and then
-tear up what he had written, but finally we got it
-down.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Henry George was the great influence in his life,
-as he has been the influence in the lives of so many
-in this world. Johnson had been a plutocrat; he had
-made, or to use a distinction Golden Rule Jones used
-to insist upon, he had &#8220;gathered,&#8221; by the time he was
-thirty, an immense fortune, through legal privileges.
-Johnson&#8217;s privileges had been tariffs on steel, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span>
-street railway franchises in several cities, and thus
-early in life he was almost ready for that most
-squalid of all poverty, mere possession. And then
-suddenly he had a marvelous experience, one that
-comes to few men; he caught a vision of a new social
-order.</p>
-
-<p>He was on a railway train going from Indianapolis
-to New York, and the news agent on the train
-importuned him to buy a novel. Johnson waved
-him aside&mdash;I can imagine with what imperious impatience.
-But this agent was not to be waved aside;
-he persisted after the manner of his kind; he had
-that weird occult power by which the book agent
-weaves his spell and paralyses the will, even such a
-superior will as Tom Johnson&#8217;s, and the agent sold
-to him, not a novel, but Henry George&#8217;s &#8220;Social
-Problems.&#8221; He was not given to reading; he read
-only for information, and even then he usually had
-someone else read to him. Once during his last illness
-he asked me what I was reading, and I told him
-Ferrero&#8217;s &#8220;Rome,&#8221; and tried to give him some notion
-of Ferrero&#8217;s description of the political machine
-which C&aelig;sar and Pompey had organized, and of the
-private fire department of Crassus, and he said:
-&#8220;Well, I&#8217;ll have Newton read it to me.&#8221; He used to
-wonder sometimes half wistfully, as though he were
-missing some good in life, how it was that I loved
-poetry so, and it was somehow consoling when Mr.
-Richard McGhee, that fine Irish member of Parliament,
-told me one night in the House of Commons
-that when Johnson made that last journey to England
-he had read Burns to him, and that Johnson<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span>
-had loved and even recited certain passages from
-them. Well then, Johnson bought his book, and idly
-turning the pages began to read, became interested,
-finally enthralled, and read on and on. Later he
-bought &#8220;Progress and Poverty,&#8221; and as he read that
-wonderful book, as there dawned upon his consciousness
-the awful realization that notwithstanding all
-the amazing progress mankind has made in the
-world, poverty has kept even pace with it, stalking
-ever at its side, that with all of man&#8217;s inventions,
-labor-saving devices, and all that, there has been no
-such amelioration of the human lot, no such improvement
-in society as should have come from so much
-effort and achievement, he had a spiritual awakening,
-experienced within him something that was veritably,
-as the Methodists would say, a &#8220;conversion.&#8221;
-There was an instant revolution in his nature, or in
-his purpose; he turned to confront life in an entirely
-new attitude, and he began to have that which so
-many, rich and poor, utterly lack, so many to whom
-existence is but a meaningless confusion of the
-senses, a life concept. And with this new concept
-there came a new ideal.</p>
-
-<p>He at once sought out Henry George, the two
-became fast friends, and the friendship lasted until
-George&#8217;s dramatic death in the midst of his campaign
-for the mayoralty of New York. George used
-to do much of his work at the Johnson home in
-Cleveland&mdash;and used to forget to fasten his collar
-when he was called from that spell of concentration
-over his desk to the dinner table. The Johnsons
-were aristocrats from Kentucky, descended from a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span>
-long line of southern ancestors. And yet Tom
-Johnson was a Democrat, from conviction and principle.
-In fact it seems almost as though the cause
-of democracy would never have got on at all if
-now and then it had not had aristocrats to lead it,
-as ever it has had, from the times of the Gracchi to
-those of the Mirabeaus and the Lafayettes and the
-Jeffersons.</p>
-
-<p>Tom Johnson made an instant impression when he
-went into politics, and he went in on the explicit
-advice of Henry George. When he arose in the
-House of Representatives at Washington to make his
-first speech, no one paid the least attention. It is, I
-suppose, the most difficult place in the world to
-speak, not so much because of the audience, but because
-of the arrangement; that scattered expanse
-of desks is not conducive to dramatic effect, or to
-any focusing of interest. The British Parliament
-is the only one in the world that is seated properly;
-there the old form of the lists is maintained, opponents
-meet literally face to face across that narrow
-chamber. But when Johnson arose at Washington,
-there were those scattered desks, and the members&mdash;lolling
-at their desks, writing letters, reading newspapers,
-clapping their hands for pages, gossiping,
-sauntering about, arising and going out, giving no
-heed whatever. But Tom Johnson had not spoken
-many words before Tom Reed, then the leader on the
-Republican side, suddenly looked up, listened, put
-his hand behind his ear, and leaning forward intently
-said: &#8220;Sh!&#8221; and thus brought his followers
-to attention before the new and strong personality<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span>
-whose power he had so instantly recognized.</p>
-
-<p>It was a power that was felt in that House. They
-tried to shelve him; they put him on the committee
-for the District of Columbia, and no shelf could
-have pleased him more, or been better suited to his
-peculiar genius, for it gave him a city to deal with.
-The very first thing he did was to investigate the
-revenues of the District, and he made a report on
-the subject, based on the theories underlying the
-proposition of the single tax. He tried to have the
-single tax adopted for the District, and while he
-failed in that design his report is a classic on the
-whole subject of municipal taxation, even if, like
-most classics, it is little read. He made some splendid
-speeches, too, on the tariff, and by a clever device,
-under the rule giving members leave to print
-what no one is willing to hear, he contrived, with
-the help of several colleagues, to distribute over the
-land more than a million copies of Henry George&#8217;s
-&#8220;Protection and Free Trade,&#8221; giving that work a
-larger circulation than all the six best sellers among
-the romantic novels.</p>
-
-<p>It is one of the peculiar weaknesses of our political
-system that our strongest men cannot be kept
-very long in Congress, and it was Johnson&#8217;s fate to
-be defeated after his second term, but he then entered
-a field of political activity which was not only thoroughly
-congenial to him, but one in which for the
-present the struggle for democracy must be carried
-on. That field is the field of municipal politics which
-he entered just at the time of the awakening which
-marked the first decade of the new century.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>When I think of the beginning of that period my
-thought goes back to an afternoon in New York,
-when, sitting in the editorial rooms of <i>McClure&#8217;s
-Magazine</i>, Lincoln Steffens said to me:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m going to do a series of articles for the magazine
-on municipal government.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And what do you know about municipal government?&#8221;
-I asked in the tone a man may adopt with
-his friend.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nothing,&#8221; he replied. &#8220;That&#8217;s why I&#8217;m going
-to write about it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>We smiled in the pleasure we both had in his fun,
-but we did not talk long about municipal government
-as we were to do in the succeeding years; we had
-more interesting subjects to discuss just then.</p>
-
-<p>I had been on a holiday to New England with my
-friend John D. Barry, and had just come from
-Maine where I had spent a week at Kittery Point,
-in the delight of long summer afternoons in the company
-of Mr. William Dean Howells, whom, indeed, in
-my vast admiration, and I might say, my reverence
-for him, I had gone there to see. He had introduced
-me to Mark Twain, and I had come away with feelings
-that were no less in intensity I am sure than
-those with which Moses came down out of Mount
-Horeb. And Steffens and I celebrated them and
-their writings and that quality of right-mindedness
-they both got into their writings, and we had our
-joy in their perfect Americanism. The word had a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span>
-definite meaning for us; it occurred to us at that
-time because of some tremendous though unavailing
-blows which Mark Twain had delivered against our
-government&#8217;s policy in the Philippines, the time
-falling in that era of khaki imperialism which opened
-in this land with the Spanish war and too much
-reading of Kipling, who, if I could bring myself to
-think that literature has any influence in America,
-might be said to have induced us to imitate England
-in her colonial policy. There comes back the picture
-of Mark Twain as he sat on the veranda of the
-home he had that summer at Sewell&#8217;s Bridge, a cottage
-on a hill all hidden among the pines; he sat
-there in his picturesque costume of white trousers
-and blue jacket, with his splendid plume of white
-hair, and he smoked cigar after cigar&mdash;he was an
-&#8220;end to end smoker&#8221; as George Ade says&mdash;and as
-he sat and smoked he drawled a delightful monologue
-about some of his experiences with apparitions and
-telepathy and that weird sort of thing; he said they
-were not to be published during his life, and since
-his death I have been waiting to see them in print.
-He had just been made a Doctor of Laws by some
-university in June of that year, a distinguishing fact
-known to a caller from the fashionable resort of
-York near by, who, though somewhat hazy as to
-Mark Twain&#8217;s performances in literature, nevertheless
-scrupulously addressed him as &#8220;Doctor,&#8221; and
-every time he was thus recognized in his new and
-scholarly dignity, he winked at us from under his
-shaggy brows. Perhaps that was part of his Americanism,
-too, unless it were a part of that universality<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span>
-which made him the great humorist he was, and philosopher,
-too; an universality that makes Mr. Howells
-a humorist as well as a novelist and a philosopher&mdash;the
-elements are scarcely inseparable&mdash;though
-Mr. Howells&#8217;s humor is of a more delicate
-quality than that of his great friend, and, as one
-might say, colleague, a quality so rare and delicate
-and delightful that some folk seem to miss it altogether.
-Perhaps it was the Americanism of these
-two great men and their democracy that have won
-them such recognition in Europe, where they have
-represented the best that is in us.</p>
-
-<p>I speak of their democracy for the purpose of
-likening it in its very essence to that of Golden
-Rule Jones and of Johnson, too, and of all the others
-who have struggled in the human cause. We owe
-Mr. Howells especially a debt in this land. He
-jeopardized his standing as an artist, perhaps, by
-his polemics in the cause of realism in the literary
-art, but he was the first to look about him and
-recognize his own land and his own people in his
-fiction; that is why it is so very much the life of our
-land as we know it, and to me there came long ago
-a wonderful and consoling lesson, when in reading
-after him, and after Tolstoy and Tourgenieff, and
-Flaubert, and Zola, and Valdez, and Thomas Hardy,
-I discovered that people are all alike, and like all
-those about us in every essential.</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln Steffens did not miss the humor in Mr.
-Howells&#8217;s writing, because he could not miss the
-humor in anything, though there was not so much
-humor perhaps in another writer whom we had just<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span>
-then discovered and were celebrating that day in the
-joy of our discovery. It was to me a discovery of
-the greatest charm, a charm that lasts to this day
-in everything the man has written, that charm of the
-sea and of ships, the romance and poetry of it all
-which I had felt ever since as a boy I found a noble
-friend in Gus Wright, an old sailor whose name I
-cannot speak even now without a quickening of the
-spirit because of the glamour that invested him when
-I sat and looked at him and realized that he had
-hunted whales in the South Pacific and had sailed the
-Seven Seas. I wish I had written him into the first
-of these papers, where he belongs; he made two miniature
-vessels for me, one a full rigged ship, the other
-a bark&mdash;dismantled now, both of them, alas, and
-long since out of commission....</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You go down to the wharves along the East
-River,&#8221; Steffens was saying, &#8220;and you&#8217;ll see a ship
-come in, and after she has been made fast to her
-wharf, an old man will come out of the cabin, light
-his pipe, and lean over the taffrail; he&#8217;ll have a
-brown, weather-beaten face, and as he leans there
-smoking slowly and peacefully, his voyage done, his
-eye roving calmly about here and there, you&#8217;ll look
-at him, and say to yourself, &#8216;Those eyes have seen
-everything in this world!&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was a rather big thought when you dwelt on it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s seen everything in the world,&#8221; Steffens went
-on, &#8220;but he can&#8217;t tell what he&#8217;s seen. Now Conrad
-has those eyes, he has seen everything, and he can
-tell it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was Joseph Conrad, of course, of whom we were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span>
-talking, the great Pole who even then had come to
-a mastery of our language that might shame most
-of his contemporary writers in it. I would not give
-&#8220;Lord Jim&#8221; for all the other sea stories that were
-ever written, not even if all the novels of Cooper
-and Scott and Stevenson and Dickens were thrown
-in. For Joseph Conrad can see all that the old sailor
-Steffens was imagining that day could see, and far
-more besides; he can see into the human soul. He
-had not written &#8220;Lord Jim&#8221; at that time, or if he
-had, I had not read it, nor had Steffens written his
-books about municipal government, to get back to
-the subject; too often, I fear, have I been thinking
-about some book of Joseph Conrad when I should
-have been thinking of municipal government.</p>
-
-<p>I did not know much about municipal government
-in those days, except what I had learned in Jones&#8217;s
-campaigns and that theoretical knowledge I had
-obtained in the courts as his attorney, and I had, I
-fear, the same indifference to the subject most of
-our citizens have. I should have preferred any time
-to talk about literature and I should prefer to do so
-now, since that is really so much more interesting
-and important. But the fact that we knew nothing
-about it in those days was not unusual; nobody knew
-much about it except that Mr. James Bryce had
-said that it was the most conspicuous failure of the
-American Commonwealth, and we quoted this observation
-so often that one might have supposed we
-were proud of the distinction. Certainly few in
-America in those days understood the subject in the
-sense in which it is understood in some of the British<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span>
-cities, like Glasgow, for instance, whose municipal
-democracy is so far ahead of ours, or in the German
-cities where municipal administration is veritably a
-science. But in Steffens&#8217;s case a lack of knowledge
-was in itself a qualification, since he had eyes, like
-the old sailor, and, like Joseph Conrad, the power to
-tell what he saw. That is, Steffens had vision, imagination,
-and if the history of the city in America
-is ever written he will fill a large place on its page.</p>
-
-<p>I marvel when I reflect that he could see so clearly
-what most had not even the sensitiveness to feel. He
-went at his task quite in the scientific spirit, isolating
-first that elementary germ or microbe, the partizan,
-the man who always voted the straight ticket
-in municipal elections, the most virulent organism
-that ever infested the body politic and as unconscious
-of its toxic power as the bacillus of yellow
-fever. Then he discovered the foul culture this organism
-blindly breeds&mdash;the political machine, with
-its boss. But he went on and his quest led him to the
-public service corporation, the street railway company,
-the gas company, the electricity company, and
-then his trail led him out into the state, and he produced
-a series of studies of politics in the American
-cities which has never been equaled, and so had a
-noble and splendid part in the great awakening of
-our time.</p>
-
-<p>As long as his writings exposed only the low and
-the vulgar politicians, ward heelers and bosses, and
-the like, he was quite popular; I believe he was even
-asked to deliver addresses before clubs of the <i>dilettante</i>,
-and even in churches, for the righteous were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span>
-terrible in their wrath. But when he went more
-deeply, when he exposed the respectable connections
-of the machine politicians, some of his admirers fell
-away, and stood afar off, like certain disciples of
-old. The citizen was delighted when some city other
-than his own was under the scrutiny of the sharp
-eyes that gleamed behind those round glasses, but
-when he drew near for a local study, there was an
-uplifting of the hands in pious horror. Cincinnati
-applauded the exposure of Minneapolis, and St.
-Louis was pleased to have Philadelphia reformed.
-Reform is popular so long as someone else is to be
-reformed.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Steffens came to Toledo occasionally, and I recall
-an evening when we sat in my library and he told
-me of a certain editor with whom he had been talking;
-the editor had been praising his work with a
-fervor that filled Steffens with despair.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Must I write up every city in the United States
-before they will see?&#8221; he said. &#8220;If I were to do
-Toledo, how that chap would berate me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He came to Toledo early in his investigations, and
-I took him to see Jones, and as we left the City
-Hall in the late afternoon of that spring day, Steffens
-was somehow depressed; we had walked a block
-in St. Clair Street in silence when he said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, that man&#8217;s program will take a thousand
-years!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It did seem long to wait. There was a time when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span>
-I thought it might be done in a shorter period, but I
-have found myself under the necessity of extending
-the term from time to time. I fear now that Steffens&#8217;s
-estimate of the length of Jones&#8217;s program
-was rather short, but I know of no other way that
-the program can be carried out. Steffens himself
-is not so impatient now; he learned much more about
-our cities than he ever wrote or dared to write, much
-no doubt that he could not write. Great as was
-the data he collected, before all the conclusions
-could be drawn, all the general rules deduced, it
-would be necessary to have the data of all life, of
-which the cities are microcosms. The subject, after
-all, is rather large.</p>
-
-<p>But to some it seemed simple enough; were there
-not policemen patroling their beats ready to arrest
-the bad people? Thus in the early days of the
-awakening in America impatience took on the form it
-always takes with us, and men flew to the old idols
-of our race, the constable and the policeman; someone
-must be hounded down, someone must be put in
-prison. This was the form which the awakening
-took in many places, and many reputations were
-built up in that wretched work, and perhaps the
-inadequacy of the work is best demonstrated by the
-instability of the reputations. I suppose that such
-efforts do accomplish something, even though it be
-at such fearful cost; they may educate some, but
-mostly they seem to me to gratify a taste for cheap
-sensation and reward that prurient curiosity which
-has always made the contemplation of sin so very
-fascinating to our race. The reformer was abroad,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span>
-seeking to make mankind over, but since he has no
-model more attractive than himself to offer, his work
-never goes very far, and he returns to his warfare
-on the cigarette, or in moments of greater courage,
-on the poor girl whose figure flits by in the darkness,
-followed by the reformer&#8217;s devouring eye.</p>
-
-<p>But Steffens did not write us up, as the reporters
-phrase it. I think Jones perplexed him in those first
-days, though he knows now that Jones was wholly
-and I had almost said solely right. Jones indeed
-perplexed most of us. A man with a program of a
-thousand years could not be expected to interest so
-vitally our impatient democracy, as would one with
-a program so speedy and simple that it involved
-nothing more complex than putting all the bad people
-in jail; and there was always someone ready
-to point out the bad people, so that it seemed simple,
-as well it might to those who had forgotten
-that even that program is six thousand years old,
-at least, according to Archbishop Ussher&#8217;s chronology.
-Steffens, however, was seeking types and in
-the two leading cities of Ohio he found them so
-perfect that he need never have gone further&mdash;had it
-not been for people like that fellow citizen of ours
-who filled Steffens with such despair. But while he
-was gathering his data on Cincinnati and on Cleveland
-he came to see us often, to our delight, and continued
-to come, so that he knew our city and our
-politics almost better than we knew them ourselves.
-He went to Cleveland, I remember, with some distinct
-prejudice against Tom Johnson; the prejudice
-so easily imbibed in gentlemen&#8217;s clubs. But I was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span>
-delighted when, after his investigation, he wrote that
-story in <i>McClure&#8217;s</i> which characterized Tom Johnson
-as the best mayor of the best governed city in
-the United States. I was delighted because I was
-flattered in my own opinion, because I was fond of
-Tom Johnson, and because it appeared just in the
-nick of time to turn the tide in Johnson&#8217;s third
-campaign.</p>
-
-<p>Jones was delighted, too; he had said almost immediately
-after Johnson became mayor of Cleveland
-that he &#8220;loved him&#8221; because, in appointing the
-Reverend Harris R. Cooley as Director of Charities
-and Corrections, Johnson selected a man who began
-at once to parole prisoners from the workhouse, and
-Jones and Johnson became friends as Johnson and
-Pingree had been friends. It was a peculiar instance
-of the whimsical and profligate generosity of the
-fates that the three cities grouped at the western
-end of Lake Erie like those cities Walt Whitman
-saw, or thought he saw, &#8220;as sisters with their arms
-around each others&#8217; necks&#8221; should have had about
-the same time three such mayors as Pingree in Detroit,
-Johnson in Cleveland and Jones in Toledo,
-though the three men were different in everything
-except their democracy.</p>
-
-<p>Johnson&#8217;s success in Cleveland, obtained nominally
-as a Democrat, though in his campaign he was as
-non-partizan as Jones himself, made him the &#8220;logical&#8221;
-candidate of the Democrats in the state for
-governor, and when he was nominated for that office
-he burst upon the old Republican state like a new
-planet flaming in the heavens. Many of the Democrats<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span>
-found that he was entirely too logical in his
-democracy, since he was as like as not to denounce a
-Democratic office holder as any other. He went forth
-to his campaign that year in his big French touring
-car, a way entirely new to us, and in the car he went
-from town to town, holding his immense meetings in
-a circus tent which was taken down and sent on
-ahead each night. In this way he was entirely independent
-of local committees, and they did not like
-that very well; it had been his wealth more than his
-democracy that had made him seem so logical as a
-candidate to some of the Democrats. Such a spectacle
-had not been seen on our country roads as
-that great touring car made; it was a red car, and
-the newspapers called it &#8220;the red devil&#8221;; sometimes
-they were willing to apply the epithet to its occupant.
-It was inevitable, of course, that provincialism
-should criticize him for having bought his car
-in France instead of the home market, and I shall
-never forget, so irresistible in retort was he, the instant
-reply he made:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That complaint comes in very bad grace from
-you protectionists. I bought my car in France it is
-true and paid $5,000 for it, but I paid you $3,000
-more in tariff duties to let me bring it home. You
-made me pay for it twice and I think I own it now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Few have ever been vilified or abused as Johnson
-was abused in our state that year; his red car might
-have been a chariot of flame driven by an anarchist,
-from the way some of the people talked. Strange,
-inexplicable hatred in humanity for those who love
-it most! Tom Johnson campaigned that year on a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span>
-platform which demanded a two-cent-a-mile railway
-fare and the taxation of railroad property at something
-like its value, or at least, he said the railroads
-should pay in taxes as much, relatively, as a man
-paid on his home; the poor man was paying on more
-than a sixty per cent. valuation while the railways
-were valued at eighteen or twenty per cent. This
-was dangerous, even revolutionary doctrine, of
-course, and Johnson was a single-taxer, supposed
-in Ohio to be a method of taxation whereby everybody
-would be relieved of taxation except the farmers
-who were to be taxed according to the superficial
-area of their farms. And of course Johnson
-was defeated, and yet within two years the legislature
-enacted the first of these proposals into law
-with but one dissenting vote. Thus heresy becomes
-orthodoxy. The proposal for taxation reform still
-waits, and will wait, I fancy, for years, since it is so
-fundamental, and mankind never attacks fundamental
-problems until it has exhausted all the superficial
-ones. And yet, while many other changes he
-contended for in his day have been made, while many
-of his heresies have become orthodoxies, the fear of
-him possessed the rural mind in the legislature until
-his death, and almost any measure could be defeated
-by merely uttering the formula &#8220;Tom Johnson.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXX</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>One remembers one&#8217;s friends in various attitudes,
-and I see Tom Johnson now standing on the platform<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>
-in the old tent, under the flaring lights, with
-the eager crowd before him&mdash;there were never such
-intelligent audiences to speak to as those in Cleveland,
-unless it were those in Toledo&mdash;and he was at
-his best when the crowd was heckling him. He was
-like Severus Cassius, who, as Montaigne says, &#8220;spoke
-best extempore, and stood more obliged to fortune
-than his own diligence; it was an advantage to him
-to be interrupted in speaking, and his adversaries
-were afraid to nettle him, lest his anger redouble his
-eloquence.&#8221; He voluntarily introduced the custom of
-heckling so prevalent in England and Scotland, because
-at first he was not a proficient speaker; he was
-so simple, so direct, so positive, that he could state
-his position in a very few words. Thus, as he told
-me once, his speeches were too short for the customary
-political meeting in a state where political oratory
-flowed on and on indefinitely, and he asked the
-crowd to put questions to him. This stirred him up,
-put him on his mettle, stimulated his thought, and he
-was best at this short range. And no one ever got
-the better of him. Once an opponent triumphantly
-demanded, in a campaign in which Johnson&#8217;s administration
-was charged with extravagance:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Johnson, is it not a fact that under your
-administration the Cleveland workhouse has lost
-money?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, sir,&#8221; the Mayor replied promptly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How do you explain that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We are not trying to make money in the Cleveland
-workhouse,&#8221; the Mayor replied instantly, &#8220;we
-are trying to make MEN!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span>Or again I see him, superintending the tearing up
-of street railway tracks, on streets where the franchises
-of the private company had expired, to make
-room for the rails of the city company, calmly
-smoking a cigar, and with a gesture of his expressive
-delicate white hand waving aside the latest of the
-many injunctions that were sued out against him.
-The battle was never lost to him, though his followers
-were often discouraged. He might have said
-of court injunctions as Napoleon said of bullets at
-the battle of Krasnoi:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Bah! They have been whistling about our legs
-these forty years!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But I see him best I think in the great hall of his
-home in Euclid Avenue, one short, fat leg tucked comfortably
-under him, his cigar in his aristocratic
-hand, his friends and admirers about him. It was a
-remarkable coterie of brilliant young men. One of
-them had been originally an opponent, one of those
-who heckled him in the tent, a fiery young radical
-not long since a blacklisted mechanic who had gone
-hungry when on strike, Peter Witt, one of the most
-picturesque personalities in Ohio politics; he became
-one of Johnson&#8217;s intimate friends and strongest supporters,
-and a splendid speaker on the stump. He
-was city clerk of Cleveland under all the Johnson
-administrations and is now the street railway commissioner
-of that city under Mayor Newton D.
-Baker, who, as city solicitor, was another of the
-group of those happy days. Mr. Baker was like a
-boy in appearance, with his sensitive face and the
-ideals of a poet, and a brilliant lawyer. He carried<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span>
-all the legal burden of the long street railway controversy
-in Cleveland,&mdash;it was almost a civil war&mdash;and
-did it all with such skill and ability, and withal with
-such grace and courtesy and good nature that he
-never offended his opponents, who were the leading
-corporation lawyers of the city. Frederic C. Howe
-had been elected to the council in Cleveland as a
-Republican from one of the most aristocratic wards,
-but he was won over by Johnson&#8217;s personality, was
-renominated by Johnson on the Democratic ticket,
-afterwards sent to the state senate and became one
-of the foremost men in the liberal movement in
-America; his books on municipal government are
-authorities. And Dr. Cooley; he was a Disciple
-preacher, and Johnson placed him at the head of the
-department of charities and corrections, so that, as
-Johnson used to say, instead of a preacher Dr.
-Cooley became a minister. It was delightful to be
-with them in those gatherings. The genuine reform
-of conditions in that city possessed them all like a
-passion; they were stimulated by a common ambition,
-which was, as Johnson used to say, to make
-Cleveland a city set on a hill, and though he was not
-a poet nor a maker of phrases everyone instinctively
-knew what he meant when he spoke of his city set
-on a hill. I do not know how much of history he
-had read, but he knew intuitively that the city in
-all ages has been the outpost of civilization, and
-that if the problem of democracy is to be solved
-at all it is to be solved first in the city. That was
-why he struggled for the free city, struggled to make
-the city democratic; he knew that the cure for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span>
-ills of democracy is not less democracy, as so many
-were always preaching, but more democracy. And
-how delighted he was when Fred Howe brought out
-his book &#8220;The City the Hope of Democracy.&#8221; He
-had the joy of seeing marshaled there in the thesis
-of a scholar all the arguments he had apprehended
-but had never reduced to terms; there they were, all
-in their logical order&mdash;and Johnson straightway
-sent a copy of the book to every member of the
-Ohio legislature, to their amazement no doubt, if not
-to their amusement.</p>
-
-<p>I used to like to go over to Cleveland and meet
-that charming group Johnson had gathered about
-him. There was in them a spirit I never saw in such
-fullness elsewhere; they were all working for the
-city, they thought only of the success of the whole.
-They had the city sense, a love of their town like
-that love which undergraduates have for their university,
-the <i>esprit de corps</i> of the crack regiment.</p>
-
-<p>But Johnson used to set me to work with the
-rest of them. I went over there once to spend the
-week&#8217;s end, for rest and relaxation, and he had me
-working far into three nights on amendments to the
-municipal code. He had terrible energy, but it was
-a joy to work with him. I wish I had gone oftener.</p>
-
-<p>I have said enough I hope to make it clear that
-Tom Johnson was one of those mortals who have
-somehow been lifted above their fellows far enough
-to catch a vision of the social order which people
-generally as yet do not see. It was inevitable, of
-course, that such a man, especially since he was a
-rich man, should have his motives impugned, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span>
-I recall now with what a confidential chuckle he said
-to me one time when he had been accused of I know
-not what vaulting and wicked ambition:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am politically ambitious; I have just one ambition;
-I want to be the mayor of a free city, and if I
-were, the very first thing I should do would be to
-appoint a corps of assessors who couldn&#8217;t see a
-building, or an improvement; they would assess for
-taxation nothing but the value of the land, and we
-would try out the single tax.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He did not realize that ambition of course; no
-one ever realizes his ambition. But he did perhaps
-more than any other man in America to make possible
-the coming of the free city in this land.</p>
-
-<p>His struggle for three-cent railway fares in Cleveland,
-which was but a roundabout method of securing
-municipal ownership in a state where the legislature
-in those days would not permit cities to own
-their public utilities was his great work. He lived
-to see that successful in a way, though not exactly
-in the way he had expected; that is another irony
-which the fates visit on the head of ambitious men.</p>
-
-<p>And yet that irony of the fates is not always,
-after all, unkind. Somehow, after a while, in the
-lengthened perspective, the broadened vision that
-reveals a larger segment of the arc, the event is seen
-in better proportion. It requires faith in one&#8217;s
-cause to see this always, and Johnson always had
-that faith. I shall not forget how when the people
-at last voted against him, he still could smile, and
-say to me: &#8220;The people are probably right.&#8221; It
-was the last time I saw him. He was sick then, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span>
-dying, and sadly changed; the hair that had been so
-black and curly that summer morning long before,
-had grown thin and white; the face, sadly lined with
-weariness, was sublimated by a new expression.
-There was the same courage in the classic profile,
-and the old smile was there. He was writing his
-memoirs with a courage as grim as that of General
-Grant&mdash;and he had the equanimity of Antoninus
-Pius. And on his countenance there was the expression
-of a purified ideal. So he had won; his was the
-victory after all.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXXI</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The best of life, no doubt, is made up of memories,
-as M. George Cain says, and perhaps that is
-why I have lingered so long over these little incidents
-of Sam Jones and Tom Johnson. I have told them
-in no sort of related order; Jones died years before
-Johnson; but somehow they seem to me to have appeared
-simultaneously, like twin stars in our northern
-sky, to have blazed a while and then gone out together.
-Different as their personalities were, different
-as two such great originals must have been,
-they were one in ideal, and even in their last words
-they expressed the vast toil and strain of the efforts
-they put forth to attain it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Was it worth while?&#8221; asked Tom Johnson of his
-friend Newton Baker, a day or two before he died.
-And Sam Jones on that last day turned to his sister
-Nell, the noble spirit who had conducted the settlement
-work at Golden Rule House, and said:</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span>&#8220;&#8216;He that endureth to the end&mdash;&mdash;&#8217; What does
-it say?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She repeated the Scripture to him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Say it in Welsh,&#8221; he said, his thought returning
-in those ultimate moments to the speech they had
-used as children. But before she could direct her
-mind into the old sequences, the end had come.</p>
-
-<p>At least, there were those in town who thought it
-was the end. The stock of the street railway company
-went up twenty-four points the next morning,
-and some brokers issued a letter saying now that
-Jones had died the securities of that enterprise offered
-a golden investment&mdash;about the most authentic
-extant illustration, I suppose, of the utter contemptibility
-of privilege in these states. The politicians
-often had been heard to say that when Jones retired
-the non-partizan movement in Toledo would come to
-an end; in their professional analyses they had pronounced
-it a personal following not governed by
-principle, and that with the passing of the leader
-it would disappear and the voters become tractable
-and docile partizan automata again. And now that
-Jones was dead and one of their organization, the
-president of the council, was to succeed to the
-mayor&#8217;s office, the hopes they had so long entertained
-seemed at last on the point of realisation. Within a
-few weeks, therefore, an ordinance granting the
-street railway company a renewal of its rights was
-passed by the council.</p>
-
-<p>Then, instantly, the old spirit flamed anew; there
-were editorials, mass meetings, and all sorts of protest
-against the action, and in response to this indignant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span>
-public feeling, the acting mayor, Mr. Robert
-H. Finch, very courageously vetoed the ordinance.
-But the machine &#8220;had the votes,&#8221; and on the following
-Monday night the council met to pass the ordinance
-over the veto. The members of the Republican
-organization were there, favored with seats in
-the office of the city clerk; lobbyists and the legal
-representatives of the street railway company were
-there. The chamber was crowded; the hot air of the
-small, low-ceiled room was charged with a nervous
-tension; there was in it an eager expectant quality,
-not unmixed with dread and fear and guilt. The
-atmosphere was offensive to the moral sense&mdash;a condition
-remarked in other halls in this land when
-councils and legislatures have been about to take
-action that was inimical to the public good.</p>
-
-<p>But the machine councilmen bore themselves
-jauntily enough; the windows were open to the soft
-night of the early autumn, and now and then some
-one sauntered in nonchalance over to the windows,
-and looked down into St. Clair Street, garish in the
-white and brilliant light of the electric signs of
-theaters, restaurants and saloons. The theater
-crowds were already going by, but it was to be
-noted that they loitered that evening, and were re&euml;nforced
-by other saunterers, as though the entertainment
-of the pavement might surpass that of the
-painted scene within. And above all the noises of
-the street, clanged the gongs of the street cars gliding
-by, and, for the moment, as a dramatic center of
-the scene, a squad of policemen was stationed in the
-lobby of the council chamber.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[178]</span>This nervous, sinister mood was somehow abroad in
-the whole city that night. Mr. Negley D. Cochran
-had written another editorial, published that evening
-in heavy type, in the <i>News-Bee</i>, calling on the
-citizens to come out and protect their rights in
-the streets of their city, so that there were apprehensions
-of all sorts of danger and disaster.</p>
-
-<p>The council proceeded with its business; the voice
-of the reading clerk droned on in the resolutions
-and ordinances that represented the normal municipal
-activities of that hour, and then, suddenly, a
-sound of a new and unaccustomed sort arose from
-St. Clair Street, the sound of the tramp of marching
-men. Those at the windows, looking out, saw a
-strange spectacle&mdash;not without its menace; the
-newspaper reporters, some of them, embellished their
-reports with old phrases about faces blanching.
-Perhaps they did; they might well have done so, for
-the men came down St. Clair Street not as a mob;
-they were silent, marching in column, by sets of
-fours, with an orderly precision and a discipline
-almost military. And at their head there was a man
-whose square, broad shoulders and firm stride were
-the last expression of determination. He wore a
-slouch hat, under which his gray hair showed; his
-closely trimmed beard was grizzled; he looked, as
-many noted, not unlike the conventional portraits
-of General Grant. The man was Mr. Johnson
-Thurston, and he was as grim as General Grant, as
-brave, as determined, and as cool. He was widely
-known in Toledo as a lawyer, however, not as a
-politician; he had never been in politics, indeed, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span>
-he was in politics that night, surely, and destined
-to remain in politics for years to come.</p>
-
-<p>He brought his column to a halt under the windows
-of the council chamber. There was no room
-in that small chamber for such a delegation, or
-seemingly for any delegation of the people, however
-small. Johnson Thurston&#8217;s son marched beside him
-as an aide, bearing a soap box&mdash;the modern tribune
-of our democracy&mdash;and he placed it on the pavement
-for his father. A street car, just then halting,
-clanged its gong for the throng to make way,
-and at this perfect symbol of the foe they were
-opposing, Johnson Thurston shook his fist, and
-shouted:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Stand there! The people are attending to their
-business to-night!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The street car stood, and Johnson Thurston
-mounted his soap box, produced a paper and read
-from it in a loud voice that section of the Constitution
-in which the people retain to themselves the
-right peaceably to assemble and petition for a
-redress of grievances. And this done, he turned to
-his followers, gave them a signal, and there went up
-from their throats in perfect unison a mighty cry:
-&#8220;Let the franchise alone!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Three times they voiced their imperative mandate,
-and then, at a signal, they wheeled about, and
-marched away in the excellent order in which they
-had come. Such a demonstration, in the streets, at
-night, before a legislative body, had it occurred in
-a capital or in a metropolis, would have been historic.
-As it was, the cry that went up from those<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span>
-men was heard in the council chamber; and it was
-destined to ring through the town for the better
-part of a decade. The council did not pass
-the ordinance over the Mayor&#8217;s veto; half an
-hour later the councilmen were escorted from their
-chamber by the police they had summoned; and a
-sadly shaken body they were, poor fellows.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the men who had marched with Johnson
-Thurston had retired to a vacant storeroom in
-Superior Street, three blocks away, over the door
-of which there was a canvas sign bearing the inscription
-&#8220;<span class="smcap">Independent Headquarters</span>.&#8221; There
-they had assembled and been drilled by Johnson
-Thurston, as college men are drilled by a leader in
-their yells, and with a solemn sense of civic duty they
-had marched to the council chamber to save their
-city from a quarter of a century more of shameful
-vassalage to a privileged public utility corporation.
-The threat of their presence had been sufficient, but
-had that proved unavailing, they had provided other
-resources. There had been all the while, from the
-hour of the opening of the doors that night, twelve
-men in the council chamber, armed with bombs, not
-of dynamite or any such anarchist explosive, but
-of asaf&#339;tida and sulphureted hydrogen and I know
-not what other overpowering fumes and odors, confidently
-relied upon to prevail against even so foul
-a stench as that which a privileged plutocracy can
-make in any of the halls of government when it has
-determined to secure another lease of its tenure.</p>
-
-<p>At Independent Headquarters, then, that autumn,
-political meetings were held, in which local affairs&mdash;the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span>
-street-car situation especially and the relation
-it bore to the machines of political parties&mdash;were
-discussed. Because of those changes the legislature
-was always making in the government of cities, three
-councilman at large were to be elected. This was
-in the year 1904, in the midst of a national campaign.
-Roosevelt was running for president for his
-second&mdash;or his first term, depending on the point
-of view&mdash;and three of those men who had voted for
-that street railway ordinance, and were ready to
-vote to pass it over the mayor&#8217;s veto, were candidates
-on the Republican ticket for councilmen at
-large. The Independents who had marched with
-Johnson Thurston determined to nominate a city
-ticket, and they honored me by offering me the place
-at the head of that ticket as their candidate for
-councilman at large. I was writing another novel
-just then and battling as usual against interruptions,
-and so I begged off; it was not the campaign
-I feared, but, as I told them, the fear that I should
-be elected. We nominated a ticket, and went into
-the campaign, speaking every night, and in November,
-though Roosevelt carried the city by fifteen
-thousand, our candidates for councilmen at large
-were elected. Clearly, then, the non-partizan movement
-had not wholly died with Golden Rule Jones;
-his soul, like the soul of John Brown, was marching
-on, and still somehow led by him, and inspired by
-his spirit, there had sprung forth, like Greek soldiers
-from the dragon&#8217;s teeth, in Toledo a democratic
-municipal movement. First of all the cities
-in America, she had taken the initial step in freeing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span>
-herself, the step all cities in America must take if
-they would free themselves from their masters&mdash;that
-of non-partizan municipal elections.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXXII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The predilection of the Ohio man for politics, I
-believe, is well known in this land, where it is generally
-identified with a love for office. There is a
-reproach implied in the reputation which we perhaps
-deserve. An Ohio man goes into politics as
-naturally as a Nova Scotian goes to sea, and yet
-not all Nova Scotians go to sea. They all love the
-sea perhaps, but they do not all care to become
-sailors. And so with us Ohioans. We all love politics,
-though fortunately we do not all care to hold
-office, even if most people do smile indulgently when
-the modest disinclination is expressed. Perhaps such
-scepticism is quite natural in a land so saturated in
-privilege that even office holding is regarded in that
-light&mdash;or was until recently, for now a new conception
-is expanding in the public consciousness and
-there is hope that ere long public office will be regarded
-as a responsibility. I was quite sure that
-I did not care to be a councilman&mdash;that weekly
-wrangle, by night, in a room choking with the fumes
-of cheap tobacco, known as the session of the common
-council, was far from my tastes. And when
-the mayoralty was suggested to me I was quite as
-certain that I did not wish that. For it was not
-long after the death of Jones that it was suggested;
-by Tom Johnson for one, who, in his blunt way, told<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[183]</span>
-me that I should run for the place; and by Steffens,
-who, just then in Cleveland, was writing the article
-in which Tom Johnson was celebrated as &#8220;the best
-mayor of the best governed city in America,&#8221; and
-Steffens found time now and then to come over to
-Toledo to see us. &#8220;And another thing,&#8221; he wrote to
-me after one of these visits, &#8220;you&#8217;ll have to run for
-mayor.&#8221; He reached this conclusion, I believe, by a
-process of inversion. He had been talking with some
-of the machine politicians, and it was their objection
-to me as a candidate that caused him to see my duty
-in that light. I was at one with them on that point,
-at any rate; they could have been no more reluctant
-to have me run than I myself was. Tom Johnson,
-when the Democrats met in their state convention
-at Columbus that year, might propose me for governor,
-and the delegation of his county, Cuyahoga,
-and the delegation from my own county of Lucas
-vote for my nomination, but that stroke of political
-lightning was easily arrested by rods that had been
-more accurately and carefully adjusted, so that I
-could take the manuscript of &#8220;The Turn of the Balance&#8221;
-and go to Wequetonsing on the shores of Little
-Traverse Bay, where the days are blue and gold,
-and there is sparkling sunshine, and a golf links
-where one may find happiness, if he is on his game, or
-if he is not, consolation in that noble view from the
-hill&mdash;the tee at the old fourth and the new twelfth
-hole&mdash;when he may, if he wish, imagine himself in
-Italy overlooking the Bay of Naples&mdash;which is no
-more beautiful. Meredith Nicholson, a hale old
-Hoosier friend, as James Whitcomb Riley used to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span>
-phrase it, was there, too, near the spot where he
-wrote that excellent novel, &#8220;The Main Chance,&#8221; and
-in that country place with him and other charming
-friends near by I spent the summer. But when I
-came home in the autumn the campaign was already
-on, and the Independents had all but nominated me
-as their candidate for mayor.</p>
-
-<p>They were forced to make their nominations by
-petition, and on the petitions proposing me for the
-office there were many thousands of names, pages
-that were stained with the grime and dust and grease
-of factories and shops&mdash;a diploma in its way, which
-might have made one proud, had not the prospect
-been one to make one so very unhappy. For I
-knew what the mayoralty had done to Jones. I had
-come to realize in my association with him that there
-is no position more difficult than that of the mayor
-of a large city in the America of our times, for the
-city is a kind of microcosm where are posited in
-miniature all the problems of a democracy, and the
-fact that they are in miniature only increases the
-difficulty. My ambitions lay in another field, and
-besides I had a feeling against it, dim and vague,
-though since adequately expressed in one of those fine
-generalizations which Se&ntilde;or Guglielmo Ferrero
-makes on his brilliant page; &#8220;there is no sphere of
-activity,&#8221; he says, writing of the perils of political
-life, &#8220;which is so much at the mercy of unforeseen
-accidents or where the effort put out is so incommensurable
-with the result obtained.&#8221; It is, of course,
-one of the privileges of the citizen in a democracy
-to be &#8220;mentioned&#8221; for public office; if no one else<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[185]</span>
-mentions him he can mention himself, and whenever
-someone else does mention him there are many who
-ascribe to his originality the credit for the suggestion.</p>
-
-<p>It seems difficult for our people to understand any
-man who really does not desire public office in a
-land where it has so long been regarded purely as
-a privilege to be bestowed or a prize to be contested.
-I suppose that even the blunt and grim old warrior
-Sherman caused the people to smile when he said
-that if nominated for the presidency he would not
-accept and if elected he would not serve. They
-wondered what he meant, and for a time it never occurred
-to them that he meant just what he said.</p>
-
-<p>But the day came at last when I must decide,
-and to a committee of the Independents I said that I
-should give them an answer in the morning. I
-thought it all over again in the watches of the night,&mdash;and
-the unfinished manuscript on my library table&mdash;and
-at last, since somebody had to do it, since
-somebody had to point out at least the danger of
-risking the community rights in the hands of a political
-machine, I said I would accept. I suppose
-that it is but an expression of that ironic mood in
-which the Fates delight to deal with mortals that it
-should be so easy to get that which one does not
-want; the Independents insisted on my standing for
-the office, but the only humor in that fact was just
-then too grim for pleasure, though there is always a
-compensation somewhere after all, and gloomy as I
-was that morning at the prospect of the bitter campaign
-and the difficulties that would follow if I were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span>
-elected, I could laugh when &#8220;Dad&#8221; McCullough, the
-old Scotsman whom we all loved for himself and for
-his devotion to our movement, leaned forward in his
-chair, stroked his whiskers in a mollifying way and,
-as though he preferred even the other members of
-his committee not to hear him, said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Would it be out of place if I suggested that in
-the campaign you bear down as lightly as possible
-on the infirmities of the law?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His shrewd sense even then warned him of the
-herring that would be drawn across the trail of
-privilege as soon as we struck it!</p>
-
-<p>And he was right. We had not opened our campaign
-at Golden Rule Hall, before privilege did
-what it always does when it is pursued, it tried to
-divert attention from itself by pointing out a smaller
-evil. All the old and conventional complaints about
-the morals of the city to which we had been used
-in Jones&#8217;s campaigns were revived and repeated with
-embellishments and improvements; no city was ever
-reviled as was ours by those who had failed in their
-efforts to control it and absorb the product of its
-communal toil. My attitude, conceived by &#8220;Dad&#8221;
-McCullough as &#8220;bearing down on the infirmities of
-the law,&#8221; was now represented as evidence of an intention
-to ignore the law, to enforce none of the
-statutes, and it was predicted that the election of
-the Independent ticket meant nothing but anarchy
-and chaos.</p>
-
-<p>To this &#8220;moral&#8221; issue that had served for so
-many years, the &#8220;good&#8221; people responded immediately,
-as they always do, and with certain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span>
-of the clergy to lead them rallied instantly about
-the machine, and for six weeks reveled in an
-inspection of all the city&#8217;s vices, and mouseled in
-the slums and stews of the tenderloin for examples
-of the depravity which they declared it was the purpose
-and design of the Independents to intensify
-and perpetuate. Their own candidate had been in
-power for a year and a half and these conditions
-had existed unmolested, but when some of our speakers
-indicated this inconsistency in their attitude they
-only raged the more.</p>
-
-<p>But notwithstanding all this, the issue was clear;
-the machine had helped to make it clear, not only
-by its long opposition to Jones, but more recently
-by its efforts for the street railway company. It
-was the old issue between privilege and democracy,
-that has marked the cleavage in society in all ages.
-The people were trying to take back their own government,
-for the purpose, first, of preventing the
-street railway company from securing another lease
-of the city&#8217;s streets for a quarter of a century, by
-which, incidentally, the company would realize profits
-on about twenty-five million dollars of watered
-stock. But the people were not to be deceived; they
-were not to be turned off the trail so easily; and the
-entire ticket was elected, so that at the beginning of
-that new year the Independents were in control of
-every branch of the government, not only in the city,
-but in the county as well.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXXIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>I have spoken of the Independents as though they
-were an authentic political party, when it was one
-of their basic principles to be no party at all. They
-were Republicans and Democrats who, in the revelation
-of Jones&#8217;s death, had come to see that it was
-the partizan that was responsible for the evil political
-machines in American cities; they saw that
-by dividing themselves arbitrarily into parties, along
-national lines, by voting, almost automatically, their
-party tickets, ratifying nominations made for them
-they knew not how, they were but delivering over
-their city to the spoiler. As Republicans, proud
-of the traditions of that party, they had voted
-under the impression that they were voting for Lincoln;
-as Democrats they thought they were voting
-for Jefferson, or at least for Jackson, but they had
-discovered that they had been voting principally for
-the street railway company and the privileges allied
-with it in interest.</p>
-
-<p>And more than all, they saw that in the amazing
-superstition of party regularity by which the partizan
-mind in that day was obsessed, they were voting
-for these interests no matter which ticket they
-supported, for the machine was not only partizan, it
-was bipartizan, and the great conflict they waged
-at the polls was the most absurd sham battle that
-ever was fought. It seems almost incredible now
-that men&#8217;s minds were ever so clouded, strange that
-they did not earlier discover how absurd was a system<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span>
-which, in order to enable them the more readily
-to subjugate themselves, actually printed little wood-cuts
-of birds&mdash;roosters and eagles&mdash;at the heads of
-the tickets, so that they might the more easily and
-readily recognize their masters and deliver their suffrages
-over to them. It is an absurdity that is
-pretty well recognized in this country to-day, and
-the principle of separating municipal politics from
-national politics is all but established in law. Mr.
-James Bryce had pointed it out long before, but
-Jones seemed to be almost the first among us to
-recognize it, and he probably had not read from
-Mr. Bryce; he deduced the principle from his
-own experience, and from his own consciousness, if
-not his own conscience, perhaps he had some intimation
-of it from the Genius of These States, whose
-scornful laugh at that and other absurdities his
-great exemplar Walt Whitman could hear, echoed as
-from some mountain peak afar in the west. But it
-was no laughing matter in Toledo in those days.
-Men were accused of treason and sedition for deserting
-their parties; it made little difference which
-party a man belonged to; the insistence was on his
-belonging to a party; any party would suffice.</p>
-
-<p>I have no intention, however, of discussing that
-principle now, but it was the point from which we
-had to start in our first campaign, the point from
-which all cities will have to start if they wish to be
-free. The task we faced was relatively greater than
-that which Jones had faced; we had a full ticket in
-the field, a candidate for every city office and a man
-running for the council in every ward in town.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span>
-Jones had run alone, and though he succeeded there
-was always a council and a coterie of municipal officials
-who represented the other interest in the community.
-Of course he had made our work possible
-by the labor he had done, great pioneer that he
-was. He had been his own platform, as any candidate
-after all must be, but with our large movement
-it was necessary to reduce our principles to some
-form and we tried to do this as simply as we could.
-We put forth our belief that local affairs should
-be separate from, and independent of, party politics,
-and that public officers should be selected on
-account of their honesty and efficiency, regardless
-of political affiliations; that the people should be
-more active in selecting their officials, and should
-not allow an office-seeker to bring about his own
-nomination; that the prices charged by public
-service corporations should be regulated by the
-council at stated intervals; and that all franchises
-for public utilities should first be submitted to a
-vote of the people, that the city should possess the
-legal right to acquire and maintain any public utility,
-when authorized so to do by direct vote of its
-people, that every franchise granted to public service
-corporations should contain an agreement that the
-city might purchase and take over its property at a
-fair price, whenever so voted by the people, and that
-no street railway franchise should be extended or
-granted, permitting more than three-cent fares, and
-unless it includes provision for universal transfers,
-satisfactory service, and reasonable compensation
-for the use of bridges, and we demanded from the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span>
-legislature home rule, the initiative and referendum
-and the recall.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps it was not such a little platform after
-all, but big indeed, I think, when one comes to consider
-its potentialities, and if anyone thinks it was
-easy to put its principles into practice, let him
-try it and see! It was drawn by that Johnson
-Thurston of whom I spoke, and by Oren Dunham
-and by Elisha B. Southard and others, citizens devoted
-to their town, and already with a prescience
-of the city spirit. They succeeded in compressing
-into those few lines all we know or need to know
-about municipal government, and ages hence our
-cities will still be falling short of the ideal they expressed
-on that little card. There were many who
-went with us in that first campaign who did not see
-all the implications of that statement of principles;
-none of us saw all of them of course. The
-movement had not only the strength but the weaknesses
-of all so-called reform movements in their
-initial stages. Those who were disappointed or
-disaffected or dissatisfied for personal reasons with
-the old party machines, no doubt found an opportunity
-for expression of their not too lofty sentiments,
-although later on when they saw that it was
-merely a tendency toward democracy they fell away,
-not because the movement had deserted its original
-ideals but because they at last understood them.</p>
-
-<p>As I now look back on that first campaign, on the
-experience I had so much dreaded, the perspective
-has worked its magic, and the hardships and difficulties
-have faded away, even, I hope, as its enmities<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span>
-have faded away, though remembering Jones&#8217;s
-admonition to &#8220;draw the sting&#8221; I tried to keep enmities
-out of it. Since I could not bring myself
-to discuss myself, I resolved not to discuss my opponents,
-and I went through the campaign without
-once mentioning the name of one of them&mdash;there
-were four candidates for mayor against me&mdash;without
-making one personal reference to them. And never
-in any political campaign since have I attacked an
-opponent. It was enough to discuss the principles
-of our little platform; and the first task was to get
-the electors to see the absurdity of their partizanship
-and to make clear the necessity of having a
-city government that represented the people or,
-since that phrase is perhaps indefinite, one that did
-not represent the privileged interests of the city.</p>
-
-<p>The campaign was like the old Jones campaigns,
-though not altogether like them.</p>
-
-<p>The legislature, which is always interfering as
-much as possible with the cities, had changed the
-time of holding the municipal elections from the
-spring to the autumn, one change wrought by a legislature
-in cities that the people approved, since
-instead of those raw spring winds we now have the
-glorious weather the autumn usually brings us in
-the lake regions, with a sparkling air and a warm
-sun, and a long procession of golden days, on which
-one really should be playing golf, if one could play
-golf in the midst of a political campaign, which
-one could not, since art and politics, or at least the
-practice of them, are wholly incompatible.</p>
-
-<p>There was no old gray Molly to jog about from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span>
-one meeting to another, and if there had been, she
-could not have jogged fast enough for the necessities
-of that hour; and we established new precedents
-when Percy Jones, the son of the Golden Rule
-Mayor, drove me about at furious speed in his big
-touring car, the &#8220;Grey Ghost&#8221; the reporters called
-it, and it streaked through the night, with its siren
-singing, from place to place until I had spoken at
-half a dozen meetings. Every day at noon it wheeled
-up to the entrance of the factories and shops as the
-men were coming out for their noon hour. And
-such meetings I believe were never held anywhere;
-there was an inspiration as the men crowded about
-the car to hear the speeches; they were not politicians,
-they were seeking nothing, they were interested
-in their city; and in their faces, what is far
-above any of these considerations, there was an eager
-interest in life, perhaps a certain hunger of life
-which in so many of them, such were the conditions
-of their toil, was not satisfied.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXXIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>As I sat and looked out over the crowds that
-poured from the shops and stood, sometimes for the
-whole of the noon hour, in discomfort perhaps if
-the wind was off the lake, and saw the veritable
-hunger for life that was in their faces, a hunger
-surely which no political or economic system, however
-wise and perfect, could satisfy, I could not help
-thinking that it was a pity the clergy did not understand<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span>
-these people better, for, after all, the message
-of the Carpenter who came out of Nazareth was for
-the workers and the poor, and He had passionately
-thrown Himself on their side. It might have been
-suggested to that pastor who complained bitterly
-that his own pews were empty on Sunday evenings
-while the streets outside his church were crowded
-with people who for one evening at least were joyous
-and free from care, that the Master whom he
-served would have asked no better congregation than
-they and no better auditorium than the street.</p>
-
-<p>But this pastor was used to making suggestions,
-not to receiving them; he was not of a mind as open
-as that one who actually came to me once to ask
-me how he could get the workingmen to hear him
-preach. He had not failed, he said, to go to them;
-he had advertised on a placard hung at the entrance
-of a factory where two thousand men were working
-that on a Monday at noon he would speak to them.
-They had known of him, for he had recently been
-celebrated in the newspapers as having inaugurated
-a crusade to close the cheap theaters, whose lurid
-melodramas,&mdash;I believe lurid is the word in that connection
-unless the melodramas are &#8220;novelized&#8221; and
-sold for a dollar and a half,&mdash;he said, were detrimental
-to morals, as no doubt they were. And so
-when he appeared, punctually, on that Monday
-noon, at the rendezvous appointed by his poster,
-the workingmen were ready and, when he stood up
-to preach to them, they received him with a deafening
-din, made by pounding on pieces of metal they
-had brought from the shop, so that the poor fellow<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span>
-could not speak at all, and when, with roars of
-awful laughter they unfurled some ribald banner
-fresh from the paint shop of their establishment,
-advising him to go to hell where he was always consigning
-so many of his fellow human beings, he
-went away quite broken-hearted. It was in that
-mood and perhaps a little chastened by his experience
-that he came to see me. I could agree with
-him, of course, that the men had acted like the perfect
-barbarians they could be at times, but there
-was nothing I could do for him, nothing I could tell
-him. I learned long ago that you cannot tell a man
-anything unless he knows it already!</p>
-
-<p>And yet that preacher&#8217;s case was perfectly simple.
-He had come to the city not long before, and
-of course, had come from the country. His training
-and his experience had all been rural, he knew
-nothing whatever of the life of our cities or of their
-problems; he thought only in agrarian sequences.
-He had a little code of conduct consisting of a few
-perfectly simple negatives, namely, men should not
-use tobacco, or liquor, or attend theaters or circuses,
-or play with colored cards, or violate (that is,
-do anything pleasant on) the Sabbath day. And
-whenever he saw people doing any of these things
-it was his duty to dissuade them from doing them,
-and if he could not dissuade them, then it was the
-duty of the authorities to force the people to stop
-doing these things by sending policemen after them.
-Poverty was caused either by drink, or by idleness,
-though usually by drink, and if the saloons were
-closed, drinking would cease!</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span>This was the man&#8217;s conception. Of the condition
-of the workingmen in the cities he had literally no
-notion. He knew they worked, and that working
-made them tired, of course, just as it made farmers
-tired. He saw no difference between the labor in
-the agricultural field and that in the industrial field.
-That men who had been shut up in dusty factories
-for six days, working intently at whirling machines,
-under the bulb of an electric light, felt, when they
-came to the one day of rest, that they should like
-to go outdoors and breathe the air, and have some relaxation,
-some fun, had never occurred to him. That
-they had to work so hard, too, that stimulants were
-perhaps a necessity, never occurred to him, just as
-it had never occurred to him that when one of these
-workers left home there was no place for him to go
-unless he went to a saloon, where there were light
-and warmth and companionship, and, above all, liberty;
-or to a cheap theatre or in the summer to a
-baseball game. And he could not understand why
-these men resented his suggestion that they give up
-all these things, and instead do as farmers do on
-Sunday, or as they pretend to do, that is, stay indoors,
-or, if they do go out, go out to attend church.</p>
-
-<p>And what was most curious of all, he had not the
-slightest notion of what we meant when we spoke of
-the street railway problem. He knew, of course,
-that it was proposed to reduce the fare a cent or
-two cents, but that was not important; what were
-two cents? That there was anything immoral in
-watering stock, in seizing millions of the communal
-value, had never occurred to him, and in the midst<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[197]</span>
-of all the complexities of city life he remained utterly
-na&iuml;ve, bound up in his little code, with not
-the glimmer of a ray of light on social conditions
-or problems, or of economics, or, in a word, of life.
-To him there were no social problems that the Anti-Saloon
-League could not solve in a week, if wicked
-officials would only give them enough policemen and
-a free rein to do it.</p>
-
-<p>And so he wondered why the workingmen would
-not come to hear him preach, or at least would not
-listen to him at the door of their shop!</p>
-
-<p>And most of the parsons in the town&mdash;at that
-time, though it is not so any more, so rapidly have
-changes come in our thought&mdash;were of this frame of
-mind. Not one of them supported our cause; many
-of them denounced it, and continued to denounce
-it, for years. Now and then there was one who
-might whisper to me privately that he understood
-and favored our efforts, but not one ever spoke out
-publicly, unless it were to denounce us. And several
-times they attacked me in their prayers. For instance,
-if&mdash;after I became mayor&mdash;I went to deliver
-an address of welcome, and a preacher was
-there to open the assembly with prayer, he sometimes
-would take advantage of the situation and, in
-the pretense of asking a blessing on the &#8220;chief magistrate
-of our beloved city,&#8221; point out my short-comings
-and read me a lecture on my duties with
-his eyes shut and his hands folded. To that attack
-it would have been necessary, I presume, though I
-am not quite sure of the ecclesiastical etiquette, to
-reply with my eyes shut and my hands folded, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[198]</span>
-Jones had said: &#8220;When He was reviled, He reviled
-not again,&#8221; and &#8220;He that endureth to the end.&#8221; It
-seemed as good a plan as any. I never replied to
-these or any other of their attacks. Some of the
-leaders of our movement always insisted that the
-preachers opposed us because they were influenced,
-according to the historical precedents, by their economic
-dependence on the privileged class. But if
-that is true I am sure the influence was unconscious
-in most cases, and that they simply did not understand.
-They were all desperately sincere. That
-was the chief difficulty with them.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, I found it better never to reply to any
-criticisms or attacks whatever. The philosophy of
-that attitude has been pretty well set forth I think
-by Emerson, though it has been so long since I have
-read it that I do not now know in which of his essays
-or his poems or his lectures he revealed it, though
-probably it would be found in all three since, shrewd
-Yankee that he was, he cast every thought he had
-in three forms. Had he lived in our day he might
-in addition have dramatized each one of them. But
-from his advice never to apologize, one may proceed
-to the virtue of never explaining. It saves an immense
-amount of time and energy, for since a politician&#8217;s
-enemies are legion, and are constantly increasing
-in number, and can attack him, as it were,
-in relays, he must have enormous energy if he is to
-reply in detail to all of them; he will find himself
-after a while more desperately involved than was the
-man in Kipling&#8217;s story, who through the Indian Government
-kept his enemy toiling night and day to answer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span>
-foolish questions about pigs, and, what was
-worse, explaining his previous answers.</p>
-
-<p>Telling what one is going to do is equally as
-foolish as explaining what one has done, or denying
-what one has not done, and so promises could be
-dispensed with as easily as retorts and explanations.
-Long catalogues of promised prodigies and miracles
-are of course absurd, and the bawling and blowing
-politician (as Walt Whitman called him) can
-make them as fluently in his evil cause as can the
-purest of the reformers. I had been disgusted too
-often with such performances to be able to enter
-into competition of that sort, and so let our little
-platform speak for itself and did not even promise
-to be good. And the people understood.</p>
-
-<p>I have often heard men complain of the strain
-and fatigue of political campaigning, and I sometimes
-think much of their distress arises from the
-fact that they campaign in ways that are not necessary,
-if nothing more derogatory is to be said of
-them. There is of course the fatigue that comes
-of nervous strain and anxiety, and this is very great,
-but the haggard visage and the husky voice are all
-unnecessary. It is no wonder to be sure that some
-men break down in campaigns, since their cause
-is so bad that anyone might well be expected to
-sicken in its advocacy, and in furthering it it is
-perhaps inevitable that their efforts partake in a
-measure of its corruption. There is no exercise that
-is physically more beneficial than speaking, especially
-speaking in the open air, provided one knows
-how to use his voice and does not attempt to shout<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span>
-up the wind; and two or three speeches at noon, just
-before luncheon and four or five more in the evening
-after dinner may be recommended as an excellent
-course in physical culture, if when one is done one&#8217;s
-speeches for the evening one will go home and, for
-an hour, read, say &#8220;Huckleberry Finn&#8221; or &#8220;Tom
-Sawyer&#8221; before he goes to bed. I can recommend
-these two great American novels with entire confidence
-in their power to refresh, and in their deep
-and true and delightful philosophy to correct aberrations
-in the point of view&mdash;of one&#8217;s self, in the
-first place, and of some other things of much more
-importance than one&#8217;s self. If the cause be one in
-which one believes there is an incomparable exhilaration
-in it all. And it was with some pride that I
-came through that first campaign without having
-lost either my temper or my voice.</p>
-
-<p>There must always remain the memory of those
-throngs in the meetings, those workingmen who
-came pouring out of the shops and factories at noon,
-glad as school boys to be released for a little while
-from toil, laughing, whistling, engaging in rude
-pleasantries, jostling, teasing and joking each
-other, and then, suddenly, pausing, gathering about
-the motor car, drawing closer, pressing up to
-the foot-board, and listening, with eager, intent
-faces, in which there was such instant appreciation
-of a joke, a pleasantry, anything to make them
-laugh, and yet somehow the adumbration of a yearning
-and a hope. Lyman Wachenheimer&mdash;who as
-judge of the police court once had fined Jones for
-contempt of court, but had come later to agree with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[201]</span>
-him and now was candidate for prosecuting attorney
-of the county&mdash;would stand up in the car, lean
-over, and speak to them out of the splendid new
-faith in democracy that had come to him, and the
-rest of us in our turn would speak. We did not
-ask them to vote for us; our message was at least
-higher than that old foolish and selfish appeal. First
-of all we wished them to vote for themselves, we
-wished them to vote their own convictions, and not
-merely to follow with the old partizan blindness the
-boss or the employer or someone else who told
-them how to vote. And all too soon for the orators
-warming to their work&mdash;they must speak rapidly,
-they must speak simply and come to the point, for
-the demands of the street meeting are obdurate
-and out under the open sky there is short shrift for
-insincerity or any of the old pretense and buncombe&mdash;the
-whistle blows, the men turn and scatter, the
-crowd melts away, a few linger to the last minute
-to catch the last word, and then they turn and run,
-and as they go they lift high the perpendicular
-hand&mdash;Walt Whitman&#8217;s sign of democracy....
-Do you know it? Sometimes one of the section gang
-working on the railroad, pausing in his labor while
-the Limited sweeps by, looks up and to the idle one
-on the rear platform of the observation car, going
-for his long holiday, he waves his hand in a gesture
-instinct with grace and the sincere greeting of a
-fellow human being, and perhaps because&mdash;alas!&mdash;the
-moment of their swift and instantly passing communication
-is isolated from all the complexities of
-our civilized life, because it is to vanish too soon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span>
-for the differences men have made between themselves
-to assert their distinction, there is that one
-instant of perfect understanding. Sometimes a man
-in a boat sailing by will hail you with this gesture
-from his passing craft; he is safe from long contact,
-he can run a risk and for that little moment yield
-to the adventure of picking up an acquaintance.
-Sometimes it is the engineer of a locomotive leaning
-out of his cab window, giving you perhaps a
-droll wink, and there are tramps who from a box
-car will exchange a friendly greeting. And I shall
-never forget the little Irish sailor up on the boat
-deck with whom I talked in the early darkness of an
-autumn evening in the middle of the Atlantic, with
-the appalling loneliness of the sea as night came
-down to meet it in mystery, and the smoke from the
-funnels trailed up off to the southwest on a rising
-and sinister wind; he told me of his mother and his
-uncle&mdash;&#8220;who makes his five guineas a week and
-doesn&#8217;t know the taste of liquor&#8221;&mdash;and of his little
-ambitions, and so, after a bit, of the mysteries of
-life, with a perfect <i>camaraderie</i>, as we stood there
-leaning over the rail, and then, suddenly, when we
-parted, invested himself with a wholly different manner,
-and touched his cap in a little salute and left me
-to the inanities of the smoking-room.</p>
-
-<p>It was something like that, those intimacies,
-vouchsafed for a moment in our early meetings,
-whether those at noon or those at night, in the suffocating
-little halls, or the cold tent, with the torches
-tossing their flames in your eyes as you spoke, and
-it was even that way in those curious meetings down<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span>
-in the darker quarter of the town, where the waste of
-the city lifted up faces that were seared and scarred
-with the appalling catastrophes of the soul that had
-somehow befallen them, and there was unutterable
-longing there.</p>
-
-<p>The one thing that marred these contacts was
-not only that one was so powerless to help these men,
-but that one stood before them in an attitude that
-somehow suggested to them, inevitably, from long
-habit and the pretense of men who sought power for
-themselves, that one needed only to be placed in a
-certain official relation to them, and to be addressed
-by a certain title, to be able to help them. It was
-enough to make one ashamed, almost enough to cause
-one to prefer that they should vote for someone else,
-and relieve one from this dreadful self-consciousness,
-this dreadful responsibility.</p>
-
-<p>And these were the people! These were they who
-had been so long proscribed and exploited; they
-had borne a few of the favored of the fates on their
-backs, and yet, bewildered, they were somehow expectant
-of that good to come to them which had
-been promised in the words and phrases by which
-their very acquiescence and subjugation had so mysteriously
-been wrought&mdash;&#8220;Life, liberty and the pursuit
-of happiness.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Where? And for them, when? Not through the
-efforts of those who employed cold phrases about
-&#8220;good&#8221; government, and &#8220;reform,&#8221; and &#8220;business&#8221;
-administrations, and efficiency methods, and enforcement
-of the laws, and law and order, and all that
-sort of thing, and class consciousness, and economic,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span>
-or any other interpretation of history, or
-through initiatives, referendums and recalls. What
-good would any of these cold and precise formul&aelig;
-do them? Better perhaps the turkey at Thanksgiving,
-and the goose at Christmas time which the
-old machine councilman from the ward gave them;
-of course they themselves paid for them, but they
-did not know it, and the councilman did not know it;
-he had bestowed them with the voice of kindness,
-in the same hearty human spirit in which he came
-to the wedding or the wake, or got the father a
-job, or the oldest son a parole from the workhouse,
-and rendered a thousand other little personal services.
-Perhaps Bath House John and Hinky Dink
-were more nearly right after all than the cold and
-formal and precise gentleman who denounced their
-records in the council. For they were human, and
-the great problem is to make the government of a
-city human.</p>
-
-<p>There were many, of course, even in our own
-movement, who were not concerned about that; I was
-strongly rebuked by one of them once in that very
-first campaign for declaring that we were no better
-than anyone else, and that all the &#8220;good&#8221; men of
-the world could not do the people much good even if
-they were elected to the city government for life. No,
-we may have efficient governments in our cities, and
-honest governments, as we are beginning to have
-everywhere, and, happily, are more and more to
-have, but the great emancipations will not come
-through the formul&aelig; of Independents, Socialists, or
-single-taxers, nor through Law and Order Leagues,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span>
-nor Civic Associations. Down in their hearts these
-are not what the people want. What they want is a
-life that is fuller, more beautiful, more splendid and,
-above all, more human. And nobody can prepare it
-and hand it over to them. They must get it themselves;
-it must come up through them and out of
-them, through long and toilsome processes of development;
-for such is democracy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That man&#8217;s program will take a thousand
-years!&#8221; Lincoln Steffens had said in despair that
-day I introduced him to Jones. Yes&mdash;or a hundred
-thousand. But there is no other way.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXXV</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The most efficient executive of which there is any
-record in history is clearly that little centurion
-who could say: &#8220;For I also am a man set under
-authority, having under me soldiers; and I say unto
-one, go, and he goeth; and to another, come, and
-he cometh; and to my servant, do this, and he doeth
-it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In my experience as an executive I learned that
-it was easy to say &#8220;Go,&#8221; but that the fellows did not
-go promptly; I could say &#8220;Come,&#8221; and he came&mdash;after
-a while, perhaps, when I had said &#8220;Come&#8221;
-again, and that sometimes, having said &#8220;Do this,&#8221; I
-had to go myself and do it, or leave it undone.</p>
-
-<p>Executive ability is a mysterious quality inhering
-in personality, and partaking of its mysteries.</p>
-
-<p>I had gone into the mayor&#8217;s office feeling that I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span>
-was about the most ill-prepared man for such a job
-in the town. Naturally I had turned to Tom Johnson,
-who had a tremendous reputation as an executive;
-even his worst enemy, as the saying is, would
-not deny his wonderful executive ability. I went
-to him in a sort of despair, and he laughed and
-leaned over and whispered&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>But perhaps after all I should not tell. It was
-spoken in confidence. And it is ungenerous and unkind
-to destroy the cherished illusions of the world,
-almost as unkind, I was about to say, as it is difficult,
-since there is nothing the world so cherishes
-and hugs to its sad old withered bosom as it does
-its illusions. It may be that they are entirely necessary
-to it, it may be that it could not get along
-without them. What would this nation have done,
-after all, if it had not been for executive ability and
-the judicial temperament? The judicial temperament
-consists, of course, in nothing more than the
-calm assurance which enables one to put off till to-morrow
-problems that should be decided to-day, for
-if allowed to go long enough problems will solve
-themselves, just as letters unanswered long enough
-despatch their own replies.</p>
-
-<p>I had deduced that generalization for myself
-long ago, while waiting for judges to hand down
-opinions, and then in decisions reading the well-known
-formula: &#8220;The court does not find it necessary
-to pass on this particular point at this time.&#8221;
-Why, I applied one time to the Supreme Court, on
-a Wednesday morning, for a stay of execution on
-behalf of a man who was to be burned alive in our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span>
-electric chair on the following Friday, and the judicial
-temperament who at that time happened to
-be chief justice calmly said that the application
-would be taken under advisement and a decision
-handed down in due course, which, at the earliest,
-was the following Tuesday morning. But the governor
-half an hour afterward said, &#8220;Oh, well, don&#8217;t
-worry; if the court doesn&#8217;t act, I&#8217;ll reprieve him,&#8221;
-an example, perhaps, of what I had in mind when
-I was writing those vague thoughts about making
-government human. But executive ability! I had,
-and still have, great admiration and reverence for
-that&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>But Tom Johnson leaned over that afternoon, as
-we sat there in the committee room of the House
-at Columbus, and laughed and whispered:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s the simplest thing in the world; decide every
-question quickly and be right half the time. And
-get somebody who can do the work. That&#8217;s all
-there is to executive ability.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I looked at him in amazement. He had grown
-quite serious.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s another thing,&#8221; he added. &#8220;Don&#8217;t spend
-too much time in your office. A quarter of an hour
-each day is generally too long, unless there are a
-whole lot of letters. Of course,&#8221; he went on reflectively,
-&#8220;you can get clerks who can sign your name
-better than you can.&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXXVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The first thing was to get men who could do the
-work, a difficulty made greater because we have been
-accustomed to bestow public offices as rewards for political
-service; the office is for the man, not the man
-for the office. I had a friend, a young man, who had
-never been in politics in his life, though he had been
-born and reared in Ohio. He was of an old, wealthy
-and aristocratic family, a graduate of an eastern
-university. His name was Franklin Macomber. I
-appointed him a member of the Board of Public
-Safety&mdash;we still had the board plan of government
-then&mdash;and the appointment to office of a young aristocrat
-afforded the newspapers and cartoonists an
-opportunity for ridicule which they did not overlook.
-But I knew the boy. I had seen him play football,
-for one thing, and I knew how he managed his
-own business. The vigor and the nerve he had displayed
-on the football field at once showed in his
-duties, and the ability and devotion he displayed in
-his own affairs he applied in the public service. The
-criticism to which the administration was constantly
-subjected distressed him; he heard so much of it at
-the fashionable club where he had his luncheons. One
-afternoon he came into City Hall with an expression
-more somber than usual, and as he sat down in my
-office he began:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They are saying&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who are saying?&#8221; I asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The people,&#8221; he replied.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span>He had come, of course, from his luncheon at the
-club. His motor car was at the door of the city
-hall, and I asked him to take me for a drive, and
-I suggested certain parts of town through which,
-for a change, we might go. We ignored the avenues
-and the boulevards, and for two hours drove about
-through quiet streets far from the life of the town
-as we knew it and as all men down in the business
-section knew it&mdash;the old third ward, where the Poles
-lived, and around to the upper end of the old seventh
-where the shops and factories were, and then on over
-through the eighth and the ninth, and so up to the
-Hill, and after we had passed by all those blocks and
-blocks of humble little homes, cottages of one story,
-and all that, I asked him if he knew what the folk who
-lived in them were saying about the administration.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, no,&#8221; he answered. &#8220;I never talk with any
-of them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; I ventured to say, &#8220;they are the people,
-they who live in those little houses with the low
-roofs. It is important to know how they feel, too.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I always felt that he had a new vision after that;
-he saw that if government was to mean anything
-to these persons, it must be made human, and the
-reforms in the police and fire departments he
-wrought out in that spirit were such that when he
-died, in not quite four years, when he was just
-turned thirty, the cartoonist had long since ceased
-to caricature him as an idle fop, and the newspaper
-editorials mourned him, in common with most of the
-community, as one of the best public servants our
-city, or any city, ever had.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXXVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>I went into the mayor&#8217;s office, as I said, all unprepared.
-My equipment was what the observations
-of a political reporter, a young lawyer&#8217;s participation
-in the politics of his state, and an intimacy with
-Golden Rule Jones could make it. It was not much,
-though it was as much perhaps as have most men
-who become municipal officials in our land, where
-in all branches of the civil service, training and experience,
-when they are considered at all, seem to be
-the last requisites. The condition I suppose is implicit
-in democracy, which has the defects of its
-own virtues, and founds its institutions in distrust.
-They order these things better in Germany, by committing
-the administration of municipal affairs to
-trained men as to a learned profession, though the
-German cities have the disadvantage of having so reformed
-their civil service that it is a monstrous bureaucracy.
-I had been chosen chiefly because I had
-been the friend of my distinguished predecessor, and
-for a long time I was so inveterately referred to as of
-that honored relation, so invariably introduced as
-the successor of Golden Rule Jones, that I was
-haunted by the disquieting dread that I was expected
-to be, if not a replica of him, at least some
-sort of measurable imitation of his manners and
-methods, the most impossible achievement in the
-world, since his was a personality wholly original
-and unique. And then besides, a man prefers to
-be himself. But of all those, and they were many<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span>
-and respectable, who doubted my ability, there was
-none whose distrust could exceed my own. I knew
-one thing, at any rate, and that was, that I did not
-know.</p>
-
-<p>Aside from my political principles, which I presume
-may as well be called liberal, and certain theories
-which were called radical, though even then I
-knew enough of human nature to know that they
-could not be realized, especially in one small city
-in the American Middle West, I had been able to
-make, or at least to recognize when others made
-them, as Mr. Bryce and most of the students of municipal
-government in America had done, two or
-three generalizations which, upon the whole, after
-four terms in a mayor&#8217;s office testing them, I still believe
-to be sound. The first was that, whatever the
-mere form of local government, our cities were directly
-ruled by those small coteries we had come to
-call political machines; the second, that these machines
-ruled the cities for the benefit of public utility
-corporations; and the third, that the legal power
-through which this was accomplished was derived
-from legislatures controlled by the same persons in
-the same interest. That is, the people had no voice
-in their own affairs; representative government itself
-had disappeared. Therefore these remedies
-seemed to be indicated, as the doctors say&mdash;non-partizan
-city elections, municipal ownership, and
-home rule for cities. This was the task, this was
-the program.</p>
-
-<p>We had already defeated the machines; Jones had
-made that victory possible by his great pioneer work<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span>
-in destroying the superstition of party regularity.
-I say defeated the machines, when perhaps I should
-say checked the machines, since the bosses remained
-and the partizans who made them possible. And the
-public utilities were in private hands, the street railway
-company still was there, desperate because its
-franchises were about to expire, and its securities,
-through the financiering too familiar to America in
-these latter days, six times the amount of its actual
-investment. And down at Columbus, the legislature
-still was sitting, controlled by rural members
-who knew nothing of cities or of city life or city
-problems, farmers and country lawyers and the politicians
-of small towns, who, in the historic opposition
-of the ruralite to the urbanite, could not
-only favor their party confreres and conspirators
-from the city&mdash;machine politicians to whom they
-turned for advice&mdash;but gain a cheap <i>r&eacute;clame</i> at home
-by opposing every measure designed to set the cities
-free. Thus the bosses in both parties, the machine
-politicians, the corporations, and their lawyers, promoters,
-lobbyists, kept editors, ward heelers, office
-holders, spies, and parasites of every kind were lying
-in wait on every hand. And besides, though inspired
-by other motives, the &#8220;good&#8221; people were always
-insisting on the &#8220;moral&#8221; issue; urging us to
-turn aside from our larger immediate purpose, and
-concentrate our official attention on the &#8220;bad&#8221; people&mdash;and
-wreck our movement. Our immediate purpose
-was to defeat the effort of the street railway
-company to obtain a franchise, to prevent it from
-performing the miracle of transmuting twenty-five<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span>
-millions in green paper into twenty-five millions in
-gold, and thereby absorb the commercial values of
-half a century. To do this it was necessary to win
-elections for years, and to win elections, one must
-have votes, and &#8220;bad&#8221; people have votes, equally
-with &#8220;good&#8221; people, and if one is to judge from
-the comment of the &#8220;good&#8221; people on the election returns,
-the &#8220;bad&#8221; people in most cities are in the majority.
-On that point, I believe, the reformers and
-the politicians at least are agreed. More than this,
-we had to obtain from reluctant legislatures the powers
-that would put the city at least on equal terms
-with the corporations which had always proved so
-much more potent than the city. Such was the
-struggle our movement faced, such was the victory to
-be won before our city could be free from the triumvirate
-that so long had exploited it, the political
-boss, the franchise promoter, and the country politician.
-The Free City! That was the noble dream.</p>
-
-<p>Well might the wise and sophisticated laugh at
-their mayor and call him dreamer! It was, and,
-alas, it is a dream. But youth is so sublimely confident,
-and counts so little on opposition. Not the
-opposition of those who array themselves against
-it&mdash;that was to be expected, of course, that was
-part of the glorious conflict&mdash;but the opposition
-from within the ranks, the opposition on the hither
-side of the barricade. For youth thinks, sometimes,
-that even opponents may be won, if only they can
-be brought to that vantage ground whence one inevitably
-beholds the fair and radiant vision. It had
-not expected the falling away of followers, of supporters,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span>
-even of friends&mdash;the strangely averted eye
-on the street, the suddenly abandoned weekly call,
-the cessation of little notes of encouragement, the
-amazing revelations of malignity and bitterness at
-election times, and the flood increasing in volume at
-each succeeding election. One man, thought to be
-devoted to a cause, fails in his desire to secure an
-office; another you refuse a contract; he whom you
-neglected to favor in January punctually appears in
-the opposition ranks in November, one by one they
-drop away, and multiply into an army. Even in the
-official group in the City Hall and in the council,
-there are jealousies, and childish spites, and pitiable
-little ambitions and with them misunderstanding,
-gossip, slander, anonymous attacks, lies, abuse,
-hatred, until youth makes the awful discovery that
-there is, after all, in human nature, pure malice,
-and youth must fight hard to retain its ideals, so
-continually are all the old lovely illusions stripped
-away in this bewildering complication of little tragedies
-and comedies we call life.</p>
-
-<p>To be sure, youth might have known, having read
-the like in books from infancy, and having made
-some reflections of its own on the irony of things,
-and indulged from time to time in philosophizings.
-But that was about the experience of others, from
-which none of us is wise enough to learn. Most of
-us indeed are not wise enough to learn from our
-own. It is all a part of life. What a thing human
-life is, to be sure, and human nature! <i>Ay di mi!</i>
-as Carlyle used to say. Patience, and shuffle the
-cards!...</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span>... I had no intention of recalling such things.
-Did not Jones say that when the Golden Rule would
-not work, it was not the fault of the Rule, but because
-one did not quite know how to work it? I have
-no intention of setting down the failures or the little
-successes of four terms as mayor. Nor shall I write
-a little history of those terms in office; I could not,
-and it would not be worth while if I could. I shall
-not attempt in these pages a treatise on municipal
-government, for if the task were rightly executed,
-it would be a history of civilization. Non-partizanship
-in municipal elections, municipal ownership,
-home rule for cities,&mdash;who is interested in these? I
-have discussed them in interviews&mdash;(&#8220;Is there to be a
-statement for us this morning, Mr. Mayor?&#8221;)&mdash;and
-speeches numerous as autumn leaves, and like them,
-lost now in the winds to which they were given.</p>
-
-<p>After all, it is life in which we are all interested.
-And one sees a deal of life in a mayor&#8217;s office, and in
-it one may learn to envisage it as&mdash;just life. Then
-one can have a philosophy about it, though one cannot
-discover a panacea, some sort of sociological
-patent medicine to be administered to the community,
-like Socialism, or Prohibition, or absolute law
-enforcement, or the commission form of government.
-One indeed may open one&#8217;s eyes and look at one&#8217;s
-city and presently behold its vast antitheses, its
-boulevards and marble palaces at one end, and its
-slums, its tenements and tenderloins at the other.
-He may discern there the operations of universal
-and inexorable laws, and realize the tremendous conflict
-that everywhere and in all times goes on between<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span>
-privilege and the people. Such a view may
-simplify life for him; it may make easy the peroration
-to the campaign speech; it may provide a glib
-and facile answer to any question. But he should
-have a care lest it make him the slave of its own
-<i>clich&eacute;s</i>, as Socialists for instance, when they become
-purely scientific, explain every human impulse, emotion
-and deed by simply repeating the formula
-&#8220;Economic determinism.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But it will not do; it will not suffice. This view
-of life is simple only because it is narrow and confined;
-in far perspectives there appear curious and
-perplexing contradictions. And even then, the most
-exhaustive analysis of life and of human society,
-however immense and comprehensive, however logical
-and inevitable its generalizations, must always
-fall short simply because no human mind and no
-assembly of human minds can ever wholly envisage
-the vast and bewildering complexity of human life.
-Each man views life from that angle where he happens
-to have been placed by forces he cannot comprehend.
-All of which no doubt is a mere repetition
-in feebler terms of what has heretofore been spoken
-of the inherent vice of the sectarian mind. There
-are no rigid distinctions of good and bad, of proletarians
-and capitalists, of privileged and proscribed;
-there are just people, just folks, as Jones
-said, with their human weaknesses, follies, and mistakes,
-their petty ambitions, their miserable jealousies
-and envies, their triumphs, and glories and
-boundless dreams, and all tending somewhither, they
-know not where nor how, and all pretty much alike.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span>
-And government, be its form what it may, is but
-the reflection of all these qualities. The city, said
-Coriolanus, is the people, and as Jones used to say,
-with those strange embracing gestures, &#8220;I believe in
-<i>all</i> the people.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXXVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>However, all these confused elements make the
-task of a mayor exceedingly difficult, especially in
-America where there are, not so many kinds of
-people, but so many different standards and customs
-and habits. When one gets down into humanity,
-one beholds not two classes, separate and distinct
-as the sexes, but innumerable classes. In Toledo
-something more than twenty languages and dialects
-are spoken every day, and as the mayor is addressed
-the chorus becomes a very babel, a confusion of
-tongues, all counseling him to his duty. The result
-is apt to be perplexing at times. The rights
-of &#8220;business&#8221; in the streets and to the public property,
-the proper bounds within which strikers and
-strike breakers are to be confined, the limitations
-of the activities of pickets, the hours in which it is
-proper to drink beer, who in the community should
-gamble, whether Irishmen or Germans make the
-better policemen; the exact proportion of public
-jobs which Poles and Hungarians should hold;
-whether Socialists on their soap boxes are obstructing
-traffic or merely exercising the constitutional
-right of free speech, whether there are more Catholics
-than Protestants holding office; whether the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span>
-East Side is receiving its due consideration in comparison
-with the West Side; whether boys have the
-right to play ball in the streets, and lovers to spoon
-in parks, and whose conceptions of morals is to prevail&mdash;these,
-like the sins of the Psalmist, are ever
-before him.</p>
-
-<p>And with it all there is a strange, inexplicable
-belief in the almost supernatural power of a mayor.
-I have been waited on by committees&mdash;of aged men&mdash;demanding
-that I stop at once those lovers who
-sought the public park on moonlit nights in June,
-I have been roused from bed at two o&#8217;clock in the
-morning, with a demand that a team of horses in
-a barn four miles on the other side of town be fed;
-innumerable ladies have appealed to me to compel
-their husbands to show them more affectionate attention,
-others have asked me to prohibit their
-neighbors from talking about them. One Jewish
-resident was so devout that he emigrated to Jerusalem,
-and his family insisted that I recall him; a
-Christian missionary asked me to detail policemen to
-assist him in converting the Jews to his creed; and
-pathetic mothers were ever imploring me to order
-the release of their sons and husbands from prisons
-and penitentiaries, over which I had no possible
-jurisdiction. I have recalled I know not how many
-times a remark Jones made one evening after one
-of those weary days I afterward came to know so
-well; &#8220;I could wash my hands every day in women&#8217;s
-tears.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Of course, the main thing was not to wash one&#8217;s
-hands of them or their difficulties. I remember one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span>
-poor soul whose husband was in the penitentiary.
-She came to me in a despair that was almost frantic,
-and showed me a letter she had received from
-her husband. A new governor had been elected in
-that state wherein he was imprisoned, and he urged
-his wife, in the letter she gave me to read, to secure
-a pardon for him before the new governor was inaugurated.
-&#8220;They say,&#8221; he wrote, &#8220;that the new
-governor is a good church member, which is a bad
-sign for being good to prisoners.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Poor soul! It was impossible to explain to her
-that I was wholly powerless. She stood and humbly
-shook her sorrowful head, and to each new attempt
-at explanation she said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are the father of all.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was a phrase which most of the women of the
-foreign born population employed; they repeated
-it as though it were some charmed formula. This
-exaggerated notion of the mayoral power was not
-confined to those citizens of the foreign quarters;
-it was shared by many of the native Americans, who
-held the mayor responsible for all the vices of the
-community, and I was never more sharply criticized
-than when, in refusing to sanction the enactment of
-a curfew ordinance, I tentatively advanced the suggestion
-that, if it did not seem too outrageously
-radical, the rearing and training of children was
-the duty, not so much of the police as of parents,
-pastors and teachers.</p>
-
-<p>It may have been because, in some way, it had got
-abroad that I was a reformer myself. It was at a
-time when there was new and searching inquiry, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span>
-a new sense of public decency, the result of a profound
-impulse in the public consciousness, and I
-had been of those who in my town had opposed the
-political machines. Constructive thinking and constructive
-work being the hardest task in the world,
-one of which our democracy in its present development
-is not yet fully capable, the impulse spent itself
-largely in destructive work. That was natural; it
-is a quality inherent in humanity. My friend Kermode
-F. Gill, the artist-builder and contractor of
-Cleveland, once told me that while it is difficult to
-get men to carry on any large construction, and
-carry it on well, and necessary to set task masters
-over them to have the work done at all, there is
-a wholly different spirit in evidence when the work
-is one of demolition. If a great building is to
-be torn down, the men need no task masters, no
-speeding up, they fly at it in a perfect frenzy, with
-a veritable passion, and tear it down so swiftly that
-the one difficulty is to get the salvage. And in
-the course of building public works I have observed
-the same phenomenon. While the forces are tearing
-down, while they are excavating, that black
-fringe of spectators, the &#8220;crow line&#8221; the builders
-call it, is always there. But when once the work
-is above ground, and construction begins, when the
-structure lifts itself, when it aspires,&mdash;the crow
-line dissolves and melts quite away. This, in a sense,
-is true of man in any of his operations. When the
-great awakening came, after the first shock of surprise,
-after the first resolve to do better, the public
-went at the work of demolition, all about the arena<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span>
-the thumbs of the multitude were turned down, and
-we witnessed the tragedy of men who but a short
-while before had been praised and lauded for their
-possessions, and used as models for little boys in
-Sunday-school, suddenly stripped of all their coveted
-garments, and held up to the hatred and ridicule
-of a world that can yet think of nothing better
-than the stocks, the pillory, the jail, and the scaffold.</p>
-
-<p>In Edinburgh I was shown a little church of
-which Sir Walter Scott was once a vestryman, or
-deacon or elder or some such official, and in the door
-still hung the irons in which offenders were fastened
-on Sunday mornings so that the righteous, as they
-went to pray, might comfort themselves with a consoling
-sense of their own goodness by spitting in
-the face of the sinner. Many of our reforms are
-still carried on in this spirit, and are no more sensible
-or productive of good.</p>
-
-<p>The word &#8220;reformer,&#8221; like the word &#8220;politician&#8221;
-has degenerated, and, in the mind of the common
-man, come to connote something very disagreeable.
-In four terms as mayor I came to know both species
-pretty well, and, in the later connotations of the
-term, I prefer the politician. He, at least, is human.
-The reformers, as Emerson said, affect one
-as the insane do; their motives may be pious, but
-their methods are profane. They are a buzz in the
-ear.</p>
-
-<p>I had read this in Emerson in my youth, when for
-a long time I had a veritable passion for him, just
-as in a former stage, and another mood, I had had
-a veritable passion for books about Napoleon, and,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span>
-at another, for the works of Carlyle, and the controversy
-excited by the reckless Froude; but the truth&mdash;as
-it appears to me, or at any rate, the part of
-a truth&mdash;was not borne in upon me until I came
-to know and to regard, with dread, the possibility
-that I might be included in their number, which I
-should not like, unless it were as a mere brother in
-humanity, somewhat estranged in spirit though we
-should be.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XXXIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The disadvantages of being classed as a reformer
-are not, I am sure, sufficiently appreciated; if they
-were the peace of the world would not be troubled
-as constantly as it is by those who would make mankind
-over on a model of which they present themselves
-as the unattractive example. One of those
-advantages is that each reformer thinks that all the
-other reformers are in honor committed to his reform;
-he writes them letters asking for expressions
-of sympathy and support, and, generally, when he
-finds that each of the others has some darling reform
-of his own which he is determined to try on an
-unwilling public, he is at once denounced as a traitor
-to the whole scheme of reform in the universe. Another
-disadvantage is that reformers never are re&euml;lected,
-and I might set forth others, were it my
-intention to embark on that interesting subject.</p>
-
-<p>I am moved to these observations, however, by the
-recollection of an experience, exasperating at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span>
-time, though now of no moment, since it has cured
-itself as will most exasperations if left long enough
-to themselves. Its importance, if it have any importance
-at all, may be ascribed to its effect of having
-saved me from any such fatal classification,
-unless I were far enough away from home, where
-almost anyone may be regarded as a reformer. To
-be sure, as I was just saying, in the days immediately
-following my first election, I was regarded by
-many of the sacred and illuminated host of reformers
-in the land as one of them, since I was asked to
-join in all sorts of movements for all sorts of prohibitions,&mdash;of
-the use of intoxicating liquors and
-tobacco and cigarettes, and I know not what other
-vices abhorred by those who are not addicted to
-them,&mdash;but it was my good luck, as it seems now to
-have been, to be saved from that fate by as good
-and faithful an enemy as ever helped a politician
-along. The Democrats had been placed in power
-that year in Ohio, and with Tom Johnson, many of
-us felt that it was an opportunity to secure certain
-changes in the laws of Ohio relating to the
-government of cities, that is, we felt it was time
-to secure our own reforms; everyone else, of course,
-felt the same way about his reforms. We had organized
-late in the previous year an association of
-the mayors of the cities in the state for the purpose
-of making changes in the municipal code that
-would give the cities a more mobile form of government
-and greater powers, in other words, it was
-the first definite movement in favor of home rule for
-cities, a liberation for which we struggled for almost<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[224]</span>
-a decade before we achieved any measure of
-success. We had drafted a new municipal code
-and had met at Columbus early in that January in
-which I took my office, to put the finishing touches
-to our code before presenting it to the legislature,
-and one morning I strolled into the hall of the House
-of Representatives before the daily session had been
-convened.</p>
-
-<p>There was in the House at that time a newly
-elected member whom Johnson had supported for
-election and no sooner was he in his seat than he
-opposed every measure Johnson espoused, and,
-under the warming applause his disloyalty won from
-Johnson&#8217;s enemies, he became an opponent of the
-mayor more vociferous than effective. He was exactly,
-I think, of that type described by Emerson,
-who in the course of saying everything worth saying,
-or that will be worth saying for the next two
-hundred years, said: &#8220;Republics abound in young
-civilians who believe that the laws make the city,
-that grave modifications of the policy and modes of
-living and employments of the population, that commerce,
-education and religion, may be voted in or
-out; and that any measure, though it were absurd,
-may be imposed on a people if only you can get sufficient
-voices to make it a law. But the wise know
-that foolish legislation is a rope of sand which perishes
-in the twisting; that the state must follow and
-not lead the character and progress of the citizen;
-the strongest usurper is quickly got rid of; and they
-only who build on Ideas build for eternity; and that
-the form of government which prevails is the expression<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[225]</span>
-of what cultivation exists in the population
-which permits it. The law is only a memorandum.
-We are superstitious, and esteem the statute somewhat;
-so much life as it has in the character of living
-men is its force.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I knew this young civilian then only as one of the
-Johnson group and as that was sufficient introduction,
-in the <i>camaraderie</i> that existed between those of
-us who were devoted to the same cause, I stopped, at
-his salutation, and chatted with him for a moment.
-He had asked my opinion on a bill he had introduced,
-a measure to prohibit or regulate public
-dances in cities, or some such thing, and when I
-failed to evince the due degree of interest in the
-young man&#8217;s measure, he was at once displeased and
-tried to heat me to the proper degree of warmth in
-the holy cause of reform. He began, of course, by
-an indignant demand to know if I was in favor of
-the evils that were connected with public dances, and
-when I tried to show him that my inability to recognize
-his measure as the only adequate method of
-dealing with those evils did not necessarily indicate
-approval of them, he struck the prescribed attitude,
-held up his right hand and said something in
-the melodramatic style, about the oath of office I
-had taken not many days before. I saw at once
-then that I was dealing with a member in high
-standing of the order of the indurated sectarian
-mind, whose fanaticism makes them the most impossible
-persons in the world, and having never been
-certain which of the advice in the Proverbs should
-be accepted, I yielded to a fatal habit of joking&mdash;the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span>
-history of the Republic is strewn with the wrecks
-of careers that were broken by a jest&mdash;and told him
-that I had taken my oath of office before a notary
-public, and that perhaps it had not been of full efficacy
-on that account.</p>
-
-<p>And then I went away, and forgot the incident.
-It was revived in my memory, however, and intensified
-in its interest for me the next morning, when
-on getting back home, I saw in the newspapers a
-despatch from Columbus, under the most ominous
-of black headlines, stating that I had told the distinguished
-representative, on the very floor of the
-House, under the aegis, one almost might say, of
-the state, that I had no reverence for my oath of office,
-and did not intend to respect it. Here was
-anarchy for you, indeed, from the old pupil of Altgeld!</p>
-
-<p>It was, of course, useless to explain, since any
-statement I might make would be but one more welcome
-knot to the tangle of misrepresentation in
-which the unhappy incident was being so gladly
-snarled, and I tried to forget it, though that was
-impossible, since it provided the text for many a
-sanctimonious editorial in the land, in each one of
-which some addition was made to the original report.
-Herbert Spencer says somewhere that for
-every story told in the world there is some basis of
-truth, and I suppose he is right, but I have always
-felt that he did not, at least in my reading of him,
-sufficiently characterize that worst vice of the human
-mind, intellectual dishonesty. Perhaps if he had associated
-less with scientists and more with professional<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[227]</span>
-reformers of the morals of other persons he
-would not have omitted this curious specimen from
-his philosophic analysis, if he did omit it; and if that
-experience of the young civilian at Columbus had
-not been sufficient, I could have supplied him with
-another out of an episode in which I had borne a
-part some years before, one which should have been
-sufficient to warn me against the type for the rest
-of my life.</p>
-
-<p>It concerns another young civilian, though this
-one was so old that he should have known better,
-and relates to a time years before when I happened
-to be running for the state senate. I say happened,
-for it was precisely of that fortuitous nature, since
-I had not been concerned in the circumstances which
-nominated me, so entirely negative in their character
-that I might as well have been said not to be running
-at all. I was a young lawyer, just beginning
-to practice, and in my wide leisure was out of town
-that summer, economically spending a holiday at
-my father&#8217;s house, and, since the Democrats had no
-hope in this world of carrying the district, and
-could get no one who was on the ground to defend
-himself to accept their nomination, they had nominated
-me. It was an honor, perhaps, but so empty
-and futile that when I came home again it seemed
-useless even to decline it, and best to forget it, and
-so I tried to do that, and made no campaign at all.
-But one afternoon I had a caller, a tall, dark
-visaged man, in black clerical garb, who came softly
-into my office, carefully closed the door, and, fixing
-his strange, intense eyes on me, said that he came to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span>
-talk politics. He represented a reform league and
-he came, he said, to discuss my candidature for the
-state senate, and to offer me the support of his organization.
-&#8220;Of course,&#8221; he went on to explain, &#8220;we
-should impose certain conditions.&#8221; He fixed on me
-again and very intently, those strange, fanatic eyes.</p>
-
-<p>I knew very well what the conditions were; it was
-hardly necessary for him to explain that I should be
-expected to sign a pledge to support the bills proposed
-by his organization, some of which, no doubt,
-were excellent measures.</p>
-
-<p>I explained to him that I was under no illusions
-as to the campaign, that there was no possible chance
-of my election that year, that if there had been I
-never would have been nominated, and nothing short
-of a miracle could elect me. &#8220;But,&#8221; I added, &#8220;even
-if that miracle happens, though it will not, and I
-should be elected, I should go down to Columbus and
-to the Senate able to say that I had made no promises
-whatever.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He looked at me a moment, with those strange,
-cold eyes peering narrowly out of his somber visage,
-and as he gazed they seemed to contract, and with
-the faint shadow of a smile that was wholly without
-humor, he said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, you can say that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What do you mean?&#8221; I asked.</p>
-
-<p>The smile raised the man&#8217;s cheeks a little higher
-until they enclosed the little eyes in minute wrinkles,
-and invested them with an expression of the deepest
-cunning.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, since you are opposed to signing our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[229]</span>
-pledge, we will waive that in your case, and you and
-I can have a little private understanding&mdash;no one
-need ever know, and you can say&mdash;&mdash;&#8221; he was gently
-tapping the ends of his fingers together, and the last
-terms of his proposal seemed to be absorbed by an
-expression of vulpine significance so eloquent and
-plain in its meaning that mere words were superfluous.</p>
-
-<p>I sat there and looked at him; I had known of him,
-he spoke nearly every Sunday in some church, and
-took up collections for the reform to which, quite
-sincerely, I believe, he was devoting his life. Then
-I said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But that isn&#8217;t my idea even of politics, to say
-nothing of ethics.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I believe now that he had no conception of the
-moral significance of his suggestion that we have
-an implied understanding which I was to be at liberty
-to deny if the exigencies of politics suggested
-it. He was a reformer, belonging to the order of
-the indurated mind. He was possessed by a theory,
-which held his mind in the relentless mould of its
-absolutism, and there his mind had hardened, and,
-alas, his heart, too, no doubt&mdash;so that its original
-impressions were all fixed and immutable, and not
-subject to change; they could not be erased nor
-could any new impressions be superimposed. He was
-convinced that his particular theory was correct,
-and that if only it could be imposed on mankind, the
-world would be infinitely better off; and that hence
-any means, no matter what, were permissible in effecting
-this imposition, because of the good that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span>
-would follow. It is an old mental attitude in this
-world, well treated of in books, and understood and
-recognized by everyone except those who adopt it,
-and in its spirit every new reform is promulgated by
-its avatar. But the reformer never thinks of himself
-in any such light, of course, he does not understand
-it any more than he understands mankind&#8217;s
-distrust of him. It is the instinctive fear of the
-theorist that has been felt for every one of them from
-Robespierre, the archtype, and impossibilist par excellence,
-down to the latest man haranguing his little
-idle crowd on the street corner.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XL</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>These observations come with the recollection of
-those days of my first term in the mayor&#8217;s office
-when I had so much to do with reformers that I
-earnestly desired that no one would ever include me
-in their category. They came to see me so often
-and in such numbers that my whole view of life was
-quite in danger of distortion. It seemed that half
-the populace had set forth in a rage to reform mankind,
-and their first need was to get the mayor to use
-the police force to help them. When they did not
-call at the office, they were writing letters. The
-favorite day for these expressions of the reforming
-spirit was Monday. I had been many months in the
-office however, before I was able to make this generalization,
-though from the first I could observe
-that Monday took on something of that dismal and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span>
-somber tone which has given it its name of blue
-Monday. In the early days of a simpler life in our
-country, when the customs of the pioneer had not
-been superseded by the complexities of modern existence,
-its color used to be ascribed to the fact that it
-was wash day, and perhaps it has remained a sort of
-moral wash day ever since. At any rate we soon
-discovered that everyone who had a grievance or a
-complaint or a suggestion about his neighbor or
-some larger scheme of reforming whole groups of the
-population was most likely to be heavily charged
-with it on Monday, and since the almost universal
-conception among us is that all reforms can be
-wrought by the mayor, by the simple process of
-issuing an order to the police, these complaints
-were of course lodged at the mayor&#8217;s office.</p>
-
-<p>They were of a curious variety, expressing, I suppose,
-not only all the moral yearnings of mankind,
-but all the meaner moods of human nature, and each
-new Monday morning seemed to have in reserve, for
-a nature that was trying to keep its faith in humanity,
-some fresh and theretofore unimagined instance
-of the depths of little meannesses to which human
-nature is capable of sinking. Many of them came
-in person with their criticism, others sent anonymous
-letters. Then there were those who came to
-repeat ugly things they had heard about me; &#8220;I
-wouldn&#8217;t tell you this if I were not your friend. I
-think you ought to know it.&#8221; Later in the afternoon
-the evenings&#8217; newspapers, with the criticisms marked,
-were laid on my desk. All this made Monday the
-hardest day of the week, especially as the day closed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span>
-with the hebdominal session of the council, where one
-might find now and then some pretty discouraging
-examples of human meanness. Tuesday was not
-quite so bad, though it was trying; human nature
-seemed to run pretty high, or pretty low, on that
-day, too. By Wednesday, the atmosphere began to
-clear, and by Thursday and Friday, everyone seemed
-to be attending to his own business and letting the
-faults of his neighbors go unnoted or at least unreported,
-and Saturday was a day of such calm that
-one&#8217;s whole faith in humanity was miraculously restored;
-if the weather was fine one might almost discover
-human nature as to be good as that nature
-which would reveal herself on the golf links.</p>
-
-<p>As a result of it all we finally made the deduction&mdash;my
-secretary Bernard Dailey, the stenographers
-in the office and the reporters who formed so pleasant
-an element of the life there&mdash;that it was all due to
-the effects of the Sunday that had intervened. In
-the first place, people had leisure on that day and
-in that leisure they could whet up their consciences
-and set them to the congenial task of dissecting the
-characters of other people, or they could contemplate
-the evils in the world and resolve highly to
-make the mayor do away with them, and then after
-the custom of our land they could gorge on the
-huge Sunday noon dinner of roast beef, and then lie
-about all afternoon like pythons in a torpor which
-produced an indigestion so acute and lasting that
-for three days it passed very well for pious fervor
-and zeal for reform. Such at least was our theory,
-offered here solely in the scientific spirit, and not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span>
-by any means as final. It was acquiesced in by all
-of us at the time, and has been supported by an unvarying
-series of data on the Monday mornings
-since then.</p>
-
-<p>We submitted it to Henry Frisch, the police sergeant
-who had been detailed for duty in the mayor&#8217;s
-office for many years, a dear and comfortable soul,
-who had served under several mayors, and had developed
-a philosophy of life that was a very Nirvana
-of comfort and repose. Long ago, so it
-seemed when he smiled indulgently on the discomfiture
-of blue Monday, he had given up humanity as
-a bad job; to him the race was utterly and irredeemably
-hopeless, and without the need of saying a
-word he could shake his honest head at the suggestion
-of a new reform with a motion that was eloquent
-of all negation. He was very tolerant, however,
-and made no argument in rebuttal, he simply
-refused to accept humanity on any general plane;
-regarding the race as a biological species merely,
-he would confide to you that his years of experience
-at that post and as a policeman who had paced his
-beat and afterward commanded a sergeant&#8217;s squad,
-had convinced him that it was altogether depraved,
-dishonest and disgusting, but with any individual
-specimen of the species he was not that way at all.
-He was really kindness itself. The next minute, with
-tears in his eyes, he would go to any extremes to
-help some poor devil out of trouble. Unless it were
-reformers; for these he had no use, he said, and if his
-advice had been accepted he would have been permitted
-to expel them from the City Hall by their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span>
-own beloved weapons of violence and force of arms.
-On Sundays he went fishing.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps at the time of which I am thinking, if
-not very specifically writing, there was more of this
-Monday spirit of reform than is usual. In the first
-place, much is expected of a new official and because
-he does not promptly work those miracles which are
-confidently expected whether he was foolish enough
-to promise them or not, he is so generally complained
-of that it may be set down as an axiom of practical
-politics that any elected official, in the executive
-branch of the government, could be recalled at
-any time during the first year of his incumbency
-of his office. Just then, too, there had been elected
-to the governorship a gentleman who had been very
-deeply devoted to the interests of the Methodist
-Church, the strongest denomination numerically in
-Ohio&mdash;the first governor of Ohio, indeed, was a
-Methodist preacher&mdash;and because of that fact and
-because of the use in his inaugural message of the
-magic phrase &#8220;law and order,&#8221; it was at once announced
-in the most sensational manner of the sensational
-press that, unless all the sumptuary laws in
-Ohio were drastically enforced, all the mayors of the
-cities would be removed. Governor Pattison had
-been elected as a Democrat, and during his campaign
-Tom Johnson and I had supported him, and it was
-while we were in Columbus at his inauguration that
-this sensation was exploited in the newspapers. I
-remember how Tom Johnson received it when one
-of his coterie brought the extra editions into the
-hotel and pointed out to him the dreadful predictions<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[235]</span>
-of the headlines; the white, aristocratic hand waved
-the suggestion imperiously aside, and he said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Four days, and it&#8217;ll all be over. That&#8217;s the life
-of a newspaper sensation.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>I believe that newspaper editors themselves place
-the limit of the effectiveness of a sensation at about
-that time, though some of them are so shrewd that
-they drop the sensation the day before the people
-begin to lose interest in it, instead of waiting for
-the day on which they actually tire of it. Which
-may be an explanation of the fact that the beginnings
-of things are always treated so much more
-fully in the press than their endings; one always
-reads of the opening of the trial, and the awful
-charge, but is never told how it all came out in the
-end, unless the end was catastrophic. The theory of
-the press is, I believe, that good news is no news.</p>
-
-<p>I do not know that poor Governor Pattison ever
-had any intention of raising the issue of local self-government,
-and of raising it in such a direct and
-positive way as by attempting to remove all the
-mayors of Ohio towns and cities in which it could be
-shown that some little enactment of the legislature
-had failed of absolute enforcement; I suppose he had
-no such intention, since the law gave him no such
-power, though that made no difference to the professional
-reverencers and enforcers of law. The poor
-man never saw the governor&#8217;s office after that night
-of his brilliant inauguration, when he stood, very
-dark and weary, with features drawn, but resolutely
-smiling, at his levee in the senate chamber, a tragic
-figure in a way, the first Democratic governor in a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[236]</span>
-long while, and the fates treating him with their customary
-irony and indignity by setting their seal
-upon him in the very hour of his triumph. He died
-in a few months, but there remained many of course
-who could prophesy in his name and cast out devils
-with each extra edition of the newspapers, and the
-discussion of law enforcement has gone on pretty
-steadily from that time to this.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XLI</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>I suppose the discussion is one which must go on
-always in any land where the people of our race
-and tradition dwell. A more objective, natural and
-na&iuml;ve people would not be so interested in sin, and
-when the late Mayor Gaynor of New York spoke of
-the difficulty of administering the affairs of a modern
-city according to &#8220;the standard of exquisite morals&#8221;
-held aloft by some persons for others, he designated
-in his clear and clever way a class of citizens familiar
-to every mayor by the curiously doctrinaire order
-of indurated mind with which they are endowed.
-They begin with the na&iuml;ve assumption that their
-standard is the one and only correct standard, and
-that since men have repeatedly refused to adopt it
-on mere inspection they must be forced to do so by
-the use of violence, a process which they call maintaining
-&#8220;law and order.&#8221; They believe that any
-wrong, any abuse, may be stopped instantly by the
-passage of a law, and if one venture to question the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span>
-efficacy of any plan they propose, he is said at once
-to be opposed to morality and to religion, and is set
-down as a profane and sacrilegious person.</p>
-
-<p>It is, of course, inconvenient to argue with a
-person who has the supreme refuge of the irrelevant
-conclusion; as inconvenient as it would be were one
-to be offered carbolic acid as a toilet article,
-and, upon refusal, be accused of not believing in
-cleanliness. This order of mind imagines that every
-phase of human conduct can be ordered and regulated
-by the enactment of statutes; that the industries,
-occupations, clothing, amusements, appetites,
-passions, prejudices, opinions, ambitions, aspirations
-and devotions of man can be changed, moulded and
-regulated by city councils and state legislatures.
-Every inconvenience, every difficulty, every disagreeable
-feature of modern life, is to be done away by
-the passage of a law.</p>
-
-<p>That our race is saturated with this curious and
-amazing superstition of the power of written enactments
-is shown by the common terminology. The
-mental reactions of a large portion of mankind
-against the irritation of opposing opinion and conduct
-habitually express themselves in the phrase,
-&#8220;There ought to be a law.&#8221; It is heard as often
-every day as the stereotyped references to the
-weather. Not a disagreeable incident in life is complained
-of without that expression; no one has a
-pet aversion or a darling prejudice that he does not
-cherish the desire of having a law passed to bring
-the rest of the world around to his way of feeling.
-And when a trust is formed, or a strike interrupts<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span>
-business, or the sheets on the hotel bed are too short,
-or the hatpin of a woman in a crowded street car
-is too long, or a new dance is introduced, or a boor
-pre&euml;mpts a seat in a train, or a cat howls on the
-back-yard fence in the night time, or a waiter is
-impertinent, or the cook leaves, the indignant citizen
-lifts his eyes hopefully toward that annual calamity
-known as the session of the state legislature, and
-repeats the formula: &#8220;There ought to be a law.&#8221;
-And when the legislature assembles, a whole body of
-foolish bills is introduced regulating everything in
-the earth, and some things that are outside of the
-earth. If a deed is disapproved of by a group of
-people, an agitation is begun to make it a criminal
-offense; by means of pains and penalties the whole of
-life is to be regulated, and government is to
-become a vast bureaucracy of policemen, catch-polls,
-inspectors, beadles, censors, mentors, monitors
-and spies. As the session draws toward its close,
-the haste to enact all these measures becomes frantic.
-I shall never forget those scenes of riot, the howling
-and drunkenness and confusion and worse I have
-witnessed in the legislatures of Illinois and of Ohio
-the last night of the session. And all this delirium
-goes on in every state of the Union, every winter&mdash;and
-all these enactments must be revered. It is the
-phase of the apotheosis of the policeman, who is to
-replace nurse and parent and teacher and pastor,
-and, relieving all these of their responsibilities, undertake
-to remould man into a being of absolute perfection,
-in whom character may be dispensed with,
-since he is to dwell forever under the crystal dome<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span>
-of a moral vacuum from which temptation has been
-scientifically exhausted.</p>
-
-<p>The reason is simple, and obvious; it inheres in
-the belief in the absolute. Your true reformer is
-not only without humor, without pity, without
-mercy, but he is without knowledge of life or of
-human nature, and without very much of any sort
-of sweetness and light. The more moral he is, the
-harder he is, and the more amazingly ready with
-cruel judgments; and he seldom smiles except with
-the unction that comes with the thought of his own
-moral superiority. He thinks there is an absolute
-good and an absolute bad, and hence absolutely good
-people and absolutely bad people.</p>
-
-<p>The peculiar and distinguishing feature of his
-mind is that life is presented to it in stark and rigid
-outline. He is blandly unconscious of distinctions;
-he has no perception of proportions, no knowledge
-of values, in a word, no sense of humor. His world
-is made up of wholly unrelated antitheses. There
-are no shades or shadows, no gradations, no delicate
-and subtle relativities. A thing is either black or
-white, good or bad. A deed is either moral or immoral,
-a virtue or a crime. It is all very simple.
-All acts of which he does not himself approve are
-evil; all who do not think and act as he thinks and
-acts, are bad. If you do not know when a deed, or
-an opinion is wrong, he will tell you; and if you
-doubt him or differ with him, you are bad, and it
-is time to call in the police. &#8220;Whenever the Commons
-has nothing else to do,&#8221; said the wise old member
-of Parliament, &#8220;it can always make a new crime.&#8221;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[240]</span>
-Statutes are thus enacted, as the saying is, against
-all evils, great and small, and the greater the evil,
-of course, the greater the moral triumph expressed
-by the mere enactment. But because of certain contrarieties
-in nature and a certain obstreperous quality
-in human nature and a general complexity in
-life as a whole these legal fulminations are frequently
-triumphs only in theory, and in practice often intensify
-the very ills they seek to cure. As the witty
-Remy de Gourmont says: <i>Quand la morale triomphe
-il se passes des choses tr&egrave;s vilaines.</i></p>
-
-<p>The more intensively developed specimen of the
-type will not overtly sin himself, but he loves to inspect
-those who do, and to peer at them, and to wonder
-how they could ever have the courage to do it;
-he likes to imagine their sensations, and to note each
-one of them as it was developed in the interesting
-experience. And hence the psychic lasciviousness of
-those who are constantly reporting plays and pictures
-as fit for the censor they are always clamoring
-for. Sometimes they go slumming as students of the
-evils of society. They are like pious uncles who
-never swear themselves under any circumstances, but
-relate stories of other men who do, recite their delightful
-experiences and roll out the awful oaths with
-which the profane gave vent to their feelings with a
-relish that is no doubt a relief to their own.</p>
-
-<p>It is, I suppose, our inheritance from the Puritans,
-or the worst of our inheritance from the Puritans,
-and it is possible that it is worth while to
-have paid the penalty as a price for the best we
-derived from them, since one has to take the bad with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[241]</span>
-the good, though in those days I often wished that
-the bequest had gone to some other of the heirs.
-Perhaps in thus speaking of the good we had from
-them, I am merely yielding to the fear of saying
-openly what I have often thought, namely, that the
-good we had from the Puritans has been immensely
-overestimated and exaggerated, and is not one whit
-better or greater in quantity or influence than that
-we had from the Cavaliers, or for that matter from
-the latest emigrant on Ellis Island. They themselves
-appreciated their own goodness, and we have always
-taken their words for granted. I have often thought
-that some day, when I had the elegant leisure necessary
-to such a task, I should like to write &#8220;A History
-of Puritanism,&#8221; or, since I should have to place
-the beginnings of the monumental work in Rome as
-far back at least as the reign of the first Emperor,
-perhaps I should be less ambitious and content myself
-with writing &#8220;A History of Puritanism in the
-United States of America.&#8221; I should have to begin
-the larger work at that interesting period of the history
-of Rome when the weary Augustus was being
-elected and re&euml;lected president against his will and
-trying to gratify the spirit of Puritanism that was
-even in such people as those Romans, by enacting all
-sorts of sumptuary laws and foolish prohibitions,
-and trying out to miserable failures every single one
-of the proposals that have since that time been made
-over and over again in the hope of regenerating
-mankind. The story of how the Emperor&#8217;s own
-daughter was almost the first to disobey his regulations
-is dramatic enough to conclude rather than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span>
-to begin any history, and yet I could write it with
-much more pity than I could the story of those
-Puritans who abounded in my own locality in my
-own time. To write fairly and philosophically of
-them I should have to wait not only for a leisure
-so large and so elegant that I am certain never to
-have it, but I should have to cultivate a philosophic
-calm which I own with shame is far from me when
-I think of some of the things they, or some of
-them, did in their efforts to force their theories on
-others. I should not recall such things now, and if
-I were to put them in that monumental and scholarly
-work of my imagination, it should be, of course, only
-in the cold scientific spirit, and as specimens, say
-in nonpariel type, at the foot of the page with the
-learned annotations.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XLII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Speaking of this passion for laws and regulations
-and how some of the zealous would order even the
-most private and personal details of life in these
-states, Mr. Havelock Ellis, in a brilliant chapter of
-his work, &#8220;The Task of Social Hygiene,&#8221; takes occasion
-to observe that &#8220;nowhere in the world is there so
-great an anxiety to place the moral regulation of
-social affairs in the hands of police,&#8221; and that
-&#8220;nowhere are the police more incapable of carrying
-out such regulation.&#8221; The difficulty is due of course
-to the fact that the old medieval confusion of crime
-and vice persists in a community where the Puritan
-tradition still strongly survives. The incapability,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span>
-as has been pointed out, is not so much in the
-policemen as in that <i>b&ecirc;tisse humaine</i> which expects
-such superhuman work of them.</p>
-
-<p>This insistent confusion of vice with crime has
-not only had the effect of fostering both, but is the
-cause of the corruption of the police. Their proper
-function is to protect life and property and maintain
-the public peace, and this the police of American
-cities perform as well as policemen anywhere. But
-when, by a trick of the sectarian mind, the term
-<i>crime</i> is made to include all the follies and weaknesses
-and vices of humanity, where there is added
-the duty of enforcing statutes against a multitude
-of acts, some of which only Puritanical severity
-classes as crimes, others of which are regarded by
-the human beings in the community with indifference,
-tolerance or sympathy, while still others are inherent
-in mysterious and imperative instincts which balk
-all efforts at general control, the task becomes
-wholly impossible and beyond human ability.</p>
-
-<p>The police know it, and everybody knows it, and
-it is the hypocrisy of society that corrupts them.
-The police know, intuitively, and without any process
-of ratiocination, that people are human, and subject
-to human frailties; they are pretty human themselves,
-and, in common with most of the people in
-the community, see no great wrong in some of the
-things that are done which the sumptuary laws condemn.
-Most of them, for instance, drink a glass of
-beer now and then, or play a game of cards, or go to
-a baseball game on Sunday. They are not apt to be
-gentlemen of the most refined and exquisite tastes.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span>
-And it is difficult to induce men to take much interest
-in punishing acts their own consciences do not condemn.
-This, with the situation at its best; at its
-worst, knowing that, despite all the enactments of
-legislatures, people will continue in their hardened
-ways, they are apt to abuse their power. For they
-know, too, that the statutes prohibiting the merely
-venial of those acts oftentimes run counter to the
-urban custom and that the community regards it as
-of no great consequence if they are not enforced.
-Thus a wide discretion is permitted the police by the
-public conscience in the discharge of their duties,
-and this discretion is one which quite humanly they
-proceed to abuse. If they choose, they may enforce
-the sumptuary laws against certain persons or refrain
-from doing so, and the opportunity for corruption
-is presented. The opportunity widens, opens
-into a larger field, and not only does the corruption
-spread, but it is not long before the police are employing
-extra legal methods in other directions, and
-at last in many instances establish an actual tyranny
-that would not be tolerated in a monarchy. The result
-is that we read every day of arbitrary interferences
-by policemen with most of the constitutional
-rights, such as free speech, the right of assembly and
-petition, etc. They even set up a censorship and
-condemn paintings, or prohibit the performance of
-plays, or assume to banish women from the streets
-because they are dressed in a style which the police
-do not consider <i>comme il faut</i>.</p>
-
-<p>And while the corruption is deplored and everywhere
-causes indignation and despair, this tyranny<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span>
-does not seem to excite resistance or even remark;
-the press, the paladium of our liberties, does not often
-protest against it, and few seem to have sufficient
-grasp of the principle to care anything
-about it.</p>
-
-<p>There is a story somewhere of a little girl, homeless,
-supperless, shivering in rags in the cold rain
-of the streets of New York, and of a passer-by observing
-in a kind of sardonic sympathy:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And she is living under the protection of sixteen
-thousand laws!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah, yes,&#8221; said his friend, perhaps a professional
-reformer of third persons, who naturally lacked a
-sense of humor; &#8220;but they were not enforced!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It is not altogether inconceivable that if all the
-laws had been enforced the little girl&#8217;s condition
-would have been even worse than it was, considering
-how haphazard had been the process of making all
-those laws, and how, if set in motion, many of them
-would have clashed with each other.</p>
-
-<p>If they were effective, the whole of human kind
-would have been translated, like Enoch, long ago.
-Of course, the assertion that they had not been enforced
-was the obvious retort. And it was true, because
-it is impossible to enforce all of them. And
-what is more no one believes that all the laws should
-be enforced, all the time,&mdash;that is, no one believes
-in absolute law enforcement, since no one believes
-that the laws should be enforced against <i>him</i>. Everybody
-hates a policeman just as everybody loves a
-fireman. And yet the fire department and the police
-department are composed of the same kind of men,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span>
-paid the same salaries, and responsible to the same
-authorities. The duty of the fireman is, of course,
-the simpler, because there is no disagreement among
-men about the thing to be done. When a fire breaks
-out in the city, the fire department is expected to
-rush to the spot, to pour water on the fire, and to
-continue pouring water on the fire until it ceases to
-burn. The reforming mind seems to think that the
-duty of the policeman is of equal simplicity, and that
-when a wrong is done, the sole duty of the police consists
-in rushing immediately to that spot, seizing the
-wrongdoer, and, by confining him in a prison, thereby
-eradicate his tendency to do wrong, and, by holding
-him up as an example to others who are considering
-the commission of that wrong, to deter them
-from it.</p>
-
-<p>As far as crimes are concerned, the policemen,
-indeed, do fairly well. Though that they succeed
-in any measure at all in discharging their functions
-is a wonder when one considers the contumely
-and abuse that are constantly heaped upon them in
-all our cities. The newspapers, when there are no
-accounts of crime to print&mdash;and the assumption is
-that crimes and casualties, if they are horrid enough,
-are the principal events in the annals of mankind
-worth chronicling&mdash;can always print suggestions of
-the crimes of the police. The reporter, a human
-being himself, dissatisfied because the policemen cannot
-gratify his hunger for sensation, is not to blame,
-perhaps; he views life from the standpoint of his
-own necessities, and his conception of life is of a
-series of exciting tragedies enacted with a view to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span>
-making the first edition interesting, so that the ears
-of the populace may be assaulted in the gloom of
-each evening&#8217;s dusk by that hideous bellowing of the
-news &#8220;boy,&#8221; whose heavy voice booms through the
-shade like some mighty portent of disaster in the
-world.</p>
-
-<p>This all sounds pretty hopeless, but if morals are
-to be wrought by and through policemen, I am sure
-we shall have to pay higher salaries, and procure
-men who are themselves so moral that their consciences
-are troubled only by the sins of others;
-there is no other way. Unless, of course, anything
-is left in these modern days of the theory of the
-development of individual character. But that is the
-program of a thousand years.</p>
-
-<p>As for the future of municipal government in this
-land, I venture to set down this prediction: That no
-appreciable advance will be made, no appreciable
-advance can be made in any fundamental sense, so
-long as the so-called moral issue is the pivot on
-which municipal elections turn, or so long as it is allowed
-to remain to bedevil officials, to monopolize
-their time and to exhaust their energies, so that
-they have little of either left for their proper work
-of administration.</p>
-
-<p>Either cities must have home rule, including the
-local police power, with the right to regulate amusements
-and resorts and even vices according to the
-will of the people in that city, whatever the rural
-view may be, or some authority other than the
-mayor, and far wiser and nobler than any mayor I
-ever knew or heard of, must be raised up by the state<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[248]</span>
-in whom may be united the powers and functions of a
-beadle, a censor, and a dictator. I have not the
-slightest idea where one so wise and pure is to be
-found, but doubtless there are plenty who do, if
-their modesty would permit them to speak.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XLIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>I used to recall, during the early and acute phase
-of this discussion, an incident that occurred in the
-old Springfield days in Loami, down in the Sangamon
-country. The little village in those days could
-boast an institution unlike any, perhaps, in the land,
-unless it were to be found in some small hamlet in the
-South. In the public square, on a space worn
-smooth and hard as asphalt, a great circle was
-drawn, and here, every day when the weather was
-fine, a company of old men gathered and played
-marbles. What the game was I do not know;
-some development of one of the boys&#8217; games, no
-doubt, but with what improvements and embellishments
-only the old men who understood and played
-it could say. Its enthralled votaries played with
-large marbles, which spun from their gnarled and
-horny knuckles all day long, with a shifting crowd
-of onlookers gaping at their prowess. The players
-were old and dignified, and took their sport seriously.
-There were to be seen, about that big ring,
-sages who had sat on juries and been swayed by the
-arguments of Lincoln; there were gray veterans who
-had gone with Sherman to the sea and had been with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span>
-Grant at Appomattox; and now, in their declining
-years, they found pleasure and a mildly stimulating
-excitement in this exercise. The skill they developed
-in the game is said by those who have studied the
-subject on the ground to have been considerable;
-some testify that these elders had raised their sport
-to the point of scientific dignity, and that the ability
-they displayed ranked them as the equals of golfers
-or of billiardists.</p>
-
-<p>The exciting tournaments went on for years, the
-old gentlemen were happy, the little village was
-peaceful and contented, when suddenly the town
-was shocked by a new sensation. Loami elected a
-reform administration. How it came about I do not
-know; some local muckraker may have practiced his
-regenerating art, or perhaps some little rivulet of
-the reform wave just then inundating the larger
-world outside may have trickled down into Loami.
-What privilege in the town was menaced I do not
-know; what portion of eminent respectability felt its
-perquisites in danger I cannot say; but Privilege
-seems to have done what it always does when pursued&mdash;namely,
-it began to cry for the reformation
-of persons instead of conditions. The new reform
-mayor, like many another mayor, was influenced;
-and, looking about for someone to reform, his eye
-wandered out of the window of the town hall one
-May morning and lighted on the grizzled marble-players,
-and he ordered the constable into action.</p>
-
-<p>Upon what legal grounds he based his edict I
-cannot say. It is not vital for, as there were about
-sixteen thousand laws then running in his jurisdiction,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[250]</span>
-it would not have been difficult to justify his
-action on legal grounds. It will be remembered that
-the old men were playing in the public square; perhaps
-they played &#8220;for keeps,&#8221; and it may have been
-that there were certain little understandings of a
-speculative nature on the side. Above all, the old
-men were enjoying themselves, and if this were not
-a sufficient offense what could be? And if a constable&#8217;s
-highest duty were not to interfere with the
-enjoyment of other folks what would become of the
-constitution and the law?</p>
-
-<p>At any rate the old men were forbidden to play,
-their game was rudely interrupted, their ring obliterated,
-their marbles confiscated. There was, of
-course, resistance; some skirmishing and scrimmaging;
-a heated, acrimonious proceeding in the mayor&#8217;s
-court, and afterward hatred and strife and bad
-feeling, the formation of factions, and other conditions
-catalogued under law and order. But at
-length the space worn so smooth under the trees
-near the bandstand was sodded, and the old fellows
-might gather in silent contemplation of a new sign,
-&#8220;Keep off the Grass,&#8221; and reflect upon this supreme
-vindication of authority.</p>
-
-<p>But Loami is a democracy, or as much of a democracy
-as the state will permit it to be, and when the
-next election rolled around the old men were alert,
-and after an exciting contest they elected a mayor
-of their own, a liberal. The reform mayor was relegated
-to the political limbo of one-termers, the
-privileged few preserved their privileges, and the old
-men, skinning the sod off that portion of the public<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[251]</span>
-square, drew anew their huge bull-ring, resumed their
-game, and everybody was happy and unreformed
-except, of course, the reformers; though perhaps
-they were happy, too, in their restored misery of
-having something to complain about and to wag
-their heads over.</p>
-
-<p>In relating this veracious little tale of the lid of
-Loami, perhaps I have not sufficiently revealed that
-attitude of moral sympathy toward the good characters
-in the story which Tolstoy insists a writer
-should always assume and maintain. But this has
-not been due to any want of that sympathy. In the
-shadows of the scene the figure of the mayor, for
-instance, has ever been present&mdash;the keenest sufferer,
-the most unhappy man of them all. He was the one
-of all of them who was burdened with official responsibility;
-the marble-playing faction was happy in
-that it had no responsibility save of that light, artificial
-sort imposed by the rules of its game; its conscience,
-indeed, was untroubled. The other faction&mdash;the
-goo-goos, or whatever they were called in
-Loami&mdash;felt responsible primarily for the short-comings
-of others; their consciences were troubled only
-by the sins of other people, the easiest and most
-comfortable, because it is the most normal, position
-that the human conscience can assume. But the
-mayor was held responsible for everything and everybody,
-and in seeking to do his duty he found that
-difficulty which must everywhere increase in a society
-and a civilization which, in casting off some of its
-old moorings, recognizes less the responsibility of
-parent and teacher, not to mention personal responsibility,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[252]</span>
-and is more and more disposed to look to
-the law and its administrators as the regulators and
-mentors of conduct.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XLIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>It is an axiom of municipal politics that a reform
-administration, or an administration elected as a
-protest against the evils of machine government,
-boss rule, and the domination of public service corporations,
-is immediately confronted by the demand
-of those who call themselves the good people to
-enforce all the sumptuary laws and to exterminate
-vice. That is, the privileged interests and their allies
-and representatives seek to divert the attention of
-the administration from themselves and their larger
-and more complex immoralities to the small and
-uninfluential offenders, an old device, always, in the
-hope of escape, inspired by privilege when pursued,
-just as friends of the fox might turn aside the
-hounds by drawing the aniseed bag across the trail.
-Many a progressive administration in this land has
-been led into that <i>cul de sac</i>, and as Mr. Carl Hovey
-observed recently of the neat saying to the effect
-that the way to get rid of a bad law is to enforce
-it, the process usually proves to be merely the way
-to get rid of a good administration. The effort had
-been made by the opponents of Golden Rule Jones
-and it had failed. It had been attempted in the case
-of Tom Johnson and it had failed, though curiously
-enough the effort was never made in Toledo or in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[253]</span>
-Cleveland or in Cincinnati, or elsewhere for that
-matter, in the days of machine domination. The
-Puritan never lets his religion interfere with business.</p>
-
-<p>I used often to recall, in those days, a witty saying
-of Mr. William Travers Jerome, when he was
-District Attorney in New York. He said he often
-wished that there were two volumes of the Revised
-Statutes, one to contain the laws enacted for human
-beings, and the other to embalm the moral yearnings
-of rural communities.</p>
-
-<p>It was disturbing and discouraging, of course, to
-feel that out there in the community there was this
-shadowy mass of well intentioned people, the most
-of whom no doubt, in common with all the rest of us,
-did wish to see moral improvement, and yet so misconstrued
-and misinterpreted our efforts. It was
-saddening, too, because in the work we were trying
-to do we should have liked their sympathy, their interest
-and their support. Because of their wider
-opportunity of enlightenment much better and
-nobler things might have been demanded of them,
-but as Johnson Thurston one night pointed out,
-they did not show as much civic spirit, as much concern
-for the common weal as those of smaller opportunities,
-those bad people as they called them of
-whom much less would naturally have been expected.
-I made a rule, as I have already said somewhere in
-these pages, not to talk back, or to argue with
-them. They viewed life from the Puritan standpoint,
-and I suppose that I viewed it from the pagan
-standpoint. The sins of others and their mistakes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[254]</span>
-and failures never did excite in me that moral indignation
-which exists in the breasts of some; perhaps
-the old distinction between bad people and good
-people had been blurred in my consciousness. I
-could see that the bad people did many good things in
-their lives, and that the good people thought many
-dark and evil thoughts. I had seen indeed so much
-more kindness and consideration, so much more pity
-and mercy shown by the bad that I felt strengthened
-in my philosophy and in my belief that if their environment
-could be improved, if they could have a
-better chance in life, they would be as good as anybody.
-It seemed to me that most of the crime in
-the world was the result of involuntary poverty,
-and the tremendous, perhaps insuperable task, was
-to make involuntary poverty impossible. But in the
-meantime there was other work to be done. Aside
-from the problem of transportation which was but
-one phase of the great struggle between privilege
-and the people, of plutocracy with democracy, there
-were civic centers, city halls, markets, swimming
-pools, bridges to be built, parks to be improved,
-boulevards and parkways to be laid out, a filtration
-plant to be installed, improvements in all of the
-other departments, a great mass of wonderful work
-for the promotion of the public amenities, the public
-health, and the adornment of the city, in a word,
-there was a city to be built, and strangely enough
-this group of objectors of whom I have been speaking,
-were so intensely preoccupied with moral considerations
-that they never had even the slightest interest
-in these improvements. I think it is this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span>
-spirit of Puritanism that has made the cities of
-America so ugly, or permitted them to be ugly;
-such conceptions as beauty and ugliness are perhaps
-impossible to minds that know no distinction
-but good and bad, and for this reason it has been
-difficult to make an &aelig;sthetic appeal with any effectiveness.</p>
-
-<p>During three of my four terms in that office the
-nasty quarrel about morals raged. As I look back
-and think now with what virulence it did rage, it
-appeals to me as a remarkable psychological phenomenon.
-Of course it was bad for those who engaged
-in it, and bad for the town as well, for such
-an exaggerated idea of conditions was given that the
-police in neighboring cities, clever rogues that they
-were, could always excuse and exculpate themselves
-for any of their delinquencies by saying that the
-thieves that had come to town hailed from Toledo,
-or that those they could not catch had gone and
-taken refuge there. But I did not engage in the
-discussion nor permit the police officials to do so.
-There was no time, since there was so much other
-work to do, and we went on as well as we could with
-what Tom Johnson used to call the policy of administrative
-repression, improving moral conditions with
-such means as we had. We did succeed in eliminating
-the wine rooms, in closing the saloons at midnight,
-and finally, after a tremendous effort, in extirpating
-professional gambling. It was of no consequence
-that it did not have any effect upon criticism,
-for we did not do it to stop criticism, and the
-discussion went on until I had been elected for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span>
-third time, and immediately after that election when
-a large majority of the people had again spoken
-their minds on the subject, it was considered the
-proper time to reopen the discussion and to hold a
-so-called civic revival. The young, uncultured man
-they brought to town to conduct that revival, could
-have known nothing whatever of life, and was wholly
-unconscious of the great economic forces which,
-with so much complexity and friction, were building
-the modern city. He came to call on me before he
-opened his revival that he might have, as he said, a
-personal, private and confidential talk. When I
-asked him how the city could be regenerated, he said
-he did not know, but this fact did not prevent him
-from telling the audiences he addressed that week
-just what should be done, and that he, for instance,
-could nobly do it, and in the end they sent a committee
-to me to tell me what to do, if not how to do
-it. I asked the committee to reduce their complaints
-to writing, to point out those evils which they considered
-most objectionable, and to propose means
-of combating them. The committee went away and
-I confess I did not expect to see them again because
-I had no notion that they could ever agree as to the
-particular evils, but after some weeks they had come
-to terms on a few heads, and filed their complaint
-pointing out several specific vices in town, and as
-a remedy proposed that they be &#8220;prevented.&#8221; I
-replied to them in a letter in which I said all I
-could think of at that time or all I could think of
-now on this whole vexed problem. It was printed
-in pamphlet form and rather widely circulated, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[257]</span>
-finally published as a little book.<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[B]</a> I do not know
-that it convinced anybody who was not convinced
-already. I think we got along a little better afterward
-than we had before, and by the time my fourth
-term was done the phenomenon of the discussion, if
-not the vice, had disappeared. After my letter was
-sent to the committee, it was said that they would
-reply to it, but they never did, and instead invited
-the Reverend William A. Sunday to come to the city
-to conduct a revival. It was announced by some
-that he came to assault our position, but when he arrived
-Captain Anson, the old Chicago baseball
-player, under whom Mr. Sunday had played baseball
-in his younger days, happened to be giving his monologue
-at a variety theater that week, and he and Mr.
-Sunday together called on me. I do not know when
-I have had a pleasanter hour than that we spent
-talking about the old days in Chicago when Anson
-had been playing first base and I had been reporting
-the baseball games for the old <i>Herald</i>. That, to be
-sure, was after the days of Billy Sunday&#8217;s services
-in right field, but it was not too late for me to have
-known and celebrated the prowess of that famous
-infield, Anson, Pfeffer, Williamson and Burns, and
-we could celebrate them again and speculate as to
-whether there were really giants in those days whose
-like was known on earth no more.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Sunday conducted his revival with the success
-that usually attends his efforts in that direction,
-but he did not mention me or the administration<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span>
-until the very close of his visit, when he said that
-we were doing as well as anybody could be expected
-to do under all the circumstances.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XLV</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>When I referred to the general rule that policemen
-are disliked and condemned I should have noticed
-certain exceptions. The traffic squad for
-instance is generally held in a respect and affection
-that is part of the civic pride of the community.
-Those fine big fellows on the corner, waving this
-way or that with a gesture the flowing traffic of the
-street, are greeted with smiles, and, as they assist
-in the perilous passage of the thoroughfares, sometimes
-with thanks and benedictions. The reason, of
-course, is simple; they are not engaged in hurting
-people, but in helping people, and so by the operation
-of the immutable law, they attract to themselves
-the best feelings of the people.</p>
-
-<p>And this is what we tried from the first to have
-all our policemen do, to help people and not to hurt
-them. It was what Jones had tried to do, and he had
-begun with one of the most interesting experiments
-in policing a city that has been made in our country.
-He took away the clubs from the policemen. He
-could have made at first no greater sensation if he
-had taken away the police altogether, the protest
-was so loud, so indignant, above all so righteous.
-What sense of security could a community feel if
-the policemen were to have no clubs, how would the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span>
-unruly and the lawless be kept in check when they no
-longer beheld this insignia of authority in the hands
-of the guardians of the peace? And perhaps to
-reassure the righteous and truly good Jones gave
-the policemen canes and ran the great risk of making
-them ridiculous.</p>
-
-<p>I am not sure that he would have cared much if he
-had, since he had so little respect for the police idea,
-and of course he had as little regard for organization.
-I remember once that at a session of the old
-police board he opposed the creation of new sergeants;
-he said a sergeant always seemed as superfluous
-to him as a presiding elder in the Methodist
-Church. With an elected board of police commissioners
-over it the police force was pretty certain to
-be demoralized, of course, as is any executive department
-of government which is directed by a board, for
-with a board, unless all the members save one are
-either dead or incapacitated, discipline and efficiency
-are impossible. We got rid of the board system in
-Ohio after two or three sessions of the legislature
-had been wrestled with, and though the &#8220;mayor&#8217;s
-code&#8221; was never enacted, many of its ideas were
-adopted in amendments to the municipal code, so
-that we approached the most efficient form of city
-government yet devised in our rather close resemblance
-to the federal plan.</p>
-
-<p>The time came, however, when the old elected
-board of public service was succeeded by a director
-of public service appointed by the mayor, and the
-old board of public safety by a director of public
-safety appointed by the same authority, though that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span>
-was not until I had entered on my third term in the
-mayor&#8217;s office. When that time came I appointed as
-Director of Public Service Mr. John Robert Cowell,
-a Manxman who managed the department of public
-works admirably, and to the post of Director of
-Public Safety Mr. John Joseph Mooney, whose
-services and assistance I had already had on the
-board of public safety when that was appointed by
-the mayor. And Mr. Mooney was able to work out
-many of the improvements we hoped to make in the
-police department.</p>
-
-<p>And as Jones had taken the clubs away from the
-policemen and given them canes, we took away the
-canes and sent them forth with empty hands. Jones
-had the idea of doing away with clubs from London
-where he observed the bobbies who control the
-mighty traffic in the streets of London. We were
-therefore able to realize the whole of his ideal in that
-respect, and our city, I think alone of all American
-cities, could not merit the reproach that a Liverpool
-man once made to me when we were discussing superficial
-appearances in the two nations. &#8220;The most offensive
-thing in America to me,&#8221; he said, &#8220;is the
-way in which the policemen parade their truncheons.&#8221;
-The public made no complaint at the disappearance
-of the canes, but the policemen did; they
-felt lost, they reported, without something to twirl
-in their hands. We thought of letting them have
-swagger sticks, but finally decided that they should
-be induced to bear themselves gracefully with their
-white gloved hands unoccupied. The white gloves
-were the subject of amusement to the boors in town,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span>
-who could always be amused at any effort at improvement,
-but with them on, and the new uniforms
-we had patterned after the uniform worn by the
-New York policemen, the members of the department
-soon began to have a pride in themselves.</p>
-
-<p>And that was exactly what we were trying to inculcate,
-though it was difficult to do, and almost
-impossible, one might think, since for generations
-policemen have been the target for the sarcasms and
-abuse of every voice of the community. The wonder
-is, with such an universal conspiracy as exists in
-America to give policemen a bad name, that they
-have any character left at all. Surely each community
-in various ways has done everything it could to
-strip its policemen of every shred of reputation and
-self respect and with these gone, character might be
-expected shortly to follow. Of course the new uniforms
-were ridiculed too, but we did not let that
-discourage us.</p>
-
-<p>There was the civil-service law to help, and we
-were of old devoted to the spirit and even to the
-letter of that, though once the letter of that law
-compelled us to an injustice, as the letter of any
-law must do now and then. We had reorganized
-the police department on a metropolitan basis, and
-had done the same with the fire department, and in
-this department there were accordingly created three
-new positions of battalion chiefs, for which captains
-were eligible. The oldest ranking captain in the
-department was Dick Lawler, by everyone in the
-department from the chief down conceded to be the
-best fireman in the department, with a long and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[262]</span>
-untarnished record of devoted duty and quiet, unassuming
-bravery. And it was his natural ambition to
-round out that career as one of the chiefs. The
-examining board held a written test, and as Lawler
-was more accomplished in extinguishing, or, as his
-comrades expressed it, in fighting fire, and much
-more comfortable and at home on the roof of a burning
-building than he was at a desk with a pen in his
-hand, he did not do very well. When, for instance,
-he read a long hypothetical question, setting forth
-certain conditions at a fire and asking the applicant
-where, under such circumstances, he would lay the
-hose, Lawler wrote down as his answer, &#8220;Where it
-would do the most good,&#8221; and on that answer the
-board marked him zero. The board marked him zero
-on so many answers indeed that the net result was
-almost zero, and he failed.</p>
-
-<p>It was a kind of tragedy, in its little way, as
-he stood in my office that morning on which he came
-to appeal from the board, with tears in his eyes.
-But the law was obdurate and I was helpless. But I
-did point out to the examining board the absurdity
-of such methods of testing a man&#8217;s ability, and after
-that they allowed a man&#8217;s record to count for fifty
-per cent. And it was not long until a vacancy occurred
-among the chiefs&mdash;and Lawler was appointed.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XLVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The questions put to Lawler were perhaps no
-more absurd than many a one framed by civil-service<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[263]</span>
-examiners. In any event the written examination
-is apt to do as much harm as good, and for
-policemen and firemen we came to the conclusion
-that it was almost wholly worthless, once it had
-been determined that an applicant could write well
-enough to turn in an intelligible report. The initial
-qualification on which we came to rely and to regard
-as most important was the physical qualification.
-There is no way to tell by asking a man questions
-whether he will be a good policeman or not;
-the only way to find that out is to try him for a
-year. But his physical condition can be determined,
-and on this basis we began to build the police force,
-under the direction of Dr. Peter Donnelly, one of
-the ablest surgeons in the country, whose tragic
-early death was seemingly but a part of that fate
-which took from us in a few short years so many
-of the best and brightest of the young men in our
-movement. The death of Peter Donnelly left us
-desolate because he had a genius for friendship equal
-to that genius as a surgeon which enabled him to
-render a great social service.</p>
-
-<p>He was perfectly rigid in the examinations to
-which he subjected applicants for positions in the
-department, and wholly inaccessible to any sort of
-influence in favor of the unfit. In the old days,
-which by many were regretted as the good old days,
-the only qualification an applicant needed was a
-friend on the police board, and as a result the force
-was encumbered with the lame, the halt, and the
-blind; there were drinkers if not drunkards among
-them, and the paunches which some bore before them<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span>
-were so great that when they took their belts off and
-hung them up in those resorts where they accepted
-the hospitality of a midnight meal, the belts seemed
-to be as large as the hoops of the Heidelberg tun.
-We rid the force of these as quickly as it could be
-done, and the recruits who replaced them were, because
-of Dr. Donnelly&#8217;s care and service, superb
-young fellows, lithe and clean, who bore themselves
-with self respect and an ardent pride in that <i>esprit
-de corps</i> we were enabled to develop.</p>
-
-<p>But before that spirit could exist there were defects
-other than physical that must be removed;
-there were old jealousies and animosities, some of a
-religious, or rather a theological nature&mdash;relic of an
-old warfare between the sects that once devastated
-the town with its unreasoning and remorseless and
-ignorant hatred; a St. Patrick&#8217;s day had once been
-celebrated by dismissing a score or more of Irishmen
-from the police department. There were other
-differences of race origin, and in doing away with all
-these, so far as it could be done, Mr. Mooney, the
-Director of Public Safety, had to his assistance the
-ability and the tact of two crusted old characters on
-the force, one of them the Chief of Police, Perry D.
-Knapp, and the other Inspector John Carew, whose
-hair had so whitened in the days he served the city
-as a detective that he was called Silver Jack. He
-was one of the ablest detectives anywhere, though
-prejudice and jealousy had kept him down for a
-long time. I had known him in my youth, and later
-in the courts, and now that I had the chance I put
-him at the head of the detective department, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span>
-when I was tired of the troubles which harassed him
-and me during the day, I tried sometimes to forget
-them at night by writing stories in which he figured
-as the clever detective he was.</p>
-
-<p>And as for Perry Knapp, I suppose there was not
-another chief of police like him anywhere. Over his
-desk was a picture of Walt Whitman, and in his
-heart was the love for humanity that Whitman had,
-and in his library were well read copies of Emerson
-and a collection of Lincolniana I have often envied
-him. He had served in close association with Jones,
-who had made his position difficult by promoting him
-over the heads of others in the department who
-ranked him, and he was the heir of all the old distrust
-of Jones&#8217;s attitude toward life. Nevertheless,
-he found a way to apply Jones&#8217;s theories to the
-policing of a city without any of that ostentation
-which in some cases has brought such methods into
-disfavor. I cannot, of course, describe his whole
-method, but he was always trying to help people
-and not to hurt them. He established a system by
-which drunken men were no longer arrested, but,
-when they could not be taken home as were those
-club members with whom he tried in that respect at
-least to put them on a parity, they were cared for at
-police headquarters until morning, and then with
-a bath and a breakfast, allowed to go without leaving
-behind to dog their footsteps that most dreadful
-of all fates, a &#8220;police record.&#8221; No one will ever
-know how many poor girls picked up in police raids
-he saved from the life to which they had been tempted
-or driven, by sending them back to their homes when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[266]</span>
-they had homes, or in some manner finding for them
-a way out of their troubles. And I shall always remember
-with a pleasure that there is such good in
-humanity after all, when I recall that boy in the
-workhouse whom a father in a far-off city was seeking.
-The boy was working with other prisoners on
-a bit of public work in one of the parks that winter
-morning, and after he had secured a parole, the
-Chief drove out to the park, and got the boy,
-clothed him with garments he had bought himself,
-bought a railway ticket and sent the boy away to
-Chicago and his home. If he had waited until the
-lad was brought in at night, he explained, the old
-man would have lost a whole day of his son&#8217;s companionship!</p>
-
-<p>That is what I mean when I say that a government
-should be made human, or part of what I mean;
-such incidents are specifically noticeable because they
-stand out in such contrast against the hard surface
-of that inhuman institutionalism the reformers with
-their everlasting repressions and denials and negatives
-are trying to make so much harder. Charley
-Stevens, the old circus man whom I appointed as
-Superintendent of the Workhouse, very successfully
-applied the some principle to the management of
-that institution, which he conducted with his humor
-and quaint philosophy more than by any code of
-rules. He usually referred to his prison as the Temple
-of Thought, and he abolished from it all the
-marks of a prison, such as stripes and close cropped
-polls, and all that sort of thing. He was criticized,
-of course, since the conventional notion is that prisoners<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[267]</span>
-should be made to appear as hideous as possible;
-I am pretty sure that reformer disapproved who
-one Sunday afternoon went down there and asked
-the superintendent if he would permit him to preach
-to the inmates and was told by Stevens that he would
-like to accommodate him, but that he could not just
-then break up the pedro game. There were those
-who said that he was making it too easy for the
-prisoners, and yet every now and then some of them
-would escape, and when they were brought back, as
-they usually were, they were met only with reproaches
-and asked why they could not leave their
-addresses when they went away so that their mail
-could be forwarded. There were, however, two escaping
-prisoners who never were returned. They
-got away just in time to make a sensation for the
-noon editions of the newspapers, and as I was on
-my way to luncheon I met Stevens, standing on
-the street corner, very calmly, while the newsboys
-were crying in our ears the awful calamity that
-had befallen society. When I asked what he was
-doing, he said that he was hunting the escaped prisoners.
-&#8220;I&#8217;ve been to the Secor and the Boody
-House,&#8221; he said, naming two leading hotels, &#8220;and
-they&#8217;re not there. I&#8217;m going over to the Toledo
-Club now, and if they&#8217;re not there, I don&#8217;t know
-where to look for them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It may be that in these little incidents I give the
-impression that he was a trifler, but that is not the
-case. He knew, of course, that so far as doing any
-good whatever in the world is concerned, our whole
-penal system is a farce at which one might laugh<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[268]</span>
-if it did not cause so many tears to be shed in the
-world. But he did try to be kind to the inmates,
-and by the operation of the parole system succeeded
-to an extent commensurate with that attained by
-Dr. Cooley of Cleveland. Of course it was all done
-under the supervision of Mr. Mooney, the Director
-of Public Safety, who rightly characterized our
-whole penal system when he said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Whenever you send one to prison you send four
-or five; you send a man&#8217;s wife and his mother, and
-his sister and his children, who are all innocent, and
-you never do him any good.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But the workhouse, though under Mr. Mooney&#8217;s
-direction, was not connected with the police department,
-except in the archaic minds of those who
-thought if we were only harsh and hard enough in
-our use of both, we could drive evil, or at least the
-appearance of evil, out of the city, and leave it,
-standing like a rock of morality, in the weltering
-waste of immorality all about us.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XLVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>In no respect has the utter impotence of medieval
-machinery in suppressing vice been more definitely
-proved than in the great failure of society in dealing
-with what is called the social evil. Whenever
-my mind runs on this subject, as anyone&#8217;s mind
-must in the present recrudescence of that Puritanism
-which never had its mind on anything else, I
-invariably think of Golden Rule Jones and the incidents
-in that impossible warfare which worried<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[269]</span>
-him into a premature grave. He was an odd man,
-born so far out of his time that the sins of others
-never troubled his conscience. He was so great, and
-knew so much of life, more perhaps than he did of
-history, on every page of which he would have found
-the confirmations of the opinions life had taught
-him, that he divined all lewdness, all obscenity to be
-subjective and not objective, so that he found less
-to abhor in the sins of the vicious than in the state
-of mind of their indefatigable accusers and pursuers.
-And he had his own way of meeting their complaints.
-Once a committee of ladies and gentlemen called
-upon him with the demand that he obliterate the
-social evil, off-hand and instantly. They were simple,
-brief and to the point. They informed him
-that the laws providing for chastity were being
-broken, that there were prostitutes in the city, and
-in short, urged him to put a stop to it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But what am I to do?&#8221; he inquired. &#8220;These
-women are here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Have the police,&#8221; they said, a new, simple and
-happy device suddenly occurring to them, &#8220;drive
-them out of town and close up their houses!&#8221; They
-sat and looked at him, triumphantly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But where shall I have the police drive them?
-Over to Detroit or to Cleveland, or merely out into
-the country? They have to go somewhere, you
-know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was a detail that had escaped them, and
-presently, with his great patience, and his great
-sincerity, he said to them:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll make you a proposition. You go and select<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[270]</span>
-two of the worst of these women you can find, and
-I&#8217;ll agree to take them into my home and provide for
-them until they can find some other home and some
-other way of making a living. And then you, each
-one of you, take one girl into your home, under the
-same conditions, and together we&#8217;ll try to find homes
-for the rest.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They looked at him, then looked at each other, and
-seeing how utterly hopeless this strange man was,
-they went away.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XLVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>To be sure, that was in another day. Prostitution
-had not become a subject for polite conversation
-at the dinner table; pornographic vice commissions
-had not been organized and provided with
-appropriations so that their hearings might be stenographically
-reported and published along with the
-filthy details gathered in the stews and slums of cities
-by trained smut hunters; it had not yet been discovered
-that the marriage ceremony required a new
-introduction, based upon the scientific investigations
-of the clinical laboratory, and on the same brilliant
-thought that centuries ago struck the wise men of
-Bohemia, who, when the population increased too
-rapidly, prohibited marriages for a number of years
-that proved, of course, to be the most prolific the
-land had ever known.</p>
-
-<p>The new conception was created in a moment, in
-the twinkling of an eye, by the necromancy of a
-striking phrase. I do not know who it is that had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span>
-the felicity to employ it first in its present relation.
-I remember that long years ago, when as a boy I used
-to frequent the gallery of the theater, I sat rapt
-afar in the mystery and romance of life on the
-Mississippi while gazing on the scenes of Bartley
-Campbell&#8217;s melodrama &#8220;The White Slave.&#8221; I can
-call back now, with only a little effort of the imagination
-and the will, that wonderful pageant&mdash;the
-<i>Natchez</i>, the <i>Robert E. Lee</i>, the great steamboats
-I knew so well from Mark Twain&#8217;s book, the plantation
-hands, the darkies singing on the levee, the
-moonlight and the jasmine flower&mdash;and there was
-no David Belasco in those days to set the scene
-either, nor, for the imagination of youth, any need
-of one! And then the beautiful octoroon, so lily
-white and fragile that it should have been patent to
-all, save perhaps an immoral slave-holder, from the
-very first scene, that she had no drop of negro blood!
-And the handsome and cruel owner and master, with
-his slouch hat and top boots, and fierce mustache
-and imperial, taking her to her awful fate down the
-river! It was an old story Bartley Campbell used
-for his plot, a story which had for me an added
-interest, because my grandfather had told it to me
-out of his own southern experiences, in those far-off
-days when he had business that took him down the
-river to New Orleans. And it was a story which,
-for a while, in many variants of its original form,
-was told all over the land to illustrate the immorality
-of slavery. I suspect that it was not altogether
-true in its dramatic details; surely no such number
-of lovely and innocent creatures were permitted to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[272]</span>
-fling themselves into the Mississippi from the hurricane
-decks of steamboats as the repetitions and
-variations of that tale would indicate; it would have
-been altogether too harrowing to the voyagers,
-some few of whom at least must have been virtuous,
-and journeyed up and down on peaceful moral missions
-of one sort and another. No doubt it was
-symbolic of a very wrong condition, and I suppose
-that is what justified it in the minds of those who
-told it over and over without the trouble of verifying
-its essential details. It was a good story, and
-in the hands of Mr. Howells it made a good poem,
-and it made surely a pretty good play, which, could
-it enthrall me now as once it did by its enchantments,
-I should like to see again to-night!</p>
-
-<p>But I doubt if I could sit through any one of the
-plays that have been written or assuredly are to be
-written about the white slaves of to-day. The plot
-has been right at hand in the tale that has gone
-the rounds of two continents, and resembles that
-elder story so closely in its incidents of abduction
-that I presume the adapter of its striking title to
-the exigencies of current reform must have been old
-enough to recognize its essential similarity to the
-parent tradition. It was told in books, it served
-to ornament sermons and addresses on sociological
-subjects, and it has, I believe, already been done in
-novels that are among the best sellers. The newspapers
-printed it with all its horrific details; it was
-so precisely the sort of pornography to satisfy the
-American sense of news&mdash;a tale of salacity for the
-prurient, palliated and rendered aseptic by efforts of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span>
-officials, heated to the due degree of moral indignation,
-to bring the concupiscent to justice. I had
-been in England, too, when the subject was under
-discussion there, and this same story was told to
-such effect that Parliament, as hysterical as one
-of our own state legislatures, had been led to restore
-the brutality of flogging. It was always the same:
-some poor girl had been abducted, borne off to a
-brothel, ruined by men employed for that purpose,
-turned over to aged satyrs, and never heard of more.
-Of course there were variations; sometimes the girl
-was lured away in a motor car, sometimes by a
-request for assistance to some lady who had fainted,
-sometimes by other ruses. The story was always
-told vehemently, but on the authority of some inaccessible
-third person, to doubt or question whom
-was to be suspected of sympathy with the outrage.
-But however high the station, or unimpeachable the
-character of the informants, anyone who had the
-slightest knowledge of the rules of evidence, unless
-he were especially credulous, would have reason to
-doubt the tales. In Toledo it had its vogue. It went
-the rounds of gentlemen&#8217;s clubs and the tea tables
-of the town, and in the curious way stories have, it
-went on and on with new embellishments at each
-repetition. I had a curiosity about it, not because
-I cared for the realistic details that might as Pooh
-Bah used to say, &#8220;lend an air of artistic verisimilitude
-to an otherwise bald and unconvincing narrative,&#8221;
-but because here was a chance to test it at
-first hand, and so I asked the person most heroically
-concerned to come and tell me of an experience that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span>
-had earned for him the plaudits of many of his fellow
-citizens and citizenesses. And so he came. He was
-a social worker, as they are called, and had had the
-training in settlement work which is said to qualify
-young persons to deal professionally with the poor
-and wicked. He was a rather good looking young
-chap, with a smile about his full red lips, who lifted
-his mild eyes to yours with perhaps an effort at
-frankness too pronounced. He spoke well and
-fluently.</p>
-
-<p>One night (he said) at the close of a hard day&#8217;s
-work in his mission, a man came to him in evident
-distress. The man was a business man, in comfortable
-though modest circumstances, with a family of
-which perhaps the most interesting member was a
-beautiful girl of seventeen. The girl was attending
-a high school, where she was in one of the advanced
-classes, and the evening before had gone from school
-to spend the night at the home of a friend, a girl of
-her own age. The next evening, on her failure to
-return home, the parents became alarmed, and after
-unavailing inquiry at her schoolmate&#8217;s house, and in
-other quarters, the distraught father had appealed
-to the social worker. The social worker at once
-caused an investigation to be made, and by a process
-of elimination (as he said, though unlike Sherlock
-Holmes, he did not detail the successive steps of his
-logic), he concluded that the girl was in a certain
-quarter of the city, in fact in a certain street. He
-then sent for the father, told him to supply himself
-with sufficient money, instructed him in the part he
-was to play, and was careful to stipulate that if he,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[275]</span>
-the social worker, were to feign drunkenness or to
-indulge in conduct out of keeping with his character,
-the father was patiently and trustingly to await
-results. Thereupon they set forth, and before midnight
-visited some thirty houses of ill fame. In the
-thirty-first house the suspicions of the social worker
-were confirmed, and, pretending to be intoxicated,
-he invited an inmate to accompany him, and ascended
-to the upper floor. He tried the doors along the
-hall, and finding them all open but one, and that
-locked, he lurched against it, broke it open, and on
-entering the room surprised a young woman, entirely
-nude, who screamed&mdash;until he muttered some word
-of understanding and encouragement. Meanwhile
-the inmate had summoned madame the proprietress,
-who flew up the stairs, burst into the room and emptied
-her revolver at the social worker.</p>
-
-<p>The social worker, at this supreme moment in his
-recital, paused, and with a weary but reassuring
-smile, as who should say such adventures were diurnal
-monotonies in his life, remarked: &#8220;with no damage,
-however, to anything but the furniture and the
-woodwork.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But he had the girl in his arms, and, thrusting
-aside foiled madame and the inmate, bore his charge
-downstairs, snatched a raincoat from the hall rack,
-wrapped it about her, called to the father to come,
-and escaped into the street.</p>
-
-<p>After the rescued girl had been restored to her
-home, and sufficiently recovered from her terrible
-experience to give a connected account of herself, she
-related the following incidents: Leaving school on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[276]</span>
-that night she had started for the home of the girl
-whom she was to visit&mdash;the girl not having attended
-school that day&mdash;and while passing a house in a
-respectable residential district, about five o&#8217;clock of
-the winter evening, darkness already having fallen,
-a woman came to the door and in great distress told
-the girl that a baby was sick, that she was alone,
-and implored the girl to come in and care for the
-baby while she ran for a doctor. The girl complied,
-and on reaching the door, was immediately seized,
-drawn into the hallway, her cries smothered by a
-hand in which there was a handkerchief saturated
-with chloroform, and she knew no more until she regained
-consciousness in the place where the social
-worker had rescued her.</p>
-
-<p>Here his direct recital ended. I put to him two
-or three questions: Who is the girl? Where is she
-now? Where is the house into which she was beguiled?
-Where is the brothel in which she was
-imprisoned? He had answers for all these. The
-girl&#8217;s name could not be divulged, even in official
-confidence, for the family could not risk publicity;
-the house where she had been summoned to care for
-the ailing baby was the home of wealthy and respectable
-people, who had been out of town at the
-time, and their residence had been broken into and
-used temporarily by the white slavers. As for the
-brothel, the social worker, by methods he did not
-disclose, had compelled the proprietress to leave the
-city, and the place was closed.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the amazing adventure of the social
-worker. It was easy to imagine the effect of it when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span>
-related to neurotic women, to prurient and sentimental
-men, and in country churches to gaping
-yokels curious about &#8220;life&#8221; in the city. It was easy
-to understand the effect it would have on minds
-starved and warped by Puritanism, ready for any
-sensation, especially one that might stimulate their
-moral emotions, and give them one more excuse for
-condemning the police. No wonder certain of the
-elect brethren in gratitude for having been told just
-what they wished to hear had contributed hundreds
-of dollars, that the &#8220;work&#8221; might go on!</p>
-
-<p>I determined, therefore, that in one instance, at
-least, the truth as to this stock story should be discovered,
-and I requested Mr. Mooney, the Director
-of Public Safety, to make a complete investigation.
-He detailed to the task the best of his detectives;
-the inspectors of the federal government under the
-white slave laws were called in, and I asked two
-clergymen of my acquaintance who knew the social
-worker and said they believed him, to give what aid
-they could. Together they worked for weeks. They
-made an exhaustive investigation, and their conclusion,
-in which the clergymen joined, was that there
-was not the slightest ground for the silly tale.</p>
-
-<p>It was, of course, simply another variant of the
-story that had gone the rounds of the two continents,
-a story which had been somehow psychologically
-timed to meet the hysteria which the pulpit,
-the press, and the legislatures had displayed, as had
-the people, in one of those strange moral movements
-which now and then seize upon the public mind, and,
-in effect, make the whole population into a mob,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span>
-which is, of coarse, the most moral thing in the
-world. The subject was investigated in England
-and it was shown that not one of the stories told in
-this cause there had any foundation in fact.<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[C]</a> So
-far as I know, no authentic verification of the story
-in any of its forms has ever been made. And yet it
-was the stock in trade of the professional moralists
-and was employed by them in two continents to generate
-that hysteria without which they cannot carry
-on their reforms. It was repeated and accepted&mdash;that
-is all, and to doubt it was to make oneself
-<i>particeps criminis</i>, a sort of accessory after the
-fact.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">XLIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>It is a subject which only the student of morbid
-psychology, I suppose, can illuminate properly, but
-I fancy he would find somewhere a significance in
-the phrase &#8220;white slave,&#8221; when acted upon by minds
-that had never been refined enough to imagine any
-but the grossest of objective crimes, and out of all
-this there arose a new conception of the prostitute
-quite as grotesque as that which it replaced. She
-was no longer the ruined and abandoned thing she
-once was, too vile for any contact with the virtuous
-and respectable; she no longer occupied even the
-sacrificial pose in which Cato centuries ago and
-Lecky in our own time figured her; she was not even
-that daughter of joy whose dalliance is the secret<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span>
-despair of moralists too prudent to imitate her
-abandon; she became the white slave, a shanghaied
-innocent kept under lock and key. And thousands
-and thousands of her sisters were said to be trapped
-every year in precisely the same way by the minions
-of a huge system, organized like any modern combination
-of rapacity and evil, with luxurious headquarters,
-presumably in some sky-scraper in New
-York, and its own attorneys, agents, kidnappers,
-crimpers, seducers, panderers and procuresses all
-over the land, a vast and complicated organization,
-with baffling ramifications in all the high and low
-places of the earth. The sensational newspapers referred
-to it as &#8220;the white slave syndicate,&#8221; as though
-it were as authentic as the steel trust or Standard
-Oil. It was even said that somewhere in New York
-the trust conducted a daily auction! With such a
-bizarre notion, the victims of their own psychic lasciviousness
-became obsessed. Raids and &#8220;revivals&#8221;
-must be inaugurated, a body of new laws enacted,
-and a horde of official inspectors, agents and detectives
-turned loose on the land, empowered to arrest
-any man and woman traveling together, and hold the
-man guilty of a felony.</p>
-
-<p>To be sure, it was something to have the conception
-change. It was something that the prostitute
-should at last be regarded with some touch of human
-pity. And it was something, a great deal, indeed,
-that there was, with all the fanatical and zealous
-law making, some quiet study of the problem. The
-word &#8220;economic,&#8221; so long scorned by the proponents
-of an absolute morality, somehow penetrated the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[280]</span>
-public consciousness, and at last it dawned on the
-human mind that prostitution is related to economic
-pressure. But, unfortunately, by the familiar
-human process, the mind leaped to extremes; it was
-assumed that all prostitutes were girls who did not
-receive sufficient wages, and the simple and all sufficient
-cure was to be the minimum wage; instead of
-receiving eight dollars a week and going to the bad,
-all working girls were to be paid nine dollars a week
-and remain virtuous. And of course new work for
-the constable was cut out; if the employers of girls
-did not pay them that much, they were all to go to
-jail, and if the girls did not remain chaste after they
-had been assured of that splendid income, they
-must go to the pillory for the godly to spit at.
-This, with the laws against white slavery, was to be
-the panacea, and prostitution, a problem which had
-perplexed the thoughtful for thirty centuries, was
-to be solved before the autumn primaries, so that
-those who solved it might get their political rewards
-promptly.</p>
-
-<p>I used to wish, when it was presented to me as
-mayor, that some of these cock-sure persons who
-would solve the problem off-hand by issuing a general
-order to the police, could get themselves elected
-to the opportunity. Of course I issued no general
-order on the subject; perhaps I was too skeptical,
-too much lacking in faith in the miraculous powers
-of the constabulary. Our city was like all cities;
-there were prostitutes in brothels, prostitutes in
-saloons, prostitutes in flats, prostitutes on the
-streets at night. There were, for instance, a score<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[281]</span>
-or more of disorderly saloons where men and women
-congregated. But we found that merely by posting
-a policeman in uniform before such a place, its
-patronage was discouraged, and in a few days discontinued.
-Of course it was a dangerous and preposterous
-power to wield; in the hands of unscrupulous
-police it might have appalling possibilities of
-evil. I had the idea of stationing a policeman before
-a disorderly house from Tom Johnson, who told me
-he had it from his father&mdash;who was Chief of Police
-in Louisville. And so we adopted it, and after a
-while the wine rooms were no more. And that was
-something. But the girls in them, of course, had to
-go somewhere, just as Jones said.</p>
-
-<p>Then we found that the police, if they were brutal
-enough, could drive the girls off the streets. It
-seemed to me always a despicable sort of business&mdash;the
-actions of the police I mean; I didn&#8217;t like to
-hear the reports of it; I don&#8217;t like to think of it,
-or write of it even now. It is not very creditable
-to make war on women, whatever the Puritans may
-say. But the streets would show an improvement,
-even they would admit; much as they might linger
-and loiter and leer, the most seductively pure of
-them could not get himself &#8220;accosted&#8221; anywhere
-down town at night. Of course, after a while, the
-poor things would come back, or others exactly like
-them would come. Then the police would have to
-practice their brutalities all over again. Perhaps
-they were not brutal enough; I am not certain. To
-be sure they were not as brutal as Augustus with his
-sumptuary laws, or as Theodosius, or Valentinian,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[282]</span>
-or Justinian, or Karl the Great, or Peter the Great,
-or St. Louis, or Frederick Barbarossa, or the Empress
-Maria Theresa in Vienna, or as John Calvin
-in Geneva, or Cotton Mather in Massachusetts, with
-all their tortures and floggings and rackings and
-brandings and burnings; or as the English Puritans
-who used to have bawds whipped, pilloried, branded
-and imprisoned and for a second offense put to
-death. And even they were not brutal enough, it
-seems, since prostitution went right on down the
-centuries to our times. I suppose that we might
-have learned from their failures that prostitution
-could not be ended by physical force and brutality.
-However, when the girls were driven from the streets,
-inasmuch as the police did not despatch them, they
-still had to go somewhere, and the brothels remained.
-They had their own quarter and if it was not a segregated
-quarter it was something very like it, since the
-police bent their efforts to rid other portions of the
-city of such places. It was perhaps a tolerated
-rather than a segregated district, and after a while
-the Director of Public Safety wished to try the experiment
-of making it a regulated district as well.
-I felt that the world was too old and I found myself
-too much of its mood to hope that any good could
-come from any of the efforts of policemen to dispose
-of such a problem, but I was glad of any experiment
-conducted in sincerity that might make for
-the better, and accordingly the Director of Safety
-put his scheme into operation. It was not <i>reglementation</i>
-in the exact European sense, since the temper
-of our American people will not acquiesce in that,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[283]</span>
-and, as I discovered by some inquiries of my own in
-the principal cities of Europe, it is not of very valid
-effect over there. But the Director adopted most
-of the familiar requirements of the Parisian <i>reglement</i>,
-except the examinations, and the registration
-of those not <i>en maison</i>; he required the
-proprietresses to report at police headquarters the
-presence of new inmates; he forbade them to have
-minors or male parasites in the houses, and as far
-as possible he separated the business from the saloon
-business. Any house which ignored his orders found
-a policeman posted before it; then it came to time.
-The result was, as Mr. Mooney could report in the
-course of a year, that the number of brothels had
-been reduced from over two hundred to thirty and
-the number of prostitutes of whom the police had
-any knowledge, in an equal proportion. He was
-very proud when General Bingham complimented his
-policemen and their policing, as he was at similar
-compliments from the government&#8217;s white slave
-agents.</p>
-
-<p>Superficially this was a very gratifying report,
-but only superficially. Five-sixths of the brothels
-had been closed, but their inmates had to go somewhere,
-just as Jones said, and the police found that
-clandestine prostitution had proportionately increased;
-the women had gone into flats, or hotels, or
-residences which on occasion could be made to serve
-as assignation houses. It may perhaps have improved
-the life of the prostitute, made it freer and
-more human, or perhaps it indicated that prostitution
-in America is showing a decadent tendency<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[284]</span>
-toward refinement. But while they had reduced the
-number of houses of prostitution, the police discovered
-that they had not reduced prostitution in the
-least, and when, after a trial of four years, I asked
-the Director and the Chief of Police what the result
-of the experiment had been, they said that, aside
-from the fact that it seemed to make for order in
-the city, and simplified the work of policing, it had
-done no good.</p>
-
-<p>The experience was like that of Chicago, where
-after a police order prohibiting the sale of liquor in
-houses of prostitution, it was found&mdash;according to
-the report of the vice commission&mdash;to be &#8220;undoubtedly
-true that the result of the order has been
-to scatter the prostitutes over a wide territory and
-to transfer the sale of liquor carried on heretofore
-in houses to the near-by saloon keepers, and to
-flats and residential sections, but it is an open
-question whether it has resulted in the lessening
-of either of the two evils of prostitution and
-drink.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The experience, I think, is probably universal. I
-used to hear the systems of regulation used in European
-cities held up as models by the pessimistic as
-the only practical method of dealing with the problem.
-Paris was commonly considered as the ideal
-in this respect; latterly it is apt to be Berlin. But
-the fact is that the <i>reglementation</i> which for years
-and years has been in force in Paris is a failure; the
-experience there was precisely what it was in our
-little city. And from Berlin, which the well-known
-German genius for organization has made the most<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[285]</span>
-efficiently governed city in the world, the same failure
-has been reported.</p>
-
-<p>In England, on the other hand, there is no regulation;
-any evening along Piccadilly, one may see
-street walkers whom the police never dream of molesting.
-It is in part due to the traditional Puritanic
-attitude of our northern race, and partly to the respect
-for personal liberty that exists in England.
-There the principle is much more scrupulously respected
-than with us, with whom individual liberty
-indeed, is hardly a principle at all. With us the
-phrase &#8220;personal liberty&#8221; is regarded merely as a
-shibboleth of brewers and distillers, an evidence on
-the part of him who employs it that he is a besotted
-slave to drink and an unscrupulous minion of the
-rum power. The interferences practiced daily by
-our policemen are unknown there, and if, for instance,
-it should even be proposed that an enactment
-like that in Oklahoma limiting the amount of
-liquor a man may keep in his own house, and providing
-that agents of the state may enter his domicile
-at will and make a search, and especially if in
-the remotest region of the British Isles there should
-be an instance of what Walt Whitman calls &#8220;the
-never ending audacity of elected persons,&#8221; such as
-is of daily occurrence in that state where these
-agents enter railway trains and slit open the valises
-of travelers in their quest of the stuff, the whole of
-the question hour the next afternoon in the House
-of Commons would be occupied with indignant interpellations
-of the home secretary and the <i>Times</i> could
-not contain all the letters that would be written.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[286]</span>Other lands have made other experiments, but
-everywhere and in all times the same failure has
-been recorded, from the efforts of Greece to control
-the <i>hetaerae</i> and <i>dicteriades</i> and the severe regulations
-of ancient Rome, down to the latest reform
-administration in an American city. Nothing that
-mankind has ever tried has been of the slightest
-avail. And now come the vice commissions with
-their pornographic reports, and no doubt feeling
-that they have to propose something after all the
-trouble they have gone to, when they have set forth
-in tabulated statistics what everybody in the world
-already knows, they repeat the old ineptitudes.
-That is, more law, more hounding by the police.</p>
-
-<p>The Chicago product is the classic and the
-model for all of these, and as the latest and loftiest
-triumph of the Puritan mind in the realm of morals
-and of law, a triumph for which three centuries of
-innocence of nothing save humor alone could have
-prepared it, its own great masterpiece in morals
-was at once forbidden circulation in the mails because
-of its immorality!</p>
-
-<p>The problem cannot be solved by policemen,
-even if&mdash;as is now recommended&mdash;they be called
-&#8220;morals&#8221; police. The word has a reassuring note
-of course, possibly by some confused with &#8220;moral&#8221;
-police, but policemen are policemen still. I have seen
-the <i>police des moeurs</i> in European cities, and they
-look quite like other policemen. And all cities
-in America have had morals police; that is exactly
-what our policemen have been, and that is exactly
-what is the matter with them. That is, all cities have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[287]</span>
-had detectives especially detailed to supervise the
-conduct of the vicious, and they always fail. We
-had such a squad in Toledo for years, though it
-was not called morals police. It was composed of
-men, mere men, because we had nothing else but
-men to detail to the work. They were honest, decent,
-self-respecting men for the most part, who on
-the whole did very well considering the salaries they
-were paid and the task imposed on them. They regulated
-vice as well as anybody anywhere could regulate
-it. But of course they failed to solve the problem,
-just as the world for thousands of years has
-failed to solve it, with all the machinery of all the
-laws of all the lawgivers in history. Solon in
-Athens tried every known device, including segregation.
-He established a state monopoly of houses
-of prostitution, confined the <i>dicteriades</i> to a certain
-quarter of the city, and compelled them to wear a
-distinctive dress, but all his stringent laws had
-broken down long before Hyperides dramatically
-bared the breast of Phryne to the Areopagus. In
-Rome there was the most severe regulation in
-the ancient world and yet&mdash;it may be read in Gibbon&mdash;the
-successive experiments of the law under
-Augustus, Tiberius, Caligula, Valerian, Theodosius
-and Justinian were all failures, and when the laws
-were most rigorous and the most rigorously enforced,
-immorality was at its height. Charlemagne
-tried and failed, and though the sentiment of the
-age of chivalry and the rise of Christianity for a
-while softened the law, under the English Puritans,
-bawds were whipped, pilloried, branded and imprisoned,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[288]</span>
-and for a second offense put to death. France
-was not behind; under Louis IX., prostitutes were
-exiled, and in 1635 an edict in Paris condemned men
-concerned in the traffic to the galleys for life, while
-the women and girls were whipped, shaved and banished
-for life. Charles V. in the monastery at Yuste,
-trying to make two clocks tick in union, found his
-efforts no more vain than his attempts to regulate
-human conduct, and Philip II. tried again to do
-what his father had been unable to accomplish.
-Peter the Great was a grim enforcer of the laws,
-and in Vienna Maria Theresa was most rigorous
-with prostitutes, putting them in a certain garb, and
-then in handcuffs; she was almost as remorseless
-in her treatment of them as was John Calvin in
-Geneva, which came to have more prostitutes proportionately
-than any other city in Europe. Several
-modern attempts at annihilation have been
-made. Saxony tried to do away with prostitutes,
-but they exist in Dresden and other cities of the
-Kingdom and Hamburg claims to have banished
-them, but in that Free and Hanseatic city I was told
-by an American who was investigating the subject
-that there were as many there as elsewhere.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">L</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>And these laws have not only failed, they have
-not only stimulated and intensified the evil, but they
-themselves have created a white slavery worse than
-that of the preposterous tales and sentimental twaddle<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[289]</span>
-that circulate among the neurotic, a white slavery
-worse than any ever imagined by the most romanticistic
-of the dime novelists or by the most superheated
-of the professional reformers. Every one
-of these laws has been devised, written and enacted
-in the identical spirit with which the Puritans in
-Massachusetts branded the red letter on the scarlet
-woman. Every one of them is an element of that
-brutal and amazing conspiracy by which society
-makes of the girl who once &#8220;goes wrong,&#8221; to use
-the lightest of our animadversions, a pariah more
-abhorred and shunned than if she were a rotting
-leper on the cliffs of Molokai. She may be human,
-alive, with the same feelings that all the other girls
-in the world have; she may have within her the same
-possibilities, life may mean exactly the same thing
-to her, she may have youth with all its vague and
-beautiful longings, but society thunders at her such
-final and awful words as &#8220;lost,&#8221; &#8220;abandoned,&#8221;
-thrusts her beyond its pale, and causes her to feel
-that thereafter forever and forever, there is literally
-no chance of redemption for her; home, society,
-companionship, hope itself, all shut their obdurate
-doors in her face. In all the world there are just
-two places she may go, the brothel, or the river,
-and even if she choose the latter, that choice, too, is
-a sin. She is &#8220;lost&#8221; and the awful and appalling
-lie is thundered in her astonished ears by the united
-voices of a prurient and hypocritical society with
-such indomitable force and persistence that she
-must believe it herself, and acquiesce in its dread
-finality. And there is no course open to her but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[290]</span>
-to go on in sin to the end of days whose only mercy
-is that they are apt to be brief. No off-hand moralist,
-even by exercising his imagination to the last
-degree of cruelty, has ever been able to devise such
-a prison as that. White slave, indeed, shackled by
-the heaviest chains the Puritan conscience has yet
-been able to forge for others!</p>
-
-<p>Strange, too, since the attitude is assumed by a
-civilization which calls itself Christian and preaches
-that the old law, with its eye for an eye and its
-tooth for a tooth, was done away with and lost in a
-new and beautiful dispensation. &#8220;Neither do I condemn
-thee; go, and sin no more.&#8221; If the world is
-ever to solve this problem, it must first of all apprehend
-the spirit of this simple and gracious expression,
-do away with its old laws, its old cruelties, its
-old brutalities, its old stupidities, and approach the
-problem in that human spirit which I suspect is so
-very near the divine. Once in this attitude, this
-spirit, society will be in position to learn something
-from history and from human experience, something
-from life itself, and what it will learn first is that
-Puritanical laws, the hounding of the police, and
-all that sort of thing have never lessened prostitution
-in the world, but on the contrary have increased
-it.</p>
-
-<p>What! Let them go and not do anything to
-them? Well, yes, if we can&#8217;t think of anything
-better to do to them than to hurt them a little
-more, push them a little farther along the road to
-that abyss toward which we have been hustling
-them. Why is it constantly necessary to do something<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[291]</span>
-<i>to</i> people? If we can&#8217;t do anything for them,
-when are we going to learn to let them alone? Or
-must this incessant interference, this meddling, this
-mauling and manhandling, go on in the world forever
-and ever?</p>
-
-<p>As to what is to be done about it, since all that
-ever has been attempted has been so much worse in
-its effect than if we had never done anything, I
-suppose I need not feel so very much ashamed of
-confessing my ignorance and saying that I do not
-know. If it were left to me I think the first thing
-I should do is to repeal all the criminal laws
-on the subject, beginning with that most savage
-enactment the Puritan conscience ever devised,
-namely, the law declaring certain children &#8220;illegitimate,&#8221;
-a piece of stupid brutality and cruelty that
-would make a gorilla blush with shame if it were
-even suggested in the African jungle.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, the first thing to do is to repeal all the criminal
-laws on the subject. They do no good, and even
-when it is attempted to enforce them, the result is
-worse than futile. I myself, with my own eyes, in
-the old police court where I have witnessed so many
-squalid tragedies, have seen a magistrate fine a
-street walker and then suspend the fine so that, as
-he explained to her in all judicial seriousness, she
-might go out and &#8220;earn&#8221; enough money to come
-back and pay it! And not a person in the court
-room, so habituated and conventionalized are we
-all, ever cracked a smile or apparently saw anything
-out of the way&mdash;least of all the street walker!</p>
-
-<p>But it would not be enough simply to repeal these<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[292]</span>
-laws from the statute books of the state; it will be
-necessary to accomplish the immensely more difficult
-task of repealing them from the human heart, where
-they were written long ago in anger, and hatred,
-and jealousy and cruelty and fear, that is in the
-heat of all the baser passions. What I am trying
-to say is that the first step in any reasonable and
-effective reform is an entire change of attitude on
-the subject, and about the only good to be expected
-from the agitation about white slavery, with
-all its preposterous exaggeration and absurd sensationalism
-is that it is perhaps making for a
-changed attitude, a new conception; if it will accomplish
-nothing more than to get the public mind&mdash;if
-there is a public mind, and not a mere public
-passion&mdash;to view the prostitute as a human being,
-very much like all the other human beings in the
-world, it will have been worth all it has cost in energy
-and emotion and credulity. If this sort of
-repeal can be made effective, if the prostitute can
-be assured of some chance in life outside the dead
-line which society so long ago drew for her, the first
-step will have been taken.</p>
-
-<p>The next step possibly will be the erection of a
-single standard of morals. And this cannot be done
-by passing a law, or by turning in an alarm for the
-police. That means thinking, too, and education,
-and evolution, and all the other slow and toilsome
-processes of which the off-hand reformers are so
-impatient. This single standard will have to be
-raised first in each individual heart; after that it
-will become the attitude of the general mind.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[293]</span>And then the commerce in vice will have to be
-stopped. I do not mean prohibited by penal laws
-alone. Policemen cannot stop it, and policemen
-should have no more to do with it than firemen. In
-fact much of the commerce has proceeded from the
-fact that its regulation has been entrusted to the
-police. It should be a subject for the fiscal laws. It
-is, I assume, known by most persons that the owners
-of the dilapidated tenements in which for the most
-part prostitution is carried on, because of the
-&#8220;risk,&#8221; extort exorbitant rentals for them, and then
-on the ground that they can rent them to no one of
-respectability, they hold them to be so worthless
-that they pay little if any taxes on them. Our
-present tax laws of course have the effect of rewarding
-the slothful, the lazy and the idle, and of
-punishing the energetic and the enterprising producer
-in business, and it would be quite possible to
-revise the tax laws so that tenderloins would be
-economically impossible, because they would cease
-to be profitable.</p>
-
-<p>In the next place, or some place in the program,
-there should be some sort of competent and judicious
-sex education. I do not know just who
-would impart it, since no one as yet knows very
-much about it, but with the earnest, sincere and
-devoted work that is being carried on all over the
-world by the scientific men and women who are
-studying eugenics and social hygiene, there is hope
-in this direction, even if it is probable that the
-world will not be saved by the new race of athletes
-that are scientifically to be bred, and may still have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[294]</span>
-some use in its affairs for the minds of its cripples
-who in all times have contributed so much to its
-advancement.</p>
-
-<p>The marvelous phenomenon known as the feminist
-movement which the students and historians of
-the next two hundred years will be busy elucidating
-will play its part, too, for in its vast impulse toward
-the equality of the sexes it must not only bring the
-single standard of morals, but it should somehow be
-the means of achieving for women their economic
-independence. This perhaps would be the most important
-of all the steps to be taken in the solution
-of the problem. The economic environment of course
-is in the lives of many girls a determining factor
-and in this connection the minimum wage indeed
-has its bearing. The old Puritan laws were conceived
-in minds intensely preoccupied with the duty
-of punishing people for their sins. Prostitutes were
-prostitutes because they were &#8220;bad,&#8221; and when
-people were bad they must be punished. But now
-we see, or begin to see, if vaguely, that, except in
-metaphysics, there is no such thing in our complex
-human life as an absolute good or an absolute bad;
-we begin to discern dimly the causes of some of the
-conduct called bad, and to the problem of evil we
-begin to apply the conception of economic influences,
-social influences, pathological influences, and
-other influences most of us know little or nothing
-about.</p>
-
-<p>Thus we begin to see that a girl&#8217;s wages, for instance,
-may have something to do with what we call
-her morals; not everything, but something. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[295]</span>
-wages of a girl&#8217;s father have something to do with
-them, too, and the wages of her great grandfather
-for the matter of that. So the dividends on which
-live the delicate and charming ladies she beholds
-alighting from their motor cars every morning in
-the shopping district may have something to do with
-them, though she is as unconscious and as innocent
-of the relation as they, as ignorant as all of us are.
-Rents have something to do with them, and so do
-taxes.</p>
-
-<p>But after the whole economic system has been re-adjusted
-and perfected and equalized, after we have
-the minimum wage, and the single tax, and industrial
-democracy, and every man gets what he produces,
-and economic pressure has been as scientifically adjusted
-as the atmospheres in a submarine torpedo
-boat, there is always the great law of the contrariety
-of things to be reckoned with, according
-to which the more carefully planned the event, the
-less it resembles the original conception. The human
-vision is so weak, and the great circle of life
-so prodigious! The solution will come, if it ever
-comes at all, by slow, patient, laborious, drudging
-study, far from the midnight session of the legislature,
-far from the ear and the pencil of the eager
-reporter, far from the platform of the sweating revivalist,
-far from the head office of the police. Our
-fondly perused pornography might expose the whole
-of the underworld to the light of day, the general
-assembly might enact successive revisions of the revised
-statutes for a hundred years, we might develop
-the most superb police organization in all history,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[296]</span>
-achieving the apotheosis of the Puritan ideal with a
-dictagraph in every bedroom and closet in the town,
-and it all would be of no avail. The study must
-survey the whole field of social and domestic relations,
-until the vast mystery of life is understood,
-and the relation between its wide antitheses established
-as Tolstoy presents them in his story of
-the poor mother who took her daughter to the public
-house in the village, and the rich mother who, at
-the same time, took her daughter to the court at
-St. Petersburg. It will be found perhaps in the
-long run, for which so few are ever willing to remain,
-that the eradicable causes of prostitution are
-due to involuntary poverty, and the awful task is
-to get involuntary poverty out of the world. It
-is a task which has all the tremendous difficulties of
-constructive social labor and it is as deliberate as
-evolution itself. And even if it is ever accomplished,
-there will remain a residuum in the problem inhering
-in the mysteries of sex, concerning which even the
-wisest and most devoted of our scientists will confess
-they know very little as yet and have not much
-to tell us that will do us any good.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">LI</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>In taking the present occasion to say so much
-about the work in morals which a mayor is expected
-to perform, I have a disquieting sense that I have
-fallen into a tone too querulous for the subject, and
-perhaps taken a mean advantage of the reader in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[297]</span>
-telling of my troubles. It is rather a troubled life
-that a mayor leads in one of these turbulent American
-cities, since so much of his time is taken up by
-reformers who seem to expect him somehow to do
-their holy work for them, and yet that is doubtless
-the business of reformers in this world, and since
-it is their mission to trouble someone, perhaps it
-is the business of a mayor to be troubled by them
-in his vicarious and representative capacity. I
-should not deny reformers their rights in this respect,
-or their uses in this world, and I should be
-the last to question their virtues. John Brown was
-beyond doubt a strong character and an estimable
-man, who did a great and heroic work in the world,
-even if he did do it in opposition to the law, and
-by the law was killed at last for doing it, but by all
-accounts he must have been a terrible person to live
-with, and I have often been glad that I was not
-mayor of Ossawattomie when he was living and reforming
-there. I would as soon have had Peter the
-Hermit for a constituent.</p>
-
-<p>I shall not go quite so far as to admit that our
-reformers were as strong in character as either of
-these great models I have mentioned, but they were
-as persistent, or in combination they were as persistent;
-when one tired or desisted, another promptly
-took his place; there were so many that they could
-spell each other, and work in relays, and thus keep
-the torch ever alive and brandishing. It was not
-only the social evil with which they were concerned,
-but the evil of drink, and the evil of gambling, and
-the evil of theaters, and the evil of moving pictures,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[298]</span>
-and post cards, and of the nude in art, and of lingerie
-in show windows, and of boys swimming in the
-river, and playing in the streets, and scores of other
-conditions which seemed to inspire in them the fear
-or the thought of evil.</p>
-
-<p>With the advent of spring, the mayor must put
-a stop to lovers wandering in the parks; when summer
-comes he must put an end instantly to baseball;
-in the winter he must close the theaters and the
-dance halls; in short, as I said before, whenever it
-was reported from any quarter that there were people
-having fun, the police must instantly be despatched
-to put a stop to it.</p>
-
-<p>And strangely enough, even when we did succeed
-in doing away with some of the evils of the town,
-when we closed the saloons promptly at midnight,
-the hour fixed by ordinance, when we did away with
-many evil resorts, when wine rooms were extirpated,
-and the number of <i>maisons de tolerance</i> were reduced
-by eighty-five per cent., when gambling was
-stamped out, their complaints did not subside, but
-went on, unabated, the same as before. They could
-not be satisfied because the whole of their impossible
-program was not adopted, and more because
-there was no public recognition of their infallibility
-and no admission of their righteousness. What that
-type of mind desires is not, after all, any reasonable
-treatment of those conditions, or any honest
-and sincere endeavor to deal with them. It demands
-intellectual surrender, the acknowledgment of its infallibility,
-and a protesting hypocrite can more
-easily meet its views than anyone else.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[299]</span>No wonder then that even such a strong man as
-Tom Johnson, one evening, when the day was done,
-should fling himself back in the motor car, with the
-dark shadow of utter weariness and despair on his
-face, and say:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wish I could take a train to the end of the longest
-railway in the world, then go as far as wagons
-could draw me and then walk and crawl as far as I
-could, and then in the midst of the farthest forest
-lie down and rest.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>We all have such moments, of course, but we
-should have fewer of them if we had a national trait
-of which I have read, in a book by Mr. Fielding Hall
-in relation to Burma. He says the Burmese have
-a vast unwillingness to interfere in other people&#8217;s
-affairs.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A foreigner may go and live in a Burman village,&#8221;
-he says, &#8220;may settle down there and live his
-own life and follow his own customs in perfect freedom;
-may dress and eat and drink and pray and
-die as he likes. No one will interfere. No one will
-try to correct him; no one will be forever insisting
-to him that he is an outcast, either from civilization
-or from religion. The people will accept him for
-what he is and leave the matter there. If he likes
-to change his ways and conform to Burmese habits
-and Buddhist forms, so much the better; but if not,
-never mind.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>What a hell Burma would be for the Puritan!
-And what a heaven for everybody else! Perhaps we
-would all better go live there.</p>
-
-<p>These things, however, should be no part of a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[300]</span>
-mayor&#8217;s business, and perhaps I may justify my
-speaking of them by saying that I spoke of them
-principally to make that point clear. They and
-some other problems that may or may not be foreign
-to his duties, have the effect of keeping a mayor
-from his real work which is or should be, the administration
-of the communal affairs of the city, and
-not the regulation of the private affairs of the people
-in it. It is quite impossible to imagine any
-work more delightful than this administration.
-Hampered in it as one is by politicians, who regard
-every question from the viewpoint of the parish
-pump, it is nevertheless inspiring to be concerned
-about great works of construction regarding the
-public comfort and convenience, the public health
-and the public amenities. It is in such work that
-one may catch a glimpse of the vast possibilities of
-our democracy, of which our cities are the models
-and the hope.</p>
-
-<p>I have observed in Germany that the mayors of
-the cities there are not burdened by these extraneous
-issues, and I think that that is the reason the German
-cities are the most admirably administered in
-the world. Perhaps I should say governed, too,
-though that is hardly correct, since the governing
-there is done by the state through its own officials.
-I have not been in Germany often enough or remained
-long enough to be able to assert that government,
-in its effect for good, is quite as much a
-superstition as it is everywhere; mere political government,
-I mean, which seems to be so implicitly
-for the selfish benefit of those who do the governing.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[301]</span>
-But the administration of public affairs is so entirely
-another matter, that it is as beautiful, at
-least in its possibilities as government is ugly in
-its actualities, and it is precisely because there has
-been so much insistence on government in our cities
-that there is as yet so little administration, and
-that so inefficient.</p>
-
-<p>In Germany the burgomeister is not chosen for
-his political views, or for his theories of any sort, or
-for his popularity; he is chosen because of his ability
-for the work he is to perform, and he is retained
-in office as long as he performs that work properly.
-It is so with all municipal departments and the result
-is order and efficient administration. When a
-German city wants a mayor, it seeks one by inquiring
-among other cities; sometimes it advertises for
-him. It would be quite impossible, of course, for
-our cities to advertise for mayors, not that there
-would be any lack of applicants, since everyone is
-considered capable of directing the affairs of a city
-in this country. Of course everyone is not capable;
-few of the persons chosen are capable at the time
-they are chosen. Many of them become very capable
-after they have had experience, but they gain this
-experience at the expense of the public, and about
-the time they have gained it, their services are dispensed
-with, and a new incompetent accidentally
-succeeds them.</p>
-
-<p>The condition is due partly to the fact that we
-are of a tradition that is concerned with governing
-exclusively, and not administering; our conception
-is of an executive, a kind of lieutenant or subaltern<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[302]</span>
-of the sovereign power, and in our proverbial fear
-and jealousy of kings we see that he does not have
-too much power or develop those powers he has by a
-long tenure of office.</p>
-
-<p>The officials of a German city are pure administrators,
-and nothing else; they are not governors
-or censors. They are not charged in fact with police
-powers at all. And if they were, they would
-not have questions of such delicacy to meet, for the
-police there are for the purpose of protecting life
-and property, and they are not expected to regulate
-the personal conduct and refine the morals of the
-community, or to rear the young. They have not
-confused their functions with the <i>censores mores</i> of
-old Rome, or like us, with the beadles of New England
-villages of colonial times. That is, the Puritan
-spirit is not known there, at least in the intensified
-acerbity in which it exists with us; moral problems,
-oddly enough, are left to parents, teachers or pastors.
-The police over there are generally a part of
-the military organizations. It would be better of
-course, to bear the ills we have than to transplant
-any military system to our soil, for state police in
-America would become mere Cossacks employed to
-keep the laboring population in subjection. But if
-the state is to undertake to regulate the moral conduct
-of the inhabitants of cities, it should provide all
-the means of regulation and take all the responsibility,
-including the onus of violating the democratic
-principle. If the state is to regenerate the land by
-the machinery of morals police, it should have its
-own morals police, tell them just how to proceed to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[303]</span>
-compel the inhabitants of cities to be moral, and pay
-them out of the state treasury.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LII">LII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>It is, however, a curious characteristic of our
-people, or of the vocal minority of them, that while
-they insist on every possible interference with every
-private and personal right, in the field of moral
-conduct, they nevertheless will tolerate no interference
-whatever with property rights. Thus it was
-precisely as Cossacks that many employers of labor
-insisted on my using the police to cow their workmen
-whenever there was a strike.</p>
-
-<p>During my first term it befell that our city was
-torn by strikes, all the union machinists in town
-walked out, then the moulders, and at last a great
-factory wherein automobiles were made was
-&#8220;struck,&#8221; as the workingmen say. It is impossible
-to give an idea of the worry such a condition causes
-officials. It is more than that sensation of weariness,
-of irritation, even of disgust, which it causes
-the general public. This is due partly to the resentment
-created by the interference with physical
-comfort, and even peace of mind, since there
-is in us all something more than a fear of disorder
-and tumult, in that innate love of harmony which
-exists potentially in humanity. But to the official
-there is a greater difficulty because of the responsibility
-to which he is held. People intuitively regard
-strikers as public enemies, and while the blame<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[304]</span>
-for the irritation caused by strikes is visited on the
-direct and apparent cause, that is, the strikers themselves;
-it is visited, too, on the official head of the
-local government, who is supposed to be able somehow
-to put a stop to such things. The general or
-mass intelligence will not as yet go much deeper
-than the superfices of the problem, or seek to understand
-the causes of economic unrest and disorder;
-it still thinks in old sequences and puts its trust in
-the weapons of the flesh.</p>
-
-<p>I think I shall never forget the first call I had
-from a delegation of manufacturers during the early
-days of those strikes. They came in not too friendly
-spirit, but rather in their capacity of &#8220;citizens
-and tax-payers,&#8221; standing on their rights, as they
-understood them, though they in common with
-most of us and with the law as well, had only
-the most hazy notions as to what those rights
-were, and perhaps still hazier notions as to their
-duties. &#8220;We come,&#8221; said the spokesman, &#8220;representing
-two millions of dollars&#8217; worth of property.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They could not have put their case more frankly.
-But I, as I was able to recall in that moment, represented
-two hundred thousand people, themselves
-among them of course. And here at the very outset
-was the old conflict in its simplest terms, of man
-against property. Now, in that old struggle, while I
-had made no sacrifices in the cause and have been of
-no especial service in it, I had nevertheless given intellectual
-assent to the general propositions advanced
-in favor of the human side, the side of man.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[305]</span>
-By prejudice, or perversity, or constitutionally, I
-considered men of more value than factories. I had
-perhaps never heard of a strike, for instance, in
-which my sympathies were not impulsively with the
-strikers. I could always see that poor foreigner,
-whose body had lain there on the cold damp rocks
-at Lemont so many years before, and somehow I
-could not get out of my mind&#8217;s eye the figures of
-the workmen on strike, many of them hungry and
-desperate as their wives and children were; they
-seemed to me to be in straits more dire than their
-harried and harassed and worried employers, though
-I could feel sorry for them, too, since even if they
-were not hungry, they, too, were the victims of the
-anarchy of our industrial system. They had of
-course no social conscience whatever, but perhaps
-they could not help that. But there they were,
-bringing their troubles to the mayor, whom perhaps
-they did not wholly regard as their mayor, since
-they had some prescience of the fact that in that
-mayor&#8217;s mind was always the memory of those
-throngs of workingmen who had looked up to him
-with some of the emotions of confidence and hope.
-There was alas little enough that he could do for
-those workingmen, but, especially in such an hour,
-he must at least not forget them. Of the relative
-rights of their present quarrel he had little knowledge;
-but he had envisaged enough of life to know,
-without too much sentimentalizing them, that, while
-they were often wrong, they were somehow right
-when they were wrong. That is, their eternal cause
-was right.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[306]</span>What the manufacturers wanted, as they put it,
-was &#8220;protection,&#8221; a term with vague and varying
-connotations. As was the case in all the strikes of
-all the years of my experience in the mayoralty, they
-felt that the police were not sufficiently aggressive,
-or that the Chief of Police had not detailed sufficient
-men to afford them protection. I did not raise the
-question, though it occurred to me, as to what the
-police were doing to protect the strikers, who were
-citizens, too, and tax-payers, or at least rent-payers
-and so indirect tax-payers, but when I asked the
-Chief, the big-hearted Perry Knapp reported that
-the strikers were complaining, too, and out of his
-collection of works on Lincoln, he brought me one
-which contained a letter the great president wrote
-to General John M. Schofield, when he assigned that
-officer to the command of the Department of the Missouri,
-in May, 1863, to succeed General Curtis.
-Curtis had been the head of one party as Governor
-Gamble had been the head of the other, in what
-Lincoln called the pestilent factional quarrel into
-which the Union men had entered. &#8220;Now that you
-are in the position,&#8221; wrote Lincoln, &#8220;I wish you to
-undo nothing merely because General Curtis or Governor
-Gamble did it, but to exercise your own judgment,
-and do right for the public interest. Let your
-military measures be strong enough to repel the invader
-and keep the peace, and not so strong as to
-unnecessarily harass and persecute the people. It is
-a difficult r&ocirc;le, and so much the greater will be the
-honor if you perform it well. If both factions, or
-neither, shall abuse you, you will probably be about<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[307]</span>
-right. Beware of being assailed by one and praised
-by the other.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>How Lincoln knew human nature! It seemed as
-good a model as one might find, since we, too, were
-in the midst of a little civil war, and we always tried
-to pursue that course. What the manufacturing
-employers wished, of course, was for us to use the
-police to break the strike; that we did not deem
-it our duty to do. What we tried to do was to
-preserve the public peace and&mdash;since our industry
-in its present status is war&mdash;to let them fight it
-out. We tried to see to it that they fought it out
-along the lines laid down, in fixing the relative rights
-of the industrial belligerents, by the Courts of Great
-Britain, and this policy had the virtual approval of
-our own courts when in an ancillary way it came
-under discussion there. But we had difficulty in
-maintaining the peace, not only because the strikers,
-or more likely their sympathizers, broke it now
-and then, but because when the strikers were not
-breaking it, the employers seemed bent on doing
-something to make them. They did not intend it
-for that purpose of course; they simply thought in
-old feudal sequences. They hired mercenaries, bullies
-provided as &#8220;guards&#8221; by private detective agencies.
-It kept the police pretty busy disarming these
-guards, and greatly added to their labors because
-the guards were always on the point of hurting some
-one.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[308]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">LIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>There was one of the employers, indeed, who grew
-so alarmed that he came one morning to the office
-predicting a riot at his plant, that very afternoon at
-five o&#8217;clock, when the works were to shut down for
-the day. This man was just then operating his
-factory with strike breakers and he was concerned
-for their safety. Indeed his concern was expressed
-in the form of a personal sympathy and love for
-them which was far more sentimental than any I
-had ever been accused of showing toward workingmen.
-He was concerned about their inalienable
-right to work, and about their wives and little children,
-and about their comfort and peace of mind;
-indeed it was such a concern, such a love, that, had
-he but shown the moiety of it to his former employees,
-they never could have gone out on strike at all.</p>
-
-<p>At five o&#8217;clock that day then, with the Chief of
-Police, I visited the plant to observe, and if possible
-to prevent the impending riot. The works had
-not yet closed for the day, but in the street before
-the black and haggard and ugly buildings where
-they had toiled, the strikers were gathered, and with
-them their wives, with bare and brawny forearms
-rolled in their aprons, and their children clinging
-timorously about their skirts. It was a gray and
-somber afternoon in spring, but there was in the
-crowd a kind of nervous excitement that might have
-passed for gayety, a mood that strangely travestied
-the holiday spirit; perhaps they regarded the strike<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[309]</span>
-as an opportunity for the sensation lacking in their
-monotonous lives. There were several hulking fellows
-loafing about whom the Chief of Police recognized
-as private detectives, and as a first step in
-preventing disorder, he ordered these away. Presently
-the whistle blew its long, lugubrious blast,
-the crowd gathered in closer groups, and a silence
-fell. Sitting there with the Chief in his official
-buggy, I waited; the great gates of the high
-stockade swung slowly open, and then there issued
-forth a vehicle, the like of which I had never seen
-before, a sort of huge van, made of rough boards,
-that might have moved the impedimenta of an embassy.
-In the rear there was a door, fastened with
-a padlock; the sides were pierced with loop holes,
-and on the high seat beside the driver sat an enormous
-guard, with a rifle across his knees. This van,
-this moving arsenal containing within its mysterious
-interior the strike breakers, and I was told other
-guards ready to thrust rifles through those loop
-holes, moved slowly out of those high gates, lurched
-across the gutter into the street, and rumbled away,
-and as it went it was followed by a shout of such
-ridicule that even the guard on the front seat lost
-his menacing gravity and smiled himself, perhaps
-with some dawning recognition of the absurdity of
-the whole affair.</p>
-
-<p>There was no riot, though when the employer came
-to see me the next day I could assure him of my
-surprise that there had been none, since there was
-an invitation to disorder almost irresistible in that
-solemn and absurd vehicle, with its rifles and loop<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[310]</span>
-holes and guards and cowering mystery within. And
-I could urge upon him too a belated recognition of
-the immutable and unwritten law by which such an
-invitation to trouble is sure to be accepted. I almost
-felt, I told him, like heaving a stone after it
-myself to see what would happen. He finally agreed
-with me, dismissed his guards, and dismantled his
-rolling arsenal, and not long afterward was using
-its gear to haul the commodities they were soon
-manufacturing in those shops again.</p>
-
-<p>And the strikes in the other plants were settled
-or compromised, or wore themselves out, or in some
-way got themselves ended, though not the largest
-and most ominous of them, that in the automobile
-works, until my friend Mr. Marshall Sheppey and I
-had worked seventy-two hours continuously to get
-the leaders of the opposing sides together. It was an
-illuminating experience for both of us, and not without
-its penalties, since thereafter we were called
-upon to arbitrate a dozen other strikes. We found
-both sides rather alike in their humanness, and one
-as unreasonable as the other, but we found too that
-if we could keep them together long enough, their
-own reason somehow prevailed and they reached
-those fragile compromises which are the most we
-may expect in the present status of productive industry
-in this world.</p>
-
-<p>The old shop of Golden Rule Jones had its strike
-with the rest of them, and yet a strange and significant
-fate befell it. Alone of all the other shops
-and factories in the city involved in that strike,
-it was not picketed by the strikers, they did not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[311]</span>
-even visit it, so far as I know. There were no guards
-and no policemen needed. And when I asked one
-of the labor leaders to account for this strange
-oversight, this surprising lack of solidarity and discipline
-in their ranks, he said, as though he must
-exculpate himself: &#8220;Oh well, you know&mdash;Mayor
-Jones. We haven&#8217;t forgotten him and what he was.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">LIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>It was because of this attitude toward workingmen,
-and their cause, that I was accused, now and
-then, by those who knew nothing about Socialism,
-of being a Socialist; by those who did know about
-it I was condemned for not being one. Our movement
-indeed had no opponents in the town more bitter
-than the Socialists, that is the authentic and
-orthodox Socialists of the class-conscious Marxist
-order, and they opposed me so insistently that I
-might as well have been the capitalist class and had
-done with it. I do not intend to confuse myself
-with the movement of which I, for a while, was but
-the merest and weakest of human instruments; I
-speak in that personal sense only because the opposition
-was of a personal quality so intense that
-it could hardly have been expected of an attitude
-that was always insisted upon as so entirely impersonal,
-the cold and scientific attitude of minds that
-had comprehended the whole of human history, analyzed
-the whole amazing complexity of human life,
-and reduced its problems to that degree in which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[312]</span>
-they were all to be solved by a formula so brief that
-it could be printed on a visiting card. The complaint
-these scientists made of our movement was
-that its ameliorations in city life were retarding
-that evolution of which they were the inspired custodians
-and conservators; some of them spoke of it
-as though it were but a darkling part of that vast
-conspiracy against mankind in which the capitalists
-were so shamelessly engaged. If we had only let
-things alone, it was urged, they might grow so desperate
-that no one but the Socialists would be capable
-of dealing with the appalling situation.</p>
-
-<p>But this was the attitude only of that coterie
-which, unselfishly, no doubt, with the purest of motives,
-and only until the industrial democracy could
-be organized and rendered sufficiently class-conscious
-to take over the work, was directing the destinies of
-the Socialist party, very much to the fleshly eye in
-the same manner that the Republican machine controlled
-that party or the Democratic machine its
-party, or, before we were done, certain persons
-attempted to control the Independent movement.
-So far as I could discern, there was not much
-difference in them all; the Socialists seemed to
-rely on all the old weapons that had so long been
-employed in the world, and so long failed; they
-seemed to contemplate nothing more than replacement
-of old orthodoxies with new, old tyrannies
-with new tyrannies; in a word, to preserve the old
-vicious circle in which humanity has been revolving
-impotently and stupidly down all the grooves of
-time.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[313]</span>I could not have been a Socialist because life had
-somehow taught me that this is a world of relativities,
-in which the absolute is the first impossibility.
-I could share, of course, their hope, or the hope of
-some of them in a well ordered society, though with
-many of them the dream seemed to be beautiful
-chiefly because they expected to order it themselves;
-they who felt themselves so long to have been the
-slaves were to become the masters; their hard and too
-logical theory of classes circumscribed their vision
-so that they could imagine nothing more clearly,
-and possibly nothing more delightful than a bouleversement
-which would leave them on top.</p>
-
-<p>I could recognize with them the masters under
-whom we all alike were serving in this land, and
-respect them as little as we might, or detest them
-as we would, they presented whatever advantage
-there is in familiarity; if nothing more inviting than
-a change in masters were proposed, one would prefer
-those one had to others whose habits and whims he
-did not know. One could be pretty sure that the
-new masters would use the same old whips and
-scorpions, or if new ones, with a sting more bitter.
-They proposed as much, indeed, in their rigid form
-of organization, with a discipline more irksome and
-relentless, what with their signing of pledges, and
-their visitations and committees of inspection, and
-trials for heresy and excommunications. They reminded
-me of those prosecutors who could behold
-no defect in the penal machinery save that it had
-not been sufficiently drastic; they would replace all
-old intolerances and ancient tyrannies by others no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[314]</span>
-different save that they were employed in the opposing
-cause, and were to be even more intolerant
-and tyrannical.</p>
-
-<p>That is, the Socialists provided for everything in
-the world except liberty, and to one whose dissolving
-illusions had left nothing but the dream of liberty
-in a world where liberty was not and probably
-never was to be, there was no allure in the proposal
-to take away even the dream of liberty.</p>
-
-<p>None of them of course would be impressed by
-these objections&mdash;was not the great cure for social
-ill written and printed on a card?&mdash;nor would
-they consider them even until they had been submitted
-to the prescribed test of a joint debate, about
-the most futile device ever adopted by mankind, and
-a nuisance as offensive as any that ever disturbed
-society. It was of course the only amusement they
-had, as popular as running the gauntlet was with
-the Indians, and they liked to torture a capitalist to
-make a Socialist holiday. It is of course quite useless
-to argue with one who is always right, one whose
-utterances have the authority of revealed truth, but
-inasmuch as society had not yet been developed to a
-point of communal efficiency sufficient to keep the
-streets clean, it seemed idle to undertake the communal
-control of production and distribution. And
-however wrong I may be in every other thing, I am
-quite sure that I am right in this, that in their analysis
-of society they have failed utterly to take into
-account that classic of the ironic spirit, the great
-law of the contrariety of things, according to which
-the expected never happens, at least in the way it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[315]</span>
-was expected to happen, and nothing ever turns
-out the way it was planned.</p>
-
-<p>But there is a more fundamental law&mdash;that of
-the destructive power of force, which always defeats
-itself. For their reliance was on force&mdash;and how
-quietly they, or the most virile of them, entered upon
-their last phase in their acceptance of the doctrine
-of force as preached now everywhere by the I. W. W.
-agitator on the curbstone! Sometimes after all the
-law does not take a thousand years to work itself
-out.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to me that the single-taxers had a
-scheme far better than that of the Socialists, since
-they suggested a reliance on the democratic, and
-not on the authoritarian theory, though in its mysterious
-progress, in its constant development of new
-functions, democracy may be expected to modify
-even that theory. I fear at least that it would not
-do away with mosquitoes; possibly not even with reformers.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">LV</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>But I would not be unfair, and I counted many
-friends among the Socialists of my town and time
-whose best ideals one could gladly share. They were
-immensely intelligent, or immensely informed; they
-had made a fairly valid indictment against society
-as it is organized, or disorganized. But like Mr.
-H. G. Wells, who calls himself a Socialist, these exceptions,
-in Mr. Wells&#8217;s words, were by no means
-fanatical or uncritical adherents. To them as to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[316]</span>
-him Socialism was a noble, and yet a very human and
-fallible system of ideas. To them, as, again to him,
-it was an intellectual process, a project for the reshaping
-of human society upon new and better lines&mdash;the
-good will of the race struggling to make
-things better. This broad and tolerant view was
-the one to which they held, though they seemed too
-closely to identify all the good will in the race, operating,
-as I believe it to be, in many ways and
-through many agencies, as Socialism, and the pontifical
-Socialism taught in our town, at least, was so
-explicitly a class hatred that most of the time it
-was anything in the world rather than good will.
-Anyone with a good heart could be a Socialist on
-Mr. Wells&#8217;s terms, if it were not his inevitable fate
-to be assured by the orthodox custodians of the
-party faith, the high priests who alone could enter
-the holy of holies and bear forth, as occasion required,
-the ark of the covenant, that Mr. Wells&#8217;s
-Socialism is no Socialism at all and that he is no
-man to consult or accept.</p>
-
-<p>My friends among them were like him in the condemnation
-they had to hear from the machine, or,
-perhaps I should say, the governing or directing
-committee&mdash;whatever the euphemism that cloaks
-the familiar phenomenon with them&mdash;they too were
-said to be no Socialists at all; they were mere &#8220;intellectuals&#8221;
-or &#8220;sentimentalists,&#8221; or easily fell into
-some other of the categories the Socialists have provided
-for every manifestation of life. They have
-doubtless rendered society a service by their minute
-classification; which seems complete if they would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[317]</span>
-only recognize the order of the sectarian mind, and
-since the orthodox among them afford so typical an
-example, include themselves in it. I am not sure that
-it is not quite as distinct a species as the capitalist
-class itself, at least it causes as much trouble in
-the world as the Socialists say the capitalist class
-creates. Socialists, at least of the impossibilist wing,
-evangelists, prohibitionists, Puritans, policemen and
-most of the rest of the reformers are endowed with
-this order of mind. While they all form subdivisions
-of a distinct intellectual class of humanity
-these are generally the same. That is, they are, all
-of them, always under all circumstances, right. All
-of these classes, fundamentally, follow the same sequences
-of thought. They differ of course in minor
-details, but they always meet on that narrow strip
-of ground upon which they have erected their inflexible
-model for humanity, with just room enough
-by its side for the scaffold upon which to hang those
-who do not accept it.</p>
-
-<p>Now, when, by any coincidence, the representatives
-of any two of these species meet in the mistaken supposition
-that there is any disagreement between
-them, there is bound to be trouble of course, and
-whenever say a Socialist of the impossibilist wing
-of the party, and a policeman&mdash;and all good policemen
-are impossibilists&mdash;meet, we have posited
-the old problem in physics of an irresistible body
-meeting an impenetrable substance.</p>
-
-<p>This phenomenon occurred on two or three occasions
-when policemen interfered with Socialists
-speaking in the streets. I am sure the Socialists in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[318]</span>
-question could have regretted the circumstance no
-more than I, for if there was one right which I
-tried to induce the police to respect, it was the
-right of free speech. On the whole they did fairly
-well, and at a time when there seemed to be an epidemic
-of ferocity among municipal officials in the
-land that led them to all sorts of unwarranted interferences
-with human and constitutional rights, we
-had folk of all sorts preaching their strange doctrines
-in our streets&mdash;Republicans, Democrats, Socialists,
-of their several sorts, I. W. W.&#8217;s, evangelists,
-anarchists, suffragists, Mormons, Salvationists,
-to say nothing of all the religious sects; wisdom was
-veritably crying in the streets. Emma Goldman,
-during that period of hysteria when the advent of
-that little woman in a city precipitated a siege of
-fear, delivered her course of lectures in Toledo to
-audiences that were very small, since there were no
-police to insure the attendance of those who were
-interested more in sensations than in her philosophic
-discussions of the German drama. And we tried
-to respect the rights of all.</p>
-
-<p>But it is one thing to give orders, and another to
-have them implicitly obeyed. Those of the indurated
-sectarian mind, who would order all life by mechanism,
-are given to saying that if they were in authority
-the police would do so and so, and would not do
-such and such a thing, that they would have the
-police see to this and that, etc., etc., etc. After
-they had been in power a while they would grow
-humble, if not discouraged, and, like me, be gratified
-if they succeeded in accomplishing about one-third<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[319]</span>
-of what they had hoped and planned to accomplish.
-Thus I, who had tried to give everybody
-the right of free speech, was now and then chagrined
-to find that someone had been interfered with for
-preaching some new heresy.</p>
-
-<p>The right of free speech cherished by all and exercised
-by none, since, owing to a disposition on
-the part of humanity to apply the hemlock or the
-noose in such cases, few say what they actually
-think, is one which certain of the Socialists preferred
-to have honored in the breach rather than in
-the observance. They would be never so happy,
-never so much in their element as when their address
-was interrupted; the greater the interference, the
-more acute the suffering for the cause, and when a
-man begins to feel that there is in him the blood of
-the martyrs, which, as he has heard somewhere, is the
-seed of the churches, why, of course, he is in such
-an exalted state of mind that there is no human way
-of dealing with him.</p>
-
-<p>And then that strange human spark, that mysterious
-thing we call personality, is always there&mdash;that
-element which makes impossible any perfectly
-or ideally organized state, social or otherwise. It
-is assumed by those of the order of mind under notice
-that it is possible so to organize human affairs
-that they will work automatically, with the precision
-of a machine, that they will work just as they are
-intended to work and in no other way, that it is,
-indeed, impossible for them to work in any other
-way, and that it may be predicted long in advance
-exactly how they will work at any given instant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[320]</span>
-and under any exigency, or circumstance. This, of
-course, is impossible, as everybody knows, except
-the impossibilists. That is why they are impossibilists.</p>
-
-<p>These speakers, however, who would dehumanize
-everything yet cannot after all dehumanize themselves,
-would frequently court arrest in the belief
-that the meed of pseudo-martyrdom thereby made
-possible was an ornament to their cause, and they
-would often try the patience of officers, who like the
-speakers themselves and all of us, are unfortunately,
-or perhaps fortunately, only human. Thus a Socialist
-speaker standing on his soap box, in the course of
-his remarks, indulged in certain reflections on the
-police as an institution. His sentiments in that respect
-were not perhaps heterodox, from the standpoint
-of my own orthodoxy, but we had been trying
-to create <i>esprit de corps</i> in the police department,
-and the policeman on that beat chancing to
-arrive at that inauspicious moment, and viewing life
-from an altitude less lofty and impersonal than the
-Socialist claimed for his outlook, took the scientific
-statements of the Socialist not in the academic sense,
-but as a personal reflection upon the body of which
-he, it seems, was growing rather proud of being a
-member, and at the conclusion of the effort he privately
-informed the speaker that if he said anything
-more against the Toledo Police Department he would
-&#8220;knock his block off.&#8221; He was reprimanded by his
-lieutenant, even after he had explained that he intended
-to execute his rude intention in his private
-and not in his official capacity.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[321]</span>The incident could be represented by the Socialists
-as a veritable reflection of the views of the administration
-on the important subject of Socialism,
-but they could not derive quite the satisfaction from
-it they had in another incident, or accident, which
-befell the most prominent and authoritative of their
-local leaders. He was speaking one evening in a
-crowded street, when he had the good fortune to be
-arrested by a captain of police. He made the occasion
-the opportunity for an edifying debate, and
-lingered as long as the captain would let him; but,
-in the end, was led to the police headquarters. This
-was the irresistible meeting the impenetrable. While
-everybody had a right to speak his mind in the
-streets, everybody else, we felt, had an equal right
-not to listen, even to free speech, and the police
-had orders to keep the streets and sidewalks clear
-for traffic. Now this captain was a chap who carried
-out orders given to him, and, as he was in
-command of the traffic squad, traffic was his specialty.
-If streets were to be cleared, then, in his
-philosophy, they were to be cleared, and no little
-thing like a constitutional inhibition against the
-abridgment of human speech would stand in his way.
-And then, after all, police are more apt to arrest
-people they do not like than those they do, and
-no one likes those who disagree with him. But after
-the arrest, the offender is turned out without chances
-of reparation. In this instance, feeling that the Socialist
-had had an indignity put upon him by his
-arrest, while I could not undo what had been done,
-I could order his release and tender him an official<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[322]</span>
-apology in writing, which was accepted, though not
-acknowledged. And an order was issued that a
-policemen who thereafter interfered with any voice
-crying in the wilderness should be dismissed from
-the department.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">LVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>As a boy, thirty years ago, I used to observe,
-with a boy&#8217;s interest, the little bob-tailed street cars
-that went teetering and tinkling, at intervals of
-half an hour, out a long street that ran within a
-block of my home. I watched the cars intently, and
-so intently that the impressions of their various
-colors, sounds and smells have remained with me
-to this day, speaking, in a way, of the conditions
-of a small American city of that time, and affording
-a means by which to measure that progress in material
-efficiency which is so often mistaken for progress
-in speculative thought.</p>
-
-<p>It may have been that my interest was intensified
-by the fact that down in Urbana Street cars
-were unknown, though they were not unimagined,
-since we used to see them when we went to Cincinnati,
-and I could then, and I can still, recall, though
-time has softened the poignancy of that hour, the
-pain of parting with a certain noble horse which
-my father sold to a man of dark and hateful aspect,
-and of the morsel of comfort I derived from the
-stipulation, invalid enough to be sure, my father
-made with the dealer, that the horse was not to be
-put to street-car service. That, by my father, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[323]</span>
-so by me myself, was held to be the most cruel, degrading
-and ignoble fate that could befall a horse.
-But another reason for my interest was the possession
-of a curiosity to which the passing show has
-always been novel, generally amusing, sometimes
-pleasing and often saddening, too&mdash;a curiosity in
-life which I hope will endure fresh and wholesome
-until life&#8217;s largest curiosity shall be satisfied at the
-end of life.</p>
-
-<p>The progress of the little street car under notice
-was leisurely and deliberate, sometimes it would
-wait obligingly for a woman, half a block away, who
-hurried puffing, and fluttering, and waving, to reach
-the street corner, and when she had clambered
-aboard, the driver would slowly unwind his brake,
-cluck to his horse, the rope traces would strain
-and the car would bowl along. Ten blocks away
-from the business section, or a few blocks further
-on, the little car with its five windows and small
-hooded platform would enter upon a bare, though
-expectant scene of vacant lots, and about a mile
-out, where there was some lonely dwelling staring
-blankly and reproachfully as though it had been
-misled, and then abandoned, and further on a few
-small, expectant cottages, the long, low street-car
-barn was reached, the car was driven on to a little
-turntable, slowly turned about and started back.
-Sometimes, if I was lucky, I had a chance to witness
-the change of horses, and to experience a nebulous
-pity for the nag that ambled contentedly into the
-stable, and did not seem to be very tired after all.</p>
-
-<p>On Summit Street there were grander cars, each<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[324]</span>
-drawn by two horses, and there were other lines in
-town, each with its cars painted a distinguishing
-color. There was one line that went out Collingwood
-Avenue, far to the very country itself; its cars
-bowled under noble trees and even past a stately
-mansion or two, or what in those days seemed stately
-mansions, and it was pleasant, it was even musical,
-to hear the tinkle of the bell on the horse&#8217;s collar.
-Then there was still another line that ran down the
-broad Maumee River, almost to Maumee Bay and
-the &#8220;marsh&#8221; where the French <i>habitants</i> lived, and
-spoke delightfully like the people in Dr. Drummond&#8217;s
-poems. On Saturday mornings my father was likely
-to send me on an errand to a superannuated clergyman
-who lived down there, and this involved a long,
-irritating journey. The journey occupied the whole
-morning, and spoiled a holiday. And then it was
-always cold, for, in the not too clear retrospect, I
-seem to have been sent on this particular errand
-only in winter, and the car was the coldest place in
-the world, especially when it got down where the
-winds from the icy lake could strike it. Its floor
-was strewn recklessly with yellow straw, in some
-ironical pretense of keeping the car warm, and I
-would sit there with feet slowly freezing in the
-rustling straw, and after I had inspected the
-two or three passengers, there was nothing to
-do but to read the notice over the fare-box in
-the front end of the car, until I had it quite by
-heart:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The driver will furnish change to the amount of
-Two Dollars, returning the full amount, thus enabling<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[325]</span>
-the passenger to put the exact fare in the
-box.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Then I could peer up toward the fare-box and
-look at the one nickel stranded half-way down its
-zig-zag chute, and look at the driver, standing on
-the front platform, slowly rocking from one foot to
-the other, bundled up in old overcoats, with his cap
-pulled down and his throat and chin muffled in a repulsive
-woolen scarf, hoary with the frost of his
-breath, and nothing of him visible except the shining
-red point of his frosted nose. His hands, one holding
-the reins, the other the brake-handle, were lost
-in the various strata of mittens that marked epochs
-co-extensive with those of the several overcoats. I
-had read once in a newspaper of a street-car driver
-in Indianapolis who, at the end of his run, never
-moved, but kept right on standing there, and when
-the barn-boss swore at him, it was found that he
-was dead, frozen at his post. And I sometimes wondered,
-as I dwelt on that fascinating horror, if it
-were possible that sometime, when the car reached
-the bay, this driver would not be found frozen.
-Sometimes I expected to be found frozen myself,
-but nothing exciting ever happened on that journey,
-and so, somehow, the trips out other streets and
-other avenues in other cars, remain more pleasantly
-in the memory, associated with the sunshine and
-the leafy arch of green overhead, with something of
-the romance and mystery of untraveled roads in the
-long vista ahead, while the winter trip down to the
-superannuated clergyman&#8217;s is cold and bleak and
-desolate, perhaps because it had no more interesting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[326]</span>
-result than the few minutes I begrudged in that
-stiff little &#8220;parlor,&#8221; where the preacher received me
-with the not unkindly regard of eyes that had the
-dazed expression of the very old. I can expiate the
-perfectly patent and impolite reluctance with which
-I visited the aged man, and the thoughtless contempt
-youth has for age itself, only by the hope that
-those dim eyes have since brightened at the realization
-of those glories they had so long foreseen,
-which formed perhaps the only consolation of a life
-that must have had little to gladden it on that forbidding
-spot.</p>
-
-<p>All these lines, and others like them in the
-sprawling young town, belonged each to different
-men, and once I happened to hear that the man who
-owned the line first mentioned say that every new
-family that moved into that thoroughfare or built
-a house there, meant $73.00 a year to him. A good
-many families moved out into that street, enough
-indeed to make a settlement that was a town in itself,
-growing and spreading at the end of the line. Gradually
-the gaunt vacancies between were built up,
-though not, it appears, until the man had grown
-discouraged and sold out, and so suffered the universal
-fate of the pioneer. One by one the other
-lines in town were sold, and finally a day came when
-all the lines were owned by a certain few men, who
-under our purely individualistic legal system, formed
-a company and thus could jointly rejoice in all the
-individual rights and privileges of a person, without
-any of his embarrassing moral duties and responsibilities.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[327]</span>I ceased to hear of the individual owner any
-more; I never saw him in his shirt-sleeves in his little
-office at the end of the line counting up the nickels
-of those new families which each meant $73.00 per
-annum to him, and it must have been about the
-same time that I began to hear of the traction company.
-There had been probably intervening experiments
-with tough mules, whom no one pitied, as
-everyone had pitied the horses they replaced, and
-there were, in other cities, astounding miracles of
-cable cars and elevated railways. And then electricity
-came as a motive power, and the streets
-were made hideous by the gaunt poles and makeshifts
-of wires, and the trolley cars came, and
-increased in size and numbers, and families swarmed,
-until out on those streets and avenues the great
-yellow cars went rushing and clanging by, with multitudes
-of people clinging to the straps and, toward
-evening, swarming like flies on the broad rear platforms,
-and the conductors in their blue uniforms
-shouting &#8220;Step lively!&#8221; with a voice as authoritative
-as that which the company spoke in the city
-councils. And the families continued to arrive, and
-to build houses, and to toil and to contribute each
-its $73.00 a year, though they did it with human
-reluctance and complaint, and grew dimly conscious
-that somewhere in the whole complicated transaction
-an injustice lurked. And finally this hidden injustice
-became the chief public concern of the people
-of the town, and an issue in local politics for more
-than a decade.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[328]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">LVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>It had been an issue, as I have more than once
-said in Jones&#8217;s time and in his campaigns, though
-the issues his tremendous personality raised were
-so vast and so general and so fundamental that
-they included all issues, as Emerson said his reform
-included all reforms. It ran like a scarlet thread
-through the warp and woof of our communal life;
-it was somehow associated with the ambitions of
-the meanest politician, it affected the fortunes of
-every man in business, and it was the means whereby
-the community came to have an ideal. The long
-story of it, like the story of the same interest in
-any town, would include triumphs and tragedies&mdash;and
-the way of politics through the town was strewn
-with the pitiable wrecks of character and of life
-itself that had been ruthlessly sacrificed to the insatiable
-greed of privilege. Only the other day one
-such wreck, once in a position of honor and trust in
-the municipality, was waiting in the outer office;
-he wanted half a dollar and a place to sleep. And
-another like him, most desperate of all, asked to be
-committed to a city hospital or even to the asylum
-for the insane; he had no other refuge, and as for
-the poorhouse, he said, not yet, not yet! And
-these were the sacrifices privilege demanded of its
-parasites; though their case morally, at least, could
-be no worse than that of privilege&#8217;s principal beneficiaries;
-not half so bad indeed, since they had lost
-the power of appreciation of spiritual values.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">[329]</span>I knew a reporter, an Irish lad, whom one of the
-attorneys of privilege sought to &#8220;befriend.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You work pretty hard, don&#8217;t you?&#8221; asked the
-attorney.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said the Irish lad.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And your salary is small?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And a mortgage on your mother&#8217;s home?&#8221; The
-agents of privilege always know a man&#8217;s necessities!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, now, I can tell you how things can be eased
-up a bit for you. For instance&mdash;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>After the proposal had been artfully made,
-the Irish lad thought a moment, and then he raised
-those blue eyes to the old lawyer.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your wife is prominent socially, isn&#8217;t she?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, yes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;President of&mdash;this and that, eh?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And your daughters just home from a finishing
-school in Europe, aren&#8217;t they?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes&mdash;but what&mdash;&mdash;?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I was wondering,&#8221; said the Irish lad, rising,
-&#8220;how you dared go home at night and look &#8217;em in
-the face.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Not all men though have the character, the moral
-resistance of that Irish lad, and the scores of the
-weak and erring ones are the tragic figures in the
-long drama of the traction company in the city,
-in any city&mdash;the drama that cannot be written.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">[330]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">LVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Meanwhile, the education of the general mind
-went on, and we were, after all, tending somewhither.
-Our experience in the greatest of our tasks demonstrated
-that, and in the change that gradually took
-place in sentiment concerning the street railway
-problem, there was an evidence of the development
-of a mass consciousness, a mass will, which some
-time in these cities of ours will justify democracy.
-It is of course the most difficult process in the world,
-for a mass of two hundred thousand people to unite
-in the expression of a will concerning a single abstract
-proposition. The mass to be sure can now
-and then as it were rear its head and blaze forth
-wrath and accomplish some instant work of destruction;
-even if it be nothing more than the destruction
-of an individual reputation. That is why the recall
-is so popular and so generously and frequently employed
-in those cities that have it. In such elections,
-with their personal and human center of interest, the
-people all turn out, while in a referendum involving
-some abstract principle, the vote cast is always
-small. That is why the referendum is so important,
-and the recall, relatively, so unimportant; the use
-of the first in the long run will afford a fine schooling
-for the people.</p>
-
-<p>The most familiar expression of this rage of
-course was the clamor for the indictment and imprisonment
-of someone connected in sinister ways
-with the company, a demand with which I never had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[331]</span>
-the slightest sympathy, to which I could never
-yield the slightest acquiescence. What good, though
-all the poor and miserable servitors of privilege
-were put in prison, while privilege itself remained?
-Such clamors have had their results; a few more
-broken lives, a little more sorrow and shame in the
-world, and the clamor ceases, and things go on the
-same as before.</p>
-
-<p>It is this instability, this variableness, this weariness
-of the public mind, on which privilege depends,
-with a cynical trust so often justified that it might
-breed cynicism in all observant and reflective natures.
-The street railway proprietors in Toledo
-expected each election to demonstrate this weariness
-in the people, and to restore them to, or at least
-confirm them in, the privileges they had enjoyed
-under the old r&eacute;gime.</p>
-
-<p>For a people to assume and for a decade consistently
-to maintain an attitude toward a public
-question therefore was a triumph of the democratic
-principle. That is what the people of Cleveland
-did; that is what the people of Detroit did; that
-is what the people of Toledo did. The successive
-stages of this process were most interesting to observe,
-the more especially since they caught in the
-movement even some of the street railway group
-and its political confreres themselves.</p>
-
-<p>In its origin the public will was destructive no
-doubt, that was the inarticulate disgust born of the
-long endurance of inadequate service, all the miseries
-of that contemptuous exploitation of the
-people so familiar in all the cities of America. To<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[332]</span>
-this, on the customary revelations of a corrupt domination
-of the political machinery of the city by the
-street railway company, there was added a moral
-rage&mdash;the one element needed to provide the spark
-for the mine. At first this rage against the company
-was such that any action taken by officials was popular
-so long as it injured or harassed or was
-somehow inimical to the company. And in consequence
-there was developed a kind of local jingoism
-or chauvinism; whenever popularity slackened or it
-was felt necessary to remind the electorate back in
-the ward of the sleepless vigilance of their representative
-in the council, a councilman had only to introduce
-some resolution that would be against the
-company&#8217;s interest. It was unfortunate, and had its
-evil phase, as any suggestion of intellectual dishonesty
-must ever have, and it made serious dealing
-with the subject extremely difficult and hazardous.
-It was difficult to recognize any of the company&#8217;s
-rights; and it was always at the risk of misunderstanding,
-and with the certainty of misrepresentation
-that this was done. But of course it was
-necessary to do this, in the course of the long and
-complicated transaction, that constant and inflexible
-opposition of the public with the private interest
-which now assumed the aspect of a noisy and
-furious war, and now the softer phases of diplomatic
-negotiations. Of course there were always those
-in town who knew exactly what was to be done; they
-could settle the vexatious problem with a facile gesture,
-between the whiffs of a cigarette on the back
-platform of a street car, or in an after dinner speech<span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">[333]</span>
-between the puffs of a cigar. The one was apt
-to advise that the &#8220;traction company be brought
-to time at once,&#8221; the other that an &#8220;equitable&#8221; settlement
-be &#8220;arranged&#8221; by conservative business
-men. Meanwhile the problem obviously consisted
-in the necessity of recognizing the private right in
-the proprietors and of securing the public right to
-the people, and to do this it was necessary to search
-out, and isolate, like some malignant organism, the
-injustice that somewhere lurked in this complex and
-irritating association.</p>
-
-<p>In my first campaign we proposed to grant no
-renewal of franchises at a rate of fare higher than
-three cents. Jones had advised it, and I had been
-committed to it long before. It was Tom Johnson&#8217;s
-old slogan, and it was popular. I used to explain to
-the crowds my own conviction that the problem
-never would be settled until we had municipal ownership,
-but there was in Toledo in those days very
-little sentiment for municipal ownership, and my
-conviction met with no applause, and was received
-only with mild toleration. In the second campaign,
-there was more indorsement; in the third there was
-a certain enthusiasm for the principle, in the fourth
-it seemed to be almost unanimous, and now the principle
-has become one of the cardinal articles of
-faith. I do not wish it to appear that I had converted
-all these people to my view; I had not tried
-to do that, and doubtless could not have done so
-had I tried, but the conviction came by the very
-necessities of the situation.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[334]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">LIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Those men who ventured early into the street-car
-business were pioneers; they assumed large risks, and
-they rendered a public service. They had the courage
-to undertake experiments; they had faith that
-the town would grow and become in time a city.
-And they staked all on the chance. They had little
-difficulty, if they had any at all, in securing franchises
-from the city to use the streets, for the people
-of the city were glad to have the convenience of
-transportation. Indeed many of the lines were community
-enterprises, organized by the men of a given
-neighborhood for the sake of the transportation
-merely, and not with any notion of personal profit.</p>
-
-<p>Franchise ordinances then were loosely drawn;
-men had no conception of what changes the future
-was to bring about, they lacked the imagination
-to prefigure it, the faith to believe it, and so the
-street-car promoters who came along a little later
-were the heirs of advantages which otherwise they
-would not have obtained. Under these advantages,
-these privileges, they or their immediate grantees
-were enabled to take over for their own use and
-profit the enormous social values that were being
-created in cities, not by them, but by all those families
-who moved in, and toiled, and wrought and
-built the modern city.</p>
-
-<p>This was the first phase of the street-car business,
-its experimental stage, commensurate with the
-rapid, disordered growth of the city in the middle<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[335]</span>
-and western states of America. Few indeed of the
-pioneers in the business became wealthy; many no
-doubt lost their money, though they tried in vain
-to vary or improve their fortunes through the
-changes that were rapidly developing the mighty
-problem of transporting the crowded populations
-of our cities. There were, for instance, the days
-when mules were substituted for horses, and sacrificed
-rapidly and ruthlessly on the principle that
-it was cheaper to replace them than to care for
-them, a system about as bad in its consuming cruelty
-as that adopted by some factories with reference
-to their human employees. Then, in a few of the
-larger cities, there were the cable cars, but the
-second phase came with the adoption of electricity
-as a motive power, and the coincident development,
-almost a miracle, of the towns of middle and western
-America into real cities.</p>
-
-<p>With electricity as a motive power, and the consequent
-cheapening of operation, the street-car business
-entered upon its second phase, and it ushered in
-at once the era of speculation in franchises and
-social values, watered stocks and bonds. The era
-of exploitation came upon us, and out of these privileges,
-out of other privileges to conduct other public
-utilities, i. e., privileges to absorb social values,
-enormous fortunes were made, with all the evils that
-come with a vulgar, newly-rich plutocracy. To
-keep, and extend, and renew these privileges, they
-must have their lawyers, and their newspapers to
-mislead and debauch the public mind; they must
-go into politics, organize and control the machines<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[336]</span>
-of both parties, bribe councilmen and legislators
-and jurors, and even have judges on the bench subservient
-to their will, so that the laws of the state
-and the grants of the municipality might be construed
-in their favor. The sordid, tragic tale of
-their domination of municipal politics is now universally
-known, and in the tale may be read the
-causes of most of our municipal misrule. It happened
-in Toledo as it happened everywhere, such is
-the inexorability of the general law, and the popular
-reaction was the same.</p>
-
-<p>And so we came upon a new, the third stage,
-since I have set out to be scientific in analysis of
-tractions, and the very name by which these big
-enterprises have latterly been called, that is, public
-service corporations, suggests the meaning and
-indicates the significance of that era. Two facts,
-or principles, had become perfectly apparent; first,
-that transportation, the primal necessity of a modern
-city, is a natural monopoly, and must be
-treated as such. Second, that if these public utility
-corporations are to continue to hold these monopolies,
-they must become public service corporations
-indeed, that is, they must serve the public. No more,
-then, the old corporation contempt of the people,
-at least outwardly expressed, but a softer voice in
-addressing them, and a new respect, perhaps grown
-sincere. Their old lobbyists disappeared from the
-council chamber and the city hall&mdash;for eight years
-they were not seen there. The companies had been
-primarily profit making institutions and only incidentally
-for public service, they were operated for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[337]</span>
-the private benefit of their owners in contempt of
-public right; the service was secondary.</p>
-
-<p>We may say that this third era is the era of
-regulation, or, as it is more apt to be, attempted
-regulation, by the city, in which the principle of
-the public interest as paramount to the private interest
-is to be the basis on which a private company
-shall be permitted to operate. This era will endure
-long enough to demonstrate itself a failure, the general
-mind will continue to learn, to inform itself,
-democracy will develop new functions, and we shall
-enter on the fourth, and perhaps the final stage,
-that of municipal ownership.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">LX</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>We came upon the scene just when the discussion
-was emerging from the second into the third
-of those phases into which I have divided the development
-of the problem. The franchises granted
-almost a generation before were about to expire,
-and new arrangements between the city and the
-traction company, the Big Con, as the newspaper
-argot would have it. Chicago had already, or almost,
-gone through her settlement; and though the
-settlement was pretty bad, it nevertheless recognized
-the principle that the value of a street railway
-franchise is a public, social, or communal value,
-produced by the community, and therefore belonged
-to the community. In Toledo the company had but
-about $5,000,000 of actual investment, while it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">[338]</span>
-had a capitalization in stocks and bonds of nearly
-$30,000,000, and the difference of $25,000,000 was
-the community value which the magnates had been
-exploiting for their own benefit. We simply proposed
-that this value should be returned to the
-people. We proposed, then, that the rate of fare
-to be charged by the company should be large
-enough and only large enough to pay a reasonable
-return on the actual investment and to provide good
-service, a service that was to be dictated, regulated
-and controlled by the city. This principle had
-been established, or at least admitted in the Chicago
-settlement, and the same thing had been done,
-though on a sounder and more scientific basis in
-Cleveland, where Tom Johnson&#8217;s long and gallant
-and intelligent contest already in effect had been
-won. Over in Detroit the same principles had been
-deduced, though the discussion there was so prolonged,
-as proved ultimately to be the case in Toledo,
-that the people demanded municipal ownership,
-without passing through the intervening experimental
-stage of regulation and control.</p>
-
-<p>There is of course nothing sacrosanct in three-cent
-fares. The movement of the people, which at
-the same time, in the old Russian phrase of
-Kropotkin, was a movement toward the people, had
-become an agitation for this rate. It had been begun
-years before by Mayor Pingree in Detroit, and
-was taken up in Cleveland by Tom Johnson, whose
-whole career in a romantic manner, at once embodied
-and illustrated the history of the street
-railway problem in the American city. The adoption<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[339]</span>
-of the phrase as a shibboleth or slogan of the
-progressive forces was simply and easily explained,
-for in the mind of Johnson and in the minds of those
-who were like him or were influenced by him, the
-difference between the prevailing fare of five cents
-and the proposed fare of three cents somehow measured
-the franchise value, or that social value which
-belonged to the people. Tom Johnson, indeed, used
-often to say that he favored a three-cent fare simply
-because it was two cents nearer nothing, thereby
-revealing a glimpse of his dream of a social order in
-which the municipality would provide transportation
-just as it provides sidewalks, sewers, bridges,
-etc., all of which are paid for at the treasury in
-taxes. It was believed and held by all of us, that
-this franchise value should be reclaimed or retained
-by the people in this direct and simple manner of
-lowering the fare.</p>
-
-<p>There was never any notion, of course, of interfering
-in any way with the existing rights of the
-company; it was to have all that to which it was
-entitled under its old franchises or contracts. But
-it was proposed that when we came to draw a new
-contract, the political relations of the city and the
-company were to be considered as of paramount
-importance, using the word &#8220;political,&#8221; of course in
-its old authentic sense, and not as expressing in any
-wise the sinister thing it has come to connote in the
-popular mind. We were determined to meet not only
-the conditions of the present, but to do what our
-forerunners in office had never done, that is, to protect
-the interests of the people of the future. I suppose<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[340]</span>
-this sounds very much like the trite generalities
-of the politician, but we sincerely tried to express
-the theory with definiteness and particularity. We
-sought not only a reduction of the fare and a regulation
-of the service in the public interest, but we
-wished to provide for that future day when, as a
-result of the certain growth of the city, the sure
-improvement in transportation facilities, and the inevitable
-development of the democratic function, the
-municipality is to undertake these enterprises as a
-proper public function.</p>
-
-<p>It was these principles we tried to bear in mind
-in those long negotiations which we held all during
-the months of one spring and summer over that
-big table in the council chamber. We were nervous
-when we entered upon this work, nervous as are
-those who enter the finals in some tournament of
-sport; we did not know much about the subject,
-and we were confronted by the street railway magnates
-and their clever lawyers. But we could learn
-as we went along, and we always had to our assistance
-Newton Baker over in Cleveland, and Peter
-Witt, and Carl Nau, whom we had employed as the
-city&#8217;s accountant when the time came at last when
-we could examine the company&#8217;s books; they had all
-gone through the long civil war in Cleveland, as
-had Professor Edward W. Bemis, whom we afterwards
-engaged in his quality of expert adviser on
-valuations.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps at first we laid too great stress on three-cent
-fares, though I do not know how we could have
-done otherwise. Dr. Delos F. Wilcox, who has written<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">[341]</span>
-an excellent work on the whole subject, had
-advised us indeed that a disproportionate amount
-of energy and effort had already been expended&mdash;not
-by us, only, but by all those in other cities who
-were in similar struggles&mdash;in the direction of low
-fares. He pointed out, I remember, that five cents
-in that day was worth little more than three cents
-or three and a half cents had been a decade before,
-according to the scale of prices then current; he
-thought that in terms of general prices the public
-had already secured three-cent fares without knowing
-it. It was a question of some subtlety and some
-intricacy, to be left to economists; we could not
-feel that our battle had been won so easily, and we
-did not undertake to console the people with the
-recondite theory. We had before us, in vision, and
-sometimes in their corporeal reality, the weary and
-exasperated strap-hangers, and the human sardines
-on the rear platform with their valid complaints;
-they all wanted low fares, good service, and seats.
-An old street-car man once said that to provide
-seats for everybody is an impossibility, and to
-prove this assertion he humorously classified humanity
-into three groups: &#8220;workers, clerkers and
-shirkers.&#8221; Each morning, he said, the workers go
-down at seven, the clerkers at eight, and the shirkers
-at nine, and that therefore it is easy to provide
-them all with seats in the morning hours; but
-that as all three classes wish to go home at the
-same hour in the evening, it is then physically impossible
-to provide them all with seats.</p>
-
-<p>But whether or not too great stress was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">[342]</span>
-three-cent fares we learned during those months of
-wearisome and futile negotiations, that the theory
-was not scientific. The people were entitled to
-their money&#8217;s worth in service, the company to adequate
-pay for the service it rendered, and as the
-basis of the whole transaction was a public necessity,
-the city had the right to control the service, to
-dictate what it should be. The old theory was that
-the people existed for the street-car company; the
-new principle was quite the reverse; the street-car
-company was but a temporary instrument of social
-service, and the social right was paramount to all
-others.</p>
-
-<p>The company therefore was entitled to a fare
-sufficient to enable it to provide the service thus
-demanded, and to do this it must charge enough to
-pay its operating expenses, taxes, and interest,
-enough to meet the cost of improvements and depreciation,
-and to pay a reasonable return on its investment.
-It was not entitled to any speculative
-return. There was no longer on the company&#8217;s part
-that risk its predecessors in interest, the pioneers or
-promoters or whatever they were, had been compelled
-to take; its investment was no longer precarious;
-nothing, indeed, could be more certain than
-the stability of street railway investments. Their
-securities, based upon a public necessity, supported
-by the diurnal comings and goings of all those thousands
-and hundreds of thousands of people, had become
-in a certain very real sense, a fixed burden
-upon the people of the city, a burden as fixed and
-inevitable as taxes. In the hands of private owners<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">[343]</span>
-such securities, under a franchise ordinance properly
-drawn, partake largely of the character of municipal
-bonds, which indeed they resemble in fundamentals
-and ends. The issue of securities was therefore to
-be as jealously guarded as an issue of municipal
-bonds, and overcapitalization, the prolific source of
-so much evil, was to be prevented. The enterprise
-had become as stable as any human institution can
-be, and with the limited risk there was to be applied
-the familiar principle of limited profit. The principle
-was recognized in Cleveland, where the return
-fixed as reasonable was 6 per cent., which is but little
-more than municipal bonds pay. And when this
-principle is established, municipal ownership almost
-automatically follows; investors used to large speculative
-profits, are ready to sell out to the municipality;
-thus, by indirection, democracy comes into
-her own.</p>
-
-<p>It was easy enough to fix most of the elements
-of this return; the accountants could do that, in
-their intricate discussions of car-miles and curves
-and straight lines of depreciation and points of
-saturation in traffic, and all that, but the tremendous
-difficulty was to determine just what the
-investment was and what was a reasonable return
-on that investment.</p>
-
-<p>It is this pass to which all such negotiations, conducted
-in sincerity, come at last; it is this on which
-the whole question hinges, it is this that might as
-well be done first as last, namely, to evaluate the
-property of the company. It is necessary not only
-to get at the investment and the return thereon, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">[344]</span>
-to ascertain what the city must pay when it comes
-to take over the street railway system.</p>
-
-<p>But we did not do it at first, and we did not do
-it at last. At first it was impossible to get it into
-the councilmanic head that it was at all necessary,
-especially since it cost money to retain the &#8220;experts,&#8221;
-as they are called, to do the work. They
-were prone to that old vice of the human mind which
-leads it to imagine that when it has stated the end
-to be achieved it has at the same time stated the
-means of achieving it,&mdash;like the advice to the bashful
-man &#8220;to assume an easy and graceful attitude,
-especially in the presence of ladies&#8221;&mdash;and when
-council was finally convinced and had provided the
-funds for the experts, we could not agree as to who
-should be employed. That is, the human equation
-was apparent. There was unhappily nobody but
-men to make evaluations, and all the engineers who
-were competent were employed by street railway
-companies, and expected or hoped to continue to be
-employed by street railway companies, and they had
-evolved so many fantastic notions of &#8220;intangible&#8221;
-value that they could account for almost any excess
-in artificial capitalization, and make the
-grossest exhibition of corporate greed in watering
-stocks appear like veritable self denial in frugality
-and economy. We selected Professor Bemis to represent
-the city, because he was one of the few of
-the &#8220;experts&#8221; committed to the people&#8217;s cause; he
-had advised Tom Johnson throughout his long war.
-But the company never could be brought to select
-anybody, or to agree upon the third arbiter&mdash;even<span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">[345]</span>
-to accept the Judge of the United States Circuit
-Court when, against the advice of the whole administrative
-circle, I proposed him.</p>
-
-<p>Again and again in our prolonged negotiations
-we returned, as in a vicious circle, to this point;
-again and again we reached this impasse.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">LXI</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Meanwhile, the franchises were expiring, and the
-time drew on when the company would have no
-rights left in the streets. And here was the opportunity
-for the mind that had the power, or the
-defect, of isolating propositions, of regarding them
-as absolute, of ignoring the intricate relativity of
-life. &#8220;Put the company off the streets,&#8221; was the
-cry; &#8220;make it stop running its cars; bring it to its
-knees.&#8221; However, we could not bring the company
-to its knees without bringing the riders to their
-feet; we could not put the company off the streets,
-without at the same time and by the same process,
-putting the people on the streets; when the cars
-stopped running the people began walking. The
-public convenience was paramount.</p>
-
-<p>Then Mr. Cornell Schreiber, the City Solicitor,
-hit upon a plan. He drew an ordinance providing
-that the company could use the streets wherein its
-rights had expired, only on the condition that it
-carry passengers at a three-cent fare, and the ordinance
-was at once passed by the council. It was
-of doubtful legality, but it had its effect in a world<span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">[346]</span>
-of human beings. Before it was effective even, people
-were tendering three cents as fare; and in the face
-of the difficulty of dealing with a whole populace in
-this mood, the company agreed to put in force a
-temporary rate of three cents during the rush hours
-of the morning and evening, and it lowered fares in
-the other hours and made further concessions. And
-there we let the matter rest.</p>
-
-<p>And, since the education of the general mind
-never stops, the people were learning. Their
-patience was time and again exhausted by the unavoidable
-length of the franchise dispute, for the
-problem was to them, as to most Americans, new, the
-legal questions in which the whole subject was
-prolific had not been settled, there was the interruption
-of business and convenience and pleasure
-attending long continued negotiations, and perhaps
-more than all that irritation of the public temper
-which proceeds from all communal disputes. The
-company&#8217;s representatives counted on all this to tire
-the people out; and since the controversy assumed a
-political complexion, and there was as always the
-difficulty of sustaining the mass will, they had hopes
-that by delay the people in weariness would surrender.
-The time came when the sentiment in favor
-of municipal ownership was so strong that the Independents
-adopted the view I had expressed and
-declared it to be their purpose to grant no renewals
-of franchises at all, but to let the company
-operate on sufferance until the city itself could take
-over the lines.</p>
-
-<p>During the course of the long struggle a change<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">[347]</span>
-had come over the spirit of the people, and this
-change had been reflected in the laws. The greatest
-difficulty had been found in the city&#8217;s want
-of autonomy; the cities of Ohio not only lacked the
-power to own and operate public utilities, but they
-even had few rights in contracting with the private
-companies. The street-car companies had always
-been more ably and assiduously represented in the
-state legislature than had the people themselves;
-the people had not had the strength to wrest these
-powers from the legislature, and indeed, in their patience
-and toryism, they had not made many efforts
-to do so. Thus our campaign led us out into the
-state, and the end, toward which we had to struggle,
-was the free city; the last of our demands was home
-rule. In the relations between public utility corporations
-and the municipality, our cities were a whole
-generation behind the cities of Great Britain, Germany,
-France and Belgium. Indeed, in relation to
-all social functions we were not much further advanced
-than was Rome in the second century.</p>
-
-<p>As to the medieval cities of Italy, the free cities
-of Germany and the cities of Great Britain, struggling
-all of them against some overlord, some king,
-noble or bishop, so at last there came to our cities a
-realization of the vassalage they were under. Their
-destinies were in the hands of the country politicians
-in the state legislature who had no sympathy with
-city problems, because they had no understanding
-of them. Oftenest indeed they had a contempt for
-them, they all held to the Puritan ideal. But a demand
-for freedom went up from Cleveland, from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">[348]</span>
-Cincinnati, from Columbus, from Toledo. The legislature
-began to make its reluctant concessions; it
-gave cities, for instance, the right to have street
-railway franchises referred to the people for approval
-or rejection. And at last in the great awakening,
-the state constitution was ultimately amended
-and cities were given home rule. It was the irony of
-life that Golden Rule Jones and Tom Johnson could
-not have lived to see that day!</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">LXII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>A few weeks after my election to a fourth term
-I wrote out and gave to the reporters a statement
-in which I said that I would not be again a
-candidate for the office of mayor. I had been thinking
-of my old ambition in letters, and of those novels
-I had planned to write. Already I had been six
-years in office and I had not written a novel in all
-that time. And here I was, just entering upon another
-term. If ever I were to write those novels
-I would better be about it, before I grew too old
-and too tired. The politicians, regarding all such
-statements as but the professional insincerities of
-their trade, could not consider my decision seriously
-of course, or credit its intention. They were somewhat
-like my friends in the literary world, or like
-some of them at least, who were unable to understand
-why I should not continue indefinitely to run for
-mayor, though the politicians were not so innocent
-and credulous, since they did not believe that I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">[349]</span>
-could as inevitably continue to be elected. I suppose
-it was the life of action that appealed to my
-literary friends or to their literary imaginations;
-they had the human habit of disparaging their own
-calling, and, if they did not hold my performance
-in that field as lightly as the politicians held it, they
-wondered why I did not prefer politics. The politicians
-in their harangues spoke of my writings bitterly,
-as though they were a personal affront to
-their intelligences, and urged the electorate to rebuke
-me for spending my time upon such nonsense.
-If I had not known that they had never read my
-books, or any books, all this might have been chilling
-to the literary aspiration, but I knew them to their
-heart&#8217;s core, where there was nothing but contempt
-for books, and, as I sometimes thought, yielding too
-much to cynicism and despair, nothing but contempt
-for any sort of beauty or goodly impulse. Of
-course, they were not so bad as that; out of politics
-they were as good as anyone or as anything; we
-instinctively recognize the vitiating quality of the
-political atmosphere in our constant use of the
-phrase &#8220;if it could only be taken out of politics,&#8221;
-as with the tariff, the currency, municipal government,
-etc. But my friends in the political line could
-join my friends in the literary line in the surprise
-they felt at my decision to retire at the end of that
-last term. The politicians did not think I meant
-what I said, of course; it is quite impossible for a
-politician to imagine a man&#8217;s meaning what he says,
-since politicians so seldom mean what they say themselves;
-they considered it merely as bad politics to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">[350]</span>
-have said such a thing at all. &#8220;It&#8217;ll embarrass you
-when you run again,&#8221; they would warn me in their
-bland <i>na&iuml;vet&eacute;</i>. It did not embarrass me, however,
-because I would not and did not run again, though I
-had to decline a nomination or two before they were
-convinced, but their own lack of faith, those who
-were still Independents, at least, proved an ultimate
-embarrassment to them, for they neglected to agree
-upon a candidate to succeed me, and by the next
-election they had grouped themselves in factions,
-each with its own candidate. Perhaps this untoward
-result came to pass as much because the independent
-movement by that time had become the Independent
-party, as for any other reason discernible to the
-mind of man; at least, it was disparaged by the use
-of that term, which implied its own reproach in
-Toledo, and its sponsors conducted themselves so
-much after the historic precedents of faction in political
-parties, by separating into the inevitable right
-and left wing, that they managed to get themselves
-soundly beaten.</p>
-
-<p>Eight years is a long time to serve in any office.
-My grandfather had given four years to the Civil
-War, and I had found the mayor&#8217;s office as trying,
-as difficult, and as alien as he had found his martial
-experience. The truth is, that long before the eight
-years were over the irritation of constant, persistent,
-nagging criticism had got on my nerves, and, besides
-the pain of misunderstanding and misrepresentation,
-I grew to have a perfect detestation for those
-manipulations which are the technic of politics.
-And, then, one cannot be a mayor always,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">[351]</span>
-and it were better to retire than to be dismissed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I thought you didn&#8217;t mind criticism?&#8221; a
-man said to me one day. &#8220;I always supposed that
-after a while one became callous.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>My dear friend Bishop Williams of Detroit was
-at the table, and I shall ever be grateful to him for
-the smile of instant comprehension and sympathy
-with which he illuminated the reply he made before
-I had time to speak.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, callous,&#8221; he remarked, &#8220;or&mdash;raw.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was precisely that. There were those who were
-always saying to me: &#8220;I know you don&#8217;t mind what
-they say about you, but I never could stand it; I&#8217;m
-too sensitive.&#8221; It was a daily experience, almost as
-difficult to endure as the visits of those who came to
-report the latest ill-natured comment; they did it
-because they were friends and felt that I should know
-it. But Bishop Williams knows life and understands
-human nature more completely and more tolerantly
-than any clergyman I ever knew.</p>
-
-<p>And then politics have the dreadful effect of beating
-all the freshness out of a man; if they do not
-make him timid, they make him hesitant and cautious,
-provident of his opinion; he goes about with
-his finger on his lips, fearful of utterance, and, when
-he does speak, it is in guarded syllables which conceal
-his true thought; he cultivates solemnity and
-the meretricious art of posing; humor is to be
-avoided, since the crowd is perplexed by humor and
-so resents it, and will have only the stale rudimentary
-wit of those stories which men, straining to be
-funny, match at the banquet board. And when he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">[352]</span>
-indulges himself in public speech it is to pour forth
-a tide of words,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="indent4">Full of sound and fury,</div>
-<div class="verse">Signifying nothing.</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>I used to be haunted continually by a horrid fear
-that I should lose the possibility of ever winning the
-power of utterance, since no such prudence is at all
-compatible with the practice of any art. For art
-must, first of all, be utter sincerity, the artist&#8217;s business
-is to think out his thoughts about life to the
-very end, and to speak them as plainly as the power
-and the ability to speak them have been given to
-him; he must not be afraid to offend; indeed, if he
-succeed at all, he must certainly offend in the beginning.
-I am quite aware that I may seem inconsistent
-in this notion, since I have intimated my belief
-that Jones was an artist; and so he was, in a
-way, and, if I do not fly to the refuge of trite sayings
-and allege him as the exception that proves the
-rule, I am sure that I may say, and, if I have in the
-least been able to convey any distinct conception of
-his personality, the reader will agree with me when
-I say, that he was <i>sui generis</i>. And besides it was
-not as a politician that he won his success. Had he
-ventured outside the political jurisdiction of his own
-city the politicians instantly would have torn him
-asunder because he had not been &#8220;regular.&#8221; And,
-that, I find, when I set it down, is precisely what I
-am trying to say about the artist; he must not be
-regular. Every great artist in the world has been
-irregular, as irregular as Corot, going forth in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">[353]</span>
-early morning in search of the elusive and ineffable
-light of dawn as it spread over the earth and stole
-through the greenwoods at Barbizon, or as Manet,
-or Monet, or any other man who never knew appreciation
-in his lifetime. And Jones and all like him
-are brothers of those incomparable artists; they are
-not kin in any way to the world&#8217;s politicians.</p>
-
-<p>And then so many of the old guard were dead.
-A strange and tragic fate had pursued us, overtaking,
-one after another, our very best&mdash;Jones, first
-of all, and then Oren Dunham, E. B. Southard, Dad
-McCullough, Franklin Macomber, Lyman Wachenheimer,
-Dr. Donnelly, William H. Maher. These
-brave, true souls were literally burned out in the
-fires of that fierce and relentless conflict, and then
-there came that soft autumn night when seven of
-our young men in a launch were run down by a
-freighter on Maumee Bay and drowned, every one
-of them.</p>
-
-<p>I shall never forget Johnson Thurston as he sat
-in my office during that last campaign, recalling
-these men who had been to him as comrades in arms,
-and, what affected him more sorely, the fact that in
-our overabundant political success the ideals that
-had beckoned them on had become blurred in the
-vision of those who came after them. I detected
-him in the act of drawing his handkerchief furtively
-from his pocket, and hastily pressing it to his eyes,
-as he stammered something in apology for his emotion....</p>
-
-<p>Thus there came the irresistible conviction that
-the work of the politician was not for me. There<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">[354]</span>
-was other work I wished to do. I doubt whether
-the politician&#8217;s work is ever permanent, though it
-is too much to say that it lacks real value; I have
-never been able to think it out. The work of few
-men, of course, is permanent, sometimes the work of
-the artist least of any. But, however ephemeral, if
-the artist&#8217;s work is done in sincerity, it is of far
-greater worth than the work of the politician, if for
-no other reason, than because, to recall again those
-words of George Moore which can never lose their
-charm or their consolation, the traffic of the politician
-is with the affairs of this world, while the artist
-is concerned with the dreams, the visions, and the aspirations
-of a world that is beyond this. I have
-quoted them before in these pages, I know; they cannot
-be quoted too often, or too often read by us
-Americans, if, by pondering them, we may plumb
-their profound depths. For we all read human history
-too superficially. Kings and emperors, princes
-and dukes, prime ministers and generals may fascinate
-the imagination for a while, but if life is ever to
-unfold its possibilities to the later consciousness,
-these become but the phantoms of vanished realms,
-and there emerge more gracious figures, Phidias and
-Theocritus; Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio; Raphael,
-Leonardo da Vinci, Titian, and Correggio;
-Donatello and Michelangelo; Sidney, Spenser, Tyndale,
-Shakespeare, and Ben Jonson. These and
-the other artists and humanists of their times are
-veritable personalities in our world, far more than
-Elizabeth, or the dukes of the Medici, or even Pericles.
-For from periods such as these their names<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">[355]</span>
-made illustrious, from the Revival of Learning, the
-Renaissance, the Reformation, man emerged as Man,
-clothed with the beauty and power of an emancipated
-spirit. In the freedom of the mind, the spontaneous
-outburst of ecstasy and delight, the new-born possibility
-of loveliness and harmony and joyous existence,
-they not only exalted life with art, but gained
-the courage to undertake sterner examinations of its
-mystery. And this same perennial spirit of humanism
-built, not only the proud and voluptuous cities
-of Tuscany and Lombardy, but the wealthy free
-cities of Flanders and Germany&mdash;and it discovered
-America, not the America of the senses alone, but
-the larger, nobler America of the mind.</p>
-
-<p>And, surely, this America is not always to bear
-the reproach of having no music, and so little painting
-and literature of her own. Surely the aspirations
-of this new land, with the irresistible impulse
-of the democratic spirit and humanistic culture are
-to find emotional expression in the terms and forms
-of enduring beauty. It was this sublime adventure
-that interested me far more than the trivial and
-repulsive wrangles of the politicians....</p>
-
-<p>Our opponents had never known how wholly right
-they were in their reiterated charge that I was but
-a dreamer; incorrigible dreamer indeed, and nothing
-more!</p>
-
-<p>But in these years I had given my city the best
-there was in me, little as that was, and when the
-legislature made provision for the constitutional convention,
-which met at Columbus, and, after months
-of deliberation, submitted a long list of amendments<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">[356]</span>
-to the fundamental law of the state, among them
-that one which granted home rule to cities, I felt,
-for it was an emotion deeper than thought, that if
-the people could only be induced to approve that
-amendment the long anticipated and happy release
-was at hand. We had been engaged on an impossible
-task; we had been trying to regenerate the city by
-means of electing to office persons who in themselves
-would reflect the communal aspiration, but this could
-not be continued indefinitely; the cities could achieve
-no genuine reform until they were autonomous.
-With home rule democracy would have the means of
-development, and the people the opportunity of self-expression;
-they would have to depend on themselves;
-they could no longer, with an Oriental fatalism,
-neglect their own destiny and then lay the blame
-for the inevitable catastrophe on the mayor, or the
-political boss, or the country members of the legislature.</p>
-
-<p>There were, if I remember well, about fifty of
-these amendments, among them provisions for the
-initiative and referendum, woman suffrage, and
-many other progressive and radical doctrines, in
-addition to our beloved home rule for cities, and,
-when the campaign opened in behalf of their adoption,
-Newton Baker, who a year before had been
-elected mayor of Cleveland, proposed that he and
-I make a tour of the state in a motor car and speak
-for the home rule amendment, since all the others
-had their devoted proponents.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing more delightful than a campaign tour in
-company with Newton Baker could be imagined, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">[357]</span>
-I had visions of our little caravan, out on the country
-roads of Ohio, going from town to town, and of
-our standing up in the car and speaking to the crowds
-of farmers who had come into the town to hear
-us, or having come for their Saturday marketing,
-would pause while we told them of the needs of cities.
-I had always believed that if the farmers could only
-be brought to understand the cities they would not
-be so obdurate with us, but would enlarge our opportunities
-of self-expression and self-government. I
-could fancy myself standing up and leaning over
-the side of the car and talking to them, while they
-stood there in their drab garments, their faces drawn
-in mental concentration, looking at us out of eyes
-around which were little wrinkles of suspicion,
-wondering what designs we had upon them; at
-first they would stand afar off, perhaps on the
-other side of the street, as they used to do when
-we went out to speak to them in the judicial
-campaigns; but then presently they would draw
-a little closer, until at last they crowded about
-the car, staying on to the end, and then perhaps
-even vouchsafing us the conservative approval of
-scattered applause. Or I would dramatize Baker as
-speaking, while I sat there utterly charmed with his
-manner, his clear and polished expression, and envied
-him his ability to speak with such surprising
-fluency, such ease and grace, as if the fact of putting
-words together so that they would form clear, logical
-and related sentences were nothing at all, and
-wondering why it was that everyone that heard was
-not instantly converted to his plan, whatever it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">[358]</span>
-was.... And then, between times, Baker
-would not be talking politics at all; he would not be
-indulging in politician&#8217;s low gossip, slandering every
-one he knew&mdash;the ineradicable and, I suppose, inevitable
-habit of politicians, because in public they
-are obliged to be so suave in utterance and so smiling
-and ingratiating in manner. Baker was not like
-them at all; he knew a vast deal of literature and
-could talk about books with comprehension; if you
-mentioned a passage from John Eglinton, or a scene
-from Tourgenieff, or a poem of Yeats or Masefield,
-he would know what you were talking about; he is not
-one of those who, by the little deceit of a thin, factitious
-smile of appreciation, pretend an acquaintance
-they have never enjoyed. Baker has been able to
-keep the habit of reading, even in politics, a singular
-achievement. Only he would not read novels that
-were in the somber or tragic manner; I used to tell
-him that this was a sign he was growing old, since
-only the buoyancy of youth can risk its spirit in such
-darkened paths. For instance, he would never read
-my novel about prisons, &#8220;The Turn of the Balance&#8221;;
-he said he knew it was too terrible. But I did not
-reproach or blame him. I no longer like to read
-terrible books myself, since life is....</p>
-
-<p>But that pretty scheme fell through, our tour
-was abandoned, and we went separate ways, though
-we did have the joy of speaking together on several
-occasions, once here in Toledo, where we opened the
-campaign in old Memorial Hall, and again in a town
-down the state, and at last in two great meetings in
-Cleveland, where they got out the old tent Johnson<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">[359]</span>
-had used in his campaigns, and the audiences its
-canvas walls sheltered, there under the flaring
-torches, were inspired by his spirit as once they
-had been by his presence, and with the enthusiasm
-of them fresh in my heart I set out from
-Cleveland that last week of the campaign for the
-long drive to Columbus, where the campaign was to
-close.</p>
-
-<p>It was a hot day in early September; the clouds
-were piled high in the west as we started, and the
-air was suffocating in its dense humidity; plainly it
-was to be a day of thunder and lightning and tropical
-showers. My friend, Henry W. Ashley, who
-understands democracy to the fundamentals (his
-father was the friend of Lincoln and wrote the
-Fifteenth Amendment), was with us, for he was ever
-an interested spectator of our politics. We went
-by the way of Oberlin because Ashley wished to see
-the college campus and indulge some sentimental reflections
-in a scene that had been so vitally associated
-with the old struggle of the abolitionists. The
-storm which had been so ominously threatening all
-the morning broke upon us as we slowly made our
-way through the country south of Oberlin, as desolate
-a tract as one could find, and we were charged
-as heavily with depression as were the clouds with
-rain as we thought of the futility of attempting to
-convince the inhabitants of such a land that they
-had any responsibility for the problems that were
-vexing the people in the cities of the state. I remember
-a village through which we passed; it was about
-noon, according to our watches, though, since in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">[360]</span>
-country the people reject Standard time and regulate
-their leisurely affairs by &#8220;God&#8217;s time,&#8221; noon
-was half an hour gone, and, after their dinners, they
-were seeking the relaxation they did not seem to need.
-The rain had ceased, and on the village green under
-the clearing sky the old men had come out to pitch
-horseshoes. Among them was a patriarch whose
-long white beard, stained with the juice of the tobacco
-he resolutely chewed, swept the belt of his
-slack trousers; he was in bare feet. The human
-foot after it has trod this earth for three score years
-and ten is not a thing of beauty, and Ashley joked
-me, as we labored in the mud of those deplorable
-roads, for my temerity in hoping that we could convert
-that antediluvian to our way of thinking.</p>
-
-<p>Had the task been wholly mine I should not have
-undertaken it, and, of course, in that instance I did
-not attempt it; the old barefoot quoit player stood
-to us a symbol of the implicit and stubborn conservatism
-of the rural districts. But there were
-others in the field, an army of them, indeed; Herbert
-Bigelow, the radical preacher of Cincinnati, who had
-been president of the constitutional convention;
-Henry T. Hunt, Cincinnati&#8217;s young mayor; and,
-most influential of all of them perhaps, James M.
-Cox, destined that autumn to be elected governor of
-Ohio. And, besides all these, there was the spirit
-of the times, penetrating at last with its inspiring
-ideas even the conservatism of the country people. I
-was confident that the old man could be counted
-upon to vote for the initiative and referendum at
-any rate, since one so free and democratic in cos<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">[361]</span>tume
-and manner must be of the democratic spirit
-as well, though I had my doubts of him in that moment
-when he should put on his spectacles and examine
-the amendments abolishing capital punishment,
-and granting home rule to cities.</p>
-
-<p>But the sun came out again as we climbed the hills
-that overlook Mansfield, to command a lovely scene,
-broad fertile valleys all renewed by the rain and
-flooded with sunshine, and I remembered that Altgeld
-had once lived there, and beheld this same landscape,
-that he had taught school in that town and
-from there had gone away with a regiment to fight
-in the Civil War. The chauffeur got out and took
-the chains off the tires, while we sat silent under the
-influences of the beauty of those little Ohio hills.
-And then, as we started on, the clouds returned, the
-scene darkened, and it began to rain again, and, before
-we knew, the car skidded and we were in the
-ditch. The wife of the farmer whose garden fence
-we had broken in our accident revealed all the old
-rural dislike of the urbanite; she said she was glad
-of our fate, since motorists were forever racing by
-and killing her chickens, and with this difficulty I left
-Ashley to deal, since he had been president of a railroad
-and was experienced in adjusting claims, and,
-after he had parleyed a while, I saw him take out his
-pocketbook, and then the chauffeur got the car out
-of the ditch and we were on our way again.</p>
-
-<p>The scenes and the experiences of that journey
-remain with me in a distinctness that is keen in my
-senses still; because I suppose I felt that in the race
-with time we were then engaged upon, if we were to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">[362]</span>
-reach Columbus that evening for the meeting which
-was to close the campaign, I was in a symbolic manner
-racing with my own fate; that campaign a success
-and I should be free. I should have liked to linger
-a while in Delaware, where I had spent a portion
-of my boyhood when my father was a pastor there,
-and where in the University my uncle William F.
-Whitlock had been a professor of Latin and literature
-for half a century, dean of the faculty, and, for
-a while, president. As we passed by the chapel in
-the shade of the old elms on the campus I felt that I
-could still hear the solemn strains of the noble hymn
-they sang at his funeral, the lusty young voices of a
-thousand students, united with the quivering trebles
-of some old clergymen, in &#8220;Faith of Our Fathers,
-Living Still.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>My eyes could pierce the walls of the chapel,
-closed and silent that afternoon for the autumn term
-had not opened, and I could see myself sitting there
-in the pew with our family, and looking at the portrait
-in oil of my uncle on the wall, among the portraits
-of the other presidents of the University,
-faintly adumbrating on his great smoothly shaven
-face the smile of quizzical humor which he wears in
-my memory. I sat there,</p>
-
-<p class="center">by these tears a little boy again,</p>
-
-<p>and thought of those days so long before when at
-evening he would come to our house and stand
-spreading his hands before the fire for a while; he
-generally brought under his arm a book for my
-father to read. I remembered that he used to carry<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">[363]</span>
-papers in his high hat, and that his coat stood away
-from his neck, round which he wore a low standing
-collar, with a black cravat. He seemed to carry in
-the pocket of his waistcoat an endless succession of
-eyeglasses; he would use a pair, take them down
-from his high nose, lay them on the table, forget
-them, and, when he wished to read again, draw
-another pair from his waistcoat pocket. And I
-went on thinking of him as he looked over his glasses
-on that evening when I had gone late into his study
-and found him bent over his desk with the &#8220;Satires&#8221;
-of Juvenal before him, studying his lesson for the
-morrow, he said. I thought he knew all the Latin
-there was left in this world, but, &#8220;Oh, no,&#8221; he said,
-and added: &#8220;If you would sometimes study at this
-hour of the night perhaps&mdash;&mdash;&#8221; He did not finish his
-sentence, since it finished itself.... &#8220;I don&#8217;t
-exactly know how to render that passage, Professor,&#8221;
-a student, blundering through an unmastered
-lesson, said in conciliatory accents one morning.
-&#8220;Ah, that has been evident for some time,&#8221; my uncle
-replied.... And now there he lay in his coffin,
-on the spot in that dim chapel where he had so often
-stood up to address the students; he was gone with
-all those others whose portraits hung on the wall,
-men who had stood to me in my boyhood as the great
-figures of the world. I should see him walking under
-those trees no more, his tall form stooped in habitual
-meditation.... They were all big, those Whitlock
-forbears of mine, six feet tall every one of them,
-grim Puritans, I think, when they first came to this
-country three centuries ago.... And I had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">[364]</span>
-a vision of my uncle as walking that afternoon in
-other groves with all these dark ministerial figures
-that towered over my boyhood. They were all Puritans,
-too, strong and rugged men, inflexible, obdurate,
-much enduring, stern pioneers whose like is
-known no more. And I, who could join in
-the lofty strains of that old hymn, as a memorial
-to my uncle, could find unavailing regret
-in my reverence.... But all changes, and
-it was a time of change, one of those periods
-which make up the whelming tragedy of this life.
-And, as they had gone, so all the old combinations
-had disappeared with them, resolved into the
-elements that make up that shadowy vale we call
-the past.... But we were driving on, racing
-away from that past as fast as we could go, on by
-the cemetery where my uncle lies in his grave, on
-by the rocky ledges of the Olentangy, the little
-stream where we boys used to swim, and, just as
-darkness was falling, besmattered with mud, we
-drove into Columbus, and along High Street, hideous
-in the crazy decorations that were hung out in honor
-of the State Fair, and up to the Neil House&mdash;and
-across the street on the steps of the old state house
-four or five thousand people already gathered for
-the meeting at which I was to be the only speaker.
-A bath and a bite of supper, and then across the
-street to the meeting, and I was standing there before
-that vast crowd, and over us the shadowy mass
-of the old capitol, in which my grandfather had made
-the first motion that was ever put in it as a member
-of the senate half a century before; he told me that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">[365]</span>
-his two sons danced all night at the ball with which
-its opening was celebrated....</p>
-
-<p>And so, on that brilliant Sunday morning in September,
-as we entered the motor car in Columbus,
-with the impressions of the great meeting of that
-Saturday night still fresh and vivid in the mind, I
-could settle myself for the long drive back to Toledo
-over the white pikes that wound northward between
-the fair fields of our beautiful Ohio, and say to myself,
-over and over, with the delicious sensations of
-a secret, that the relief had almost come at last, and
-that now I could do the thing I loved to do&mdash;if only
-the people would approve the constitutional amendments
-at the election on Tuesday. There were the
-happiest of auguries in the sky; it was without a
-cloud to fleck its blue expanse, and the sun blazed
-and its light sparkled in the fresh air, and as we
-rode the fields swept by, the pastures still green, the
-ripening corn tall in maturity, nodding its heavy
-tassels and waving its broad leaves of dark green,
-the mown fields yellow with their stubble, and the
-wide land, somnolent and heavy with fecundity, already
-rich with the gold of autumn.</p>
-
-<p>And the people did approve, with vast majorities,
-and among all the principles of democracy they
-wrote in their fundamental law that day was that of
-municipal home rule, so that all those cities, undreamed
-of when the old constitution had been written,
-and all those little towns, silent and sleepy in the
-drowse of that Sunday afternoon, might own and
-operate their public utilities, might draft their own
-charters, have what form of government they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">[366]</span>
-pleased, in short, become free. And so the great
-dream of Johnson and of Jones came true at last.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">LXIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>It was of the Free City they had dreamed and
-that they had not lived to behold the fulfillment of
-their dream was, in its way, the final certification
-of the validity of their services as pioneers. It is an
-old rule of life, or an old trick of the fates that
-seem so casually to govern life, that the dreams of
-mortals are seldom destined to come true, though
-mortals sometimes thwart the fates by finding their
-dreams in themselves sufficient. In this sense Jones
-and Johnson had already been rewarded. It had
-been a dream of wonder and of beauty, the vision
-of a city stately with towers, above which there
-hung the glow which poor Jude used to see at evening
-when he climbed to the roof of the Brown House
-on the ridgeway near Marygreen. It was a city
-in which there were the living conceptions of justice,
-pity, mercy, consideration, toleration, beauty, art,
-all those graces which mankind so long has held
-noblest and most dear. It was a city wherein human
-life was precious, and therefore gracious, a
-city which the citizen loved as a graduate loves his
-alma mater, a city with a communal spirit. There
-the old ideas of privilege had given way to the
-ideals of service, public property was held as sacred
-as private property, power was lightly wielded, the
-people&#8217;s voice was intelligent and omnipotent, for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">[367]</span>
-they had learned the wisdom that confuses demagogues,
-and amid the interplay of myriad forces, the
-democratic spirit was ever at work, performing its
-noble functions. You might have said that the
-people were inspired, since they united so readily in
-great constructive work, reducing to order and scientific
-arrangement all the manifold needs and expressions
-of the daily life, conquering in the old
-struggle against nature, providing against all that
-casualty and accident which make life to-day such
-a snarl of squalid tragedies and ridiculous comedies
-that it well may seem to be ruled by none other than
-the most whimsical and spiteful of irresponsible
-spirits. It was more than a city indeed, it was a
-realm of reason, wherein the people at last in good
-will were living a social life. The eternal negative,
-the everlasting no, had given way to a new affirmation;
-each morning should ordain new emancipations,
-and each evening behold new reconciliations
-among men. It was a city wherein the people were
-achieving more and more of leisure, that life in all
-her splendor and her beauty and her glory might not
-pass by unhailed, unrecognized even, by so many
-toiling thousands. It was the vision of a city set
-upon a hill, with happy people singing in the streets.</p>
-
-<p>These words I know but vaguely express the
-vision that had come to those two men with the
-unpoetic names of Johnson and Jones. When I
-speak of a city where people sing in the streets I
-am perfectly well aware of the smile that touches
-the lips of sophistication, though the smile would
-have been none the less cynical had I mentioned<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">[368]</span>
-merely a city in which there were happy people at
-all. I am perfectly well aware that such a thing
-in all literalness is perhaps impossible to the weary,
-preoccupied crowds in the streets of any of our
-cities; it would be too absurd, too ridiculous, and
-probably against the law, if not indeed quite wicked.
-In Mr. Housman&#8217;s somber lines:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">These are not in plight to bear,</div>
-<div class="verse">If they would, another&#8217;s care.</div>
-<div class="verse">They have enough as &#8217;tis: I see</div>
-<div class="verse">In many an eye that measures me</div>
-<div class="verse">The mortal sickness of a mind</div>
-<div class="verse">Too unhappy to be kind.</div>
-<div class="verse">Undone with misery, all they can</div>
-<div class="verse">Is to hate their fellow man;</div>
-<div class="verse">And till they drop they needs must still</div>
-<div class="verse">Look at you and wish you ill.</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>And yet, it is not wholly impossible after all.
-One evening in Brussels, hearing the strains of a
-band I looked out of my hotel window, and saw a
-throng of youth and maidens dancing in a mist
-of rain down an asphalt pavement that glistened
-under the electric lights. It was a sight of such
-innocence, of such simple joy and gayety as one
-could never behold in our cities, and it occasioned
-no more remark, was considered no more out of
-place or unbecoming than it would be for a man to
-sprawl on one of our sidewalks and look for a dime
-he had dropped. But I happened to use that phrase
-about singing in the streets simply because it was
-one Jones used to employ, just as Johnson used<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">[369]</span>
-forever to be talking about his city set on a hill. If
-Johnson&#8217;s phrase was in an old poetic strain Jones
-meant literally what he said. He used to talk of
-the crowds he had seen along the boulevards of
-Paris, and the gayety, impossible to us, in which
-they had celebrated the 14th of July, and he talked
-of all this to such purpose that Toledo became the
-first city in America to have a &#8220;sane&#8221; Fourth of
-July.</p>
-
-<p>Jones and Johnson, because they had vision, were
-thinking in sequences far beyond the material conceptions
-of the communities about them, and utterly
-impossible to skulking city politicians, with their
-miserable little treacheries and contemptible and
-selfish ambitions. They were imagining a spirit
-which might and perhaps some day will possess a
-whole people. And when I intimated the pity it was
-that they had not lived to see that silvery September
-day when the people of Ohio voted for municipal
-autonomy, I did not mean in the least to aver
-that their dream had been realized for us, simply
-because we had secured an amendment to our fundamental
-law. Memoranda to this effect had been
-noted on the roll of the constitution, but these after
-all were but the cold, formal and unlovely terms that
-expressed concepts which had been evolving slowly
-in the public consciousness.</p>
-
-<p>They realized, what all intelligent men must ere
-long apprehend, that too great stress has been laid
-on mere political activity. We have counted it as
-of controlling force in human affairs, the energy behind
-human activities, the cause, instead of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">[370]</span>
-effect, the motive, instead of a mere expression of
-our complex life. They saw more deeply than politics,
-they recognized other and mightier influences
-at work, affecting the interests and the emotions of
-men. They knew that there is after all, an unconscious,
-subtle wisdom in the general neglect of
-politics by the masses of citizens, who intuitively
-know that other things are of more importance.
-They were but seeking to clear the way for the
-more fundamental expressions of human interest,
-human emotions, human fervors, human liberties.
-For of course it is not the city that makes the
-people free, but the people that make the city free;
-and the city cannot be free until the people have
-been freed from all their various bondages, free
-above all from themselves, from their own ignorances,
-littlenesses, superstitions, jealousies, envies,
-suspicions and fears. And it is not laws that
-can set them free, nor political parties, nor organizations,
-nor commissions, nor any sort of legalistic
-machinery. They must themselves set themselves
-free, and themselves indeed find out the way.</p>
-
-<p>Nor is that freedom to be defined; its chief value
-lies, as does that of any concept of truth, in the fact
-that it is largely impressionistic, subject to the
-alterations and corrections of that mysterious system
-of incessant change which is life itself. The
-value and even the permanence of many ideals and
-many truths&mdash;for truths are not always permanent,
-but are subject to the flux of life&mdash;lie in the fact
-that they are impressionistic. Reduced to formal
-lines and hardened into rigid detail they become<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">[371]</span>
-something quite otherwise than that which they were
-at first or were intended to be.</p>
-
-<p>No, neither for them, nor for us, had the dream
-come true. But it had come nearer. It had become
-possible. Many obstacles had been removed; many
-purifications had been wrought, many deliverances
-achieved. To Cleveland and to Toledo, those two
-cities by the lake, the years had brought their
-changes. Not objectively, perhaps; outwardly they
-were much the same&mdash;without form, inharmonious,
-ugly, with the awful antitheses of our economic
-system, and what is worse, the vast welter of
-mediocrity and banality between. But there had
-been ameliorations. In each of them there were
-plans traced for beautiful civic centers with groups
-of buildings and other public amenities, which, when
-realized, would render them comparable in that respect
-to those old cities of Europe where the benison
-of art has descended on the people from the hands
-of kings. And these things were coming up out of
-the people, despite provincialism and philistinism
-and politics; there was a new understanding of sovereignty,
-not as a menace descending from above,
-but as an aspiration coming up from below. And
-this new aspiration in the people, pressing with the
-irresistible urge of moral sentiment against old institutions
-will renovate the cities and recreate the
-lives in them.</p>
-
-<p>For after all the world grows better. Not as
-rapidly as we should like, but yet, in a way, better.
-The immense sophistication of the modern mood, to
-be sure, is apt to cast contemporary thought in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">[372]</span>
-the mould of multifold negation; and sensibilities,
-long distressed by the contemplation of life in
-aspects it would not wear were this more of a realm
-of reason, find their only solace in that pessimism
-which makes charming so much of modern poetry.
-Doubtless this is the mood most congenial to the
-agnosticism of the reflective, contemplative mind
-in the present phase of its philosophy. It has its
-undoubted fascinations, its uses, and, indeed, its
-truth, part reaction though it be from the excessive
-strain of contemporary life in cities, and the dull
-orthodoxies of the Victorian age. To one, indeed,
-who, in eight years&#8217; participation in municipal politics
-might in that respect have been compared to
-that character in one of Anatole France&#8217;s novels
-who never opened a door without coming upon some
-hitherto unsuspected depth of infamy in mankind,
-it was difficult to avoid that strain. And yet, bad
-as municipal government has been in this land, it is
-everywhere better to-day. The level of moral sentiment,
-like the level of intelligence, mounts slowly,
-in wide spirals, but it mounts steadily all the time.
-In not every city has the advance been so marked,
-for not every city has had such personalities as
-Johnson and Jones, and without personalities, democracies
-seem unable to function. The old corruptions,
-once so flagrant, are growing less and less,
-and there is left only the residuum of meanness
-and pettiness and spite, the crimes that require no
-courage and entail no fear of the law, committed by
-beings who never could attain the robust stature of
-the old and brazen and robust offenders. The strain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">[373]</span>
-is running out, attenuating, and ere long will be
-extinct.</p>
-
-<p>Those gentle pessimists of such congenial culture
-may indeed point to other ages that excel
-ours, say in speculative thought, and all the five
-arts, but I think it is demonstrable that upon the
-whole, and employing long epochs for the comparison,
-things are growing better. Notwithstanding
-all the ignorance and all the woe in the world to-night,
-never before has there been such widespread
-opportunity for enlightenment, never such widespread
-comfort, never so much kindness, so much
-pity for animals, for children, and, above all, never
-have women been shown such consideration. It needs
-no very powerful imagination, peering into the shadowy
-background of human history, to appreciate
-the tremendous implications of this fact. Indeed the
-great feminist movement of our time, a movement
-which in the histories of mankind centuries hence
-will be given the sectional mark of the beginning
-of a new age, is in itself the proof of a great advance,
-in which the ballot will be the very least
-important of all the liberties to be won.</p>
-
-<p>With all the complications of this vast and confusing
-interplay of the forces of this age, the city
-is inextricably bound by its awful responsibility for
-so much that is bad, for so much that is good, in
-our time. And in the cities, now as always, the
-struggle for liberty will go on. The old leaders
-will pass, and the new will pass, and pass swiftly,
-for they are quickly consumed in the stress and heat
-of the passionate and savage struggle. To them<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">[374]</span>
-must ever come the fatigue of long drawn opposition,
-of the repeated and unavailing assaults on the
-cold, solid and impregnable walls of institutions. In
-this fatigue they may grow conservative after a
-while, and they should pray to be spared the
-acquiescence of the middle years, the base capitulation
-of age.</p>
-
-<p>But always the people remain, pressing onward
-in a great stream up the slopes, and always somehow
-toward the light. For the great dream beckons,
-leads them on, the dream of social harmony always
-prefigured in human thought as the city. This radiant
-vision of the city is the oldest dream in the
-world. All literature is saturated with it. It has
-been the ideal of human achievement since the day
-when the men on the plains of Shinar sought to build
-a city whose towers should reach unto heaven. It
-was the angelic vision of the mystic on Patmos, the
-city descending out of heaven, and lying foursquare,
-the city where there was to be no more sorrow nor
-crying. It has been the goal of civilization down
-to this hour of the night, when, however vaguely and
-dimly, the ideal stirs the thousands in this feverish
-town going about their strange and various businesses,
-pleasures, devotions, sacrifices, sins. It has
-been the everlasting dream of humanity. And humanity
-will continue to struggle for it, to struggle
-toward it. And some day, somewhere, to the sons of
-men the dream will come true.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">THE END</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1">FOOTNOTES:</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[A]</a> These have been collected and published under the title,
-&#8220;Letters of Labor and Love,&#8221; by Samuel M. Jones, The Bobbs-Merrill
-Co., Indianapolis.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[B]</a> &#8220;On the Enforcement of Law in Cities,&#8221; Bobbs-Merrill,
-Indianapolis, 1913.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[C]</a> &#8220;The Truth About the White Slave Traffic,&#8221; by Teressa
-Billington-Greig. <i>The English Review</i>, June, 1913.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph1">TRANSCRIBER&#8217;S NOTES:</p>
-
-
-
-<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></div>
-
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